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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...

Next year, David Gilmour turns 70. From his seat in Astoria’s studio, he admits he’s not yet given much thought to how he’ll mark the occasion – “Maybe we’ll have 20 or 30 people round for a bevy, I don’t know,” he shrugs. “Mortality is something I think a lot about and always have,” he continues. “It was frightening when I was young. At my age now, I’m no longer fussed about it. It’s lost its fear for me, pretty much.” Of course, Gilmour has more immediate business to attend to. “I finished this album yesterday,” he says with a smile. “And I’ve got another record on the go. Rattle That Lock came out of a font of stuff so I don’t think it’ll be that long before another one comes out. Maybe at the end of the tour I’ll just want to collapse and feel like an old man again. But I’ve got the best part of another album stewing away.”

Considering there were six years between Gilmour’s first two solo albums, 22 between the second and third and nine between On An Island and Rattle That Lock, this feels like momentous news. “These songs have been on the go for the last few years,” he explains. “There are one or two really old ones. One is probably 20 years old. It’s still trying to fight its way to the top of the pile. It will one day. We will see how good they get to be in a couple of years time. As for Rattle That Lock, I don’t want to overplay things, but I think it’s the best thing I’ve done. Probably ever. It’s very easy to be deluded, but I think it’s very good.”

For the time being, Gilmour admits his next assignment will be planning his September tour. He dusted down 1972’s “Wot’s… Uh The Deal” for the On An Island tour, so can we assume he’ll go rummaging through the archives to see if there’s any more rarities that he can dust down for this tour? “I might completely rearrange one or two old songs,” he admits. “We shall see.”

Is there a song that always reminds you of Syd?

“‘Shine On You Crazy Diamond’ is about Syd,” he says. “Every time that I’ve sung that song, I’ve thought about Syd. You have to think about what you’re singing, you can’t just troll the words out. You have to work harder if someone else has written them – which I’ve grown skilled at, having spent so much of my time singing Roger’s words.”

Talking of Roger, is there a song that reminds you of him?

“‘Money’. I’m not talking about any connection to the lyric. Just the quirky 7/8 time reminds me of Roger. It’s not a song I would have written. It points itself at Roger, rather.”

Now Pink Floyd is officially over, what part of it do you miss the most?

“I was taking earlier to you about the early moments,” he says quietly, running a hand through his tight crop of white hair. “We were not exactly equals, because things aren’t ever quite equal. But in terms of the band dynamic during that era, there were moments where magic happened. I suppose you could say I miss those. But there’s not much about it that I have disliked or haven’t enjoyed. At the same time, there’s not much of it that I miss. It was 99% a great experience, and we wouldn’t want to talk about the other 1%. That’s been done.”

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

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

Watch Peter Gabriel’s new video for “Solsbury Hill”

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Peter Gabriel has marked the 40th anniversary of the release of his first solo album with a new video of "Solsbury Hill". The video is a montage of live performances of the song, including footage from Rockpalast (1978), Live in Athens (1987), Secret World Live (1993), Growing Up Live (2003), New B...

Cream – Fresh Cream Deluxe

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In 1966, Cream were a blues wolf in jazz clothing. An outfit with heavy individual reputations in their former bands (Eric Clapton with the Yardbirds and the Bluesbreakers; Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce with Graham Bond) their preparations for greatness took place under the radar. Prior to their low-k...

In 1966, Cream were a blues wolf in jazz clothing. An outfit with heavy individual reputations in their former bands (Eric Clapton with the Yardbirds and the Bluesbreakers; Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce with Graham Bond) their preparations for greatness took place under the radar. Prior to their low-key debut at the Windsor Festival, they rehearsed in a South London scout hut. “This is barely a third of the equipment,” they told Melody Maker’s already deafened correspondent.

On record, likewise, there was as yet not much to suggest the freeform heaviosity that the band would develop over the next three years. Their debut single “Wrapping Paper” (a composition by Bruce and lyricist Pete Brown) gave little clue that it was the work of musicians with revered chops. Instead, this was an interesting period curio, a McCartney-style jazz pastiche, in which the band assumed the persona of a barbershop quartet remembering an idyllic summer with a lost love. Mild subversion came from the title (for “wrapping” substitute “rolling”) which suggested this reverie had perhaps been prompted by smoking a joint.

In a short interview for BBC Radio’s Saturday Club, included in this set, host Brian Matthew suggests to a young Eric Clapton that this isn’t the single people have been expecting from them. “We wanted to surprise them,” says Clapton. “We wanted to show them we were more than just a blues band.”

Certainly that was what he was hoping. When Cream first met the press, they were anxious to suggest they were into something new – not blues, not jazz. Clapton, whose talk was of Dada and taxidermied animals, seemed keenest of all to break with his past, and his reputation as a blues hotshot. He wanted to buy a stuffed bear for the band to have onstage with them, and have made a top hat which incorporated a bird cage.

Cream’s 1966 debut Fresh Cream, basically a 50/50 split between their own songs and blues covers, shows how they succeeded and failed in these ambitions. With their airman’s goggles and Davy Crockett hats, Cream were clearly not interested in reverently polishing blues antiques with John Mayall. Their own songs (say, Bruce’s “NSU” or Baker’s “Sweet Wine” – like “Sleepy Time Time” written with Bruce’s wife Janet Godfrey) promoted something a bit more exciting. “I Feel Free” wasn’t a bad way of putting it.

