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The Velvet Underground’s Loaded to receive six disc 45th anniversary re-release

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The Velvet Underground album Loaded is to be re-released on October 30 by Rhino. A six-disc Loaded: Re-Loaded 45th Anniversary Edition follows on from previous anniversary editions of The Velvet Underground And Nico, White Light White Heat and The Velvet Underground. The set contains the original ...

The Velvet Underground album Loaded is to be re-released on October 30 by Rhino.

A six-disc Loaded: Re-Loaded 45th Anniversary Edition follows on from previous anniversary editions of The Velvet Underground And Nico, White Light White Heat and The Velvet Underground.

The set contains the original 1970 album remastered in both stereo and mono; demos, early versions and alternate mixes from that era; a newly remastered/re-edited version of Live At Max’s Kansas City; an unreleased May 1970 concert recorded in Philadelphia.

Remastered stereo and mono versions of the album fill out the first two discs, along with various outtakes, and the mono mix for the unissued single: “Rock & Roll” b/w “Lonesome Cowboy Bill.” The third disc explores the creative process behind many of the songs on the album with more than 20 demos, early versions and alternate mixes.

Also included is a remastered version of Live At Max’s Kansas City, which was recorded at the storied New York nightclub on August 23, 1970, the day Lou Reed left the band. Along with the performances from the original 1972 album, the disc includes additional performances selected from the expanded version of the album that Rhino introduced in 2004.

An unreleased club performance feature on the fifth disc. It was recorded on May 9, 1970 at the Second Fret in Philadelphia. The band was down to a trio that night: Lou Reed, Sterling Morrison and Doug Yule, who alternated between bass and drums to fill in for Moe Tucker, who was pregnant at the time. Loaded, which came out six months after the show, is well represented with seven songs, including: “Cool It Down,” “Oh! Sweet Nuthin’” and “Sweet Jane”.

The final disc is an audio only DVD that features three different mixes of Loaded:
– Surround Sound Remix in DTS and Dolby Digital
– 96/24 High resolution Stereo Downmix
– 96/24 High resolution Original Stereo Mix

For the Surround Sound and Stereo Downmix, the original track listing has been re-sequenced slightly to include the segue that was originally planned for “I Found A Reason/Head Held High.”

The tracklisting for Loaded: Re-Loaded 45th Anniversary Edition is:

Disc One: Loaded Remastered
“Who Loves The Sun”
“Sweet Jane” – Full Length Version
“Rock & Roll” – Full Length Version
“Cool It Down”
“New Age”
“Head Held High”
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill”
“I Found A Reason”
“Train Round The Bend”
“Oh! Sweet Nuthin’”

Session Outtakes:
“I’m Sticking With You” – New Remix
“Ocean”
“I Love You”
“Ride Into The Sun”

Disc Two: Loaded Remastered: Promotional Mono Version
“Who Loves The Sun”
“Sweet Jane” – Full Length Version
“Rock & Roll” – Full Length Version
“Cool It Down”
“New Age”
“Head Held High”
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill”
“I Found A Reason”
“Train Round The Bend”
“Oh! Sweet Nuthin’”

Singles and B-Sides
“Who Loves The Sun”
“Oh! Sweet Nuthin’”
“Rock & Roll” *
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill” *

Disc Three: Demos, Early Versions and Alternate Mixes
Demos
“Rock & Roll” – Demo
“Sad Song” – Demo
“Satellite Of Love” – Demo
“Walk And Talk” – Demo
“Oh Gin” – Demo
“Ocean” – Demo
“I Love You” – Demo
“Love Makes You Feel Ten Feet Tall” – Demo Remix
“I Found A Reason” – Demo

Early Versions
“Cool It Down” – Early Version, Remix
“Sweet Jane” – Early Version, Remix
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill” – Early Version, Remix
“Head Held High” – Early Version, Remix
“Oh! Sweet Nuthin’” – Early Version, Remix

Alternate Mixes
“Who Loves The Sun” – Alternate Mix
“Sweet Jane” – Alternate Mix
“Cool It Down” – Alternate Mix
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill” – Alternate Mix
“Train Round The Bend” – Alternate Mix
“Head Held High” – Alternate Mix
“Rock & Roll” – Alternate Mix

Disc Four: Live At Max’s Kansas City Remastered
“I’m Waiting For The Man”
“White Light/White Heat”
“I’m Set Free”
“Sweet Jane”
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill”
“New Age”
“Beginning To See The Light”
“I’ll Be Your Mirror”
“Pale Blue Eyes”
“Candy Says”
“Sunday Morning”
“After Hours”
“Femme Fatale”
“Some Kinda Love”
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill” – Version 2

Disc Five: Live At Second Fret, Philadelphia, 1970*
“I’m Waiting For The Man”
“What Goes On”
“Cool It Down”
“Sweet Jane”
“Rock & Roll”
“Some Kinda Love”
“New Age”
“Candy Says”
“Head Held High”
“Train Round The Bend”
“Oh! Sweet Nuthin’”

*previously unreleased

Disc Six: Audio DVD
96/24 Hi-Resolution Surround Sound Remix
96/24 Hi-Resolution Stereo Downmix
96/24 Hi-Resolution Original Stereo Mix

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Grateful Dead members announce Dead & Company tour dates

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Dead & Company, the band formed by members of the Grateful Dead and John Mayer, have confirmed dates for their forthcoming tour. At the start of August, Billboard revealed that three of the Dead’s "core four" players - guitarist Bob Weir and drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann - were goi...

Dead & Company, the band formed by members of the Grateful Dead and John Mayer, have confirmed dates for their forthcoming tour.

At the start of August, Billboard revealed that three of the Dead’s “core four” players – guitarist Bob Weir and drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann – were going out as Dead & Company, with John Mayer on guitar.

Uncut first reported rumours this was afoot back in May.

Dead & Company’s first appearance will be on October 31 at New York’s Madison Square Garden – the site of more than 50 Grateful Dead shows.

Tickets for the New York show go on sale on Friday, August 14 and cost between $75 – $99.

Now they have announced eight more gigs, according to a new report on Billboard.

Dead & Company will play:

Oct. 29 – Albany, NY @ Times Union Center
Oct. 31 – New York City, NY @ Madison Square Garden
Nov. 1 – New York City, NY @ Madison Square Garden
Nov. 5 – Philadelphia, PA @ Wells Fargo Center
Nov. 6 – Washington, DC @ Verizon Center
Nov. 10 – Worcester, MA @ DCU Center
Dec. 27 – San Francisco, CA @ Bill Graham Civic Auditorium
Dec. 28 – San Francisco, CA @ Bill Graham Civic Auditorium
Dec. 30 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Forum
Dec. 31 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Forum

The Dead & Company announcement comes shortly after the Grateful Dead’s run of five sold-out shows earlier this summer, billed as Fare Thee Well.

You can read our report about the Fare Thee Well anniversary shows by clicking here.

“Those songs weren’t done with us,” Bob Weir explained to Billboard. “It was a matter of who wanted to get back out on the road and keep doing it.” Mayer’s enthusiasm, he adds, “was the cherry on the sundae that made this project look like a good idea.”

Added Bill Kreutzmann, “When we first started playing years ago, it was with Pig Pen, and he was nothing but a blues guy. We took that and made it into the Grateful Dead and we’re doing that with John. And John gets to open up to many styles and doesn’t have to be locked into any one genre. And I think that’s why John is excited to play with us because we offer up a whole new cookie. He’s told me that he’s been at home working on our material like crazy. He’ll be one of us.”

Says Mickey Hart: “All the pieces just fell together magically. There was a kind of serendipity there – when you’re not actually looking for anything and then all of a sudden, it all appears.”

In addition to Mayer, Dead & Company will feature the Allman Brothers’ Oteil Burbridge on bass and keyboardist Jeff Chimenti, who played on the recent Fare Thee Well shows.

The band have launched a website: http://deadandcompany.com/.

In other Dead news, Uncut has been hosting a series of online exclusives, previewing unheard tracks from the band’s forthcoming 30 Trips Around The Sun set. Click here to listen to our latest exclusive: an unreleased version of “Scarlet Begonias”. We’ll have another one for you on September 10.

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Todd Haynes’ Carol reviewed

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In Todd Haynes new film Carol, women are frequently viewed through glass. Car windows, mirrors, shop windows; in one scene, rows of female dolls are seen exhibited behind display cases in Frankenberg’s, a high end Manhattan department store where suburban housewife Carol first meets curious, reser...

In Todd Haynes new film Carol, women are frequently viewed through glass. Car windows, mirrors, shop windows; in one scene, rows of female dolls are seen exhibited behind display cases in Frankenberg’s, a high end Manhattan department store where suburban housewife Carol first meets curious, reserved Therese. It is as if women are strange, unfathomable creatures; best scrutinized at a distance.

