The Afghan Whigs are releasing a 20th anniversary edition of their Black Love album on double album and CD on November 25.
The album has been remastered and expanded with nine previously unreleased demos, outtakes and studio jam sessions.
We're delighted to preview one of those unreleased tracks -...
The Afghan Whigs are releasing a 20th anniversary edition of their Black Love album on double album and CD on November 25.
The album has been remastered and expanded with nine previously unreleased demos, outtakes and studio jam sessions.
We’re delighted to preview one of those unreleased tracks – a cover of New Order‘s “Regret” recorded during Black Love sessions.
The tracklisting for Black love 20th anniversary edition is:
Original Album Remastered Crime Scene Part One
My Enemy
Double Day
Blame, Etc.
Step Into The Light
Going To Town
Honky’s Ladder
Night By Candlelight
Bulletproof
Summer’s Kiss
Faded
Demos and Jams* Go To Town – Acoustic Version/Mix
Leaving Town – Mix 1.0
Faded – Demo
Regret
Crime Scene Part II – Mix 1.1 with Scratch Vocals
Mick Taylor Jam
Wynton Kelly Jam
I Often Think Of You
Staring Across The Water
Kate Bush releases the track “And Dream Of Sheep†tomorrow - Friday, November 18.
The track is taken from her forthcoming live album, Before The Dawn. It will be available to download from midnight on Friday morning.
Anyone who has pre-ordered the album Before The Dawn will receive an automati...
Kate Bush releases the track “And Dream Of Sheep†tomorrow – Friday, November 18.
The track is taken from her forthcoming live album, Before The Dawn. It will be available to download from midnight on Friday morning.
Anyone who has pre-ordered the album Before The Dawn will receive an automatic download of “And Dream Of Sheep”.
Before The Dawn played for 22 sold-out nights at London’s Hammersmith Apollo in 2014. You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here.
The live album which captures the whole show over 3 CDs and 4x vinyl is available on November 25.
The CD and LP tracklisting for Before The Dawn are:
Disc One – Act One
Lily
Hounds Of Love
Joanni
Top Of The City
Never Be Mine
Running Up That Hill
King Of The Mountain
Disc Two – Act Two
Astronomer’s Call
And Dream Of Sheep
Under Ice
Waking The Witch
Watching Them Without Her
Watching You Without Me
Little Light
Jig Of Life
Hello Earth
The Morning Fog
Disc Three – Act Three
Prelude
Prologue
An Architect’s Dream
The Painter’s Link
Sunset
Aerial Tal
Somewhere In Between
Tawny Moon
Nocturn
Aerial
Among Angels
Cloudbusting
_________________
Side One
Lily
Hounds Of Love
Joanni
Top Of The City
Side Two
Never Be Mine
Running Up That Hill
King Of The Mountain
Side Three
Astronomer’s Call
And Dream Of Sheep
Under Ice
Waking The Witch
Watching Them Without Her
Watching You Without Me
Side Four
Little Light
Jig Of Life
Hello Earth
The Morning Fog
Side Five
Prelude
Prologue
An Architect’s Dream
The Painter’s Link
Side Six
Sunset
Aerial Tal
Somewhere In Between
Tawny Moon
The tales told by NME have become the stuff of legend. And in this first edition of our new series, The NME Interviews, you'll find the very Best Of The 1960s – a wealth of gripping interviews rescued from the NME vaults. It’s a story that begins with Elvis Presley at an army barracks in Germany...
The tales told by NME have become the stuff of legend. And in this first edition of our new series, The NME Interviews, you’ll find the very Best Of The 1960s – a wealth of gripping interviews rescued from the NME vaults. It’s a story that begins with Elvis Presley at an army barracks in Germany, talking about his love of NME, and ends with John Lennon pondering the future of The Beatles. Over the decade, the magazine was at the forefront of every cultural revolution: embarking on wild adventures with The Who and the Rolling Stones; discovering the genius of David Bowie and Led Zeppelin; introducing a host of visiting American superstars to the madness of swinging London – they’re all here, in The NME Interviews: Best Of The 1960s.
Gillian Welch is set to release Boots No 1: The Official Revival Bootleg on November 25.
Boots No 1 celebrates the 20th anniversary of Welch’s Revival album and has been curated and produced by Gillian Welch and David Rawlings – alongside archivist Glen Chausse – mining selections from their ...
Gillian Welch is set to release Boots No 1: The Official Revival Bootleg on November 25.
Boots No 1 celebrates the 20th anniversary of Welch’s Revival album and has been curated and produced by Gillian Welch and David Rawlings – alongside archivist Glen Chausse – mining selections from their extensive vault of analog tape recordings.
The two-disc set will feature 8 previously unreleased songs, and include 21 outtakes, alternate versions, and demos from the making of the album. Among them, you’ll find the earliest home demo of “Orphan Girl†and the rarity “Georgia Road†– a song that was only performed live once.
Ahead of the release of Boots, we’re delighted to carry a UK exclusive stream of the full album – which you can hear below.
The album will be available on CD and digitally and is available for pre order from Amazonby clicking here and from iTunesby clicking here.
