Home Blog Page 370

Exclusive! Joanna Newsom discusses new album with Uncut

0
Joanna Newsom has spoken exclusively to Uncut about her forthcoming album, Divers. Talking to Jaan Uhelszki in Los Angeles, Newsom discussed the "fear of loss" that informed her fourth album, and how it was prompted by her marriage to comedian Andy Samberg. "Everyone's getting older. When I crossed...

Joanna Newsom has spoken exclusively to Uncut about her forthcoming album, Divers.

Talking to Jaan Uhelszki in Los Angeles, Newsom discussed the “fear of loss” that informed her fourth album, and how it was prompted by her marriage to comedian Andy Samberg. “Everyone’s getting older. When I crossed that line in my mind where I knew I was with the person that I wanted to marry, it was a very heavy thing, because you’re inviting death into your life. You know that that’s hopefully after many, many, many, many years, but the idea of death stops being abstract, because there is someone you can’t bear to lose. when it registers as true, it’s like a little shade of grief that comes in when love is its most real version. Then it contains death inside of it, and then that death contains love inside of it.”

She also describes how her appearance in Paul Thomas Anderson’s Inherent Vice delayed the record, but that it was “totally worth it.” She added, “What really happened is I spent four years in this suspended state of agitation, waiting for things to make sense. But then it was just sustained, slow work.”

The diving theme first emerged in ‘You Will Not Take My Heart Alive’, but she didn’t notice it until a few songs in. “For me, it’s not just the diving that’s important, it’s the implication of the medium that’s being moved through in the process of diving and that, for me, might be the thing that really connects back to the thesis of… I don’t want to say thesis. That’s too much work.”

Newsom has unveiled another album track, ‘Leaving The City’, which you can hear below.

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

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, John Grant, Julian Cope, The Doors, Linda Ronstadt, Peter Gabriel, The Dead Weather, Deerhunter, Otis Redding, Captain Beefheart and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

U2 concert evacuated due to ‘unspecified security breach’

0
Last night's (September 20) U2 concert in Stockholm has been evacuated following a security threat. A statement on the band's website details a "security breach," and explains that the lack of resolution means that tonight's concert has been postponed until September 22. All tickets remain valid. L...

Last night’s (September 20) U2 concert in Stockholm has been evacuated following a security threat. A statement on the band’s website details a “security breach,” and explains that the lack of resolution means that tonight’s concert has been postponed until September 22. All tickets remain valid.

Local media reported that police were searching for a man who entered the Ericsson Globe Arena carrying a gun. Reports of a bomb have been dismissed.

Concert organisers Live Nation are yet to comment on the circumstances surrounding the cancellation, simply stating that “safety is a priority” from the venue’s stage.

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, John Grant, Julian Cope, The Doors, Linda Ronstadt, Peter Gabriel, The Dead Weather, Deerhunter, Otis Redding, Captain Beefheart and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Neil Young plays brand new and rare material at Farm Aid 30

0
Neil Young unveiled a new song at Farm Aid's thirtieth anniversary concert this weekend (September 19). Performing with Promise Of The Real, Young debuted 'I Won't Quit', a tirade against corporate greed and the treatment of farmers and animals. Taking place in downtown Chicago, at the FirstMerit B...

Neil Young unveiled a new song at Farm Aid’s thirtieth anniversary concert this weekend (September 19). Performing with Promise Of The Real, Young debuted ‘I Won’t Quit’, a tirade against corporate greed and the treatment of farmers and animals.

Taking place in downtown Chicago, at the FirstMerit Bank Pavilion, his set also featured a number of rarities. He performed ‘Alabama’ for the first time since 1973’s Time Fades Away tour, and ‘Western Hero’ for the second time ever, following its inaugural outing at a Voters For Choice benefit in Washington DC on January 14, 1995. See the full setlist and Young and POTR’s set (starting at 7:36:00) below.

Setlist:
‘Workin’ Man’
‘A Rock Star Bucks A Coffee Shop’
‘Big Box’
‘Alabama’
‘Western Hero’
‘I Won’t Quit’
‘Love And Only Love’

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, John Grant, Julian Cope, The Doors, Linda Ronstadt, Peter Gabriel, The Dead Weather, Deerhunter, Otis Redding, Captain Beefheart and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

This month in Uncut

0
Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, John Grant and The Doors all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out on September 22. In our cover feature, we visit Rod in Los Angeles on the eve of his new album and the Faces reunion, and discover why he was never much of a natural songwriter. "I was too busy – as I...

Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, John Grant and The Doors all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out on September 22.

In our cover feature, we visit Rod in Los Angeles on the eve of his new album and the Faces reunion, and discover why he was never much of a natural songwriter.

“I was too busy – as I said in my autobiography – having a good time,” he says. “I couldn’t be bothered to sit down and write songs, especially in the early ’70s. In the Faces, you literally had to lock me in a room to get the lyrics finished. Now, with the coming of age and with a few stories to tell, it’s a luxury. I love it. Now, when I’m not making an album, I miss it. But yeah, it was like being at school for me.”

Joanna Newsom also invites Uncut into her LA home, to discuss her new album Divers, four years in the making. “I took time off to do the movie [Inherent Vice],” she says. “It did maybe defer some of my music work for a while. But it was totally worth it. What really happened is I spent four years in this suspended state of agitation, waiting for things to make sense. But then it was just sustained, slow work.”

John Grant answers questions from fans and collaborators, taking on topics such as The Czars, Elton John, Sinéad O’Connor and his current vices. “The Coke Zero, and there’s a chocolate from Green & Black’s, Sea Salt,” he reveals. “It’s a blue packaging. Oh God, the No 1 thing, which I can’t get my hands on very often – luckily – is this stuff made in Norway, Smash! It’s just insane. Do you know what Bugels are? They’re cone-shaped corn crisps that’ve been around for decades. So they’re Bugels covered in milk chocolate and salt. And you just cannot believe, I mean, it’s like crack. For real. And I’ve smoked crack, so I’m telling you, man.”

With the help of John Densmore, Robby Krieger, Bruce Botnick and more, Uncut looks into the strange tale of what The Doors did after Jim Morrison‘s death – namely, two albums, now reissued. “You needed three stable guys to balance Dionysus,” says Densmore, recalling their relationship with Morrison. But after his death, who could replace a frontman of such terrifyingly “strong energy”? Paul Rodgers? Kevin Coyne? Joe Cocker? Paul McCartney?

