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Sunn O))) – Kannon

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In French photographer Estelle Hanania’s shots for the sleeve of Kannon, the members of Sunn O))) can be seen in the band’s signature hooded robes lurking about a magnificently gloomy Oslo mausoleum. Apparently, they have a thing about loitering in these kinds of spaces – in the artwork for 20...

In French photographer Estelle Hanania’s shots for the sleeve of Kannon, the members of Sunn O))) can be seen in the band’s signature hooded robes lurking about a magnificently gloomy Oslo mausoleum. Apparently, they have a thing about loitering in these kinds of spaces – in the artwork for 2009’s Monoliths & Dimensions, it was an Aztec pyramid.

As they so often do, these strange figures look as if they’re preparing for a mysterious rite. Perhaps it has something to do with the cryptic black object on the album’s cover. Though designed by Swiss artist Angela LaFont Bollinger as a visual representation of the Buddhist goddess of mercy for which Kannon is named, it more strongly resembles a charred icon from a long-defunct religion now being readied for worship by a new circle of eager adherents. In other words, you don’t have to be Peter Cushing to know that unspeakable things are about to happen even if – as was the case with the banks of fog that filled Royal Festival Hall during Sunn O)))’s appearance during David Byrne’s Meltdown last summer – you’ll strain your eyes trying to see what the hell they are.

The music on Kannon has no shortage of sinister elements, either. Even more inhuman than the groans and shrieks of amplifiers are the noises that emerge from Attila Csihar, the Hungarian vocalist who has been a frequent collaborator with the core Sunn O))) partnership of Stephen O’Malley and Greg Anderson when he’s not busy fronting Norwegian black-metallers Mayhem. Rarely have Csihar’s guttural rumblings been so terrifying as they are when they make their first appearance a few minutes into the first of Kannon’s three parts. Compared to him, Smaug the dragon sounds as menacing as Taylor Swift.

Of course, all this ought to be entirely ridiculous. And at various junctures in Sunn O)))’s 17-year history, it has been. But O’Malley and Anderson have always been quick to concede the absurdity of their highly stylised vision of metal at its blackest and sludgiest, perhaps because they’re also confident about their music’s ability to overwhelm everything in its path like a river of toxic ooze. With its combination of high-concept ideas and low-end, bowel-quivering ballast, the formula has proven to be irresistible to eggheads and headbangers alike.

Now, thanks to the instantly legendary Meltdown performance and the band’s bruising collaboration with Scott Walker on last year’s Soused, Sunn O))) may be breaking through to listeners beyond the metal and experimental-music camps that have made equal claims on the band since it first emerged in Seattle in 1998. While Sunn O)))’s own cult of adherents is well schooled in the band’s studiously curated selection of reference points (the gnarly drones of Dylan Carlson and Earth, the sustained tone compositions of LaMonte Young, the none-more-black extremes of Darkthrone and Bathory) and keenly familiar with its collaborators (Merzbow, Boris and Ulver all having preceded Scott), these newcomers are enthralled first and foremost by the spectacle and scale of it all. Even though any work of ambient doom metal played by scary dudes in robes will remain a bridge too far for many, Kannon will leave other neophytes feeling awed by the complexity and physicality achieved here and rightfully so.

The album’s 34-minute length adds to the air of accessibility, at least by Sunn O))) standards. It’s also a more dramatic demonstration of the band’s core ethos than might have been possible on the recent collaborations with Scott Walker and Ulver, as well as the far more guest-heavy Monoliths & Dimensions. Not since 2004’s White 2 has the band been so pared down or sounded so focused on the mission of achieving maximum density.

The music here first began to take shape during the sessions for Monoliths in 2007 and continued to develop via live performances. Though longtime collaborators such as Csihar, Oren Ambarchi, Rex Ritter and Steve Moore all contributed to Kannon’s triptych, the interplay between O’Malley’s guitar and Anderson’s bass often provides the music’s richest moments. The surprising sensitivity that the players exhibit towards each other defies the assumption that Sunn O))) entirely owes its impact to slow-motion riffage or cascades of feedback. In fact, the guitar heroics of “Kannon II” would seem downright Hendrixian if they weren’t accompanied by what sounds like a swarm of angry bees, with Csihar somewhere in the middle of them trying to conduct a black mass.

Speaking of masses, Sunn O)))’s longstanding penchant for pomp and ritual has never before yielded music that seems so religious. That association is no doubt fostered by the liturgical nature of Csihar’s singing (rather than his growling) and the Buddhist reference in the album’s title, Kannon being the figure who listens to the sounds of suffering throughout the world. While doubters may scoff at the possibility there’s a devotional dimension to Sunn O)))’s sonic monoliths, Kannon could very well elicit a meditative response from anyone who can hear it as something more than a hellish miasma of noise. Indeed, if not for the Hammer Horror signifiers of evil that pervade the band’s visual presentation, Kannon could soundtrack a yoga class, albeit one taking place in the sixth circle of hell.

Q&A
Stephen O’Malley
How do you think Kannon compares with your previous albums?

I was playing the mix to Oren Arambachi, who plays on the record. He reacted by saying, “You know what? I think this is pretty accessible for Sunn O))) — it’s kind of like Sunn O)))’s pop album.” And he wasn’t making a joke. He was making a metaphor, obviously – it’s not pop. But for Sunn O))), there’s something about it that you can grasp a little bit more. It’s not because of the length or the speed – there’s more on the surface here. This record is close to how the band really sounds live in the last couple of years.

Do you think that the music on Kannon is still steeped in the band’s more-is-more aesthetic?
It’s not like it’s all really coloured by a lot of effects or crazy edits or stuff like that – it’s more the sound of our amps. Of course, there are overdubs and Attila may have three vocal mics going at once, or maybe there’s a sub synth that Oren did that sounds like an avalanche happening, but it’s not excessive – they’re all parts of the arrangement. What’s excessive is the fact we’ve arrived at a place where each guy needs four full amplifier stacks on stage, or that we have a sponsorship with the fog machine company, or that we have to air-freight 50-year-old amplifiers to Tasmania to play one show – that’s excessive. But hey – who gets to do this shit?
INTERVIEW: JASON ANDERSON

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.

