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Mickey Newbury – Looks Like Rain

Elvis Presley’s performance of “An American Trilogy” in his groundbreaking 1972 global satellite concert and subsequent multi-platinum album Aloha From Hawaii helped bring one singer-songwriter to wider attention, far beyond his Nashville base. The portmanteau of traditional, patriotic songs from the 19th century was first assembled by Mickey Newbury who, back in country music’s stomping ground, was already making a serious name for himself.

Elvis Presley’s performance of “An American Trilogy” in his groundbreaking 1972 global satellite concert and subsequent multi-platinum album Aloha From Hawaii helped bring one singer-songwriter to wider attention, far beyond his Nashville base. The portmanteau of traditional, patriotic songs from the 19th century was first assembled by Mickey Newbury who, back in country music’s stomping ground, was already making a serious name for himself.

Starting out as a jobbing songwriter, he fashioned hits for Roy Orbison, Tom Jones, Kenny Rogers and many more, while also working tirelessly to give others a leg-up. He persuaded old-school country chart regular Roger Miller to take a chance on “Me And Bobby McGee” by new kid on the block Kris Kristofferson, and also encouraged cut-from-similar-cloth contemporaries Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt to move to Nashville.

Newbury’s own recording career had humble beginnings, with the underwhelming 1968 debut Harlequin Melodies comprised mostly of self-penned material others had already put their mark on. The man himself all but disowned the record, unhappy with the production and arrangements foisted upon him by RCA, prompting a bold step away from industry norms into the realm of the fledgling country outlaws.

The result was Looks Like Rain, a melancholic masterpiece that presents itself as a concept album in all but name. Country music had long been the terrain of the tearjerker, the pocket-sized tale of woe that rarely breached the three-minute mark, but Mickey’s focus was on a song cycle drilling deep into emotional despair, pain and regret.

At a time when Nashville favoured 10-track LPs lasting half an hour, Newbury poured his heart out on just seven songs largely linked by rain sound effects, over a total running time just shy of 40 minutes. The choice of the off-the-beaten-track, primitive Cinderella Studios lent itself to a more intimate, atmospheric sonic palette, imbuing the lyrical subject matter with a tangible sense of isolation.

Perhaps because he was used to writing for other voices, Newbury reveals himself to be something of an actor, able to inhabit the role of narrator with world-weary ease. Heartbreak blends with comic irony on the raconteur punchline of “She Even Woke Me Up To Say Goodbye”, leading straight into “I Don’t Think Much About Her Anymore”, a shoulder-shrug codicil laced with the ambiguity of a man still hurting but dismissive of his wounds.

On the evidence of the above two titles alone, Looks Like Rain sets out its stall as a profound study of bravado desperately attempting to paper over the cracks of forlorn wisdom, of a soul-searching, confessional examination of the self. Poetic vulnerability of this Herculean weight had rarely been heard in country music since the heyday of Hank Williams close to two decades earlier.

Throughout the ’60s, however, country had appeared to settle in to an unchallenged, user-friendly format of short and bittersweet soliloquies in which sorrow was expressed and dispensed with in the strum of a guitar. Even the genre’s most articulate and impassioned voices (George Jones, Loretta Lynn) sang stories that, by and large, offered a conclusion, if not closure.

Newbury, on his own albums rather than on material offered elsewhere, was geared more toward narratives with supplementary intrigue, hinting at further chapters to be played out somewhere over the horizon once the last note had been struck. The stripped-back, seven-minute opener “Write A Song A Song” is a compelling illustration of a what-happened-next? scenario that asks more questions than it answers (“The minute my feet touched the floor/The cold hardwood creaked with each step that I made to the door”).

In terms of an eloquent novelist’s approach to lyrics, and what can or can’t be shoehorned into the usually restrictive parameters of popular song, Mickey’s most evident late ’60s contemporaries are arguably Dylan and Jimmy Webb; writers with a playful relationship to both language and where it could lead. He’s at it again on the abstract folk lament “33rd Of August”, plucking images out the air that invite additional investigation (“There’s a big crowd at the station, where a blind man sings his songs/But he can see what they can’t understand”).

The contents of Looks Like Rain spawned covers by a dazzling array of names – including Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, Joan Baez and fellow outlaw Waylon Jennings – and while the songs are reassuringly robust in isolation, a richer portrait of fascinating brush strokes emerges when they’re consumed as a whole. This is a downpour of formidable depth.

Neko Case announces new album, Neon Grey Midnight Green

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Neko Case has announced details of a new studio album, Neon Grey Midnight Green. which is released on September 26 by Anti-. You can hear the first track from the album, "Wreck", below.

Neko Case has announced details of a new studio album, Neon Grey Midnight Green. which is released on September 26 by Anti-. You can hear the first track from the album, “Wreck“, below.

Her first new music since 2018’s Hell-OnNeon Grey Midnight Green was primarily recorded at Case’s own Vermont studio, Carnassial Sound, with additional sessions in Denver, Colorado with the PlainsSong Chamber Orchestra and in Portland, Oregon with Tucker Martine.

You can pre-order Neon Grey Midnight Green here.

The tracklisting for the album is:

Destination
Tomboy Gold
Wreck
Winchester Mansion of Sound
An Ice Age
Neon Grey Midnight Green
Oh, Neglect…
Louise
Rusty Mountain
Little Gears
Baby, I’m Not (A Werewolf)
Match-Lit

Ryan Davis & The Roadhouse Band – New Threats From The Soul

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This Ryan Davis is a happening type. A longtime mainstay of the Louisville, Kentucky, alternative arts and music scenes, he also co-founded the multimedia Cropped Out festival and runs his own Sophomore Lounge record label. He's also a virtuoso storyteller, whose songs are mostly vast unfurling narratives with more verses than a poetry anthology. Davis served time previously in State Champion, across whose four albums of mostly familiar alt.country – think Son Volt, Silver Jews – there are tantalising hints on tracks like “Death Preferences”, “There Is A Highlights Reel” and “Brain Days” of the music he’s currently making with The Roadhouse Band.

This Ryan Davis is a happening type. A longtime mainstay of the Louisville, Kentucky, alternative arts and music scenes, he also co-founded the multimedia Cropped Out festival and runs his own Sophomore Lounge record label. He’s also a virtuoso storyteller, whose songs are mostly vast unfurling narratives with more verses than a poetry anthology. Davis served time previously in State Champion, across whose four albums of mostly familiar alt.country – think Son Volt, Silver Jews – there are tantalising hints on tracks like “Death Preferences”, “There Is A Highlights Reel” and “Brain Days” of the music he’s currently making with The Roadhouse Band.

Davis took a five-year songwriting sabbatical after State Champion’s Send Flowers (2018). The songs he eventually started writing that duly appeared on 2023’s Dancing On The Edge uniformly had a fantastical new heft, often unspooling in the lengthy manner of Neil Young’s “The Last Trip To Tulsa”, say, or Songs: Ohia’s “Farewell Transmission”, cryptic, discursive, touched by the absurd. The sensational New Threats From The Soul is a further elaboration of this digressionary poetry, seven songs that mostly find Davis ruefully considering life and what it’s become, asking the question on everyone’s lips. Is there a point to any of it, given the way it all ends, and the disappointments along the way?

At times these long, unwinding songs may remind you of the ruminative musings of Lambchop’s Kurt Wagner, Okkervil River’s Will Sheff, Will Oldham, maybe MJ Lenderman. Lou Reed, even. Most of all, you’ll probably think of David Berman’s Purple Mountains, whose sole, eponymous album was released less than a month before Berman’s suicide in 2019. As so often with Berman on that singular masterpiece, the skewed humour and jaunty breeziness Davis sometimes tunefully deploys disguises the heartbreak, grief, loss, yearning and desperation in his songs, an existential crisis in every rhyming couplet.

The nine-minute title track that opens the album, for instance, blows in on a warm melodic wind, the kind of tune you might have heard coming through an open window in the Summer Of Love, The Rascals’ “Groovin’”, perhaps. A musical haze, anyway, of melodica, pedal steel, piano, fiddle, Davis’s languid Southern drawl, Freakwater’s Catherine Irwin‘s lovely harmonies. The song itself is a lament for lost love that tracks a romance from euphoric blossoming (“You’re the new sheriff in the Wild West of my heart!”) to inevitable ruin (“Your sweet nothings still sour the sheets on the bed”). It’s by turns hilarious, ecstatic, broken, like a barroom full of beautiful losers. In “Monte Carlo/No Limits”, another abandoned lover crashes his car outside his ex’s house and leaves it there as a reminder of the wreck their love has become, as if this will somehow win her back. “Better If You Let Me” is contrite apology, like Warren Zevon’s “Reconsider Me”, someone promising to change, become new and improved, even as he’s barking orders from afar: “Leave the fish tank light on, baby/Turn up the motherfucking ‘Fur Elise’.”