Elsewhere, Julian Cope remembers the making of his first two solo albums, World Shut Your Mouth and Fried, and a period that included Mars Bars, suppository-sized speed pills and a giant turtleshell… ““It was ridiculous,” he tells us. “But at least it was valiantly ridiculous.”

On a similarly cosmic trip, Harmonia recall the making of their only single, “Deluxe (Immer Wieder)”, and their members’ work with Neu!, Cluster, Kraftwerk and Brian Eno.

Friends and collaborators remember the great soul singer Otis Redding and his classic Otis Blue album – “He was a whirlwind of a guy,” they say; Linda Ronstadt takes us through her greatest albums including her work with the Eagles and Neil Young; and Depeche Mode‘s Dave Gahan reveals the albums that have shaped his life.

Our front section features Sid Vicious, Captain Beefheart, John Cooper Clarke and The Bodysnatchers, while our albums section includes The Dead Weather, John Grant, Israel Nash, Deerhunter, Peter Gabriel, The Velvet Underground and Slade.

Films and DVDs previewed this month include Rubble Kings and The Lobster, while End Of The Road festival is reviewed in our live section.

Our free CD, Reason To Believe, features music from Los Lobos, Patty Griffin, Joanna Newsom, John Grant, Fuzz, Gospelbeach, Martin Courtney and Euros Childs.

The new Uncut, dated November 2015, is out on September 22.

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.

Ride announce expanded 25th anniversary reissue of Nowhere

0
Ride have announced a 25th anniversary reissue of their 1990 debut album, Nowhere. The CD/DVD release includes an expanded fifteen-track edition of the album as well as a DVD recording of a 1991 concert at London's Town & Country Club. Says Bell, "We were really driven, within the band, to imp...

Ride have announced a 25th anniversary reissue of their 1990 debut album, Nowhere.

The CD/DVD release includes an expanded fifteen-track edition of the album as well as a DVD recording of a 1991 concert at London’s Town & Country Club.

Says Bell, “We were really driven, within the band, to improve on the songwriting, performances and production of the first two EPs, and create something special, an album which stood for our aesthetic and had a real artistic integrity.”

Drummer Loz Colbert added: “When we’d completed the album and it was all mixed and mastered, it seemed like we’d arrived, we’d made it… and what did that feel like? Nowhere.”

The album reached Number 11 in the UK charts. The new edition will be presented in a hardback cardboard case with a canvas-style cover, and include a 36-page booklet full of unseen photos and brand new sleeve notes written by Bell, compiled using the help of Ride fans via a Twitter Q&A.

The tracklisting for Nowhere CD and Double LP is:

‘Seagull’
‘Kaleidoscope’
‘In A Different Place’
‘Polar Bear’
‘Dreams Burn Down’
‘Decay’
‘Paralysed’
‘Vapour Trail’
‘Taste’
‘Here And Now’
‘Nowhere’
‘Unfamiliar’
‘Sennen’
‘Beneath’
‘Today’

While the live at Town & Country Club ’91 DVD will show:

‘Polar Bear’
‘Unfamiliar’
‘Like A Daydream’
‘Drive Blind’
‘Vapour Trail’
‘Beneath’
‘In A Different Place’
‘Perfect Time’
‘Sennen’
‘Taste’
‘Today’
‘Decay’
‘Dreams Burn Down’
‘Chelsea Girl’
‘Nowhere’
‘Seagull’

The band play the following UK dates this October:

O2 Academy, Leeds (October 11)
UEA, Norwich (12)
O2 Academy Brixton, London (14)
O2 Academy, Liverpool (15)
Anson Rooms, Bristol (17)
O2 Academy, Newcastle (18)
Corn Exchange, Edinburgh (19)
Rock City, Nottingham (21)
Institute, Birmingham (22)

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.

Thom Yorke shares new music

0
Thom Yorke has shared two pieces of new music this week. An eight minute track, "Villain", premiered as part of the New York Fashion Week runway show for New York design brand Rag & Bone. Yorke - and produced Nigel Godrich - had previously worked with Rag & Bone in 2011 and 2013. Conseque...

Thom Yorke has shared two pieces of new music this week.

An eight minute track, “Villain“, premiered as part of the New York Fashion Week runway show for New York design brand Rag & Bone.

Yorke – and produced Nigel Godrich – had previously worked with Rag & Bone in 2011 and 2013.

Consequences Of Sound report that “Villain” features vocals provided by the Brooklyn Youth Chorus.

Meanwhile, part of Yorke’s score for the Roundabout Theatre Company’s new Broadway production of Harold Pinter‘s play Old Times, have aired as part of a television spot for the play. Watch the video featuring Yorke’s score below.

Old Times – directed by Douglas Hodge – stars Clive Owen, Eve Best, and Kelly Reilly. The show runs from October 6 through November 29 at American Airlines Theatre in New York City.

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.

Ryan Adams announces details of his Taylor Swift cover album…

0
Ryan Adams has confirmed that his cover of Taylor Swift's album, 1989, will be released digitally on Monday, September 21. Adams broke the news on Twitter yesterday [September 17]. https://twitter.com/TheRyanAdams/status/644525353357152256/ Adams announced that he would be recording the covers at...

Ryan Adams has confirmed that his cover of Taylor Swift‘s album, 1989, will be released digitally on Monday, September 21.

Adams broke the news on Twitter yesterday [September 17].

https://twitter.com/TheRyanAdams/status/644525353357152256/

Adams announced that he would be recording the covers at the start of August and has been posting various behind the scenes video clips and photos on Twitter and Instagram.

Swift responded to the news of the release by Tweeting, “Ryan’s music helped shape my songwriting. This is surreal and dreamlike.”

https://twitter.com/taylorswift13/status/644535114203025408

Adams has already shared previews of “Welcome To New York”, “Bad Blood”, “All You Had To Do Was Stay”, “Out Of The Woods”, “Wildest Dreams” and “Shake It Off” from the album.

Adams has a lengthy history of covering other artists, ranging from Oasis’ “Wonderwall” to Bryan Adams’ “Summer Of ’69” and Foo Fighters’ “Times Like These”.

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.

