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Win tickets to see Jack White’s American Epic series on the big screen

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American Epic - the ambitious documentary series overseen by Jack White, T Bone Burnett and Robert Redford - screens this coming Friday and Saturday at London's BFI Southbank. We have two pairs of tickets to see the complete series: scroll down for further details. Spread across three documentarie...

American Epic – the ambitious documentary series overseen by Jack White, T Bone Burnett and Robert Redford – screens this coming Friday and Saturday at London’s BFI Southbank.

We have two pairs of tickets to see the complete series: scroll down for further details.

Spread across three documentaries, the series charts the development of blues, country, gospel, Hawaiian, Cajun and folk music through the lives of musicians including Charley Patton, The Carter Family and Joe Falcon, using previously unseen film footage, unpublished photographs, and interviews with some of the last living witnesses to that era.

A fourth film, The American Epic Sessions, features Willie Nelson, Merle Haggard, Elton John, Beck, Steve Martin, Rhiannon Giddins, Taj Mahal, Los Lobos, Alabama Shakes and Stephen Stills, who all have a go at recording on a perfectly reassembled Western Electric recording machine in an old studio in Melrose, Hollywood.

For the Sessions, Jack White runs a house band with the help of T Bone Burnett.

You can watch the trailer below.

The American Epic Sessions screen on Friday, February 19, 2016. The film begins at 8:40 pm. It runs for 120 mins. Location: BFI Southbank, NFT1.

The Amerian Epic Trilogy screens on Saturday, February 20, 2016. The films begin at 7:00 pm. Each of the three films is an hour long. Location: BFI Southbank, NFT1.

We have ONE pair of tickets for Friday and ONE pair of tickets for Saturday.

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

What is the name of the record label run by Jack White?

Send your answer along with your name, address and contact telephone number to UncutComp@timeinc.com by noon, Thursday February 18, 2016.

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

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Jarvis Cocker on Pulp, Harry Potter and life in Paris

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The Pulp frontman answers questions from fans and celebrity admirers, discussing his legendary charm and why happy songs make him “physically want to kill someone”. Originally published in Uncut's February 2010 issue (Take 153). Interview: John Lewis. _________________________ Jarvis Cocker ar...

The Pulp frontman answers questions from fans and celebrity admirers, discussing his legendary charm and why happy songs make him “physically want to kill someone”. Originally published in Uncut’s February 2010 issue (Take 153). Interview: John Lewis.

_________________________

Jarvis Cocker arrives at a wine bar in central London, wearing his characteristic tweeds and corduroys and looking not unlike the puppet that he voices in Wes Anderson’s Fantastic Mr Fox. “I don’t actually get recognised that much,” he says. “I think I’ve done a really good job of sliding into obscurity. The beard helps a bit. I have to stand outside independent record shops to get recognised now.”

Yeah, right. Within minutes of his arrival, the waiters are whispering his name, and people on neighbouring tables are pointing and staring. Unaware of his presence, a posh young couple bluster into the bar, commandeer the neighbouring table and – rather imperiously – instruct Jarvis to mind their coats while they get drinks.

“Not a soul will be allowed to come within 10 yards of this table,” he informs them. Both suddenly recognise his voice and shriek nervously. “Ohmygod, it’s Jarvis,” they gasp. Jarvis bows diffidently and then turns back to the interview. “Right, next question…”

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If asked to go on Strictly Come Dancing, would you do it? You’d make a great ballroom dancer!
Rachel Unthank, The Unthanks
I would definitely consider it. I’ve always found it really moving, especially going to the ballroom below Blackpool Tower, watching all these old couples dancing while a guy played the organ. I attended ballroom dancing classes twice – it was when I was studying at Saint Martin’s in London and students could get cheap lessons. They tried to teach us a basic rumba, and I was useless. I never had the discipline to learn dance moves, I was more into dancing freestyle. Maybe Latin would be the thing. You can get a bit wild with that, can’t you?

What was the best Pulp parody: Spitting Image, Goodness Gracious Me, Ali G or Brass Eye?
Justin, Newark
Oh, Brass Eye, without a doubt. Perves Grundy and Blouse, ha! Chris Morris got the moves perfectly. I quite enjoyed Goodness Gracious Me’s “Hindi People”, a kind of parody of race tourism, rather than class tourism. I think the worst one was Spitting Image. It looked more like Dennis Norden. I understand that this puppet of me is now in the possession of The Edge from U2. No, really! Apparently, there was an auction of Spitting Image figures, and he bought mine. I hope he’s having fun with it.

The Third Uncut Playlist Of 2016

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I've spent the past few days digging into a forthcoming book by Jesse Jarnow called Heads: A Biography Of Psychedelic America, which makes all kinds of connections between The Grateful Dead, communes, LSD distribution, graffiti artists, DJs, internet pioneers, fine artists, celebrated chefs and God ...

I’ve spent the past few days digging into a forthcoming book by Jesse Jarnow called Heads: A Biography Of Psychedelic America, which makes all kinds of connections between The Grateful Dead, communes, LSD distribution, graffiti artists, DJs, internet pioneers, fine artists, celebrated chefs and God knows what else. It’s an excellent read, and was the source of a recommendation for Ray Barretto’s fun “Acid”, which usefully drowned out the Kanye album playing over at NME earlier this morning. Inspired me to hit the Dead’s “To Terrapin” set, too, given the eulogising over their May ’77 dates.

