Home Blog Page 363

Introducing the new issue of Uncut…

0
It was a long time ago now, but I dimly recall part of my English degree involved comparing the various quirks and emendations of Shakespeare’s plays in the Folio version and the Quarto version; scholarly anal retention at its finest, I guess. Weirdly, though, I was thinking about that process a f...

It was a long time ago now, but I dimly recall part of my English degree involved comparing the various quirks and emendations of Shakespeare’s plays in the Folio version and the Quarto version; scholarly anal retention at its finest, I guess. Weirdly, though, I was thinking about that process a few weeks ago in the office, while we were working our way through The Cutting Edge 1965 – 1966: The Bootleg Series Vol. 12 – or at least the 6CD version of this new Bob Dylan boxset that Allan Jones reviews in today’s new issue of Uncut. It’s a strange experience, listening again and again to “Like A Rolling Stone” (there are 20 versions of it here), hearing the microscopic adjustments in tempo, the distinctions in guitar tone, the presence and absence of organ lines.

I’m aware that drawing parallels between the likes of Shakespeare and Dylan is a hazardous, often pretentious, business, but perhaps this is where we are with rock archaeology right now. Part of the pleasure of expansive projects like The Cutting Edge – and, indeed, like Montage Of Heck, the new Kurt Cobain album that we investigate in this month’s cover story – is that they turn us all into historical detectives, or at least privileged critics; that the act of listening becomes more active than passive as you become involved in piecing the story of a song together, in analysing its gestation.

Of course, this isn’t always the way I’d choose to engage with music, and it’d be disingenuous to pretend I’m going to play The Cutting Edge more frequently than I do, say, Blonde On Blonde. Nevertheless, as with many of these archival projects, innumerable new angles on old stories materialise. Just when you think you know everything about these most canonical of songs, another take on “Tombstone Blues†is cued up, and a new avenue of exploration reveals itself.

Dylan, it transpires, never had a fixed idea of how a song should work; his music has always been, and of course continues to be, in a constant state of adaptation and flux. We might see the single version of “Like A Rolling Stone†as the ultimate manifestation of Dylan’s art. Dylan himself, one suspects, would see it as just one of a number of almost infinite possibilities. Which is why he’s so perfectly suited to encyclopaedic boxsets like this one.

There are plenty of new things to engage us in this month’s Uncut – albums by Floating Points, Kelley Stoltz, Nadia Reid and Bitchin Bajas are strong personal favourites – but until Neil Young finally gets around to releasing Archives 2, whenever that may be, there’s plausibly enough here to obsess over. It’s a question of degrees. Good luck with your studies…

 

Tame Impala/Pond’s Jay Watson shares new track from side-project GUM

0
Tame Impala member Jay Watson is releasing a new album with his side-project GUM. Following his band's recent album Currents, the Australian multi-instrumentalist and Pond member will issue Glamorous Damage on November 13. Watson is now streaming single and album opener "Anesthetized Lesson", whic...

Tame Impala member Jay Watson is releasing a new album with his side-project GUM.

Following his band’s recent album Currents, the Australian multi-instrumentalist and Pond member will issue Glamorous Damage on November 13.

Watson is now streaming single and album opener “Anesthetized Lesson“, which you can hear below.

Pitchfork reports that the album was recorded and mixed by Watson himself at home in Perth. The album will be available to pre-order on October 30.

The tracklisting for Glamorous Damage is:

‘G.U.M’
‘Anesthetized Lesson’
‘Glamorous Damage’
‘Notorious Gold’
‘Elafonissi Blue’
‘Television Sick’
‘New Eyes’
‘R.Y.K’
‘Science Fiction’
‘Ancients’
‘Greens And Blues’
‘She Never Made It To Tell’
‘Carnarvon’

You can watch a trailer for the album below.

You can buy Tame Impala’s Current from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

EL VY (The National, Menomena) share “Need A Friend” video

0
EL VY — the collaborative project of the National's Matt Berninger and Menomena/Ramona Falls' Brent Knopf — have unveiled a new video. Pitchfork reports that "Need A Friend" has been directed by Tom Berninger: you can watch it below. EL VY release their debut album Return To The Moon on Octobe...

EL VY — the collaborative project of the National’s Matt Berninger and Menomena/Ramona Falls’ Brent Knopf — have unveiled a new video.

Pitchfork reports that “Need A Friend” has been directed by Tom Berninger: you can watch it below.

EL VY release their debut album Return To The Moon on October 30. You can pre-order a copy from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here.

The tracklisting for Return To The Moon is:

Return to the Moon (Political Song for Didi Bloome to Sing, with Crescendo)
I’m The Man To Be
Paul Is Alive
Need A Friend
Silent Ivy Hotel
No Time To Crank The Sun
It’s A Game
Sleepin’ Light (feat. Ural Thomas)
Sad Case
Happiness, Missouri
Careless

EL VY will perform with a touring band for the following shows:

November
03 – PORTLAND, OR, Doug Fir Lounge
04 – SEATTLE, WA, Neumos
06 – SAN FRANCISCO, CA, The Independent
07 – LOS ANGELES, CA, Troubadour
10 – PHILADELPHIA, PA, Union Transfer
11 – WASHINGTON, DC, 9:30 Club
13 – NEW YORK, NY, Bowery Ballroom
14 – BROOKLYN, NY, Music Hall of Williamsburg
15 – BOSTON, MA, The Sinclair
16 – MONTREAL, QC, Theatre Fairmount
17 – TORONTO, ON, Opera House
19 – CHICAGO, IL, Metro
20 – MILWAUKEE, WI, The Turner
21 – MINNEAPOLIS, MN, First Avenue

