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Uncut’s 25 best lost films

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Here, then, is our list of the greatest lost films, featuring work that’s fallen off the radar by such fabled directors as Stanley Kubrick, Robert Altman, Billy Wilder, Francis Ford Coppola, Lindsay Anderson, Orson Welles, John Huston and Jean-Luc Godard. This being Uncut, even Bob Dylan has made ...

Here, then, is our list of the greatest lost films, featuring work that’s fallen off the radar by such fabled directors as Stanley Kubrick, Robert Altman, Billy Wilder, Francis Ford Coppola, Lindsay Anderson, Orson Welles, John Huston and Jean-Luc Godard. This being Uncut, even Bob Dylan has made our extraordinary list.

As you’ll discover, many of these films are hard to find because they’re tangled up in labyrinthine rights issues. Some have been suppressed by the director or the studio, while others have simply disappeared off the map entirely, too “obscure” to warrant a DVD, Blu-ray or Special Edition like the latest blockbuster. Ironically, in this digital age, a 20-odd year old VHS cassette is often the only format in which these brilliant movies can be located. But we think they’re all worth seeing – perhaps at film festivals, online, or most likely late at night on a satellite movie channel like TCM.

Where to begin? Why not with a film deemed so controversial it has been airbrushed out of existence by its studio – Disney…

Originally published in Uncut’s July 2010 issue (Take 158), and updated in July 2015. (We define a ‘lost’ film as one you can’t buy new, whether as an officially released DVD, Blu-ray or download. However, due to the often complicated nature of film rights ownership, licensing deals, sales territories and release schedules, some films can appear to be “officially available” one week and then not the next. Let’s make it clear, then: all information is correct at time of going to press…)

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25 SONG OF THE SOUTH
Directors: Wilfred Jackson and Harve Foster
Starring: Ruth Warrick, Bobby Driscoll, James Baskett (USA, 1946)
Disney is famous for operating a system of ‘limited edition’ DVD runs of its catalogue (Bambi, for example, is also currently unavailable), but Song Of The South has never been part of that schedule. Wary of racial controversy, the studio has practically airbrushed the film from its own history; according to rumour, a DVD release was last considered – and swiftly rejected – in 2006. Little Bobby Driscoll plays a lonely white kid on a plantation. When he runs away, Baskett’s Uncle Remus, a former slave, tricks him into going home by spinning him tales of Brer Rabbit. This was Disney’s finest early attempt at mixing live action and animation, but even in the 1940s caused outrage for its picture-book presentation of the rabid Old South as an idyllic paradise, and for its beyond stereotypical depiction of black characters – screenings were picketed by the NAACP. But then Song Of The South is also the movie that has Baskett singing “Zip A Dee Doo Da”, surely one of the most popular songs in all of Disney, a bluebird on his shoulder. Could we give that up?
Expect to pay: My oh my, it’s a VHS or nothing! £20, maybe?

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24 HIDE IN PLAIN SIGHT
Director: James Caan,
Starring: James Caan, Jane Eikenberry, Robert Viharo (USA, 1980)
By the end of the ’70s, Caan’s career was in freefall, due to a series of high-profile flops and an almost irrational arrogance that saw him turn down starring roles in Apocalypse Now, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Superman and Kramer Vs Kramer. People simply stopped asking him to be in their films, so he decided to make his own. He had promising material to work with here – the true story of a divorced factory worker’s attempt to find his children, who disappeared into the Witness Protection Programme when their stepfather testified against Mob associates. Caan, however, didn’t seem to know what kind of film he was making, and mixed blue collar realism with conspiracy thriller paranoia. He was good in it, and you wanted to see what he did next. But the film bombed and Caan, after starring in Michael Mann’s Thief, and by then battling bankruptcy and cocaine addiction, vanished from the screen for five years before making a comeback in Coppola’s Gardens Of Stone. He never directed again, and this has never been reissued.
Expect to pay: £20 – and that’s for a 30-year-old VHS cassette!

