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The Beach Boys announce Pet Sounds 50th anniversary editions

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The Beach Boys' Pet Sounds - which was recently voted Uncut's Greatest Album Of All Time - receives the deluxe treatment to coincide with its 50th anniversary. On June 10, Capitol will release special expanded editions of Pet Sounds. ** A 4CD/Blu-ray Audio collectors edition presented in a hardbou...

The Beach Boys‘ Pet Sounds – which was recently voted Uncut’s Greatest Album Of All Time – receives the deluxe treatment to coincide with its 50th anniversary.

On June 10, Capitol will release special expanded editions of Pet Sounds.

** A 4CD/Blu-ray Audio collectors edition presented in a hardbound book, featuring the remastered original album in stereo and mono, plus hi res stereo, mono, instrumental, and 5.1 surround mixes, session outtakes, alternate mixes, and previously unreleased live recordings

** A 2CD and digital deluxe edition pairing the remastered album in stereo and mono with highlights from the collectors edition’s additional tracks

** A remastered, 180-gram LP edition of the album in mono and stereo with faithfully replicated original artwork

You can read Uncut’s exclusive interview with Brian Wilson in our new issue, available in UK stores and to buy digitally

The tracklisting for the 4CD/Blu-ray Audio collectors edition is:

CD 1
Pet Sounds (Mono)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice
You Still Believe In Me
That’s Not Me
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)
I’m Waiting For The Day
Let’s Go Away For Awhile
Sloop John B
God Only Knows
I Know There’s An Answer
Here Today
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times
Pet Sounds
Caroline No

Pet Sounds (Stereo)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice
You Still Believe In Me
That’s Not Me
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)
I’m Waiting For The Day
Let’s Go Away For Awhile
Sloop John B
God Only Knows
I Know There’s An Answer
Here Today
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times
Pet Sounds
Caroline No
Additional Material
Caroline No (Promotional Spot #2)
Don’t Talk. . . (Unused Background Vocals)
Hang On To Your Ego (Alternate Mix)
Caroline No (Promotional Spot #1)

CD 2
The Pet Sounds Sessions
Sloop John B (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Sloop John B (Stereo Backing Track)
Trombone Dixie (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Trombone Dixie (Stereo Backing Track)
Pet Sounds (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Pet Sounds (Stereo Track Without Guitar Overdub)
Let’s Go Away For Awhile (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Let’s Go Away For Awhile (Stereo Track Without String Overdub)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Stereo Backing Track)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Stereo Track with Background Vocals)
You Still Believe In Me (Intro – Session)
You Still Believe In Me (Intro – Master Take)
You Still Believe In Me (Highlights from Tracking Date)
You Still Believe In Me (Stereo Backing Track)
Caroline No (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Caroline No (Stereo Backing Track)
Hang On To Your Ego (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Hang On To Your Ego (Stereo Backing Track)
I Know There’s An Answer (Vocal Session) [previously unreleased]
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder) (Brian’s Instrumental Demo)
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder) (Stereo Backing Track)
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder) (String Overdub)
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times (Highlights from Tracking Date)
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times (Stereo Backing Track)
That’s Not Me (Highlights from Tracking Date)
That’s Not Me (Stereo Backing Track)

CD 3
The Pet Sounds Sessions (continued)
Good Vibrations (Highlights from First Tracking Date)
Good Vibrations (Stereo Backing Track)
I’m Waiting For The Day (Highlights from Tracking Date)
I’m Waiting For The Day (Stereo Backing Track)
God Only Knows (Highlights from Tracking Date)
God Only Knows (Stereo Backing Track)
Here Today (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Here Today (Stereo Backing Track)

Alternate Versions
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Mono Alternate Mix 1)
You Still Believe In Me (Mono Alternate Mix)
I’m Waiting For The Day (Mono Alternate Mix, Mike sings lead)
Sloop John B (Mono Alternate Mix, Carl sings first verse)
God Only Knows (Mono Alternate Mix, with sax solo)
I Know There’s An Answer (Alternate Mix) [previously unreleased]
Here Today (Mono Alternate Mix, Brian sings lead)
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times (Mono Alternate Mix)
Banana & Louie
Caroline No (Original Speed, Stereo Mix)
Dog Barking Session
God Only Knows (With A Cappella Tag)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Mono Alternate Mix 2)
Sloop John B (Mono Alternate Mix, Brian sings lead throughout)
God Only Knows (Mono Alternate Mix, Brian sings lead)
Caroline No (Original Speed, Mono Mix)

CD 4
Live Recordings [all previously unreleased]
Wouldn’t It Be Nice
Sloop John B
God Only Knows
Michigan State University, October 22, 1966
Good Vibrations
God Only Knows
Wouldn’t It Be Nice
Daughters of the American Revolution Constitution Hall, Washington DC, November 19, 1967
God Only Knows
Carnegie Hall, New York, November 23, 1972 (2nd Show)
God Only Knows
Jamaican World Music Festival, Montego Bay, Jamaica, November, 26, 1982
Sloop John B
Universal Studios, Universal City, California, May, 23, 1989
Caroline No
You Still Believe In Me
Paramount Theater, New York City, November 26, 1993
Stack-O-Vocals
Wouldn’t It Be Nice
You Still Believe In Me
That’s Not Me
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)
I’m Waiting For The Day
Sloop John B
God Only Knows
I Know There’s An Answer
Here Today
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times
Caroline No
Bonus Track
Good Vibrations (Master Track with Partial Vocal) (previously unreleased)

Blu-ray Pure Audio Disc
5.1 Surround Sound: 96kHz/24-bit
Mono; Stereo; Stereo Instrumental (new to hi res): 192kHz/24-bit
Wouldn’t It Be Nice
You Still Believe In Me
That’s Not Me
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)
I’m Waiting For The Day
Let’s Go Away For Awhile
Sloop John B
God Only Knows
I Know There’s An Answer
Here Today
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times
Pet Sounds
Caroline No
Additional Material in 5.1 Surround and Stereo
Unreleased Backgrounds (Unused Intro for “Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)”)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Session Highlights)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Alternative Mix without Lead Vocal)
God Only Knows (Session Highlights)
God Only Knows (Master Track Mix with A Cappella Tag)
Summer Means New Love

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Win tickets to see Jeff Lynne’s ELO at intimate gig

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Jeff Lynne's ELO begin a 12 date UK tour next month. The tour begins on April 5 in Liverpool and climaxes with four nights at London's O2 Arena. We have FIVE pairs of tickets to give away to the final rehearsal and full show run through at the Liverpool Echo Arena on April 4. This will be an incr...

