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Conor Oberst announces new album, Ruminations

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Conor Oberst has announced details of his new acoustic solo album, Ruminations. The album was written last winter in Oberst's hometown of Omaha, Nebraska. "I wasn't expecting to write a record," says Oberst. "I honestly wasn't expecting to do much of anything. Winter in Omaha can have a paralyzin...

Conor Oberst has announced details of his new acoustic solo album, Ruminations.

The album was written last winter in Oberst’s hometown of Omaha, Nebraska.

“I wasn’t expecting to write a record,” says Oberst. “I honestly wasn’t expecting to do much of anything. Winter in Omaha can have a paralyzing effect on a person but in this case it worked in my favor. I was just staying up late every night playing piano and watching the snow pile up outside the window. Next thing I knew I had burned through all the firewood in the garage and had more than enough songs for a record. I recorded them quick to get them down but then it just felt right to leave them alone.”

The tracklisting for Ruminations is:

Tachycardia
Barbary Coast (later)
Gossamer Thin
Counting Sheep
Mamah Borthwick (A Sketch)
The Rain Follows the Plow
A Little Uncanny
Next of Kin
You All Loved Him Once
Till St. Dymphna Kicks Us Out

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Read Iggy Pop’s David Bowie playlist

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Iggy Pop paid tribute to David Bowie during a two-hour radio show over the weekend. Pop's Iggy Confidential on BBC Radio 6 Music found Pop share his memories of Bowie while playing some of his favourite songs by his late friend. The playlist included "Art Decade", "Moonage Daydream", "Dollar Days"...

Iggy Pop paid tribute to David Bowie during a two-hour radio show over the weekend.

Pop’s Iggy Confidential on BBC Radio 6 Music found Pop share his memories of Bowie while playing some of his favourite songs by his late friend.

The playlist included “Art Decade”, “Moonage Daydream”, “Dollar Days” and “Warszawa”

You can hear the programme by clicking here.

Iggy Pop played:

Boys Keep Swinging
Art Decade
John, I’m Only Dancing (Sax Version)
Black Country Rock
Station To Station
What In The World
Wild Is The Wind
Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps)
The Prettiest Star (Single Version)
Moss Garden
Panic in Detroit
Dirty Boys
Moonage Daydream
Sound and Vision
Under Pressure
Diamond Dogs
Criminal World
Where Are We Now?
I Can’t Give Everything Away
Stay (US Single Edit)
TVC 15
Young Americans (Single Version)
Golden Years (Single Version)
Aladdin Sane
Dollar Days
Warszawa

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Ramones – Ramones 40th Anniversary Deluxe Edition

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“Ramones” and “deluxe” might be two words you’d think should never go together, but this 40th anniversary, three-disc set of the Ramones’ debut is the latest manifestation of a gradual reappraisal of the band that began with the 2003 documentary, End Of The Century. If the Ramones had pr...

Ramones” and “deluxe” might be two words you’d think should never go together, but this 40th anniversary, three-disc set of the Ramones’ debut is the latest manifestation of a gradual reappraisal of the band that began with the 2003 documentary, End Of The Century. If the Ramones had previously portrayed themselves as something of a cartoon – The Archies with black leather and glue stains – End Of The Century shaded in the depth, turning them into a dark, difficult graphic novel. It showed for the first time the extent of the hatred that existed between Johnny and Joey, a personal tragedy that lay at the heart of the fraternity, and it also showed that their delinquent fusion of music and image was not a dumb fluke – this was a band knowingly acting within a specifically New York tradition of pop art-rock.

That point is driven home by the album’s producer Craig Leon, who remastered the tapes for this reissue and contributes fantastic liner notes. According to Leon, Ramones was always perceived as the first element of a three or four-album run that would drive home the same themes, over and over – before they began recording, they wrote a list of 35 songs they planned to record over the next couple of years. Later, Leon and Tommy Erdelyi/Ramone, the drummer and musical director, considered cutting the album as a single continuous track to reflect the aural bombardment of the Ramones live experience but also the band’s monomaniacal vision. The Ramones, like Warhol or Lichtenstein, were masters of doing one thing brilliantly and repetitively – something reinforced by the second disc of this set, which contains singles and unreleased demos, including tracks that would appear on subsequent albums such as “You’re Gonna Kill That Girl”, “You Should Never Have Opened That Door” and “I Don’t Care” but could easily have fitted on Ramones.

The set is split into three discs, which give the brevity of an average Ramones song allows for nearly 80 tracks (albeit six of which are different versions of “Blitzkrieg Bop”). Disc one offers a remaster of the original stereo version of the album, plus a brutal, focused mono mix, available for the first time (it’s also being issued on vinyl). Leon’s challenge as producer was always to capture the thundering impact of the band and he had originally toyed with releasing the album in mono for precisely this purpose. In his notes, he explains how each instrument was isolated to achieve “the totally unique sonic environment of separation that characterizes the final mix of the album”. Equal care was paid to mixing, with Leon rejecting a first mix as too conventional until settling on one inspired by A Hard Day’s Night ¬ the Ramones were Beatles nuts, saw themselves as a Bizarro version of the originals, and even wanted to record Ramones at Abbey Road – replicating the odd tension of an old-fashioned four-track mix and achieving with this “retro nouveau style” the desired tone of “imbalance rather than balance”. Finally came the mastering sessions. While Nick Kent scribbled notes in the corner, the acetate grooves were cut so deep to get the requisite volume, it burnt the cutting lathe. Ramones might sound rough and ready – and it was certainly recorded at haste on a tiny budget – but it still utilised whatever that was available in “a state-of-the-art New York studio of the mid-70s”.

The demos on disc two – which include the bludgeoning unreleased version of “Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World” with Nazi lyrics – give an idea of the difference this attention to detail made to the final releases: tracks like “53rd and 3rd” and “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend”, while entirely recognizable, are tinny and rough in their original form and would later be both beefed up and smoothed down by the studio process. Otherwise, nothing changes. The Ramones knew what they had was special and they didn’t want to dilute it even if that meant reviews for the completed album, a lacerating 29 minutes of absurdity and attitude, would confuse the likes of the Dayton Journal Herald, who dismissed it as “El Stinko garbage”, failing to see the line the band drew from rock‘n’roll through British Invasion, girl groups, bubblegum pop and glam.