The Revenant

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“Exeunt, pursued by bear” is one of Shakespeare’s most famous stage directions, taken to its limit in Alejandro Iñárritu’s new film. Here, Hugh Glass – a real-life 19th century trapper and frontiersman – is mauled by a grizzly bear near the banks of the Missouri river. It’s a gruelli...

“Exeunt, pursued by bear” is one of Shakespeare’s most famous stage directions, taken to its limit in Alejandro Iñárritu’s new film. Here, Hugh Glass – a real-life 19th century trapper and frontiersman – is mauled by a grizzly bear near the banks of the Missouri river. It’s a gruelling, 5-minute scene – a brilliantly executed piece of digital trickery that thrusts the viewer right into the blood, sweat and claws. Iñárritu follows Glass as he miraculously makes his way back the 200 miles to Fort Kiowa, seeking revenge against the men who left him to die in the wilderness.

What follows is essentially IMAX adventure porn with beards and muskets; Bear Grills meets Cormac McCarthy in an inhospitable landscape one character rightly describes as “the edge of the world”. As Glass makes his way unsteadily through barren countryside – beset by Indians, French soldiers and ghosts – you might think of the eerie, hallucinatory tone of Jim Jarmusch’s Dead Man or perhaps one of Werner Herzog’s forays into the outer limits of endurance like Aguirre: The Wrath Of God. There are minor echoes, too, of other survival tales Touching The Void and 127 Hours.

As Glass, Leonardo di Caprio is buried under a mound of facial hair and furs – he looks like a hipster gone to seed; his stoic determination is impressive. You will watch a man cauterize a throat wound with gunpowder! Pitted against Glass is Tom Hardy as John Fitzgerald – one of two men tasked with looking after the wounded trapper and who abandons Glass to the elements. Fitgerald’s windy speeches about “the sublimity of mercy” are typical Iñárritu guff (as is the Native American mysticism), yet the bulky Hardy seems more naturally at home among the snowy mountains and fast-moving rivers than Di Caprio: his maniacal, semi-scalped Fitzgerald a good fit in this bleak, godless terrain. The soundtrack by Ryuichi Sakamoto, Alva Noto and Bryce Dessner, meanwhile, features unsettling, electronic drones and pulsing orchestral flourishes.

Iñárritu’s plan seems to make the viewer experience as much as possible Glass’ tribulations, in all their macabre glory. The opening battle sequence, where the US military expedition for whom Glass is a guide are attacked by Ree Indians, is a gruesome 10-minute sequence, seemingly shot in one take. As Glass’ journey progresses, Iñárritu heightens colours, closes in on tiny details and frames magnificent wild vistas. It’s thrilling; if exhausting.

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.

Bob Mould announces new album

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Bob Mould has announced details of a new album. Patch The Sky is due out on March 25. According to Pitchfork, Mould is joined on the album by bassist Jason Narducy (Split Single, Verbow) and drummer Jon Wurster (Superchunk, Mountain Goats). Recently, Mould discussed the possibility of a Hüsker D...

Bob Mould has announced details of a new album.

Patch The Sky is due out on March 25. According to Pitchfork, Mould is joined on the album by bassist Jason Narducy (Split Single, Verbow) and drummer Jon Wurster (Superchunk, Mountain Goats).

Recently, Mould discussed the possibility of a Hüsker Dü reunion, after the band launched a new website. He confirmed that the group was “reviving the logo and the brand” but when asked whether the band were likely to launch a comeback by Stereogum, he confirmed, “Nah, no reunion.”

“You know … Grant [Hart] and I have talked. We’re fine,” Mould told Stereogum. “Will we work together? No. I like to run my own ship and I think he likes to run his own ship, and that’s great… I got my life over here, man. I never want to take advantage of the fact that I was in that band. Nor do I ever want to get in the way of its legacy.”

Mould has written a lengthy essay about Patch The Sky on the Merge Records website:

“Here’s the deal. In 2012, people loved Silver Age (to a degree that surprised me, pleasantly), likewise Beauty & Ruin in 2014 (despite the heaviness of the subject matter, which I thought might be a bit alienating… apparently not. Another pleasant surprise.).

“But Patch The Sky is the darkest one.

“After the Letterman performance in February 2015 where ‘dust fell from the rafters’, it would have seemed logical to go the punk rock route—an entire album of two-minute songs—but that wasn’t where my soul was at.

“I withdrew from everyday life. I wrote alone for six months. I love people, but I needed my solitude. The search for my own truth kept me alive. These songs are my salvation.

“I’ve had a solid stretch of hard emotional times, and thanks for the condolences in advance. I don’t want to go into the details—more death, relationships ending, life getting shorter—because they’re already in the songs. Just listen and see if you can fit yourself into my stories. The words make you remember. The music makes you forget.

“But Patch The Sky is also the catchiest one.

“I always aim for the perfect balance of bright melodies and dark stories. I’ve used this juxtaposition for years. This time, I’ve tuned it to high contrast.

“The first side of the album is generally simple and catchy. The second side is heavier in spirit and tone. Opposing forces and properties. I love both sides of Patch The Sky.

“At the core of these songs is what I call the chemical chorus—you hear it once and your brain starts tingling. The heart rate picks up. It gets worse—you know it’s coming again and you can barely stand the anticipation. Then, the beautifully heartbreaking bridge appears, and you’re all set up—hooked for life. Music is an incredibly powerful drug. I want to be your drug dealer. I have what you need.”

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.

David Bowie, the Tao Jones Index…

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For a while in the mid-1990s, the West Midlands were home to a music festival called Phoenix; a slightly half-cocked Glastonbury surrogate that, far from taking place in idyllic Avalon, was established on a disused airfield-cum-landfill site blessed with little in the way of either shelter or shade....

