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David Bowie: Sound And Vision limited edition 40th anniversary picture disc revealed

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David Bowie's "Sound And Vision" will be released as a 7" picture disc to mark the 40th-anniversary of the single's original release. It will be released on February 10 2017; the original single was released on February 11, 1977. The A-side features a brand new remaster of the track and the flip s...

David Bowie‘s “Sound And Vision” will be released as a 7″ picture disc to mark the 40th-anniversary of the single’s original release.

It will be released on February 10 2017; the original single was released on February 11, 1977.

The A-side features a brand new remaster of the track and the flip side sees the first physical release of the 2013 remix of the song. The stripped back remix by Sonjay Prabhakar was originally done for a Sony Experia advert and utilises the original lead vocals and Mary Hopkin’s backing vocal with a new piano part.

The track listing is:

A-Side Sound and Vision (2016 remaster)
Produced David Bowie & Tony Visconti

B-Side Sound and Vision (Sony Experia mix)
Produced David Bowie & Tony Visconti
Remixed by Sonjay Prabhakar

The images used on the A and B sides of the picture disc are by David James and were taken during the filming of The Man Who Fell To Earth.

Meanwhile, a new documentary – David Bowie: The Last Five Years – will air on Saturday, January 7 on BBC Two between 9.00pm-10.30pm.

You can read our preview of David Bowie: The Last Five Years in the new Uncut – now on sale and available to buy digitally

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

An interview with Brian Eno: “I didn’t see Bowie and Lou as my peers”

To celebrate the arrival of a new Brian Eno album - Reflections - I thought I'd post my interview with Eno from last year, which coincided with the release of The Ship. The piece originally appeared in our June 2016 issue and our conversation, which took place at Eno's studio, covered a lot of groun...

To celebrate the arrival of a new Brian Eno album – Reflections – I thought I’d post my interview with Eno from last year, which coincided with the release of The Ship. The piece originally appeared in our June 2016 issue and our conversation, which took place at Eno’s studio, covered a lot of ground including David Bowie, Lou Reed, his Obscure label and just what he thinks of his old records…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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“I think the interesting thing, looking back on your work, is that you realise you could never do it again,” says Brian Eno. “There’s was ballet at Sadler’s Wells last week by Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker that’s based around one of my songs. ‘Golden Hours’ from Another Green World. When I listen to that song again, I think, ‘Jesus, I would never do that now.’ I could not leave that in that condition. You can hear I’m doing all the percussion myself with sticks on a desk and it’s completely chaotic. It’s so badly played but actually that is the character of the piece. I just wouldn’t make it now like that.”

another-green-world

Eno is sitting at a large circular wooden table in the middle of his West London studio. He nibbles thoughtfully at a croissant while in front of him, a pot of tea slowly cools. It is, he decided earlier, “a four bag morning.” Eno bulk buys his tea – as a consequence, boxes of Palanquin Red Bush Spiced are stacked neatly in a cube in a corner of his studio’s kitchen area. Ostensibly, we are here to talk about his superb new album, The Ship – a weighty, ruminative record that draws inspiration from the First World War and the Titanic disaster. It also contains a revelatory cover of The Velvet Underground’s “I’m Set Free” that has, it transpires, been over a decade in the making. To coincide with its release, there are several installations planned and – next – Eno reveals he is planning a new collaboration with David Byrne. Although talking to Eno requires across-the-board thinking, today he obligingly discusses more than just the project at hand, including previous career highs, his working relationship with his late friend David Bowie and his views on some of his other storied collaborators.

Located in a cobbled mews close to Portobello Road, Eno’s studio is airy and open-plan, with whitewashed walls and skylights. Close to the front door stand a set of floor to ceiling bookshelves. There are volumes by Antony Beevor, Alexis de Tocqueville and Richard Dawkins. A biography of Ghenghis Khan sits near to Billy Childish’s poetry collection The Man With The Gallows Eyes. Eno’s BAFTA for the Channel 4 series Top Boy nestles on the same shelf as Bill Drummond’s 17 and Byrne’s How Music Works. Fixed on a wall adjacent to the bookshelves are several shelves of DVDs and CDs, including Eno’s own vocal and instrumental box sets from 1993. Below these, a turntable rests on freestanding metal shelves packed with vinyl, divided alphabetically by strips of cardboard. On the floor, a copy of Sly And The Family Stone’s Fresh lies next to an album by the Ensemble Of The Bulgarian Republic.

A grey filing cabinet and a dark brown sofa mark the start of the studio area itself. A whiteboard acts as Eno’s de facto diary, with his activities for March drawn in red felt pen. A letter from the V&A is attached to a radiator by a round red magnet. White cubes of different sizes sit on various surfaces: originating from a previous exhibition, these are light boxes built around concealed colour monitors that gradually alter the intensity and hue of light. Eno points towards a clock hanging on the wall. “It’s a one-year clock,” he explains. “There’s one revolution in a year. So we’re at quarter past the year now. Did you realise that? Isn’t that amazing?”

Eno’s latest paintings – in gaudy, bright colours – sit on a table. “I started doing those fluorescent ones because an art shop up the roads has just closed down,” he says. “They were selling of fluorescent paints very cheap, so I bought some.” Towards the rear of the room is his studio space. Two giant Mac displays rest on a table, flanking a solitary synthesizer. Bundles of wires project from various mixers and other discreet-looking pieces of tech. Behind them, a sleek, metallic mic is fixed to its stand. Eager to demonstrate a new software package, Eno turns on the keyboard. “One of the things I like is the possibility of tuning different scales,” he begins playing a series of notes that he then manipulates through a program. So far, so very Eno.

