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Watch John Cale, Animal Collective and more perform songs from The Velvet Underground & Nico

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John Cale performed The Velvet Underground And Nico in its entirely live at the Philharmonie de Paris last night [Sunday, April 3]. The album was played in random order along with songs from White Light/White Heat. Cale was joined by Animal Collective, Mark Lanegan, Pete Doherty and Carl Barât, E...

John Cale performed The Velvet Underground And Nico in its entirely live at the Philharmonie de Paris last night [Sunday, April 3].

The album was played in random order along with songs from White Light/White Heat.

Cale was joined by Animal Collective, Mark Lanegan, Pete Doherty and Carl Barât, Etienne Daho and Lou Doillon.

“There She Goes Again” with Animal Collective

“I’ll Be Your Mirror” with Etienne Daho
https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PLZ2_tdy9HTNK1CZzTX94xPQOiGol0eaqa&v=ejaGPh6FcZE

“Femme Fatale” with Lou Doillon

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.

The Beatles’ Anthology sets hit streaming services

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The Beatles' three Anthology albums have been made available to stream online for the first time. Originally released as double-CD sets in 1995 and 1996, Anthology 1, 2 and 3 compiled rare and previously unreleased material from the group's archives. 1 dealt with their early period, 2 with their im...

The Beatles‘ three Anthology albums have been made available to stream online for the first time.

Originally released as double-CD sets in 1995 and 1996, Anthology 1, 2 and 3 compiled rare and previously unreleased material from the group’s archives. 1 dealt with their early period, 2 with their imperial 1965-’67 time, and 3 with their work from The White Album, Let It Be and Abbey Road.

The first two sets also included Lennon solo demos reworked by Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr – “Free As A Bird” on 1, and “Real Love” on 2, with the former reaching No 2 in the UK singles chart.

The rest of The Beatles’ catalogue was made available to stream on December 24, 2015.

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.

Violent Femmes – We Can Do Anything

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Not so much a boast as an expression of amused incredulity, the title of Violent Femmes’ ninth studio album is an acknowledgement that few comebacks have ever been quite so unlikely. Arriving 16 years after their last studio record, and some 33 since Gordon Gano, Brian Ritchie and Victor DeLorenzo...

Not so much a boast as an expression of amused incredulity, the title of Violent Femmes’ ninth studio album is an acknowledgement that few comebacks have ever been quite so unlikely. Arriving 16 years after their last studio record, and some 33 since Gordon Gano, Brian Ritchie and Victor DeLorenzo first patented their frenetic, fantastically snotty blend of folk, punk, indie and country, We Can Do Anything is a testament to sheer cussedness as much as an act of renewed creativity.

Violent Femmes’ first two albums – 1983’s exuberant eponymous debut and its darker, more explorative follow-up, Hallowed Ground – remain essential, and they were rarely less than terrific during the ’80s, but the quality tailed off following 1991’s under-rated Why Do Birds Sing? and the departure of DeLorenzo in 1993. In the aftermath of the underwhelming Freak Magnet in 2000, Gano’s decision to licence their classic single “Blister In The Sun†to a burger company infuriated Ritchie, who sued his bandmate while declaring that he had “lost his songwriting ability many years agoâ€.

And that, it seemed, was that, until the bulging coffers of Coachella inspired a change of heart. Faced with an offer they couldn’t refuse, Violent Femmes reformed for the festival in 2013, and began touring again. Last year they released a new EP and started work on We Can Do Anything, recorded piecemeal in several US studios, with Gano, Ritchie and Dresden Dolls drummer Brian Viglione joined by a handful of old friends.

It wasn’t always easy, according to Gano, whose muse appears to be a more elusive mistress than she once was. We Can Do Anything clocks in at a mere 30 minutes. Three of the ten tracks are co-writes, one is a cover, and the rest are based on ideas which date back years, sometimes decades.

Given this fragile state of affairs, they wisely choose to play to their strengths. This is an instantly familiar mix of anti-folk, post-punk, phantasmagorical country and alternative rock, delivered via an equally recognisable blend of raw acoustic guitars, thrumming acoustic bass and rattling snare, garnished with Gano’s petulant whine. The singer was at school when he wrote the first two Violent Femmes album, and even at 52 he appears to be in an arrested state of aggrieved teenage-hood, locked in psychological warfare with mocking jocks and sneering prom queens. The album’s stand-out track, “Big Carâ€, dates back to the late ’80s and is a macabre revenge fantasy which begins with Gano cruising with a high-school “teenage tartâ€. With each verse the mood darkens, until the final line delivers a brutal sting in the tail.

It’s classic Gano – simultaneously funny, transgressive and deeply unsettling. He’s rarely shy about letting his hang-ups hang out. “Foothillsâ€, which recalls the carefree stomp of “American Musicâ€, casts him as a grudge-holding menial – “my boss is a jerk†– while “Issues†is an amusing portrait of a man outwardly scornful of his partner’s over-sharing, but secretly turned on by their relentless neediness. Upbeat opener “Memory†manages to be both regretful and spiky. Even “I Could Be Anythingâ€, the child-friendly tale of a heroic dragon-slaying knight called Sir Bongo, turns into a bizarre underdog fantasy. Leaping between several different styles and time signatures, it’s the most eccentric and musically complex track on the album.

Everything feels remarkably fresh and unforced. The deceptively sweet-toothed doo-wop of “Untrue Love†might seem a tad rote, and the herky-jerky “Travelling Solves Everything†is a misfire, but the reflective, heartfelt “What You Really Mean†better indicates the depth of quality. Written by Gano’s sister, Cynthia Gayneau, and fleshed out with soft horns and rippling piano, it harks back to the unabashed tenderness of “Good Feeling†and “I Know It’s True, But I’m Sorry To Sayâ€.

All that’s lacking are the lowering shadows which appeared on the greatest Violent Femmes record, Hallowed Ground. Gano’s father was a Baptist minister, and many of his best songs are soaked in old-time religion. There’s none of that holy terror here, sadly, although the ramshackle country-gospel of “I’m Not Done†finds Gano “wild in the sight of Godâ€.

It’s the closing track on an album which works equally well as a final curtain or a new chapter. The band themselves seem unsure which it might turn out to be. “We came together, we broke apart,†Gano sings, throwing out mixed messages to the last. “It has ended; it will not restart.†And yet, “With all of this, we’re not done.†Here’s hoping.

Q&A
GORDON GANO
Given all that’s happened, Violent Femmes seem remarkably well preserved.
Absolutely! It sounds fresh and natural. People ask, ‘Is it similar to how it used to be?’ It’s more than similar, it’s exactly the same! The majority of it was recorded live, and in some cases it was the first time people were hearing these songs, so it’s very in-the-moment. I find the title humorous, because for us all to get in one room at the same time and play some songs, we’ve done something miraculous.

What is the provenance of these songs?
They date from all over. Probably the oldest are “I Could Be Anything†and “Big Carâ€, they go back 25 years or so. I’ve attempted to play “Big Car†with Violent Femmes over the years, and there have always been dissenters. It almost didn’t make it this time. It’s a fun song, then it’s really creepy, and then this horror takes place, but I made the argument that if we dropped it for those reasons then we shouldn’t be watching any Coen Brothers movies either. And of course there are other songs like that in our catalogue.

