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Bob Johnston: “Don’t ever quit – don’t stop playing! If you do, don’t come back!”

In this substantial interview from Uncut Take 202/March 2014 issue, the legendary producer looks back on his groundbreaking work with Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash, Leonard Cohen among others... ---------- Such is his irrepressible nature, Bob Johnston can’t stop himself from sharing a good story - e...

In this substantial interview from Uncut Take 202/March 2014 issue, the legendary producer looks back on his groundbreaking work with Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash, Leonard Cohen among others…

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Such is his irrepressible nature, Bob Johnston can’t stop himself from sharing a good story – even when he’s declining an interview and is on the point of putting the phone down. You’re calling from England? He knows about England.

“Guy stood on the front steps of my house in Nashville on a Sunday night,” he says. “Tells me he’s got a group in England who he wants me to record. He says to me, ‘I have a castle in Crowborough. If you record the group, and get them to 99 on the charts, you can come and live in the castle for a month’…

“I said, ‘Can I really? What will you give me if I get them a number one?’ He said, ‘You can stay there a year.’ So I went over to England and recorded Lindisfarne for Fog On The Tyne…”

He pauses, recalling his meeting with Charisma records boss Tony Stratton-Smith and this commission as a freelance producer. This was 1970 – after Johnston had spent several years recording artists like Simon & Garfunkel, Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, and Johnny Cash. For all his time spent as head of Columbia in Nashville, and all these successes, you can tell the 81-year old Texan still enjoys the punchline of the tale.

“They went to number one,” he says triumphantly. “And I moved into the castle.”

But he’s not interested in talking right now. He’s got a book coming out, and doesn’t want “too many versions of himself” out there at the same time. That, however, seems impossible. A man of warm regards and bitter enmities; who has rubbed shoulders with the greats while never hoping for their glory; a man, what’s more, whose fantastically tall stories all turn out to be true, there is, quite simply, only one Bob Johnston.

Charlie McCoy, the multi-instrumentalist who played on every Bob Dylan album from 1965 to 1970, recalls his first recording with Dylan as an apparently completely accidental event. When McCoy was in New York for a visit, his Nashville pal Bob Johnston arranged for him to go and see a Broadway show. Johnston suggested he drop by the Columbia studios on 51st Street to pick up the tickets.

“He introduced me to Dylan,” recalls Charlie today, “and he said to me, ‘I’m getting ready to record a song, why don’t you pick up that other guitar and play?’ We had time for one take, one playback and then the bass player left for another session. And that was ‘Desolation Row’.”

Bob Johnston has historically explained his role as a producer in terms of staying out of the way of the artist and what they have to communicate. Certainly, he has no respect for those who leech off or otherwise obstruct talent. That might be a business executive. Equally, it might be a lesser artist. In New York, Bob recorded Simon and Garfunkel.

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“Don’t kid yourself,” he says. “It was Paul Simon. I wanted Simon to do the harmony too – I think that would have been better than Artie. But they had been at high school together and that’s how they did it. Artie never did like me very much.”

The UK’s five smallest record shops revealed…

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The five smallest record shops in the UK have been revealed. The Vinyl Factory report that the Entertainment Retailers Association have surveyed 220 record shops in search of the country's smallest. 5. Earworm Records 1 Powells Yard, Goodramgate, York, YO1 7LS 196 square foot 4. People Records 14...

The five smallest record shops in the UK have been revealed.

The Vinyl Factory report that the Entertainment Retailers Association have surveyed 220 record shops in search of the country’s smallest.

5. Earworm Records
1 Powells Yard, Goodramgate, York, YO1 7LS
196 square foot

4. People Records
14 Chapel Street, Guildford, GU1 3UL
165 square foot

3. The Record Shop
7 Shurdington Rd, Cheltenham, GL53 0JB
100 square foot

2. Marrs Plectrum
387 Fulbridge Rd, Peterborough PE4 6SF
79 square foot

1. VOD Music
28 New Street, Mold, Flintshire, CH7 1NZ
67 square foot

In related vinyl news, earlier this year the first vinyl record shop opened in the Mongolian capital, Ulaanbaatar.

Dund Gol Records opened in the Children’s Book Palace of Mongolia in March, 2015.

One of the world’s most isolated record shops, Dund Gol Records is the brainchild of B. Batbold. It has a stock of over 1,000 vinyl records from Batbold’s own collection.

In an interview with The UB Post, Batbold said, “Western artists are releasing vinyl records instead of CDs. I don’t want to keep all my vinyl records. I want to spread vinyl records to people who collect vinyl records. That’s why I opened the store.”

In other vinyl firsts, the world’s biggest record collection is to be turned into a vinyl library.

Brazilian collector Zero Freitas has amassed over 5 million records, which he employs a team of college interns to catalogue.

Speaking to the BBC, Freitas – who owns a private bus line in the São Paulo suburbs – outlines his plans to create a searchable collection for public use.

“We hope people will be able to select records through our collection and listen to the music,” says Freitas. “The relationship people have with certain songs is subjective and personal. I want to share this with people and make it possible for them to recall their memories.”

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.

Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young: “It’s not a democracy, it’s a dictatorship”

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When CSNY returned to action in 2006, they found themselves fighting another unjust American war, this time in Iraq rather than Vietnam. But had they finally made peace with each other? Messrs Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young talk to Uncut about the egomania, debauchery and bush babies that ran riot i...

