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Pete Townshend’s solo albums set for reissue

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Pete Townshend's entire solo catalogue is being reissued next Friday (October 7). The albums, including 1980's Empty Glass, have been remastered and come on CD in digipak sleeves. The Who's guitarist and songwriter has released seven solo albums in total, ranging from 1972's Who Came First to 1993...

Pete Townshend‘s entire solo catalogue is being reissued next Friday (October 7).

The albums, including 1980’s Empty Glass, have been remastered and come on CD in digipak sleeves.

The Who‘s guitarist and songwriter has released seven solo albums in total, ranging from 1972’s Who Came First to 1993’s Psychoderelict. 1977’s Rough Mix, however, was a collaboration between the guitarist and the Small Faces and Faces’ bassist, guitarist, singer and songwriter Ronnie Lane.

1989’s The Iron Giant, meanwhile, was Townshend’s version of Ted Hughes’ popular children’s story, featuring Roger Daltrey and John Lee Hooker.

The tracklistings of the seven reissues are:

Who Came First (1972)

1. Pure And Easy
2. Evolution
3. Forever’s No Time At All
4. Let’s See Action
5. Time Is Passing
6. There’s A Heartache Following Me
7. Sheraton Gibson
8. Content
9. Parvardigar

Rough Mix (1977)

1. My Baby Gives It Away
2. Nowhere To Run
3. Rough Mix
4. Annie
5. Keep Me Turning
6. Catmelody
7. Misunderstood
8. April Fool
9. Street In The City
10. Heart To Hang Onto
11. Till The Rivers All Run Dry

Empty Glass (1980)

1. Rough Boys
2. I Am An Animal
3. And I Moved
4. Let My Love Open The Door
5. Jools And Jim
6. Keep On Working
7. Cat’s In The Cupboard
8. A Little Is Enough
9. Empty Glass
10. Gonna Get Ya

All The Best Cowboys Have Chinese Eyes (1982)

1. Stop Hurting People
2. The Sea Refuses No River
3. Prelude
4. Face Dances Part Two
5. Exquisitely Bored
6. Communication
7. Stardom In Acton
8. Uniforms (Corp d’esprit)
9. North Country Girl
10. Somebody Saved Me
11. Slit Skirts

White City (1985)

1. Give Blood
2. Brilliant Blues
3. Face the Face
4. Hiding Out
5. Secondhand Love
6. Crashing By Design
7. I Am Secure
8. White City Fighting
9. Come To Mama
The Iron Man (1989)

1. I Won’t Run Anymore
2. Over The Top
3. Man Machines
4. Dig
5. A Friend Is A Friend
6. I Eat Heavy Metal
7. All Shall Be Well
8. Was There Life
9. Fast Food
10. A Fool Says…
11. Fire
12. New Life / Reprise

PsychoDerelict (dialogue version) (1993)

1. English Boy
2. Meher Baba M3
3. Let’s Get pretentious
4. Meher Baba M4 (Signal Box)
5. Early Morning Dreams
6. I Want That Thing
7. Dialogue Intro (Outlive The Dinosaur)
8. Outlive The Dinosaur
9. Flame (demo version)
10. Now And Then
11. I Am Afraid
12. Don’t Try To Make Me Real
13. Dialogue Intro (Predictable)
14. Predictable
15. Flame
16. Meher Baba M5 (Vivaldi)
17. Fake It
18. Dialogue Intro (Now and Then – reprise)
19. Now and Then – reprise
20. Baba O’Riley (demo)
21. English Boy (reprise)

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Conor Oberst: “Bright Eyes still talk about doing another album”

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Bright Eyes have discussed making another album, singer and songwriter Conor Oberst reveals in the new issue of Uncut, dated November 2016 and out now. The last album the group released was The People's Key in 2011, yet Oberst says he's not sure if it'll be the final Bright Eyes record. "I don't k...

Bright Eyes have discussed making another album, singer and songwriter Conor Oberst reveals in the new issue of Uncut, dated November 2016 and out now.

The last album the group released was The People’s Key in 2011, yet Oberst says he’s not sure if it’ll be the final Bright Eyes record.

“I don’t know if it will be the last Bright Eyes album, we still talk about doing another record,” he explains.”Nate [Walcott] and Mike [Mogis] are both really busy doing their own stuff… We’ve always tried to do things we’re interested in at that moment. For fans of my music or Bright Eyes, I think that’s frustrating for a lot of them because we don’t really do that same thing twice too much.”

In the new issue of Uncut, Oberst looks back on the making of records by Bright Eyes, Desaparecidos, Monsters Of Folk and his own solo work.

“At the time, I wanted to make it like Death Of A Ladies’ Man, that Leonard Cohen album with Phil Spector,” Oberst says of Bright Eyes’ 2002 album Lifted, Or The Story Is In The Soil, Keep Your Ear To The Ground, “just over-the-top, huge production. We had all these weird ideas – all the in-between-song collages, all that stuff. We were really ambitious, but what I think is the charm is that we didn’t know what the fuck we were doing, it came off like a grade-school orchestra was playing it!”

The new Uncut, featuring the Specials, Bob Weir, Peter Hook, Shirley Collins, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Marc Almond and Nina Simone is out now.

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

 

Jean-Michel Jarre announces Oxygene 3

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Jean-Michel Jarre has announced the release of Oxygene 3. The album is due on December 2. “I don’t necessarily like anniversaries that much," says Jarre. "But when I was recording Electronica, two years ago, I did a piece of music (today Oxygene 19) that made me think about what Oxygene could ...

Jean-Michel Jarre has announced the release of Oxygene 3.

The album is due on December 2.

“I don’t necessarily like anniversaries that much,” says Jarre. “But when I was recording Electronica, two years ago, I did a piece of music (today Oxygene 19) that made me think about what Oxygene could be if I was composing it today. Then I took the 40th anniversary of the first album as a deadline to push myself to see if I could compose this new chapter in six weeks, just like I did for the first one: probably to avoid thinking too much about, whether it was a good idea or not, and also to record everything in one go… The idea was not to copy the first album, but rather keeping the dogma of embarking listeners on a journey from beginning to end with different chapters, all linked to each other.

“What made the first Oxygene so different at the time, is probably the minimalist aspect, and the fact that there are almost no drums, and I wanted to keep this approach, creating the groove mainly with the sequences and the structure of the melodies only. When I did the first Oxygene in the vinyl days, I had a structure in mind divided in 2 parts fitting the A&B sides of an album. This time I enjoyed doing the same: one side being darker, the other being brighter. So when I think of it today, Oxygene 3 has actually two sides…

“I did the first Oxygene on an 8 tracks tape recorder with very few instruments, with no other choice than being minimalist. I tried to keep this minimalist approach for Oxygene 3. Some moments are built around one or two elements like in the first volume.”

