Home Blog Page 364

Watch 10 deep cuts from Neil Young’s latest tour

0
This time last year, I was in the middle of writing our cover story on Neil Young’s busy 2014. As I remember, my main problem was trying to work out how to fit everything in: two albums, solo and Crazy Horse tours, Pono, a new band, a new memoir... Compared to such a dizzying amount of activity, ...

This time last year, I was in the middle of writing our cover story on Neil Young’s busy 2014. As I remember, my main problem was trying to work out how to fit everything in: two albums, solo and Crazy Horse tours, Pono, a new band, a new memoir…

Compared to such a dizzying amount of activity, until recently 2015 didn’t seem to be shaping up to be quite such an eventful year for Neil. Typically, however, the last month or so reminded us that Neil is capable of swift and dramatic twists, with his Rebel Content tour providing a series of wild and upredictable moments.

It seems barely a show has gone by where Young hasn’t pulled some stunning rarity from the archives – “Time Fades Away” for the first time in 12 years, “Here We Are In The Years” for the first time since 1976, “Alabama” for the second time since 1973, “Western Hero” for only the third time ever, “Vampire Blues” for the first time since March 1974…

In my experience, once Neil assembles a set list for a particular tour, he pretty much sticks to it. Yet on the Rebel Content tour the setlists have felt more digressive, as he drops in an “L.A.” or “Hippie Dream” seemingly out of the blue. I suspect the key to that might be Promise Of The Real themselves; or at least, Lukas and Micah Nelson.

When I spoke to Lukas Nelson for my cover story last year, he outlined the nature of his and his brother’s relationship with Neil: “I guess I’ve known him for most of my life. Let’s see, Farm Aid started in 1985, and Dad did the first Farm Aid and Neil was a part of it, and so I think I met Neil… I was born in ’88, and I’ve been to most Farm Aids since then, I’ve only missed a couple. So I’ve known Neil for a long time. My whole life, really.”

Presumably, the closeness of that relationship – “He’s always just been Uncle Neil,” Nelson told me – allows for a different vibe between Neil and his young cohorts. That Promise Of The Real have none of the extensive studio history as, say, Crazy Horse presumably encourages license to wander through the catalogue without restrictions. Neil rarely takes a backing band in a new stylistic direction, preferring instead to change bands in order to change styles. Yet during their 29 shows with Neil, Promise Of The Real have played Crazy Horse songs, Stray Gators songs, Buffalo Springfield songs…

As ever, we can speculate wildly about what all this means or where it’s going. To add to the fun, of course, came last week’s news that Neil’s next archive album would be the Bluenote Cafe tour from 1988… Where does that fit into all this, you might wonder…

Anyway, just below you’ll find 10 great clips of Neil and Promise Of The Real playing some of these rarities from the Rebel Content tour. At this point, I should thank Mark Golley, our friendly Neil fan, for his help pulling these together.

Meanwhile, if you’ve not already got a copy of the current issue of Uncut – Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt and more – it’s still in the shops or available to buy digitally by clicking here. We’ll be back this time next week to unveil our December 2015 issue…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Hippie Dream
(Pinnacle Bank Arena, Lincoln, Nebraska; July 11)

Bad Fog of Loneliness
(Susquehanna Bank Center, Camden, New Jersey; July 16)

Looking For A Love
(Champlain Valley Exposition, Essex Junction, Vermont; July 19)

Alabama
(FirstMerit Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island, Chicago, Illinois; September 19)

Western Hero
(FirstMerit Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island, Chicago, Illinois; September 19)

Here We Are In The Years
(WaMu Theater, Seattle, Washington; October 4)

Time Fades Away
(Santa Barbara Bowl, Santa Barbara, California; October 10)

L.A.
(The Forum, Inglewood, California; October 14)

Burned
(The Forum, Inglewood, California; October 14)

Vampire Blues
(The Forum, Inglewood, California; October 14)

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.

Link Wray – 3-Track Shack

0
When Steve Verroca encountered Link Wray playing guitar at a club in Virginia towards the end of the 1960s he was thrilled and shocked. The place was full of drunken sailors and hookers, none of whom were really listening to Wray, who was stationed on a small stage beside the bar with his brother Do...

When Steve Verroca encountered Link Wray playing guitar at a club in Virginia towards the end of the 1960s he was thrilled and shocked. The place was full of drunken sailors and hookers, none of whom were really listening to Wray, who was stationed on a small stage beside the bar with his brother Doug on drums, and Billy Hodges on keyboards and bass.

“It was smoky and loud,” says Verroca, “and Link was up there, pretty much like a human jukebox, nobody was playing any attention. I was glad that I was watching the immortal Link Wray play, and very sad that he was playing in a rathole like that.”

But Verroca had a plan, and it would lead to an extraordinary diversion in Wray’s stalled career. It was not, perhaps, as revolutionary as the recordings which made his name, starting with the malign electricity of his 1958 hit, “Rumble”. But there is a case to be made for the albums which emerged from Wray’s collaboration with Verroca. They didn’t exactly invent Americana; the recordings are too wild to be constrained by a generic straightjacket. But in diverting Wray’s energies back to the music which has first inspired him – hard country, hellfire gospel, blues – they showed how rock’n’roll could renew itself by reigniting its primal spirit. You only have to listen to Wray’s two attacks on “In The Pines” to understand that Wray’s shack recordings are the staging post between Lead Belly and Nirvana Unplugged. The fidelity, it’s true, is not high. Wray sings like one-lunged Jagger, and the guitar fizzes like an ultraviolet insect exterminator. It’s punk before punk, delivered with the momentum of a runaway train.

Granted, few people cared at the time. Between 1971-3, when the records were released, rock was still struggling to absorb The Rumble Man’s earlier innovations – power chords and distortion – but viewed from here, the naked beauty of the recordings Wray made at the family farm in Accokeek, Maryland is obvious.

Wray’s initial reluctance about the project was understandable. The music business had moved on since his brief moment of exposure, and as an innovator he had never really been rewarded. Link’s brother Ray took care of the money, leaving Link to take care of the music. Wray was over 40, with no realistic expectation of a return to currency. Whatever market there had been for instrumental rock’n’roll had evaporated. But still, Wray had his pride. If he was going to make another record, more than a decade after his last, he was determined that it should be done properly, in a high-end studio.

Everything changed when Wray showed Verroca his rehearsal space. In retrospect, it has become known as the 3-Track Shack, a reference to the basic Ampex recorder in the corner, but not much effort had been taken to disguise its previous function. It was a chicken coop which had been converted into a rehearsal space, when the inconvenience of hosting a recording studio in the basement of the main house became too great. The shack was not designed with comfort in mind, and little thought had been given to acoustics. The roof leaked, playing havoc with the tuning of the piano.

In the sleeve notes to this reissue, Wray gives his views on the shack in a 1971 interview. “We just sit down, start the tape and play what we want. If it’s good it’s good, and if it’s bad it’s bad. There’s no electronics, just the real nitty gritty, honest music. When I’d be working in the studios in New York it’d be like working in a cathedral. You get these studios with 16 tracks and 24 tracks and you get drunk with power. You start adding more and more to what you have and in the end it’s becoming mechanical music, head music, all planned out. The feeling comes first. Feeling is the secret, not some jumped up sound.”

