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10 Essential Films For 2016

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Planning for the year ahead in film is admittedly a dicey business. A great trailer does not necessarily make a good film, of course. As with previous preview lists, I've tried to avoid the big studio superhero films - of which there are several coming - and focus instead on the films that I suspect...

Planning for the year ahead in film is admittedly a dicey business. A great trailer does not necessarily make a good film, of course. As with previous preview lists, I’ve tried to avoid the big studio superhero films – of which there are several coming – and focus instead on the films that I suspect may have greater resonance with Uncut readers.

So, we welcome back some familiar faces – John Hillcoat, the Coens bothers, Ben Wheatley, Richard Linklater – and look forward, too, to the directorial debut of Don Cheadle, who has also found time to star in a much-anticipated Miles Davies biopic. There’s comedy, sci-fi, thrillers and also gripping political reportage (or, well, that’s perhaps stretching it: Liz Lemon in Kabul, anyone?).

Of course, as this is restricted to films with trailers, sadly I can’t include Martin Scorsese‘s Silence, Todd Solondz‘ Wiener-Dog or Kenneth Lonergan’s Manchester By The Sea. Looking through the forthcoming listings, though, I notice this curious inclusion to the November 2016 schedule: Untitled WB Event Film 1. Now what on earth could it be?

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Triple Nine
Directed by: John Hillcoat
Opens February 19

Hail, Caesar!
Directed by: Joel and Ethan Coen
Opens March 4

Knight Of Cups
Directed by: Terrence Malick
Opens March 4

Whiskey Tango Foxtrot
Directed by: Glenn Ficarra and John Requa
Opens March 4

High Rise
Directed by: Ben Weatley
Opens March 18

Midnight Special
Directed by: Jeff Nichols
Opens March 18

Miles Ahead
Directed by: Don Cheadle
Opens April 22

Everybody Wants Some
Directed by: Richard Linklater
Opens May 13

Mojave
Directed by: William Monahan
Opens Spring
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2pwwVQ8YCl4

The Nice Guys
Directed by: Shane Black
Opens Summer

The February 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring the 200 Greatest Albums Of All Time, 2016 Preview, New Order, Suede, John Cale, Michael Rother, Sun Ra, Barry Adamson, Savages, Ryley Walker, Tindersticks, Lucinda Williams, Peaches, The Long Ryders, Lera Lynn, Ronnie Lane and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

February 2016

The 200 greatest albums of all time, plus New Order, John Cale and Suede, all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated February 2016 and out now. We count down the best albums ever made for the first time ever in Uncut, as chosen by a swathe of our staff and contributors – plus there are informat...

The 200 greatest albums of all time, plus New Order, John Cale and Suede, all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated February 2016 and out now.

We count down the best albums ever made for the first time ever in Uncut, as chosen by a swathe of our staff and contributors – plus there are informative infographics, charts and breakdowns of the results of our poll. Pick up the issue to see who has made it into our historic chart…

Elsewhere, we head to Paris to find New Order taking stock after one of the strongest and most poignant comebacks in recent memory. “[Peter Hook]’s not got a monopoly on our history,” protests Stephen Morris. “It’s our past as much as his.”

“We’ve earned our hedonist medals,” says Bernard Sumner later. “Time to move on.”

John Cale answers your questions in our Audience With… feature, tackling topics such as instrument abuse, Lou Reed, jamming with Bowie, and recalling the time he made Nico cry.

“Everybody knew the excitement of the first Velvets album wouldn’t last,” he tells us. “When it came to White Light/White Heat we were barely able to be in the same room.”

As they prepare to release their new album Night Thoughts, Suede tell Uncut about mid-life “disaster thinking”, their “Shakespearean” story and getting older. “I don’t feel sad that I’m not young,” Brett Anderson explains. “All of the jagged edges that I had, the inability to place myself and be comfortable anywhere, I don’t have that any more and I’m pleased about that.”

The issue also features our 2016 album preview, featuring The National, Ray Davies, Underworld, Jack White, Graham Nash, Radiohead, PJ Harvey, Swans and more.

Krautrock legend Michael Rother talks us through the best albums of his career, from Neu! and Harmonia to his stellar solo work. “I’ve sort of lost interest in releasing new music,” this once studio-bound musician tells us. “Instead I now try to add a creative element when I play live. In China last year I saw these people going totally wild… having the time of their lives listening to the music. This is what I really love now.”

Also in the issue, members of the Arkestra tell the incredible story of Sun Ra‘s “Space Is The Place”, the 22-minute epic that gave its title to an album and an interstellar film by the eccentric, visionary jazzman. “It really was as if he was an Egyptian priest, with the concepts he’s talking about,” says Knoel Scott.

Our Instant Karma news section features Ryley Walker and Danny Thompson, Matmos, Ronnie Lane and Lera Lynn, while our reviews section includes Eleanor Friedberger, Savages, Tindersticks, Lucinda Williams, Ty Segall, Francoise Hardy, The Long Ryders and Them.

We catch Peaches and Death live, and check out films including The Revenant and the Sarah Records documentary.

The free CD, What’s Going On! The Sound Of 2016, features great new tracks from John Cale, Lucinda Williams, Fat White Family, Tindersticks, Cian Nugent, Tortoise and Suede.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

David Bowie’s ★ reviewed

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When you’ve come back from the dead, as David Bowie effectively did with his surprise 2013 album The Next Day, what exactly do you do for an encore? The sudden appearance of “Where Are We Now?” on the morning of January 8th – his 66th birthday – was a coup de theatre even by the standards ...

When you’ve come back from the dead, as David Bowie effectively did with his surprise 2013 album The Next Day, what exactly do you do for an encore? The sudden appearance of “Where Are We Now?” on the morning of January 8th – his 66th birthday – was a coup de theatre even by the standards of an artist with a long history of dramatic entrances. The problem is though that when you’ve pulled off such an audacious stunt once – one to rival that of Lazarus, you could say – what do you do on future birthdays? “The future,” as Bowie told NME in 1973, “is very open-ended, actually.”

The clues may have been planted in the last track on The Next Day, “Heat”: a sinister melodrama driven by eerie violin howls and eldritch electronic effects that suggested Bowie was girding himself to do the full Scott Walker. Blackstar (or, indeed, ★), Bowie’s 25th studio album, and one that will be serendipitously released on his 69th birthday, is not quite his Tilt, but it does represent yet another marvellous reinvention for Bowie. This time, working in cahoots with a brand new band, Bowie has concocted an album that is wide-ranging in scope and, critically, experimental in tone. After the relatively straightforward The Next Day, it is as if Bowie now feels free to indulge his more avant garde impulses. There are moments of challenging sonic exploration and heavy jazz-metal jams alongside a handful of astonishingly beautiful songs that find Bowie lighting up the room with some of his finest soul singing in decades. Blackstar makes reference to bluebirds, prodigal sons, and heavenly bodies. One song repeatedly inquires of the listener, “Where the fuck did Monday go?” Welcome then to Blackstar – Bowie’s latest creative Year Zero.