The songs are all about playing in a band and relaxing, the joy of being young, and they walk it like they talk it, being jumping-off points for wonderful spur-of-the moment improvisations. Nonetheless, the band didn’t have an oversupply of this stuff, and so – possibly against his inclinations – Clapton’s blues portfolio (covers of Willie Dixon’s “Spoonful” and Robert Johnson’s “Four Until Late”; Muddy Waters’ “Rollin’ And Tumblin’” and “I’m So Glad” by Skip James) was opened to fill out their repertoire.

Night after night on a circuit where they filled bookings intended for Graham Bond, Cream offered a set which extended and departed from its raw materials. This, with its discs of mono and stereo mixes, contemporary singles, and a third with outtakes, alternates and radio sessions does much the same. It’s a thorough document, but also by its nature helps illustrate how from the off, the band could never quite find the format (single, album, double album) to demonstrate their uniquely exploratory and contradictory nature (blues/psych; pop/counterculture; composed/improvised) and show their full powers.

Still, as primitive, and occasionally bloody awful as is the original stereo mix (especially on headphones, where it makes you feel like you’ve got flu), the dissonance between harmony vocals or guitar solo (left channel) and full band (right) found the band and engineer John Timperley creating a fabulously savage juxtaposition, with something like the power of a live performance.

It’s a mighty thing. On “Sleepy Time Time” and “Spoonful” you can hear the roots of Sabbath and Zeppelin’s hammer swing, the amps humming in the room. Even during their cover of “Rollin’ And Tumblin’”, where Jack Bruce sounds more Peter Sellers than Muddy Waters, his unfortunate minstrel show is rescued by the ferocious performance.

Clapton’s blues chops gifted the group Skip James’ “I’m So Glad” and the riffs for “Toad”, otherwise a (admittedly very good) three-minute drum solo for Ginger Baker. If it doesn’t sound especially appetizing in principle, it does however give a good idea what Cream’s airman’s uniforms might have been about. The origins of their music was in the earth, but their transformative power was in revealing how it might take flight.

EXTRAS 6/10: The third disc of extra material isn’t quite the Early Floyd-like trove you might hope for on a deluxe project like this. There’s clearly been no discovery of the band’s October 21st ’66 session, and the third disc otherwise stripmines 2003’s The BBC Sessions for contemporary material, with the odd previously unavailable track added. Sometimes perversely, it must be said. It’s interesting that they did “Sitting On Top Of The World” on November 28th ’66 but wouldn’t record it until Wheels Of Fire – but it’s excluded here. Otherwise, the new mixes are welcome, and the (few) bonus tracks like “The Coffee Song” and “Beauty Queen” good to have. The collation of EP material in one place is good housekeeping, if not exactly incentivizing.

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

Beatles vinyl albums on sale in newsagents

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The Beatles albums are to be sold through newsagents. Publishers De Agostini have launched The Beatles Vinyl Collection, a 23-part series of magazines that all come with a copy of a Beatles album on 180-gram vinyl. Alongside the band's studio albums, the series will also include the Anthology sequ...

The Beatles albums are to be sold through newsagents.

Publishers De Agostini have launched The Beatles Vinyl Collection, a 23-part series of magazines that all come with a copy of a Beatles album on 180-gram vinyl.

Alongside the band’s studio albums, the series will also include the Anthology sequence, the ‘red’ and ‘blue’ compilations, the live at the BBC albums and Past Masters.

Issue one retails for an introductory price of £9.99 and includes a vinyl copy of Abbey Road, a binder for the 23 folders, one poster representing the 23 original album covers of the collection.

From issue 2, all issues with single albums will cost £16.99 with double and triple albums retailing for £24.99. The Beatles Vinyl Collection will be published fortnightly.

The albums are also available to buy online by clicking here.

The Beatles Vinyl Collection:

ABBEY ROAD
SGT. PEPPER’S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND
HELP!
THE BEATLES
RUBBER SOUL
MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR
YELLOW SUBMARINE
BEATLES FOR SALE
LOVE
A HARD DAY’S NIGHT
1962 – 1966
WITH THE BEATLES
ANTHOLOGY 1
REVOLVER
ANTHOLOGY 2
LIVE AT THE BBC
PLEASE PLEASE ME
ON AIR – LIVE AT THE BBC VOLUME 2
LET IT BE
1
ANTHOLOGY 3
1967 – 1970
PAST MASTERS

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 new Thurston Moore song, “Cease Fire”

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Thurston Moore has released a new song, "Cease Fire". The track is available as a free download through Moore's website. “Guns are designed to kill and we, as non-violent human beings, are against the killing of any person or animal," says Moore in a statement on his site. "The song is also abou...

Thurston Moore has released a new song, “Cease Fire“.

The track is available as a free download through Moore’s website.

“Guns are designed to kill and we, as non-violent human beings, are against the killing of any person or animal,” says Moore in a statement on his site. “The song is also about the power of love, in all its freedom of choice. A power that no gun can extinguish as love will rule always. Melt down your guns and kiss your neighbor.”

The Thurston Moore Group’s new album, Rock’n’Roll Consciousness, is due in spring. Speaking to Uncut for our Album Preview, Moore said, “The title came to me while I was teaching at the Jack Kerouac School for Disembodied Poetics, a summer writing workshop at Neuropa University. It got me in tune with ideas of art as basic positive activism in the face of oppression. So a lot of talk about the raising of consciousness, and I started thinking of what I really love about rock’n’roll and making noise.”

