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Introducing… Joni Mitchell: The Ultimate Music Guide

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Very pleased, this week, to unveil an Ultimate Music Guide project that I’ve wanted to do for a good while now. The latest edition of our UMGs is dedicated to Joni Mitchell, and goes onsale in the UK on Thursday. You can, though, already order a copy of Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to Joni Mitch...

Very pleased, this week, to unveil an Ultimate Music Guide project that I’ve wanted to do for a good while now. The latest edition of our UMGs is dedicated to Joni Mitchell, and goes onsale in the UK on Thursday. You can, though, already order a copy of Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to Joni Mitchell from our online shop.

THIS ITEM IS CURRENTLY OUT OF STOCK; WE’LL AMEND THIS MESSAGE WHEN IT BECOMES AVAILABLE AGAIN

Mitchell has been creative about curating her own backstory, with a bunch of compilations since the turn of the millennium, even if she’s not typically one for nostalgia. A 2013 Canadian radio interview found her telling the interviewer how she didn’t much enjoy looking back on her career, or listening to her own extraordinary records. “I have one friend who comes over here and insists on putting my music on,” she admitted. “He’s into it. We’ll play pool. I’d rather have Duke Ellington on, frankly, to play pool.”

What, then, would Mitchell make of our tender, comprehensive and frequently awestruck Ultimate Music Guide; a testament to her genius? One suspects she might be uncomfortable with the retrospective angles, and at least some of the reverence. She is not, though, unaware of her own place in musical history. “I’m cursed by astrology to be deeper than the average person, and also have the need to be original,” she told the radio interviewer. “To plant the flag where no one else has been.”

The Ultimate Music Guide to Joni Mitchell is the definitive overview of every stage of that complex, groundbreaking career. A battalion of Uncut writers have provided deep and illuminating reviews of every one of her albums, from 1968’s Song To A Seagull right up to Shine, 39 years later. Along the way, there are new insights into her canonical ‘70s masterpieces, and valuable reappraisals of more neglected corners of the Mitchell catalogue.

There are, too, a host of revelatory interviews salvaged from the archives of NME and Melody Maker, which reinforce a sense of Mitchell as one of the most radical, intelligent and creatively uncompromising voices of the modern era. “David Geffen said to me once that I was the only star he ever met that didn’t want to be one,” she told Melody Maker in 1986. “The reluctant star, y’know….”

What she always wanted, of course, was to be far more than that. Another Melody Maker piece finds her in London at the start of 1970, for a show at the Royal Festival Hall. She has been working on a new album – scheduled to include a song called, at this point, “They Paved Paradise And Put Up A Parking Lot” – and talks about how America “may suddenly get very strange”.

“I want my music to get more sophisticated,” she says. Has any singer-songwriter ever fulfilled such a rash promise so completely?

Robyn Hitchcock – Robyn Hitchcock

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For most of his creative life, Robyn Hitchcock has been in a state of flux. A songwriter as in thrall to PG Wodehouse, Mervyn Peake and Syd Barrett as he is to Bob Dylan, Lou Reed and The Byrds, he’s long been torn between Britain and America. Being better-known in the States has meant a lot of to...

For most of his creative life, Robyn Hitchcock has been in a state of flux. A songwriter as in thrall to PG Wodehouse, Mervyn Peake and Syd Barrett as he is to Bob Dylan, Lou Reed and The Byrds, he’s long been torn between Britain and America. Being better-known in the States has meant a lot of touring there, and Hitchcock has spent almost as much time overseas as he has in London, or on his beloved Isle of Wight.

This US/UK seesaw isn’t the only one he’s on, either. Across 40 years of releasing records, he’s also repeatedly swung between the poles of hushed acoustic folk and psychedelic power-pop; sometimes, with 1984’s I Often Dream Of Trains and 1985’s Fegmania!, or 2004’s Spooked and 2006’s Olé! Tarantula, hitting those extremes in the space of just two records.

In the 11 years since Olé!, however, his last genuinely ‘loud’ album, and also his final LP to be recorded in America, Hitchcock has moved steadily towards more sedate acoustic material, largely recorded in London and typified by 2014’s gossamer-fine, Joe Boyd-produced The Man Upstairs.

In an inevitable but overdue oscillation, then, Robyn Hitchcock – his 21st solo album and first to be self-titled – finds the songwriter wrenched hard back to America and the fried rock of his ur-indie ’70s troupe The Soft Boys, or the colourful, Surrealist new wave of the Egyptians. The quirks might have been turned down a little – aside from some oozing mackerel, there are few seafood shout-outs – but Hitchcock, now ensconced as one of Nashville’s rare pedestrians, sounds more energised and vibrant than he has in decades.

Much of the vibe is likely down to producer Brendan Benson, who begged the guitarist to make a record like The Soft Boys, but the prime strength of Robyn Hitchcock is down to the meat of its 10 songs. Opener “I Want To Tell You About What I Want” is a stunning power-pop return, complete with four brave, wordy verses taking in telepathy, “cannibal overlords” and a future where cats become the planet’s dominant species. In “Virginia Woolf”, an angular, glammy stomp, Hitchcock inhabits multiple emotional perspectives within three minutes; first, he inspects suicide with grim gallows humour – “Sylvia Plath, she lay down on the floor/Sylvia Plath, opened one final door” – before his crooked smile fades, and he laments, multi-tracked and pale, “Sometimes you feel what you don’t want to feel/Sometimes it hurts.”

Aside from pedal-steel on the stately “Sayonara Judge” and “1970 In Aspic”, and the twanging Johnny Cash parody “I Pray When I’m Drunk” (“I think about you every time I strum”), there’s little evidence of Nashville on Robyn Hitchcock, despite three of the city’s top session musicians comprising the rhythm section. In fact, living in Music City seems to have sharpened the songwriter’s sense of his own history. In particular, on “Raymond And The Wires”, he delves deeper than ever before, and recalls riding on a trolleybus with his father in 1964. “We couldn’t sit upstairs because my father’s leg was bad,” he croons, before movingly reflecting that although he “didn’t know him close”, his father “travels ’round beside me now, he goes everywhere I’ve been”.