The roots of Blackstar lie in the 2014 Record Store Day single Bowie recorded with the Maria Schneider Orchestra – “Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)” (you can also find it on the Nothing Has Changed compilation, released in November 2014). A seven-minute post-modern jazz experiment, the song found Bowie operating in an unfamiliar idiom with a new set of musicians drawn from New York’s vibrant contemporary jazz scene. Clearly inspired by these sessions, Bowie has conscripted “Sue…” saxophonist Donny McCaslin, whose muscular reed-playing dominates Blackstar, to act as bandleader. The 49 year-old Berklee graduate, with 10 albums of his own under his belt, fills out the Blackstar lineup with his own players: keyboardist Jason Lindner, bassist Tim Lefebvre, percussionist Mark Guiliana and guitarist Ben Monder.

Bowie has never publicly busied himself much with jazz – aside from Mike Garson’s virtuoso piano runs on “Lady Grinning Soul”, say – and his collaborations with McCaslin’s quartet feel less about getting in touch with his inner Miles and more as a means to explore new ideas. These are not just artistic decisions, so much as psychological ones. The Next Day brimmed with stylistic echoes of his previous records and was mostly staffed by familiar faces – Gerry Leonard, Sterling Campell, Zachary Alford, Earl Slick, Gail Ann Dorsey. Producer Tony Visconti remains for Blackstar, but the onus is on the new; if Bowie now wants to pursue a fresh musical agenda, surely this is best done in the genial company of new companions?

As if to underscore these intentions, Bowie deliberately frontloads Blackstar with two of its most outré tracks: “Blackstar” and “‘Tis A Pity She Was A Whore”. They’re very different songs – the former is a mind-bogglingly audacious ambient-prog-electronic-soul marathon lasting just shy of ten minutes, the latter a pounding skronkathon – but both act as defiant and divisive statements, as a bold introduction to the album’s weird logistics. Blackstar has seven tracks in total, two of which have already been out (albeit in different versions) while another is pegged to Bowie’s off-Broadway musical, Lazarus. It isn’t the first time one of his albums has been assembled from other sources: Diamond Dogs, for example, was salvaged from an ambitious plan to stage George Orwell’s 1984 as a musical; Heathen was stitched together from cover versions, new material and songs from his thwarted Toy venture.

The apparent patchwork provenance, though, makes it hard to discern overall themes from Blackstar. The violence and anger of The Next Day presented a Bowie actively engaged with the oppressive forces at work in a world to which he returned after a decade-long absence. Here, there is a less obvious thematic thread. The songs are full of narrators and characters offering a jumble of perspectives. One recounts an act of supernatural transformation: “Something happened on the day he died/Spirit rose to leave him and stepped aside”. Another negotiates a series of violent episodes: “Man, she punched me like a dude/Hold your mad hands, I cried”. A third seems to have committed murder: “I pushed you down beneath the weeds/Endless faith in hopeless deeds”. And then there is “Lazarus”, one of the four new songs Bowie has written for his off-Broadway musical – based on Walter Tevis’ original novel, The Man Who Fell To Earth – but the only one to figure on Blackstar (as far as we know). Was Bowie working on both projects simultaneously, and if so how did one feed into the other? Is he tacitly using “Lazarus” to connect The Man Who Fell To Earth to Blackstar? Or is Lazarus simply the latest in a celebrated line of starmen to appear in Bowie’s songs?

Perhaps Blackstar is unified by sound more than message. After the crunchy riffs of The Next Day, Blackstar has a more nuanced approach. Crucially, there is only one guitar solo on the album – a harsh, Fripp-like report across the album’s otherwise meditative closer, “I Can’t Give Everything Away”. For the most part, Bowie lets McCaslin and his band lead the way. On Blackstar’s reworking of “Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)”, for instance, the free jazz textures of the original are replaced by a dense industrial thrum. It resembles a kind of jazz/metal hybrid – Bowie’s Lulu moment, perhaps? – as McCaslin drives his band towards a thrillingly discordant crescendo.

Of course, it’s not a totally new Bowie that emerges from all this. There are subtle resonances of his previous personae throughout the album. The cryptic, fragmented lyrics of “Girl Loves Me” (“Popo blind to the Polly in the hole by Friday”) seem to have been created with cut-up techniques similar to the ones he used on Diamond Dogs and later revisited via a computer programme for Outside. “Blackstar” itself shares a dark theatrical atmosphere with “Aladdin Sane” while the song’s sudden and transfixing detour into soul – with McCaslin’s sax rolling and swooping in the background – recalls the euphoric brass swells on “Sweet Thing/Candidate/Sweet Thing (Reprise)” from Diamond Dogs.

“Lazarus” – which might or might not be sung from the point of view of the musical’s resident alien, Newton – glides along with the same sumptuous, melancholic grace as Heathen’s grand centrepiece, “Slip Away”. And while “Blackstar” and “‘Tis A Pity She Was A Whore” feature some Scott Walker-ish mannerisms, Bowie’s warm, soulful timbre on “I Can’t Give Everything Away” echoes “A Word On Wing” or perhaps a less operatic take on “Wild Is The Wind”.

Bowie elects to close Blackstar with two relatively straightforward songs. They are a strong reminder, perhaps, that despite giving free reign to his experimental tendencies, he remains very capable of classic songcraft. Both vocals, delivered close to the microphone to convey a sense of intimacy, find Bowie in reflective mood. On “Dollar Days” he sings wistfully about “the English evergreens” over his own leisurely paced acoustic playing. “I Can’t Give Everything Away”, meanwhile, is borne along on soft synth washes and fleeting snatches of harmonica. An elegant, relaxed and rather touching end.

When he chose to return to music in 2013, David Bowie made his past work for him on The Next Day; a strategic move, perhaps, to help shore up his comeback and to remind a mass audience of his consistent strengths. What could have been read at the time, however, as a dignified coda to an extraordinary career now looks more like a kind of palette cleanser before new adventures. This is what Blackstar feels like: the beginning of a new Bowie phase, one that may turn out to be as uncompromising and creatively volatile as anything that has preceded it. There’s an argument that drawing on tag-lines from nearly 40 years ago is somewhat against the spirit of Blackstar. Nevertheless, one of the advertising slogans used to promote “Heroes” back in 1977 seems just as apposite today. “Tomorrow,” it read, “belongs to those who can hear it coming.”

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The February 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring the 200 Greatest Albums Of All Time, 2016 Preview, New Order, Suede, John Cale, Michael Rother, Sun Ra, Barry Adamson, Savages, Ryley Walker, Tindersticks, Lucinda Williams, Peaches, The Long Ryders, Lera Lynn, Ronnie Lane and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Read Jerry Dammers tribute to Specials’ drummer, John Bradbury

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Jerry Dammers has paid tribute to John Bradbury, the drummer with The Specials, who has died aged 62. "Hearing of Brad’s death has been a great shock to me and it is a very sad day indeed," said Dammers in a statement. "I was friends with Brad and the two of us shared a house some time before th...