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 Ninth Uncut Playlist Of 2017

Yep, questionable thanks to our far-flung Uncut correspondent Jon Dale, who hooked us up with the self-explanatory “In The Air Tonight Drum Fill For 1 hour 10 Minutes At 99.9%, 100%, And 100.1% Speed”. Quite an interesting endurance project, in some ways reminiscent of a brutal minimalist techno...

Yep, questionable thanks to our far-flung Uncut correspondent Jon Dale, who hooked us up with the self-explanatory “In The Air Tonight Drum Fill For 1 hour 10 Minutes At 99.9%, 100%, And 100.1% Speed”. Quite an interesting endurance project, in some ways reminiscent of a brutal minimalist techno record by, say, Surgeon. Not sure I’ll ever make the full 70 minute stretch, though.

Maybe more edifying, I’m thrilled that music from Alice Coltrane’s ashram meditation tapes are finally getting a formal reissue; some of my favourite New Age music, and a critical consolation these past few months. They won’t make the world go away, exactly, but they might just put it on ice for a few minutes…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

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

2 Bill MacKay – Esker (Drag City)

3 Will Stratton – Rosewood Almanac (Bella Union)

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

5 Father John Misty – Pure Comedy (Bella Union)

6 Lloyd McNeill Quartet – Washington Suite (Soul Jazz)

7 DD Horns – DD Horns (Bandcamp)

8 Anthony Pateras – Blood Stretched Out (Immediata)

9 Magnetic Fields – 50 Song Memoir (Nonesuch)

10 Karen Elson – Double Roses (1965 Records)

11 Bargou 08 – Targ (Glitterbeat)

12 The Cairo Gang – Untouchable (God?/Drag City)

13 Resound – Black History (Spacebomb)

14 La Mambanegra – El Callegüeso y su Mala Maña (Movimientos)

15 At The Drive-In – Incurably Innocent (Rise)

16 Chris Smith – Blossom (Unsigned)

17 Arto Lindsay – Cuidado Madame (Northern Spy)

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

19 The Necks – Unfold (Ideologic Organ)

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

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

22 Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society – Magnetoception (Eremite)

23 Joseph Prein  – In The Air Tonight Drum Fill For 1 hour 10 Minutes At 99.9%, 100%, And 100.1% Speed (Soundcloud)

Exclusive! Hear a previously unreleased Fleetwood Mac song, “Where We Belong”

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With Fleetwood Mac's 1987 album Tango In The Night receiving the deluxe reissue treatment soon, we're delighted to host one of the rarities included in this new edition. Christine McVie's previously unreleased song, "Where We Belong", was recorded during rehearsal sessions for the album at Record O...

With Fleetwood Mac‘s 1987 album Tango In The Night receiving the deluxe reissue treatment soon, we’re delighted to host one of the rarities included in this new edition.

Christine McVie‘s previously unreleased song, “Where We Belong“, was recorded during rehearsal sessions for the album at Record One in Sherman Oaks, California.

You can hear the song below.

Tango In The Night: Deluxe Edition expands on the original with a selection of rare and unreleased recordings, newly remastered sound plus several music videos. The album will be released on March 10 on Warner Bros. Records on these three physical formats, as well as digitally:

Deluxe: Three CDs, DVD and LP. The original album with remastered sound on CD and 180-gram vinyl, alongside rare and unreleased recordings, 12” remixes, a DVD with music videos and a high-resolution version of the album.

Expanded: Two CDs. The original album with remastered sound, plus rare and unreleased recordings.

Remastered: One CD. The original album with remastered sound.

The tracklisting for the Deluxe edition is:

Disc One: Original Album – 2017 Remaster
‘Big Love’
‘Seven Wonders’
‘Everywhere’
‘Caroline’
‘Tango In The Night’
‘Mystified’
‘Little Lies’
‘Family Man’
‘Welcome To The Room… Sara’
‘Isn’t It Midnight’
‘When I See You Again’
‘You And I, Part II’

Disc Two: B-Sides, Outtakes, Sessions
‘Down Endless Street’
‘Special Kind Of Love’ (Demo)*
‘Seven Wonders’ (Early Version)*
‘Tango In The Night’ (Demo)*
‘Mystified’ (Alternate Version)*
‘Book Of Miracles’ (Instrumental)
‘Where We Belong’ (Demo)*
‘Ricky’
‘Juliet’ (Run-Through)*
‘Isn’t It Midnight’ (Alternate Mix)*
‘Ooh My Love’ (Demo)*
‘Mystified’ (Instrumental Demo)*
‘You And I, Part I & II’ (Full Version)*

*Previously unissued.

Disc Three: The 12” Mixes
‘Big Love’ (Extended Remix)
‘Big Love’ (House On The Hill Dub)
‘Big Love’ (Piano Dub)
‘Big Love’ (Remix/Edit)
‘Seven Wonders’ (Extended Version)
‘Seven Wonders’ (Dub)
‘Little Lies’ (Extended Version)
‘Little Lies’ (Dub)
‘Family Man’ (Extended Vocal Remix)
‘Family Man’ (I’m A Jazz Man Dub)
‘Family Man’ (Extended Guitar Version)
‘Family Party’ (Bonus Beats)
‘Everywhere’ (12” Version)
‘Everywhere’ (Dub)

Disc Four: The Videos (DVD)
‘Big Love’
‘Seven Wonders’
‘Little Lies’
‘Family Man’
‘Everywhere’

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

Return To Waterloo

Ray Davies has turned his hand to most art forms during his career, but his sole foray into filmmaking, Return To Waterloo, has barely seen since it was broadcast on Channel 4 one Sunday evening in November 1984. Conceived three years earlier though, it is clever and acerbic piece – largely dialog...

