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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 ...

After 10 years of break-ups and breakdowns, Radiohead have settled into some kind of workable routine. They live apart from the media glare. They tour in short bursts, usually when they choose. They have their own studio, their own rhythm, and the commercial mandate to do what they please. They now seem to be down to one serious band meltdown per album.

“It’s been pretty stable, really,” assesses the long-suffering Colin Greenwood, the band’s chief diplomat and peacemaker. “I used to think it’s all going to end tomorrow, every day – but I don’t think about that any more because it’s unhealthy. Am I ready for it to end? Probably not. You know people go to The Priory for rehab for drugs? I’d have to go to rehab for organising my life.”

Does Greenwood need Radiohead more than Radiohead need him? “Definitely. That’s the one most emphatic answer, to all the questions in your interview; a big ‘Yes’, underlined, italicised, with a flashing red light behind it.”

Right now, there are half-finished tapes all over Radiohead’s studio, but no future masterplan, no clear direction. “It’s much more like, this is an ongoing, healthy, slightly less destructive, slightly more enjoyable thing that we decided to do,” says the singer, visibly brightening as his car ride back to Oxford looms.

But if an air of calm hangs over Radiohead today, history tells us it won’t last. Yorke will find the success of Amnesiac too much to handle. There will be tears and traumas. The crucifixion of Thom Yorke dictates that genius equals pain.

“It’s not genius,” corrects Ed O’Brien, ever so politely, before dashing off to a gathering of Victorian polar explorers. Or not. “It’s just that if you want something good to come out of something, you have to put in a lot of effort, and that involves a lot of hard work, and a lot of blood, sweat and tears. No different to anything, no different to what we all do.”

The interview is over. Radiohead are moving onwards. Maybe we’ll travel with them, or perhaps we’ll get off at the next stop. Thom Yorke might make the world a finer, fairer place. Or maybe he will end up choking on the festering contempt for his fellow man which seems to fuel his bilious lyrical worldview.

“Really? Hmmm,” he considers the possibility for a moment, scanning his mental hard disk. Eventually, he decides: “I don’t think it’s about people. A lot of it’s about self-created demons. People build themselves their own mazes that they can’t get out of… but no, I’m not negative. In fact, if I was negative about strangers in the street then I think I’d go mad, definitely.”

So Thom Yorke has some faith in the human race?

“Yes,” he answers softly, carefully. “Given time and the correct amount of information. That’s one of the things I really hang on to. If you explain yourself, then things will be all right. Ignorance is the reason people get hurt.”

The people paid to protect Thom Yorke are hovering now, eager to whisk him away to safety. In fact, so keen is he to escape that he gets up from the table and leaves through the wrong exit, searching for a taxi that isn’t there. He returns a minute later, laughing sheepishly.

Uncut is determined to bid farewell to pop’s most paranoid android on an up note, a note of conciliation and of we-must-do-this-again. You know what, Thom? You really should do more interviews.

He’s already halfway through the door when he responds.

“You know what…?”

He never does finish that sentence.

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.

The National unveil Grateful Dead tribute album, Day Of The Dead

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The National have announced details of Day Of The Dead, their mammoth 59-song, six-hour celebration of the music of The Grateful Dead. Curated by The National's Aaron and Bryce Dessner, the set will be released on May 20 by 4AD. It features over 60 artists, 59 tracks and is almost 6 hours long. I...

The National have announced details of Day Of The Dead, their mammoth 59-song, six-hour celebration of the music of The Grateful Dead.

Curated by The National’s Aaron and Bryce Dessner, the set will be released on May 20 by 4AD.

It features over 60 artists, 59 tracks and is almost 6 hours long.

It will be released on 5 x CD, and as a limited edition vinyl boxed set. All profits will help fight for AIDS/HIV and related health issues around the world through the charity Red Hot Organisation.

The line-up includes The Flaming Lips, Wilco featuring Bob Weir, Kurt Vile and J Mascis, Will Oldham, Jenny Lewis, Sharon Van Etten, Justin Vernon, The National, The War On Drugs, Jim James and many more.

You can read more about this amazing project in the new issue of Uncut, in shops next week – Tuesday, March 22