The 23rd Uncut Playlist Of 2015

Still pretty hooked on the Four Tet album and the Kompakt comp this week; apart from anything else, both very powerful working soundtracks for hot weather. Ditto a strong late arrival from Duane Pitre, which completes a trilogy with his last couple of albums ("Feel Free" and "Bridges") and confirms ...

Still pretty hooked on the Four Tet album and the Kompakt comp this week; apart from anything else, both very powerful working soundtracks for hot weather. Ditto a strong late arrival from Duane Pitre, which completes a trilogy with his last couple of albums (“Feel Free” and “Bridges”) and confirms him once again as my favourite – and most nuanced – drone artist out there at the moment.

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

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

1 Four Tet – Morning/Evening (Text)

2 Various Artists – Total 15 (Kompakt)

3 Mercury Rev – The Light In You (Bella Union)

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

5 Bilal – In Another Life (BBE)

6 Gwenno – Y Dydd Olaf (Heavenly)

7 Alif – Aynama-Rtama (Nawa Recordings)

8 Wand – 1000 Days (Drag City)

9 Phil Cook – Southland Mission (Thirty Tigers)

10 Kurt Vile – B’lieve I’m Goin Down… (Matador)

11 Dungen – Allas Sak (Smalltown Supersound)

12 Duane Pitre – Bayou Electric (Important)

13 Master Musicians Of Bukkake – Further West Quad Cult (Important)

14 Alela Diane & Ryan Francesconi – The Sun Today (Believe Recordings)

15 Craig Finn – Faith In The Future (Partisan)

16 Blondes – Persuasion (RVNG INTL)

17 Uncut’s next free CD

18 Jamie xx – In Colour (Young Turks)

Own your own Nick Cave doll!

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A new range of Nick Cave dolls will go on sale at this year's ComicCon event. The dolls have been produced by LA-based pop artist Plasticgod and will be available in a series of six different models, each tailored to a specific Cave song. Pitchfork reports that each toy will be on sale from July 9...

A new range of Nick Cave dolls will go on sale at this year’s ComicCon event.

The dolls have been produced by LA-based pop artist Plasticgod and will be available in a series of six different models, each tailored to a specific Cave song.

Pitchfork reports that each toy will be on sale from July 9 and retail for $40 in a limited edition of 200.

Red Right Hand”, “Into My Arms”, “Tupelo”, “Ship Song” and two dolls for “Babe, You Turn Me On“, one of which glows in the dark.

In other intriguing Cave miscellany, earlier this year teamed up with Australian skateboarding company Fast Times to produce his own official skateboard.

More recently, Cave and Warren Ellis released their latest film soundtrack.

The score for Loin Des Hommes is the duo’s latest soundtrack collaboration, which previously included The Proposition (2005), The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford (2007), The Road (2009) and Lawless (2012).

A compilation of their previous soundtrack work, White Lunar, was released in 2009.

Loin Des Hommes (Far From Men) is French drama starring Viggo Mortensen and directed by David Oelhoffen.

Meanwhile, you can watch Bongwater’s strangely prescient “Nick Cave Dolls” below…

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch Bruce Springsteen sing Beach Boys classics with Brian Wilson

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Bruce Springsteen joined Brian Wilson on stage in Holmdel, New Jersey on Wednesday, July 1, 2015. Wilson was appearing at the PNC Bank Arts Center in Holmdel as part of his current tour. Springsteen joined Wilson on stage to perform Beach Boys' classics, "Barbara Ann" and "Surfin' USA". https://w...

Bruce Springsteen joined Brian Wilson on stage in Holmdel, New Jersey on Wednesday, July 1, 2015.

Wilson was appearing at the PNC Bank Arts Center in Holmdel as part of his current tour.

Springsteen joined Wilson on stage to perform Beach Boys’ classics, “Barbara Ann” and “Surfin’ USA“.

Meanwhile, Brian Wilson recently postponed his scheduled UK tour due to commitments in America.

