Home Blog Page 297

The Residents announce new album, The Ghost Of Hope

0
The Residents have announced details of a new studio album. The Ghost Of Hope is released on vinyl and CD on March 24. The album is described as "a historically accurate album based on train wrecks from the late 19th and early 20th Centuries." "After discovering a series of vintage news articles h...

The Residents have announced details of a new studio album.

The Ghost Of Hope is released on vinyl and CD on March 24. The album is described as “a historically accurate album based on train wrecks from the late 19th and early 20th Centuries.”

“After discovering a series of vintage news articles highlighting the dangers of train travel in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and inspired by the era’s graceful language, the group contrast that eloquence against the sheer horror of these devastating events. In their own unique style, the band has constructed a highly original series of tone poems quite unlike the music of anyone else – except, of course, The Residents. The album features guest collaborator Eric Drew Feldman – who has worked with everybody cool, so he’s already in your record collection.

“If there’s a primary metaphor within this collection it is certainly found in that humble word ‘hope.’ When powerful men of the world build political campaigns around this simple four-letter word and fail, one wonders what life might become without it. Regardless, whether it be historical and literal, symbolic and metaphorical or simply nonsense, The Residents remain mum.”

The tracklisting for The Ghost Of Hope is:

Horrors Of The Night
The Crash At Crush
Death Harvest
Shroud Of Flames
The Great Circus Train Wreck of 1918
Train vs Elephant
Killed At A Crossing

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

Brian Wilson announces additional Pet Sounds shows

0
Brian Wilson has extended his Pet Sounds 50th anniversary world tour, adding two UK festival dates and two indoor shows to his itinerary. He will now play Kendal Calling and Camp Bestival as well as London’s Hammersmith Apollo and at Sheffield City Hall. Brian will present Pet Sounds in its ent...

Brian Wilson has extended his Pet Sounds 50th anniversary world tour, adding two UK festival dates and two indoor shows to his itinerary.

He will now play Kendal Calling and Camp Bestival as well as London’s Hammersmith Apollo and at Sheffield City Hall.

Brian will present Pet Sounds in its entirety plus greatest hits for one last time, with special guests Al Jardine and Blondie Chaplin.

Brian said; “I’m really happy to be able to come back to the UK and perform Pet Sounds yet again for all our fans. The response from everyone has been amazing and that’s why we decided to come back and play Pet Sounds for one last time. We want to thanks the fans in the UK for all their support, and look forward to playing these shows this Summer. Love and Mercy, Brian.â€

The new Pet Sounds tour dates are:

July 29: Kendal Calling, Lowther Deer Park
July 30: Camp Bestival, Lulworth Castle
August 1: Hammersmith Apollo, London
August 2: Sheffield City Hall, Sheffield

Tickets for Kendall Calling and Camp Bestival are on sale now.

The London Hammersmith Apollo show and Sheffield City Hall show go on sale on Friday, February 3 at 10am from www.alt-tickets.co.uk.

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

Japandroids – Near To The Wild Heart Of Life

0
Japandroids’ rise through the ranks has coincided with the golden age of the power duo. The Vancouver band, comprising Brian King (guitar, vocals) and David Prowse (drums, vocals), have come to prominence during a post-White Stripes boom dominated by the likes of The Black Keys, Royal Blood, Shove...

Japandroids’ rise through the ranks has coincided with the golden age of the power duo. The Vancouver band, comprising Brian King (guitar, vocals) and David Prowse (drums, vocals), have come to prominence during a post-White Stripes boom dominated by the likes of The Black Keys, Royal Blood, Shovels & Rope, Drenge and Wye Oak.

Like those pairs, their popularity is rooted in the kind of exhilaratingly raw live performances which offer a corrective to the pre-set, almost-live predictability of so many contemporary rock bands. What makes Japandroids stand out from other duos, however, is the lack of an overt blues base. Essentially a standard four-piece guitar band cleverly compressed into two units, their take on classic ’70s and ’80s rock comes filtered through the stringency of punk and post-punk alternative rock.

That said, the influence of their more abrasive forebears has steadily decreased with time. Whereas on their 2009 debut, Post-Nothing, “Young Hearts Spark Fire†sounded like Dinosaur Jr colliding with Hüsker Dü – all careening melody and upstart lo-fi energy – by 2012’s follow-up, Celebration Rock, Japandroids were more streamlined. Though still anchored in the attack aesthetic of their stage shows, the songs now boasted an unashamed anthemic quality, filtering in overtly mainstream influences. “Fire’s Highway†was equal parts John Mellencamp and Fucked Up. The “Oh yeah, all right†refrain on “Evil’s Sway†nodded to Tom Petty’s “American Girlâ€. “Adrenaline Nightshift†sounded like The Replacements shot through with a dose of Thin Lizzy. The album title was no empty statement: here was a band who did not regard rock with a capital R as a dirty word.

The blend on Celebration Rock was so effective it was hard to see how it could be improved upon. It turns out that King and Prowse have reached a similar conclusion. Their third album reflects significant changes in the world of the band. Japandroids effectively downed tools following the end of the Celebration Rock tour in the autumn of 2013. The hiatus was followed by a label transfer, from Polyvinyl to ANTI-, while King moved away from Vancouver and settled into a serious relationship, necessitating a shift in working practices. In short, in the five years since their last record, they’ve taken a deep breath and surveyed their options. The result is an expansive record which fizzes with a desire to play around with the possibilities of the studio rather than the stage, shifting the parameters of their music beyond the fast and frantic.