The closest the album comes to unconditional despair is on the interlinked “Mutilation Springs” and “Mutilation Falls”, which between them account for 20 minutes of the album’s running time. “I can’t remember the last time the good times felt so bad,” Davis sings on the former. A desolate mood prevails, the music a fractured plane of old-school synths, sparse percussion, pedal steel, fiddle, a flute. They sound like songs from the place America has become, basically the equivalent of the most derelict room in that Motel 6 out near the Interstate. A dilapidated joint. Ghosts in the walls, broken windows, a body in the bathtub, screamers in the parking lot. Davis hardly recognises the place.

I can barely tell the cattle roads from the chemtrails of our past lives,” he sings on the melodically handsome, windswept “The Simple Joy”, looking back at what used to be, panoramic and glorious. Sweeping strings and a mass of voices join him on a chorus that sounds like it’s being sung on a prairie by a wagon train choir who’ll probably turn out to be members of the Donner Party, snowbound in the Sierras, eating their own dead. The gorgeous, punningly titled “Walden Pawn” is a final beckoning. “I’ll be soaring home tonight in confusing winds,” he sings, the music behind him starlit and spectral, heading for a place of salvage and repair, asylum from vagrant drift in a world gone wrong. What an incredible head-spinning trip this album is.

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Hear Shirley Collins new version of “Hares On The Mountain”

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To celebrate Shirley Collins' 90th birthday on Saturday July 5, a new, previously unreleased version of “Hares On The Mountain” has been released. Scroll down to hear it.

To celebrate Shirley Collins‘ 90th birthday on Saturday July 5, a new, previously unreleased version of “Hares On The Mountain” has been released. Scroll down to hear it.

THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT STARS BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, SLY STONE, SCOTT WALKER, NEIL YOUNG, WET LEG, BLONDIE, BOOKER T, SADE AND MUCH MORE – CLICK HERE TO HAVE IT DELIVERED

Atraditional English ballad Collins’ first recorded “Hares On The Mountain” on her debut album Sweet England – recently voted the #9 best album of the 1950s by Uncut – before Collins rewrote the melody and recorded it with Davy Graham for 1965’s Folk Roots, New Routes.

Collins re-sung “Hares On The Mountain” on her most recent record, Archangel Hill.
  
Most recently, Collins recorded “Hares On The Mountain” with her musical director Ian Kearey to serve as the theme tune for Bridget Christie’s Channel 4 show The Change and this latest, faster version was recorded as an alternative take, unreleased before now.

A limited 7” of “Hares On The Mountain (Fast Version)” / “Oakham Poachers” will be released on August 8.

Black Sabbath: Back To The Beginning, Villa Park, July 5, 2025

Those lucky enough to see Black Sabbath on their then-final The End tour back in 2016/17 (without original drummer Bill Ward) would have gone away happy knowing that this was three quarters of a band calling it a day while still at the peak of their powers.

Those lucky enough to see Black Sabbath on their then-final The End tour back in 2016/17 (without original drummer Bill Ward) would have gone away happy knowing that this was three quarters of a band calling it a day while still at the peak of their powers.

THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT STARS BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, SLY STONE, SCOTT WALKER, NEIL YOUNG, WET LEG, BLONDIE, BOOKER T, SADE AND MUCH MORE – CLICK HERE TO HAVE IT DELIVERED

Ozzy’s voice was strong as ever like it had been studio double tracked live, Geezer Butler’s bass was thunderously low and fluid, Tony Iommi’s riffs could still summon demons while drummer Tommy Clufetos stepped up to do a spectacular job of replicating Ward’s dinosaur swing on the traps.

Even with Ward back in the fold, it was understandable that fans of Birmingham’s finest musical export had trepidations when Back To The Beginning was announced – a final farewell to the almighty Sabbath backed by a titanic line-up of mega fans, all keen to tread the boards with the heavy rock leviathans one last time.

Devotees of Sabbath and the more underground end of doom metal scene endlessly debated who should be and who shouldn’t be on the line-up. Amplifier worshippers Sunn O))), Sleep, Electric Wizard, Earth even; who took their name from an earlier incarnation of Ozzy’s Fab Four. Children of Sabbath are legion; their love of the band near devotional. Then there was the largely speculative discourse about Ozzy’s current health. Would he be up for the challenge? After all this the man whose entire life has been a one man battle against the health and wellbeing industry of the last two centuries.

CLICK HERE TO BUY A COPY OF OUR ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE – BLACK SABBATH

But as the 40000 metal pilgrims walk through the turnstiles and onto the hallowed pitch of Villa Park, Aston Villa Football Club’s stadium, all quibbles, speculations and gripes fall away. This is no longer a gig, this is no longer an internet debate, this is a celebration of one of the greatest riff creators of all time and its death-defying frontman and we’re all together in the here and now. The shared feeling is palpable as is the good nature. 

This is Black Sabbath. This is Ozzy. This is Birmingham. We are his people.

Now show us what you’ve got…

Yungblood is the first act to really elevate the crowd with a stirring and deliberately overwrought rendition of ‘Changes’ inspiring mass singing from the terraces. Steven Tyler is joined on stage by Ronnie Wood and Rage Against The Machine’s Tom Morello (also acting as the day’s musical director) for one of numerous supergroup changeovers. They power through a charged version of “The Train Kept A Rollin’” before moving into Aerosmith’s “Walk This Way” and finally Led Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love”. It’s an absolute blast.

After Slayer surge through a relentless set finishing with a punishing “Reigning Blood” and “Angel Of Death“, the seriously big guns arrive in the form of Guns N’ Roses and Metallica, both bands that could fill Villa Park themselves. Even so it’s all rather exciting watching these rock titans playing a compact show in service of someone else other than themselves. You sense it’s rather liberating for them.

At last, Ozzy comes onstage sitting on his custom built black throne and as you’d expect the faithful go wild. He’s frail, make no mistake, and as his band power through solo material “Mr Crowley” and “Crazy Train” you wonder if he’s still capable of commanding the stage from his seat. But the glint in his eye and his desire to be himself shines through it all and for that we, the crowd, love him even more.

With Springsteen, Iggy, McCartney, Neil Young all seemingly defying old age, there’s something touching, sad, magnificent and beautifully honest in watching Ozzy take to the stage this one last time. He’s battle worn, but he’s still the king of all he surveys.

Finally, he’s joined by his lifelong compadres as Black Sabbath take to the stage as the original four piece, the inventors of heavy metal. The place goes nuts and the band sound frankly amazing as they launch into “War Pigs“, “Iron Man“, “Paranoid” and surprise curveball “NIB“. Geezer Butler is still one nimble bass player as he proudly thrashes out a rhythm on his custom Aston Villa decorated guitar. The band are jamming hard to make up for the fact that Ozzy remains seated on his throne throughout. And it works. My goodness, it works.

Finally the skies over Birmingham light up with fireworks and that’s it. It’s over. An era has ended and we all know it. God bless Ozzy Osbourne indeed. 

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Oasis, Principality Stadium, Cardiff, July 4, 2025

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Long prior to the roar that greets their arrival onstage at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium, the noise around the return of Oasis has been deafening. 

Long prior to the roar that greets their arrival onstage at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium, the noise around the return of Oasis has been deafening. 

THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT STARS BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, SLY STONE, SCOTT WALKER, NEIL YOUNG, WET LEG, BLONDIE, BOOKER T, SADE AND MUCH MORE – CLICK HERE TO HAVE IT DELIVERED

Splashed all over the tabloids every day, just as they were post Knebworth. Teenage fans spreading audio of soundchecks and rehearsals on TikTok, furiously speculating as to which songs might make the set. Giant popup stores with queues out of the door in cities across the UK. Documentaries. Books (one of which, A Sound So Very Loud, is especially good). All night radio and TV specials. Oasis are, nearly 30 years on from the release of (What’s The Story) Morning Glory?, everywhere in a way that they have never been before.

In 2025, they will play to more people than they have in any other calendar year of their existence. Excitingly, too, these audiences will not be comprised solely of 45-year-olds looking to recapture their glory years. Multiple new generations – seduced by the chaotic swagger on display in 2016’s excellent Supersonic doc – want their piece of the action.