Haynes is a skilled chronicler of while middle class women’s emotional pain – from Safe to Far From Heaven and Mildred Pierce. For Carol, though, Haynes moves expertly onto another level. Set across the Christmas and New Year of 1951/2, his film documents the lesbian relationship between Carol and Therese, a young shop assistant, in a less tolerant society. Visually, Haynes delivers a typically lavish experience – from the cars to the clothes, the film has been meticulously dressed down to the smallest detail. It’s so rich; it’s a little like drowning in double cream. But Carol is more than just about the furs and furnishings: this is quiet, significant cinema from a master filmmaker operating at the peak of his powers.

Rooney Mara plays passive Therese Belivit, who relieves her dreary life at Frankenberg’s with an extra-curricular interest in photography. Working the toy counter in the run-up to Christmas, she meets Carol Aird (Cate Blanchett): a well-heeled socialite who is looking for a doll as a gift for her daughter. “The Bright Betsy. She cries and wets herself.” Carol leaves her gloves on the counter, giving Therese an opportunity to contact her. Soon, they lunch together: though Therese admits, “I barely even know what to order.” The besotted Carol murmurs, “What a strange girl you are. Flung out of space.”

The early part of Carol focuses on the unlikely relationship between the two. Therese has an oddly defensive stillness about her; as if she is waiting for something to happen. Carol, meanwhile, is in perpetual motion: a swish of her fur coat, a turn of her heel, carried along on restless, flickering energy. As the film progresses, we learn that Carol is more fragile than she first appears. Perhaps she is worn-down by attempts to suppress her nature; yet, with Therese, she is determined to pursue her instincts, at whatever cost. Haynes is reunited here with Blanchett – the hopped-up “electric” Bob from his Dylan biopic, I’m Not There – who conveys a kind of heavy-lidded sadness behind her immaculate movie star looks. Although Carol is essentially melodrama, Blanchett is thankfully more reined in here than in Blue Jasmine. It transpires she is in the final stages of a loveless marriage to Harge (Kyle Chandler). Taking off with Therese in her cream-coloured Packard convertible, Carol heads off on a road trip that reaches its conclusion in a motel in Waterloo, Iowa.

Haynes fifth consecutive period piece, Carol is based on Patricia Highsmith’s 1952 novel, The Price Of Salt. The script – adapted by Phyllis Nagy – carries much of Highsmith’s elegant wordplay. Carol and Therese are described as being “like physics – pinballs, bouncing off each other.” Looking over Therese’s photographs, Carol notes, “I have a friend who tells me I should be more interested in humans.” As one character, a movie buff, declares, “I’m charting the correlation between what the characters say and what they feel” – which is very true of this excellent film. Critically, Haynes mimics the reserve of the era, depending on glances or gestures to communicate the powerful, dangerous feelings that pass between Carol and Therese.

CAROL OPENS IN THE UK ON NOVEMBER 27

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide: Led Zeppelin

Valhalla we are coming! Uncut's latest deluxe Ultimate Music Guide is dedicated to the mighty and imperious Led Zeppelin. Inside this fully upgraded and updated edition you'll discover the entire story of Page, Plant, Jones and Bonham, told through amazing interviews from the NME and Melody Maker ar...

Valhalla we are coming! Uncut’s latest deluxe Ultimate Music Guide is dedicated to the mighty and imperious Led Zeppelin. Inside this fully upgraded and updated edition you’ll discover the entire story of Page, Plant, Jones and Bonham, told through amazing interviews from the NME and Melody Maker archives. They reveal a band with unquenchable appetites – for global domination, for boundless excess and, most strikingly, for musical excellence. An uncommonly driven band, with terrifyingly high standards and surprisingly thin skins.
The Ultimate Music Guide also includes in-depth reviews of every single Led Zeppelin album, a forensic look at Jimmy Page’s 2014/2015 remasters, and a load of new stuff about the solo adventures of Robert Plant. It’s the complete tale of a band who took the blues to unimaginable new places, who transformed the heartsong of the disenfranchised into the conqueror’s battle hymn. Good times, bad times; you’re about to get your share…

 

Order Print Copy

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Paul McCartney’s banana and the new issue of Uncut…

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What would you do with Paul McCartney's banana? One evening a few weeks ago, I diligently interrupted my holiday to go through some emails back at the hotel room. One, from my colleague Michael Bonner stood out. Michael had written it at Ashford Station, on the way back to London after spending some...

What would you do with Paul McCartney’s banana? One evening a few weeks ago, I diligently interrupted my holiday to go through some emails back at the hotel room. One, from my colleague Michael Bonner stood out. Michael had written it at Ashford Station, on the way back to London after spending some time at McCartney’s studio near Rye.

Ostensibly, McCartney was talking to Uncut about the imminent reissues of Pipes Of Peace and Tug Of War. As Michael put it in the email, though, “he can’t really stop himself talking about The Beatles,” and the interview opened up into an intimate and wide-ranging chat that used “Here Today” as a jump-off point to discuss much about McCartney’s relationship with John Lennon. From their earliest songwriting attempts, through the Beatles split, right up to the distressing aftermath of Lennon’s death, McCartney is candid and poignant, to an almost unnerving degree.

He remembers in detail the day he heard Lennon had been shot, for instance, remembers Linda telling him the news, then deciding to go ahead with a planned recording session (with The Chieftains) because “you’re always advised to work through your grief.”

“I came out and was still in shock,” he tells Michael. “I didn’t want to see any paparazzi but they were there. There was guy with a mic. He said, ‘What do you think of John…’ We were driving past, so it wasn’t like I was standing doing a big interview. I just couldn’t think of anything. I said, ‘It’s a drag.’ And I meant, ‘An unholy fucking bastard worst drag ever.’ But the words that came out, ‘It’s a drag’, sounded so casual. It certainly didn’t sum up what I was feeling. Anyway, there you go. Too bad. That’s what happened.

“Then I came home and just cried and saw the news and tried to find out some more details on the news and saw pundits coming on and doing what people had wanted me to do. Which was to be sensible about his death and what a tragedy it was, du-du-du-du-du-du, and he was a great man and du-du-du-du-du-du. But I couldn’t. I couldn’t get any of that together. In fact, I rather despised the pundits who did. I can’t blame them now, but they were old friends or casual acquaintances and they’d been hauled in to say something. Yeah, but it was a hell of a shock for months at least, on an immediate level, and then there were all sorts of repercussions and stuff.”

You can read the whole interview in this month’s new issue of Uncut, on sale today in the UK, and a pretty good example of how we’re trying to draw powerful connections between rock’s canonical superstars (I would use the word ‘iconic’ at this point, but it’s become so naff and meaningless nowadays that I’ll do anything to avoid it) and the very best music being made in 2015. As a consequence, we have terrific interviews with McCartney, Keith Richards and John Lydon, alongside equally compelling pieces about Julia Holter and Kurt Vile.

There are also pieces on Dan Auerbach, Squeeze, Mercury Rev, Richard Farina, Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats and Beirut, and deep reviews of Bjork, Link Wray, Robert Forster, Low, New Order, David Gilmour, Wilco and the Dave Rawlings Machine. Low, Lydon, Auerbach’s Arcs, Uncle Acid and Forster are also on this month’s free CD, along with the likes of Phil Cook, Bilal amd Titus Andronicus, a wonderful lost gem from Elyse Weinberg (featuring Neil Young on guitar), and a revelatory version of “Reel Around The Fountain” by James Elkington & Nathan Salsburg that shows how Johnny Marr was a folkie all along.

Anyway, about that banana. “Macca,” wrote Michael in his original email, “gave me a banana for the train” I’d like to say we’ve preserved it in some way as a holy relic, as part of an Uncut museum of gifts from rock’s beneficent grandees. Unfortunately, though, the iniquities of the national rail network put paid to that dream. “It’s proved useful,” he continued, “as I’ve been at Ashford for an hour due to a derailment further down the line…”

 

John Lennon – Lennon: The Vinyl Box Set

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Despite his claim that he considered himself part American since the first time he heard Elvis, in the final analysis America was not good for John Lennon. He may have left Britain seeking freedom from the small-mindedness and the racism directed at Yoko, but the impact on his creativity was just ca...

Despite his claim that he considered himself part American since the first time he heard Elvis, in the final analysis America was not good for John Lennon. He may have left Britain seeking freedom from the small-mindedness and the racism directed at Yoko, but the impact on his creativity was just catastrophic, as this boxset of vinyl reissues demonstrates in the contrast between the vicious purity of his solo debut, John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band, and the sweeter pop perfection of the follow-up Imagine, with anything that followed.