In that statement, Wray was both ahead of and behind the times. But the focus on inspiration and spontaneity produced great results. Verroca did a deal for five albums. In the end, only three emerged. The first, Link Wray, is an untamed, feral country rock album, with strung-out Stones-style ballads (“Take Me Home Jesus”), violent story songs (“Fallin’ Rain”), concluding with a swampy take on Willie Dixon’s “Tail Dragger”.

The second album, Mordicai Jones, is a more polished affair, with Gene Johnson taking vocal duties after Bobby Howard took fright in front of the microphone. Johnson is a better singer than Wray, technically, and there’s nothing wrong with the songs (“The Coca Cola Sign Blinds My Eyes” is especially fine), but there is a sense that as Verroca and Wray got used to their limitations the fire dimmed slightly. The third album, Beans And Fatback, was sometimes dismissed by Wray, but it matches the spirit of the first album, and adds muscle. As well as those assaults on “In The Pines” (one labelled as “Georgia Pines”), there’s the swaggering beat of “I’m So Glad, I’m Proud” which succeeds, even though Wray appears to be singing on a different continent to his swaggering guitar. And “Hobo Man” is a gorgeous, strung-out ballad in the Stones gospel mode which shows that Wray’s guitar could evince subtlety as well as raw power.

Ultimately, Wray was right. In 1971, no-one was crying out for a new Link Wray album. The records didn’t sell and Wray took his new direction west, collaborating with Jerry Garcia and others on the equally unsuccessful Be What You Want To. In truth, some of the magic was lost when Wray started to move in more elevated circumstances. The shack recordings were all about making do and making it up, and working within constraints helped focus Wray’s creativity. Verroca likes to joke that “the shack was so small, you had to go outside to change your mind.” At their best, these sessions capture a man rediscovering that he was right all along.

Q&A
Producer Steve Verroca on working with Link Wray
How did you persuade Link to work with you?

At the beginning, Link didn’t like me. Link was like, ‘What the fuck do you want?’ He was the guy who invented rock’n’roll, and he was broke. He couldn’t even feed his family. So he was very sceptical. He barely shook my hand, he didn’t want to know about me. He said: “You want to produce an album? Who the hell wants an album of Link Wray’s music any more?” This was the ’60s, man, it was The Beatles, the Stones and all that stuff. And I said, “Well, Link, these are the people who idolise you.” He didn’t believe it – he thought I was just bullshitting him. I went back to New York and I began getting all these phone calls from Link, he was so excited. We wrote most of the material on the Polydor album, the Indian head album (Link Wray) on the phone. Me and him together at all kinds of hours. He’d call me at three in the morning.

Why did you decide to record in the shack?
To me, it looked like that was his home. He was awesome in there. So I thought, how am I going to convince him that we’re going to record here, in this chicken coop? He didn’t care for the idea at all. So we agreed that we would do a couple of songs, and if they were not master quality, I would book a studio in New York. We did a couple of songs, and Link and his brother Doug, and a couple of other guys trooped over, and Link said, “Man, this is the best stuff I’ve ever done. Let’s do it here.”

What was he like to work with?
There was nothing very conventional about Link. He made his own equipment. He bought cheap Japanese guitars from the loan shop and he worked on them. The first, and the only, amp we used, he made out of an old radio. He got some tubes and he built a wood box, and he put some industrial cotton in the box and a 10-inch speaker, and it sounded incredible. There was no buttons, no high, no low, no bass, no treble, just one way: boom! The sound was so huge that it was impossible to record. The amp, the Link Wray sound, leaked into the drum track, it leaked into the piano track. So we decided to put the amp outside in the yard. The only way we could do that was to mic it through the window and it gave us kind of a special sound. We were trying different things. The piano was all rusted, because the shack in winter leaked. We had all blankets all over the place and we miked the piano under the blankets and we started playing, and then Link just dropped his guitar, and said ‘Wait a minute, Steve, something is wrong with this sound, it’s horrible!’ He was right. Something was very wrong. What the problem was – the piano was untunable. You could not tune the piano. We had to tune to the piano, so we all were out of tune! That’s how we got that sound. Then other problems came up. Like, the chickens would fly into the coop, through the window. One of the chickens hit me, boom, right in my face. So Fred, Link’s dad, put a chicken wire on the window.

Is it true the album was supposed to be on The Beatles’ label Apple?
We took the tapes to New York to transfer them to eight-track. My wife – now my ex wife – Yvonne, worked for Allen Klein who managed The Beatles and the Stones. One day she went to work and she had forgotten the keys to the apartment so Link and I got a cab to her office to drop off the keys, and by the elevator in the lobby, there was John Lennon. My wife was there with [Lennon’s girlfriend] May Pang, who knew me very well. And she goes: “Hi Steve, Hi Link”, and John Lennon turns around, sees Link, and goes “Link Wray! Man, I love ya!” He hugged him and gave him a big kiss on the cheek. They spent an hour together talking. Then he asked Link, “What you doing in New York, do you live here?” Link says, “No, I’m here finishing my album.” John Lennon was so excited you wouldn’t believe, and he wanted Apple to put out the album, except they could not guarantee me a release within the year. He sent Sid Bernstein – he’s the guy who put The Beatles on their concert tour – to the shack and he wanted John and Link to do a jam together. They wanted to tape it, and they wanted to film it, working at the shack together. But there were problems.
INTERVIEW: ALASTAIR McKAY

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.

Richard Hawley – Hollow Meadows

0
The album title, another location in Richard Hawley’s ongoing emotional roadmap to the soul of Sheffield, refers to an establishment out on the edge of the Peak District which has housed the variously afflicted through the years – a care-home where the rich would dump their defective offspring, ...

The album title, another location in Richard Hawley’s ongoing emotional roadmap to the soul of Sheffield, refers to an establishment out on the edge of the Peak District which has housed the variously afflicted through the years – a care-home where the rich would dump their defective offspring, a borstal for naughty boys, a hospital for shell-shocked soldiers, a hospice for the mentally troubled. It’s a place where things were hidden away, a veil concealing problematic issues that would otherwise disturb the seeming surface calm of family and society.

An odd choice then, perhaps, for an album that finds Hawley delving deeper beneath his own still waters to confront the kinds of nagging anxieties that only increase the older one gets. It’s almost as if he’s opted to uncover the hidden secrets of his own Hollow Meadows, shine a light on troubling issues through the illuminating medium of music. Like its inmates, Hawley was stricken down, forced into solitude and inactivity: and when you’ve spent long, painful months laid out recovering from a slipped disc, unable to move, with just the birds visible through your window for company, the mind does tend to turn in upon itself, and reflection prompt a deeper understanding of your place within the world – which is the general, albeit loose, theme of Hollow Meadows.