The UK tour was planned for September 2015, but Wilson has now decided to postpone the dates due to the success of the biopic, Love And Mercy.

The rescheduled shows will now take place in 2016, with a string of concerts to mark the 50th anniversary of Pet Sounds.

Critically, they will also be Wilson’s last European dates.

Said Wilson in the statement, “I’m sorry I won’t be able to make these shows this year, but I look forward to seeing all my fans in 2016 to help me celebrate 50 years of Pet Sounds. This will be my final European tour. I hope you all enjoy my movie when it opens in the UK on July 10, I’ll see you all soon, Best Brian.”

Click here to read our review of Love And Mercy. The film stars John Cusack, Paul Dano and Elizabeth Banks and tells the story of two periods of Wilson’s life in the 1960s and 1980s.

Wilson released his latest album, No Pier Pressure, on April 6 through Virgin EMI. The album featured collaborations with Al Jardine, David Marks and Jim Keltner as well as M Ward and Zooey Deschanel.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Super rare Bob Dylan test pressing up for sale…

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A rare test pressing of Bob Dylan's album Blood On The Tracks is up for sale. Los Angeles store, Ameoba Music, is selling the record for $12,000 (£7,600). The copy is one of only five test pressings known to exist of an early pressing of the album, dubbed the "New York" version. The pressing inc...

A rare test pressing of Bob Dylan‘s album Blood On The Tracks is up for sale.

Los Angeles store, Ameoba Music, is selling the record for $12,000 (£7,600).

The copy is one of only five test pressings known to exist of an early pressing of the album, dubbed the “New York” version.

The pressing includes four previously unreleased takes of songs from the album (“Lily, Rosemary & The Jack Of Hearts”, “Idiot Wind”, “If You See Her, Say Hello” and “Tangled Up In Blue”), plus an alternate version of “You’re A Big Girl Now”.

According to Amoeba, “The story goes that in the fall of 1974, Bob Dylan went home for the holidays with a copy of his newly recorded album Blood On The Tracks, which was set to release in weeks…

“Upon listening to the record, which was recorded at A&R Recording in New York, Dylan’s brother, David Zimmerman, suggested that Dylan re-record some of the songs because too many sounded the same. Dylan then stopped production of the album to re-record half of it at Sound 80 in Minneapolis with different musicians, ending up with a 10-song album evenly split between the two sessions.

“The ultra rare pressing was made at a Columbia Records plant in Santa Maria, Calif.”

Here’s the “New York” version of “Tangled Up In Blue”:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8x-0aECsy98

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Hustlers Convention

In 1973, Jalal Mansur Nuriddin, one-time acupuncturist, US Army paratrooper and founding member of The Last Poets, recorded his debut solo album. Released under the alias Lightnin’ Rod, the album – Hustlers Convention – was mired in bad luck and bad business. While the genre’s pioneers – G...

In 1973, Jalal Mansur Nuriddin, one-time acupuncturist, US Army paratrooper and founding member of The Last Poets, recorded his debut solo album. Released under the alias Lightnin’ Rod, the album – Hustlers Convention – was mired in bad luck and bad business. While the genre’s pioneers – Grandmaster Flash, Melle Mel, Fab 5 Freddie and others – embraced it, nevertheless protracted legal issues held it back from mainstream success. Widely sampled since, its admirers cite it as an underground classic, and the recognition the album and its creator deserve is long overdue.

The story of Nurridin and his album are taken up by British director Mike Todd in this partly crowdfunded documentary. Clearly a low-budget passion project, although it lacks the cinematic gloss of comparable retro-themed rockumentaries like Searching For Sugar Man the heavyweight list of talking-head cameos here attests to the project’s cultural importance. Todd interviews famous fans and commentators including George Clinton, Melle Mel, Fab 5 Freddie, KRS-One, Ice-T, MC Lyte, Greil Marcus, Nelson George and Chuck D, who is also credited as executive producer on the film. Nuriddin himself, now a senior citizen who speaks in effortless rhyme almost constantly, is also an engagingly laidback star presence.

