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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds announce European tour dates

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have announced an 8-week European tour beginning in the UK at Bournemouth’s International Centre on September 24. The band last toured Europe in 2014. Full dates are below, with tickets on sale from 9am on Friday 17 February and available here. Nick Cave & The ...

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have announced an 8-week European tour beginning in the UK at Bournemouth’s International Centre on September 24.

The band last toured Europe in 2014.

Full dates are below, with tickets on sale from 9am on Friday 17 February and available here.

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds’ eight piece touring line up features Nick Cave, Warren Ellis, Martyn Casey, Thomas Wydler, Jim Sclavunos, Conway Savage, George Vjestica and Larry Mullins.

The Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds tour itinerary is:

September
24 Bournemouth UK Bournemouth International Centre
25 Manchester UK Arena
27 Glasgow UK The SSE Hydro
28 Nottingham UK Motorpoint Arena
30 London UK The O2

October
3 Paris France Zénith
6 Amsterdam Netherlands Ziggo Dome
7 Frankfurt Germany Jahrhunderthalle
9 Hamburg Germany Sporthalle
10 Luxembourg Rockhal
12 Düsseldorf Germany Mitsubishi Electric Halle
13 Antwerp Belgium Sportpaleis
16 Oslo Norway Spectrum
18 Stockholm Sweden Ericsson Globe
20 Copenhagen Denmark Royal Arena
22 Berlin Germany Max-Schmeling Halle
24 Warsaw Poland Torwar
26 Prague Czech Rep. O2 Arena
28 Belgrade Serbia Kombank Arena
30 Ljubljana Slovenia Dvorana Tivoli

November
1 Vienna Austria Stadthalle
2 Munich Germany Zenith
4 Padova Italy Kioene Arena
6 Milan Italy Forum
8 Rome Italy PalaLottomatica
12 Zurich Switzerland Hallenstadion
13 Geneva Switzerland Arena
16 Athens Greece Faliro Sports Arena (Tae Kwon Do)
19 Tel Aviv Israel Menorah Arena

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Bob Dylan announces London Palladium dates

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Bob Dylan will play a run of shows at the London Palladium. Supporting his forthcoming triple album, Triplicate, out on May 31, Dylan and his band will perform for three nights at the West End theatre in April. Tickets for Dylan's previously announced UK tour are mostly sold out, but the London da...

Bob Dylan will play a run of shows at the London Palladium.

Supporting his forthcoming triple album, Triplicate, out on May 31, Dylan and his band will perform for three nights at the West End theatre in April.

Tickets for Dylan’s previously announced UK tour are mostly sold out, but the London dates go on sale at 10.00am this Friday (February 10).

The 30-song Triplicate is the singer and songwriter’s third set drawing from the classic American songbook, following 2015’s Shadows In The Night and 2016’s Fallen Angels, and is divided into three themed discs.

Bob Dylan plays:

London Palladium (April 28, 29, 30)
Cardiff Motorpoint Arena (May 3) – SOLD OUT
Bournemouth International Centre (4) – SOLD OUT
Nottingham Motorpoint Arena (5)
Glasgow SECC Clyde Auditorium (7) – SOLD OUT
Liverpool Echo Arena (8)
London Wembley SSE Arena (9)

Ticket information is available at the London Palladium and Bob Dylan’s own site.

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Father John Misty, Jesus And Mary Chain, Lucinda Williams and more for End Of The Road Festival

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Father John Misty and Mac DeMarco have been confirmed as headliners for this year's End Of The Road festival. Also on the bill are The Jesus And Mary Chain, Lucinda Williams, Band Of Horses, Amadou & Mariam, Ty Segall, Real Estate and Parquet Courts. This year's festival runs from August 31 - ...

Father John Misty and Mac DeMarco have been confirmed as headliners for this year’s End Of The Road festival.

Also on the bill are The Jesus And Mary Chain, Lucinda Williams, Band Of Horses, Amadou & Mariam, Ty Segall, Real Estate and Parquet Courts.

This year’s festival runs from August 31 – September 3 at its usual home, Larmer Tree Gardens in south Wiltshire, England.

You can read the line-up below – with acts to be announced.

Mac DeMarco
Father John Misty
Lucinda Williams
Band Of Horses
The Jesus and Mary Chain
Amadou & Mariam
Ty Segall
Real Estate
Parquet Courts
Perfume Genius
Alvvays
Foxygen
Car Seat Headrest
Jens Lekman
The Lemon Twigs
Deerhoof
Gold Panda
Nadine Shah
Bill Ryder-Jones
Ryley Walker
Girl Band
Marika Hackman
Courtney Marie Andrews
All We Are
Julia Jacklin
Sinkane
Romare
Vaudou Game
Let’s Eat Grandma
Margaret Glaspy
Kelly Lee Owens
Michael Chapman
Brix & The Extricated
John Smith
Japanese Breakfast
Julie Byrne
OMNI
IDER
Nap Eyes
Aaron Lee Tasjan
Amanda Bergman
Nadia Reid
Tasseomancy
Pixx
Girl Ray
Ultimate Painting
Shovels & Rope
John Moreland
Gabriella Cohen
HMLTD
Gulp
Shame
Lisa O’Neill
Xylouris White
Goat Girl
Lankum
Scott Hirsch
W. H. Lung
The Honey Hahs
DUDS
J. Bernardt
Legends Of Country
Mega Bog
The Spook School
Creatures

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.

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Danny Says

If Danny Fields didn’t exist, it’s doubtful anyone would invent him – unless it was some hipster Woody Allen making a wild new musical version of Zelig, about an unlikely figure who somehow happened to just be there for 90 per cent of the most interesting moments in American rock and roll betw...