What does the future hold?
We always take it a piece at a time. We have a tour booked in Australia and New Zealand, and we hope to get to the UK and Europe. I hope it all comes together, but let me check my email and see what happened today!
INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

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.

Midnight Special

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There are a lot of furrowed brows in Jeff Nichols’ news film. And a lot of staring, pensively, into the middle distance. These are Nichols’ ways of signaling that Midnight Special is a serious and thoughtful film, although essentially it is a variation on a hoary old sc-fi conceit – the child ...

There are a lot of furrowed brows in Jeff Nichols’ news film. And a lot of staring, pensively, into the middle distance. These are Nichols’ ways of signaling that Midnight Special is a serious and thoughtful film, although essentially it is a variation on a hoary old sc-fi conceit – the child with special powers.

To bolster the weightiness of his undertaking, Nichols has attracted a quality cast – Michael Shannon, Kristen Dunst, Adam Driver, Joel Edgerton and Sam Shepard – while David Wingo’s sussurating ambient drones evoke ruminative moods. It is safe to say that like other recent genre pieces Cloverfield, Monsters and District 9, Midnight Special has aspirations beyond its B-movie origins. Although it’s a laudable intent, it’s hard to locate gravitas in a story that feels largely like an episode of The X Files. Much as the grounded and serious tone of Christopher Nolan’s Batman movies was inherently implausible – it’s a man, dressed up in a bat suit! – so Nichols attempts to imbue Midnight Special with similar qualities often feel ponderous.

The first 30 minutes of Nichols’ film are arguably the strongest. Shannon and Edgerton appear to have kidnapped an 8 year-old boy called Alton (Jaeden Lieberher) who has unusual powers. “Things would break. Lights, cars,†says one eyewitness. “A visible spectrum of light came from his eyes,†says another, rather dogmatically. Around this, Nichols slowly shades in some detail. Shepard heads up a religious cult who have attached their own beliefs to the boy’s gifts. The FBI are also interested in Alton, keen to monitor his destructive capabilities. As Shannon and Edgerton escort the boy through the back roads of Louisiana and Arkansas, Midnight Special has an intimacy and focus that recalls Nichols’ earlier films – the excellent Mud, a kind of updated Huck Finn that marked the start of Matthew McConaughey’s career upswing, and Take Shelter, a thriller with Shannon as a man who experienced apocalyptic visions.

When the scope of Midnight Special gets bigger, it falters. The pacing is out of whack, it’s too long and for a chase film there is remarkably little dramatic tension. It’s all a bit Speilbergy; but critically, it lacks the warmth and sense of wonder (or even fun) of the obvious antecedents, E.T and Close Encounters Of The Third Kind.

Adam Driver – as an NSA analyst drafted in to assist the FBI – has a little of Richard Dreyfuss’ gangly charm and deftness. But everyone else is taking it all far too seriously.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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.

REM: “If we couldn’t be successful being who we were, then we didn’t want to be successful”

David Stubbs invites Peter Buck, Mike Mills and Michael Stipe to talk about the 20 greatest singles of their major-label era. But which one does Stipe find “gross and disgustingâ€? And why does Mills think, “It’s amazing how many songs we’re playing now that we could have written yesterdayâ...

David Stubbs invites Peter Buck, Mike Mills and Michael Stipe to talk about the 20 greatest singles of their major-label era. But which one does Stipe find “gross and disgustingâ€? And why does Mills think, “It’s amazing how many songs we’re playing now that we could have written yesterdayâ€? Originally published in Uncut’s November 2003 issue.

____________________

June 24, Brixton Academy, London. REM used to belong to the world – when “Everybody Hurts†was a global anthem of solace, when their albums sold in the dozens of millions. Paradoxically, that was the time when they receded from the world. They didn’t tour. They didn’t do interviews. Their rare public appearances were seized upon and shrouded in misapprehension.

Was Stipe dying? Was Peter Buck living on the streets following a breakdown after his divorce? Now that their albums sell in mere seven-figure amounts, now that they are regarded by some as a busted flush, REM are back in the world, much more out and about. Stipe’s even on the cover of the Radio Times, as he gleefully reminds the throng tonight. Yet they no longer belong to the world, they belong to us – they’re ‘our’ band again. It’s reflected in songs like “Imitation Of Lifeâ€, whose oblique, associative lyrics feel like a return to Murmur terrain, or in the experimental drift of albums like Up and New Adventures In Hi-Fi.

You also feel that, despite the tensions and difficulties they endured in the late ’90s, they’re perfectly comfortable with where they’re at right now. Once, they would have had to play a giant, godforsaken hangar like the Wembley Arena – now they’re playing one of two nights to a packed Brixton Academy and it feels fine. Very fine, in fact.

Stipe, in particular, is more thrilled than you might imagine to play here – he describes it to Uncut as “a venue we all really like – we have a history there, even though we never performed there as a band. So for me it was a personal triumph to play Brixton Academy.â€

For Stipe, the history is in its usage in the film Velvet Goldmine, of which he was executive producer (this connection is fondly exacerbated by the stage set, shifting backdrops of various spangly, garish, glam-style hues). It’s also, as he relates in a rambling but infectiously amusing anecdote from the stage, the place where he first saw The Smiths. Stipe, a loner in the crowd, recalls taking note of the shapes Morrissey threw with a view to borrowing a couple of them. An interesting bit of cross-fertilisation – both The Smiths and REM would launch an unco-ordinated but simultaneous attack from either side of the Atlantic on the New Pop which had so enlivened the early ’80s but was now curdling into something hideously garish. REM and The Smiths would be the ’80s antidote. REM alone would go on to dominate the ’90s.

As the song “Everybody Hurts†would prove definitively, Stipe is one of rock’s great communicators. Offstage, it’s a different story. There was a poignant moment when he acted as character witness for Buck at the latter’s ‘air rage’ trial, when he spoke of how Peter was the only person who would talk to him in his teens. Much of that shyness has survived in Stipe. At the aftershow party, in the L-shaped bar upstairs, Mike Mills and Peter Buck both affably hold court, models of Southern gallantry and good cheer. When Stipe eventually hoves into view, the atoms in the room begin to dance, as is the usual chain reaction when there’s a celebrity about. But soon, the atoms settle back down, as Stipe, those saucer eyes gazing everywhere and nowhere, recedes into his own world, among a huddle of close associates.

At one point a formidable, perhaps slightly tipsy lady brandishing a T-shirt fearlessly approaches him, breaking into his aura. Loudly congratulating him on playing such a copious selection of songs from Fables Of The Reconstruction, an album dear to her, she asks him to sign the shirt. Politely, he obliges – not something he used to do – and she engages him in further unsolicited banter. The more she banters to Stipe, however, the less magnificent he seems to her. Can this odd little man be the same charismatic creature as the rock god who worked several thousand loyal fans into a frenzy of good feeling just an hour ago? She starts to look him up and down witheringly. She’s especially unimpressed by a large attachment across his shirt front, emblazoned with the word “MICHAELâ€.

“Whassat about, then?†she slurs, brusquely.

Stipe looks through her with large, mournful eyes. “It’s a joke,†he replies. The lady is a beat away from retorting, “Well, s’not very funny,†before Stipe is thankfully distracted and pulled away elsewhere. Stipe might seem not all there to the casual eye, but there’s actually nothing wrong with his antennae. The next person he approaches is Matthew Herbert, whose Goodbye Swingtime has been one of the great unsung albums of 2003. There’s a probability of him and Stipe working together.

