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Hear new Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds song, “Jesus Alone”

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Nick Cave has released a track from his forthcoming Bad Seeds album, Skeleton Tree. Scroll down to hear "Jesus Alone". Accompanying the track is footage of the band performing the song taken from Andrew Dominik’s 3D black and white feature film One More Time With Feeling. Launching globally on ...

Nick Cave has released a track from his forthcoming Bad Seeds album, Skeleton Tree.

Scroll down to hear “Jesus Alone“.

Accompanying the track is footage of the band performing the song taken from Andrew Dominik’s 3D black and white feature film One More Time With Feeling.

Launching globally on September 8, the film was originally intended as a one night only event. Additional screenings of the film have now been added on September 9, 10 and 11.

Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds‘ sixteenth studio album will be released globally on vinyl, CD and across all digital platforms on 9th September 2016, the day after the film premieres.

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Public Image Ltd announce Metal Box and Album deluxe box sets

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PiL have announced deluxe reissues of Metal Box and Album. Both albums will be available as four CD and four vinyl LP deluxe boxsets, as well as digitally, on October 28. The editions will include rare and unreleased mixes and demos, alongside a live album. Metal Box will feature a live set taken...

PiL have announced deluxe reissues of Metal Box and Album.

Both albums will be available as four CD and four vinyl LP deluxe boxsets, as well as digitally, on October 28. The editions will include rare and unreleased mixes and demos, alongside a live album.

Metal Box will feature a live set taken from PiL’s impromptu gig at Manchester’s The Factory on June 18, 1979. Album will include the band’s set at Brixton Academy on 27 May, 1986.

As a nod to the original release in which the album was packaged in a metal film canister, Metal Box will come in a square metal tin with an embossed PiL logo.

Meanwhile, Album will come in a square cardboard box with stamped artwork as a faithful recreation of the originally minimalist aesthetic to the album.

Both re-issues will come with a 72 page booklet, together with an exclusive poster, prints (in the vinyl version) and postcards (for the CD).

The tracklisting for the re-issues of Metal Box and Album is:

‘Metal Box’ 4 CD
CD 1: Metal Box
CD 2: B-sides, mixes & radio sessions
CD 3: Unreleased Mixes
CD 4: Live at Manchester, Russell’s Club (The Factory) 18/6/79

Disc 1:
Remastered album
1. Albatross
2. Memories
3. Swan Lake (Death Disco)
4. Poptones
5. Careering
6. No Birds Do Sing
7. Graveyard
8. The Suit
9. Bad Baby
10. Socialist
11. Chant
12. Radio 4

Disc 2:
B-sides, mixes & radio sessions
1. Death Disco (7” edit)
2. Death Disco 12”
3. Half Mix / Megga Mix (b-side)
4. Death Disco – BBC TV, Top of the Pops July 12.7.72
5. Memories 12”
6. Another (b-side)
7. Poptones – BBCRadio 1, John Peel Sessions 1979
8. Careering – BBC Radio 1, John Peel Sessions 1979
9. Chant – BBC Radio 1, John Peel Sessions 1979
10. Poptones – BBC TV, Old Grey Whistle Test 5/2/80 (audio)
11. Careering – BBC TV, Old Grey Whistle Test 5/2/80 (audio)
12. Pied Piper (rare compilation-only track)

Disc 3:
Unreleased Mixes
1. Poptones (version 3) (unreleased)
2. Swan Lake (monitor mix)
3. Albatross (monitor mix) (alternative mix)
4. Swan Lake (“master”) (alternative mix) (unreleased)
5. Unknown INST Jam 1 (“Chant”) (unreleased)
6. Unknown Jam 2 (“Megachant”) (unreleased)
7. Music from an Oven (aka Memories) (unreleased)
8. Radio 4 (“symphony suite”) (unreleased)
9. Home is Where The Heart is (original mix) (unreleased)
10. Unknown INST 2 (unreleased)

Disc 4:
Live at Manchester, Russell’s Club (The Factory) 18/6/79 (unreleased)
1. Chant
2. Swan Lake (aka Death Disco)
3. Memories
4. Public Image
5. Annalisa
6. No Birds Do Sing

‘Metal Box’ 4 LP
LP 1: Metal Box
LP 2: Metal Box (continued)
LP 3: Live at Manchester, Russell’s Club (The Factory) 18/6/79
LP 4: Rare Mixes and BBC Radio Sessions

LP 1 & 2:
‘Metal Box’ studio album
Disc 1 (side 1):
Albatross
Memories

Disc 1 (side 2):
Swan Lake (Death Disco)
Poptones
Careering

Disc 2 (side 1):
No Birds Do Sing
Graveyard
The Suit

Disc 2 (side 2):
Bad Baby
Socialist
Chant
Radio 4

LP 3:
Live at Manchester, Russell’s Club (The Factory) 18/6/79 (unreleased)

Disc 3 (side 1):
Chant
Swan Lake (aka Death Disco)
Memories

Disc 3 (side 2)
Public Image
Annalisa
No Birds Do Sing

LP 4:
Rare Mixes & BBC Session

Disc 4 (side 1):
Swan Lake (monitor mix)
Albatross (monitor mix)

Disc 4 (side 2):
BBC Radio 1, John Peel Sessions 1979
Poptones
Careering
Chant

‘Album’ 4 CD
CD 1: Album
CD 2: Live at Brixton Academy 27.5.86
CD 3: Various, mixes & outtakes etc
CD 4: Original 1985 Album demos

Disc 1:
Remastered album
1. FFF
2. Rise
3. Fishing
4. Round
5. Bags
6. Home
7. Ease

Disc 2:
Live at Brixton Academy 27.5.86 (unreleased)
1. Kashmir
2. FFF
3. Low Life
4. Fishing
5. Poptones
6. Pretty Vacant
7. Banging the Door
8. Flowers of Romance
9. Bags
10. Round
11. Home
12. Public Image
13. Rise
14. Annalisa

Disc 3:
Various, mixes & outtakes etc
1. Things in E (aka Ease) (alternative Laswell mix) (1986) (unreleased)
2. Rise (7” edit)
3. Rise (instrumental)
4. Home (7” edit)
5. Rise (Bob Clearmountain remix
6. Home – BBC TV, Old Grey Whistle Test 20/5/86 (audio)
7. Round – BBC TV, Old Grey Whistle Test 20/5/86 (audio)

Bonus Tracks
1. Time Zone – World Destruction (12”)
2. Time Zone – World Destruction (Industrial Remix)

Disc 4:
Original 1985 Album demos
1. Animal (unreleased)
2. Black Rubber Bags (aka Bags) (unreleased)
3. European Cars (aka Round) (unreleased)
4. Fairwell Fairweather Friend (aka FFF) (unreleased)
5. Pearls Before Swine (aka Fishing) (unreleased)
6. Things in E (aka Ease) (instrumental) (unreleased)
7. Ben Hur (unreleased) (instrumental) (unreleased)
8. Cats (unreleased) (instrumental) (unreleased)
9. Have a Nice Day (unreleased) (instrumental) (unreleased)
10. Untitled 3 (unreleased) (instrumental) (unreleased)
11. Pearls Before Swine (aka Fishing) (alternate mix) (incomplete) (unreleased)

‘Album’ 4 LP
LP 1: Album
LP 2: Original 1985 Album demos
LP 3: Various, mixes & outtakes etc 1
LP 4: Various, mixes & outtakes etc 2

LP1:
‘Album’ studio album
Disc 1 (side 1):
FFF
Rise
Fishing
Round

Disc 1 (side 2):
Bags
Home
Ease

LP2:
Original 1985 Album demos

Disc 2 (side 1):
Animal (unreleased)
Black Rubber Bags (aka Bags) (unreleased)
European Cars (aka Round) (unreleased)

Disc 2 (side 2):
Fairwell Fairweather Friend (aka FFF) (unreleased)
Pearls Before Swine (aka Fishing) (unreleased)
Things in E (aka Ease) (instrumental) (unreleased)

LP3:
Various, mixes & outtakes etc 1

Disc 3 (side 1):
Things in E (Ease) (alternative Laswell mix) (unreleased)

Disc 3 (side 2):
Rise (7” edit)
Rise (instrumental)
Home (7” edit)

LP4:
Various, mixes & outtakes etc 2

Disc 4 (side 1):
Home – BBC Old Grey Whistle Test 20/5/86
Round – BBC, Old Grey Whistle Test 20/5/86
Rise (Bob Clearmountain remix)

Disc 4 (side 2):
Time Zone – World Destruction (12”)
Time Zone – World Destruction (Industrial Remix)

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

A new Frank Zappa collection has been confirmed

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ZAPPAatite: Frank Zappa’s Tastiest Tracks, a career-spanning collection of Zappa’s back-catalogue, will be released on September 23. A prolific, eccentric, performer Zappa’s output features over 60 albums as a solo-artist and member of Mothers of Invention. 2016 marks the fiftieth anniversary...