If Danny Fields didn’t exist, it’s doubtful anyone would invent him – unless it was some hipster Woody Allen making a wild new musical version of Zelig, about an unlikely figure who somehow happened to just be there for 90 per cent of the most interesting moments in American rock and roll between 1965–1977.

Unlike a Zelig, though, Fields wasn’t just simply there, blending in. Variously journalist, scout, PR man, manager, fixer and “underground mayor,†to quote Alice Cooper, he helped shape the scene. He’s hardly a household name, but his ears are responsible for a lot of the music played in all the coolest households over the past fifty years.

If you’re glad The Doors broke through, be thankful Fields, as their self-appointed publicist, was around to suggest “the song about fire†should be a single. If you ever shook to The Stooges or MC5, you owe him a drink – he got Elektra to sign both bands with a single phonecall to label boss Jac Holzman who, by that point, had made Fields “company freak,†hired, essentially, to stay up later than everyone else.

Ramones fans should know him as the man who discovered the band in 1975 and became their first manager. They parted in the early 1980s, but not before Da Bruddas wrote one of their most glorious songs in his honour, “Danny Saysâ€. Scholars of American pop’s ripped underbelly might recognise Fields’s name from the footnotes through his associations with these bands, not to mention The Velvet Underground. But seeing it all laid out up front in director Brendan Toller’s documentary – that this one guy had his antenna up in a way that put him right in the middle of it time and again – is remarkable.

More startling yet are the other flashpoints the film uncovers. You know those giddy photographs of Bob Dylan meeting Patti Smith for the first time backstage in Greenwich Village in 1975? Fields was behind the camera. Before that, he was the one who first invited Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe, two wide-eyed kids persistently hanging around, to join the backroom gang at Max’s Kansas City. Before that, in the same fabled New York hangout, he introduced David Bowie to Iggy Pop.

If that’s not enough, how about this: in 1966, as an editor on teen fan mag Datebook, he was the one who sensed a quote John Lennon had given months earlier without fuss to The Evening Standard was maybe worth highlighting. Thus the world got the “more popular than Jesus†furore that saw The Beatles’ US tour met with death threats, and fuelled their decision to stop playing live.

This all makes such a fantastic surface you can forgive Toller’s film for not going far beneath. We get a taste of Fields’s persona – dry, catty, sharp, simultaneously unimpressed yet in love with it all – but no idea of what might tick inside. In this respect, the opening is most poignant. Illustrated with glowing home movies, we glimpse a straight early life as a Jewish boy in suburban Brooklyn, where Fields was born Daniel Feinberg in 1939. Already, though, there are kinks: his doctor father left a bowl of amphetamines on the sideboard, like sweets, and Danny and his mother would help themselves.

Openly gay, Fields studied law, but was more interested in “hanging out with a bunch of dissolute faggots.†Dropping out, he met his destiny when he fell in with Andy Warhol’s Factory crowd, forming close friendships with Edie Sedgwick, Nico (he was later responsible for bringing her and John Cale to Elektra for the magisterial Marble Index) and Lou Reed.

Shortly before his death, Warhol told Fields he’d like to film his story. Fulfilling the prophecy, Toller’s documentary is likely very different to anything Andy might have made, but he’s indebted to Warhol for lessons he taught Fields, who developed the habit of documenting his life, down to regularly tape-recording conversations.

Toller interviewed Fields over several years, and brings in Iggy, Alice, Jac Holzman and many others. But the gems come from Fields’s own archive, best of all his C-120 tape of Reed’s uncharacteristically enthusiastic reaction the night Fields first played him The Ramones: “That is, without doubt, THE most fantastic thing you’ve ever played me!â€

It’s telling that the documentary ends on the Ramones adventure: there’s nothing about what Fields has done since. You sense he could say things about the past three decades, too. But, then, maybe those stories just aren’t as good.

EXTRAS: Great 1969 promo for Nico’s “Evening Of Light†featuring Iggy; Fields Q&A; more 1975 audio of Fields and Lou; interviews; trailer. 7/10

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Exclusive! Hear alternative versions of Evan Dando’s “Shots Is Fired” and “Rancho Santa Fe”

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Evan Dando's 2003 solo album, Baby I'm Bored, is due for reissue. Released in June as a 2CD/2LP and Limited Edition 2LP/2CD set, the reissue will include an extra disc of unheard and unreleased tracks, singles, b-sides and rarities - including alternative versions of "Shots Is Fired" featuring Liv ...

Evan Dando‘s 2003 solo album, Baby I’m Bored, is due for reissue.

Released in June as a 2CD/2LP and Limited Edition 2LP/2CD set, the reissue will include an extra disc of unheard and unreleased tracks, singles, b-sides and rarities – including alternative versions of “Shots Is Fired” featuring Liv Tyler and “Rancho Santa Fe”.

We’re delighted to be able to share both of these tracks with you – listen to them below.

The Extras disc includes:
Shots Is Fired (Alternative Version featuring Liv Tyler)
I Wanna Be Your Mamma Again
Tongue Tied
Whoops
Sucker Punch
The Same Thing You Thought Hard About… (Alternative Version)
Au Bord De La Seine
Rancho Santa Fe (Alternative Version)
A Walk In The Woods With Lionel Ritchie
Rudy With A Flashlight
Hannah & Gabi (Live Version)
The Same Thing You Thought Hard About… (Live Version)

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide: Neil Young

“Roll another number for the road…†Neil Young’s vigorous workrate can be hard for even the most obsessive fan to keep up with: since 2000 alone, he’s managed two autobiographies, eight personally curated archive releases, one imaginatively conceptual live album, five films, an environment...

