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Watch Pink Floyd rehearsal footage from 1969

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Pink Floyd have shared rehearsal footage taken in 1969. The clip finds the band performing "The Beginning (Green Is The Colour)" during rehearsals before their performance at the Royal Festival Hall, London on 14 April 1969. This clip and others are included on the CD/DVD/Blu-ray package Pink Floy...

Pink Floyd have shared rehearsal footage taken in 1969.

The clip finds the band performing “The Beginning (Green Is The Colour)” during rehearsals before their performance at the Royal Festival Hall, London on 14 April 1969.

This clip and others are included on the CD/DVD/Blu-ray package Pink Floyd – The Early Years 1969 Dramatis/ation, which also includes a photo booklet, memorabilia from the period, and a credits booklet. Available from March 24, 2017.

You can watch two other early Floyd clips below.

Interstellar Overdrive“, filmed for the Granada TV programme Scene – Underground at the UFO Club, London on 27 January 1967
Taken from Pink Floyd – The Early Years 1965-1967 Cambridge St/ation

Instrumental Improvisation” from The Sound Of Change, a BBC TV programme filmed in London on 26 March, 1968. Taken from Pink Floyd – The Early Years 1968 Germin/ation

The band have also released a trailer for the forthcoming Their Mortal Remains exhibition.

The exhibition runs from May 13 – October 1, 2017 at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum and includes more than 350 objects and artefacts on display, many of them never before seen, including hand-written lyrics, musical instruments, letters, original artwork and stage props.

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Hear Bob Dylan cover Hoagy Carmichael’s “Stardust”

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Bob Dylan has shared a new track form his forthcoming album, Triplicate. As with Dylan's two previous albums - 2015's Shadows In The Night and 2016's Fallen Angels - Triplicate finds Dylan tackling the great American Songbook. The track is a version of Hoagy Carmichael’s "Stardust". https://www...

Bob Dylan has shared a new track form his forthcoming album, Triplicate.

As with Dylan’s two previous albums – 2015’s Shadows In The Night and 2016’s Fallen Angels – Triplicate finds Dylan tackling the great American Songbook.

The track is a version of Hoagy Carmichael’s “Stardust“.

Dylan has previously shared versions of “I Could Have Told You” and “My One And Only Love“, which were both popularised by Frank Sinatra.

Triplicate will see Dylan tackling songs made famous by the likes of Charles Strouse, Lee Adams, Harold Hupfield, and Cy Coleman and Carolyn Leigh.

The album will be released on March 31 in a 3-CD 8-Panel Digipak, a 3-LP vinyl set and a 3-LP Deluxe Vinyl Limited Edition packaged in a numbered case.

The complete vinyl track listing for Triplicate is as follows. The CD sequence and track listing is identical to the vinyl version, but each disc has only one side:

Disc 1 – ‘Til The Sun Goes Down
Side 1:
I Guess I’ll Have to Change My Plans
September Of My Years
I Could Have Told You
Once Upon A Time
Stormy Weather

Side 2:
This Nearly Was Mine
That Old Feeling
It Gets Lonely Early
My One and Only Love
Trade Winds

Disc 2 – Devil Dolls
Side 1:
Braggin’
As Time Goes By
Imagination
How Deep Is The Ocean
P.S. I Love You

Side 2:
The Best Is Yet To Come
But Beautiful
Here’s That Rainy Day
Where Is The One
There’s A Flaw In My Flue

Disc 3 – Comin’ Home Late
Side 1:
Day In, Day Out
I Couldn’t Sleep A Wink Last Night
Sentimental Journey
Somewhere Along The Way
When The World Was Young

Side 2:
These Foolish Things
You Go To My Head
Stardust
It’s Funny To Everyone But Me
Why Was I Born

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Watch the trailer for Pink Floyd’s Their Mortal Remains exhibition

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Pink Floyd have released a trailer for the forthcoming Their Mortal Remains exhibition. The exhibition runs from May 13 – October 1, 2017 at London's Victoria and Albert Museum. The Pink Floyd Exhibition: Their Mortal Remains retrospective marks the 50th anniversary of the band’s first album, ...

Pink Floyd have released a trailer for the forthcoming Their Mortal Remains exhibition.

The exhibition runs from May 13 – October 1, 2017 at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum.

The Pink Floyd Exhibition: Their Mortal Remains retrospective marks the 50th anniversary of the band’s first album, The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn, and debut single, “Arnold Layne“.

The exhibition includes more than 350 objects and artefacts on display, many of them never before seen, including hand-written lyrics, musical instruments, letters, original artwork and stage props.

Meanwhile, to coincide with the forthcoming release of The Early Years, 1965 – 1972: The Individual Volumes, the band have also released video clips from each of the separate sets.

You can watch the first two below.

1965-1967 CAMBRIDGE ST/ATION
‘Interstellar Overdrive’ from The Scene – Live 1/3

1968 GERMIN/ATION
‘Instrumental Improvisation’ – Live 6/3

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Will Oldham: “I think about sex a lot, so why not sing about it?”

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Will Oldham may have a reputation as a reticent chap – an actor and singer who has cultivated the image of an austere, mordant, alt.country hillbilly, aka Bonnie “Prince” Billy. But, in well over an hour of conversation, he proves to be as garrulous and entertaining as anyone Uncut has ever sp...

Will Oldham may have a reputation as a reticent chap – an actor and singer who has cultivated the image of an austere, mordant, alt.country hillbilly, aka Bonnie “Prince” Billy. But, in well over an hour of conversation, he proves to be as garrulous and entertaining as anyone Uncut has ever spoken to. Sitting in his backyard in Louisville, Kentucky – you can actually hear the bright red cardinals chirruping in nearby trees – he expounds at length about ’80s punk (“it was a small step from Buddy Holly to the Misfits”); about Brazilian music (Os Mutantes, Gal Costa, Milton Nascimento, Antonio Carlos Jobim); Roy Harper (“I heard Valentine playing in a bar and then had to discover everything he’d ever recorded”) and about his unlikely collaborations with R Kelly (“a remarkable songwriter”) and Kanye West (“so crazy and so functional at the same time”). “It’s exciting to get questions from these musical luminaries,” he says, as he begins to rummage through out postbag. “And even more exciting to get questions from everybody else!” Originally published in Uncut’s Take 181 (June 2012). Words: John Lewis

_______________________________________

What are your songwriting rituals?
Lee Ranaldo
They’re always different. You can never replicate the elements that form a song. The majority of songs come as a surprise to me and tend to be about complicated things I find interesting. There are glimmers of revelations about sexuality, spirituality, physicality, musicality. Actually, I think about sex a lot – I’m sure lots of people do – so why not sing about it? These things are inescapable, so let’s sing about them. And a song is integrated with any experience.

You are best known to most as a musician and actor, but do you engage in any other form of artistic practice? Do you paint, draw or sculpt, for instance?
Alasdair Roberts
I never have, and I’ve been thinking about this a lot. The traditional idea is that the visual arts and the performing arts are the exclusive domain of a small group of people deemed “artistic” and “creative”. I’ve never subscribed to that. I feel that if one is artistically or creatively minded, then anything one does in one’s life is an expression of that. All things have the potential to be approached expressively or artistically, and I found a way of turning something that was relatively impractical into a practical pursuit. If I’d had the skills, I’d have pursued something a little more practical, and pursued it more impractically!