Oxygene 3 will be available on CD, Vinyl and in the Ultimate Oxygene-Trilogy Box-Set, combining all three Oxygene-albums on CD and Vinyl, with an attached coffee-table-book featuring rare photos and notes on the story of Oxygene.

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Tim Buckley singles compilation announced

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Tim Buckley's singles are to be collected on a new album. Wings: The Complete Singles 1966 - 1974 contains the A side and B side of all his UK and US singles, including the cancelled 1967 single “Once Upon a Time” b/w “Lady, Give Me Your Key”, the latter track making its first appearance an...

Tim Buckley‘s singles are to be collected on a new album.

Wings: The Complete Singles 1966 – 1974 contains the A side and B side of all his UK and US singles, including the cancelled 1967 single “Once Upon a Time” b/w “Lady, Give Me Your Key”, the latter track making its first appearance anywhere.

The 21-song compilation is due out November 18 on Omnivore Recordings.

The track listing is:
Wings
Grief in My Soul
Aren’t You the Girl
Strange Street Affair Under Blue
Once Upon a Time

Lady, Give Me Your Key
Morning Glory
Knight-Errant

Once I Was

Pleasant Street
Carnival Song

Happy Time

So Lonely

Move With Me
Nighthawkin’
Quicksand

Stone in Love

Dolphins

Honey Man

Wanda Lu

Who Could Deny You

all tracks stereo, except 1–9 mono

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Robbie Robertson on his best albums, from The Band to Dylan

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In his 52-year career as songwriter, Band leader and, according to Bob Dylan, “mathematical guitar genius”, Robbie Robertson has played his part in the evolution of American music. Aged just 16, in 1959 he joined Ronnie Hawkins’ backing group. The Hawks later conspired with the newly electric ...

In his 52-year career as songwriter, Band leader and, according to Bob Dylan, “mathematical guitar genius”, Robbie Robertson has played his part in the evolution of American music. Aged just 16, in 1959 he joined Ronnie Hawkins’ backing group. The Hawks later conspired with the newly electric Dylan, before becoming The Band, a polestar of US music. Since leaving The Band in ’76 Robertson has collaborated with Martin Scorsese and released five solo albums. At 67 he still embraces the mystery of creative exploration. “You don’t necessarily recognise these things as they’re happening,” he tells Uncut. “It’s always a discovery process.” Interview: Graeme Thomson. Originally published in Uncut’s April 2011 issue (Take 167).

____________________________

 

BOB DYLAN
The Bootleg Series Vol 4: Bob Dylan Live, 1966, The ‘Royal Albert Hall’ Concert
(Columbia, 1998)
The most famous live bootleg in rock history was finally released in 1998, and captures Dylan & The Hawks in their ragged pomp at Manchester Free Trade Hall in ’66. Their music enrages folk purists, one of whom famously cries “Judas!” at Dylan…

ROBERTSON: Oh, I remember the “Judas” night, but we’d heard it all before. We’d toured the US, Canada, Australia, then all over Europe, so by the time we got to England we were hardened veterans of negativity. It was an interesting experience, to go all over the world and have thousands of people turn up to boo you – they’d throw stuff, too. I learned to play guitar without looking at my hands, because I had to watch out for flying objects. An extraordinary experiment in terror. At some point you think, ‘God, it’s only music.’ That night in Manchester we knew we were in the zone and we did something beautiful. After the show we’d listen on a little mono Nagra tape recorder and we’d say, “That’s not that bad!” We just had to barrel through, but there were times when you woke up screaming, “Maybe I’m wrong!” We’d pick up a newspaper and it would talk about how terrible the show was. We were in the middle of a musical revolution, and it was very challenging to believe in something when no-one else did.

Reviewed! Oasis, Supersonic – the documentary

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In Will Carruthers’ excellent memoir of his time with Spacemen 3 and Spiritualized, Playing The Bass With Three Left Hands, he recalls a fallow period working as a manual labourer where one job involved digging trenches for electric cables at Oasis’ Knebworth concerts. “Somewhere in the distan...

In Will Carruthers’ excellent memoir of his time with Spacemen 3 and Spiritualized, Playing The Bass With Three Left Hands, he recalls a fallow period working as a manual labourer where one job involved digging trenches for electric cables at Oasis’ Knebworth concerts. “Somewhere in the distance,” he writes, “I saw two white golf carts with people in them. It was the stars of the show… they drove round and round and laughed. Their joy seemed neither convincing nor entirely convinced, or maybe I was just jealous.”

The Knebworth shows in August 1996, where the band played to a total of 250,000 people, bookend Mat Whitecross’ documentary – tacitly suggesting that essentially it was all down hill from here for the remaining 13 years of Oasis’ career. Whitecross’ focus on the 2 ½ years leading it up to Knebworth allows Noel Gallagher to frame Oasis’ rise in terms that are both heroic and hackneyed: “We were grafters who came from nothing and took it all.”

Both Noel and Liam are on hand to provide voiceovers, accompanied by a close inner-circle including former bandmates Bonehead and Guigsy, label boss Alan McGee, manager Marcus Russell and Peggy Gallagher. Over footage, these voices helpfully take us from Inspiral Carpets tours in the late 80s to basement rehearsal rooms and onwards. It is a well-documented story, and the familiar narrative beats are all present and correct from McGee’s live epiphany at Glasgow’s King Tut’s Wah Wah Hut to the band being thrown off a ferry to Amsterdam, Noel’s sudden depature mid-American tour, oh, and Noel and Liam – they just don’t get on, right?

Whitecross’ problems aren’t just limited to the familiarity of the tale – much of it blasted onto the front pages of the tabloids at the time. Unlike Supersonic’s obvious antecedent Amy – members of whose creative team are producers here – Supersonic lacks much intimacy or insight. The lesser-told testimonials of childhood friends Juliette Ashby and Lauren Gilbert gave Winehouse’s story a freshness and immediacy. The arrival of the iPhone in the early Oughts, conveniently coinciding with her rising fame, was a boon for that film’s director Asif Kapadia. Whitecross only has shaky camcorder footage from the Manchester Boardwalk or the back of a tour bus; he must make do, then, with less satisfying, impersonal TV and concert film.

That said, a viewer looking to experience the ‘full Liam’, for instance, will be amply rewarded by scenes best described as “a big bunch of chaos”, much of it involving his brother. “Noel has a lot of buttons, Liam has a lot of fingers,” says Bonehead sagely. Often their sibling squabbling is just very, very funny; over distance, it begins to wear. A young Liam’s early revelation that all he wants to do is make enough money to buy Peggy a new home is surprisingly sweet. But perhaps the most revealing moment comes when the brothers find themselves in an Irish bar along with their estranged father, Tommy, who had been paid to contact the boys by a British tabloid. Liam is all for settling a few scores with his fists, but Noel talks him out of it. What Noel said to calm down his angry, impetuous younger brother has been lost to history, but Whitecross finally finds an opportunity to interrogate their sibling dynamic. It’s a shame there isn’t more of it.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Shovels & Rope – Little Seeds

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Michael Trent and Cary Ann Hearst have made their reputation as a duo with keen ears for characters and places, their songs essentially serving as clever narratives on which to hang variants of blues, folk and country clatter. 2013’s “Birmingham” was a case in point (and an Americana Award win...