Lots more mind-expanding pleasures here, as well. Please pay special attention to that Gimmer Nicolson find, a full song from Kevin Morby’s terrific “Singing Saw” and the first release by Let’s Eat Grandma – don’t be put off by the seemingly wacky name; it’s a beauty.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Tim Hecker – Love Streams (4AD)

2 Missy Elliott – Pep Rally (Amazon Music)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wVS-U7gFi4E&feature=youtu.be

3 Mikael Seifu – Zelalem (RVNG INTL)

4 Jesu/Sun Kil Moon – Jesu/Sun Kil Moon (Caldo Verde)

5 Gimmer Nicolson – Christopher Idylls (Light In The Attic)

6 Wilco – February 3, 2016 Capitol Theatre (Port Chester, NY) (NYCtaper.com)

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

8 The Dead Tongues – Montana (Self-released)

https://soundcloud.com/winsome-management/graveyard-fields-by-the-dead-tongues

9 Kevin Morby – Singing Saw (Dead Oceans)

10 Let’s Eat Grandma – Deep Six Textbook (Transgressive)

11 Khun Narin – II (Innovative Leisure)

12 Konono N°1 – Konono N°1 Meets Batida (Crammed Discs)

13 Ensemble Economique – Blossoms In Red (Denovali)

14 Träd, Gräs och Stenar – Box Set (Anthology)

15 Matthew Bourne – Moogmemory (Leaf)

16 Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band – The Rarity Of Experience (No Quarter)

17 William Tyler – Live At Third Man Records: 18/7/14 (Third Man)

18 Various Artists – Why The Mountains Are Black: Primeval Greek Village Music: 1907-1960 (Third Man)

19 ELO – On The Third Day (Jet)

20 Scritti Politti – White Bread Black Beer (Rough Trade)

21 Dreamboat – Dreamboat (MIE Music)

22 Coypu – Floating (MIE Music)

23 Ray Barretto – Acid (Fania)

24 The Grateful Dead – To Terrapin: Hartford 77 (Rhino)

Fleetwood Mac: archival live album to make vinyl debut

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Fleetwood Mac have announced details of a triple live album from their 1979 - 1980 tour. The 22 songs previously appeared on the CD and digital editions of last year's remastered edition of Tusk. They are now being released as a stand-alone vinyl package on March 4 from Warner Bros. Records. The ...

Fleetwood Mac have announced details of a triple live album from their 1979 – 1980 tour.

The 22 songs previously appeared on the CD and digital editions of last year’s remastered edition of Tusk.

They are now being released as a stand-alone vinyl package on March 4 from Warner Bros. Records.

The songs for Fleetwood Mac: In Concert were recorded in Tucson, St. Louis, Omaha and during the band’s six-night stand at Wembley Arena in London in June 1980.

FLEETWOOD MAC: IN CONCERT
LP Track Listing

Side One
Intro (Wembley, 26/06/80)
“Say You Love Me”(Wembley, 26/06/80)
“The Chain” (Wembley, 20/06/80)
“Don’t Stop” (Wembley, 27/06/80)
“Dreams” (Wembley, 20/06/80)

Side Two
“Oh Well” (Wembley, 20/06/80)
“Rhiannon” (Tucson, 28/08/80)
“Over And Over” (St. Louis, 05/11/79)
“That’s Enough For Me” (Wembley, 21/06/80)

Side Three
“Sara” (Tucson, 28/08/80)
“Not That Funny” (St. Louis, 05/11/79)
“Tusk” (St. Louis, 05/11/79)
“Save Me A Place” (St. Louis, 05/11/79)

Side Four
“Landslide” (Omaha, 21/08/80)
“What Makes You Think You’re The One” (St. Louis, 05/11/79)
“Angel” (St. Louis, 05/11/79)
“You Make Loving Fun” (Wembley, 20/06/80)

Side Five
“I’m So Afraid” (St. Louis, 05/11/79)
“World Turning” (Wembley, 22/06/80)

Side Six
“Go Your Own Way” (Wembley, 22/06/80)
“Sisters Of The Moon” (Wembley, 22/06/80)
“Songbird” (Wembley, 27/06/80)

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

An interview with the Coen Brothers: “We sold out long ago…”

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With the Coens' new film Hail, Caesar!, due out in March, I thought I'd post my feature on the making of Inside Llewyn Davis; the brothers' yarn about a Greenwich Village folkie in the early 1960s. The piece ran in Uncut issue 200 and includes interviews with Joel and Ethan Coen, along with the the...

With the Coens’ new film Hail, Caesar!, due out in March, I thought I’d post my feature on the making of Inside Llewyn Davis; the brothers’ yarn about a Greenwich Village folkie in the early 1960s.

The piece ran in Uncut issue 200 and includes interviews with Joel and Ethan Coen, along with the then-unknown Oscar Isaac and returning Coens’ veterans John Goodman and T Bone Burnett.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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Joel Coen remembers the first time he visited Greenwich Village. It was during his student days, he explains, shortly after he had moved from suburban Minneapolis and enrolled in the undergraduate film program at New York University. “This was the very beginning of the Seventies – ’71, ’72,” he says. “The last vestiges of the original folk scene were still there. Gerde’s was still on Third Street. There was still a Gaslight, but it had moved up the street on MacDougal Street. The music was different, but you could sort of see the traces of it. The area was still very heavily Italian American. There was a little bit of it still there, on Bleecker Street and MacDougal.”

Joel tells us this over a mid-morning coffee in London. He’s folded his rangy frame into a capacious leather armchair, with his knees bent upwards and his feet resting on the table in front of him. Today, he’s wearing jeans and a dark blue shirt with a scarf wrapped loosely round his neck. His hair is unkempt, the stubble on his chin is flecked with grey and, as he peers out from behind his round glasses, he has a vaguely professorial air about him.

Next to him, Ethan Coen hunches over his coffee cup. He is dressed identically to Joel, but without the scarf. If his elder brother can seem quite serious, Ethan on the other hand has a permanent squinty smile fixed on his face, as if he’s trying to stop himself laughing. When he does laugh, incidentally, his whole body shakes and he runs his hand through his short hair and across his face, as if he’s trying to make himself stop.

For their latest film, Inside Llewyn Davis, Joel and Ethan have recreated the cafés and coffeehouses of Greenwich Village; albeit from an earlier era to the one Joel remembers. The events of their film take place across one week in late 1961 – a pivotal time in the Village, it transpires, and also in the life of Davis, a young folk singer struggling to make a living on the circuit who also suffers a series of typically Coenesque indignities. As Ethan explains, “One day, Joel just said, ‘What about this? Here’s the beginning of a movie… a folk singer gets beat up in the alleyway behind Gerde’s Folk City.’ We thought about the scene. And then we thought, ‘Why would anyone beat up a folk singer..?’”