Jerry Dammers has paid tribute to John Bradbury, the drummer with The Specials, who has died aged 62.

“Hearing of Brad’s death has been a great shock to me and it is a very sad day indeed,” said Dammers in a statement. “I was friends with Brad and the two of us shared a house some time before the Specials . He was highly intelligent, had a very mischievous sense of humour which could be very funny, and he played the drums with an incredible amount of energy which was a very important part of the Specials’ sound and live shows. We had some really great times together and it is truly tragic that he has died so young. My thoughts are with all his family.”

The band announced the news of Bradbury’s death via Twitter earlier today [December 29, 2015].

The Guardian cites a statement released by the band’s spokesperson praised the musician’s influence on the 2 Tone scene. “Brad’s drumming was the powerhouse behind the Specials, and it was seen as a key part to the 2 Tone sound.

“He was much respected in the world of drumming, and his style of reggae and ska was seen as genuinely ground-breaking when the Specials first hit the charts in 1979,” the statement continued. “He was an integral part of the Specials re-forming in 2008, and [he] toured with them extensively up to the present day. His contribution to the world of music can not be understated and he will much missed by family, friends and fans alike.”

Bradbury joined The Specials in 1979, and continued with The Special AKA.

Bradbury was also a member of soul group JB’s Allstars and ska band, Selecter.

The news comes three months after the death of the band’s trombonist, Rico Rodriguez.

Billy Bragg paid tribute to Bradbury, writing on Twitter:

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

This month in Uncut

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The 200 greatest albums of all time, plus New Order, John Cale and Suede, all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated February 2016 and out now. We count down the best albums ever made for the first time ever in Uncut, as chosen by a swathe of our staff and contributors – plus there are informat...

The 200 greatest albums of all time, plus New Order, John Cale and Suede, all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated February 2016 and out now.

We count down the best albums ever made for the first time ever in Uncut, as chosen by a swathe of our staff and contributors – plus there are informative infographics, charts and breakdowns of the results of our poll. Pick up the issue to see who has made it into our historic chart…

Elsewhere, we head to Paris to find New Order taking stock after one of the strongest and most poignant comebacks in recent memory. “[Peter Hook]’s not got a monopoly on our history,” protests Stephen Morris. “It’s our past as much as his.”

“We’ve earned our hedonist medals,” says Bernard Sumner later. “Time to move on.”

John Cale answers your questions in our Audience With… feature, tackling topics such as instrument abuse, Lou Reed, jamming with Bowie, and recalling the time he made Nico cry.

“Everybody knew the excitement of the first Velvets album wouldn’t last,” he tells us. “When it came to White Light/White Heat we were barely able to be in the same room.”

As they prepare to release their new album Night Thoughts, Suede tell Uncut about mid-life “disaster thinking”, their “Shakespearean” story and getting older. “I don’t feel sad that I’m not young,” Brett Anderson explains. “All of the jagged edges that I had, the inability to place myself and be comfortable anywhere, I don’t have that any more and I’m pleased about that.”

The issue also features our 2016 album preview, featuring The National, Ray Davies, Underworld, Jack White, Graham Nash, Radiohead, PJ Harvey, Swans and more.

Krautrock legend Michael Rother talks us through the best albums of his career, from Neu! and Harmonia to his stellar solo work. “I’ve sort of lost interest in releasing new music,” this once studio-bound musician tells us. “Instead I now try to add a creative element when I play live. In China last year I saw these people going totally wild… having the time of their lives listening to the music. This is what I really love now.”

Also in the issue, members of the Arkestra tell the incredible story of Sun Ra‘s “Space Is The Place”, the 22-minute epic that gave its title to an album and an interstellar film by the eccentric, visionary jazzman. “It really was as if he was an Egyptian priest, with the concepts he’s talking about,” says Knoel Scott.

Our Instant Karma news section features Ryley Walker and Danny Thompson, Matmos, Ronnie Lane and Lera Lynn, while our reviews section includes Eleanor Friedberger, Savages, Tindersticks, Lucinda Williams, Ty Segall, Francoise Hardy, The Long Ryders and Them.

We catch Peaches and Death live, and check out films including The Revenant and the Sarah Records documentary.

The free CD, What’s Going On! The Sound Of 2016, features great new tracks from John Cale, Lucinda Williams, Fat White Family, Tindersticks, Cian Nugent, Tortoise and Suede.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Lemmy, lead singer of Motörhead, dies aged 70

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Lemmy, lead singer of Motörhead, has died aged 70. The band announced on their Facebook page earlier today [December 29, 2015]. "There is no easy way to say this…our mighty, noble friend Lemmy passed away today after a short battle with an extremely aggressive cancer. He had learnt of the disea...

Lemmy, lead singer of Motörhead, has died aged 70.

The band announced on their Facebook page earlier today [December 29, 2015].

“There is no easy way to say this…our mighty, noble friend Lemmy passed away today after a short battle with an extremely aggressive cancer. He had learnt of the disease on December 26th, and was at home, sitting in front of his favorite video game from The Rainbow which had recently made it’s way down the street, with his family.

“We cannot begin to express our shock and sadness, there aren’t words.

“We will say more in the coming days, but for now, please…play Motörhead loud, play Hawkwind loud, play Lemmy’s music LOUD.

“Have a drink or few.

“Share stories.

“Celebrate the LIFE this lovely, wonderful man celebrated so vibrantly himself.

“HE WOULD WANT EXACTLY THAT.

“Ian ‘Lemmy’ Kilmister
1945 -2015
Born to lose, lived to win.”

The band have set up a Facebook tribute page where fans can leave condolences and share stories.

Motorhead at the Glastonbury Festival on June 26, 2015. (Photo by Samir Hussein/Redferns via Getty Images)
Motorhead at the Glastonbury Festival on June 26, 2015. (Photo by Samir Hussein/Redferns via Getty Images)

Meanwhile, Alice Cooper released the following statement:

“When we say ‘one of a kind’ in rock’n roll, Lemmy was the epitome of that – one of the most beloved characters in rock’n roll. I can’t think of anyone who didn’t adore Lemmy; you can’t say ‘heavy metal’ without mentioning Lemmy. If you’re a 13 year old kid learning to play bass, you want to play like Lemmy. He was one of a kind. And I will personally miss seeing him out on the road. We did many shows together and we looked forward to it every time we were touring with Motörhead. Rock’n roll heaven just got heavier.”

Lemmy was born Ian Fraser Kilmister on December 24, 1945. During the 1960s, he played in several bands – including The Rockin’ Vickers – and also worked as a roadie for the Jimi Hendrix Experience.

In 1972, he joined Hawkwind as bassist and vocalist, providing vocals on the band’s biggest UK chart single, “Silver Machine“, which reached No.3 in 1972.