Photo: Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images

Part of Noel Gallagher’s often-cited justification for not sooner reuniting with his brother – among other reasons – was that anyone who wanted to see Oasis play had surely had plenty of opportunity. Unlike his own heroes The Jam, The Smiths and the Stone Roses – all in and out within half a decade, never playing stadiums – the band that he led played to tens of thousands-strong crowds all over the world for more than 15 years. Even if you were a toddler when Definitely Maybe arrived, you could still have watched them at Wembley Stadium or Heaton Park with a legally purchased pint in hand. But now? There is an entirely new audience to service who weren’t even born when Oasis split up. And service them they do, with the setlist of dreams. 

The opening blast of “Hello” and “Acquiesce” is almost impossibly euphoric. Suddenly a six piece – with Noel, Gem Archer and Paul ‘Bonehead’ Arthurs all on guitar – the Oasis wall of noise is even more titanic. Drummer Joey Waronker – recruited from Liam’s project with John Squire – successfully apes the styles of all four previous drummers (“our fourteenth drummer”, Noel jokes): from Tony McCarroll’s rattling garage band hi hats to Alan White’s show-y fills to Zak Starkey and Chris Sharrock’s retronomic grooves.

Photo: Samir Hussein/WireImage

Liam Gallagher, it is immediately apparent, is fired up for this like never before. It is he who has most craved this reunion: as much if not more so than the fans. He attacks “Morning Glory” and “Cigarettes & Alcohol” and “Supersonic” with a venom that elevates them way above nostalgia. These are sentiments – “I need to be myself/I can’t be no one else” – that ring as true coming from his mouth as they did when they were first released.

Given that Oasis have about 75 minutes’ worth of material that they simply have to play, there isn’t a great deal of room for curveballs. But the brash, Buzzcocks punk of “Fade Away” – a song both Liam and Noel revisited as solo artists – is a welcome, unexpected inclusion. A Be Here Now one-two of “D’You Know What I Mean?” and “Stand By Me” sits comfortably amongst the songs from better regarded albums. The Noel-sung moments, too – aside from the obvious ones – are surprising: “Talk Tonight” a rare low key moment, and a huge highlight.

But of course, in the main, it is the euphoria of the enormo-songs that people have paid all that money for. And relentlessly they come. “Live Forever” and “Half The World Away” and “Wonderwall“. “Don’t Look Back In Anger” and “The Masterplan” and “Slide Away“. When “Champagne Supernova” finally arrives, its seven minutes feel almost physical. 

The question of how long this reunion will run for – and if there will be new music – is one that nobody yet knows the answer to. Very little is said in between songs – there are certainly no across-the stage barbs – but by as the final chords ring out, as one of the biggest roasts of the night greets the sight of Liam and Noel briefly embracing each other, it feels like anyone with a pulse would want to experience an occasion as emotionally visceral as this many, many more times. And in that I include the two people at the very centre of all this.

Oasis setlist Cardiff July 4, 2025:

Hello
Acquiesce
Morning Glory
Some Might Say
Bring It on Down
Cigarettes & Alcohol
Fade Away
Supersonic
Roll With It
Talk Tonight
 (sung by Noel)
Half the World Away (sung by Noel)
Little By Little (sung by Noel)
D’You Know What I Mean?
Stand By Me
Cast No Shadow
Slide Away
Whatever
Live Forever
Rock ’n’ Roll Star


The Masterplan (sung by Noel)
Don’t Look Back in Anger (sung by Noel)
Wonderwall
Champagne Supernova

A Sound So Very Loud by Ted Kessler and Hamish MacBain is available now from Pan Macmillan

The V&A announces new details on the David Bowie Centre

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The David Bowie Centre opens at the V&A East Storehouse on September 13, 2025.

The David Bowie Centre opens at the V&A East Storehouse on September 13, 2025.

THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT STARS BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, SLY STONE, SCOTT WALKER, NEIL YOUNG, WET LEG, BLONDIE, BOOKER T, SADE AND MUCH MORE – CLICK HERE TO HAVE IT DELIVERED

New details have been revealed about the David Bowie Centre, at the recently-opened V&A East Storehouse.

The David Bowie archive encompasses 90,000+ items.

Bookings to see 3D items from the David Bowie archive, including costumes, musical instruments, models, props and scenery, can be made through the V&A’s new seven-day-a-week Order an Object service. Visitors can book up to five items per visit at a time that suits them. Bookings require at least two weeks’ notice and Bowie items will begin to go live for advance booking from September.

The Centre will open with two guest curated displays, by Nile Rodgers and The Last Dinner Party

Nine rotating displays reveal aspects of Bowie’s extraordinary creative capacity, including ideas for projects that were never realised. Highlights include an idea to adapt George Orwell‘s 1984 and unrealised Young Americans and Diamond Dogs films.

Other displays explore Bowie’s creation of his Ziggy Stardust and Aladdin Sane and look at his embrace of technology, futurism and science fiction, plus his 1987 Glass Spider tour and concert at the Berlin Wall. Others spotlight Bowie’s creative collaborators including Gail Ann Dorsey, and the creation of the 1975 Young Americans album, alongside his wide-spread creative influence and legacy.

Madeleine Haddon, Curator, V&A East said: “Bowie embodied a truly multi-disciplinary practice — musician, actor, writer, performer, and cultural icon — reflecting the way many young creatives today move fluidly across disciplines and reject singular definitions of identity or artistry. His fearless engagement with self-expression and performance has defined contemporary culture and resonates strongly with the values of authenticity, experimentation and freedom that we celebrate across the collections at V&A East Storehouse. This archive offers an extraordinary lens through which to examine broader questions of creativity, cultural change, and the social and historical moments during which Bowie lived and worked. In the Centre, we want you to get closer to Bowie, and his creative process than ever before. For Bowie fans and those coming to him for the first time, we hope the Centre can inspire the next generation of creatives.”

For more information on the David Bowie Centre and to sign-up for updates, please visit: vam.ac.uk/exhibitions/david-bowie-centre.

Eiko Ishibashi and Jim O’Rourke announce new album Pareidolia

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Eiko Ishibashi and Jim O’Rourke are releasing a new album Pareidolia, out August 29 through Drag City. You can hear an edit of the title track below.

Eiko Ishibashi and Jim O’Rourke are releasing a new album Pareidolia, out August 29 through Drag City. You can hear an edit of the title track below.

THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT STARS BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, SLY STONE, SCOTT WALKER, NEIL YOUNG, WET LEG, BLONDIE, BOOKER T, SADE AND MUCH MORE – CLICK HERE TO HAVE IT DELIVERED

A collage of improvised music from their 2023 European tour, Pareidolia follows Ishibashi’s latest album, Antigone, and O’Rourke’s Hands That Bind soundtrack.

The tracklisting for Pareidolia is:

Par
Ei
Do
Lia

Poor Creature – All Smiles Tonight

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The great success of Lankum, and their producer John “Spud” Murphy’s ubiquity across the sonically radicalised new Irish trad scene, can make it seem as if Ye Vagabonds, ØXN, John Francis Flynn and co comprise an essentially single entity, passing through Murphy’s studios for ocean-deep overdubs as centuries of lyrical heritage are challenged and channelled through doomy, bestial drones.

The great success of Lankum, and their producer John “Spud” Murphy’s ubiquity across the sonically radicalised new Irish trad scene, can make it seem as if Ye Vagabonds, ØXN, John Francis Flynn and co comprise an essentially single entity, passing through Murphy’s studios for ocean-deep overdubs as centuries of lyrical heritage are challenged and channelled through doomy, bestial drones.

THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT STARS BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, SLY STONE, SCOTT WALKER, NEIL YOUNG, WET LEG, BLONDIE, BOOKER T, SADE AND MUCH MORE – CLICK HERE TO HAVE IT DELIVERED

The contrast between Lankum’s often thunderously heavy yet beautifully textured albums and Landless’s more sparely arranged harmonies, though, shows Murphy’s careful attentiveness to each distinct talent. Lankum’s Cormac MacDiarmada provided trademark string drones on Landless’s Lúireach (2024), and he and Landless’s Ruth Clinton are romantic partners, these days living away from Dublin in northwest Ireland. Alongside Lankum’s touring drummer John Dermody, their debut as Poor Creature sees Murphy characteristically knee-deep in its arrangements.