Influenced by undergoing Primal Scream Therapy, John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band presents the singer peeled to his core, dredging up tormenting traumas – notably, parental abandonment – and dispelling them through cathartic bursts of honesty rarely heard in pop music. This confrontational approach involves Lennon being progressively scoured of illusions, notably in the angry “I Found Out” and bitter “Working Class Hero”, eventually culminating in “God”, a litany of iconoclastic demurral rejecting not just religion but all the bogus pillars supporting his previous worldview, leaving him utterly alone, save for a single buttress: “Just believe in me; Yoko and me”. It’s a brutally selfish album – the long-held first syllable of “Isolation” is what the project’s all about, ultimately – and it’s never an easy listen: the backings, with Lennon accompanied by just Ringo Starr and Klaus Voorman, are likewise pared-back to match the material, leaving just his voice, carefully treated by Phil Spector, to occupy the foreground.

By comparison, Imagine is a joyous reaffirmation of pop naivete, for all the hard-edged bitterness of “I Don’t Want To Be A Soldier” and “Gimme Some Truth”, and the wilful spite of the McCartney-baiting “How Do You Sleep”, all of which are more readily listenable than the previous album. There’s a delight and uplift about “Oh Yoko!” that’s utterly infectious, and even the emotional palsy of “Crippled Inside” is dealt with in jaunty, singalong style. The naive charm of “Imagine” has sustained better than most utopian anthems, but the clincher here is “Jealous Guy”, as sweet as anything Lennon wrote: the whistling is a masterstroke, at once vulnerable and apologetic, tender and unthreatening.

But then, it all starts to go pear-shaped, with the crude sloganeering and rabble-rousing of Some Time In New York City, where the couple’s wafer-thin insights on contemporary issues like feminism, black power and the Troubles are set to generic rock music with nothing remotely revolutionary about it – even the Zappa/Mothers contributions on the live tracks are limp by their standards. A year later, Mind Games was written and recorded just as John and Yoko were splitting, and Lennon was under constant FBI surveillance – though the stress doesn’t seem to have prompted any sharp response beyond a few anodyne apophthegms, patronising homilies and bland apologies. And tellingly, the mantra-like title-track, the clear standout here, dated from the John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band era.

Things went from bad to worse with Walls And Bridges, which features the worst opening track on any ex-Beatle album (“Going Down On Love”) and a tranche of uninspired, self-pitying funk-soul cuts, the best of which – “Scared” and “Steel And Glass” – ape Bobby Bland’s contemporary R&B style. But perhaps the saddest aspect of the album is that Lennon needed a little of Elton John’s charisma to score the only Number One solo single of his lifetime with “Whatever Gets You Through The Night”, whose cheesy, sax-riffing effervescence hasn’t aged at all well.

The oldies album Rock’n’Roll was better, but still patchy. “Peggy Sue” sounds too thick, “Rip It Up/Ready Teddy” too thin, and the reggaefied “Do You Wanna Dance” is an abomination. But “Be-Bop-A-Lula” stalks along nicely, and “Stand By Me” shifts engagingly from folksy opening to soul climax. The album was partly legal payback for Lennon using a line from “You Can’t Catch Me” in “Come Together”, though rather than whisking lightly along like the Chuck Berry original, the version here is mired in lolloping boogie brass.

Following five years of house-husbandry raising his son Sean, Double Fantasy was better than expected, but still mediocre. The air of domestic tranquility, while rather irritating, was well conveyed in “Beautiful Boy” and “Woman”, the simplicity of the sentiment echoed in the melody and arrangement; but it was a patchy affair, despite the clear improvement in Yoko’s contributions. By the posthumous Milk And Honey, four years later, her tracks display a greater variety and charm than Lennon’s, which are sadly more meat and potatoes than milk and honey: to be generous, possibly demos denied their due development.

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is on sale in the UK on Tuesday, August 25 – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

October 2015

Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, Kurt Vile and John Lydon are all in the new issue of Uncut, dated October 2015 and out on August 25. McCartney is on the cover, and inside he discusses his old Beatles songwriting partner, John Lennon, George Harrison's "late blooming" talent, the upcoming reissues o...

Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, Kurt Vile and John Lydon are all in the new issue of Uncut, dated October 2015 and out on August 25.

McCartney is on the cover, and inside he discusses his old Beatles songwriting partner, John Lennon, George Harrison‘s “late blooming” talent, the upcoming reissues of his ’80s hits Tug Of War and Pipes Of Peace, and how he learned to “block the shit”.

“When I think of John, I think of us writing together,” says McCartney. “‘A Day In The Life’… stuff like that.”

Keith Richards talks about his new solo album, Crosseyed Heart, his first LP under his own name in 23 years, and the future – “I tell you this, I ain’t retiring,” he says.

Ahead of the release of his new album, B’lieve I’m Goin’ Down…, Kurt Vile takes us through his career in albums, from God Is Saying This To You and The War On Drugs’ Wagonwheel Blues, to his own Smoke Ring For My Halo and his latest effort.

Uncut also meet John Lydon, the self-proclaimed king of punk, at his Malibu home and discover that he’s matured with age. Subjects under discussion include a Sex Pistols perfume range, his thoughts on David Cameron’s Britain and just what he intends to do with his body after he dies – “It’s very easy to be bitter and twisted,” he confesses.

Elsewhere, Dan Auerbach answers your questions on Akron, working with Dr John, stepping on Neil Young‘s foot and his new band, The Arcs. “We worked on The Black Keys every single day. Relentless. I treat music like it’s a job.”

Mercury Rev discuss the making of their Deserter’s Songs highlight, “Opus 40”, inspired by the Catskill Mountains and energised by The Band‘s Levon Helm.

We’re also in Los Angeles’ Echo Park for a trip with radical, mystical songwriter Julia Holter, and a look inside her fantastic new album, Have You In My Wilderness. We also chat to Squeeze cool cats Chris Difford, Glenn Tilbrook and co about their remarkable London story… involving both sweetshops and cop shops.

In the reviews section, we look at new albums from Low, Keith Richards, New Order, Robert Forster, David Gilmour and Mercury Rev, archive releases from Queen, Link Wray and the Faces, and DVDs and films on Wilco, NWA and Alejandro Jodorowsky. Live, we catch gigs from Björk and The Sonics.

Beirut‘s Zach Condon takes us through his life in records, while David Bowie, Roger Waters, Richard Farina and Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats all feature in our front section.

The issue also comes with a free CD, Coming Up, featuring tracks from Craig Finn, The Arcs, Wand, Phil Cook, PiL, Lou Barlow and Low.

The new issue of Uncut is in UK shops now and available to buy as a digital edition 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.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Paul McCartney track exclusive! Hear rare edit of “Take It Away”

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Paul McCartney is on the cover of the new issue of Uncut, which is on sale in UK shops today [Tuesday, August 25, 2015] and available to buy digitally by clicking here. In our world exclusive interview, we visit Sir Paul at his studio in Sussex where he talks openly about working with and without J...

Paul McCartney is on the cover of the new issue of Uncut, which is on sale in UK shops today [Tuesday, August 25, 2015] and available to buy digitally by clicking here.

In our world exclusive interview, we visit Sir Paul at his studio in Sussex where he talks openly about working with and without John Lennon – and discusses extensively the relationship that revolutionised music.

“When I think of John, I think of us writing together,” says McCartney. “‘A Day In The Life‘… stuff like that.”

To celebrate our with Macca, we’re delighted to host this remastered rarity from the McCartney archives: “Take It Away [single edit]“.

U221-PMcC-cover-Zinio

The full-length version of the track is available on the upcoming deluxe edition of Tug Of War which, along with Pipes Of Peace, is reissued on October 2, 2015.

Both albums will come with additional material – including previously unreleased tracks and never before seen video – and can be pre-ordered now from McCartney’s website.

Uncut’s October 2015 issue is in shops now.

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Jimi Hendrix fake memorabilia flooding auction sites

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Mitch Mitchell's widow Dee Mitchell has warned Jimi Hendrix fans to beware of fake memorabilia currently flooding online auction sites. As reported by Noise 11, Dee Mitchell has alerted fans of items on sale – such as equipment, clothes, books and instruments – that have been falsely attributed...

Mitch Mitchell‘s widow Dee Mitchell has warned Jimi Hendrix fans to beware of fake memorabilia currently flooding online auction sites.

As reported by Noise 11, Dee Mitchell has alerted fans of items on sale – such as equipment, clothes, books and instruments – that have been falsely attributed as having come ‘From The Estate of Mitch Mitchell’ or from herself.

According to Mitchell, most of the items fans may see online are “tacky, cheap rubbish” and advises collectors to “ask for plenty of authentication, dates, and a full provenance with loads of information” before making a purchase.

“Any provenance from me would be detailed and packed with information,” she said, adding that those interested in any memorabilia should “take great care not to buy anything which seems a bit dodgy”.

“Please, don’t get ripped off. Far too many already have. Let the buyer beware.”

Meanwhile, a new Jimi Hendrix documentary and CD are being lined up for release over the next few months.

On September 4, Showtime will air Jimi Hendrix: Electric Church, a new film about Hendrix’ Atlanta Pop set.