When CSNY returned to action in 2006, they found themselves fighting another unjust American war, this time in Iraq rather than Vietnam. But had they finally made peace with each other? Messrs Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young talk to Uncut about the egomania, debauchery and bush babies that ran riot in their past, and discovers whether playing Neil’s “boring-assed fucking protest music” has, finally, made them a truly harmonious quartet… Originally from Uncut’s July 2008 issue (Take 134). Words: Alastair McKay

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“It’s not a democracy, it’s a dictatorship…”

Let’s say it’s April, 2006, by which time Neil Young’s simmering anger at America’s invasion of Iraq and the slaughter going on there during the subsequent occupation comes to what  you might call boiling point. In nine frantic days, he writes, records and releases Living With War, an album of coruscating fury at the Bush administration, its demented War On Terror and the havoc it’s wreaking in the Middle East that provokes an unprecedented right-wing backlash, Neil demonised by conservative ultras and the hawkish pro-Bush media. Undaunted by the fierce criticism of the record, he now thinks about taking it on the road.

Living With War had been recorded in a day, with Neil joined only by drummer Chad Cromwell and bassist Rick Rosas, plus occasional interventions from Tommy Brea’s forlorn trumpet. The songs were rough and raw, and fuelled by rage, though some of the harder edges were softened by the addition of a hastily convened 100-voice choir.

This was not a record made with a career plan in mind. It was Young working at the far edges of instinct, and with a sense of urgency he has rarely shown since the Kent State massacre of 1970 – when the National Guard shot dead four students protesting against Nixon’s invasion of Cambodia – prompted him to write “Ohio”. And, just as that record was issued immediately, so Living With War was rush-released within weeks of its recording. It was a brazen, brilliant move – reconnecting Young with his roots as a folk singer, and shattering the sense of a career drifting into the twilight.

The songs on Living With War had no room at all for subtlety. They were all about making a point and moving on. They were, in essence, punk, which makes it even more surprising that Young now decides to take the songs on the road with his former CSNY band mates, with whom he has had such a fractious history. The garage rock of his more primal backing band, Crazy Horse, would have been perhaps a more obvious fit. But then being obvious isn’t part of who Neil Young is.

There is also something pragmatically calculating about Young’s alliance with Crosby, Stills and Nash for the dates that follow in the summer of 2006. He knows more people will come to see CSNY than they would to see him solo, such is the affection – much tested, but to many still undiminished – of a band who, before they were driven apart by conflicting egos, drugs and an apparent inability to occupy the same space without soon being at each others’ throats, had assumed, with 1970’s multi-million selling Déjà Vu, the status of “the American Beatles”.

Young’s bold-faced strategy is evident when you watch CSNY: Déjà Vu – his new documentary film about what became the Freedom Of Speech tour – when it becomes clear Young made a deliberate choice to hijack a schedule that had already been booked, and then dictate his terms.

“I called them up,” Young tells Uncut, “and said, ‘Listen, I made this record, you should listen to it, as this is what I want to do. I want to do all the songs on the record in the show. I don’t want to focus on anything else and I don’t want you to focus on anything else.’”

There would be room for nostalgia in the set, but only if the songs supported the mission: saving whales, for example, was off the agenda.

“We’re going to do a tour that’s focused on this type of music and this subject,” Young insisted. “We don’t want to take away from the intensity by diverting ourselves into little side trips.”

Young’s demands were precise. Nothing was to distract from the message. There was to be no loose talk, no rambling introductions to the songs, no glib statements about politics, no taunting of the president. There was to be no repeat, essentially, of the Monterey Pop festival in 1967, where David Crosby decided to use the platform to share his sincere belief that President Kennedy had been killed by more than one gunman.

In most previous incarnations in their troubled history, such discipline would have been unthinkable. But how easily were David Crosby, Graham Nash and Stephen Stills, none of them known for easily toeing anyone’s line, persuaded to buckle to Neil’s will?

“From when Neil first called and said, ‘Come over, I’ve got some music for you to listen to,’ from that moment, we knew that we wanted to support him,” Graham Nash tells Uncut. “We knew that we wanted to sing those songs. We knew the importance of the direction of the tour and we went right along with it. We completely agreed with what Neil was trying to do.”

Destroyer’s Dan Bejar: “David Bowie’s ‘Where Are We Now?’ is a major inspiration”

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Destroyer's Dan Bejar, speaking in the current Uncut, reveals how David Bowie's comback inspired his own forthcoming album. The band's tenth record Poison Season, out on August 28, is their follow-up to 2011's acclaimed Kaputt. Explaining the impact of Bowie's January 2013 single, Bejar says: "[Cl...

Destroyer‘s Dan Bejar, speaking in the current Uncut, reveals how David Bowie‘s comback inspired his own forthcoming album.

The band’s tenth record Poison Season, out on August 28, is their follow-up to 2011’s acclaimed Kaputt.

Explaining the impact of Bowie’s January 2013 single, Bejar says: “[Classic rock] has 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 current Uncut, featuring David Gilmour on the cover, is out now.

Photo: Fabiola Carranza

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.

Watch Thom Yorke play three new songs in Japan

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Thom Yorke debuted three new songs at a gig in Japan last night. The singer was joined by Nigel Godrich at Zepp Namba Osaka in Tokyo for the show which featured material from his recent album Tomorrow's Modern Boxes, 2013 LP Amok and his debut The Eraser. Yorke also debuted three new songs – "Im...