Morrissey: forthcoming London shows are likely to be his last

0
Morrissey has claimed that his upcoming London shows are likely to be his final UK performances. Morrissey is due to play two consecutive nights at London’s Eventim Apollo in Hammersmith on September 20 and 21. In a statement posted on quasi-official fan site True To You, Morrissey blamed the de...

Morrissey has claimed that his upcoming London shows are likely to be his final UK performances.

Morrissey is due to play two consecutive nights at London’s Eventim Apollo in Hammersmith on September 20 and 21.

In a statement posted on quasi-official fan site True To You, Morrissey blamed the decision on a lack of interest from UK record labels.

He was dropped from Harvest last year, after the release of his latest studio album, World Peace Is None Of Your Business.

In his statement, dated September 17, Morrissey wrote:

“There is absolutely no way that we can generate any interest from record labels in the United Kingdom, therefore the imminent two nights at Hammersmith are likely to be our final ever UK shows. We are obsessively grateful for all interest and loyalty from our audience … throughout 28 years … but without new releases, there is no point in any additional touring. Thank you for so many absolutely incredible times. The pleasure and privilege is mine … ”

Prior to the London shows this weekend, Morrissey is backing a pop-up shop at Battersea Dogs & Cats Home.

Morrissey’s Mporium merchandise shop will open between Friday, September 18, and Monday September 21 from 10:30am-5pm each day.

A limited number of Your Arsenal and Vauxhall And I vinyl signed by Morrissey will be available at the shop alongside other official merchandise. Engraved, numbered and dated Battersea Dog and Cat tags will also be available to fans.

Twenty-five copies of each album will be available on vinyl for each day of opening and will be strictly limited to one per customer only.

Meanwhile, Morrissey’s debut novel, List Of The Lost, will be published on September 24, 2015 at £7.99.

The press release contains the following notes written by Morrissey.

“Beware of the novelist … intimate and indiscreet … pompous, prophetic airs … here is the fact of the fiction … an American tale where, naturally, evil conquers good, and none live happily ever after, for the complicated pangs of the empty experiences of flesh-and-blood human figures are the reasons why nothing can ever be enough. To read a book is to let a root sink down. List of the lost is the reality of what is true battling against what is permitted to be true”.

News of the novel first broke on August 22 via 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

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.

Exclusive! Paul McCartney on The Beatles’ “brilliant” new 1+ video collection

0
Paul McCartney has spoken exclusively to Uncut about the forthcoming new edition of The Beatles 1. McCartney - who is on the cover of the month's issue of Uncut - gives us a sneak peek at what to expect from his former band's latest release. The Beatles 1+ compiles 50 promotional films and videos....

Paul McCartney has spoken exclusively to Uncut about the forthcoming new edition of The Beatles 1.

McCartney – who is on the cover of the month’s issue of Uncut – gives us a sneak peek at what to expect from his former band’s latest release.

The Beatles 1+ compiles 50 promotional films and videos. These ‘mini movies’ were recorded by the band after the stopped touring and gave fans around the world the chance to see The Beatles at work and play.

As McCartney explains, some of the promotional material was recorded purely by chance.

“We’ve got all visuals associated with the hits on the album, 1,” he tells us. “All the music videos, and where there isn’t a music video – they’ve made some up! Which is brilliant. They’ve found footage.”

“‘Hey, Bulldog’ is to die for, as my wife would say,” McCartney continues. “It’s great, because there happened to be a camera crew there filming The Beatles at EMI while we were doing ‘Lady Madonna’. They were going to film a little bit of that, but they stayed and we got onto ‘Hey, Bulldog’. It’s great, and it all fits with the record because they filmed the take we used.”

Essentially a restored and expanded update of The Beatles’ 1 compilation from 2000, the 200-minute The Beatles 1+ includes the band’s 27 No 1 singles, with the restored videos, along with a second disc of 23 videos, including alternate versions, as well as rarely seen and newly restored films and videos; all include new audio mixes in deluxe CD/2DVD and CD/2Blu-ray packages. The original 27-track audio CD is also being made available with new stereo mixes.

They will be released on November 6 by Apple Corps Ltd/UMG.

A 2LP, 180-gram vinyl package will follow.

The footage was scanned in high-def 4K and the audio restored from the original analogue tapes at Abbey Road Studios by Giles Martin.

McCartney and Ringo Starr have provided exclusive audio commentary and filmed introductions respectively.

The Beatles 1 [CD; DVD; Blu-ray; CD/DVD; CD/Blu-ray]
DISC 1 AUDIO (CD) + DISC 1 VIDEO (DVD or Blu-ray)
1. Love Me Do
2. From Me To You
3. She Loves You
4. I Want To Hold Your Hand
5. Can’t Buy Me Love
6. A Hard Day’s Night
7. I Feel Fine
8. Eight Days a Week
9. Ticket To Ride
10. Help!
11. Yesterday
12. Day Tripper
13. We Can Work It Out
14. Paperback Writer
15. Yellow Submarine
16. Eleanor Rigby
17. Penny Lane
18. All You Need Is Love
19. Hello, Goodbye
20. Lady Madonna
21. Hey Jude
22. Get Back
23. The Ballad of John and Yoko
24. Something
25. Come Together
26. Let It Be
27. The Long and Winding Road
DISC 1 VIDEO EXTRAS
Paul McCartney audio commentary
Penny Lane
Hello, Goodbye
Hey Jude
Ringo Starr filmed introductions
Penny Lane
Hello, Goodbye
Hey Jude
Get Back

The Beatles 1+ (CD/2DVD; CD/2Blu-ray]
DISC 1 AUDIO (CD) + DISC 1 VIDEO (DVD or Blu-ray)
(same as above)
DISC 2 VIDEO (DVD or Blu-ray)

1. Twist & Shout
2. Baby It’s You
3. Words Of Love
4. Please Please Me
5. I Feel Fine
6. Day Tripper *
7. Day Tripper *
8. We Can Work It Out *
9. Paperback Writer *
10. Rain *
11. Rain *
12. Strawberry Fields Forever
13. Within You Without You/Tomorrow Never Knows
14. A Day In The Life
15. Hello, Goodbye *
16. Hello, Goodbye *
17. Hey Bulldog
18. Hey Jude *
19. Revolution
20. Get Back *
21. Don’t Let Me Down
22. Free As A Bird
23. Real Love
DISC 2 VIDEO EXTRA
Paul McCartney audio commentary
Strawberry Fields Forever

* alternate version

You can pre-order the 1 CD by clicking here.