ZAPPAatite: Frank Zappa’s Tastiest Tracks, a career-spanning collection of Zappa’s back-catalogue, will be released on September 23.

A prolific, eccentric, performer Zappa’s output features over 60 albums as a solo-artist and member of Mothers of Invention. 2016 marks the fiftieth anniversary of Mothers of Invention’s debut, Freak Out!

To coincide with the fiftieth anniversary of Mothers of Invention’s debut, Freak Out!, Zappa’s releases have been compressed into an 18-track primer. His son, Ahmet Zappa and archivist, Joe Travers have compiled the album. It will be split into three food-themed sections: Appetizers, Entrees and Desserts to accompany the album cover of Zappa.

“This isn’t a greatest hits album as Frank didn’t really have ‘hits,’ nor is it a ‘best of’ since that would be impossible to fit on a single disc,” said Ahmet Zappa. “ZAPPAtite collects a cross section of my favourite songs that lean more towards the rock side of his expansive repertoire.”

The tracklisting is:

APPETIZERS
1. I’m The Slime
2. Dirty Love
3. Dancin’ Foo
4. Trouble Every Day

ENTREES
5. Peaches En Regalia
6. Tell Me You Love Me
7. Bobby Brown Goes Down
8. You Are What You Is
9. Valley Girl
10. Joe’s Garage
11. Cosmik Debris
12. Sofa No. 1
13. Don’t Eat The Yellow Snow

DESSERTS
14. Titties & Beer
15. G-Spot Tornado
16. Cocaine Decisions
17. Zoot Allures
18. Strictly Genteel

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Thee Oh Sees – A Weird Exits

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If there’s a single thread that ties together the many records and overlapping lineups of Thee Oh Sees – other than the presence of founder, songwriter and garage rock talisman John Dwyer – it’s the constant, agitating need for evolution, as Dwyer filters his current musical obsessions throu...

If there’s a single thread that ties together the many records and overlapping lineups of Thee Oh Sees – other than the presence of founder, songwriter and garage rock talisman John Dwyer – it’s the constant, agitating need for evolution, as Dwyer filters his current musical obsessions through Thee Oh Sees’ sinister psych rock template. There’s also a sense of restless unease that pervades everything Dwyer works on, either with Thee Oh Sees, solo as Damaged Bug, or via his own record label, the reliably out-there Castle Face.

Thee Oh Sees are always the same but different, drifting through genres before twisting them out of shape, from the bubblegum of Castlemania to the metal-tinged Floating Coffin. On A Weird Exits, they do this more successfully than ever before, with Dwyer taking the band into pulsing dance rhythms and Krautrock as he explores the rich, crackling rhythmic potential of the group’s new two-drummer lineup.

This most clearly manifests itself on third track “Jammed Entrance”, a wicked instrumental that enters on a flurry of electronics, a warped, back-looped sense of “Tomorrow Never Knows” disjointedness that soon develops into a rhythmic jam, with spacey drums, flickering synths and a rippling melody. It’s pretty intense, but nowhere near as claustrophobic as the usual Oh Sees experience. A Weird Exits has an immediacy and coherence that was missing on previous outing, 2015’s Mutilator Defeated At Last – a fine album, but not as hooky as this one. More than that, it’s also strangely light – the sound is just as malicious and serrated, but it’s all a little more spacious, as if a veil has been lifted. Tracks like the Eno funk of “Unwrap The Fiend Part 2” and “Crawl Out From The Fall Out” diverge from the band’s usual oeuvre, the latter almost verging on the orchestral but still wedded to a winding, serpentine rhythmic sense. That comes from Dwyer’s increasingly beat-focused listening tastes and also the new lineup of twin percussionists Ryan Moutinho and Dan Rincon, who have opened up a new line of attack, bringing a touch of James Brown and even Ornette Coleman to the show.

As Dwyer insists, the album still has plenty of “face-fuckers”, though these are front-loaded to the first half of the album. They include fuzzy, demonic garage rockers like the feral “Gelatinous Cube”, with ear-burning guitar and Dwyer’s vocals at their most sinister, or the single “Plastic Plant”, taut and freaky, with all the changes of pace and grotesque architectural flourishes of a typical Oh Sees song, albeit now with the twin drummers giving the guitars as good as they get. The album’s opening two songs demonstrate the ensemble’s prodigious swing and power, springing spaniel-like into life with the bouncy percussion of “Dead Man’s Gun”, a fluid thrasher that features Dwyer whooping with delight before each skronky guitar solo. “Ticklish Warrior” is a grungy number locked to a spiralling groove, and features a rumbling guitar solo that comes in like a lawnmower and goes out like a foghorn.

Although the album only has two instrumentals – “Jammed Entrance” and “Unwrap The Fiend Part 2” – identifiable lyrics play second fiddle to tone of voice throughout A Weird Exits. “Unwrap…” itself is almost like Thee Oh Sees in easy listening form, a chewy march that has the same rippling feel as “Jammed Entrance” but this time played out in slow motion. It’s followed by “Crawl Out From The Fall Out” (Dwyer excels at giving songs tangible, evocative, almost onomatopoeic titles), the longest track on the album and also the most unexpected – a real catalogue curiosity that opens with a pitter-patter of cymbals, before what sounds like an oboe takes things steadily, ominously forward. It’s a piece that has the feel of a chamber orchestra rather than a garage rock band, lasting eight gentle minutes with a translucent vocal and melody that seems to be pinched from “Chariots Of Fire”.

The album’s downbeat second half is finished off by the regal “The Axis”, a wave of stuttering noise anchored to a fat organ sound. It almost sounds like Fleetwood Mac, with Dwyer affecting an unusually pompous vocal while firing out bluesy notes, until the whole song collapses in a joyous wall of fuzz and explosions, as if Dwyer was gleefully blowing up the bridge to his past in preparation for his next assault.

Q&A
John Dwyer
What was the guiding principle with this album?

We have been letting the songs take us where they will. A lot of the songwriting was driven by endless horrible acts in the world perforated by moments of beauty. We wrote a lot of this album as a band, so it has a sort of togetherness maybe less present in previous releases.

What are the benefits of recording with two drummers?
You get a full stereo atmosphere. Dan and Ryan couldn’t be more different as drummers yet they complement each other really nicely, so everything falls into place when we get in the studio. We have practised a lot and written a lot – it’s been a fruitful year in that respect.

There are some surprisingly mellow songs on the album…
I wouldn’t call it mellow so much, but the album definitely has its ebb and flow to it. The last two tunes are a bit on the down-tempo, but I’d say there are definitely a few face-fuckers here as well. The session produced a lot of songs, some of which seemed to not need vocals but instead had more texture.

What about the dancey aspects?
Overall, I’ve been getting deeper and deeper into repetition and beat, hence the two drummers I guess. I’ve been listening to ’70s Kraut, prog and old electronic music, which definitely pulls from Afrobeat and other dancier counterparts. I’ve always been fond of dance music so really I guess it was a matter of time before we morph towards that. Kinda weird coming from a guy who don’t dance.
INTERVIEW: PETER WATTS

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Jack White’s Acoustic Recordings 1998-2016 reviewed

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On July 30, a high-altitude balloon left the earth's atmosphere and, 28,000 metres above the planet's surface, played a gold-plated record on a space-proof turntable. “We could not be happier to check this longtime goal off its bucket list,” announced the project's instigators, Third Man Records...

On July 30, a high-altitude balloon left the earth’s atmosphere and, 28,000 metres above the planet’s surface, played a gold-plated record on a space-proof turntable. “We could not be happier to check this longtime goal off its bucket list,” announced the project’s instigators, Third Man Records of Nashville, Tennessee. The label’s founder and figurehead elucidated further in the press release. “Our main goal from inception to completion,” said Jack White, “was to inject imagination and inspiration into the daily discourse of music and vinyl lovers.”