Thom Yorke debuted three new songs at a gig in Japan last night.

The singer was joined by Nigel Godrich at Zepp Namba Osaka in Tokyo for the show which featured material from his recent album Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes, 2013 LP Amok and his debut The Eraser.

Yorke also debuted three new songs – “Impossible Knots“, “Not The News” and “Traffic“, which you can watch below.

The gig was only his second show after his recent performance at the Latitude Festival.

Thom Yorke played:

‘The Clock’
‘Brain In A Bottle’
‘Impossible Knots’
‘Black Swan’
‘Guess Again!’
‘Amok’
‘Not The News’
‘Truth Ray’
‘Traffic’
‘Twist’
‘Pink Section’
‘Nose Grows Some’
‘Cymbal Rush’
‘Default’

Yorke recently revealed that he will compose new music for an upcoming for a new production of Harold Pinter‘s play Old Times in New York.

The play will star Clive Owen, Eve Best and Kelly Reilly and be directed by Douglas Hodge. It will run at American Airlines Theatre from October 6 through to November 29, presented by the Roundabout Theatre Company.

“It’s been a pleasure working with Doug on my first stage production,” Yorke said of his involvement. “I’ve enjoyed exploring through music the script’s themes of love and memory as well as Pinter’s rhythms, twists and turns.”

Director Hodge added: “The music Thom has written for Old Times gives an immediacy and a ‘now?ness’ to the show.”

“The play itself is about memory and love – Thom’s music works backwards and forwards and plays with time and repetition in the same way Pinter does.”

“In true Thom Yorke style, the music is epic, heartbreaking, irresistible and complex. I’m hopeful this collaboration will result in a new kind of theatre-goer coming to our show.”

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.

Read Tom Waits new poem to Keith Richards

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Tom Waits has written a new poem, "A Likely Story", about his friend Keith Richards. The poem appears in a forthcoming Rolling Stone tribute, Keith Richards: The Ultimate Guide to His Music & Legend. You can read the poem below. Waits and Richards have worked together several times over the y...

Tom Waits has written a new poem, “A Likely Story“, about his friend Keith Richards.

The poem appears in a forthcoming Rolling Stone tribute, Keith Richards: The Ultimate Guide to His Music & Legend.

You can read the poem below.

Waits and Richards have worked together several times over the years, firstly on Waits’ Rain Dogs album in 1985, then 1992’s Bone Machine and most recently Bad As Me in 2011.

In May 2013, Waits joined the Rolling Stones on stage to perform a version of “Little Red Rooster”. Click here to watch some footage.

Richards will release a new solo album, Crosseyed Heart, on September 18; it is his first release under his own name since 1992’s Main Offender.

You can read our preview of Crosseyed Heart by clicking here.

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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.

Pete Townshend co-writes tribute to Ronnie Lane

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Pete Townshend has co-written a song about Ronnie Lane with Lane's wife, Kate. The song, "Chameleon", features on the new album by Des Horsfall's Kuschty Rye. You can hear it below. Townshend plays guitar and sings on the song, and composed the music; Kate Lane composed the lyrics for her husband....

Pete Townshend has co-written a song about Ronnie Lane with Lane’s wife, Kate.

The song, “Chameleon“, features on the new album by Des Horsfall’s Kuschty Rye. You can hear it below.

Townshend plays guitar and sings on the song, and composed the music; Kate Lane composed the lyrics for her husband.

“Chameleon” appears on The Bastard’s Tin, which is the second of a proposed trilogy of Kuschty Rye albums, names after Ronnie Lane’s 1979 song.

The project is dedicated to Lane and Slim Chance, the band Lane formed after leaving the Faces in 1973.

Townshend and Horsfall are accompanied on the song by Slim Chance’s Steve Simpson and Charlie Hart.

“Chameleon” is described as a “devotional love letter” from Kate Lane to her husband. It was written following their separation, after he was diagnosed with the early symptoms of multiple sclerosis.

You can find more information on the Kuschty Rye project by clicking here.

Meanwhile, Uncut are currently hosting a series of online exclusives taken from the forthcoming Faces box set, You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything.

The box set is released by Rhino on August 28 and contains newly remastered versions of all four of the band’s studio albums, plus a bonus disc of rarities.

You can click here to listen to our first exclusive: “Flying (Take 3)”, which is one of the unreleased bonus tracks from The First Step.

The surviving members of the Faces – Rod Stewart, Ron Wood and Kenney Jones – are to reunite 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.

In other news, a new Small Faces box set will include rarities, outtakes and alternative versions.

The Decca Years is released on October 9, 2015.

The 5-CD box set compiles everything that the Small Faces recorded for Decca during their 18-month record deal with the label, along with the last remaining recording sessions that the group made for the BBC during the same period.

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 27th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

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Not to be too bushy-tailed about being back in the office, but a nice thing about returning after a fortnight away has been the pile of new music awaiting me. Below, I've shared as much of the good stuff as I can, but please make a special effort to check out Israel Nash, whose second album is an ab...

Not to be too bushy-tailed about being back in the office, but a nice thing about returning after a fortnight away has been the pile of new music awaiting me. Below, I’ve shared as much of the good stuff as I can, but please make a special effort to check out Israel Nash, whose second album is an absolute killer if you appreciate a) CSNY’s live takes of “Down By The River”; b) My Morning Jacket up to “It Still Moves”; c) “No Other; d) Jonathan Wilson solo albums. Post very much in character here, I guess.