Nuriddin made Hustlers Convention with Alan Douglas, The Last Poets regular producer whose other credits included Jimi Hendrix and Miles Davis. A vivid Blaxploitation-style narrative about living large and paying a heavy price, the album tells the story of two brothers, Sport and Spoon, whose visit to the eponymous gathering of pimps and high-rollers ends in a dramatic showdown with the police. Full of verbal dexterity and superfly imagery, the story ends with Sport on Death Row reflecting on where his life went wrong. Nuriddin laid down the bling-heavy gangsta blueprint, though his cautionary message about the deadly downside of thug life clearly got lost in translation.

Todd’s film frames the album in historical and cultural context: from the civil rights struggle to the Black Panthers, from African oral tradition to “jail toast” convict rhymes, from the Harlem-based Black Arts Movement of the 1960s to the Rudy Ray Moore’s bawdy Dolemite movies of the 1970s. “If you were 14 years old and trying to understand the streets, it was sort of like a verbal Bible,” recalls Chuck D. “It was the seedy side of life told in an eloquent way,” confirms Douglas. The producer assembled a starry guest list of musicians to provide backing for Nuriddin on Hustlers Convention, including Billy Preston and Kool and the Gang. The latter offered their services following a chance encounter in a neighbouring studio, but no paperwork was signed and the band’s manager later raised objections. The United Artists label consequently got cold feet about promoting the album, fearing a messy legal battle. Hustlers Convention was a commercial flop but enjoyed a long cult afterlife, with some hip-hop historians claiming it went on to sell a million copies on word of mouth alone.

The Mancunian Todd gives the story a strong British dimension. After playing with The Last Poets in Liverpool in the 1980s, Nuriddin spent several years living in the city. Just last year, he finally performed the Hustlers Convention album live for the first time at London’s Jazz Cafe, and Todd captures that performance on film. DJ Gilles Peterson and poet Lemn Sissay are among the Brit acolytes giving testimony on camera.

But there remain some fuzzy gaps in this story. Nuriddin’s intriguing English exile is never fully explained. Nor is there much insight into what he has been doing musically and personally for the last four decades. At 71, he appears to live in a pleasant but modest retirement community in small-town Georgia. “I chose the message over the money,” he shrugs, insisting he never made a penny from Hustlers Convention. Even so, he still harbours ambitions to complete two unreleased sequels, Hustlers Detention and Hustlers Ascension. The film touches on these basic details, but leaves them unexamined. Todd deserves ample respect for fanboy dedication, but not much for journalistic rigour.

Hustlers Convention follows an all too familiar narrative arc for African-American artists, one of early promise compromised by ill fortune and bad business decisions. But for all the star names offering testimony to Nuriddin’s poetic skills and deep cultural impact, it seems odd that nobody has stepped up to take a financial risk on his artistry nowadays. Neither tragic downfall nor triumphant comeback story, Todd’s film lacks a sense of closure. But it works just fine as a solid documentary tribute to a classic spoken-word album that is, quite literally, unsung.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Jim Morrison’s vulgar ‘bootleg’ Peanuts cartoon strip to be auctioned

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A 'bootleg' Peanuts cartoon by Jim Morrison is to be auctioned by Lelands in America. According to the auction house, "this humorous original artwork incorporating pasted-on Peanuts character cut-outs with his own handwritten dialogue." Morrison's humour itself is lewd. The first frame depicts Sno...

A ‘bootleg’ Peanuts cartoon by Jim Morrison is to be auctioned by Lelands in America.

According to the auction house, “this humorous original artwork incorporating pasted-on Peanuts character cut-outs with his own handwritten dialogue.”

Morrison’s humour itself is lewd. The first frame depicts Snoopy growling at Pigpen, who replies, “If you bite my balls, I’ll suck your c–k.” The second frame shows Lucy pleading with Charlie Brown: “I’ll give you 15 [cents] if you’ll f–k me, Charlie Brown,” to which he replies: “Throw in your tricycle and it’s a deal, Baby.”