December
01 – COPENHAGEN, Pumpehuset
02 – HAMBURG, Grunspan
03 – AMSTERDAM, Melkweg
04 – COLOGNE, Kantine
06 – BERLIN, Astra
07 – BRUSSELS, AB
08 – PARIS, Trabendo
10 – LONDON, Electric Ballroom
12 – MANCHESTER, Gorilla
13 – DUBLIN, Whelans

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Robert Forster – Songs To Play

0
When Bob Dylan released Modern Times in 2006, Robert Forster wrote an incisive essay in The Monthly about his hero’s shape-shifting personas. In particular, he examined Dylan's most recent incarnation: as a grizzled older man, getting on a bit yet still swinging, facing down death with a tune. â€...

When Bob Dylan released Modern Times in 2006, Robert Forster wrote an incisive essay in The Monthly about his hero’s shape-shifting personas. In particular, he examined Dylan’s most recent incarnation: as a grizzled older man, getting on a bit yet still swinging, facing down death with a tune.

“His best songs of the last ten years bear comparison with the best of his ’60s work,†Forster wrote, “and more importantly they offer a new voice: cracked, lovelorn, pessimistic, gallows-humoured, still towering over his generation. Old age suits him.â€

Over his last decade, Forster, now nearing 60, has gone through a few reinventions of his own. First off, 2008’s The Evangelist suggested he was following Dylan’s example and embracing the cruel passage of time just as it had embraced him. Inspired by the sudden death of The Go-Betweens’ co-founder and co-writer, Grant McLennan, in May 2006, the record was slow, sparse and filled with ruminations on loss. It had its beautiful moments, sure, but the sarcasm, the louche sophistication and the playful, biting wit that have long characterised Forster’s best work were, understandably, taking a back seat. It was as if Bryan Ferry had suddenly morphed into Nick Drake.

The Evangelist was something of an anomaly, though; in the years since, Robert Forster has become the renaissance man he’s long cast himself as in his songs. His career as a music critic has flourished, even resulting in a publication of his columns, The Ten Rules Of Rock And Roll; he’s compiled the reissue series G Stands For Go-Betweens, Volume One of which was released earlier this year; he’s begun producing for other people, including The John Steel Singers on their 2010 debut, Tangalooma; and now he’s not only writing songs about Rupert Bunny paintings, he’s so respected as a cultural commentator that he’s actually invited to galleries to talk about them.

With Songs To Play, Forster has finally returned to his old job, and – defying the example of Dylan – ignored the advancing years. Crucially, these are some of his finest songs in decades. Strikingly immediate, yet also rewarding repeated immersion, the 10 tracks here are, just as Forster intended, amusing, infectious and relaxed, a world away from the seam of sadness at the heart of The Evangelist. That lyrical wryness, as typically Australian as it is Forster-esque, has returned, with the songwriter heading out on wild flights of fancy; notably on the poised, acoustic “Songwriters On The Runâ€, a rather meta tale about two fugitive musicians who eventually hide out with a gig promoter, and “Disaster In Motionâ€, an atmospheric portrait of a small, isolated town. “Population 80, nothing much here,†he sings over watery organ, acoustic guitar and muted bass. “Things just drift from year to year/Once there was a scandal, once there was a flood…â€

Unlike The Evangelist, recorded by Go-Betweens producer Mark Wallis on computer in London, Songs To Play was made in collaboration with two of The John Steel Singers, Scott Bromiley and Luke McDonald, and tracked live to tape up a mountain outside Brisbane. It’s arguably the best Forster has ever sounded, with the crisp recording a world away from the digital reverb smears that blighted 1990’s Danger In The Past, or even The Go-Betweens’ Tallulah.

30 years his juniors, Bromiley and McDonald seem to have acted as the young bucks pushing Uncle Robert to again experiment with arrangements. 1996’s Warm Nights was similarly expansive, with lysergic fuzz guitars, oom-pah-assisted country shuffles and stately “Like A Rolling Stone†homages, and Songs To Play picks up where that left off; from the bossa nova rhythms of “Love Is Where It Isâ€, and the acidic, clattering folk of “I’m So Happy For Youâ€, to the glittering piano and glockenspiel parts that highlight the limping, romantic “And I Knewâ€, there’s a rich palette of colour here. Throughout much of the record, too, the lilting violin and voice of Forster’s wife, Karin Bäumler, are important textures, echoing Amanda Brown’s contributions to The Go-Betweens’ late-’80s peaks.