“Raymond…” is built around soft arpeggios and mildewed cello, but the rest of the album showcases Hitchcock’s unsung skills on the Fender Telecaster. Though his electric guitar-playing can be overshadowed by his acid lyrics and floral shirts, Hitchcock’s work here demonstrates precisely why no less a guitarist than Graham Coxon enlisted him to play lead on his Spinning Top album in 2009. Melding the tumbling runs of Richard Thompson, the unsculpted aggression of Syd Barrett and the barbed, Oriental accents of Roger McGuinn, Hitchcock’s parts on the likes of “Mad Shelley’s Letterbox” and “Time Coast” are sublime.

His playing is a particular revelation on the penultimate “Autumn Sunglasses”, one of the most complete pieces of Hitchcock’s long career. Taking one of his great vespertine melodies, he and producer Benson thread it with overdriven cello, taut drums, crystalline 12-string and an orchestra of backwards guitars flowing like so many falling leaves. “Feel the warmth/Through the looking glass/Now you’re gone/Your reflection remains,” he murmurs, looking back with equal measures of desire and regret.

Whichever way the pendulum has swung over his 40-year career, Robyn Hitchcock’s muse has remained gloriously timeless. He may change his scenery on the outside – whether he’s using acoustic or electric, in the US or Europe – but reassuringly he’s still the Dylan, Barrett and Beefheart obsessive who would cover Lennon’s “Cold Turkey” for gobbing punks. “I’m singing to the ruins/I’m singing from the past,” goes the final verse of robust closer “Time Coast”. “I’m singing like a fossil/Time goes by so fast.” Robyn Hitchcock may excavate an ancient style, then, but there’s nothing archaic about the result. “I made it just in time,” goes its joyful final line.

Q&A
ROBYN HITCHCOCK
What’s it like recording and living in Nashville?

Where I am you feel like punk is yet to happen – it all feels like it’s before summer 1976, a lot of hairy blokes. You feel like Zuma has just come out, or maybe Grievous Angel. It’s pretty good, because it’s not very big yet, but it’s quite affordable and it feels international, it feels like Los Angeles or New York. But having said that, I’m the only Brit that I see around. I think Steve Winwood has a place here, but I haven’t seen him buying Marmite in the local Whole Foods. I can see why Dylan went to record here. What you’re getting for your money is a really confident band, it’s not all twangy stuff. Nashville’s a very good place to make a psychedelic rock album.

A lot of these songs seem to be reflecting on your past – was this intentional?
In my songs, nothing’s intentional. The songs are the mistresses, they steal upon me like cats, they come to you when they want you. I sometimes find I’m walking around, or trying to do the accounts, or washing up, or any other human activity, and I realise a song is actually playing itself in my head. So I have no control over the songs. But they were all written off the British mainland. And they seem to be about my life, people I knew or I’d heard of, or people that were invented, and a lot of hybrids as well.
INTERVIEW: TOM PINNOCK

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

Watch Depeche Mode cover David Bowie’s “Heroes”

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Depeche Mode covered David Bowie’s "Heroes" on the first date of their Global Spirit tour. The band performed Bowie's song during their encore at the Friends Arena in Stockholm. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1b_kuYWiZo&feature=youtu.be The band's Global Spirit tour dates are: May 9 Antwerp,...

Depeche Mode covered David Bowie’s “Heroes” on the first date of their Global Spirit tour.

The band performed Bowie’s song during their encore at the Friends Arena in Stockholm.

The band’s Global Spirit tour dates are:

May 9 Antwerp, Belgium Sportpaleis
May 12 Nice, France Stade Charles-Ehrmann
May 14 Ljubljana, Slovenia Dvorana Stožice
May 17 Athens, Greece Terra Vibe Park
May 20 Bratislava, Slovakia Štadión Pasienky
May 22 Budapest, Hungary Groupama Aréna
May 24 Prague, Czech Republic Eden Aréna
May 27 Leipzig, Germany Festwiese
May 29 Lille, France Stade Pierre-Mauroy
May 31 Copenhagen, Denmark Telia Parken
June 3 London, United Kingdom London Stadium
June 5 Cologne, Germany RheinEnergieStadion
June 9 Munich, Germany Olympiastadion
June 11 Hannover, Germany HDI Arena
June 18 Zurich, Switzerland Letzigrund Stadion
June 20 Frankfurt, Germany Commerzbank-Arena
June 22 Berlin, Germany Olympiastadion
June 25 Rome, Italy Stadio Olimpico
June 27 Milan, Italy Stadio San Siro
June 29 Bologna, Italy Stadio Rentao Dall’Ara
July 1 Paris, France Stade de France
July 4 Gelsenkirchen, Germany Veltins-Arena
July 6 Bilbao, Spain BBK Live Festival
July 8 Lisbon, Portugal NOS Alive Festival
July 13 St. Petersburg, Russia SKK
July 15 Moscow, Russia Otkritie Arena
July 17 Minsk, Belarus Minsk-Arena
July 19 Kiev, Ukraine Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex
July 21 Warsaw, Poland PGE Narodowy
July 23 Cluj-Napoca, Romania Cluj Arena

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

The Who and Guns N’ Roses announce co-headline tour dates

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The Who and Guns N’ Roses are to co-headline a number of dates together in South America. The first confirmed date is set for September 23 at Rio de Janerio’s Rock in Rio Festival. The second has announced for October 1 at at Estadio Único De La Plata in Buenos Aires, Argentina. According to ...

The Who and Guns N’ Roses are to co-headline a number of dates together in South America.

The first confirmed date is set for September 23 at Rio de Janerio’s Rock in Rio Festival. The second has announced for October 1 at at Estadio Único De La Plata in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

According to Blabbermouth, additional co-headlining shows are rumored to be taking place in Brazil, Peru, and Chile, although these are as yet unconfirmed.

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

The 17th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

A couple of old Daniel Bachman records appearing here after the great show he played with Jake Xerxes Fussell in Cambridge this week (I reviewed it here; please enjoy also my trademark terrible photography). Elsewhere, these are the records I’m playing while trying to follow two cricket matches a...

A couple of old Daniel Bachman records appearing here after the great show he played with Jake Xerxes Fussell in Cambridge this week (I reviewed it here; please enjoy also my trademark terrible photography).