Cut back to the gig and Stipe is truly in his element, addressing his fans en masse, teasing Buck, bantering, then leading the charge through REM’s back catalogue, including “The Great Beyondâ€, “It’s The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)â€, the aforementioned Fables… medley, “Get Up†and “Losing My Religionâ€, with the two unreleased songs from their forthcoming best-of, “Bad Day†and “Animalâ€, scorching two new holes in the setlist.

The gamut of emotions, postures, styles and shades of meaning is wide – and yet, while betraying none of these, there’s a unifying glow of fun about the evening, a highly bearable lightness of being. It’s that simple (“What’s the point of doing gigs if they’re not fun?†asks Mills), that tough to pull off. Stipe once suggested that REM would quit at the turn of the millennium, and many thought the departure of drummer Bill Berry would kill off the band. Some question their validity as they enter middle age, caricature them as tenacious dinosaurs taking up space, irrelevancies out of their rock time. Untrue. The fact is that REM’s propensity to square the circle – exploring, transforming, while remaining true to their quintessence – is simply beyond the imagination of any of the emergent mainstream rock bands, forged in marketing departments and obediently tailored for MTV. As Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone put it, “The rock world of today is so much like the one that REM were rebelling against 20 years ago. Once again, radio is full of metal gomers who never met a rule they didn’t obey, and once again REM are totally out of step with the times.â€

REM, 2003. Our band. More so than ever.

___________________________

And so to REM’s singles. There’s always been a tendency to measure REM in terms of their albums. This is partly down to elderly, complacent notions of the relative ‘importance’ of albums over singles, representing as they do more sustained creative efforts, to be savoured in aloof privacy. What’s more, REM albums have often been statements of intent, their musical mood and implied manifesto instigated, as a rule, by Buck and often as a deliberate reaction to their previous work. For example, the rocky sleaze of Monster was a response to the gravitas of Automatic For The People, the friendly yellow-golden tones of Reveal an antidote to the experimentalism of Up, and so forth.

And yet, as if in defiance of themselves, REM are also a great singles band, a very public band with a knack of creating big, ear-catching anthems or, thanks to the distantly but unerringly sensitive Stipe, tapping into undercurrents in the collective mood and bringing them to the surface. It’s that REM which Uncut explores here as Michael Stipe, Mike Mills and Peter Buck discuss what we consider to be their 20 finest singles since making the fateful leap to Warners (the period covered by their imminent best-of) and rock’s major league. Even their brightest, daftest moment, “Shiny Happy Peopleâ€, embarrassed as the band are of it, is one of the great earworms of the ’90s. Then there are singles like “Standâ€, “Daysleeper†and “The Great Beyondâ€, each drawn from very different points and phases of REM’s history, yet each reminders of a quintessential thread that runs through their changeling career. That is, their unique, undiminished capacity to write loud, translucent, timeless, unaffected, deceptively complex yet instantly irresistible pop-rock songs, the sort for which the grossly over-used term ‘classic’ should be more strictly reserved.

Then there’s Magisterial REM, on singles like “Drive†and “Everybody Hurtsâ€, in which, minus the ostentatious anguish or histrionic clumsiness of other would-be Keepers Of Rock’s Conscience, REM walk where others fear to tread in this inchoate, postmodern age, writing – whisper it – songs that matter.

Finally, we hope that whatever arguments you might have about the order of, and inclusions in, this Top 20, that there’s not too much grumbling about the No 1 – fittingly, it was undiluted Essence Of REM which would give them their massive breakthrough hit. So typically atypical. So REM.

Motorhead announce a live album and film of their final tour

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Motorhead are releasing a live album and film from their final tour with Lemmy Kilmister. Clean Your Clock will document the band’s two Munich gigs, which took place on November 20 and 21, 2015. Lemmy passed away aged 70 after a short battle with cancer on December 28 2015, which was just 17 ...

Motorhead are releasing a live album and film from their final tour with Lemmy Kilmister.

Clean Your Clock will document the band’s two Munich gigs, which took place on November 20 and 21, 2015.

Lemmy passed away aged 70 after a short battle with cancer on December 28 2015, which was just 17 days after the band’s final gig in Berlin.

The group’s dummer Mikkey Dee told Sweden’s Expressen: “He spent all his energy on stage and afterwards he was very, very tired. It’s incredible that he could even
play, that he could finish the Europe tour.â€

Clean Your Clock will be released on coloured double vinyl, CD, DVD and blu-ray.

It will be available to buy on May 27.

Full track list is below:

Live Intro
Bomber
Stay Clean
Metropolis
When The Sky Comes Looking For You
Over The Top
Guitar Solo
The Chase Is Better Than The Catch
Lost Woman Blues
Rock It
Orgasmatron
Doctor Rock Pt 1
Drum Solo
Doctor Rock Pt 2
Just ‘Cos You Got The Power
No Class
Ace Of Spades
Whorehouse Blues
Overkill

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 Michael Stipe, Pixies, Flaming Lips and more perform at last night’s David Bowie Memorial Concert

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The first of two sold out David Bowie memorial concerts kicked off last night at Carnegie Hall, New York. The concert, which sold out in two hours, was organised by New York entrepreneur Michael Dorf. It was originally intended as a tribute concert to the singer, but was changed to a memorial follo...

The first of two sold out David Bowie memorial concerts kicked off last night at Carnegie Hall, New York.

The concert, which sold out in two hours, was organised by New York entrepreneur Michael Dorf. It was originally intended as a tribute concert to the singer, but was changed to a memorial following his death from liver cancer in January.

The artists who performed included Laurie Anderson, Cat Power, J. Mascis & Sean Lennon, Flaming Lips and Pixies.

Over half the songs of the evening featured HoLY HoLY, led by Tony Visconti and featuring drummer Woody Woodmansey.

Michael Stipe, performing his first major solo gig for the first time since the dissolve of R.E.M in 2011, sang a version of “Ashes To Ashes” with accompaniment from Karen Nelson on vocals.

He was met with huge applause as he took to the stage, before stating: “David Bowie was a hippy before he was a space man. I was a hippy when I was 12 years old.â€

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dI8SpGy-P44

Debbie Harry encouraged the crowd to sing along with her throughout, before bringing it to its feet with her performance of “Starman”.

Pixies performed their original song, “Cactus”, which Bowie covered on his 2002 Heathen album.

Wayne Coyne sat on Chewbacca’s shoulders as he led Flaming Lips in their performance of “Life On Mars?”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iSYVCWyxl1E

Toronto-based Choir! Choir! Choir! closed the show with their performance of “Space Oddity”, which turned into a sing-along after the whole crowd joined in.

The second concert at Radio City Hall tonight will be available to stream live via Skype in exchange for a minimum £15 donation to charity. Find out how by clicking here.

See below for the full setlist of Thursday’s concert.