You played at an All Tomorrow’s Parties festival (one of the Shellac weekends). Have you ever been asked to curate a festival, like ATP or Meltdown?
Eamon, Dublin
I have been asked a couple of times. I thought it would be cool to get Madonna to play with a band of great musicians, with Mike Watt on bass and Steve Albini on guitar, for example. Ha ha. I had vague ideas to invite an Indonesian ensemble SuraSama, an Eastern European musician called Félix Lajkó, and getting Glenn Danzig to do an experimental set. But generally, I don’t like festivals. When people say: “I’m going to a festival because this band’s playing and this band’s playing and this band’s playing”, does that mean they’re interchangeable? I can’t digest more than two great performances in one weekend, so the concept is indulgent and decadent and kinda disgusting to me. And it seems oxymoronic to invite musicians that I admire to perform in such a competitive environment, where the only winners are the guys with the loudest soundsystems, like Andrew WK or the Foo Fighters. Festivals are good pay cheques for musicians, but they’re not ideal environments.

Elle

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“You always wanted a sanitized version of life,” says Irene Leblanc (Judith Magre), chiding her daughter Michele (Isabelle Huppert). Michele has just walked in on her mother in a state of semi-undress with a toy boy lover. In Paul Verhoeven’s film, Michele is constantly surrounded by desire, c...

“You always wanted a sanitized version of life,” says Irene Leblanc (Judith Magre), chiding her daughter Michele (Isabelle Huppert). Michele has just walked in on her mother in a state of semi-undress with a toy boy lover. In Paul Verhoeven’s film, Michele is constantly surrounded by desire, control and sexuality. As a top video games executive, she encourages her artistic team to more graphically depict the barbarous acts of an orc rapist. She is in the throes on an imprudent affair with a colleague’s husband. Her father is a notorious Seventies mass murderer. Meanwhile, she is raped at home by a masked intruder. “Thursday. At 3pm,” she tells a group of stunned friends with clinical detachment.

Verhoeven has long liked to provoke his audiences – in Basic Instinct, Starship Troopers, Black Book – and Elle is no exception. Michele remains determined not to give in to her anxieties about the incident, she pursues a business as usual line, maintaining a rigorous sense of purpose. Occasionally, though, her self-control cracks. Verhoeven pitches Elle as several films at once. It is partly a comedy of bourgeois manners involving the various vexing members of Michele’s family, partly a lurid thriller about the ramifications of assault and also a sophisticated portrait of a multifaceted central character.

Huppert – rightly nominate for a Best Actress Oscar – successfully navigates these tonal and narrative shifts, fusing Verhoeven’s contradictory trails into a consistent, complex performance. For Verhoeven’s part, working from a novel by Betty Blue author Philippe Djian, he is clearly in debt to Hitchcock, Polanski and DePalma – masters of black comedy and prurient melodrama.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Rare and unreleased David Bowie albums planned for Record Store Day

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Two limited edition David Bowie albums are being released for this year's Record Store Day. Cracked Actor (Live In Los Angeles 1974) and the Hunky Dory era promo album, BOWPROMO1 are due on April 22. The former is the first official release of this ‘Philly Dogs Tour’ show from September 1974, ...

Two limited edition David Bowie albums are being released for this year’s Record Store Day.

Cracked Actor (Live In Los Angeles 1974) and the Hunky Dory era promo album, BOWPROMO1 are due on April 22.

The former is the first official release of this ‘Philly Dogs Tour’ show from September 1974, some of which was featured in the BBC documentary Cracked Actor. The full live show is documented on the triple vinyl five-sided album, with a sixth side featuring an etching of the Diamond Dog era Bowie logo.

All of the 16 track multi track tapes were finally reunited in one place in November of last year and mixed officially for the first time by long time Bowie collaborator Tony Visconti. The live set features newly commissioned artwork with rare and unseen photographs from the 1974 Universal Amphitheatre show by Terry O’Neill and Jamie Andrews in a gatefold sleeve.

BOWPROMO1 was originally pressed in very small quantities in 1971 and featured seven Hunky Dory-era songs by David on side A and five by Dana Gillespie on the flip.

This Record Store Day one-sided release faithfully replicates the original promo featuring Bowie’s seven tracks plus five exclusive Bowie prints and new sleeve notes about this highly collectable rarity in a special presentation box.

DAVID BOWIE – CRACKED ACTOR (LIVE LOS ANGELES ’74) (3 LP SET)

Side 1:
Introduction
1984
Rebel Rebel
Moonage Daydream
Sweet Thing/Candidate/Sweet Thing

Side 2:
Changes
Suffragette City
Aladdin Sane
All The Young Dudes
Cracked Actor

Side 3:
Rock ‘n’ Roll With Me
Knock On Wood
It’s Gonna Be Me
Space Oddity

Side 4:
Diamond Dogs
Big Brother
Time

Side 5:
The Jean Genie
Rock ‘n’ Roll Suicide
John, I’m Only Dancing (Again)

Side 6:
David Bowie logo etching

BOWPROMO1 SIDED BOXSET LP
Oh! You Pretty Things
Eight Line Poem
Kooks
It Aint Easy
Queen Bitch
Quicksand
Bombers / Andy Warhol Intro

The April 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Björk. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Deep Purple, Chrissie Hynde, The Magnetic Fields and we look inside legendary LA venue The Troubadour, while our free CD collects great new tracks from Grandaddy, Laura Marling, Real Estate, Hurray For The Riff Raff and more. The issue also features Alison Krauss on her best recorded work. Plus John Mayall, Jaki Liebezeit RP, Procul Harum, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Creation, Buena Vista Social Club, Elliott Smith, George Harrison, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Sleaford Mods and more, plus 131 reviews

Hear Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy cover Merle Haggard’s “Mama Tried”

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Will Oldham has announced a new Bonnie “Prince” Billy album. Best Troubadour consists entirely of Merle Haggard covers. The album is released on May 5 through Domino. “Merle Haggard is a channeler who has paid ample tribute to those that came before him,” says Oldham. “He has demonstrate...

Will Oldham has announced a new Bonnie “Prince” Billy album.

Best Troubadour consists entirely of Merle Haggard covers. The album is released on May 5 through Domino.

“Merle Haggard is a channeler who has paid ample tribute to those that came before him,” says Oldham. “He has demonstrated explicitly and implicitly his standing on the shoulders of Tommy Duncan/Bob Wills, Jimmie Rodgers, Floyd Tillman, Lefty Frizzell and many others. There are songs in his catalogue that seep solidly into the headspace of Kentuckians who grew up when I did, and beyond through his vast influence on the George Straits, Dwight Yoakams, Alan Jacksons, John Andersons, Toby Keiths, and too many others. He is not the original, but he may be the most significant junction.”

You can watch a 360-degree video for “Mama Tried” below.