Dressed today in dark jeans, a shirt and coat, Eno’s blue eyes sparkle behind his glasses. He is warm and often very funny in conversation; though very specific, too. At one point, he breaks our interview off to demonstrate the Markov Chain Generator software that helped create “The Hour Is Thin”, a poem read by Peter Serafinowicz that appears on The Ship. “I won’t debit the interview,” he insists.
Later, he disappears into the toilet. There, he begins singing Al Green’s “How Can You Mend A Broken Heart” in full voice. Emerging, he smiles. “I’m thinking of doing it tonight with my a cappella group, if I can find the lyrics…”

Watch Michael Stipe sing “Happy Birthday” to Patti Smith

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Michael Stipe presented Patti Smith with a happy birthday cake at her gig in Chicago on December 30. Smith - who turned 70 that day - was performing Horses in full at the city's Riviera Theater. During the concert, Stipe joined Smith on stage to sing "Happy Birthday" and present her with a cake. C...

Michael Stipe presented Patti Smith with a happy birthday cake at her gig in Chicago on December 30.

Smith – who turned 70 that day – was performing Horses in full at the city’s Riviera Theater. During the concert, Stipe joined Smith on stage to sing “Happy Birthday” and present her with a cake.

Confetti showered the crowd as they sang along to Smith’s birthday song. Watch video footage shared by fans below.

Click here to read a classic interview with Patti Smith from the Uncut archives

https://www.instagram.com/p/BOqykNIDOUU/

Meanwhile, Smith will continue her Horses tour in April in Australia. You can find more details by clicking here.

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

Read Brian Eno’s New Year message

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Brian Eno has shared an extensive New Year message, urging the public to push for equality. Taking to his Facebook page on January 1, Eno addressed the “pretty rough year” of 2016 and questioned whether it is “the end – not the beginning – of a long decline”. “This decline includes t...

Brian Eno has shared an extensive New Year message, urging the public to push for equality.

Taking to his Facebook page on January 1, Eno addressed the “pretty rough year” of 2016 and questioned whether it is “the end – not the beginning – of a long decline”.

“This decline includes the transition from secure employment to precarious employment, the destruction of unions and the shrinkage of workers’ rights, zero hour contracts, the dismantling of local government, a health service falling apart, an underfunded education system ruled by meaningless exam results and league tables, the increasingly acceptable stigmatisation of immigrants, knee-jerk nationalism, and the concentration of prejudice enabled by social media and the internet,” he wrote.

He blamed the “huge wealth inequalities” for the decline of democracy and urged readers to “start something big”.

“It will involve engagement: not just tweets and likes and swipes, but thoughtful and creative social and political action too,” he continued. “If we want social generosity, then we must pay our taxes and get rid of our tax havens. And if we want thoughtful politicians, we should stop supporting merely charismatic ones.”

He concluded that “inequality eats away at the heart of a society, breeding disdain, resentment, envy, suspicion, bullying, arrogance and callousness,” before adding that “if we want any decent kind of future we have to push away from that, and I think we’re starting to.”

2016/2017The consensus among most of my friends seems to be that 2016 was a terrible year, and the beginning of a long…

Posted by Brian Eno on Sunday, January 1, 2017

Eno released his new album, Reflections, on January 1.

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me soundtrack to be reissued

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The soundtrack to Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me is set to be reissued in January by The Death Waltz Recording Company. The 1992 prequel film retraces the last week in the life of Laura Palmer. Like the original Twin Peaks series, the film featured original music by Angelo Badalamenti and singer Jul...

The soundtrack to Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me is set to be reissued in January by The Death Waltz Recording Company.

The 1992 prequel film retraces the last week in the life of Laura Palmer. Like the original Twin Peaks series, the film featured original music by Angelo Badalamenti and singer Julee Cruise.

According to The Vinyl Factory, the reissue will feature liner notes from film critic Mark Kermode.

The soundtrack for the series is also being reissued by Mondo on “damn fine coffee”-coloured vinyl, accompanied by lyrics and linear notes from Badalamenti.

A brand new series of Twin Peaks will air on Showtime later this year.

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

Tributes paid to George Michael

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Tributes have been paid to George Michael, who has died aged 53. The singer died from heart failure, according to his publicist. "It is with great sadness that we can confirm our beloved son, brother and friend George passed away peacefully at home over the Christmas period," read the statement, v...

Tributes have been paid to George Michael, who has died aged 53.

The singer died from heart failure, according to his publicist.

“It is with great sadness that we can confirm our beloved son, brother and friend George passed away peacefully at home over the Christmas period,” read the statement, via the BBC. “The family would ask that their privacy be respected at this difficult and emotional time. There will be no further comment at this stage.”

Meanwhile, tributes have been paid to Michael by many of his peers and other musicians, including Brian May, Andrew Ridgeley, his former bandmate in Wham!, Madonna and Elton John.

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

Rick Parfitt dies aged 68

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Rick Parfitt has died aged 68. He died in hospital in Spain, his manager and family said in a statement. The statement said: "We are truly devastated to have to announce that Status Quo guitarist Rick Parfitt has passed away at lunchtime today. "He died in hospital in Marbella, Spain as a res...

Rick Parfitt has died aged 68.

He died in hospital in Spain, his manager and family said in a statement.

The statement said:

“We are truly devastated to have to announce that Status Quo guitarist Rick Parfitt has passed away at lunchtime today.

“He died in hospital in Marbella, Spain as a result of a severe infection, having been admitted to hospital on Thursday evening following complications to a shoulder injury incurred by a previous fall.

“This tragic news comes at a time when Rick was hugely looking forward to launching a solo career with an album and autobiography planned for 2017 following his departure from Status Quo’s touring activities on medical advice.

“He will be sorely missed by his family, friends, fellow band members, management, crew and his dedicated legion of fans from throughout the world, gained through 50 years of monumental success with Status Quo.

“Rick is survived by his wife Lyndsay, their twins Tommy and Lily and Rick’s adult children Rick Jnr and Harry.

No further comment will be made at this time and Rick’s family, and the band, ask for their privacy to be respected at this difficult time.”