Disc three gives the album further context. It features two live sets recorded one night at The Roxy in Hollywood in 1976 – the second has not been released before, and is, as you might hope, near identical to the first. Every song is the same but different, with Dee Dee barking out 1-2-3-4, at one point in the middle of a song, Joey flattening vowels, Johnny thundering lightning chords and Tommy offering minimalist percussion. It also adds a dose of the one thing people missed from the debut: a sense of humour. Joey’s deadpan intros are brief – and repetitive – but they reinforce the wit that lay behind the surliness of the most serious joke in punk.

EXTRAS 8/10: Three-CD/one-LP limited edition of 19,760 individually numbered copies featuring remastered stereo and mono mix of original album, singles (stereo & mono), out-takes and demos, and two live shows. Also includes liner notes by producer Craig Leon and journalist Mitchell Cohen, with photographs by Roberta Bayley.

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Leonard Cohen pays tribute to his former muse, Marianne Ihlen

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Leonard Cohen has paid tribute to his former muse, Marianne Ihlen, who died last week. According to her friend, the filmmaker Jan Christian Mollestad, Ihlen passed away on July 28 at Diakonhjemmets Hospital in Oslo, reportedly less than a week after being diagnosed with leukaemia. Cohen's Facebook...

Leonard Cohen has paid tribute to his former muse, Marianne Ihlen, who died last week.

According to her friend, the filmmaker Jan Christian Mollestad, Ihlen passed away on July 28 at Diakonhjemmets Hospital in Oslo, reportedly less than a week after being diagnosed with leukaemia.

Cohen’s Facebook page reports that the singer asked that a letter to him from Mollestad, informing Cohen of her passing, be used in his memorial:

“Dear Leonard

Marianne slept slowly out of this life yesterday evening. Totally at ease, surrounded by close friends.

Your letter came when she still could talk and laugh in full consciousness. When we read it aloud, she smiled as only Marianne can. She lifted her hand, when you said you were right behind, close enough to reach her.

It gave her deep peace of mind that you knew her condition. And your blessing for the journey gave her extra strength. Jan and her friends who saw what this message meant for her, will all thank you in deep gratitude for replying so fast and with such love and compassion.

In her last hour I held her hand and hummed Bird on a Wire, while she was breathing so lightly. And when we left he room, after her soul had flown out of the window for new adventures, we kissed her head and whispered your everlasting words

So long, Marianne”

Born in Norway, Ihlen ran away to the Greek island of Hydra with her boyfriend, Norwegian author Axel Jensen, when she was 22. After giving birth to a son – known as ‘Little Axel’ – she and Jensen broke up. Ihlen met Cohen on Hydra in the early Sixties and the pair began a relationship.

During their first years together, Ihlen inspired several of Cohen’s songs – including “So Long, Marianne” and “Bird On A Wire” – and he dedicated his poetry collection, Flowers For Hitler, to her.

“Oh, those years were really good,” Ihlen told author Kari Hesthamar. “Very good. We sat in the sun and we lay in the sun, we walked in the sun, we listened to music, we bathed, we played, we drank, we discussed. There was writing and lovemaking and…It was absolutely fabulous, you know, to have it like that. During five years I didn’t have shoes on my feet, you know…And I met many beautiful people. Now they are cast to the winds. Some are dead. Many are dead.”

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

New book featuring rare and unseen Big Star photographs to be published

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Big Star - Isolated In The Light is an authorized, limited-edition book, showcasing images from photographers who chronicled both Big Star's beginnings during the burgeoning 1970's Memphis music scene and the later solo projects of songwriters Alex Chilton and Chris Bell in Memphis, New York and acr...

Big Star – Isolated In The Light is an authorized, limited-edition book, showcasing images from photographers who chronicled both Big Star’s beginnings during the burgeoning 1970’s Memphis music scene and the later solo projects of songwriters Alex Chilton and Chris Bell in Memphis, New York and across Europe.

The book will be published on October 14 and features over 200 (many rare and previously unseen) color and black and white images by photographers including William Eggleston, alongside historic images from the vaults of Ardent Studios Archives, Chris Bell’s original handwritten letters and lyrics, new interviews and commentary from Jody Stephens, Chris Stamey, Jon Auer and Ken Stringfellow plus other contributions from Ivo Watts-Russell, Simon Raymonde, Kim Deal and more.

The book is available as a hardback limited edition of 1,000 numbered books. There will be a standard version of 500 copies and the Signature Edition of 500 copies, which will include a previously unpublished signed and numbered 10″x7.5″ print and 2 posters.

Photo © Maude Clay Schuller

Big Star – Isolated In The Light is available for pre-order by clicking here.

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Welcome to The History Of Rock: 1978

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A landmark week for publishing, I think: when was the last time a magazine appeared in UK newsagents with Kate Bush, Tammy Wynette and Sham 69 on the cover? Not to mention Dylan, Earth Wind & Fire, Bruce, Siouxsie, Bob Marley, the Pistols, the Stones, Magazine, The Clash, The Jam, XTC, Devo, Tom...

A landmark week for publishing, I think: when was the last time a magazine appeared in UK newsagents with Kate Bush, Tammy Wynette and Sham 69 on the cover? Not to mention Dylan, Earth Wind & Fire, Bruce, Siouxsie, Bob Marley, the Pistols, the Stones, Magazine, The Clash, The Jam, XTC, Devo, Tom Waits, Johnny Thunders and Dire Straits (not together).

This, of course, is how The History Of Rock 1978 shapes up. Kate’s on the cover, and you can order a copy from our online shop. It’s a great issue: here’s John Robinson to fill you in on the details…

“Welcome to 1978. After the revolutions of the past year or so, this is a year where in music’s war-torn landscape, reconstruction, of a kind, begins. There are survivors of punk’s revolution – Bob Marley, The Clash, and John Lydon to name three – but others aren’t so lucky. Bands like the Damned, Television and the Sex Pistols break up. Sid Vicious ends the year in a foreign jail.