The digital tracklisting

DAY OF THE DEAD DIGITAL TRACK LISTING
“Thunder” (Vol.1)
01. Touch of Grey – The War On Drugs
02. Sugar – Phosphorescent, Jenny Lewis & Friends
03. Candyman – Jim James & Friends
04. Cassidy – Moses Sumner, Jenny Lewis & Friends
05. Black Muddy River – Bruce Hornsby and DeYarmond Edison
06. Loser – Ed Droste, Binki Shapiro & Friends
07. Peggy-O – The National
08. Box of Rain – Kurt Vile and the Violators (featuring J Mascis)
09. Rubin and Cherise – Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy & Friends
10. To Lay Me Down – Perfume Genius, Sharon Van Etten & Friends
11. New Speedway Boogie – Courtney Barnett
12. Friends of the Devil – Mumford & Sons
13. Uncle John’s Band – Lucius
14. Me and My Uncle – The Lone Bellow & Friends
15. Mountains of the Moon – Lee Ranaldo, Lisa Hannigan & Friends
16. Black Peter – Anohni and yMusic
17. Garcia Counterpoint – Bryce Dessner
18. Terrapin Station (Suite) – Daniel Rossen, Christopher Bear and The National (featuring Josh Kaufman, Conrad Doucette, So Percussion and Brooklyn Youth Chorus)
19. Attics of My Life – Angel Olsen
20. St. Stephen (live) – Wilco with Bob Weir

“Lightning” (Vol.2)
01. If I Had the World to Give – Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy
02. Standing on the Moon – Phosphorescent & Friends
03. Cumberland Blues – Charles Bradley and Menahan Street Band
04. Ship of Fools – Tallest Man on Earth & Friends
05. Bird Song – Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy & Friends
06. Morning Dew – The National
07. Truckin’ – Marijuana Deathsquads
08. Dark Star – Cass McCombs, Joe Russo & Friends
09. Nightfall of Diamonds – Nightfall of Diamonds
10. Transitive Refraction Axis for John Oswald – Tim Hecker
11. Going Down The Road Feelin’ Bad – Lucinda Williams & Friends
12. Playing in the Band – Tunde Adebimpe, Lee Ranaldo & Friends
13. Stella Blue – Local Natives
14. Eyes of the World – Tal National
15. Help on the Way – Bela Fleck
16. Franklin’s Tower – Orchestra Baobab
17. Till the Morning Comes – Luluc with Xylouris White
18. Ripple – The Walkmen
19. Brokedown Palace – Richard Reed Parry with Caroline Shaw and Little Scream (featuring Garth Hudson)

“Sunshine” (Vol.3)
01. Here Comes Sunshine – Real Estate
02. Shakedown Street – Unknown Mortal Orchestra
03. Brown-Eyed Woman – Hiss Golden Messenger
04. Jack-A-Roe – This Is The Kit
05. High Time – Daniel Rossen and Christopher Bear
06. Dire Wolf – The Lone Bellow & Friends
07. Althea – Winston Marshall, Kodiak Blue and Shura
08. Clementine Jam – Orchestra Baobab
09. China Cat Sunflower -> I Know You Rider – Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks
10. Easy Wind – Bill Callahan
11. Wharf Rat – Ira Kaplan & Friends
12. Estimated Prophet – The Rileys
13. Drums -> Space – Man Forever, So Percussion and Oneida
14. Cream Puff War – Fucked Up
15. Dark Star – The Flaming Lips
16. What’s Become of the Baby – s t a r g a z e
17. King Solomon’s Marbles – Vijay Iyer
18. Rosemary – Mina Tindle & Friends
19. And We Bid You Goodnight – Sam Amidon
20. I Know You Rider (live) – The National with Bob Weir

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.

Dexys announce new album, Let The Record Show Dexys Do Irish And Country Soul

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Dexys have announced details of a new album, Let The Record Show Dexys Do Irish and Country Soul. It will be released on June 3rd on 100% / Warner Music. “We had the idea to do this album in 1984 or 1985,” says Kevin Rowland. “It was to be called Irish and was to feature songs like ‘Carric...

Dexys have announced details of a new album, Let The Record Show Dexys Do Irish and Country Soul.

It will be released on June 3rd on 100% / Warner Music.

“We had the idea to do this album in 1984 or 1985,” says Kevin Rowland. “It was to be called Irish and was to feature songs like ‘Carrickfergus’. ‘Curragh of Kildare’ and ‘Women Of Ireland’ – all of which are featured here. Dexys broke up not too long afterwards, so it didn’t happen.”

“Over the years, I would often think about it,” he continues. “The idea of it never went away. I can recall 10 or 12 years ago thinking, for example, ‘If I do ‘Carrickfergus’, I can try this or that.’ Or maybe we can do ‘You Wear it Well’, as the brief had expanded from solely consisting of Irish songs, to songs I’ve always loved and wanted to record. The album was always at the back of my mind. Then just as we were getting ready to record ‘One Day I’m Going To Soar’, I had an inspirational bolt from the blue, a strong clear feeling that this album should be our next project.’

“The album is called ‘Dexys DO Irish and Country Soul’: DO it, not BECOME it,” he emphasises. “We’re not trying to be Irish, and we haven’t used too many Celtic instruments on there. It’s our sound. We’re bringing our style to these songs. I’m just a guy who follows my intuition, my inspiration. This really felt like the right thing to do. We have put probably more care and attention into these songs than we might have done with our own songs, because the odds were high. It was important to get them right, and make sure every one of them felt relevant to us.”