Ray Davies has turned his hand to most art forms during his career, but his sole foray into filmmaking, Return To Waterloo, has barely seen since it was broadcast on Channel 4 one Sunday evening in November 1984. Conceived three years earlier though, it is clever and acerbic piece – largely dialogue free, its narrative comes delivered in song – with a healthy contempt for the mid-1980s social and political landscape. A soundtrack album even followed in 1985. Although billed as a Ray Davies solo album, it featuring every member of The Kinks except Dave and including three songs from the band’s 1984’s Word Of Mouth album. Both artefacts have since been largely forgotten, but this DVD release reveals it as a significantly overlooked part of Davies’ canon; perhaps even his most fully realised work of the decade.

It stars Ken Colley as The Traveller, a commuter who contemplates past, present and future on the 8.52 from Guildford to Waterloo. Poker-faced, sad and sinister, The Traveller bears an unnerving resemblance to the police’s identikit profile of the “Surrey rapist”, which glares out from the cover of a newspaper at Guildford station. Does this explain the Traveller’s fascination with every young woman he sees on the train? Is he genuinely dangerous or simply another middle-aged fantasist? Or is he pining for his missing daughter?

The action is confined almost entirely to the train, although there are flashbacks to Colley’s youth, his house in Surrey, Waterloo station and other locations on the line to London. As the train passes through the suburbs, we meet some of the other passengers, who collectively represent the different ideologies and generations of British society. There are self-satisfied fellow businessmen, a trio of contemptuous young punks led by Tim Roth and Sallie-Anne Field, two old gossips (one being Ethel from Eastenders) and a pair of horrified veteran soldiers, distraught at perceived national decline. Davies even keeps a small part for himself, as a busker at Waterloo underground.

These ciphers really spring to life when they give voice to Davies’s ideas in singalongs that are both dark and comic. Davies displays a sure touch with these inherently ridiculous scenes by playing them so straight you have to take them seriously. In one, a young businessman is serenaded by two sharp-suited old hands who sit either side and promise him a ride “on the ladder of success” to an electro-disco soundtrack. Later, agony aunt Claire Rayner pops up to narrate the lyrics of “Lonely Hearts”, a plaintive yet cynical ballad. As the train nears Waterloo, the battle between the generations is represented by an actual fight on the train against the nihilistic backdrop of “Not Far Away”, delivered in part-snarl, part-drawl by Tim Roth, like Brett Anderson doing A Clockwork Orange. The songs are uniformly fine – particularly the Dylan-esque, nation-skewering finale “Expectations” – but not so good or so bad that they detract from the film’s narrative.

The influence of Dennis Potter is palpable – but you can also spot touches of Julien Temple and Alan Clarke, particularly in the concept of the yuppie rapist, a character who allows Davies to pick over his favourite ground – the hypocrisy, lies and corruption beneath the pressed suits of the English establishment. It’s a theme that never seems to date and which worked as well in the Thatcherite 80s as it does today in the aftermath of Brexit. In The Traveller’s home life, there are also obvious allusions to Davies’ personal circumstances; at the time, he was in the process of separating from Chrissie Hynde, with whom he had a daughter.

Cinematographer Roger Deakins – who later worked with the Coen Brothers and Sam Mendes – works here with a greyed-out palate that evokes the drabness of the British suburban experience. Davies, meanwhile, aquits himself well: although only 60 minutes, Return To Waterloo never feels slight. It’s exceptionally well executed for a first-time writer-director, and brilliantly visualises – even deepens – the over-arching conceptual content of Davies’s career-long work as a songwriter, story-teller and social commentator.
EXTRAS: None.

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

Reviewed, Kelly Reichardt’s Certain Women

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In her 2010 film, Meek’s Cutoff, the director Kelly Reichardt tracked a small band of settlers travelling across the Oregon High Desert in the 19th century. Among other qualities, Reichardt shot landscape incredibly well – the browns and ochres of the scorched Oregon trail, the bleached out sky....

In her 2010 film, Meek’s Cutoff, the director Kelly Reichardt tracked a small band of settlers travelling across the Oregon High Desert in the 19th century. Among other qualities, Reichardt shot landscape incredibly well – the browns and ochres of the scorched Oregon trail, the bleached out sky.

It is a skill she has repeatedly demonstrated with great success. 2006’s Old Joy found two old friends Kurt (Will Oldham) and Mark (Daniel London) on a camping trip in the Oregon wilderness, while in 2008’s Wendy And Lucy, a young woman played by Michelle Williams drifted through Oregon and Washington on her way to Alaska. The opening shot of Certain Women watches a train moving slowly through the snowy Montana countryside and once again demonstrates Reichardt’s awareness of powerful rural surroundings.

Certain Women is adapted from three loosely interwoven stories by Maile Meloy, the older sister of The Decemberists’ Colin Meloy. These are melancholic vingnettes that unfold under Montana’s flinty, unforgiving skies.