While guitar-pop thrills aren’t exactly absent here – “Midnight To Morning†and “No Known Drink Or Drug†are particularly potent examples – when they do arrive they now come with a crisp, arena-friendly sheen. Elsewhere, a willingness to experiment leads to some surprising results. The album’s seven-minute centrepiece, “Arc Of Barâ€, is alternately vastly ambitious, deeply silly and hugely enjoyable. It starts with a skittering electro pulse and a mock-pompous brass flourish, like some big-haired ’80s synth-rock epic. Later there’s a gum-chewing chorus of sing-song female voices and a surfeit of the off-the-peg “woh-oh-oh†background vocals which are scattered across the album. All the while, King colourfully details a nefarious night time scene. It’s a tad histrionic – “For her love I would help the devil/To steal Christ right off the cross†– but its mix of brash bombast and sheer chutzpah is ultimately hard to resist, and stands as a totem for the ambitions of the whole record.

Alongside “True Love And A Free Life Of Free Will†and “I’m Sorry (For Not Finding You Sooner)â€, “Arc Of Bar†finds Japandroids staking new ground. Built over a pummelling martial tattoo and a simple, circular chord sequence, the former is the most intense, introverted song in their catalogue. The latter, meanwhile, is a brief, atmospheric interlude which borrows the guitar riff from Kim Carnes’ “Bette Davis Eyes†and features King’s distorted vocal over an array of atmospheric augmentations. Both speak of a new willingness to brood rather than burn.

The lyrics are equally reflective. You wouldn’t call Near To The Wild Heart Of Life a concept album, exactly, but its loose coalition of themes feels like a story unravelling. There’s plenty of God and devil talk, life depicted as a series of choices between good and evil. King returns consistently to the tensions between home and the road, the difficulties in making vital personal connections while living life on the run. In “True Love And A Free Life Of Free Will†he “plans to settle down/Plans to up and split.†What happens when you want both?

The brace of opening songs set the scene. The title track is a classic rock’n’roll creation story. Sent off with a kiss by the local bar girl – “Give ’em hell for us!†– like some kind of alt.rock Dick Whittington, King recounts his coming-of-age tale with a clumsy, if appealing lack of irony. “It got me all fired up to go far away,†he cries. “I left my home and all I had.†It’s a stadium-sized rabble rouser, urged on by Prowse’s thundering drum artillery. “North East South West†tracks our heroes on the next stage of their quest. Namechecking Texas and Tennessee – “America made a mess of me†– it weighs up success and escape against the siren call of home, via the kind of supercharged chorus specifically designed to cause mayhem at summer festivals.

As the album moves through its eight chapters, King’s commitment to a rooted kind of love becomes stronger, while his attachment to the itinerant life he’s chasing becomes more conflicted. The fantastic “Midnight To Morning†finds him reflecting, “so many miles, so much to loseâ€. It’s pretty much a perfect guitar song, recalling the fast, flighty urgency of the best of Celebration Rock. Musically and thematically, “No Known Drink Or Drug†nudges things further along. Over a kinetic buzz of noise and melody, King concedes that the vagaries of love trump the more reliable pleasures of intoxication.

The final track offers a reckoning of sorts. The thrilling “In A Body Like A Grave†begins with a Who-ish flourish of acoustic rhythm guitar, while King’s declamatory vocal weighs up the conflicting pressures of church, work, school, small-town ties, love and inevitable compromises: “Age is a traitor/Bit by bit/Less lust for life/More talking shit.†Against it all, he concludes, you do your best and take what you can. It’s an unflinching yet ultimately affirming climax to an album which finds wildness in unexpected places.

Q&A
BRIAN KING
After the Celebration Rock tour, you announced you needed “time to disappear into the ether for a whileâ€. How did that pan out?

When we finished touring Celebration Rock we realised we hadn’t really taken any time off the band in five or six years. It was an awesome experience, we did 500 shows all around the world, we made two albums, but physically and mentally we were so burnt out. We’ve always loved what we do, but we just needed a break to get excited about it again. We took about six months off, the first half of 2014, and after that we were dying to get together again, close the door and turn up the amps. By the late summer of 2014, we started working on this record. It seems like we did it in secret, but not really. We’ve been really busy, we just weren’t updating Twitter and Instagram at the end of each day!

Did your working process change after taking that break?
Dave and I have always lived in the same neighbourhood in Vancouver, but when we finished touring I moved to Toronto, which is in the same country but five hours and three time zones away. Not long after that I started dating my girlfriend, who lives in Mexico City. For the first time we had to figure out how to write songs and be a band while straddling multiple time zones. We spent a lot of time apart working on stuff, then getting together for very short, concentrated chunks of time in one of those three cities, and showing each other everything we had done and trying to put it together. It produced a record I don’t think we could have made if we met up every day at three o’clock to jam. It was an attempt at a new way of writing songs.

Were there things you consciously wanted to change?
We felt we had refined our band and our songs to a pretty fine point. To some extent, that’s what our second record is: hitting the nail on the head of a very specific kind of song. I know a lot of people would love us to make that record over and over, but this time we really set out to expand on the kind of songs we wrote. Not every song has to be really fast, or have the energy at ten the whole time. We tried to make an album that was a little more complete, like those great rock’n’roll albums that have a little bit of everything, where you feel you are taken on a journey over 40 minutes. It was a lot of trial and error trying to break out of our comfort zone. There were no rules. Whatever we thought sounded cool, we went with it, and the more different things were from our first two records, the better. We followed our instincts.

Is it still just the two of you in the studio?
It’s just the two of us! We’ve expanded on the instruments that we record, and the way we record, but at the end of the day it’s just the two of us. A couple of friends sang back-up vocals on “Arc Of Barâ€, but everything was laid down by either Dave or myself. We made the first two records live in the studio, this is the first record where we decided to throw out that old school rulebook and build and layer. Just trying to use the studio the way it was designed to be used. It’s not just about capturing a show any more.

You’ve suggested the record forms a loose narrative. What story does it tell?
We put a lot of time and a lot of care picking the songs and the order they went in, and trying to tell a story. The songs and the sequencing kind of wrote themselves. [The title track] was always going to be number one. You’ve got this song about being at home, and chasing your dreams and leaving; then “North East South West†is second, about what happens when you actually do that, and being out in the world. It just makes fucking sense! There’s a sense of two very different lifestyles and ideas of how to live clashing on this record: the romantic life of being in a band and travelling, against being with someone you love and building a home, and being old enough to appreciate how important the little things are. There are a lot of different interpretations about what a really wild and romantic life really means. The record is like being pushed and pulled back and forth, trying to pull the best out of both of those things.