Jeff Lynne’s ELO begin a 12 date UK tour next month.

The tour begins on April 5 in Liverpool and climaxes with four nights at London’s O2 Arena.

We have FIVE pairs of tickets to give away to the final rehearsal and full show run through at the Liverpool Echo Arena on April 4.

This will be an incredibly intimate event, with a crowd of just 150.

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

What is the name of ELO’s debut album?

Send your answer along with your name, address and contact telephone number to UncutComp@timeinc.com by noon, Friday, April 1.

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

Here’s some housekeeping…
Doors from 3pm, show to start 4pm: no entry after this.
All mobile phones are to be handed in at entry.
Competition winners only, no reviews.
Refreshments will be available.
No travel, accommodation or expenses to be covered.

Good luck!

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Brian Wilson: “I miss making music”

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Brian Wilson invites Uncut into his Los Angeles home to discuss his music, his upcoming Pet Sounds 50th anniversary tour and the future, in the new issue of Uncut, out now. Wilson reveals that he hasn't written a song for 18 months, but admits that he misses making music and is planning to work on ...

Brian Wilson invites Uncut into his Los Angeles home to discuss his music, his upcoming Pet Sounds 50th anniversary tour and the future, in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

Wilson reveals that he hasn’t written a song for 18 months, but admits that he misses making music and is planning to work on a new album later in 2016.

“I haven’t been inspired to write,” he tells Uncut‘s Bud Scoppa. “I might make an album later on this year. A tribute album to the great rock’n’roll artists like Chuck Berry, Bill Haley, Little Richard, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones…

“[Do I miss making music?] I do, yeah.”

During the feature, Wilson also discusses The Beach Boys‘ 2012 reunion, and his late brothers Dennis and Carl Wilson, while longtime cohorts Blondie Chaplin and Al Jardine let us in on what it’s like working with Brian.

“What I like about Brian now is that he’s really happy,” explains Chaplin. “He’s happy with the music that he did before, he’s happy to be doing it now and he’s more animated onstage.”

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

David Bowie – Bowie At The Beeb

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For an artist eager to stage-manage much of his life and career – including, as we discovered this year, his death – David Bowie was perversely happy to present his workings in public. Take 1973’s 1980 Floor Show TV special, where “1984” was previewed in an embryonic stage a year before it...

For an artist eager to stage-manage much of his life and career – including, as we discovered this year, his death – David Bowie was perversely happy to present his workings in public. Take 1973’s 1980 Floor Show TV special, where “1984” was previewed in an embryonic stage a year before it would appear on Diamond Dogs; or in December 1974, when a skeletal Bowie covered The Flares’ “Footstompin’” live on America’s Dick Cavett Show, and then thought nothing the following year of reusing Carlos Alomar’s riff for “Fame”.

Even the sheer number of references to movies, literature, philosophy and the occult in Bowie’s songs – from bardos to Billy dolls – practically invites the listener to peer beneath the surface and examine his influences and his bookshelves.

Bowie At The Beeb, reissued for the first time on vinyl after its release on CD in 2000, presents more of Bowie’s workings for our delectation. So quickly did he evolve between 1968 and 1972 that most of these sessions showcased songs that wouldn’t be in the shops for months. After four songs with the Tony Visconti Orchestra from 1968 and two recorded with Junior’s Eyes in late ’69 (not broadcast at the time), we find Bowie taking over Radio 1 for a full hour in February 1970. Though the session is still incomplete – no “Buzz The Fuzz”, “Karma Man” or “London Bye Ta-Ta” – we hear Bowie debut an incomplete, shorter “The Width Of A Circle” with his brand new sideman. “Michael’s just come down from Hull,” Bowie says. “I met him for the first time about two days ago.” And with the entrance of Mick Ronson’s aggressive, strangulated lead guitar, the sound of the Spiders From Mars is prematurely hatched.

An electric “Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud”, recorded in March 1970, is darker and stranger when shorn of its syrupy orchestrations, and from the same session, unearthed for this vinyl reissue, is a full-band version of “The Supermen”. Recorded a month before the version on The Man Who Sold The World, this is sleeker, heavier and more dynamic, with Ronson’s mangled lead lines supremely exciting.

One of the strangest sessions took place on June 3, 1971: with Hunky Dory still six months away, Bowie was joined at the BBC by George Underwood, who sings “Song For Bob Dylan” (not included here), Dana Gillespie, Geoff MacCormack, Arnold Corns guitarist Mark Carr-Pritchard, and Ronno, a group consisting of Ronson, Trevor Bolder and Woody Woodmansey. The jaunty opener, “Bombers”, is sublime, with Bowie “on piano and an amazing pair of trousers”, according to John Peel, while “Looking For A Friend”, written for Arnold Corns, is strutting but slighter. With “Oh! You Pretty Things” subsequently lost, the most historically valuable selection from this session is “Kooks”, written by Bowie to celebrate the birth of his son Zowie four days earlier. “I’d been listening to a Neil Young album,” he tells Peel, “and they phoned through and said my wife had had a baby on Sunday morning. And I wrote this about the baby.” He professes to be unsure of the words, but this meditative solo take is actually strikingly similar to the Hunky Dory version, a testament to Bowie’s faith in intuition.

Just a month after Hunky Dory’s release in December 1971, Bowie was back at the BBC, now performing in the guise, if not the name, of Ziggy. Out are the quirky piano ballads, and in are sleazy rockers such as “Hang On To Yourself”, “Ziggy Stardust” and a propulsive “I’m Waiting For The Man”. Returning in May 1972, the Spiders preview a metallic “Suffragette City”, which tops the album version for sheer energy. There’s more Velvets worship too, with a brazen “White Light/White Heat” (“White light… gonna make me feel like Lou Reed”), while the Spiders’ take on “Moonage Daydream” presages the more bombastic Aladdin Sane, with Ronson’s guitar spewing molten chords and Bolder’s bass buzzing and blown-out.

Later the same month, Bowie must have been feeling nostalgic, for here we’re shunted back in time with “Space Oddity”, “Changes”, “Andy Warhol” and “Oh! You Pretty Things”, before a session the following day brings us back to Ziggy with “Lady Stardust” – Bowie sounding even more like Elton John on the opening line than on the album – and a rawer “Rock’n’Roll Suicide”.