Experience Hendrix L.L.C. and Legacy Recordings will release the DVD and Blu-ray version on October 30, which will feature bonus content not included in the broadcast version.

Electric Church features interviews with Hendrix’s Experience band mates Billy Cox and the late Mitch Mitchell as well as Paul McCartney, Steve Winwood, Rich Robinson, Kirk Hammett, Derek Trucks, Susan Tedeschi, festival organizer Alex Cooley and many others.

The film contains colour 16mm footage of Hendrix’s appearance on July 4, 1970, which took place ten weeks before his death.

Freedom: Jimi Hendrix Experience Atlanta Pop Festival – due on August 28 – includes six performances not seen in the Showtime documentary.

This will be available as a 2CD set and also as a 200-gram 2LP vinyl set.

The first 5,000 vinyl units will be individually numbered.

Jimi Hendrix Experience – Freedom: Atlanta Pop Festival 2CD/2LP VINYL (release date: August 28)

Disc 1
Fire
Lover Man
Spanish Castle Magic
Red House
Room Full Of Mirrors
Hear My Train A Comin’
Message To Love

Disc 2
All Along The Watchtower
Freedom
Foxey Lady
Purple Haze
Hey Joe
Voodoo Child (Slight Return)
Stone Free
Star Spangled Banner
Straight Ahead

Jimi Hendrix: Electric Church DVD/Blu-ray (release date: October 30)
Contains performances of three additional songs not included in the broadcast version of the film, and other never before released Hendrix bonus content.

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is on sale in the UK on Tuesday, August 25 – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Morrissey announces debut novel, List Of The Lost

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Morrissey's first novel, List Of The Lost, will be published next month, according to quasi-official fansite, True To You. According to a post dated August 22, "Morrissey's first novel, List of the Lost, will be published by Penguin Books (UK) at the end of September. The book will be issued in sof...

Morrissey‘s first novel, List Of The Lost, will be published next month, according to quasi-official fansite, True To You.

According to a post dated August 22, “Morrissey’s first novel, List of the Lost, will be published by Penguin Books (UK) at the end of September. The book will be issued in softcover/paperback as a New Fiction title, and comes almost two years after Morrissey’s very successful Autobiography publication of October 2013.

“Penguin Books will confirm an on sale date within this coming week. List of the Lost will be available in the UK, Ireland, Australia, India, New Zealand and South Africa.”

Morrissey launched his memoir at a book signing in Gothenburg, Sweden on October 17, 2013.

The book topped the best sellers chart in its first week of sale, selling just under 35,000 copies according to sales figures in trade magazine The Bookseller.

You can read the Uncut review of Autobiography by clicking here

Meanwhile, Morrissey has shared three previously unheard demos from the Years Of Refusal sessions.

They are initial run-throughs of “Something Is Squeezing My Skull“, “One Day Goodbye Will Be Farewell” and “Mama Lay Softly On The Riverbed” which were recorded in 2008.

They are currently streaming on True To You.

Years Of Refusal was Morrissey’s ninth solo album, following 2006’s Ringleader Of The Tormentors.

It was the first Morrissey album since 1992’s Your Arsenal not to feature long-time bandmate Alain Whyte on guitar.

In other news, Morrissey is due to play a handful of live dates in September.

He’ll play:

Plymouth, Plymouth Pavillions (September 15)
Hull, Hull Arena (September 18)
London, Eventim Hammersmith Apollo (September 20, 21)

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is on sale in the UK on Tuesday, August 25 – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

This month in Uncut

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Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, Kurt Vile and John Lydon are all in the new issue of Uncut, dated October 2015 and out on August 25. McCartney is on the cover, and inside he discusses his old Beatles songwriting partner, John Lennon, George Harrison's "late blooming" talent, the upcoming reissues o...

Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, Kurt Vile and John Lydon are all in the new issue of Uncut, dated October 2015 and out on August 25.

McCartney is on the cover, and inside he discusses his old Beatles songwriting partner, John Lennon, George Harrison‘s “late blooming” talent, the upcoming reissues of his ’80s hits Tug Of War and Pipes Of Peace, and how he learned to “block the shit”.

“When I think of John, I think of us writing together,” says McCartney. “‘A Day In The Life’… stuff like that.”

Keith Richards talks about his new solo album, Crosseyed Heart, his first LP under his own name in 23 years, and the future – “I tell you this, I ain’t retiring,” he says.

Ahead of the release of his new album, B’lieve I’m Goin’ Down…, Kurt Vile takes us through his career in albums, from God Is Saying This To You and The War On Drugs’ Wagonwheel Blues, to his own Smoke Ring For My Halo and his latest effort.

Uncut also meet John Lydon, the self-proclaimed king of punk, at his Malibu home and discover that he’s matured with age. Subjects under discussion include a Sex Pistols perfume range, his thoughts on David Cameron’s Britain and just what he intends to do with his body after he dies – “It’s very easy to be bitter and twisted,” he confesses.

Elsewhere, Dan Auerbach answers your questions on Akron, working with Dr John, stepping on Neil Young‘s foot and his new band, The Arcs. “We worked on The Black Keys every single day. Relentless. I treat music like it’s a job.”

Mercury Rev discuss the making of their Deserter’s Songs highlight, “Opus 40”, inspired by the Catskill Mountains and energised by The Band‘s Levon Helm.

We’re also in Los Angeles’ Echo Park for a trip with radical, mystical songwriter Julia Holter, and a look inside her fantastic new album, Have You In My Wilderness. We also chat to Squeeze cool cats Chris Difford, Glenn Tilbrook and co about their remarkable London story… involving both sweetshops and cop shops.

In the reviews section, we look at new albums from Low, Keith Richards, New Order, Robert Forster, David Gilmour and Mercury Rev, archive releases from Queen, Link Wray and the Faces, and DVDs and films on Wilco, NWA and Alejandro Jodorowsky. Live, we catch gigs from Björk and The Sonics.

Beirut‘s Zach Condon takes us through his life in records, while David Bowie, Roger Waters, Richard Farina and Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats all feature in our front section.

The issue also comes with a free CD, Coming Up, featuring tracks from Craig Finn, The Arcs, Wand, Phil Cook, PiL, Lou Barlow and Low.

You can also buy Uncut digitally 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.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Track premiere! Listen to a previously unreleased live version of The Faces’ “Jealous Guy”

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Welcome to the second our of exclusive track premieres from the Faces' upcoming box set, You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything (1970 – 1975). Last week, we brought you the previously unheard “Flying (Take 3)”. This week, we're very excited to present for your listening pleasure, "Jealous G...

Welcome to the second our of exclusive track premieres from the Faces‘ upcoming box set, You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything (1970 – 1975).

Last week, we brought you the previously unheard “Flying (Take 3)”.

This week, we’re very excited to present for your listening pleasure, “Jealous Guy” recorded live at the Reading Festival in August 1973.

We’ll share one more exclusive track from the Faces box set next week. Unfortunately, this track is only available to UK viewers.

You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything (1970 – 1975) will be available on August 28 through Rhino on CD, digitally and as a limited edition vinyl.

The box set contains newly remastered versions of all four of the band’s studio albums, plus a bonus disc of rarities.

You can pre-order the CD set by clicking here. And you can pre-order the vinyl set by clicking here.

Scroll down for the full tracklisting.

Meanwhile, Rod Stewart, Ron Wood and Kenney Jones are to reunite The Faces to play a show for Prostate Cancer UK.

They will perform at Rock ‘n’ Horsepower at Hurtwood Park Polo Club in Ewhurst, Surrey on Saturday, September 5, 2015.

“This year is the 40th anniversary since The Faces parted ways so it’s about time we got together for a jam,” said Stewart. “Being in The Faces back in the day was a whirlwind of madness but my God, it was beyond brilliant. We are pleased to be able to support Prostate Cancer UK.”