Injecting imagination and inspiration into the daily discourse of music lovers. It’s a resonant phrase, and one which works pretty neatly as a mission statement for Jack White’s endeavours these past 18 years. Surveying the thirteen albums, 11 live albums, multitudinous singles, lavish whims, capricious digressions and so on that constitute his discography is a daunting business. And while Third Man’s capacity for invention and reinvention marks them out as innovators among record labels, they’ve steered clear of any White boxsets or compilations. Up until now, there’s been no easy way into the cumulative catalogue of The White Stripes, The Raconteurs, The Dead Weather and White’s solo activities.

As you’d imagine from White, Acoustic Recordings 1998-2016 is not much like an orthodox greatest hits: only three of its 26 tracks, most notably “Hotel Yorba”, were released as singles. For those millions whose understanding of White’s canon begins and ends with the chanted riff of “Seven Nation Army”, much will be rather baffling. The cover appears to signal the intent – a black and white shot of White cradling his Gibson L-1 acoustic, a guitar which is now 101 years old – as does hiring Greil Marcus to write the sleevenotes. Here is White arraying himself in the signifiers of antiquity, as a creature of folklore, as an emissary from the Old Weird America.

Marcus’ essay spends an inordinate length of time discussing one of White’s heroes, Son House, and it’d be logical to assume that Acoustic Recordings would concentrate on the blues. But the music here is generally much harder to categorise in such reductive terms, and not all the tracks even feature a guitar: it’s a pleasure, for instance, to revisit the baroque weirdness of 2005’s “Forever For Her (Is Over For Me)”, and how it constructs hysterical melodrama out of piano, marimba and Meg White’s brute artisanship.

A clutch of tracks are clearly exercises in genre, like the Raconteurs’ sawing “Bluegrass Version” of “Top Yourself” (a 2008 b-side), or the beautifully fingerpicked “Never Far Away”, from the mostly forgotten environs of the Cold Mountain soundtrack (2005). What Acoustic Recordings best illustrates, though, is a consistency to White’s songwriting that has endured through his myriad projects, even as his music has swung unpredictably between playfulness and intensity. From 2001’s “We’re Going To Be Friends” to an alternate mix of 2012’s “Hip (Eponymous) Poor Boy”, there’s an underlying sweetness, a McCartneyish gift for melody, that make many of White’s best songs resemble intricate nursery rhymes. It’s also evident in one of his most controversial works, “Love Is The Truth”, written for a 2006 Coca Cola advert and repurposed here with the shrill horns having been stripped off.

That sort of tinkering happens throughout Acoustic Recordings, ensuring that the tracks adhere to the title’s promise, and proving once again that White is happy to play fast and loose with any notions of authenticity. “City Lights” comes billed as a previously unreleased White Stripes track (dating from the Get Behind Me Satan sessions) but, as Greil Marcus reveals in his notes, was only recently finished with the help of White’s current bandmate, Dominic Davis. Two guitars intertwine with a brackish elegance, and White’s pinched vocal is shadowed by that of Davis, while shakers – a ghost of Meg? – provide minimal rhythm. The resulting track is spectral, mantric, and quite unlike anything in the known White Stripes songbook: one wonders, intrigued, what their original version would have sounded like.

That first version might plausibly surface on another compilation or boxset, as part of a more conventional scouring of the archives than this one. But White’s taste for making mischief with our ideas of the vintage and the modern, of honesty and dishonesty, may predicate against him ever releasing anything quite so straightforward. “[This] is mirror-music,” writes Marcus, “the singer talking to himself, trying to tell himself the truth.” As it has been for nearly two decades now, trying to work out when White is telling us the truth, and when he’s leading us on, is part of what makes him such a compelling artist.

Acoustic Recordings might be unadorned, toying as it does with a concept of unmediated expression, but it brings us no closer to the real Jack White. Perhaps we should just take the advice he gives in one of his very best songs, the rollickingly Dylanish “Carolina Drama”, from the Raconteurs’ underrated Consolers Of The Lonely (2008): “Well now you heard another side to the story/But you wanna know how it ends?” he asks at the end of his messy, vivid narrative. “If you must know the truth about the tale/Go and ask the milkman…”

Acoustic Recordings 1998-2016 TRACKLISTING

  1. SUGAR NEVER TASTED SO GOOD
  2. APPLE BLOSSOM (REMIXED)
  3. I’M BOUND TO PACK IT UP (REMIXED)
  4. HOTEL YORBA
  5. WE’RE GOING TO BE FRIENDS
  6. YOU’VE GOT HER IN YOUR POCKET
  7. IT’S TRUE THAT WE LOVE ONE ANOTHER
  8. NEVER FAR AWAY
  9. FOREVER FOR HER (IS OVER FOR ME)
  10. WHITE MOON
  11. AS UGLY AS I SEEM
  12. CITY LIGHTS (PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED WHITE STRIPES TRACK)
  13. HONEY, WE CAN’T AFFORD TO LOOK THIS CHEAP
  14. EFFECT AND CAUSE
  15. LOVE IS THE TRUTH (ACOUSTIC MIX)
  16. TOP YOURSELF (BLUEGRASS VERSION)
  17. CAROLINA DRAMA (ACOUSTIC MIX)
  18. LOVE INTERRUPTION
  19. ON AND ON AND ON
  20. MACHINE GUN SILHOUETTE
  21. BLUNDERBUSS
  22. HIP (EPONYMOUS) POOR BOY (ALTERNATE MIX)
  23. I GUESS I SHOULD GO TO SLEEP (ALTERNATE MIX)
  24. JUST ONE DRINK (ACOUSTIC MIX)
  25. ENTITLEMENT
  26. WANT AND ABLE

 

 

 

 

 

Pink Floyd announce major retrospective exhibition

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The Pink Floyd Exhibition: Their Mortal Remains is a new retrospective exhibition due to run at London's Victoria and Albert Museum from May 13 – October 1, 2017. The exhibition - which has been mounted with the involvement of all three surviving band members - is described as "an immersive, mult...

The Pink Floyd Exhibition: Their Mortal Remains is a new retrospective exhibition due to run at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum from May 13 – October 1, 2017.

The exhibition – which has been mounted with the involvement of all three surviving band members – is described as “an immersive, multi-sensory and theatrical journey through Pink Floyd’s extraordinary world. A story of sound, design and performance, the exhibition will chronicle the music, iconic visuals and staging of the band, from the underground psychedelic scene in 1960s London to the present day, illustrating their groundbreaking use of special effects, sonic experimentation, powerful imagery and social commentary”.

Tickets go on sale at 10:0am today [Wednesday, August 31] via the V&A and other ticketing partners.

The exhibition will feature more than 350 objects and artefacts including never-before-seen material, set and construction pieces from some of Pink Floyd’s album covers and stage performances including The Dark Side Of The Moon, The Wall and The Division Bell, instruments, music technology, original designs, architectural drawings, handwritten lyrics and psychedelic prints and posters.

Martin Roth, Director of the V&A said: “The V&A is perfectly placed to exhibit the work of a band that is as recognisable for its unique visual imagery as for its music. Pink Floyd is an impressive and enduring British design story of creative success. Alongside creating extraordinary music, they have for over five decades been pioneers in uniting sound and vision, from their earliest 1960s performances with experimental light shows, through their spectacular stadium rock shows, to their consistently iconic album covers. The exhibition will locate them within the history of performance, design and musical production by presenting and complementing the material from Pink Floyd’s own archive with the V&A’s unrivalled collections in architecture, design, graphics and literature.”

The exhibition is curated by the V&A by a team led by Victoria Broackes alongside Aubrey ‘Po’ Powell of Hipgnosis and Paula Stainton.

The band recently announced an extensive, 27-disc early years box set, covering 1965 – 1972, which will be released on November 11, 2016.

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Sounds Of The New West! The History Of Rock! End Of The Road!

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Just back in the office after a fortnight of dodging wild boar, mountain goats and various other bits of unidentifiable Mediterranean wildlife, and am massively gratified by the positive vibes from so many of you about our newly re-upholstered Uncut. Genuine thanks to everyone for the kind messages ...