Elsewhere, these are the records I’m playing while trying to follow two cricket matches and the Giro, and maybe do some work finishing this issue. Special new additions this week come from the Deslondes, putting some more distance between themselves and their old collaborator Alynda Lee; another track from the James Elkington solo debut; Mary Epworth; and I guess Grizzly Bear and LCD Soundsystem, though you maybe know about those already. Lee Bains record is fire by the way and I’ll drop a track in here as soon as I can. Thanks, as ever.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Daniel Bachman – Daniel Bachman (Three Lobed)

2 Mike Cooper – Raft (Room 40)

3 Various Artists – Innerpeace: Rare Spiritual Funk & Jazz Gems. The Supreme Sound Of Producer Bob Shad )Wewantsounds)

4 The Deslondes – Hurry Home (New West)

5 Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires – Youth Detention (Nail My Feet Down To The South Side Of Town) (Don Giovanni)

6 The War On Drugs – Thinking Of A Place (Atlantic)

https://vimeo.com/213900454

7 Various Artists – Function Underground: The Black And Brown American Rock Sound 1969-1974 (Now-Again)

8 Floating Points – Reflections – Mojave Desert (Pluto)

9 Jeff Tweedy – Together At Last (dBpm)

10 Daniel Bachman – River (Three Lobed)

11 Seabuckthorn – Turns (Lost Tribe Sound)

12 Various Artists – Psychic Migrations (Cinewax/Volcom Stone)

13 Marc Jonson – Years (Future Days)

14 James Elkington – Wintres Woma (Paradise Of Bachelors)

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

16 Mary Epworth – Me Swimming (Sunday Best)

17 Evan Dando – Baby I’m Bored (Fire)

18 Gas – Narkopop (Kompakt)

19 Sufjan Stevens, Bryce Dessner, Nico Muhly & James McAlister – Planetarium (4AD)

20 Rips – Rips (Faux Discx)

21 Dylan Howe – Subterranean (Motorik)

22 Träd, Gräs Och Stenar – Tack För Kaffet (So Long) (Subliminal Sounds)

23 LCD Soundsystem – Call The Police/American Dream (Columbia)

24 Grizzly Bear – Three Rings (Youtube)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8G3kSiJZpjs

25 Hayden Pedigo – Greetings From Amarillo (Driftless)

26 Michael Mayer – DJ Kicks (!K7)

26 Luomo – Tessio (Force Tracks)

 

Mindhorn reviewed

For a comedian, Julian Barratt never seemed especially comfortable being funny. As zookeeper Howard Moon in The Mighty Boosh, his character was vain and selfish; but never especially comical. Playing journalist Dan Ashcroft in Nathan Barley, he was the voice of reason in amidst the ridiculous hipste...

For a comedian, Julian Barratt never seemed especially comfortable being funny. As zookeeper Howard Moon in The Mighty Boosh, his character was vain and selfish; but never especially comical. Playing journalist Dan Ashcroft in Nathan Barley, he was the voice of reason in amidst the ridiculous hipster setting he was there to document. Perhaps that’s why Barratt’s career has never accelerated along similar lines to his peers – he doesn’t seem a natural fit for panel shows or prime time sitcoms.

Mindhorn, which Barratt co-wrote and stars in, at least shares some similarities with his earlier work. He plays actor Richard Thorncroft who, during his Eighties’ pomp, enjoyed success as Bruce Mindhorn – a TV detective based on the Isle of Man, whose left eye had been replaced by a bionic implant, allowing him to “see the truth”. In the present day, Thorncroft is unemployed, delusional and overweight; unable to move on from his former glories. In that sense, like Vincent Moon or Dan Ashcroft, Thorncroft is locked in his own world. A shot at redemption comes when a killer, loose on the Isle of Man, demands to negotiate with Mindhorn.

As a character, Mindhorn is a familiar comic creation in the tradition of Alan Partridge or Stephen Toast – pompous, overbearing, lacking self-awareness – the plot, too, has echoes of the Partridge Alpha Papa movie. But the film’s strength lies in less obvious laughs. Returning to the Isle of Man, Thorncroft meets his former co-star and ex Patricia DeVille (Essie Davies), chirpy stunt man Clive (Simon Farnaby; the film’s co-writer) and another former co-star (Steve Coogan) who has launched a successful business empire on the back of his Mindhorn spin-off. Here, it is possible to watch Thorncroft gradually unravel during each humiliating encounter. The film sags, though, towards the end – as the need for a ‘serious’ conclusion to the narrative overwhelms the silliness of Barratt and Farnaby’s confection.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

Black Grape announce first new album in 20 years

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Black Grape have announced details of their first new album for 20 years. Pop Voodoo will be released on UMC (Universal Music) on July 7, 2017. You can hear a new song, "Everything You Know Is Wrong", below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-83NBlJ7dc Black Grape will play an intimate show at th...

New limited edition David Bowie picture discs to be released

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Details of the latest David Bowie 7" picture discs have been announced. "Be My Wife" will be released on June 16 on Parlophone. Originally released in the UK in June 1977, "Be My Wife" was the second and last single to be taken from Low. The AA of the new 7” picture disc is a previously unrel...

Details of the latest David Bowie 7″ picture discs have been announced.

Be My Wife” will be released on June 16 on Parlophone.

Originally released in the UK in June 1977, “Be My Wife” was the second and last single to be taken from Low.

The AA of the new 7” picture disc is a previously unreleased live version of the instrumental “Art Decade“, recorded in Perth, Australia in 1978 during the ISOLAR II tour.

Meanwhile, to celebrate the latest stop of the David Bowie Is exhibition in Barcelona, a special limited edition red vinyl of “I’m Afraid Of Americans” will be released on 7″. The Trent Reznor remixed ‘V1′ version of the track is a double A-side with an acoustic version of “Heroes” live at The Bridge School benefit which was only briefly available on the Bridge School compilation vinyl.

This single will be exclusively available at the Barcelona leg of the David Bowie Is exhibition at Museu Del Disseny De Barcelona from May 26.

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

Hear LCD Soundsystem’s new songs, “Call The Police” and “American Dream”

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LCD Soundsystem have released two new songs, "Call The Police" and "American Dream". The tracks are from the band’s long-awaited comeback record, which is due later this year via Columbia. They're the first new material from the band since December 2015's “Christmas Will Break Your Heart”. ...

LCD Soundsystem have released two new songs, “Call The Police” and “American Dream“.

The tracks are from the band’s long-awaited comeback record, which is due later this year via Columbia.

They’re the first new material from the band since December 2015’s “Christmas Will Break Your Heart”.

Meanwhile, James Murphy has written a lengthy post on the band’s Facebook page providing an update on the album’s progress (“1 more vocal and 2 more mixes to go”) as well as a detailed explanation of why there’s no firm release date in place yet for the record.