The strip is done entirely in the hand of Morrison and signed “Jim” in the upper right corner.

Elsewhere, two Doors albums, released after the death of Jim Morrison, are to be reissued later this year.

Other Voices and Full Circle, the band’s seventh and eighth albums, will be reissued in September by Rhino. These editions feature remastered audio by producer Bruce Botnick, while Full Circle CD is accompanied by bonus track, “Treetrunk“.

Morrison died in July 1971 while The Doors were recording Other Voices. Following his death, keyboardist Ray Manzarek, guitarist Robby Krieger and drummer John Densmore, continued the recording with Krieger and Manzarek sharing vocal duties.

The vinyl editions of both albums will be pressed on 180g vinyl and will come with sleevenotes.

The albums will also be paired together for a 2CD set.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Rolling Stones release Sticky Fingers Live album

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The Rolling Stones have released a new live album, Sticky Fingers Live. The digital-only release was recorded on May 20, 2015 at the Fonda Theatre, Los Angeles, when the Stones performed their 1971 album during a secret club gig. The album is currently available from iTunes in the US and UK. The ...

The Rolling Stones have released a new live album, Sticky Fingers Live.

The digital-only release was recorded on May 20, 2015 at the Fonda Theatre, Los Angeles, when the Stones performed their 1971 album during a secret club gig.

The album is currently available from iTunes in the US and UK.

The tracklisting for Sticky Fingers Live is:

“Sway”
“Dead Flowers”
“Wild Horses”
“Sister Morphine”
“You Gotta Move”
“Bitch”
“Can’t You Hear Me Knockin’”
“I Got the Blues”
“Moonlight Mile”
“Brown Sugar”

Click here to read Uncut’s review of the new Sticky Fingers deluxe edition

In Stones-related news, the band have announced details of a major new retrospective, EXHIBITIONISM.

The exhibition will run from April 6 2016 – September 2016 at London’s Saatchi Gallery, where it will occupy nine themed galleries spread across two entire floors.

EXHIBITIONISM includes over 500 artefacts and will include original stage designs, dressing room and backstage paraphernalia; rare guitars and instruments, costumes, rare audio tracks and unseen video clips; personal diaries and correspondence; original poster and album cover artwork, and unique cinematic presentations.

“We’ve been thinking about this for quite a long time but we wanted it to be just right and on a large scale,” said Mick Jagger. “The process has been like planning our touring concert productions and I think that right now it’s an interesting time to do it.”

Keith Richards said, “While this is about The Rolling Stones, it’s not necessarily only just about the members of the band. It’s also about all the paraphernalia and technology associated with a group like us, and it’s this, as well as the instruments that have passed through our hands over the years, that should make the exhibition really interesting.”

The band are currently wrapping up their North American Zip Code tour. The tour began on May 24 at Petco Park, San Diego. You can click here to watch footage from the opening night of the show.

July 4: Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Indianapolis, Indiana
July 8: Comerica Park, Detroit, Michigan
July 11: Ralph Wilson Stadium, Buffalo, New York
July 15: Le Festival d’ete de Quebec, Quebec City

American readers! Uncut’s July 2015 issue [Take 218] featuring the Rolling Stones on the cover is now available in US stores and is also available digitally

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Beatles “lost” concert film blocked from release

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A film of The Beatles first concert in the States has been blocked by a court ruling. Bloomberg reports that Sony have won a legal battle blocking the release of the film which features material from the band's show at the Coliseum in Washington D.C. on February 11, 1964. According to a previous s...

A film of The Beatles first concert in the States has been blocked by a court ruling.

Bloomberg reports that Sony have won a legal battle blocking the release of the film which features material from the band’s show at the Coliseum in Washington D.C. on February 11, 1964.

According to a previous story on Spin, Ace Arts had obtained 35 minutes of footage from the concert which formed part of a 92-minute documentary entitled The Beatles: The Lost Concert.

The film was due to premier in New York’s Ziegfield Theater on May 6, 2012.