“Long before this, NME’s Charles Shaar Murray meets Howard Devoto and decrees Magazine one of the best of the ‘post-punk’ bands. Nearly 40 years on, we have come to think of post-punk as a genre – here, though, its liberated values and policy-driven music have yet to coalesce into anything so formal

“Instead there are new bands – among them XTC, Pere Ubu, X-Ray Spex, Devo, the Slits, and Siouxsie And The Banshees – who have taken punk as a starting point, a means to their own end. Among the artists of the ‘new wave’ (as everyone is calling it) our cover star Kate Bush, being a more mystical and theatrical figure, is an odd fit. Still, in 1978 her records convincingly slug it out with the Bee Gees in the top ten. It is a time for odd fits.

“This is the world of The History Of Rock, a monthly magazine which follows each turn of the rock revolution. Whether in sleazy dive or huge arena, passionate and increasingly stylish contemporary reporters were there to chronicle events. This publication reaps the benefits of their understanding for the reader decades later, one year at a time.  Missed one? You can find out how to rectify that by visiting our online shop and picking up a back issue.

“In the pages of this fourteenth edition, dedicated to 1978, you will find verbatim articles from frontline staffers, filed from the thick of the action, wherever it may be. Backstage with Bruce Springsteen. Discussing Charles Manson with Siouxsie Sioux. In Riker’s Island with Sid Vicious.

“Sid protests his innocence. Even if no one believes him, at least someone is there to give him a fair hearing.”

Sara Watkins – Young In All The Wrong Ways

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Sara Watkins is just 34, but she’s already managed to put as many miles on her musical odometer as artists twice her age. The SoCal prodigy was just eight years old when she first fiddled onstage with her family, and during the last quarter century, she’s whisked her way through bands and projec...

Sara Watkins is just 34, but she’s already managed to put as many miles on her musical odometer as artists twice her age. The SoCal prodigy was just eight years old when she first fiddled onstage with her family, and during the last quarter century, she’s whisked her way through bands and projects as if she were trying on shoes at a Melrose Ave. boutique – playing in the long-running Watkins Family Hour, the all-star octet Works Progress Administration, the radio show A Prairie Home Companion, the one-off collaboration Mutual Admiration Society and, most notably, Nickel Creek, whose five albums set the template for avant-bluegrass.

Watkins’ restless spirit and musical sophistication are just as apparent in the choices she’s made in the making of her three solo albums. She roped in Led Zeppelin’s John Paul Jones to produce her self-titled 2009 debut and entrusted her second LP, 2012’s Sun Midnight Sun, to the young polymath Blake Mills. On those LPs, she surrounded herself with LA luminaries including pedal steel master Greg Leisz, Attractions drummer Pete Thomas, Heartbreakers keyboard player Benmont Tench and multi-instrumental wizard Jon Brion.

Young In All The Wrong Ways
is Watkins’ first completely self-written effort, which gives the record a newfound coherence and a distinct personality, as she sets down her fiddle and leaves behind her bluegrass comfort zone for terrain she’d only hinted at previously. She’s exploring this frontier in league with the musicians she’s handpicked for her studio band, all of them members of her extended musical family, whose hub is the Largo nightclub on La Cienega Blvd. in West Hollywood. She tapped one of her oldest friends, Punch Brothers guitarist Gabe Witcher, as producer, while his bandmates, guitarist Chris Eldridge and standup bass player Paul Kowert, comprise the core band with Witcher and in-demand drummer Jay Bellerose. Brion’s guitars and Tench’s Hammond B3 supply much of the musical colour, while Sarah Jarosz and Aoife O’Donovan (her cohorts in the recently formed trio I’m With Her) blend their voices here and there. My Morning Jacket’s Jim James duets on the bluegrass rave-up “One Last Time”, a stylistic bridge to her previous albums.

Apart from the ballad “The Love That Got Away”, which she composed on ukulele, and “One Last Time”, written several years back, Watkins worked up the material for the new record over an 18-month period on a parlour-sized Bourgeois guitar, typically while sitting in the front yard of her Echo Park home. The sylvan setting in which these songs were conceived is belied by the confrontational edginess of the most memorable of them. In contrast to “The Foothills”, which opened Sun Midnight Sun with a reassuring blast of fiddle-powered bluegrass exuberance, the title track kickstarts the new album with an emphatic declaration of intent, as the song’s narrator strides away from the significant other she’s outgrown, and from the frustration and disappointment he represents.

“I learned how to hustle – to like the feel of that burn/Frayed at the edge accelerate into the turn”, she sings, spitting out the words. “I’m not riding any longer on the back of your bike/I’ve gone the miles and god knows I’ve got the fight”. The track climaxes with a furious guitar duel between Witcher and Brion, trading haymakers from opposite sides of the stereo mix. Likewise, the refrains of “Move Me” and “Say So” aren’t so much entreaties as demands directed at a lover or at existence itself, likely both. This sort of wounded assertiveness enlivens Lucinda Williams’ writing and singing, but coming from Watkins it’s unprecedented and exciting. So is the stylistic thrust of these three linchpin songs, which recall Linda Ronstadt’s Peter Asher-produced ’70s classics in their dynamic pairings of ambling country-rock verses and rip-roaring pop choruses.

Not every song burns with turbulence and tenacity. The aforementioned “The Love That Got Away” shimmers with bittersweet Beatlesque loveliness, as does the Witcher collaboration “Without a Word”. In their sequence, Watkins and Witcher have placed “Like New Year’s Day”, written with fellow Largo regular Dan Wilson (who also co-wrote “Say So”), between “Move Me” and “Say So” in the album’s meaty centre; this short-story-like recollection of an escape to the desert allows the album to take a breath, providing some tranquility and perspective between the surrounding emotional outbursts. The mood mellows in the album’s final minutes with the Dolly Parton-like country lament “The Truth Won’t Set Us Free”, followed by evocations of Alison Krauss (“Invisible”) and Emmylou Harris (“Tenderhearted”).

Young In All The Wrong Ways may be Watkins’ third solo album, but it feels and sounds like her first, reintroducing her as a writer/artist of uncommon eloquence and consequence.

Q&A
Sara Watkins
Were you inspired by any particular artists or records in making this record?

Not really. There was some strategy – an occasional reference to a Roy Orbison song or other iconic touchstones – but we weren’t trying to replicate anything. Mostly, we were just trying to play these songs with that band, have it go through their filters and let something new come out.