Elsewhere, Forster’s songwriting seems to have been broadened by his experience as a journalist, especially on the stunning, keen-eyed “A Poet Walksâ€. This surreal, five-minute travelogue charts his journey around a rediscovered town – perhaps taking place just after his train trip in 2006’s “Here Comes A City†– and eventually grows into a widescreen Mariachi-tinged epic that brings to mind both Morricone and Love’s Forever Changes. As the chord sequence descends, trumpets blare and violins wail, Forster sings of the psychological journey prompted by his physical travels: “To walk, past all the loves that I’ve known/Past all the lives I’ve outgrown/The skin and the bone…â€

It’s not all reverie, either; on “Let Me Imagine Youâ€, a brittle indie-pop paean to the power of the mind in this age of digital over-sharing, Forster delivers the best line of the record, tongue firmly in cheek: “Please don’t twitter/Let me imagine you/I find it sweeter…†Other gems reveal themselves with time: “Kathy got married to Emmylou†on “Disaster…†is deliciously jarring after Forster has set up the traditional, conservative rural scene, while on the punchy, 12-bar opener, “Learn To Burnâ€, he gets joyfully silly, warning, “I mistook Memphis for a house in Surrey/You can miss detail when you’re in a hurry.â€

The Go-Betweens were at their most impressive when they matched traditional pop structures with warped lyrics or experimental textures – “Cattle And Caneâ€â€™s cantering, off-kilter rhythm, say, or the detached wordplay of “You Can’t Say No Foreverâ€. Perhaps Forster was reminded of these successes as he compiled the Go-Betweens boxsets, as in many respects, for all the years, joy and pain that have spooled by, the Robert Forster on Songs To Play is very much like the Robert Forster of the ’80s – bookish, aloof, fey, stylish and sarcastic, he’s still speak-singing snarky bon mots like a subtropical Jonathan Richman in an undertaker’s suit, or an Antipodean Lou Reed more comfortable at a gallery than Lexington, 125. Back in 1987, he even turned grey, the result of a reputed eight-hour dye job in unlikely honour of Dynasty’s Blake Carrington.

His modus operandi – white, suburban, left-of-centre indie-pop, still in thrall to the ’60s and ’70s – might not have changed all that much, but Songs To Play is nevertheless his strongest work for decades. It’s to Robert Forster’s credit that he hasn’t settled down into the persona of the older musician, like his hero Dylan, slowing both tempos and heart rates. Instead he’s returned revitalised, buoyed by young blood and new possibilities, reinvigorated by life, art and music. His hair’s now grey for real, yet he’s sounding more youthful than he has in years. Old age suits him.

You can buy Songs To Play from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch all-star cover of Cream’s “Sunshine Of Your Love” at Jack Bruce tribute concert

0
A special tribute concert took place at London's Roundhouse on October 24 to mark the one-year anniversary of Jack Bruce's death. The concert featured performances from a number of the Cream bassist's friends and family, culminating in renditions of two of the band's tracks, "Sunshine Of Your Love"...

A special tribute concert took place at London’s Roundhouse on October 24 to mark the one-year anniversary of Jack Bruce‘s death.

The concert featured performances from a number of the Cream bassist’s friends and family, culminating in renditions of two of the band’s tracks, “Sunshine Of Your Love” and “We’re Going Wrong“.

Among the musicians who appeared at the end – which was also called Sunshine of Your Love – were Ginger Baker, Phil Manzanera, Ian Anderson, Living Colour’s Vernon Reid and Bruce’s daughter Aruba Red.

As reported on Rolling Stone, the event raised funds for East Anglia’s Children’s Hospices.

Scroll down to watch audience-recorded footage of the show.

In a statement, Sunshine of Your Love musical director Nitin Sawhney said: “Jack Bruce was one of my biggest heroes when I was growing up – a consummate musician, composer and all round rock genius with a killer voice and one of the most creative and versatile musical minds of his generation.”

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Hear Keith Richards’ Desert Island Discs

0
Keith Richards appeared on BBC Radio's Desert Island Discs yesterday [October 25, 2015]. You can find links below to most of the records Richards' chose, and also listen to the programme either on Youtube or at the BBC iPlayer site. During the course of the programme, Richards told the show's pres...

Keith Richards appeared on BBC Radio’s Desert Island Discs yesterday [October 25, 2015].

You can find links below to most of the records Richards’ chose, and also listen to the programme either on Youtube or at the BBC iPlayer site.

During the course of the programme, Richards told the show’s presenter Kirsty Young that he believes the Rolling Stones are “getting better. We could be fooling ourselves, but from the response from the audience and the way I’m feeling and the way the boys are playing, is this promise of more and I mean… who is going to jump off a moving bus?.â€

Chuck Berry, “Wee Wee Hours”

Hank Williams, “You Win Again”

Aaron Neville, “My True Story”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rcoTz7wLRpQ

Etta James, “Sugar On The Floor”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1YXu3o67t5E

Freddie Scott, “Are You Lonely For Me Baby”

Gregory Isaacs, “Extra Classic”

Nigel Kennedy & The English Chamber Orchestra, “Spring: Four Seasons (Vivaldi)”

Little Walter, “Key To The Highway”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3guFiuBPCHk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c46oQ-KkHag

Richards released his latest album, Crosseyed Heart, in September. You can read Uncut’s review by clicking here.

Crosseyed Heart can be bought from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

David Bowie confirms new single and album, Blackstar

0
David Bowie has confirmed that he will release a new single and album on his 69th birthday. Over the weekend, The Times ran a report on the album. Subsequently, Bowie has issued a statement clarifying the story. The statement, which appears on Bowie's website, says: "It can now be confirmed that...

David Bowie has confirmed that he will release a new single and album on his 69th birthday.

Over the weekend, The Times ran a report on the album.

Subsequently, Bowie has issued a statement clarifying the story.

The statement, which appears on Bowie’s website, says:

“It can now be confirmed that ‘Blackstar’ is the forthcoming single and album from David Bowie.