“Roll another number for the road…†Neil Young’s vigorous workrate can be hard for even the most obsessive fan to keep up with: since 2000 alone, he’s managed two autobiographies, eight personally curated archive releases, one imaginatively conceptual live album, five films, an environmentally friendly car and a new audio format, plus the small matter of 14 new studio albums. To navigate that amazing body of work, you’ll need a trustworthy companion – which is where our Ultimate Music Guide: Neil Young comes in.
This deluxe, updated edition tells the complete story of Young, right up to 2016’s Peace Trail. We’ve reviewed every single one of his albums, and rescued a wealth of interviews from the NME, Melody Maker and Uncut archives. “You can’t worry about what people think. I never do. I never did, really,†Young told Uncut in 2012. And here’s the proof: one of rock’s greatest runs, anatomised and celebrated in all its weird, ragged glory…

Watch an exclusive clip of the Drive-By Truckers performing “Ever South”

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Ahead of their upcoming UK tour dates, we're delighted to share an exclusive interview and performance of "Ever South" by Drive-By Truckers. The interview was conducted by The Hold Steady's Craig Finn at New York's Electric Lady Studios. "Ever South", of course, is taken from the band's current al...

Ahead of their upcoming UK tour dates, we’re delighted to share an exclusive interview and performance of “Ever South” by Drive-By Truckers.

The interview was conducted by The Hold Steady’s Craig Finn at New York’s Electric Lady Studios.

Ever South“, of course, is taken from the band’s current album, American Band – a former Uncut Album Of The Month.

Drive-By Truckers play:

March 1 – Manchester – O2 Ritz
March 2 – Bristol – Anson Rooms
March 3 – London – Roundhouse
March 4 – Brighton – Concorde 2

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Exclusive! Hear an unreleased session outtake of Kris Kristofferson’s “Best Of All Possible Worldsâ€

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We're delighted to be able to preview an unreleased session outtake for Kris Kristofferson's “Best Of All Possible Worldsâ€. This version is taken from The Austin Sessions: Expanded Edition, released by Rhino on February 10. Originally released in 1999, The Austin Sessions found Kristofferson...

We’re delighted to be able to preview an unreleased session outtake for Kris Kristofferson‘s “Best Of All Possible Worldsâ€.

This version is taken from The Austin Sessions: Expanded Edition, released by Rhino on February 10.

Originally released in 1999, The Austin Sessions found Kristofferson recording stripped-down versions of his best-known songs, including “Me and Bobby McGee†“Why Me?†and “Sunday Morning Coming Downâ€.

“Best Of All Possible Worlds†is one of two tracks left off the original album, along with “Jody And The Kid“, which make their debut on the expanded version. Producer Fred Mollin says the songs show different sides of Kristofferson’ songwriting. “One is lighthearted, dry, sarcastic and one of the greatest examples of Kris’ humor and storytelling, while the other is just deeply emotional and shows the true aching heart that can be felt like an arrow, from Kris to the listener.â€

The tracklisting for The Austin Sessions: Expanded Edition is:

“Me And Bobby McGeeâ€
“Sunday Morning Coming Downâ€
“For The Good Timesâ€
“The Silver Tongued Devil And Iâ€
“Help Me Make It Through The Nightâ€
“Loving Her Was Easier (Than Anything I’ll Ever Do Again)â€
“To Beat The Devilâ€
“Who’s To Bless And Who’s To Blameâ€
“Why Me?â€
“Nobody Winsâ€
“The Pilgrim: Chapter 33â€
“Please Don’t Tell Me How The Story Endsâ€
“Best Of All Possible Worlds†*
“Jody And The Kid†*

* previously unreleased

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

David Bowie’s No Plan EP for vinyl and CD release

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David Bowie's No Plan EP is to be released on CD and special vinyl formats. The four-track EP was previously a digital-only release, but will now be available physically, including a limited edition made-to-order numbered die-cut package with 12†white vinyl and an exclusive artwork lithograph th...

David Bowie‘s No Plan EP is to be released on CD and special vinyl formats.

The four-track EP was previously a digital-only release, but will now be available physically, including a limited edition made-to-order numbered die-cut package with 12†white vinyl and an exclusive artwork lithograph that will be available to pre-order for a limited time only.

The EP features Bowie’s final studio recordings, made during the sessions for his 28th and final album, ★.

All vinyl configurations of the No Plan EP feature a special laser etching on side B. The No Plan EP artwork has been designed by longtime Bowie collaborator Jonathan Barnbrook.

The No Plan EP will be available on CD from February 24 and 12″ vinyl from April 21.

A limited edition made-to-order die-cut 12″ vinyl will be out on May 26. You can find out more by clicking here.

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Introducing The Ultimate Music Guide To Neil Young

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For even the most obsessive fan, it can sometimes be tough to keep up with Neil Young. At 71, he remains more restless, unpredictable and hyper-productive than any other artist of a comparable age and reputation. Since 2000, The Rolling Stones have released two new albums, while Bob Dylan has manage...

For even the most obsessive fan, it can sometimes be tough to keep up with Neil Young. At 71, he remains more restless, unpredictable and hyper-productive than any other artist of a comparable age and reputation. Since 2000, The Rolling Stones have released two new albums, while Bob Dylan has managed seven (eight, I guess, if you count Triplicate). Bruce Springsteen has also produced seven; Tom Waits, a mere four.

In that time, Young has come up with two autobiographies, eight personally curated archive releases, one imaginatively conceptual live album, five films, an environmentally friendly car and a new audio format, plus the small matter of 14 new studio albums. It’s an eccentric and gripping, if not always magnanimously received, body of work that tells the tale of an artist driven to spontaneous creation, whim, rough-hewn experiments and rapid emotional responses that pay little heed to the expectations of his paymasters and, sometimes, his fans.

