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Watch David Gilmour’s rare live performance of a Pink Floyd classic

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David Gilmour gave a rare outing to Pink Floyd's "One Of These Days" earlier this week. Gilmour played the instrumental track during his European tour opener at Freedom Square in Wroclaw, Poland earlier in the week. It was the first time Gilmour had played the song live in 22 years, and the first t...

David Gilmour gave a rare outing to Pink Floyd’s “One Of These Days” earlier this week.

Gilmour played the instrumental track during his European tour opener at Freedom Square in Wroclaw, Poland earlier in the week. It was the first time Gilmour had played the song live in 22 years, and the first time he’d performed it during a solo set.

“One Of These Days” originally appeared as the opening track on Pink Floyd’s 1971 album Meddle.

Gilmour also played other Floyd songs, including “Wish You Were Here”, “Run Like Hell”, “Time,” “Shine On You Crazy Diamond” and “Comfortably Numb”, alongside material from solo albums On An Island and Rattle That Lock.

Gilmour is now set to play two shows in Pompeii in Italy on July 7 and 8 for the first time since Pink Floyd played there in October 1971.

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Jeff Beck exclusive! Hear new album track, “Scared For The Children”

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It's a busy year for Jeff Beck. There's a summer tour of the States with Buddy Guy and a new book - Beck01 - published by Genesis Publications - which explores his passions for hot rodding and rock'n'roll. But Beck is also back with Loud Hailer - his first new studio album in six years. And, belo...

It’s a busy year for Jeff Beck.

There’s a summer tour of the States with Buddy Guy and a new book – Beck01 – published by Genesis Publications – which explores his passions for hot rodding and rock’n’roll.

But Beck is also back with Loud Hailer – his first new studio album in six years.

And, below, UK fans can hear an exclusive preview of the album – “Scared For The Children“.

The album features Beck alongside vocalist Rosie Bones, guitarist Carmen Vandenberg, drummer Davide Sollazzi and bassist Giovanni Pallotti; it has been produced by Filippo Cimatti and will be released on July 15 on Atco Records.

You can read our exclusive interview with Jeff Beck in the new issue of Uncut – in shops and available to buy digitally now – where the maestro looks back on a lifetime of rock reinvention

The tracklisting for Loud Hailer is:

The Revolution Will Be Televised
Live In The Dark
Pull It
Thugs Club
Scared For The Children
Right Now
Shame
Edna
The Ballad Of The Jersey Wives
O.I.L.
Shrine

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The 22nd Uncut Playlist Of 2016

Once again, something that might hopefully be a bit of a distraction from ongoing multiple meltdowns: this week's selection of music from the Uncut stereo. Please do check new additions: the ever-excellent Nathan Bowles (been sat on this one for ages and am relieved to finally share); another top Py...

Once again, something that might hopefully be a bit of a distraction from ongoing multiple meltdowns: this week’s selection of music from the Uncut stereo. Please do check new additions: the ever-excellent Nathan Bowles (been sat on this one for ages and am relieved to finally share); another top Pye Corner Audio/Head Technician jam; the crazy Patten mixtape (Cocteaus! Cypress Hill! Hecker etc!); Devendra’s return (the album’s kinda early Caetano meets Flight Of The Conchords and is maybe his best in a while); the Betty Davis preview of course; and this week’s revelatory Neil clip…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Pye Corner Audio – Stasis (Ghost Box)

2 Nathan Bowles – Whole And Cloven (Paradise Of Bachelors)

3 Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith & Suzanne Ciani – FRKWYS Vol 13: Sunergy (RVNG INTL)

4 Scott Hirsch – Blue Rider Songs (Scissortail)

5 The Avalanches – Wildflower (XL)

6 Patten – Re-Edits Vol 2 (Soundcloud)

7 Devendra Banhart – Ape In Pink Marble (Nonesuch)

8 Rafi Bookstaber – Late Summer (Woodsist)

9 Ryley Walker – Golden Sings That Have Been Sung (Dead Oceans)

10 Jack Rose – Raag Manifestos (VHF)

11 Mark Eitzel – 60 Watt Silver Lining (Warner Bros)

12 Noura Mint Seymali – Arbina (Glitterbeat)

13 Betty Davis – The Columbia Years 1968-1969 (Light In The Attic)

14 Kendrick Lamar – Good Kid mAAd City (Top Dawg Entertainment)

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

16 Neil Young & Promise Of The Real – Like An Inca (Paris 2016)

17 Allah-Las – Calico Review (Mexican Summer)

18 Teenage Fanclub – Here (PeMa)

https://soundcloud.com/theepema/iminlove

Robert Ellis – Robert Ellis

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For all its offshoots and mutations, there remains the suspicion that country music has pretty strict border controls. Recent years have seen a number of artists, evidently mindful of being typecast, break out into more inclusive territory. Sturgill Simpson is a keen example, forgoing the traditiona...

For all its offshoots and mutations, there remains the suspicion that country music has pretty strict border controls. Recent years have seen a number of artists, evidently mindful of being typecast, break out into more inclusive territory. Sturgill Simpson is a keen example, forgoing the traditional slant of his early work for amorphous albums that embrace gospel, psychedelia and cosmology; while the likes of Justin Townes Earle, Daniel Romano and (most strikingly) Israel Nash have all ditched their prior formalism for a more expansive type of music whose relationship to country has become increasingly tenuous.

Much the same can be said of Robert Ellis. Reared in the Southern Texas enclave of Lake Jackson, Ellis emerged from a religious community where there were just two types of music: country and bluegrass. By the time he began his recording career, both 2009’s The Great Rearranger and follow-up Photographs (2011) – intuitive records that shifted back and forth between countrypolitan and folk – suggested he belonged to the lineage of George Jones or Kris Kristofferson.

But 2014’s wonderful The Lights From The Chemical Plant flipped all that on its head. This time country played a secondary role to R’n’B, white soul, a dash of jazz and a baroque form of singer-songwriterly pop. It was a vivid and unexpected transformation, Ellis tapping into such influences as Paul Simon and Randy Newman. “Because of Photographs, I feel like people have made certain associations with what I do and who I am,” he told Uncut. “It’s important sometimes to put things in context for them.”