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

Ask Steve Earle

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Ahead of the release of his new album, So You Wannabe an Outlaw, Steve Earle will be answering your questions as part of our regular An Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’d like us to ask the singer song-writer? How did get cast in The Wire? What was life like growing up in Texas...

Ahead of the release of his new album, So You Wannabe an Outlaw, Steve Earle will be answering your questions as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’d like us to ask the singer song-writer?

How did get cast in The Wire?
What was life like growing up in Texas?
What’s the best advice Willie Nelson ever gave him?

Send up your questions by noon, Tuesday, May 9 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

The best questions, and Steve’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine.

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

Father John Misty – Pure Comedy

Sometimes to just have to let it all out. And, appropriately for a record which skewers alienation and entertainment and escapism, while also scratching obsessively at the eternal questions of existence, Josh Tillman’s third album as Father John Misty arrives in a hailstorm of words and emotions, ...

Sometimes to just have to let it all out. And, appropriately for a record which skewers alienation and entertainment and escapism, while also scratching obsessively at the eternal questions of existence, Josh Tillman’s third album as Father John Misty arrives in a hailstorm of words and emotions, a righteous torrent. There’s a bit of godlessness too. Quite a lot of it, actually.

Those first impressions are overwhelming. After the deluge, there is much to digest.The running time is 75 minutes. The record’s centrepiece, “Leaving LA”, – the fulcrum on which this novelistic rumination turns – runs on for 13 of those minutes. The song itself took four years to write, and was edited down from around 40 verses. The tune will not be troubling dance halls. Lyrically, it sprawls and nags. The verse is not so much a manifesto as a sermon in which the speaker – a singer hiding behind a beard – grows tired of the sound of his own voice, but can’t stop the noise. The interference comes from inside Tillman’s head and, while he bridles at the suggestion, the prevailing tone is one of disgust.

The sound is austere, but also oddly comforting. Regular producer Jonathan Wilson provides the airbags, adding an veneer of easy-listening to Tillman’s chronic discomfiture, aided by arranger Gavin Bryars, who puts strings and gospel singers where you might expect the steel guitars to appear. There is no lead guitar. When the weeping steel does arrive, as the album veers towards its conclusion on “The Memo”, it comes as a great relief. The tune is a country shuffle. And then the words start to unfurl. “Gonna steal some bedsheets,” Tillman croons, as if corrupting a Bertolt Brecht farce, “from an amputee…”

Did someone mention comedy? Well, there is a bit of that. Gallows humour, bitter stuff, a thin smile on the mask of tragedy. It is certainly clear that Tillman has travelled a long way in the two years since I Love You, Honeybear, his soulful, exuberant, melodramatic riff on romance. But if you listen hard, you might just be able to discern that – in between being mad as hell about everything and everyone, not excluding himself – Tillman remains a hopeful soul, albeit one who is in the habit of scratching love graffiti on the back of a doomsayer’s placard. We are, Tillman suggests at the end of the existential title track, “Just random matter suspended in the dark/Hate to say it, but each other’s all we’ve got.”

So, yes, we may all be locked in cycles of futility, chasing chimeras and false promises, but we’re not going to hell, because God doesn’t exist. The purity, as much as the comedy, is Tillman’s point. Run the laughter track. Cue the gospel choir.

How did we get here? For Tillman, Pure Comedy represents a deepening of his artistry, and perhaps, a reaction to the hollowness, the absurdity of success. Certainly, there is an element of irony in the arc of the singer’s career, if we put aside his four year stint as the drummer of Fleet Foxes. Before his alter ego was conceived, Tillman had issued eight albums (almost) under his own name. Those J Tillman recordings are now regarded by their author as “fantasies… that had very little to do with my worldview or my life”. His three albums as Father John Misty, by contrast, represent a stark change of approach, prompted, Tillman says, “because of a psychedelic experience”. So, while that reverential pseudonym suggests playfulness and insincerity, the work is more obviously rooted in the singer’s life. It would be wrong to call it autobiographical, because Tillman is too self-aware to download himself without considering the ramifications. But the work does reflect the concerns and preoccupations of a concerned, preoccupied man. A man, remember, with a strongly evangelical upbringing.

The name, he says, is “a thought experiment”, and is no more significant than Bob Dylan’s, or David Bowie’s, or Nina Simone’s or Serge Gainsbourg’s. “I don’t presume that those people are singing from a persona, or an alter ego,” Tillman says. “But at some point, you do become a cartoon character in the minds of other people.” Still, he tries not to write from “a disingenuous place, where I’m trying to animate some bogus person.”

So what happened? If Honeybear inhabited the feverish craziness of love, Pure Comedy begins when Tillman and his wife, photographer Emma Elizabeth Tillman leave LA, and move to New Orleans. Tillman had gone to Los Angeles in the first place, as “a sick joke” – his amusement at his incompatibility with new surroundings is reflected on 2012’s Fear Fun. By quitting town, the couple were indulging a fantasy of dropping out together. In New Orleans, they knew literally nobody. Tillman jokes that if their house had caught fire, they would have had no friends to call. They survived for two years before moving back to California.

That mood of isolation permeates the first five songs. “Pure Comedy” itself throws bleach over false idolatry (“They worship themselves but they’re totally obsessed/With risen zombies, celestial virgins, magic tricks”). “Total Entertainment Forever” is a gently swinging tune from a virtual future in which a man has dinner with his wife before retiring to his den to have sex with a computerised Taylor Swift. “When the historians find us,” Tillman sings, “we’ll be in our homes/Plugged into our hubs/Skin and bones/A frozen smile on every face.”

“Things It Would Be Helpful To Know Before The Revolution” sounds (agreeably) like Elton John addressing the apocalypse. “Ballad of the Dying Man” is a wry demolition of the false consciousness of social media – the man checks his newsfeed as he summons his last breath before departing “from the rented heavens to the shadows in the cave”. And “Birdie” is a curious, sometimes tempestuous song in which life “is just narrative/meta-data in aggregate”.