These are themes that run through the 148 pages of our deluxe, updated Ultimate Music Guide to Neil Young, out on Thursday in the UK available to buy here now (along with a load of our other Ultimate Music Guides). For this comprehensive attempt to make sense of Young’s sprawling catalogue, we’ve found a host of interviews from the NME, Melody Maker and Uncut archives that show how, among many things, he’s been consistent in his contrary single-mindedness, his imperturbable desire to keep moving forward. “I’ve never liked it, when they shout out for the old songs immediately after you’ve finished a new one,†he complains to MM’s Ray Coleman in 1976. “Kinda deflating… To hell with the old ones!â€

Our reviews of every one of his albums provide a similarly compelling narrative, finding significant echoes and hidden treasures on even his most misunderstood and neglected ’80s records, right up to 2016’s Earth and Peace Trail. “You can’t worry about what people think. I never do. I never did, really,†Young told Uncut in 2012. And here’s the proof: one of rock’s greatest runs, anatomised and celebrated in all its weird, ragged glory…

Mose Allison – I’m Not Talkin’: The Song Stylings Of Mose Allison 1957 – 1971

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“They stole my music but they gave me my name,†Muddy Waters once said of The Rolling Stones. Mose Allison’s status as a white boy stealing the blues was somewhat more complicated, for he grew up not in Dartford but in the Mississippi Delta, where he picked cotton alongside black sharecroppers...

“They stole my music but they gave me my name,†Muddy Waters once said of The Rolling Stones. Mose Allison’s status as a white boy stealing the blues was somewhat more complicated, for he grew up not in Dartford but in the Mississippi Delta, where he picked cotton alongside black sharecroppers and learned to plough behind a mule, before heading for university to graduate in English and philosophy.

He mocked the cultural complexity of his backstory with playfully self-deprecating humour in “Ever Since I Stole The Bluesâ€: “Well have you heard the latest, are you in the know/ It’s in the mornin’ papers and on the radio/ It’s even gonna make the TV news: ‘White Boy Steals the Blues’.

Yet in the end, it was white boys who stole Mose’s blues – especially white boys playing in London’s R’n’B clubs, following the landmark 1963 release of Mose Allison Sings, a compilation of the best vocal tracks from the six albums he had recorded for Prestige between 1957 and 1959.

The impact of that 1963 release was both instant and enduring, for what a defining generation of young British musicians heard was radically different from any of the other blues recordings finding their way across the Atlantic at the time, whether it was the electric Chicago blues of Waters and Wolf on imported Chess LPs or Robert Johnson’s spooked pre-war country blues on Columbia’s seminal 1961 compilation, King Of The Delta Blues Singers.

Allison’s blues were jazzy and sophisticated. His piano playing was a hybrid of boogie-woogie, stride, swing, Nat Cole, Errol Garner and early Ray Charles embellished with bebop improvisations. He sang in a sly, slack-jawed voice with a distinctive rural diction and his lyrics were smart and witty, littered with puns and moonshine wisdom, indebted as much to Mark Twain’s Huck Finn as to the Delta argot of Johnson, Charley Patton and Son House. As Jamie Cullum noted almost half a century later, Allison was “a genre in his own rightâ€.

Georgie Fame recorded his songs and copied his style. John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers covered him and so did the Yardbirds, The Kinks and Manfred Mann. Pete Townshend was inspired to write “My Generation†after hearing Allison’s “Young Man’s Blues†and The Who then covered the original composition on Live At Leeds. On Allison’s first visit to Britain, he appeared on TV with The Rolling Stones and performed at the Cavern club. Van Morrison later recorded with him and The Clash and Elvis Costello also went on to cover his songs.

Half a dozen remastered racks from that now legendary 1963 compilation are included on this timely and near-definitive 24-track retrospective of the first 15 years of Allison’s recording career. They include “Young Man’s Bluesâ€, which first appeared on Allison’s 1957 debut Back Country Suite For Piano Bass And Drums as a brief vocal interlude on a predominantly instrumental album that was inspired both by the country blues of the Delta and the classical/folk arrangements of Bartok’s “Hungarian Sketchesâ€.

Townshend recalled the impact the song had on him when he wrote the liner notes for an Allison compilation many years later. “The man’s voice was so cool, so decisively hip, so uncomplicated,†he enthused. “Mose was my man. I felt him to be the epitome of restrained screaming power… the voice of a gentle giant with the strength to change the world, but the humility and character to stand alone.”

Equally memorable is “Parchman Farmâ€, a 1958 rolling piano blues about the Mississippi state penitentiary quite different from the Bukka White composition of the same name and which was recorded by Fame and Mayall among countless others. “I’m goin’ be here the rest of my life and all I did was shoot my wife,” he deadpans with the laconic wit that was to become his trademark.

Equally influential on British R’n’B were Allison’s early covers of Willie Dixon’s “Seventh Sonâ€, Big Joe Williams’ “Baby Please Don’t Go†and Sonny Boy Williamson’s “Eyesight To The Blindâ€, which arguably became better-known than the versions by the original artists. All are included here.

Yet it’s Allison’s own compositions that remain his calling card. By the early ’60s he had moved to Atlantic and the 14 tracks here recorded between 1962 and 1971 mark the maturation of a unique “eccentric traditionalistâ€, as he came to describe himself.