Robert Ellis feels like a natural extension of this approach, placing an even greater distance between its creator and his roots. Primarily a guitar player but also extremely tidy on piano, Ellis brings a wider pallete of textures. Keyboards are more prominent, as is a three-piece string section that gives a number of these songs a slightly ornate, chamber-pop feel. “The High Road”, for instance, makes its presence felt with a concerted shimmy of violins and cello, before being ushered along by trebly electric guitars and limber acoustics in lovely interplay. The song’s sense of rapt deliberation is in pointed contrast to “Screw”, a curious instrumental in which Ellis and Kelly Doyle improvise a guitar duet over electronic ambience and the soft purr of indistinct vocal samples. This experimental tone finds fuller expression in “It’s Not OK”. Beginning with a stabby piano riff reminiscent of 10cc or Harry Nilsson, it eventually gives way to some fabulously digressive jazz-rock, all rolling cymbals and free rhythms, punctuated by a piercing guitar solo.

At its heart, though, this is essentially a great pop album. Both “Perfect Strangers” and the burnished “California” sound like the sort of bittersweet entreaties that might have come from the pen of Dwight Twilley in his ’70s prime. Or, more recently, West Coast darlings Dawes (whose singer Taylor Goldsmith, incidentally, featured on Ellis’ last album). Written by Delta Spirit’s Matthew Vasquez, “How I Love You” posits Ellis as the broken romantic, crying hurt over yearning guitar-pop and piano, underscored by steel. Things get beefier on “Couples Skate”, though it’s trounced by the twanging country-rock of “Drivin’”, co-written by Angaleena Presley, formerly one-third of Pistol Annies.

Picking through the lyrics, you might be forgiven for assuming that Robert Ellis is a break-up album. Most of these tunes address relationships in crisis, love souring with familiarity and the passage of time, couples allowing the weeds to grow between them. What’s more, given Ellis’ split from his wife since The Lights From The Chemical Plant, and his subsequent move away from his adopted Nashville home, it’s tempting to conclude that it’s all autobiographical. Yet Ellis is less interested in confession than he is in acute character studies, folding whatever first-hand experience he has into narrative songs that try to make sense of the impulses that drive us. “We can adapt or maybe we could divorce”, he sings on the dizzyingly beautiful “Elephant”. “We could jump ship or we could easily change course”.

The open road, pop music’s most trusted symbol of freedom and flight, instead becomes an agent of imprisonment. “Elephant”’s protagonist is torn between staying and leaving, “The High Road” of the title has worn its subject down, the abandoned woman in “California” can’t bear to make a fresh start, for “every road leads away from the things you wanted”. Souls in flux, forever undergoing some kind of transformation. In Ellis’ gifted hands, these restless portraits serve as a perfect reflection of his own voyaging musical self.

Q&A
ROBERT ELLIS
Did your recent marriage break-up play into this album in some way?

Whatever’s happening in your life inevitably ends up in your narrative songwriting, but I wouldn’t say it’s strictly autobiographical by any means. A lot of the stuff maybe started from a feeling, then sort of evolved as the characters took shape and the stories developed. I don’t necessarily find my life to be the most interesting story that one could tell.

How conscious were you of escaping the folk/country tag?
When we were writing and arranging the songs I think we were far enough down the path of our own voice that I wasn’t consciously trying to make it not country. Certain things, like “Drivin’”, just came out sounding like country tunes. At one point in time I really didn’t want to be typecast, because country can be pejorative in some ways. But I really don’t give a shit anymore.

The album is self-titled, often an indication of someone trying to make some sort of statement. Was that the case here?
I thought about it a lot. And seeing as I produced this one and we did it in Houston, where I began, I feel personally like I’ve grown into whatever I’m doing now, in a way that feels really comfortable and natural. Whereas maybe on previous records I was still kind of figuring some of that stuff out. When the record was finished I thought it sounded like us. And everyone gets to do the self-titled record thing one time, right?
INTERVIEW: ROB HUGHES

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Rob Wasserman – Lou Reed, Elvis Costello, Van Morrison bassist – dies aged 64

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Rob Wasserman - who played bass with Lou Reed, Elvis Costello, Bob Weir and many others - has died aged 64. The news was broken by Weir, a long-serving musical collaborator. https://twitter.com/BobWeir/status/748281734878355461 A classically trained violinist, Wasserman moved to the upright bass ...

Rob Wasserman – who played bass with Lou Reed, Elvis Costello, Bob Weir and many others – has died aged 64.

The news was broken by Weir, a long-serving musical collaborator.

A classically trained violinist, Wasserman moved to the upright bass when he was 20 and released his first jazz album, Solo, in 1983. He released four more solo albums.

Wasserman recorded with Van Morrison (Beautiful Vision), Lou Reed (New York, Magic And Loss, Lulu), Elvis Costello (Mighty Like A Rose), Rickie Lee Jones (Flying Cowboys, Naked Songs) among many others.

His last album, the six-CD set Fall 1989: The Long Island Sound, recorded with Jerry Garcia Band and Weir, was released in December 2013.

Wasserman and Weir created RatDog in the mid-’90s following the Grateful Dead’s break up in 1995.

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch the Beatles’ new video for “While My Guitar Gently Weeps”

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The Beatles have released a new music video for “While My Guitar Gently Weeps”. Directed by Dandypunk, André Kasten and Leah Moyer, the video for this version of the song honours the memory of Sir George Martin. The string arrangements and recording session at Air Studios in 2006 for “While...

The Beatles have released a new music video for “While My Guitar Gently Weeps”.

Directed by Dandypunk, André Kasten and Leah Moyer, the video for this version of the song honours the memory of Sir George Martin.

The string arrangements and recording session at Air Studios in 2006 for “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” (LOVE Version) were Martin’s final pieces of work.

The video has been made in conjunction with Cirque du Soleil to celebrate the 10th anniversary of The Beatles LOVE at The Mirage Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas.

Meanwhile, Genesis Publications have announced a book of rare photos taken on The Beatles’ 1966 Tokyo concerts.

In 1966 The Beatles embarked on their last tour, playing concerts in seven cities over the course of four months, beginning in London and ending in San Francisco.

On June 29th 1966, The Beatles arrived in Tokyo to play five shows to sold-out crowds at the Nippon Budokan. This stay in Tokyo is captured in a new book of photographs taken by Japanese photographer Shimpei Asai, entitled Hello Goodbye: The Beatles In Tokyo, 1966.

Asai is the only Japanese photographer to have been given official access to The Beatles in Tokyo, and his photos have remained unknown to most outside Japan.

You can find more details about the book here.