The tracklisting for Best Troubador is:

The Fugitive
I’m Always On a Mountain When I Fall
The Day the Rains Came
Haggard (Like I’ve Never Been Before)
I Always Get Lucky With You
Leonard
My Old Pal
Roses In the Winter
Some Of Us Fly
Wouldn’t That Be Something
Pray
That’s The Way Love Goes
Nobody’s Darling
What I Hate (excerpt)
I Am What I Am
If I Could Only Fly

The April 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Björk. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Deep Purple, Chrissie Hynde, The Magnetic Fields and we look inside legendary LA venue The Troubadour, while our free CD collects great new tracks from Grandaddy, Laura Marling, Real Estate, Hurray For The Riff Raff and more. The issue also features Alison Krauss on her best recorded work. Plus John Mayall, Jaki Liebezeit RP, Procul Harum, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Creation, Buena Vista Social Club, Elliott Smith, George Harrison, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Sleaford Mods and more, plus 131 reviews

Watch Bill Murray’s new video, “Happy Street”

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Historically, I've always found myself drawn to Bill Murray's extra-curricular activities. After all, it's hard not to enjoy tales of the actor performing karaoke with strangers, crashing stag dos or bartending at SXSW. There is an especially heart-warming website called Bill Murray Stories, where...

Historically, I’ve always found myself drawn to Bill Murray‘s extra-curricular activities.

After all, it’s hard not to enjoy tales of the actor performing karaoke with strangers, crashing stag dos or bartending at SXSW.

There is an especially heart-warming website called Bill Murray Stories, where members of the general public are invited to submit photographs and anecdotes of themselves featuring Bill Murray. Each one details unusual and random encounters with Murray at baseball games, on the golf course, or the Duty Free at JFK airport.

The stories carry headlines like, ‘Autograph At My Wedding’, ‘One Unbelievable Elevator Ride, Part 2’ and ‘Bill Murray Ate Church’s Chicken At My Choir Rehearsal’.

In the perfect Uncut meeting of the minds, it is even possible to watch Bill Murray sing Bob Dylan.

For his latest venture, Murray has teamed up with Paul Shaffer – an old comrade from the Saturday Night Live days who subsequently became musical director and sidekick for David Letterman‘s shows.

Shaffer has a new album out – Paul Shaffer & The World’s Most Dangerous Band – which features guest vocalist ranging from Dion to Jenny Lewis. Murray appears on a song called “Happy Street“: you can watch the video below. Meanwhile, Paul Shaffer & The World’s Most Dangerous Band is released on March 17 on Sire Records.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Bill Callahan and more confirmed for End Of The Road festival

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Bill Callahan has been announced as the final headliner for this year's End Of The Road Festival. Other new additions to the bill include Slowdive, Japandroids and Pond. They join Father John Misty, Mac DeMarco, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Lucinda Williams, Band Of Horses, Amadou & Mariam, Ty Segall...

Bill Callahan has been announced as the final headliner for this year’s End Of The Road Festival.

Other new additions to the bill include Slowdive, Japandroids and Pond.

They join Father John Misty, Mac DeMarco, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Lucinda Williams, Band Of Horses, Amadou & Mariam, Ty Segall, Real Estate, Parquet Courts and more at the festival, which runs from August 31 – September 3 at its usual home, Larmer Tree Gardens in south Wiltshire, England.

Tier 3 tickets are now on sale at £179. There are no boking or transaction fees. A deposit scheme allows people to pay £45 now and the balance by 15 June. You can find more information by clicking here.

Line Up additions:

Bill Callahan
Slowdive
Japandroids
Pond
Baxter Dury
Waxahatchee
The Moonlandingz
Moses Sumney
Timber Timbre
Alex Cameron
Daniel Romano
Blanck Mass
Allison Crutchfield and The Fizz
Aldous Harding
Mdou Moctar
PWR BTTM
Jonathan Toubin (DJ)
The Surfing Magazines
Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever
Lowly
H. Hawkline
Lowtide
Tides Of Man

The April 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Björk. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Deep Purple, Chrissie Hynde, The Magnetic Fields and we look inside legendary LA venue The Troubadour, while our free CD collects great new tracks from Grandaddy, Laura Marling, Real Estate, Hurray For The Riff Raff and more. The issue also features Alison Krauss on her best recorded work. Plus John Mayall, Jaki Liebezeit RP, Procul Harum, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Creation, Buena Vista Social Club, Elliott Smith, George Harrison, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Sleaford Mods and more, plus 131 reviews

Black Sabbath officially announce #TheEnd

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Black Sabbath have officially announced they have split up. Last month, the band played what was billed as their ‘final gig’ with a career-spanning set in their native Birmingham. However, guitarist Tony Iommi then went on to say that he was ‘sure’ the band could make more music together. ...

Black Sabbath have officially announced they have split up.

Last month, the band played what was billed as their ‘final gig’ with a career-spanning set in their native Birmingham. However, guitarist Tony Iommi then went on to say that he was ‘sure’ the band could make more music together.

“It’s just the touring for me. It’s time to stop roaming the world and be at home for a bit,” he said. “When you’re touring you’ve got to go out for six, eight, 12 months or whatever, and you’ve got a schedule that you have to do. Now, if I want to do some TV for a month, I can do that.”

Iommi continued: “I don’t think we’ve ruled anything out, apart from me not wanting to tour any more. Who knows? We may do something. We haven’t spoken about it. We haven’t talked about anything, really – but I’m sure something can happen somewhere.”

However, the band have posted what seems to be an official announcement that the band is over with an image with the words “Black Sabbath: 1968-2017” along with the caption #TheEnd – along with a classic photo of Sabbath in their ’70s prime.

#TheEnd

Posted by Black Sabbath on Tuesday, March 7, 2017

Posted by Black Sabbath on Tuesday, March 7, 2017

The April 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Björk. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Deep Purple, Chrissie Hynde, The Magnetic Fields and we look inside legendary LA venue The Troubadour, while our free CD collects great new tracks from Grandaddy, Laura Marling, Real Estate, Hurray For The Riff Raff and more. The issue also features Alison Krauss on her best recorded work. Plus John Mayall, Jaki Liebezeit RP, Procul Harum, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Creation, Buena Vista Social Club, Elliott Smith, George Harrison, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Sleaford Mods and more, plus 131 reviews

The 10th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

OK, a strong selection of new things here, including of course the really good Fleet Foxes comeback. But there are now tracks to hear from those Joan Shelley and Endless Boogie albums I’ve been alluding to for weeks, and a new song from Hiss Golden Messenger, plus fresh arrivals from Woods and Sun...