As his piano playing took on a darker resonance with pronounced use of the sustain pedal to give his bustling lines a more elusive quality, his lyrics also grew more striking and idiosyncratic. On “Everybody Cryin’ Mercy†recorded in 1968 at the height of the Vietnam War, he essayed perhaps the slyest protest song of all time as he artfully noted, “Everybody’s cryin’ peace on earth jus’ as soon as we win this war.â€

Elsewhere lines such as “I’ve been doin’ some thinking ’bout the nature of the universe/I found out things are getting better, it’s just that people are getting worse†appear heavy with a world-weary cynicism, although Allison refuted the suggestion. “There’s a strong ironical wit that comes from rural America,†he said. “It’s not pessimistic. It’s just dealing with a harsh reality.â€

I’m Not Talkin’ is a fitting testament to this eccentric traditionalist extraordinaire.

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Tributes paid to David Axelrod

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Tributes have been paid to composer, arranger and producer David Axelrod, who has died aged 83. Born in Los Angeles in 1933, Axelrod produced his first album in 1959. He spent several years working for Capitol Records during the 1960s and went on to release more than a dozen of his own albums, incl...

Tributes have been paid to composer, arranger and producer David Axelrod, who has died aged 83.

Born in Los Angeles in 1933, Axelrod produced his first album in 1959. He spent several years working for Capitol Records during the 1960s and went on to release more than a dozen of his own albums, including his 1968 debut album Songs Of Innocence and Songs Of Experience, the following year.

He also collaborated with the Electric Prunes on their 1968 album Mass In F# Minor, finishing recording duties with session musicians when the band split up during the sessions.

During the 1990s, artists including DJ Shadow, Wu-Tang Clan and Lil Wayne sampled his tracks, leading to a resurgence of interest in his work. Subsequently, Axelrod released an eponymous album in 2001 on the British dance label Mo’Wax.

In 2005, Blue Note released a collection of his late ’60s work, called The Edge.

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The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

The Fifth Uncut Playlist Of 2017

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After teasing the excellent Arbouretum and Wooden Wand albums for a week or two, a couple of songs have turned up on Bandcamp that I’ve linked to here (Just click on the listings). Still nothing from that wonderful Joan Shelley record with Tweedy and his gang, unfortunately. Other stuff worth fla...

After teasing the excellent Arbouretum and Wooden Wand albums for a week or two, a couple of songs have turned up on Bandcamp that I’ve linked to here (Just click on the listings). Still nothing from that wonderful Joan Shelley record with Tweedy and his gang, unfortunately.

Other stuff worth flagging up: the Jarvis and Gonzales concept album about the Chateau Marmont (scene, right by the pool and near the Belushi bungalow, of one of my strangest interviews back in the ‘90s); Matt Jencik cloudy ambience; and a couple of great new live sets from faithful retainers Hiss Golden Messenger (Back on the road after a seasonal pause) and Ryley Walker (in exploratory improv mode, jousting again with Bill Mackay). Been a while since I mentioned this caveat, but it seems salient this week: the playlist is just a document of music we listened to in the Uncut office – inclusion doesn’t automatically mean we liked it (though mostly, of course, we did)…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Hiss Golden Messenger – Live At The Blind Pig, Ann Arbor, 28/1/17 (Download here)

2 Mac DeMarco – This Old Dog (Captured Tracks)

3 Feral Ohms – Feral Ohms (Silver Current)

4 Jarvis Cocker/Chilly Gonzales – Room 29 (Deutsche Grammofon)

5 Ryley Walker/Bill Mackay/Michael Zerang – Live At The Hideout, Chicago 28/1/17 (Download here)

6 Thundercat – Show You The Way (Feat Michael McDonald & Kenny Loggins) (Brainfeeder)

7 Joan Shelley – Joan Shelley (No Quarter)

8 Wooden Wand – Clipper Ship (Three Lobed Recordings)

9 Blondie – Fun (BMG)

10 Arbouretum – Song Of The Rose (Thrill Jockey)

11 Skyway Man – Seen Comin’ From A Mighty Eye (Light In The Attic)

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

13 Ryley Walker – Shaking Like The Others/I Laughed So Hard I Cried/Two Sides To Every Cross (aquariumdrunkard.com)

14 Damaged Bug – Bunker Funk (Castle Face)

15 Karima Walker
- Hands in Our Names (Orindal)

16 Father John Misty – Pure Comedy (Bella Union)

17 Matt Jencik – Weird Times (Hands In The Dark)

18 Sampha – Process (XL)

 

 

The Doors – The London Fog 1966

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A few moments before it alights on a rooftop sunbather in a bikini, the roving aerial camera of R Lee Frost’s 1966 movie Mondo Bizarro makes its way down an unprepossessing street of dawdling traffic and shabby sun-bleached awnings. We see a minibus parked. There are a couple of Volkswagens. â€...

A few moments before it alights on a rooftop sunbather in a bikini, the roving aerial camera of R Lee Frost’s 1966 movie Mondo Bizarro makes its way down an unprepossessing street of dawdling traffic and shabby sun-bleached awnings. We see a minibus parked. There are a couple of Volkswagens.

“This,†an actorly narration informs us, “is Sunset Boulevard, legendary street of dreams and myths. Young people from all over the world are drawn here by the glamour and the film industry. For this is Hollywood. Here are the fabled clubs and watering places of the celebrated…â€

Fabled? Celebrated? It doesn’t look that way. Still, as the camera moves, it accidentally catches something of particular historical interest above the frontage of The London Fog, the newest but also paradoxically the shabbiest of the clubs on the strip. It’s a red sign which reads: “The Doorsâ€, announcing a new band from the city, then in residence.