All your albums have eight tracks. Why?
We’re in our early thirties, we’re the last generation that grew up listening to albums before the internet, where the album was still the thing. The CD generation was: if you can put 80 minutes on an album you should. Now, there’s a mindset that the more songs you have the better – you get more Spotify streams, more downloads. We always think a record should be a coherent listening experience. With eight songs, four on each side, you can really create something strong. Maybe you have to leave some songs off. That’s okay!
INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

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 History Of Rock 1984!

0
“Real music by real peopleâ€: that’s the quote on the cover of the new edition of The History Of Rock, positioned artfully next to a picture of The Smiths. Our encyclopaedic monthly mag has reached its 20th issue, and the year under the microscope is 1984. It should be arriving in the shops on ...

“Real music by real peopleâ€: that’s the quote on the cover of the new edition of The History Of Rock, positioned artfully next to a picture of The Smiths. Our encyclopaedic monthly mag has reached its 20th issue, and the year under the microscope is 1984. It should be arriving in the shops on Thursday, but you can order a copy of History Of Rock 1984 from our online shop now. Please remember, too, that if you’ve missed any previous issues the full History Of Rock range is now in stock there.

Lots to enjoy this issue: Nina Simone and Hüsker Dü; James Brown and ZZ Top; Wham! Making mincemeat of a Melody Maker journalist. Here, anyway, is John Robinson to roll out the big welcome to The History Of Rock 1984…

“The 20 years so far covered by History Of Rock have seen action and reaction, financial successes and grassroots revolution. This year, rock remains as engaged as it needs to be during the administration of Margaret Thatcher – with its cold war, nuclear threat and high unemployment – the movement which takes place this year is actually not aggressive in character.

“More than ever, artists put their money where their mouth is to change the world for the better. In September, Paul Weller – continuing a recent philanthropic streak – and Wham! play a benefit concert for striking miners, while at the end of the year the pair join Band Aid. A collective put together by Bob Geldof and Midge Ure after viewing a news report on the Ethiopian famine, their ad hoc group of pop stars ends the year at the top of the charts, raising millions for charity.

“Musically, meanwhile, the aggressive commerciality signalled by the rise of Duran Duran now meets its characterful reaction. The likes of REM, Lloyd Cole, Prefab Sprout and our cover stars The Smiths celebrate a renewal of guitar music. Under the radar, meanwhile, a kinship develops between Black Flag, Nick Cave and The Fall – whose work is seen as much as transgressive writing as it is music. In the US, Prince and Michael Jackson engage with huge audiences in different, but no less dramatic ways.

“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 increasingly stylish contemporary reporters were there to chronicle events. This publication reaps the benefits of their understanding for the reader decades later, one year at a time.  Missed one? You can find out how to rectify that here.

“In the pages of this twentieth edition, dedicated to 1984, you will find verbatim articles from frontline staffers, filed from the thick of the action, wherever it may be. In a hotel room with Morrissey. Hearing Dave Lee Roth explain why Van Halen is like a tampon. And finding out that the way to George Michael’s heart is through an aggressive interview.

“’We didn’t want to talk to Melody Maker because your hypocrisy makes us sick,’ says George. ‘You use our name on the cover and then slag us off inside. We’re only talking to you because we fancied doing a juicy interview for a change…’â€

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Courtney Marie Andrews – Honest Life

0
Honest Life may be her first European release, but Courtney Marie Andrews is hardly the neophyte. The 26-year-old Arizona native has been gigging for the past decade, either alone or with others, as well as negotiating a fair amount of session activity. Perhaps the most high-profile collaboration to...

Honest Life may be her first European release, but Courtney Marie Andrews is hardly the neophyte. The 26-year-old Arizona native has been gigging for the past decade, either alone or with others, as well as negotiating a fair amount of session activity. Perhaps the most high-profile collaboration to date has been with US brat-rockers Jimmy Eat World, for whom she sang back-ups on 2010’s Invented (plus the world tour that followed) and this year’s Integrity Blues. Until recently, too, Andrews was Damien Jurado’s live guitarist.

Then there are her five prior solo albums, beginning with 2008’s Urban Myths, issued on tiny indie label, River Jones. Nevertheless, and mindful that she’s already withdrawn the first three of those, Honest Life is likely to serve as an introduction to most of us. In fact, and by her own admission, this is the record to which all roads have been leading.

The journeying metaphor happens to be a pretty apt one. Conceived in Belgium while touring with local singer Milow, Honest Life is the product of both heartache and homesickness. These are essentially break-up songs, their vulnerability made all the more acute by Andrews’ physical dislocation. But while there’s plenty of wistful candour, she doesn’t overdo the sentimental bit. It is, instead, a remarkably assured piece of work, gracefully furnished and artfully wrought.

Andrews has been eliciting lofty comparisons to Joni Mitchell back in the States. Certainly, tunes like “Irene†or “Not The End†are marked by that same crystalline glide and swoop, especially the manner in which she caresses the higher notes. Though there’s more of a quiver in Andrews’ voice that aligns her just as equitably to the late Judee Sill or, on the more countrified songs, Emmylou Harris. Like Harris, she has a natural ability to traverse folk and country with apparent ease.