OK, a strong selection of new things here, including of course the really good Fleet Foxes comeback. But there are now tracks to hear from those Joan Shelley and Endless Boogie albums I’ve been alluding to for weeks, and a new song from Hiss Golden Messenger, plus fresh arrivals from Woods and Sun Araw. Not sure I’ve ever posted that Six Organs Of Admittance tune, either.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Bill MacKay – Esker (Drag City)

2 Pharrell Williams – Runnin’ (Columbia)

3 Rob Thomsett – Hara/Yaraandoo (Now Again)

4 Various Artists – Sing It High, Sing It Low: Tumbleweed Records 1971-1973 (Light In The Attic)

5 John Moreland – Big Bad Luv (4AD)

6 John Matthias & Jay Auborn – Race To Zero (Village Green)

7 Joan Shelley – Joan Shelley (No Quarter)

8 Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society – Simultonality (tak:til/Glitterbeat/Eremite)

9 Anthony Pasquarosa With John Moloney – My Pharaoh, My King (Feeding Tube)

10 Six Organs Of Admittance – Burning The Threshold (Drag City)

11 Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda – World Spirituality Classics, Volume 1: The Ecstatic Music of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda (Luaka Bop)

12 Hiss Golden Messenger – Biloxi/Jenny And The Roses (The Warhol: Silver Studio Sessions)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=227Ty2yjGio

13 Will Stratton – Rosewood Almanac (Bella Union)

14 Emily Barker – Sweet Kind Of Blue (Kartel)

15 Thundercat – Drunk (Brainfeeder)

16 Jane Weaver – Modern Kosmology (Fire)

17 Fleet Foxes – Crack-Up (Nonesuch)

18 Endless Boogie – Vibe Killer (No Quarter)

19 Aldous Harding – Party (4AD)

20 At The Drive-In – In.Ter A.Li.A (Rise)

21 Jake Xerxes Fussell – What In The Natural World (Paradise Of Bachelors)

22 Woods – Love Is Love (Woodsist)

23 Dire Wolves Absolutely Perfect Brothers Band – Sun City Twilight Interdimensional Crochet Contest Parts 1 + 2/Umbrella Vape Dad (Bandcamp)

24 Arca – Arca (XL)

25 Sun Araw – 40 Hooves (Drag City)

Rhiannon Giddens – Freedom Highway

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Reproduced in the liner notes for Rhiannon Giddens’ second solo album, Freedom Highway, is an advertisement from a newspaper in Kingston, New York. The date is 1797, when slavery was still alive in the northern United States, and the item for sale is a “remarkable smart healthy Negro Wench”, w...

Reproduced in the liner notes for Rhiannon Giddens’ second solo album, Freedom Highway, is an advertisement from a newspaper in Kingston, New York. The date is 1797, when slavery was still alive in the northern United States, and the item for sale is a “remarkable smart healthy Negro Wench”, who, the seller promises, is “about 22 years of age” and is “used to both housework and farming.” Reducing a woman to such utilitarian traits is horrifying enough, but the ad notes as well that “she has a child about 9 months old, which will be at the purchaser’s option”.

This clipping is an ugly but revealing artefact of an era in Western history when human beings could be collected and bartered as property, with slave children essentially worthless. For Giddens, a member of the groundbreaking African-American folk group the Carolina Chocolate Drops and now a solo artist, this ad provided the inspiration for the opening track on Freedom Highway. “At The Purchaser’s Option” opens with a beseeching banjo melody over a stolid drumbeat, almost matter-of-fact in its marching steadiness. Giddens sings in the voice of the slave, who will not allow herself to stop loving this “babe upon my breast” despite their uncertain future together. “You can take my body, you can take my bones,” she declares. “You can take my blood, but not my soul.” Giddens rushes the chorus slightly, getting just ahead of her band to evoke the woman’s hardened defiance as well as her urgent worry. In just a few short verses the song paints this woman’s life as a constant struggle to balance her own maternal love with the world’s crushing indifference, to steel herself against unimaginably horrendous circumstances.

Freedom Highway is full of songs like “At The Purchaser’s Option”, which were written over the past few years but sound like they’ve been lurking around the American subconscious for centuries, passed along by oral tradition or via song collectors and academics until they found their way to this particular singer, to this particular album, to this particular moment in history. They sound impossibly old, which marks them as remarkable feats of naturalistic songwriting, but they also sound startlingly relevant, suggesting that the nature of African-American experience has not changed dramatically over the last two hundred years.

If you didn’t know about that newspaper advertisement, you might hear the song in the present tense: It captures any mother’s concern that her child might be taken suddenly and violently from her, shot by cops or criminals or swallowed up by a lopsided system. That worry pervades Freedom Highway as it runs just under the surface of American history, connecting the present to the near and distant past. “Julie”, another original that sounds convincingly ancient, imagines a conversation as Union troops approach the plantation. The woman of the house begs her slave to protect the family’s riches, but Julie answers, “Mistress, O Mistress, that trunk of gold is what you got when my children you sold.” Rather than play the moment as one of triumph or vengeance, “Julie” remains tensed like a muscle, with only Dirk Powell’s fiddle and Giddens’ own banjo accompanying her strong vocals.

This is no cold history lesson or dry academic exercise. Giddens inhabits these songs as though taking the stage in short plays, dramatising her characters in a way that makes their predicaments sound visceral and urgent. Her songs sound like they are designed to provoke empathy in the listener and potentially – hopefully – realign assumptions about race in this or any other era. Toward this end Freedom Highway draws as much from Giddens’ training in opera and musical theater as from her tenure with the Chocolate Drops, who revived forgotten or neglected musical traditions and expanded the range and import of contemporary Americana.

Her 2015 solo debut, Tomorrow Is My Turn, only hinted at the extent of Giddens’ interpretive abilities. She put her own spin on a handful of songs written or made famous by women artists ranging from Sister Rosetta Tharpe and Geeshie Wiley to Dolly Parton and Patsy Cline, but the album was somehow less than the sum of its parts, partly due to T Bone Burnett’s production and partly due to its overdetermined concept. Freedom Highway sounds much better for being looser and more open-ended. It invites the listener to step into a world that somehow is treacherous and wondrous in equal measure: full of misery and joy, loneliness and lust, fear and fellowship, and every kind of music imaginable.

Giddens and her touring band, along with co-producer/fiddler Dirk Powell, wrangle an incredible range of sounds and styles and integrate them into a cohesive tracklist that ranges from the lusty juke jazz of “Hey Bebe” (with its deliciously lascivious trumpet solo by the amazingly named Alphonso Horne) to the blazing R’n’B of “Better Get It Right the First Time” (with its deftly rapped verse by Giddens’ nephew Justin Harrington). The celebratory quality of the music belies the bleakness of the predicaments described in the songs, which doesn’t soften their impact but instead adds complexity to these portrayals and presents these characters as real people. Which, in the case of “At The Purchaser’s Option”, they actually are.

This isn’t the old weird America so often romanticised in contemporary roots music, but rather an America not too far removed from the one that exists today. Giddens writes and sings and plays banjo in a way that allows these songs to toggle between the past and the present, presenting slave narratives that sound starkly relevant to Trump’s America. Nowhere is that more obvious than on “Baby Boy”, which depicts a mother comforting her son at various points in his life. Each stage is represented by a different singer: Giddens soothes the infant, her sister Lalenja Harrington address the boy growing into an adult, and Haitian American cellist Leyla McCalla summons the memory of the man perhaps as a ghost. As the song progresses, their vocals intertwine into a lovely round of tender voices, as though the life of this one family were folding in on itself.