Does this album have an overarching theme?
A lot of it has to do with the way you process disruption in life and embrace it as a positive thing rather than ominous chaos. So ideally there’s a hopefulness in the arc of the album. It’s about doing a status check on the course you’re on in life and adjusting if necessary. Sometimes that’s easy, and sometimes it requires a lot of reevaluating. This album was written while I was going through one of those course adjustments that we all go through every five or 10 years.

To what do you attribute your growth as an artist?
One thing my previous albums haven’t had is a common thread, other than sonically. With this one, I do feel like I’ve become much more comfortable in what I have to say and how I want to say it. I think that’s been earned over the years by playing, writing, trying to collaborate and being in as many bands as I can. I’m encouraged that all the incredible things I’ve seen and heard in music are sinking in and hopefully coming out.
INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch performances from Lou Reed tribute concert

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New York's Lincoln Center hosted a tribute concert for Lou Reed on July 30. The Bells: A Daylong Celebration of Lou Reed featured performances of Reed's love songs by artists including Lenny Kaye, John Spencer, David Johansen, Lucinda Williams, Anohni, Mark Kozelek, Laurie Anderson and more. Ander...

New York’s Lincoln Center hosted a tribute concert for Lou Reed on July 30.

The Bells: A Daylong Celebration of Lou Reed featured performances of Reed’s love songs by artists including Lenny Kaye, John Spencer, David Johansen, Lucinda Williams, Anohni, Mark Kozelek, Laurie Anderson and more.

Anderson programmed the event with Reed’s producer Hal Willner. The day also included lessons with Reed’s tai chi master, an installation of six of Reed’s guitars playing feedback drones and screenings of films relating to Reed.

The music was provided by a house band including Sonic Youth’s Lee Ranaldo and Steve Shelley, who were joined by guests. Watch some of the footage below.

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

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch 1,000 people cover The White Stripes’ “Seven Nation Army”

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An Italian group of over 1,000 musicians called Rockin'1000 have covered The White Stripes' "Seven Nation Army". The event took place in Orogel Stadium in Cesena, Italy. on July 24 in front of an audience of 15,000 people, reports Entertainment Weekly. Among the other songs they performed were Dav...

An Italian group of over 1,000 musicians called Rockin’1000 have covered The White Stripes‘ “Seven Nation Army“.

The event took place in Orogel Stadium in Cesena, Italy. on July 24 in front of an audience of 15,000 people, reports Entertainment Weekly.

Among the other songs they performed were David Bowie‘s “Rebel Rebel”, The Verve‘s “Bittersweet Symphony” and Nirvana‘s “Smells Like Teen Spirit”.

Rockin’1000 were previously part of a campaign by fans to get Foo Fighters to play a gig in the local area.

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

David Bowie exhibition to feature unpublished photographs

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A new David Bowie exhibition featuring previously unpublished photographs of the late star is set to open next month in London. Bowie By Gerald Fearnley takes place at Snap Galleries from August 16th to September 24th, and will feature photos from two sessions in 1967. Much of the exhibition featu...

A new David Bowie exhibition featuring previously unpublished photographs of the late star is set to open next month in London.

Bowie By Gerald Fearnley takes place at Snap Galleries from August 16th to September 24th, and will feature photos from two sessions in 1967.

Much of the exhibition features a face-painted Bowie at photographer Fearnley’s Bryanston Street studio, engaging in mime and yoga poses, and more. Fearnley also took the cover photo of Bowie’s 1967 debut album, and a colour outtake from the shoot is also available to view here for the first time.

Fearnley came into contact with Bowie through his brother Derek ‘Dek’ Fearnley, who was bassist in Bowie’s backing band in 1966 and ’67, The Buzz.

“It is every gallery owner’s dream,” explains Snap’s Guy White, “launching a collection of previously unseen photographs of a major artist like David Bowie. Sadly such events are rare, because by now, pretty much everything worth seeing has been seen. Not in this case though – Gerald Fearnley created a technically accomplished and intimate set of black and white photographs of David Bowie. To uncover and exhibit these images for the first time, fifty years after they were first taken is pretty special.”

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Prince official tribute concert announced

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Prince's family have announced an official tribute concert to celebrate the singer and multi-instrumentalist's life and career. Though the performers are yet to be announced, the event will take place at Minneapolis' US Bank Stadium on October 13th, with tickets on sale next month, according to Ass...

Prince‘s family have announced an official tribute concert to celebrate the singer and multi-instrumentalist’s life and career.

Though the performers are yet to be announced, the event will take place at Minneapolis’ US Bank Stadium on October 13th, with tickets on sale next month, according to Associated Press.

“We are excited for the opportunity to bring everyone together for the official family celebration of Prince’s life, music and legacy, and there is no better place to do it than his hometown of Minneapolis,” said Prince’s family in a statement. “We are honoured by the artists who will pay tribute and grateful to those that have worked so hard to make this celebration possible.”

Meanwhile, earlier this month, the Prince Online Museum launched, comprising 12 of Prince’s websites. It begins with an early CD-ROM version called Prince Interactive in 1994, and stretches up to 3rdEyeGirl.com – his final website.

“We launch with 12 of Prince’s most popular sites, but over 20 years online, Prince launched nearly 20 different websites, maintained a dozen different social media presences, participated in countless online chats and directly connected with fans around the world,” Sam Jennings, director of the museum, told Billboard.

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

 

The making of Kate Bush’s “Wuthering Heights”

Happy birthday, Kate! To mark Kate Bush's birthday this weekend - July 30 - we're posting our piece on the making of her landmark single, "Wuthering Heights". This first appeared in Uncut's January 2015 issue [Take 212]. -------- Prior to her triumphant run of London shows in 2014, the last song ...

Happy birthday, Kate! To mark Kate Bush’s birthday this weekend – July 30 – we’re posting our piece on the making of her landmark single, “Wuthering Heights”. This first appeared in Uncut’s January 2015 issue [Take 212].

——–

Prior to her triumphant run of London shows in 2014, the last song Kate Bush performed at one of her own concerts, on May 14, 1979, was the extraordinary single that launched an extraordinary career.