The tracklisting for Boots No 1 is:
Disc One Orphan Girl (Alternate Version)
Annabelle (Alternate Version)
Pass You By (Alternate Version)
Go On Downtown (Revival Outtake) *
Red Clay Halo (Revival Outtake)
By The Mark (Alternate Mix)
Paper Wings (Demo)
Georgia Road (Revival Outtake) *
Tear My Stillhouse Down (Home Demo)
Only One and Only (Alternate Version)
Disc Two Orphan Girl (Home Demo)
I Don’t Want to Go Downtown (Revival Outtake) *
455 Rocket (Revival Outtake) *
Barroom Girls (Live Radio)
Wichita (Revival Outtake) *
One More Dollar (Alternate Version)
Dry Town (Demo) *
Paper Wings (Alternate Mix)
Riverboat Song (Revival Outtake) *
Old Time Religion (Revival Outtake) *
Acony Bell (Demo)
A shorter list this week, thanks to the domination of a few new arrivals that I’ve been hammering. A strong recommendation, then, to A Tribe Called Quest’s poignant and uplifting “We Got It From Here... Thank You 4 Your Serviceâ€, which provided a rare high point when it was released at the e...
A shorter list this week, thanks to the domination of a few new arrivals that I’ve been hammering. A strong recommendation, then, to A Tribe Called Quest’s poignant and uplifting “We Got It From Here… Thank You 4 Your Serviceâ€, which provided a rare high point when it was released at the end of last week. This is probably one of those old man moments where I suggest that, even if you’ve felt aesthetically disenfranchised from hip-hop these past few years, it’s really worth a go – and provides a bridge between the old school and the excellent Anderson.Paak and Kendrick Lamar, who both guest (along with Jack White, Busta Rhymes and Elton John, of all people).
Also of course the new Necks album, which finds the quintessential CD band reconfiguring themselves and their explorations for a new vinyl era. “Unfold†isn’t out ‘til February, but you can hear a hefty extract below. The new Ty Segall is his best and most Lennonish in a while, I think, and King Gizzard And The Lizard Wizard continue to be a terrific diversion in those odd months when Thee Oh Sees don’t release a record. Finally, and perhaps of special interest to anyone who’ll be joining me at the Ryley Walker show in Islington tonight, there’s a mighty recording of his recent New York show from NYC Taper. Adventurous jams for unstable days…
New Uncut in UK shops next Tuesday, by the way, and with subscribers by the weekend. Includes all our end of year business (charts, new David Cavanagh and Laura Snapes essays, lots more charts), plus a really fine Stones interview by Michael Bonner, Ryley Walker, Gillian Welch, the Drive-By Truckers, Thee Oh Sees, James Chance and 75 Dollar Bill. Hope you like it…
Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey
1 A Tribe Called Quest – We Got It From Here… Thank You 4 Your Service (Epic)
2 The Necks – Unfold (Ideologic Organ/Editions Mego)
3 Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever – Julie’s Place (Sub Pop)
They don’t make them like this anymore, and they didn’t back then, either. As the years go by, Nic Roeg’s splintered sci-fi classic – about a melancholy alien who comes crashing to Earth looking for water; but about other things, too, about the passing time, lost chances, loneliness and corr...
They don’t make them like this anymore, and they didn’t back then, either. As the years go by, Nic Roeg’s splintered sci-fi classic – about a melancholy alien who comes crashing to Earth looking for water; but about other things, too, about the passing time, lost chances, loneliness and corruption, about how America works and looks, and about David Bowie – keeps pace with us both because it’s so much of its time and so utterly unlike anything else in 1976.
Like its protagonist, it never seems to grow old. Four decades on, it comes into new focus again, in light of Bowie’s death, and the fact that it helped feed his great final burst of creativity, the semi-sequel musical Lazarus, and the songs that span-off to form Blackstar.
The film has been repackaged several times, so fans will be most curious about what’s new in this edition…
EXTRAS: The big draw is the gorgeous new 4K restoration, approved by cinematographer Anthony Richmond, a sensitive job that respects the source. There have been restorations before, but the movie never looked better or richer, yet still feels like a 1970s film.
From here, Bowie fans will head straight for the teasingly titled, 16-minute “The Lost Soundtracks†featurette. Cool your jets. It doesn’t contain anything of Bowie’s fabled aborted soundtrack. But his collaborator, Paul Buckmaster, is on hand to briefly recall the work they did, and allude again to the tapes held in storage somewhere in Bowie HQ…
More time is given to the soundtrack that was finally used. As Chris Campion, biographer of composer John Phillips, points out, the legend of the Bowie soundtrack is so potent no ever really talks about the music actually heard in the movie. It gets its due here, though music nerds (us) might bemoan the lack of yet more detail: there’s no mention of BBC Radiophonic man Desmond Briscoe’s involvement, or the pieces by Stomu Yamashta. A CD of Phillips’s music is also included in the Collector’s set, along with some exciting art cards, a poster and original press material.
Elsewhere come new interviews with producer Michael Deeley, who’s valuable on the business of getting such an unlikely movie made; costumer designer May Routh, who shares her original sketches; and stills photographer David James.
Older interviews with Roeg, screenwriter Paul Mayersberg and co-star Candy Clark are imported from the previous Studiocanal/ Optimum release of 2011, along with the fine 25-minute making-of, Watching The Alien. Sadly, they’ve not been able to include the holy grail: the Bowie-Roeg-Buck Henry commentary that was originally recorded in 1992 and included on Criterion’s (out of print) 2005 Region A Blu-Ray. So obsessives still need both.
8/10
Bruce Springsteen has been awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Barack Obama announced 21 new recipients of America’s highest civilian honour – the last he will award as President – on November 16.
According to a White House press release, the medal is “presented to individuals who h...
Bruce Springsteen has been awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Barack Obama announced 21 new recipients of America’s highest civilian honour – the last he will award as President – on November 16.
According to a White House press release, the medal is “presented to individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to world peace, or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavorsâ€.