“Contrary to inaccurate reporting on the sound and content of the album, only the following can be confirmed:

“The single will be released on November 20th and is not part of David’s theatre piece ‘Lazarus’.

The album will be released on David’s birthday, January 8th 2016.”

Bowie shared a 45-second snippet of the album’s title track earlier this month, which will appear on opening sequence of the upcoming television series The Last Panthers.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Joe Moss, former manager of The Smiths and Johnny Marr, dies aged 72

0
Joe Moss, former manager of The Smiths and Johnny Marr, has died aged 72. The news was broken on Marr's website. “We regret to announce that, after a brave struggle with cancer, Joe Moss, manager of Johnny Marr and The Smiths, has died at the age of seventy-two. “Joe Moss was already a legend...

Joe Moss, former manager of The Smiths and Johnny Marr, has died aged 72.

The news was broken on Marr’s website.

“We regret to announce that, after a brave struggle with cancer, Joe Moss, manager of Johnny Marr and The Smiths, has died at the age of seventy-two.

“Joe Moss was already a legend in Manchester by the start of the 1980s, which is when he and Johnny Marr first met: a patron of the famed Twisted Wheel, and an instigator of the pioneering store Eighth Day, Moss had turned his love of street fashion into Crazy Face, an influential clothing line with a store in the City’s Chapel Walks. Marr worked in the clothes shop next door, and at the age of seventeen, introduced himself to Moss as a ‘frustrated musician’; the pair quickly became close friends, with Marr moving in to the Moss household and placed in charge of a new Crazy Face store underneath the label’s Portland Street headquarters. Moss mentored and encouraged Marr’s musical ambitions, and when The Smiths came together, he supplied the group with space at Portland Street to rehearse at, and a PA for them to play through; he bought them a van, guided the group through their first shows, secured record contracts for the UK and America, publishing and agency deals, and helped hire a dedicated crew. He left the group unexpectedly in late 1983, while ‘This Charming Man’ was riding high in the charts and with their debut LP completed, on the eve of The Smiths’ first trip to America.

“‘Joe was a one off, an amazing person and totally unique,’ says Johnny Marr. ‘He started looking after me when I was seventeen; it was Joe who put the idea in my head to go and knock on Morrissey’s door. He invested his time and money in us when no one else wanted to know, and his belief in us kept us going. Without him there wouldn’t have been any Smiths. He was an original beatnik and a true bohemian, respected by all. Everyone who met him loved him; he can never be replaced.’

“After The Smiths, Moss helped reinvigorate the Manchester scene of the 1990s by promoting shows at the Night and Day Café on Oldham Street. He resumed managing with the group Marion, whose 1998 album ‘The Program’ was produced by Johnny Marr; he also managed Haven, again enlisting Marr as a producer. In 1999, Joe Moss resumed his role as Johnny Marr’s manager, a position he retained until the present.

“He is survived by his wife Sarah and his children David, Rachael, Ivan, Stella and Edie.â€

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Exclusive! Watch the Grateful Dead play “Truckin’†from their Fare Thee Well tour

0
The Grateful Dead have announced details of their forthcoming box sets documenting the band's final concerts at Soldier's Field in Chicago on July 3, 4 and 5. To whet your appetites, we're delighted to bring you "Truckin'", from the July 5 show. The Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful...

The Grateful Dead have announced details of their forthcoming box sets documenting the band’s final concerts at Soldier’s Field in Chicago on July 3, 4 and 5.

To whet your appetites, we’re delighted to bring you “Truckin’“, from the July 5 show.

The Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead sets will be available on November 20 through Rhino on a number of formats.

A 3-CD/2 Blu-ray, 3/CD-DVD, 2 Blu-Ray or 2-DVD sets will be released in shops and digitally which includes full audio from the band’s final show on July 5.

A 2 CD/digital Best Of edition will feature highlights from all three shows. You can order it by clicking here.

Meanwhile, a 12-CD/Blu-ray set and a 12-CD-DVD set will be available exclusively on Dead.net the official Grateful Dead website, and will be limited to 20,000 individually numbered copies per sets.

FARE THEE WELL – Dead.net Exclusive Complete Versions
12-CD/7-Blu-ray Complete Version – Full audio and high-definition video from all three shows on CD and Blu-ray plus exclusive bonus Blu-ray of behind-the-scenes footage and three CDs of intermission music by Circles Around The Sun. Individually numbered, limited edition of 20,000.

12-CD/7-DVD Complete Version – Full audio and video from all three shows on CD and DVD plus exclusive bonus DVD of behind-the-scenes footage and three CDs of intermission music by Circles Around The Sun. Individually numbered, limited edition of 20,000.

FARE THEE WELL – Retail Versions
3-CD/2-Blu-ray Version – Full audio and high-definition video from final show (July 5) on CD and Blu-ray.
3-CD/2-DVD Version – Full audio and video from final show (July 5) on CD and DVD.
2-Blu-ray Version – Full high-definition video from final show (July 5) on Blu-ray.
2-DVD Version – Full video from final show (July 5) on DVD.
2-CD “Best Of” Version – Audio highlights from all three shows.
Digital Download – Audio and video from the final show (July 5) will be available as well as audio from the “Best Of” version.