You can pre-order the 1 DVD by clicking here.

You can pre-order the 1 Blu-ray by clicking here.

You can pre-order the 1 CD/DVD by clicking here.

You can pre-order the 1 CD/Blu-ray by clicking here.

You can pre-order the 1 deluxe CD/2 DVD by clicking here.

You can pre-order the 1 deluxe CD/2 Blu-ray 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 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.

The 32nd Uncut Playlist Of 2015

0
What's new? No less than three new Kelley Stoltz records, Sun City Girls and Scientist reissues, a copy of the abbreviated Dead bonanza, a new Thom Yorke track. I imagine many of you have seen the medley Kendrick Lamar performed on the Colbert show a few nights ago: if not, please check it out - I c...

What’s new? No less than three new Kelley Stoltz records, Sun City Girls and Scientist reissues, a copy of the abbreviated Dead bonanza, a new Thom Yorke track. I imagine many of you have seen the medley Kendrick Lamar performed on the Colbert show a few nights ago: if not, please check it out – I can’t think of a better TV performance this year.

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

1 Floating Points – Elaenia (Pluto)

2 John McLaughlin – My Goal’s Beyond (Douglas)

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

4 Steve Hauschildt – Where All Is Fled (Kranky)

5 PC Worship – Basement Hysteria (Northern Spy)

6 Weyes Blood – Cardamom Times (Mexican Summer)

7 Christopher Bissonnette – Pitch, Paper & Foil (Kranky)

8 King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – Paper Mâché Dream Balloon (Heavenly)

9 Oneohtrix Point Never – Garden Of Delete (Warp)

10 Baby Spiders – Seven Months Out Of The Year (www. babyspiders.bandcamp.com)

11 Gary Clark Jr – The Story Of Sonny Boy Slim (Warner Bros)

12 Phil Cook – Southland Mission (Thirty Tigers / Middle West)

13 Kelley Stoltz – In Triangle Time (Castle Face)

14 Kelley Stoltz – Odds & Sods (Stroll On)

15 Kelley Stoltz – The Scuzzy Inputs Of Willie Weird (Stroll On)

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

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

18 The Grateful Dead – 30 Trips Around The Sun: The Definitive Live Story (Rhino)

19 Thom Yorke – Villain (Youtube)

20 Scientist – Introducing Scientist – The Best Dub Album In The World (Superior Viaduct)

21 Sun City Girls – Torch Of The Mystics (Abduction)

22 Kendrick Lamar – To Pimp A Butterfly Medley (Colbert)

Introducing… The History Of Rock: 1967

0
Thanks for all the kind words you've had to say about our Fleetwood Mac Ultimate Music Guide, that I launched here last week. This time out, we have the latest volume of our History Of Rock project to plug, which deals with the momentous events of 1967. History Of Rock: 1967 is in the shops already,...

Thanks for all the kind words you’ve had to say about our Fleetwood Mac Ultimate Music Guide, that I launched here last week. This time out, we have the latest volume of our History Of Rock project to plug, which deals with the momentous events of 1967. History Of Rock: 1967 is in the shops already, and you can order a copy at our online shop. But in the meantime, here’s John Robinson to introduce the issue…

“Welcome to 1967. In the popular imagination, this is a year defined by its summer – a summer not announced by warmer weather, so much as by the Beatles release of Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band in June, and continuing through singles like their own ‘All You Need Is Love’, ‘Itchycoo Park’ by the Small Faces and Traffic’s ‘Hole In My Shoe’. It is also a more symbolic season, in which the tentative drug dalliance, conceptual thought and musical explorations seeded in the previous year all burst into vibrant colour. Or, in the case of the Jimi Hendrix Experience, into flames.

“Bands are leaving the cities. They are growing (and shaving) moustaches. Fans are following them in greater numbers not to scream, but to mingle with them as something like equals, to listen and watch the lightshow. An American city, San Francisco, becomes the spiritual home of this development – generally called ‘Flower Power’, which George Harrison goes to witness in person – and quickly, of its kitsch. The ‘genuine people’, as Graham Nash observes, have already gone elsewhere.

“The Beatles make influential music in 1967, but it may be the Rolling Stones (for whom this is not considered a vintage year) who are the avatars of the culture. In January, Brian Jones tells the world that something called ‘the age of Aquarius’ is coming. It is the sentencing in July of Mick Jagger and Keith Richards that threatens to bring the summer’s idyll to an end. The band’s return with ‘We Love You’ offers a new and ironic note of defiance for the autumn. Come the winter, Jagger will be telling reporters that Satanic Majesties is ‘just another album’, as the year’s costumes are removed and put away.

“The staffers of NME and Melody Maker were there with all these musicians, increasingly for longer periods. Transatlantic travel is fractionally more common, and when the opportunity arises, American groups are visited in their own surroundings. Making music has come to reflect an entire lifestyle, and travel of one kind or another is broadening the mind.

“This is the world of The History Of Rock, a new monthly magazine and ongoing project which reaps the benefits of this access for the reader decades later, one year at a time. In the pages of this third edition, dedicated to 1967, you will find verbatim articles from frontline staffers, compiled into long and illuminating reads. Missed an issue? You can find out how to rectify that here.

“What will surprise the modern reader most is the access to, and the sheer volume of material supplied by the artists who are now the giants of popular culture. Now, a combination of wealth, fear and lifestyle would conspire to keep reporters at a rather greater length from the lives of musicians.

“At this stage, however, representatives from New Musical Express and Melody Maker are where it matters. At Monterey with Brian Jones, or looning at UFO. Talking Coronation Street with the Monkees. They are with Traffic, awaiting a delivery of poached eggs.

“Join them there. You’ll flip on it.”

Destroyer – Poison Season

0
Dan Bejar’s 19-year climb from lo-fi-bedroom obscurity to wider acclaim was slowed somewhat by the defiantly abstruse nature of his early recordings. But over time, before the soft grandeur of his 2011 breakout, Kaputt, at least, the Vancouver native began embedding tantalising nuggets of a more w...