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

1 Olga Bell – Incitation (One Little Indian)

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

3 Gagakirise And EYE – Gagakiriseye (Thrill Jockey)

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

5 Sk Kakraba – Songs Of Paapieye (Awesome Tapes From Africa)

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

7 Method Man – The Meth Lab (Tommy Boy)

8 Joanna Newsom – Sapokanikan (Drag City)

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

10 Simon Scott – Insomni (Ash International)

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

12 Michael Chapman – Fish (Tompkins Square)

13 The City – Now That Everything’s Been Said (Light In The Attic)

14 El Vy – Return To The Moon (4AD)

15 John Grant – Grey Tickles, Black Pressure (Bella Union)

16 Robert Forster – Songs To Play (Tapete)

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

18 Scott Tuma – Hard Again (Scissor Tail)

19 Scott Tuma – The River 1 2 3 4 (Scissor Tail)

20 Larry Gus – I Need New Eyes (DFA)

21 Julia Holter – Have You in My Wilderness (Domino)

22 Duane Pitre – Bayou Electric (Important)

23 Ava Cherry – How Loneliness Goes (iTunes)

24 Christina Vantzou – No 3 (Kranky)

25 The Chills – Silver Bullets (Fire)

26 Los Lobos – Gates Of Gold (429)

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

28 Israel Nash Gripka – Israel Nash’s Rain Plains (Loose)

29 Dave Rawlings Machine – Nashville Obsolete (Acony)

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.

Jason Isbell – Something More Than Free

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2013’s Southeastern, was, give or take the odd playful moment, a gripping description of the self-dug pit from which its composer had recently hauled himself. Now sober, married and grateful, Jason Isbell was reporting where he’d been, and what he’d seen. Its connection was instant and unspari...

2013’s Southeastern, was, give or take the odd playful moment, a gripping description of the self-dug pit from which its composer had recently hauled himself. Now sober, married and grateful, Jason Isbell was reporting where he’d been, and what he’d seen. Its connection was instant and unsparing, and it was always going to be a tough act to follow. Sensibly, Isbell hasn’t.

Though Southeastern was a redemption song, it also emitted an undertone of anxiety, the sound of someone waking somewhere unfamiliar and unexpectedly comfortable, wondering if they’re really supposed to be here. Something More Than Free finds Isbell sounding surer of himself, as a songwriter and a man. There’s a confidence about his character sketches, leavened with wise humility: any of this cast of anxious itinerants could have been him, had his luck run a little lousier, his talent not been quite so irrepressible.

That said, it picks up, kind of, where Southeastern left off. That album closed with “Relatively Easy”, a thanks for the small mercies of a happy home and enjoyable work: more than many ever get. Something More Than Free opens with the gospel-laced “If It Takes A Lifetime”, narrated by someone putting a spring in his daily trudge by reminding himself that you can spend a long time looking for what was right here all along (“I thought that I was running to/But I was running from”). Not for the last time on the album, there’s something of the terse Springstonian sermon about it (“A man is a product of/All the people that he ever loved”).

On the basis that Isbell seems unlikely to bristle at Springsteen comparisons, Something More Than Free has something of Nebraska and something of The Rising about it – the terse, elegant poetry of the former, the deadpan rock’n’roll ecstasies of the latter, and sometimes, as on “Twenty-Four Frames” and “Palmetto Rose”, both. But it says much that all of the album leaves one grasping for measures against other inhabitants of the pantheon – the tightly wrought, Paul Simon-ish detail of the sparse “Flagship”, in which the occupants of some fleapit hotel are drawn as lessons in life and how not to live it, or the unfettered Neil Young-esque guitar solo that illuminates the gently epic “Children Of Children”.

Like the aforementioned greats, whose ranks Isbell sounds more and more poised to join, he understands the value of his own story, his own lexicon. Though familiarity with his previous works is not a prerequisite, those who have been listening will wonder whether the lovelorn drifter crooning “The Life You Chose” into an empty glass is the same guy who sang “Alabama Pines”, on 2011’s Here We Rest. Those whose association with Isbell’s works reaches back to first contributions to Drive-By Truckers will hear something of sublime father-to-son ballad “Outfit” in the title track, also a caution against resignation to destiny.

Though Isbell’s principal interests are failure and regret – rightly so; they’re much more interesting than triumph and hubris – he filters both through a humour as warm as it is bitter. So “How To Forget”, a return to a favourite theme of settling accounts with the past, is a mid-tempo country shuffle told as an unexpected meeting with an over-exuberant ex (“She won’t stop telling stories, and most of them are true/She knew me back before I fell for you”). Closing track “To A Band That I Loved” – a stately, gorgeous Americana ballad drawn from the same vein as Dawes’ recent “All Your Favourite Bands” – is a heartfelt attempt to make up some of the credit that the titular group were refused by an indifferent world.

Isbell’s studio discography already now comprises five albums – eight, if his stint in DBTs is included. Still in his mid-thirties, he has the kind of voice – in both singing and writing – that only seems likely to improve with age. It’s already a significant canon. Little seems beyond him.

Q&A
JASON ISBELL
Are you surprised by how such an obviously personal catharsis like Southeastern resonated with people? How do you feel about that album now?