The BBC reports that the first part of The Beatles: The Lost Concert focused on the rise of Beatlemania in the United States and was followed by the 12-song set, which was originally broadcast in American cinemas in March 1964.

The Beatles: The Lost Concert has subsequently been in hiatus.

However, a UK judge has now ruled in favour of Sony Corp, effectively blocking the film from release.

Sony owns the worldwide copyrights to the eight Lennon-McCartney compositions played during the concert, including “I Saw Her Standing There“, “I Want To Hold Your Hand” and “From Me To You”.

According to Judge Richard Arnold, the songs “are reproduced in their entirety; the extent of the reproduction is excessive having regard to the transformative purpose; and the permit such use would likely damage the market for, or potential value of” the songs.

Meanwhile, several items of Beatles memorabilia are up for auction via Lelands in America.

Rolling Stone reports that the items include a postcard signed by all four Beatles during their stay at Miami’s Deauville Hotel in 1964, a week after they filmed their second appearance for the Ed Sullivan Show. The current bid is $12,636.21 (£19,699.41).

Another lot consists of three Apple Records bank cheques signed by John Lennon (undated), George Harrison (dated 1971) and Ringo Starr (1972).

Among other Beatles artefacts in the auction are a vintage Ludwig drum set designed like Starr’s and an unused ticket for a 1965 Beatles show in Portland, Oregon, currently priced at $1,100 (£705.46).

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Rory Gallagher’s Taste: 4 CD box set announced

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Rory Gallagher's Taste are the subject of a four-CD boxset due on August 28, 2015. I'll Remember will include remastered versions of the band's two studio albums, Taste and On The Boards, as well as bonus tracks. Additionally, the box set contains previously unreleased live concert recordings from...

Rory Gallagher’s Taste are the subject of a four-CD boxset due on August 28, 2015.

I’ll Remember will include remastered versions of the band’s two studio albums, Taste and On The Boards, as well as bonus tracks.

Additionally, the box set contains previously unreleased live concert recordings from Stockholm’s Live at Konserthuset, off-air at the Paris Theatre in London as part of John Peel’s live Top Gear sessions and Woburn Abbey Festival; demo recordings made in July 1967 at Belfast’s Maritime Hotel; sleevenotes including rare and previously unseen photographs.

Full Track Listing:

Disc One – Taste
Blister On The Moon
Leaving Blues
Sugar Mama
Hail
Born On The Wrong Side of Time
Dual Carriageway Pain
Same Old Story
Catfish
I’m Moving On
Blister On The Moon – Alt Version
Leaving Blues – Alt Version
Hail – Alt Version
Dual Carriageway Pain – Alt Version – No Vocal
Same Old Story – Alt Version
Catfish – Alt Version

Disc Two – On The Boards
What’s Going On
Railway and Gun
It’s Happened Before, It’ll Happen Again
If The Day Was Any Longer
Morning Sun
Eat My Words
On The Boards
If I Don’t Sing I’ll Cry
See Here
I’ll Remember
Railway and Gun – Off The Boards mix
See Here – Alt Version
It’s Happened Before, It’ll Happen Again – Take 2 – Beat Club audio 1970
If The Day Was Any Longer – Beat Club audio 1970
Morning Sun – Beat Club audio 1970
It’s Happened Before, It’ll Happen Again – Take 1 – Beat Club audio 1970

Disc Three – Live In Stockholm and London 1970
What’s Going On – Live in Stockholm – September 1970
Sugar Mama – Live in Stockholm – September 1970
Gambling Blues – Live in Stockholm – September 1970
Sinner Boy – Live in Stockholm – September 1970
At The Bottom – Live in Stockholm – September 1970
She’s 19 Years Old – Live in Stockholm – September 1970
Morning Sun – Live in Stockholm – September 1970
Catfish – Live in Stockholm – September 1970
I’ll Remember – BBC Radio One – Live from the Paris Theatre 1970***
Railway and Gun – BBC Radio One – Live from the Paris Theatre 1970***
Sugar Mama – BBC Radio One – Live from the Paris Theatre 1970***
Eat My Words – BBC Radio One – Live from the Paris Theatre 1970***
Catfish – BBC Radio One – Live from the Paris Theatre 1970***
*** Off-air recordings