Dan Bejar’s 19-year climb from lo-fi-bedroom obscurity to wider acclaim was slowed somewhat by the defiantly abstruse nature of his early recordings. But over time, before the soft grandeur of his 2011 breakout, Kaputt, at least, the Vancouver native began embedding tantalising nuggets of a more welcoming song-form amid the distancing Dadaisms and abstractions that dominated his albums

These tracks, primarily inspired by arty ’70s British acts including Bowie, T. Rex, Roxy Music, Eno, John Cale and Mott The Hoople, are what Bejar refers to as “street rock”. Memorable examples of this impulse are scattered through the 42-year-old iconoclast’s thick body of work all the way back to 2001’s Streethawk: A Seduction, the fifth Destroyer album but the first predominantly listenable one. It’s thrillingly evident in the propulsive swagger of “Jackie, Dressed In Cobras” from the New Pornographers’ second album, 2005’s Twin Cinema, and “Myriad Harbor” from their 2007 LP Challengers, recordings so masterfully conceived and executed it seems downright perverse that Bejar’s mined this rich vein so infrequently. But on Poison Season, Bejar re-embraces street rock, and recontextualises it as well.

Kaputt, dreamed up in the thrall of Avalon and quieted by a major life-change, the birth of his son, revealed a more measured Bejar, easing himself into soft-rock reveries and setting aside his obscurant tendencies in favour of couched but discernible emotion. These tendencies spill over into the new album. The Kaputt lineup – including the production team of guitarist David Carswell and bassist John Collins – is unchanged except for the addition of versatile drummer/percussionist Josh Wells. But on Poison Season, they’re joined by a five-piece string section, which brings a symphonic lushness to the bookends, two stately versions of “Times Square, Poison Season”, the first a wistful piece redolent of 1940s film music, over which Bejar establishes his subtly altered vocal persona, which is warmer, closer and precisely enunciated.

The prelude is forcefully shoved aside by a fanfare of brass and pummeling drums, and we’re suddenly transported to Springsteen’s turf as we follow two “lovers on the run” whose hyper-romantic idyll is rudely interrupted by the dawn of a new day. Only Bejar could come up with the payoff line, subverting George Harrison’s most uplifting refrain with “Oh shit, here comes the sun”. The following “Forces From Above” unfolds with carefully arranged Baroque strings, but the track shifts in feel and dynamic as the rhythm section and horns take over. Here, Bejar and the band seem to be taking their cues from Henry Mancini’s 1960s film scores, as the soaring strings, blaring horns and thumping congas careen toward the rousing climax.

“Hell”, “The River” and “Girl In A Sling” are of a piece, the strings, horns and Ted Bois’ piano, which functions as the album’s foreground instrument, playing off each other with an uptown cool that is downright Ellingtonian.

“Times Square” sits in the dead centre of the 13-track sequence, its strutting groove supplied by a “Walk On The Wild Side”-like acoustic guitar and sax, while the lyrics second that emotion with the lines “Judy’s beside herself/Jack’s in a state of desolation/The writing on the wall isn’t writing at all/Just forces of nature in love with a radio station”, wryly referencing the Velvets’ “Rock And Roll”. It’s a clever Lou Reed lift, and Bejar comes to it casually and affectionately. “Archer On The Beach”, radically altered from the one-off 2010 original, is a laidback big-band nocturne on the order of Steely Dan’s Aja.

Two string-laden songs later, on “Bangkok”, the group take us on a stone soul picnic, Laura Nyro and Todd Rundgren slow-dancing amid the flickering lights of a sultry summer night in Manhattan. Then, the free-jazz squall of “Sun In The Sky” gives way to the third and final take of “Times Square”, Bejar bringing increased nuance to the lyrics over the end-title theme, as this Zen archer lets fly with his second straight bull’s eye.

QA
Dan Bejar
The new LP is loaded with classic-rock references. What made you go there?

It’s always been Destroyer’s comfort zone. That is the music that got me out of the basement, and into trying to sing in a rock’n’roll band, in 1997. For some reason I recently started to revisit those early-’70s records that were so pivotal to me in the late ’90s, mostly sparked by the song “Where Are We Now” by David Bowie. It made me think about him for the first time in a long time, and sonically it is definitely a major inspiration for Poison Season.

The sonic idea behind the album seems to be the juxtaposition of heavily arranged elements with a rock band playing live off the floor.
They were two very separate recording sessions done quite far apart, physically, spiritually, etc. So the mystery of the record – and it seems to me art needs a mystery – was how they could possibly live together and interact. To me, the tension created by the two approaches sitting side by side, or even butting up against each other within the same song, went from being a source of great worry to being one of the things about the album that I am most enjoying.

You’ve made two welcoming albums in a row. What’s up with that?
The absence of complete severity in Poison Season is a major fuck-up. But in the end I am always a slave to melodies and a certain kind of cinematic lift. Prefab notions of redemption, which maybe, someday, I will exorcise myself of.
INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA

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.

The 31st Uncut Playlist Of 2015

0
Some kind of karma here, since messing about finishing an issue and so forth has meant this week's playlist has arrived late, and racked up a serendipitous 31 entries. Very hooked on the Floating Points record again these past few days… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Steve H...

Some kind of karma here, since messing about finishing an issue and so forth has meant this week’s playlist has arrived late, and racked up a serendipitous 31 entries. Very hooked on the Floating Points record again these past few days…

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

1 Steve Hauschildt – Where All Is Fled (Kranky)

2 Thunderbitch – Thunderbitch (www.thundabetch.com)

3 Jeffrey Lewis & Los Bolts – Manhattan (Rough Trade)

4 Floating Points – Elaenia (Pluto)

5 Chris Forsyth & Koen Holtkamp – The Island (Trouble In Mind)

6 King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – Paper Mâché Dream Balloon (Heavenly)

7 The Necks – Vertigo (Northern Spy)

8 Byron Westbrook – Precipice (Root Strata)

9 Kode9 – Nothing (Hyperdub)

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

11 Tomaga – Familiar Obstacles (Hands In The Dark)

12 Panda Bear – Crosswords (Domino)

13 Weyes Blood – Cardamom Times (Mexican Summer)

14 Luke Vibert – Bizarster (Planet Mu)

15 Alan Vega/Alex Chilton/Ben Vaughn – Cubist Blues (Light In The Attic)

16 Lou Barlow – Brace The Wave (Domino)

17 Peaches – Rub (I U She Music)

18 Xylouris White – Goats (Other Music)

19 Bitchin Bajas – Transporteur (Hands In The Dark)

20 Ryley Walker – Primrose Green (Dead Oceans)

21 Robert Forster – Songs To Play (Tapete)

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

23 Martin Courtney – Many Moons (Domino)

24 Sun Ra And His Arkestra – To Those Of Earth… And Other Worlds (Strut)

25 The Meters – Here Comes The Meter Man: The Complete Josie Recordings 1968-1970 (Charly)

26 Patrick Cowley – Muscle Up (Dark Entries/Honey Soundsystem)

27 The Go-Betweens – Before Hollywood (Rough Trade)

28 The Go-Betweens – Spring Hill Fair (Sire)

29 Four Tet – Pink (Text)

30 Die Nerven – Out (Glitterhouse)

31 Blumfeld – L’Etat Et Moi (Big Cat)

Grateful Dead exclusive! Hear an unreleased version of “Uncle John’s Band”