I wouldn’t say I’m surprised, but I’m certainly grateful. I’ve always had faith in the power of an honest story well told. Honestly, there aren’t too many different stories to tell, so if you pick the right details, songs can be broad in scope and purpose without being vague. People latch on to that.

There’s an echo of “Outfit” in the title track – the line about loading boxes for someone else evoked the bucket of wealthy man’s paint. To what extent are your songs about ordinary hardship a gesture of thanks that you escaped that kind of work?
Both those songs were inspired by conversations with my father. He’s worked very hard his whole life, as did his father and mother. I work very hard myself, but there are obvious rewards to what I’m doing. Dad’s only reward is a family that’s well taken care of, and that seems to be enough for him. Those stories are the ones that interest me the most: work as service, as a labour of love in the truest sense.

The characters in the songs generally seem kind of lonely and adrift (“Flagship”, “Speed Trap Town”, “Hudson Commodore”) – do you see yourself in them?
I’m not lonely in any permanent sense, but I still feel like a person on the fringes of society in a lot of ways. I love traveling, I crave it sometimes, but I’m not delusional enough to believe it’s a natural and healthy way to live. It’s possible for me to inhabit these characters because I have a good memory of the times when I was adrift, and I still feel like a bit of a castaway.

Is “Children Of Children” in any respect about your own parents? And/or is it in some respect a preparation for fatherhood?
It is about my parents, and my wife’s parents. Both sets were very young when we were born. The time my mother spent raising me likely cost her a lot of opportunities, and even though she’d never be resentful of that and it’s obviously not my fault, I’ve benefited from it, so I’ve felt guilty about it. I think my wife Amanda has at times felt that way about her mother. The song is my way of looking those things in the eye and dealing with them.
INTERVIEW: ANDREW MUELLER

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.

Track premiere! Hear an unreleased version of the Faces’ classic,”Flying”

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On August 28, the Faces release You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything (1970 - 1975) - a new box set containing newly remastered versions of all four of the band's studio albums, plus a bonus disc of rarities. To coincide with this momentous Faces news, we’re delighted to be able to share exclus...

On August 28, the Faces release You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything (1970 – 1975) – a new box set containing newly remastered versions of all four of the band’s studio albums, plus a bonus disc of rarities.

To coincide with this momentous Faces news, we’re delighted to be able to share exclusively a track from these sets – “Flying (Take 3)”, which is one of the unreleased bonus tracks from The First Step.

We’ll share two more exclusive tracks from the Faces box set over the next few weeks. Unfortunately, this track is only available to UK viewers.

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

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.

Kurt Cobain, Montage Of Heck soundtrack given November release date

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The soundtrack for recent Kurt Cobain film, Montage Of Heck, has been given a release date. The yet-untitled LP will feature unheard music by Cobain. As AwardsLine reports, it will be released the same say as the DVD, coming on November 6. According to Billboard, director Brett Morgen sifted thro...

The soundtrack for recent Kurt Cobain film, Montage Of Heck, has been given a release date.

The yet-untitled LP will feature unheard music by Cobain.

As AwardsLine reports, it will be released the same say as the DVD, coming on November 6.

According to Billboard, director Brett Morgen sifted through the extensive Cobain archives for home recordings and rare tracks.

The release will include recordings featured in the film, and it has been reported that other unheard material will also be included. Morgen describes the music featured as ranging “from thrash to ragtime and everything in between”. It will also include “a sketch comedy routine”.

Commenting on the soundtrack as a whole, Morgen said: “You really get a sense of how happy he was simply by creating himself. His lyrics are really playful, and, at times, you can feel his smile and warmth coming through.”

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.

Patti Smith to turn Just Kids memoir into a TV series

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Patti Smith's memoir Just Kids is to be turned into a TV mini series for Showtime. Smith will adapt her memoir with John Logan, who is showrunner on the cable network's series, Penny Dreadful. The announcement was made by Sowtime president David Nevins during the Television Critics Association's s...

Patti Smith‘s memoir Just Kids is to be turned into a TV mini series for Showtime.

Smith will adapt her memoir with John Logan, who is showrunner on the cable network’s series, Penny Dreadful.

The announcement was made by Sowtime president David Nevins during the Television Critics Association’s summer press tour.

The Hollywood Reporter quotes Nevins as saying, “Just Kids is one of my favorite memoirs of all time.

“Not only is it a fascinating portrait of artists coming of age, but it’s also an inspiring story of friendship, love and endurance. I’m so thrilled that Patti Smith will bring her unique voice to writing the scripts along with the gifted John Logan, who has been doing such a phenomenal job with Penny Dreadful for us.”

In a statement, Patti Smith said, “A limited series on Showtime will allow us to explore the characters more deeply, enabling us to develop stories beyond the book and allow a measure of unorthodox presentation.

“The medium of a television limited series offers narrative freedom and a chance to expand upon the themes of the book.”

Meanwhile, Smith’s new memoir, M Train, is due to be released on October 6. She will support the book’s release with a tour; currently, only North American dates have been announced.