Tracklisting for Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead Dead.Net edition:

July 3rd, 2015
Disc One
1. “Box of Rain”
2. “Jack Straw”
3. “Bertha”
4. “Passenger”
5. “The Wheel”
6. “Crazy Fingers”
7. “The Music Never Stopped”

Disc Two
1. “Mason’s Children”
2. “Scarlet Begonias”
3. “Fire On The Mountain”
4. “Drums”
5. “Space”

Disc Three
1. “New Potato Caboose”
2. “Playing In The Band”
3. “Jam”
4. “Let It Grow”
5. “Help On The Way”
6. “Slipknot!”
7. “Franklin’s Tower”
8. “Ripple”

Disc Four
Intermission Music by Circles Around The Sun
1. “Space Wheel”
2. “Mountains Of The Moon”
3. “Praying For The Band”
4. “Tripple”
5. “Deal Breaker”
6. “Deadometer”
7. “Borrow From A Friend”
8. “Grimes Surf Story”

July 4th, 2015
Disc Five
1. “Shakedown Street”
2. “Liberty”
3. “Standing On The Moon”
4. “Me And My Uncle”
5. “Tennessee Jed”
6. “Cumberland Blues”
7. “Little Red Rooster”
8. “Friend Of The Devil”
9. “Deal”

Disc Six
1. “Bird Song”
2. “The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion)”
3. “Lost Sailor”
4. “Saint Of Circumstance”
5. “West Of L.A. Fadeaway”

Disc Seven
1. “Foolish Heart”
2. “Drums”
3. “Space”
4. “Stella Blue”
5. “One More Saturday Night”
6. “U.S. Blues”

Disc Eight
Intermission Music by Circle Around The Sun
1. “Hallucinate A Solution”
2. “Ginger Says”
3. “Saturday’s Children”
4. “Eartha”
5. “Split Pea Shell”

July 5th, 2015
Disc Nine
1. “China Cat Sunflower”
2. “I Know You Rider”
3. “Estimated Prophet”
4. “Built To Last”
5. “Samson and Delilah”
6. “Mountains On The Moon”
7. “Throwing Stones”

Disc Ten
1. “Truckin'”
2. “Cassidy”
3. “Althea”
4. “Terrapin Station”
5. “Drums”

Disc Eleven
1. “Space”
2. “Unbroken Chain”
3. “Days Between”
4. “Not Fade Away”
5. “Touch Of Grey”
6. “Attics Of My Life”

Disc Twelve
Intermission Music by Circles Around The Sun
1. “Gilbert’s Groove”
2. “Farewell Franklins”
3. “Hat And Cane”
4. “Never Too Late”
5. “Scarlotta’s Magnolias”

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The story of Television, by Richard Lloyd

0
Thirty-eight years ago, TELEVISION released their extraordinary debut, Marquee Moon. Now, RICHARD LLOYD reveals the whole fraught story of an epochal album – a tale of unrelenting tension, disgusting shirts, drunken producers, and the intense power trips of Lloyd’s sparring partner, Tom Verlaine...

Thirty-eight years ago, TELEVISION released their extraordinary debut, Marquee Moon. Now, RICHARD LLOYD reveals the whole fraught story of an epochal album – a tale of unrelenting tension, disgusting shirts, drunken producers, and the intense power trips of Lloyd’s sparring partner, Tom Verlaine… Story: Damien Love. Originally from Uncut’s March 2012 issue (Take 178).

_____________________________

In the fall of 1973, I had just come back to New York City and needed a place to stay.

I was in my early twenties, and had been pretty much leading a vagabond life. I was doing a lot of nightclubbing at Max’s Kansas City, in the back room, where I met a fellow named Terry Ork. Terry had a very large loft in Chinatown and a spare room, so I moved in.

Mostly what I did during the day was play my guitar, with no amplifier. I didn’t want anybody to hear me, until I was good. Terry’s day job was managing a movie memorabilia shop on 13th Street, Cinemabilia. He had this disgruntled assistant, Richard Meyers, who would later become Richard Hell.

One day, Terry said to me, “I know this guy who does what you do.â€

I said, “Huh? What do I do?â€

“You play electric guitar all alone all day. That’s all this guy does.â€

This turned out to be Richard Meyers’ best friend, Tom Miller, soon to become known as Tom Verlaine.

Terry told me Tom was going to be playing audition night at Reno Sweeney’s, and did I want to go. Reno’s was a hang-out for the Broadway set: Liza Minnelli, drag artists, gay wannabe singers. I wasn’t too interested. But Terry was going, and I didn’t have anything else to do. We got a cab up, Richard Hell came in, and we all sat waiting for Tom to arrive.

He came in with his guitar and an old Fender amplifier, and stood there looking irked already, like it was too much trouble to even open the door. Richard and Tom had between them what I can only describe as universal contempt.

Richard ran over and started helping him with his stuff. He said, “You don’t look right.†Tom was wearing what looked like a shirt from 1932: old, yellowing, frayed, almost disgusting. Richard put his fingers into a hole by the shoulder, and tore it. Then he enlarged another hole, so one of Tom’s nipples could be seen. I sat watching them feeling like an anthropologist watching strange animals and their social habits.

Finally, Tom played. Three songs. The second was “Venus De Miloâ€.