24 days later, Ziggy Stardust was released, and David Bowie would have no more time to chat with John Peel about Chuck Berry songs. Instead, he’d be producing his hero Lou Reed, and Bowie and America would devour each other with delight and disgust. There would be no room for the Spiders, for BBC sessions or for Ziggy himself.

Still, the short period covered by Bowie At The Beeb is a pivotal and fascinating one; if you want to hear Mick Ronson at the peak of his powers, “Kooks” in its infancy, or an ensemble cover of “It Ain’t Easy”, you’ll find them all here, often as stunning as their ‘official’ versions. Ultimately, even when it seems as if Bowie is letting us peer behind the curtain to see the nuts and bolts of his work, the magic remains intact.

EXTRAS 7/10: Four heavyweight LPs housed in a sturdy box. “The Supermen” is previously unreleased, while the duo version of “Oh! You Pretty Things” was a Japan-only bonus track on the 2000 CD release.

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Bob Dylan’s Blonde On Blonde: 50th anniversary tribute concerts announced

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Bob Dylan's album Blonde On Blonde turns 50 in 2016 and there are plans to mark the event with tribute concerts in both the UK and America. The Dylan Project - which features Dave Pegg, Simon Nicol and Gerry Conway - will perform the album in sequence and in its entirety during a run of dates in No...

Bob Dylan‘s album Blonde On Blonde turns 50 in 2016 and there are plans to mark the event with tribute concerts in both the UK and America.

The Dylan Project – which features Dave Pegg, Simon Nicol and Gerry Conway – will perform the album in sequence and in its entirety during a run of dates in November and December, including a show at London’s Under The Bridge on December 12.

Meanwhile, an unconnected event takes place in Nashville on May 12 and 13, in CMA Theater at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, where Grand Ole Opry string band Old Crow Medicine Show will perform the album in its entirety.

Dylan himself releases a new album, Fallen Angels, this summer.

The album will be the follow-up to 2015’s Shadows In The Night, a set of covers of Frank Sinatra classics. Read our review of Shadows In The Night here.

Dylan will tour the US in June and July, supported by Mavis Staples on all dates.

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch Gillian Welch, David Rawlings and T Bone Burnett perform “Everything Is Free”

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Gillian Welch and David Rawlings performed last week on Music City Roots - Nashville's roots and Americana variety show. They were joined by T Bone Burnett for their final song, "Everything Is Free"; the song originally appeared on Welch's album Time (The Revelator). You can watch the footage belo...

Gillian Welch and David Rawlings performed last week on Music City Roots – Nashville’s roots and Americana variety show.

They were joined by T Bone Burnett for their final song, “Everything Is Free“; the song originally appeared on Welch’s album Time (The Revelator).

You can watch the footage below.

The Tennessean reports that the duo and Burnett were presented with Berklee College of Music’s American Master Awards.

Music City Roots host Jim Lauderdale praised Welch and Rawlings as “modern-day icons who rebooted our ideas about folk and roots music.”

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Rare Beatles’ 10-inch acetate sells for £77,500 at auction

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A rare Beatles acetate has sold for for £77,500 at auction. The 10-inch acetate of "Till There Was You" and "Hello Little Girl" was recorded in 1962 and bears the handwriting of Brian Epstein. The disc lay forgotten in the attic of Les Maguire - the keyboardist in another Liverpool band, Gerry an...

A rare Beatles acetate has sold for for £77,500 at auction.

The 10-inch acetate of “Till There Was You” and “Hello Little Girl” was recorded in 1962 and bears the handwriting of Brian Epstein.

The disc lay forgotten in the attic of Les Maguire – the keyboardist in another Liverpool band, Gerry and the Pacemakers.

BB News reports that the 78 RPM acetate was mislabelled by Epstein as “‘Til There Was You” and credited to “Paul McCartney & The Beatles“.

“Hello Little Girl”, on the other side, was also mistitled as “Hullo Little Girl” and credited to “John Lennon & The Beatles“.

In was used to help secure the band a recording contract with EMI Records.

The record was sold at Warrington auction house, Omega Auctions.

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

May 2016

PJ Harvey, Brian Wilson, The National and Donovan are all in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2016 and out now. Harvey is on the cover, and inside we tell the full story of her explosive new album, The Hope Six Demolition Project, with help from the fearless artist's closest collaborators, some of...

PJ Harvey, Brian Wilson, The National and Donovan are all in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2016 and out now.

Harvey is on the cover, and inside we tell the full story of her explosive new album, The Hope Six Demolition Project, with help from the fearless artist’s closest collaborators, some of whom accompanied her on her investigative journeys to Kosovo, Afghanistan and Washington DC.

“There is a great openness,” says Seamus Murphy. “You have to be open to all kinds of weirdness when you go to these places.”

As Pet Sounds turns 50, Uncut meets Brian Wilson at his home in Beverly Hills to discuss his upcoming tour, his new book, I Am Brian Wilson, the 2015 biopic Love & Mercy, his daily routine and his musical legacy.

“We had our work cut out for us after Pet Sounds to elevate our musical status,” Wilson tells us.

With The National‘s all-star tribute to the Grateful Dead finally completed and ready for release, we talk to the varied artists involved, from Grizzly Bear and Lee Ranaldo to Bruce Hornsby. “This could be a bridge,” says The National’s Aaron Dessner. “All this is about the future of this music.”

In our ‘making of’ feature, Donovan reveals how he wrote and created “Sunshine Superman”, and the change it made to his life. “I wanted to bring the bohemian manifesto to millions of young people who were only reading cereal boxes when they got up to go to school,” he explains.

Elsewhere, Uncut travels to Los Angeles to meet Cate Le Bon, and discover how a great Welsh songwriter ended up facing rattlesnakes in Topanga Canyon; while power-pop pioneers Cheap Trick take us through their career, album by album.

We also journey inside the hidden arts of the archive raiders, to discover where and when the next treasure trove of ‘lost’ albums will emerge. “When you’re able to peel back the layer and get into something that the world has never heard,” says Numero Group‘s Ken Shipley, “that’s like awesome Indiana Jones shit right there.”

Jean Michel Jarre answers your questions about electronic music, his involvement in the May ’68 Paris demonstrations and his abiding love for The Who, while Mogwai‘s Stuart Braithwaite picks the music that has soundtracked his life.

In the front section, we discover how Jack White, T Bone Burnett, Robert Redford, Willie Nelson and more helped piece together TV series American Epic, the new story of a nation’s musical roots; Brix Smith talks about The Fall and her new book; Geoff Emerick tells us why it’s possible to restage The Beatles‘ studio sessions as a stadium rock event; and the Ramones get their own museum retrospective.