October 6 New York, NY – New York Public Library
October 7 New York, NY – Barnes & Noble Union Square
October 8 Brooklyn, NY – St. Joseph’s College
October 9 Washington, DC – George Washington University
October 10 Boston, MA – Back Bay Events Center
October 11 Chicago, IL – Dominican University
October 12 Ann Arbor, MI – Michigan Theater
October 13 Toronto, Ontario – The Design Exchange
November 6 Philadelphia, PA – Free Library of Philadelphia
November 7 Portsmouth, NH – The Music Hall
November 12 Atlanta, GA – The Variety Playhouse
November 13 Nashville, TN – OZ Arts Nashville
November 15 Miami, FL – Miami Book Fair
November 16 Los Angeles, CA – The Orpheum Theatre
November 17 Santa Cruz, CA – Rio Theatre
November 18 San Rafael, CA – Dominican University
November 19 Berkeley, CA – First Congregational Church
November 20 Portland, OR – Newmark Theatre
November 22 Seattle, WA – Town Hall Seattle

On October 27, HarperCollins will also release an updated, expanded edition of 1998’s Patti Smith Collected Lyrics, featuring thirty-five new songs, new artwork, as well as an introduction from Smith herself.

Smith returns to the UK to play two shows at London’s Roundhouse on October 30 and 31. The shows are part of her tour celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Horses album.


You can read our review of Patti Smith live at Field Day, Victoria Park, London, June 7, 2015 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.

Led Zeppelin: The Ultimate Music Guide

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On December 10, 2007, Led Zeppelin took to the stage of the O2 Arena, London, for what may turn out to be a last, extraordinary reunion. The occasion was a tribute show for their old label boss, Ahmet Ertegun, though other agendas were certainly in play. Before the show had even been officially anno...

On December 10, 2007, Led Zeppelin took to the stage of the O2 Arena, London, for what may turn out to be a last, extraordinary reunion. The occasion was a tribute show for their old label boss, Ahmet Ertegun, though other agendas were certainly in play. Before the show had even been officially announced, Robert Plant digressed from talking about his new album with Alison Krauss, “Raising Sand”, to tell Uncut’s then-editor Allan Jones, “There’ll be one show, and that’ll be it. We need to do one last great show.”

If the stories at the time were to be believed, upwards of a million people tried to secure tickets, proving that Led Zeppelin’s popular appeal had hardly diminished in their time away. Looking through the archives of NME and Melody Maker to compile this deluxe, upgraded edition of our Ultimate Music Guide to Led Zeppelin (on sale in the UK on Thursday, though you can buy it here now), however, it became apparent that Led Zeppelin’s story was not just about enormous success, about the notable debauchery of legend. It was about an uncommonly driven band with terrifyingly high standards and surprisingly thin skins.

In 2015, in the wake of Jimmy Page’s elaborate expansions of the entire Led Zep catalogue, the idea of the band having once been unpopular with critics is hard to countenance. In this Ultimate Music Guide, you’ll find Uncut’s current writers writing incisively about each one of the band’s albums: finding riches and innovation in each of them, right up to the Plant and Page reunions of the 1990s, and – new in this edition – the former’s varied and potent solo efforts .

The fascinating old interviews, however, tell a different story. Often, they reveal a band baffled by the opprobrium they attract. The epic Led Zeppelin campaigns of the 1970s, it transpired, were driven not only by an unquenchable hunger for global domination, but also by a desire for excellence. And while Page, in particular, might have appeared untouchable and remote to his fans and detractors, the truth presented in these pages is that he was as human and vulnerable as most artists.

In this light, the 2007 reunion show and the extravagant remasters aren’t just a nostalgic celebration for Led Zep’s old fans, but a way of capitalising on the respect which the band have finally won, all these years down the line. For here, in the Ultimate Music Guide to Led Zeppelin, is the complete story 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…

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.

Roger Waters is writing memoirs, planning a tour for next year

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Roger Waters has revealed that he’s planning to embark on a world tour in 2016 and is writing his autobiography. The news are reportedly anecdotally in an interview with Israeli newspaper Haaretz. Waters performed at the Newport Folk Festival on July 24, 2015. For his first live performance sin...

Roger Waters has revealed that he’s planning to embark on a world tour in 2016 and is writing his autobiography.

The news are reportedly anecdotally in an interview with Israeli newspaper Haaretz.

Waters performed at the Newport Folk Festival on July 24, 2015.

For his first live performance since the end of his Wall tour in 2013, Waters played an entirely acoustic set that featured Pink Floyd tracks as well as new and old solo material.

You can watch fan footage of new song “Crystal Clear” below.

He also covered Bob Dylan‘s “Forever Young”.

My Morning Jacket were a last-minute addition the line-up of the US festival and joined Waters onstage after having played their own set earlier in the day.

Levon Helm‘s daughter Amy got up with Waters as he covered her late father’s song “Wide River To Cross”.

Meanwhile, Roger Waters The Wall is scheduled for to screen at cinemas worldwide on September 29, 2015.

Written and directed by Waters and Sean Evans, the film debuted at last year’s Toronto Film Festival. The film includes concert footage from Waters’ three-year solo tour in which he played The Wall in its entirety, as well as behind-the-scenes footage of Waters’ exploring his own family history during World War 1 and World War 2.

Roger Waters said, ”I hope these world wide screenings this coming 29th September will be a good opportunity to remember, not just our fallen loved ones, but all the other guys fallen loved ones. Ashes and diamonds foe and friend we were all equal in the end.”

Waters will also reunite with his Pink Floyd bandmate Nick Mason on September 29 for a Q&A to accompany the screenings.

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.