Michael Trent and Cary Ann Hearst have made their reputation as a duo with keen ears for characters and places, their songs essentially serving as clever narratives on which to hang variants of blues, folk and country clatter. 2013’s “Birmingham” was a case in point (and an Americana Award winner), a rucking number about life on the road, protagonists Rockamount Cowboy and Nickajack Man burning rubber between Tennessee and the Carolinas.

Their career has moved on apace since follow-up Swimmin’ Time grazed the US Top 20, a documentary about the couple appeared in 2014 and last November saw them release a set of collaborations with pals such as Shakey Graves and The Milk Carton Kids.

Little Seeds isn’t a radical departure from past endeavours, though it is a more expansive work and, more interestingly, a more personal one. Many of these tunes were a direct result of events close to home. Perhaps none more so than “BWYR”, a spectral, harmony-driven plea for unity in divisive times, a response to the church shooting that claimed nine lives in their adopted Charleston last summer. The death of a friend forms the basis of “This Ride”, while two compositions deal with the Alzheimer’s diagnosis of Trent’s father, a dual portrayal of stoicism and dignity fragmented by memories that refuse to knit together.

All this might suggest an overly sombre listening experience, but Little Seeds is actually nothing of the sort. These songs are often vividly effervescent. “I Know” is a playful tale of petty jealousies and band rivalries that sounds like a dust-up between T. Rex and Gun Club. “Buffalo Nickel” examines the nature of Trent and Hearst’s marital relationship, its distorted howl and primitive thump adding a further dimension to the similarities to The White Stripes. And the recent arrival of the couple’s first child also plays into the album’s more spirited passages. It is, in fact, a portrait of life’s triumphs and travails, its joys and sorrows rendered in wholly compelling detail.

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Kate Bush to release triple live album, Before The Dawn

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Kate Bush is releasing a live album, Before The Dawn, chronicling her late 2014 performances at London's Hammersmith Apollo. Released under the name The KT Fellowship, the triple-album is set to come out on November 25. Before The Dawn will reportedly follow the structure of Bush's live shows, fea...

Kate Bush is releasing a live album, Before The Dawn, chronicling her late 2014 performances at London‘s Hammersmith Apollo.

Released under the name The KT Fellowship, the triple-album is set to come out on November 25.

Before The Dawn will reportedly follow the structure of Bush’s live shows, featuring seven hits, including “King Of The Mountain” and “Hounds Of Love”, a performance of Side Two of Hounds Of Love, entitled ‘The Ninth Wave’, and then a suite from Bush’s 2005 album Aerial.

The disc will also include the previously unreleased song, “Tawny Owl”, sung by the singer’s son, Albert McIntosh, as well as a performance of “Never Be Mine”, most likely recorded at a rehearsal.

Bush’s last studio album was 50 Words For Snow, released in 2011.

Read Uncut’s review of the Before The Dawn live show.

The CD and LP tracklistings of 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

Side Seven
Nocturn
Aerial

Side Eight
Among Angels
Cloudbusting

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

 

Win an exclusive signed Sting print!

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This Friday – September 30 – sees the release of Sting‘s new boxset, The Studio Collection. The box features eight of Sting's solo albums, spread across 11 LPs, from 1985's The Dream Of The Blue Turtles, to 2013's The Last Ship. To mark this momentous release, we’ve got two exclusive print...

This Friday – September 30 – sees the release of Sting‘s new boxset, The Studio Collection.

The box features eight of Sting’s solo albums, spread across 11 LPs, from 1985’s The Dream Of The Blue Turtles, to 2013’s The Last Ship.

To mark this momentous release, we’ve got two exclusive prints signed by Sting to give away.

To be in with a chance of winning one of them, just answer this question correctly:

What is the opening track on The Dream Of The Blue Turtles?

Send your answer along with your name and address to UncutComp@timeinc.com by noon, Monday, October 10, 2016.

Two winners will be chosen from the correct entries and notified by email. The editor’s decision is final.

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

David Gilmour joined by Benedict Cumberbatch onstage in London

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David Gilmour was joined by Benedict Cumberbatch onstage at London's Royal Albert Hall last night (September 28). The Sherlock star took to the stage to perform the final song of the night, a version of "Comfortably Numb", originally featured on Pink Floyd's 1979 album The Wall, after being persona...

David Gilmour was joined by Benedict Cumberbatch onstage at London‘s Royal Albert Hall last night (September 28).

The Sherlock star took to the stage to perform the final song of the night, a version of “Comfortably Numb”, originally featured on Pink Floyd‘s 1979 album The Wall, after being personally invited by Gilmour.

The two were introduced by mutual friends, with Cumberbatch stepping into the shoes of David Bowie, who performed the song with the guitarist at the Royal Albert Hall in 2006. It was Bowie’s final stage appearance.

David Gilmour is set to play the Royal Albert Hall tonight (September 29) and tomorrow (30).

Last night, Gilmour played:

5 A.M.
Rattle That Lock
Faces Of Stone
What Do You Want From Me
The Blue
The Great Gig In The Sky
A Boat Lies Waiting
Wish You Were Here
Money
In Any Tongue
High Hopes
One Of These Days
Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Parts I-V)
Fat Old Sun
Coming Back To Life
On An Island
Us And Them
Today
Sorrow
Run Like Hell
Time
Breathe (Reprise)
Comfortably Numb

 

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

 

The 33rd Uncut Playlist Of 2016

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A few things to flag up, as ever, not least the Padang Food Tigers/ Sigbjørn Apeland and Botany albums which get better and better, I think, the more I play them. The first has a kind of porch improv vibe that maybe recalls Duane Pitre's rustic drone, the electro-acoustic duo of Mountains, and the ...

A few things to flag up, as ever, not least the Padang Food Tigers/ Sigbjørn Apeland and Botany albums which get better and better, I think, the more I play them. The first has a kind of porch improv vibe that maybe recalls Duane Pitre’s rustic drone, the electro-acoustic duo of Mountains, and the mellower moments of Pelt, though Apeland is a harmonium player, so there’s a raga texture in there, too. Botany, meanwhile, creates billowing psychedelic constructs while using the cut-and-paste methodology of an old-school hip hop producer. Think a late entry into Eno’s Ambient series from DJ Shadow? Kin to Floating Points, too.