In the first, Laura Dern plays Laura, a lawyer whose client (Jared Harris), a disabled construction worker, takes the law into his own hands. In the second, Ryan (James Le Gros) and his wife Gina (Michelle Williams, a Reichardt regular) weather a difficult time in their marriage while trying to build a new home – literally – in the wide open spaces of Montana. In the final section, a Native American rancher named Jamie (Lily Gladstone), who is drawn to Beth (Kristen Stewart), her teacher at an adult education class.

In each of these stories, Reichardt illustrates how these women have become world-weary after years of misogyny and frustration. These are all understated pieces, but like the performances they are intensely felt. Gladstone and Stewart, in particular, deliver exemplary work.

Certain Women is released in the UK on March 3

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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

Free Fire

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Across his brief but busy career so far, Ben Wheatley has established himself as one of Britain’s most exciting filmmakers. His peerless early run of films – Down Terrace, Kill List, Sightseers – spun through genres ranging from gangster to horror to black comedy, building towards his masterly...

Across his brief but busy career so far, Ben Wheatley has established himself as one of Britain’s most exciting filmmakers. His peerless early run of films – Down Terrace, Kill List, Sightseers – spun through genres ranging from gangster to horror to black comedy, building towards his masterly Civil War psychotropic horror, A Field In England.

Since then, Wheatley has enjoyed a more elevated profile. He directed Peter Capaldi’s first two episodes as Doctor Who and steered an A-list cast including Tom Hiddleston through a baroque adaptation of JG Ballard’s High-Rise.

But the closer Wheatley moves into the mainstream, the less unique his films feel. Ostensibly, Free Fire is most accessible film, but it contains few of the flourishes that distinguished his earlier work.

Set during 1978, the film takes place over one night in a warehouse in Boston (in fact, Wheatley’s home town of Brighton, cunningly disguised). There, an arms deal is underway involving an unlikely group of ne’er-do-wells (Cillian Murphy, Michael Smiley, Sharlto Copley, Armie Hammer, Brie Larson among them). After a bad-tempered start, things go wrong at speed and a bloody shoot out develops.

Free Fire feels like an extended set-piece; it would work better as a fast and thrilling 10 minute sequence in a Walter Hill film, for instance. To Wheatley’s credit, the first half hour – before the bullets start flying, that is – are well handled. Wheatley has always been good at building tension and here he allows it to simmer as the various parties goad one another. But it lacks the idiosyncratic qualities of, say, Tarantino (an obvious antecedent) or Wheatley’s earlier films. The fire fight is handled with a kind of exhilarating glee, but it’s all very slight. Perhaps one to mark down as a palette cleanser between bigger projects as opposed to a major work from an increasingly prolific filmmaker.

Free Fire opens in the UK on March 31

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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 Brett Anderson’s unreleased solo track, “Forest Lullaby”

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Brett Anderson has unveiled the previously unreleased solo track, "Forest Lullaby", which you can hear below. The song is taken from Anderson's upcoming compilation, Collected Solo Work. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K9-_lxnzUy4&feature=youtu.be “These are the four solo albums I made between ...

Brett Anderson has unveiled the previously unreleased solo track, “Forest Lullaby“, which you can hear below.

The song is taken from Anderson’s upcoming compilation, Collected Solo Work.

“These are the four solo albums I made between 2007 and 2011,” says Anderson. “It was an exciting time for me as an artist; I had fallen out of love with being in bands and I wanted to try to explore things and test myself and grow beyond those parameters. I think you can see the development in the work; from the clumsy fumblings of the debut through to the self-conscious minimalism of Wilderness and finally to the apogee of Slow Attack and the growl and gnarl of Black Rainbows, there is hopefully a sense that I was learning through my mistakes and plotting points on a creative path. It was lonely and hard sometimes but I’m proud that I had the courage to wander somewhere different.”

“The vital lessons I learnt, both in art and in life, fed directly into where I currently find myself and into my journey with Suede.”

The box set of Collected Solo Work comes in a variety of formats include a five CD and DVD collection featuring live material, as well as across four vinyl LPS. It will be released on March 17, 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

New John Martyn anthology to feature demos, rarities and unreleased songs

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A new anthology of John Martyn's songs has been announced. The 35-track, double CD set called Head And Heart – The Acoustic John Martyn will be released on April 28, 2017. The set comprises material from his 1967 debut London Conversation through to a version of "Patterns In The Rain", recorded...

A new anthology of John Martyn‘s songs has been announced.

The 35-track, double CD set called Head And Heart – The Acoustic John Martyn will be released on April 28, 2017.

The set comprises material from his 1967 debut London Conversation through to a version of “Patterns In The Rain“, recorded live at Island Records 25th birthday party in 1987.

In addition, the album also features four previously unreleased recordings, including three demo versions of songs recorded at the sessions for 1968’s The Tumbler and the long lost 1971 performance of “Bless The Weather” for The Old Grey Whistle Test.

The set included liner notes by Uncut contributor and author of the Sandy Denny biography, I’ve Always Kept A Unicorn, Mick Houghton.