Watch Jeff Buckley cover The Smiths’ “I Know It’s Over” in new video

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A new video has been released ahead of the release of You and I, a new compilation featuring 10 unreleased Jeff Buckley recordings. You can watch Buckley's version of The Smiths' "I Know It's Over" below. You and I also includes Buckley's versions of songs by Bob Dylan ("Just Like A Woman"), Sly &...

A new video has been released ahead of the release of You and I, a new compilation featuring 10 unreleased Jeff Buckley recordings.

You can watch Buckley’s version of The Smiths‘ “I Know It’s Over” below.

You and I also includes Buckley’s versions of songs by Bob Dylan (“Just Like A Woman”), Sly & the Family Stone (“Everyday People”) and Led Zeppelin (“Night Flight”).

The album also includes two original songs: “Grace” (presented here as the track’s first solo performance) and “Dream of You and I“.

“I Know It’s Over” is one of two covers from The Smiths’ The Queen Is Dead album that will appear on You and I; the other is “The Boy With the Thorn in His Side“.

You and I is released on March 11.

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Bill Hicks – Ultimate Bill Hicks

Bill Hicks would have turned 54 on December 16th, 2015 – far from an old man, an approximate contemporary of Jon Stewart, Louis C.K., Chris Rock. It says much about Hicks, for better and for worse, that it’s possible to imagine an almost infinite array of plausible life trajectories had he not b...

Bill Hicks would have turned 54 on December 16th, 2015 – far from an old man, an approximate contemporary of Jon Stewart, Louis C.K., Chris Rock. It says much about Hicks, for better and for worse, that it’s possible to imagine an almost infinite array of plausible life trajectories had he not been claimed by cancer in 1994, aged just 32 – but not before he’d established himself as the most influential comedian of his era.

Hicks might have calmed down in middle age, resigned himself to comfortable ennoblement among comedy aristocracy. He might have grown crankier, his toying with conspiracy theory devolving into outright 9/11 Truther-dom. He might – very easily – have been marginalised by the sanctimony of online vigilantes, who failed or declined to appreciate that the ultimate butt of (most of) his jokes about women was men. He might have attempted activism, revving up crowds of Occupy demonstrators with anti-corporate rhetoric. Or he might have directed his rage at religion towards touchier targets than American Christians, risking the fate of Theo van Gogh and the staff of Charlie Hebdo.

Hicks’ work contained multitudes, as does this box set, which unites four live specials (One Night Stand, Sane Man, Relentless, Revelations) and It’s Just A Ride, a documentary/tribute released shortly after his death (the latter, while serviceable, was superseded in 2009 by Paul Thomas and Matt Harlock’s terrific American: The Bill Hicks Story). More than two decades later, it’s more remarkable how much of Hicks’ schtick resonates than how little. While some of the topical stuff has dated – his rants defending smoking now seem especially quaint – we remain a way from outgrowing his gleeful meditations on hypocrisy vis-à-vis sex and drugs. Hicks’ refusal to forgive ignorance is also still a tonic, though his famous encounter with a Nashville waffle waitress (“What you readin’ for?” “. . . so I don’t end up being a fuckin’ waffle waitress”) actually seems less funny since the empowerment of the wilfully illiterate by social media.

The last of these shows, Revelations, was recorded at London’s Dominion Theatre in November 1992. Even now, it seems improbable and outrageous that this supremely vigorous presence had little more than year left to live. It’s a glorious performance, Hicks grown confidently into the role of the black-clad preacher emerging from a pit of fire. He appears wholly at home, not just on stage but in London, in front of a crowd which, like himself, regards America with a detached bemusement that occasionally erupts into incomprehending fury.

It’s perfectly possible that Hicks died without knowing what the internet was. That being the case, his famous suggestion to any marketing and advertising types in the Dominion’s audience – “Kill yourself” – now strikes not merely as the key riff of a superb, unfurling routine, but as a last, prescient warning to the future.

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch Arcade Fire’s David Bowie tribute parade

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Arcade Fire have released footage from the parade the band threw in tribute to David Bowie. The January 16 event was organised by the band and Preservational Hall Jazz Band, who led a procession through the streets of New Orleans. Fan shot footage from the parade was posted online at the time of t...

Arcade Fire have released footage from the parade the band threw in tribute to David Bowie.

The January 16 event was organised by the band and Preservational Hall Jazz Band, who led a procession through the streets of New Orleans.

Fan shot footage from the parade was posted online at the time of the parade but the band have now released their own professional clip for fans who could not be there. Watch the four minute video below, including the Arcade Fire take on Bowie’s “Heroes“.

Bowie and the Arcade Fire worked together frequently in the last years of his life. He first joined the band on stage at a Fashion Rocks concert in 2005 for a rendition of “Wake Up“, from their debut album Funeral.

Later in 2013 Bowie sang a guest vocal on the title song of Arcade Fire’s most recent album, Reflektor.

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Bruce Springsteen to publish autobiography, Born To Run

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Bruce Springsteen is to release his autobiography. Born To Run will be published on September 27 by Simon & Schuster. According to a post on Springsteen's website, "the work will be published in hardcover, ebook, and audio editions by Simon & Schuster in the United States, United Kingdom, ...

Bruce Springsteen is to release his autobiography.

Born To Run will be published on September 27 by Simon & Schuster.

According to a post on Springsteen’s website, “the work will be published in hardcover, ebook, and audio editions by Simon & Schuster in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and India, and rights have already been sold to publishers in nine countries.

“Springsteen has been privately writing the autobiography over the past seven years. He began work in 2009, after performing with the E Street Band at the Super Bowl’s halftime show.

“In Born to Run, Mr. Springsteen describes growing up in Freehold, New Jersey amid the ‘poetry, danger, and darkness’ that fueled his imagination. He vividly recounts his relentless drive to become a musician, his early days as a bar band king in Asbury Park, and the rise of the E Street Band. With disarming candor, he also tells for the first time the story of the personal struggles that inspired his best work, and shows us why the song ‘Born to Run’ reveals more than we previously realized.