Faces_LP_Box

The track listing for You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything (1970 – 1975) is:

THE FIRST STEP
1. “Wicked Messenger”
2. “Devotion”
3. “Shake, Shudder, Shiver”
4. “Stone”
5. “Around The Plynth”
6. “Flying”
7. “Pineapple And The Monkey”
8. “Nobody Knows”
9. “Looking Out The Window”
10. “Three Button Hand Me Down”
11. “Behind The Sun” (Outtake) *
12. “Mona – The Blues” (Outtake) *
13. “Shake, Shudder, Shiver” (BBC Session) *
14. “Flying” (Take 3) *
15. “Nobody Knows” (Take 2) *

LONG PLAYER
1. “Bad ‘n’ Ruin”
2. “Tell Everyone”
3. “Sweet Lady Mary”
4. “Richmond”
5. “Maybe I’m Amazed”
6. “Had Me A Real Good Time”
7. “On The Beach”
8. “I Feel So Good”
9. “Jerusalem”
10. “Whole Lotta Woman” (Outtake) *
11. “Tell Everyone” (Take 1) *
12. “Sham-Mozzal” (Instrumental – Outtake) *
13. “Too Much Woman” (Live) *
14. “Love In Vain” (Live) *

A NOD IS AS GOOD AS A WINK…TO A BLIND HORSE
1. “Miss Judy’s Farm”
2. “You’re So Rude”
3. “Love Lives Here”
4. “Last Orders Please”
5. “Stay With Me”
6. “Debris”
7. “Memphis”
8. “Too Bad”
9. “That’s All You Need”
10. “Miss Judy’s Farm” (BBC Session) *
11. “Stay With Me” (BBC Session) *

OOH LA LA
1. “Silicone Grown”
2. “Cindy Incidentally”
3. “Flags And Banners”
4. “My Fault”
5. “Borstal Boys”
6. “Fly In The Ointment”
7. “If I’m On The Late Side”
8. “Glad And Sorry”
9. “Just Another Honky”
10. “Ooh La La”
11. “Cindy Incidentally” (BBC Session) *
12. “Borstal Boys” (Rehearsal) *
13. “Silicone Grown” (Rehearsal) *
14. “Glad And Sorry” (Rehearsal) *
15. “Jealous Guy” (Live) *

* previously unreleased

BONUS LP
1. “Pool Hall Richard”
2. “I Wish It Would Rain” (With A Trumpet)
3. “Rear Wheel Skid”
4. “Maybe I’m Amazed”
5. “Oh Lord I’m Browned Off”
6. “You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything (Even Take The Dog For A Walk, Mend A Fuse, Fold Away The Ironing Board, Or Any Other Domestic Short Comings)” (UK Single Version)
7. “As Long As You Tell Him”
8. “Skewiff (Mend The Fuse)”
9. “Dishevelment Blues”

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 September 2015 issue of Uncut is on sale in the UK on Tuesday, July 28 – featuring David Gilmour, a free Grateful Dead CD, Bob Dylan and the Newport Folk Festival, AC/DC, Killing Joke, the Isley Brothers, Julien Temple, Ryley Walker and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The 28th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

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Just before we get into this week's playlist, please have a look at this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r02nVTzY1l4 It's a trailer for a movie called Ethiopiques- Revolt of the Soul: The Golden Age of Ethiopian Music which is trying to achieve funding, and which seems to have amazing footage of ...

Just before we get into this week’s playlist, please have a look at this:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r02nVTzY1l4

It’s a trailer for a movie called Ethiopiques- Revolt of the Soul: The Golden Age of Ethiopian Music which is trying to achieve funding, and which seems to have amazing footage of Alemayehu Eshete et al. Would love this to be completed.

While we wait for the new issue to turn up (hopefully subscribers should be getting it this weekend), here are the things that have been played these past few days. Note the new Ryley Walker jam with Bill MacKay…

Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

1 Natural Information Society & Bitchin Bajas – Autoimaginary (Drag City)

2 Bitchin Bajas – Bitchin Bajas (Drag City)

3 Ballaké Sissoko & Vincent Segal – Musique De Nuit (No Format)

4 Israel Nash – Israel Nash’s Silver Season (Loose/Thirty Tigers)

5 Gagakirise And EYE – Gagakiriseye (Thrill Jockey)

6 Dave Heumann – Here In The Deep (Thrill Jockey)

7 King Midas Sound/Fennesz – Editions 1 (Ninja Tune)

8 Michael Chapman – Fish (Tompkins Square)

9 The Dead Weather – Dodge And Burn (Third Man)

10 Simon Kirby/Tommy Perman/Rob St John – Concrete Antenna (www.concreteantenna.org)

11 Various Artists – Rastafari: The Dreads Enter Babylon 1955-83 (Soul Jazz)

12 Trader Horne – Morning Way (Earth)

13 Doug Hream Blunt – My Name Is (Luaka Bop)

14 Bill MacKay & Ryley Walker – Land Of Plenty (Whistler)

15 Steve Hauschildt – Where All Is Fled (Kranky)

16 Los Lobos – Gates Of Gold (429)

17 Susan Howe & David Grubbs – Woodslippercounterclatter (Drag City)

18 Shape Worship – A City Remembrancer (Front And Follow)

Lloyd Cole and the Commotions – Collected Recordings 1983-1989

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The career of Lloyd Cole & The Commotions began with a fortuitous false start. Their first single, “Down At The Mission”, was pulled at the eleventh hour when the band signed to Polydor, and one can only assume they’ve been counting their blessings ever since. Heard here (officially) for t...

The career of Lloyd Cole & The Commotions began with a fortuitous false start. Their first single, “Down At The Mission”, was pulled at the eleventh hour when the band signed to Polydor, and one can only assume they’ve been counting their blessings ever since. Heard here (officially) for the first time, this frantic slice of blue-eyed funk reveals a subsequently unexplored fascination with cheesy synths, shrieking falsetto and slap bass. Imagine early Spandau Ballet fronted by a drunk Edwyn Collins and you’re still only halfway there.

It’s not pretty, but then that’s partly the point. Collected Recordings is a warts and all excavation of one of the most idiosyncratic and sporadically brilliant bands of the ’80s. Running to 66 tracks and five CDs, it includes remastered versions of the group’s three albums – Rattlesnakes (which has never sounded better), Easy Pieces and Mainstream – plus two further discs of B-Sides, Remixes And Outtakes and Demos And Rarities. All but two tracks on the latter are previously unreleased, while six songs have never been heard before in any form. There’s also a DVD of videos and TV performances, and a 48-page hardback book.

This is, then, very much the final word on a band which formed in 1982 in Glasgow, where Buxton boy Cole was studying English Literature and Philosophy. A 21-year-old who had read a few books and was keen for everyone to know it, Cole’s aesthetic was hewn from the milieu of New Journalism, Leonard Cohen songs and the French New Wave. Much of the action here takes places in basement rooms littered with paperbacks, art magazines, red wine, unfathomable women, strong cigarettes and unfinished first novels.

Majoring in undergraduate chic, Cole strolls through the extended narrative in his black polo neck and floppy fringe, alongside Julie and Jim (a knowing nod to Truffaut), Arthur Lee, Joan Didion, Sean Penn, Truman Capote, Grace Kelly, Norman Mailer, Jesus, Eva Marie Saint and Simone De Beauvoir. The romantic yearning – which is acute – is buried beneath a protective layer of verbosity; for Cole, love is a girl who can spell “audaciously”. To what extent this represented autobiography rather than a richly imagined internal life doesn’t much matter. As a lyricist Cole presented a fully-formed world view from the off, delivered in a vibrato-heavy voice somewhere between a nervy gulp and an affirming swallow.

The four Commotions – Neil Clark (guitar), Blair Cowan (keyboards), Lawrence Donegan (bass) and Stephen Irvine (drums) – animated this vision most successfully on Rattlesnakes. There’s nothing indie about the band’s 1984 debut. This is pop classicism, a thrilling blend of sparkling guitars, sighing female singers and elegant strings. Drawing on The Byrds, The Velvet Underground, Bob Dylan, Postcard Records and a smattering of blues, folk and soul, Rattlesnakes pivots on its trifecta of instant classics. Demos of “Perfect Skin”, “Forest Fire” and “Are You Ready To Be Heartbroken?” reveal them to be fully-formed masterpieces at an early stage, but Rattlesnakes’ greatness endures because it holds the line from top to bottom.

The title track is a glorious blend of quicksilver acoustic guitar, Anne Dudley’s vaulting string figure and Cole’s literate smarts. The lovely, lovelorn “Patience” is as good as anything they ever recorded, and while Springsteen was singing about ’69 Chevys, Cole prefers the “2CV”, hymned over a gentle acoustic backing which vaguely recalls Big Star’s “Thirteen”. “Four Flights Up” reanimates the helter-skelter blues of ’65 Dylan, while the wonderful “Forest Fire”, a masterclass in understated dynamics, ends with the postmodernist conceit of Cole commenting upon his own working process – “it’s just a simple metaphor, for a burning love” – which manages to be funny, clever-clever, and oddly touching. Contemporary B-sides like “The Sea And The Sand” and “Andy’s Babies” convey an admirable strength in depth, while the previously unheard “Eat My Words” finds Cole crooning like a callow Scott Walker.

As Cole tells Uncut, “1984 was our year”. Rattlesnakes was widely lauded, spawned three modest hit singles and stayed in the Top 100 for 12 months. It proved a hard act to follow. Easy Pieces, released in November 1985, met with a more muted critical response, but although its flaws are obvious, it holds up rather better than its low-key rep suggests. Producer Paul Hardiman, so innovative and accommodating on Rattlesnakes, was replaced by Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley, who steered the band towards a more obviously commercial sound, instantly heralded by the punchy horns on opener “Rich”. The strings remain, alongside prominent accordion, smoothly soulful backing vocals, and burbling synth drums on the rather limp lead single, “Brand New Friend”.