It’s an enchanting, and exciting moment, and this current release has much of the same qualities. Recorded at the club by a UCLA student named Nettie Peña, whose father had passed his enthusiasm for audio recording on to his daughter, The Doors were on this night near the start of their first professional engagement, their performance supported by friends from the university.

As with the Sex Pistols at Manchester’s Lesser Free Trade Hall, there’s a degree of mythology in play with an event like this. Nettie herself in her sleevenotes recalls it being a standing-room-only kind of event, although the tape suggests a more sparse turnout. In 1972 Ray Manzarek recalled that the club was no thriving concern. This was the sort of place you’d find in a Tom Waits song: peopled by the odd drunk, serviceman or prostitute, but not generally by bands going places. This tape is said to come from May near the end of the band’s run – the band first auditioning in late February, and then playing throughout March and April.

By mid-May, the band were let go by the London Fog, the club closing shortly afterwards. But this was not before The Doors had been checked out by Ronnie Haran, who booked the considerably more prestigious Whiskey-A-Go-Go club nearby. Haran wouldn’t sit down in the London Fog (“I might get crabs,†she apparently said at the time), but was blown away by the band. Ray Manzarek said she fell instantly in love with Jim Morrison. Haran today says she fell instead for Manzarek’s playing.

The Doors were at this stage fuelled-up and on the runway, but not yet taken off. The previous year the band had made a rudimentary five-song demo, which had won them a contract with CBS (which would not ultimately be taken up). More significantly, they had just secured the services of another UCLA student, Robby Krieger, to play guitar, who now added his tangential blues to songs like “Moonlight Drive†and “Hello, I Love Youâ€.

Listening to The London Fog captures their evolving promise. This clearly isn’t yet The Doors of another officially-released early live show, Live At The Matrix, 1967. There, the young band offer a full and discursive hour-and-a-half display of their powers from “The End†to “Crawling King Snakeâ€, their own compositions politely blowing the minds of lightly-applauding turtlenecked hipsters at an all-seater San Francisco nightclub.

As with that release, there’s an interesting insight into which were the band’s earliest songs. Here, amid the covers that make up the majority of the half-hour recording, there’s a reading of “Strange Daysâ€, which is already much as it would appear on the band’s second album, down to Ray Manzarek’s ornate organ intro. It’s magnificent, and clearly a very different order of thing than what has previously transpired in the set. It unfolds with the dark ellipsis of a short story – which is probably why it’s greeted with what, hand on heart, you’d have to report as nothing more than polite applause. The other original composition in the seven here is “You Make Me Feel Realâ€, which wouldn’t show up until Morrison Hotel four years later.

It’s a minor song, a basic 12-bar rocker, but it gets a far better reception, an innocent fact which won’t have gone unnoticed by the band as they worked on their evolving stagecraft. It’s probably this which is the revelation of The London Fog. We’re not so much hearing the heft of a fully-formed, not yet famous group, as we did with the Matrix recordings, but instead one which has a talent, charisma and presence already very much working for it, even if all the material isn’t quite there yet.

After some tuning, the opener “Rock Meâ€, a take on BB King’s song from two years previously, shows just how the band can open up a song to create their own space and drama. The logical end of this were the band’s extended excursions on “The End†and “Light My Fire†(it is at this point Nettie Pena becomes in a small way the villain of the piece – a second reel of this performance containing “The End†and possibly “Moonlight Drive†has got waylaid during a house move somewhere at some point in the last 50 years), but here the band set quite their own pace and style.

Like other bands of the period, blues was their starting point, but piloted by Manzarek’s entropic musicality and Robby Krieger’s intrepid noise The Doors leave it quicker than most. “Baby Please Don’t Go†isn’t, in principle, going to offer huge surprise to anyone familiar with blues-based music of the 1960s. However, Morrison’s innate theatricality draws you in, as the volume lowers, to focus attention on the singer as the conductor of events (“the shamanâ€, as Manzarek recalled the young Jim). It was a dramatic resource on which he and the band would draw throughout their existence.

Their swinging take on Wilson Pickett’s “Don’t Fight It†does something similar, but in a tempo which throws forward to “Love You Two Timesâ€. Elsewhere, the impression is of a band with a particular dynamism and a burgeoning confidence – to the point where they are happy to let the keyboard player sing “Hoochie Coochie Manâ€, and not the singer.

All round, it’s more than the sum of its parts, if not quite the event that is clearly hoped for – and as the facsimile packaging, 10†vinyl release and so forth might encourage you to believe. Discovered in 2011 this has clearly been awaiting the right occasion to bolster its release. The 50th anniversary of The Doors now provides just that – along with the welcome reminder that a release such as this doesn’t have to be completely mindblowing for it to be quietly historic.

Q&A
ROBBY KRIEGER
By the time of these recordings, you’d been in the group maybe six months, right?

Was it that quick? When I got in the group they already had four or five songs and I added my guitar and changed them a little bit. Then at one point Jim said, ‘Hey, we’re gonna need more songs, you should write some too. It was the first time I thought about writing. I went home and wrote “Light My Fire†which worked out pretty good, and the second was “Love Me Two Timesâ€â€¦ “You’re Lost Little Girlâ€â€¦ This was all in a couple of months of joining the group.

Tell me a bit more about writing “Light My Fireâ€.
I was living with my parents in Pacific Palisades – I had my amp and SG guitar. I asked Jim what should I write about? He said, write about something universal, which won’t disappear two years from now. Something that people can interpret for themselves. I said to myself I’d write about the four elements: earth, air, fire, water. I picked fire, because I loved the Stones song “Play With Fireâ€, and that’s how that came about.