“’Writing about yourself is a funny business,’ Mr. Springsteen notes in his book. ‘But in a project like this, the writer has made one promise, to show the reader his mind. In these pages, I’ve tried to do this.’

“’This is the book we’ve been hoping for,’ said Jonathan Karp, publisher of Simon & Schuster. ‘Readers will see their own lives in Bruce Springsteen’s extraordinary story, just as we recognize ourselves in his songs.’

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Savages – Adore Life

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A couple of years back, Savages pasted up notes around concert venues at which they were playing, requesting that the audience not take photos of their live performance. “Our goal is to discover better ways of living and experiencing music”, it read, and of course they were ridiculed for their e...

A couple of years back, Savages pasted up notes around concert venues at which they were playing, requesting that the audience not take photos of their live performance. “Our goal is to discover better ways of living and experiencing music”, it read, and of course they were ridiculed for their efforts: who was this band of women, with their all-black wardrobe, and their androgynous hairstyles, to tell music lovers how to enjoy themselves? To take one’s self too seriously is to set one’s self up for a fall.

But what if you don’t stumble? The brace of music assembled on Savages’ second album, Adore Life – 10 taut, white-knuckle songs about love, desire, fear, fucking and self-actualisation – takes itself very seriously indeed. In doing so, though, it succeeds in shucking off superficial comparison points, reaching for something deeper and more profound.

This was by no means foretold. Savages’ debut album, 2013’s Silence Yourself, was full of vigor, but a little too in thrall to its influences – a bit Siouxsie, a bit Stranglers, a bit Magazine – and after a decade-odd of bands reviving the sounds and strategies of post-punk, that didn’t quite feel enough. Still, in the flesh, it worked. In 2013, Savages played a show at Ministry Of Sound, a nightclub in the concrete environs of London’s Elephant & Castle. Inside, black-clad post-punk dads rubbed shoulders with art students sporting fierce bobs, and Savages set up in right in the middle of the crowd, encircled. Stark lighting illuminated vocalist Jehnny Beth’s mannered dance moves – think Jacques Brel by way of Ian Curtis – and the effect was electrifying. It cut right to the paradox at the heart of Savages’ music: that by embracing honesty and vulnerability, blowing away the smoke and smashing the mirrors, it was possible to create something of startling power.

In this spirit, Adore Life is utterly direct, delivered with a torrid urgency suggestive of the fact that any deviation or metaphor might endanger the entire enterprise. The subject is love – romantic, and sexual. But whereas some post-punk bands treated love archly, as something to subvert or critique – think Gang Of Four’s “Anthrax” – Beth explores it at close quarters. Her lyrics speak frankly of a taste for submission. “I want your fingers down my throat,” she trembles over wailing guitars on “When In Love”, while “Surrender” is a command to engage in acts of mutual pleasure (“Come and be my muse/I hope to get used…”). Midway through “I Need Something New”, a remarkable fusion of avant-garde opera and cold industrial rock churn, we find her mid-coitus with an unnamed lover in a cold room, her booming vibrato hiccuping into a jolt of falsetto as she spits out the word “fucking”. Notably, though, the eroticism on display here never feels designed to titillate, or cater to male fantasy; a sense of confrontation is embedded in the music, a broiling tension that sounds as much like war as it does love.

This is all thanks to the band – guitarist Gemma Thompson, drummer Fay Milton and bassist Ayşe Hassan – who feel both tightly drilled and nicely limber, the result of months of rehearsal and workshopping at a three-week residency at New York venue Baby’s All Right, in which songs received flatly were mercilessly culled. Where Silence Yourself was recorded mostly live, dore Life’s parts were recorded separately, with the mix completed by the Danish electronic musician Anders Trentemøller. The result is a crisp, metronomic propulsion, captured best on the churning, eastern-tinged opener “The Answer”, or “Sad Person” – a prickly rush that finds Beth noting that love has a similar chemical effect on the brain as a hit of cocaine.

At times, Savages don’t cleanly hit the mark: the jumpy bass and skittering hi-hats of “Evil” recalls featherweight post-punk revivalists like White Lies, and can’t quite carry Beth’s lyric, a nuanced lament about the dogmatic family values of French Catholicism. They make far more from a couple of accomplished torch songs. “Is it human to adore life?” asks “Adore”, a track about shucking off sexual guilt inspired by the poet Minnie Bruce Pratt, who lost custody of her sons after coming out as a lesbian in 1975. Finally, there is “Mechanics”, a gloomy lieder redolent of the cold symphonies of Scott Walker’s Tilt. A pansexual exploration of the whirring cogs and levers that define attraction, it feels naïve but hopeful, born in a dark place but groping towards the light. “My love will stand/The test of time,” sings Beth. Increasingly, it looks like Savages will too.

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Introducing… The Who: The Ultimate Music Guide

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"The mod thing is dying. We don’t plan to go down with it, which is why we've become individualists." June 5, 1965. In the august pages of the Melody Maker, a radically stroppy band are being unveiled to a world beyond Shepherd's Bush. "A new name is being hurled around in hip circles - The Who,"...

“The mod thing is dying. We don’t plan to go down with it, which is why we’ve become individualists.”

June 5, 1965. In the august pages of the Melody Maker, a radically stroppy band are being unveiled to a world beyond Shepherd’s Bush. “A new name is being hurled around in hip circles – The Who,” the piece begins. “Today, with one hit gone and another on the way, they are reckoned by the ‘In Crowd’ to be on the crest of a success wave that could make them the new rave – on a nationwide scale.”

Over half a century later, what Pete Townshend referred to as “the mod thing” has died, been reborn, and cycled round and round again several times over, yet still the indefatigable Who endure, both embodying and transcending that scene. They have, of course, become successful on something far bigger than a national scale. In two nights’ time (Feb 11), Hammersmith Apollo will host a “fully immersive cinematic theatrical experience” celebrating Quadrophenia, featuring a screening of the 1979 movie and a Q&A with many of the original cast, among other Who/mod-based activities.

Then, on February 13, The Who themselves play a London show at Wembley Arena before heading off on the latest leg of the self-explanatory “Who Hits 50” tour – a tour, in fact, that currently seems destined to last almost as long as the band’s extensive, storied history. From the end of February until the end of May, Townshend, Roger Daltrey and their accomplices will be bringing their volatile and often remarkable show to some of the biggest venues in the USA.