The album closes with a cover of the Staple Singers’ epochal “Freedom Highway”, a song directly inspired by the Civil Rights marches in Alabama in 1965 and debuted later that year in Chicago at a performance that would become the foundation for one of that group’s defining albums. Giddens slows the song down slightly, which implies that social progress has met some resistance – which, sadly, it has. The sense of joyous determination has not diminished, however, thanks to the buoyancy of the brass band punctuating the song with exclamation points and to the steeliness of Bhi Bhiman’s electric guitar. It’s a risky choice of song, perhaps a bit too on the nose, especially coupled with that cover art, as it might give the impression that Giddens is letting older voices speak not through her but for her. But in the context of this remarkably wise and timely album, the song sounds like a hopeful denouement: an opportunity for Giddens to gather all of her characters into one choir and show them – and all of us – a way forward.

Q&A
Rhiannon Giddens

Tomorrow Is My Turn had a very pronounced narrative. Was there a similar guiding idea behind this record?
The idea was to show these different aspects of African American experience, from a long time ago to not that long ago. When you make a record you have to be really careful not to over-theme it, especially if you’re a literalist like me. I’ve always been a crafter of things based on other things rather than making something up wholecloth, so my danger is to be too literal. I knew the next record after Tomorrow… was going to be a little more personal and use more of my original material. “Julie” was the focus for me in a lot of ways, just in terms of who these women are in history who don’t have voices, who don’t have books written about them or movies made about them. Particularly in the slave experience, it’s so often men who are talked about and the women are the reasons to do things, like the Nate Parker movie [Birth Of A Nation]. They don’t have their own agency in these stories, and that’s something that had been bothering me, so all the protagonists in the slave-narrative songs on the record are women. That was important to me.

There’s definitely a theatrical quality to some of these songs, which are all character-driven.
Let them talk. The whole point of the album is the voices. I don’t even like to say I wrote “Julie”, because to me it feels like a voice that needs to be heard through me. A lot of these songs are that way, and these voices need to be out there and released from books and interviews and living in a different way. That’s how I approach interpreting something: I try to find the voice and the story, what needs to be said and a way to let the material say it. It’s about getting out of the way, especially on this project. It’s about removing the ego, because once the ego gets involved, art suffers. That’s what I cherish about making this record. I think Dirk and I were able to do that as players and as writers, especially on a song like “We Could Fly”. I like to say we pulled it out of the air. We found that song together. As an ensemble we found the soul of each song together, because everyone was open and trusting. It’s a beautiful way to make a piece of art.

Tell me about “Julie”. It seems to be a focal point on the album.
I started writing that song some years ago. I read this book by Andrew Ward called The Slaves’ War: The Civil War In The Words Of Former Slaves, and I was moved to start writing songs. I wasn’t much of a songwriter at that point. I had written a couple of exercise songs, a blues or whatever, but these songs started to come out of me. “Julie” was the first one. I wrote it on my banjo. It had been sitting there for a while until it just seemed like the right time to do something with it.

In a sense, the wide-ranging music on the album reflects the variety of African-American experience you mentioned.
Some of it is based in the Chocolate Drops’ sound, and some of it is from the New Basement Tapes songs. After Tomorrow… I had to find a band that could tour that record, and we’ve been playing together for about two years. In our show we touch on a lot of different styles. We don’t have a genre. It’s whatever the song wants to do and we have the chops to do it. Like “Birmingham Sunday”. We’ve done something completely different [with the Richard Fariña song]. We even added that little tune in the middle of it. The energy was all in the moment. We didn’t do a lot of splicing. We did most things live in the studio altogether.

That approach seems to create a sense of the songs, especially something like “At The Purchaser’s Option”, toggling between the past and the present, commenting on a historical moment as well as on the present day.
That’s what I keep telling people. When you know the past, you understand the present and you can see where we’re going. I’ll tell you this: the album was originally called something different, but we changed the title. We were going to call it At The Purchaser’s Option, which is a phrase from a slave advertisement that I read. That’s an aspect of slavery that is a subtext for other things, and the song can apply to people in slavery today. I sang the song at a gala for an organisation that helps to free women who’ve been trafficked. Modern slavery is huge, and there are still all these women who have no control over their bodies and their children. That’s an enormous topic, and it felt right to name the record that.
Then the election happened. And it just didn’t feel right anymore. So we changed it to Freedom Highway. That felt right because At The Purchaser’s Option, while depressing, still exclaims, you can’t destroy me. But Freedom Highway is more about standing together and getting through this hard time. Given what happened in the election, it felt like the focus needed to be there. It feels like that title just lifted everything.
INTERVIEW: STEPHEN DEUSNER

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Fleet Foxes announce new album, Crack-Up; share song, “Third of May / Ōdaigahara”

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Fleet Foxes have confirmed details of their new studio album, Crack Up. The album is their first since 2011's Helplessness Blues. Crack-Up will be released by Nonesuch on June 16. All eleven of the songs on written by Robin Pecknold. The album was co-produced by Pecknold and Skyler Skjelset. Crack...

Fleet Foxes have confirmed details of their new studio album, Crack Up.

The album is their first since 2011’s Helplessness Blues. Crack-Up will be released by Nonesuch on June 16.

All eleven of the songs on written by Robin Pecknold. The album was co-produced by Pecknold and Skyler Skjelset. Crack-Up was recorded at various locations across the United States between July 2016 and January 2017: at Electric Lady Studios, Sear Sound, The Void, Rare Book Room, Avast, and The Unknown.

Fleet Foxes is Robin Pecknold (vocals, multi-instrumentalist), Skyler Skjelset (multi- instrumentalist, vocals), Casey Wescott (multi-instrumentalist, vocals), Christian Wargo (multi- instrumentalist, vocals), and Morgan Henderson (multi-instrumentalist).

The tracklisting for the album is:

I Am All That I Need / Arroyo Seco / Thumbprint Scar
Cassius, –
– Naiads, Cassadies
Kept Woman
Third of May / Ōdaigahara
If You Need To, Keep Time on Me 7. Mearcstapa
On Another Ocean (January / June) 9. Fool’s Errand
I Should See Memphis
Crack-Up

The band have also shared the track “Third of May / Ōdaigahara“, which is available as an instant download with pre-orders of the album from iTunes and the Nonesuch site. You can watch the video below, created by Sean Pecknold & Adi Goodrich.