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

Björk writes letter attacking sexism in the media

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Björk has written a powerful open letter attacking sexism in the media, telling her detractors to “eat your bechdel test heart out.” The Icelandic artist played two DJ sets at Houston’s Day For Night Festival on Friday (December 16) under her Björk Digital moniker, which combines the artist...

Björk has written a powerful open letter attacking sexism in the media, telling her detractors to “eat your bechdel test heart out.”

The Icelandic artist played two DJ sets at Houston’s Day For Night Festival on Friday (December 16) under her Björk Digital moniker, which combines the artist’s digital, audio and visual works.

However, Björk has responded to negative reviews of her set with an open letter that addresses the sexism that female artists face with how their performances, and indeed art, are received.

Writing on Facebook to “little miss media”, Björk firstly thanked her fans for “letting me be me” with regards to her venture into DJing but slammed “some media” for not being able to “get their head around that I was not ‘performing’ and ‘hiding’ behind desks,” a criticism that she believes is not aimed at her male counterparts.

“Women in music are allowed to be singer songwriters singing about their boyfriends,” she continued. “If they change the subject matter to atoms, galaxies, activism, nerdy math beat editing or anything else than being performers singing about their loved ones, they get criticised; journalists feel there is just something missing … as if our only lingo is emo…”

Referencing the fact that she wrote her albums Volta and Biophilia “about subjects that females [don’t] usually write about”, she then said that it wasn’t until her 2015 album Vulnicura that she got “full acceptance” from the media.

“Men are allowed to go from subject to subject, do sci-fi, period pieces, be slapstick and humorous, be music nerds getting lost in sculpting soundscapes, but not women. If we don’t cut our chest open and bleed about the men and children in our lives, we are cheating our audience.”

Ending the letter on a hopeful note, Björk said “Let’s make 2017 the year where we fully make the transformation!!! The right to variety for all the girls out there!!!”

Read her full statement below.

dear little miss media!!!! happy winter solstice !!!as you know the majority of my career i havent moaned about…

Posted by Björk on Wednesday, December 21, 2016

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

Yoko Ono cast in Wes Anderson’s new film

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Wes Anderson has cast Yoko Ono in his next film, a stop-motion animated feature called Isle Of Dogs. The director announced the film, which he is making in England, and its ensemble cast in a video message - which you can see further down. Bill Murray, Bryan Cranston, Tilda Swinton, Frances McDorm...

Wes Anderson has cast Yoko Ono in his next film, a stop-motion animated feature called Isle Of Dogs.

The director announced the film, which he is making in England, and its ensemble cast in a video message – which you can see further down.

Bill Murray, Bryan Cranston, Tilda Swinton, Frances McDormand, Scarlett Johansson, Greta Gerwig, Jeff Goldblum and F. Murray Abraham will all take voice roles in the film, joined by Harvey Keitel, Akira Ito, Akira Takayama, Koyu Rankin, Courtney B. Vance and Edward Norton.

The film will be Anderson’s ninth film as director and his first since The Grand Budapest Hotel – Uncut’s Film Of The Year in 2014.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mi7WURbBoPg

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

UK air date for David Bowie: The Last Five Years documentary revealed

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The UK air date for the new David Bowie film, David Bowie: The Last Five Years, appears to have been revealed. Produced and directed by Francis Whately, the documentary is a follow up to Whately’s film David Bowie: Five Years, which aired on the BBC back in 2013. The new film will feature rare an...

The UK air date for the new David Bowie film, David Bowie: The Last Five Years, appears to have been revealed.

Produced and directed by Francis Whately, the documentary is a follow up to Whately’s film David Bowie: Five Years, which aired on the BBC back in 2013. The new film will feature rare and unseen archive footage of the late artist, as well as new interviews with his collaborators.

Speaking to Uncut, Whatley said, “It’s not just about the last five years. It’s about how the last five years relate thematically to his whole career.”

You can read our preview of David Bowie: The Last Five Years in the new Uncut – now on sale and available to buy digitally

The UK air date for the new film has been reported by the unofficial but renowned Bowie fan site David Bowie News, with the BBC set to confirm those details in the coming days. David Bowie: The Last Five Years will premiere on BBC Two on January 7 at 9pm, three days short of the first anniversary of his death.

Another Bowie programme will air on the BBC in January, with Bowie At The BBC set to air on January 13 at 10pm on BBC Four. Archive footage of Bowie’s live performances and interviews with the BBC will be shown during the hour-long programme.

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

Steve Earle – Guitar Town 30th Anniversary Edition

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At various points while promoting his breakthrough album three decades ago, Steve Earle opened for fellow “new country” stalwart Dwight Yoakam, Nashville legend George Jones and college rock/barroom big hitters The Replacements, which gives an impressive snapshot of the man’s crossover appeal,...

At various points while promoting his breakthrough album three decades ago, Steve Earle opened for fellow “new country” stalwart Dwight Yoakam, Nashville legend George Jones and college rock/barroom big hitters The Replacements, which gives an impressive snapshot of the man’s crossover appeal, or at least potential.

Crossovers and often contradictory pigeonholing were rife for artists trying to cut loose from country’s perceived ghetto in the ’80s. A few years previously Earle’s first label was marketing him as “neo-rockabilly”; by the time of Guitar Town he was regularly reading reviews anointing him the “Redneck Springsteen”, and although he vehemently disliked the sobriquet it holds a fair amount of water here. The blue-collar rage with a back porch twang of “Someday” and “Gettin’ Tough” (“I was born in the land of plenty, now there ain’t enough”) owes a Jersey-shaped debt to Bruce’s anthemic tendencies. But Earle works hard – and succeeds – at being his own man, albeit exhibiting tasteful shared DNA with his heroes Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt, or outlaws like Waylon and Willie.