Not a bad time, then, for Uncut to unveil a deluxe remastered edition of our Ultimate Music Guide to The Who (it’s in the shops on Thursday, but you can order a copy of The Who Ultimate Music Guide from the Uncut store any moment now.) “I think our greatest accomplishment was to create the arena anthem,” Townshend tells us in a typically candid introduction. “That is a song that on its own serves almost as a short show in itself. This caters for the shallow attention span demonstrated by the audience in busy and chaotic arenas or stadiums… Three or four of the best anthemic Who songs strung together generate a blistering 25-minute musical event. This was something we stumbled onto by accident rather than by design.

“Now that stadium events are seen to be so overcooked, it may be an accomplishment that should be reassessed and downgraded, but ‘Baba O Riley’ and ‘Won’t Get Fooled Again’ are extremely hard to beat as a way of rallying a massive audience. I’ve written about 650 songs. Only a few of them could be described as ‘anthems’, but those will probably be the songs that prevail.”

I’m not sure we’ve tackled every one of those 650 songs in the Ultimate Music Guide. Nevertheless, as usual, there are deep reviews of every single Who album, plus a treasure trove of interviews that span 50 years and which showcase Townshend, in particular, as one of the most complex, self-flagellating and quoteworthy figures the rock era has produced. There are agonising meditations on age (“I often feel that I’m too old for rock’n’roll,” he gripes – in 1973!); frank recollections of his addictions (“My theory about smack is ‘Keep taking the tablets ’til the pain goes away'”: 1993); repeated tussles with the weight, significance and meaning of “Tommy”, “Quadrophenia” and “Lifehouse”; and one last combative encounter from 2015, in which Townshend prepares for his 70th birthday by announcing, “There’s a desire I have to do a show which is crap. Go out in front of a bunch of devoted Who fans and say, ‘Listen, you bunch of fucking cunts. Fuck off. Don’t come back…'”

Townshend’s meaning, of course, is never quite straightforward. His appetite for stirring up trouble remains, however, unquenchable, and hopefully this Ultimate Music Guide is testament to that, and to the quixotic genius that The Who have manifested for so long. They have, it’s fair to say, “become individualists…”

The Long Ryders – Final Wild Songs

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There are many kinds of three-chord horseshit, and The Long Ryders tried them all. Famously, they perverted country and western, but the plan was always more complicated than that. When Sid Griffin left his LA garage group in the early 1980s, he placed a musicians’ wanted ad which read: “Two ex-...

There are many kinds of three-chord horseshit, and The Long Ryders tried them all. Famously, they perverted country and western, but the plan was always more complicated than that. When Sid Griffin left his LA garage group in the early 1980s, he placed a musicians’ wanted ad which read: “Two ex-Unclaimed members want the Byrds, Standells and Seeds to ride again.” Another ad, the one that attracted singer and guitarist Stephen McCarthy, proposed a merger of the Buffalo Springfield and the Clash.

Over four albums released between 1983 and 1987, The Long Ryders made good on all of that, being both musically diverse, and singular in their intentions. They were country, and punk, and rock’n’roll. They did foot-on-the-floor boogie, cajun, a bit of psychedelic rock. They wore their fringes like Roger McGuinn. They were Tom Petty, without the heartbreak.

All of which helps explain what was brilliant about The Long Ryders, and why they failed. Operating in Los Angeles at a time when new wave was morphing into vainglorious pop, their influences were considered old hat. Equally, the bands the Ryders inspired were yet to take flight, with the exception, perhaps, of their near-contemporaries The Jayhawks, who were thinking along the same lines in Minneapolis.

What’s clear now is that the Ryders are the bridge between country rock and what became Americana. Listen to early Uncle Tupelo, and you’ll hear Jeff Tweedy and Jay Farrar working out how to render American roots music with punk energy. And the influence didn’t just flow into the furrows of alt.country. Listen to the The Long Ryders’ acoustic rendering of “Black Girl” (from May-June 1984) included on Disc One of this four-disc set, and it’s hard not to hear Kurt Cobain’s unplugged version of the same song, though he called it “Where Did You Sleep Last Night?”.

They weren’t thanked for it at the time, as is clear from “Encore From Hell” which closes Disc Two. It’s not a song as such. Instead, singer Sid Griffin reads out reviews of the band’s 1985 album State Of Our Union. “It’s so difficult to know where to begin,” begins one, “there’s just so many bad things to say.” Or: “There are 10 things wrong with this album, and they’re all the songs.” Or, Griffin’s favourite, a one-sentence demolition from the Northern Echo: “If these guys are at the helm of West Coast rock, abandon ship.” And, yes, another reviewer settled for “three-chord horseshit”.

The Ryders weren’t without their supporters at the time, of course. They were part of the Paisley Underground – a label coined by Michael Quercia of The Three O’Clock to encapsulate an LA scene incorporating The Rain Parade, The Bangles and The Dream Syndicate. That scene was real, and got much press attention, especially in the UK and Europe, though it never went overground.

The box contains all three of the albums The Long Ryders released during their lifespan, and their debut EP, 10/5/60, which is still a career highpoint. From the declamatory “Join My Gang”, through the Byrds country of “You Don’t Know What’s Right” and the chiming psychedelia of “And She Rides”, the record showed a band clicking into focus. The title track is pure garage rock, with a riff and a snarl. If they played it any faster it would be Hüsker Dü.

The first LP, Native Sons (with West Coast producer Henry Lewy reprising the Flying Burritos template) is simply gorgeous, from the Chuck Berry motorvating of “Run Dusty Run” to the Petty-ish infections of “I Had A Dream”. There’s no disguising the influences at play on “Ivory Tower”, which has Gene Clark guesting on it, but that doesn’t make it any less effective. The extras add depth. There’s a fine acoustic run through “The Wreck Of The 309”, which leaves the pain in Tom Stevens’ vocal exposed. And the ghost of Gram Parsons is exorcised in a sparse campfire rendering of “Farther Along”.