The band have also confirmed a tour itinerary for 2017. They will play:

May 26 | Sydney, Australia at Sydney Opera House
May 27 | Sydney, Australia at Sydney Opera House
May 28 | Sydney, Australia at Sydney Opera House
May 29 | Sydney, Australia at Sydney Opera House
July 1 | Spain, Vilanova i la Geltrú at Vida Festival
July 3 | Italy, Ferrara at Bands Apart
July 7 | Spain, Bilbao at Bilbao BBK Live
July 13 | Ireland, Dublin at The Iveagh Gardens
July 14 | Ireland, Dublin at The Iveagh Gardens (SOLD OUT)
July 16 | United Kingdom, Southwold at Latitude Festival
July 27 | Portland ME at Thompson’s Point
July 28 | Newport RI at Newport Folk Festival (SOLD OUT)
July 29 | Columbia MD at Merriweather Post Pavilion w/ Animal Collective
July 31 | Philadelphia PA at Mann Center for the Performing Arts w/ Animal Collective
August 1 | Brooklyn NY at BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! Festival at the Prospect Park Bandshell
August 4 | Toronto ON at Massey Hall
August 6 | Detroit MI at The Masonic
September 23 | Los Angeles CA at Hollywood Bowl w/ Beach House
September 27 | Morrison CO at Red Rocks Amphitheatre w/ Beach House

The April 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Björk. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Deep Purple, Chrissie Hynde, The Magnetic Fields and we look inside legendary LA venue The Troubadour, while our free CD collects great new tracks from Grandaddy, Laura Marling, Real Estate, Hurray For The Riff Raff and more. The issue also features Alison Krauss on her best recorded work. Plus John Mayall, Jaki Liebezeit RP, Procul Harum, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Creation, Buena Vista Social Club, Elliott Smith, George Harrison, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Sleaford Mods and more, plus 131 reviews

Introducing Genesis: The Ultimate Music Guide

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Summer 1978. Genesis have survived the departures of Peter Gabriel and Steve Hackett. They have, in fact, just played a mammoth gig in the grounds of Knebworth House to 100,000 people. Phil Collins, though, still feels he has to defend the evolutions of his remarkable band. “You can’t expect us ...

Summer 1978. Genesis have survived the departures of Peter Gabriel and Steve Hackett. They have, in fact, just played a mammoth gig in the grounds of Knebworth House to 100,000 people. Phil Collins, though, still feels he has to defend the evolutions of his remarkable band. “You can’t expect us to stay neat and tidy,” he tells the man from the Melody Maker. “We’re not a neat, tidy band. We have to take chances.”

Uncut’s latest Ultimate Music Guide is dedicated to that remarkably untidy band: an ambitious survey of the entire, brilliant career of Genesis – from prog shapeshifters to stadium gods. It’s on sale in the UK on Thursday, but you can order a copy of the Ultimate Music Guide: Genesis from our online shop now. Within its pages, an epic musical saga unfolds, over multiple chapters, in which outlandish, seemingly disjointed ideas are propelled along with virtuosity, gusto and a heroic disregard for normal rock’n’roll practice. That could also be a description of any number of individual Genesis tracks, of course, but it works pretty neatly as a summary of their storied career. The adventure begins within the rarefied environs of Charterhouse School, some 50 years ago, and ends, at least for now, in a New York hotel suite.

It is there, in September 2014, that Uncut encounters Phil Collins and Mike Rutherford, contemplating the history of their band on the occasion of a suitably expansive boxset, R-Kive, being released. “When I joined the band in 1970, Genesis was a band of songwriters desperate to write hits as well as good songs,” Collins tells Uncut’s Michael Bonner. “They weren’t going to sell out to do it. There is a huge jump from ‘Supper’s Ready’ to ‘Illegal Alien’, yeah. But I think of it in simple terms. Look at what you read when you’re 20 – like The Hobbit – then look at the books you’re reading 20 years later, or what kind of music you listen to, or what kind of clothes you wear. Because there’s a change. You grow up, that’s part of it.”

The Ultimate Music Guide: Genesis, then, seeks to explain the whole shapeshifting brilliance of the band. We’ve delved deep into the archives of NME and Melody Maker, finding interviews with the members that have languished unseen for decades. You’ll see characters emerging and plans being formulated, key figures stepping in and out of the spotlight. A career path being mapped out that does not always appear obvious, but which incrementally builds Genesis into one of the biggest bands of their era.

Alongside all these revelatory interviews, we’ve written in-depth new reviews of every single Genesis album, from their 1969 debut right up until 1997’s Calling All Stations, stopping off at all auspicious points in between. We’ve also investigated the significant solo careers: not just of Peter Gabriel and Phil Collins, but of Steve Hackett, Anthony Phillips, Mike Rutherford and Tony Banks, too. It’s a tricky tale, but an endlessly rewarding one.

“If our present success continues, we’ll be in the situation where we can realize most of our ambitions in music,” Peter Gabriel tells Melody Maker in 1973. “I hope what we do will be completely new.”

Supper’s ready: here’s the main course…

 

 

Listen to Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood’s new 16-minute Radiohead remix

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Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood have provided a 16 minute Radiohead remix for Paris Fashion Week. The pair have collaborated on "Bloom (Creatures Mix For Jun Takahashi)", which soundtracks designer Jun Takahashi’s latest Undercover collection. The 16-minute recording includes elements of "Bloom",...

Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood have provided a 16 minute Radiohead remix for Paris Fashion Week.

The pair have collaborated on “Bloom (Creatures Mix For Jun Takahashi)“, which soundtracks designer Jun Takahashi’s latest Undercover collection.

The 16-minute recording includes elements of “Bloom“, “Glass Eyes“, “Spectre“, “Glass Eyes” and “Motion Picture Soundtrack”.

Takahashi and Yorke have worked together on numerous occasions in the past, DJing together, and with Yorke modelling for Takahashi’s Undercover clothing brand.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJW_m3b48Co

The April 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Björk. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Deep Purple, Chrissie Hynde, The Magnetic Fields and we look inside legendary LA venue The Troubadour, while our free CD collects great new tracks from Grandaddy, Laura Marling, Real Estate, Hurray For The Riff Raff and more. The issue also features Alison Krauss on her best recorded work. Plus John Mayall, Jaki Liebezeit RP, Procul Harum, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Creation, Buena Vista Social Club, Elliott Smith, George Harrison, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Sleaford Mods and more, plus 131 reviews

Bob Dylan keeps a bowling ball in Jack White’s private bowling alley

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Jack White has a private bowling alley in his house in which he keeps a bowling ball for Bob Dylan. A new profile in The New Yorker on the musician describes his home in Nashville, including a three-lane bowling alley. In the outbuilding in which the alley is housed are a rack of balls for White’...

Jack White has a private bowling alley in his house in which he keeps a bowling ball for Bob Dylan.

A new profile in The New Yorker on the musician describes his home in Nashville, including a three-lane bowling alley. In the outbuilding in which the alley is housed are a rack of balls for White’s friends.

The New Yorker‘s Alec Wilkinson writes that “each dedicated ball has a name tag, and some of the balls are painted fancifully—Bob Dylan’s has a portrait of John Wayne.”

The piece also reveals a host of rare items that White owns, including Leadbelly’s New York City arrest record, James Brown‘s driving license from the ’80s and a copy of Action Comics No. 1 from June 1938, which includes Superman’s first published appearance.

Among the items listed in the article is also the first demo recording Elvis Presley ever made, dating from 1953. White is said to have bought it for $300,000 (£245,192) from an auction.

“If I’m going to invest in something, it has to have meaning to me, something that has historical value and can be passed on,” he told The New Yorker. “If I buy Elvis’ first record, and we are able to digitise it and release it, and people can own it, or I can preserve this comic book, it is cooler than buying some Ferrari or investing in British Petroleum.”