Yoakam had to tolerate the media cornering him towards “cowboy chic”, his hat and hip pals on the LA rock scene deflecting attention away from the records. That left Earle all but unchallenged as the eloquent Everyman among the cool young country-based up-and-comers of the day (Lyle Lovett, KD Lang, Nanci Griffith). It’s especially evident in the sentiment and simplicity of “My Old Friend The Blues”, the song’s universality spawning covers as diverse as The Proclaimers and Percy Sledge. It’s there again in the rousing optimism of the closing “Down The Road”. The title track is that rare beast, a song about being a touring, jobbing musician rooted in celebration rather than self-pity (“Got a two-pack habit and a motel tan/When my boots hit the boards I’m a brand new man/With my back to the riser I make my stand”). Having said that, he blots his copybook on the borderline-mawkish “Little Rock ‘n’ Roller”, where presumably the same hardened road warrior phones home to talk to his kid.

Earle’s eye for detail and easy turn-of-phrase gives his music a filmic, nigh-on-heroic quality, key factors in understanding the relentless Boss parallels to come. The ensuing years would also bring highs and lows, two or three (maybe four) divorces, jail time, and a couple of remarkable creative rebirths. He kicked it all off in ’86 by putting down a near perfect marker.

EXTRAS 7/10: Second disc comprises a full, 19-song live show from ’86. Earle and his band The Dukes road-test embryonic versions of material that would feature on subsequent albums (“The Devil’s Right Hand”, “The Week Of Living Dangerously”) and there’s a superb cover of Springsteen’s “State Trooper”.

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

The Best Films Of 2016 – The Uncut Top 20

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The January 2017 issue of Uncut features the best albums of the year, compiled by the Uncut team, along with our reissues and compilations of the year, and the best films and books. You can read new assessments of the films in the issue, but below is the full list of Uncut’s films. Click on the l...

The January 2017 issue of Uncut features the best albums of the year, compiled by the Uncut team, along with our reissues and compilations of the year, and the best films and books.

You can read new assessments of the films in the issue, but below is the full list of Uncut’s films. Click on the links to read the original Uncut reviews… and as always let us know in the comments or on Facebook what would make your Top 20.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Uncut’s Top 20 Films Of 2016 are:

20. Youth
DIR: PAOLO SORRENTINO
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

19. Suburra
DIR: STEFANO SOLLIMA

18. Everybody Wants Some!!
DIR: RICHARD LINKLATER
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

17. High Rise
DIR: BEN WHEATLEY
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

16. The Hateful Eight
DIR: QUENTIN TARANTINO

15. Victoria
DIR: SEBASTIAN SCHIPPER

14. Love & Friendship
DIR: WHIT STILLMAN
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

13. Hell Or High Water
DIR: DAVID MACKENZIE
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

12. Hail, Caesar!
DIR: JOEL AND ETHAN COHEN
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

11. Anomalisa
DIR: CHARLIE KAUFMAN AND DUKE JOHNSON

10. Mustang
DIR: DENIZ GAMZE ERGÜVEN

9. Julieta
DIR: PEDRO ALMODOVAR
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

8. I, Daniel Blake
DIR: KEN LOACH
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

7. Paterson
DIR: JIM JARMUSCH
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

6. A Bigger Splash
DIR: LUCA GUADAGNINO

5. Spotlight
DIR: TOM McCARTHY
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

4. The Big Short
DIR: ADAM McKAY
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

3. Son Of Saul
DIR: LÁSZLÓ NEMES

2. The Revenant
DIR: ALEJANDRO IÑÁRRITU
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

1. Nocturnal Animals
DIR: TOM FORD
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

The Best Reissue Albums Of 2016 – The Uncut Top 30

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The January 2017 issue of Uncut features the best albums of the year, compiled by the Uncut team, along with our reissues and compilations of the year, and the best films and books. You can read new assessments of the albums in the issue, but below is the full list of Uncut’s reissues and compila...

The January 2017 issue of Uncut features the best albums of the year, compiled by the Uncut team, along with our reissues and compilations of the year, and the best films and books.

You can read new assessments of the albums in the issue, but below is the full list of Uncut’s reissues and compilations. Click on the links to read the original Uncut reviews… and as always let us know in the comments or on Facebook what would make your Top 30.

Uncut’s Top 30 Reissues Of 2016 are:

30. NEIL YOUNG – Time Fades Away

29. FRANCOISE HARDY – Mon Amie Le Rose

28. SUPER FURRY ANIMALS – Fuzzy Logic

27. THE SCIENTISTS – A Place Called Bad

26. PINK FLOYD – The Early Years

25. GRACE JONES – Warm Leatherette Deluxe
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

24. MARC ALMOND – Trials Of Eyeliner
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

23. VARIOUS ARTISTS – Music Of Morocco: Recorded By Paul Bowles, 1959

22. JUDY HENSKE & JERRY YESTER – Farewell Aldebaran
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

21. THIS HEAT – Deceit
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

20. DAVID BOWIE – Bowie At The Beeb
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

19. VARIOUS ARTISTS – I’m A Freak Baby: A Journey Through The British Heavy Psych And Hard Rock Underground Scene 1968-1972

18. RYAN ADAMS – Heartbreaker
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

17. LED ZEPPELIN – The Complete BBC Sessions
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

16. RAY CHARLES – The Atlantic Studio Albums – In Mono
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

15. GILLIAN WELCH – Boots No 1: The Official Revival Bootleg

14. LEE HAZLEWOOD – The Very Special World Of

13. BOB DYLAN – The 1966 Live Recordings
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

12. CLUSTER – 1971-1981

11. LOU REED – The RCA And Arista Album Collection
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

10. TERRY REID – The Other Side Of The River
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

9. THE ASSOCIATES – Sulk

8. TERRY ALLEN – Lubbock (On Everything)

7. BIG STAR – Complete Third

6. RAMONES – Ramones – 40th Anniversary Edition
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

5. JACK WHITE – Acoustic Recordings 1998-2016
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

4. BERT JANSCH – Avocet
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

3. VARIOUS – Close To The Noise Floor: Formative UK Electronica 1975-1984

2. VAN MORRISON – …It’s Too Late To Stop Now… Vols. II/III/IV
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

1. DAVID BOWIE – Who Can I Be Now?

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

February 2017

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Leonard Cohen, David Bowie, Leon Russell and our 2017 preview all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out now and available to buy digitally. Cohen is on the cover, and inside, David Cavanagh examines the life and work of rock's late master poet, while Cohen's collaborators share their intimate memo...