Nowhere is this better illustrated than on “How Quickly Your Heart Mends†(regular readers may recognise the song from its appearance on Uncut’s 2016 Sounds Of The New West covermount CD). Over piano and pedal steel, steadied by a ticking rhythm, Andrews details the empty consolations of life with an airy elegance that leavens the song’s disconsolate mood: “The jukebox is playin’ a sad country song/For all the ugly Americans/Now I feel like one of them.†Others display a kind of stony wisdom that belies her relatively tender years. The baroque-styled “Only In My Mindâ€, her anguish cushioned by a dreamy string arrangement, suggests that we knowingly live with our own illusions, both as a comforting strategy and as protection against aspects of ourselves that we refuse to deal with. “In my mind, life was a road without any turns,†she sings, as if caught in an absent reverie. “Every chance was given/No hard lessons to be learned.â€

The other musical strand at play here is Southern soul. Andrews has assembled a backing band capable of navigating the emotional and stylistic nuances of her songs. In particular, the subtle embellishments of pianist Charles Wicklander and pedal steel player, Steve Norman. Andrew Butler’s Hammond organ gives wings to “15 Highway Linesâ€, whose sedate acoustic strum eventually makes way for a Memphis beat and a gorgeous vocal line in which Andrews truly soars. “Put The Fire Outâ€, which examines the duality between letting go and reconnecting with your roots, is similarly endowed, with its shuffling piano and sudden urgency. One of several songs that were written after Andrews returned to Seattle to bartend at a tavern, it’s about as close as she gets to closure over her romantic woes, finding succour in the company of those with a shared experience: “There’s a place for everything/And I think I know mine now/Now that I’m off this plane I think I’m ready to stay.â€

Perhaps the most intriguing thing about Honest Life is the options it presents. On this evidence, such is Andrews’ intuitive feel for disparate musical idioms that she could take a number of directions from here. She could just as easily go classic Nashville country as austere American folk. And she clearly has a great Southern soul album in her. For the time being, though, it’s enough to wallow in the possibilities.

Q&A
COURTNEY MARIE ANDREWS
You call Honest Life your coming-of-age record…

It feels like I’m at my most mature as a songwriter and finally have enough experience to make a record like this. It’s been a very therapeutic process. It’s amazing how heartbreak will change your values, how much it will shake the core of who you are and make you reassess your life. That’s where a lot of these songs about wanting to be back home came from. It’s a kind of break-up travelogue record.

Did you need to leave home in Phoenix, Arizona, in order to blossom?
Oh yeah. I’m definitely one of those people who grows very well amid change. I like to throw myself over the edge a lot of the time, just to see what happens. I’ve always thrived in that way. I’m a restless spirit, I think that’s just part of who I am. In fact, I’m currently in the process of moving from Seattle to LA. I’ve met a lot of great artists and musicians here, but I think LA is a lot more conducive to songwriters.

What’s next for you?
I’ve already started writing the next album and hope to record it in the spring, if I can nail down the time after my European tour. It’s really moving towards a soul kind of feeling, but there are also a lot of songs involving the empowerment of women. That comes from my love of Aretha Franklin and Odetta, those kinds of people. I’m already so excited about these new songs.
INTERVIEW: ROB HUGHES

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

Bill Callahan announces new shows

0
Bill Callahan has announced details of a series of shows in London. He will play six shows in Hoxton Hall where he will be joined by guitarist Matt Kinsey. This series of shows will be the first time Callahan has played in London since his 2014 tour in support of the stunning album Dream River. ...

Bill Callahan has announced details of a series of shows in London.

He will play six shows in Hoxton Hall where he will be joined by guitarist Matt Kinsey.

This series of shows will be the first time Callahan has played in London since his 2014 tour in support of the stunning album Dream River.

Callahan will play:

Thursday 4 May
Friday 5 May

Saturday 6 May – Matinee & Evening shows
Sunday 7 May – Matinee & Evening shows

Tickets are available from Friday, February 3 and limited to 2 per person. You can find more info 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

The Jacksons mark 50th anniversary with UK concert

0
The Jacksons have announced they will perform at Blenheim Palace as part of their 50th anniversary world tour. The show takes place on Sunday June 18 during the Nocturne concert series. Special guests will be Kool & The Gang. The Nocturne concert series runs from June 15 to 18 and The Jackso...

The Jacksons have announced they will perform at Blenheim Palace as part of their 50th anniversary world tour.

The show takes place on Sunday June 18 during the Nocturne concert series.

Special guests will be Kool & The Gang.

The Nocturne concert series runs from June 15 to 18 and The Jacksons and Kool & The Gang join composer Max Richter on this year’s bill, with more names to be announced in due course.

Tickets start at £45 and are on sale at 9am on Wednesday February.

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

Jason Lytle: “There will be a second new Grandaddy album”

0
Grandaddy will release another new album after 2017's upcoming Last Place, Jason Lytle tells Uncut in the new issue, dated March 2017 and out now. The songwriter has revealed that he signed a two-album deal with Danger Mouse's 30th Century Records, meaning that a follow-up to the band's first album...

Grandaddy will release another new album after 2017’s upcoming Last Place, Jason Lytle tells Uncut in the new issue, dated March 2017 and out now.

The songwriter has revealed that he signed a two-album deal with Danger Mouse‘s 30th Century Records, meaning that a follow-up to the band’s first album in 11 years is almost guaranteed.

“I know for a fact there’ll be another Grandaddy LP,” he laughs, “’cos I signed a two-album deal! But the next one will be looser [than Last Place].”

Elsewhere in the feature – in which Lytle takes Uncut through nine of the finest albums he’s worked on as Grandaddy and solo – the singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist explains how he made the group’s new album, released on March 3.

“I hope Grandaddy fans like [Last Place],” he says, “as it really is a lot about them, even more so than it is about me… I just have a better ability of knowing what Grandaddy is, myself, now from a distance. It’s so part of me. I was so inspired by the fans and the people that have made it very clear over the years how dedicated they are to the music.

“A certain amount of time needed to go by [before I returned to Grandaddy]. I spent a lot of time and care in trying to make it resemble a Grandaddy record. Once I brought all those [Grandaddy] ingredients together, they ended up showing me the way. I was going that extra mile making sure that whatever weird sounds there were sat pretty well, and it not be like, ‘Oh, there’s another wacky Grandaddy sound!’”