Setlist:

With backing band:
Cyndi Lauper – “Suffragette City”
HoLY HoLY – “Width Of A Circle”
Robyn Hitchcock – “Soul Love”
Laurie Anderson – “Always Crashing In The Same Car”
Members of Gogol Bordello – “Breaking Glass”
Debbie Harry & Matt Katz-Bohen – “Starman”

Without backing band:
Joseph Arthur – “The Man Who Sold the World”
The Mountain Goats – “Word on a Wing”
Michael Stipe w/ Karen Elson & Paul Cantelon – “Ashes to Ashes”
J. Mascis & Sean Lennon – “Quicksand”

With backing band:
Bettye LaVette – “It Ain’t Easy”
Perry Farrell – “Rebel Rebel”
Cat Power – “Five Years”
Ann Wilson – “Let’s Dance”

Without backing band:
Pixies – “Cactus”
Rickie Lee Jones – “All the Young Dudes”
Jakob Dylan – “Heroes”
The Flaming Lips – “Life on Mars?”
Choir! Choir! Choir! with the New York City Children’s Chorus – “Space Oddity”

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.

The 10th Uncut Playlist Of 2016

A bit of a complicated week at Uncut, given that we've migrated from the eight floor down to the third floor, into what is admittedly a more comfortable space (with natural light!) until recently occupied by Now magazine. Moving aside the discarded copies of Fifty Shades Darker, here's what we've be...

A bit of a complicated week at Uncut, given that we’ve migrated from the eight floor down to the third floor, into what is admittedly a more comfortable space (with natural light!) until recently occupied by Now magazine. Moving aside the discarded copies of Fifty Shades Darker, here’s what we’ve been annoying the new neighbours with: special attention, please, to the fine new Steve Gunn record I’ve been keeping quiet about for a while; an excerpt from Eno’s excellent “The Ship”; the return of Hope Sandoval; an auspicious hook-up between Christian Fennesz and Jim O’Rourke; and, maybe best of all, something wonderful from Brigid Mae Power, who reminds me of both Tim Buckley and Liz Fraser – but not, oddly, of This Mortal Coil’s “Song To The Siren”…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

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

2 Tony Joe White – Rain Crow (Yeproc)

3 Brigid Mae Power – Brigid Mae Power (Tompkins Square)

4 Spain – Carolina (Glitterhouse)

5 Psychic Ills – I Don’t Mind (Feat. Hope Sandoval) (Sacred Bones)

6 Mark Pritchard – Under The Sun (Warp)

7 The Still – The Still (Bronzerat)

8 Ragner Kjartansson & The Allstar Band – The Visitors (Vinyl Factory)

9 The Grateful Dead – Red Rocks 7/8/78 (Rhino)

10 Mr David Viner – So Well Hid (Mauvaise Foi)

11 Corinne Bailey Rae – The Heart Speaks In Whispers (Virgin)

12 Steve Gunn – Eyes On The Lines (Matador)

13 Christian Fennesz & Jim O’Rourke – It’s Hard For Me To Say I’m Sorry (Editions Mego)

14 Moses Sumney – Everlasting Sigh (Youtube)

15 Michael Stipe – The Man Who Sold the World (The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hF2ed7ouU3o

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

17 Marisa Anderson – Into The Light (Mississippi)

18 The Skiffle Players – Skifflin’ (Spiritual Pajamas)

19 Brian Eno – The Ship (Warp)

Paul McCartney announces career-spanning compilation

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Paul McCartney has announced the release of a new collection of his post-Beatles career. the 4CD Pure McCartney features 67 tracks, spanning his 1970 solo debut album all the way through to 2013's New. It will also be available to buy as a 2CD and 4LP set. Speaking about the project, McCartney sa...

Paul McCartney has announced the release of a new collection of his post-Beatles career.

the 4CD Pure McCartney features 67 tracks, spanning his 1970 solo debut album all the way through to 2013’s New.

It will also be available to buy as a 2CD and 4LP set.

Speaking about the project, McCartney said in a statement: “Me and my team came up with the idea of putting together a collection of my recordings with nothing else in mind other than having something fun to listen to.

“Maybe it’s to be enjoyed on a long car journey or an evening at home or at a party with friends? So we got our heads together and came up with these diverse playlists from various periods of my long and winding career.â€

The album will be released on 10 June.

The tracklisting is:

PURE McCartney 2CD
DISC 1
01 Maybe I’m Amazed
02 Heart Of The Country
03 Jet
04 Warm And Beautiful
05 Listen To What The Man Said
06 Dear Boy
07 Silly Love Songs
08 The Song We Were Singing
09 Uncle Albert / Admiral Halsey
10 Another Day
11 Sing The Changes
12 Jenny Wren
13 Save Us
14 Mrs Vandebilt
15 Mull of Kintyre
16 Let ‘Em In
17 Let Me Roll It
18 Nineteen Hundred and Eighty Five
19 Ebony and Ivory

DISC 2
01 Band on the Run
02 Arrow Through Me
03 My Love
04 Live and Let Die
05 Too Much Rain
06 Goodnight Tonight
07 Say Say Say [2015 Remix]
08 My Valentine
09 The World Tonight
10 Pipes of Peace
11 Dance Tonight
12 Here Today
13 Wanderlust
14 Great Day
15 Coming Up
16 No More Lonely Nights
17 Only Mama Knows
18 With a Little Luck
19 Hope For The Future
20 Junk

PURE McCartney 4CD – 67 tracks
DISC 1
01 Maybe I’m Amazed
02 Heart Of The Country
03 Jet
04 Warm And Beautiful
05 Listen To What The Man Said
06 Dear Boy
07 Silly Love Songs
08 The Song We Were Singing
09 Uncle Albert / Admiral Halsey
10 Early Days
11 Big Barn Bed
12 Another Day
13 Flaming Pie
14 Jenny Wren
15 Too Many People
16 Let Me Roll It
17 New

DISC 2
01 Live and Let Die
02 English Tea
03 Mull of Kintyre
04 Save Us
05 My Love
06 Bip Bop
07 Let ‘Em In
08 Nineteen Hundred and Eighty Five
09 Calico Skies
10 Hi, Hi, Hi
11 Waterfalls
12 Band on the Run
13 Appreciate
14 Sing The Changes
15 Arrow Through Me
16 Every Night
17 Junior’s Farm
18 Mrs Vandebilt

DISC 3
01 Say Say Say [2015 Remix]
02 My Valentine
03 Pipes of Peace
04 The World Tonight
05 Souvenir
06 Dance Tonight
07 Ebony and Ivory
08 Fine Line
09 Here Today
10 Press
11 Wanderlust
12 Winedark Open Sea
13 Beautiful Night
14 Girlfriend
15 Queenie Eye
16 We All Stand Together

DISC 4
01 Coming Up
02 Too Much Rain
03 Good Times Coming / Feel The Sun
04 Goodnight Tonight
05 Baby’s Request
06 With a Little Luck
07 Little Willow
08 Only Mama Knows
09 Don’t Let it Bring You Down
10 The Back Seat Of My Car
11 No More Lonely Nights
12 Great Day
13 Venus and Mars / Rock Show
14 Temporary Secretary
15 Hope For The Future
16 Junk

VINYL
A1
01 Maybe I’m Amazed
02 Heart Of The Country
03 Jet
04 Warm And Beautiful
05 Listen To What The Man Said
06 Dear Boy

A2
01 Silly Love Songs
02 The Song We Were Singing
03 Uncle Albert / Admiral Halsey
04 Another Day
05 New

B1
01 Mull of Kintyre
02 Sing The Changes
03 Jenny Wren
04 Mrs Vandebilt
05 Save Us

B2
01 Let ‘Em In
02 Let Me Roll It
03 Ebony and Ivory
04 Nineteen Hundred and Eighty Five

C1
01 Band on the Run
02 Arrow Through Me
03 My Love
04 Live and Let Die
05 Too Much Rain

C2
01 Say Say Say [2015 Remix]
02 My Valentine
03 Goodnight Tonight
04 The World Tonight
05 Pipes of Peace

D1
01 Dance Tonight
02 Here Today
03 Wanderlust
04 Great Day
05 Coming Up
06 No More Lonely Nights

D201
Too Many People
02 Only Mama Knows
03 With a Little Luck
04 Hope For The Future
05 Junk

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.