The album’s tracklisting is:

Women of Ireland
To Love Somebody
Smoke Gets in Your Eyes
Curragh of Kildare
I’ll Take You Home Again, Kathleen
You Wear It Well
40 Shades of Green
How Do I Live
Grazing in the Grass
The Town I Loved So Well
Both Sides Now
Carrickfergus

The band will appear in Dublin at the National Concert Hall (March 29) and London’s Royal Festival Hall (April 29).

Rowland also DJs at How Does It Feel To Be Loved? at The Phoenix in London on Saturday April 16.

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.

Bon Iver announce “Cercle” live shows

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Bon Iver have unveiled a new live show, "Cercle". The band will perform special in-the-round performances across four nights at the Sydney Opera House's Vivid LIVE from May 27 - 30. The rest of the Vivid LIVE program includes New Order, Anohni, Max Richter and more. Bon Iver will also headline th...

Bon Iver have unveiled a new live show, “Cercle“.

The band will perform special in-the-round performances across four nights at the Sydney Opera House’s Vivid LIVE from May 27 – 30.

The rest of the Vivid LIVE program includes New Order, Anohni, Max Richter and more.

Bon Iver will also headline the Eaux Claires Music Festival – curated by Justin Vernon – which takes place on August 12 – 13 in Eau Claire, Wisconsin.

The line up includes Beach House, Vince Staples, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Mavis Staples, James Blake, Jon Hopkins and more.

At the Eaux Claires festival, he National’s Aaron and Bryce Dessner will unveil Day Of The Dead, their charity project featuring musicians performing Grateful Dead songs.

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.

This Heat – This Heat/Health & Efficiency/Deceit reissued

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Dominant narrative tells us that post-punk came out of the fire of punk – the disruptive socio-cultural possibilities of 1976 opening the way for a more questioning, experimental programme. It’s a convenient story, but for the most part, it reads like a not-so-subtle warping of the truth. Dig in...

Dominant narrative tells us that post-punk came out of the fire of punk – the disruptive socio-cultural possibilities of 1976 opening the way for a more questioning, experimental programme. It’s a convenient story, but for the most part, it reads like a not-so-subtle warping of the truth. Dig into the archives of most of the truly significant post-punk groups, and you’ll find stories that wind further back, into the strange climes of the early to mid-’70s: T-Rex fanatics, Canterbury prog fall-out, jejune improvisers, Welsh folkies, this is the real stuff of post-punk’s history.

This Heat benefited from the vegetation clearing of punk and post-punk, but the trio had already earned their stripes in various ways. Drummer Charles Hayward was in Quiet Sun with Phil Manzanera (Roxy Music), Bill MacCormick (Matching Mole) and Dave Jarrett; meeting guitarist Charles Bullen via a music paper advertisement, the two started working together as a free improvising duo, Dolphin Logic, while also joining Radar Favourites, alongside Geoff Leigh (Henry Cow) and Gerry Fitzgerald. Bass player and organist, the late, great Gareth Williams, entered the fray as manager first, before joining Hayward and Bullen in Friendly Rifles.

Too much like the Sex Pistols, that name: an improvisation played along to a multi-layered field recording on cassette, made during the long hot British summer of 1976, would give the trio their lasting tattoo, This Heat. That recording would also act as an early manifestation of the trio’s practice: everything up for grabs, or as the group’s motto would have it, “All possible processes. All channels open. Twenty-four-hour alert.”

Particularly once they’d set up Cold Storage, their own studio and practice space, This Heat were always on call, less a group than a project for living, making protest music that smelted brittle poetry by channelling social angst, and the creeping dread of the beginnings of Thatcherite rule, directly onto tape. You can hear their experiment in relatively bare-bones form on their debut, self-titled album, often referred to as Blue & Yellow after the record sleeve’s stark colour scheme. Opening with the quiet buzz and whirr of “Testcard”, This Heat explodes into the barely unchecked fury of “Horizontal Hold”, where the trio’s playing cuts in and out of range with sudden, brutish leaps, the group making the most of the alchemical power of tape editing.

“Not Waving”, one of This Heat’s most dolorous songs, follows, with a distressed voice singing out from uncertain terrain, the group’s laminar improvisation moulded into a loosely plotted sea-song: imagine Robert Wyatt’s Rock Bottom re-scored for Cold War anxiety. These juxtapositions make up the bulk of This Heat: hissing, crepuscule instrumentals like “Diet Of Worms”, or “Rainforest” (recorded at their very first gig), weaving between bleak, abstract protest songs. As an album, it’s an unremitting, scorched-earth experience, which makes the following year’s Health & Efficiency 12” all the more surprising: a joyous, exultant anti-anthem, “dedicated to the sunshine”, the title track has strong claim to be This Heat’s greatest six minutes, the brief body of the song itself, strung with slack-jawed guitars, giving way to a four-minute coda where a loop unspools to a seeming eternity.