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

 

Robert Wyatt and Nick Mason on ‘I’m A Believer’: “We made our own rules and did what we liked”

0
How Canterbury’s jazz adventurer turned out a hit Monkees cover, tiring out Pink Floyd’s drummer and battling Top Of The Pops in the process… “The show side of pop? I can’t be bothered!†Originally published in Uncut's February 2014 issue (Take 201). Words: Tom Pinnock _________________...

How Canterbury’s jazz adventurer turned out a hit Monkees cover, tiring out Pink Floyd’s drummer and battling Top Of The Pops in the process… “The show side of pop? I can’t be bothered!†Originally published in Uncut’s February 2014 issue (Take 201). Words: Tom Pinnock

_________________________________

From the psych pop of early Soft Machine to the cerebral jazz-fusion of Matching Mole, by 1974 Robert Wyatt was intent on following his own singular muse. You would imagine, though, that even Wyatt’s closest collaborators were shocked when he decided to release a cover of The Monkees’ Neil-Diamond-penned “I’m A Believer†as his debut solo single. “No, Robert has always been most peculiar,†laughs Pink Floyd’s Nick Mason, who produced and played drums on the recording, “so nothing very much surprises me with him.â€

Wyatt has been in a wheelchair since June 1, 1973, when he fell out of a window at a Maida Vale party. But rather than hindering him creatively, his paralysis allowed the drummer to put down his sticks and concentrate on singing, keyboards and songwriting, crafting the experimental, pastoral Rock Bottom, produced by Mason and featuring Fred Frith and Richard Sinclair.

Far from starting a more commercial era in his career, though, things didn’t run smoothly after the release of “I’m A Believerâ€. An appearance on Top Of The Pops led to arguments with the show’s producer and threats of a ban, then Virgin refused to release his follow-up single. The irrepressible Wyatt wouldn’t have had it any other way, though – the only reservation he has about the track is his own “jigging about†when miming on TV.

“If you’re going to do it, do it properly, like Wilko Johnson… I just thought, note to self, don’t do that anymore. But we all learn from our mistakes,†he says, mock-philosophically. “That well-known saying – well, not that well-known, because I made it up – ‘we live and learn, but in that order, unfortunately.’â€

____________________________

ROBERT WYATT: I’d said in NME or Melody Maker that I really liked pop music – to me, it’s the folk music of the industrial age, it’s what people sing and dance to on a Saturday night. Simon Draper at Virgin, he saw this and he called my bluff, saying “Would you do a pop song?†I’d intended to do “Last Train To Clarksvilleâ€, ’cause I like that, but I got muddled up.

NICK MASON: I met Robert at UFO, then we did some gigs together – we certainly spent time together in New York when Soft Machine were touring with Hendrix. We were all holed up in the same hotel there in 1968. Then I produced Rock Bottom.

DAVE MACRAE: Was I surprised Robert was doing a Monkees song? Working with Robert, surprises were the norm! He has great mental energy, always looking for new ways to express his ideas.

RICHARD SINCLAIR: In The Wilde Flowers with Robert, I remember doing things like Chuck Berry numbers, so “I’m A Believer†wasn’t anything unusual from Robert. He always wanted to be a popular singing artist. Blond-haired, quite good-looking, bouncing about – he liked that idea of entertainment, still does!

Flaming Lips – Oczy Mlody

0
Throughout their 30-year career, but especially in the last decade, the Flaming Lips have made self-indulgence a virtue. They’ve recorded a 24-hour song, covered full albums by The Beatles and Pink Floyd, released music via giant gummy skulls, and – perhaps most notoriously – recorded an album...

Throughout their 30-year career, but especially in the last decade, the Flaming Lips have made self-indulgence a virtue. They’ve recorded a 24-hour song, covered full albums by The Beatles and Pink Floyd, released music via giant gummy skulls, and – perhaps most notoriously – recorded an album with Miley Cyrus, which they released for free but couldn’t give away. That playful unpredictability is compelling even when the music is not. And most of the time it’s not. These projects tend to work better as stunts and happenings, which means they’re probably more fun to create than they are to hear.

But that only makes their studio albums somehow miraculous. Embryonic in 2009 and The Terror in 2013 stand among the band’s finest releases, each expanding the Lips’ candy-coated psychedelia while balancing the extreme whimsy and extreme melancholy that have become the band’s signature. Long after several generations of contemporaries have folded or flopped, the Flaming Lips are still writing the story of their career, adding some essential and entertaining chapters.

Oczy Mlody is perhaps the inevitable outcome of the Lips’ endearing self-indulgence, combining the best and worst traits of their main and side projects into a concept album that is sure to be divisive even among their diehard fans. There are unicorns and demon frogs and wizards and rainbows, guest spots by Cyrus and the comedian Reggie Watts, and instrumental interludes that sound like Pink Floyd got chopped-and-screwed. At times it dares to reach for beauty; often it settles for a strained frivolity.

Musically, the Lips claim they were inspired by Syd Barrett and A$AP Rocky; lyrically, by a Polish translation of Close To Home, a novel by Erskine Caldwell (most famous for Tobacco Road). The details of that book have nothing to do with Oczy Mlody. Instead, the Polish language, with its logjams of consonants and curlicue ogoneks, provided the foundation for the lyrics and concepts. Wayne Coyne would scan the pages, his eyes catching on unusual clusters of letters and his brain translating the strange words into skewed fairy tales. Hence the title: Oczy Mlody translates into English as “eyes of the youngâ€, but it translates into Coynese as a futuristic drug that allows users to sleep for three months at a time. Or something like that.

“There Should Be Unicorns†offers the most concrete evocation of this world and its strange rules, with Coyne painting “day-glow strippers†and “edible butterflies†into the landscape like Bob Ross on ’shrooms. The music is never as animated as the lyrics, and the lyrics sound more juvenile than usual, especially when the fantastical intermingles with a real-world problem like police brutality. There’s nothing on Oczy Mlody that is any more or less silly than Yoshimi battling those pink robots or that Christmas skeleton pleading with a suicide bomber, but there’s no metaphorical underpinning to give emotional weight to so much whimsy. The unicorns are merely unicorns.