The tenderness of the band’s name is reflected in their music, and the greater sense of space they require makes All Smiles Tonight an airier, optimistic contribution to Ireland’s new wave, despite trad songs haunted by limbo and loss. MacDiarmada and Clinton’s love of country music also results in covers of the Louvin Brothers’ “Lorene” and Irish country stars Ray Lynam & Philomena Begley’s “The Whole Town Knows”. Clinton, meanwhile, brings Landless’s vocal focus with her, as she explores sometimes incantatory rhythms, framed by Murphy in vast echoing chambers and intimate close-up.

Poor Creature inadvertently began in the first Covid lockdown, when a Zoom session brought Clinton and MacDiarmada’s friends poignantly if remotely together, and one sang the old love song “An Draighneán Donn”. “We had a laptop and phone open as well and there was a time-lag between the two,” Clinton recalls, “an overlap which Cormac recorded.” This gave a clue to new musical possibilities, earthed in a contemporary sadness which folk songs stood ready to address. In All Smiles Tonight’s “An Draighneán Donn”, the lyric mourning a migrating lover “going far away ’cross the foam” has this separation embodied by time-lagged, layered vocals. MacDiarmada’s viola drone and fiddle also faultily align, as if across a stuttering transmission in the cosmic beyond suggested by Murphy’s cavernous echo, climaxing in huge, sustained organ notes (incredibly, from an ’80s keytar). As the ballad’s mournful lyrics compress and scatter in the production’s heady, heavenly atmosphere, the massed vocal sound suggests the community felt in that original Zoom call, as the music ascends.

Adieu Lovely Eireann” sits at one extreme of All Smiles Tonight’s approach, as Clinton’s voice is all but submerged beneath a seam of strings, while Dermody’s pounding drums add to a ravey organ’s descent. Seek out the words sunk in this sea of sound, and the story of 19th-century forger William Hill, here a romantic rogue deported to Australia, aches with exile from beloved Ireland.

Bury Me Not” sees a sailor’s desperate dying fear of burial at sea cruelly ignored, as guitar feedback resembles groaning sea-beasts. Clinton’s sorrowful voice sees him to his fate, singing with gentle prettiness as “around his head the sea snakes hiss”. This awful lyrical beauty shows the value of the traditional song-collecting at the root of this contemporary music, soaked up by its makers in singing sessions in Dublin and now Donegal and Fermanagh. “It could be a song you’ve known for years,” Clinton says. “You just have to hear the right person singing it, and it could change everything.” The unlucky sailor is also serenaded by Clinton’s theremin, here not wobbling exotica but a piercing, near human sound.

Poor Creature are equally adept at the simplicity which Landless explore. MacDiarmada’s voice is bereft as the Louvin Brothers’ sparely emotional words plunge through the heart of “Lorene”: “To stop me from hurting, all it would take is a letter from you.” His guitar marks his halting progress, verses stopping, suspended, notes individuated and lonely. The title track sees Clinton’s replaced lover putting on a brave face as MacDiarmada’s fiddle accompanies her towards a dance, Dermody giving her progress gallows momentum, until her voice grows defiantly huge.

Clinton greets the ghost lover returning from across an ocean and death’s borders to again share her bed on the closing “Willie-O” with unshaken grace. Her modest, narrative vocal provides the pure folk counterweight to Murphy’s maelstroms – once again to thrilling effect.

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Wet Leg – Moisturizer

From The Rolling Stones to Robert Palmer, love as a medical emergency is a perennial theme for songwriters. Well, sound the alarm and send out the paramedics once again, because Wet Leg are in love. It’s all over their second album, but explicitly ringing out as a klaxon call on current single “CPR”. “Hello 999, what’s your emergency?” asks Rhian Teasdale with call handler calm before making her orgasmic self-diagnosis: “I…I…I…I…I…I’m in love.” And when Teasdale sings she’s in love, you’d best believe she’s in love, however you want to spell it.

From The Rolling Stones to Robert Palmer, love as a medical emergency is a perennial theme for songwriters. Well, sound the alarm and send out the paramedics once again, because Wet Leg are in love. It’s all over their second album, but explicitly ringing out as a klaxon call on current single “CPR”. “Hello 999, what’s your emergency?” asks Rhian Teasdale with call handler calm before making her orgasmic self-diagnosis: “I…I…I…I…I…I’m in love.” And when Teasdale sings she’s in love, you’d best believe she’s in love, however you want to spell it.

THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT STARS BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, SLY STONE, SCOTT WALKER, NEIL YOUNG, WET LEG, BLONDIE, BOOKER T, SADE AND MUCH MORE – CLICK HERE TO HAVE IT DELIVERED

It’s quite the turnaround. Debut album Wet Leg was written post-break-up, its sass and snark enabling a playfully scornful catharsis. Most of the songs had been concocted purely for the amusement of Teasdale and fellow founder Hester Chambers, a sort of knockabout therapy. But the release of debut single “Chaise Longue” in the summer of 2021 changed everything. Wet Leg became an old-school overnight sensation, as the world beyond their Isle of Wight home – an unexpected cultural ground zero, notwithstanding its festival history – fell bigtime for the song’s singular wit, louche hookline and deadpan call-and-response on buttered muffins and the like.

Teasdale and Chambers were carried along in its giddy slipstream all the way to the Brits, then onwards to scoop two Grammys, an Ivor Novello Award and score highly in Uncut’s Albums of the Year list. Through the rush of acclaim and surprise commercial success, the words of their third single “Too Late Now” resonated: “I’m not sure if this is the kind of life that I saw myself living.”

Two years of diligent touring, including zipping around the Antipodes supporting Harry Styles, laid the groundwork for that life. Some bands would have cracked; Wet Leg consolidated, and now identify as a five-piece with touring guitarist Joshua Mobaraki, bassist Ellis Durand and drummer Henry Holmes all firmly in the fold (plus producer Dan Carey an honorary sixth Leg on Swarmatron duties).

It turns out Teasdale and Chambers were fibbing back in 2022 when they said they had already completed their second album: instead Moisturizer sprang to life when the group rented an Airbnb in Southwold, Suffolk, a writers’ retreat in which to work by day, then hang out and watch horror films by night. This was the Wet Leg equivalent of Bon Iver’s cabin in the woods, a place to vanquish the pressure of expectation and home in on their own musical desires. They have dubbed this hermetic world “Moisturizer Valley”. According to Teasdale, it’s “a space somewhere between fantasy and reality” with a punk White Lotus aesthetic captured in the video for the album’s first single “Catch These Fists”. The song is a cranky kick-ass response to unwanted male attention, with Teasdale lumbering up and limboing down for a night out with trouble in store: “Limousine/Racking up/Ketamine/Giddy up/Man down/Level up”. It’s a cold shoulder in haiku style, soundtracked by a curt, clanking guitar line, a sonic disruption to send the unlucky suitor home with a flea in his ear: “He don’t get puss, he get the boot.”

We’re a long way from the self-comforting group hug of the Wet Leg sleeve. Instead, the talons are out on the somewhat disturbing album cover shot by Iris Luz, with Chambers and Teasdale presenting like ghoulish characters from a Hideo Nakata J-horror. It’s just one demonstration of the take-it-or-leave-it confidence threaded throughout Moisturizer, one of its strongest cards alongside a refreshed sound palette that relishes the ferocious dynamics of riot grrrl, freely indulges in outbreaks of garage rock and detours into Tame Impala-like, neon-lit grooves.

The album opens with their emergency callout “CPR”, capturing heady, unsettling confusion in the line “is it love or is it suicide?” The hounds of love are in pursuit but instead of throwing her shoes in the lake, she’s leaping off the precipice. Meanwhile, the rest of the band are laying down a lithe, bendy bassline, punctuated with bursts of grungey guitar en route to the song’s clamorous climax.

The bells and whistles subside but Teasdale is still disorientated by her treatment on “Liquidise”, as she outlines turning to jelly at the thought of her condition (“so many creatures in the fucking world/How did I get to be so lucky?”) and rides the choppy waves of guitar by alternating between deadpan staccato delivery and sweeter legato tones.

Elsewhere, the band emulate something close to relaxed rapture, or at least contentment on “Davina McCall”, a laidback paean to resting easy in a relationship with a lyric inspired by McCall’s Big Brother catchphrase “I’m coming to get you”. As it happens, McCall is already a confirmed Wet Leg fan and delighted by her namecheck. Shakira, meanwhile, has yet to comment on the line “I’ll be your Shakira, whenever, wherever”.