The tracklisting for Head And Heart is:

Fairy Tale Lullaby – from London Conversation
London Conversation – from London Conversation
Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright – from London Conversation
She Moved Through The Fair – from London Conversation
Goin’ Down To Memphis – demo from The Tumbler session *
A Day At The Sea – demo from The Tumbler session *
Seven Black Roses – demo from The Tumbler session *
Woodstock – from Stormbringer!
John The Baptist – demo from Stormbringer! session
Traffic Light Lady – demo from Stormbringer! session
Parcels – from The Road To Ruin with Beverley Martyn
New Day – from The Road To Ruin with Beverley Martyn
Tree Green – from The Road To Ruin with Beverley Martyn
Go Easy – from Bless The Weather
Bless The Weather – Old Grey Whistle Test performance *
Head And Heart – from Bless The Weather
Singin’ In The Rain – alternative take
In The Evening – from Ain’t No Saint

( * ) Previously Unreleased

Disc 2:
The Glory Of Love – from Ain’t No Saint
Solid Air – from Solid Air
Over The Hill – alternative take from Solid Air Deluxe Edition
May You Never – live from Solid Air Deluxe Edition
Go Down Easy – Take 3 from Island Years box set
When It’s Dark – from Solid Air Deluxe Edition
Fine Lines – from Inside Out
Ways To Cry – from Inside Out
Beverley / Make No Mistake – The Bob Harris Show, 15/10/1973
One Day Without You – John Peel session, 13/1/1975
Lay It All Down – from Sunday’s Child
My Baby Girl – John Peel session, 13/1/1975
All For The Love Of You – from Ain’t No Saint
Working It Out – from Ain’t No Saint
Spencer The Rover – John Peel Session, 13/1/1975
Certain Surprise / Couldn’t Love You More – John Peel session, 4/2/1977
Patterns In The Rain – live at Island Records Birthday Party, 4/7/1987

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… The History Of Rock 1985

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1985: a year of The Smiths and REM, Kate Bush and the Jesus & Mary Chain, of Dexys’ Don’t Stand Me Down and the small matter of Live Aid. This week, we’re proud to present our new edition of The History Of Rock, dedicated to 1985: it’s on sale in the UK on Thursday, but you can visit our...

1985: a year of The Smiths and REM, Kate Bush and the Jesus & Mary Chain, of Dexys’ Don’t Stand Me Down and the small matter of Live Aid. This week, we’re proud to present our new edition of The History Of Rock, dedicated to 1985: it’s on sale in the UK on Thursday, but you can visit our History Of Rock online shop to order a copy of 1985 – and, indeed, all the preceding volumes.

Here, anyhow, is John Robinson to reveal the details of this excellent volume. Tom Waits, as you’ll see, is our cover star…

“Tom Petty releases a song called ‘Spike’ in 1985, and in it he makes an observation that holds up pretty well for the entire year: ‘The future ain’t what it used to be.’ As ever with Petty, it’s a smart remark you can take a couple of ways, but whichever way you choose to take it, it tells you something about change He might mean to convey a disappointment with the world’s prospects. He might simply be expressing a rejection of glossy modernity in music, and advocating a more traditional mode.

“1985 has supporters of both these positions. Enduring performers like Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Robert Plant and Tom Waits display the same restless creativity deep into their careers as they did at the start – they’re the same, but always different.

“Younger blood is also much in evidence. Husker Du, The Jesus and Mary Chain, Run DMC, The Pogues, The Cure and The Cult are among those moving the musical agenda on. So determined is Kevin Rowland from Dexys to move things on, he runs the risk of leaving his fans and the record business behind.

“Then there are those who see their work as a shoulder to a larger wheel. Billy Bragg is working with the British Labour Party. Paul Weller remains alert and engaged. Then, when Bob Geldof announces Live Aid in June, the July event motivates the rock world to stir itself across its genres and generations to help alleviate the suffering caused by the Ethiopian famine.

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

“In the pages of this 21st edition, dedicated to 1985, you will find verbatim articles from frontline staffers, filed from the thick of the action, wherever it may be. On the bus with Neil Young, learning about David Crosby’s drug problems. Hearing how Mick Jagger fished a paparazzo out from under a hedge, and gave him a cup of tea. At an art gallery with Joni Mitchell, hearing how life has treated Jack Nicholson.

“’It’s been pretty fucking good,’ Jack says. It’s the kind of year to make you look back and agree.”

Watch Ryan Adams cover Bruce Springsteen’s “Streets Of Philadelphia”

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Ryan Adams has covered Bruce Springsteen's song "Streets Of Philadelphia" for BBC Radio 6 Music. The timing of the release of Adams’ cover is particularly apt, given that the 89th Academy Awards took place in LA on Sunday. The cover was recently recorded as part of BBC Radio 6 Music’s upcoming...

Ryan Adams has covered Bruce Springsteen‘s song “Streets Of Philadelphia” for BBC Radio 6 Music.

The timing of the release of Adams’ cover is particularly apt, given that the 89th Academy Awards took place in LA on Sunday.

The cover was recently recorded as part of BBC Radio 6 Music’s upcoming celebration of the year 1994 – which will be broadcast on Friday (March 3) – with Adams taking on Springsteen’s track from the Oscar-winning film Philadelphia, which although released in 1993 won the Oscar for Best Original Song at the 1994 ceremony.

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

Dirty Projectors – Dirty Projectors

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It’s been five years since Swing Lo Magellan, David Longstreth’s experiment in (relative) orthodoxy following a decade as a post-genre polymath, favouring restless conceptual manoeuvres over easy notions of authenticity. Following six albums featuring choral music, half-recalled Black Flag cover...