Her only No 1, “Wuthering Heights” was inspired by a BBC mini-series of Emily Bronte’s Gothic novel. Haunted by the image of Catherine Earnshaw’s ghostly hand outside the window – “Let me in! Let me in!” – Bush wrote the song at the age of 18, shortly before beginning work on her debut album, The Kick Inside. “I was in my flat, sitting at the upright piano at about midnight,” she told her fan club in 1979. “There was a full moon, the curtains were open, and it came quite easily.”

The fact that Bush shared her childhood name (Catherine) with Earnshaw, and a birthday (July 30) with Bronte, fostered a sense of cosmic kinship with the subject of “Wuthering Heights”, a bond acted out when she recorded the song with members of the Alan Parsons Project. “She seemed to adopt different personas when she was singing,” recalls guitarist Ian Bairnson. “Suddenly there was another person there.”

Aided by a wildly eccentric video and some choice publicity photos, “Wuthering Heights” was instantly impactful, and later spoofed by everyone from Pamela Stephenson to Alan Partridge. These days Bush may regard its unbridled romanticism with mixed feelings (it was nowhere to be heard in Before The Dawn), but it remains one of music’s boldest opening statements of artistic intent, and an unforgettable exploration of obsessive love, supernatural imagining and powerful femininity.

Lou Rhodes – theyesandeye

On the evidence of her fourth solo album, Lou Rhodes would have fitted in pretty well with the Laurel Canyon crowd, hanging out on a verandah with her guitar, expounding on ecology, the life trip and universal love in the company of Joni, Judee and Stephen Stills. Her previous records – includin...

On the evidence of her fourth solo album, Lou Rhodes would have fitted in pretty well with the Laurel Canyon crowd, hanging out on a verandah with her guitar, expounding on ecology, the life trip and universal love in the company of Joni, Judee and Stephen Stills.

Her previous records – including 2005’s Mercury-nominated debut, Beloved One – have featured lean, acoustic finger-pickings with folk/blues inflections and subtle strings, in songs drawing from a deeply personal well of emotion, Rhodes’ warm, tremulous voice their focus. Top marks for understatement, even if at times there’s been rather too little going on, but with theyesandeye, Rhodes has opted for a more resonant and expansive analogue sound, mixing early ’70s Californian folk with dreamy English pastoralism of the same period. Harp, double bass and synth are key, but a wide range of instruments is used, along with reverb, echo and multi-tracking. Lyrically, nature looms large, along with the love and unity that have always been Rhodes’ themes – even in her work with Andy Barlow as Lamb, the ’90s electronic duo whose best known track “Górecki” brought together the Polish contemporary classical composer and a broken beats/forlorn vocals fusion, in the service of Guinness promotion.

Rhodes started work on the new record – whose title is her misreading of the name of a painting, that spoke to her newly positive mindset – in 2013, but was sidetracked by another Lamb album (2014’s Backspace Unwind) and subsequent tour. She described juggling those demands to Uncut: “Sometimes I feel pulled in very different directions by these two incarnations; it’s like have two children that both need feeding, but one shouts a lot louder than the other.” Last year, the solo Rhodes shouted loudly and co-producer Simon Byrt, who she’d met by chance, responded. She had a set of songs but was unsure of where to take them, although intuition was leading her toward “a slightly psychedelic feel.” Byrt’s role was vital. “Apart from his vintage echo obsession, Simon has a unique musical ear and is a remarkable multi-instrumentalist,” reckons Rhodes. “His piano playing and use of melody is something else and so there was a really magical interplay between the two of us. He was also hugely supportive of my writing process and we wrote a couple of the songs together in the studio.”

theyesandeye is short (11 tracks in just 35 minutes), but sweet and sensitively judged, balancing the heady fulsomeness that orchestration and studio effects bring with playing restraint and the need for open spaces. It begins with “All The Birds” and the plaintive cry of seagulls, which is echoed in the song’s freewheeling rhythmic propulsion and Rhodes’ husky, multi-tracked vocals – when combined, a reminder that Nick Drake is still very much a touchstone. Drake’s influence is there too on the darker “Them”, where piano, strings, soft drum rolls and the gentle throb of double bass provide the backdrop to an examination of our compulsive need to blame: “One finger points away, the others point right back,” Rhodes sighs. There are echoes of John Martyn in the contented “All I Need”, while the sombre “Never Forget” (“an older song harking back to unhappier times,” she explains) channels Ralph Vaughan Williams’ “The Lark Ascending”.

Trilling harp, cello and seductive 3D space notwithstanding, the call for ecological responsibility that is “Sea Organ” is the set’s least convincing moment, its message couched in ’60s hippy-speak: “All at once our eyes are open and our hearts can feel the weight of all the damage we have done; just as if the earth had spoken in a voice so real – ‘come to me, children, for we are all one.’” Still, it’s a personal expression and one clearly made in good faith. It follows the album’s unexpected punctum – a cover of The xx’s “Angels”. The original is hardly an in-your-face assault and so a difficult song to reinvent without destroying its emotional power, but Rhodes and band have recalibrated its ghostliness via a finger-picked guitar opening and outro, delicate violin, ripples of harp and cavernous vocal reverb.

If it can’t claim to stretch the boundaries of contemporary alt.folk, then theyesandeye hits its own modest target – a quietly eloquent, simply persuasive record that chimes well with the current taste for bucolic abstraction, and moves Rhodes forward.

Q&A
Lou Rhodes
How do you see the LP in contemporary folk terms?

In terms of influences, I guess what was firing me up was that spacious, 1970s Californian sound and this was a big part of why I asked [avant-folk sound architect] Noah Georgeson to mix. So, the result is a kind of transatlantic feel with a few English folk roots showing.

What made you cover the The xx’s “Angels”?

I guess you could say it’s a bold move! I just love the song. I rarely do covers, but I just had a yearning to do a version of this song in a totally stripped and acoustic way. I think if you’re going to cover a song, you have to turn it on its head a little. Romy [Madley Croft] got in touch via mutual friends and said she loved it, so that made me happy.