Just back in the office after a fortnight of dodging wild boar, mountain goats and various other bits of unidentifiable Mediterranean wildlife, and am massively gratified by the positive vibes from so many of you about our newly re-upholstered Uncut. Genuine thanks to everyone for the kind messages I’ve found all over Twitter, Facebook and elsewhere about the redesign, the upgraded Reviews section, the Bowie cover and, especially, the long-awaited fourth volume of our Sounds Of The New West comps, which seems to have struck a significant chord; there seem to be lots of pictures of the CD sleeve sat next to the original comps from the turn of the millennium. After such a lot of work – most notably by Marc Jones, our designer – I’m thrilled and relieved it’s worked out so well. Anything else you’d like to tell us, please get in touch via uncut_feedback@timeinc.com.

Obviously I’ve arrived back as the next issue is being knocked into shape, and have been confronted with a great weight – actual and virtual – of new music to work my way through. Already today I’ve listened to Steve Hauschildt, Leonard Cohen, Cyrus Gengras and this Prophets Of Rage supergroup featuring Chuck D, B Real and three-quarters of Rage Against The Machine (it sounds exactly how you’d imagine), plus reissues from Dennis Bovell, Low and Julius Eastman. Lots more to get through, of course, not least the Frank Ocean album and – sorry to be a tease – some enticing stuff from Light In The Attic, among other labels, that hasn’t been officially announced yet, as far as I can tell.

More jobs: to write a review of the 75 Dollar Bill album that I keep banging on about. I didn’t listen to much while I was away, apart from the new Factory Floor album that my wife favoured for driving music as we were getting lost on precipitous mountain passes, but I did keep coming back to the New York desert blues of “WOOD/METAL/PLASTIC/PATTERN/RHYTHM/ROCK”, which is rapidly shaping up as one of my favourite releases of 2016, not least because it made for an amazing descent/touchdown experience on the plane home.

I’ll try and fold some of this stuff into one of my other tasks: to prepare for the End Of The Road festival this weekend, and patch together a soundtrack to play between the bands – Teenage Fanclub, Scritti Politti, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Jenny Hval, and more – when Uncut takes over the Big Top stage there on Sunday. I’ll be there with Tom Pinnock, Laura Snapes, Mark Bentley and Charlotte Treadaway from Uncut, reporting live from End Of The Road with news, reviews and so on to keep you up to speed, whether you’re on site or wishing you were. Also, Tom and Laura will be hosting a series of Q&As with some of the festival’s key attractions:

FIELD MUSIC – 3.30pm FRIDAY – TIPI TENT BAR
JEFFREY LEWIS – 2.30pm SATURDAY – TIPI TENT BAR
KEVIN MORBY – 2.15pm SUNDAY – TIPI TENT BAR
DEVENDRA BANHART – 5.00pm SUNDAY – PIANO STAGE

Again, please drop by and say hi.

One last thing before I go. Our archive-digging History Of Rock series reaches 1979 with its next edition out next week. But in case you missed it, we’re also making available again the first volume of the series, dedicated to 1965. It’ll be in UK shops this Thursday, but you can buy History Of Rock: 1965 now from our online shop.

Here’s the introduction from John Robinson:

“Welcome to 1965. As the year dawns, the personalities who will define much of the music of the next 50 years – be that The Beatles, Bob Dylan, or the Rolling Stones – are all still in their early 20s. They are already working at an extremely high level, producing classic work like “Help”, “Highway 61” and “Satisfaction”. In their wake, a second wave of innovators are busy determining their own paths, inspired by the work of others (“they knocked us out” is a phrase you’ll read a lot) and their own unique visions.

“The music writers of New Musical Express and Melody Maker were there with them all. These were not by any means the faintly dandyish figures of the following decades. Rather, these were diligent newspapermen with musical leanings; dedicated record “trade” professionals who uncovered pivotal detail by their fastidious reporting of music events. They skilfully captured the major personalities up close, at a time where music – and along with it, music writing – was undergoing rapid change.

“This is the world of The History Of Rock, a new monthly magazine and ongoing project which which reaps the benefits of this access for the reader decades later, one year at a time. In the pages of this first edition, dedicated to 1965, you will find verbatim articles from frontline staffers, compiled into long and illuminating reads. You will be present as enduring reputations (“the witty Beatles”; “the battling Kinks”) are formed, but also to discover fascinating byways off the main track.

“You will recognize many of the names, faces and places here, but you’ve perhaps never quite seen them quite so innocently, or so intimately in their time. Here, Carnaby Street is still a fashionable destination. A Rickenbacker guitar, as advertised by John Lennon, will cost you 150 guineas. Andrew Loog Oldham seems to have a hand in everything. America? America is spoken of as an extremely remote place indeed, and a sense of spirited transatlantic competition thrives in the language of much of the reporting.

“What may surprise the modern reader most is the access to, and the sheer volume of material supplied by the artists who are now the giants of popular culture. Now, a combination of wealth, fear and lifestyle would conspire to keep reporters at a rather greater length from the lives of musicians.

“At this stage, however, representatives from New Musical Express and Melody Maker are where it matters. At John Lennon’s dinner table. Being serenaded by John Coltrane in his hotel room. In a TV studio with the Rolling Stones.

“Join them there. You’ll be knocked out!”

Hell Or High Water

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Pitched as a heist movie, David Mackenzie’s latest film feels more like a contemporary Western set in a time of heightened financial anxiety. Rather like Andrew Dominik’s outstanding Killing Them Softly, Hell Or High Water is a film about recession-hit criminals, burdened by reverse mortgage loa...

Pitched as a heist movie, David Mackenzie’s latest film feels more like a contemporary Western set in a time of heightened financial anxiety. Rather like Andrew Dominik’s outstanding Killing Them Softly, Hell Or High Water is a film about recession-hit criminals, burdened by reverse mortgage loans and back taxes.

The genre’s classic signifiers are there – Texas Rangers, Comanche Indians, bank robbers – but they have been pushed close to extinction by economic collapse, foreclosures and debt. Chris Pine and Ben Foster play brothers who rob a number of Texas Midland Bank branches to raise enough funds to cover debts incurred by the family farm – debt that is owed to the same chain of banks. It’s a devilish, if grim irony.

They’re pursued by a pair of Texas Rangers – crusty Jeff Bridges and his stoical deputy Gil Birmingham. Mackenzie and screenwriter Taylor Sheridan (who wrote last year’s crime thriller, Sicario) let the film unfold leisurely – though Sheridan sometimes makes his points about the iniquities of the banks a little laboriously.

Pine – rangy, hawk-like – resembles Robert Ryan as the “good” brother, while Bridges is satisfactorily curmudgeonly as the old timer enjoying one last hurrah before impending retirement. It’s hard to find a thread between Mackenzie’s films – from the magic realism of Young Adam and Hallam Foe to the shouty violence of Starred Up. Hell Or High Water, meanwhile, is another career swerve: though it is pretty good.

Meanwhile, Nick Cave and Warren Ellis provide a score that typically shifts between scratchy and twangy.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Kristin Hersch announces new album and book

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Kristin Hersch is to release a new double album and hardback book, Wyatt At The Coyote Palace. The album and book are released on October 28 in the UK by Omnibus Press. It follows on from her previous book/album releases, Crooked in 2010 and 2013's Throwing Muses’ project, Purgatory/Paradise. P...

Kristin Hersch is to release a new double album and hardback book, Wyatt At The Coyote Palace.

The album and book are released on October 28 in the UK by Omnibus Press.

It follows on from her previous book/album releases, Crooked in 2010 and 2013’s Throwing Muses’ project, Purgatory/Paradise.

Pitchfork reports that the book is inspired by her autistic son Wyatt and “his fascination with an abandoned apartment building inhabited by coyotes.”

“I had so loved his love of the place,” Hersh said in a statement. “Throwing Muses’ drummer, Dave [Narcizo] — my best friend since third grade — decided that Wyatt needed to encapsulate his sense memories of the coyote palace, make the experience finite, like bottling a memory. Dave thinks we’ll see it again, and Wyatt’s love of the place will come back, when the images have been filtered through Wyatt’s intense and fascinating psychology.”