At first, it sounds as if Hawley’s retreating from the folksy psychedelia of Standing At The Sky’s Edge, into the smooth, retro songcraft of his earlier albums: sultry vibrato guitar heralds “I Still Want You”, a lilting waltz with Mellotron and strings, in which he professes his enduring devotion “until the sun grows cold”. And the ballad croon of “Serenade Of Blue” draws on similarly cosmic portents to express a reluctant emotional fissure, the gently drifting descent of its melody like a leaf fluttering to earth. But elsewhere, psychedelic touches percolate subtly through the songs, fraying their edges with the sympathetic string drones of “Nothing Like A Friend”, the shimmering guitar and organ textures of “Welcome The Sun”, and the psych-folk swirl that closes “Sometimes I Feel”, stippled with children’s voices from just outside Hawley’s garden-shed studio, headily redolent of the back-porch hippie bucolicism that spurred on Traffic.

“Sometimes I Feel” is the fulcrum around which the whole album pivots, a litany of “all these things I know to be true” laid over what sounds like harpsichord arpeggios. It’s Hawley’s most reflective lyric, one streaked with the kind of almost Zen acceptance that comes from lonely recuperation. “Sometimes, if you really don’t want to go the way the world is,” he sings, “you just can’t stop it.” And there’s much of the world he doesn’t go along with, not least the screen obsession derided in “The World Looks Down”, whose punning title is further developed in a series of rhetorical questions: “How did we ever dream at night, before the screen took hold?/And where’s the wisdom in our time that makes our children old?” His own children’s ageing is most painfully confronted in the concluding “What Love Means”, written in the immediate anguished aftermath (“did we pass the test?”) of his daughter’s leaving home: the paradox being, of course, that there’s ultimately no coherent answer to what love means.

Sung to solo guitar accompaniment, it’s one of several tracks reflecting the growing influence of folk music upon Hawley’s art. His neighbour, omni-talented guitar virtuoso Martin Simpson, layers nimble banjo arpeggios over slide resonator guitar on “Long Time Down”, one of a brace of tracks considering the impact of cycling elemental forces on our fragile grasp upon endurance; and “Heart Of Oak” is a fulsome tribute to his friend and mentor Norma Waterson. Ironically, it’s the most out-and-out rocker on the entire album, its trenchant, chugging riff striated with distorted guitar hooks and lead lines; but its message is for the ages: “You’re precious to me, like Blake’s poetry/I wish you well, old heart of oak”.

As for Hawley himself, his own situation is perhaps best summarised in
“Welcome The Sun”, where the admonishment to escape the shadows and face the light again is surely directed at his own recuperating self. As he notes, “You owe your allegiance to the fealty of your needs”.

Q&A
Richard Hawley
The album had its genesis in your enforced recuperation…

I slipped a disc in my back, compounding what happened a year before, when I broke my leg while on tour. An unlucky series of events! I ended up just lying on my back for four or five months, and when you’re in that state it’s easy to get negative, so I tried to stay positive. I started writing songs, and as a result, without wanting to over-egg the pudding, your mind goes to deeper places.

There’s a very philosophical cast to “Sometimes I Feel”.
That’s my favourite on the record. It just seemed to appear out of nowhere. It strikes me that we pay so much attention to our outer appearance and well-being, but very little attention to our inner well-being – and a lot of this record is about that. Because I couldn’t move about, it made me spring-clean the way I thought: because what drives us as people is our thoughts, and without wanting to sound like some fucking hippy, it’s a matter of getting that balance between your inner being and the outside world. It can cause a lot of shit if you don’t get that right. And as you get older, you need a bit more maintenance with these things.

Is it Mellotron or strings on “I Still Want You”?
It’s both: a Mellotron, with the awesome Nancy Kerr playing two tracks of viola with it, to add the bowing touch. The Mellotron’s a lovely sound, it has a unique sound all its own, nothing really like strings, but Nancy put emotion back into the part. Though I’m not sure she’s that pleased with what I did to her viola part on “The World Looks Down”: I played it from an iPhone at the bottom of a big metal bin, and re-recorded it from the top, because I wanted that sort of Bollywood edge to it. She looked at me as if I’d dropped some acid!
INTERVIEW: ANDY GILL

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.

How much would you pay for Bruce Springsteen’s old house?

0
The house where Bruce Springsteen wrote Born To Run is up for sale. Springsteen lived in the property in Long Branch, New Jersey from 1974 to 1975. Billboard reports that the house was bought by three fans in 2009 with the intention of turning the house into a museum. According to NJ.com, built i...

The house where Bruce Springsteen wrote Born To Run is up for sale.

Springsteen lived in the property in Long Branch, New Jersey from 1974 to 1975.

Billboard reports that the house was bought by three fans in 2009 with the intention of turning the house into a museum.

According to NJ.com, built in 1920, the two-bedroom, single-bath house with a new roof, new wood floors and vinyl siding is now on the market for $299,000. Springsteen reportedly wrote every song on the album, including the title track as well as “Thunder Road”, “Tenth Avenue Freeze-out”, “Jungleland” and “Backstreets” while living there.

A new, expanded edition of Bruce Springsteen: The Ultimate Music Guide is available in shops now; it is also available to buy digitally by clicking here

Meanwhile, Springsteen will release The Ties That Bind: The River Collection, a four-CD/three-DVD package dedicated to his 1980 double album.

The box set features the original single disc album of The River (then called The Ties That Bind) that Springsteen planned to release in 1979.

It also includes 11 previously unreleased outtakes from The River sessions, a two hour Springsteen and the E Street Band concert shot in Tempe, Arizona on November 5, 1980 and a new hour long documentary shot by his long-term collaborator Thom Zimny featuring unseen footage and photographs.

The entire package is available in a 10″ x 12″ box with a hardcover 148-page coffee table book. Other images include pages from Springsteen’s notebooks, single covers, and photos from the original album package.

The Ties That Bind: The River Collection will be released on December 4.

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.

Grateful Dead’s Phil Lesh diagnosed with bladder cancer

0
Phil Lesh, bassist with the Grateful Dead, has revealed he has bladder cancer. Explaining the cancellation of two shows by his Phil & Friends project, Lesh wrote on Facebook, "I am sorry to let you know that I will need to cancel the October 24th and 25th Phil & Friends shows with Chris Rob...

Phil Lesh, bassist with the Grateful Dead, has revealed he has bladder cancer.

Explaining the cancellation of two shows by his Phil & Friends project, Lesh wrote on Facebook, “I am sorry to let you know that I will need to cancel the October 24th and 25th Phil & Friends shows with Chris Robinson.

“I was diagnosed with bladder cancer in early October, and have spent the last few weeks at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale doing tests and eventually surgery to remove the tumors. I am very fortunate to have the pathology reports show that the tumors are all non aggressive, and that there is no indication that they have spread.

“So thanks to my local doctor Cliff Sewell, and the incredible team at the Mayo Clinic, all is well and I can return to normal activities in two weeks from my surgery. Unfortunately, that means I will have to cancel the PLF shows scheduled for Oct 24/25. We will reschedule these shows as soon as we can, but in the meantime, keep a lookout for a free Grate Room show before I leave for the East Coast shows. I also plan to pop in and jam in the bar before we leave, so I hope to see you there at Terrapin.

Love Will See You Through….

-Phil”

Rolling Stone reports that Lesh’s Phil & Friends had recently cancelled his scheduled appearances at his Terrapin Crossroads restaurant and venue in San Rafael, California due to “unforeseen circumstances.”