He formed Motörhead in 1975 and was its only constant member. The band released 23 studio albums; their latest, Bad Magic, was released on August 28, 2015.

Earlier this year, the band had been forced to cancel dates on their 40th anniversary Tour due to Lemmy’s ill-health.

Phil Taylor, who was Motörhead’s drummer from 1976 to 1984 and again from 1987 to 1992, died on November 13, 2015.

Ex-guitarist “Fast” Eddie Clarke, who played with the group between 1976 and 1982, led tributes to Lemmy. He wrote on his Facebook page:

“I have just been told that Lemmy has passed away in LA.
Like Phil, he was like a brother to me. I am devastated.
We did so much together, the three of us.
The world seems a really empty place right now.
I am having trouble finding the words…
He will live on in our hearts. R.I.P Lemmy!”

https://twitter.com/genesimmons/status/681648168975532034

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Introducing the new Uncut

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It's traditional at this time of year to publish Best Of... lists, as we commemorate and document the highlights of the previous 12 months. Indeed, by following these handy links, you can catch up with our own Best Albums Of 2015, Best Reissues and Best Films. Serendipitously, for the new issue of ...

It’s traditional at this time of year to publish Best Of… lists, as we commemorate and document the highlights of the previous 12 months. Indeed, by following these handy links, you can catch up with our own Best Albums Of 2015, Best Reissues and Best Films.

Serendipitously, for the new issue of Uncut we’ve decided to unveil our list of the 200 Greatest Albums Of All Time. This is the first time in Uncut‘s 18 year history that we’ve undertaken such an ambitious project, and while I don’t want to give away any surprises about what records have – or, perhaps, haven’t – made this list, it throws into sharp relief the commendably wide and varied tastes of the electoral college: in this case, Uncut’s crack team of writers.

Anyway, all will be revealed when the issue goes on sale in UK shops and digitally from December 29.

Elsewhere in the new issue, there’s our mammoth 2016 Preview, featuring interviews with The National‘s Aaron Dessner, as he lifts the lid of his mammoth Grateful Dead covers project, Ray Davies, Graham Nash, Yoko Ono, Parquet Courts, T Bone Burnett, Underworld, Animal Collective, Chris Forsyth, Swans and many more who guide us through their new releases for the year ahead.

There’s also all-new interviews with Suede, New Order, John Cale and Michael Rother as well as a hefty 38 pages of reviews.

There’s plenty more, too – but it’s best if we keep a few surprises back until nearer the time.

I guess at this point it only leaves me to wish you a Merry Christmas from all of us here at Uncut. We can’t thank you enough for your continued support during the past year and we look forward to seeing you again in 2016 – which, incidentally, is already shaping up to be quite an exciting year for music…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

CBGB to reopen… as a restaurant at Newark airport

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CBGB is to reopen as a restaurant in Newark airport. Rechristened the CBGB L.A.B. (Lounge and Bar), The Gothamist reports the restaurant will serve "American fare in a fun environment recalling the legendary music venue." The original CBGB's was opened in December, 1973 by Hilly Kristal, where Ram...

CBGB is to reopen as a restaurant in Newark airport.

Rechristened the CBGB L.A.B. (Lounge and Bar), The Gothamist reports the restaurant will serve “American fare in a fun environment recalling the legendary music venue.”

The original CBGB’s was opened in December, 1973 by Hilly Kristal, where Ramones, Patti Smith, Television, Talking Heads, Blondie and many others gained renown in the 1970s. It closed for business in 2006.

Kristal died in 2007, and the following year designer John Varvatos turned the site into a retail store.

The restaurant at New Jersey’s Newark Liberty International Airport will be run by chef Harold Moore, who New York City restaurant Commerce, reports Rolling Stone.

The menu will include $9 disco fries, an $11.50 wedge salad and a $14 cheeseburger.

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Björk releases “Stonemilker” virtual reality app

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Björk has released an Apple Store app designed specifically to view her 3D video for "Stonemilker", previously promoted as an in-person only experience at exhibitions in New York and London. The video was made available via YouTube in June this year, but the new app is designed to recreate some of...

Björk has released an Apple Store app designed specifically to view her 3D video for “Stonemilker“, previously promoted as an in-person only experience at exhibitions in New York and London.

The video was made available via YouTube in June this year, but the new app is designed to recreate some of the in-person experience.

“Stonemilker” is the opening track from Vulnicura, released earlier this year, while the video is shot in Björk’s native Iceland, by Andrew Huang, and includes an ‘immersive’ string version of the track.

For the full experience you’ll need virtual reality glasses, though the app does work in a more basic way on iPhone and iPad without the accessory.

You can see an interactive version of the 3D filming via YouTube, below:

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

See Shane MacGowan’s new teeth!

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Shane MacGowan has shown off his new smile after undergoing what his dental surgeon described as "the Everest of dentistry". MacGowan lost his last natural tooth in 2008. However, he decided to get a new set of dentures; the work was documented by Sky Arts for a programme titled Shane MacGowan: A ...

Shane MacGowan has shown off his new smile after undergoing what his dental surgeon described as “the Everest of dentistry”.

MacGowan lost his last natural tooth in 2008.

However, he decided to get a new set of dentures; the work was documented by Sky Arts for a programme titled Shane MacGowan: A Wreck Reborn which aired last night (December 20).

Darragh Mulrooney, the Irish dental surgeon who operated on MacGowan, described the job as being among his most challenging. Extending his Everest metaphor, he told The Independent: “There was a whole team required to get to the summit.”

MacGowan had 28 dentures fitted alongside one gold tooth in a procedure which took nine hours. The work has already begun to affect the musician’s diet, as his surgeon explains, and should also improve his singing ability: “There was a moving moment when someone gave Shane an apple to eat … something he hadn’t done in 20 years.”

“Shane recorded most of his great works when he had some teeth to work with,” Mulrooney added. “The question on everyone’s lips is how it will affect his voice. The tongue is a finely attuned muscle and it makes precise movements. We’ve effectively retuned his instrument and that will be an ongoing process.”

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Bruce Springsteen – The Ties That Bind: The River Collection

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Only the insatiable Bruce Springsteen, you feel, could record a sprawling double album that would one day prove to be merely the tip of the iceberg. Released in October 1980, unlike its predecessor, the finely wrought Darkness On The Edge Of Town, The River made no attempt to sustain a mood or hold ...

Only the insatiable Bruce Springsteen, you feel, could record a sprawling double album that would one day prove to be merely the tip of the iceberg. Released in October 1980, unlike its predecessor, the finely wrought Darkness On The Edge Of Town, The River made no attempt to sustain a mood or hold to a narrative through-line: the only story it tells is of Springsteen’s sheer prolificacy. Even today, it’s the album that comes closest to mapping the contours of his live show. Mixing carefree rockers, soulful testifying and solemn moments of contemplation, The River’s 20 tracks move from deep shade (the title track, “Stolen Car”, “Drive All Night”, “Independence Day”) to knockabout romps such as “Ramrod”, “I’m A Rocker” and “Crush On You”.