For a while in the mid-1990s, the West Midlands were home to a music festival called Phoenix; a slightly half-cocked Glastonbury surrogate that, far from taking place in idyllic Avalon, was established on a disused airfield-cum-landfill site blessed with little in the way of either shelter or shade. Bob Dylan, possibly disoriented, would fill in a gap in the schedule between Suede and Tricky. Crazy Horse would face off against The Wedding Present. Hotels in nearby Stratford-Upon-Avon seemed perpetually haunted by the forlorn figure of Keith from The Prodigy, found wandering their corridors in the later early hours. It was all, I guess, very much of its time.

In that spirit, one year in the middle of the decade, the festival witnessed a clandestine special show. I can’t pretend to have seen it myself; I was languishing backstage, some way after midnight, when a friend returned from the dance tent in a state of some excitement. There, he had witnessed a deeply experimental, semi-improvised drum’n’bass set by a band billed as the Tao Jones Index. Their frontman, a notable lyrical collagist, appeared to be making up a lot of the words as he went along. Frequently, he would intone, with quasi-operatic portent, a newish buzzword of the time: “<>The Internet!<>”

This, I realise, is not how most people would likely remember David Bowie. But it strikes me today, in the wake of yesterday’s terrible news, that it’s a valuable way of understanding the nature of this most fearless of musicians. Many tributes in the past 24 hours have presented Bowie as a man of impeccable taste, as an artist whose every creative whim produced a cultural revolution.

And yes, of course, Bowie’s hit rate of innovation is probably higher than any other performer, never mind ones who operated for such a sustained length of time at such an exalted commercial level. But one of the keys to his genius, as the Tao Jones Index business illustrated so well, was that he was spectacularly unafraid of failing. The danger of looking daft was not something which seemed to bother Bowie unduly: for a man habitually associated with an elevated concept of cool, he was rarely afraid to place that coolness in jeopardy. In fact, the one time he seemed to try and insulate himself from potential embarrassment, he ended up in Tin Machine.

Risk was critical to the whole Bowie endeavour, a sense that preposterous ideas – ideas which could fall flat, could potentially end in humiliation – could just as easily turn out to reconfigure our ideas of what a pop star could be, what pop could do. As we sit hear and try to come to terms with the loss, and at the same time attempt to measure out the mind-boggling scope and impact of his career, I think it’s useful to see Bowie’s journey as a long-distance highwire walk. A mutant-jazz album as valediction? How on earth would that work?

001-BYRDS-cover-UK

Anyhow, we’re currently working, as you might imagine, on a special edition of Uncut. In the meantime, you can still pick up a copy of our Ultimate Music Guide to Bowie, and we have a further Ultimate Music Guide going on sale this week – this one dedicated to The Byrds, and the subsequent illustrious solo careers of their various members. That goes on sale in the UK now, and you can pick up a copy of our Byrds Ultimate Music Guide from our online shop.

 

 

Fleetwood Mac – Tusk (Deluxe Edition)

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Few multi-million-selling albums, grounded so thoroughly within the MOR landscape, puzzle more than Fleetwood Mac’s 1979 double album Tusk. The stories of its reception are well known. After the wild success of Rumours, the five-piece, led by the songwriting trio of Lindsey Buckingham, Christine M...

Few multi-million-selling albums, grounded so thoroughly within the MOR landscape, puzzle more than Fleetwood Mac’s 1979 double album Tusk. The stories of its reception are well known. After the wild success of Rumours, the five-piece, led by the songwriting trio of Lindsey Buckingham, Christine McVie and Stevie Nicks, and completed by rhythm section John McVie and Mick Fleetwood, refused to rest on laurels – especially Buckingham, who’d been listening to post-punk and new wave, later telling Uncut that this new music had offered him “a little room to deprogram and reaffirm things – to retrieve my own style”.

The outcome was ten months in the studio, costs of around one million dollars, and an album that McVie herself once described as “very different, very Lindsey Buckingham”, and which Buckingham recently told critic Jen Boyles was “the most important album we made, but only because it drew a line in the sand that for me defined the way I still think today.” But painting it Buckingham’s baby (soon after its release, when it was clear it wouldn’t repeat the success of Rumours, it was referred to as ‘Lindsey’s folly’) does grave disservice to the group’s two other songwriters, who met Buckingham’s experiments with more subtle, yet no less effective, sideways steps.

On Tusk, McVie embraced an ambiguity that she never quite articulated before or since: the album’s opener, “Over & Over”, begins as though it’s suspended in mid-air, a music always in the process of becoming, while the song’s protagonist sketches out uncertain emotional territory. Nicks contributes the album’s most resonant, Mac-esque songs – several of her classics appear on Tusk, including the breathtaking “Sara” (which gains a few minutes of aquatic drift on the alternate version on Disc Three of this deluxe edition, more of which later), and one of her most epic melodramas, “Sisters Of The Moon”. But it’s fair to say the album’s legend rests on the wildness of Buckingham’s experiments, such as curiosities like the taut elastic snap of “The Ledge”, or the modular drum tattoos of “Tusk” – the album’s most experimental song, it was, tellingly, released as the lead single.

From here, the deluxe edition stretches out, firstly with a disc of single versions, remixes and studio sessions. The former are flotsam – truncations or minor alterations that ultimately flag how deceptively consummate Tusk really is, as a strongly conceptualised, archly constructed double album. More compelling are the studio sessions, particularly when we reach Buckingham’s material, from a bluesy twist around “Out On The Road”, which would eventually become “That’s Enough For Me”, through to multiple versions – six of “I Know I’m Not Wrong”, five of “Tusk” itself – from sessions across 1978 and 1979.

The various takes of “Tusk” simply further unveil the borderline-ridiculousness, and thus the heroic hubris, of the song. Charting the progression of “I Know I’m Not Wrong”, however, through its various forms, from scratchy demo through off-the-cuff guitar-and-drums performance, to its more considered iterations, suggests the group relished the potential to rewrite and rebuild in the studio. The third disc, which features an alternate Tusk constructed of session outtakes, proves this – “What Makes You Think You’re The One”, for example, missing the chord at the beginning of the chorus that pivots the song into next gear, is a much looser performance, with Buckingham’s vocals strained and stretched.