It’s been five years since Swing Lo Magellan, David Longstreth’s experiment in (relative) orthodoxy following a decade as a post-genre polymath, favouring restless conceptual manoeuvres over easy notions of authenticity. Following six albums featuring choral music, half-recalled Black Flag covers, agitated Afro-pop and Bjork collaborations, Swing Lo Magellan came billed simply as “an album of songs”, though in the end it was a little more complicated than that. With Longstreth, things are seldom as they seem.

On the follow-up, he toys with another established singer-songwriter trope. The blurb accompanying the eighth Dirty Projectors LP blares “THIS IS A BREAK-UP ALBUM”, referencing Longstreth’s split with former bandmate Amber Coffman. Yet this is no textbook exercise in backwoods blues, acoustic miserabilism and long shadows. He opts instead to express romantic pain through the medium of mainstream R&B, which should come as no great surprise. Longstreth recently worked with Kanye West and Rihanna, and co-wrote and co-produced chunks of Solange’s A Seat At The Table. Their influence is clear. Among the co-writers and collaborators here are Kanye’s “creative director” Elon Rutberg and Solange herself, who has a hand crafting the lovely, lilting pop skank of “Cool Your Heart”. Timbaland’s right-hand man, Jimmy Douglass, mixed the record. Battles’ Tyondai Braxton is another key cohort.

Some of Longstreth’s more obvious peers have been this way before. At times, Dirty Projectors recalls the polyphonic adventurism of Bon Iver’s 22, A Million and Sufjan Stevens’ The Age Of Adz. Like those records, it takes conventional songs and plants bombs beneath them, but Longstreth’s immersion is more brazen. “Winner Take Nothing” resembles Drake. “Cool Your Heart”, with its echoes of Beyoncé’s “Hold Up”, is tailor-made for daytime radio.

The suspicion inevitably lingers that Longstreth is playing another intellectual game, trying 808s and heartbreak on for size. The disarming opener, “Keep Your Name”, provides evidence both for and against. A woozy electro-ballad, beginning “I don’t know why you abandoned me”, it’s both painfully heartfelt yet entirely mannered. He lays out his sorrow and anger in a chocolatey R&B croon before breaking into a choppy rap which references Naomi Klein and Gene Simmons. And he hasn’t lost his flair for the meta. “Keep Your Name” samples a telling line – “We don’t see eye to eye” – from Swing Lo Magellan’s “Impregnable Question”, a duet with Coffman.

This is smart-arsed sadness, and we’re never quite sure whether Longstreth is speaking his heart or hedging his bets, whether he wants to confess or impress. Occasionally he fails to bridge the gap. “Ascent Through Clouds” hymns rebirth, Longstreth’s heavily treated falsetto set against a sweet drizzle of orchestration, which halfway through builds to a discordant crescendo, like a Millennial “A Day In The Life”. The message gets lost, however, somewhere in the busy cleverness of the medium.

As a rule, the punchier songs detail love’s end game. “Death Spiral” is a crisp, funky rake through a relationship’s final throes, Longstreth’s falsetto riding satisfyingly crunchy beats. “Work Together” is frantically glitchy R&B, a maze of sampled and treated voices, buffeted analogue beats, robotic phrases, piano glissandos and sharp strings. It’s a musical thrill ride, all bumps and jerks, nothing comfortable about it, which is presumably the point.

The seven-minute “Up In Hudson”, on the other hand, winds back to the beginning of the affair. It’s a New York love story, forensically detailed, and Longstreth gives it an appropriately warm setting; a soft breeze of ’70s soul horns, a dollop of doo-wop backing vocals. The second half morphs into a trippy guitar reverie, all feedback, drone and Indian rhythm, while “Little Bubble” glides into sorrow with a sighing string refrain and decaying organ notes. Longstreth wakes up alone – “how did you sleep, what did you dream of?” – and contemplates life outside the self-contained bubble of coupledom. It’s a beautiful, tender ballad, undeniably heartfelt.

As the album progresses, some form of resolution arrives. “I See You” ends on a note of “forgiveness and reconciliation”, the projected perfection of the lover fading away, and “in its place I see you”. Over thick waves of organ and heavy drums, Longstreth unites the romantic and the aesthetic: “I believe that the love we made is the art,” he sings. If art is love, and love is art, then this hyper-stylised, characteristically idiosyncratic break-up album, in the end makes a perfect kind of sense.

Q&A
DAVID LONGSTRETH
It’s been five years since Swing Lo Magellan. Why so long?

It came together slowly, and that was about internalizing the time I spent with Kanye, and Rihanna, and in the Solange camp. There are moments when the biggest stuff out there is also the most daring and the most exciting, and it’s just beautiful, the music that these people have been making. I didn’t know where I wanted to go next, and immersing myself in that environment I learned so much. I’ve always been creatively reckless, the thing that’s most exciting to me is to try new things. I needed that after Swing Lo. I’m really grateful.

The sound and textures are striking, but the album is built on disciplined songwriting.
There’s a tautness in the songs, but it’s layered with this level of arrangement which is pretty new. I was listening to a lot of Duke Ellington, so the arrangements are quite lush and intricate. I couldn’t have made this record without making Swing Lo and Bitte Orca, where I’m thinking about songwriting super hard.

Was writing about your breakup cathartic?
Music has been the way that I have processed life and experience, and it was a natural thing to do. It was the only thing I could do. I think it was cathartic. It’s frontloaded with the shock, horror and sadness, out-and-out despair, processing that experience, and ending up if not in a good place, then at least in a place of acceptance.
INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

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

John Mayall announces major UK tour

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John Mayall has announced a 36-date UK tour, beginning in October. Mayall - who talks about his long career in this month's Uncut - kicks off the tour on October 17 at The Hawth Theatre in Crawley. It finishes at Leas Cliff Pavilion in Folkestone on November 26. Mayall's latest album, Talk About T...