The uncommitted listener may not get much further than this. The mood is hardly lifted by “Leaving LA”, which Tillman has placed at the dead centre of the album. In tone, it is funereal, hailing the last sunrise on Sunset. There is no chorus to speak of. If you prune the lyrics to the first and last verses, what remains is the relatively unremarkable story of the singer and his missus deciding to opt for a different future. In between, Tillman satirises himself, “the LA phonies and their bullshit bands”, the polluted water (“if you want ecstasy or birth control/Just run the tap until the water’s cold”). He goes back to childhood, to a near death experience in JC Penney’s, choking on a watermelon candy, and he pauses, in verse 8 (of 10) to review his own efforts. “I’m beginning to see the end/of how it all goes down between me and them/Some 10 verse chorus-less diatribe/Plays as they all jump ship, I used to like this guy/But this new shit makes me want to die.”

It is, by any standards, an indulgent song, and self-consciously so. But as resignation letters go, it is a nagging, neurotic masterpiece. And the light? Strangely there is some. True, “A Bigger Paper Bag” continues the mood of narcissistic self-laceration, but the vanity is tempered by a degree of self-awareness. “When The God of Love Returns There’ll Be Hell To Pay” is an atheist’s reckoning with a flawed creator (“Maybe try something less ambitious the next time you get bored”). “Two Wildly Different Perspectives” is an oddly beautiful reconstruction of human conflict – the tune punctuated by crashing cymbals and fruit machine bleeps. “So I’m Growing Old On Magic Mountain” has the narcotic charm of Neil Young’s “On The Beach”, and may be the best song on the record. And the concluding “In Twenty Years Or So” ends with the singer – “a ghost in a cheap rental suit” – coming to terms, almost, with his own ridiculousness. The final sound on the record is the faint tolling of a wine glass being hit by a spoon.

Overall, it’s a long, strange ride, and Joshua judges ruefully. He is not a light traveller. For every bright flicker, every fragment of redemption, he provides 10 arguments against. And yet, and yet. There is a moment on “Smoochie”, a lovely tune full of quiet hums and autumnal sun, in which the singer packs his doubts away as his lover says: “Hand me a sea peach”. A moment of paradise on a hearse-ride through hell.

Q&A
Josh Tillman
Did you have an idea what you were going to do before you made the record?

Well, its coherence is no fault of mine. I write these things, and they kind of force-correct as they go on. The first five songs are fairly representative of the record I set out to make, but it very much changed as I went on. You can really hear the progress of the writing as you listen through the record, because at the smack-dab middle you’ve got “Leaving LA”. I had some instinct that if I was going to make a record about humanity – quote-unquote – I needed to have a portrait of a living breathing human being at the centre of it. Because the record starts with some really broad strokes.

There seems to be a sense of pure disgust coming out at the listener.
No, no! I don’t think of it as disgust at all. I really did not approach this record like [transcendentalist essayist/poet, Ralph Waldo] Emerson, or something like that, sitting alone, hiding from humanity. I’m part of what’s going on. There’s an idealism at the core of the record. I get called ‘cynical’ a lot. I don’t know … I don’t believe in cynical music. I don’t think there’s such a thing as cynical music. I don’t think you sit down at a piano for hours and hours at a time, trying to find the most beautiful way of saying something, if you’re a cynic. If you’re a cynic you go have a drink and say ‘fuck it’. I differentiate between people and humanity. And while I’m defensive about it being cynical or rooted in disgust, I also think there’s room for disgust. But with this record, I’ve really made a conscious effort to give the songs some levity. In “Pure Comedy” that last line has more impact than the whole six and a half minutes that precede it. That’s the point of the song: “Just random matter suspended in the dark/I hate to say it, but each other’s all we’ve got.”

There is a sense of redemption towards the end, a few lighter notes.
It is sort of relentless. There’s just so many lyrics on this thing. The thing is, I may be naive, but I still think of albums as being long enough to have a catharsis. It was the same thing on the last one. Typically I front-load my records with some disgust, I guess.

Tell me about working with producer Jonathan Wilson and arranger Gavin Bryars.
With Jonathan there’s not much to say. He’s something who I trust and I don’t see myself making records with anyone else. Gavin was like a total Hail Mary. I just got his email from a friend of a friend of a friend and sent him “Leaving LA”. That song was either going to have a Gavin Bryars arrangement or it wasn’t going to have strings. Working with Gavin was incredible. It didn’t really hit home that he was in the studio until the strings started coming through the playback. I made a conscious decision to commit to whatever he had done. I didn’t hear a demo of his arrangement; I didn’t hear anything. It was something I felt strongly about.

You recorded at United Recording in LA (formerly Ocean Way) where Sinatra and the Beach Boys worked. Did the aura of the studio influence you?
No – not on a conscious level. But being in a studio like that does give the proceedings a certain patina of formality.

Musically what were your thoughts? You’ve moved away from the folk rock character you sometimes mock.
How have I mocked folk rock?

There are are some lyrics in there somewhere.
Hahaha. I’m not mocking. I talk about this in the song “Leaving LA”: ‘But the role of Oedipus was a total breeze’. When you think about the characteristics of your average folk rock tune, I don’t think you can point to any of my songs that exhibit those traits. Yet here I find myself, in the year 2017, and when certain people think of white, acoustic, male folk rock, they think of me. I don’t really hear much in my music that exemplifies those values musically or lyrically. There’s nothing folk rock about a song like “Hollywood Forever Cemetery” or “Honeybear”. There’s not a single banjo to be heard anywhere. And the lyrics themselves are not impressionistic or austere or self-serious. So it’s very weird. There have been some country moments. But it’s a bizarre way to characterise my music. I’m not trying to split hairs, but musically this record feels like the soundtrack to something else.

The Trump song you did after the album, Holy Hell, was that a spur of the moment thing?
Yeah – it was a song for my friends. everybody was pretty fucked upon over the election. It’s funny,. I think people think I wrote “Pure Comedy” on November 10th. I wrote those “topical” songs in 2015 at least. A line like ‘and where did they find those goons they elected to rule them” – that’s not even an explicitly political line. We elect who’s going to rule us in a million different ways every day, before even getting to politics

So, other than Trump, you’re not in despair right now?

Well, I don’t know. Sometimes the most hopeful songs come out of despair. When you start writing hopeful songs you have to worry.
INTERVIEW: ALASTAIR McKAY

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

Grandaddy bassist Kevin Garcia dies aged 41

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Kevin Garcia, one of the founding members of Grandaddy, has died aged 41. The bassist suffered a massive stroke on Monday, according to the band. Writing on their Facebook page, the band said, "We were all able to say goodbye to him and he was surrounded by his closest friends and family here in Mo...

Kevin Garcia, one of the founding members of Grandaddy, has died aged 41.