Iggy Pop – Post Pop Depression

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Having just about held it in for 38 minutes, Iggy Pop's personal dam bursts in the closing moments of his 17th solo album, the 68-year-old unleashing an extraordinary tirade at the climax of escape fantasy "Paraguay". "You take your motherfucking laptop, and just shove it into your goddamn foul mou...

Having just about held it in for 38 minutes, Iggy Pop‘s personal dam bursts in the closing moments of his 17th solo album, the 68-year-old unleashing an extraordinary tirade at the climax of escape fantasy “Paraguay”.

“You take your motherfucking laptop, and just shove it into your goddamn foul mouth, and down your shit-heel gizzard, you fucking phony two-faced, three-timing piece of turd,” he rasps breathlessly. “And I hope you shit it out with all the words in it, and I hope the security services read those words, and pick you up and flay you for all your evil and poisonous intentions, because I’M SICK and it’s YOUR FAULT, and I’m gonna go heal myself now.” Amid the unredeemed darkness of Post Pop Depression, that final phrase may represent the sole note of hope.

Recorded in secret with Queens Of The Stone Age’s Josh Homme and Dean Fertita as well as Arctic Monkeys drummer Matt Helders, the mission may have been to recapture the wildness of Pop’s Berlin-era albums with David Bowie – The Idiot and Lust For Life. However, Homme’s superbly Bowie-esque backing vocals do little to rekindle the self-possessed optimism of those records. Post Pop Depression is unremittingly bleak; a meditation on mortality and regret which – unlike the standard post-Time Out Of Mind outing by a Saga holiday-aged pop star – offers no soft-focus reverb, and precious little comfort either side of the grave.

Talking to the New York Times, Pop was eager to put some distance between himself and his album’s dour side. “I had a kind of character in mind,” he noted. “It was sort of a cross between myself and a military veteran.” However, the anger, the exhaustion here sounds very much his own. “I’ve shot my gun, I’ve used my knife,” he mutters sorrowfully on “American Valhalla“. “It hasn’t been an easy life.”

Times have indeed been tough for Pop; even before Bowie’s departure this January, the deaths of fellow Stooges Scott and Ron Asheton (in 2009 and 2014, respectively) had robbed him of key co-combatants. And, in between the insurance ads, his attempt to subvert his ‘godfather of punk’ image with oddball chanson collection Après foundered when his record label, Virgin EMI, refused to release it. “They would have preferred that I do a rock album with popular punks, sort of like: ‘Hi Dad!'” he seethed, as he snuck Après out independently in 2012. “What has a record company ever done for me but humiliate and torment and drag me down?”

Humiliation is everywhere on Post Pop Depression; the down-on-her-luck beauty of the lava-lamp-lit “Gardenia“; the cowed wage slave trudging weekend-wards on “Sunday”. A crushing, low-slung guitar riff on “In The Lobby”, meanwhile, accompanies a depiction of a streetwalking cheetah going joylessly through the motions. “And it’s all about the edge, and it’s all about the dancing kids, and it’s all about the sex, and it’s all about done,” Pop smoulders, concluding bitterly. “I follow my shadow tonight.” Berlin memoir “German Days“, for its part, recalls not the excitement of exploring the city’s ripped backside but a world of crappy clip joints. “Glittering champagne on ice,” Pop ululates over a lugubrious beer-hall squelch. “Garish, overpriced.”

The past and the present are sullied, but the future is grimmer still. Ennio Morricone death bells clang over the sullen “Chocolate Drops” and the hateful “Vulture”, as Pop attempts to shoo away those who would one day pick at his bones, while the raw, powerful “American Valhalla” confronts the afterlife with a shudder over a glowering bass thud: “Is anybody in there? And can I bring a friend?”

The characters depicted here, however, might be too far gone for friendship, and wobbly BBC Radiophonic keyboards on opener “Break Into Your Heart” cannot mask the misanthropy within; Pop’s search-and-destroy conclusion on sexual partners: “Break them all, take them all, fake them all, steal them all, fail them all.”

However, if the cruel world of Post Pop Depression is eat or be eaten, Pop knows he is no longer predator but prey. Nick Cave‘s Grinderman project explored male-pattern entropy with a wink, but with this wounded howl of a record, Pop stubbornly refuses to see the funny side. Grimly compelling, it concludes with Pop’s “Everybody’s Talkin'” of the damned, “Paraguay”, its protagonist trudging off to the jungle with what remains of his Yankee dollars. “I’m going where sore losers go,” he grunts. “To hide my face and spend my dough.” Like the rest of Post Pop Depression, it sounds like a resignation speech.

Q&A
Dean Fertita

You recorded in secrecy in Joshua Tree, California; why was that?
Nobody needed to know what was happening and if we didn’t like what we were doing, we knew we could just drive out into the middle of the desert and bury it and no-one would ever know it existed.

The lyrics are very dark. Did that surprise you?
If you had looked at this on paper and seen the guys who were on the record then you would have expected it to sound a certain way, but at this stage of his career we felt we could make a record with him that relied more on the content being heavy. We think he is maybe one of the most underrated lyricists in American music – he is so good at expressing something that people can understand simply but there is a lot of subtext there.

Iggy’s rant at the end of “Paraguay” is incredibly powerful. How did it come about?
That was absolutely spur of the moment. We had done three or four versions of that song and each one was completely different. He had no lyrics in front of him. I was ecstatic that we had a moment like that. There’s been some talk within our little group that this could be his last record, but you don’t know for sure. My hope is that he is super inspired by what we did and makes ten more records, but if it is the last thing he does, I am just proud to have been in the room when he said what he said. And if he stops, he stops on a high.
INTERVIEW: JIM WIRTH

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.

Here’s how you can watch tonight’s David Bowie memorial concert

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The second of two David Bowie memorial concerts is set to take place at Radio City Hall tonight. Due to “unprecedented demand,†it will be available to stream live via Skype in exchange for a minimum £15 donation to charity. Viewers will be asked to donate via the platform ammado in return ...

The second of two David Bowie memorial concerts is set to take place at Radio City Hall tonight.

Due to “unprecedented demand,†it will be available to stream live via Skype in exchange for a minimum £15 donation to charity.

Viewers will be asked to donate via the platform ammado in return for a link to the Skype live stream, and proceeds will go to a range of arts, music and education charities. The concert starts at 20:00 local time on Friday 1 April, which is around 01:00 UK time.

The event was originally organised by New York entrepreneur Michael Dorf as a Tribute concert to the singer, but it was changed to a memorial following his death in January. Dorf told Pollstar: “It’s all kind of a very bittersweet success in the sense that it’s now a tribute to someone who’s passed versus a tribute to someone who was probably going to be in attendance.â€

Performers among those confirmed for tonight’s streamed concert include Blondie, Pixies and Michael Stipe. Stipe’s performances on both nights are thought to be his biggest since the dissolve of R.E.M in September 2011.