At least on the first half of the record, the instrumentals are more compelling than the lyric-based songs, mixing the Lips’ familiar psychedelia with beats and hip-hop production techniques. The opening title track in particular evokes the mood of a particularly bittersweet fairy tale, pitting bottom-heavy rhythms against delicate synth melodies. As the album progresses, however, it accrues gravity and import – a particularly puzzling magic trick. “Do Glowy†is a zero-gravity boudoir slow jam, “Listening To Frogs With Demon Eyes†a seven-minute mini-opera whose creepy-crawly sound effects and stargazing lyrics conjure an almost pagan ambience.

“The Castle†is all metaphor: a painfully detailed portrayal of how a fragile soul processes tragedy and pain, inspired by the suicide of a close friend. “Her brain was the castle,†Coyne sings, “and the castle can never be rebuilt again.†Here the imagery not only has poignancy and emotional heft, but makes that personal loss sound incalculable. That’s the underlying theme of this record, which is strange even for the Lips: the thin veil between existence and oblivion, a mortal dread so intense that it pervades every single bubbly note on these songs. Oczy Mlody continues the Lips’ longstanding mission to explore the joy and sadness of simple human consciousness, so that even when the album loses its footing – which it does, often – it never loses its way.

Q&A
Wayne Coyne
Which comes first: the songs or the concept?

These things never come as an idea. It’s almost as though something happens and it leads to another thing happening and before you know it, you’ve got something really magical. One song gives you another piece of an unknown story.

How did that process work for Oczy Mlody?
The very first track on the record, called “Oczy Mlodyâ€, had been around for a while. Steven [Drozd] and I kept going back to it. It had a mood to it, but we didn’t know what to do with it. Then we stumbled upon “The Castleâ€, which I wrote after a session one night, just singing into my phone. I liked that idea of singing about the castle as the structure of your beautiful life or whatever. I filled the song with lyrics that hint at the fairytale world – unicorns and stuff like that – which really hinted us toward a new flavour that the Flaming Lips hadn’t really explored before.

How did that change “Oczy Mlody”?
We started to tie the two songs together. Oh, Oczy Mlody is a drug you take in this futuristic fairytale world. It just kept going from there, the same [way] we would have hit upon concepts for all our records. It feels like we’re making the soundtrack to a movie. We have characters and locations and moods and things that are happening. It helps us feel like we’re in the same story, even though we’re not sure what happens.
INTERVIEW: STEPHEN DEUSNER

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

Paul Weller announces his first ever full film score

0
Paul Weller has announced details of his first ever full film score. Jawbone: Music From The Film will be released by Parlophone Records on March 10. The 36-minute album is available on Vinyl LP, CD, Download and to stream. The film, a boxing drama, is the brainchild of actor Johnny Harris, who sa...

Paul Weller has announced details of his first ever full film score.

Jawbone: Music From The Film will be released by Parlophone Records on March 10. The 36-minute album is available on Vinyl LP, CD, Download and to stream.

The film, a boxing drama, is the brainchild of actor Johnny Harris, who says: “Paul would constantly send through any new ideas, demos, or recordings, and what was unique and beautiful about this approach was that Paul’s new compositions were now inspiring and influencing the story as I was re-writing it. I’d also send Paul through new drafts of the script, or any new ideas as they were forming along the way, and a beautifully collaborative process evolved.â€

The tracklisting for Jawbone: Music From The Film is:

Jimmy / Blackout
The Ballad of Jimmy McCabe
Jawbone
Bottle
Jawbone Training
Man on Fire
End Fight Sequence

Jawbone stars Johnny Harris, Michael Smiley and Ian McShane and is in cinemas from March 17.

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 Fourth Uncut Playlist Of 2017

0
As you can see, our week started with a load of Can albums, and a pretty concerted celebration of Jaki Liebezeit. Here, though, are this week’s key arrivals: three strong new songs by Ryley Walker, performed live for Aquarium Drunkard; an excellent preview of Jaxe Xerxes Fussell’s forthcoming al...

As you can see, our week started with a load of Can albums, and a pretty concerted celebration of Jaki Liebezeit. Here, though, are this week’s key arrivals: three strong new songs by Ryley Walker, performed live for Aquarium Drunkard; an excellent preview of Jaxe Xerxes Fussell’s forthcoming album; Thundercat’s ravishing yacht rock jam featuring Kenny Loggins and Michael McDonald; Lambchop covering Prince; a new single from Promised Land Sound; and these three wonderful Erasmo Carlos reissues from Light In The Attic, which made me feel a bit of a fraud thinking of myself as a Tropicalia expert when I’d never come across them before. Am very much looking forward to sharing Arbouretum, Joan Shelley, Wooden Wand and Feral Ohms music as soon as I can but, in the meantime, thanks as ever for listening.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Can – Future Days (Spoon)

2 Can – Ege Bam Yasi (Spoon)

3 Can – Flow Motion (Spoon)

4 Can – Monster Movie (Spoon)

5 Can – Tago Mago (Spoon)

6 Various Artists – The Hired Hands (Scissor Tail)

7 Elliott Smith – Either/Or: Expanded Edition (Kill Rock Stars)

8 Arbouretum – Song Of The Rose (Thrill Jockey)

9 Michele Mercure – Eye Chant (Freedom To Spend)

10 Philippe Baden Powell – Notes Over Poetry (Far Out)

11 Jesus & Mary Chain – Damage And Joy (Warner Brothers)

12 Feral Ohms – Feral Ohms (Silver Current)

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

14 Erasmo Carlos – Erasmo Carlos E Os Tremendões (Light In The Attic)

15 Erasmo Carlos – Erasmo Carlos (Light In The Attic)

16 Joan Shelley – Joan Shelley (No Quarter)

17 Wooden Wand – Clipper Ship (Three Lobed Recordings)

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

19 On Fillmore – Happiness Of Living (Northern Spy)

20 Lambchop – When You Were Mine (Merge)

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

22 Promised Land Sound – By The Rain (Paradise Of Bachelors)

 

 

 

 

Singles soundtrack reissue to contain rarities and unreleased tracks

0
Epic Soundtrax and Legacy Recordings celebrate the 25th anniversary of Cameron Crowe's film Singles, with the release of a newly expanded and remastered edition of the film's soundtrack on May 19. This new edition of the album contains previously unreleased recordings by Chris Cornell, Mudhoney and...