1981’s Deceit, however, is This Heat’s crowning achievement. If This Heat was process laid bare, and Health & Efficiency a constructivist intervention, Deceit is close to This Heat’s state-of-the-world address, taking in geopolitics and military strategy (in Simon Reynolds’ Rip It Up, Hayward despaired of the national security policy of Mutually Assured Destruction), painted in unsurprisingly bleak hues. On “Shrink Wrap”, they take on false consciousness in a manner similar to Scritti Politti’s “Hegemony”, calling into question common-sense understandings through tortured vocal display: “Don’t bite the hand that feeds you/You can have your cake and eat it.”

Elsewhere, This Heat inject yet more ferocity into their songs, the thoroughgoing demystification of song employed by Rock In Opposition gaining new urgency on “SPQR” and “A New Kind Of Water”, brusquely cutting from studio to rough live audio on the astonishing “Makeshift Swahili”, occasionally dialling down the intensity on gorgeous, hesitant improvisations like “Radio Prague”. But it’s the commitment and energy of Deceit that stays with you, an echo of their legendary live form: as Hayward reflects on the latter, “our whole thing, the politics, the lyrics, everything was rooted in pure sound, so that was our focus and we seized any chance to unleash the sound with unabashed enthusiasm.”

Williams had left by the time Deceit was released, and though This Heat carried on briefly with new members, the magic had gone, and they eventually disbanded. The trio would all go on to make excellent music: Hayward with Camberwell Now and Regular Music, and as a powerhouse improvisor; Bullen with Lifetones and Circadian Rhythms; and Williams with Mary Currie on the Flaming Tunes cassette. There’s something mercurial in This Heat’s slim body of released music, though, and something intangible, an X factor that constantly eludes conscious articulation. Remarkable music, indeed.

Q&A
Charles Hayward & Charles Bullen
This Heat are usually framed as a post-punk group. Did punk feel like a divisive moment?

Hayward: [This Heat] were already gigging by the time the punk thing exploded and were very curious when we read things like “No more Beatles or Rolling Stones”. Unfortunately when we heard the actual music it sounded like Chuck Berry on speed. The DIY thing was already in place, the European improv scene, Sun Ra, the German bands like Can & Faust, and most of the punk stuff just didn’t have the same commitment to sound.

What made Cold Storage such a unique place to record?
Hayward: David Cunningham [of the Flying Lizards] told us there was this disused meat fridge at the Acme Studios complex on Acre Lane, Brixton. When we went to take a look there were no lights working so we had to use torches; it had its own micro-climate in there, mist and stuff. I expected to see a pack of albino wolves.

What did Gareth bring to This Heat, and what are your fondest memories of his presence?
Bullen: Gareth was a very gentle and very funny man! Though he probably seemed to be a bit of a wild man onstage after the first year or so. He was very much into the “non-musician” thing all the way, even though by a year later he had also picked up the bass and guitar and reached a fair bit of technical proficiency on both.
INTERVIEW: JON DALE

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.

Watch Massive Attack’s new video for “Ritual Spirit”

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Massive Attack have released the video for "Ritual Spirit". The track is taken from the EP of the same name released earlier this year The new video has been directed by Robert Del Naja (3D), from the band, and Medium and stars Kate Moss; you can watch it below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fh...

Massive Attack have released the video for “Ritual Spirit“.

The track is taken from the EP of the same name released earlier this year

The new video has been directed by Robert Del Naja (3D), from the band, and Medium and stars Kate Moss; you can watch it below.

“Me and Kate have been friends for years, but had never collaborated, so last year we booked a studio with Medium and set up a shoot,” says Del Naja. “During the session Kate was dancing in the dark, lighting herself with a naked bulb. She perfectly captured the essence of this track… intimate and ritualistic. We edited it back in Bristol to keep it raw with no re-touching, I didn’t want to lose the spirit of that moment.”

I have always been a huge fan of Massive Attack and 3D has been a friend for many years,” says Moss. “When he asked me to collaborate with him I didn’t have to think twice. I always thought their visuals were amazing and I was proud to be in this video.”

The band had previously released a video for “Take It There [ft. Tricky]”.

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.

The Who to headline the Isle Of Wight Festival

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The Who are headlining this year's Isle of Wight Festival. The show will be the band's only UK festival performance of 2016. They play on Saturday June 11. The band first played The Isle of Wight Festival in 1969, 1970, and then again in 2004 – the same year that David Bowie also headlined, his...

The Who are headlining this year’s Isle of Wight Festival.

The show will be the band’s only UK festival performance of 2016.

They play on Saturday June 11.