Actors Robert De Niro, Tom Hanks, Robert Redford and Cicely Tyson have also been named as recipients, joined by Diana Ross, Ellen DeGeneres and Lorne Michaels. The medals will be handed out next Tuesday (November 22) in a ceremony live-streamed from the White House.
A White House’s press release summarises Springsteen’s validation: “Bruce Springsteen is a singer, songwriter, and bandleader. More than five decades ago, he bought a guitar and learned how to make it talk.
“Since then, the stories he has told, in lyrics and epic live concert performances, have helped shape American music and have challenged us to realize the American dream. Springsteen is a Kennedy Center honoree and he and the E Street Band he leads have each been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.â€
Vangelis has announced details of a new new 13-disc box set entitled Delectus, which contains some of his best known work.
Along with Chariots Of Fire, the set includes remastered versions of Earth, L’Apocalypse Des Animaux, China, See You Later, Antarctica, Mask, Opera Sauvage, Soil Festivities ...
Vangelis has announced details of a new new 13-disc box set entitled Delectus, which contains some of his best known work.
Along with Chariots Of Fire, the set includes remastered versions of Earth, L’Apocalypse Des Animaux, China, See You Later, Antarctica, Mask, Opera Sauvage, Soil Festivities and Invisible Connections.
“I always welcome remastering my old work for two basic reasons†– explains Vangelis – “firstly, I get the opportunity to bring the sounds to today’s standards, secondly, it gives me the chance to go through the experiences and memories of the time.â€
The set also includes his collaborative recordings with Jon Anderson as Jon & Vangelis – Short Stories, The Friends Of Mister Cairo and Private Collection. The remastered originals will be complemented with rare B-sides and 4 previously unreleased tracks.
The tracklisting is:
Earth
L’Apocalypse Des Animaux
China
See You Later
Antarctica
Mask
Opera Sauvage
Chariots Of Fire
Soil Festivities
Invisible Connections
Short Stories
Private Collection
The Friends Of Mr Cairo
With so much of what is labelled “world musicâ€, the appeal is not always the lure of the Other. In many cases we are seeking a twist on the familiar, be it Tuareg musicians who sound like galloping heavy metal bands, Bollywood musicians making slightly wonky disco, or Nigerian dance bands making...
With so much of what is labelled “world musicâ€, the appeal is not always the lure of the Other. In many cases we are seeking a twist on the familiar, be it Tuareg musicians who sound like galloping heavy metal bands, Bollywood musicians making slightly wonky disco, or Nigerian dance bands making pulsating big-band funk. It is the everyday being put through an unfamiliar filter – like seeing ourselves reflected in a fairground mirror.
This, in part, is the appeal of the Cretan lute player Giorgos Xylouris. He is a renowned exponent of traditional music from a noble family – his father and two of his uncles are celebrated exponents of the lyra, a bowed instrument with roots to the Byzantine Empire – and his Xylouris Ensemble (featuring many of his friends and relatives, including some of his own children) play a lively take on traditional Cretan music. But put him and his Cretan lute, or laouto, alongside the free-rock drummer Jim White and his sound seems to transform. Their thrashy drums/lute duels can have the free-swinging energy of The White Stripes or the herky-jerky of a post-punk band, while other times they sound like growling freak-folk balladeers.
The pair met in 1990 while Giorgos was living in White’s home city of Melbourne. After playing on the same bills for nearly a quarter of a century, they finally got together in Manhattan in 2014 (courtesy of the Cretan Association of New York) to record the album Goats. The follow-up, started in New York and completed in studios in Crete and, of all places, Iceland, is a less subtle and more vividly defined cultural collision that is in every sense of the word. The punky tracks are very punky indeed; the brooding ballads particularly broody.
The laouto is an eight-string instrument with moveable frets, sharing the same violin-like tuning (GDAE) and paired strings as the mandolin. In traditional Cretan music, its role was that of “passadorikosâ€, playing chords and countermelodies to accompany the bowed lyra. Giorgos Xylouris, however, is part of a generation of laouto players who have transformed the instrument from to – from rhythm to lead. And Black Peak sees Xylouris moving freely between the two modes, often within a fraction of a second.
Watch him in action and you’ll see him manipulate the instrument in a variety of ways. He strokes the strings with his fingers, or picks at them with his thumb and fingernails, but usually uses a long, floppy plectrum – historically made of a vulture’s feather – which can be flapped loosely to provide lightly strummed pattern, or held tightly to get an aggressive tone.
The title track of the album opens with a sparkly, plucked riff, backed by pounding floor toms and a stentorian vocal. “Forging†is a powerful one-chord drone that mixes a proggy, chiming metal riff with some thunderous drum pattern and sees Xylouris forcing out a simple four-note melody at the upper end of his vocal register.
A track entitled “Erotokritos†is based on the opening stanzas of an epic 17th-century poem that provides the basis for much Cretan music. “It is about the past and the future,†says Xylouris. “About how our feelings for time go deep into the earth and cry out into the sky.†He adopts a terrifyingly low baritone rumble, while his pal Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy provides eerie vocal harmonies.
Other lyrics, all sung in Greek, are written by a friend of Giorgos, a Cretan farmer (and, apparently, jewellery designer) called Mitsos Stavrakakis. The title track, for instance, is about a black mountain in Crete. “The lyric asks the mountain if he is lonely and needs company,†says Giorgos. Other tracks seem similarly rooted in the landscape, or in traditional folk melodies: “Pretty Kondilies†is a jaunty, sailor’s hornpipe-like instrumental that draws attention to traditional verse.