Lesh is due to join the other members of Dead & Company, the band formed by members of the Grateful Dead and John Mayer, for their first concert, on October 31 at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

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.

Linda Ronstadt: “It wasn’t until 1980 that I really started to learn how to sing”

0
Linda Ronstadt takes us through the highlights of her back catalogue in the current issue of Uncut, out now. The country-rock chanteuse discusses how she effectively formed the Eagles, why she took left-turns into mariachi and jazz, and how she copes today with Parkinson's disease. "I really was t...

Linda Ronstadt takes us through the highlights of her back catalogue in the current issue of Uncut, out now.

The country-rock chanteuse discusses how she effectively formed the Eagles, why she took left-turns into mariachi and jazz, and how she copes today with Parkinson’s disease.

“I really was terrible in the beginning,” laughs Ronstadt. “I had no idea what I was doing. It wasn’t until about 1980 that I really started to learn how to sing.

“Life got a little bit more isolated then,” she explains, recalling the huge success of albums such as 1974’s Heart Like A Wheel. “It became a little bit more difficult to go to the market and shop because people would say, ‘Sign your autograph’, while I was trying to buy chicken.”

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.

Check out Neil Young’s new website

0
Neil Young has launched a new website GoEarth.org which offers information on earth ecology, banning GMOs, the future of farming, climate change and more with the intention of motivating people toward global conservation. "GoEarth.org is a powerful resource for finding services and organizations de...

Neil Young has launched a new website GoEarth.org which offers information on earth ecology, banning GMOs, the future of farming, climate change and more with the intention of motivating people toward global conservation.

GoEarth.org is a powerful resource for finding services and organizations dedicated to helping you live a healthy, vital and informed life, while participating in Earth’s flourishing sustainability movement,” a statement for the site reads. “[The site] is a reliable portal for information on common sense, innovative and creative solutions to many of the crisis we face. GoEarth.org connects us with some of the most effective organizations, working to conserve the natural world and protect our freedoms.”

Meanwhile, Young continues to dig deep into his archive on the current leg of his Rebel Content tour with Promise Of The Real.

At his show at The Forum, Inglewood, California on October 14, he played Time Fades Away track “L.A.” for the first time since January 1973; and only the song’s 23rd live performance.

The set also included live rarities “Vampire Blues” and “Burned” and a tour debut for “Mansion On The Hill“.

The set list at The Forum, October 14:
1. After The Gold Rush
2. My My, Hey Hey (Out Of The Blue)
3. Helpless
4. Old Man
5. Mother Earth (Natural Anthem)
6. Hold Back The Tears
7. Out On The Weekend
8. From Hank To Hendrix
9. Human Highway
10. Wolf Moon
11. Words
12. L.A.
13. Burned
14. September Song
15. A Rock Star Bucks A Coffee Shop
16. People Want To Hear About Love
17. Big Box
18. Monsanto Years
19. Cowgirl In The Sand
20. Workin’ Man
21. I Won’t Quit
22. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
23. Mansion On The Hill
24. Love And Only Love

25. Vampire Blues

You can find more information about Young’s current tour rarities 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.

Nico and The Marble Index: “She hated the idea of being beautiful”

0
An out-of-tune harmonium, a collection of Wordsworth poems, a soupçon of heroin... and four days to make a masterpiece. Twenty-five years after Nico’s death, arranger John Cale, among others, recalls the fraught creation of The Marble Index. “She hated fashion. She hated the idea of being blond...

An out-of-tune harmonium, a collection of Wordsworth poems, a soupçon of heroin… and four days to make a masterpiece. Twenty-five years after Nico’s death, arranger John Cale, among others, recalls the fraught creation of The Marble Index. “She hated fashion. She hated the idea of being blonde and beautiful. She wanted to do something more substantial…” Words: Allan Jones. Originally published in Uncut’s August 2013 issue (Take 195).

_____________________________________

“There are very few albums that are truly unprecedented,” says John Cale. “But The Marble Index is one of them. It’s unique. No-one had heard anything like it before, which is why some people had a tough time making sense of it. There were no easy reference points. It had nothing in common with anything. It wasn’t folk music, it wasn’t rock and it certainly wasn’t pop. It was something else altogether. It took the listener to a place they’d never been before that was maybe a bit frightening and strange.”

John Cale is talking to Uncut from Los Angeles, where in September 1968 he and Nico had come to record her second solo album, a deal signed with Elektra after the label’s A&R legend, Danny Fields, had arranged an audition for her with Elektra head Jac Holzman. By then both were former members of The Velvet Underground, after separately falling out with Lou Reed.

“I think Nico saw The Marble Index as a chance to be taken seriously, which she craved, and be known for something more than her beauty,” Cale goes on. “She thought that was a flimsy kind of fame. She hated it. That whole scene around The Velvet Underground and Andy Warhol she’d got into, she was really turned off by a lot of it and had walked away from it. She hated fashion. She hated the idea of being blonde and beautiful, and in some ways she hated being a woman, because she figured all her beauty had brought her was grief. The superficiality of it all was something she found an annoyance. She wanted to do something more substantial, her own music.

“She’d done that first solo album, Chelsea Girl, and she’d hated the way it came out. It was very conservatively produced and arranged. She thought it was another example of the superficiality that attached itself to her. She felt used in a way, so there was always an undercurrent of anger in her – ‘Look what the boys are making me do now!’ She had a maternal disdain for the male psyche. She knew she was better than Chelsea Girl and couldn’t understand why that was the kind of album people thought she wanted to make.

“So The Marble Index was an opportunity for her to prove she was a serious artist, not just this kind of blonde bombshell. She’d had a hand in a couple of songs on Chelsea Girl, but where the songs for Marble Index came from I don’t know. That’s a mystery. I knew she’d latched onto Jim Morrison and had started writing poetry, and suddenly she had a harmonium and was writing songs, which is not something that had been encouraged when she was in the VU. Lou wasn’t interested in the band being an instrument for her benefit. His attitude was, ‘The Velvet underground is The Velvet Underground. Don’t mess with it.’ It was one of the reasons she left.

“What these new songs were like, I had no idea. I didn’t even hear them until we were in the studio. She hadn’t even finished writing the album yet. She had this small book with her poetry in and she would sit at the harmonium and work on songs all the time. She didn’t talk about them or what they meant to her. Writing the songs and singing them, that was her responsibility. Explaining them was not her responsibility. So to an extent, I didn’t know quite what I was getting myself into. I just got a call from Danny Fields, who was putting it all together, and then I was on my way to LA.”

Laurie Anderson in conversation with Brian Eno

To London’s glamorous South Bank, then, for a lunchtime treat: Laurie Anderson in conversation with Brian Eno, as part of the London Film Festival’s new LFF Connects series. Ostensibly, the starting point for this encounter is Heart Of The Dog – Anderson’s first film since 1986’s Home Of T...