The April 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Björk. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Deep Purple, Chrissie Hynde, The Magnetic Fields and we look inside legendary LA venue The Troubadour, while our free CD collects great new tracks from Grandaddy, Laura Marling, Real Estate, Hurray For The Riff Raff and more. The issue also features Alison Krauss on her best recorded work. Plus John Mayall, Jaki Liebezeit RP, Procul Harum, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Creation, Buena Vista Social Club, Elliott Smith, George Harrison, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Sleaford Mods and more, plus 131 reviews

Dave Davies announces new album, Open Road

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Dave Davies has announced details of a new album, Open Road. The album has been written and produced in collaboration with his son, Russ Davies. Open Road will be released on March 31 via Red River Entertainment. On collaborating with his son, Davies Snr said, "Working with my son was a delight ...

Dave Davies has announced details of a new album, Open Road.

The album has been written and produced in collaboration with his son, Russ Davies.

Open Road will be released on March 31 via Red River Entertainment.

On collaborating with his son, Davies Snr said, “Working with my son was a delight and he made me realize a lot about myself. I feel an almost strange magnetic loving energy pervading through the whole work. I found it very demanding emotionally and I wanted it to have integrity. Even though Russ is my son we happened to both gel with the ideals, stories and motives of the work; the honesty, the purity of it, and its deceptive simplicity and wonder of it.”

The tracklisting for Open Road is:

Path Is Long
Open Road
Don’t Wanna Grow Up
King of Diamonds
Forgiveness
Sleep On It
Slow Down
Love Has Rules Of Its Own
Chemtrails

The April 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Björk. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Deep Purple, Chrissie Hynde, The Magnetic Fields and we look inside legendary LA venue The Troubadour, while our free CD collects great new tracks from Grandaddy, Laura Marling, Real Estate, Hurray For The Riff Raff and more. The issue also features Alison Krauss on her best recorded work. Plus John Mayall, Jaki Liebezeit RP, Procul Harum, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Creation, Buena Vista Social Club, Elliott Smith, George Harrison, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Sleaford Mods and more, plus 131 reviews

Son Volt – Notes Of Blue

When alt-country pioneers Uncle Tupelo broke up in 1994, Jeff Tweedy persuaded most of the band’s cohorts to join him in Wilco, while Jay Farrar, the band’s other main songwriting force, set out into less charted terrain with an entirely new lineup which he named Son Volt. 1995’s Trace was th...

When alt-country pioneers Uncle Tupelo broke up in 1994, Jeff Tweedy persuaded most of the band’s cohorts to join him in Wilco, while Jay Farrar, the band’s other main songwriting force, set out into less charted terrain with an entirely new lineup which he named Son Volt.

1995’s Trace was the first of three albums in four prolific years that initially saw Son Volt outstrip Wilco in both critical acclaim and commercial success. But as Tweedy refocused Wilco in new and increasingly experimental directions that led all the way to the Grammys, Farrar seemed to opt for the back roads less travelled. He put Son Volt on hiatus and released a brace of solo albums, reformed the band with a new lineup, took time out again to record an album under the name Gob Iron and teamed up with Death Cab for Cutie’s Ben Gibbard on the soundtrack to a documentary about Jack Kerouac.

Albums continued to appear sporadically under the Son Volt brand, although until the announcement of Notes Of Blue, there had been just one Son Volt album – 2013’s Honky Tonk – in eight years. Notes Of Blue finds Farrar with another revamped lineup and a broader take on the collage of Americana than perhaps ever before, with its roots-rock sound grounded not only in the old, weird folk heritage of Appalachia but equally in the dark and mysterious ‘guitar stylings’ of the original bluesmen of the Mississippi Delta.

Promise The World” opens the album in familiar Burritos-styled country-rock territory, all weeping pedal steel as Farrar sings with weather-beaten resignation that “there will be hell to pay”, ameliorated by the promise of “light after darkness, that is the way.”

This quest for redemption infuses the album and is present again on “Back Against The Wall”, a gritty roots-rocker with Farrar’s snarling guitar blasting out of a vintage Magnatone amp, like Neil Young feeding Old Black through his 1950s Fender Deluxe. The song wouldn’t have sounded out of place on Uncle Tupelo’s No Depression and lines such as “what survives the long cold winter will be stronger and can’t be undone” might serve as an anthem of defiance at the prospect of four years of Trump.

The spirit of the Delta rears its head for the first time on “Static”, with a primitively hypnotic riff derived from Mississippi Fred McDowell delivered in the rambunctious style of Aerosmith covering his blues standard “You Gotta Move”. “Cherokee” is another stomping blues-rocker, this time in the North Mississippi hill country style of RL Burnside and sounding like a heavier version of “Buzz And Grind”, which Farrar recorded a decade ago as Gob Iron.

The gentler aesthetic of both “The Storm” and “Cairo And Southern” draws on yet another rich thread of the blues heritage in the delicate finger-picking of Skip James, the ethereal sound of the bluesman’s trademark D-minor tuning also evoking the lilting Bahamian guitar spirituals of Joseph Spence. The melting slide guitar work could have graced a Taj Mahal or early Ry Cooder album, but “The Storm” is given added resonance by Farrar’s yearning, almost falsetto voice on another redemptive tale about heading for the promised land to escape from a life of “women and whisky”.

Lost Souls” is a pneumatic stop-start blues rocker drenched in ZZ Top-style slide guitars with a muso lyric dedicated, according to Farrar, “to the amazingly talented bands and performers you meet along the way but never hear from again.” It might even be read it as a lament for Uncle Tupelo.

The reverberating “Midnight”, with its shades of Dinosaur Jr, is the album’s darkest song, offering “no redemption…down in hell”. “Sinking Down”, another track driven by the spirit of McDowell, is hardly more cheerful as a mediation on “the troubles of the world that won’t keep away for long” before a melodic Tom Petty-like chorus offers a glimmer of hope as once again Farrar sings of a need to “atone for the women and wine”.

Farrar turned 50 last year and the thematic threads of atonement and redemption seem to reflect the concerns of a man surveying the horizon in both directions from a bivouac of hard-won self-knowledge. Certainly it’s an album he couldn’t have made when Son Volt were starting out – and it may just be the most satisfying record he’s made since the group’s stellar 1995 debut.

Q&A
Jay Farrar
What’s the link that has led you from country to the blues?

I’ve done a few blues-inspired songs in the past. But Hank Williams is really the key. He showed us that the blues as a music form was an integral part of country music early on.

Some say the blues today has become little more than a heritage music used as a soundtrack for beer commercials. What makes the spirit of the blues still relevant for you in 2017?
For years I’ve been drawn to the passion, common struggle and possibility for redemption that’s always been a part of the blues. Everyone has to pay the rent and get along with their significant others, so many of the themes are universal. For me, the blues fills that void that’s there for religion, really. That’s the place I turn to be lifted up and for the chance for redemption. Whether this record achieves that is anyone’s guess.