Feral Ohms, by the way, is Ethan Miller (Heron Oblivion, Howlin Rain etc) reconnecting with the full-force blastitude of Comets On Fire. Rest assured, I’ll post a track when one enters public domain…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Lambchop – FLOTUS (City Slang/Merge)

2 NxWorries (Anderson Paak & Knxwledge) – Yes Lawd! (Stones Throw)

3 James Johnston – The Starless Room (Clouds Hill)

4 Light Fantastic – Out Of View (Spiritual Pajamas)

5 Orchestre Poly-Rythmo De Cotonou – Madjafalao (Because Music)

6 Padang Food Tigers & Sigbjørn Apeland – Bumblin’ Creed (Northern Spy)

7 Botany – Deepak Verbera (Western Vinyl)

8 Norah Jones – Day Breaks (Blue Note)

9 Steve Hauschildt – Strands (Thrill Jockey)

10 Pony Hunt – Heart Creek (Hearth Music)

11 75 Dollar Bill – Wood/Metal/Plastic/Pattern/Rhythm/Rock (Thin Wrist)

12 Discharge – Hear Nothing See Nothing Say Nothing (Clay)

13 The Olympians – The Olympians (Other Hand/Daptone)

14 Feral Ohms – Live In San Francisco (Castle Face)

15 Danny Brown – Atrocity Exhibition (Warp)

16 Lambchop – Mr M (City Slang)

17 Various Artists – Let It Be: Black America Sings Lennon, McCartney And Harrison (Ace)

18 Sammus – Weirdo (Feat Homeboy Sandman) (Don Giovanni)

19 Tim Hecker – Love Streams (4AD)

20 Julius Eastman – Femenine (Frozen Reeds)

The Band announce 40th anniversary edition of The Last Waltz

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The Band celebrate the 40th anniversary of The Last Waltz with four new editions. Available on November 11 from Rhino, these will pair the audio and video for the first time. Meanwhile, a 40th Anniversary Collector's Edition, limited to 2,500 copies worldwide, which includes a replica of Martin Sco...

The Band celebrate the 40th anniversary of The Last Waltz with four new editions.

Available on November 11 from Rhino, these will pair the audio and video for the first time. Meanwhile, a 40th Anniversary Collector’s Edition, limited to 2,500 copies worldwide, which includes a replica of Martin Scorsese‘s original shooting script for the film. The Collector’s Edition also includes a foreword by Scorsese and an essay from screenwriter Mardik Martin.

40th Anniversary Edition – Original soundtrack with newly remastered audio from the original master tapes on two CDs.

40th Anniversary Deluxe Edition – Complete audio from the concert, including rehearsals and outtakes, plus The Last Waltz film on Blu-Ray.

40th Anniversary Deluxe Edition Vinyl – Complete audio from the concert, including rehearsals and outtakes, pressed on 180-gram vinyl for the first time and presented in an ornate lift-top box.

40th Anniversary Collector’s Edition – Limited to 2,500 copies, this version includes:
* Complete audio from the concert.
* The Last Waltz film on Blu-ray.
*Second Blu-Ray disc including a rarely seen interview from the 1990s with Martin Scorsese and Robbie Robertson, photo gallery, and 5.1 audio mix of the original album.
* 300-page book, bound in red faux-leather with a full replication of Scorsese’s shooting script, rare and previously unseen photos, set sketches, three foldout storyboards, and a foreword by Scorsese.

40th Anniversary Collector’s Edition track listing is:

Disc One
“Theme From The Last Waltz” – with orchestra
“Up On Cripple Creek”
“The Shape I’m In”
“It Makes No Difference”
“Who Do You Love” – with Ronnie Hawkins
“Life Is A Carnival”
“Such A Night” – with Dr. John
“The Weight”
“Down South In New Orleans” – with Bobby Charles
“This Wheel’s On Fire”
“Mystery Train” – with Paul Butterfield
“Caldonia” – with Muddy Waters
“Mannish Boy” – with Muddy Waters
“Stagefright”

Disc Two
“Rag Mama Rag”
“All Our Past Times” – with Eric Clapton
“Further On Up The Road” – with Eric Clapton
“Ophelia”
“Helpless” – with Neil Young
“Four Strong Winds” – with Neil Young
“Coyote” – with Joni Mitchell
“Shadows And Light” – with Joni Mitchell
“Furry Sings The Blues” – with Joni Mitchell
“Acadian Driftwood”
“Dry Your Eyes” – with Neil Diamond
“The W.S. Walcott Medicine Show”
“Tura Lura Lura (That’s An Irish Lullaby)” – with Van Morrison
“Caravan” – with Van Morrison

Disc Three
“The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down”
“The Genetic Method/Chest Fever”
“Baby Let Me Follow You Down” – with Bob Dylan
“Hazel” – with Bob Dylan
“I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Live We Never Have Met)” – with Bob Dylan
“Forever Young” – with Bob Dylan
“Baby Let Me Follow You Down” (Reprise) – with Bob Dylan
“I Shall Be Released”
Jam #1
Jam #2
“Don’t Do It”
“Greensleeves” (From Movie Soundtrack)

Disc Four
“The Last Waltz Suite”
“The Well”
“Evangeline” – with Emmylou Harris
“Out Of The Blue”
“The Weight” – with The Staples
“The Last Waltz Refrain”
Concert Rehearsal
“King Harvest (Has Surely Come)”
“Tura Lura Lura (That’s An Irish Lullaby)”
“Caravan”
“Such A Night”
“Rag Mama Rag”
“Mad Waltz” – Sketch track for “The Well”
“The Last Waltz” – Instrumental
“The Last Waltz – Sketch

Disc Five: Blu Ray
Track Listing (5.1 Surround Sound Mix)
“Theme From The Last Waltz” – with orchestra
“Up On Cripple Creek”
“The Shape I’m In”
“It Makes No Difference”
“Who Do You Love” – with Ronnie Hawkins
“Life Is A Carnival”
“Such A Night” – with Dr. John
“Down South In New Orleans” – with Bobby Charles
“Mystery Train” – with Paul Butterfield
“Mannish Boy” – with Muddy Waters
“Stagefright”
“Further On Up The Road” – with Eric Clapton
“Ophelia”
“Helpless” – with Neil Young
“Coyote” – with Joni Mitchell
“Dry Your Eyes” – with Neil Diamond
“Tura Lura Lura (That’s An Irish Lullaby)” – with Van Morrison
“Caravan” – with Van Morrison
“The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down”
“Baby Let Me Follow You Down” – with Bob Dylan
“I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Live We Never Have Met)” – with Bob Dylan
“Forever Young” – with Bob Dylan
“Baby Let Me Follow You Down” (Reprise)
“I Shall Be Released” – Finale
“The Well”
“Evangeline” – with Emmylou Harris
“Out Of The Blue”
“The Weight” – with The Staples
“The Last Waltz Refrain”
“Theme From The Last Waltz”

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Watch John Cooper Clarke and Hugh Cornwell discuss their new album, This Time It’s Personal

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John Cooper Clarke and Hugh Cornwell have collaborated on an album, This Time It’s Personal, which is released on October 14 by Sony Music. The album features vocals by Clarke and guitars by Cornwell. The duo have also announced a run of shows during November and December to support the album's ...