In our reviews section, we rate new albums from Sturgill Simpson, Ben Watt, Graham Nash and Tim Hecker, alongside reissues from Status Quo, Sandy Denny and Cluster. We also catch Black Sabbath and Mick Head live, and check out new DVDs including Heartworn Highways and the new Blur documentary.

Click here to buy this issue of Uncut digitally

Our free CD, Let Uncut Shake, features new tracks from Mogwai, Kevin Morby, Graham Nash, Laura Gibson, Sturgill Simpson, Woods, Cate Le Bon, Bombino, Andrew Bird, Tim Hecker and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

This month in Uncut

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PJ Harvey, Brian Wilson, The National and Donovan are all in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2016 and out now. Harvey is on the cover, and inside we tell the full story of her explosive new album, The Hope Six Demolition Project, with help from the fearless artist's closest collaborators, some of...

PJ Harvey, Brian Wilson, The National and Donovan are all in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2016 and out now.

Harvey is on the cover, and inside we tell the full story of her explosive new album, The Hope Six Demolition Project, with help from the fearless artist’s closest collaborators, some of whom accompanied her on her investigative journeys to Kosovo, Afghanistan and Washington DC.

“There is a great openness,” says Seamus Murphy. “You have to be open to all kinds of weirdness when you go to these places.”

As Pet Sounds turns 50, Uncut meets Brian Wilson at his home in Beverly Hills to discuss his upcoming tour, his new book, I Am Brian Wilson, the 2015 biopic Love & Mercy, his daily routine and his musical legacy.

“We had our work cut out for us after Pet Sounds to elevate our musical status,” Wilson tells us.

With The National‘s all-star tribute to the Grateful Dead finally completed and ready for release, we talk to the varied artists involved, from Grizzly Bear and Lee Ranaldo to Bruce Hornsby. “This could be a bridge,” says The National’s Aaron Dessner. “All this is about the future of this music.”

In our ‘making of’ feature, Donovan reveals how he wrote and created “Sunshine Superman”, and the change it made to his life. “I wanted to bring the bohemian manifesto to millions of young people who were only reading cereal boxes when they got up to go to school,” he explains.

Elsewhere, Uncut travels to Los Angeles to meet Cate Le Bon, and discover how a great Welsh songwriter ended up facing rattlesnakes in Topanga Canyon; while power-pop pioneers Cheap Trick take us through their career, album by album.

We also journey inside the hidden arts of the archive raiders, to discover where and when the next treasure trove of ‘lost’ albums will emerge. “When you’re able to peel back the layer and get into something that the world has never heard,” says Numero Group‘s Ken Shipley, “that’s like awesome Indiana Jones shit right there.”

Jean Michel Jarre answers your questions about electronic music, his involvement in the May ’68 Paris demonstrations and his abiding love for The Who, while Mogwai‘s Stuart Braithwaite picks the music that has soundtracked his life.

In the front section, we discover how Jack White, T Bone Burnett, Robert Redford, Willie Nelson and more helped piece together TV series American Epic, the new story of a nation’s musical roots; Brix Smith talks about The Fall and her new book; Geoff Emerick tells us why it’s possible to restage The Beatles‘ studio sessions as a stadium rock event; and the Ramones get their own museum retrospective.

In our reviews section, we rate new albums from Sturgill Simpson, Ben Watt, Graham Nash and Tim Hecker, alongside reissues from Status Quo, Sandy Denny and Cluster. We also catch Black Sabbath and Mick Head live, and check out new DVDs including Heartworn Highways and the new Blur documentary.

Our free CD, Let Uncut Shake, features new tracks from Mogwai, Kevin Morby, Graham Nash, Laura Gibson, Sturgill Simpson, Woods, Cate Le Bon, Bombino, Andrew Bird, Tim Hecker and more.

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

‘Lost’ Rolling Stones track from 1964 found in an attic

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A Rolling Stones song from 1964 has been discovered in an attic in Torquay, where it has sat for 50 years. "No One Loves You More Than Me" was recorded by the fledgling group in 1964, during one of their first sessions at IBC Studios, in London’s Portland Place, reports The Telegraph. The unmark...

A Rolling Stones song from 1964 has been discovered in an attic in Torquay, where it has sat for 50 years.

No One Loves You More Than Me” was recorded by the fledgling group in 1964, during one of their first sessions at IBC Studios, in London’s Portland Place, reports The Telegraph.

The unmarked, 17 minute tape was apparently discarded by the band after the recording sessions.

Jeremy Nielsen, a friend of a sound engineer who worked the studio, found the tape when he visited the studio in 1967.

Aside from “No One Loves You More Than Me”, the tape also contains two versions of “As Tears Go By” and an early recording of “Congratulations”.

Other songs on the recording include covers of “Diddley Daddy”, “Roadrunner”, “Bright Lights, Big City”, “I Want To Be Loved” and “Baby’s What’s Wrong”.

Nielsen, who lives in Torquay, Devon, said: “It amazes me that I didn’t know what it was at the time. It was only when I read a chapter in Keith Richards‘ book that I became curious and decided to play it. After I heard it I looked up the track ‘No One Loves You More Than Me’ and found it doesn’t appear anywhere, it’s like that song doesn’t exist.”

The demo tape containing the song is to be auctioned next month.

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Hear Thom Yorke and Mark Pritchard team up on “Beautiful People”

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Thom Yorke has appared on a track called "Beautiful People", which has been taken from Mark Pritchard's forthcoming album, Under The Sun. Although the two artists hadn’t formally collaborated until now, Pritchard previously remixed Radiohead’s "Bloom", taken from the band’s last full-length, ...

Thom Yorke has appared on a track called “Beautiful People”, which has been taken from Mark Pritchard‘s forthcoming album, Under The Sun.

Although the two artists hadn’t formally collaborated until now, Pritchard previously remixed Radiohead’s “Bloom”, taken from the band’s last full-length, 2011’s King Of Limbs.

“The original instrumental to ‘Beautiful People’ is a personal song about loss, hopelessness and chaos, but ultimately the message is love and hope,” Pritchard said of the song.

“Thom’s contribution to this collaboration captured perfectly what the piece is about. I will be forever grateful to have worked with such a immense talent.”

Under The Sun is released on May 13 via Warp Records.