A live version of “You Can’t Judge A Book By The Cover” has the Ryders sounding like Dr Feelgood saluting Chuck Berry, so it’s perhaps not surprising that pub rock veteran Will Birch was engaged for their major-label debut, State Of Our Union (1985). It opens with the hit that wasn’t – “Looking For Lewis And Clark” – and rattles through a series of melodic anthems. The songs are broadly critical of Reagan’s America, though the politics are masked by the straightforward urgency of the tunes. There’s more than a hint of The Cars in “Here Comes That Train Again”, but the sentiment of “Good Times Tomorrow, Hard Times Today” makes it a timeless piece of country rock, and the harmonies on “Two Kinds Of Love” are gorgeous. The ballad “If I Were A Bramble And You Were A Rose” and the “Captain’s mix” of “Lights Of Downtown” are equally lovely, and quite at odds with what was popular in 1985.

On the final album, 1986’s Two Fisted Tales, Ed Stasium removes the rough edges and adds a bit of Petty-ish swagger, and Griffin offers some hint of his future direction on the folky “Harriet Tubman’s Gonna Carry Me Home”. Disc Three includes nine fine demos including McCarthy’s lovely ballad “He Can Hear His Brother Calling”, which is among the best things the band ever did.
For fans, though, the real treasure is Disc Four, a live set recorded in Goes, in the Netherlands. It starts at full pelt with “Mason Dixon Line”, and never relents, rushing through “Masters Of War” and ending with a breathless “Tell It To The Judge On Sunday”. The Long Ryders add power to Dave Dudley’s trucking anthem “Six Days On The Road”, and hail their garage roots with an urgent reprise of the Flamin’ Groovies’ “I Can’t Hide”. The whole thing is a rush of ringing guitars and fire engine melodies that is retro and futuristic and timeless.

“I won’t give you any false modesty,” Griffin suggests. “We didn’t have flamethrowers, we just had a rockin’ act that was kinetic.” The world may now be ready to listen.

Q&A
Sid Griffin on the long march of Americana
What was your plan for the box?

We want The Long Ryders to be acknowledged as a very important link in the chain. When we came out it was all Haircut 100 and A Flock Of Seagulls. It was synth pop and watered-down dance music which was in the way. We were really the first and almost only band of our ilk doing this crazy wedding of punk ethos ethos and country and western attitude. In just a few years bands we inspired were everywhere: Uncle Tupelo and the Black Crowes – who were Mr Crowe’s Garden, an opening act for us – the list goes on.

Did you feel like you were in a wilderness back then?
In the early days we weren’t that distinct, and we had this idea of crossing Ramones, Sex Pistols, Clash, and earlier punk, ’60s garage guys – the 13th Floor Elevators and the Standells – with country and western instrumentation of pedal steel or banjo and having a new American hybrid. The first time we played a country and western song to a blatantly punk rock audience was at the Music Machine in West LA. I think we were on the bill with the Circle Jerks, and for the first 30 seconds people couldn’t believe it. It was just wild. There was silence. After a minute there was this noise, some of the people were going bananas and some of the people were making fun of us and spitting at us. That was the first time – playing “Brand New Heartache” by the Everly Brothers as a shuffle. I remember once at the Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, the guy said, ‘Go and play something on the air’. So I went to the library, and there was all these LPs on the wall, and they had a white sticker saying what the tracks were. I pulled out a Long Ryders record, and some kid had written on it – ‘Side A: Sounds like shit. Side B: mostly sounds like shit.’ It was that hard of a battle.

Was the Paisley Underground real?
It was. It’s unfortunate that more of it didn’t break through to a wider audience. The only band that broke through was The Bangles. But it was an amazing time. Imagine living in an idyllic, sunny Los Angeles. I shared a house with one of The Bangles, and a roadie. And in our house at that time we’d have Eric Burdon of the Animals staying, and Billy Bremner of Rockpile was a roommate for while. Around the corner was Steve Wynn of The Dream Syndicate, and two of the guys from Green On Red, John Doe and Exene Cervenka of X lived about a block and a half away. Dwight Yoakam lived three blocks the other way. Benmont Tench lived four blocks away. People would ask me, of the people you knew, who did the best? For a while I would say The Bangles, then maybe Dwight Yoakam. I had a roommate named John Silva, he went on to manage Nirvana and the Foo Fighters, so I used his name for a while. Then I thought, hang on, Matt Groening from the Simpsons was around the corner, he did a cartoon called Life Is Hell. He’d come down from Oregon and Silva had come out from Boston, I’d come out from Kentucky, just trying to make it. All in one neighbourhood. It was a beautiful time.

Where did it all go wrong?
We famously did a beer commercial and were accused of selling out. It really backfired in North America for us. Peter Buck gave an interview commenting about it, and even Green On Red teased us. What I didn’t understand was that X, Los Lobos, The Blasters, all sorts of bands did a beer commercial, so why pick on us? The reason we did it then was we weren’t getting a lot of airplay. The most profile we got in the United States was through this beer commercial.

Why wasn’t “Looking For Lewis And Clark” a hit?
Nick Stewart, who’s the guy who signed U2, was so forceful in a business meeting, he finally got Island to agree to put a lot of money behind the record. It did really well the first few weeks. Then Nick was told by one of the Island guys, who looked really depressed: “I know we agreed to spend this money on pressing up more singles, but I left the meeting knowing my marching orders and didn’t do it.”. So it sold out and there were no more records to buy, literally. For years I was really upset about it. Some really nasty stuff went down. Then I thought, that’s not the way to look, because we had seven years travelling the world and playing on bills with people like Gene Clark and Roger McGuinn. All these great things happened. How many people from a little town in Kentucky got to do what I did? I’ve even thought: what happens if we had gone through the roof and everybody got on drugs and hated each other? We’re all really close still, so I can’t complain.
INTERVIEW: ALASTAIR McKAY

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Robert Forster announces live dates

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Robert Forster has announced a number of UK tour dates for May and June this year. He will be accompanied by his band who feature Scott Bromiley (guitar, bass, keyboards, vocals), Luke McDonald (guitar, bass, keyboards, vocals), Karin Baeumler (violin and vocals) and Chris O'Neill (drums). Click h...