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Keith Richards to tell story of his early life in BBC documentary

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Keith Richards is to explore his formative years in a BBC documentary and curate "an incredible weekend" for the broadcaster. For BBC Two, Keith Richards - The Origin Of The Species is a 60-minute film by acclaimed director Julien Temple, in which he journeys back to his formative years during the ...

Keith Richards is to explore his formative years in a BBC documentary and curate “an incredible weekend” for the broadcaster.

For BBC Two, Keith Richards – The Origin Of The Species is a 60-minute film by acclaimed director Julien Temple, in which he journeys back to his formative years during the post-war era. This film is the centrepiece of the BBC’s My Generation season.

Speaking in the film, Keith Richards says: “There was a feeling late 50s/early 60s that there was a change coming. Harold Macmillan actually said it – the ‘winds of change’ and all that – but he didn’t mean it in quite the same way. I certainly felt that for my generation, what was happening and the feeling in the air was – it’s time to push limits. The world is ours now and you can rise or fall on it.”

Julien Temple says: “Listening to the early Stones as a kid changed everything for me. I felt a new way of living emerging, a new kind of person becoming possible – something I wanted to be a part of. And without a doubt I thought Keith Richards was the Origin Of The Species. This film sets out to explore how both he and the 60s in England came about.”

Cassian Harrison, Channel Editor, BBC Four, says: “Keith Richards is undoubtedly one of the key icons of our age. His film for BBC Two will be a fascinating exploration into the post-war years, how they impacted both his life and others and influenced the 60s and the decades that followed. And his curated weekend of programmes for BBC Four will be a thrilling musical journey for viewers – giving an extraordinary and unique insight into Keith’s passions and inspirations.”

Meanwhile, for BBC Four this September, Keith Richards’ Lost Weekend will feature two nights of programming all hand-picked by Richards. Each night will feature an introduction by Richards – specially-filmed by Julien Temple – talking about the reasons behind his selections and inspirations.

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Van Morrison announces new studio album, Keep Me Singing

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Van Morrison has announced details of a new studio album, Keep Me Singing. Morrison's 36th studio album, it will be released on September 30 through Caroline Records. The album contains 12 original songs written and performed by Morrison, as well as a cover of "Share Your Love With Me" - written b...

Van Morrison has announced details of a new studio album, Keep Me Singing.

Morrison’s 36th studio album, it will be released on September 30 through Caroline Records.

The album contains 12 original songs written and performed by Morrison, as well as a cover of “Share Your Love With Me” – written by Alfred Baggs and Don Robey. For the track “Every Time I See A River”, Morrison has collaborated with lyricist Don Black. The album’s closing track, “Caledonia Swing”, is an instrumental featuring Morrison on piano and saxophone. All tracks were produced by Van Morrison.

You can buy The Ultimate Music Guide to Van Morrison from our online shop by clicking here

The tracklisting for Keep Me Singing is:
Let It Rhyme
Every Time I See A River
Keep Me Singing
Out In The Cold Again
Memory Lane
The Pen Is Mightier Than The Sword
Holy Guardian Angel
Share Your Love With Me
In Tiburon
Look Beyond The Hill
Going Down To Bangor
Too Late
Caledonia Swing

Van Morrison has also announced he will play 7 live dates across the UK in October and November, beginning with a headline performance at Bluesfest 2016 at London’s O2 and culminating in a show at Manchester’s O2 Apollo.

30th October – Bluesfest 2016, The O2, London
8th November – Philharmonic Hall, Liverpool
9th November – Philharmonic Hall, Liverpool
13th November – Playhouse, Edinburgh
14th November – Royal Concert Hall, Glasgow
28th November – Royal Concert Hall, Nottingham
29th November – O2 Apollo, Manchester

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Scotty Moore, Elvis Presley’s guitarist, dies aged 84

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Scotty Moore has died aged 84. Moore was the last survivor of Elvis Presley's original band which also included bassist Bill Black. Moore died at his home in Nashville on Tuesday, June 28, according to The Commercial Appeal. Along with Black, Moore was a member of The Blue Moon Boys, who backed P...

Scotty Moore has died aged 84.

Moore was the last survivor of Elvis Presley’s original band which also included bassist Bill Black.

Moore died at his home in Nashville on Tuesday, June 28, according to The Commercial Appeal.

Along with Black, Moore was a member of The Blue Moon Boys, who backed Presley on many of his key songs including “Heartbreak Hotel“, “Blue Suede Shoes” and “Jailhouse Rock”.

After appearing in four of Presley’s films including Jailhouse Rock and GI Blues, Moore was fired by Sam Philips in 1964 for breaking his contract by releasing a solo album, The Guitar That Changed The World.

Moore was reunited with Presley for the ’68 Comeback special.

Keith Richards was one of those inspired by Moore. He once said: “When I heard ‘Heartbreak Hotel’, I knew what I wanted to do in life.

“It was as plain as day. All I wanted to do in the world was to be able to play and sound like that. Everyone else wanted to be Elvis, I wanted to be Scotty.”

Moore also worked with artists including Richards, Ronnie Wood, Ringo Starr, Carl Perkins, Levon Helm and Jeff Beck.

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Ramones exclusive! Hear an unreleased demo of “I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You”

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On July 29, the Ramones release a 40th anniversary box set of their self-titled debut album containing plenty of rare and unreleased goodies. We're delighted to preview the box set with this unreleased demo of “I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You”. It was recorded by Tommy Ramone at Dick Char...

On July 29, the Ramones release a 40th anniversary box set of their self-titled debut album containing plenty of rare and unreleased goodies.

We’re delighted to preview the box set with this unreleased demo of “I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You”.

It was recorded by Tommy Ramone at Dick Charles Recording on 729 7th Ave, NYC and included on one of the band’s early demo tapes.

The 3CD/1LP set will be released as a limited edition of 19,760 individually numbered copies.

The set includes stereo and mono mixes of the original album, plus rarities, as well as unreleased demos and live show – all produced, mixed, and mastered by the album’s original producer and mixer Craig Leon.

It will be packaged in a 12 x 12 hardcover book and also include production notes by the album’s producer Craig Leon, an essay by journalist Mitchell Cohen along with additional pictures taken by Roberta Bayley.

The first disc features Leon’s newly remastered stereo version and mono mix of the album. “The earliest mixes of the album were virtually mono,” says Leon. “We had an idea to record at Abbey Road and do both a mono and stereo version of the album, which was unheard of at the time. I’m thrilled that now, 40 years later, we followed through on that original idea.”