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Don Cheadle: “Miles Davis went everywhere those songs could possible take him”

Don Cheadle was 10 when he was first introduced to Miles Davis’ music. “My parents had copies of Kind Of Blue and Porgy And Bess,” he tells Uncut. “I used to listen to those LPs all the time; especially Porgy And Bess. Because it’s based on Gershwin, it’s very theatrical and expressive. ...

Don Cheadle was 10 when he was first introduced to Miles Davis’ music. “My parents had copies of Kind Of Blue and Porgy And Bess,” he tells Uncut. “I used to listen to those LPs all the time; especially Porgy And Bess. Because it’s based on Gershwin, it’s very theatrical and expressive. It felt like it was telling a story. Starting out as an actor at that age, those two things dovetailed together. It was going somewhere.”

It took 40 years for Cheadle to catch up again to Davis. The result is Miles Ahead – a film in which Cheadle not only stars as Davis but also directs. As with its subject, Miles Ahead has its own mercurial style. Set largely in the late ’70s, when Davis withdrew both from the concert stage and from the recording studio, it cuts away to show Davis’ earlier career in the late 1950s and his courtship of dancer Frances Taylor (Emayatzy Corinealdi), his first wife. There is also a fabricated subplot involving the hunt for stolen studio tapes that is closer to caper movie than conventional biopic.

“We didn’t want it to be a stuffy, cradle-to-the-grave film; the Greatest Hits of Miles Davis’ life,” explains Cheadle. “The ’70s became the departure point for us. How did this incredibly prolific artist, who had changed music three or four times, go silent for five years? What’s happening? How do you get out of that? You start the movie when he’s not playing and it makes you lean in and say, ‘What? We’re going to listen to you not play?’

“The period between when he met Frances and when she was running out of the door for her life was the period when he took Kind Of Blue and went from that first supergroup with Coltrane, Cannonball and Wynton Kelly to the second supergroup. He went everywhere those songs could possible take him, then never playing any of them again.”

Click here to read Miles’ collaborators on the making of Kind Of Blue, Bitches Brew and more

One useful comparison to Miles Ahead may well be Love & Mercy, the Brian Wilson drama that similarly focused on two specific periods in its subject’s life. Both films depicted the hard construction work that goes into creating art: in Miles Ahead, Cheadle takes us inside the Porgy And Bess sessions. “One of the questions we had as we were putting the film together was, ‘How do you show genius, quote unquote?’” admits Cheadle, who learned to play trumpet for the film. “We went in there and acted like musicians, played it, figured it out and just recorded the session.”

How would Cheadle describe the film’s two Davises – the 1950s and 1970s versions? “It’s not just binary,” he counters. “It was modal. It was like, this is now and that was then. You see similar things in both times. The fragile nature of what he’s dealing with: his jealousy, his fear of losing, the rage that inspires.”

Did you ever meet Davis?
“No, I saw him perform at Red Rocks, in Denver, Colorado, when I was a senior in high school, in 1982,” reveals Cheadle. “But I met Kenny G that night. Though that’s not exactly the same thing as meeting Miles Davis, right?”

Miles Ahead is released in the UK on April 22

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

What’s inside the new issue of Uncut?

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From Kosovo to Washington DC, from Afghanistan to an old rifle range, beneath London's former tax office… The tale of PJ Harvey's latest album is an odyssey that takes in conflict zones and art installations, with war photographers and poets along for the ride alongside her trusted corp of musicia...

From Kosovo to Washington DC, from Afghanistan to an old rifle range, beneath London’s former tax office… The tale of PJ Harvey’s latest album is an odyssey that takes in conflict zones and art installations, with war photographers and poets along for the ride alongside her trusted corp of musicians. “There is a great openness,” says Seamus Murphy. “You have to be open to all kinds of weirdness when you go to these places.”

In this month’s new edition of Uncut, out now, Michael Bonner pieces together the gripping genesis of Harvey’s “Hope Six Demolition Project”. He revisits an ad hoc studio deep in the bowels of Somerset House, by the Thames in London, where Harvey invited members of the public to watch the sessions from behind a glass screen. “It was a really brave step to do that,” remembers her co-producer and longtime collaborator John Parish, “because you’re accepting that people may see you fuck up in a major way. And we all did some howlingly bad things in the session.”

The imaginative, sometimes fearless mechanics of actually making a record is, in many ways, the lifeblood of Uncut. This month, for instance, besides our PJ Harvey exclusive, we have the epic inside story of how The National corralled the great and good of American indie rock into making a 59-track tribute album to The Grateful Dead. Rob Mitchum, in his first piece for us, talks to the many and varied artists – among them My Morning Jacket, Lee Ranaldo, Yo La Tengo, Grizzly Bear and Dead outrider Bruce Hornsby – about the enduring power of Garcia and co’s music, and the challenges of turning on a new generation. “This could be a bridge,” says the National’s Aaron Dessner, a guiding force behind the mammoth project. “All this is about the future of this music.”

In a similar vein, we’ve got deep insights into Donovan’s “Sunshine Superman” and the backstories of Cheap Trick’s key albums, and much fascinating stuff about how Jack White, T Bone Burnett, Robert Redford, Willie Nelson and many more helped piece together American Epic, a major new show that reconstructs the way a nation’s musical roots were captured for posterity.

What else? A hike in Topanga Canyon involving the brilliant and surreal Cate Le Bon and a rattlesnake. An investigation into how the finest reissue labels track down the next musical grail; “Awesome Indiana Jones shit,” reckons Numero Group’s Ken Shipley. Sturgill Simpson, Black Sabbath, Graham Nash, Status Quo, Tim Hecker, Bombino and the Heartworn Highways movie are reviewed. And, as a poignant appendix to our Beach Boys Ultimate Music Guide, Bud Scoppa visits Brian Wilson at home in Beverly Hills, on the eve of a 50th anniversary boxset of Pet Sounds, an autobiography and what may be Brian’s final tour of Europe. All seems calm. “Brian right now is really happy,” confirm Blondie Chaplin, Al Jardine and more. But what is rock’s most storied genius really like? Uncut enters Brian Wilson’s study to find out…

Just one quick note. Among the riches on this month’s free CD – Mogwai, Kevin Morby, Konono No 1, The Jayhawks, Sturgill, Cate Le Bon, Andrew Bird, Tim Hecker and many more – you might struggle to find the Ben Watt track that’s advertised on the sleeve. Where Ben’s “Gradually” should have sat, instead there is the meditative hum of Bitchin Bajas. We’re still trying to piece together the uncanny series of events that led to this mistake, but I can only apologise here for the embarrassing cock-up: “Gradually” will be included on the next free CD.