I read that in writing the album you focused on specific blues guitar tunings, courtesy of Skip James and Mississippi Fred McDowell, and used those as your “points of departure”…
To me there’s always been a mystique attached to the guitar voicings of those two performers, so I was compelled to get inside their tunings and see what was there. Skip James, it’s a D-Minor tuning, so it has built into it kind of an intangible haunting effect. The assertive slide playing of Mississippi Fred McDowell is mesmerising, sll of that was the target. But the arrow actually landed somewhere between Tom Petty and ZZ Top!
INTERVIEW: NIGEL WILLIAMSON

The April 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Björk. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Deep Purple, Chrissie Hynde, The Magnetic Fields and we look inside legendary LA venue The Troubadour, while our free CD collects great new tracks from Grandaddy, Laura Marling, Real Estate, Hurray For The Riff Raff and more. The issue also features Alison Krauss on her best recorded work. Plus John Mayall, Jaki Liebezeit RP, Procul Harum, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Creation, Buena Vista Social Club, Elliott Smith, George Harrison, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Sleaford Mods and more, plus 131 reviews

An interview with David Gilmour

Happy birthday, David Gilmour! To mark the auspicious event, I thought I'd post my cover story from Uncut's September 2015 issue [Take 220]. Contains Gilmour, Robert Wyatt, Aubrey ‘Po’ Powell, Phil Manzanera and Nick Laird-Clowes... Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner Coming Back To Life The...

Happy birthday, David Gilmour! To mark the auspicious event, I thought I’d post my cover story from Uncut’s September 2015 issue [Take 220]. Contains Gilmour, Robert Wyatt, Aubrey ‘Po’ Powell, Phil Manzanera and Nick Laird-Clowes…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Coming Back To Life
The Endless River has brought the tale of Pink Floyd to a satisfying conclusion, and now David Gilmour can begin a new phase of his career. As he prepares for his first solo album in nine years, however, Gilmour has a different view. Whether “one is or isn’t in a band feels a bit daft when you get to our age,” he tells Uncut, in a world exclusive interview. “It’s part of a continuum.” Join us, then, as Gilmour and his closest allies consider the journey from “Fat Old Sun” to Rattle That Lock – and beyond!

Not for the first time, David Gilmour is considering his future. For almost 50 years now, his decisions as a musician have been directly linked to Pink Floyd. But today Gilmour is readying his new solo album Rattle That Lock; the first record he’s made since calling time on his old band last year. “At what point one decides one is or isn’t in a band – and exactly what the meaning of the word ‘band’ is – feels a bit daft when you gets to our age,” he says. “I don’t think of it like that anyway. It’s part of a continuum. I don’t try and do anything differently. Things just come out different when I’m doing solo records than when I’m doing Pink Floyd. You just accept what comes along, really.”

As if to highlight the intertwined relationship between Gilmour’s work as a solo artist and his career in Pink Floyd, we meet on Astoria, the houseboat-recording studio moored along the Thames that Gilmour has owned since 1986. We are in the studio where the Gilmour-led Pink Floyd convened to work on A Momentary Lapse Of Reason and The Division Bell – but also where Gilmour recorded much of last solo album, On An Island.

A quick glance round the studio identifies a number of items with explicit connections to his past. Behind him, for instance, sits the Martin D-35 acoustic guitar that he first used on “Wish You Were Here”, while grouped in a corner along with his peddle board and a small beige amp rests his fabled black Stratocaster. Even Gilmour’s smartphone, it seems, recently chose to remind him of his celebrated history. “Funnily enough, ‘the iPod angel’ as I call it played ‘Echoes’ from Live In Gdansk the other day,” he reveals. “That’s the first time I’ve listened to it since it came out, I think. You’re going along and your iPod – or now it’s in my iPhone, of course – plays a song at random. It played ‘Echoes’ and I thought, ‘God, that was great fun.’ Do I miss that way of working? I do. But you can’t get back to that sort of equality that one has when one starts out as a young chap in a band. Gradually, over years, the balance of power changes. Your life changes and you become – how does one put it without sounding ridiculous? – bigger and more powerful and some of the people that you work with are too respectful. When you’re young, you can argue and fight and it’s all forgotten the next day. You call people all the names under the sun. ‘No, that’s shite.’ But somehow that equality is really hard to recreate later in life.”

Gilmour’s old friend Robert Wyatt considers the connection between the music Gilmour was making then – during Floyd’s heyday – and the music he’s making now. “The Floyd was more overtly dramatic,” he offers. “The climaxes were more climactic. The wait-for-it bits were more wait-for-it. There’s almost a kind of folk music flow to what David does now. It’s more undulated landscape that mountains and valleys.”

“I think it’s a sigh of relief,” adds Aubrey ‘Po’ Powell, Gilmour and Pink Floyd’s creative director. “You create something larger than life and you’ve got to deal with it on a day to day basis, and that’s what Pink Floyd had become. Doing On An Island was a way for David to get away from that and do something for himself. Rattle That Lock also is an extension of that. But it is a celebration, almost, of everything David’s ever learned musically.”

As Rattle That Lock arrives in a post-Floyd world, it is instructive to look back and consider the reaction Gilmour’s then-bandmates had to his very first solo album – David Gilmour, released in 1978. “Oh, you know,” Gilmour says dryly. “The usual Pink Floyd reaction. Absolute silence.”

Pink Floyd’s Dark Side Of The Moon recording console up for auction

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The recording console used by Pink Floyd to record The Dark Side Of The Moon will go up for auction later this month. The Abbey Road Studios EMI TG12345 MK IV recording console was used extensively between 1971 and 1983 in Studio Two. Aside from Pink Floyd, the console was also used by Paul McCart...

The recording console used by Pink Floyd to record The Dark Side Of The Moon will go up for auction later this month.

The Abbey Road Studios EMI TG12345 MK IV recording console was used extensively between 1971 and 1983 in Studio Two.

Aside from Pink Floyd, the console was also used by Paul McCartney and Wings, George Harrison, Ringo Starr, Kate Bush and The Cure.

The console will now be the subject of an auction being held by New York auctioneers Bonham’s, which will take place on March 27. The console is expected to reach a six-digit figure, though no estimate has been set.

Katherine Schofield, Head of Entertainment Memorabilia in London commented: “We are hugely excited to offer such an important item of music engineering used by iconic bands and legendary artists. Made for the powerhouse that is Abbey Road Studios, the engineers forward thinking together with the military precision of EMI craftsmanship has created one of the best sounding recording consoles ever made. The association with one of the UK’s most relevant and successful bands, Pink Floyd, highlights the fact that this is far from being any ordinary console.’

Currently owned by producer Mike Hedges – who bought it from Abbey Road in 1983 – the console is still in an “excellent working condition” and is currently housed in Prime Studios in Austria.

The April 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Björk. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Deep Purple, Chrissie Hynde, The Magnetic Fields and we look inside legendary LA venue The Troubadour, while our free CD collects great new tracks from Grandaddy, Laura Marling, Real Estate, Hurray For The Riff Raff and more. The issue also features Alison Krauss on her best recorded work. Plus John Mayall, Jaki Liebezeit RP, Procul Harum, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Creation, Buena Vista Social Club, Elliott Smith, George Harrison, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Sleaford Mods and more, plus 131 reviews