The anniversary edition’s second disc spotlights single mixes, outtakes, and demos. Several of those recordings have never been released, including demos for “I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend“, “53rd and 3rd” and “Loudmouth“.

The third disc captures the band performing two full sets live at The Roxy in West Hollywood on August 12, 1976. While the band’s first set has been available before, the evening’s second set makes its debut here. Rounding out the set is an LP containing the new mono mix of Ramones.

Ramones 40th Anniversary Deluxe Edition is available to pre-order by clicking here.

The tracklisting is:

Disc One: Original Album
Stereo Version 40th Anniversary Mono Mix
“Blitzkrieg Bop”
“Beat On The Brat”
“Judy Is A Punk”
“I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend”
“Chain Saw”
“Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue”
“I Don’t Wanna Go Down To The Basement”
“Loudmouth”
“Havana Affair”
“Listen To My Heart”
“53rd & 3rd”
“Let’s Dance”
“I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You”
“Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World”
“Blitzkrieg Bop”*
“Beat On The Brat”*
“Judy Is A Punk”*
“I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend”*
“Chain Saw”*
“Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue”*
“I Don’t Wanna Go Down To The Basement”*
“Loudmouth”*
“Havana Affair”*
“Listen To My Heart”*
“53rd & 3rd”*
“Let’s Dance”*
“I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You”*
“Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World”*

Disc Two: Single Mixes, Outtakes, and Demos
“Blitzkrieg Bop” (Original Stereo Single Version)
“Blitzkrieg Bop” (Original Mono Single Version)
“I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend” (Original Stereo Single Version)
“I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend” (Original Mono Single Version)
“Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World” (Original Uncensored Vocals)*
“I Don’t Care” (Demo)
“53rd & 3rd” (Demo)*
“Loudmouth” (Demo)*
“Chain Saw” (Demo)*
“You Never Should Have Opened That Door” (Demo)
“I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend” (Demo)*
“I Can’t Be” (Demo)
“Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World” (Demo)*
“I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You” (Demo)*
“Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue” (Demo)
“I Don’t Wanna Be Learned/I Don’t Wanna Be Tamed” (Demo)
“You’re Gonna Kill That Girl” (Demo)*
“What’s Your Name” (Demo)

Disc Three: Live at The Roxy (8/12/76)
Set One
“Loudmouth”
“Beat On The Brat”
“Blitzkrieg Bop”
“I Remember You”
“Glad To See You Go”
“Chain Saw”
“53rd & 3rd”
“I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend”
“Havana Affair”
“Listen To My Heart”
“California Sun”
“Judy Is A Punk”
“I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You”
“Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World”
“Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue”
“Let’s Dance”

Set Two
“Loudmouth”*
“Beat On The Brat”*
“Blitzkrieg Bop”*
“I Remember You”*
“Glad To See You Go”*
“Chain Saw”*
“53rd & 3rd”*
“I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend”*
“Havana Affair”*
“Listen To My Heart”*
“California Sun”*
“Judy Is A Punk”*
“I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You”*
“Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World”*
“Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue”*
“Let’s Dance”*

40th Anniversary Mono Mix
LP Track Listing
“Blitzkrieg Bop”*
“Beat On The Brat”*
“Judy Is A Punk”*
“I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend”*
“Chain Saw”*
“Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue”*
“I Don’t Wanna Go Down To The Basement”*
“Loudmouth”*
“Havana Affair”*
“Listen To My Heart”*
“53rd & 3rd”*
“Let’s Dance”*
“I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You”*
“Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World”*

* Previously Unreleased

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

David Bowie in Baal

On March 2, 1982, just after The Nine O’Clock News ended, viewers to BBC One were greeted with this continuity announcement. “On BBC One now, a star vehicle for a Big Star – Bertolt Brecht’s first character creation, the anarchic genius Baal, is portrayed in tonight’s television presentati...

On March 2, 1982, just after The Nine O’Clock News ended, viewers to BBC One were greeted with this continuity announcement. “On BBC One now, a star vehicle for a Big Star – Bertolt Brecht’s first character creation, the anarchic genius Baal, is portrayed in tonight’s television presentation by David Bowie…”

If it’s difficult to believe there was once a time when Bowie could turn up on BBC One at 9:25PM on a Tuesday night in a bleak, abrasive adaptation of a difficult 1918 play by Brecht, well, get used to the feeling – or, at least, get used to it if you’re planning going anywhere near Dissent & Disruption, a 13-disc BluRay box (also available as two 6-disc DVD sets) gathering the surviving BBC productions of director Alan Clarke, who died in 1990. These 23 dramas range widely in style and subject, but all leave you wondering that there was ever TV being made like this here. Or, perhaps, wondering why it isn’t anymore. Baal, Clarke’s collaboration with Bowie, is admittedly not the greatest piece here. But it is extraordinary, and, although relegated to a footnote in Bowie’s work, marks a pivotal moment – his last art-for-art’s-sake auf wiedersehen to Berlin and all that.

Alan-Clarke

Baal was Brecht’s first play, and rages with strange, provocative adolescent glee and anger, all angst, spite and bitter humour, while foreshadowing both the fascination with outcasts and the experimental techniques for which he would become famous, not least the use of song and heightened dialogue. The eponymous anti-hero is a filthy, dissolute artist running on schnapps, sex and his all-encompassing loathing of polite Weimar society and its hypocrisies. Blessed with a divine gift for poetry and performance, he’s a user, a manipulator, a self-aggrandising, self-pitying narcissist and all-round bastard – a prototype rockstar, you could argue. We follow him down, from elite salons through sodden barrooms and fetid garrets, through debasement, abuse and abandonment, rape and murder, finally out into the wild uncaring heart of the Black Forest.

When Clarke first conceived of filming the play, in collaboration with Brecht scholar John Willet, he considered Steven Berkoff for the role. It was Willett who suggested Bowie, who, when the programme was recorded in summer 1981, had not long completed his run as The Elephant Man on the American stage. He brings lessons learned there, as well with Lindsay Kemp and, of course, stalking stages as Ziggy and The Duke (plus, it should be said, the beautiful annunciation he brought to his Peter And The Wolf narration).