The bassist suffered a massive stroke on Monday, according to the band. Writing on their Facebook page, the band said, “We were all able to say goodbye to him and he was surrounded by his closest friends and family here in Modesto.

“Kevin started playing with Grandaddy when he was fifteen. He was an actual angel. He navigated life with a grace, a generosity and a kindness that was utterly unique. And contagious. He is loved so deeply by so many.

“Kevin was a proud father of two children, Jayden and Gavin. He is survived by his grandmother Joan, his parents Randy and Barbara (who let us practice at their house until 2001…and who are the best), his brothers Craig and Jeff and his wife Sondra.”

Grandaddy released their debut album Under The Western Freeway in 1997. It was followed by The Sophtware Slump (2000), Sumday (2003) and Just Like The Fambly Cat (2006). They split up in 2006, reforming for a series of reunion concerts a few years later.

Grandaddy returned with a new album, Last Place, earlier this year.

The band have asked for donations to a GoFundMe page to help with Garcia’s family’s expenses.

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

Watch the trailer for a new John Lennon graphic novel

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A new graphic novel based on John Lennon's time in New York is set to be released later this month. Based on on the 2010 book Lennon by David Foeniknos, the graphic novel is described as “true biographical fiction” and imagines Lennon recounting his life to an unnamed therapist living in his bu...

A new graphic novel based on John Lennon‘s time in New York is set to be released later this month.

Based on on the 2010 book Lennon by David Foeniknos, the graphic novel is described as “true biographical fiction” and imagines Lennon recounting his life to an unnamed therapist living in his building.

While the bulk of the book will deal with Lennon’s time in New York, it will also chronicle his time growing up in Liverpool, the Beatle years, his relationship with Yoko Ono and his solo career.

Lennon: The New York Years runs to 156 pages and will be published by IDW Publishing on May 30.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VqVCCD1R_Ds&feature=youtu.be

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

Daniel Bachman and Jake Xerxes Fussell reviewed

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I want to write something quickly this morning, before anyone else gets up, about the show I saw in Cambridge last night. Jake Xerxes Fussell and Daniel Bachman have been touring the UK these last few days, playing to reverent crowds and, I hear, at the Caught By The River show in Bristol, breaking ...

I want to write something quickly this morning, before anyone else gets up, about the show I saw in Cambridge last night. Jake Xerxes Fussell and Daniel Bachman have been touring the UK these last few days, playing to reverent crowds and, I hear, at the Caught By The River show in Bristol, breaking out some strong moves to Funkadelic, in Fussell’s case at least.

This last detail might sound incongruous, given the expectations of two musicians whose adherence to the precepts, as per billing at Cambridge Blue Moon, of Primitive American guitar music, would make them likely to be stern avant-folklorists. It’s a tradition that seems to have privileged thorniness from John Fahey onwards.

What’s interesting about Fussell and Bachman’s sets, however, is how this is fundamentally social music; that even though the country-blues may have travelled thousands of miles, actually and metaphorically, into spaces of more formal culture, it retains a rare spirit of companionability. You can hear it when Bachman unself-consciously digs into a songbook nearly a century old, raiding the Paramount label catalogue for William Moore’s “Old Country Rock”, or essaying a lovely Lemuel Turner song, “Beautiful Eyes Of Virginia”, that he first heard, he told Aquarium Drunkard, at the house of the legendary blues archivist, Joe Bussard.

It’s especially striking in Fussell’s performance, as he draws neglected yarns from the southern states (he’s from the Georgia-Alabama border country, but now based in Durham, North Carolina) and beyond and brings them alive to a new audience. What emerges is a set that can encompass vintage pop jazz – Duke Ellington’s “Jump For Joy” being hardly the most rustic of picks – alongside the likes of “Raggy Levy”, located in Alan Lomax’s recordings of Georgia Sea Island Singers.

Over a frequently terrifying few months of 2017, I’ve found Fussell’s second album, What In The Natural World, to be an unostentatious consolation of sorts, and that quality comes across even more potently when he steps up in this small and comfortable room. Fussell plays electric, and on What In The Natural World he’s backed by a skilled band including Nathan Bowles on drums, and Nathan Salsburg, among others. Here, though, Fussell’s own playing has such an inherently percussive momentum that it begins to seem odd he would ever need rhythm backup. Unlike more uptight and overtly scholarly contemporaries, Fussell carries his academic chops lightly. His tunes swing, and his picking is intricate but easygoing.

It all makes most sense in the outstanding “Have You Ever Seen Peaches Growing on a Sweet Potato Vine?”, which we featured on our Uncut CD a while back, and which has a kind of ambling cyclical momentum that could just about be described as infinite country blues. It’s one of those occasions where vernacular music becomes transcendent without appearing to try too hard at being deep, and only a broken string seems to stop it rolling round and round indefinitely.

That and Daniel Bachman’s set, of course (the pair have been alternating headline slots from night to night). Bachman’s reputation is maybe more hardcore and introverted than Fussell’s, and the Virginian certainly has a longer and more complicated discography – though the recent self-titled set on Three-Lobed is as good a point of entry as any. Bachman is often talked up, perhaps not always helpfully, as the most obvious successor to Jack Rose, and you can understand that in the way his music folds raga into the blues, how there are moments of profound spiritual intensity, even as he’s picking out a rag on his lap guitar.

But again there’s a sense, much more pronounced than on his still-gripping records, that this is visceral rather than straightforwardly cerebral music. If some other players in this scene tend to towards a kind of salon prettiness, Bachman, while no less ornate and virtuosic, is also a sight rougher. He plays surprisingly loud, and favours a thick, aggressive sound that could cut through much rowdier rooms than this one. Even when Fussell joins him, on shruti box drone, for one last song, the mood remains as feisty as it is contemplative. Elevated good-time music, perhaps, where the devotional and the downhome are intertwined in ways which are not always immediately apparent.

 

The Eagles are suing Hotel California

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The Eagles are reportedly suing a Mexican hotel named Hotel California. According to Reuters, the band filed a complaint on Monday (May 1), arguing that the hotel – which is situated in Todos Santos,Baja California Sur – “actively encourages” guests to believe that the establishment is in s...

The Eagles are reportedly suing a Mexican hotel named Hotel California.

According to Reuters, the band filed a complaint on Monday (May 1), arguing that the hotel – which is situated in Todos Santos,Baja California Sur – “actively encourages” guests to believe that the establishment is in some way associated with the band.