Mick Jagger and Paul McCartney were also tipped to be joining the line-up, a rumour McCartney’s spokesman dismissed as “tabloid rubbish.†Jagger’s representatives have not commented.

The first installment took place last night at Carnegie City Hall. Click here to watch the performances.

Bowie tributes are at the forefront of many minds this week, with Emily Eavis also announcing “several tributes†to the singer at this year’s Glastonbury.

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 Eno shares 21-minute-long new song, “The Ship”

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Brian Eno has released a preview of his upcoming album, The Ship. The 21-minute clip is the full title track from his first solo album since 2012’s Lux. Eno’s disembodied vocals can be heard over the quivering synths, marking the first time he has sung on a solo album since 2005’s Another Day...

Brian Eno has released a preview of his upcoming album, The Ship.

The 21-minute clip is the full title track from his first solo album since 2012’s Lux. Eno’s disembodied vocals can be heard over the quivering synths, marking the first time he has sung on a solo album since 2005’s Another Day On Earth.

Eno said in a statement: “The piece started as an Ambient work intended for a multichannel sound installation in Stockholm, but during the making of it I discovered that I could now sing a low C – which happens to be the root note of the piece. Getting older does have a few fringe benefits after all.

“From that point the work turned into an unusual kind of song… a type I’ve never made before where the vocals floats free, untethered to a rhythmic grid of any kind.â€

Also on the album is a cover of Velvet Underground’s ‘I’m Set Free‘, written by Lou Reed and which, according to Eno: “seems more relevant now that it did then.â€

The Ship will be available to buy from April 21.

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.

Keith Richards criticises modern artists for not writing their own music

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Keith Richards has critisised contemporary chart topping artists for relying on multiple collaborators to write their music and produce their albums. The singers in the firing line were Adele and Rihanna, who often share credits with teams of co-writers. He was asked by Time Out to compare their so...

Keith Richards has critisised contemporary chart topping artists for relying on multiple collaborators to write their music and produce their albums.

The singers in the firing line were Adele and Rihanna, who often share credits with teams of co-writers. He was asked by Time Out to compare their song writing process to that of the Rolling Stones, to which he responded: “Well, they can’t rely on themselves, can they?â€

Adele worked with 11 other writers to create her most recent album 25, and Rihanna’s Anti album is credited with 12.

He extended his tirade toward modern music culture in general, blasting television talent shows. He said: “We’re in the midst of a heavy-duty ‘showbiz’ period, even stronger than when we killed it last time. The X Factor and all this competition shit. It’s just for people who want to be famous. Well if it’s fame you want, good luck. You’d better learn to live with it.”

Richards has just returned to the UK following the Stones’ historic gig in Cuba. Next week, the band launch their major retrospective, Exhibitionism, at the Saatchi Gallery in London.

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 David Gilmour play “Wish You Were Here” during rare TV appearance

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David Gilmour played "Wish You Were Here" during his first American TV appearance in 10 years. He also played "Rattle That Lock" on Jimmy Kimmel Live, which was broadcast on Monday March 28. You can watch both performances below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=1&v=LTGwB6CBuX0 Gi...

David Gilmour played “Wish You Were Here” during his first American TV appearance in 10 years.

He also played “Rattle That Lock” on Jimmy Kimmel Live, which was broadcast on Monday March 28.

You can watch both performances below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=1&v=LTGwB6CBuX0

Gilmour recently began a short run of North American tour dates in support of Rattle That Lock. These include a two-night stand in Toronto on March 31 and April 1, followed by shows in Chicago and New York.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DcGju-xvcZM

Later this year, Gilmour will also return to Pompeii: the site of the 1971 film, Pink Floyd: Live At Pompeii.

“Agreement reached. After 45 years David Gilmour will play again at Pompeii on 7 and 8 July,†culture minister Dario Franceschini tweeted.

Elton John is also scheduled to perform at Pompeii in July.

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.

The White Stripes and Jack White announce Record Store Day releases

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Third Man Records have announced details of this year's Record Store Day releases. Among them are rarities from The White Stripes and Jack White. The White Stripes' Peel Sessions will receive their first official release on two albums, one red and one vinyl. The band's two sessions for John Peel t...

Third Man Records have announced details of this year’s Record Store Day releases.

Among them are rarities from The White Stripes and Jack White.

The White Stripes‘ Peel Sessions will receive their first official release on two albums, one red and one vinyl. The band’s two sessions for John Peel took place in 2001. A standard black vinyl version of this release will be available later this year.

Jack White, meanwhile, will release a limited edition green vinyl 7″ of Stevie Wonder’s “You Are The Sunshine Of My Life“. This single includes White’s cover from his appearance on their show earlier this Spring with the Muppets house band, The Electric Mayhem, on the a-side, plus the special TV rendition, featuring the rest of the Muppets singing along, as the b-side.

Also for Record Store Day, B52 vocalist Kate Pierson releases “Venus” b/w “Radio in Bed” in the Blue Series 7″. Both tracks are produced by Jack White.

Other artists who will have releases on Record Store Day include David Bowie, Bob Dylan and Patti Smith.

A trio of Bowie releases include a picture disc of the 1970 album The Man Who Sold The World, a picture-disc seven-inch of “TVC15” and a 12-inch EP, “I Dig Everything“, compiling six tracks Bowie recorded and released as three different singles for Pye in 1966.

Bob Dylan previews his new album, Fallen Angels, with a 7″ EP, Melancholy Mood.

Patti Smith releases Horses Live Electric Lady Studios – a full live performance of Smith’s debut album recorded in August 2015.

Record Store Day will take place on 16 April 2016. You can find the full releases for the UK here and America by clicking here.

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.

Glastonbury Festival 2016: full line-up announced

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The full line-up for this year's Glastonbury Festival has been announced. Joining headliners Muse, Adele and Coldplay are PJ Harvey, LCD Soundsystem, New Order and Beck. Also playing are Kurt Vile, Kamasi Washington, John Grant and Jeff Lynne’s Electric Light Orchestra. The festival runs from J...

The full line-up for this year’s Glastonbury Festival has been announced.

Joining headliners Muse, Adele and Coldplay are PJ Harvey, LCD Soundsystem, New Order and Beck.

Also playing are Kurt Vile, Kamasi Washington, John Grant and Jeff Lynne’s Electric Light Orchestra.

The festival runs from June 22 – 26, at Worthy Farm, Pilton, Somerset.

The full line-up is as follows:

Muse
Adele
Coldplay
Foals
Beck
Jeff Lynne’s Electric Light Orchestra
LCD Soundsystem
PJ Harvey
ZZ Top
Disclosure
New Order
Earth Wind & Fire
Ellie Goulding
The Last Shadow Puppets
Skepta
The 1975
Grimes
Annie Mac
Sigur Rós
Underworld
James Blake
The Syrian National Orchestra
Savages
Floating Points (Live)
Laura Mvula
Stormzy
Art Garfunkel
Bring Me the Horizon
Santigold
Chvrches
Vince Staples
Daughter
Richard Hawley
The Lumineers
Gregory Porter
Ronnie Spector
Ezra Furman
M83
Kurt Vile
Mercury Rev
Jess Glynne
Madness
Wolf Alice
Baaba Maal
Ernest Ranglin
Bastille
Róisín Murphy
John Grant
Years & Years
Little Simz
Carl Cox
Nao
Fatboy Slim
Guy Garvey
Kamasi Washington
Jack Garratt
Cyndi Lauper
Explosions in the Sky
AlunaGeorge
Bat for Lashes
Protoje
Two Door Cinema Club
Jake Bugg
Mac DeMarco
Of Monsters and Men
Dua Lipa
Unknown Mortal Orchestra
Saint Etienne
Band of Horses
Lady Leshurr
Rokia Traoré
Hinds
Blossoms
LÃ¥psley

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.