Clarke mounts the piece with a degree of stylisation that terrifies current British TV. Intercut with abstract split-screen monologues and songs, the cast perform as though in a live performance against huge, detailed sets erected as frieze-like tableaux, the camera usually at a distance – as if, indeed, you were in the stalls viewing a theatre stage. A filthy, snaggletoothed scum-seer, Bowie himself suggests an expressionist woodcut come to life, yet exudes a fitting naturalism the cast around him avoids.

He clearly responded to the project. To mark its broadcast, Bowie decided to cut a 7-inch EP of the five Brecht songs he performs in the drama, acting as his own Greek chorus. In the TV version, he accompanies himself with bare plucks at the banjo he perpetually clutches. For the Baal EP, however, Bowie returned to Germany’s Hansa studio with Tony Visconti and 15 Berlin players, the last time he would record beside the Wall. The record has become a semi-obscure curio, but two songs, “The Drowned Girl” and “Remembering Marie A”, rank among Bowie’s most affecting 1980s recordings. Listening to these and watching his rank, ragged TV characters, it’s astonishing to remember that the next time the world saw him would be “Let’s Dance”.

Deceptively stagebound, Baal may seem uncharacteristic of Clarke, who’s best known for the visceral, prowling “realism” of Scum, Made In Britain (which, made for ITV, is sadly not included) and The Firm. But everything here is united by attitude, anger and irreverence, by an unflinching gaze, a jabbing intensity of style and an explosion of ideas. Next time someone tells you we’re currently living in the Golden Age of TV, think of Clarke, and spit.

EXTRAS: A mouth-dropping array, including hours of Clarke shorts, documentaries, and archive footage, and new contributions from collaborators and fans including Gary Oldman and Danny Boyle.

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

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Margo Price announces UK tour dates

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Margo Price has announced a string of UK dates this autumn. On the back of her album, Midwest Farmer’s Daughter, Price and her band will play five shows, including London's Scala on September 1. Her band includes Dillon Napier on drums, Kevin Black on bass, Luke Schneider on pedal steal and Jami...

Margo Price has announced a string of UK dates this autumn.

On the back of her album, Midwest Farmer’s Daughter, Price and her band will play five shows, including London’s Scala on September 1.

Her band includes Dillon Napier on drums, Kevin Black on bass, Luke Schneider on pedal steal and Jamie Davis on guitar.

The tour dates are:

Sunday August 28: BRISTOL, The Exchange
Monday August 29: LEEDS, Brudenell Social Club
Tuesday August 30: MANCHESTER, Deaf Institute
Thursday September 1: LONDON, Scala
Friday September 2: SALISBURY, End Of The Road Festival

Tickets go on sale Friday July 1 at 10am.

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Elizabeth Fraser records music for new BBC drama

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Elizabeth Fraser has recorded a version of the Irish folk song "She Moves Through The Fair" for a new BBC drama series. A collaboration with the Insects (Tim Norfolk and Bob Locke), the song appears in the debut episode of the corporation's new supernatural series, The Living And The Dead. Clash r...

Elizabeth Fraser has recorded a version of the Irish folk song “She Moves Through The Fair” for a new BBC drama series.

A collaboration with the Insects (Tim Norfolk and Bob Locke), the song appears in the debut episode of the corporation’s new supernatural series, The Living And The Dead.

Clash reports that you can hear the song on the Graham Norton show at the 1:44:44 mark.

Earlier this year, Fraser collaborated with her husband, Damon Reece, on the score for a new four-episode miniseries, The Nightmare Worlds Of H.G. Wells. The score is Fraser’s most substantial work since the Cocteau Twins’ Milk And Kisses in 1996.

The Living And The Dead begins on BBC One tonight [June 28], though it has previously been available on the BBC iPlayer as a box set.

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Van Morrison’s “It’s Too Late To Stop Now… Volumes II, III & IV” reviewed

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How to understand the motivations and anxieties of Van Morrison in the summer of 1973, a cabaret star trapped in the most recalcitrant hermit’s body? “I’ve never been so enthralled by such a premeditated lack of visual entertainment,” wrote the NME’s Roy Carr after a gig that July in Amste...

How to understand the motivations and anxieties of Van Morrison in the summer of 1973, a cabaret star trapped in the most recalcitrant hermit’s body? “I’ve never been so enthralled by such a premeditated lack of visual entertainment,” wrote the NME’s Roy Carr after a gig that July in Amsterdam.

A few days later, Morrison and the Caledonia Soul Orchestra rolled into London’s Rainbow Theatre, where a BBC crew captured the weird inversions of their show. When you hear those performances on the original live set, “It’s Too Late To Stop Now”, and this new 3CD sequel, it’s easy to imagine a soul revue anchored by a vigorous and impassioned frontman: every roar, after all, seems physically transporting; every band introduction and piece of shtick a meticulous re-interpretation of showbiz craft.

Watching the BBC footage on the DVD part of this new package, however, a more familiar Morrison dominates. He wears a wristwatch clamped over his left shirt cuff, making it easier for him to check the time, and spends the majority of the set with his eyes shut, right hand discreetly flicking to the dynamic movements of his band. That band seem acutely tuned to his whims, but he barely even glances at them, let alone interacts. When he reaches the part in “Cyprus Avenue” about how “all the little girls rhyme something/On the way back home from school,” his three-year-old daughter Shana appears onstage beside him, and is left unacknowledged and fiddling with a tambourine.

It is only at the end of the song that he explodes into a brief frenzy of pacing and leaping to match the ecstacies of his voice. “Caravan”, too, culminates in a trouser-splitting kick of triumph that seemingly comes out of nowhere. But as Carr reported from Amsterdam, that brief and explosive release of the tension was a regular climax of the show. What looked like unmediated spontaneity was really, in its way, all part of the act.

“Volumes II, III & IV” are an emphatic reassertion that Morrison’s 1973 tour was among the greatest ever, but they also cast a few aspersions on the idea of the shows being mercurial, improvisatory, with songs being pulled into radical new shapes every night. The 45 songs are drawn from the same shows – in LA, Santa Monica and London – that provided the 18 tracks on what we should now call “It’s Too Late To Stop Now: Volume I”. Ad-libs are revealed as regular ornamentations. The stutters, false endings, devastated pauses and exuberant finale of “Cyprus Avenue” were not, it transpires, a one-off revelation, but a nightly miracle of singer and 11-piece band (who deserve equal credit in the album title, by the way) turning simultaneously on the same dime. The biggest difference comes in the audience reactions: uneasy giggling in the intimacy of LA’s Troubadour club; hooting rapture in the wider space of London’s Rainbow.