To London’s glamorous South Bank, then, for a lunchtime treat: Laurie Anderson in conversation with Brian Eno, as part of the London Film Festival’s new LFF Connects series. Ostensibly, the starting point for this encounter is Heart Of The Dog – Anderson’s first film since 1986’s Home Of The Brave – which is in turn complimented by Eno’s own film and TV work. But, really, this is an opportunity to enjoy a lively and digressive back-and-forth between two old friends and collaborators that covers the therapeutic qualities of music on dogs, Russian propaganda art, the Tibetan Book of the Dead and “liquid sound”. Early on, Anderson and Eno agree they both like films that don’t necessarily follow conventional linear structures – preferring what Eno describes as “the ongoing textures of the semi-narrative”. A good description, it transpires, for their musings here today.

The not entirely unexpected upshot is that this hour-long event feels rather like an informal natter between two tuned-in college professors. Anderson has a slight tendency to let her sentences drift off, as if she’s suddenly thought of something slightly more interesting to think about. Eno, meanwhile, holds his line thought more assiduously. They are both endearingly funny. At one point, Eno mentions a recent exhibition of his in Frankfurt that Anderson had visited while the installation’s sound was still in progress. What kind of music was it, she asks. “Ah, typical Brian Eno stuff,” he deadpans.

Anderson and Eno’s collaborative relationship began in the Nineties with Anderson’s Bright Red album. Eno recalls how working on that album altered his production method. Traditionally, mixing an album began with the rhythm section, laying down a landscape on top of which the vocals were placed; fascinated by Anderson’s voice, Eno decided to upend the process and begin with her voice and then build instruments around her; a technique he has continued to this day. Listening back to the songs from that era, meanwhile, Anderson explains she finds them “floaty and open in a way I had forgotten”.

Similarly, Eno – never known for looking back on his former achievements – surprisingly admits to experiencing a “nostalgic glow” around some of the music he made during the 1970s. For instance, he reveals he recently found an envelope of track sheets from his second album, 1974’s Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy). Back then, he was recording on 16-track equipment and he describes his wonder at discovering that his charts accounted for only half that number. Now, he adds, there are 120 tracks available in recording sessions. Perhaps if you wanted to try and tease any threads from their meandering discussion, it might be the way in which these two artists, who first began working in analogue musical environments, have successfully navigated their way through the digital revolution and beyond.

There are revelations, too. Eno explains that he enjoys working on his music while travelling by rail (“Music For Trains?” asks Anderson). We learn, too, that Anderson’s grandmother deployed some next-level millinery skills during her time as a missionary in Japan. There are more serious considerations, of course. These are both artists who enjoy working unmediated on a small level – “If you don’t think there’s a set of rules, it’s all fine,” notes Eno, though that doesn’t factor in his presumably lucrative production duties for U2 and Coldplay. During an audience Q&A, they are asked which current artists they admire. Anderson cites the films of Guy Maddin – particularly his comedy The Saddest Music In The World – while Eno explains he has recently finished David Graeber’s anthropological study, The Utopia Of Rules. He specifically mentions the closing chapter: a study of what Eno describes as the “goth romances” of Game Of Thrones and Dungeons And Dragons. It loops back to a comment Eno made earlier, about how he used to turn the sound down on the TV set and put on a record at random instead; it would often make the experience “more interesting than the programme makers intended”. Nowadays, Eno does not own a television set.

Admittedly, it’s a lot to digest over lunch. But in between the ideasjams, there are jokes. At one point, Eno recounts an incident that occurred when he was living in New York. One day, he walked into a crowded store and, at the top of his voice, asked whether they sold rubbers. “For your pencil?” asks Anderson dryly.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The soundtrack for Heart Of A Dog is released by Nonesuch Records on October 23. You can pre-order it 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.

Faces – 1970-1975: You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything

0
They came together in a marriage of convenience – remaining Small Faces Ronnie Lane, Ian McLagan and Kenney Jones were in need of a frontman, Rod Stewart required a rhythm section to further his nascent solo career and fellow Jeff Beck Group castoff Ron Wood just needed a gig. What the five had in...

They came together in a marriage of convenience – remaining Small Faces Ronnie Lane, Ian McLagan and Kenney Jones were in need of a frontman, Rod Stewart required a rhythm section to further his nascent solo career and fellow Jeff Beck Group castoff Ron Wood just needed a gig. What the five had in common was a love of American R’n’B and a knack for appropriating its tropes with verve and personality. They went on to make but four studio albums, none of them a masterpiece (although two come close), along with a handful of single sides, during their four years as a working unit.

The Faces were barely there after Ooh La La, their 1973 swansong, with Lane going his own way, Stewart making his Atlantic crossing and Woody replacing Mick Taylor in the Stones. The brevity of their existence as a fully loaded entity, the lack of a Sticky Fingers or a Who’s Next in their discography and Stewart’s subsequent career have conspired to deflate the band’s legacy. Largely forgotten is the fact that the Faces’ status as an arena-rock band rivalled that of the Stones, The Who and Led Zeppelin following Stewart’s 1971 breakthrough, Every Picture Tells A Story. It was Rod who got the asses in the seats, but the band as a whole sealed the deal with its antic, boozy brilliance onstage. The records were primarily an advertisement for the tours – Jones admitted as much. But as the new retrospective You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything systematically reveals, there’s more substance here than the Faces’ marginalised present-day critical standing would lead the uninitiated to believe.

Whereas 2004’s Five Guys Walk Into A Bar, assembled by McLagan, functioned as a subjective, at times surprisingly intimate portrait of the band, this five-disc set of newly remastered recordings presents the four albums in order, each tagged with relevant extras, adding a fifth disc of non-LP singles. Organised in this way, the boxset documents the band’s evolution from a tentative recording unit haphazardly honing a distinctive sound into a sure-handed studio band with more on its mind than coming up with the next crowd-pleaser.

The self-produced First Step, recorded during their getting-to-know-you phase and released in early 1970, finds the bandmembers locating their sweet spot – the interplay of Stewart’s rasp, Wood’s evocative slide work and McLagan’s B3 churn. The tasty recipe is most appealingly represented by “Flying”, their very first studio foray; Wood and Lane’s Band-like ballad “Nobody Knows”, sung in unison by Stewart and Lane; and a suitably rustic cover of Dylan’s “The Wicked Messenger”. It also reveals a band in need of some serious editing, as five of the 10 tracks stretch out for five minutes or more. The most intriguing of the five previously unissued bonus tracks are the raucous blues-rocker “Behind The Sun”, cut in LA two months after the album’s release, and a live-at-the-Beeb “Shake, Shudder, Shiver”, their slithering grooves betraying the band’s fondness for Free.

Rod Stewart is on the cover of the current issue of Uncut; talking about the Faces and more; click here for more details

By the time they returned to the studio to cut Long Player, they’d toured extensively, and the two segments of the band had begun to cohere, but at the same time they’d had precious little time to write together, and the album stands as a classic case of the sophomore slump. The inclusion of two extended live performances failed to disguise the paucity of first-rate material. The most revelatory Long Player bonus track is a raw-boned live-in-the-studio run-through of the rockabilly chestnut “Whole Lotta Woman”, which is preceded by a few seconds of raucous banter in a microcosm of the Faces’ freewheeling bonhomie.