A common theme from the alternate mix is one of Tusk denuded. An acoustic “Storms”, Nicks swooning between two glinting guitars, is gorgeous, and suggests that a stripped-back Fleetwood Mac album would have offered plenty; the subtle reveal of McVie’s “Honey Hi” is stealthier, the alternate version mustering its melancholy energies from piano and a twitching, Lissajous-curve guitar figure. “Angel” is far more intimate than in its final manifestation, with a tart, stinging guitar highlighting Nick’s understated vocals; “Sisters Of The Moon”, on the other hand, floods the sensorium with waves of organ and guitar, draping the song with even more lustrous fabrics.

If you splash out for the five-disc set, you also get two discs of previously unreleased live material from the ’79/’80 Tusk Tour, mostly drawn from shows at Wembley, Tucson and St Louis. Cherry-picking from Tusk and Rumours, with a few outliers, these are strong performances, but they add little when it comes to illuminating the intrigue of Tusk-era Fleetwood Mac. And that’s, ultimately, where this deluxe edition comes unstuck. There was a fine opportunity here to really delve into those storied sessions, to pull together, and subsequently pull apart, the mercurial magic of this music, to show the breadth of experiment and risk undertaken, and to detail just how the album’s peculiar, light-dappled production came about.

That’s not to sneeze at what we have here: the studio sessions on the second half of Disc Two, and the alternate Tusk of Disc Three, much of which was previously unreleased, is plenty illuminating. But Tusk is strong stuff, surprisingly unyielding in its intrigue. As a document of a group responding to mega-success by both experimenting wildly, pushing the studio-as-instrument to places that usually only an Eno would go, and by introverting in response to Rumours’ interpersonal melodramas, it’s still a bristling, staggering listen.

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.

PJ Harvey announces new festival appearances

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PJ Harvey has announced additional festival dates for 2016. She plays Norway's Øya festival, which takes place at Tøyenparken, Oslo, between August 9 and 13. She will also play Sweden's Way Out West, which takes place in Slottsskogen Park, Gothenburg between Thursday August 11 and Saturday Augus...

PJ Harvey has announced additional festival dates for 2016.

She plays Norway’s Øya festival, which takes place at Tøyenparken, Oslo, between August 9 and 13.

She will also play Sweden’s Way Out West, which takes place in Slottsskogen Park, Gothenburg between Thursday August 11 and Saturday August 13.

It’s not yet been confirmed which specific days Harvey will play.

Harvey previously announed a headline slot at Field Day at London’s Victoria Park on June 12.

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 – as yet untitled – 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 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.

Robert Plant announces ‘A Southern Journey’ tour dates

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Robert Plant has announced tour dates running during March. He will embark on the "Blues... Roots and Hollers (A Southern Journey)" tour with The Sensational Space Shifters. "I'm always eager to return to the hospitality of the Southern states," Plant says. "Towns and cities that hold fond memorie...

Robert Plant has announced tour dates running during March.

He will embark on the “Blues… Roots and Hollers (A Southern Journey)” tour with The Sensational Space Shifters.

“I’m always eager to return to the hospitality of the Southern states,” Plant says. “Towns and cities that hold fond memories for me personally, places that gave birth to so much of the music I love. Our recent travels have taken this wild whirlwind of a band though many incredible and inspiring places, from TK to TK. Having just begun work on our new album, we thought we’d take time out to raise a little sand and welcome springtime with one more adventure, another celebration of life and song.”

The tour dates are:
MARCH
4 – 6 – Okeechobee, Florida – Okeechobee Music & Arts Festival
6 – St. Augustine, Florida – St. Augustine Amphitheatre
7 – Mobile, Alabama – Saenger Theatre
9 – Jackson, Mississippi – Thalia Mara Hall
10 – Baton Rouge, Louisiana – River Center Theatre
11 – Shreveport, Louisiana – Shreveport Municipal Auditorium
13 – Cain’s Ballroom – Tulsa, Oklahoma
15 – The Bomb Factory – Dallas, Texas
17 – San Antonio, Texas – Tobin Center for the Performing Arts
18 – Midland, Texas – Wagner Noel Center Performing Arts Center
20 – Austin, Texas – ACL Live at Moody Theater

In other news, Plant has contributed an exclusive version of Elbow’s “The Blanket Of Night” to The Long Road, a new concept record benefitting the British Red Cross. Set for release on March 4th, The Long Road is available now for pre-order on the iTunes Store and on CD, LP, and Limited Edition Red LP via Kartel. All profits from The Long Road go to the British Red Cross.

Plant also recently unveiled “Light Of Christmas Day“, his first new collaboration with Alison Krauss in almost 10 years. Featured in the film, Love The Coopers, the song marks the first release by the duo since Raising Sand. “Light Of Christmas Day” is available now on the iTunes Store and all other digital retailers.

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 Tony Visconti’s tribute to David Bowie

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Tony Visconti has paid tribute to David Bowie, whose death was announced earlier today. Writing on his Facebook page, Visconti said: "He always did what he wanted to do. And he wanted to do it his way and he wanted to do it the best way. His death was no different from his life - a work of Art. He...

Tony Visconti has paid tribute to David Bowie, whose death was announced earlier today.

Writing on his Facebook page, Visconti said:

“He always did what he wanted to do. And he wanted to do it his way and he wanted to do it the best way. His death was no different from his life – a work of Art. He made Blackstar for us, his parting gift. I knew for a year this was the way it would be. I wasn’t, however, prepared for it. He was an extraordinary man, full of love and life. He will always be with us. For now, it is appropriate to cry.”

Bowie and Visconti collaborated for many years, working with him intermittently from Bowie’s 1969 album Space Oddity through to the new Blackstar album.

Other tributes have been paid to Bowie by friends and former collaborators.

Glastonbury Festival founder Michael Eavis recalled Bowie’s first appearance at the event. “He came in ’71 with lovely, long flowing hair like a hippie, he was fantastically beautiful and nobody knew who he was,” Eavis said. “He played at four in the morning at sunrise, songs that we’d never heard before and it was great fun. He’s one of the three greatest, there is Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley and David Bowie. I was only half awake because I’d been up all night.”

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.

Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide: David Bowie

Look out, you rock'n'rollers!" Following up on our Pink Floyd special, Uncut is now proud to present a deluxe remastered edition of The Ultimate Music Guide to David Bowie! Within its plush pages, you'll find a multitude of bewitching interviews from the archives of NME and Melody Maker - “I’m g...

Look out, you rock’n’rollers!” Following up on our Pink Floyd special, Uncut is now proud to present a deluxe remastered edition of The Ultimate Music Guide to David Bowie! Within its plush pages, you’ll find a multitude of bewitching interviews from the archives of NME and Melody Maker – “I’m going to be huge, and it’s quite frightening,” announces a youthful Dame – together with in-depth reviews of all 26 Bowie albums. From the era-defining dislocation of “Space Oddity”, to the startling return presaged by “Where Are We Now?”, this Ultimate Music Guide tells the complete story of how Bowie blew our minds, time and again. Come on, come on, we’ve really got a good thing going…

 

Order Print Copy

David Bowie dies aged 69

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David Bowie has died aged 69. According to a post on his official Facebook page, he had been suffering from cancer. “David Bowie died peacefully today surrounded by his family after a courageous 18 month battle with cancer. While many of you will share in this loss, we ask that you respect the f...

David Bowie has died aged 69.

According to a post on his official Facebook page, he had been suffering from cancer.

“David Bowie died peacefully today surrounded by his family after a courageous 18 month battle with cancer. While many of you will share in this loss, we ask that you respect the family’s privacy during their time of grief.”

Writing on Twitter, Bowie’s son, the film director Duncan Jones, also confirmed the news.

The news has been confirmed to Uncut by Bowie’s UK publicist.

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.

Slash: “I felt very proud that I was part of this grand lineage of English piss-heads”

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Here, Guns N’Roses' eminent guitarist on fatherhood, snakes, why motorbikes are more dangerous than drugs, and his favourite British sitcom… “I love anything with Dawn French, she's fucking brilliant, man!” Originally published in Uncut’s February 2008 issue (Take 129). Words: John Lewis ...

Do you still have any contact with Stoke-on-Trent?
Phil “The Power” Taylor, darts champion and native of Stoke
My dad’s family are still there, although I didn’t see them for a long time. I was reunited with them in the early 1990s when my uncle David saw something in the British press about “Slash – real name Saul Hudson” and contacted my office and I was like “wow, David Hudson! That’s my fucking uncle!” So I invited my uncle and my grandfather and a few others when GNR played Wembley, and they hung out in the dressing room, and they cleaned me out of drink! And that takes some doing. I was pretty annoyed but, in a weird way, I felt very proud that I was part of this grand lineage of English piss-heads.

Did you have posters on your wall as a kid?
Rizwan, Harrow
I had a King Kong poster. And anything with dinosaurs on it. And as I got older I had the same Led Zeppelin, Aerosmith, Rolling Stones and Hendrix posters that all kids had at the time.

Stoke City or Port Vale?
Jamie Bowman, Merseyside
I think my father’s family in Stoke were all Stoke City. The only time I keep up with my football is when I’m in England. In fact, the only game I’m physically been to was a really good game between Arsenal and Manchester [United]. When I’m in LA, you don’t really get much football, which is why David Beckham was such a big deal. That was hilarious. I think he just came here to take the piss, you know? The idea that America is going to convert to football by paying a king’s ransom for this English guy with a fucked ankle. Everyone on the other side of the pond must be laughing their asses off.

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.

 

Petition for new “super heavy” element to be named after Lemmy

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A petition has been launched to name a newly discovered heavy metal after Lemmy, who died on December 28, 2015. The campaign set up by John Wright, a business support manager from York, aims to rename Ununoctium 118 - Lemmium. It is one of four radioactive "super-heavy" elements that were added to...

A petition has been launched to name a newly discovered heavy metal after Lemmy, who died on December 28, 2015.

The campaign set up by John Wright, a business support manager from York, aims to rename Ununoctium 118 – Lemmium.

It is one of four radioactive “super-heavy” elements that were added to chemistry’s periodic table last week. The four new elements were discovered by scientists in America, Japan and Russia. The new additions were formally verified by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) on December 30.

The petition, which already has already gained 15,000 signatures, reads: “Heavy rock lost its most iconic figure over Christmas with the sudden and unexpected death of Ian ‘Lemmy’ Kilmister. Lemmy was a force of nature and the very essence of heavy metal.

“We believe it is fitting that the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) recommend that one of the four new discovered heavy metals in the periodic table is named Lemmium. An astrological object (a star) has been named Lemmy to meet the IUPAC naming recommendations.”

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.

Watch David Bowie’s new video for “Lazarus”

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David Bowie has released a new video for his track, "Lazarus". “Lazarus” is the second single from Bowie’s 28th album ★, which is released on January 8 on ISO/Columbia Records. Click here to read Uncut's review of ★ Director Johan Renck, who also directed the 10-minute short film for th...

David Bowie has released a new video for his track, “Lazarus“.

“Lazarus” is the second single from Bowie’s 28th album ★, which is released on January 8 on ISO/Columbia Records.

Click here to read Uncut’s review of ★

Director Johan Renck, who also directed the 10-minute short film for the album’s title track, commented on the experience of visually interpreting that song and “Lazarus”:

“One could only dream about collaborating with a mind like that; let alone twice. Intuitive, playful, mysterious and profound… I have no desire to do any more videos knowing the process never ever gets as formidable and fulfilling as this was. I’ve basically touched the sun.”

The “Lazarus” video appears to be directly connected to the “★” video: it features the return of the button-eyed character played by Bowie in the previous film.

You can read our review of the “★” video by clicking here.

Meanwhile, Uncut issue 224 is now on sale in North America, featuring David Bowie on the cover and a substantial, behind the scenes interview with ★ bandleader Donny McCaslin about the making of the album.

uncut_issue_feb2016_us

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.

Father John Misty shares ‘rejected’ Pandora promo clips

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Father John Misty has released a set of short promo clips which he claims were rejected by the streaming service Pandora. Misty, aka singer-songwriter Josh Tillman, who released his acclaimed second album I Love You, Honeybear last year, posted seven clips to Soundcloud of himself, with tongue seem...