Rehearsal does not, though, diminish the potency of this music. Morrison might not have the moves of his R&B heroes, but he understands totally how musical transcendence can be achieved through discipline. Variety comes not from nightly rethinks of the core canon, but from a deep and intoxicating repertoire. “There were as many songs again that were mixed but didn’t get released,” bassist David Hayes told Uncut last year, and the new album precisely bears that out: 18 of the 45 tracks are songs that didn’t feature on the original set. Four new selections from “Hard Nose The Highway” realise the potential of ‘73’s rather overproduced studio work, with “Snow In San Anselmo” an unexpected highlight. Shorn of its choral ostentation, it’s revealed as a flighty reverie that would’ve fitted neatly on “Moondance”.

“Moondance” itself turns up in Santa Monica (Volume III), at a dash, while “Sweet Thing” and “The Way Young Lovers Do” show how, as with “Cyprus Avenue”, Morrison and the Caledonia Soul Orchestra opened up “Astral Weeks”’ internalised meditations into big band showstoppers: John Platania’s guitar pinging off the horns and strings in “Sweet Thing”, at both Santa Monica and London shows, is a particularly treat. Morrison’s extemporising about a “Coup De Ville” is complemented by references to Thunderbird in California, and Champagne in Finsbury Park.

A burnished Morrison/Platania blues, “I Paid The Price”, is one of two original songs that haven’t previously seen official release, the other being “No Way”, a jazz mooch written by pianist Jef Labes that could easily pass as a Mose Allison cover. Without the evidence of film, Morrison could be having a rare old time, as he belts out “Hey Good Lookin’” and “Buona Sera”, the beloved entertainer dusting down a few canonical moves. Listening again, though, there is something stranger and more compelling than playfulness at work. However fully Morrison inhabits these rowdy celebrations, he never seems exactly infected by their joy. Epiphanies have to be worked for, and the idea of joy embedded within the songs is not instinctively channelled by this most unreadable of artists: it is something to ruthlessly pursue and then, eventually, to attack.

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Ryan Adams – Heartbreaker: Deluxe Edition

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David Ryan Adams, as he was then called, first caught our ear in 1997, on Whiskeytown’s second album, Strangers Almanac, a major label debut of eventually unrealised promise, record company politics and their own volatile infrastructure delaying the release of a third album until 2001. By then, t...

David Ryan Adams, as he was then called, first caught our ear in 1997, on Whiskeytown’s second album, Strangers Almanac, a major label debut of eventually unrealised promise, record company politics and their own volatile infrastructure delaying the release of a third album until 2001.

By then, the band had split and Ryan Adams, as he now was, had put out a solo album, 2000’s much-revered Heartbreaker. Acclaimed at the time by fans as a classic of what was becoming known as Americana, it now splendidly gets a full bells and whistles reissue on Adams’ PAX AM label. Heartbreaker Deluxe is a 2CD or 4LP boxset, plus a concert DVD from October 2000. Both formats feature the remastered original album, outtakes, alternative versions, demos and sundry unreleased tracks of variable merit. Among the latter is a stomping, jokey version of Morrissey’s “Hairdresser On Fire”, followed by some jovial studio bickering over whether it appeared on Bona Drag or Viva Hate, an edited version of which banter became Heartbreaker’s opening track, “(Argument With David Rawlings Concerning Morrissey)”.

Opening an album of delicate folk ballads and weather-beaten country tearjerkers with a conversation about the foppish Manchester entertainer may sound at least incongruous, perhaps even a little addled and possibly quite baffling to many. It’s a typically clever Adams ploy, however, a cute indication of the emotional topography of the album that follows, for which an even more accurately descriptive title than Heartbreaker might have been taken from another Morrissey tune, “Late Night, Maudlin Street”. The album, after all, is something of a hymn to self-pity, epic moping, bereft, stricken, nearly every track an exquisite example of nothing but woe. The more misery Adams pours into these songs, however, the more darkly alluring they become, thanks mostly to the crepuscular atmospheres conjured for them by producer Ethan Johns.

Whiskeytown had played a pretty straightforward kind of country rock, with appealing echoes of The Flying Burrito Brothers and The Replacements of Pleased To Meet Me, Don’t Tell A Soul and All Shook Down rather than the yammering punk of Let It Be and Stink, which was the kind of hardcore racket Adams had noisily essayed in the pre-Whiskeytown Patty Duke Syndrome. There were hints too on the glossier bits of Strangers Almanac of Tom Petty, whose slick commerciality their label rather clearly wanted Whiskeytown to emulate. On Heartbreaker, however, Adams and Ethan Johns abandoned such toe-tapping tunefulness, stripped the music of superfluous frippery, anything that could be described as merely decorative and thus unnecessary, in the process reducing everything to little more than a murmur.

Most tracks feature just Adams, his voice and guitar, often nimbly fingerpicked. There’s an occasional wheezing harmonica, here and there ghostly banjo, sepulchral organ and occasional piano from a pre-Wilco Pat Sansone, eerie harmonies from Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch, Kim Richey and Allison Pierce. The overall mood is profoundly subdued, whispering and furtive. Some tracks are so discreetly mixed they’re almost subliminal, like figures in a fog, barely glimpsed, there but not there. “To Be The One”, “Don’t Ask For The Water”, “Sweet Lil Gal (23rd/1st)” and “Why Do They Leave?” all, for instance, seem to exist only as shimmer, in a trembling half-light, Adams voice as gently laid upon the arrangements as a shroud. The notable exceptions to this compelling hush are “To Be Young (Is To Be Sad, Is To Be High)”, whose brash clatter joyfully recalls the Dylan of “Subterranean Homesick Blues”, the skittering “My Winding Wheel”, the raucous Bo Diddley-inspired “Shakedown On 9th Street” with Gillian Welch whooping in the background and Adams and Dave Rawlings exchanging crunching electric guitar riffs, and the wonderfully ramshackle “Damn, Sam (I Love A Woman That Rains)”, again evocative of mid-’60s Dylan. The dreamily wistful “AMY”, meanwhile, is often compared to something by Nick Drake, but is surely more redolent of Donovan’s Elysian psychedelia, with its double-tracked vocals, glockenspiel, synthesised woodwinds and sibilant cymbal splashes.