All of which begs the question: do we need a hefty addendum to an album that already boasts its fair share of sidebars and diversions? Yes and no. This is a weighty document. As well as four discs featuring 52 tracks of audio material, The Ties That Bind includes a double-DVD film shot in 1980 at a concert in Tempe, Arizona, plus rehearsal footage and an hour-long documentary. There is also a 120-page coffee-table book.

Inevitably, not all of it is essential, but it helps immeasurably that The Ties That Bind is smartly thought out, and structured in such a way that allows three distinct records to emerge from the one that already exists. Heard alongside Springsteen’s considerable marginalia, the original version of The River – which takes up two of the four CDs – is subtly reshaped. The third disc comprises the first official release of The River: Single Album, much bootlegged and better known among aficionados as The Ties That Bind. This is the album that Springsteen completed in 1979 as the intended follow-up to Darkness On The Edge Of Town, and which he eventually scrapped because he felt it lacked unity. He was wrong. It holds together very well indeed.

Seven of the 10 songs eventually appeared on The River. Some survived essentially unchanged, others feature alternate lyrics and notable shifts of mood and emphasis. “The Price You Pay” runs to six minutes and includes an extra verse, and there’s a fine, razor-edged rockabilly version of “You Can Look (But You Better Not Touch)”, on which Springsteen channels Jerry Lee. Of the three songs ultimately dropped from The River, the unremarkable “Be True” and terrific “Loose Ends” ended up on Tracks, while the unreleased “Cindy” is a pretty, Buddy Holly-ish strum recounting a mismatched love affair.

The big reveal comes on the final disc of outtakes, comprising 22 tracks recorded in 1979 and 1980. Half of these were previously released on the Tracks boxset and Essentials album, but they speak more clearly returned to their original context. The extent to which Springsteen was being influenced by punk and new wave is evident on “DollHouse”, “Living On The Edge Of The World” – two parts Clash to one part Costello and the Attractions – “Where The Bands Are” and the messy, urgent “Held Up Without A Gun”.

The remaining 11 outtakes are unreleased rarities, some of which have remained off the radar of even the most dedicated bootlegger. They’re a mixed bag, yet even the slightest numbers have an exuberant appeal. Many are essentially genre studies. On “Little White Lies” the Boss does polka, complete with Cossack cries of “hoy!”, “Chain Lightning” is a rowdy rumble, Duane Eddy’s “Peter Gunn” hopped up on moonshine and shackled to spooky organ. “Party Lights” uses The Byrds’ “Feel A Whole Lot Better” as the starting point for a more downbeat exploration of the life of the working single mother who appeared in “I Wanna Marry You”.

It’s a fine thing to finally hear the studio version of “Paradise By The C”, the joyous soul instrumental until now only available on Live 1975-85, while “Mr. Outside” is a pleasingly ramshackle solo busk, bringing all this scattershot creativity back to the founding spark of creation. But these are, essentially, trifles. Occasionally, however, The Ties That Bind throws up a song that renders Springsteen’s decision to cast it into the wilderness all but inexplicable. “The Man Who Got Away” is a thumping potboiler, blurring the lines between cinematic derring-do and real-life transgressions. Better still are “Night Fire”, “The Time That Never Was” and “Stray Bullet”. These are A-grade Springsteen, fully realised, broiling with atmosphere and emotional heft.

So what are we left with? A handful of wonderful “new” songs, some interesting also-rans and alternative choices, and the sobering realisation that, in 1980, Springsteen could have released an entirely different double album from The River: a work not quite of equal quality, but still of a remarkably high standard.

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

David Lynch reveals Twin Peaks teaser trailer

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David Lynch has released a teaser trailer for the new season of Twin Peaks. The revived series is due back on TV screens in 2017 on the Showtime network. The new trailer features Michael Horse - Deputy Hawk in the show - and the unveiling of the town's welcome sign. "Location sometimes becomes a ...

David Lynch has released a teaser trailer for the new season of Twin Peaks.

The revived series is due back on TV screens in 2017 on the Showtime network.

The new trailer features Michael Horse – Deputy Hawk in the show – and the unveiling of the town’s welcome sign.

“Location sometimes becomes a character,” says Horse. “There’s a lot of holy places up here, a lot of sacred places. I can’t put my finger on how I would describe it. It just touches something in the psyche. It’s almost like being in a moving painting.”

You can watch the trailer below.

It ends of a predictably enigmatic note.

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney perform “Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town”

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Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band were the musical guests on the December 19 edition of Saturday Night Live. They performed "Meet Me In The City", a previously unreleased song included on Springsteen's recent box set The Ties That Bind: The River Collection, and "The Ties That Bind", from The...

Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band were the musical guests on the December 19 edition of Saturday Night Live.

They performed “Meet Me In The City“, a previously unreleased song included on Springsteen’s recent box set The Ties That Bind: The River Collection, and “The Ties That Bind“, from The River album.

The show was hosted by Tina Fey and Amy Poehler.

During a closing performance of “Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town”, the band were joined by Paul McCartney.

You can watch footage below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YHW115pAK08

Before the show, Springsteen posted a photograph of himself and McCartney on Instagram:

Meanwhile, has revealed he is working on a new solo album.

Springsteen called SiriusXM’s E Street Radio on December 9, 2015, to reveal the news.

Reports Rolling Stone, Springsteen had called the show to discuss the forthcoming River tour, to support The Ties That Bind: The River Collection, a four-CD/three-DVD package dedicated to his 1980 double album.

“The project I’ve been working on is more of a solo project,” he said. “It wasn’t a project I was going to probably take the band out on. So I said, ‘Gee, that’s going to push the band playing again until a ways in the future. It’ll be nice to get some playing in so you don’t wind up being two or three years between E Street tours.’ This will give us a chance to get out there and stretch our muscles a little bit.”

“We made the box set and there was no plan to tour,” Springsteen said. “Then we felt, ‘Maybe we should do a show just to raise the flag and have some fun and make it a little more exciting.’ I said. ‘Okay, maybe we’ll do a show in New York.’ Then that went quick to, ‘Maybe we should do a couple of shows.’ Then it turns into, ‘Maybe we should do a small series of shows, basically one-nighters, with maybe a little bit around the country.”

Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band’s The River tour dates:

January 16 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Consol Energy Center
January 19 – Chicago, IL @ United Center
January 24 & 27 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
January 29 – Washington, DC @ Verizon Center
January 31 – Newark, NJ @ Prudential Center
February 2 – Toronto, ON @ Air Canada Centre
February 4 – Boston, MA @ TD Garden
February 8 – Albany, NY @ Times Union Center
February 10 – Hartford, CT @ XL Center
February 12 – Philadelphia, PA @ Wells Fargo Center
February 16 – Sunrise, FL @ BB&T Center
February 18 – Atlanta, GA @ Philips Arena
February 21 – Louisville, KY @ KFC Yum! Center
February 23 – Cleveland, OH @ Quicken Loans Arena
February 25 – Buffalo, NY @ First Niagara Center
February 27 – Rochester, NY @ Blue Cross Arena
February 29 – St Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center
March 3 – Milwaukee, WI @ BMO Harris Bradley Center
March 6 – St Louis, MO @ Chaifetz Arena
March 10 – Phoenix, AZ @ Talking Stick Resort Arena
March 13 – Oakland, CA @ Oracle Arena
March 15 & 17 – Los Angeles, CA @ Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch Ray and Dave Davies perform together for the first time in almost 20 years

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Ray and Dave Davies performed together on stage for the first time in almost 20 years last night (December 18, 2015). The momentous event happened during Dave's concert at the Islington Assembly Hall, London when Ray arrived on stage to play "You Really Got Me". The brothers haven’t performed to...

Ray and Dave Davies performed together on stage for the first time in almost 20 years last night (December 18, 2015).

The momentous event happened during Dave’s concert at the Islington Assembly Hall, London when Ray arrived on stage to play “You Really Got Me“.

The brothers haven’t performed together since The Kinks played their final show at Norwegian Wood in Oslo, Norway, in June, 1996.

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Best Albums Of 2015 – The Uncut Top 50

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The current issue of Uncut features the best albums of the year, compiled by the Uncut team, along with our reissues and compilations of the year, and the best films and books. You can read new assessments of the albums in the issue, but below is the full list of Uncut’s albums of the year. Click...

The current issue of Uncut features the best albums of the year, compiled by the Uncut team, along with our reissues and compilations of the year, and the best films and books.

You can read new assessments of the albums in the issue, but below is the full list of Uncut’s albums of the year. Click on the links to read the original Uncut reviews… and as always let us know in the comments or on Facebook what would make your Top 50.

Uncut’s Top 50 Albums Of 2015 are:

50 YO LA TENGO Stuff Like That There (MATADOR)
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

49 SONGHOY BLUES Music In Exile (PIAS)

48 MY MORNING JACKET The Waterfall (BELLA UNION)
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

47 MIGUEL Wildheart (RCA)

46 OLIVIA CHANEY The Longest River (NONESUCH)

45 PANDA BEAR Panda Bear Vs The Grim Reaper (DOMINO)
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

44 LAURA MARLING Short Movie (VIRGIN)
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

43 EZRA FURMAN Perpetual Motion People (PIAS)

42 JD McPHERSON Let The Good Times Roll (ROUNDER)

41 JESSICA PRATT On Your Own Love Again (DRAG CITY)
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

40 BOB DYLAN Shadows In The Night (COLUMBIA)
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

39 PAUL WELLER Saturns Pattern (UNIVERSAL)
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

38 DAVE RAWLINGS MACHINE Nashville Obsolete (ACONY)
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

37 LOW Ones And Sixes (SUB POP)
Read Uncut’s review by clicking here

36 DESTROYER Poison Season (MERGE/DEAD OCEANS)
Read Uncut’s review of Poison Season by clicking here

35 YOUNG FATHERS White Men Are Black Men Too (BIG DADA)

34 FFS FFS (DOMINO)

33 MATTHEW E WHITE Fresh Blood (DOMINO)
Read Uncut’s review of Fresh Blood here

32 SUN KIL MOON Universal Themes (CALDO VERDE)

31 FOUR TET Morning/Evening (BANDCAMP)

30 KAMASI WASHINGTON The Epic (BRAINFEEDER)

29 KURT VILE b’lieve i’m goin down… (MATADOR)

28 BASSEKOU KOUYATE AND NGONI BA Ba Power (GLITTERBEAT)
Read Uncut’s review of Ba Power here

27 JAMIE XX In Color (YOUNG TURKS)
Read Uncut’s review of In Color here

26 JOANNA NEWSOM Divers (DRAG CITY)

25 JOHN GRANT Grey Tickles, Black Pressure (BELLA UNION)
Read Uncut’s review of Grey Tickles, Black Pressure here

24 RICHARD THOMPSON Still (PROPER)
Read Uncut’s review of Still here

23 SLEATER-KINNEY No Cities To Love (SUB POP)

22 GWENNO Y Dydd Olaf (HEAVENLY)

21 ALABAMA SHAKES Sound & Color (ROUGH TRADE)
Read our blog on Sound & Color here

20 HOLLY HERNDON Platform (4AD)

19 MBONGWANA STAR From Kinshasa (WORLD CIRCUIT)

18 WILCO Star Wars (db)
Read our review of Star Wars here

17 BLUR The Magic Whip (PARLOPHONE)
Read our review of The Magic Whip here

16 THE WEATHER STATION Loyalty (PARADISE OF BACHELORS)

15 JASON ISBELL Something More Than Free (SOUTHEASTERN)
Read our review of Something… here

14 ROBERT FORSTER Songs To Play (TAPETE)
Read our review of Songs To Play here

13 JIM O’ROURKE Simple Songs (DRAG CITY)

12 UNKNOWN MORTAL ORCHESTRA Multi-Love (JAGJAGUWAR)
Read our review of Multi-Love here

11 BJÖRK Vulnicura (ONE LITTLE INDIAN)

10 NEW ORDER Music Complete (MUTE)

9 SLEAFORD MODS Key Markets (HARBINGER SOUND)
Read our review of Key Markets here

8 NATALIE PRASS Natalie Prass (SPACEBOMB)
Read our review of Natalie Prass here

7 COURTNEY BARNETT Sometimes I Sit And Think And Sometimes I Just Sit (MOM AND POP/MARATHON/MILK!)
Read our review of Sometimes… here

6 TAME IMPALA Currents (FICTION)
Read our review of Currents here

5 FATHER JOHN MISTY I Love You, Honeybear (BELLA UNION)
Read our review of I Love You, Honeybear here

4 RYLEY WALKER Primrose Green (BELLA UNION)
Read our review of Primrose Green here

3 SUFJAN STEVENS Carrie & Lowell (ASTHMATIC KITTY)

2 KENDRICK LAMAR To Pimp A Butterfly (TOP DAWG ENTERTAINMENT)

1 JULIA HOLTER Have You In My Wilderness (DOMINO)

PJ Harvey shares new album teaser

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PJ Harvey has released a teaser trailer for her new album. Harvey's ninth studio album documents her journeys to Kosovo, Afghanistan and Washington, D.C. The album was recorded during her month long residency at Somerset House, Recording in Progress, in which audiences were given the opportunity t...

PJ Harvey has released a teaser trailer for her new album.

Harvey’s ninth studio album documents her journeys to Kosovo, Afghanistan and Washington, D.C.

The album was recorded during her month long residency at Somerset House, Recording in Progress, in which audiences were given the opportunity to see Harvey at work with her band and producers in a purpose-built studio.