How would you write back then?
One time Jim came and stayed at my house when my parents went on a trip and we wrote “Take It As It Comesâ€, “Strange Daysâ€, lot of cool songs, a couple months later. “The End†was written at that time, which was a love song at that time about a guy breaking up with his girlfriend. Usually, he would have an idea for the lyrics and I would put what I heard as the music. It always seemed to work. When I had something, he always made it better.

Did the London Fog gig feel like a big break?
It did at first, because it was a club on the strip, a new one. It wasn’t the status of the Whiskey or something, but there it was, only a block away. We thought it was pretty cool…until the second night. The first night, we must have had 100-150 people and after that, the second night, nobody. And over the next couple of weeks maybe a couple sailors would come in. It was pretty boring, but it was good because we could play our own songs and work ’em up – it wasn’t like we were rehearsing, we had to play them – in case anybody actually came in. But it was disappointing that we weren’t building up a following. I guess it was a new club, people didn’t know to come in.

What strikes you about the young Doors?
It sounds very raw, obviously, but you can definitely tell it’s us. We were making mistakes and stuff. Ray was singing a lot at that time, and was a little bit out of tune. Jim, even though his voice wasn’t fully developed yet, he had the chops: he could go real high and had that low croony thing going on. The sound is actually pretty good for an audience recording. What I think is pretty cool is when we finish a song and you hear like…three people clapping.

Were you impressed with Jim?
At first no, but as the residency continued, he really came out of his shell. I think that must have been after we did it for a couple of weeks. It was probably towards the end of the run. He was definitely beginning to feel it by then. He used to be very shy, he wouldn’t even look at the audience – his back was turned. When we rehearsed at home, we rehearsed in a circle, so we could look at each other and he would know when to come in. You can’t do that on stage. Eventually he turned around and started interacting with the audience.

Tell me about your experience of the blues?
When I started playing guitar I started playing flamenco music which I really loved. But I had a couple of buddies who were playing steel string guitar, they were trying to get into blues, and we all discovered these old records – one of the guy’s dads had a bunch of old records. I really liked Blind Willie Johnson, who played slide guitar, a blind guy, and Robert Johnson, of course. I didn’t try to emulate them especially but I did love the slide and experimenting with that. I didn’t want to do what those guys were doing, but I thought that sound would work with rock’n’roll. So “Moonlight Drive†was an important song for us, it was actually the first song we played together, the four of us, when we got together for the first time. That was all it took, man, they loved that sound – they wanted it on every song.

You played that at the London Fog, I presume?
Yeah. Unfortunately, half of the songs have not been found yet. There were two tapes, but only one has been found. I had no memory of Nettie Peña – I was in the regular school not the film school, I was younger than them. I heard that some tapes had been found. All this time we’ve been trying to find the other tape. We haven’t stopped looking. It’s gotta be in her storage in her house somewhere. I should probably go over there with a magnetometer…We’ve known about it all this time, it’s pretty frustrating. There was a guy at the Whiskey who recorded a lot of stuff, John Jernick, and no-one knows what happened to him, or his tapes. There’s nothing from the Whiskey – he did the sound there, he was an audio freak and he made tapes – so somebody’s got it.

How does it feel to be approaching your 50th anniversary?
It doesn’t feel like 50 years. It’s cool that it’s lasted this long. What moves me when people say things like The Doors changed my life – it feels great when you’ve affected people positively that much.
INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Hear new music from Jarvis Cocker and Chilly Gonzales’ Room 29 album

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Jarvis Cocker and Chilly Gonzales have unveiled tracks from their forthcoming album, Room 29. The album - described as a song cycle about a piano in a hotel room - is released on Deutsche Grammophon on March 17. Cocker and Gonzales have released videos for two album tracks “Tearjerker†and â€...

Jarvis Cocker and Chilly Gonzales have unveiled tracks from their forthcoming album, Room 29.

The album – described as a song cycle about a piano in a hotel room – is released on Deutsche Grammophon on March 17.

Cocker and Gonzales have released videos for two album tracks “Tearjerker†and “The Tearjerker Returnsâ€, which you can watch here:

You can also watch a trailer for the album below.

The inspiration for the album came when Cocker stayed in Hollywood’s Chateau Marmont hotel and discovered a baby-grand piano in the corner of his room. What if it could “sing†of the life stories and events it had witnessed?

The album was recorded by long-term Gonzales collaborator Renaud Letang at the Ferber Studios in Paris. The Kaiser Quartett, the Macedonian Symphonic Orchestra, flautist Nathalie Hauptman, French horn player Hasko Kroeger, soprano singer Maud Techa and film historian David Thomson all appear on the album.

You can pre-order the record by clicking here.

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Willie Nelson announces new studio album, God’s Problem Child

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Willie Nelson will release a new studio album, God's Problem Child, on April 28 via Legacy Recordings. The album features 13 new songs, including seven recently written by Willie and Buddy Cannon, his longtime collaborator and producer. God's Problem Child will be released on CD, 12" vinyl LP or d...

Willie Nelson will release a new studio album, God’s Problem Child, on April 28 via Legacy Recordings.

The album features 13 new songs, including seven recently written by Willie and Buddy Cannon, his longtime collaborator and producer.

God’s Problem Child will be released on CD, 12″ vinyl LP or digitally the day before Nelson’s 84th birthday.

The title track features vocals from Leon Russell, on what may be Russell’s very last recording, while one of the songs, “He Won’t Ever Be Gone”, is a tribute to Merle Haggard.