Epic Soundtrax and Legacy Recordings celebrate the 25th anniversary of Cameron Crowe‘s film Singles, with the release of a newly expanded and remastered edition of the film’s soundtrack on May 19.

This new edition of the album contains previously unreleased recordings by Chris Cornell, Mudhoney and Paul Westerberg, in addition to rarities and tracks from the film not included on the original album.

The album will be released as 2CD and 2LP sets.

This expanded edition includes, for the first time on CD, “Touch Me I’m Dick” the signature track from Singles performed by Citizen Dick – a fictional band created for the film featuring frontman Matt Dillon backed by Pearl Jam’s Eddie Vedder, Stone Gossard and Jeff Ament.

SINGLES: ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE SOUNDTRACK DELUXE EDITION track listing
Would? – Alice In Chains
Breath – Pearl Jam
Seasons – Chris Cornell
Dyslexic Heart – Paul Westerberg
Battle Of Evermore – The Lovemongers
Chloe Dancer/Crown Of Thorns – Mother Love Bone
Birth Ritual – Soundgarden
State of Love And Trust – Pearl Jam
Overblown – Mudhoney
Waiting For Somebody – Paul Westerberg
May This Be Love – The Jimi Hendrix Experience
Nearly Lost You – Screaming Trees
Drown – Smashing Pumpkins

Bonus Disc
(included in 2CD and 2LP editions)
Touch Me I’m Dick – Citizen Dick (first time on CD)
Nowhere But You – Chris Cornell (Poncier)
Spoon Man – Chris Cornell (Poncier)
Flutter Girl – Chris Cornell (Poncier)
Missing – Chris Cornell (Poncier) (first time on CD)
Would? (live) – Alice In Chains (first time on CD)
It Ain’t Like That (live) – Alice In Chains (first time on CD)
Birth Ritual (live) – Soundgarden (first time on CD)
Dyslexic Heart (acoustic) – Paul Westerberg (first time on CD)
Waiting For Somebody (score acoustic) – Paul Westerberg (previously unreleased)
Overblown (demo) – Mudhoney (previously unreleased)
Heart and Lungs – Truly
Six Foot Under – Blood Circus
Singles Blues 1 – Mike McCready (previously unreleased)
Blue Heart – Paul Westerberg (previously unreleased)
Lost In Emily’s Words – Paul Westerberg (previously unreleased)
Ferry Boat #3 – Chris Cornell (previously unreleased)
Score Piece #4 – Chris Cornell (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

Gregg Allman pays tribute to Allman Brothers drummer, Butch Trucks

0
Gregg Allman has paid tribute to Butch Trucks, the Allman Brothers Band drummer who has died aged 69. "I'm heartbroken," Allman said in a statement. "I've lost another brother and it hurts beyond words. Butch and I knew each other since we were teenagers and we were bandmates for over 45 years. He ...

Gregg Allman has paid tribute to Butch Trucks, the Allman Brothers Band drummer who has died aged 69.

“I’m heartbroken,” Allman said in a statement. “I’ve lost another brother and it hurts beyond words. Butch and I knew each other since we were teenagers and we were bandmates for over 45 years. He was a great man and a great drummer and I’m going to miss him forever. Rest In Peace Brother Butch.”

Former Allman Brothers Band guitarist Warren Haynes – who played guitar for the group from 1989-1997 and again from 2000-2014 – wrote on his website.

“After all the devastating losses of 2016 I can’t believe it. I’m still in shock. I am truly honored to have played music and shared life with Butch for over 25 years. He was one of a kind-as a drummer and as a human being,” Haynes wrote. “Butch was part of what is unfortunately now a dying breed of musicians who served with honor like soldiers. He put 110% of his self into every song he played. He was the Lou Gehrig of rock drummers. I’ve seen him play many times when he was injured or sick and most people would have bailed or phoned it in. Not Butch. He would play with the utmost intensity till he was about to fall over with no regrets. He was very proud of the fact that up until our last shows in 2014 he was the only member of the band who had never missed a show. His mission in life was to serve the music. And serve the music he did. Butch considered the Allman Brothers Band music to be reverent and each performance to be of the highest level of importance and he drove that “freight train†like no other could. We miss you Butchie.â€

Other tributes have been paid from Jason Isbell, Sheryl Crowe and Phish.

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

PJ Harvey, Ryan Adams lead Green Man Festival line-up

0
PJ Harvey, Ryan Adams and Future Islands have been announced as headliners of this year's Green Man Festival. Other artists confirmed for the festival include Michael Kiwanuka, Lambchop, Conor Oberst, Angel Olsen and more. Green Man 2017 takes place in Brecon Beacons from August 17 to August 20. ...

PJ Harvey, Ryan Adams and Future Islands have been announced as headliners of this year’s Green Man Festival.

Other artists confirmed for the festival include Michael Kiwanuka, Lambchop, Conor Oberst, Angel Olsen and more.

Green Man 2017 takes place in Brecon Beacons from August 17 to August 20.