But most effective of all are the ballads, which are weirdly aggressive affairs. Usually they stay on a single chord and see Xylouris playing tremolo style, strumming chords so quickly and so violently that his instrument sounds like a giant, angry wasp. Throughout White plays with the inventiveness of a free jazz improviser but uses the tom-toms rather than the cymbals to create highly textural accompaniment, while Xylouris sings arhythmically, like a declamatory poet.
When Giorgos’ father Psarantonis arrives on the final track, “The Feastâ€, to provide countermelodies on the bowed lyra, it sounds like a circle has truly been completed. This is Cretan folk music played with a rock’n’roll intensity that is truly immersive.
Q&A
Giorgos Xylouris
How much of the music is improvised?
We have the basic song before we record. But each time we play, it’s like we are teasing the song to see what it will give back to us. And we try to make more space every time to do a new thing. It’s like we have a map of the song, and, as we play, we then discover more creeks, more peaks, more roads, more trees, more animals! Jim is an amazing, unique musician. I discover myself with him every time we play together.
How do you label this music?
We have been labelled free jazz, post-punk, world music, ethnic music. I think we’re a mosaic of all these labels. My life, since I was 12 years old, was as a professional music. I would play shows with my father: we’d stay in the same room, wake up the next day and play another club. Even now, I play the lute all the time. I worry that my friends want me to shut up and stop playing. I even sleep with my instrument! The other day I fell asleep with it on my chest and it fell on the floor and broke! Luckily I was able to fix it…
What are your influences outside of traditional Greek music?
Initially, the only chance I got to listen to other music was when it was on the radio, in a bar. But I liked lots of it – Jimi Hendrix, the Stones, Led Zeppelin, Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Billie Holiday, Paco de Lucia. Later, in Melbourne, I would hear the Dirty Three, the Bad Seeds, Grinderman, Irish music. I loved it. I am always open to new music – I loved The Cairo Gang when we supported them in the US. I am also obsessed with an Alice Coltrane album at the moment. And so on.
How did you meet up with Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy?
Oh, I wish I could record more with Billy! I’m sure we will in the future. When he sings backing vocals, he gives a spiritual, exotic feeling to the music. He gives me this feeling every time I hear him sing. It is the feeling that we exist in a different timing.
INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS
A new Johnny Cash book titled Forever Words: The Unknown Poems features 41 previously unreleased poems written by Cash himself.
Some of the poems date back to as early as 1944. The poems collected in the book were chosen from approximately 200 pieces left by Cash in varying states of completion.
A...
A new Johnny Cash book titled Forever Words: The Unknown Poems features 41 previously unreleased poems written by Cash himself.
Some of the poems date back to as early as 1944. The poems collected in the book were chosen from approximately 200 pieces left by Cash in varying states of completion.
According to Pitchfork, the book also features facsimiles of his handwritten poems. In a quote given to the New York Times, Cash’s son John Carter Cash said, “I want people to have a deeper understanding of my father than just the iconic, cool man in black. I think this book will help provide that.â€
Rick Wakeman has announced details of a new studio album.
Piano Portraits will be released on January 13, 2017 and the track listing includes versions of David Bowie's "Life on Mars?", which Wakeman recorded the original piano parts for, and "Space Oddity", to which he contributed mellotron; throug...
Rick Wakeman has announced details of a new studio album.
Piano Portraits will be released on January 13, 2017 and the track listing includes versions of David Bowie‘s “Life on Mars?”, which Wakeman recorded the original piano parts for, and “Space Oddity”, to which he contributed mellotron; through The Beatles, Yes and Led Zeppelin; to classical pieces composed by Debussy and Tchaikovsky.
“I’ve been wanting to do a piano album for years and I spent quite a bit of time looking at everything from straight classical pieces to stuff that I’d played on in the past like ‘Morning Has Broken’ and ‘Life On Mars?’,†Wakeman explains. “Plus pieces of music that I thought would work really well like ‘Stairway to Heaven’ and classics like ‘Clair de Lune’. Nearly all of the tracks have a memory for me somewhere down the line and it just seemed to work.â€
The tracklisting is:
Help
Stairway to Heaven
Life on Mars
I’m Not In Love
Wonderous Stories
Berceuse
Amazing Grace
Swan Lake
Morning Has Broken
Summertime
Space Oddity
Dance of the Damselflies
Clair de Lune
Vow To Thee My Country
Eleanor Rigby
Digital pre-orders will receive an instant download of Wakeman’s interpretation of “Help” by The Beatles.
Brian Eno is to release a new ambient album, Reflections, on January 1, 2017.
The album will be released in three formats. As a CD, in case bound sleeve with 6 page booklet, as a double album - in printed inners, in printed outer sleeve with download card - and digitally.
It consists of one track,...
Brian Eno is to release a new ambient album, Reflections, on January 1, 2017.
The album will be released in three formats. As a CD, in case bound sleeve with 6 page booklet, as a double album – in printed inners, in printed outer sleeve with download card – and digitally.
It consists of one track, “Reflection”, which is 54 minutes long.
You can read a statement below from Eno about the album.
“Reflection is the latest work in a long series. It started (as far as record releases are concerned) with Discreet Music in 1975 ( – or did it start with the first Fripp and Eno album in 1973? Or did it start with the first original piece of music I ever made, at Ipswich Art School in 1965 – recordings of a metal lampshade slowed down to half and quarter speed, all overlaid?)