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Hear Devendra Banhart’s new song, “Saturday Night”

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Devendra Banhart has shared a new track from his upcoming album, Ape In Pink Marble. "Saturday Night" follows on from “Middle Names", which Banhart shared in June. The Ape In Pink Marble tracklisting is: Middle Names Good Time Charlie Jon Lends a Hand Mara Fancy Man Fig in Leather Theme for a T...

Devendra Banhart has shared a new track from his upcoming album, Ape In Pink Marble.

Saturday Night” follows on from “Middle Names”, which Banhart shared in June.

The Ape In Pink Marble tracklisting is:

Middle Names
Good Time Charlie
Jon Lends a Hand
Mara
Fancy Man
Fig in Leather
Theme for a Taiwanese Woman in Lime Green
Souvenirs
Mourner’s Dance
Saturday Night
Linda
Lucky
Celebration

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Sex Pistols – Live ’76

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When the Sex Pistols took the stage at Manchester’s Lesser Free Trade Hall on June 4, 1976, Great Britain didn’t look especially great. Politically, economically, socially – in every way possible – the country was a shambles, with inflation sending the price of food well beyond the budgets o...

When the Sex Pistols took the stage at Manchester’s Lesser Free Trade Hall on June 4, 1976, Great Britain didn’t look especially great. Politically, economically, socially – in every way possible – the country was a shambles, with inflation sending the price of food well beyond the budgets of middle- and working-class shoppers and average wages plummeting to £72 a week. The value of the pound was dropping precipitously, to the extent that the country was offered a bailout loan by its former colony, the United States of America. The Pistols appeared as though summoned from the depths of the British psyche: the nation’s darkest fears and starkest desires manifest in safety-pinned T-shirts and frayed guitar riffs. The band weren’t simply responding to all the shit going down in the mid-’70s. Rather, they represented a collective response to a crumbling world.

Their performance in Manchester stands as one of the most important concerts ever played on British soil, spurring the Manchester music scene and creating a new rock capital to rival London. While Live ’76 gathers this and other shows from that bellwether year, it’s impossible to reconstruct such a moment 40 years later, especially now that punk has been so thoroughly absorbed into the mainstream and Never Mind The Bollocks… is available in exclusive pink vinyl at HMV. In 2016 it’s not always easy to tell what the hubbub was all about. Running blithely and recklessly through Paul Revere & The Raiders’ “Stepping Stone” and The Stooges’ “No Fun”, the Sex Pistols sound like any old punk band, churning out a brash rumble and conveying squalid bravado common to the acts that followed in their wake.

This show, much like the others in this 4CD boxset, has long been available as a bootleg, and this version sounds like it: the sound quality ranges from murky and indistinct to safety-pin-in-your-ear shrill. Steve Jones’ guitar sounds like it’s holding a razor to your throat, but Johnny Rotten gets lost in the mix, his disgust fatally muted. Not even a year old at the time, the band sound like they’re only just getting used to their power, learning how to wield it before they would eventually turn it outward in a spray of spittle and vitriol.

The Sex Pistols grew cockier as the year bore on and as conditions in Britain worsened. When they played Islington in late August, racial tensions were coming to a boil in London, culminating in a massive riot at the Notting Hill Carnival. It must have seemed like an ominous sign when even Big Ben stopped working. It would be months before it faithfully told the time again. The Pistols sound like they’re internalising all of this national angst and rendering from it smeary, taunting punk rock. They open their set with a new song, “Anarchy In The UK”, which was written only a few weeks beforehand and must have sounded like a reasonable prediction for Britain. They sound tentative at first, as though gauging the crowd; soon enough, the song turns ferocious and mean, the musicians playing with a new sense of mission and a fresh relentlessness to their attack. That would only intensify with subsequent shows.

Live ’76 presents a band in the process of becoming a legend – not simply developing a reputation as a fiery live act, but rethinking the role pop music could play in society. American punk bands like the Ramones and the New York Dolls were largely apolitical (or, at least, not explicitly political), but the Sex Pistols sound political out of necessity, as though outrage might be the only sane reaction to Britain in the mid-1970s. By September, the country was requesting a nearly £4 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund and the Sex Pistols had played their first international show in Paris, returning home emboldened by the experience.

On September 17, they played HM Prison in Chelmsford, a high-security facility for young male offenders. In such a setting anything less than a riot would be anti-climactic, but at least Rotten tries to rile things up: “This is about Harold Wilson, it’s called ‘Liar’,” he cajoles, growing more comfortable in his contrariness. “Well, come on, have a riot! Boo! Boo!” If anything, the rhythm section – drummer Paul Cook and bass player Glen Matlock – keep things from getting too out of control, their taut interplay preventing the songs from falling all apart completely.

Just a week later the Sex Pistols played the 76 Club in Burton Upon Trent, which marks a tipping point for the band and the movement they represented. Punk was becoming more visible in the mainstream, and the band play with no presumptions. In fact, they might sound even hungrier on these songs, even more confrontational than usual, especially on “Problems”, with its feedback-drenched false start and its violent ending. Two weeks later the Pistols would sign with EMI. Before 1976 was over they would drop the f-bomb on the BBC and nearly get Bill Grundy fired. Live ’76 plays like a prelude to the Pistols’ short career, but they sound like they’re warning the empire of even worse days to come.

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Wild Beasts – Boy King

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For music fans of a certain age, there is something both thrilling and reassuring about Wild Beasts, these four working-class northern school friends who make adventurous and literary art rock. They sing about fighting and fucking, about football and chip butties, but do so while invoking obscure Fr...

For music fans of a certain age, there is something both thrilling and reassuring about Wild Beasts, these four working-class northern school friends who make adventurous and literary art rock. They sing about fighting and fucking, about football and chip butties, but do so while invoking obscure French philosophers and highbrow novelists. In interview, they recall a time when the rock inkies were full of post-punk bands earnestly discussing Derrida and Truffaut: the band’s first four albums all but came with reading lists, with the band citing Nabakov, Rimbaud, Larkin, JG Ballard, Henry Miller and the feminist literary critic Helene Cixous.

On their fifth album, they have decided to strip away all the book learning and play dumb. Of course, this being Wild Beasts, “playing dumb” still means invoking Byron and TS Eliot, but here the lyrics are relatively blunt, more like haiku than sonnets. The album runs in at a lean, mean 40 minutes and each track – every one in a doomy, minor key – fulfils its duties within three or four minutes.

And, working with Texan producer John Congleton, the musical accompaniment has also been pared back. The drums are minimal and funky. The basslines twitch and squelch, leaving lots of space. Heavy metal riffs are played through masses of effects units, to the point where the guitars barely sound like guitars any more. Moreover, the vocal hooks are stronger, catchier and more insistent. This is an album filled with earworms, with hooklines and stray phrases that burrow deep into your consciousness.

The band has always alternated between its lead vocalists, the gruff baritone of Tom Fleming and the eerily androgynous operatic countertenor of Hayden Thorpe; here it’s Thorpe who dominates proceedings. His disembodied, ethereal falsetto has always chimed with the lyrical tone of Wild Beasts songs: a world in which masculinity is in crisis, where machismo is a drag act. But here the gender politics sound darker and more despairing than ever.

Alpha Female” sees them accepting masculine frailties and ceding control to the opposite sex, although this praise of womankind is set to an oddly butch backing (what Fleming describes as “feminist cock rock”). The dramatic “Tough Guy” starts with an aggressive statement of self-pity (“Now I’m all fucked up and I can’t stand up/So I’d better suck it up like a tough guy would”) before adopting the carapace of masculinity.

Elsewhere, the band both have their cake and eat it. They critically present a world in which men are narcissistic, self-harming and mindlessly hedonistic but cannot resist celebrating it. On the creepy industrial electronica of “Eat Your Heart Out Adonis”, Thorpe whispers about nihilistic carnal desires (“Carnivores just want the dark meat/Won’t get off until they taste it”). The lead single “Get My Bang” is a shimmering piece of synth funk in which the protagonist seems to celebrate the pursuit of pleasure, be it through empty consumerism or mindless sex. “There’s no getting it right, no getting it wrong,” he howls, “just getting it on.” The juddering basslines and sequenced synths of “Celestial Creatures” turns a riotous night out in a lairy nightclub into a transcendental moment to celebrate. On the electronic sludge-rock of “He The Colossus”, Hayden’s courtship ritual is more brutal than ever. “You can stuff your chastity,” he coos, like an innocent choirboy gone bad. “We are vigilantes/We’re on the streets/We’re running free.”