 

 

 

Animal Collective – Painting With

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Travellers passing through Baltimore Airport heading home for Thanksgiving on November 25 last year may well have heard some strange new pop music coming from the airport’s speakers. As discreet promotion to herald the arrival of their latest album, one of Baltimore’s best-known experimental jam...

Travellers passing through Baltimore Airport heading home for Thanksgiving on November 25 last year may well have heard some strange new pop music coming from the airport’s speakers. As discreet promotion to herald the arrival of their latest album, one of Baltimore’s best-known experimental jam-bands, Animal Collective, were pumping out their 11th long-player on a loop throughout the day to anyone who cared to listen. Quite what effect this had on unsuspecting travellers is not known – it surely drove staff nuts by the end of the day – but the fact that an Animal Collective record was deemed suitable to be aired non-stop in a public building on the eve of a national holiday gives some indication of the character of the music. No two ways about it, really: Painting With is as close to conventional pop as Animal Collective have come.

This should come as a relief to anyone turned off by their last album, 2012’s Centipede Hz, which veered away from the lush tropical vistas of their 2009 high-water mark, Merriweather Post Pavilion, to reveal a gnarly and unvarnished side to the band. Bristling with restless energy and almost deliberately perverse, Centipede Hz seemed to ask questions of those new fans seduced by the charming psychedelia of Merriweather…, perhaps warning admirers that Animal Collective are not just here for the blissful moments in life. One only has to peruse their 15-year discography to hear them evolve with each release, shapeshifting into a slightly different entity, seldom repeating themselves as they look for new ways and forms of expression.

But Painting With is striking because it manages to distill the essence of Animal Collective into 12 slices of bite-size psych-pop that have the punchy immediacy of a Ramones album and which find Dave Portner (Avey Tare), Noah Lennox (Panda Bear) and Brian Weitz (Geologist) – regular collaborator Josh ‘Deakin’ Dibb sat this album out – adhering fairly strictly to a set of ideas designed to take the group out of their comfort zone. There are no ambient pieces or improv jams, for example, and no songs over five minutes: most zip by in three minutes, into which Animal Collective cram their usual quota of experimentation with heightened cartoon exuberance to make some of the most exciting music of their career. Portner cites old-school hit factory Tin Pan Alley and Ray Davies as influences on his more concise songwriting for Painting With, while Lennox felt the Cubist notion of distorting and rearranging reality could be applied to these songs – an obvious idea that’s always hovered around Animal Collective, and which they make explicit on this record. Hence opener and lead single “FloriDada”, a gurgling Ren & Stimpy eulogy to the Sunshine State stacked with rippling Beach Boys harmony, nursery-rhyme melody and a sample of The Surfaris’ classic “Wipe Out”. This first new track in four years places the nimble vocal interplay between Portner and Lennox to the fore – the pair wrote parts for each other and recorded the vocals sitting high up on pedestals to better project to one another – and this is repeated across the album on “Hocus Pocus”, “Lying In The Grass”, “Spilling Guts” and “Summing The Wretch”, one singer completing the other’s phrase or shadowing the lead in a pacey game of Django Django’s doo-wop ping-pong.

Animal Collective have never had trouble locating their inner child – much of their appeal lies in their ability to conjure a naïve sense of new-age wonder – and their tactical regression this time has fuelled this positive approach to pop. Naturally, when they entered the storied EastWest Studios in Los Angeles in July last year to record Painting With – using the room where Pet Sounds took shape – they set up a baby’s paddling pool in the studio and projected a loop of dinosaur films on the wall. As with the sessions for Merriweather, the three had sent demos and ideas to each other before recordings began, with Lennox and Portner bringing eight songs apiece to the studio. Both artists had toyed with the pop form and explored succinct songwriting on their recent solo albums as Avey Tare’s Slasher Flicks and, more successfully, Lennox’s Panda Bear Meets The Grim Reaper, but here it’s Portner who delivers the niftiest numbers.

The Burglars” could be the Happy Days theme collapsing down a wormhole: “When I was young my parents yelled beware of the ivory man that will steal and sell”, Portner trills, as a mangled zurna spills over breakbeats before the honeyed chorus kicks in. On the sentimental “Bagels In Kiev” he loosely addresses the situation in Ukraine – “These days I’m not so sure who is getting along or if they were before… it’s like we can’t escape all the noise and violence”, he sings, adding: “Bagels for everyone, that’s the kind of thing you would’ve wanted” – as Christmas synths swell to a dreamy crescendo. Both songs clock in well below three minutes yet are so intricately structured, using layers of modular synth patterns, samples and patchwork rhythms, that it takes several listens to register all the activity. That the band carve clarity out of such chaos merely underlines their psychedelic credentials, and rather shows up fellow lava-lamp botherers like Tame Impala and UMO as modern-day Totos.

Indeed, submerged in the cosmic funk of “Vertical” is an analogue belch played by one John Cale, while sax man to the stars Colin Stetson appears on “FloriDada”, though both turns seem so nuanced you wonder what was actually added, especially when a sample of a trumpet then appears in “Lying In The Grass”. Having never found a use for brass on their previous albums, Portner was determined to make room for it here.

The abrupt nature and fizzy disposition of Painting With might cause some long-time AC acolytes to splutter on their bong, but why would this extraordinary band want to remake Merriweather…? Label them Dada, Cubist or pop art as you wish – each tag fits – but like true postmodernists, Animal Collective are making it up as they go along, and they’re never boring.

Q+A
Panda Bear’s Noah Lennox

What were you looking to do with this record?
On the most basic level we’re trying to do something that is exciting for us, and that’s the best you can do, really. You have to let the chips fall where they do after that. We’re trying to do something new, and I’m not gonna presuppose that it’s new for the universe, but it’s something that feels fresh and different.

Setting out, did you give yourselves any guidelines?
We had three ideas that we clung to the whole time. We tried to do something that had really short songs, and we spoke about basic plodding rhythms, and we wanted to do something different – or special – for us with the singing. It’s typical for us to throw up a bunch of ideas like, yeah, we wanna do something that makes me think of ballet! But by the time you’ve finished recording it, it hasn’t really turned out that way.