“Anyway, it’s the music that I later called ‘Ambient’. I don’t think I understand what that term stands for anymore – it seems to have swollen to accommodate some quite unexpected bedfellows – but I still use it to distinguish it from pieces of music that have fixed duration and rhythmically connected, locked together elements.
“The pedigree of this piece includes Thursday Afternoon, Neroli (whose subtitle is Thinking Music IV) and LUX. I’ve made a lot of thinking music, but most of it I’ve kept for myself. Now I notice that people are using some of those earlier records in the way that I use them – as provocative spaces for thinking – so I feel more inclined to make them public.
“Pieces like this have another name: they’re GENERATIVE. By that I mean they make themselves. My job as a composer is to set in place a group of sounds and phrases, and then some rules which decide what happens to them. I then set the whole system playing and see what it does, adjusting the sounds and the phrases and the rules until I get something I’m happy with. Because those rules are probabilistic ( – often taking the form ‘perform operation x, y percent of the time’) the piece unfolds differently every time it is activated. What you have here is a recording of one of those unfoldings.
“Reflection is so called because I find it makes me think back. It makes me think things over. It seems to create a psychological space that encourages internal conversation. And external ones actually – people seem to enjoy it as the background to their conversations.
“When I make a piece like this most of my time is spent listening to it for long periods – sometimes several whole days – observing what it does to different situations, seeing how it makes me feel. I make my observations and then tweak the rules. Because everything in the pieces is probabilistic and because the probabilities pile up it can take a very long time to get an idea of all the variations that might occur in the piece. One rule might say ‘raise 1 out of every 100 notes by 5 semitones’ and another might say ‘raise one out of every 50 notes by 7 semitones’. If those two instructions are operating on the same data stream, sometimes – very rarely – they will both operate on the same note…so something like 1 in every 5000 notes will be raised by 12 semitones. You won’t know which of those 5000 notes it’s going to be. Since there are a lot of these types of operations going on together, on different but parallel data streams, the end result is a complex and unpredictable web.
“Perhaps you can divide artists into two categories: farmers and cowboys. The farmers settle a piece of land and cultivate it carefully, finding more and more value in it. The cowboys look for new places and are excited by the sheer fact of discovery, and the freedom of being somewhere that not many people have been before. I used to think I was temperamentally more cowboy than farmer… but the fact that the series to which this piece belongs has been running now for over 4 decades makes me think that there’s quite a big bit of farmer in me.”
Ahead of the release of a new studio album, Mike Oldfield will be answering your questions as part of our regular An Audience With... feature.
So is there anything you’d like us to ask the singer-songwriter?
What's his favourite memory of Kevin Ayers?
What are the pros and cons of having a huge ...
Ahead of the release of a new studio album, Mike Oldfield will be answering your questions as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.
So is there anything you’d like us to ask the singer-songwriter?
What’s his favourite memory of Kevin Ayers?
What are the pros and cons of having a huge hit like Tubular Bells?
How did he come to recruit Roger Chapman and Jon Anderson for his Crises album?
Send up your questions by noon, Monday, November 21 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.
The best questions, and Mike’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine.
The last time we saw Adam Driver, he was driving a lightsabre through his father in the latest Star Wars movie. Thankfully, there are no such interstellar shocks here in Jim Jarmusch’s quietly unassuming portrait of a gentle, artistic man and his wife.
Paterson is a city in New Jersey; it is als...
The last time we saw Adam Driver, he was driving a lightsabre through his father in the latest Star Wars movie. Thankfully, there are no such interstellar shocks here in Jim Jarmusch’s quietly unassuming portrait of a gentle, artistic man and his wife.
Paterson is a city in New Jersey; it is also the name of Driver’s protagonist, a bus driver and aspiring writer who, bound by the coincidence of his name, enjoys an almost karmic sense of cosmic connection to his hometown. As we learn, Paterson – the place – has yielded many more famous residents, from Hurricane Carter to Sam & Dave’s Sam Moore and 18th century anarchist weaver, Gaetano Breaxi. Paterson’s sense of civic pride is palpable, as each day he goes to work, drives his bus, listens to snatches of his passengers’ conversation on his bus and writes poetry during his lunch-break. One involves a paean to Ohio Blue Tip matches (“sober and furious and stubbornly ready to burst into flameâ€).
Jarmusch has had a terrific year – although his two projects released in the last 12 months may, superficially, not have been more different. On one hand, the Stooges film was high energy rock’n’roll; on the other, Paterson is a warm and uncynical in its celebration of small-town life and dreams. Yet, as Iggy Pop explains in Gimme Danger, the Stooges were the culmination of his small-town dreams. Although, admittedly, the end results are very different, perhaps there are similarities in the core of each story, after all.
Driver and Golshifteh Farahani as Paterson’s wife Laura are both superb: he is prone to philosophizing while she is loose and unaffected, embarking each day on a new artistic endeavour, from painting to baking and learning to play the guitar. The film is structured as a week in Paterson’s life, where each day is essentially repetitive – the plot consists of distractions from his routine: minor misfortunes and happy accidents, mostly, in which Paterson calmly truffles for meaning. Much like Forest Whitaker in Ghost Dog: Way Of The Samurai, Paterson is a zen-like spirit searching for deeper enlightenment in the every day.
Earlier today, I spent a few minutes looking for anything I’d previously written about Leonard Cohen. One of the things I found, and had forgotten about, was a review of “Ten New Songs†from my last days at NME. There isn’t much to be proud of in the piece; a lot of pat auto-criticism involv...