Leonard Cohen, David Bowie, Leon Russell and our 2017 preview all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out now and available to buy digitally.

Cohen is on the cover, and inside, David Cavanagh examines the life and work of rock’s late master poet, while Cohen’s collaborators share their intimate memories.

“A day at Leonard’s always started the same,” remembers producer and songwriter Patrick Leonard, who collaborated with Cohen during his last decade. “He would greet you at the door and he would say, ‘Have you eaten?’ At first I’d say, ‘Yeah, I just ate.’ Then I realised that wasn’t the answer. The answer was ‘No, I haven’t.’

“We would sit in the kitchen and he would make scrambled eggs or chop some salad or put a mozzarella ball in some chicken soup… It was always really special to have Leonard cook something really simple and sit and eat.”

In our Instant Karma section, we talk to David Bowie‘s long-time bandmates about the tributes they have planned for 2017 – the year that would have seen Bowie’s 70th birthday – and to the makers of the upcoming BBC documentary, David Bowie: The Last Five Years. “It’s not just about the last five years,” explains director Francis Whatley, “it’s about how the last five years relate thematically to his whole career.”

Uncut pays tribute to the late Leon Russell with a previously unpublished interview in which the great collaborator looks back at his extraordinary life.

We also survey some of 2017’s most anticipated releases, featuring The Jesus And Mary Chain, Paul Weller, The Waterboys, Peter Perrett, Depeche Mode, Fleet Foxes and more.

In this issue, Uncut also looks at 50 of the finest modern protest songs, from Bob Dylan and Neil Young to Jarvis Cocker, Julian Cope and Janelle Monáe.

Mike Oldfield answers your questions ahead of the release of his new album Return To Ommadawn, while Ty Segall takes us through his most important releases, including his strong new self-titled record.

Billy Bragg recalls the creation of “A New England”, written after a night in the pub in 1980 – “No fucker was writing music I wanted to hear,” he tells us – while Tift Merritt takes us through eight of the most important records in her life.

In our reviews section, we feature new albums from Japandroids, Mark Eitzel, The xx, Michael Chapman, Julie Byrne, and archive releases from The Doors, the Grateful Dead, Gene Clark and Mose Allison.

We catch Wilco and Hiss Golden Messenger live, and review films and DVD releases including La La Land, Rules Don’t Apply, Danny Says and more.

This issue’s free CD, Protest Now!, includes songs by Ezra Furman, Kevin Morby, Ry Cooder, Roy Harper, Richard Thompson, Bright Eyes, Father John Misty, Jason Isbell and Jarvis Cocker.

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

The Best Albums Of 2016 – The Uncut Top 50

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The January 2017 issue of Uncut features the best albums of the year, compiled by the Uncut team, along with our reissues and compilations of the year, and the best films and books. Below is the full list of Uncut’s albums of the year. Click on the links to read the original Uncut reviews… and ...

The January 2017 issue of Uncut features the best albums of the year, compiled by the Uncut team, along with our reissues and compilations of the year, and the best films and books.

Below is the full list of Uncut’s albums of the year. Click on the links to read the original Uncut reviews… and as always let us know in the comments or on Facebook what would make your Top 50.

You can also hear our Albums Of The Year on a handy Spotify stream – which you can find by clicking here.

Uncut’s Top 50 Albums Of 2016 are:

50. Kevin Morby – Singing Saw

49. Christine And The Queens – Chaleur Humaine

48. Skepta – Konnichiwa

47. Handsome Family – Unseen

46. Swans – The Glowing Man
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

45. King – We Are King
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

44. Okkervil River – Away
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

43. Róisín Murphy – Take Her Up To Monto

42. Brigid Mae Power – Brigid Mae Power
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

41. Anna Meredith – Varmints

40. Let’s Eat Grandma – I, Gemini

39. Shovels & Rope – Little Seeds
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

38. Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band – The Rarity Of Experience
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

37. Tim Hecker – Love Streams
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

36. Jenny Hval – Blood Bitch
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

35. Eleanor Friedberger – New View
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

34. Lucinda Williams – The Ghosts Of Highway 20
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

33. King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – Nonagon Infinity
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

32. 75 Dollar Bill – Wood/Metal/Plastic/Pattern/Rhythm/Rock

31. Cass McCombs – Mangy Love

30. Frank Ocean – Blonde

29. Kendrick Lamar – untitled unmastered
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

28. Case/Lang/Veirs – Case/Lang/Veirs

27. Shirley Collins – Lodestar

26. Cate Le Bon – Crab Day

25. Iggy Pop – Post Pop Depression
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

24. Paul Simon – Stranger To Stranger

23. Margo Price – Midwest Farmer’s Daughter
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

22. The Avalanches – Wildflower

21. William Tyler – Modern Country
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

20. Angel Olsen – My Woman
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

19. Lambchop – Flotus
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

18. Solange – A Seat At The Table

17. Cavern Of Anti-Matter – Void Beats/Invocation Trex

16. Hiss Golden Messenger – Heart Like A Levee
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

15. Wilco – Schmilco
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

14. Bon Iver – 22, A Million

13. Drive-By Truckers – American Band

12. Brian Eno – The Ship

11. Thee Oh Sees – A Weird Exits
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

10. Beyoncé – Lemonade

9. Teenage Fanclub – Here

8. Anohni – Hopelessness
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

7. Sturgill Simpson – A Sailor’s Guide To Earth
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

6. PJ Harvey – The Hope Six Demolition Project

5. Ryley Walker – Golden Sings That Have Been Sung
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

4. Leonard Cohen – You Want It Darker
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

3. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – Skeleton Tree
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

2. Radiohead – A Moon Shaped Pool
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

1. David Bowie – Blackstar
You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

This month in Uncut

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Leonard Cohen, David Bowie, Leon Russell and our 2017 preview all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out now. Cohen is on the cover, and inside, David Cavanagh examines the life and work of rock's late master poet, while Cohen's collaborators share their intimate memories. "A day at Leonard's alwa...