How did you adhere to this idea with the vocals?
For the first time, Dave and I both wrote singing parts for each other to sing, and it had to be that way because of how precise the songs are. The two vocals dance around each other in this weird way, and if you lose one of the voices in the song, it just doesn’t work in the same way. Writing music for two voices took a bit of work for both of us. “Lying In The Grass” is a good example of this in one of my songs, and then “FloriDada” or “Vertical” for Dave. For this record, Dave and I had wanted to do nine songs apiece and it ended up being eight apiece, but that turned out to be more than enough. I started writing for the record on January 1st of last year. I spent a month and a half writing and then sent demos to the other guys in late February/March.

How does the album title relate to the music?
In the beginning we didn’t have painting as a target but we found, as we were making the record, we were often talking about it in visual terms, often with painting references, like, this sound feels like a splat of paint, or I wanna do a part that feels like taking a paintbrush and putting a colour all over the song. I should say that we don’t have a grasp of the more technical side of music so we’re often forced to translate ideas in more figurative or visual ways. This time, for whatever reason, we talked about paint a lot. I think we were even going to call the record (i)Paint(i) at one point. The Duchamp stuff is more Dave’s thing – the Dada and “FloriDada” connection is pretty direct. I wasn’t that knowledgeable about the Dada stuff until talking to these guys about it after the song. My favourite is the Cubist reference. Cubism often involves a distorted, rearranged version of reality and I feel like a lot of these songs feature elements of traditional songwriting or traditional songform but are kind of rearranged or distorted in funny ways.

What was your brief for John Cale when he joined you in the studio?
There was a sound in “Hocus Pocus” that Brian was playing and we all liked the part but weren’t sold on the quality of the sound in terms of how it related to other sounds in the song. Dave’s sister was working for John doing live visuals, and the part was kind of like a stringy-type instrument, so we wondered if John would be down to come in and use his viola and recreate the part. That didn’t end up working, or we didn’t use the viola stuff he did, but he also brought in some electronics, like a sampler and other things, and we tried a whole bunch of things and talked about the song and hung out for half a day. It was super cool. [Cale’s contribution appears on “Vertical”.]

You invited saxophonist Colin Stetson to play on the record, too, on “FloriDada”.
We were into this idea of using an instrument or a quality of a sound that we hadn’t really found a way to do so before, in a way that we found pleasing. Saxophones – and brass in general – is an element we’ve always found challenging to fit into our music, so it was a fun challenge to do that this time. But we’re all big fans of Colin and like the way he uses his instrument idiosyncratically. He’s a good traditional player but he also has a unique way of using the instrument. We knew we wanted this specific part of the song to feature saxophone, so we ran the part and he set up his saxophones, three of four of them – some of them are really big – and he ripped for an hour. He was looping and playing over it, he did seven or eight layers of stuff. Then we chose bits from that.

How much did those Golden Girls samples cost for “Golden Gal”?
Too much. Yeah, that one stung a little bit but it was an important part of the song, so off we go.

Five figures?
Yeah, in that range.
INTERVIEW: PIERS MARTIN

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Paul McCartney launches bid to reclaim Beatles back catalogue

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Paul McCartney has filed a claim with the American Copyright Office to take back his publishing rights to The Beatles’ catalogue when they start becoming available in 2018. The publishing is currently owned by Sony/ATV Music Publishing, but American law allows living artists to apply to take back...

Paul McCartney has filed a claim with the American Copyright Office to take back his publishing rights to The Beatles’ catalogue when they start becoming available in 2018.

The publishing is currently owned by Sony/ATV Music Publishing, but American law allows living artists to apply to take back the right 56 years after initial publication, meaning the Lennon-McCartney catalogue becomes available in 2018.

According to Billboard, on December 15, 2015, McCartney filed a termination notice of 32 songs with the US Copyright Office.

The BBC reports that most of the songs date from 1962 – 1964, although others come from much later in the band’s career. Some of those, including “Come Together” and “Why Don’t We Do It In The Road”, are not due to become available until 2025.

John Lennon’s half of the publishing will remain with Sony/ATV which reportedly made a deal with Lennon’s widow, Yoko Ono.

McCartney never owned many of the songs he produced. During The Beatles, ownership of the songs went straight to Northern Songs – a company founded by the band’s manager Brian Epstein.

After Epstein’s death in 1967, the company was sold to ATV Music.

ATV was consequently bought by Michael Jackson for $47.5 million in 1985.

In 1995, Jackson sold half of his share in ATV Music to Sony, who purchased the remainder of Jackson’s stake earlier this month.

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

UK supermarket chain to sell vinyl albums by David Bowie, The Beatles, Led Zeppelin and more

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UK supermarket chain Sainsbury's have started selling vinyl albums in 171 stores as of today [March 21]. The Independent reports that the chain will sell vinyl albums for the first time since the 1980s following the success of Adele’s 25 which sold over 300,000 in the retailer’s stores. The li...

UK supermarket chain Sainsbury’s have started selling vinyl albums in 171 stores as of today [March 21].

The Independent reports that the chain will sell vinyl albums for the first time since the 1980s following the success of Adele’s 25 which sold over 300,000 in the retailer’s stores.

The list of albums includes three by David Bowie (Hunky Dory, The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars, Nothing Has Chainged), The Beatles (Sgt Pepper, Abbey Road) and Led Zeppelin (Led Zeppelin and Led Zeppelin IV).

Pete Selby, Sainsbury’s head of music and Books told Music Week: “There is an enduring love for this format with music fans and we’re delighted to offer an ongoing selection of titles for everyone, from contemporary releases to much-loved classics. Our customers have rich, varied tastes and our range will naturally reflect this.

“We don’t see this as a novelty gifting fad but a complimentary part of our existing music offer with a long term future in our stores. Vinyl is definitely experiencing a revival with demand growing stronger year on year. It is our aim to make the vinyl experience easy and pleasurable for our customers who are ready to re-engage with a format that resonates with them on an emotional level.”

Sean Cowland, Music Buyer added: “The diverse nature of CD sales at Sainsbury’s – from bestselling chart lines to more specialist catalogue – has given us the confidence that our customers not only choose us as a destination for New Release albums but are also open to recommendation and discovery in store. The vinyl offer reflects this.”

In December last year, Tesco became the first UK supermarket chain to reintroduce LPs to its stores.

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Radiohead: “We were spitting and fighting and crying…”

"We thought we were trapped in one of those Twilight Zone slow time machines…" With Amnesiac, their second smash hit album of uneasy listening in just over six months, at the top of the charts on both sides of the Atlantic, Radiohead are even more determined to retain their anonymity. As for Thom ...