0
On September 18, The Grateful Dead release 30 Trips Around The Sun - a mammoth, 80-disc box set containing previously unreleased live performances from the Dead's archive. On the same date, the band will also release 30 Trips Around The Sun: The Definitive Live Story 1965-1995, a more modest four-d...

On September 18, The Grateful Dead release 30 Trips Around The Suna mammoth, 80-disc box set containing previously unreleased live performances from the Dead’s archive.

On the same date, the band will also release 30 Trips Around The Sun: The Definitive Live Story 1965-1995, a more modest four-disc set including 30 unreleased performances – one from each concert in the boxed set.

You can pre-order 30 Trips Around The Sun: The Definitive Live Story 1965-1995 by clicking here

To coincide with this momentous Dead news, we’re delighted to be able to share a number of tracks from the set upfront.

Click here to listen to an unreleased version of “Viola Lee Blues”

Click here to listen to an unreleased version of “Shakedown Street”

Click here to listen to an unreleased version of “Scarlet Begonias”

For our latest exclusive, we’re delighted to present a version of “Uncle John’s Band”, recorded live at Parc des Expositions, Dijon, France on September 18, 1974…

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.

Genesis interviewed: “We ended up as a three-piece because we had too many ideas for a five-piece…”

0
With the imminent re-issue of Peter Gabriel's first four solo albums - and last week's news of Phil Collins' reissues - I thought it a convenient moment to post my Genesis feature from the December 2014 issue of Uncut... Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner -------- One evening during the summe...

These days, Phil Collins can no longer play the drums. Since 2007, he’s been suffering from nerve damage to his elbow. Despite undergoing surgery, he explains, he has two numb fingers on his left hand and cannot grip a drumstick. “I joined Genesis when I was 19,” he says. “I’m 63 now, I’ve played drums all my life. I don’t miss it. It’d be nice to have the choice, but I don’t miss it.” Collins’ injuries, he concedes, are one critical reason why the 1971 – 1975 line-up of Genesis could never reunite again. “There’s this incessant desire for it to happen,” he acknowledges. “But I often think, ‘Have people thought it through?’ It’s not as if you’re going to get Peter as the singer, me as the drummer. I can’t play any more, so it’s never going to happen. But even if it could, you’re not going get Peter singing ‘I Can’t Dance’ or ‘Invisible Touch’ or ‘Tonight, Tonight, Tonight’ or ‘Mama’.”

Do the band feel that they were trying to escape the shadow of the Gabriel era during the Collins’ years?

“No, I don’t think so anymore than Peter was trying to escape the shadow of us,” counters Tony Banks. “It’s just what you did. Peter’s music became much more streamlined and harmonically a lot simpler in the later years. I’ve always tried to keep a few rambling moments in Genesis. Things like ‘Domino’, ‘Home By The Sea’ and ‘Drive The Last Spike’, and I think they are very much part of Genesis’ character. Funnily enough, up on stage they proved to be some of the most successful songs.”

“I think I’m still regarded as the new singer,” laughs Collins. “I’ve been here 40 years as singer. ‘74/75 I took over the singing and I’m still thought of to be the new guy. It doesn’t frustrate me. I just find it kind of comical. But yeah, what is the difference between ‘I Can’t Dance’ and ‘Sledgehammer’? We’ll never know.”

“You’ve got to remember, while we were doing things like The Lamb…, we were generally unloved,” explains Banks. “We didn’t get much support at the time. Tribute bands like The Musical Box, they get far bigger audiences than we ever did then. It’s a funny thing, nostalgia. It’s interesting, the music we made in the early 70’s. It’s not really like anything else. Whereas some of those things we did in the Eighties – really good pop songs, but not so dissimilar from what else was going on. That’s why I like things like ‘Domino’ and ‘Home By The Sea’, because they couldn’t be done by another band.”

“I was a lot easier to understand than Peter, but less interesting,” admits Collins. “I won’t have it any other way. I was far less interesting and that’s added to his mystique as a personality and all the stuff he does. I’m far too normal, I’m far too… I hate to say it, but I am far too middle of the road and far more showbizzy than Pete was. That enhances the mystique about those early years. I used to think, because of my background in stage school, I was the closest to all those nasty words: ‘middle of the road’, ‘show business’, ‘Max Bygraves’. I guess I’m not that far away, when you look back on it.”

Genesis1-44

Although not a fan of The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway – a consensual Gabriel-era peak – Tony Banks remembers being pleasantly surprised when he went to see tribute band The Musical Box perform the album live. “I crept into the Albert Hall to watch them play it,” he reveals. “It was interesting. The trouble is, they’re using the old show that in this day and age looks very dark and a little bit strange. When it was good, it was great. I thought ‘Back In New York City’ sounded great. The best moment for me was when they did ‘The Musical Box’ as an encore and I though that was a lot better. The Lamb is always a bit of a funny album for me. I never felt that it really concluded very well. I thought the song ‘It’ was not very strong ender and so I have a slightly funny feeling about it all. But they did a grand job.”

Tony Banks pauses for a second, then reflects on the experience of watching his former schoolfriend and closest collaborator impersonated on stage. “At times, the guy doing Peter was uncanny,” he considers. “From the distance, I thought it pretty good, really. The mannerisms of speech, his stuttering. It was really quite funny.”

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.