Now, Terry worked as assistant to Andy Warhol by night, and wanted to sponsor a band, like Andy had with the Velvets. His idea was to sponsor a band around me. But when I heard Tom playing “Venusâ€, just all rhythm chords, I knew. I leaned over, shouting in Terry’s ear. “Forget my band. Put me and this guy together. You’ll have the band you’ve been looking for.â€

Björk announces new live album

0
Björk has announced details of a new live album. Vulnicura Live is limited to 2,000 copies, which will be split equally between a 2xCD set (released on November 13) and a double-LP picture disc (released on December 4), reports Pitchfork. According to the pre-order on Rough Trade, the "14 track s...

Björk has announced details of a new live album.

Vulnicura Live is limited to 2,000 copies, which will be split equally between a 2xCD set (released on November 13) and a double-LP picture disc (released on December 4), reports Pitchfork.

According to the pre-order on Rough Trade, the “14 track set recorded on her 2015 tour features eight songs from ‘Vulnicura’ plus six from various stages of her career. The album was mixed and put together by Bjork herself with help from Arca and The Haxan Cloak.”

Björk recently announced Vulnicura Strings (Vulnicura: The Acoustic Version), a remake of her 2015 LP that only features strings and her voice.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

David Lynch streams 18-minute experimental track

0
David Lynch is streaming "Night - A Landscape With Factory", an 18-minute collaboration with Marek Zebrowkski. The piece is from Polish Night Music, which was given a limited release in 2008 and is now being made available on double vinyl from November 13, reports Rolling Stone. The album will als...

David Lynch is streaming “Night – A Landscape With Factory“, an 18-minute collaboration with Marek Zebrowkski.

The piece is from Polish Night Music, which was given a limited release in 2008 and is now being made available on double vinyl from November 13, reports Rolling Stone.

The album will also include a download card to access a four-track live album, Live At The Consulate General Of The Republic Of Poland.

Zebrowski and Lynch first worked together on Lynch’s 2006 film, Inland Empire.

Polish Night Music tracklisting:

1. “Night (City Black Street)”
2. “Night (A Landscape With Factory)”
3. “Night (Interiors)”
4. “Night (A Woman On a Dark Street Corner)”

Live At The Consulate General Of The Republic Of Poland tracklisting:

1. “Night (Memories of Machines)”
2. “Night (Unfilled Dreams)”
3. “Night (The Great Electrical Pants Stand Like Cathedrals)”
4. “Night (Snowfalls Through The Black Leafless Trees)”

Meanwhile, Lynch is working on a memoir, Life & Work, due for release in 2017.

“There’s a lot of bullshit out there about me, in books and all over the Internet,” Lynch said in a statement. “I want to get all the right information in one place, so if someone wants to know something, they can find it here. And I wouldn’t do it with anyone other than Kristine; she and I go way back, and she gets it right.”

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Chrissie Hynde – Reckless: My Life

0
The evocative opening chapters of Chrissie Hynde’s Reckless describe an idyllic American childhood in Akron, Ohio and are so well-wrought you think you’ve mistakenly started reading something by Richard Russo or Richard Ford. Things quickly get cloudy, though. By the mid-'60s, Akron’s in a gr...

The evocative opening chapters of Chrissie Hynde’s Reckless describe an idyllic American childhood in Akron, Ohio and are so well-wrought you think you’ve mistakenly started reading something by Richard Russo or Richard Ford. Things quickly get cloudy, though.

By the mid-’60s, Akron’s in a grubby decline that reflects Hynde’s own often messy embrace of rock music (“bands were everything; nothing else matteredâ€), drugs (“we smoked everything and dropped anythingâ€) and indiscriminate sex (“I’d have whoever who’d have meâ€). She’s drawn mostly to bad-ass types, tattooed truckers and bikers, an infatuation with one Cleveland biker gang ending with her naked and beaten on the floor of a deserted house, “covered in a variety-pack of jismâ€.

It was all her fault, she now claims – “You don’t fuck around with people who wear ‘I Heart Rape’ and ‘On Your Knees’ badges†– a controversial opinion, much criticised after a recent Sunday supplement interview. It better suits the book’s narrative, however, for her to be seen less as victim than hardboiled survivor, unbowed by circumstance, the defiant author of her own scattered life.

Things eventually get better for her, but it’s a long march towards The Pretenders. She moves to London (her wide-eyed first impressions are hilarious), writes briefly for NME, drifts in and out of the emerging London punk scene before, finally, finding her dream band.

Curiously, there are less than 100 mostly acrid pages on The Pretenders, whose career was too quickly derailed by chronic drug abuse, heavy drinking, debilitating tours, bitter internal dispute and death. Guitarist James Honeyman-Scott died in June 1982 after a cocaine binge, two days after the sacking of increasingly smacked-out bassist Pete Farndon, who eight months later was found drowned in a bathtub, a needle in his arm.

The writing here is jittery, agitated, rushed, angry, everything perhaps too painful to linger over, including her barely-mentioned marriage to Ray Davies. The book then ends abruptly, 30 years of her life unaccounted for, mentioned only in a brief epilogue, as if none of it mattered enough to write about.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Low – Ones And Sixes

0
Low’s last album, 2013’s The Invisible Way, felt like the completion of a full circle. It marked roughly their 20th anniversary, with Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker complemented by their fourth bassist, Steve Garrington, and saw them veering closer to their formative style than they had in more t...