John Cooper Clarke and Hugh Cornwell have collaborated on an album, This Time It’s Personal, which is released on October 14 by Sony Music.

The album features vocals by Clarke and guitars by Cornwell.

The duo have also announced a run of shows during November and December to support the album’s release.

You can watch them talk about the album in the film below.

The This Time It’s Personal tracklisting is:

It’s Only Make Believe
Way Down Yonder In New Orleans
Spanish Harlem
Johnny Remember Me
MacArthur Park
She’s A Woman
Donna
Jezebel
Love Potion Number 9
Sweeter Than You

Tour dates:

Fri 25 November – Norwich Waterfront
Sat 26 November – Cambridge Junction
Tue 29 November – London O2 Forum Kentish Town
Wed 30 November – Bristol O2 Academy
Thu 01 December – Birmingham O2 Institute
Sat 03 December – Manchester O2 Ritz
Thu 08 December – Sheffield Leadmill
Fri 09 December – Glasgow O2 ABC

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Wilco – Schmilco

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Don’t be fooled by its lighthearted, Nilsson Schmilsson-referencing title – Schmilco is as considered and introspective as the band’s 2015 surprise release Star Wars was spontaneous and exuberant. Stripped back yet unnervingly intense, not unlike Neil Young’s bleak masterpiece On The Beach, ...

Don’t be fooled by its lighthearted, Nilsson Schmilsson-referencing title – Schmilco is as considered and introspective as the band’s 2015 surprise release Star Wars was spontaneous and exuberant. Stripped back yet unnervingly intense, not unlike Neil Young’s bleak masterpiece On The Beach, Wilco’s tenth studio album is striking for the challenges Jeff Tweedy and his partners have set for themselves as they engage in a tug of war between order and chaos, acceptance and despair.

The folky strummed acoustic on which most of Schmilco’s dozen tracks are built hearkens back to Wilco’s first album, 1994’s A.M.; released at a time when Tweedy was viewed merely as Uncle Tupelo’s second banana, having reacted to Jay Farrar’s abrupt exit by gamely picking up the pieces and making the most of what then seemed like a shot in the dark. Since that modest, engaging and unexpectedly surefooted first step, Farrar’s one-time sidekick and his shifting lineup have accumulated one of the richest, most diverse and ambitious bodies of work of any American band of the last quarter-century. Despite his stature, Tweedy, whose humanity and lack of pretension were at the root of Wilco’s initial appeal, retains his underdog appeal 22 years and 10 albums down the road. The antithesis of a larger-than-life rock star, less enigmatically distant than the similarly adored auteur Thom Yorke, he’s always come off as a friend and confidant, if a troubled one at times, a guy we reflexively root for. Tweedy is unafraid to be unflinchingly honest, but he’s never seemed more vulnerable than he does on this nerve-jangling album.

In the pre-release literature, Tweedy describes the album as “joyously negative… I just had a lot of fun being sour about the things that upset me.” Resourceful as ever, he’s come up with an artfully twisted way to vent his spleen – and more to the point, to expose the depths of his anguish. Time feels suspended within the record’s arid, claustrophobic atmosphere; the running time is less than 37 minutes, only one track breaks four minutes and most are under three, but you can get lost – or trapped – inside it, as in a dream that refuses to release you from its jittery thrall. Tweedy and his cohorts have boiled down each song and instrumental part to its essence – in its starkness, the sound evokes bone and gristle, to the degree that the record’s moments of fleshed-out human warmth are magnified, mirroring the jangled nerves that rattle the frontman’s rumpled, perennially boyish tenor.

In the opening “Normal American Kids”, Tweedy looks back to his youth, but not nostalgically – far from it. The lyric describes feeling apart and unsettled by the existential distance from perceived normalcy, while Nels Cline’s slide wheezes asthmatically, seconding the emotion. “Always hated those normal American kids”, he ruefully concludes. The vibe warms considerably, if temporarily, on the following “If I Ever Was A Child”, with its loping cadence, gilded guitars and textured chorus harmonies, recalling the Byrdsy folk rock of 2007’s lovely Sky Blue Sky. Glenn Kotche’s feverish double-time drumming propels “Cry All Day” while bass player John Stirratt, whose stolid parts counterbalance his bandmates’ extremes, puts his oars in the water to pull against the unchecked energy, suggesting the uneasy duality of agitation and reflectiveness that give the album its distinct character. The band courts anarchy on “Common Sense”, with its fractured stop/start cadence, dissonant guitar chords, queasy slide and what could pass for the zither in “The Third Man Theme” refracted through a bad acid trip. There’s a stretch of spirited acoustic rock’n’roll in the acrimonious “Nope” and the chugging “Something To Lose”, followed by the misanthropic lament “Happiness” (“…depends on who you blame”) and the bonsai short story “Quarters”, before things go haywire again with “Locator”. On this eerie, disjointed track, the underlying mortal dread breaks the surface, as the narrator peers into the abyss, mesmerised, chanting “I hide/Here below”.

Whenever we begin to get comfortable on this record, Tweedy and his cohorts pull the rug out from under us. In the past, they’ve kept us on edge by deftly employing eruptive tonal shifts, the operative modes of Being There and Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, as well as more recent cacophonous disturbances triggered by Cline’s trademark freak-outs like Wilco (The Album)’s “Bull Black Nova” and The Whole Love’s “Art Of Almost”. On Schmilco, by contrast, the approach is sustained and reductive, leading to an emptying out, a detox of the psyche; which is why experiencing the whole of it – culminating with the unsettlingly beautiful “Shrug And Destroy” (the album’s “Norwegian Wood”), the spoken/sung, Velvets-referencing “We Aren’t The World (Safety Girl)” and the blessedly liquid closer “Just Say Goodbye” – ultimately brings such a sense of relief. Without question, Schmilco is Wilco’s quietest, most disquieting album. And if Tweedy’s soul-baring amid these artfully austere backdrops constitutes a performance, it’s a pretty convincing one.

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

New David Bowie singles compilation announced

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A new compilation of David Bowie's singles will be released on November 11. LEGACY BOWIE collects together Bowie’s singles from 1969’s "Space Oddity" through to the final singles "Lazarus" and "I Can’t Give Everything Away" from earlier this year. All formats of BOWIE LEGACY feature a previo...

A new compilation of David Bowie‘s singles will be released on November 11.

LEGACY BOWIE collects together Bowie’s singles from 1969’s “Space Oddity” through to the final singles “Lazarus” and “I Can’t Give Everything Away” from earlier this year.