Led Zeppelin – Presence/In Through The Out Door/Coda

0
Rather contrary to their initial expectations, Led Zeppelin never did crash and burn. Instead, their final studio albums, conceived while fighting grave personal problems, found them grimly digging in and fighting on. In the last installments of the band’s reissue programme you can hear remastered...

Rather contrary to their initial expectations, Led Zeppelin never did crash and burn. Instead, their final studio albums, conceived while fighting grave personal problems, found them grimly digging in and fighting on. In the last installments of the band’s reissue programme you can hear remastered shifts in personal dynamics (Plant and Jones ascendant; Page in retreat) reflected in music that was martial, haunted and oddly un-Zeppelin-like. The fact that In Through The Out Door contained an epic synth song and an Elvis pastiche compounds the feeling that the subsequent death of John Bonham didn’t so much bring Led Zeppelin down in flames as stop them abruptly between new, weird stations.

For all their talk of battle, the devil and Mexico, these are not warm records. After a bad car accident, Robert Plant sang Presence on crutches, while Page’s vision for the LP was metallic. No acoustic guitars, no additional colours, no outside influences on the riffing, a song like “Achilles Last Stand” was the antithesis of the hungry-eared and multi-textured “Kashmir”. In lyric form and musical scale, it was epic – the marauding Viking charge of “Immigrant Song” raised exponentially to the power of Game Of Thrones. Page has called the record (made with little pre-production and mixed quickly in studio time begged from the Stones) “urgent” and “anxious” –one way of saying it’s all rock, but not much roll.

When they were vulnerable, Zeppelin threw up their guard – here even the plaintive blues “Nobody’s Fault But Mine” assumes a mighty and rebarbative nature rather at odds with the lyric. The discs of “companion audio”, often short on revelation, here reveal a moment of sheer anomaly. “10 Ribs & All/Carrot Pod Pod (Pod)” is, whatever that title may mean, everything the LP is not: a tender piano piece. As such, it throws forward to In Through The Out Door, an LP on which John Paul Jones enters the spotlight.

At the band’s huge Knebworth show, a couple of weeks before the album’s release, Led Zeppelin were tentatively emerging from a lengthy hiatus, acknowledging that all was not the same in the world as when they last performed in it. “No Quarter” went a bit reggae, Page poured sweat, and Plant danced like Kate Bush. Nor did he sound completely confident about his place in this new world. After some remarks about caves in Peru, he announced the band’s forthcoming new album. “As you’ve no doubt read the reviews…” he grinned, “…it’s tremendous. You can imagine!”

Page came to regard In Through The Out Door as transitional, which isn’t surprising since the band’s future movements would presumably have featured work on which he roused himself from his Sussex pit to play electric guitar. The opener “In The Evening” sets a magnificent riff in the haunting pan-global ambience that permeated some of Physical Graffiti, while elsewhere John Paul Jones and Robert Plant, the group’s early risers, completed the album with tuneful pop. The heavier contemporary numbers (particularly the furious “Wearing And Tearing”, in which Plant barks like a Jack Russell) hint at a fire still burning, but ultimately only appeared on Coda.

If there is pure genius in this last set of remasters, it is in how Jimmy Page has contrived to turn Coda from a desultory selection of offcuts into an essential purchase. With more open ears, “Wearing And Tearing”, “Darlene” and “Ozone Baby” sound as if future Zep albums could have seen the band deliver something re-engaged with blues and old rock’n’roll – a kind of heavier Exile On Main St, perhaps. Better still, it rounds up early-’70s strays like “Hey Hey What Can I Do?” (from an Atlantic sampler album) and “St Tristan’s Sword” (a III-era item). There’s a version of “When The Levee Breaks” which actually sounds different from the released version. Best of all are the fruits of the much-discussed Bombay Sessions from ’72. If you like hearing people politely misunderstand one another in different languages, there’s some interesting bootleg versions of Page and Plant’s visit to EMI’s studios in Bombay to record with Indian musicians. Here, events are trimmed down to the finished product: “Four Hands” (“Four Sticks”) and a version of “Friends”. Both are staggering things, throwing forward to Page/Plant and the solo WOMAD Plant. Still, as heavy as the tracks are, it’s impossible not to note that the George Harrison vibes are even heavier, a fact which may have precluded their release at the time.

The Led Zep reissue campaign has posed as many questions as it has answered (like “Are we really going to pretend we find the companion audio as revelatory as Jimmy Page does?” and “How come this is the iTunes remaster, not a belt-and-braces one from the tapes?”), but it has genuinely pulled something out of the hat here. This being a band on some level all about unfinished business, we can only look at the guitarist and ask another question. What next?

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.

Ultimate Music Guide: Fleetwood Mac

Don't Stop! Uncut's newest Ultimate Music Guide tells the incredible story of Fleetwood Mac - an infinite series of surprise plot twists, where radical upheavals arrive with every new album. "We’ve never done what was expected of Fleetwood Mac," says the band's first leader, Peter Green, "we’ve ...

Don’t Stop! Uncut’s newest Ultimate Music Guide tells the incredible story of Fleetwood Mac – an infinite series of surprise plot twists, where radical upheavals arrive with every new album. “We’ve never done what was expected of Fleetwood Mac,” says the band’s first leader, Peter Green, “we’ve always done the opposite.”

Fleetwood Mac: The Ultimate Music Guide collects revealing features, unseen for decades, from the archives of Uncut, NME and Melody Maker They document the rise and fall of Green’s band, the emergence of Christine McVie, the transitional lineups of the early ’70s, the dramatic arrival of Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, and the glory and devastation that soon followed. “Being in Fleetwood Mac is more like being in group therapy,” noted the mostly redoubtable Mick Fleetwood in 1977, as he contemplated the seismic impact of Rumours and laid bare – not for the last time – the private lives of its key players.

Our Ultimate Music Guide, though, focuses on Fleetwood Mac’s extraordinary music as much as their intimate affairs. To that end, we’ve commissioned new, in-depth reviews of every single one of their albums, from lost gems to some of the biggest-selling releases of all time. Like everything about Fleetwood Mac, it makes for an uncommonly long and complicated story, but one that is never less than compelling. “Looking back, it’s like listening to war stories,” says Fleetwood. “There’s blood and guts and disagreements still to this day. But that’s what makes it mean a shit.”