Low’s last album, 2013’s The Invisible Way, felt like the completion of a full circle. It marked roughly their 20th anniversary, with Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker complemented by their fourth bassist, Steve Garrington, and saw them veering closer to their formative style than they had in more than a decade. With its clear vocals and reverent pace, it recalled the period spanning 1994 debut I Could Live In Hope to 2001’s standout Things We Lost In The Fire. Producer Jeff Tweedy kept the arrangements spare and spiritual, and accentuated the prevailing sense of Midwestern, middle-aged familiarity.

If Low had chosen to live out their career reprising and honing older sounds, like so many of their early ’90s peers do, few would have begrudged them the comfort. It’s hard to imagine it’s been an easy run: not least considering Sparhawk’s breakdown a decade ago, when he imagined himself to be an Antichrist figure straight from the pages of a Don DeLillo novel, but also the weight of inhabiting such diffuse, desolate music for so long.

Sparhawk spoke last year about avoiding his old habit of spoiling anything that sounded beautiful, commenting that the songs he loved most on The Invisible Way and 2011’s C’mon were the “pretty and intimate†ones. He warned, however, that the new material they had been writing was “not prettyâ€.

Recorded with BJ Burton at Justin Vernon’s April Base studios in Wisconsin, Ones And Sixes is as significant a volte-face as Low have made since 2004’s misanthropic rock epic The Great Destroyer into 2007’s brittle, barren Drums And Guns. The spectre of apocalypse has often lingered on the fringes of Low’s music. Their 11th record sounds as if the cataclysm has finally been, leaving a reeling dystopia in its wake. “Gentle†opens with frayed industrial drums and profoundly deep synthetic bass, the effect conjuring an army trudging across a snowy wilderness. You’d imagine Trent Reznor or Tim Hecker to have produced. Similarly, “The Innocents†shudders gravely as Parker intones, “All you innocents better run for it.†Throughout, she and Sparhawk seem to turn their regrets and sacrifices into warnings for those who can still run.

Confusion reigns: hooked around whip-crack drums, “No Comprende†has Sparhawk malevolently intoning every syllable of a misunderstanding, before building to a grave guitar epic that recalls Grails’ baked-earth doom. Parker exposes the subtly undermining tricks of intimate fights on “Congregationâ€, with its flinty programmed percussion, and on “Spanish Translationâ€, a moment of violent clarity proves worse than ignorance. “All I thought I knew then/Blew out the back of my head/Into the river it bled,†sings Sparhawk, a reminder that, biblically, apocalypse is as much revelation as devastation. The song veers between spacey, distant verses and great lurching choruses; after the honeyed Invisible Way, the structures of Ones And Sixes sometimes feel jarring.

The moments where everything comes together, though, stop the album from becoming too alienating for its own good. “Into You†is a transcendent hymn set to a dripping beat, slumping into each line as Parker describes the comfort and pain of long-term connection. The taut, Spoon-like “What Part Of Me†is a similarly ambiguous love song: “What part of me don’t you know/What part of me don’t you own?†Parker and Sparhawk sing together, either out of wonder or frustration.

The record peaks with the astonishing, penultimate “Landslideâ€, 10 minutes of hard-edged riffs into mournful peace and then a thrilling swathe of crescendos that sound as if Sparhawk is yanking the strings from his guitar. It’s strange to hear the omnipresent darkness in Low’s work made so overt and cinematic, but refreshing, too. After two decades, a band that could easily feel like part of the wallpaper remain hungry to show that you never know what lies beneath.

Q+A
Alan Sparhawk
Why the title?

Ones And Sixes is a step away from zeros and fives. It’s an organised effort to create randomness and/or chaos. Where do you place your precious control to create something that is then out of your control? Once it was there, other references came: one to six was a scale once used to measure someone’s sexual preference, or the success of an internet page. I heard the number of the beast is actually 616, not 666.

What prompted the dystopian electronic textures?
We work in a certain direction for a few records then, when it feels like we have arrived with it or have answered a few questions, we tend to stab off into a different direction. The past few records have been an effort to shut down my ego and just let the songs do the work, but I can’t stand it any more. When I met BJ and heard some of the things he was doing, especially with hip-hop, I knew he was the right person for the task. He wants to push boundaries, and we were ready. Certainly the ongoing war and racial/economic violence present every reason to shout a little louder. Meanwhile, seems like marriage in rock’n’roll has taken some tough hits these past couple years. It’s hard to make a relationship work in any situation, but you have to try. Love still wins.

Is there any significance to the record being released on 9/11?
We didn’t plan it that way, but when we found out,
a little voice inside me whispered “Perfectâ€.
INTERVIEW: LAURA SNAPES

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Listen to Sufjan Stevens’ remix of “Blue Bucket Of Gold”

0
Sufjan Stevens has released a remix of "Blue Bucket Of Gold", from his Carrie & Lowell album. The remix features members of Stevens’ touring band, the remix was recorded while on the road by Tucker Martine in Portland, Oregon as well as at Stevens’ studio in Brooklyn. The rework is an inte...

Sufjan Stevens has released a remix of “Blue Bucket Of Gold“, from his Carrie & Lowell album.

The remix features members of Stevens’ touring band, the remix was recorded while on the road by Tucker Martine in Portland, Oregon as well as at Stevens’ studio in Brooklyn.

The rework is an interpretation of the band’s live version of the song.

Stevens recently performed in the UK at the End Of The Road festival: you can read Uncut’s review of the show by clicking here.