Tom Petty reveals new Mudcrutch album; shares “Trailer” track

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Tom Petty's Mudcrutch have announced details of their second album. 2 will be released by Reprise Records on May 20. The new album has been produced by Tom Petty and Mike Campbell with Ryan Ulyate. The current line up is: Tom Petty (bass/vocals), Tom Leadon (guitar/vocals), Benmont Tench (keyboar...

Tom Petty’s Mudcrutch have announced details of their second album.

2 will be released by Reprise Records on May 20.

The new album has been produced by Tom Petty and Mike Campbell with Ryan Ulyate.

The current line up is: Tom Petty (bass/vocals), Tom Leadon (guitar/vocals), Benmont Tench (keyboards/vocals), Mike Campbell (guitar/vocals), and Randall Marsh (drums/vocals).

Three instant downloads are available with pre-orders on MudcrutchMusic.com, including “Trailer“, which you can hear below.

Mudcrutch has also announced their first American tour, starting at Denver’s Ogden Theater on May 26. Tickets for all headline shows go on-sale Friday, April 1st (10am local venue time) and every online ticket purchased for the headline tour includes a CD copy of the new album, 2.

The first single “Trailer” with b-side “Beautiful World” will be released as a limited edition vinyl 7 inch on Record Store Day.

“2” Album Tracklist:
Trailer
Dreams of Flying
Beautiful Blue
Beautiful World
I Forgive It All
The Other Side Of The Mountain
Hope
Welcome To Hell
Save Your Water
Victim of Circumstance
Hungry No More

Mudcrutch 2016 Tour Dates:
Thursday, May 26th @ Ogden Theatre, Denver, CO
Sunday, May 29th @ Summer Camp Festival*, Chillicothe, IL
Tuesday, May 31st @ Ryman Auditorium, Nashville, TN
Thursday, June 2nd @ Tabernacle, Atlanta, GA
Friday, June 3rd @ Bunbury Music Festival*, Cincinnati, OH
Monday, June 6th @ 9:30 Club, Washington, DC
Tuesday, June 7th @ The Fillmore, Philadelphia, PA
Friday, June 10th @ Webster Hall, New York, NY
Saturday, June 11th @ Webster Hall, New York, NY
Tuesday, June 14th @ Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, NY
Wednesday, June 15th @ House of Blues, Boston, MA
Sunday, June 19th @ The Fillmore, San Francisco, CA
Monday, June 20th @ The Fillmore, San Francisco, CA
Saturday, June 25th @ The Fonda Theatre, Los Angeles, CA
Sunday, June 26th @ The Fonda Theatre, Los Angeles, CA
Tuesday, June 28th @ The Observatory, Santa Ana, CA

* Tickets purchased for the festivals do not include CD of “2”

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.

Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy & Bitchin Bajas reviewed!

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The mysteries of Will Oldham are such that, on the rare occasions when we actually learn something intimate about him, knowledge only seems to deepen the enigma. In a recent interview with the Aquarium Drunkard website, Oldham revealed that he’d spent the last 30 years collecting the gentle mottos...

The mysteries of Will Oldham are such that, on the rare occasions when we actually learn something intimate about him, knowledge only seems to deepen the enigma. In a recent interview with the Aquarium Drunkard website, Oldham revealed that he’d spent the last 30 years collecting the gentle mottos contained in fortune cookies. He did not, characteristically, explain his motives. “I’ve always wondered why I keep these fortunes,†he told the interviewer, “and when we started to get together for this I thought, ‘Oh, this is going to be a good thing.’â€

This, it turns out, is a project based around the wisdom of fortune cookies; a beatitudinous vibe-in in the company of three kosmische dudes from Chicago who go by the name of Bitchin Bajas. The hook-up has already produced an album, Epic Jammers And Fortunate Little Ditties, providing Oldham and his Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy persona with an escape route from the environs of folk music. Now, the quartet have taken up residence at London’s Café Oto for three nights, during which they will usher in the New Age using synths, reeds, the odd guitar, myriad delays and a lyrical palette that consists entirely of those fortune cookie homilies.

As the Bajas hum empathetically, and Oldham recites the greatest hits of his cookie collection – “Your heart is pure, your mind is clear, your soul devout,†for instance – with a flourish of his right hand, a tiny light glowing on his index finger, it’s easy to see the whole operation as a satire on off-the-shelf spirituality. That would underestimate, though, the alluringly cultish ambience on this third night, and the sense that we are participating in a playful but profound exercise: how can context and performance invest even the most facile messaging with sacred heft?

Oldham has never sung better, his voice a tool of great strength and subtlety where once it was a parched croak. Even when loops allow him to harmonise with himself, there remains an uncanny clarity, as if this lavishly-bearded new guru has manifested simultaneously in all four corners of the room. The occasional zithers and flute, freestyling around Oldham’s incantations, mean that the closest comparison might be Brian Eno’s old protégé Laraaji: an artist deadly serious about his New Age explorations, but one who also uses laughter workshops as a means to achieve meditative bliss.

So it is, perhaps, with Oldham. Towards the end of the 90-minute set, he chooses one more gnomic insight from the cookie jar: “Laugh, and the world laughs with you. Snore, and you sleep alone.†By now, the quartet have been joined by the drummer Charles Hayward, fresh from the reunion of his old band, This Heat. Where Bitchin Bajas are discreet, Hayward is an edgier presence, working through his percussive arsenal of a tin drum, another tin drum, some bells, a gong, a bigger gong. Even his most vigorous clanks, however, cannot disrupt the yogic calm; it simply sounds like a complementary ritual being enacted in another part of the temple.

At one point, Hayward refrains from fiddling with his toys, and sets to more orthodox work on a snare drum. There is a zither, a persistent organ riff, a saxophone, and Oldham twanging away on mouth harp, and for a moment the clouds of metaphorical incense clear to reveal not improvising creatures of spirit, but fleshly guys jamming in a room, a sort of Spiritualized without the bombast. Oldham is dancing, provocatively, in his chair now, reincarnated as a grooving celebrant. “Your hard work is about to pay off,†he serenely pronounces. “Congratulations…â€

Phil Collins on ‘In The Air Tonight’: “I have no idea what it’s about”

The prog-rocker’s personal nightmare that became an ambient-electro, drum-holocaust sensation… Words: David Cavanagh. Originally published in Uncut's June 2008 issue (Take 133). Picture: Peter Still/Redferns ________________________ At the end of 1980, if you’d been looking for an artist to...

The prog-rocker’s personal nightmare that became an ambient-electro, drum-holocaust sensation… Words: David Cavanagh. Originally published in Uncut’s June 2008 issue (Take 133). Picture: Peter Still/Redferns

________________________

At the end of 1980, if you’d been looking for an artist to take British synth-pop into its darkest territories, you wouldn’t have glanced twice at Phil Collins, genial frontman of Genesis and drummer with jazz-fusioneers Brand X. Yet in January 1981, in those cold, confusing weeks following John Lennon’s murder, a singular piece of obsessive minimalism, climaxing in a cataclysm of drums, leapt from 36 to 4 in the UK charts. It was time to shift some paradigms.