Fleming sings lead on just two tracks. The jerky synth pop of “2BU” is a song of impotent rage and revenge fantasies, while “Ponytail” is an R&B groove which sees Fleming duetting with a munchkin-style, sped-up vocal sample; the lyrics describe the “beautiful agony” of a sado-masochistic relationship where the female “victim” is ultimately in control.

In stark contrast to this nihilistic mood, the drumless closing track, “Dreamliner”, is a rare moment of respite. Here Thorpe’s voice, accompanied by just muted piano and synthesized strings, sounds like the lairy, priapic protagonist of so many of these songs taking a walk of shame. “Keep the peace or fight the most gorgeous of wars,” he sings. It’s a perfect rejoinder to an album where male cynicism sometimes seems to be eating away at itself, and where masculine crisis has never sounded so much fun.

Q&A
Tom Fleming
How did you hook up with producer John Congleton?

We loved a lot of his recent work, especially the Grammy-winning album he produced for St Vincent and his work with the likes of Swans, John Grant, Blondie and all the rest, and we were surprised when he actually approached us. It’s not every day you get contacted by a big-name, Grammy-winning producer! We did actually meet other very good producers, but John seemed to have some ideas about what he liked and didn’t like about our music. He wanted us to sound more spontaneous, to leave mistakes in, to sound like a band making a mess. He had a very Texan, no-bullshit approach, which was refreshing. You realise that English feyness and intellectualism doesn’t count for much in Texas.

Your previous albums have always come with a bit of a reading list. This album less so…
On “He The Colossus”, there’s a glancing reference to TS Eliot’s line in The Love Song Of J Alfred Prufrock – “Shall I part my hair behind?/Do I dare to eat a peach?” It’s the idea of performance versus impotence. But, generally, we wanted to get away from being typecast as a “clever band”. We wanted to kick against that. We wanted the lyrics to be self-explanatory.

Initially, it doesn’t sound like a guitar record…
Our last album, Present Tense, was almost all synthesizers. This one is actually the most guitar-heavy album we’ve made! John [Congleton] had a treasure trove of weird fuzz pedals, and we used them to weaponise the guitars. We wanted to use the tropes of rock’n’roll in a more interesting way, to “shred” without making it sound like a Van Halen record. Not that there’s anything wrong with a Van Halen record, of course…

Would you say the mood is more lustful and hedonistic than romantic?
Absolutely. There’s a lot of sex, but not a lot of love. It’s a crueller record. None of us were in a place where we wanted to make a collection of romantic ballads. We wanted it to be more performative. There are lots of big, stupid gestures. A lot of it is about impotent rage, about narcissistic personality disorder, about the nihilistic pursuit of hedonism. Sometimes we analyse it, sometimes we just revel in it!

Was it a conscious decision to make Hayden’s voice the focus?
Yeah, it was an intense collaboration, but you learn that an important part of collaboration is knowing when to shut the fuck up! There’s still lots of my backing vocals and guitar. And, where we used to sing our own lyrics, it was much more fluid and mixed up here.
INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Todd Phillips’ War Dogs reviewed

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The film opens with a flashback: a body in a car boot, an act of violence, a voiceover. Events revolve around an unreliable protagonist of questionable moral fibre while his partner-in-crime is unpredictable, prone to sudden profane outbursts; there is another figure, a ruthless, inscrutable older m...

The film opens with a flashback: a body in a car boot, an act of violence, a voiceover. Events revolve around an unreliable protagonist of questionable moral fibre while his partner-in-crime is unpredictable, prone to sudden profane outbursts; there is another figure, a ruthless, inscrutable older man. But which film is this? You could be forgiven that War Dogs was the latest film from Martin Scorsese – so heavily does it borrow from the director’s box of tricks – rather than Todd Phillips, the guy who brought you The Hangover films.

As in those films, there is bromance and there is chaos; a scattershot black comedy of excess and adrenalized peril. It follows the true-life exploits of David Packouz (Miles Teller) and Efraim Diveroli (Jonah Hill), schoolfriends who made a fortune as arms dealers in the last days of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars. They began buying weapons at police auctions and sold them on the internet – a military site Diveroli describes as “eBay, but for war” – before finding themselves on top of a huge deal to sell outdated Chinese ammunition to the Pentagon.

Phillips film riffs on any number of Scorsese films. Hill’s Diveroli is a version of Donny Azoff, his character in The Wolf Of Wall Street, who was essentially a cuddlier Joe Pesci. The show-and-tell business of how the arms business works from the top down – told in voiceover by Packouz – replays Scorsese’s introduction to the day-to-day operations of the Tangiers in Casino. More generally, the voicovers, flashbacks, jump cuts, music cues are familiar from many Scorsese films; the presence of Bradley Cooper, as a corrupting figure, aims for a De Niro-esque cameo.

Another reference here is Adam McKay’s The Big Short – which similarly focused on characters making cash from crisis. Although McKay’s film was about hedge fund managers, Phillips’ guys are arms dealers: what’s the difference? While The Big Short largely took place in offices and financial institutions, War Dogs at least gets out a bit. Packouz and Diveroli find themselves heading into Iraq for some bantz on the road to Fallujah. There is some crude ethnic stereotyping. On learning they are in a region called “the triangle of death”, Diveroli laughs, “We drive through all triangles. Including your mum’s.” It is danger played for LOLZ.

Phillips is so focused on the double act between Teller (subdued, bland) and Hill (maniac, dirty) that he literally forgets to bother with any other characters. Packouz’ wife, played by Ana de Armas, exists solely as a narrative point, as a reminder of the ‘normal’ life he is slowly disappearing from. What does she do, apart from worry about him and raise their child? Cooper’s arms dealer fares better, with a couple of meaty scenes where he is required to be shadowy and threatening. He vaguely recalls Will Ferrell’s cameo at the end of Wedding Crashers, as Chazz Reinhold, a legendary retired crasher who now lives at home with his overbearing mother.

Everything else is turned up to 11. Phillips seems to be aiming for maximum impact. A massive Scarface mural hangs on the wall in Diveroli’s office. Yes! We get it!

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

REM on Out Of Time: “This is a record of challenges”

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The wisdom of Michael Stipe is put to the test, as REM retire from touring and expand their sound on Out Of Time. Gavin Martin takes the Athens heritage tour… “I’ve never written upfront love songs," says Stipe, I’ve never lip-synched in videos…” Originally published in NME's 23/03/91 is...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGXVyDsOV2w

The sun is going down over Athens and we’re sat in a downtown bar with Peter Buck drinking beer and whiskey, chomping on the gratis barbecue chicken and mustard dip. Buck is REM’s wildcard, noted for volatile outbursts onstage and in interview.

In the early days when REM were getting together and Buck was fleshing out his encyclopedic, Anglophile record collection, he used to wear a dress and carry a knife, a dress code which soon gets you a reputation in redneck bars. That was before he met his match  in his wife, Barrie, who manages a club two doors down from the group’s office.

One thing’s for sure – with Peter Buck in the engine room REM will never want for lust and fury. He’s the restless hungry heart of the band with no end of ideas and future plans.

He knows there’s lots more for REM to do. He’s convinced they have yet to make a brilliant album backing their heroine Patti Smith, a blues album, “though I feel such a honky saying that”, a country album, an album that they write, record and mix in a week, and an EP of Troggs cover versions. He’s also well aware that they are the last survivors of their era, that the road they’ve travelled is littered with corpses.

“I think it’s kind of sad, I was friends with those bands: X, Hüsker Dü, The Dream Syndicate… all I can say is we’re friends and we were friends before we were in a band. Some people put together a band then try to figure out if they’re friends or not. It’s like getting married to a stranger. It’s been done and we can make it work, but I wouldn’t like to do it.

“We are a good band, there’s no taking away from that. But we have been lucky, we’ve met the right people. To be honest, I don’t think we’ve ever made a mistake. We came close – we were on the road for six years straight, we were totally worn out. But none of us got into smoking cocaine. There was a lot of horrible stuff we could have done. It was never hard times… hard times is when you’ve got no job and kids to worry about.”

Your band has been called the greatest band in the world.