In addition to her curveball cultural comparisons, Teasdale embraces romantic cliché – battling through storms, never wanting to wake up from the dream, not noticing crummy weather because time spent with her love means eternal sunshine – but she’s still deep in reverie on the goth-tinged “Jennifer’s Body”, oscillating between shy understatement (“I like you”) and more daring gender-fluid gestures (“want a man?/I’ll pretend for you”). Teasdale has spoken about the liberation she has found in embracing her queerness and shrugging off the male gaze. So she doesn’t mince her words on “Mangetout”, with its terse hookline “get lost forever”. In one of the album’s few breaks from bliss, a mock coquettish Teasdale drips bile as she trills sweetly “you’re washed up, irrelevant and standing in my light”. As melodic fuzz guitars build up a head of steam, she seems to damn all male-kind before dropping the mic, message delivered, job done.

Hester Chambers, meanwhile, offers her take on love at first sight on “Pond Song”. Cosmological couplings and Princess Bride references are propelled along by the fuzz guitar and bouncy keyboard combo once favoured by Elastica. It may possibly be the only love song ever to namecheck the Solent, but where else is an Isle of Wight girl going to gaze wistfully across the water? Chambers makes more slightly dorky cultural connections – “the rock to my roll… we go like salsa and Doritos” – on melodic grunge track “Don’t Speak”. With super-soft vocals, she touches on the vulnerability of obsession, where emotional availability tips over into malleability.

The album’s most graceful moment, “11:21”, is also one of the highlights, as Teasdale stretches her vocal from plaintive soprano to plangent alto, while Chambers makes the tin whistle flutter with surprising elegance. In contrast, the entire band whoop it up on the closing “U And Me At Home”, all chiming in with animalistic whoops on the titular hookline to produce an exultant group mantra.

By this point, it’s all too clear that Wet Leg have blitzed any second album nerves. Indeed, Moisturizer is a bold confident blast fuelled by the security and invincibility of a deep love, whether the songs pitch headlong into a torrid affair on the punchy “Pillow Talk” or into the rush of new love on the alluring twanging canter of “Pokemon”. “I don’t wanna take it slow,” insists Teasdale, as the chaise longue disappears in the rearview mirror.

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Bill Callahan – EartH Theatre, London, July 2, 2025

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The worst of the heatwave has passed through London by the time Bill Callahan rolls into town, but it’s still sweltering in Earth’s cavernous art deco theatre. It’s packed in here, too: 720 people squeezed in to witness one of America’s finest living songwriters play a rare solo show as part of a European summer run. A handful will be lucky enough to pick up one of the custom T-shirts Callahan is selling at the merch stall for £40 – plain, off-white shirts that he writes on before each show. On the last one left, he’s written “River Guard” across the front in black marker pen, the title of one of his most powerful songs, from 1999’s Knock Knock. Someone snaps it up. Seems like a good deal.

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The size of venue feels right for this stripped-back show. The sole focus is Callahan, in green shirt and blue trousers, playing a white electric Fender and a hi-hat he operates with his left foot while his right activates a subtle kick from an array of pedals. A few years back he struggled to fill Hammersmith Apollo with a full band, but last September his four-night residency at the ICA with drummer Jim White went down a storm. This show is pure, undiluted Callahan, hypnotic and intense, as this great interpreter of dreams explores the human condition in that laconic baritone, his words ripe with wonder and subversion. 

Callahan turned 59 last month and has a young family to look after, which might explain his desire to hit the road three years after his last album YTILAER, touring a solo performance with minimal overheads. It’s still a captivating spectacle – it’s tempting to cast him as the Gen X Leonard Cohen, given his deep catalogue and devoted fanbase – though you sense this is very much work for him, clocking in for an 80-minute shift. “What time is it?” he asks after he’s played “Rock Bottom Riser”. “10.40pm,” someone shouts. “OK. Wonderful to be here, thank you all for coming,” he says, putting his guitar down and walking off. There’s no encore. 

Before that, he glides fairly serenely through 16 songs which amount to a Callahan best-of, taking in Smog staples such as “Cold Blooded Old Times”, “Teenage Spaceship” and “Red Apples”. On “Let’s Move To The Country”, another from Knock Knock, the record he made after his break-up with Chan Marshall, he adds a new line – “Pretty woman in a petticoat”, to pair with “live with a monkey and a goat” – then returns to his eternal source of inspiration: “Off to sleep we go / To the land that we don’t know.” As he sings on “Coyotes”: “They say never wake a dreamer – maybe that’s how we die.” 

When Callahan reduces his material to its essence in this way – his sinuous guitar playing is treated with effects – you’re confronted with the stark brilliance and bleak beauty of his songs. There’s the prison warden wrestling with his conscience in the opener “Jim Cain”. On the next song, “747”, he sings of seeing “stock footage of heaven” after waking up on a plane. And then he seeks to divine meaning from his place in the natural order of things, his lyrics rich with symbolism as he tucks into the frontier blues of “The Well” and “Say Valley Maker”. 

In addressing universal themes, Callahan bridges the ancient and the modern – many of his songs might’ve been written a hundred years ago – and you feel he’s part of a lineage of cosmic Americana sketched out by Cormac McCarthy and David Lynch, visionaries who mapped out their own realities, whose stories are laced with magic realism. “This place feels real nice – like my first gigs in London a long time ago,” he says. The old times were good for Callahan too, but now he’s lived his experiences, he’s rarely sounded better. 

SET LIST 
1 Jim Cain
2 Eid Ma Clack Shaw
3 747
4 Cold Blooded Old Times
5 Ride For The Feeling
6 Coyotes
7 Teenage Spaceship
8 Partition
9 Cowboy
10 Natural Information
11 Red Apples
12 Say Valley Maker
13 The Well
14 Let’s Move To The Country
15 In The Pines
16 Rock Bottom Riser 

WIN tickets to the Amateur Photographer Festival of Photography – DOCUMENTARY!

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Our friends at Amateur Photographer are hosting the Festival of Photography – DOCUMENTARY a one-day event held on August 9, 2025 at the Royal Geographical Society in South Kensington, London – and you could win tickets to the event.

Our friends at Amateur Photographer are hosting the Festival of Photography – DOCUMENTARY a one-day event held on August 9, 2025 at the Royal Geographical Society in South Kensington, London – and you could win tickets to the event.

THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT STARS BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, SLY STONE, SCOTT WALKER, NEIL YOUNG, WET LEG, BLONDIE, BOOKER T, SADE AND MUCH MORE – CLICK HERE TO HAVE IT DELIVERED

Building on the success of the Festival of Outdoor Photography, Amateur Photographer is giving you another opportunity to learn, be inspired and engage with leading image-makers as they share their wealth of knowledge.

Throughout the day you will hear from a series of world class experts in Documentary photography. Each giving an insight into their work, how they captured some of the world’s best known documentary images and how you can too. Confirmed speakers include: Zed Nelson, Laura Pannack, Jillian Edelstein, Jon Nicholson and more!

Here’s the line-up…

ZED NELSON: Guns, Beauty and the Anthropocene
This year’s Sony World Photography Awards winner Zed Nelson takes us on a revealing journey into humankind’s increasingly illusory relationship with the natural world, and behind the scenes on three previous award-winning projects.

JON NICHOLSON: Auto Exposure
Jon takes us through his 40-year career in sports reportage, documenting the culture of everything from Formula 1 (featuring the likes of Ayrton Senna and Damon Hill) to banger racing, as well as some of his other work.

SIMON HILL & JOHN BULMER: The North Revisited 
John Bulmer’s colour images of northern England taken in the 1960s and ’70s remain a cornerstone of British documentary photography. Simon Hill recently revisited those communities and they discuss their two bodies of work.

KRISHNA SHETH: Life on the Picture Desk
Recently appointed Director of Photography for The Economist, Krishna will talk about her career, which began as a picture researcher at the Express newspaper, before becoming Deputy Photography Director at The Telegraph Magazine.

JILLIAN EDELSTEIN: Sharing the Story
Jillian shares stories related to managing reconciliation in post-apartheid South Africa, personal stories linked to Ukraine and Palestine, and local stories on a range of topics. Plus, how commercial work helps to fund the personal projects.

CAROL ALLEN-STOREY: Telling Women’s Stories
Carol discusses her humanitarian documentary work photographing issues affecting women and children around the world for NGOs such as UNICEF, Save the Children and Comic Re

LAURA PANNACK: Documentary Portraiture
Laura discusses her portraiture and social documentary work, which has been extensively exhibited and published worldwide, including at the National Portrait Gallery, the Houses of Parliament, Somerset House and the Royal Festival Hall.