Earlier today, I spent a few minutes looking for anything I’d previously written about Leonard Cohen. One of the things I found, and had forgotten about, was a review of “Ten New Songs†from my last days at NME. There isn’t much to be proud of in the piece; a lot of pat auto-criticism involving “the qualities that have inspired at least three generations of self-conscious miserablilists†and “cheesy productionâ€. The last line, though, is kind of interesting: “Life’s a bitch and then you die, but in Cohen’s case, nowhere near as early as he imagined.â€
The enduring survival of Leonard Cohen – comfortably into his eighties, and some distance beyond many of his juniors, as well as his contemporaries – was a small miracle to take comfort from these past few years. It became more obvious than ever these past few weeks, as “You Want It Darker†landed in a time of such turmoil, at a time when voices of contemplative maturity, wisdom and humanity seemed in chronically short supply.
As is the modern way, and one that may well have been anathema to Cohen himself – though his epigrammatic gifts with a perfectly weighted sentence would have ruled on Twitter – I resorted to sticking favourite songs onto social media. An improbable amount of Cohen material worked almost too neatly as valedictions, so the first thing I turned to, perhaps perversely, was an instrumental, “Tacoma Trailerâ€, from “The Futureâ€; a tune I’ve always loved, and which felt like the end credits music at the close of an epic, though emotionally measured, drama.
It’s a neat illustration, too, of the point made by Bob Dylan in David Remnick’s recent Cohen profile. “When people talk about Leonard,†said Dylan, “they fail to mention his melodies, which to me, along with his lyrics, are his greatest genius. Even the counterpoint lines—they give a celestial character and melodic lift to every one of his songs. As far as I know, no one else comes close to this in modern music.â€
The second piece I chose was a track called “Recitationâ€, from the “Live In London†album, recorded at the O2 run in 2008. I’m never sure whether that’s the right title for it, given how it seems to derive from the same poem that produced “A Thousand Kisses Deepâ€.
Some fine things have been written about Cohen these past few days, and I don’t feel I’m ready, or maybe capable, of matching them. We’re working on what we hope will be suitable Uncut tributes for further down the line, but in the meantime, here’s the best piece from my personal archives: a review of that “Live In London†album, “an uncommonly thoughtful victory lapâ€â€¦
When The Songs Of Leonard Cohen arrived in record shops just after Christmas, 1967, its creator was already 33 years old – an unusual age to be releasing a debut album. But the patina of experience was critical to Cohen’s appeal. Here was a singer – no, a poet – who could write about the usual stuff, chiefly girls – well, women – with a rueful and weathered maturity far beyond the range of his younger contemporaries.
It was a good trick then, and it remains so four decades later, as Leonard Cohen continues his extraordinary comeback tour. While the likes of The Rolling Stones tackle the songs of their youth in an absurd if bracing defiance of age, and Bob Dylan and Neil Young often seem to have an ambiguous, sometimes fraught, relationship to their back catalogues, Cohen has no comparable problems. The older he becomes, the better he inhabits many of these uncannily graceful and profound songs.
Consequently, Live In London is much more than a souvenir of a memorable show at the O2 Arena in July 2008. It showcases a (then) 73-year-old singer with still-growing wisdom and an ever-deepening voice, who now brings an even greater gravity to songs that were hardly bubblegum in the first place.
Take “Who By Fireâ€. It’d be risky to claim that this live reading is a more definitive version than the original on 1974’s New Skin For The Old Ceremony. But the incantatory resonance of Cohen’s baritone, the way it is underpinned so delicately by the female vocals, Javier Mas’ lute-like archilaúd and Neil Larsen’s Hammond B3, make it sound more like sacred music than a folk singer’s appropriation of sacred music, band introductions notwithstanding. An enterprising film director would do well to cast this Cohen as the voice of a god – if Cohen could reconcile the complexities of his own beliefs to accept such a frivolous gig.
Then again, as Live In London proves, Leonard Cohen is a covertly frivolous man. If he has been stereotyped for 20, 30, 40 years as the laureate of misery, these shows have redefined him as more of a droll old charmer, not averse to satirising himself.
“It’s been a long time since I stood on the stage in London,†he intones wryly before “Ain’t No Cure For Loveâ€. “It was about 14 or 15 years ago. I was 60 years old, just a kid with a crazy dream. Since then I’ve taken a lot of Prozac, Paxil, Welbutrin, Effexor, Ritalin, Focalin. I’ve also studied deeply in the philosophies and religions, but cheerfulness kept breaking through.â€
He says more or less the same every night, but the crafted wit is well worth repeating. Rehearsal does not preclude warmth, and the three months of preparation that Cohen and the band went through before the tour began last spring – down to the ad libs, perhaps – is one good reason why Live In London has more in common with a measured studio album than most live sets.
Spontaneity isn’t necessary here. Instead, meticulous control is crucial to the potency of these 25 songs, particularly in the marvellous sequence that closes the first half of the concert, running through “Who By Fire†and “Hey, That’s No Way To Say Goodbye†to a broadly celestial “Anthemâ€.
These are not complete reinventions: the musical director, Roscoe Beck, was imbuing Cohen’s songs with the same stately pacing, with similar Mediterranean fringes, as far back as 1988, judging by the Cohen Live album released in 1994. Now, though, there’s a shade more discretion to Bob Metzger’s guitar playing, and fewer cruise liner flourishes from Dino Soldo on the “instruments of windâ€. Javier Mas, the Spanish guitarist, is an obvious star, but as the whole band take compact, jewel-like solos during “I Tried To Leave Youâ€, it’s hard to spot a weak link.