The band first played The Isle of Wight Festival in 1969, 1970, and then again in 2004 – the same year that David Bowie also headlined, his last ever UK live performance.

Richard Ashcroft is confirmed as special guest to The Who on the day, performing tracks from his new solo album ‘These People’.

Festival boss John Giddings says: “The Who are part of the fabric of The Isle of Wight Festival, and it’s great to welcome them back to the island as part of their ongoing 50th anniversary celebrations. We’re proud to have a line up of home-grown headliners to help celebrate our own 15th anniversary and ensure that this year delivers yet another unforgettable weekend of music.”

The Isle of Wight Festival takes place June 9 – 12 at Seaclose Park, Newport.

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.

The Grateful Dead reveal new box set

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The Grateful Dead have announced details of a new box set. July 1978: The Complete Recordings is a limited Edition 12-CD boxed set that highlights five unreleased concerts. It will be released by Rhino on May 13 alongside a three-CD set Of the band's July 8, 1978 Red Rocks Concert, which is also a...

The Grateful Dead have announced details of a new box set.

July 1978: The Complete Recordings is a limited Edition 12-CD boxed set that highlights five unreleased concerts.

It will be released by Rhino on May 13 alongside a three-CD set Of the band’s July 8, 1978 Red Rocks Concert, which is also available in The Complete Recordings.

“As an archivist and Dead Head, this boxed set is about as exciting as it gets,” says Grateful Dead archivist and boxed set producer David Lemieux. “Musically, it features five exhilarating, dynamic nights in the summer of 1978. The sound quality is impeccable, as would be expected from Betty Cantor-Jackson’s always-pristine recordings. The rarity of the first three nights, and the hall-of-fame pedigree of the last two, makes this one of the most astonishing Grateful Dead releases ever. Collaborating with the owners of these tapes, we are very pleased to see these important historical documents returned home and now shared with the world.”

The set is available now for pre-order exclusively at Dead.net.

Show #1
Arrowhead Stadium: Kansas City, MO (June 1, 78)

Disc 1
Bertha
Good Lovin’
Tennessee Jed
Jack Straw
Friend Of The Devil
Me And My Uncle
Big River

Disc 2
Terrapin Station>
Playing In The Band>
Rhythm Devils>
Space>
Estimated Prophet>
The Other One>
Wharf Rat>
Around And Around
Johnny B. Goode

Show #2
St. Paul Civic Center Arena, St. Paul, MN (June 3, 78)

Disc 1
New Minglewood Blues
Loser
Looks Like Rain
Ramble On Rose
Mexicali Blues>
Mama Tried>
Peggy-O
Cassidy
Deal>
The Music Never Stopped

Disc 2
Scarlet Begonias>
Fire On The Mountain
Dancing In The Street>
Rhythm Devils>
Not Fade Away>
Stella Blue>
Sugar Magnolia
Werewolves Of London

Show #3
Omaha Civic Auditorium, Omaha, NE (June 5, 78)

Disc 1
Sugaree
Beat It On Down The Line
They Love Each Other
Looks Like Rain
Dire Wolf
It’s All Over Now
Candyman
Lazy Lightning>
Supplication
Deal
Samson And Delilah
Ship Of Fools

Disc 2
Estimated Prophet>
Eyes Of The World>
Rhythm Devils>
Space>
Wharf Rat>
Truckin’>
Iko Iko>
Around And Around
Promised Land

Show #4
Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison, CO (June 7, 78)

Disc 1
Jack Straw
Candyman
Me And My Uncle>
Big River
Friend Of The Devil
Cassidy
Tennessee Jed
Passenger
Peggy-O
The Music Never Stopped

Disc 2
Cold Rain And Snow
Beat It On Down The Line
Scarlet Begonias>
Fire On The Mountain

Disc 3
Dancing In The Street
Rhythm Devils>
Space>
Not Fade Away>]
Black Peter>
Around And Around
U.S. Blues
Johnny B. Goode

Show #5 Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Morrison, CO (7/8/78)

Disc 1
Bertha>
Good Lovin’
Dire Wolf
El Paso
It Must Have Been The Roses
New Minglewood Blues
Ramble On Rose
Promised Land
Deal
Samson And Delilah
Ship Of Fools

Disc 2
Estimated Prophet>
The Other One>
Eyes Of The World>
Rhythm Devils>
Space>
Wharf Rat>
Franklin’s Tower
Sugar Magnolia

Disc 3
Terrapin Station>
One More Saturday Night
Werewolves Of London

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.

Brian Johnson reportedly says he’s been “kicked to the curb” by AC/DC

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Brian Johnson feels like he's been "kicked to the curb" by AC/DC after suffering problems with his hearing, says a friend of the singer. The band recently rescheduled a handful of US live dates after Johnson was advised by doctors to "stop touring immediately or risk total hearing loss". The group...