Disc Four – Taste Mark I – Belfast Sessions and Demos / 7” single and Live at Woburn Abbey Festival 1968
Wee Wee Baby – Major Minor demo
How Many More Years – Major Minor demo
Take It Easy Baby – Major Minor demo
Pardon me Mister – Major Minor demo
You’ve Got To Pay – Major Minor demo
Norman Invasion – Major Minor demo
Worried Man – Major Minor demo
Blister On The Moon – A-Side of the Major Minor 7” single
Born On The Wrong Side of Time – B-Side of the Major Minor 7” single
Summertime ( Instrumental ) – Live at Woburn Abbey Festival 1968
Blister On The Moon – Live at Woburn Abbey Festival 1968
I Got My Brand On You – Live at Woburn Abbey Festival 1968
Medley – Rock Me, Baby / Bye Bye Bird / Baby Please Don’t Go / You Shook Me, Baby – Live at Woburn Abbey Festival 1968

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Richard Thompson – Still

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"Beatnik Walking", the second track on the new Richard Thompson album, is an affectionate little sketch which speaks volumes about its creator. As he tells Uncut, it documents a working trip to the Netherlands with his wife and baby son 22 years ago. Realising that none of the dates on his Dutch tou...

“Beatnik Walking”, the second track on the new Richard Thompson album, is an affectionate little sketch which speaks volumes about its creator. As he tells Uncut, it documents a working trip to the Netherlands with his wife and baby son 22 years ago. Realising that none of the dates on his Dutch tour were more than two hours’ drive away, Thompson elected to stay in Amsterdam with his family, doing the Times crossword in the morning; seeing a few sights; eating in the same restaurant every lunchtime; and then setting out for the evening show. Excitement, but not more than he could handle. For someone of Thompson’s proclivities, it was a dream break.

The Fairport Convention founder’s 46-year year career has shown him to be a man of brilliant – if slightly conservative – habits. An unworldly frump in his folk-rock prime – check out the rugby shirt he wears on the back cover of his debut solo LP, 1972’s Henry The Human Fly – his scarily fluent guitar work influenced left-fielders like Television and Pere Ubu as much as it did folkies, but no amount of good press has ever given him the confidence to look life in the eye. In his beret or his baseball cap, the 66-year-old is still the living embodiment of awkwardness.

If the pre-release blurb was anything to go by, the aim for Still was to wrest Thompson out of his comfort zone. Recorded at Wilco‘s The Loft studio in Chicago, under the guidance of Jeff Tweedy, it might – if one believed such things were possible – have been the album when he cut loose and did something entirely out of character. It isn’t. For all the possibilities seemingly offered by working with an unfamiliar producer in a new studio, Still is almost relentlessly inward looking. It’s about repression; unexpressed and inexpressible emotions; characters who go nowhere; who sit tight on their desires; who keep their mouths – and on chastity belter “All Buttoned Up” their legs – shut.

Elegaic opener “She Never Could Resist A Winding Road” sets a curious tone; a fare-thee-well to a wandering spirit, who “never could stay any place too long, to not be standing still’s where she belongs”. Regular listeners will spot the parallel with “Beeswing“, the hybrid Anne Briggs/Vashti Bunyan portrait Thompson conjured up for 1994’s Mirror Blue – and behind the strathspey-like tangles of his guitar solo, one reads the unwritten story; the narrator’s yearning to follow his desires, the craving for the open road coupled with the overriding fear that something nasty might lie in wait around the corner.

The clip-clop rhythms of “Beatnik Walking” reinforce that sense that adventure might be something best taken in moderation, Thompson’s memoir of what he did on his holidays capturing a quietly luminous reverie, and standing up for the world’s silent types as he sings: “Dutch is not a loving tongue, you say your piece and run, you say you care in other ways.”