Father John Misty has released a set of short promo clips which he claims were rejected by the streaming service Pandora.

Misty, aka singer-songwriter Josh Tillman, who released his acclaimed second album I Love You, Honeybear last year, posted seven clips to Soundcloud of himself, with tongue seemingly firmly in cheek, ‘promoting’ his music and tour.

In these, Tillman promises a mixtape featuring “100% Ed Sheeran”, and says: “It gets lonely out on the road, my Pandora mixtape helps me retain some semblance of an emotional existence as I sell myself piece by wretched piece, one t-shirt at a time.”

Whether the clips were actually submitted to and rejected by Pandora is as yet unknown… have a listen below.







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.

James Brown – Mr Dynamite: The Rise Of James Brown

THE ONE. James Brown was obsessed with The One. It signified the first and over-emphasised beat of the 4/4 rhythm of funk, the music that Brown and his band spawned between 1965’s “Papa’s Got A Brand New Bag” and 1967’s “Cold Sweat” – both numbers have a claim as funk’s founding ch...

THE ONE. James Brown was obsessed with The One. It signified the first and over-emphasised beat of the 4/4 rhythm of funk, the music that Brown and his band spawned between 1965’s “Papa’s Got A Brand New Bag” and 1967’s “Cold Sweat” – both numbers have a claim as funk’s founding charter. And, of course, The One signified Brown himself, Mr Dynamite, the amazing Mr PleasePlease, the Hardest Working Man In Showbiz, Soul Brother Number One!

As an act of self-invention, Brown has few rivals in pop. Abandoned by his parents, he was raised by his aunt in the beer-joint-cum-brothel she ran in poverty-stricken Carolina. In his teen years he spent time in prison before music rescued him. A competent drummer, a supercharged vocalist and a dazzling dancer, Brown clawed his way up through 1950s black showbiz with a mix of raw talent, iron determination and a patrician white manager. The ‘hardest working’ tag was no idle boast; Brown worked his band 360 days a year, burning up the chitlin’ circuit before claiming New York’s Apollo for his coronation, the resultant 1963 live album becoming a fixture in black family homes.

Thereafter Brown’s career was a series of peaks that are the focal points of Alex Gibney’s mesmerising documentary: his nationwide TV appearances on the T.A.M.I. Show and The Ed Sullivan Show, his sequence of groundbreaking hits, and his role as black spokesman and peacemaker during the insurrections of the civil rights era – following the assassination of Martin Luther King in 1968, a Brown concert forestalled a riot in Boston. When Brown changed his hairstyle from glistening, pompadoured ‘process’ to frizzy ‘natural’ in 1967, America’s ghettos followed suit, while 1968’s “Say It Loud – I’m Black And I’m Proud” busted the ghetto snobbery that held light skin superior. “Overnight, the dark-skinned girls were the ones everyone wanted,” recalls the Reverend Al Sharpton, a fan and later friend of Brown. And when “Sex Machine” arrived in 1970, the whole world hit the dancefloor.

Doing justice to such a gargantuan career and the complex, private man behind it calls for delicate judgment, and Gibney supplies it, lacing terrific archival footage of Brown’s live shows with pithy interviews from the man’s band and entourage. “A tyrant”, to quote one band member, Brown fined his musicians for missed cues, flat notes, dirty shoes… anything that caught his fancy. Onstage the group wore uniform “to show they were proud to belong”, and checking into a motel from the tour bus they were expected to show up suited and booted as
a mark of black pride.

Brown’s band respected and even loved their leader, though, as one remarks, you couldn’t tell him so because he would see it as weakness. Drummer Melvin Parker recalls pulling a gun on his boss as the singer was shaping up to punch his brother, saxophonist Maceo Parker. None of Brown’s talented band saw a bean in royalties, even saxophonist Pee Wee Ellis, whose arrangements shaped Brown’s sound, not least on “Cold Sweat”, where Ellis harnessed Miles Davis’ “So What” for the song’s coda. When his band finally rose up in protest in 1970, Brown promptly recruited a younger team led by bassist Bootsy Collins and his brother Catfish.

Of Brown’s private life there is no hint, and his decline and fall are beyond Gibney’s remit, though there is an engaging chapter on his influence on the hip-hop generation and ’80s stars like Michael Jackson and Prince. What Mr Dynamite does is take us deep into the engine room of Brown’s music and give witness to his originality and supernatural performing talents. Brown’s confused, ambiguous politics – he was bamboozled and used by President Richard Nixon even as he championed black America – are deftly dissected, along with a psyche that bore the scars of his childhood abandonment – Brown trusted almost no-one, and naively thought that if he could succeed, so could anyone. “He was a civil rights movement of one,” opines tour manager Alan Leeds. Finally, Mr Dynamite is more than a portrait of James Brown – its rich blend of anecdotes, insights and rare archive footage paints a vivid picture of a troubled, tumultuous era in American history. Unmissable.

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.

LCD Soundsystem to tour this year

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LCD Soundsystem have been announced as headliners for this year's Coachella line-up, with more tour dates to follow. The band split up after a final Madison Square Garden show in 2011. But apart from the Coachella announcement, Consequence Of Sound reports that the band's website carries the messa...

LCD Soundsystem have been announced as headliners for this year’s Coachella line-up, with more tour dates to follow.

The band split up after a final Madison Square Garden show in 2011.

But apart from the Coachella announcement, Consequence Of Sound reports that the band’s website carries the message, “2016 tour dates coming soon”.

Among other bands confirmed for Coachella are Guns N’ Roses, Sufjan Stevens, Courtney Barnett, Lush, Underworld, Bat For Lashes, Savages, Deerhunter, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, the Last Shadow Puppets.

You can find ticket info by clicking here.

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.

Third Man Records to release early Jack White material

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Jack White's Third Man Records have announced plans to release some of White's early material, via their Vault subscription service. Some of the music will come from Two Star Tabernacle, White's early punk band. Of the three Two Star Tabernacle tracks set to appear on Vault release number 27, two a...

Jack White‘s Third Man Records have announced plans to release some of White’s early material, via their Vault subscription service.