Brian Johnson feels like he’s been “kicked to the curb” by AC/DC after suffering problems with his hearing, says a friend of the singer.

The band recently rescheduled a handful of US live dates after Johnson was advised by doctors to “stop touring immediately or risk total hearing loss“.

The group issued a statement on their website confirming that the remaining dates of their US tour will be “made up later in the year, likely with a guest vocalist”.

Following speculation over Johnson’s future, comedian Jim Breuer spoke about the situation on his The Metal In Me podcast.

During the episode, Breuer described a conversation he allegedly had with Johnson recently where the singer said he was feeling “really depressed” and like a “hired gun” whose been “kicked to the curb” by the group.

Breuer says Johnson “didn’t say he wanted to quit and “didn’t say he was done”.

Johnson also allegedly told Breuer that he believes the band has already hired his replacement to continue touring and releasing music.

Breuer and Johnson are close friends and have worked together several times in the past, with the AC/DC singer even recording vocals for the comedian’s rock album.

However, he later clarified his comments, saying that he got “carried away”.

Writing on Facebook: “I have seen some stories circulating about my podcast. As a friend, I saw Brian withdrawn for the first time in my life. He’s not a quitter, he seemed hurt by the situation of being between a rock and a hard place. I spoke as a true fan and friend, simply venting as if he was a brother of mine. I hope to see him Rock Out one more time. You have to remember I’m a comedian & a storyteller. I definitely exaggerate and sometimes I get a little carried away!! And this was one of those times!”

On Twitter, he added:

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.

Sony to buy Michael Jackson estate’s share of Sony/ATV Music Publishing

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Sony has agreed to buy out the Michael Jackson estate's 50-percent share of Sony/ATV Music Publishing. By paying the Jackson estate $750 million, Sony now completely controls music the publishing company, Billboard reports. Currently a memorandum of understanding between the parties, an agreement i...

Sony has agreed to buy out the Michael Jackson estate’s 50-percent share of Sony/ATV Music Publishing. By paying the Jackson estate $750 million, Sony now completely controls music the publishing company, Billboard reports. Currently a memorandum of understanding between the parties, an agreement is expected by the end of the month, with the deal scheduled to close in late 2016 or early 2017.

Michael Jackson purchased ATV Music in 1985 for over $40 million. Ten years later, he sold Sony a 50-percent share in the company for over $100 million to create Sony/ATV.

Jackson’s estate was $500 million in debt at the time of his death in 2009. With the new deal, the estate will be debt-free and, in fact, will be in surplus. In a statement, the estate’s co-executors John Branca and John McClain said:

This transaction further allows us to continue our efforts of maximizing the value of Michael’s Estate for the benefit of his children. It also further validates Michael’s foresight and genius in investing in music publishing. His ATV catalogue, purchased in 1985 for a net acquisition cost of $41.5 million, was the cornerstone of the joint venture and, as evidenced by the value of this transaction, is considered one of the smartest investments in music history.

Sony Entertainment CEO Michael Lynton said:

This acquisition will enable Sony to more quickly adapt to changes in the music publishing business, while at the same time continuing to be an unparalleled leader in the industry and a treasured home for artists and writers. All of us at Sony look forward to continuing to work with the Estate to further Michael Jackson’s legacy in many different ways.

Jackson’s estate will retain its 10-percent stake in EMI Music Publishing, as well as Mijac Music, which owns songs written by Jackson and other writers, in addition to Jackson’s master recordings.

Recently, Sony’s imprint Legacy Recordings reissued Michael Jackson’s 1976 album Off the Wall.

 

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.

Wayfaring Strangers: The lost outriders of Americana

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The next issue of Uncut is still a week or two away, but one of the features we have in there is a piece by Jason Anderson on the culture of reissue labels, and their quest to discover music of quality that has remained lost and unheard, even at this late date. One of the fervid and articulate recor...

The next issue of Uncut is still a week or two away, but one of the features we have in there is a piece by Jason Anderson on the culture of reissue labels, and their quest to discover music of quality that has remained lost and unheard, even at this late date. One of the fervid and articulate record-hunters who Anderson interviewed was Ken Shipley, from the Chicago imprint, Numero Group.

Asked about the myth of crate-diggers finding these gems in record shops, Shipley was dismissive. “That’s just some fantasy shit that the media wants to portray of people on their stomachs crawling around on basement floors,” he told Anderson. “The reality is all the best records are in people’s houses. And really, the best stuff right now is stuff that’s undiscovered and people never even knew existed.”