What’s the idea behind “Sea Organ”?
I randomly heard this sound that was made by an architectural structure under the sea in Zadar, Croatia, which makes these outlandish sounds when waves wash over it. I took a sample of it into the studio and that was the basis of the song. I don’t really pre-plan lyrics, but what came out was a bit of a homage to Earth and the way we’ve messed around with her. In the end, the sample didn’t really work when we tried to vary its pitch, so we replaced it with layers of cello, harp and guitar – but it’s still there in essence.
INTERVIEW: SHARON O’CONNELL

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

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Bruce Springsteen announces Chapter And Verse album

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Bruce Springsteen has announced Chapter And Verse, a new career spanning anthology that includes five previously released tracks. According to his website, the album is "the audio companion" to Springsteen’s forthcoming autobiography Born To Run, and will be released on September 23 on Columbia ...

Bruce Springsteen has announced Chapter And Verse, a new career spanning anthology that includes five previously released tracks.

According to his website, the album is “the audio companion” to Springsteen’s forthcoming autobiography Born To Run, and will be released on September 23 on Columbia Records.

Springsteen reportedly selected the songs on Chapter And Verse to reflect the themes and sections of Born To Run.

The compilation begins with two tracks from his early band The Castiles and ends with the title track from 2012’s Wrecking Ball.

Recordings from Steel Mill and The Bruce Springsteen Band feature musicians who would go on to play in The E Street Band. Solo demos of “Henry Boy” and “Growin’ Up” were cut in 1972 shortly before Springsteen began recording his debut album, Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J.

Chapter And Verse will be available as a single CD and double LP, as well as via digital download and streaming. The package will include lyrics and rare photos. Chapter And Verse will be available for preorder on Friday, July 29.

The Chapter And Verse tracklisting is:

Baby I — The Castiles (recorded May 2, 1966, at Mr. Music, Bricktown, NJ; written by Bruce Springsteen and George Theiss; previously unreleased)
You Can’t Judge a Book by the Cover — The Castiles (recorded Sept. 16, 1967, at The Left Foot, Freehold, NJ; written by Willie Dixon; previously unreleased)
He’s Guilty (The Judge Song) — Steel Mill (recorded Feb. 22, 1970, at Pacific Recording Studio, San Mateo, CA; previously unreleased)
Ballad of Jesse James — The Bruce Springsteen Band (recorded March 14, 1972, at Challenger Eastern Surfboards, Highland, NJ; previously unreleased)
Henry Boy (recorded June 1972, at Mediasound Studios, New York, NY; previously unreleased)
Growin’ Up (recorded May 3, 1972, at Columbia Records Recordings Studios, New York, NY; previously appeared on Tracks)
4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy) (1973, The Wild, The Innocent & the E Street Shuffle)
Born to Run (1975, Born To Run)
Badlands (1977, Darkness On The Edge Of Town)
The River (1980, The River)
My Father’s House (1982, Nebraska)
Born in the U.S.A. (1984, Born In The U.S.A.)
Brilliant Disguise (1987, Tunnel Of Love)
Living Proof (1992, Lucky Town)
The Ghost of Tom Joad (1995, The Ghost of Tom Joad)
The Rising (2002, The Rising)
Long Time Comin’ (2005, Devils & Dust)
Wrecking Ball (2012, Wrecking Ball)

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Pink Floyd announce extensive 27-disc early years box set

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Pink Floyd have announced details of a comprehensive new box set dedicated to the band's formative period. The Early Years 1965 - 1972 is a deluxe 27-disc boxset featuring seven individual book-style packages, including never before released material. It will be released on November 11. The box se...

Pink Floyd have announced details of a comprehensive new box set dedicated to the band’s formative period.

The Early Years 1965 – 1972 is a deluxe 27-disc boxset featuring seven individual book-style packages, including never before released material. It will be released on November 11.

The box set will contain TV recordings, BBC Sessions, unreleased tracks, outtakes and demos, running to over 12 hours of audio (made up of 130 tracks) and over 15 hours of video.

It contains over 20 unreleased songs, including seven hours of previously unreleased live audio, plus more than five hours of rare concert footage.

There are also replica 7” singles, memorabilia, feature films and new sound mixes. Previously unreleased tracks include 1967’s “Vegetable Man” and “In The Beechwoods” which have been newly mixed for the release.

In addition to the deluxe set, a 2-CD highlights album called The Early Years – CRE/ATION will also be available on 11 November 2016 through Pink Floyd Records.

Each individual book-style package will be released separately early in 2017, except CONTINU/ATION which is exclusive to this box set.

PF_TheEarlyYears_BoxCDs_3D

Here’s what’s in the set.

CAMBRIDGE ST/ATION
1965-1967
Covering Syd Barrett’s time with the band, from the pre-EMI demos, through the non-album hit singles and related tracks, the first volume also features previously unreleased tracks like “Vegetable Man” and “In The Beechwoods” (newly mixed), plus BBC session recordings. Pink Floyd have also acquired the tapes of an unreleased 1967 concert in Stockholm.
The DVD/Blu-ray includes historic TV performances plus some of Pink Floyd’s own film material.

GERMIN/ATION
1968
This volume explores the time immediately after Syd Barrett’s departure, when Pink Floyd were still writing singles and at the same time developing their own unique, more instrumentally-based style. There are non-album single releases, plus a recently discovered session at Capitol Records studios in Los Angeles, BBC sessions and other tracks.
DVD/Blu-ray includes the recently restored promo clip of “Point Me At The Sky”, some international TV performances and a selection of song material from other television shows.

DRAMATIS/ATION
1969
In 1969 Pink Floyd unveiled their 2-part conceptual live production of The Man and The Journey, covering a 24-hour period of dreaming, waking and other activities. Never released in that form, however some of the songs were used on the More soundtrack and the Ummagumma album. This volume refers back to The Man and “The Journey tour with live performances in Amsterdam and for the BBC in London, but also includes the bonus tracks from the More soundtrack that were used in the film but not on record, plus non-album tracks like the early version of Embryo from the Harvest sampler, Picnic.
Video material includes 20 minutes of The Man and The Journey rehearsal at the Royal Festival Hall, directed by Anthony Stern, including “Afternoon (Biding My Time)”, “The Beginning (Green Is The Colour)”, “Cymbaline”, “Beset By Creatures Of The Deep” and “The End Of The Beginning” (the last part of A Saucerful Of Secrets), plus other live performance footage from that year.