All formats of BOWIE LEGACY feature a previously unreleased version of the classic 1971 single “Life On Mars?” mixed by original producer Ken Scott.

A vinyl set will be released on January 7, 2017.

Standard CD tracklisting
Let’s Dance (single version)
Ashes To Ashes (single version)
Under Pressure – Queen & David Bowie
Life On Mars? (2016 mix)
Changes
Oh! You Pretty Things
The Man Who Sold The World
Space Oddity
Starman (original single mix)
Ziggy Stardust
The Jean Genie (original single mix)
Rebel Rebel
Golden Years (single version)
Dancing In The Street – David Bowie & Mick Jagger
China Girl (single version)
Fame
Sound And Vision
‘Heroes’ (single version)
Where Are We Now?
Lazarus (radio edit)

Deluxe CD tracklisting
CD1
Space Oddity
The Man Who Sold The World
Changes
Oh! You Pretty Things
Life On Mars? (2016 mix)
Starman (original single mix)
Ziggy Stardust
Moonage Daydream
The Jean Genie (original single mix
All The Young Dudes
Drive-In Saturday
Sorrow
Rebel Rebel
Young Americans (original single edit)
Fame
Golden Years (single version)
Sound And Vision
‘Heroes’ (single version)
Boys Keep Swinging
Ashes To Ashes (single version)
Fashion (single version)

CD 2
Under Pressure – Queen & David Bowie
Let’s Dance (single version)
China Girl (single version)
Modern Love (single version)
Blue Jean
This Is Not America – with The Pat Metheny Group
Dancing In The Street – David Bowie & Mick Jagger
Absolute Beginners (edit)
Jump They Say (radio edit)
Hallo Spaceboy (PSB Remix) – with The Pet Shop Boys
Little Wonder (edit)
I’m Afraid Of Americans (V1 edit)
Thursday’s Child (radio edit)
Slow Burn (radio edit)
Everyone Says ‘Hi’ (edit)
New Killer Star (radio edit)
Where Are We Now?
Lazarus (radio edit)
I Cant Give Everything Away (radio edit)

BOWIE LEGACY 2 LP tracklisting
Side 1
Let’s Dance (single version)
Ashes To Ashes (single version)
Under Pressure – Queen & David Bowie
Life On Mars? (2016 mix)
Changes

Side 2
Oh! You Pretty Things
The Man Who Sold The World
Space Oddity
Starman (original single mix)
Ziggy Stardust

Side 3
The Jean Genie (original single mix)
Rebel Rebel
Golden Years (single version)
Dancing In The Street – David Bowie & Mick Jagger
China Girl (single version)

Side 4
Fame
Sound And Vision
‘Heroes’ (single version)
Where Are We Now?
Lazarus (radio edit)

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Crowdfunded Lemmy statue erected in his favourite bar

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A bronze statue of Lemmy has been unveiled at his favourite bar, the Rainbow Bar and Grill in West Hollywood. The fan-funded campaign raised nearly $23,000, reports Consequence Of Sound. The life-sized bronze statue was sculpted by Los Angeles artist Travis Moore and was based on a photograph take...

A bronze statue of Lemmy has been unveiled at his favourite bar, the Rainbow Bar and Grill in West Hollywood.

The fan-funded campaign raised nearly $23,000, reports Consequence Of Sound.

The life-sized bronze statue was sculpted by Los Angeles artist Travis Moore and was based on a photograph taken by photographer Robert John.

According to LA Weekly, Todd Singerman insists Motörhead‘s management never interfered in Moore’s design process. “This is for the fans. Nothing corporate,” he says. “Not the label, nothing. This is a fan thing and we tried to stay out of the way.”

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

The Rolling Stones announce Havana Moon DVD

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The Rolling Stones have announced plans for a home entertainment release for their Havana Moon concert film. It's released on November 11 by Eagle Rock Entertainment on DVD, Blu-ray, DVD+2CD, DVD+3LP, Digital Video and Digital Audio plus a special Deluxe Edition. Click here to read Uncut's review ...

The Rolling Stones have announced plans for a home entertainment release for their Havana Moon concert film.

It’s released on November 11 by Eagle Rock Entertainment on DVD, Blu-ray, DVD+2CD, DVD+3LP, Digital Video and Digital Audio plus a special Deluxe Edition.

Click here to read Uncut’s review of Havana Moon

The film documents the band’s historic show in Havana, Cuba on March 25, 2016.

The track Listing for Havana Moon is:

DVD
Jumpin’ Jack Flash
It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll (But I Like It)
Out Of Control
Angie
Paint It Black
Honky Tonk Women
You Got The Silver
Midnight Rambler
Gimme Shelter
Sympathy For The Devil
Brown Sugar
You Can’t Always Get What You Want
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction
Bonus Tracks:
Tumbling Dice
All Down The Line
Before They Make Me Run
Miss You
Start Me Up

BLU-RAY
Jumpin’ Jack Flash
It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll (But I Like It)
Out Of Control
Angie
Paint It Black
Honky Tonk Women
You Got The Silver
Midnight Rambler
Gimme Shelter
Sympathy For The Devil
Brown Sugar
You Can’t Always Get What You Want
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction
Bonus Tracks:
Tumbling Dice
All Down The Line
Before They Make Me Run
Miss You
Start Me Up

DVD+2CD
DVD
Jumpin’ Jack Flash
It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll (But I Like It)
Out Of Control
Angie
Paint It Black
Honky Tonk Women
You Got The Silver
Midnight Rambler
Gimme Shelter
Sympathy For The Devil
Brown Sugar
You Can’t Always Get What You Want
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction
Bonus Tracks:
Tumbling Dice
All Down The Line
Before They Make Me Run
Miss You
Start Me Up
CD Tracklisting
Jumpin’ Jack Flash
It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll (But I Like It)
Out Of Control
Angie
Paint It Black
Honky Tonk Women
You Got The Silver
Midnight Rambler
Gimme Shelter
Sympathy For The Devil
Brown Sugar
You Can’t Always Get What You Want
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction

DVD+3LP
DVD Tracklisting
Jumpin’ Jack Flash
It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll (But I Like It)
Out Of Control
Angie
Paint It Black
Honky Tonk Women
You Got The Silver
Midnight Rambler
Gimme Shelter
Sympathy For The Devil
Brown Sugar
You Can’t Always Get What You Want
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction
DVD Bonus Tracks
Tumbling Dice
All Down The Line
Before They Make Me Run
Miss You
Start Me Up
LP Tracklisting
Jumpin’ Jack Flash
It’s Only Rock ‘n’ Roll (But I Like It)
Tumbling Dice
Out Of Control
All Down The Line
Angie
Paint It Black
Honky Tonk Women
You Got The Silver
Before They Make Me Run
Midnight Rambler
Miss You
Gimme Shelter
Start Me Up
Sympathy For The Devil
Brown Sugar
You Can’t Always Get What You Want
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction

DELUXE EDITION
Contains the DVD, BLU-RAY and 2 CDs with the above content in a 60 page hardback photobook

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Bob Dylan announces 36CD box set: The 1966 Live Recordings

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Bob Dylan is to release a 36 CD box set containing every known recording from his 1966 concert tours of the US, UK, Europe and Australia. Bob Dylan: The 1966 Live Recordings will be released on Friday, November 11 by Columbia Records and Sony Music's Legacy Recordings. The material has been drawn ...