The new albums follows on from Let England Shake – Uncut’s Album Of The Year in 2011.

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Best Films Of 2015 – The Uncut Top 20

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The current issue of Uncut features the best films of 2015, compiled by the Uncut team, along with our albums of the year, reissues and compilations of the year, and the best films and books. You can read new assessments of the films in the issue, but below is the full list of Uncut's films. Click ...

The current issue of Uncut features the best films of 2015, compiled by the Uncut team, along with our albums of the year, reissues and compilations of the year, and the best films and books.

You can read new assessments of the films in the issue, but below is the full list of Uncut’s films. Click on the links to read the original Uncut reviews… and as always let us know in the comments or on Facebook what would make your Top 20.

Uncut’s Top 20 Films Of 2015 are:

20 Cartel Land
DIRECTED BY: MATTHEW HEINEMAN

19 Mistress America
DIR: NOAH BAUMBACH
Read Uncut’s review of Mistress America by clicking here

18 It Follows
DIR: DAVID ROBERT MITCHELL

17 The Lobster
DIR: YORGOS LANTHIMOS

16 Foxcatcher
DIR: BENNETT MILLER
Read Uncut’s review of Foxcatcher by clicking here

15 Ex Machina
DIR: ALEX GARLAND

14 Whiplash
DIR: DAMIEN CHAZELLE
Read Uncut’s review of Whiplash by clicking here

13 A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night
DIR: ANA LILY AMIRPOUR
Read Uncut’s review of A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night by clicking here

12 Sicario
DIR: DENIS VILLENEUVE

11 Inside Out
DIR: PETE DOCTER, RONALDO DEL CARMEN

10 Timbuktu
DIR: ABDER RAHMANE SISSAKO
Read Uncut’s review of Timbuktu by clicking here

9 Beasts Of No Nation
DIR: CARY FUKANAGA

8 Wild Tales
DIR: DAMIÁN SZIFRON

7 While We’re Young
DIR: NOAH BAUMBACH
Read Uncut’s review of While We’re Young by clicking here

6 Birdman
DIR: ALEJANDRO IÑÁRRITU
Read Uncut’s review of Birdman by clicking here

5 Mad Max: Fury Road
DIR: GEORGE MILLER
Read Uncut’s review of Mad Max: Fury Road by clicking here

4 Carol
DIR: TODD HAYNES
Read Uncut’s review of Carol by clicking here

3 Love & Mercy
DIR: BILL POHLAD
Read Uncut’s review of Love & Mercy by clicking here

2 The Duke Of Burgundy
DIR: PETER STRICKLAND
Read Uncut’s review of The Duke Of Burgundy by clicking here

1 Inherent Vice
DIR: PAUL THOMAS ANDERSON
Read Uncut’s review of Inherent Vice by clicking here

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Best Reissue Albums Of 2015 – The Uncut Top 30

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The current issue of Uncut features the best reissues and compilations of the year, compiled by the Uncut team, along with our albums of the year, and the best films and books. You can read new assessments of the albums in the issue, but below is the full list of Uncut's reissues and compilations. ...

The current issue of Uncut features the best reissues and compilations of the year, compiled by the Uncut team, along with our albums of the year, and the best films and books.

You can read new assessments of the albums in the issue, but below is the full list of Uncut’s reissues and compilations. Click on the links to read the original Uncut reviews… and as always let us know in the comments or on Facebook what would make your Top 30.

Uncut’s Top 30 Reissues Of 2015 are:

30 RIDE Nowhere (SONY)

29 RED HOUSE PAINTERS Box Set (4AD)
Read Uncut’s review of Box Set by clicking here

28 FACES 1970-1975: You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything… (RHINO)
Read Uncut’s review of You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything… by clicking here

27 ROBIN GIBB Saved By The Bell 1968-70 (RHINO)
Read Uncut’s review of Saved By The Bell by clicking here

26 KARIN KROG Don’t Just Sing: An Anthology 1963-1999 (LIGHT IN THE ATTIC)

25 DR JOHN The Atco/Atlantic Singles 1968-74 (OMNIVORE)

24 FLORIAN FRICKE Kailash (SOUL JAZZ RECORDS)
Read Uncut’s review of Kailash by clicking here

23 LINK WRAY 3-Track Shack (ACE)
Read Uncut’s review of 3-Track Shack by clicking here

22 GRATEFUL DEAD 30 Trips Around The Sun (RHINO)
Read John’s report from the Dead’s 50th anniversary shows by clicking here

21 THE PRETTY THINGS Bouquets From A Cloudy Sky (SNAPPER)
Read Uncut’s review of Bouquets From A Cloudy City by clicking here

20 TOWNES VAN ZANDT The Nashville Sessions (CHARLY)
Read Uncut’s review of The Nashville Sessions by clicking here

19 PUBLIC ENEMY It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back (DEF JAM)
Read Uncut’s review of It Takes A Nation Of Millions… by clicking here

18 BERT JANSCH Bert Jansch (TRANSATLANTIC/PIAS)

17 JULIAN COPE Fried (CAROLINE)

16 MILES DAVIS At Newport 1955-1975 (SONY)
Read Uncut’s review of At Newport 1955 – 1975 by clicking here

15 SUPER FURRY ANIMALS Mwng (PLACID CASUAL)

14 VARIOUS ARTISTS Ork Records: New York, New York (NUMERO GROUP)
Read Uncut’s review of Ork Records: New York, New York by clicking here

13 VAN MORRISON Astral Weeks (RHINO)
Read Uncut’s review of Astral Weeks by clicking here

12 THE GO-BETWEENS G Stands For Go-Betweens Vol 1 (DOMINO)
Read Uncut’s review of G Stands For Go-Betweens by clicking here

11 BROADCAST Tender Buttons (WARP)

10 DAVID BOWIE Five Years (PARLOPHONE)

9 MICHAEL HEAD AND THE STRANDS The Magical World Of The Strands (MEGAPHONE)
Read John’s blog about The Magical World Of The Strands of by clicking here

8 THE ISLEY BROTHERS The RCA Victor and T-Neck albums (SONY)

7 LEAD BELLY Smithsonian Folkways Collection (SMITHSONIAN FOLKWAYS)

6 THE VELVET UNDERGROUND Loaded (UNIVERSAL)
Read Michael’s blog about Loaded by clicking here

5 PERE UBU Elitism For The People 1975-1978 (FIRE RECORDS)
Read Uncut’s review of Elitism For The People by clicking here

4 HARMONIA Complete Works (GROENLAND RECORDS)

3 LED ZEPPELIN Physical Graffiti (SWANSONG/RHINO)
Read Uncut’s review of Physical Graffiti by clicking here

2 BOB DYLAN Bootleg Series Vol 12: The Cutting Edge 1965-1966 (SONY)
Read Michael’s blog on The Cutting Edge by clicking here

1 THE ROLLING STONES Sticky Fingers (UNIVERSAL)
Read Uncut’s review of Sticky Fingers by clicking here

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Sun City Girls – Torch Of The Mystics

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They have been many things to many people over the years – exotica merchants; performance anti-artists; mythopoeic poets – but if there’s one thing that defined the long-running underground saga of avant-ethno-psych-rock trio Sun City Girls, it was their unpredictability. Originating from Temp...