DEVI/ATION
1970
At the end of 1969 and in the early part of 1970, Pink Floyd recorded and mixed their contribution to Michelangelo Antonioni’s alternative view of US society, Zabriskie Point. 3 songs were released on the soundtrack album, and a further 4 in the expanded CD edition in 1997. Never released on one Pink Floyd disc, this volume compiles remixed and updated versions of the Zabriskie Point audio material.
In the same year, Pink Floyd scored their first UK Number One album with Atom Heart Mother, a collaboration with Ron Geesin, and the audio includes the first performance for the BBC, featuring an orchestra and choir, as well as, on DVD, the original Quad mix.
Video material includes a full hour of Pink Floyd performing live at San Francisco cable TV station KQED plus extracts from historic performances of ‘Atom Heart Mother’, and material from French TV coverage of the St. Tropez festival in Southern France.

REVERBER/ATION
1971
In 1971 Pink Floyd recorded the Meddle album, containing the LP side-long Echoes, regarded by many as laying the groundwork for The Dark Side Of The Moon, and, as such, is an important part of the Pink Floyd canon.
This package includes part of the original demos, when the project gestated from Nothing to Return Of The Son Of Nothing, as well as a contemporary BBC session recording.
Audio-visual material includes the original unreleased Quad mix of “Echoes” but also material of live band performances in 1971, including songs performed with Roland Petit and his Marseille ballet company.

OBFUSC/ATION 1972
In 1972 Pink Floyd travelled to Hérouville, north of Paris, to record at Strawberry Studios there, based in the town’s Chateau. In a remarkable two weeks, they wrote and recorded one of their most cohesive albums, Obscured By Clouds, the soundtrack to Barbet Schroeder’s La Vallée.
1972 saw the release of Pink Floyd Live At Pompeii, a film of the band performing without an audience in the historic Roman amphitheatre of Pompeii, directed by Adrian Maben. The video material includes the performances from the Live At Pompeii film, edited to new 5.1 audio mixes, plus material from contemporary French TV as well as performances from Brighton Dome in June 1972 and further performances with the Roland Petit ballet company.

CONTINU/ATION
(Exclusive to ‘The Early Years 1965-1972’ box set)
A bonus CD/DVD/Blu-ray disc package includes a CD of early BBC radio sessions, the audio tracks from the film The Committee, Pink Floyd’s live soundtrack to the 1969 NASA moon landings, and more.
Audio-visual material includes 3 feature films: The Committee, More and La Vallée (Obscured By Clouds), plus more live footage and festival performances by the band.

5-Pink-Floyd-(CD62-NPA022)---©Pink-Floyd-Music-Ltd-RGB

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Chet Baker biopic Born To Be Blue reviewed

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“Who do you like better?” Asks Ethan Hawke’s Chet Baker at the start of Robert Budreau’s biopic. “Me or Miles Davis?” The question is meant to frame the film’s narrative conflict between East Coast jazz (angular, staccato) and its West Coast counterpart (laid-back, melancholy), but in ...

“Who do you like better?” Asks Ethan Hawke’s Chet Baker at the start of Robert Budreau’s biopic. “Me or Miles Davis?” The question is meant to frame the film’s narrative conflict between East Coast jazz (angular, staccato) and its West Coast counterpart (laid-back, melancholy), but in a year in which Don Cheadle’s Miles Ahead has so far dominated music films, it has a more prescient quality.

Like Cheadle’s film, the principle action in Born To Be Blue takes place in a relatively small but critical window of time; Davis appears here, too, played by Kedar Brown as an angular, growling presence. Davis hangs over Born To Be Blue in more ways than one. In a chronological sense, the film begins in 1954, when Baker plays Birdland. After the show, he asks David whether he liked it. “It was sweet, like candy,” says gravelly voiced Miles, telling him to come back again when he has lived a little more. Is Baker ready – literally and figuratively – to play Birdland?

In fact, Budreau’s film is a little less straightforward than that. As with Miles Ahead, Born To Be Blue offers a meta- account of a key section of Baker’s life, mixing half-truths alongside real events. The wall is gone through. It opens with a film within a film, with Baker cast as himself in a biopic; a fictional conceit. It follows this immediately with a real life incident, where Baker was brutally beaten up, losing his front teeth which forced him to rebuild his technique from scratch. There is heroin galore – true – and an understanding if exasperated girlfriend, an actress named Jane (Carmen Ejogo) – false – who nurses Baker through the worst of his rehabilitation. As Baker, Ethan Hawke is intensely committed – subtly conveying a complex mix of frailty and arrogance – and there is strong work from Ejogo as well as Callum Scott Rennie as Baker’s long-suffering ally, Pacific Jazz Records founder Dick Bock.

“Was it really like this?” Jane asks on the set of the fictional Baker film, though she might as well be asking how accurate Budreau’s excellent film is. “No,” replies Baker. “If this were real, there would be vomit everywhere.”

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

BORN TO BE BLUE IS ON GENERAL RELEASE

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The 26th Uncut Playlist Of 2016

Very taken with the new Xylouris White album this week, not least because it gives me an excuse to link back to this piece about the band and a trip I made to Athens a couple of years ago. Lots of other good stuff here, too, but one or two inclusions make me think I should add one of my periodic qua...

Very taken with the new Xylouris White album this week, not least because it gives me an excuse to link back to this piece about the band and a trip I made to Athens a couple of years ago. Lots of other good stuff here, too, but one or two inclusions make me think I should add one of my periodic qualifiers that this is very much a catalogue of the records we’ve played in the Uncut office these past few days, and that consequently, inclusion in the list does not automatically equal endorsement. Consider yourselves warned etc.