Clearly, the band needed help on the other side of the glass, and they got it from Glyn Johns, perhaps the greatest British rock producer, who proceeded to transform them on 1971’s A Nod Is As Good As A Wink… To A Blind Horse and 1973’s Ooh La La into a two-pronged studio unit, balancing the taut though seemingly ramshackle blues’n’boogie of “Stay With Me”, “That’s All You Need” and “Borstal Boys” with Lane’s poignant, folk-infused “Debris”, “Glad And Sorry” and “Ooh La La”, which collectively comprise the gold standard of the band’s recordings. Solid rehearsal takes of “Borstal Boys”, “Silicone Grown” and “Glad And Sorry”, along with the Johns-produced single sides “Skewiff (Mend The Fuse)” and “Dishevelment Blues” on the Stray Singles disc provide a satisfying complement to the latter LP. All nine of the collected singles are on Five Guys Walk Into A Bar, but it’s useful to have them in one place.

Between the orderly new overview, with its 15 previously unissued tracks, and McLagan’s engagingly hodgepodge insider’s portrait, we now have as complete a picture as we’re likely to get. Barring the miraculous discovery of a live recording from the band’s triumphant 1972 arena tour, or at least a long-overdue set dedicated to the BBC Sessions, the Faces’ peak moments are consigned to the dustbin of memory. In the case of this underrated, misunderstood band, you had to be there.

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.

Hüsker Dü to reform..?

0
Hüsker Dü have launched their first official website, prompting speculation that the band are about to reform. The Minneapolis Star Tribune reports that this is the first new Hüsker Dü activity the three band members have agreed to since Warner Bros. issued the 1994 post-breakup album "The Livi...

Hüsker Dü have launched their first official website, prompting speculation that the band are about to reform.

The Minneapolis Star Tribune reports that this is the first new Hüsker Dü activity the three band members have agreed to since Warner Bros. issued the 1994 post-breakup album “The Living End“.

The Tribune story notes the band have recruited Dennis Pelowski, Minneapolis-based manager of the Meat Puppets, to sort out their business affairs.

Pelowski and the Puppets already have experience dealing with SST Records, the label run by Black Flag guitarist Greg Ginn, which issued five of Hüsker Dü’s earliest albums.

Due to a number of factors – contractual and personal – Hüsker Dü have never enjoyed an active afterlife of reissues and anthology releases. The website launch – and a reported Facebook page – can be seen as a considerable step forward for the band.

Speaking Uncut in May 2014, Bob Mould said, “Over the past year and a half, the three of us have had conversations. Things are moving forward. We’re all on the same page as far as doing stuff.”

When asked whether the Hüsker Dü records that came out on SST would be re-released, Mould revealed, “There’s been back and forth between SST and the Hüsker Dü estate, trying to figure out what’s going on. There’s been agreements and some things still up in the air. There’s non-disclosure, so I can’t get into it too deeply, but there’s been dialogue and I’m optimistic.”

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.

Bruce Springsteen announces extensive The River box set

0
Bruce Springsteen will release The Ties That Bind: The River Collection, a four-CD/three-DVD package dedicated to his 1980 double album. Rolling Stone reports that among many component parts the box set features the original single disc album of The River (then called The Ties That Bind) that Sprin...

Bruce Springsteen will release The Ties That Bind: The River Collection, a four-CD/three-DVD package dedicated to his 1980 double album.

Rolling Stone reports that among many component parts the box set features the original single disc album of The River (then called The Ties That Bind) that Springsteen planned to release in 1979.

It also includes 11 previously unreleased outtakes from The River sessions, a two hour Springsteen and the E Street Band concert shot in Tempe, Arizona on November 5, 1980 and a new hour long documentary shot by his long-term collaborator Thom Zimny featuring unseen footage and photographs.

The entire package is available in a 10″ x 12″ box with a hardcover 148-page coffee table book. Other images include pages from Springsteen’s notebooks, single covers, and photos from the original album package.

Springsteen shared the audio for “Meet Me In The City“. Listen to it below.

A new, expanded edition of Bruce Springsteen: The Ultimate Music Guide is available in shops now; it is also available to buy digitally by clicking here

The tracklisting for The Ties That Bind: The River Collection is:

CD 1
The River – Record One
1. “The Ties That Bind”
2. “Sherry Darling”
3. “Jackson Cage”
4. “Two Hearts”
5. “Independence Day”
6. “Hungry Heart”
7. “Out In The Street”
8. “Crush On You”
9. “You Can Look (But You Better Not Touch)”
10. “I Wanna Marry You”
11. “The River”

CD 2
The River – Record Two
1. “Point Blank”
2. “Cadillac Ranch”
3. “I’m A Rocker”
4. “Fade Away”
5. “Stolen Car”
6. “Ramrod”
7. “The Price You Pay”
8. “Drive All Night”
9. “Wreck On The Highway”

CD 3
The River: Single Album
1. “The Ties That Bind”
2. “Cindy”
3. “Hungry Heart”
4. “Stolen Car” (Vs. 1)
5. “Be True”
6. “The River”
7. “You Can Look (But You Better Not Touch)” (Vs. 1)
8. “The Price You Pay”
9. “I Wanna Marry You”
10. “Loose End”

CD 4
The River: Outtakes
Record One
1. “Meet Me in the City”
2. “The Man Who Got Away”
3. “Little White Lies”
4. “The Time That Never Was”
5. “Night Fire”
6. “Whitetown”
7. “Chain Lightning”
8. “Party Lights”
9. “Paradise By The “C””
10. “Stray Bullet”
11. “Mr. Outside”

Record Two
12. “Roulette”
13. “Restless Nights”
14. “Where The Bands Are”
15. “Dollhouse”
16. “Living On The Edge Of The World”
17. “Take ’em As They Come”
18. “Ricky Wants A Man Of Her Own”
19. “I Wanna Be With You”
20. “Mary Lou”
21. “Held Up Without a Gun”
22. “From Small Things (Big Things One Day Come)”

DVD 1
The Ties That Bind (Documentary)

DVD 2
The River Tour, Tempe 1980
Concert – Part 1

1. “Born to Run”
2. “Prove It All Night”
3. “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out”
4. “Jackson Cage”
5. “Two Hearts”
6. “The Promised Land”
7. “Out in the Street”
8. “The River”
9. “Badlands”
10. “Thunder Road”
11. “No Money Down”
12. “Cadillac Ranch”
13. “Hungry Heart”
14. “Fire”
15. “Sherry Darling”
16. “I Wanna Marry You”
17. “Crush on You”
18. “Ramrod”
19. “You Can Look (But You Better Not Touch)”

DVD 3
The River Tour, Tempe 1980
Concert – Part 2

1. “Drive All Night”
2. “Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)”
3. “I’m A Rocker”
4. “Jungleland”
5. “Detroit Medley”
6. “Where The Bands Are (Credits)”

BONUS: The River Tour Rehearsals
– Ramrod
– Cadillac Ranch
– Fire
– Crush On You
– Sherry Darling

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 the trailer for Bill Murray’s Christmas special!

0
Just a short blog today - we're in the midst of press deadlines - but in case you've not yet seen it, here's the trailer for Bill Murray's Christmas special. According to Netflix, "This winter, Bill Murray brings an extra-special dose of holiday cheer to Netflix with the premiere of an all-star mus...