The lawsuit also alleged that the owners pipe in “Hotel California” and other songs by The Eagles during guests’ stay.

“Defendants lead US consumers to believe that the Todos Santos Hotel is associated with the Eagles and, among other things, served as the inspiration for the lyrics in ‘Hotel California,’ which is false,” the complaint says.

The lawsuit is seeking a “variety of damages and a halt to any infringement”, according to the report.

It is also reported that the hotel was originally named Hotel California in 1950 – long before the Eagles track from 1976. However, the hotel went through a series of name changes before reverting back to its original name from 2001.

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

Radiohead announce remastered OK Computer, B-Sides and unreleased tracks

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Radiohead have confirmed details of OKNOTOK. It will feature remastered OK Computer, eight B-sides and three never before released tracks: “I Promise”, “Lift” and “Man Of War”. A boxed edition will ship in July, featuring a black box emblazoned with a dark image of a burned copy of OK ...

Radiohead have confirmed details of OKNOTOK.

It will feature remastered OK Computer, eight B-sides and three never before released tracks: “I Promise”, “Lift” and “Man Of War”.

A boxed edition will ship in July, featuring a black box emblazoned with a dark image of a burned copy of OK Computer containing three heavyweight 180 gram black 12″ vinyl records and a hardcover book containing more than thirty artworks (many of which have never been seen before) and lyrics.

It will also include a notebook containing 104 pages from Thom Yorke’s library of scrawled notes of the time, a sketchbook containing 48 pages of Stanley Donwood and Tchock’s ‘preparatory work’ and a C90 cassette mix tape compiled by the band, taken from OK Computer session archives and demo tapes.

You can pre-order by clicking here.

Digital formats, double CD, and triple 180g LP versions of the 23 track album will be released widely on June 23.

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

Introducing The History Of Rock 1987

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In a nice bit of synchronicity, our History Of Rock series reaches 1987 this month; an ideal opportunity to mark the 30th anniversary of The Joshua Tree activities with a U2 cover. The issue arrives in UK shops on Thursday, but you can already buy a copy of History Of Rock 1987 from our online shop....

In a nice bit of synchronicity, our History Of Rock series reaches 1987 this month; an ideal opportunity to mark the 30th anniversary of The Joshua Tree activities with a U2 cover. The issue arrives in UK shops on Thursday, but you can already buy a copy of History Of Rock 1987 from our online shop. A reminder, too, that the whole encyclopaedic series is available there: a lavish and forensic collection which takes deep dips into the archives of NME and Melody Maker to find the best stories of each year from 1965 onwards. Obviously I’m biased, but it’s really built up now into a pretty amazing project that’s part nostalgia, part nostalgia, and entirely a celebration of the great music and great music writing of the past half-century.

Anyhow here, as ever, is John Robinson to provide a more elegant and detailed welcome to 1987…

“The 1980s have given it a bit of a rough ride so far, but this year marks a spirited return for rock. The Beastie Boys have leaped to notoriety sampling Led Zeppelin, while Def Jam producer Rick Rubin has worked a powerful transformation on The Cult. Also on Def Jam, hip hop group Public Enemy are described as the best rock group in the world’.”

“Energy, attitude, sedition…Rock’s abiding principles are this year to be found in plenty of different places. In the grassroots noise of small and disreputable UK bands who play something called Grebo. In the swashbuckling, bad reputation riffs of Guns N’ Roses. In the cathartic, political new album by REM, which provides a disturbing snapshot of America.

“America is also a focus for our cover stars, U2. This year they use their mastery of extravagant gestures and stirring dynamics to deliver their hardest and most focused album yet: The Joshua Tree. It’s rock at its best: noisy, moving and politically-charged.

“As ever, there are magnificent exceptions to the rule. From Iceland, the Sugarcubes and their singer Bjork arrive from a place completely outside the western rock tradition. From the north-west of the UK, meanwhile, originality of the most thrilling kind derives from The Fall and a faintly villainous new concern called the Happy Mondays. A pair of conceptualists called The Justified Ancients Of Mu Mu participate in music to steal from, subvert, and liberate it.

“This is the world of The History Of Rock, a monthly magazine which follows each turn of the rock revolution. Whether in sleazy dive or huge arena, passionate and stylish contemporary reporters were there to chronicle events. This publication reaps the benefits of their understanding for the reader decades later, one year at a time.  Missed one? You can find out how to rectify that here.

“In the pages of this 23rd edition, dedicated to 1987, you will find verbatim articles from frontline staffers, filed from the thick of the action, wherever it may be.

“With Tom Waits, in a bar with a inscrutable waiter and a stopped clock. On tour in the Bible belt with the Beastie Boys’ and their inflatable stage penis. Discovering how these days his band’s enormous success means Bono has a whole new circle of acquaintances.

“’I met Muhammad Ali,’ he says. ‘He’s a big U2 fan.’”

 

 

Natalie Merchant announces 10-disc box set including new and unreleased songs

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Natalie Merchant releases a deluxe 10-CD box set on June 23. The Natalie Merchant Collection includes all eight solo albums, plus Butterfly, a newly recorded set, and Rarities, a disc of previously unreleased and rare tracks. Butterfly features four new songs and six reinterpreted selections from ...

Natalie Merchant releases a deluxe 10-CD box set on June 23.

The Natalie Merchant Collection includes all eight solo albums, plus Butterfly, a newly recorded set, and Rarities, a disc of previously unreleased and rare tracks.

Butterfly features four new songs and six reinterpreted selections from her catalogue, all arranged for string quartet. Rarities collects 15 rare and previously unreleased tracks recorded between 1998 and 2017, including home studio demos, album outtakes, live tracks, and collaborations with diverse artists like Billy Bragg, David Byrne, The Chieftains, Cowboy Junkies and Amy Helm.