Recorded by a band already second guessing its natural instincts in the pursuit of commercial traction, there is plentiful evidence of Second Album Syndrome. “Minor Character” and “Grace” are not just poor songs, they find Cole already flirting with self-parody, but such moments are in the minority. The headlong rush of “Lost Weekend” recounts a disastrous sojourn to Amsterdam over chiming Rickenbacker. Second single “Cut Me Down” is simple and affecting, while the sombre “James”, an empathetic dig in the ribs to an “impossible” acquaintance hiding from a “thoughtless, heartless world”, is a quiet highlight, drifting on a sound-bed of martial drums, mournful organ and chiming guitar.

The ‘Rarities’ brief of Collected Recordings is at is most instructive sketching in the detail of the two-year gap between Easy Pieces and 1987’s Mainstream. There’s a fine alternate version of “Jennifer She Said”, recorded with Stewart Copeland and Julian Mendelsohn, and pickings from sessions with Chris Thomas, including the excellent and unreleased “Everyone’s Complaining”, meatier than anything on Mainstream. This generous rump of unheard material includes the pleasingly odd “Old Wants Never Gets”, on which, says Cole, “Blair and I are trying very hard to be Prince”.

The number of producers tried out for Mainstream – the band eventually settled on Ian Stanley – speaks of its somewhat compromised nature. The title is a knowing wink. A calculated tilt at a bigger, smoother rock sound, Mainstream is sleek and mid-paced, but although the frantic energy of old may have dissipated, it has its moments. “Jennifer She Said” is punchy pop, “My Bag” flashes by in a blizzard of cocaine-themed puns and pithy put-downs of the executive life, while “29” is an ambitious departure, an atmospheric ballad which nods to Cole’s long-standing love of David Bowie. Too often, however, the songs play second fiddle to the sound. “Sean Penn Blues” – perhaps the most ’80s song title ever – has little discernible shape or purpose; “Hey Rusty” aims for the E Street Band but settles for Deacon Blue; the title track meanders before setting its sights on an epic, U2-shaped climax.

Mainstream didn’t shift the requisite seven-figure numbers and Cole split up the group in 1989. Their concluding experiment in maturity failed partly because Lloyd Cole & The Commotions excelled at making young man’s music: occasionally clumsy and anxious to show off, as young men tend to be, but also brimming with words, ideas and the propulsive energy of precocious youth. Collected Recordings bears deep and eloquent testament to Cole’s view that “we did one thing really well for a little while”. It’s not a bad epitaph.

Q&A
LLOYD COLE
How hands-on were you in putting together the boxset?

There are 769 emails in my mailbox to do with making this record. It took at least as much work as making a normal album, it was a massive undertaking. We found everything, all the rare tracks, things I didn’t have or had forgotten. There’s stuff from between Easy Pieces and Mainstream where you can hear us trying to see what we could do next. It makes quite a fun story.

Did it make you reassess anything about the band?

Our strength when we began was that I had an aesthetic that everybody else was willing to buy into. The longer we existed the more we became democratic, and to be honest I can’t really complain about that, because I had less ideas. We were up against Thatcher, democracy seemed like a good idea! It was a lovely band to be in, but each year that went by it was more difficult. It was natural that it only had a limited lifespan, but I think the body of work we managed to put together is pretty great.

Your initial trajectory was rapid. What were the high points?
Writing “Are You Ready To Be Heartbroken?” in September ’83 was the moment where I thought, ‘Oh I can do this.’ The following month I took home the portastudio we shared and wrote the essences of “Forest Fire” and “Perfect Skin” in one weekend. Then I knew we were onto something. Being in NME, being on Top Of The Pops, those were the yardsticks. That’s where David Bowie had been, that’s where Morrissey already was, that’s where we wanted to be.

Did you suffer from the curse of the classic debut album?

I don’t think that was the problem. The problem was we grew up with Bowie, thinking that we had to reinvent ourselves with every record, and that’s a curse. So rather than doing Rattlesnakes Mk II, we decided to make more of a pop electric record. I think the good tracks on Easy Pieces are great and the bad tracks are awful.

Were you under external pressure to follow Rattlesnakes with a hit?
There was no expectation with Rattlesnakes, from a business point of view. Five months later we did a gig in Bristol and every record company from the Polygram group worldwide was there. I guess their eyes lit up with dollar signs. It wasn’t just the record company. There was this strange period in my life when it looked like I was going to become some kind of superstar – I never did – but what happened as a consequence was that we allowed ourselves to be persuaded that if we didn’t meet the Christmas ’85 release date there would be a chance that we’d be forgotten. I think that was the beginning of the end. People waited five years for [the Blue Nile’s] Hats, and people would have waited five years for the next Commotions record, but we were insecure in our position.

Mainstream sounds like a compromised album.
We basically thought we could make something better than a Simple Minds record. It’s possibly the most sonically beautiful record I’ve put my name to, but there’s not many actual songs. I think “My Bag” and “29” are great songs, but there’s also some excuses for songs, and a lot of long play-outs. Ian Stanley had come from producing Songs From The Big Chair by Tears For Fears, and we allowed ourselves to get into this position of thinking that selling less than a couple of million albums was failure.

What do you remember about breaking up?
It was very sad, and I was splitting up with my girlfriend at the same time. We weren’t childhood friends who grew up with a gang mentality, we became friends through playing music together, but you can’t not be close to a bunch of blokes you play with for years. It was upsetting and difficult. If there had been a great idea for a fourth Commotions record we would have made it, but there wasn’t. As a consequence, all the aspects of the lifestyle that made me unhappy weighed on me more. I felt that my being there was necessary for everybody else to make a living, and I didn’t like that.

You reformed to tour in 2004. Is there a temptation to do so again for the box-set?
They wanted me to do some solo shows, but I’m sure I’ll be able to, I’ve got other stuff going on. It’s too late for the five-piece. When we got together in 2004 it was a lot of fun, but I was at my limit. It required a different type of energy to that which I have these days. I don’t think it would be possible now, but I don’t think any of us have any regrets.
INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

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 September 2015 issue of Uncut is on sale in the UK on Tuesday, July 28 – featuring David Gilmour, a free Grateful Dead CD, Bob Dylan and the Newport Folk Festival, AC/DC, Killing Joke, the Isley Brothers, Julien Temple, Ryley Walker and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Trainwreck reviewed

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These days, Judd Apatow is a not just a multi-millionaire filmmaker but also a benign godfather, overseeing other projects by a sprawling ‘family’ of loosely connected comedians. Evidently keen to keep things on a casual footing, Apatow is also “the guy”. As in: “From the guy who brought y...

These days, Judd Apatow is a not just a multi-millionaire filmmaker but also a benign godfather, overseeing other projects by a sprawling ‘family’ of loosely connected comedians. Evidently keen to keep things on a casual footing, Apatow is also “the guy”. As in: “From the guy who brought you Bridesmaids”, as he is credited on the poster for Trainwreck. Although Apatow directed Trainwreck, it’s a shame that the name of the film’s writer and star, Amy Schumer, is absent.

Schumer is the creator and star of Inside Amy Schumer, a successful American sketch comedy that is widely tipped to storm this year’s Emmy awards. In Trainwreck, she plays Amy Townshend; a heavy drinker who enjoys a succession of one-night stands (“Never, ever let them sleep over”). “Don’t judge me, fuckers,” she says early on in voiceover.

By day, Amy is a writer for S’Nuff magazine, brainstorming features like ‘Ugliest Celebrity Kids Under 6’ and ‘Does Garlic Make Semen Taste Different’. The first 30 minutes of the film have a funny, foul-mouthed swagger; props especially to Tilda Swinton as Amy’s editor, swathed in toxic orange spray-tan and barking at her staff in flat Estuary vowels. Amy is commissioned to write a sports piece, where she meets a sports surgeon, played by Bill Hader and his Concerned Eyebrows.

Gradually, the com is replaced by the rom and what began as a frank and smart exploration of modern sexual politics winds up as a more conventional piece. Hader is good, incidentally; maintaining a good balance between awkward and low-key charm as the film moves towards an increasingly programmatic final act. Schumer is sharp and funny, though her edges are dulled by Apatow’s need for comforting resolutions, where emotional maturity, domesticity and group hugs win the day.

Incidentally, Schumer is not alone in having her name omitted from her own film’s poster. There were no credits on the Bridesmaids art for writers and stars Kristen Wiig, Annie Mumolo and Maya Rudolph. Thankfully, though, there was room for “The Producer Of Superbad, Knocked Up And The 40 Year Old Virgin”.

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 September 2015 issue of Uncut is on sale in the UK on Tuesday, July 28 – featuring David Gilmour, a free Grateful Dead CD, Bob Dylan and the Newport Folk Festival, AC/DC, Killing Joke, the Isley Brothers, Julien Temple, Ryley Walker and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Joe Strummer and the 101ers remembered: “Even then, he had this charisma…”

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To mark what would have been Joe Strummer's 66th birthday today [August 21], here's a piece from Uncut's November 2014 issue [Take 210], where Allan Jones - an old friend of Strummer's from art school in Newport - chronicled the history of Strummer's pre-Clash band, the 101ers. For some incredible ...