Cohen himself, of course, may be more reliable these days, having lost his old habit of drinking three bottles of wine before a show. He has a clutch of relatively new songs, too, with two from 2001’s underrated Ten New Songs included in the London show, plus a stirring recitation of verses from “A Thousand Kisses Deep†that didn’t make the original recording. A meditation on love, memory, mortality and related topics, it’s an apposite highlight, not least when Cohen intones, “I’m still working with the wine, still dancing cheek to cheek/The band is playing ‘Auld Lang Syne’, but the heart will not retreat.â€
It captures a man forced back on to the road by financial exigency – back to “Boogie Streetâ€, he might say – only to discover that something else is driving him onwards. Perhaps that something, Cohen realised, is a chance to achieve a resolution of sorts, with both his art and with his fans. An uncommonly thoughtful victory lap, which deserves – and has received – a handsome recorded memorial.
Neil Young spent his 71st birthday at the Standing Rock Reservation, site of the Dakota Access Pipeline protests, to perform for those involved.
Young turned 71 on Saturday, November 12.
"Got my birthday wish today, my girl took me to #StandWithStandingRock #WaterIsLife," he wrote on his Facebook ...
Neil Young spent his 71st birthday at the Standing Rock Reservation, site of the Dakota Access Pipeline protests, to perform for those involved.
Young turned 71 on Saturday, November 12.
“Got my birthday wish today, my girl took me to #StandWithStandingRock #WaterIsLife,” he wrote on his Facebook page.
In September, Young unveiled a new song “Indian Givers“, which addresses the proposed and controversial Dakota Access Pipeline that cuts through Native American land. The track will appear on Young’s forthcoming album, Peace Trail.
Fleet Foxes have provided a progress update on the status of their new album.
In an Instagram post from four weeks ago, Robin Pecknold described the alum as "kind of crazy / vast so working on 'putting babies to sleep / living my truth' palliative solo album on off days"
https://www.instagram.com/...
Fleet Foxes have provided a progress update on the status of their new album.
In an Instagram post from four weeks ago, Robin Pecknold described the alum as “kind of crazy / vast so working on ‘putting babies to sleep / living my truth’ palliative solo album on off days”
Overnight, though, the band updated their Facebook cover photo with Hiroshi Hamaya’s “Eruption at Mount Tokachi, Hokkaido Prefecture, Japan, 1962â€.
In the comments thread, when asked if a new album was coming, the band replied, “Alllllmost done.â€
This will be the first new album of studio material from the band since 2011’s Helplessness Blues.
Sunset Boulevard is not far from Watts, a few miles, but the two areas of Los Angeles are divided by a cultural chasm. One basks in the glamorous glow of adjacent Hollywood, the other is a black ghetto latterly celebrated in NWA’s Straight Outta Compton and formerly known for the 1965 riots that b...
Sunset Boulevard is not far from Watts, a few miles, but the two areas of Los Angeles are divided by a cultural chasm. One basks in the glamorous glow of adjacent Hollywood, the other is a black ghetto latterly celebrated in NWA’s Straight Outta Compton and formerly known for the 1965 riots that burned a substantial portion of the neighbourhood to the ground. Racial division in the ‘City Of Angels’ has always been fiercely enforced.
The arrival of Otis Redding to play a weekend of shows at Sunset’s Whisky A Go Go in April 1966 was therefore a statement in itself. Redding was not from Watts – like most of the era’s great soul singers he hailed from the deep South, from Macon Georgia – but a black act bossing the Whisky, a bastion of hip rock bands, was testimony not only to Redding’s soaring popularity but, truly, a sign of the times.
As much was exactly what was intended by Redding and his friend and manager, Phil Walden, a young white impresario who had fallen in love with black music and who would later found Capricorn Records to oversee the career of the Allman Brothers. The pair had decided that ‘crossing over’ – wooing white America – was a game they could win. Motown had already succeeded, so, to a lesser extent, had James Brown, but Otis was coming from a different place to either; Stax Records of Memphis, a label and studio where, as house guitarist Steve Cropper put it, ‘race never entered’.
As audacious as placing a full-blown R’n’B band into the heart of groovy LA was recording the weekend’s six sets, a decision made redundant by Stax’s imperious tour of Europe a year later and the resulting Otis album Live In Europe. The Whisky sessions, in much truncated form, didn’t see light of day until after Redding’s death in late 1967.
Live In Europe and the triumphant performance at the 1967 Monterey festival – a show that sealed Otis’ conquest of the white US audience – are arguably better testimonies to Redding’s live prowess, not least because they have him backed by Stax’s house band the MGs, the co-architects of his studio output. In particular, Cropper’s scything, chattering guitar is a sorely missed presence on the Whisky session. Yet if you want to know how Otis sounded in his ascent through the grind of the so-called chitlin circuit, backed by his regular ten-piece touring band, this is a better guide.
The audience for the Whisky sessions – it was not a large venue, holding a mere 250 or so – was a mix of the curious and the cognoscenti. Minor hits like “These Arms Of Mineâ€, “Pain In My Heart†(covered by the Stones) and “Mr Pitiful†had put Otis’ name out there beyond his adoring black fans, while Otis Blue, released a few months previously, had opened more ears. Among the crowd were fans like Van Morrison and Dylan, but for others Otis was still news. Robbie Krieger of The Doors (a regular fixture at the Whisky) recalls watching the show slack-jawed at the energy being pumped out onstage by an act of which he had barely heard. Such was the racial divide of the times.