Collins’ “In The Air Tonight†was only denied a UK No 1 place by Lennon’s posthumous chart-topper “Womanâ€. Intense and menacing, “In The Air…â€, beloved of air-drummers and vocoder mimics, popularised a far-reaching new studio effect (“gated drumâ€, or “gated reverbâ€) discovered by engineer Hugh Padgham during 1979 sessions for Peter Gabriel’s third album in London. “In The Air…†was to become an enduring favourite of classic rock radio programmers, NFL footballers, foul-mouthed rappers and chocolate-advertising gorillas. It has even cultivated its own urban myth. In the most popular version, Collins witnesses a real-life murder (“I was there and I saw what you didâ€), and later lures the unsuspecting killer to one of his concerts where he sings “In The Air…†while a spotlight is trained on the guilty man’s face.

________________________

PHIL COLLINS (writer, performer): During the 1978 Genesis world tour, my marriage broke up. I came back to a virtually empty house. I moved everything out of the master bedroom, put a studio in, and threw myself into home recording. I had a Brennell 8-track, an electric piano, a Prophet-5 synthesiser and a drum machine. I had no intention of making a record. I was just keeping myself busy.

One of the songs was a moody thing with a bit of an atmosphere. I found some chords for it, which I liked, and rather than over-arrange it I decided to put a vocal on next. I was trying to move away from the complicated Genesis stuff, go in a simpler direction. I didn’t have any lyrics prepared, but I started singing, and what came out is what you hear on “In The Air…â€.

It’s wonderful that an urban myth has grown up around it, and that people on courses at universities have tried to decipher its meaning, because I can say with hand on heart that I have no idea what it’s about. Obviously, having my wife leave me, and losing my two little ones, there was anger, bitterness and hurt. Those emotions are in the song, but in an abstract way. I’ve no idea what “coming in the air tonight†means – apart from an impending darkness, possibly.

About a year later, I played my demoes to our manager Tony Smith and also Ahmet Ertegun [Genesis were signed to Atlantic in America]. To me they were still just doodles, but Ahmet said: “You’ve got to make a record.†I’d met Hugh Padgham when I played drums on Peter Gabriel’s album [“Intruderâ€, “No Self-Controlâ€], and bonded with him straight away as someone who could make my drums sound huge.

The drum fill on “In The Air…†became a landmark, I suppose. I’ve been at traffic lights and seen guys in cars pounding along to it on their steering-wheels. When we started getting visitors down to the studio, people like Eric Clapton, we’d play “In The Air…†to them – loud, obviously – and when the drums came in, they’d be flattened to the walls. It wasn’t my choice as single. When I did Top Of The Pops, it was No 36 in the charts. Dave Lee Travis said to me: “That’s going to be Top 3 next week.â€

I thought: ‘Nah…’ It was the famous Top Of The Pops with the paint pot on the piano. Ironically, when I sang the original demo, and wrote down the words afterwards, I used a piece of decorator’s stationery. The decorator that my wife went off with. An interesting piece of memorabilia, there, should I ever wish to sell it.

The American Dreamer

In the winter of 1970-71, the writer and actor LM “Kit†Carson visited his friend Dennis Hopper’s house outside Taos, in the desert of New Mexico. Hopper had recently returned from shooting The Last Movie in Peru’s and was busy editing the 48 hours of footage he’d brought back. After five ...

In the winter of 1970-71, the writer and actor LM “Kit†Carson visited his friend Dennis Hopper’s house outside Taos, in the desert of New Mexico. Hopper had recently returned from shooting The Last Movie in Peru’s and was busy editing the 48 hours of footage he’d brought back. After five days, Carson was convinced the process needed to be documented for posterity. Joining forces with photographer-turned-director Lawrence Schiller, the pair returned with a 16mm camera to shoot a free-form portrait of Hopper in his wild and lonely kingdom.

By turns excruciating and mesmerising, embarrassing, sordid, banal and beautiful, the resulting film has since become legend. Partly because few other director portraits find the auteur under study stripping off and strolling naked along a suburban sidewalk. And partly because, for 45 years, it has been practically impossible to see.

As part of his countercultural mission statement – and his mission to boost his revolutionary image – Hopper instructed Schiller and Carson to only distribute the film on university campuses. For decades, then, The American Dreamer existed only as scratched college prints or bleary bootlegs. But now, fuly restored, it is finally being released. The film will be available on the arthouse video-on-demand service MUBI from February 12-March 13; meanwhile, a region-free Blu-Ray/ DVD combo has been issued by Etiquette Pictures in the US.

If The American Dreamer was envisaged as a countercultural rallying cry in 1971, what lends it potency today is our retrospective knowledge of what came next. The film ostensibly captures Hopper at his height, having shaken the industry with the phenomenal success of Easy Rider and poised to make the film of his dreams.

In fact, though, it freezes him at the edge of an abyss, about to experience the career-wrecking commercial failure of The Last Movie, and enter a wilderness from which it would take a decade-and-a-half to emerge. Most striking is how, beneath his exhausted bluster and bat-shit posturing, Hopper seems to sense it coming. Early on, Schiller asks what will happen if The Last Movie doesn’t find an audience. Hopper assures him it will; then, tellingly, ruminates on Orson Welles, whom he’d recently encountered going cap-in-hand around the studios, failing to get funding.

Pressure was building on Hopper. For different reasons, the acidheads of the counterculture and the heads of Universal studio were both on his back, impatient to see his Easy Rider follow-up. Added to the weight of their expectations were his own. The Last Movie meant far more to him than Captain America. It was a movie he’d been dreaming about since the early-1960s, and a deeply personal statement about Hollywood’s destructive effects. As he started editing, though, he found it slipping out of reach. Originally scheduled for three months, it would take him over a year to complete his cut.

Meanwhile, he’d just come out of his disastrous eight-day marriage to Michelle Phillips, and was looking to sleep with every woman he could. Meanwhile again, his appetite for booze and drugs was tipping into addiction. More than filming him working on The Last Movie, Carson and Schiller film Hopper not working on it: firing rifles in the desert; offering philosophical pearls such as, “I don’t believe in readingâ€; and, indeed, bent double on a broken bed, baring his ass for fondling by a coterie of 30 naked young women, in a toe-curling group “sensitivity encounter.â€

Alongside Orson Welles, the other phantom on Hopper’s mind is Charles Manson, whom he admits having recently visited in jail. At points, filling his compound with stoned chicks and lecturing them, it seems like Hopper, having already grown the beard, is considering picking up where Manson left off.

Then again, it pays to consider how much Hopper is playing “Dennis Hopper†here. It’s key to remember that, behind the camera, Carson had recently starred in David Holzman’s Diary, the brilliant 1967 mockumentary that debunked cinema verite and shared themes with The Last Movie: namely, how the very presence of a camera warps reality, rendering it fake. Hopper makes the very point in a scene where he takes Schiller to task over his invasive filming – a confrontation that was itself staged.

The American Dreamer isn’t simply a significant documentary about New Hollywood. With its reflexive nature, and its nagging suggestion of something that has just been missed ¬– the impending sense of “we blew it†– it’s a key movie of that wave. See it, remember the wild Dennis that was, and hope that, someday, The Last Movie itself will be released from limbo.

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.