For greater transparency, maybe buy our new issue, as discussed here? Granted I’m not the most neutral judge, but I do think it’s a particularly good one.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Wilco – Schmilco (dBpm)

2 Itasca – Open To Chance (Paradise Of Bachelors)

3 The Double – Dawn Of The Double (In The Red)

4 David Crosby – Lighthouse (GroundUP Music/Verve)

5 Syrinx – Tumblers From The Vault (1970-1972) (RVNG INTL)

6 Hiss Golden Messenger – Heart Like A Levee (Merge)

7 Xylouris White – Black Peak (Bella Union)

8 Entrance – Promises (Thrill Jockey)

9 Drive-By Truckers – American Band (ATO)

10 Gruff Rhys – Set Fire To The Stars (Finders Keepers)

11 Daniel Lanois – Goodbye To Language (Anti-)

12 Joan As Police Woman & Benjamin Lazar Davis – Let It Be You (Reveal)

13 Tomaga – The Shape Of The Dance (Hands In The Dark)

14 Syd Arthur – Apricity (Communion)

15 Wilco – Star Wars (dBpm)

16 Robert Stillman – Time Of Waves (Orindal)

17 Dylan Golden Aycock – Church Of Level (Scissortail)

18 Sarah Louise – VDSQ Acoustic Series Volume 12 (Bandcamp)

19 Teenage Fanclub – Here (PeMa)

20 Hiss Golden Messenger – I Am The Sky (Live)

21 Various Artists – Basket Full Of Dragons: A Tribute To Robbie Basho Vol II (Obsolete)

22 Hailu Mergia & Dahlak Band – Wede Harer Guzo (Awesome Tapes From Africa)

23 Acid Arab – Musique De France (Crammed Discs)

 

 

The Rolling Stones announce Cuba concert film

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The Rolling Stones have announced details of a new concert film. Havana Moon documents the band's free outdoor concert in Havana, Cuba on March 25, 2016. Filmed by Paul Dugdale, the concert film will premier on cinema screens across the globe for one night only on Friday, September 23. “The Cub...

The Rolling Stones have announced details of a new concert film.

Havana Moon documents the band’s free outdoor concert in Havana, Cuba on March 25, 2016.

Filmed by Paul Dugdale, the concert film will premier on cinema screens across the globe for one night only on Friday, September 23.

“The Cuba show was simply amazing,” says Mick Jagger. “It was an incredible moment; a huge sea of people for as far as the eye could see. You could feel the buzz of the enthusiasm from the crowd and that was for me the stand out moment.”

“There’s the sun the moon the stars and The Rolling Stones,” adds Keith Richards. “Seeing Cuba finally get the chance to rock out was special… A night to remember in Havana.”

The Stones were the first rock band to play an open-air, free concert in the country. Their show attracted a million people in Havana, which took place in the same week as President Obama became the first serving US President to visit Cuba in 88 years.

Tickets will go on sale at the beginning of August and are available by clicking here.

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch Ryley Walker’s new video for “The Roundabout”

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Ryley Walker has released the video for "The Roundabout". The track is taken from his forthcoming album, Golden Sings That Have Been Sung. Click here to read a long interview with Ryley Walker “Fourth of July in Pilsen is the height of summer in Chicago.” He goes on, “Dozens of crews with a...

Ryley Walker has released the video for “The Roundabout“.

The track is taken from his forthcoming album, Golden Sings That Have Been Sung.

Click here to read a long interview with Ryley Walker

“Fourth of July in Pilsen is the height of summer in Chicago.” He goes on, “Dozens of crews with ad hoc explosives and a beer in hand make for a blitzkrieg celebration. I lived at 21st/Leavitt some years back and got to know this evening first hand very well. Forever my favorite part of summer in the city. This video hopefully captures a few of those moments of joy from the people involved.”

Golden Sings That Have Been Sung is released on August 19 on Dead Oceans.

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Burroughs: The Movie

By the mid-1990s, it was no longer unusual to see William S Burroughs infecting the screen in some shape or form. Following the author’s cameo in Drugstore Cowboy (1989), David Cronenberg’s 1991 adaptation of The Naked Lunch kicked open the gate. The interview-profile Commissioner Of Sewers foll...

By the mid-1990s, it was no longer unusual to see William S Burroughs infecting the screen in some shape or form. Following the author’s cameo in Drugstore Cowboy (1989), David Cronenberg’s 1991 adaptation of The Naked Lunch kicked open the gate. The interview-profile Commissioner Of Sewers followed and before long he was turning up to lend alt.cool kudos to Nike ads on TV.

Since his death in 1997, Burroughs has continued to serve as a source of fascination in both dramas (2000’s Beat, with Kiefer Sutherland and Courtney Love; 2012’s bust On The Road; 2013’s Kill Your Darlings) and documentaries (1999’s The Source; 2010’s William S Burroughs: A Man Within).

Still, the finest screen portrait – the most intimate, the strangest and funniest – remains the first, filmed when his legend remained largely underground, and Burroughs, then in his mid-60s, was supporting himself through readings at clubs on the world’s burgeoning punk scene. Burroughs: The Movie began in 1978 as a project by 24-year-old New York University film student Howard Brookner. (A course mate named Jim Jarmusch helped, handling sound). Initially, Brookner planned a 20-minute short, filmed at that year’s Nova Convention, a three-day happening organised in New York by friends and fans to celebrate Burroughs’s return after decades abroad.

In the event, Brookner hit it off with Burroughs, and continued to film him over the next five years, amassing hundreds of hours of material. The resulting document frames Burroughs near his peak as croaking raconteur, distantly burnishing his myth with deadpan anecdotes, and as a performer. Alongside readings, there’s a memorable sequence with Burroughs playing Dr Benway, re-enacting the Naked Lunch scene in which the doctor fails to save a patient while operating with a toilet plunger, splattered in fake blood, sighing, “Well, it’s all in a day’s work…”

Elsewhere come unexpectedly revealing moments. Burroughs revisits his childhood home and ultra-straight brother, Mortimer, who dismisses The Naked Lunch (“disgusting… I pitched it halfway through”) while the author squirms. Elsewhere, Burroughs opens up for the first time about his wife Joan’s death. There are sad, haunting scenes of his fated son, William Jr, lost in drink and drugs.

Brookner died in 1989 aged only 34 and Burroughs, originally released in 1983, was almost lost. After decades existing only as a ropey VHS bootleg, this restoration was painstakingly compiled by his nephew, Aaron. It is priceless, not simply as a profile of this writer, but – Smith at al at the Nova Convention; Burroughs hanging out with Francis Bacon; Burroughs chatting with pal Terry Southern, sections of the Sgt Pepper cover come to life – of an age that already seems more distant than it should.

EXTRAS: 30-minute “cut-up” edit; outtakes; Jim Jarmusch commentary; booklet with Luc Sante essay; material on the restoration of the film; much more.

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.