It is sometimes hard to countenance that this “best stuff” genuinely exists. Surely, it’s more likely that rare records are now being rediscovered and repromoted due to a fetishisation of obscurity, rather than as a celebration of excellence? The Numero Group’s ongoing series of “Wayfaring Strangers” compilations eloquently suggests otherwise, bearing witness to the fact that great tranches of valuable music are still out there, having been hidden at the back of remote American attics for the past 40-odd years. The focus of “Wayfaring Strangers” is on private press records – releases on indie labels that were often little more than personal vanity projects. Copies would rarely number more than a few hundred. Distribution would mostly be limited to the artists’ neighbourhood and nearby towns. Ambitions would, almost without exception, be stymied.

Still, the post-Joni women collected on the “Ladies From The Canyon” edition of “Wayfaring Strangers” (2006), and the American Primitives who fill the “Guitar Soli” set (2008), suggest a rich hinterland of music-makers: briefly transcendent; ultimately thwarted. “Cosmic American Music”, the latest volume, is perhaps the strongest yet, evidence of how an adventurous idea of roots-rock permeated every level of the country’s music business in the 1970s. The Eagles might have been finessing frontier tropes for a mainstream rock audience, and becoming America’s biggest band in the process. But at the same time, Chapel Hill’s Arrogance were struggling to be heard beyond their immediate environs – even though the strafed honky-tonk of “To See Her Smile” was every bit the equal of the songs released by their Hollywood contemporaries.

“To See Her Smile”‘s excellence is endemic of “Cosmic American Music”, and a good indication of how straitened circumstances and general obscurity did not mean that the records collected here sound remotely amateurish. There’s a fluency and craftsmanship consistently on show, far removed from any assumptions about naïve art or outsider music – not least when Clarence White, prototyping his and Gene Parsons’ Stringbender gadget, adds plaintive steel effects to Mistress Mary’s ambling “And I Didn’t Want You”.

At least one of Arrogance, Don Dixon, ended up playing a critical part in the ongoing development of the sound, co-producing REM’s “Murmur” and “Reckoning” with Mitch Easter. White Cloud, meanwhile, harboured two key players: Eric Weissberg, who essayed “Duelling Banjos” on the Deliverance soundtrack; and frontman Thomas Jefferson Kaye, who would produce Gene Clark’s “No Other”. White Cloud’s “All Cried Out” is a small classic of country-soul, at once lush and distrait, and a useful reminder that Kaye’s fantastic, self-titled solo album from 1973 itself languishes mystifyingly out of print.

Keen students of the genre will recognise a couple more “Cosmic American Music” contributors from other recent reissues, notably Colorado ex-Marine Kenny Knight: his louche chugger, “Baby’s Back”, resurfaced with its 1980 parent album, “Crossroads”, on the Paradise Of Bachelors label a year ago. The outstanding FJ McMahon, likewise, has had his Fred Neil-ish “Spirit Of The Golden Juice”, dating from 1969, in circulation via Rev-Ola since 2009. Bill Madison, whose “Buffalo Skinners” could plausibly be the work of Bert Jansch circa “LA Turnaround”, apparently saw his “Sunday Mornin’ Hayride” (1973) slipped back out on Yoga around the same time.

They, thus far, are the lucky ones. Explaining the competitive ethos of the reissues business, Ken Shipley told Jason Anderson that “You gotta keep this shit super tight,” and as a consequence it’s hard to know whether, for instance, the rest of Sandy Harless’ “Songs” is a match for the delicately Gene Clarkish “I Knew Her Well”. Harless’ bad luck is twofold. First, he paid for the recording of “Songs” from the profits of his “27-tank fish-breeding business”, only to be ripped off by a sham record label. Second, his faint online profile is overshadowed today by that of a female singer sharing the same name. The second Sandy Harless is a strenuously Christian proselytiser: her vision of cosmic American music may not, one suspects, be quite the same thing at all.

Radiohead announce new live shows

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Radiohead have announced a series of live shows later this year which, together with the festival dates already announced and a few more international festival dates to follow, will complete their touring schedule for 2016. The headline shows include three nights at London’s Roundhouse in May, an...

Radiohead have announced a series of live shows later this year which, together with the festival dates already announced and a few more international festival dates to follow, will complete their touring schedule for 2016.

The headline shows include three nights at London’s Roundhouse in May, and two nights at Madison Square Garden in New York in July.

Tickets for the shows go on sale at 9am this Friday, March 18.

The new shows are:

MAY 20 AMSTERDAM, HEINEKEN MUSIC HAL
MAY 21 AMSTERDAM, HEINEKEN MUSIC HALL
MAY 23 PARIS, LE ZENITH
MAY 24 PARIS, LE ZENITH
MAY 26 LONDON, ROUNDHOUSE
MAY 27 LONDON, ROUNDHOUSE
MAY 28 LONDON, ROUNDHOUSE
JULY 26 NEW YORK, MADISON SQUARE GARDEN
JULY 27 NEW YORK, MADISON SQUARE GARDEN
AUGUST 4 LOS ANGELES SHRINE AUDITORIUM
AUGUST 8 LOS ANGELES SHRINE AUDITORIUM
OCTOBER 3 MEXICO CITY PALACIO DE LOS DEPORTES
OCTOBER 4 MEXICO CITY PALACIO DE LOS DEPORTES

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.