You can buy Carrie & Lowell from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Elton John announces new album, Wonderful Crazy Night

0
Elton John has announced details of a new studio album. Wonderful Crazy Night will be released on February 5, 2016 on Virgin EMI Records. The single, "Looking Up", is available as a free download when you pre-order the album. The album was co-produced by Elton and T-Bone Burnett and recorded at T...

Elton John has announced details of a new studio album.

Wonderful Crazy Night will be released on February 5, 2016 on Virgin EMI Records.

The single, “Looking Up“, is available as a free download when you pre-order the album.

The album was co-produced by Elton and T-Bone Burnett and recorded at The Village in Los Angeles.

It is John and Burnett’s third collaboration after 2010’s The Union and 2013’s The Diving Board.

The album’s 10 songs are co-writes between John and Bernie Taupin. The album features drummer Nigel Olsson and guitarist Davey Johnstone, along with percussionist Ray Cooper, bassist Matt Bissonette, keyboard player Kim Bullard and percussionist John Mahon.

The tracklisting for Wonderful Crazy Night is:

1. Wonderful Crazy Night
2. In The Name Of You
3. Claw Hammer
4. Blue Wonderful
5. I’ve Got 2 Wings
6. A Good Heart
7. Looking Up
8. Guilty Pleasure
9. Tambourine
10. The Open Chord

The album is available as a Super Deluxe Boxset, Deluxe CD, Standard LP and Standard CD.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Joanna Newsom streams new album, Divers

0
Joanna Newsom is streaming her new album, Divers, ahead of its release. The album is due in shops on October 23. You can pre-order the album from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here. The album is being streamed over on NPR's site - you can hear Divers in full by clicking here. Newsom has released a vi...

Joanna Newsom is streaming her new album, Divers, ahead of its release.

The album is due in shops on October 23.

You can pre-order the album from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here.

The album is being streamed over on NPR’s site – you can hear Divers in full by clicking here.

Newsom has released a video for “Sapokanikanâ€, which has been directed by Paul Thomas Anderson.

And also “Leaving The City“.

The album has been produced by Steve Albini and Noah Georgeson and features contributions from Nico Muhly, Ryan Francesconi and Dave Longstreth.

The tracklisting for Divers is:

Anecdotes
Sapokanikan
Leaving the City
Goose Eggs
Waltz of the 101st Lightborne
The Things I Say
Divers
Same Old Man
You Will Not Take My Heart Alive
A Pin-Light Bent
Time, As a Symptom

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Ask Father John Misty

0
You might know him as Father John Misty or the Fleet Foxes' former drummer, but Josh Tillman is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With... feature. So is there anything you'd like us to ask him? Singing an Everly Brothers song on stage with Florence Welch at C...

You might know him as Father John Misty or the Fleet Foxes’ former drummer, but Josh Tillman is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’d like us to ask him?

Singing an Everly Brothers song on stage with Florence Welch at Coachella: how did that come about?
What are his enduring memories of being a member of the Fleet Foxes?
How did he come to meet Marilyn Manson at the Chateau Marmont?

Send up your questions by noon, Thursday, October 29 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

The best questions, and Josh’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine.

Please include your name and location with your question.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch Blur’s trailer for their new documentary

0
Blur have announced details of a new documentary film, New World Towers. The film will be released on December 2 at selected Picturehouse, Odeon, Cineworld and Vue cinemas at cities around the UK including London, Manchester, Birmingham, Liverpool and Edinburgh. An international release is also pl...

Blur have announced details of a new documentary film, New World Towers.

The film will be released on December 2 at selected Picturehouse, Odeon, Cineworld and Vue cinemas at cities around the UK including London, Manchester, Birmingham, Liverpool and Edinburgh.

An international release is also planned, with more dates to follow shortly.

The film follows the making of their The Magic Whip album, cutting documentary footage with the band’s concerts in Hyde Park and Hong Kong.

You can watch the trailer below.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Joni Mitchell: progress update

0
Joni Mitchell is "making good progress", according to July Collins. Rolling Stone reports that Collins posted the update on her Facebook page: "I have just heard from a close mutual friend that Joni is walking, talking, painting some, doing much rehab every day, and making good progress--I have a...

Joni Mitchell is “making good progress”, according to July Collins.

Rolling Stone reports that Collins posted the update on her Facebook page:

“I have just heard from a close mutual friend that Joni is walking, talking, painting some, doing much rehab every day, and making good progress–I have another friend who went through something similar-it does take a long time, three years for my friend, who has realy totaly recovered professionally and personally. I will try my best to see our songbird when I am in LA in the coming weeks.”

Previously, People magazine claimed to have obtained court papers filed in Los Angles on July 2 which reveal that Mitchell “is expected to make a full recovery” after suffering a brain aneurysm in late March.

In the documents, Mitchell’s lawyer Rebecca J. Thyne wrote that she had visited Mitchell at her home in California on June 26.

“When I arrived she was seated at her kitchen table feeding herself lunch,” Thyne wrote.

“She also told me that she receives excellent care from caregivers round-the-clock,” Thyne continued. “It was clear that she was happy to be home and that she has made remarkable progress. She has physical therapy each day and is expected to make a full recovery.”

The last official statement regards Mitchell’s health came on June 28, 2015 through the artist’s official website: “Joni is speaking, and she’s speaking well. She is not walking yet, but she will be in the near future as she is undergoing daily therapies. She is resting comfortably in her own home and she’s getting better each day. A full recovery is expected.â€

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.