Robert Forster has announced a number of UK tour dates for May and June this year.

He will be accompanied by his band who feature Scott Bromiley (guitar, bass, keyboards, vocals), Luke McDonald (guitar, bass, keyboards, vocals), Karin Baeumler (violin and vocals) and Chris O’Neill (drums).

Click here to read our Album By Album interview with Robert Forster

“It was seven years since my last album, and I am thrilled at the response to Songs To Play,” says Forster. “And so this tour will be my first shows with a band in the UK for eight years. It’s a long time and we can’t wait to play. Expect fireworks, recent and old songs, and one or two new dance moves.”

The full list of shows is:

MAY 28: Whelans, Dublin
MAY 29: King Tut’s Wah Wah Hut, Glasgow
MAY 31: Deaf Institute, Manchester
JUNE 1: Islington Assembly Hall, London

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Belly to reunite for summer tour dates

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Belly have reunited to play shows this coming summer in the US and the UK. The band were formed in 1991 by Tanya Donelly (Throwing Muses, the Breeders); the original line-up featured Fred Abong, Thomas Gorman and Chris Gorman, with Abong replaced by Gail Greenwood in 1993. It's not clear who the l...

Belly have reunited to play shows this coming summer in the US and the UK.

The band were formed in 1991 by Tanya Donelly (Throwing Muses, the Breeders); the original line-up featured Fred Abong, Thomas Gorman and Chris Gorman, with Abong replaced by Gail Greenwood in 1993.

It’s not clear who the line-up will be for this coming tour.

The news was announced on the band’s website:

“Belly is very happy to announce that we will be reuniting to play some shows this coming summer in the US and the UK. Dates will be announced as they are confirmed, but right now we can tell you with relative confidence that the UK shows will fall in the middle of July, and US shows will be scattered throughout August and possibly into September.

“We’ve also got a handful of brand new Belly songs in various stages of writing and recording, that we’ll be releasing one by one over the next few months. First previews will be right here on the website!”

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Monkees announce new album and 50th anniversary tour

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The Monkees have announced details of their first new studio album for 20 years, as well a tour dates to celebrate the band's 50th anniversary. Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith, and Peter Tork have all worked on GOOD TIMES!, which will be available June 10 on CD and digitally, with a vinyl version com...

The Monkees have announced details of their first new studio album for 20 years, as well a tour dates to celebrate the band’s 50th anniversary.

Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith, and Peter Tork have all worked on GOOD TIMES!, which will be available June 10 on CD and digitally, with a vinyl version coming out on July 1.

The new album will feature new songs written for the band by Rivers Cuomo (Weezer), Ben Gibbard (Death Cab for Cutie) and XTC’s Andy Partridge as well as a song co-written by Noel Gallagher and Paul Weller.

GOOD TIMES! will also feature unreleased songs that were originally recorded and written for the group during the 60s, including “Love To Love” by Neil Diamond, which features a vintage vocal by Davy Jones.

Harry Nilsson wrote the title track “Good Times!” which he recorded at a session with Nesmith in January 1968. The production was never completed, so the band returned to the original session tape (featuring Nilsson’s guide vocal) and have created a duet with Dolenz. “Good Times!” will mark the first time Dolenz and Nilsson have sung together since Dolenz’ May 1973 single “Daybreak”.

Meanwhile, Dolenz and Tork will launch a Monkees 50th Anniversary Tour on May 18 at Barbara B. Mann Performing Arts Hall in Fort Myers, Florida.

The 50-date North American treck closes at the Pantages Theater in Los Angeles on September 16.

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch the Rolling Stones play “She’s A Rainbow” for the first time in 18 years

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The Rolling Stones began their latest tour in Chile on Wednesday night (February 3) and played 1967 track "She's A Rainbow" for the first time in 18 years. In the run up to the show at the Estadio Nacional, the band asked fans via their website to choose the track that they would play during their ...

The Rolling Stones began their latest tour in Chile on Wednesday night (February 3) and played 1967 track “She’s A Rainbow” for the first time in 18 years.

In the run up to the show at the Estadio Nacional, the band asked fans via their website to choose the track that they would play during their performance.

They offered “She’s A Rainbow”, “Anybody Seen My Baby”, “She’s So Cold” and “Like a Rolling Stone”, with the former winning by the most votes. The track hadn’t been played since 1998 and, Rolling Stone reports, only the 11th time in their entire history. You can watch the band play the track below.

The Stones tour continues on February 7 with three nights at Argentina’s Estadio Unico. It finishes on March 17 at Mexico City’s Foro Sol.

Meanwhile, a major retrospective – EXHIBITIONISM – runs at the Saatchi Gallery, London, from April 6 2016 – September 2016.

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Daevid Allen’s final album set for release

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The final album Daevid Allen worked on before his death aged 77 in March, 2015, has been scheduled for release. ELEVENSES by the Daevid Allen Weird Quartet will be released on February 12, 2016. The Quartet line-up is Allen alongside Don Falcone of Spirits Burning, Michael Clare of Daevid Allen's...

The final album Daevid Allen worked on before his death aged 77 in March, 2015, has been scheduled for release.

ELEVENSES by the Daevid Allen Weird Quartet will be released on February 12, 2016.

The Quartet line-up is Allen alongside Don Falcone of Spirits Burning, Michael Clare of Daevid Allen’s University of Errors, and drummers Trey Sabatelli (The Tubes) and Paul Sears (The Muffins).

Click here to read our celebration of the genius of Daevid Allen and Gong

The band previously recorded a 2005 album DJDDAY under the band name Weird Biscuit Teatime.

The tracklisting for ELEVENSES is:

TransloopThisMessage
Imagicknation
The Latest Curfew Craze
Kick That Habit Man
Secretary Of Lore
Alchemy
The Cold Stuffings Of November
Grasshopping
God’s New Deal
Dim Sum In Alphabetical Order
Killer Honey
Under The YumYum Tree Cafe
Banana Construction

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Second Uncut Playlist Of 2016

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I'm trying to get back into the rhythm of compiling these lists every week. Lots new to check out again here: can I particularly flag up Tim Hecker, The Dead Tongues - another player from that fruitful North Carolina scene (there are blood ties with Phil Cook's band), King, the less-heralded new Igg...