A lot of great break-up albums – In The Wee Small Hours, Blood On The Tracks, Shoot Out The Lights, Back To Black, Lemonade, take your pick – usually come with at least some degree of vitriol attached. Like Beck’s Sea Change, however, angry retribution is largely absent from Heartbreaker, recrimination mostly replaced by bleak resignation, especially on the grovelling “Come Pick Me Up”, which casts the singer as craven, desperate, prepared to endure any humiliation to get his girl back. “Come pick me up, take me out, fuck me up,” Adams sings, wheedling and needy. “Steal my records, screw all my friends, behind my back, with a smile on your face and then do it again…” Elsewhere, Adams is more dignified, poised and poignant, if no less forsaken, especially on the bleakly fatalistic “Bartering Line”, “Call Me On Your Way Back Home” and the superlative “Oh My Sweet Carolina”, a duet with Emmylou Harris that recalls forlorn Gram Parsons ballads like “Hickory Wind”, “She” and “A Song For You”. Best of all is “In My Time Of Need”, which takes its title from the lyric to another Parsons song, “In My Hour Of Darkness”, which so sombrely closed Grievous Angel. A faux-Dust Bowl ballad, sung by Adams in the character of a struggling homesteader, with Gillian Welch providing a tender high harmony line over the spectral plunk of a banjo and Sansone’s wonderfully discreet piano, “In My Time Of Need” is a song of eventual solace and reconciliation, something akin to Warren Zevon’s “Don’t Let Us Get Sick”, love in the end transcendent rather than ruinous. “I will come for you when my days are through,” Adams sings with a quiet passion, “and I’ll let your smile just up and carry me.”

Heartbreaker was the first of 13 solo albums Adams released between 2000 and 2011, three of them in 2005 alone (one of them a double). 2001’s Gold was much-admired (and also an Uncut Album Of The Year), but things then got messy. He was often accused of profligacy, self-indulgence, a lack of quality control. There was much good work to come, but too often the albums that followed have tended to fade into an ubiquitous static, a common noise, not hard to switch off and even easier to forget. Heartbreaker, however, remains a singular pinnacle in a sometimes overstretched career, unforgettable, entirely wonderful.

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

George Clinton pays tribute Bernie Worrell

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George Clinton has paid tribute to his Parliament-Funkadelic bandmate Bernie Worrell, who died on Friday [June 24]. Worrell, who was 72, had been suffering from lung cancer. Clinton has since released a statement to Billboard. "This is a huge loss," said Clinton. "The world of music will never be ...

George Clinton has paid tribute to his Parliament-Funkadelic bandmate Bernie Worrell, who died on Friday [June 24].

Worrell, who was 72, had been suffering from lung cancer. Clinton has since released a statement to Billboard.

“This is a huge loss,” said Clinton. “The world of music will never be the same. Bernie’s influence and contribution – not just to Funk but also Rock and Hip Hop – will forever be felt. Bernie was a close and personal friend and this is a time of sadness for me personally. P-Funk stands with his family and fans alike in mourning this loss.

“The world is a little bit darker and a little less funky without Bernie in it.”

Worrell joined Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic in 1970, appearing on albums including Maggot Brain, Mothership Connection and One Nation Under The Groove.

In 1980, Worrell was invited to join Talking Heads live band and ended up staying as the band’s keyboardist and unofficial member until their 1992 breakup.

Speaking to Uncut in 2015, Worrell recalled his time with Talking Heads:

“I’d been with P-Funk for about ten years, and I think Talking Heads modelled their larger line-up around ours; they told me they used to sneak into our shows, they were all fans of P-Funk. They took the concept of multi-rhythms, integrated it, got the rhythm thing more energetic, and got more people involved. Jerry [Harrison] didn’t play funk: that’s what they wanted, the black rhythms. So I brought my feel into things, like the clavinet intro to ‘Life During Wartime’, and I’d suggest things they could do on guitars. I would coach what they would do. I had been musical director of P-Funk for years, so it was good to be able to sit back and just play.

Nona Hendryx joined up too, and I brought in Lynn Mabry from the Brides Of Funkenstein, we made it a party! Talking Heads were a bit stiff when they started out, they admitted that to me. That’s why we injected the brotherhood, that’s what I brought to them. Those rhythms got to them, it became a unique combination of David [Byrne]’s quirkiness – he’s a conceptualist, like George Clinton – and the rhythms.”

Worrell’s Twitter feed confirmed the news of his death: “AT 11:54, June 24, 2016, Bernie transitioned Home to The Great Spirit.”

Tributes have been paid by artists including Chuck D, Jason Isbell, Vernon Reid and Sean Ono Lennon.

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

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Devendra Banhart announces new album, Ape In Pink Marble

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Devendra Banhart has announced details of his ninth studio album, Ape In Pink Marble. The album is released on September 23 by Nonesuch Records. You can hear the first track from the album, "Middle Names", below. You can pre-order the album from the Nonesuch store by clicking here. The Ape In Pi...

Devendra Banhart has announced details of his ninth studio album, Ape In Pink Marble.

The album is released on September 23 by Nonesuch Records.

You can hear the first track from the album, “Middle Names“, below.

You can pre-order the album from the Nonesuch store by clicking here.

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 August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

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Elvis & Nixon

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On December 21, 1970, an unexpected meeting took place in the Oval Office of the White House. At Elvis Presley’s request, he was granted an audience with Richard Nixon where he asked the President for a badge from the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. This fabled summit is the subject of di...

On December 21, 1970, an unexpected meeting took place in the Oval Office of the White House. At Elvis Presley’s request, he was granted an audience with Richard Nixon where he asked the President for a badge from the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. This fabled summit is the subject of director Liza Johnson’s slight, but delightful, film.

The truth is so remarkable Johnson – and the screenwriters, who including Cary Elwes – have to resort to very little fictionalization. No longer the megastar he once was, threatened by The Beatles and the Woodstock generation, Presley wants to volunteer as an undercover agent. The Beatles, he says, are “anti-American, possibly with Communist leanings.” As he explains to the President, “If I can have a narcotics badge, I could protect this nation from sliding into anarchy.” His plan is to infiltrate the immoral arbiters of the Age of Aquarius: “The Rolling Stones, the Grateful Dead or possibly the Black Panthers.” After all, “I have a military background and I have a deep, abiding interest in law enforcement.”