They have been many things to many people over the years – exotica merchants; performance anti-artists; mythopoeic poets – but if there’s one thing that defined the long-running underground saga of avant-ethno-psych-rock trio Sun City Girls, it was their unpredictability. Originating from Tempe, Arizona and founded by the Bishop brothers Alan and Richard (who played, predominantly, bass and guitar, respectively), the group’s three-decade tenure ended in 2007 after the passing of drummer Charles Gocher. Across those years, tales of their pranksterism were legion. Live, they’ve been known to improvise a hobos-around-the-campfire skit, or give a slideshow of a trip to Bali; maybe Alan would turn up in his Uncle Jim alter ego and berate the crowd. Once they advertised a gig as “Sun City Girls play John Coltrane’s Live In Seattle” and then proceeded to play an original copy of said Coltrane album over the venue’s PA. They’ve performed a pitch-perfect cover of the soundtrack to Jodorowsky’s El Topo. And so on.

For all their wildness, though, the Sun City Girls held their cards close to their chest, and sometimes they could shock long-term listeners with albums that accessed something spectrally ‘other’. Torch Of The Mystics, one such album, was recorded at a critical juncture for the group. They’d already made some important, if unexpected, connections: circling around the scene that birthed the Meat Puppets, who alongside Butthole Surfers would become one of their few taggable peers in the American underground, they found themselves playing alongside hardcore groups like Black Flag and JFA, whose Placebo imprint released some early Sun City Girls albums. That string of records from across the ’80s pinned the group as, variously, denizens of modern esoterica, a wildly flailing improvised rock troupe, or a multi-headed hydra somewhere between goof-off and stinging political critique, while their self-released Cloaven cassette series gave free reign to their wildest urges.

Torch Of The Mystics would be the last album they recorded before brother Rick moved from Tempe to Seattle. It’s tempting, then, to see it as the culmination of ‘phase one’ of Sun City Girls. It certainly comes across as a clearing of the decks, as soon after, their music became more expansive and unpredictable on gravity-defying sides like Bright Surroundings, Dark Beginnings. It’s also a rare Sun City Girls album for being drawn entirely from the same sessions, recorded in 1988. And it’s structured perfectly, with a vicious, rough-housing Side One – the closest they’ve come to making a perfect rock statement – giving way, on Side Two, to multiple detours into majority-world peregrination.

Torch Of The Mystics opens with the clarion ring of “Blue Mamba”, where a honed riff falls like hammer to anvil, before droning vocals wind out a sinus-cavity hum, Rick Bishop breaking ranks mid-way through for the first of many spiralling guitar anti-solos. “Tarmac 23” has the Girls singing incantations in what sounds like a made-up or channelled language, while they sit on one brooding chord; “Esoterica Of Abyssinia” twists through a slippery, break-neck speed melody from the Orient, mutating at unexpected moments into untethered improvisation. So far, they’ve given us rock music from other planes of there, recorded close to ‘in the red’, the drums clattering away underneath cavernous reverb.

But the following “Space Prophet Dogon” shifts the tone: its descending melody and stately pace are strangely regal. It’s a long, deep exhale, after which things get, in many ways, weirder and weirder. “The Shining Path” is a faithful cover of Bolivian folk song “Llorando Se Fue” – popularised in 1989 by French group Kaoma as “Lambada” – which reclaims the song’s melancholy. “Café Batik” is a spooked organ ceremonial, with Alan Bishop sighing out in a dream-world falsetto; “Radar 1941” is a sea-sick, drunken anti-shanty, “The Vinegar Stroke” a warped, snake-charming rattle that prefigures some of Sir Richard Bishop’s later solo moves.

There are, perhaps, more widescreen Sun City Girls albums – 1996’s 330,003 Crossdressers From Beyond The Rig Veda is a stunning snapshot tour of detourned world music; 1993’s Kaliflower is by turns tightly wound and eerily psychedelic – but Torch Of The Mystics stands as the perfect expression of what Sun City Girls, at the very top of their game, could be. It’s as close to a desert island disc as you’re going to get, and one of the very few albums to survive the ’90s underground with its mystique and magic untarnished. A wholly holistic trip.

Q&A
Alan Bishop
I’d long thought we’d never see reissues of these Sun City Girls albums…
In January, Jimmy at Forced Exposure pointed out that 2015 was the 25th anniversary of the original release, and perhaps a week later David Segal at the Seattle Stranger wrote an article entitled, “When will Sun City Girls reissue Torch Of The Mystics?”, so we decided to do it, although I’d have rather waited for the 37th anniversary or something non-celebratory, but that’s just me.

I’d imagine you re-listened to the album through the process of organising the reissue – how did you respond to hearing this music from your former self?
I heard it last year for the first time in a while and it always sounds good to me. One thing that struck me was that I realised how angelically beautiful Charlie (Gocher)’s voice came through on “Papa Legba”.

What are your memories of recording Torch Of The Mystics?
We were living in a small Tempe apartment in 1988 and I borrowed David Oliphant (of Maybe Mental)’s eight-track Tascam machine and a few mics, asked him some questions about using it, kept my notes at hand, and proceeded to record and mix a ton of material that Summer. We recorded it in a variety of locations, including the median in the middle of Apache Avenue in front of Gammage Auditorium (“Burial In The Sky”). Much of it was recorded live.
INTERVIEW: JON DALE

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Original Quadrophenia cast reunite for special live event

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Members of the original cast of Quadrophenia are to reunite as part of a special, interactive cinematic event in honour of the film. Phil Daniels, Phil Davis, Toyah Wilcox, Mark Wingett, John Altman, Trevor Laird, Garry Cooper and Daniel Peacock will join director Franc Roddam on February 11, 2016 ...

Members of the original cast of Quadrophenia are to reunite as part of a special, interactive cinematic event in honour of the film.

Phil Daniels, Phil Davis, Toyah Wilcox, Mark Wingett, John Altman, Trevor Laird, Garry Cooper and Daniel Peacock will join director Franc Roddam on February 11, 2016 at the Eventim Apollo in Hammersmith for a Q&A session following a screening of the film and live re-enactments of its most famous scenes.

The Who tribute act Who’s Who will perform songs from the soundtrack while Vespa scooters, the original 1973 Who album artwork and vintage photographs of the band will also be on display.

Franc Roddam said: “This event is a great celebration of the film and era. It’s overwhelming to think that Quadrophenia is still held in such high regard all these years later. I’m looking forward to being reunited with the cast and talking to fans of the film.”

Tickets for the event are on sale now available at eventimapollo.com and AXS.com.

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.