Some of the music will come from Two Star Tabernacle, White’s early punk band. Of the three Two Star Tabernacle tracks set to appear on Vault release number 27, two are earlier versions of what became White Stripes tracks.

The release will feature “Hotel Yorba” and “Now Mary” in earlier incarnations, as well as an unreleased track entitled “Itchy“, all recorded live in January 1998, three years before the release of White Blood Cells.

Other tracks on the subscription come from another early White band The Bricks, also featuring early versions of White Stripes songs and an unreleased track called “One And Two“. The Bricks only existed for about half a dozen shows, and produced early versions of “Candy Cane Children” and “You’ve Got Her in Your Pocket“.

The release will be a three gold LP collection, also featuring tracks by The Dead Weather and a handful of other Third Man Records acts. Subscription sign ups are available by clicking here until January 31.

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.

Some further thoughts on Uncut’s 200 Greatest Albums Of All Time

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First up: Happy New Year! I hope you all had a great Christmas and New Year; and, critically, are managing to keep it together over these perilous first few days back after the break. As you're hopefully aware, the new edition of Uncut is now on sale. In case this news somehow got lost in the gener...

First up: Happy New Year! I hope you all had a great Christmas and New Year; and, critically, are managing to keep it together over these perilous first few days back after the break.

As you’re hopefully aware, the new edition of Uncut is now on sale. In case this news somehow got lost in the general post-Star Wars/pre-David Bowie album clamour, please indulge me while I do some gentle recapping of the issue.

Our cover story is our survey of the 200 Greatest Albums Of All Time: this has already opened up plenty of debate on our Facebook page and on Twitter. Of course, we’d love to know what you think about the list – so please drop us a line at uncut_feedback@timeinc.com.

For our own part, it’s an interesting experiment. Although it’s not reason enough, it occurred to us that we’ve never run a ‘greatest albums of all time’ list before – but as writers brought up on similar NME lists passim, and subsequently drip-fed various iterations on the theme in other media, it seemed a useful way to stimulate debate about not only the music we love and write about every month in Uncut but the manner in which our attitude to the past changes over time.

For what it’s worth, I voted for The Velvet Underground‘s Loaded as the Greatest Album Of All Time. That’s certainly been my opinion for a number of years now. But at earlier points in my life, I distinctly recall making an equally valid claim for Ziggy Stardust, and then later Disintegration by The Cure. The reasons why I alighted on those albums are now lost in my memory; and there will probably come a time when my tastes shift imperceptibly and another album other than Loaded, becomes – in my humble opinion – the Greatest Album Of All Time.

Anyway, elsewhere in the issue, there’s our massive 2016 Preview starring – deep breath – The National‘s mammoth Grateful Dead project, Animal Collective, Ray Davies, PJ Harvey, Chris Forsyth, Endless Boogie, Radiohead, Parquet Courts, The Cult, Yoko Ono, Steve Gunn, Underworld, Swans, Graham Nash and Mark Eitzel.

There’s also New Order, Suede, An Audience With John Cale, the Making Of Sun Ra‘s “Space Is The Place”, an Album By Album with Michael Rother and Barry Adamson takes us through My Life In Music. We review new albums by Lucinda Williams, Savages, Tindersticks and Ty Segall and reissues by The Long Ryders, Françoise Hardy and Them. In the front section, Ryley Walker and Danny Thompson hook up, Matmos shares the secrets of his washing machine and Ronnie Lane is remembered.

In Film, I’ve written about The Revenant, Trumbo, Spotlight and Bone Tomahawk, while in DVD, The Friends Of Eddie Coyle makes it on to DVD in the UK and a new Sarah Records doc is reviewed.

The issue is in shops now, of course; but you can also buy it digitally by clicking here.

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.

Laurie Anderson – Heart Of A Dog

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In Laurie Anderson’s new film, Heart Of A Dog, everyone dies. Her mother, her husband, Lou Reed, her beloved rat terrier, Lolabelle, her artist friend Gordon Matta-Clark. Anderson ruminates softly and sharply on each one, except Reed, who is not mentioned at all, though he makes a cameo towards th...

In Laurie Anderson’s new film, Heart Of A Dog, everyone dies. Her mother, her husband, Lou Reed, her beloved rat terrier, Lolabelle, her artist friend Gordon Matta-Clark. Anderson ruminates softly and sharply on each one, except Reed, who is not mentioned at all, though he makes a cameo towards the end, sitting on a beach in a home movie, and his song “Turning Time Around”, from 2000’s Ecstasy, plays over the final credits.

If Heart Of A Dog sounds like a stinker, be assured that it isn’t. Rather it’s warm, witty and thought-provoking, and strikes a chord with everyone who sees it because Anderson, who is 68, is such a compelling narrator and her subject is the very stuff of life: grief, love, joy, memory, loss.

It helps, of course, to have seen the film before listening to the Heart Of A Dog album, but it’s not essential. The album is the film’s full sound design and consists of 25 or so stories, thoughts and observations set to mostly new compositions by Anderson. This beatless music, broadly electronic and characterised by circling drones and violin, churns quite menacingly in places around Anderson’s dulcet voice but never impedes the narrative or artificially inflates the drama of a story.

Without the film’s visual accompaniment, the album is like listening to a series of short radio plays, or a podcast of Anderson’s anthropological musings, and it is no worse for that. In fact, Anderson admits that the music was the last element of the film to come together. She dashed it off quickly, even recycling material from her earlier albums Homeland (2010) and Bright Red (1994).

Heart Of A Dog came about a few years ago when the Franco-German arts channel Arte commissioned her to make a personal essay. She had made one film before, the 1986 concert film Home Of The Brave, but this would be quite different. Given carte blanche and no deadline, she decided to try to assemble a story about her dog, Lolabelle, who had recently died. But with limited footage of the dog, how best to go about this? How would she articulate and represent her thoughts on film? And how would she connect all these different stories on the screen in a coherent manner? So she drew illustrations, which were then animated, and paired these with home videos shot by her family on Super 8 in the 1950s and more recent iPhone footage and other, staged material. The result is an impressionistic montage that evokes, in its philosophical open-endedness and technical simplicity, Chris Marker’s La Jetée. (Marker, funnily enough, had Anderson’s “O Superman” on his answerphone for 20 years.)