You can hear the gulf at the very start of the record, with Otis introduced by a patter lifted from James Brown’s shows: “It’s star time…†Otis, 24 years old, rips into a furious “Can’t Turn You Looseâ€, the band’s relentless groove punctuated by the might of its six-piece horn section. The opener brings a smattering of polite applause from an audience uncertain how to react (or simply too stunned), prompting Otis to urge, “Holler as loud as you want, stomp as hard as you want to. Just take your shoes off. Get soulful!â€
Otis and band soon had the room cooking, and on later sets you can hear a boisterous audience yelling and singing along, especially to a hyper-ventilated “Satisfactionâ€, which sits at the heart of every performance. The Stones’ hit was suggested to Otis by Walden, and after being unleashed on Otis Blue quickly became a calling card, transmuted from the droll, loping original into an urgent demand, its guitar riff pumped out by horns. Ry Cooder, who opened the Whisky sets as one of the Rising Sons, remarks that the audience “heard ‘Satisfaction’ done at land-speed-record tempo. I don’t think any white band could play that fast in those days.â€
The setlist didn’t vary much across the weekend, and essentially alternated between high tempo, kick-ass numbers like “I’m Depending On You†and plaintive ballads like “Just One More Day†and “Pain In My Heartâ€. Otis could handle both with equal panache. His voice on slow pieces like “Ole Man Trouble†was strong but mellow and melodic, while “Respect†and “Mr Pitiful†(which mysteriously clocks in around two minutes, rather than the six, seven and eight allotted “Satisfactionâ€) find him coarse-grained, ebullient. Otis, built like a linebacker, was no great mover – no spins or splits – but exuded a physical force that tumbles out the speakers.
Given the singer’s adulation of Sam Cooke, whom he covered three times over on Otis Blue, it’s a surprise that no Cooke numbers feature here, but Redding was clearly out to showcase his own material like “Chained And Boundâ€, another tear-jerker. He makes room, nonetheless, for a couple of covers on his last set. “A Hard Day’s Night†becomes a vicious stomp some way removed from the Fabs’ original, and excluding the original’s airy middle eight. “Papa’s Got A Brand New Bag†is an homage to his fellow Georgian James Brown, something of a throwaway but clearly fun on the night.
Famously, Otis could never sing the same song the same way twice (which made lip-synching a calamity zone) and every number here comes up slightly different, as he punctuates it with assorted stammers, grunts and exhortations. The band, to their credit, rarely miss a cue. The sheer length and repetitions make end-to-end listening of these six sides something for the dedicated, but as a tribute to a still-missed talent, it testifies.
As PJ Harvey ends another momentous year, Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to PJ Harvey provides a definitive guide to one of the most vital British artists of the past 25 years. In this lavish new mag, you'll find long-lost interviews from the pages of NME and Uncut, that reveal the fluctuating moods...
As PJ Harvey ends another momentous year, Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to PJ Harvey provides a definitive guide to one of the most vital British artists of the past 25 years. In this lavish new mag, you’ll find long-lost interviews from the pages of NME and Uncut, that reveal the fluctuating moods and modes of this remarkable performer. There are trips to a Dorset farmyard, and recollections of breakdowns in London. Tense on the road pieces in Los Angeles, and unnervingly garrulous chats about love, Nick Cave, foxhunting and haircare. From Dry to The Hope Six Demolition Project… it’s the complete PJ Harvey story.
Aerosmith have announced European tour dates for next year, as part of their Aero-Vederci Baby! ‘farewell’ tour.
The dates follow on from their series of shows in South America, rocking to their die-hard fans in Chile, Argentina, Colombia, Bolivia, Brazil, Peru and Mexico.
Joe Perry - “Itâ€...
Aerosmith have announced European tour dates for next year, as part of their Aero-Vederci Baby! ‘farewell’ tour.
The dates follow on from their series of shows in South America, rocking to their die-hard fans in Chile, Argentina, Colombia, Bolivia, Brazil, Peru and Mexico.
Joe Perry – “It’s been 3 years since we have been on tour in Europe and I can speak for my brothers that we can’t wait to get over there and take it up a few notches. Last tour in South America we were running on all cylinders and I can see no reason to let up now.”
Steven Tyler – “Aerosmith just got done ripping through South America like true ambassadors of rock…The band is unstoppable right now and in Europe, we’re going to keep doing what we do best… Let The Music Do The Talking…Living On The Edge, and living to rock another day.”
As part of the Aero-Vederci Baby tour, they will also be performing at some of the biggest music festivals in the world including Sweden Rock, France’s Hellfest and Download Festival in Donington, UK.
May 17, 2017: Hayarkon Park, Tel Aviv, Israel
May 20, 2017: Black Sea Arena, Batumi, Georgia
May 23, 2017: Olympiski, Moscow, Russia
May 26, 2017: Konigsplatz, Munich, Germany
May 30, 2017: Waldbuhne, Berlin, Germany
June 2, 2017: Tauron Arena, Krakow, Poland
June 5, 2017: Royal Arena, Copenhagen, Denmark
June 8, 2017: Sweden Rock Festival, Solvesborg, Sweden
June 11, 2017: Download Festival, Donington, UK
June 14, 2017: 3 Arena, Dublin, Ireland
June 17, 2017: Hellfest, Clisson, France
June 20, 2017: Lanxess Arena, Cologne, Germany
June 23, 2017: Firenze Rocks Festival, Florence, Italy
June 26, 2017: Meo Arena, Lisbon, Portugal
June 29, 2017: Rivas Auditorio Miguel Rios, Madrid, Spain
July 2, 2017: Rock Fest Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
July 5, 2017: Hallenstadion, Zurich, Switzerland