To mark what would have been Joe Strummer’s 66th birthday today [August 21], here’s a piece from Uncut’s November 2014 issue [Take 210], where Allan Jones – an old friend of Strummer’s from art school in Newport – chronicled the history of Strummer’s pre-Clash band, the 101ers.

For some incredible photography of Strummer and the 101ers, you can buy photographer Julian Yewdall’s book A Permanent Record: Joe Strummer by clicking here or visit his Facebook page.

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210815101ersuncut

Joe Strummer, newly blond and his hair reduced to not much more than Aryan stubble, sees me through a crowd of people and hurries out of sight with head-down urgency. It’s July, 1976, and Joe and I have fetched up separately for a gig at the Royal College of Art. There’s a bar set up outdoors in a kind of courtyard or garden, which is where a little later I’m standing when Joe suddenly appears next to me. He seems unusually lost for words. “It all happened real fast,” he says finally, not looking at me and acting like it would be better for both of us not to be seen together. Joe’s recently joined The Clash after walking out on The 101’ers only days before their first single comes out, Joe’s loyalty to his old band tested by the ferocity of his ambition in a contest that was only going to have winner. “I wanted to let you know what was happening,” he goes on. “But I was told not to talk to you. I didn’t know what to do. Everything’s real different now.”

I’m wondering who Joe’s taking orders from these days when on cue we’re rudely interrupted by a pugnacious little dude in a leather jacket and brothel creepers. This is Bernie Rhodes, manager of the fledgling Clash, although it’s quickly clear he’s missed his true vocation as, I don’t know, supreme leader of North Korea or some other dismal outpost of totalitarian oppression we’re told must be ruled with what’s called an iron fist. I dislike him on sight but not as he seems to think for luring Joe away from The 101’ers. Things have lately been changing fast, punk looming if not already here. The 101’ers and the bands they’ve shared the pub rock circuit with are now apparently out of date, about to be left behind, made redundant by a brutal new noise. The ship Joe’s just jumped is in other words already sinking. I’m also inclined to believe he’s found some kind of calling and a future he wants to be part of, so good luck to him.

What rankles, though, is now being lectured by the windbag Rhodes, who sounds like he’s making an accusatory speech in front of a people’s tribunal, me in the dock for being a part Joe’s past Bernie demands no further reference to, The 101’ers a crap pub rock band Joe is well rid of and in his emerging version was never really part of. “If I haven’t made myself clear,” he says, his hot breath in my face, “let me say it again. The 101’ers, they never existed, right? Give it a month and no one will even remember them.”

Eric Clapton is coming to a cinema near you…

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A new Eric Clapton concert film is due in cinemas this September. Eric Clapton: Live At The Royal Albert Hall was recorded in May this year during Clapton's run of shows celebrating his 70th birthday. Clapton has played more than 200 performances at the Albert Hall during his 50 years as a musicia...

A new Eric Clapton concert film is due in cinemas this September.

Eric Clapton: Live At The Royal Albert Hall was recorded in May this year during Clapton’s run of shows celebrating his 70th birthday.

Clapton has played more than 200 performances at the Albert Hall during his 50 years as a musician.

The film will screen shown in theaters worldwide beginning on September 14. It is produced by Examination Productions and Eagle Rock, and brought to screens by Arts Alliance. Cinema listings and tickets will be available soon from www.EricClaptonFilm.com.

Presented by Paul Gambaccini, the concert film also features interviews with members of Clapton’s current band including Paul Carrack, Andy Fairweather Lowe and Chris Stainton.

You can watch the trailer for the film below.

At the end of last year, Clapton released a DVD and Blu-ray tour documentary, Planes, Trains And Eric. You can read Uncut’s review of the doc by clicking here.

Speaking to Uncut last year, Clapton discussed turning 70 and how that might impact on his future career. “There are tons of things I’d like to do, but I’m looking at retirement, too,” he said.

“I’m 70 next year. JJ [Cale] wisely did the same thing. He said, ‘When I turn 70 I’m unofficially retired.’ I think what I’ll allow myself to do, within reason, is carry on recording in the studio, but the road has become unbearable. It’s unapproachable, because it takes so long to get anywhere, and it’s hostile out there. Everywhere. Getting in and out of airports, getting on planes, travelling in cars. I like my life too much to have it ruined by other people’s aggression. In the old days it was good fun. Travelling was something I used to look forward to, the change of scenery, meeting new people and getting a taste of a different culture. Now, the culture is global. It’s all different versions of America, often in a kind of resentful, reluctant way.”

You can read the interview with Clapton in its entirety by clicking here.

In related news, earlier this year, the Rolling Stones included a previously unreleased version of “Brown Sugar”, featuring Clapton, on the reissue edition of their Sticky Fingers album. You can listen to it by clicking here.

Significantly Clapton also released a new song last year: “For Jack” was a tribute to his former Cream colleague Jack Bruce, who died in October aged 71.

Clapton described his former bandmater as “a great musician and composer, and a tremendous inspiration to me.”

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 September 2015 issue of Uncut is on sale in the UK on Tuesday, July 28 – featuring David Gilmour, a free Grateful Dead CD, Bob Dylan and the Newport Folk Festival, AC/DC, Killing Joke, the Isley Brothers, Julien Temple, Ryley Walker and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Ask Noddy Holder!

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With a new Slade box set When Slade Rocked The World 1971 – 1975 on sale on October 30, Noddy Holder is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With... feature. As the former face of National Sausage Week, what is his banger of choice? What are his enduring memori...

With a new Slade box set When Slade Rocked The World 1971 – 1975 on sale on October 30, Noddy Holder is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

As the former face of National Sausage Week, what is his banger of choice?
What are his enduring memories of growing up in the Black Country?
How did his voice come to be used as the lift announcements at the Walsall New Art Gallery?

Send up your questions by noon, Friday, September 18, to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

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

Please include your name and location with your question.

When Slade Rocked The World 1971 – 1975 will include the band’s four albums from the period along with singles, a flexi-disc, memorabilia and more.

You can pre-order the box set by clicking here.

slade_rocked

The full tracklisting is:

VINYL LP & SINGLES TRACKLISTINGS
Slayed?

How D’You Ride
The Whole World’s Goin’ Crazee
Look At Last Nite
I Won’t Let It ‘Appen Agen
Move Over
Gudbuy T’Jane
Gudbuy Gudbuy
Mama Weer All Crazee Now
I Don’ Mind
Let The Good Times Roll
Feel So Fine

Slade Alive!
Hear Me Calling
In Like A Shot From My Gun
Darling Be Home Soon
Know Who You Are
Keep On Rocking
Get Down With It
Born To Be Wild

Old New Borrowed And Blue
Just Want A Little Bit
When The Lights Are Out
My Town
Find Yourself A Rainbow
Miles Out To Sea
We’re Really Gonna Raise The Roof
Do We Still Do It
How Can It Be
Don’t Blame Me
My Friend Stan
Everyday
Good Time Gals

Slade In Flame
How Does It Feel
Them Kinda Monkeys Can’t Swing
So Far So Good
Summer Song (Wishing You Were Here)
O.K. Yesterday Was Yesterday
Far Far Away
This Girl
Lay It Down
Heaven Knows
Standin’ On The Corner

4 Double A side picture sleeve singles
‘Coz I Love You’ / ‘Look Wot You Dun’
‘Take Me Bak ‘Ome ‘ / ‘Cum On Feel The Noize’
‘Skweeze Me Pleeze Me’ / ‘Merry Xmas Everybody’
‘The Bangin’ Man’ / ‘Thanks For The Memory’

The Albums That Rocked The World Tracklisting
CD 1
Slayed?

How D’You Ride
The Whole World’s Goin’ Crazee
Look At Last Nite
I Won’t Let It ‘Appen Agen
Move Over
Gudbuy T’Jane
Gudbuy Gudbuy
Mama Weer All Crazee Now
I Don’ Mind
Let The Good Times Roll
Feel So Fine

Slade Alive!
Hear Me Calling
In Like A Shot From My Gun
Darling Be Home Soon
Know Who You Are
Keep On Rocking
Get Down With It
Born To Be Wild

CD 2
Old New Borrowed And Blue
Just Want A Little Bit
When The Lights Are Out
My Town
Find Yourself A Rainbow
Miles Out To Sea
We’re Really Gonna Raise The Roof
Do We Still Do It
How Can It Be
Don’t Blame Me
My Friend Stan
Everyday
Good Time Gals

Slade In Flame
How Does It Feel
Them Kinda Monkeys Can’t Swing
So Far So Good
Summer Song (Wishing You Were Here)
O.K. Yesterday Was Yesterday
Far Far Away
This Girl
Lay It Down
Heaven Knows
Standin’ On The Corner

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 September 2015 issue of Uncut is on sale in the UK on Tuesday, July 28 – featuring David Gilmour, a free Grateful Dead CD, Bob Dylan and the Newport Folk Festival, AC/DC, Killing Joke, the Isley Brothers, Julien Temple, Ryley Walker and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Sleaford Mods – Key Markets

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If Sleaford Mods didn’t exist, one gets the impression that the music press would probably have invented them. Journalists of a certain age love interviewing people like Jason Williamson – a mouthy, entertaining fortysomething with a hinterland and a life before music – while Andrew Fearn’s ...