Though Heart Of A Dog would become mawkish if Anderson dwelled solely on Lolabelle, the dog does provide moments of light relief. On “Lola Goes Blind”, Anderson talks about Lolabelle losing her sight and teaching her to paint and sculpt and play the keyboard, as best one can. Whether through training or by fluke, Lolabelle plays freestyle jazz on the piano fairly competently – the YouTube clips are well worth a look.

Through Lolabelle, Anderson digresses and reflects on her own life, mixing candid observation and childhood memories with thoughts on surveillance and data (a familiar topic) and the contrasting Western and Eastern approaches to death and grieving. “The purpose of death,” she realises, said in that mellifluous and comforting voice, “is to release love.” Ultimately, in whichever medium she uses, Anderson’s role as an artist is to tell stories and join the dots. On “Phosphenes” she muses, not unlike David Attenborough, on those stripes and squiggles you see when you close your eyes, describing them as “screen savers, holding patterns that just sit there so your brain won’t fall asleep”.

Later, in “Bring Her Some Flowers”, she recalls a harrowing visit to a hospital to see her dying mother. “Listen,” she tells a priest named Father Pierre, a converted Egyptian Jew, “I have a really big problem. I’m going to see my mother and she’s dying, but I don’t love her.” Prepared for a tranquil reconciliation, she arrives to a scene of chaos in the ward, her mother dead. Beneath this tale seethes the kind of queasy sound design David Lynch uses in his films to invoke impending dread.

Perhaps you could say she’s made the ideal album for this digital age: bitesize content packed with real depth and genuine emotion. Yet in many ways, removed from the context of the gallery or museum, Heart Of A Dog becomes Anderson’s most satisfying and human work. There’s something for everyone.

Q&A
Laurie Anderson
Heart Of A Dog is deeply personal but also totally universal.

It’s not really about me and my life and my childhood and getting to know me as such.
It’s really about what stories are, why you have them and what you do with them. I like it when people make their own story from this, and I try to leave it open.

How did you go about composing the music?
I cut the film and showed it to some people with just a voiceover, no music at all, and they all said: please don’t put music on it. And I thought, well, wait a second, I am a musician, I can always take it off if I don’t like it. I did the music super-fast. One thing I did was playing the violin along with the film and finding phrases that worked. I mostly used drone-like keyboard and violin phrases that were kind of twisty. Once in a while I would put in songs or fragments of songs. But I did slap that together really quickly.

It’s impossible to watch Lolabelle playing the keyboard without grinning.
She loved music and basically music saved her life. But it was the only world available to her; she did not do well when she went blind. I wished that the castanets and bells she played had been part of the videos, because it was really pretty rhythmic. She played with both paws.

What are you working on at the moment?
Right now I’m doing some work with Lou’s archive. I have all of his things and I want to do some exciting projects. I mean, Lou’s work doesn’t need me to do anything – it’s in the world, it’s in people’s heads, he’s already there – but I do have these things I wanna put out there.
INTERVIEW BY PIERS MARTIN

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.

Exclusive! Brian Wilson speaks! + Win Love And Mercy DVDs and Blu-rays!

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The Brian Wilson biopic Love And Mercy is out now on Blu-ray and DVD. To coincide with this momentous event, we have TEN copies of the film to give away on the format of your choice - either Blu-ray or DVD. http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/?bctid=4685807372001 But first, here's a word o...

The Brian Wilson biopic Love And Mercy is out now on Blu-ray and DVD.

To coincide with this momentous event, we have TEN copies of the film to give away on the format of your choice – either Blu-ray or DVD.

http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/?bctid=4685807372001

But first, here’s a word or two from Brian Wilson himself…

How did you feel the first time you saw Love & Mercy?
The first time I saw it I was a little bit scared to see the bad years of my life. But I thought it was amazing how factual and accurate the portrayals were.

What kind of role did the movies in your early life?
We didn’t actually go to very many movies. [Instead], I played a lot of piano. I’m self-taught.

Did you have any initial reservations about the film?
I knew we were in good hands. I knew he was going to do good. And we spent nineteen years developing this script.

In Love & Mercy, you are portrayed by Paul Dano and John Cusack. Did you spend time with them before production?
They hung out with me for a week and they got to view my mannerisms. That’s why they portrayed me so well. They just wanted to capture my personality.

This film depicts the challenges of being an artist. When you were creating “Pet Sounds”, who encouraged you?
It was my engineer, Chuck [Charles Dean “Chuck” Britz]. He inspired me to produce really good records and he helped me produce them.

loveandmercy_PR03

Do you think Cusak and Elizabeth Banks, who plays your wife, Melinda Ledbetter, captured the essence of your relationship with Melinda?
They were very much in love [on screen], just like Melinda and me, and they portrayed our love affair very, very well.

Did Elizabeth have a chance to spend some time with Melinda before production?
Yeah. They had lunch for a couple of days, three hours each day: so that’s six hours. So she had a lot of time to capture Melinda’s personality.

Was the portrayal Dr. Eugene Landy accurate?
It was so accurate that I actually believed that was the real Dr. Landy in the movie, although it wasn’t. But it was portrayed so perfectly that it scared me.

Can you talk about your musical contributions to the film’s score and soundtrack?
They played mostly Beach Boys records but I wrote a song called “One Kind of Love.” The producer asked me to write a love song [about] Melinda and I for the movie so I wrote that.

Besides the romance, what did the filmmakers really get right about your life in the movie?
They got the producing part of my life right, when I was producing records. They captured that very well.

Finally, is there a message you hope viewers take away from this film?
I hope it captures the feeling of my life and what I went through and I hope they can feel what I felt.

LOVE-&-MERCY-cover

You can read Uncut’s review of Love And Mercy by clicking here

As we were saying, we have TEN copies of Love And Mercy to give away.

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

Who plays Eugene Landy in Love And Mercy?

Send your answer along with your name, address and contact telephone number to UncutComp@timeinc.com by Monday, January 11.

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

http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/?bctid=4685899553001

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.