Bob Dylan is to release a 36 CD box set containing every known recording from his 1966 concert tours of the US, UK, Europe and Australia.

Bob Dylan: The 1966 Live Recordings will be released on Friday, November 11 by Columbia Records and Sony Music’s Legacy Recordings.

The material has been drawn from three main audio sources: soundboards, CBS Records mobile recordings and audience tapes.

“While doing the archival research for The Cutting Edge 1965-1966: The Bootleg Series Vol. 12, last year’s box set of Dylan’s mid-60s studio sessions, we were continually struck by how great his 1966 live recordings really are,” said Adam Block, President, Legacy Recordings. “The intensity of Bob’s live performances and his fantastic delivery of these songs in concert add another insightful component in understanding and appreciating the musical revolution Bob Dylan ignited some 50 years ago.”

Columbia/Legacy will also release Bob Dylan’s performance at the Royal Albert Hall from May 26, 1966 as an album entitled The Real Royal Albert Hall 1966 Concert, as a 2CD and 12″ 2LP collection on November 25.

dylan-the-real-royal-albert-hall-1966-111927096

Here’s the tracklisting in full:

Bob Dylan: The 1966 Live Recordings
Disc 1 – Sydney, April 13, 1966 (Soundboard recorded by TCN 9 TV Australia)
Disc 2 – Sydney, April 13, 1966 (Soundboard recorded by TCN 9 TV Australia)
Disc 3 – Melbourne, April 20, 1966 (Soundboard / unknown broadcast)
Disc 4 – Copenhagen, May 1, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 5 – Dublin, May 5, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 6 – Dublin, May 5, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 7 – Belfast, May 6, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 8 – Belfast, May 6, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 9 – Bristol, May 10, 1966 (Soundboard / audience)
Disc 10 – Bristol, May 10, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 11 – Cardiff, May 11, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 12 – Birmingham, May 12, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 13 – Birmingham, May 12, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 14 – Liverpool, May 14, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 15 – Leicester, May 15, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 16 – Leicester, May 15, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 17 – Sheffield, May 16, 1966 (CBS Records recording)
Disc 18 – Sheffield, May 16, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 19 – Manchester, May 17, 1966 (CBS Records recording)
Disc 20 – Manchester, May 17, 1966 (CBS Records recording except Soundcheck / Soundboard)
Disc 21 – Glasgow, May 19, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 22 – Edinburgh, May 20, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 23 – Edinburgh, May 20, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 24 – Newcastle, May 21, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 25 – Newcastle, May 21, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 26 – Paris, May 24, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 27 – Paris, May 24, 1966 (Soundboard)
Disc 28 – London, May 26, 1966 (CBS Records recording)
Disc 29 – London, May 26, 1966 (CBS Records recording)
Disc 30 – London, May 27, 1966 (CBS Records recording)
Disc 31 – London, May 27, 1966 (CBS Records recordings)
Disc 32 – White Plains, NY, February 5, 1966 (Audience tape)
Disc 33 – Pittsburgh, PA, February 6, 1966 (Audience tape)
Disc 34 – Hempstead, NY, February 26, 1966 (Audience tape)
Disc 35 – Melbourne, April 19, 1966 (Audience tape)
Disc 36 – Stockholm, April 29, 1966 (Audience tape)

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Ask Julia Holter

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Ahead of a run of tour dates in November, Julia Holter 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 did she learn from working with Linda Perhacs? She's covered Crowded House, Roxy Music...

Ahead of a run of tour dates in November, Julia Holter 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 did she learn from working with Linda Perhacs?
She’s covered Crowded House, Roxy Music and Guillaume de Machaut’s 14th century composition “Je Vivroie Liement”; what’s the connection between the three?
How did her collaboration with Jean Michel Jarre come about?

Send up your questions by noon, Tuesday, October 4 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

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

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Teenage Fanclub and September’s album highlights reviewed

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As you're hopefully aware by now, our excellent new issue of Uncut is in UK shops, with revealing stories on The Specials, Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Peter Hook, the remarkable Shirley Collins and, of course, much, much more. If you're in the USA, print editions of our first relaunch mag should now be reac...

As you’re hopefully aware by now, our excellent new issue of Uncut is in UK shops, with revealing stories on The Specials, Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Peter Hook, the remarkable Shirley Collins and, of course, much, much more. If you’re in the USA, print editions of our first relaunch mag should now be reaching you: it’s the one with David Bowie on the cover, also featuring David Crosby, Margo Price, a hair-raising Lou Reed piece and, yes, lots more besides. Please let us know how you’re feeling about our new look and the changes to Uncut; as ever, we’d be very pleased to hear from you (email uncut_feedback@timeinc.com).

This week, it seems a good time to write a bit about some of my favourite albums of the last month. Teenage Fanclub’s unassuming rock masterclass of “Here”, many of you will already know about, I suspect. There is some sweet irony that no British band of their generation have grown into middle age as gracefully as the one lumbered with that absurdly short-termist name. Nevertheless, the Fanclub’s ninth album proper, and first in six years, might just be their best this millennium; a triangulation of mature soppiness, mitigated contentment and indelible tuneage.

As usual, the three frontmen get four songs each, and Norman Blake sets the tone with the terrific gush of “I’m In Love”. “There is pain in this world,” he notes conscientiously, but “It feels good when you’re close to me/That’s enough.” It’s Gerry Love, though, who ultimately steals the show, with his four songs best exemplifying the “Here” MO of adding a little fuzz and grunge into the twinkling constructs of harmonies and horns: check out the guitar break on the jazzish “The First Sight”. Not “Everything Flows”, exactly, but an endearingly restrained statement of intent.

2016 feels very much like a breakthrough year for the glut of adventurous folk guitarists who’ve been nurtured in the underground these past few years. As William Tyler, Steve Gunn and Ryley Walker gain mainstream kudos, the next tranche of players – Chuck Johnson, Marisa Anderson, Sarah Louise – are moving up a level. Witness Tulsa’s Dylan Golden Aycock, curator of the fine Scissor Tail label (he put out the fantastic Scott Hirsch album earlier this year) and the latest graduate of the Imaginational Anthems comps to assert himself. “Church Of Level” mostly finds Aycock respectfully expanding on Takoma School roots, moving towards the sort of chamber folk compositions mastered by James Blackshaw and Tyler himself, circa “Impossible Truth”. A bustle of drums augment the guitar solipsisms on “Lord It Over”, but the key weapon is subtly deployed pedal steel, giving downhome fingerpicking workouts like “Red Bud Valley II” a pleasing ethereal undercurrent.