John Mayall has announced a 36-date UK tour, beginning in October.

Mayall – who talks about his long career in this month’s Uncut – kicks off the tour on October 17 at The Hawth Theatre in Crawley. It finishes at Leas Cliff Pavilion in Folkestone on November 26.

Mayall’s latest album, Talk About That, is on sale now.

You can find more information about the tour by clicking here.

October
17th – Crawley, The Hawth
18th – Llandudno, Venue Cymru
19th – Stoke-on-Trent, Victoria Hall
20th – Liverpool, Philharmonic Hall
21st – Birmingham, Town Hall
22nd – Tunbridge Wells, Assembly Hall Theatre
24th – Sheffield, City Hall
25th – Norwich, Theatre Royal
26th – Salisbury, City Hall
27th – Truro Hall, Cornwall
28th – Frome, Cheese and Grain
29th – Portsmouth, Kings Theatre
31st – York, Grand Opera House

November
1st – Southport, Theatre
2nd – London, Cadogan Hall
3rd – London, Cadogan Hall
4th – Cambridge, Corn Exchange
5th – Bristol, Colston Hall
7th – Ipswich, Regent Theatre
8th – Oxford, New Theatre
9th – Southend, Cliffs Pavilion
10th – Guildford, G Live
11th – Canterbury, Marlowe Theatre
12th – Blackpool, Grand Theatre
14th – Gateshead, The Sage
15th – Halifax, Victoria Theatre
16th – High Wycombe, Swan Theatre
17th – Basingstoke, The Anvil
18th – Dartford, The Orchard
19th – Torquay, Princess Theatre
21st – Manchester, Bridgewater Hall
22nd – Buxton, Opera House
23rd – St Albans, Arena
24th – Weston Super Mare, Playhouse Theatre
25th – Bournemouth, Pavilion Theatre
26th – Folkestone, Leas Cliff Pavilion

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

Ask Fairport Convention!

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It is a busy year for Fairport Convention. Not only do they have a new album, 50:50@50, due on March 10 and their annual Cropredy festival in August; but 2017 also marks the band's 50th anniversary. As if that wasn't enough, Simon Nicol and Dave Pegg will be answering your questions as part of our r...

It is a busy year for Fairport Convention. Not only do they have a new album, 50:50@50, due on March 10 and their annual Cropredy festival in August; but 2017 also marks the band’s 50th anniversary. As if that wasn’t enough, Simon Nicol and Dave Pegg will be answering your questions as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’d like us to ask the folk legends?

How did Robert Plant come to appear on 50:50@50?
Can they share with us a favourite memory of Sandy Denny?
What’s life like today in Fairport Convention?

Send up your questions by noon, Wednesday, March 8 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

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

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 Eighth Uncut Playlist Of 2017

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For some reason, this week’s list seems intensely skewed towards Chicago music, not least because of the Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society album that I flagged up last week. A first track has emerged from that one now, along with the news that Abrams’ new European label, tak:til, w...

For some reason, this week’s list seems intensely skewed towards Chicago music, not least because of the Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society album that I flagged up last week. A first track has emerged from that one now, along with the news that Abrams’ new European label, tak:til, will also be giving a wider reissue to my favourite album of last year from 75 Dollar Bill.

Anyhow, more interconnected Chicago goodness: a solo album on Drag City from Ryley Walker’s sometime sparring partner, Bill Mackay; The Cairo Gang, Bottle Tree and a transatlantic reconfiguration of the Chicago Underground Duo; a new track from Will Oldham; Brokeback; and a reissue of maybe Califone’s best album.

Special attention, too, to the Anthony Pasquarosa/John Moloney set, that captures that devotional Bull/Higgins guitar/drums vibe in honour of Pharaoh Sanders. A terrific album – click on the link to hear a bit of it, and let me know, as ever, how it vibrates with you…

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

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

3 Charlie Watts – …Meets The Danish Radio Big Band (Impulse)

4 King Ayisoba – 1000 Can Die (Glitterbeat)

5 Piri – Voces Querem Mate (Far Out)

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

7 Joan Shelley – Joan Shelley (No Quarter)

8 Trouble Funk – Drop The Bomb (Sugar Hill)

9 The Go-Betweens – Liberty Belle & The Black Diamond Express (Beggar’s Banquet)

10 Jidenna – The Chief (Wondaland/Epic)

11 Chicago / London Underground – A Night Walking Through Mirrors (Cuneiform Records)

12 Various Artists – Running The Voodoo Down (Festival)

13 Ride – Charm Assault (Wichita)

14 Bill MacKay – Esker (Drag City)

15 Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – Treasure Map (The End Of All Music)

16 Bottle Tree – Bottle Tree (International Anthem Recording Co)

17 Penguin Cafe – The Imperfect Sea (Erased Tapes)

18 Califone – Slowness (Dead Oceans)

19 Zeitkratzer – Performs Tracks From The Albums Kraftwerk and Kraftwerk 2 (Zeitkratzer Productions)

20 The Cairo Gang – Untouchable (God?/Drag City)

21 Brokeback – Illinois River Valley Blues (Thrill Jockey)

22 Growing – Disorder (Important)