I’m trying to get back into the rhythm of compiling these lists every week. Lots new to check out again here: can I particularly flag up Tim Hecker, The Dead Tongues – another player from that fruitful North Carolina scene (there are blood ties with Phil Cook’s band), King, the less-heralded new Iggy record (the one where he recites Walt Whitman over Alva Noto and Tarwater electronica) and the amazing Bitchin Bajas/Will Oldham hook-up? Hopefully I’ll have something to play from that soon.
Strong week for reissues too, with the Träd, Gräs Och Stenar box, Third Man’s Primeval Greek Village Music comp, and the Gimmer Nicholson discovery (originally slated to be the first album on Ardent) in particular. More as I find out…
Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1. Jefferson Airplane – After Bathing At Baxter’s (RCA Victor)

2. King – We Are King (King Creative)

3. Cate Le Bon – Crab Day (Turnstile)

4. Thomas Cohen – Bloom Forever (Stolen)

5. The Third Eye Foundation – Semtex: 20th Anniversary Edition (Ici D’Ailleurs)

6. The Dead Tongues – Montana (Self-released)

https://soundcloud.com/winsome-management/graveyard-fields-by-the-dead-tongues

7. Thee Oh Sees – Fortress (Castleface)

8. Träd, Gräs Och Stenar – Box Set (Anthology)

9. The Dead Tongues – Desert (Self-released)

10. Fraser & DeBolt – This Song Was Borne (Roaratorio)

11. Various Artists – Wayfaring Strangers: Cosmic American Music (Numero Group)

12. Tim Hecker – Love Streams (4AD)

13. Kevin Morby – Singing Saw ((Dead Oceans)

14. Glenn Jones – Fleeting (Thrill Jockey)

https://soundcloud.com/thrilljockey/flower-turned-inside-out-1

15. Heron Oblivion – Heron Oblivion (Sub Pop)

16. Gabriel Kahane – The Ambassador (StorySound)

17. White Denim – Stiff (Downtown)

18. Modern Studies – Ten White Horses (Soundcloud)

19. Judge Barry Hertzog – The Best Of Slag Van Blowdriver (4 Zero)

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

21. Rob Galbraith – Damn It All (Numero Group)

22. Fennesz – Mahler Remix (Touch)

23. Freddie Gibbs – Shadow Of A Doubt (ESGN)

24. William Tyler – Live at Third Man Records: 07/18/2014 (Third Man)

25. Anohni – Hopelessness (Rough Trade)

26. Iggy Pop/Tarwater/Alva Noto – Leaves Of Grass (Morr Music/ https://anost.net/en/Products/Iggy-Pop-Tarwater-Alva-Noto-Leaves-Of-Grass/)

27. Various Artists – Why The Mountains Are Black: Primeval Greek Village Music: 1907-1960 (Third Man)

28. Gimmer Nicholson – Christopher Idylls (Light In The Attic)

29. Iggy Pop – Post Pop Depression (Rekords Rekords/Loma Vista/Caroline International)

Watch the first trailer for Don Cheadle’s Miles Davis biopic

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The first trailer has been released for Miles Ahead; the biopic of Miles Davis directed by and starring Don Cheadle. The film is set in 1979, during Davis' five-year period away from the public eye. For anyone expecting a straight biopic, Cheadle has described the film as "a gangster pic. It's a mo...

The first trailer has been released for Miles Ahead; the biopic of Miles Davis directed by and starring Don Cheadle.

The film is set in 1979, during Davis’ five-year period away from the public eye. For anyone expecting a straight biopic, Cheadle has described the film as “a gangster pic. It’s a movie that Miles Davis would have wanted to star in.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bvt9LU45ruc

The film also stars Emayatzy Corinealdi as Frances Taylor and Ewan McGregor.

We’ll bring you a report on the film soon…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Cure contribute to New Order’s new website

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New Order have launched a new archival website called Singularity: The Influence of New Order. The website documents their musical influences through tributes, cover songs and specially curated mixtapes besides more personal memorabilia. "New Order occupy a singular space in the history of modern ...

New Order have launched a new archival website called Singularity: The Influence of New Order.

The website documents their musical influences through tributes, cover songs and specially curated mixtapes besides more personal memorabilia.

“New Order occupy a singular space in the history of modern music,” says the homepage. “Their influence on other creatives, including musicians, writers, visual artists and photographers, is near unparalleled. Inspired by their lasting impact, Singularity is a collection of personal contributions from a wide range of creatives showcasing how, when, where and why this band not only defined an era, but continue to do so. Explore Singularity: The Influence of New Order.”

Among the confirmed content for the website so far is a mixtape curated by The Cure‘s Robert Smith, Cold Cave’s cover of “Your Silent Face“, Chromatics’ cover of “Ceremony” and Hot Chip‘s remix of “Tutti Frutti”.

The group have also confirmed details of a US tour in March.

They are scheduled to play New York, Philadelphia and Miami before heading to Europe for a string of festival dates, including Sonar, Roskilde, Rock Werchter and Oya Festival. In between, they will headline a homecoming gig at Manchester’s Castlefield Bowl on July 7.

The full list of tour dates are as follows:
New York, Radio City Music Hall (March 10)
Philadelphia, Tower Theatre (12)
Chicago, Chicago Theatre (16)
Las Vegas, The Cosmopolitan (23)
Sonar Festival (June 16-18)
Roskilde Festival (June 25–July 2)
Rock Werchter Festival (June 30–July 3)
Bilbao BBK Live (July 7-9)
Manchester, Castlefield Bowl (7)
Oya Festival (August 9-13)

The March 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our 19 page David Bowie tribute plus Loretta Lynn, Tim Hardin, Animal Collective, The Kinks, Mavis Staples, The Pop Group, Field Music, Clint Mansell, Steve Mason, Eric Clapton, Bert Jansch, Grant Lee Phillips and more plus our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.