Ever thought that “Sister Ray” was maybe a bit on the short side, and could be improved by some heavy Bo Diddley vibes? In that unlikely event, The Double’s debut record will be something of a dream come true, sustaining as it does a kind of elevated boom-chicka-boom drone for two sides and 40-odd minutes. It’s a pleasurable act of endurance to listen to “Dawn Of The Double” and, one assumes, even more of one to play. The pair behind this marathon are, though, serious operators, being drummer Jim White (The Dirty Three, Xylouris White et al) and guitarist Emmett Kelly (The Cairo Gang), who first crossed paths in the rather more nuanced environs of Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy’s band. The vinyl-only format enhances radical garage-rock credibility, albeit interrupting the brutalist genius of the whole endeavour. How about enlisting a Glenn Branca-style Guitar Army to hammer the point home even more emphatically?

Back in the high summers of acid-folk a decade ago, the calmness exuded by Kayla Cohen in her songs would doubtless be romanticised as in some way uncanny. Nowadays, perhaps fortunately, the sort of candlelit Laurel Canyon fare she purveys as Itasca doesn’t need that kind of witchy qualification; it’s just a lovely collection of songs, in which the serenity of voice and understatement of band create a humane intimacy rather than anything more mystical. Not much happens on the deceptively tranquil “Open To Chance”, even though it presents fractionally fuller instrumentation than on Cohen’s previous underground releases. But the charms of songs like “Henfight” and “Carousel” accumulate steadily, insidiously, over repeat plays. One to file, rewardingly, between Meg Baird and Paradise Of Bachelors labelmates, The Weather Station.

How best to salute the majesty of Robbie Basho: cosmic American folk maestro; New Age guitar traveller; heroic yodeller? The cosmopolitan bunch assembled by Arborea’s Buck Curran for “Basket Full Of Dragons: A Tribute To Robbie Basho Vol II” deploy a variety of strategies, using both repurposed Basho tunes and home-baked homages, with some pretty mixed results. Staunch guitar technicians like Glenn Jones, Chuck Johnson and German fanboy Steffen Basho-Junghans provide a faithful bedrock, but many of the vocal interpretations have a gothic, mimsy affect, Twelve Hides’ “California Raga” veering close to All About Eve territory. The strongest contributions steer clear of guitars, with Syrian oud player Tammam Saeed foregrounding Basho’s eastern predilections, and Mike Tamburo discovering that a hammer dulcimer, of all things, brilliantly captures the maestro’s spectral intensity.

Reissues, now. The fraught business of waiting on Neil Young’s whims must have stymied most chances Crazy Horse had of developing their own career – though, of course, losing the gifted Danny Whitten didn’t help. Nevertheless, the arrival of Frank ‘Poncho’ Sampedro evidently emboldened Ralph Molina and Billy Talbot to have another go, following 1971’s fine, Whitten-fronted “Crazy Horse” and two forgettable sets, featuring radically reconfigured lineups, in 1972. Much of “Crazy Moon”, back on vinyl for the first time in forever, dates from around the same time as the “Zuma” sessions, in 1974, but it would sit on the shelf ’til 1978.

There’s a fair bit to ensnare Neil completists, given his prominent role on five tracks. The strongest is Sampedro’s “Downhill”, a quintessential Crazy Horse trudge with some penetrating Old Black action. Sampedro turns out to be the best songwriter of the trio; his countryish “Too Late Now” is another standout, with roistering piano from Barry Goldberg. Ben Keith and David Briggs also help out and, even if the lyrics don’t reward forensic study (“She’s Hot” and “Dancin’ Lady” being indicative titles), Crazy Moon emerges as an enjoyable reassertion of a band’s core values. A couple of Molina attempts at soft-rock illustrate that a desire to stretch those values is, at best, ill-advised.

For adventurous music fans happy to let labels do their crate-digging for them, the recent market in 1960s and ’70s Ethiopian music has provided a rich seam of new discoveries. As the Ethiopiques compilations on Buda Musique proved, a ravishing party music scene thrived under a censorious dictatorship, harbouring stars like Mahmoud Ahmed, Mulatu Astatke and the local James Brown surrogate, Alemayehu Eshete. Organist Hailu Mergia played with many of these, as part of Swinging Addis’ hottest combo, The Walias, but his music as a bandleader only gained prominence when the Awesome Tapes imprint reissued their Tche Belew (1977) in 2014. Mergia stayed in America after a Walias tour in 1981, becoming a taxi driver in Washington DC. Slowly, though, the deep riches of his career are being rediscovered.

“Wede Harer Guzo”, a hitherto-unknown cassette from ’78, finds him hooking up with a purportedly hipper group, the Dahlak Band, heading deeper into a kind of chant-laden, Arabic-scale, laidback funk – check how Mergia improvises over a delirious ascending bassline on the stand-out, “Almaz Eyasebkush”. It’s easy to fetishise this sort of music as exotic and obscurantist, but Wede Harer Guzo refutes that tokenism with every wonderful track: better think of it as kin to the likes of Jimmy Smith, Jackie Mittoo, The Upsetters and The Meters.

The story of Syrinx, told on “Tumblers From The Vault (1970-1972)”, is one that tells of how pop, the avant-garde and strong classical aspirations could get in a fruitful tangle on the cusp of the ’70s. John Mills-Cockell, the Canadian band’s leader, had a hinterland in trad rock (his early band, Kensington Market, were produced by Felix Pappalardi at Electric Ladyland). He had also, though, studied electronic music as an academic discipline – a key to understanding Syrinx’s two beguiling albums, collected here. The synth baroque of Wendy Carlos, and Terry Riley’s timelag meditations are useful reference points, but it’s still hard to imagine, at 45 years’ remove, quite how alien “Syrinx” (1970) and “Long Lost Relatives” (1971) must have sounded upon release, given it’s generally easier to compare Mills-Cockell’s music with subsequent electronica.

The self-titled debut is stately and subdued, with a processional glide to the likes of “Chant For Your Dragon King” (as everything here, vocal-free) that pre-empts both Side 2 of Low and the encroaching New Age. “Long Lost Relatives”, meanwhile, is flightier and more whimsical, Doug Pringle’s electronic sax lines often to the fore. The squiggliness can sometimes feel like a conservatoire prank, but Mills-Cockell’s romantically-inclined melodies are ravishing; like an implausible mash-up of Michael Nyman, Arthur Russell and Stereolab.