If Sleaford Mods didn’t exist, one gets the impression that the music press would probably have invented them. Journalists of a certain age love interviewing people like Jason Williamson – a mouthy, entertaining fortysomething with a hinterland and a life before music – while Andrew Fearn’s minimal backing tapes draw from every critical hobby horse of the past 40 years: the DIY urgency of punk, the laptop expediency of rave, the minimal thunder of early hip-hop.

And then, of course, there’s the lyrics: state-of-the-nation poetry that grabs you by the lapels and demands your attention. Grimly satirical, horrifying and hilarious, this is a coked-up voyage through the arse end of Austerity Britain, a bathetic tour of dead-end jobs, benefit offices and lairy confrontations in provincial Weatherspoon pubs.

Williamson can be very, very funny – he curses more entertainingly than anyone in pop music since the Troggs Tapes – but his motivation is toxic anger and frustration. “If it makes us laugh, then it’s probably an idea that’s worth exploring,” he tells Uncut. “But comedy is never the inspiration. I’m more passionate about the rant as a viable artform.”

“Face To Faces” is as close as Williamson gets to a political statement on this album (“Boris on a bike?/Quick, knock the cunt over”). “Rupert Trousers” starts by mocking the image of “Boris with a brick” (when the Mayor of London declared his solidarity with builders at last year’s Conservative Party Conference by holding a brick) and continues with a splenetic, scattershot assault on the upper classes who are “spitting out fine cheese made by that tool from Blur”.

But the politics is critical rather than constructive, despairing rather than utopian; indeed the perky, breakneck “No One’s Bothered” berates Middle England for its political apathy (“you’re trapped/me too/alienation?/no one’s bothered”).
There are some wonderfully Wildean aphorisms here (“variety is the lie of life”) but if Williamson’s poetry recalls anybody it’s William Blake. Where Blake sought to observe beauty in detail – “the world in a grain of sand, the heaven in a wild flower” – Williamson sees horror, despair and drudgery in the same fragments. Even hedonism seems like a chore. “Skunk? I’ve got to be pissed up to smoke that shit, you cunt”.

Williamson is good at painting Hogarthian grotesques in a few brushstrokes. And, like Hogarth, he sometimes expends great energy on ridiculing somebody he finds hateful. “Giddy On The Ciggies” directs its venom to the male model David Gandy (“ripped up Tory cunt”). “Cunt Make It Up” – the c-word in this instance being a provocative transcription of “couldn’t” – is an extended character assassination of some leatherjacket-wearing local band from a Nottingham suburb. “Riding motorbikes from the fifties?/you live in Carlton, you twat/you’re not Snake fucking Plissken/You’re shit/you look like Rocket From The Crypt”. “Bronx In A Six” sees Williamson rail at length against an old boss who ran a shoe shop (the “Bronx” being an upmarket footwear brand, the “six” being the size). He eviscerates the shop keeper (“I’ll fucking tie your veins around your Vans limited editions”) and mocks the ambitions of these budding capitalists (“I’m laughing my head off at the old cows that grazed on grass from the boom/it soon turned its jets on your face”).

This is a band who are unlikely to hire a string section or a gospel choir – sonically, Sleaford Mods can’t really move on too much. The music is still minimal and brutal: relentless drum loops and fingerbleeding post-punk basslines, like Martin Rev’s Suicide on a Nottingham City Council budget. If there’s any development, it’s that Williamson sometimes takes a break from rhyming in his chewy East Midlands and starts to sing. “Tarantula Deadly Cargo” sees him howling near the top of his register, Shaun Ryder style; while “The Blob” sees him enunciating a three-note whine like John Lydon.

As Ryder or Lydon have found to their cost, it’s sometimes tempting for a brave and intelligent satirist to play the court-jester. But Williamson’s spleen will always keep those tendencies in check.

Q&A
Jason Williamson
How have things changed since you gave up your job as a benefits adviser last year?

It was a bit of a shock to the system, to be honest. I miss the routine of getting up. And I felt guilty. Why am I jetting off to Switzerland? Why aren’t I in that shit £15 white shirt, sitting behind a desk, eating donuts from Asda? I’m slowly trying to look at it constructively, without any self pity.

Your earlier work often told stories. Here the lyrics seem more fragmented.
Yeah, there’s a lot more randomness. A few tunes tell a story. With other tracks, you’ll get a couple of lines that sum it up, and the rest is snapshots. A lot of words relate to things that are going on in my head that I really don’t want to explore. There’s some comedy, but more “what the fuck is he on about?”

How did you vote in the General Election?
Green, which I regret. I’m one of these twats who voted Green and wanted a Labour government. I should have just voted Labour. I hated their manifesto – so fucking vague, it could have been a recipe for a Bakewell tart. But they’d have brought some compassion. I’ve seen the people bearing the brunt of Tory policy – disabled people, single mothers who’ve lost their benefits trying to survive on 17 hours work a week. I mean, fuck off.

What’s your beef with David Gandy on the track “Giddy On The Ciggies”?
He’s this fantastically handsome male model with this fucking great body who is purportedly a Tory supporter. Hence “ripped-up Tory cunt”. In a sense, he’s probably a really nice guy, like a lot of the people I have a go at. But, in a sense, fuck off. When he did that underwear campaign for Marks & Spencer it was like some fascist notion of male physique. It just drew you to his bollocks and his cock and his tits. You didn’t know whether you were supposed to buy some Y-fronts or have a wank.
INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

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 September 2015 issue of Uncut is on sale in the UK on Tuesday, July 28 – featuring David Gilmour, a free Grateful Dead CD, Bob Dylan and the Newport Folk Festival, AC/DC, Killing Joke, the Isley Brothers, Julien Temple, Ryley Walker and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Jeff Tweedy talks Wilco, Star Wars and Bob Dylan

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Jeff Tweedy has explained the reasons why Wilco surprise released their new album Star Wars as a free download from the band's website. Star Wars was released in July. The album - the band's first since 2011’s The Whole Love - was initially available as a free download for 30 days via wilcoworld...

Jeff Tweedy has explained the reasons why Wilco surprise released their new album Star Wars as a free download from the band’s website.

Star Wars was released in July.

The album – the band’s first since 2011’s The Whole Love – was initially available as a free download for 30 days via wilcoworld.net and anti.com, as well as through iTunes, Google Play and Amazon Digital. It was also available through traditional streaming services including Spotify, Apple Music and Rdio.

It will be released on CD on August 21 and on vinyl on October 13. You can pre-order both formats from the Wilco website by clicking here.

Speaking to Rolling Stone, Tweedy explained, “I was really dreading the modern rollout pattern. Usually, by the time the record comes out, I hate it. I hate talking about it. I hate all the people that have weighed in on it. I think it’s done a disservice to our records, the way they’ve been heard in dribs and drabs, and a lot of people think they’ve heard a whole record after just hearing one song. That’s not the way Wilco records work.”

Also in the interview, Tweedy admitted he’s not a fan of the Star Wars move series: “No! In fact, I didn’t know there was a new Star Wars movie coming out until my lawyer told me.”

He continued, “Everybody advised me against [calling the album Star Wars], because there is a heavily protected trademark involved. But I think from our point of view, it was clearly recontextualized, clearly did not have any of the look and feel of what would be protected under law. So, you know, we’ll see. They haven’t said anything so far.”

He also revealed that work is currently progressing on the follow-up to Star Wars. “I’m about halfway done with the next record,” he said.

Tweedy also talked about touring with Bob Dylan in 2013, saying, “We’ve talked a little bit, and I actually get a really warm feeling from him. I felt very inspired just being in the presence of somebody that has that few fucks to give about anything. There’s a lot of middle ground there between somebody like Bob Dylan and Paul McCartney, who totally gives it up every night for the people and the songs. But if I had to choose one to be more inspired by, it’s definitely on the more curmudgeonly asshole side of the spectrum.”

You can read Uncut‘s review of Star Wars 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 September 2015 issue of Uncut is on sale in the UK on Tuesday, July 28 – featuring David Gilmour, a free Grateful Dead CD, Bob Dylan and the Newport Folk Festival, AC/DC, Killing Joke, the Isley Brothers, Julien Temple, Ryley Walker and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.