New Order, Steve Coogan, Shaun Ryder honour Tony Wilson in tribute video

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A host of musicians have paid tribute to Tony Wilson, Factory Records founder, on the eighth anniversary of his death. Poet Mike Garry and musician Joe Duddell have released a song in his honour called "St. Anthony: An Ode To Anthony H Wilson". The accompanying video features members of New Order ...

A host of musicians have paid tribute to Tony Wilson, Factory Records founder, on the eighth anniversary of his death.

Poet Mike Garry and musician Joe Duddell have released a song in his honour called “St. Anthony: An Ode To Anthony H Wilson“.

The accompanying video features members of New Order members Bernard Sumner, Stephen Morris, Gillian Gilbert, Shaun Ryder, John Cooper Clarke and Vini Reilly alongside Manchester luminaries including Steve Coogan, Paul Morley, Christopher Eccleston and Factory sleeve designer, Peter Saville.

Dundell based the music on New Order’s track, “Your Silent Face“. The song is remixed by Andrew Weatherall and will be released digitally and on 12” vinyl/CD on August 14 via Skinny Dog.

Watch the video below.

Speaking to The Guardian, Sumner said: “I think St Anthony is a very fitting and moving epitaph. I was very shocked by Tony’s death. He always seemed so young and enthusiastic in spirit. He had the attitude of a man in his 20s, which I thought was a great way to be.”

He continued: “Tony Wilson who was no saint, but he was a good man who did good things by using his position in the media to help musicians, artists and poets to grow. He didn’t need to do that, and he didn’t do it for the money, he did it because he was trying to do good for the culture of the city he lived in and loved.”

“Most people will have had some experience of cancer either personally or via a friend or family member. I know I have. So it is fantastic that all proceeds from St Anthony will go to cancer research, and it’s also very moving to know that even after all these years, people are still thinking of him, Ian Curtis, Martin Hannett and Rob Gretton.”

Proceeds from the event and single will go to the Christie Charitable Fund.

Tony Wilson died on August 10, 2007, aged 57.

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.

Joanna Newsom announces new album, Divers, and shares track, “Sapokanikan”

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Joanna Newsom has announced details of her first album in five years. Divers will be released by Drag City on October 23. She has released a video for “Sapokanikan”, which has been directed by Paul Thomas Anderson. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ky9Ro9pP2gc The album has been produced by St...

Joanna Newsom has announced details of her first album in five years.

Divers will be released by Drag City on October 23.

She has released a video for “Sapokanikan”, which has been directed by Paul Thomas Anderson.

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

Newsom first confirmed she was working on new material in December, 2014.

Speaking to Dazed, she commented: “I’m working on something new – I should hopefully have a little more news soon. I’ve been working hard for a lot of those five years on a new idea.”

The tracklisting for Divers is:

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

The album can be pre-ordered from the Drag City website by clicking here.

It can also be pre-ordered from iTunes by clicking here.

Recently, Newsom appeared in Inherent Vice, the latest film from Anderson.

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.

Samatha Crain – Under Branch & Thorn & Tree

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For many, last year’s European debut Kid Face served as a compelling introduction to Samantha Crain. Though she’s been making records for the best part of ten years now, picking up plaudits from sympatico touring partners like First Aid Kit and Deer Tick. Under Branch & Thorn & Tree, wh...

For many, last year’s European debut Kid Face served as a compelling introduction to Samantha Crain. Though she’s been making records for the best part of ten years now, picking up plaudits from sympatico touring partners like First Aid Kit and Deer Tick.

Under Branch & Thorn & Tree, while less directly autobiographical than Kid Face, is a deft patchwork of stories and impressions largely drawn from first-hand experience, both in her native Oklahoma and beyond. Her folksy arrangements favour the minimal, the graceful plasticity of Crain’s voice framed by acoustic guitar, percussive strings and discreet rhythms. She calls this her underdog album. “Killer” was inspired by the Occupy Movement, while the very lovely “Outside The Pale” alludes to her own Choctaw heritage: “You and I tell the stories the TV won’t release/ They keep us in the wild / Under branch and thorn and tree.”

There are existential echoes of Jason Molina, a key inspiration, on many of these songs. “When You Come Back” or “If I Had A Dollar”, for instance, wouldn’t feel out of place on a Songs:Ohia album. But the spirit of Joanna Newsom also pervades Crain’s work, particularly in the unusual phrasing and her habit of stretching a vowel until it finds the perfect place to alight.

Most striking of all, perhaps, is her gift for a convincing narrative. “Elk City” tells the true tale of a 17-year-old girl who arrives in a new town with her boyfriend, only for him to scarper when boom turns to bust. She consoles herself with a fling, only to find that “that night turned into nine months sittin’ on my ass/Waiting for a baby/My first and my last”. And nothing quite prepares you for “You Or Mystery”, the story of a lonely neighbour who ends up dead in his own kitchen.

As with everything Crain does, the profound and the tragic is to be found in the tiniest detail.

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.

Julian Cope announces reissues of World Shut Your Mouth and Fried

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Julian Cope is re-releasing World Shut Your Mouth and Fried. The reissues gather together for the first time the b-sides of contemporaneous singles and associated BBC radio sessions, and both albums feature sleeve notes by Cope's long-serving PR and Uncut contributor, Mick Houghton. Both albums ar...

Julian Cope is re-releasing World Shut Your Mouth and Fried.