“Yeah, but you know rock’n’roll isn’t a foot race. If somebody says The Monkees are the greatest band in the world I’ll go, ‘OK, maybe today they are. Tomorrow, who knows?’ It just depends. That’s the great thing about rock’n’roll: anyone can do it. I’ve seen the worst bands in the world, bands that I despise, turn out a great song or play great one night. I never liked The Dead Kennedys but ‘Holiday In Cambodia’ is a masterpiece… we still play that at soundchecks, the single version, not the album version. Michael doesn’t know any of the words, but we always go into it. We play Kool And The Gang, Freddie King, that Fleetwood Mac song, ‘The Chain’, we play
that a lot…”

He runs through some of his listening habits – today it was Nick Drake, African hi-life, yesterday it was orchestral stuff. He can’t wait for the Dylan bootleg material, right now another favourite, Neil Young’s Freedom LP, is playing on the bar sound system. Surprisingly an era which he is still catching up with is the ’60s; he’s never heard Love’s Forever Changes. That’s kind of weird, I say, because its atmosphere and worldview is very close to that of Green.

During the making of Out Of Time he bought a load of the excellent Beach Boys CD reissues. He left them around the studio and Mike Mills picked up on them. Their harmonies, or rather REM’s interpretation of them, are to be found all over the record. That gives him a clue but it still doesn’t solve the big mystery; sometimes Buck can’t help wondering how REM songs get written.

It can start with Michael trying to tell the band what sort of music he wants to accompany his lyrics, but his instructions are usually too vague, too abstract for the others to understand. Other times, the group will try to tell him what they want from his lyrics but Stipe is always onto something else. Somehow it all comes right in the end, he still hasn’t figured out how or why; he probably never will.

Buck’s stories could go on all night. Stories about the Masonic Lodge, Japanese transvestite bars and the group’s political involvement.

“Basically that stuff is a pain in the ass. I didn’t get into music to shake politicians’ hands. But because this is a small town, you can make a difference. You can sit in a room and talk to 50 people and change the country. It would be different if we lived in Los Angeles. How can you change Los Angeles?”

We wind up talking about his other grand passion – movies. John Ford’s The Searchers is discussed in detail. Kevin Costner’s Dances With Wolves gets the high sign, The Godfather III is dismissed and the slavering anticipation that began earlier in the day when he and Stipe discussed Jodie Foster’s Silence Of The Lambs continues.

REM’s own movie company is still in its fledgling stage. Stipe says that, for him, in the great cauldron of the senses, it’s always been the visual that has risen to the top. He even says he visualises his songs before he writes them. With TourFilm, some of the group’s promos, videos and information films, he’s made the first steps into visual media. In years to come it may be movies and videos that fill the time REM formerly spent trekking round auditoriums and backroad bars.

Buck recalls that once, but only once, it was his passion for cinema that brought them close to doing something silly and superstar extravagant.

“The original shooting script from Orson Welles’ Citizen Kane was for sale. We saw this thing, it had instructions by Welles and the cinematographer written in the margins. I was looking at Michael, I said, ‘Can you imagine the vibes that would be coming off that! We’ll split the cost – you can have it in your house for a week, I’ll have it at mine for the next.’ We came close, but we got a hold of ourselves just in time.

“We could have afforded it, but we’d have ended up eating cheese for the rest of our lives.”

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Kings Of Leon announce new studio album, Walls

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Kings Of Leon have announced details of their new studio album, Walls. The band's seventh studio release, Walls will be released on October 14 through Columbia Records. It was recorded in Los Angeles by Arcade Fire producer Markus Dravs. You can watch a teaser for the album below. https://www.yo...

Kings Of Leon have announced details of their new studio album, Walls.

The band’s seventh studio release, Walls will be released on October 14 through Columbia Records.

It was recorded in Los Angeles by Arcade Fire producer Markus Dravs.

You can watch a teaser for the album below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nIir79GiwNw

The tracklisting for Walls is:

Waste A Moment
Reverend
Around The World
Find Me
Over
Muchacho
Conversation Piece
Eyes On You
Wild
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The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

R.E.M. announce 25th anniversary reissue of Out Of Time

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R.E.M. will reissue Out Of Time on November 18 via Concord Bicycle. The 25th Anniversary edition will be released in three different formats. The 2 CD Set will include a remastered version of the original album alongside demo versions of every album track, as well as demos for two non-album b-side...

R.E.M. will reissue Out Of Time on November 18 via Concord Bicycle.

The 25th Anniversary edition will be released in three different formats.

The 2 CD Set will include a remastered version of the original album alongside demo versions of every album track, as well as demos for two non-album b-sides and a previously unreleased song.

The 3 LP Set will include remastered vinyl versions of the original album and the demos.

The 25th Anniversary Deluxe Edition will include 4 discs, featuring the remastered album, demos, recordings from the band’s performance at Mountain Stage in 1991, and a Blu-Ray disc with hi-resolution audio and 5.1 Surround Sound versions of Out Of Time, all of the music videos from the album, and the 1991 electronic press kit Time Piece, featuring in-studio footage, exclusive performances and more. All versions will feature extensive liner notes featuring interviews from all four band members and producers Scott Litt and John Keane.

‘OUT OF TIME’ – 25th ANNIVERSARY EDITION (2 CD SET):

DISC 1
‘OUT OF TIME’

Radio Song
Losing My Religion
Low
Near Wild Heaven
Endgame
Shiny Happy People
Belong
Half A World Away
Texarkana
Country Feedback
Me In Honey

DISC 2
‘OUT OF TIME’ DEMOS

Losing My Religion 1 (demo)
Near Wild Heaven 1 (demo)
Shiny Happy People 1 (demo)
Texarkana 1 (demo)
Untitled Demo 2
Radio – Acoustic (Radio Song 1 demo)
Near Wild Heaven 2 (demo)
Shiny Happy People 2 (demo)
Slow Sad Rocker (Endgame demo)
Radio – Band (Radio Song 3 demo)
Losing My Religion 2 (demo)
Belong (demo)
Blackbirds (Half A World Away demo)
Texarkana (demo)
Country Feedback (demo)
Me On Keyboard (Me In Honey demo)
Low (demo)
40 Sec. (40 Second Song demo)
Fretless 1 (demo)

‘OUT OF TIME’ – 25th ANNIVERSARY EDITION (3 LP SET):

DISC 1
‘OUT OF TIME’

Time Side
Radio Song
Losing My Religion
Low
Near Wild Heaven
Endgame

Memory Side
Shiny Happy People
Belong
Half A World Away
Texarkana
Country Feedback
Me In Honey

DISC 2
‘OUT OF TIME’ DEMOS

Side 1
Losing My Religion 1 (demo)
Near Wild Heaven 1 (demo)
Shiny Happy People 1 (demo)
Texarkana 1 (demo)
Untitled Demo 2

Side 2
Radio – Acoustic (Radio Song 1 demo)
Near Wild Heaven 2 (demo)
Shiny Happy People 2 (demo)
Slow Sad Rocker (Endgame demo)

DISC 3
‘OUT OF TIME’ DEMOS

Side 1
Radio – Band (Radio Song 3 demo)
Losing My Religion 2 (demo)
Belong (demo)
Blackbirds (Half A World Away demo)
Texarkana (demo)

Side 2
Country Feedback (demo)
Me On Keyboard (Me In Honey demo)
Low (demo)
40 Sec. (40 Second Song demo)
Fretless 1 (demo)

‘OUT OF TIME’ – 25th ANNIVERSARY DELUXE EDITION (4 DISC SET):

DISC 1
‘OUT OF TIME’

Radio Song
Losing My Religion
Low
Near Wild Heaven
Endgame
Shiny Happy People
Belong
Half A World Away
Texarkana
Country Feedback
Me In Honey

DISC 2
‘OUT OF TIME’ DEMOS

Losing My Religion 1 (demo)
Near Wild Heaven 1 (demo)
Shiny Happy People 1 (demo)
Texarkana 1 (demo)
Untitled Demo 2
Radio – Acoustic (Radio Song 1 demo)
Near Wild Heaven 2 (demo)
Shiny Happy People 2 (demo)
Slow Sad Rocker (Endgame demo)
Radio – Band (Radio Song 3 demo)
Losing My Religion 2 (demo)
Belong (demo)
Blackbirds (Half A World Away demo)
Texarkana (demo)
Country Feedback (demo)
Me On Keyboard (Me In Honey demo)
Low (demo)
40 Sec. (40 Second Song demo)
Fretless 1 (demo)