Leonard Cohen, David Bowie, Leon Russell and our 2017 preview all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

Cohen is on the cover, and inside, David Cavanagh examines the life and work of rock’s late master poet, while Cohen’s collaborators share their intimate memories.

“A day at Leonard’s always started the same,” remembers producer and songwriter Patrick Leonard, who collaborated with Cohen during his last decade. “He would greet you at the door and he would say, ‘Have you eaten?’ At first I’d say, ‘Yeah, I just ate.’ Then I realised that wasn’t the answer. The answer was ‘No, I haven’t.’

“We would sit in the kitchen and he would make scrambled eggs or chop some salad or put a mozzarella ball in some chicken soup… It was always really special to have Leonard cook something really simple and sit and eat.”

In our Instant Karma section, we talk to David Bowie‘s long-time bandmates about the tributes they have planned for 2017 – the year that would have seen Bowie’s 70th birthday – and to the makers of the upcoming BBC documentary, David Bowie: The Last Five Years. “It’s not just about the last five years,” explains director Francis Whatley, “it’s about how the last five years relate thematically to his whole career.”

Uncut pays tribute to the late Leon Russell with a previously unpublished interview in which the great collaborator looks back at his extraordinary life.

We also survey some of 2017’s most anticipated releases, featuring The Jesus And Mary Chain, Paul Weller, The Waterboys, Peter Perrett, Depeche Mode, Fleet Foxes and more.

In this issue, Uncut also looks at 50 of the finest modern protest songs, from Bob Dylan and Neil Young to Jarvis Cocker, Julian Cope and Janelle Monáe.

Mike Oldfield answers your questions ahead of the release of his new album Return To Ommadawn, while Ty Segall takes us through his most important releases, including his strong new self-titled record.

Billy Bragg recalls the creation of “A New England”, written after a night in the pub in 1980 – “No fucker was writing music I wanted to hear,” he tells us – while Tift Merritt takes us through eight of the most important records in her life.

In our reviews section, we feature new albums from Japandroids, Mark Eitzel, The xx, Michael Chapman, Julie Byrne, and archive releases from The Doors, the Grateful Dead, Gene Clark and Mose Allison.

We catch Wilco and Hiss Golden Messenger live, and review films and DVD releases including La La Land, Rules Don’t Apply, Danny Says and more.

This issue’s free CD, Protest Now!, includes songs by Ezra Furman, Kevin Morby, Ry Cooder, Roy Harper, Richard Thompson, Bright Eyes, Father John Misty, Jason Isbell and Jarvis Cocker.

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

Introducing the new issue of Uncut!

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A little good news today, you’ll be relieved to hear: the new issue of Uncut should have materialised in UK shops this morning. Our cover star, of course, is Leonard Cohen, and we celebrate his genius with a deep piece by David Cavanagh, plus intimate memories from his closest collaborators, inclu...

A little good news today, you’ll be relieved to hear: the new issue of Uncut should have materialised in UK shops this morning. Our cover star, of course, is Leonard Cohen, and we celebrate his genius with a deep piece by David Cavanagh, plus intimate memories from his closest collaborators, including John Lissauer, Sharon Robinson, Patrick Leonard and Roscoe Beck.

It is Beck who tells us one of the most remarkable stories, remembering a day in Ghent, in 2012, when he got a serious bout of food poisoning and passed out. “When I awoke,” says Beck, “there was Leonard, crouching at the foot of my bed, and looking directly into my face with intense concentration mixed with the utmost of compassion. I didn’t know how long I had been there, or how long he had, but I had the feeling that he had been watching over me the entire time I was out. Opening my eyes and seeing his eyes so intently looking into mine is an experience I will never forget. Management was already talking about cancelling the show and everyone was in panic mode, that is, everyone but Leonard. He spoke to me lightly, ‘Hey Rossie…’ The moment was so emotionally poignant that I could only laugh, and then I said, ‘I’ll be there, Leonard.’  ‘I never doubted it,’ he said.”

Elsewhere in the issue, we’ve got a great lost interview with another of 2016’s fallen heroes, Leon Russell, and a behind-the-scenes look at both the upcoming David Bowie tribute shows, and the BBC’s new Bowie documentary. Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall and Billy Bragg are interviewed, and there’s a mammoth 2017 preview, with all the latest news on forthcoming albums by Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, Ray Davies, The Jesus & Mary Chain and many more.

Plus, there’s a timely rundown of 50 great protest songs from the past decade, with 15 of them – including tracks by Ezra Furman, Rhiannon Giddens, Ry Cooder, Run The Jewels, Father John Misty, Jason Isbell, Jarvis Cocker – compiled on our free CD. From Bob Dylan to Beyoncé, via a litany of old Uncut favourites and neglected new voices, it proves that politically-charged music is as vital as it’s ever been, even if it’s not always acknowledged as such. In our list, you’ll find a song about the financial crisis by a personal friend of Donald Trump, and another that actually brought down a government.

For all the necessary righteous fury, writing a good protest anthem can be a delicate business: how to articulate the visceral horrors of the world when so much of a songwriter’s energy is traditionally focused on the most personal and internal of dramas? Trust Leonard Cohen to think long and hard about the dilemma, as one suspects he did about most things.

When he addressed global iniquities on Popular Problems in 2014, though, he had evidently decided self-reflexive irony might be his best mode of attack. “There’s torture and there’s killing, and there’s all my bad reviews,” he noted, unflinchingly. “The war, the children missing… Lord, it’s almost like the blues.”