First Look – Whit Stillman’s Love & Friendship

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In a splendid piece of counter-intuitive programming, Whit Stillman’s first film for 14 years – Damsels In Distress – was released in UK cinemas on the same day as Marvel’s superhero team-up, Avengers Assemble. An predictably elegant and distinctive comedy, Stillman's film mixed references ...

In a splendid piece of counter-intuitive programming, Whit Stillman’s first film for 14 years – Damsels In Distress – was released in UK cinemas on the same day as Marvel’s superhero team-up, Avengers Assemble.

An predictably elegant and distinctive comedy, Stillman’s film mixed references to the works of obscure British novelists with lengthy discussions on “the decline of decadence” and the unusual sexual proclivities of a 12th century religious order. As a reminder of Stillman’s core strengths after so long an absence, it was perfect. Notionally set during the present day, it felt a lot like Stillman’s previous dispatches from the drawing rooms of Manhattan’s Upper East Side; artful chamber pieces that in turn evoked earlier eras.

For Love & Friendship, Stillman has adapted a Jane Austen novella, Lady Susan. Austen’s comedy of manners is an easy fit for Stillman, and he is reunited here with Kate Beckinsale and Chloë Sevigny, the stars of his 1998 almost-hit, The Last Days Of Disco. Beckinsale plays Lady Susan Vernon – “a genius of an evil kind”, a widow out to secure her position in society via favourable marriages for herself and her daughter. Confronted at one point with some unflattering truths, she poo-poos them, “Facts are such horrid things.”

Stillman directs with the zing of a Howard Hawks comedy while his screenplay fluidly reshapes Austen’s formal prose (in this case, Lady Susan was an epistolary novella) into sharp, accessible dialogue. Around Susan orbit a series of largely clueless, if often well-meaning male characters. They are described by on screen captions as, variously, “a divinely attractive man” or “a bit of a rattle”. There is Tom Bennett as a considerably wealthy but hopelessly dim suitor; The Thick Of It’s Justin Edwards as Susan’s soft-hearted brother-in-law; Stephen Fry as Sevigny’s gouty husband; James Fleet as the concerned father of one of Susan’s intended victims. Thankfully, Bill Nighy is nowhere in sight.

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.

High-Rise

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Considering how deeply JG Ballard’s novels have penetrated popular culture, it’s surprising how few have made it to the big screen. Spielberg's Empire Of The Sun and Cronenberg's Crash are the most well-known, but there's also Jonathan Weiss’s rarely screened 1999 adaptation of The Atrocity Ex...

Considering how deeply JG Ballard’s novels have penetrated popular culture, it’s surprising how few have made it to the big screen. Spielberg’s Empire Of The Sun and Cronenberg’s Crash are the most well-known, but there’s also Jonathan Weiss’s rarely screened 1999 adaptation of The Atrocity Exhibition, and Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude – a Portuguese-Swedish co-production based on a short story, Low-Flying Aircraft. Previously, Nic Roeg, Paul Mayersberg and Bruce Robinson have all toiled unsuccessfully to film Ballard’s 1975 breakthrough novel, High-Rise. In the event, Ben Wheatley has finally brought it to cinemas in his first major work since A Field In England: another piece about a very English type of psychosis.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LYmY2tBYins

Wheatley envisions High-Rise as an occult, psychedelic seizure; nowhere near as coldly alarming as Ballard’s book, but horrific in its own way. The story takes place in a newly-built tower block whose occupants turn on one another when the building’s systems begin to fail. After a prim, orderly beginning, where Tom Hiddleston’s Dr Robert Laing moves into the tower, Wheatley lets reality slip away – a Regency fancy dress party; a white horse clip-clopping across the roof terrace garden; a car-park full of burned out cars – before pitting floor against floor in all-out block war.

Hiddleston – resembling Low-era Bowie – makes Laing detached and indifferent, a coolly immaculate cipher for the film’s events. Around him orbit, Luke Evans’ documentary maker Richard Wilder who responds viscerally to the building-wide mayhem. As the building’s architect Anthony Royal, Jeremy Irons is at his most Jeremy Irons – inscrutable, implacable. Sienna Miller, as Laing’s free-spirited neighbour, is one of the few characters who seem able to navigate the twisting psychological landscape inside the tower. Elsewhere, James Purefroy and Reece Shearsmith deliver grotesque comic performances. Portishead’s stately cover of ABBA’s “S.O.S” soundtracks a montage of freewheeling chaos.

Wheatley may lack Ballard’s satirical edge – the issues of class that percolate the novel have been sidelined, for instance – but his devilish glee is infectious.

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.