Watch Neil Young And The Chrome Hearts perform “Ambulance Blues”

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Neil Young and The Chrome Hearts performed "Ambulance Blues" last night [July 1, 2025] at Drafbaan Stadspark, Groningen in The Netherlands. You can watch fan footage below.

Neil Young and The Chrome Hearts performed “Ambulance Blues” last night [July 1, 2025] at Drafbaan Stadspark, Groningen in The Netherlands. You can watch fan footage below.

THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT STARS BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, SLY STONE, SCOTT WALKER, NEIL YOUNG, WET LEG, BLONDIE, BOOKER T, SADE AND MUCH MORE – CLICK HERE TO HAVE IT DELIVERED

This is a relatively rare outing for the On The Beach track, which Young hasn’t performed live since his 2019 American solo tour.

Prior to that, Young and The Promise Of The Real (the Chrome Hearts forebears) performed it during a private concert in France in 2016.

The track received a more consistent outing during Young’s 2008 tour with the Chrome Dreams band – aka Ben Keith, Rick Rosas, Ralph Molina, Pegi Young, Anthony Crawford and Cary Kemp.

You can read our review of Young and the Chrome Hearts in Copenhagen on June 22, 2025 by clicking here.

The Best Albums Of 2025… Halftime Report

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As we hit the halfway point of 2025, here's 20 of the best albums we've heard - released between January 1 and June 30.

As we hit the halfway point of 2025, here’s 20 of the best albums we’ve heard – released between January 1 and June 30.

This list is chronological, beginning with The Weather Station‘s Humanhood – which was released on January 17 – and ending with Van Morrison‘s Remember Now, which was released on June 13.

Plenty of great stuff here – from familiar faces to newcomers and, we hope, a few surprises…

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The Weather Station
Humanhood
[Fat Possum]
What we said: “Tamara Lindeman’s stunning seventh album is the work of a songwriter at the peak of her powers, possessing fierce honesty and outstanding creative instincts as she addresses anxieties both personal and global…

Chris Eckman
The Land We Knew The Best
[Glitterhouse]
What we said: “… a collection of interior monologues, essays in contrition, apology, enough regret to flood a valley. ‘Somehow I missed the memo that said when you reach breaking point, you just say stop…’ Eckman sings on the confessional ‘Haunted Nights’, an attempt to explain ruinous behaviour…

Richard Dawson
End Of The Middle
[Domino]
What we said: “After The Ruby Cord, an 80-minute album set in a hallucinatory VR future, Richard Dawson is concentrating on smaller things here: namely, the mundane trauma of family units. Yet his songwriting is as powerful and moving as ever…

Yazz Ahmed
A Paradise In The Hold
[Night Time Stories]
What we said: “Trumpeter, flugelhornist and composer Yazz Ahmed has created her most exquisite song world yet on A Paradise In The Hold, 10 tracks of magnetic, boundry-transcending jazz that intricately blend influences from her British-Bahraini heritage…

The Tubs
Cotton Crown
[Trouble In Mind]
What we said: “… the addictive jangle of the music, the sheen of darkness beyond the melody and the lyrical concision of Owen Williams, who writes a song that is exorcism, confession and accusation all at once…

The Delines
Mr. Luck & Ms. Doom
[Decor Records and El Cortez Records]
What we said: “In a little over 40 minutes, [Willy] Vlautin, [Amy] Boone and the boys take you on a road trip across the great divide, from the casinos of Biloxi, right up on to the rodeos of Utah and somehow chart an entire continent of cruelty, desperation and clear-eyed determination.”

Edwyn Collins
Nation Shall Speak Unto Nation
[AED]
What we said: “Working with his regular collaborators -co-producers Jake Hutton and Sean Read, musicians James Walbourne and Carwyn Ellis, and son Will (on bass) – Collins collates his influences into a carnival of understatement.”

Destroyer
Dan’s Boogie
[Merge]
What we said: “... these songs insinuate with a vaguely vintage sound that recalls Jonathan Donahue’s spangled dreaminess and the (s)weary brio of Father John Misty…

Eiko Ishibashi
Antigone
[Drag City]
What we said: “With Antigone, Ishibashi’s music has reached an astonishing level of maturity – at the level of tone, texture and text. The creative partnership she has achieved with the mercurial Jim O’Rourke, since they met over 15 years ago, continues to pay wonderful dividends.”

Dean Wareham
That’s the Price of Loving Me
[Carpark]
What we said: “It says everything about Wareham’s distinctive way around a guitar that he can take a Nico cover – in this case, ‘Reich De Träume’ – and shape it into something warm and languorous, in keeping with the rest of this great solo album.

Brown Horse
All the Right Weaknesses
[Loose Music]
What we said: “Brown Horse have taken the live momentum of the new songs directly into the studio, keeping their raw charge intact which accentuating their dynamics and fine-tuning their arrangements.”

The Waterboys
Life, Death And Dennis Hopper
[Sun Records]
What we said: “Conceptually, it’s closer to Songs For Drella or Sufjan Stevens’ Illinois than it is Rick Wakeman. Hopper is a device, an operatic metaphor concerning pop’s golden age, where artists had the freedom to explore themselves and make mistakes.”

Salif Keita
In So Kono
[NØ FØRMAT!]
What we said: “His guitar playing takes centre stage, hypnotic, complex, repetitive patterns played clawhammer style, plucked with the flesh at the tips of his fingers like a medieval lute player, usually with a capo high on the fretboard…

William Tyler
Time Indefinite
[Psychic Hotline]
What we said: “While his previous records examined the pathway to modern America, Time Indefinite seems to stare into the heart of what the country is now, in all its fragmented polarised turmoil; the state of the nation in perfect sync with Tyler’s own troubled state of mind.”

Kassi Valazza
From Newman Street
[Loose Music]
What we said: “From Newman Street is an album full of chapters closing and new ones opening, created by a singer-songwriter who embellishes her folky observations with psychedelic flourishes and knowing nods to the past.”

Robert Forster
Strawberries
[Tapete Records]
What we said: “On his ninth solo album, Forster once again knits together the ordinary and the remarkable, furring the edges with a craftsman’s dexterity.”

Stereolab
Instant Holograms On Metal Film
[Duophonic UHF Disks and Warp Records]
What we said: “At a time when neo-facism is on the rise across the world and even a Labour government is slashing welfare budgets to boost defence spending, Instant Holograms… pushes back forcefully against this grim tide with a vital blast of agit-pop.

Alan Sparhawk
With Trampled By Turtles
[Sub Pop]
What we said: “Sparhawk’s relationship with progressive bluegrass/country folk types Trampled By Turtles stretches back to their early days when they were mentees and mates in Duluth, Minnesota. When he was fathomed deep in grief, the sextet invited him to ride along for some tour dates and occasionally he joined them onstage…

Pulp
More
[Rough Trade]
What we said: “Over almost half a century they’ve been an object lesson in a band slowly discovering their strengths, honing their craft, taking their time. They’ve matured – not like a fine wine, but maybe like a magnificently ripe Wensleydale.

Van Morrison
Remembering Now
[Exile Productions and Virgin Records]
What we said: “The title refers not only to the recurring lyrical theme of a man in his 80th year simultaneously inhabiting both his past and present, but the rich sense of musical retrieval, too.”

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Five of the best live sets we saw at Glastonbury 2025

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Pulp
(Pyramid Stage, Saturday)

It’s been precisely thirty years and four days, Jarvis Cocker informs us, since Pulp walked onto the Pyramid Stage in 1995 to replace The Stone Roses as headliners, a genuine surprise in the pre-iSnitch days. For two songs – “Sorted For E’s And Wizz” and “Disco 2000”, both debuted here in ’95 – there’s the possibility that ‘Patchwork’ (as they’re billed) might recreate that legendary set in jumbled order, but towards the end of their sensational hour, Cocker pulls out the original 1995 setlist, writ on the back of an envelope, and tears it to pieces declaring, “It’s all about now”.

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And a rammed Pyramid Stage field very much live in their own Pulp Summer moment; there’s an effervescent “Do You Remember The First Time?”, a breakneck “Mis-Shapes”, a sublime “Babies” and an intimate “Something Changed”. “Acrylic Afternoons” takes us back to the dawning of indie sleaze and the Red Arrows make a perfectly timed fly-by at the climax of “Common People”. Thirty years on, they still steal the weekend.