DISC 3
LIVE AT MOUNTAIN STAGE

Introduction
World Leader Pretend
Radio Song
Fall On Me
It’s the End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)
Half A World Away
Belong
Love Is All Around
Losing My Religion
Dallas
Radio Song
Disturbance At The Heron House
Low
Sawn Swan H
Pop Song 89

DISC 4
OUT OF TIME – BLU-RAY

Out Of Time – Hi-Resolution Audio
Out Of Time – 5.1 Surround Sound
Radio Song (music video)
Losing My Religion (music video)
Low (music video)
Near Wild Heaven (music video)
Shiny Happy People (music video)
Belong (music video)
Half A World Away (music video)
Country Feedback (music video)
Time Piece

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch Hiss Golden Messenger’s new video for “Tell Her I’m Just Dancing”

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Hiss Golden Messenger will release a new album called Heart Like A Levee on October 7. The follow-up to 2014’s Lateness Of Dancers, the record finds frontman M.C.Taylor joined by Megafaun's Bradley and Phil Cook, Bon Iver's Matt McCaughan, Tift Merritt and Alexandra Sauser-Monnig among others. T...

Hiss Golden Messenger will release a new album called Heart Like A Levee on October 7.

The follow-up to 2014’s Lateness Of Dancers, the record finds frontman M.C.Taylor joined by Megafaun’s Bradley and Phil Cook, Bon Iver’s Matt McCaughan, Tift Merritt and Alexandra Sauser-Monnig among others.

The new release from the album is the video for “Tell Her I’m Just Dancing”. It follows “Biloxi“, which Taylor released in July.

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Prince’s Paisley Park to open for public tours

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Prince’s Paisley Park estate is to open to the public from October. The property served as both a production studio and creative hub from 1985 to his death in April this year. “Only a few hundred people have had the rare opportunity to tour the estate during his lifetime,” said a statement f...

Prince’s Paisley Park estate is to open to the public from October.

The property served as both a production studio and creative hub from 1985 to his death in April this year.

“Only a few hundred people have had the rare opportunity to tour the estate during his lifetime,” said a statement from his family. “Now, fans from around the world will be able to experience Prince’s world for the first time as we open the doors to this incredible place.”

Tours of the site, located in Minnesota, will take in the main floor that houses the recording and mixing studios, along with tours of his video editing suite, rehearsal rooms, private NPG Music Club and personal concert hall.

Visitors will also be able to see thousands of personal artefacts from Prince’s archives for the first time, including concert wardrobe, awards, instruments, artwork, rare recordings and more.

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Betty Davis – The Columbia Years 1968 – 1969

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A name on the guestlist of greatness, the former Betty Mabry had hip cachet in the ’60s, and has it again now. A model, a songwriter and a friend of both Jimi Hendrix and Miles Davis (who she married), her trio of mid-1970s albums (Betty Davis, They Say I’m Different and Nasty Gal) established h...

A name on the guestlist of greatness, the former Betty Mabry had hip cachet in the ’60s, and has it again now. A model, a songwriter and a friend of both Jimi Hendrix and Miles Davis (who she married), her trio of mid-1970s albums (Betty Davis, They Say I’m Different and Nasty Gal) established her as a powerful female performer. A cross between George Clinton and Bette Midler, she played sex music with no implied candlelit dinner, a hard and uncompromising funk in which she inhabited an aggressive, theatrically sexual persona. At the time, she outraged nearly everyone.

Hers is a story with some great records, a lot of interesting associations, and – possibly the most important factor – many years of unaccounted time, into which mystery and supposition has since enticingly poured. Carlos Santana and Herbie Hancock remember her as charismatic, beautiful and vibrant, someone pushing at boundaries as Madonna and Grace Jones later would. An early single, a Phil Spector-style production called “Get Ready For Betty”, sketched out her early manifesto, warning women to “keep your fella under lock and key…”

These songs, recorded with boyfriend Hugh Masekela (’68, in LA) and a year later in New York with Miles Davis, find her in transition, almost precisely halfway between her vaguely spicy early soul and her later incarnation in silver hotpants. The fact that the sub-Dusty supper club strings of “Live, Love, Learn” was released as an A-side in 1968 in favour to its superior flip, the belting “It’s My Life” suggests there was some confusion over what precisely her proposition was. An interesting detail in this package is a Columbia Records memo which debates whether she should even be recorded again. “PS:” it concludes, a word of friendly advice, “Betty Mabry is now Mrs Miles Davis.”

Patriarchal career influence isn’t, perhaps, an easy fit into the narrative of an empowered woman writer/performer, but it is part of the story. Davis was a scenester, and her work so far had often reflected that sense of place. She had the previous year written “Uptown (To Harlem)”, rendered superbly by The Chambers Brothers, and in 1964 a single called “The Cellar”, about a club she hosted.

Here she hones her skills as a writer on place with the drawling “Down Home Girl”, and the self-explanatory “Hanging Out”, which nails her milieu and the mood of these recordings. Hendrix’s girlfriend Devon Wilson gets an administrative credit on the ’69 session, while the musicians (John McLaughlin, Larry Young, Mitch Mitchell et al) are a team of Miles/Jimi associates otherwise over-qualified for the basic R’n’B comping which is required of them.

There are nods towards the evolution of the feisty Betty persona here (“Ready, Willing & Able”). There are weirder covers (Creedence’s “Born On The Bayou”?), but it’s the Cream song “Politician Man” which really offers a foreshadowing of what is to come. On the talkback, Miles Davis is heard giving his wife some advice on how she might approach the performance. “Sing it just like that,” he says, in his unmistakable croak, “with the gum in your mouth an’ all, bitch…”

In the original version, as sung by an acne-scarred jazz bassist from Lanarkshire, “Politician” is a fairly heavy-handed piece of political satire. In it, the elected official of the title attempts to coerce a young woman into the backseat of his car in order that he may, nudge nudge, “show you what my politics are….” As sung by Betty Davis, it feels transformative, with Betty assuming again the predatory role – as if she is turning the tables on a sleazy politician on behalf of every harassed intern or junior researcher in history.

It clearly made an impression on Miles, who later recorded a number called “Backseat Betty” in honour of how she delivered the song. More importantly, it signposted how Betty Davis might channel her attitude and charisma in the future. She already talked it. In a few years she would walk it on completely her own terms.

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Bob Dylan Archive to unveil 10th anniversary extended edition of Martin Scorsese’s No Direction Home

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The Bob Dylan Archive will present its first series of Dylan On Film screenings, beginning with the world premiere of the 10th anniversary edition of Martin Scorsese's No Direction Home. The screening takes place on Wednesday, September 21 at the University of Tulsa's Lorton Performance Center; the...

The Bob Dylan Archive will present its first series of Dylan On Film screenings, beginning with the world premiere of the 10th anniversary edition of Martin Scorsese’s No Direction Home.

The screening takes place on Wednesday, September 21 at the University of Tulsa’s Lorton Performance Center; the Archive is housed in the University of Tulsa.

The anniversary edition of No Direction Home includes more than 90 minutes of extended scenes and full-length interviews with Scorsese, Dave van Ronk and Liam Clancy that have recently been unearthed.

That evening will also feature the inaugural public exhibition of physical elements from the archive – titled The Ghost Of Electricity – which include Dylan’s handwritten lyrics, the leather jacket he wore onstage at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965 and the typescript of his first novel, Tarantula. The Ghost Of Electricity will move to The Henry Zarrow Center for Art and Education, where it will be on display from Friday, September 23 through October 10.

The Dylan On Film festival runs from September 21 to 24 and includes Festival! – Murray Lerner’s 1967 documentary about the Newport Folk Festival – and Dont Look Back plus Q&A with director D.A. Pennebaker. The festival will also screen 2007’s 65 Revisited, containing outtakes from Pennebaker’s original film, and Dylan’s first directorial effort, Eat The Document.

The series closes that evening with Bob Dylan: From The Archive, a program of rare and never-before-seen performances spanning 1963 to 2003 and held exclusively in The Bob Dylan Archive.

You can find the full schedule and ticketing details by clicking here.

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.