The reissues gather together for the first time the b-sides of contemporaneous singles and associated BBC radio sessions, and both albums feature sleeve notes by Cope’s long-serving PR and Uncut contributor, Mick Houghton.

Both albums are released by Caroline on August 14, 2015.

World Shut Your Mouth was originally released in February 1984 while Fried in November that same year.

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.

Prince compares record contracts to “slavery”

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Prince has used a rare meeting with journalists to take a shot at the way the music industry works, comparing record contracts to "slavery", and advising young artists not to sign. According to NPR, Prince met 10 journalists at his Paisley Park Studios in Minneapolis on Saturday [August 8, 2015], w...

Prince has used a rare meeting with journalists to take a shot at the way the music industry works, comparing record contracts to “slavery”, and advising young artists not to sign.

According to NPR, Prince met 10 journalists at his Paisley Park Studios in Minneapolis on Saturday [August 8, 2015], where he addressed the state of the music industry.

The singer revealed the reason he is releasing his new album, HitNRun, directly through Jay Z’s streaming service Tidal. “Record contracts are just like — I’m gonna say the word – slavery,” NPR reports Prince as saying. “I would tell any young artist… don’t sign.”

Prince complained that record company contracts reduce artists to the level of “indentured servitude”, with little control over how their music is used or the revenue they receive from streaming services.

“Once we have our own resources, we can provide what we need for ourselves,” Prince said of why he decided to work with Tidal, “Jay Z spent $100 million of his own money to build his own service. We have to show support for artists who are trying to own things for themselves.”

The Minneapolis Star Tribune reports that Prince later debuted two songs from his new album, possibly titled “Million Dollar Show” and “Shut It Down”. The Tribune report descibes them as “very dense and mechanical, with lots of intriguing electronic noises.”

HitNRun will be released through Tidal on September 7. A physical release will follow, according to the Tribute.

During a lawsuit against Warner Bros in 1993, Prince wrote the word “Slave” on his face in protest against the label.

Prince and the label later reconciled.

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.

Uncut’s 50 best American punk albums

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The Uncut team have dug out their leather jackets and Converse sneakers and compiled a Top 50 of the greatest American punk albums. But what constitutes “American punk” in the first place? After some debate, we decided to avoid the ur-punk groups like The Velvet Underground and The Stooges, or t...

The Uncut team have dug out their leather jackets and Converse sneakers and compiled a Top 50 of the greatest American punk albums. But what constitutes “American punk” in the first place? After some debate, we decided to avoid the ur-punk groups like The Velvet Underground and The Stooges, or the proto-punk garage scene that spawned Nuggets, and focus on the period between 1975 – where the CBGB’s crowd were at their rowdiest – and 1983, when punk had arguably fragmented and mutated into something beyond its original form.

Our chronological list incorporates albums by bands hailing from the urban-industrial landscape of Cleveland, the backwaters of the American Northwest, from Los Angeles, New York, Houston and Minneapolis. One album is produced by a ’60s West Coast rock legend. Another features 14 songs in 15 minutes. A third includes an unlikely encomium to Idi Amin. Here, then, is Uncut’s pick of the loudest, fastest, hardest, sweatiest albums ever… Hey! Ho! Let’s go!

Written by Damien Love, John Robinson, Peter Shapiro, Jim Wirth. Originally published in Uncut’s March 2014 issue (Take 202).

____________________

1 THE DICTATORS
Go Girl Crazy!
EPIC, 1975

Rarely accorded iconic status, The Dictators’ debut is a milestone in smart-assed, knuckleheaded American punk, hymning beer, junk food and TV in stoopid anthems like “Teengenerate”. Formed in 1973 around the three-chord method of songwriter-bassist Andy “Adny” Shernoff and metal soloing of guitarist Ross “The Boss” Friedman, their no-frills New York street gang look and trash culture aesthetic predated the Ramones (as did their buzzsaw cover of “California Sun”). Roadie-turned-singer Handsome Dick Manitoba’s antics made them a live favourite, but an antagonistic presence: Manitoba’s macho heckling of Jayne County resulted in a brawl that saw The Dictators banned from Max’s Kansas City. DL

____________________

2 PATTI SMITH
Horses
ARISTA, 1975

Improvising with her group, extemporising lyrics, Smith’s early shows were pitched between Lenny Bruce-style stand-up and Beat poetry happening. The glory of Horses is how it refines that experimentation into a solid set of songs, while retaining every flutter of Smith’s visionary vibration. Her love of French Symbolist poetry informs the fever dream lyrics, but equally important is the album’s pop-literateness, collaging old songs (“Gloria”, “Land Of A Thousand Dances”) as the foundations from which she takes flight. John Cale’s production leaves the rough edges on the jams driven by guitarist Lenny Kaye, while Tom Verlaine contributes inimitable flashes as guest guitarist. DL

____________________

3 RAMONES
Ramones
SIRE, 1976

Dolly Parton famously joked “it costs a lot of money to look this cheap”. By the same token, to sound as stupid as the Ramones managed on their debut required considerable intelligence. Superficially a piledriving record, Ramones is actually all about variety: noise and silence, punk and pop, black and white. So it was with the songs. From hustler’s lament to high-school romance; United Fruit and Castro to assault with a deadly weapon… the Ramones had it all covered. The extremity makes it punk. The subtlety makes it an enduring classic. JR