Neil Young And The Chrome Hearts
(Pyramid Stage, Saturday)

“How you doing at home in your bedrooms?” Having backed down from his refusal to be televised, Neil Young treats the viewing millions to his own skewed and intense version of a great Glasto moment. It’s a set by turns fragile and ferocious: he first emerges alone with a guitar for an unshowy “Sugar Mountain” – a paean to youth from a 79-year-old veteran of dark country arts – before his Chrome Hearts band arrive bearing CSNY-esque harmonies and no little righteous fury.

Be The Rain” demands urgent climate action in the face of rampant consumerism, Young barking about Big Oil and deforestation through one loudhailer effect mic of the many in his array; “Cinnamon Girl” and “Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black)” are things of crushing dynamic impact.

The Needle And The Damage Done” and “Harvest Moon”, respectively, provide a period of intimate reflection and idyllic respite and, while there is a good twenty minutes or so of bluesy indulgence an hour in, Young punches his humanitarian politics down the camera lenses with closing rages through “Rockin’ In The Free World” and “Throw Your Hatred Down”, just when we need them most. All that, and Hank Williams’ guitar as special guest for “Looking Forward” – in Young terms, a hit blitz.

Wolf Alice
(Other Stage, Sunday)

With Kneecap’s field closed off two hours before stage-time, Bob Vylan making headlines and virtually every second band expressing support for Palestine, it’s a politically charged weekend. Ellie Rowsell’s declaration of “Solidarity with the people of Palestine” ahead of Wolf Alice’s bubble-swathed finale “Don’t Forget The Kisses” is far from controversial then, and certainly less so than the fact that this London band weren’t automatically handed a Pyramid Stage headline slot.

As album four approaches, they have the crowds, the songs and the sheer showstopping variety. Rowsell first appears in star-smothered attire, roaring “Formidable Cool” like a levitating demon goddess. Then, within the first half hour alone, she transforms into a dream-pop angel for “Delicious Things”, a feverish Kate Bush for primal recent single “Bloom Baby Bloom” and a Laurel Canyon balladeer for the seated acoustic “Safe From Heartbreak (If You Never Fall In Love)“. One minute she’s striking supervillain poses with a megaphone for an utterly savage “Yuk Foo”, the next cooing though a gorgeously glitched-up “Silk” or a phenomenal “The Last Man On Earth” that could teach Lana Del Rey a thing or two about enormous cinematic drama ballads. Majestic.

John Fogerty
(Pyramid Stage, Saturday)

Finally recovering his song rights after a 50-year legal battle has clearly made John Fogerty an invigorated figure. Full of life and blue plaid energy, he tears into his mid-afternoon set like a honky-tonker possessed, surrounded by an equally excitable family band and backed by suitably Creedence-friendly visuals: wide open highways, dappling brooks, backwoods wildlife. He spends the next hour going on down to Virginia, California, Louisiana and wherever else takes his wandering fancy, revelling in the sheer joy and vigour of his impassioned roots Americana.

It’s very much a Creedence show: he powers through “Up Around The Bend”, “Green River” and “Born On The Bayou” in short measure, exults over the joyful memory of being gifted the guitar he wrote “Who’ll Stop The Rain” on, and hops on a locomotive for “Keep On Chooglin’”. For the finale, he’ll toast Glastonbury with a flute of freshly poured champagne ahead of “Bad Moon Rising” and “Proud Mary”, much to celebrate at 80.

Not Completely Unknown
(Acoustic Stage, Saturday)

Come for the rumours that Timothy Chalamet might turn up (he doesn’t), stay for the rich and heartfelt renditions of Bob Dylan songs from a collection of devoted acolytes. Helmed by Sid Griffin of The Long Ryders and set up as an intimate chamber country affair (stand-up bass, banjo, piano, the works), the Not Completely Unknown show is a reverent homage, each player telling their best Bob gig anecdote ahead of a few favoured numbers drawn from Greenwich Village to gospel conversion. Paul Carrack delivers a sweetly bluegrass “Mr Tambourine Man”, Ralph McTell a harmonica-drenched “One Too Many Mornings”.

Hothouse Flowers singer Liam Ó Maonlaí is the only one to approach a Bob-like delivery for “Is Your Love In Vain?” and “Pressing On”. More inventive is Katya, who reworks “One More Cup Of Coffee” for doudouk and trip-hop keyboard. Delicious stuff, but no “Murder Most Foul”?

Introducing The Definitive Ultimate Music Guide: Oasis

Hello, hello, it's good to be back

Hello, hello, it’s good to be back

“You gonna wake up then, or what?”

As we launch this new magazine, in the shops tomorrow, it’s exactly 31 years – almost to the minute – since Oasis first sauntered on to the NME stage at the Glastonbury Festival and into the consciousness of the wider world. Up until this point the band had been joyously heralded by the weekly music papers for six months, and available to witness at only around 30 gigs in provincial pubs and clubs. This, then – for a group who had released their debut single six weeks previously – was undoubtedly a big one.

Oasis play for 30 minutes, but from what I recall from watching them out in the field that day, it feels much longer. The performance is poised and spectacularly unhurried, as if they have everything completely under control and are proceeding, from “Shakermaker” to “I Am The Walrus”, at their own serene pace, according to their own plan.

There’s a point during the instrumental break of “Supersonic” where Liam Gallagher stands completely still and simply drinks it all in, for a moment the calm centre of the storm. He reviews the Manchester City T shirts, the massive gathering, the crowd surfing. If he was thinking that he’d arrived in style and on schedule, he wouldn’t have been wrong.

It’s this side of Oasis – the poise, the accomplishment, the bravura self-confidence – that we particularly celebrate in this 172-page definitive edition. There are insightful in-depth reviews of every Oasis album, and of Noel and Liam’s solo careers. There’s an introduction from Liam and an affectionate afterword from Bonehead – and an eight-page foldout miscellany and timeline to complement the story.

Maybe best of all are the archive interviews. Writers from NME and Melody Maker are there throughout the band’s career, but it’s the ones who are there at the start who have the privilege of witnessing the charisma, and accomplishment of a group the like of which they haven’t seen for quite some time.

“Nice one, see you later,” Liam says as he and Noel leave the stage that day. It’s admittedly quite a lot later, but we welcome them back now for all of the same reasons we welcomed them then.

Enjoy the magazine. You can reserve your limited edition hardback here.

Quadrophenia: A Mod Ballet, Sadler’s Wells, London, June 25, 2025

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Pete Townshend’s major rock operas – Tommy, Lifehouse and Quadrophenia – are a personal legacy he continues to wrestle with, repeatedly reviving and retranslating them into new forms. Quadrophenia (1973) was his attempt to remind The Who of their youthful Mod roots, and the music which lured him back to the band for 1996 performances of the album. After the 1979 film fleshed out and supplanted his liner note narrative, his wife Rachel Fuller’s orchestral arrangements for Quadrophenia Classical (2015) reconfigured the music. That recording, with additional soloists replacing vocals, soundtracks Quadrophenia: A Mod Ballet. The title will provoke derision from Who fundamentalists, suspicious of Townshend’s sometimes overreaching penchant for high-art versions of his classic music. Working with his blessing and light touch consultation, though, this Sadler’s Wells production revives Quadrophenia’s fervid, youthful essence.

Pete Townshend’s major rock operas – Tommy, Lifehouse and Quadrophenia – are a personal legacy he continues to wrestle with, repeatedly reviving and retranslating them into new forms. Quadrophenia (1973) was his attempt to remind The Who of their youthful Mod roots, and the music which lured him back to the band for 1996 performances of the album. After the 1979 film fleshed out and supplanted his liner note narrative, his wife Rachel Fuller’s orchestral arrangements for Quadrophenia Classical (2015) reconfigured the music. That recording, with additional soloists replacing vocals, soundtracks Quadrophenia: A Mod Ballet. The title will provoke derision from Who fundamentalists, suspicious of Townshend’s sometimes overreaching penchant for high-art versions of his classic music. Working with his blessing and light touch consultation, though, this Sadler’s Wells production revives Quadrophenia’s fervid, youthful essence.

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A prologue sees Jimmy (Paris Fitzpatrick) poised on a jutting rock over stormy back-projected waves and the equally tempestuous, crashing brass of “I Am The Sea”. Four Mods emerge behind him to represent his four psychological sides, a narrative element likely lost on newcomers to Townshend’s story.