Just a short blog today – we’re in the midst of press deadlines – but in case you’ve not yet seen it, here’s the trailer for Bill Murray‘s Christmas special.

According to Netflix, “This winter, Bill Murray brings an extra-special dose of holiday cheer to Netflix with the premiere of an all-star musically-driven holiday special, A Very Murray Christmas. Set inside New York City’s iconic Carlyle hotel, A Very Murray Christmas opens with Murray preparing to host a live, international holiday broadcast. After a blizzard shuts down the production, he makes the best of the situation by singing and celebrating with friends, hotel employees and anyone else who drops by.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rf_dgbBK25o

What the press release fails to mention is that A Very Murray Christmas is directed by Sofia Coppola, marking her first collaboration with Murray since Lost In Translation.

There’s also the small matter of Murray’s co-stars. It seems he’s run riot through his address book and rounded up George Clooney, Jason Schwartzman, Jenny Lewis, Amy Poehler, Michael Cera and many more…

It debuts – of course – in December.

Meanwhile, in similarly festive Murray news, you might be interested in this for your Christmas stocking. Cook Your Own Food is a scratch and sniff book, based around scenes from Murray’s most celebrated films – Lost In Translation, The Life Aquatic, Caddyshack, Groundhog Day and so on.

According to the publisher’s website, “Feel closer to the greatest man alive! Delve into his scenes, drink with him, laugh with him and smell as he smells.

“We’ve brought together some amazing artists to re-interpret some classic Bill Murray films. Focusing on his culinary habits.

“Scratch the smelly pads at the top right and enter the world of Bill Murray”.

You can buy it online by clicking here.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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.

Patti Smith reunited with stolen items after 36 years

0
Patti Smith has been reunited with a number of stolen possessions, 38 years after they were taken from her tour truck. Citing a story that first ran in The Chicago Tribune, The Guardian reports that Smith was reading from her new memoir M Train at Dominican University in Illinois when she was appro...

Patti Smith has been reunited with a number of stolen possessions, 38 years after they were taken from her tour truck.

Citing a story that first ran in The Chicago Tribune, The Guardian reports that Smith was reading from her new memoir M Train at Dominican University in Illinois when she was approached by a woman named Doreen Bender.

“A woman stood up and told Patti that she had a bag of clothes that belonged to her 40 years ago and would like to return it. Smith (and everybody) looked totally confused, but asked the person to come up to the stage and hand her the bag. Patti looked inside and just froze,” said one eye witness, quoted by The Guardian.

The missing items also included a shirt Smith wore on Rolling Stone’s 1978 cover, a Keith Richards t-shirt and a piece of cloth given to the singer from her late brother and road manager Tom Smith, who died in 1994. Bender said an unnamed male friend, who worked for U-Haul at the time, gave her and her roommate Smith’s missing possessions decades ago, which they divided between them.

“I just thought, ‘Oh my God, these are her clothes and they still have sweat on them,’” Bender told the Tribune. She added: “The feeling of making your hero happy, it was a moment. It was the highlight of my life.”

You can buy M Train 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.

The Grateful Dead release tracklisting for Fare Thee Well box sets

0
The Grateful Dead have announced details of their forthcoming box sets documenting the band's final concerts in Chicago earlier this year. 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 12-CD/Blu-ray set and a...

The Grateful Dead have announced details of their forthcoming box sets documenting the band’s final concerts in Chicago earlier this year.

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 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.

Both sets will contain full audio and high-definition video from the band’s three shows at Soldier’s Field in Chicago on July 3, 4 and 5.

The sets will also include a bonus disc featuring behind-the-scenes footage directed by Bill Kreutzmann’s son, Jason.

Meanwhile, 3-CD/2 Blu-ray, 3/CD-DVD, 2 Blu-Ray or 2-DVD sets will be released in shops and digitally which include 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 from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here.

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 Rolling Stones announce next archival release…

0
The Rolling Stones have announced details of their next release in their ongoing From The Vault series, which showcases previously unreleased live shows. The band will release Live At The Tokyo Dome 1990 on October 30 on iTunes, DVD, Blu-ray, vinyl album and as a DVD + CD set. The show was one of ...

The Rolling Stones have announced details of their next release in their ongoing From The Vault series, which showcases previously unreleased live shows.

The band will release Live At The Tokyo Dome 1990 on October 30 on iTunes, DVD, Blu-ray, vinyl album and as a DVD + CD set.

The show was one of ten that the Stones played between February 14 and 27 during the Steel Wheels World Tour.

These were the first concerts the Rolling Stones ever performed in Japan. The footage has been restored and the sound newly mixed by Bob Clearmountain.

The tracklisting is:
Intro: Continental Drift
Start Me Up
Bitch
Sad Sad Sad
The Harlem Shuffle
Tumbling Dice
Miss You
Ruby Tuesdat
Almost Hear You Sigh
Rock And A Hard Place
Mixed Emotions
Honky Tonk Women
Midnight Rambler
You Can’t Always Get What You Want
Can’t Be Seen
Happy
Paint It Black
20,000 Light Years From Home
Sympathy For The Devil
Gimme Shelter
It’s Only Rock ’n’ Roll
Brown Sugar
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction
Jumpin’ Jack Flash

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.

Good Night And Good Riddance: How Thirty Five Years Of John Peel Helped To Shape Modern Britain

0
“In case you’re thinking to yourselves, ‘Who is that twerp?’ I’m the bloke who comes on your radio late at night and plays you records by lots of sulky Belgians.” This was John Peel, introducing Top Of The Pops in 1982, wryly acknowledging the image people had of him even then as a curat...

“In case you’re thinking to yourselves, ‘Who is that twerp?’ I’m the bloke who comes on your radio late at night and plays you records by lots of sulky Belgians.” This was John Peel, introducing Top Of The Pops in 1982, wryly acknowledging the image people had of him even then as a curator of the obscure, champion of the unlistenable, the more unpopular the better.

It was an opinion of Peel shared by successive Radio One controllers, who often shunted him around the schedules like they were looking for somewhere to hide him.

Peel may have taken occasional refuge in the recondite and frankly baffling, but as David Cavanagh reminds us time and again in Good Night And Good Riddance, the charts across the four decades of his broadcasting career would have been very different without his crucial early support of, randomly, Marc Bolan, David Bowie, Rod Stewart, Bob Marley, The Ramones, The Sex Pistols, The Jam, Joy Division, The Fall, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Frankie Goes To Hollywood, The Smiths, Happy Mondays, Nirvana, Pulp, PJ Harvey, Underworld, The Orb, The White Stripes.

It wasn’t all Ivor Cutler and Scraping Foetus Off The Wheel.

Whatever life he had outside the radio studio is barely mentioned. This is a biography of Peel as broadcaster. It’s told via a chronological history of 265 of the shows he presented between 1967 and 2003 and could have been bitty, a story told piecemeal, in stuttering sequence.

It works brilliantly though, each entry allowing Cavanagh to chart Peel’s mutating enthusiasms, prejudices, blow-ups and face-offs with his own listeners (the divisive Punk Specials of December 1976 and August 1977, for instance). Cavanagh is also marvellously alert to Peel’s itinerant moods and hardening attitudes, from the whimsical presenter of The Perfumed Garden and Night Ride to the old grump in a baggy jumper presenting the BBC’s Glastonbury coverage.