Line-up in full:
PJ Harvey, Ryan Adams, Future Islands, Michael Kiwanuka, Lambchop, Conor Oberst, Angel Olsen, BadBadNotGood, Jon Hopkins (DJ), Field Music, This is the Kit, Julia Jacklin, Fionn Regan, The Big Moon, Richard Dawson, Melt Yourself Down, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Laura Gibson, Sunflower Bean, Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band, Jessica Pratt, Karl Blau, Grumbling Fur, LVL UP, Shame, Wolf People, Big Thief, Gill Landry, Michael Chapman, Doomsquad, Deep Throat Choir, Girl Ray, Gaelynn Lea, Warhaus, The Orielles.

You can find more details 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

David Bowie postage stamps revealed!

0
The Royal Mail are to release a set of David Bowie postage stamps. The set of 10 stamps will be on sale from March 14 from either local Post Offices or online by clicking here. The stamps will feature the album artwork for Hunky Dory, Aladdin Sane, "Heroes", Let’s Dance, Earthling and ★ as wel...

The Royal Mail are to release a set of David Bowie postage stamps.

The set of 10 stamps will be on sale from March 14 from either local Post Offices or online by clicking here.

The stamps will feature the album artwork for Hunky Dory, Aladdin Sane, “Heroes”, Let’s Dance, Earthling and ★ as well as four additional stamps of Bowie live from the 1973 Ziggy Stardust Tour, the 1978 Stage Tour, the 1983 Serious Moonlight Tour and 2004’s A Reality Tour.

The stamps will also be available as a range of limited edition sets, including a presentation pack, a First Day Cover set with the six David Bowie Special stamps and a First Day Cover set with the David Bowie live stamp sheet.

There will also be individual framed stamp and print sets, a Berlin Years souvenir cover and an Album Art fan sheet.

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

Watch trailer for Lost In France – a new doc about Scotland’s indie music scene in the ’90s

0
Next month sees the release of Lost In France - a new documentary following the rise of the Glaswegian music scene during the 1990s. In the late 1990s, a collection of musicians from Chemikal Underground Records - among them, Franz Ferdinand, Mogwai, The Delgados and Arab Strap - hired a bus and h...

Next month sees the release of Lost In France – a new documentary following the rise of the Glaswegian music scene during the 1990s.

In the late 1990s, a collection of musicians from Chemikal Underground Records – among them, Franz Ferdinand, Mogwai, The Delgados and Arab Strap – hired a bus and headed off on a road trip to a town in rural France to play a one-off gig. Now they are headed back to relive the experience.

Featuring a mix of live performances and interviews, the film reunites key personnel in an intimate exploration of friendship, memory and making music.

Lost in France screens as a nationwide cinema event on February 21 as part of Glasgow Film Festival followed by an exclusive performance broadcast live via satellite from the Glasgow O2 ABC, featuring a supergroup including Alex Kapranos (Franz Ferdinand), Stuart Braithwaite (Mogwai), RM Hubbert plus The Delgados’ Emma Pollock, Stewart Henderson and Paul Savage. You can find more information about that by clicking here.

You can watch the trailer for the film here…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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 Lambchop’s cover of Prince’s “When You Were Mine”

0
Lambchop have shared their cover of Prince's "When You Were Mine". The track has been recorded by the band's new live line up featuring Wye Oak's Andy Stack. The track comes ahead of the band's sold out and only UK show tomorrow night at The Roundhouse. https://soundcloud.com/cityslang/lambchop-w...

‘Intelligent turntable’ allows you to play vinyl from a smartphone

0
A new “intelligent turntable†that allows users to play vinyl from their smartphone is in the works. According to its page on the Coming Soon tech website, the LOVE turntable “reads vinyl with a stylus, connects to Bluetooth & Wi-Fi, and is controlled by your smartphoneâ€. It promises â€...

A new “intelligent turntable†that allows users to play vinyl from their smartphone is in the works.

According to its page on the Coming Soon tech website, the LOVE turntable “reads vinyl with a stylus, connects to Bluetooth & Wi-Fi, and is controlled by your smartphoneâ€. It promises “the intimacy of vinyl with modern-day convenienceâ€.

A ‘how it works’ section on the site explains: “Once LOVE is synced with your audio device, put any size vinyl on one of the two complimentary 7″ record bases. LOVE then scans the vinyl to determine its size and number of tracks. If you’d like to start your listening experience with track 3, simply Press LOVE’s top shell three times or select the track through the app. From there, sit back, relax, and enjoy your record.â€

The LOVE turntable isn’t available to buy yet, but intrigued parties can sign up here to be notified when it launches, and receive a 50% discount on the eventual purchase price.

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

U2 to play new material during Joshua Tree anniversary tour?

0
U2 bassist Adam Clayton has offered an update on the band's upcoming Joshua Tree 30th anniversary tour. Speaking to Rolling Stone, Clayton said that the group are considering playing songs from their delayed next album, Songs Of Experience, during the shows. “It would be very much my wish that w...

U2 bassist Adam Clayton has offered an update on the band’s upcoming Joshua Tree 30th anniversary tour.

Speaking to Rolling Stone, Clayton said that the group are considering playing songs from their delayed next album, Songs Of Experience, during the shows.

“It would be very much my wish that we could play something from Experience as part of the show, maybe one or two songs,†he said.

“Again, I caution that by saying we really have to see the arc of this show and we have to figure out whether those Experience songs would work well in a stadium in this context, but I’d love to see some of that material out there and people being familiar with it before the album comes out.â€

Clayton also issued an update on when fans should expect their next album release, saying: “We all very much feel like it needs to be the end of this year. It’s not on any schedule anywhere, anything like that. We’re going to get back to that later this year and polish it off and finish it off a bit more. But we think we’re there with itâ€.

“It’s not like the switch to do these Joshua Tree shows was because we needed a lot of time. It was just because it’s pretty much in the bag. We can still work on it throughout this year, all the little nips and tucks that we want to do. It’ll be a pleasure to get out there and play these Joshua Tree songs. In some ways, the experience of playing those Joshua Tree shows and those songs this summer, inevitably, couldn’t help [but] have some impact on what that record ultimately becomes when we finish work on it.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