To bring this momentous meeting to life, Johnson is blessed with two strong performances from Michael Shannon as Presley and Kevin Spacey as Nixon. Shannon underplays Presley – it works well. Despite the film being very funny, Shannon brings an understated pathos to the part. “When I walk into a room, everyone remembers their first kiss watching one of my movies, but they never see me,” he says. “He’s buried under gold and money. I don’t know if I know who he is anymore.”

Spacey similarly pushes Nixon away from revue sketch parody into something more nuanced. Around them, orbit a strong supporting cast – Alex Pettyfer as Jerry Schilling and Johnny Knoxville as Sonny West, members of Presley’s Memphis Mafia, and Colin Hanks as White House staffer Egil Krogh. But the main event between Shannon and Spacey sparkles.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

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Ralph Stanley, bluegrass pioneer, dies aged 89

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Ralph Stanley, the pioneer of bluegrass and Appalachian music, has died aged 89. TThe news was confirmed on Facebook by his grandson, Nathan, who wrote, "My papaw, my dad, and the greatest man in the world, Dr. Ralph Stanley has went home to be with Jesus just a few minutes ago. He went peacefully ...

Ralph Stanley, the pioneer of bluegrass and Appalachian music, has died aged 89.

TThe news was confirmed on Facebook by his grandson, Nathan, who wrote, “My papaw, my dad, and the greatest man in the world, Dr. Ralph Stanley has went home to be with Jesus just a few minutes ago. He went peacefully in his sleep due to a long, horrible battle with Skin Cancer… My Papaw was loved by millions of fans from all around the world, and he loved all of you.”

Stanley was born in Stratton, Virginia on February 25, 1927. His first public performance was in church, aged 11 years old. He began performing with his older brother Carter as the Stanley Brothers, securing a daily slot on the radio station WNVA. The show’s sponsors, the Clinch Valley Insurance Company, inspired the name of the brothers band, The Clinch Mountain Boys.

They signed to Columbia in 1948, recording songs including “The White Dove“, “The Lonesome River” and “The Fields Have Turned Brown” for the label.

They moved to Mercury in 1953, recording “I’m Lonesome Without You” and “Memories Of Mother”, which proved to be among their most enduring songs.

After Carter died in December 1966, Stanley continued performing with the Clinch Mountain Boys as a solo artist.

In 2000, Stanley’s music was featured on the soundtrack for the Coen Brothers film, O Brother, Where Art Thou?.

In 2012, Stanley appeared on the soundtrack of Nick Cave‘s film Lawless, including a version of the Velvet Underground‘s “White Light White Heat”.

Speaking to Uncut, Nick Cave recalled recording with Stanley.

“Getting him on board was hilarious,” said Cave. “He came back with a version of ‘White Light White Heat‘, it was in 3/ 4. It was like a swing thing and we were going to drop it on to the music. But that was in 4/4. So I’m saying, look, could you do this in 4/4? We’re Skyping Ralph… so all he can see is me and Warren [Ellis]’s faces stuck in the computer screen. So [producer] Hal Wilner is there, the person who has got the godfather of bluegrass music to sing these songs. And we’re going, ‘It’s kind of ONE-two-three-four-ONE.’ And Ralph is looking at the screen with this kind of… utter disdain.

“What he ended up doing was very much his own thing,” continued Cave. “Hal came back with his stuff, which was amazing. His versions were just so strange and so beautiful, it was a real coup. Hal brought Lou Reed in who was working up the road because Hal was producing the Lulu album. He came into the studio and he was visibly moved by Ralph’s version of ‘White Light White Heat’.”

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Terry Reid: “If you live on a farm in Mexico, they’ve never even heard of Led Zeppelin”

He could have been the frontman of Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple and the Spencer Davis Group. Instead, Terry Reid embarked on a remarkable musical adventure of his own. Now, one of British rock’s greatest voices tells his story: of bad luck and bloody-mindedness, of Jagger’s wedding and Keith’s pa...

The curse of Terry Reid was not, however, about to lift. After River sank without trace, the label releasing Seed Of Memory, ABC, went bottoms up: “I saw it all go down the tubes. ABC simply froze the record and wouldn’t give it back to me. I had three major record companies wanting to take it on. I was broke and busted. Graham helped me out just to get me back on my feet. It’s sod’s law. You have to laugh or that sort of thing could crush you.”

Three years later, it happened yet again. Reid signed with the seemingly solid Capitol Records and made a decent rock’n’roll record in Rogue Waves. “Capitol was in a real mess,” says Reid, “people were coming and going and no-one knew what to do with the record. I was left high and dry once more.” He didn’t record again until 1991, when Trevor Horn produced The Driver. The title track was a collaboration with soundtrack composer Hans Zimmer, intended as the title song for the Tom Cruise vehicle Days Of Thunder. With a certain crushing inevitability, it was passed over.

Understandably defeated, Reid largely opted out of the ’90s. But since 2000, he’s been steadily rebuilding his career. Having moved down to Beverly Hills, Reid became part of a band of local session men who played a small club called The Joint every Monday night. Leader of the pack was guitarist Waddy Wachtel and, as word spread, stellar guests would drop by including Roger Daltrey, Joe Walsh, Bobby Womack and Keith Richards. One night, Robert Plant joined Reid onstage to sing “Season Of The Witch” and “Morning Dew”. “Robert did say onstage that I could have had his life,” admits Reid. “He says there were a bunch of things I could’ve had. But he doesn’t know what I would’ve wanted.”

Playing The Joint re-energised Reid and, since moving to Palm Desert, two hours outside LA, he’s begun touring more regularly, including dates this year that featured underground artists Howlin Rain and Matt Sweeney as his backup. “There was no record after The Driver because nobody asked me,” he says ruefully. “The most lucrative thing for me in the last 10 years has been from my old songs being used in movies.” Reid even tried acting, appearing as a golfing caddy in 2005 film The Greatest Game Ever Played.

It’s another curious twist in Terry Reid’s story, one in which the acclaim of his illustrious peers has rarely tempted him away from the comforts of a normal life. “People will always gravitate towards the train crash, all the things that went wrong in your life,” he points out. “But I have a lot of irons in the fire at the moment. I prefer to live among real people to experience what it’s really like. You live on a farm in Mexico, they’ve never even heard of Led Zeppelin.”

The August 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Neil Young, plus the Small Faces, Jeff Beck, Arthur Lee and Love, Jimmy Webb, Ultravox!, Radiohead, Steve Gunn, Mick Harvey, Fleetwood Mac, Ramones, William Burroughs, Bat For Lashes, Bruce Springsteen and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.