His influence was huge, irrefutably so, and Good Night And Good Riddance is a brilliant tribute to someone you probably owe at least half your record collection to.

You can order Good Night and Good Riddance: How Thirty-Five Years of John Peel Helped to Shape Modern Life 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.

Australian government writes to Morrissey to defend plans to kill feral cats

0
The Australian government has responded to recent criticism from Morrissey over plans to cull up to two million feral cats to help save endangered species. The pledge was made in July by the country's Federal environment minister, Greg Hunt, who said that reduced numbers of feral cats would "halt a...

The Australian government has responded to recent criticism from Morrissey over plans to cull up to two million feral cats to help save endangered species.

The pledge was made in July by the country’s Federal environment minister, Greg Hunt, who said that reduced numbers of feral cats would “halt and reverse the threats to our magnificent endemic species”.

There are currently an estimated 20 million feral cats in the country, with the government hoping to reduce the figure by two million before 2020 by trapping, shooting and a new poison bait.

Last month, The Guardian reports, Morrissey described the cull as “idiocy” and said the cats were “smaller versions of Cecil the Lion”.

Morrissey said the Australian government was a “committee of sheep-farmers who have zero concerns about animal welfare or animal respect”.

He was joined in his criticism by Brigitte Bardot.

Now the Australian government has formally responded to Morrissey and Bardot through its threatened species commissioner, Gregory Andrews.

In letters seen by Guardian Australia, Andrews tells both: “I would like to commend you for your commitment to, and advocacy for, animals and their welfare.”

Andrews adds, however, that feral cats are an invasive species responsible for the extinction of at least 27 Australian mammals, such as the lesser bilby, desert bandicoot and large-eared hopping-mouse.

“We don’t want to lose any more species like these,” he wrote. “It is with this sentiment in mind that the Australian government has taken a stance on feral cats; for the protection of our native species that belong here.”

Andrews told The Guardian Australia: “I never thought I’d write to Brigitte Bardot. It’s an unusual situation. I’m glad people like them care about animal welfare and I care deeply about animal welfare too.”

“The threat to our wildlife are clear and feral cats are top of the list. We don’t hate cats but we don’t have a choice. We will do this as humanely as possible and we will reduce the net suffering of animals in Australia.”

“I sleep very well at night knowing what we are doing. Australians support this. Brigitte Bardot and Morrissey have a lack of understanding of Australia and what we are losing. They aren’t Australians, they aren’t experiencing the extinction crisis we have 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.

Watch Beck, Cat Power, Jakob Dylan cover The Byrds

0
Beck, Cat Power and Jakob Dylan were among the artists who appeared at a tribute to Sixties' California acts like the Byrds, Beach Boys and Buffalo Springfield at the Orpheum Theater in Los Angeles. The show, Echo In The Canyon, was loosely tied to the 50th anniversary of the Byrds' debut album, Mr...

Beck, Cat Power and Jakob Dylan were among the artists who appeared at a tribute to Sixties’ California acts like the Byrds, Beach Boys and Buffalo Springfield at the Orpheum Theater in Los Angeles.

The show, Echo In The Canyon, was loosely tied to the 50th anniversary of the Byrds’ debut album, Mr. Tambourine Man.

The Los Angeles Times reports that the show was part of a larger tribute project that also includes a studio album due next year.

Dylan served as band leader at the event, with other artists performing including Regina Spektor and Fiona Apple.

Dylan and Beck performed The Byrds’ “The Bells Of Rhymney” and “Goin’ Back” (from Notorious Byrd Brothers, but originally written by Goffin-King).

Cat Power joined Dylan to duet on the Turtles’ “You Showed Me”, written by Roger McGuinn and Gene Clark, as well as “Never My Love” by the Association.

Fiona Apple and Dylan performed The Beach Boys‘ “In My Room”.

Dylan also performed the Mamas And The Papas’ “Dedicated To The One I Love”, Buffalo Springfield’s “Questions” and the Monkees’ “She”.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EFak1lGL8U8

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aDXQa-e19Kk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kc33tUC1mVk

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.

Bruce Springsteen: The Ultimate Music Guide Deluxe Edition!

0
If you're looking for something to read on Thursday - October 15 - please allow us to politely steer you in the direction of Uncut’s latest deluxe Ultimate Music Guide... As you'll presumably have guessed by now, it's dedicated to Bruce Springsteen and inside this fully upgraded and updated editi...

If you’re looking for something to read on Thursday – October 15 – please allow us to politely steer you in the direction of Uncut’s latest deluxe Ultimate Music Guide

As you’ll presumably have guessed by now, it’s dedicated to Bruce Springsteen and inside this fully upgraded and updated edition you’ll discover the entire story of The Boss, told through amazing interviews from Uncut as well as the NME and Melody Maker archives.

We bring the story up to date with Tom Morrello‘s account of life on the road with Springsteen on the High Hopes tour. And of course, the Ultimate Music Guide also includes in-depth reviews of every single album.

If you can’t make it to the shops on Thursday, then fret not: you can order a copy by clicking here.

It will also be available digitally from Thursday in our digital store – which you can find by clicking here.

Anyway, here’s John‘s introduction to whet your appetite…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

——–

September 1978. Bruce Springsteen has just finished playing a show at the Palladium in New York City; a show that has stretched on for nearly four astonishing hours, and which the reporter from NME has been moved to call “the greatest rock’n’roll show that I will ever experience”. It is very late, and even the most demanding of fans would probably cut Springsteen some slack. As dawn approaches, though, he remains energised and attentive, convening with the hundreds of awe-struck followers waiting to pay homage and collect autographs.

“My music gave me everything… I was nobody, I had nothing,” he explains to the writer. “I will never put anyone in the position of being humiliated.” The fans, he says, give him “a real heavy feeling of responsibility… I don’t wanna let the people that have supported me down. And it ain’t good enough just getting by, I wanna take it all the way, every night.”

Thirty-seven action-packed years down the line, Bruce Springsteen’s modus operandi remains miraculously unchanged. As his career rolls into its fifth decade, Springsteen’s commitment, conscientiousness and exuberant love for his fans, his country and the redemptive possibilities of rock’n’roll stand as an example to all other performers. “Bruce has never talked about stopping,” his henchman Steve Van Zandt told Uncut a few years ago. “It’s unimaginable.”

Here, then, is a very special and, we hope, comprehensive guide to a true rock titan. In these pages, you’ll find revelatory Springsteen interviews from every stage of his career. In 1974, laying waste to the dancehalls of Texas, his distrust of stardom is so great he hopes someone will shoot him if he ever plays Madison Square Garden. In 2002, he is at home in New Jersey, reiterating the core message that has sustained him for so long: “I think you have to make a point of behaving like a human being.” In between, there are adventures in France, raids on Graceland, paranoid episodes involving socks, and much more.

There are also deep, forensic reviews of every Springsteen album, from Greetings From Asbury Park, NJ to High Hopes, shining new light on a musical catalogue that still, with each new chapter, has the capacity to startle and inspire.

You want the heart? You want the soul? You want control right now? Better listen to Bruce, baby…

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.