That song, “Almost Like The Blues”, makes the cut in our rundown of the 50 best protest songs of the past decade. One more significant entry in the Top 50 (and a highlight of the free accompanying CD) is an old Hurray For The Riff Raff song, “The Body Electric”. Their forthcoming album, The Navigator, is also discussed in our 2017 preview – a superb album and a critically important one in 2017: “An empowering battle cry for the people who are being pushed out,” as the band’s Alynda Lee Segarra tells us.

“A lot of the songs I wrote at the time seemed dystopian ideas,” she continues. “‘What’s the worst that could happen?’ Now it’s pretty much the worst you’ve ever seen – so it feels very timely to put out.”

To borrow a title from another song in our Top 50, I guess this is why we fight.

The Velvet Underground to receive special Grammy Award

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The Velvet Underground, Nina Simone and Sly Stone are set to be honoured at the 2017 Grammy Special Merit Awards. The honourees will be celebrated as part of the pre-Grammy Awards festivities in February. They will each received Lifetime Achievement Awards at the Grammy Special Merit Awards. Gosp...

The Velvet Underground, Nina Simone and Sly Stone are set to be honoured at the 2017 Grammy Special Merit Awards.

The honourees will be celebrated as part of the pre-Grammy Awards festivities in February.

They will each received Lifetime Achievement Awards at the Grammy Special Merit Awards.

Gospel singer Shirley Caesar, jazz pianist Ahmad Jamal, guitarist Charley Pride and “Father of Country Music” Jimmie Rodgers will also receive Lifetime Achievement Awards.

In honouring The Velvet Underground, the Recording Academy wrote: “Despite a relatively brief lifespan and limited commercial success, The Velvet Underground are now recognised as one of the most influential rock bands of all time. Comprising Lou Reed, John Cale, Sterling Morrison, and Maureen ‘Moe’ Tucker, the band was, perhaps, ahead of their time, both visually and sonically. Often dubbed the quintessential proto-punk band, they’ve continued to be the benchmark for countless modern-rock movements over the past 50 years.”

Stone was credited by the Recording Academy as playing “a critical role in the development of soul, funk, rock, and psychedelia,” reports Rolling Stone.

Meanwhile, John Cale recently announced that he’ll be playing The Velvet Underground’s debut The Velvet Underground & Nico at three special shows in New York, Paris and Liverpool.

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

Nile Rodgers announces new Chic album

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Nile Rodgers has announced the first new Chic album in 25 years, titled It’s About Time. In a post on his website, Rodgers revealed that the band’s follow-up to 1992’s Chic-Ism was originally scheduled for a summer 2015 release but was pushed back two years in a row. Rodgers goes on to expla...

Nile Rodgers has announced the first new Chic album in 25 years, titled It’s About Time.

In a post on his website, Rodgers revealed that the band’s follow-up to 1992’s Chic-Ism was originally scheduled for a summer 2015 release but was pushed back two years in a row.

Rodgers goes on to explain that he was forced to delay putting the record out till next year because he “couldn’t release an album about the joy of life in a year of so many deaths”. Instead, ‘It’s About Time’ will arrive in time for the 40-year anniversary of the band’s formation as well as the 40-year anniversary of Studio 54’s opening.

Detailing his plans for Chic, Rodgers writes: “In 2017, we will pay homage to the club that put us on the international map by doing a series of concerts, afterparties, VIP Packages, films and singles – then drop the full album along with a BIG SURPRISE!”

Elsewhere in the message, Rodgers talks about the impact Prince and David Bowie’s deaths had on him.

“The year had barely started when David Bowie passed away. Though I’ve done dozens of albums with god knows how many superstars, David and ‘Let’s Dance’ is one of the highest plateaus in my career,” he writes.

“When Prince suddenly died, it was like I’d been struck by lighting twice,” he added. Read the full post here.

In a new interview with Rolling Stone, Rodgers said that he hopes ‘It’s About Time’ offers some hope in dark times.

“I feel like I’m at the breaking point. The only thing that counterbalances that much negativity is superimposing a massive amount of positivity,” he told the magazine. “That’s the only way the scales get even. You can’t do just a little trickle; you’ve got to go all in. So [2017] is ‘party year’ for us. Like, big time. It’s insane.”

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews

Bob Dylan – The 1966 Live Recordings

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Where do you go after your own fans have called you Judas? Well, of course: you go to Glasgow, where, if anything, things get wilder yet. Bob Dylan’s 1966 tour, when he took the battle to “go electric” that had started at the Newport Folk Festival in July 1965 to audiences around the world, i...

Where do you go after your own fans have called you Judas? Well, of course: you go to Glasgow, where, if anything, things get wilder yet.

Bob Dylan’s 1966 tour, when he took the battle to “go electric” that had started at the Newport Folk Festival in July 1965 to audiences around the world, is the most mythologised in the history of rock’n’roll: the legend of an unstoppable speeding artist hitting the immovable wall of his audience’s preconceptions about who he was, and breaking through into wide open new territory, dragging popular music with him.

Possibly designed to bridge the gap between the “old” and “new” Dylans, the very structure of these gigs – a solo acoustic performance followed by a full band electric set – served only to heighten the division. The nightly routine was set in stone early. First Dylan would go out alone with acoustic guitar, and the people in the dark would sit in rapt silence and applaud whatever he did. Then he would return backed by the five-man band still known as The Hawks, plug in his Fender Telecaster, and the boos, catcalls and slow-handclapping would begin, as the folk-fundamentalist section of his audience voiced their earnest sense of betrayal.

Much of the tour’s notoriety rests on the show that took place at Manchester’s Free Trade Hall on May 17, when a lone voice cried out the vitriolic, ridiculous, heckle that would echo down the decades – “Judas!” – and Dylan, in disgust, instructed his already thunderous band to play the final “Like A Rolling Stone” “fuckin’ loud”.