Act One then reverts to Jimmy’s London life, from office drone frustration to his idolatry of rock star the Godfather (Jack Widdowson), introduced with “My Generation”’s original violent guitar chords of as he rips open his Union Jack jacket. His tossing of Jimmy’s My Generation album in the Stage Door gutter is the first of several grim disillusions. Jimmy’s solo dance acts as a physical soliloquy in response, green parka trailing raggedly behind him, no match for the dazzling grace of his other hero the Ace Face (Dan Baines, looking more like Trainspotting’s cocky blond Jonny Lee Miller than Sting).

Director Rob Ashford and choreographer Paul Roberts ignore the cinema interpretation of the album’s story in these London scenes. Townshend’s concern with his parents’ war-traumatised generation and their impact on his own is movingly dramatised in Jimmy’s parents’ suburban home life. Mother (Kate Tydman) rouses from depressed sofa slumber to engage Father (Stuart Neal) in a desperate, half-violent erotic dance to “Love Reign O’er Me”, before slumping back to Valium and TV as Jimmy enters, ignorant of their roiling inner lives. Inter-generational anger simmers when he joins his dad in deadening factory work, explained by a flashback to Father surviving his friends’ wartime massacre on another coastal rock, the score dropping to hear their last gasps. A Soho café sanctuary and the exhilaration of Jimmy and the coveted Mod Girl’s rock club dance to “Can’t Explain”, pushing themselves to the limit as Yazz Ahmed’s Milesian trumpet gives the song a new, hip twist, counter these inherited horrors.

Act Two sends Jimmy to Brighton, where day-tripping Mods terrify packed commuter carriages to “5.15”, and he floats skyward amid swirling visions of pills and dream girls. A thrilling Mods and Rockers battle royal contrasts with Jimmy’s beach reunion with his family, a tantalising moment of happy unity with his childhood self. It all leads back to that jutting rock, though, where the crisis which sent Phil Daniels’ Jimmy’s scooter hurtling over a cliff is reached. The ocean churns under cosmic black sky, and Fitzpatrick’s acting matches his dancing as Jimmy shudders through his dark night of the teenage soul, finally achieving shattered transcendence as “Love Reign O’er Me” hits Gotterdammerung orchestral heights harder than any power chord. Alongside the young cast’s exuberant dancing and brightly coloured Paul Smith fashion, this ending’s hard-won optimism should speak to any new, young audiences who may be lured to Sadler’s Wells, giving The Who a fresh generation of fans.

Lana Del Rey opens 2025 UK tour in Cardiff

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Lana Del Rey opened her British tour in Cardiff last night, June 23, 2025. Here are our pick of five great moments from the show.

Lana Del Rey opened her British tour in Cardiff last night, June 23, 2025. Here are our pick of five great moments from the show.

ULTIMATE RECORD COLLECTION: LANA DEL REY IS IN SHOPS NOW OR AVAILABLE TO BUY FROM US HERE

Country playlist

Hope you like her new direction! Whether it’s called Lasso, The Right One Will Stay, Classic or something different entirely, Lana’s new album is said to moving in a country direction. Even if support group London Grammar don’t exactly set the tone for that, Lana’s pre-show playlist does – hitting the crowd with historic pop/country crossover hits like Jimmy Dean’s “Big Bad John” (1961), “Jackson” by Johnny Cash and June Carter (1967) and Glen Campbell’s “Rhinestone Cowboy” (1975).

Actual husband

Much as she did at Stagecoach in the spring, Lana opens the show with a new song, “Husband Of Mine”. Point of difference for Cardiff: her actual husband – alligator tour guide Jeremy Dufrene – is in the house! “It’s a long way to travel,” she explains as she sniffles a bit after embracing him mid-song. “These are good tears!”

“Happy Birthday Lana!”

There weren’t a load of signs commemorating Lana’s 40th birthday last Saturday, but the one caught by the roving crowd camera does raise a endearingly massive cheer when it’s shown on the big screen.

“57”

Maybe the best of the new songs we’ve heard so far – certainly the catchiest – “57” gets a huge welcome from Lana’s Welsh fandom, who are hip enough to have pre-learned the words from Stagecoach footage on YouTube. Featuring her Spotify stats as a chorus “I’ve got 57.5 million listeners on Spotify…”. It’s genius, because it’s true.

“Young And Beautiful”

Great song anyway but improved by Lana’s concession to the traditional “pier into the crowd” stadium gig strategy. Followed by a Lady Diana Spencer-style train of gauzy dress fabric, she performs the song from beneath the kind of floral arch under which American couples get married in idyllic locations. Do we take this theatre? We do.

A full review will appear in the next Uncut, on sale July 18

ULTIMATE RECORD COLLECTION: LANA DEL REY IS IN SHOPS NOW OR AVAILABLE TO BUY FROM US HERE

Hear The Lemonheads’ new single, “In The Margin”

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Evan Dando has confirmed that the new Lemonheads album Love Chant will be released by Fire Records on October 24. Hear new single “In The Margin” below:

THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT STARS BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, SLY STONE, SCOTT WALKER, NEIL YOUNG, WET LEG, BLONDIE, BOOKER T, SADE AND MUCH MORE – CLICK HERE TO HAVE IT DELIVERED

Love Chant (pre-order here) was recorded in Brazil by Apollo Nove and features guest appearances from J Mascis, Juliana Hatfield, Erin Rae, John Strohm of the Blake Babies and Nick Saloman of The Bevis Frond. Other songs were co-written with Adam Green of The Moldy Peaches and Dando’s long-time collaborator Tom Morgan.

It will be released to coincide with Dando’s memoir, Rumours Of My Demise, which is published by Faber on November 6.

The Lemonheads tour the UK and Europe throughout August and September, see the full list of dates on the poster below:

Terry Riley by Pete Townshend

Happy 90th birthday, Terry Riley! Pete Townshend hails the minimalist maestro’s enduring influence...

Happy 90th birthday, Terry Riley! Pete Townshend hails the minimalist maestro’s enduring influence

“The first time I heard Terry Riley would’ve been A Rainbow In Curved Air, when it first came out in 1969. I wasn’t particularly studying minimalist or electronic music, but I was experimenting and finding new stuff, and I happened upon him. I was playing with tape machines, which were central to Terry Riley’s method. It was how he got his delay loops. I also had two tape machines, but I used to bounce from machine to machine, rather than use them as a delay system.

THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT STARS BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, SLY STONE, SCOTT WALKER, NEIL YOUNG, WET LEG, BLONDIE, BOOKER T, SADE AND MUCH MORE – CLICK HERE TO HAVE IT DELIVERED

“‘Baba O’Riley’ was an accident. It came out of the Lifehouse project, where I was working on creating music using computers. But I couldn’t get my hands on a music computer that was up to the job, and ended up drifting into synthesisers. I was working with the Lowrey Berkshire, which had a repetitive kind of arpeggio setting. Instead of precise mathematical beats, it had drop beats in between, with drop rhythms and repeated rhythms, so you got the effect of layering. And when I listened back, I went into a kind of meditative trance. I think I’d experienced some of that while listening to A Rainbow In Curved Air – a sense of being raised up and lifted, lost in the moment. So I just felt it was right to name it in honour of Terry Riley.

“After A Rainbow In Curved Air, I think everybody was hoping that he would do more, but he didn’t do anything like it. I think the closest he came was working with John Cale on Church Of Anthrax [1971]. I met him later on – it might’ve been the late ’70s/early ’80s – when he came to a Who gig in San Francisco. Terry was an experimenter. He wasn’t interested in [making] friends, he wasn’t interested in having hits – although he did say to me when we met, ‘I wish I’d made something out of my work as you have.’

“I think what a lot of people don’t know about Terry Riley is that he’s also a reed player. He plays saxophone on In C and did an album called Reed Streams [1966], which is really interesting because it demonstrates that he was drifting into more classical Indian modality scales. He also worked with the Kronos Quartet [1984’s Cadenza On The Night Plain and 1989’s Salome Dances For Peace] and that actually sounds like baroque music. So when you hear his diversions – his experiments, his adventures in tonal fields other than electronic music or organ music – you hear his baroque and Indian influences more clearly. But they’re actually there in everything that he does. He’s quite clearly an ascetic, he’s quite clearly an inheritor of the sincere San Francisco hippie movement of spirituality and Indian and Vedantic meditation and Buddhism and so on. “To be honest, I don’t know quite what I’m doing yet for the Barbican performance. I know that they’re doing In C, which I’ve performed myself when I did Lifehouse Chronicles at Sadler’s Wells in 2000. I also did an orchestral version of ‘Baba O’Riley’, which I might like to put up if I can gather the musicians. But I’m now in the process of getting out my old organs and tape loop systems and seeing if I can come up with something. It should be interesting.”

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