 

Order Print Copy

Legend

0
For an actor like Tom Hardy, who specializes in colourful, larger-than-life roles, Legend is a dream gig. Why? Because not only does he get to do the things Tom Hardy is historically good at – violence, an accent, bulking up, more violence – but here he does it twice. Thanks to some ‘How did t...

For an actor like Tom Hardy, who specializes in colourful, larger-than-life roles, Legend is a dream gig. Why? Because not only does he get to do the things Tom Hardy is historically good at – violence, an accent, bulking up, more violence – but here he does it twice. Thanks to some ‘How did they do that?’ digital business, Legend finds Hardy playing both Ronnie and Reggie Kray.

He plays Ronnie as a kind of autistic psychopath: slicked back hair, thick-set mouth, perpetual frown, stunted speech patterns. Weirdly, he looks like Patrick Marber. As Reg, he is a dashing jack-the-lad; socially engaged, a charmer, up for a bit of banter with both the ladies and the police who follow him everywhere. Reg entertains ideas of running a legitimate business; alas, if only his brother wasn’t such a deranged maniac… Out in his mucky caravan in the woods, meanwhile, Ron’s principle interests are young men and killing.

Admittedly, the Krays story has been well-told before; but not like this. Hardy has an incredible physical presence – even in films like Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy or Locke, where he is not required to actually kill anyone, he strains to contain himself. In Legend, Reggie moves like a big cat; muscle and sinew. Ron is a blunter instrument altogether. Even the cheery offer of a cuppa could end badly for someone. But Hardy aside, the fresh spin of Legend is that this is essentially the wife’s tale: Frances Shea (Emily Browning). It is Frances who provides the film’s voiceover, and who is central to Reg’s plan to go legit. We experience the gruesome business of life in the Krays orbit from her perspective.

Legend is written and directed by Brian Helgeland, who also wrote the screenplay for LA Confidential; a film that broadly covered similar ground. His work here is sharp, observant and mercifully he avoids the usual filmmaking clichés of depicting London. He casts well, too. Christopher Eccleston, Paul Bettany, David Thewlis and Taron Egerton do solid work in supporting roles.

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.

Introducing… Fleetwood Mac: The Ultimate Music Guide

0
Early 1969. California has been hit by a series of destructive floods, so bad that the international telephone operator is sceptical a connection can be made between London and Los Angeles. When the call goes through, however, the NME's Nick Logan has a few demanding questions for the first leader o...

Early 1969. California has been hit by a series of destructive floods, so bad that the international telephone operator is sceptical a connection can be made between London and Los Angeles. When the call goes through, however, the NME’s Nick Logan has a few demanding questions for the first leader of Fleetwood Mac, Peter Green. One is how Green’s band will sustain their reputation as blues purists in the wake of a big hit single, the expansive “Albatross”. Will their next single be another change from what their fans have come to expect?

“I don’t really care,” says Green, yawning. “I never have done really. We’ve never done what was expected of Fleetwood Mac – we’ve always done the opposite. We just do what we want to do.”

Thus begins the remarkable story of Fleetwood Mac – a saga unparalleled in rock, as our new Uncut Ultimate Music Guide dedicated to the band makes clear (on sale in the UK on Thursday Sept 10, but available to order now at our online shop). Over the next four and a half decades, the band’s history has often read like an infinite series of surprise plot twists, where radical upheavals arrive with every new album. Key members come and go, lost to religious cults and mental breakdowns, victims of multiple romantic traumas. Musical directions and locations change as frequently as the lineup: the blues evolve into the apotheosis of sophisticated pop; and a remote Hampshire commune is swapped for the LA highlife.

As the revealing features collected in this Ultimate Music Guide prove, the journalists of Uncut, NME and Melody Maker have been alongside Fleetwood Mac every step of the way. They documented the rise and fall of Peter Green’s band, the emergence of Christine McVie, the transitional lineups of the early ’70s, the dramatic arrival of Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, and the glory and devastation that soon followed. “Being in Fleetwood Mac is more like being in group therapy,” noted the mostly redoubtable Mick Fleetwood in 1977, as he contemplated the seismic impact of “Rumours” and laid bare – not for the last time – the private lives of its key players.

Our Ultimate Music Guide, though, focuses on Fleetwood Mac’s extraordinary music as much as their intimate affairs. To that end, we’ve commissioned new, in-depth reviews of every single one of their albums, from lost gems to some of the biggest-selling releases of all time. Like everything about Fleetwood Mac, it makes for an uncommonly long and complicated story, but one that is never less than compelling.

“Looking back, it’s like listening to war stories,” Mick Fleetwood told Uncut in 2002. “But you have to remember there were people yelling in pain with their legs shot away. There’s blood and guts and disagreements still to this day. But that’s what makes it mean a shit.”

Meanwhile, in other blood and guts and disagreements news, the third volume of our History Of Rock series is also on sale this Thursday, and in stock at our shop now. The year in focus is 1967, Jimi Hendrix is on the cover, and I’ll write more about it in a few days’ time. For now, please enjoy the herculean reviewing shifts Tom Pinnock pulled at last weekend’s End Of The Road festival for us. Click for full reports on The War On Drugs, Future Islands and Jessica Pratt, Sufjan Stevens, Sleaford Mods and Euros Childs, Low, Tame Impala and Fuzz, Pond, Ought and Gulp.

Watch Robert Plant and Ringo Starr sing ‘Happy Birthday’ to Jerry Lee Lewis

0
Robert Plant and Ringo Starr paid tribute to Jerry Lee Lewis, to mark his imminent 80th birthday at his show at the London Palladium on Sunday [September 6]. Lewis turns 80 on September 29. He is currently on a 'farewell' tour of the UK: his final show takes place at the Clyde Auditorium, Glasgow...

Robert Plant and Ringo Starr paid tribute to Jerry Lee Lewis, to mark his imminent 80th birthday at his show at the London Palladium on Sunday [September 6].

Lewis turns 80 on September 29.

He is currently on a ‘farewell’ tour of the UK: his final show takes place at the Clyde Auditorium, Glasgow, on September 10.

Starr and Plant wheeled a birthday cake onto the stage and joined a host of other musicians and fans in singing “Happy Birthday” to Lewis.

Starr later wrote on Twitter, “Had a great time at the Jerry Lee Lewis show in London happy birthday Jerry peace and love”.

Lewis released his last album, Rock & Roll Time, in 2014.

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.