Tracklisting for The Natalie Merchant Collection is:

DISC 1 – TIGERLILY (1995)
San Andreas Fault
Wonder
Beloved Wife
River
Carnival
I May Know The Word
The Letter
Cowboy Romance
Jealousy
Where I Go
Seven Years

DISC 2 – OPHELIA (1998)
Ophelia
Life Is Sweet
Kind & Generous
Frozen Charlotte
My Skin
Break Your Heart
King Of May
Thick As Thieves
Effigy
The Living
When They Ring the Golden Bells

DISC 3 – MOTHERLAND (2001)
This House Is on Fire
Motherland
Saint Judas
Put The Law on You
Build a Levee
Golden Boy
Henry Darger
The Worst Thing
Tell Yourself
Just Can’t Last
Not in This Life
I’m Not Gonna Beg

DISC 4 – THE HOUSE CARPENTER’S DAUGHTER (2003)
Sally Ann
Which Side Are You On?
Crazy Man Michael
Diver Boy
Weeping Pilgrim
Soldier, Soldier
Bury Me Under the Weeping Willow
House Carpenter
Owensboro
Down On Penny’s Farm
Poor Wayfaring Stranger

DISC 5 – LEAVE YOUR SUPPER (2010)
Nursery Rhyme of Innocence and Experience
Equestrienne
Calico Pie
Bleezer’s Ice-Cream
It Makes a Change
The King of China’s Daughter
The Dancing Bear
The Man in the Wilderness
maggie and milly and molly and may
If No One Ever Marries Me
The Sleepy Giant
The Peppery Man
The Blind Men and the Elephant

DISC 6 – LEAVE YOUR SLEEP (2010)
Adventures of Isabel
The Walloping Window Blind
Topsyturvey-World
The Janitor’s Boy
Griselda
The Land of Nod
Vain & Careless
Crying, My Little One
Sweet & a Lullaby
I Saw a Ship A-Sailing
Autumn Lullaby
Spring and Fall: to a young child
Indian Names

DISC 7 – NATALIE MERCHANT (2014)
Ladybird
Maggie Said
Texas
Go Down, Moses
Seven Deadly Sins
Giving Up Everything
Black Sheep
It’s A-Coming
Lulu (Introduction)
Lulu
The End

DISC 8 – PARADISE IS THERE: THE NEW TIGERLILY RECORDINGS (2015)
San Andreas Fault
Beloved Wife
Carnival
River
The Letter
Where I Go
I May Know the Word
Seven Years
Cowboy Romance
Jealousy
Wonder

DISC 9 – BUTTERFLY (2017)
Butterfly
She Devil
Baby Mine
Frozen Charlotte
Ophelia
The Worst Thing
The Man in the Wilderness
My Skin
Vain & Careless
Andalucía

DISC 10 – RARITIES (1998–2017)
The Village Green Preservation Society
Too Long at the Fair
Order 1081 (with David Byrne & Fatboy Slim)
To Love Is to Bury (with Cowboy Junkies)
Saint Judas
Birds & Ships (with Billy Bragg)
The Lowlands of Holland (with The Chieftains)
Sonnet 73
Learning the Game
My Little Sweet Baby
Political Science
Build a Levee
Sit Down, Sister
The Gulf of Araby
Portofino

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

Watch Dan Auerbach’s video for “King Of A One Horse Town”

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Dan Auerbach has shared the music video for "King of a One Horse Town". The video follows a day in the life of a “king of a one horse town,” who Auerbach describes as “anyone who’s scared of the outside world. Anyone who’s afraid to go beyond their own block for fear of failure. It could...

Dan Auerbach has shared the music video for “King of a One Horse Town”.

The video follows a day in the life of a “king of a one horse town,” who Auerbach describes as “anyone who’s scared of the outside world. Anyone who’s afraid to go beyond their own block for fear of failure. It could be a drug dealer. A drunk. A professor. That’s a feeling any of us can relate to.”

You can watch the video below.

The song is taken from Waiting On A Song – Auerbach’s follow-up to 2009’s Keep It Hid – which will be released on June 2 via his new label, Easy Eye Sound.

The tracklisting for Waiting On a Song is:

“Waiting On A Song”
“Malibu Man”
“Livin’ In Sin”
“Shine On Me”
“King Of A One Horse Town”
“Never In My Wildest Dreams”
“Cherrybomb”
“Stand By My Girl”
“Undertow”
“Show Me”

The June 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Summer Of Love, talking to the musicians, promoters and scenesters on both sides of the Atlantic who were there. Plus, we count down the 50 essential songs from the Summer Of Love, from The Seeds to The Smoke, and including The Beatles, The Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Chuck Berry, go on the road with Bob Dylan and there are interview Fleet Foxes, Fairport Convention, Fred Wesley, Jane Birkin and David Lynch’s Twin Peaks’ co-conspirators Angelo Badalamenti and Julee Cruise. Our free CD has been exclusively compiled for us by Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold and includes cuts from Todd Rundgren, Neu!, Van Dyke Parks, The Shaggs, Arthur Russell and Cate Le Bon. Plus there’s Feist, Paul Weller, Perfume Genius, Ray Davies, Joan Shelley, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Johnny Cash, Alice Coltrane, John Martyn and more in our exhaustive reviews section

Phoenix: “When we heard D’Angelo, we stayed in the studio for an extra year”

Phoenix's Thomas Mars reveals the highlights of his excellent record collection. Oh, and Sigue Sigue Sputnik… Originally published in Uncut's August 2010 issue (Take 159). Words: Sharon O'Connell _____________________________ Sigue Sigue Sputnik Flaunt It Thomas Mars: I have a very vague memory ...

Phoenix’s Thomas Mars reveals the highlights of his excellent record collection. Oh, and Sigue Sigue Sputnik… Originally published in Uncut’s August 2010 issue (Take 159). Words: Sharon O’Connell

_____________________________

Sigue Sigue Sputnik
Flaunt It
Thomas Mars: I have a very vague memory of this, but that’s what I love about it. It was given to me when I was 10 by my older brother; he went to study for a year in Seattle and this was one of the gifts he brought back. It’s almost like a toy – the cover is fluorescent with a Japanese robot on it, and the music is almost like a toy, too. I loved it a lot. It felt like something that was really mine.

Iggy Pop & James Williamson
Kill City
This was a first for me because everything on it is something I thought I wouldn’t I like. There was a saxophone, heavy synthesisers and every chord is really full. From what I understand, in the week Iggy would go for treatment for his depression and at the weekend, he would write the record. There’s nothing subtle here – it’s heavy and dark and hard to listen to.

Alain Souchon
Jamais Content
I feel like this was the only record my parents had, which is pretty sad! I guess Alain Souchon was a family friend, because they weren’t into music at all, so this was probably a gift. It’s very French, kid-friendly pop. It comes from an era when people could spend a lot of time in the studio, experimenting with technology. It has a quality such that you don’t know whether it’s a real drummer or a machine.