The tracklisting for God’s Problem Child is:

Little House On The Hill (Lyndel Rhodes)
Old Timer (Donnie Fritz / Lenny LeBlanc)
True Love (Willie Nelson / Buddy Cannon)
Delete And Fast Forward (Willie Nelson / Buddy Cannon)
A Woman’s Love (Mike Reid / Sam Hunter)
Your Memory Has A Mind Of Its Own (Willie Nelson / Buddy Cannon)
Butterfly (Sonny Throckmorton / Mark Sherrill)
Still Not Dead (Willie Nelson / Buddy Cannon)
God’s Problem Child (Jamey Johnson / Tony Joe White)
It Gets Easier (Willie Nelson / Buddy Cannon)
Lady Luck (Willie Nelson / Buddy Cannon)
I Made A Mistake (Willie Nelson / Buddy Cannon)
He Won’t Ever Be Gone (Gary Nicholson)

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Hear Paul McCartney and Elvis Costello’s previously unreleased demo for “Twenty Fine Fingers”

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Paul McCartney has shared a previously unreleased demo of "Twenty Fine Fingers", one of the tracks he recorded with Elvis Costello in 1987 for Flowers In The Dirt. You can hear the song below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WOCQIxv-Rqg&feature=youtu.be The demo for "Twenty Fine Fingers" is o...

Paul McCartney has shared a previously unreleased demo of “Twenty Fine Fingers“, one of the tracks he recorded with Elvis Costello in 1987 for Flowers In The Dirt.

You can hear the song below.

The demo for “Twenty Fine Fingers” is one of the rarities included in the forthcoming reissue of Flowers In The Dirt, which is available from March 24.

The Flowers In The Dirt reissue formats include a deluxe boxset which contains previously unreleased demos, unseen archival video, notebook of McCartney’s handwritten lyrics and notes, Linda McCartney Flowers In The Dirt exhibition catalogue, a 112-page hardcover book documenting the making of album and more.

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Depeche Mode’s new single is coming later this week

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Depeche Mode will release a new single “Where’s The Revolution†on Friday, February 3. A video, directed by Anton Corbijn, will follow. The track is the first new music from the band in four years and the first offering from their impending 14th studio album, Spirit, which will be released on...

Depeche Mode will release a new single “Where’s The Revolution†on Friday, February 3. A video, directed by Anton Corbijn, will follow.

The track is the first new music from the band in four years and the first offering from their impending 14th studio album, Spirit, which will be released on March 17 on Columbia Records.

Spirit has been produced by James Ford and is the follow up to the band’s 2013 album Delta Machine. Among the tracks are “Backwards”, “Poisoned Heart” and “Scum”.

Speaking to Uncut, Dave Gahan said, “We wrote for most of last year – Martin [Gore] tucked away in his studio and me in my place in New York. I think sonically it’s got a fatter sound to it than Delta Machine. We were very lucky to get James Ford to produce this record. James made us work a lot faster than we normally would have. We’d got a bit self-indulgent over the years with the amount of time we spent in the studio. Sometimes you have to do that. But sometimes it can actually work against you. You have too much time to think about it. There’s 12 songs on the album. There could have been a lot more. Between us, there were at least 20 songs that were all good enough to be on the album. But James was very keen on making an album that was much more concise.â€

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Hear the first track from Blondie’s new album, Pollinator

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Blondie have announced details of their new studio album, Pollinator. The album includes a number of writing collaborations with artists including Johnny Marr, Dave Sitek, Dev Hynes and The Strokes' Nick Valensi, while Joan Jett and Laurie Anderson make studio appearances (“Doom Or Destinyâ€) al...

Blondie have announced details of their new studio album, Pollinator.

The album includes a number of writing collaborations with artists including Johnny Marr, Dave Sitek, Dev Hynes and The Strokes’ Nick Valensi, while Joan Jett and Laurie Anderson make studio appearances (“Doom Or Destinyâ€) along with The Gregory Brothers (“When I Gave Up On Youâ€).

Pollinator, the band’s 11th studio album, is released by BMG on May 5, and it’ll be available on CD, digital and heavy weight vinyl.

You can hear the first single, “Fun“, co-written by Sitek, below. A 7†vinyl pressing of “Funâ€, limited to 1,000 copies, will be available to order from independent retailers on February 1.

Pollinator has been produced by John Congleton (St. Vincent, John Grant, War On Drugs, David Byrne) while the sleeve artwork has been designed by Shepard Fairey.

The Pollinator tracklisting is:

Doom or Destiny
Long Time (with Dev Hynes)
Already Naked
Fun (with Dave Sitek)
My Monster (with Johnny Marr)
Best Day Ever (with Sia and Nick Valensi)
Gravity (with Charli XCX)
When I Gave Up On You
Love Level
Too Much
Fragments

The March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews

Bob Dylan announces new album, Triplicate

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Bob Dylan has announced details of a new album, Triplicate. Spread across three discs, each disc runs in a thematically-arranged 10-song sequence of American Songbook standards. Triplicate 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 Edi...

Bob Dylan has announced details of a new album, Triplicate.

Spread across three discs, each disc runs in a thematically-arranged 10-song sequence of American Songbook standards.

Triplicate 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 album follows 2015’s Shadows In The Night and 2016’s Fallen Angels, which similarly featured Dylan and his band recording Songbook standards.

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 March 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The 101 Weirdest Albums Of All Time. Elsewhere in the issue, Ryan Adams tells us about his new album, Greg Lake (in one of his last interviews) remembers Emerson Lake & Palmer, and our free CD collects great new tracks from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Duke Garwood, The Necks and more. The issue also features Grandaddy’s Jason Lytle on his best recorded work. Plus Michael Chapman, Buzzcocks, Rick Parfitt, Paul Weller & Robert Wyatt, John Waters, St Paul & The Broken Bones, Tinariwen, Dirty Projectors, Cream, Lift To Experience, New Order and more, plus 131 reviews