We know all about that concert, of course. Originally mislabelled “The Royal Albert Hall”, it was one of the most famous bootleg records of all time, and when it was finally given legal release in 1998 as part of Dylan’s Bootleg Series, that manic, majestic performance officially took its place among the greatest live albums ever made. The “Judas!” incident crystallises the poison drama of Dylan’s ’66 world tour so perfectly it’s little surprise Martin Scorsese made it the climax of his kaleidoscopic Dylan documentary, No Direction Home.

But that Manchester gig wasn’t the end of the ’66 tour. It wasn’t even the first time things turned Biblical. Three nights before Manchester, in Liverpool, amid steady cries of “Traitor!” and “Go home,” another voice screamed, “What happened to your conscience?”, and Dylan shot back, “Oh. There’s a fellow up there looking for The Saviour…”

And two nights after Manchester, with the Judas jeer still ringing in his ears, there came Glasgow, where Dylan faced his most restive crowd yet – and, just when it sounded like the factions in the audience were on the verge of physical violence, taunted them further: “Bob Dylan’s backstage. He couldn’t make it for the second half. He got very sick – and I’m here to take his place.”

By this stage, sounding weary and on fire, he had only one week of the tour left to go. But you can hear in his voice that it seemed more like a year. Speaking in 1978, Hawks guitarist Robbie Robertson summed up the surreal, grinding Groundhog Day experience: “It was a strange way to make a living: You get in this private plane, they fly you to a town, we go to this place, we play our music and people boo us. Then we get back on the plane, we go to another town, we play our music, and they boo us.”

Across the remaining shows, combatting crowds in Edinburgh, Newcastle, Paris and London, with every passing song Dylan would sound sicker, stranger, a little closer to burning out for good, and a little more magnificent.

The chance to go through all of this again – to experience “Judas!” in its full, swirling, exhausting context – comes with the release of this astonishing 36CD set, gathering together every concert known to have been recorded during Dylan’s ’66 tour.

It hardly needs saying that this mammoth box is not intended for the casual Dylan listener. Even committed fans might think twice. Essentially, what you get is the same songs played in the same order over 23 nights. But, by God, how they are played. This is Dylan hitting his performing peak, and devotees will revel in it the way jazz heads would an unearthed cache of Charlie Parker. While there are no radical changes in the way songs are played, charting the shifts in focus, the changes in pattern and chemical balance from gig to gig, becomes addictive. Is Sheffield the most glorious acoustic show he ever played? Well, how about this “Mr Tambourine Man” from Birmingham? Or Liverpool’s “Desolation Row”? Meanwhile, as they dig deeper in the face of resistance, strengthening the music’s palatial architecture, you hear his band becoming The Band.

These recordings both prove the legend of the ’66 tour, and add nuance, as it becomes clear that as many in those audiences were with Dylan as against him. In Melbourne, the loudest screaming actually comes from teenage girls reacting to “Tom Thumb’s Blues”, as though the Fab Four had just appeared. It isn’t until he reaches the British Isles that things grow truly toxic, but even during the angriest rumblings of Glasgow, some of the most impassioned voices are crying for more electricity: “Tombstone Blues, Bob!”

The best way to listen might be to treat the boxset almost as you would a TV series, following the underlying drama from episode to episode. And, just as with any great series, there are recurring themes – growing spookier every night, “Ballad Of A Thin Man” becomes a particular psychodrama – and stand-out episodes, legends within the legend. The most significant might be the revelation of the fabled Paris concert that took pace on Dylan’s 25th birthday. He seems close to the end by now (“I wanna get out of here just as much as you…”), and the electric set takes on a ragged, terminal air. Balanced between defiance and despair, he roars himself hoarse, sounding close to throwing up, or passing out.

While the vast majority of the shows here sound fantastic, there are issues with some recordings. The collection is gathered from three sources. The earliest concerts were not professionally recorded, and the handful represented – three in the US, one apiece in Melbourne and Stockholm – come scavenged from tapes made by bootleggers in the audience. Invaluable as muddy snapshots of atmosphere, they are hard to listen to as music.

At the other end of the fidelity scale are four concerts recorded by Columbia Records using multi-track equipment: the previously released Manchester show; the hypnotic Sheffield gig; and the tour’s final two-night stand in London on May 26 and 27, when, before an audience that included Beatles and Stones, Dylan’s patience ran out, and he announced he wouldn’t be coming back. The first of the London shows is also being given a stand-alone release as The Real Royal Albert Hall 1966 Concert, newly remixed for this set by Chris Shaw – Dylan’s engineer on recent recordings including 2001’s masterpiece “Love & Theft”– who wrings every last drop of ambient beauty from the truly otherworldly acoustic set.

The bulk, however, are the raw recordings Dylan’s sound engineer made each night using a tape recorder plugged directly into the mixing board. Intended for possible use in Eat The Document, the anti-documentary Dylan was filming as the tour progressed, these are the same tapes he and the band listened to after each show, trying to work out if it was them or the booing audiences who had gone insane. They come at you in glorious mono, warts and all: a few songs missing, tapes sometimes running out mid-tune. But you can’t put a price on this stuff. Putting you right onstage, this is history in a box, exploding.

The February 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Leonard Cohen. Elsewhere in the issue, we look at the 50 Great Modern Protest Songs and our free CD collects 15 of the very best, featuring Ry Cooder, Jarvis Cocker, Roy Harper, Father John Misty, Hurray For The Riff Raff and Richard Thompson. The issue also features our essential preview of the key albums for 2017, including Roger Waters, Fleet Foxes, Paul Weller, The Jesus And Mary Chain, the Waterboys and more. Plus Leon Russell, Mike Oldfield, Ty Segall, Tift Merritt, David Bowie, Japandroids, The Doors, Flaming Lips, Wilco, The XX, Grateful Dead, Mark Eitzel and more plus 139 reviews