“We thought we were trapped in one of those Twilight Zone slow time machines…” With Amnesiac, their second smash hit album of uneasy listening in just over six months, at the top of the charts on both sides of the Atlantic, Radiohead are even more determined to retain their anonymity. As for Thom Yorke, he wants the myth-making to stop… Originally published in August 2001’s Uncut (Take 51). Words: Stephen Dalton

_________________

The towering inferno is visible from miles away. Thom Yorke drives towards the horizon, the acrid stench of toxic smoke filling his car. He cranks up the air-conditioning to maximum, but still the rank odour is inescapable. A wave of choking nausea shudders through him.

The Radiohead singer is passing Arscott Farm in Devon, on his way back to Oxford from his country hideaway. Here a mountainous funeral pyre of 7,000 animals, slaughtered under foot-and-mouth regulations, will burn for a week. Maybe longer. By some sick twist of voodoo economics, this grotesque flesh bonfire will pump more potentially cancer-causing dioxins into the food chain than all of Britain’s worst chemical plants. Death stalks the natural world, making it safe for capitalism.

Thousands of miles away, the masked foot soldiers of free trade are using riot shields, tear gas, water cannons and rubber bullets to beat down 400 anti-globalisation protestors outside a World Trade Organisation summit in Quebec City. The bad karma police are out in force today.

All these disconnected but simultaneous events somehow link back to Thom Yorke, choking in his smoke-filled car, a tiny speck crawling across the Devon landscape. Rage, nausea, motion sickness, animal corpses in flaming heaps. The vomit, the vomit. And then Thom remembers – tomorrow he has a day of press interviews scheduled in London. Being the planet’s most critically revered rock icon comes with a heavy price.

The 8th Uncut Playlist Of 2016

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Morning all. Just beginning our long, strange etc etc listening session of the National and friends' "Day Of The Dead" Grateful Dead tribute album. It begins with The War On Drugs doing "Touch Of Grey" and should keep us going for most of the day (and while I remember, we have the full exclusive sto...

Morning all. Just beginning our long, strange etc etc listening session of the National and friends’ “Day Of The Dead” Grateful Dead tribute album. It begins with The War On Drugs doing “Touch Of Grey” and should keep us going for most of the day (and while I remember, we have the full exclusive story of the project in our new issue, out Tuesday; PJ Harvey’s on the cover).

Plenty here, as ever, in the meantime. Quick regular note that the order is not a meritocracy, but simply the sequence we played the records this week. And also while we don’t tend to waste much time on music we don’t like here, some things do sneak onto the stereo that don’t receive universal love in the office; hence inclusion doesn’t necessarily equal endorsement. Thanks…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Big Thief – Masterpiece (Saddle Creek)

2 Marisa Anderson – Into The Light (Bandcamp)

3 Pita – Get In (Editions Mego)

4 9 Bach – Anian (Real World)

5 Gavin Bryars/Philip Jeck/Alter Ego – The Sinking Of The Titanic (Touch)

6 Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Phosphorescent Harvest (Silver Arrow)

7 Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Hello LA, Bye Bye Birmingham (Silver Arrow)

8 Brian Eno – The Ship (Warp)

9 Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith – Ears (Western Vinyl)

10 The Associates – Sulk: Deluxe Edition (BMG)

11 Charles Bradley – Changes (Daptone)

12 Whitney – No Woman (Secretly Canadian)

13 Chris Abrahams – Fluid To The Influence (Room40)

14 Car Seat Headrest – Teens Of Denial (Matador)

15 Mike Cooper & Derek Hall – Out Of The Shades (Paradise Of Bachelors)

16 The Skiffle Players – Skifflin’ (Spiritual Pajamas)

17 Bitchin Bajas & Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – Epic Jammers and Fortunate Little Ditties (Drag City)

18 Jenks Miller & Rose Cross NC – Blues From WHAT (Three-Lobed)

19 Kendrick Lamar – Untitled Unmastered (Top Dawg)

20 Cian Nugent – March 9, 2016 Union Pool (http://www.nyctaper.com)

21 Various Artists – Day Of The Dead (4AD)

Watch Laurie Anderson perform for six dogs on TV

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Laurie Anderson performed on American television last night (March 16) to an audience of dogs. Anderson performed a concert for dogs in New York earlier this year, having held a similar event in Sydney during 2010. Last night, she appeared to on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and discussed her...

Laurie Anderson performed on American television last night (March 16) to an audience of dogs.

Anderson performed a concert for dogs in New York earlier this year, having held a similar event in Sydney during 2010.

Last night, she appeared to on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and discussed her recent project Heart Of A Dog, later performing a piece written specifically for dogs.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ku6cI5v70MQ

Anderson’s film, Heart of a Dog — in which she reflects on the deaths of her mother, husband Lou Reed and her dog — is set to debut on HBO April 25.

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Studio where David Bowie recorded Blackstar closes down

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The Magic Shop Recording Studio in Soho, New York has closed down. The studio was opened by Steve Rosenthal in 1988; among its most famous clients was David Bowie, who recorded The Next Day and Blackstar there. Other artists who have recorded in the studio over the years include The Rolling Stones...

The Magic Shop Recording Studio in Soho, New York has closed down.

The studio was opened by Steve Rosenthal in 1988; among its most famous clients was David Bowie, who recorded The Next Day and Blackstar there.

Other artists who have recorded in the studio over the years include The Rolling Stones, Lou Reed, Warren Zevon, Kurt Vile, Ramones, Sonic Youth and more.

Rosenthal revealed that Dave Grohl tried to buy the studio after it featured in his Sonic Highways TV series, but the deal fell through.

Rosenthal wrote on The Magic Shop’s Facebook page, “After an amazing 28 year run, I will have to close The Magic Shop Recording Studio. March 16, 2016 will be our last day open.

“Everyone knows why I have to close, so there is little point in rehashing my story. My eternal thanks goes to Dave Grohl, The Foo Fighters and Lee Johnson for stepping up big time last year to try and save the studio from this fate. I would also like to thank the late, great David Bowie for recording Blackstar and the Next Day at the studio. It was an honor to have him and Tony Visconti working here for the last few years.

“One last thing,” he continued, “I get that New York City is always changing and adapting like the living city it is. Maybe what I believe in is no longer of value, but it was for us and we lived it.

“As the city becomes more of a corporate and condo island, some of us wish for a better balance between money and art, between progress and preservation, and we hope that one day we will see a reversal of the destruction of conscience and community we are witnessing.

“Or maybe not…”

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.