Showing you care, though, is not something that comes easy for the characters elsewhere on Still. The Miss Havisham spinster of the spooky “Josephine” sublimates her desires into scribbling on the wall as she waits in vain for the love of her life, while the protagonist in the leery “All Buttoned Up” clatters up against his girlfriend’s heavily fortified virtue, desperate to cop a feel, but mindful that he’s far too much of a good guy to try his luck. “I’ve got desires, raging fires, but I’ll do the right thing won’t I,” grunts Thompson, his strangulated whine of a guitar solo a fiery portrait of a libido straining under heavy manners.

That church mouse’s yearning to be a proper rat recurs; jealousy underpins hatred on the mark’s portrait of the sexy conman, “Long John Silver“, while the 80s smoove of “Where’s Your Heart?” (complete with faux-Prince harmonies) expresses the soft-bodied creature’s loathing and half-suppressed admiration for the hard-shelled. “Is it just yourself you’re enamoured of,” sings Thompson, an attempted put-down seemingly delivered by someone who dreams of loving themselves a little more.

Love, though, is not something Still’s dramatis personae can deal with. The dervish whirl of “Pony In The Stable” expresses that fear that passion and excitement might be too much to handle. “You’re messing with my mind, you’re thrilling me but killing me,” stammers Thompson, the accompanying car-alarm guitar wails subtitling the anxiety at its core.

Emotionally, the centre of Still might be the anguished “Dungeons For Eyes“, Thompson’s account of meeting a genuine baddie – a killer turned politician – at a social engagement. “Am I supposed to love him, am I supposed to shake his hand,” Thompson wonders, suddenly confronted with the banality of evil, but as powerful as his sense of repulsion is, what seems to horrify Thompson more is that – given the opportunity to right wrongs, even to speak his mind – he does nothing. “I can’t forgive you, I can’t forgive me,” he mutters over a rising cacophony.

Inertia, though, comes naturally to him, making closer “Guitar Heroes” – Thompson’s affectionate portrait of the fretmasters who bewitched him as a child – oddly revealing. The mini-Thompson blocks out the world to try and emulate his idols, with parents, school, girlfriends (“she says there’s normal boys out there”) all waved away as he pursues his mission to make a tiny corner of a big, intimidating universe absolutely his own. It’s gauche and funny, but the underlying joylessness emerges in a crushing crescendo: “Well I played and played until my fingers bled, I shut out all the voices but the voice in my head, now I stand on the stage and I do my stuff, and maybe it’s good but it’s never good enough.”

Whether that’s how Thompson genuinely feels about his work is a moot point; disentangling fact from fiction in his songs is an untidy business. However, it says something about the kind of determination that keeps him interesting; the producers, the backing bands, the studios, change, but the songs fundamentally do not. Tightly wound – easygoing but uptight; the work of a man still striving for a modest kind of perfection. And – not for the first time – with Still he has almost achieved it.

Q&A
RICHARD THOMPSON

You made Still in Wilco’s studio in Chicago in just nine days; do you like to make records quickly?
I never seem to have time to be a slow ponderer – it might be nice occasionally to have that luxury. We had a very small window to make this record in between my schedule and Jeff’s schedule. We did a thing called the AmericanaramA tour, which was a sort of travelling festival, and we spent time together, so the idea slowly formed that it might be nice to ask Jeff to produce a record. I’ve been making records for a long time and I know how to do it a certain way, but it can get a little stale, so it can be nice to get new people to come in and challenge you a bit.

“She Never Could Resist A Winding Road” is lovely; do you like the idea of escaping?
I wrote it about somebody else, but often you write a song and come back to it a bit later and think: ‘That’s about me.’ I suppose I like the idea of winding roads because you can’t see round the corner which is always a very seductive thing. And I suppose that’s a nice way to think about life – you’re on this journey, and the road winds, and you never quite know what’s coming.

“Beatnik Walking” is a walking tour of Amsterdam, correct?
It’s about a tour I did of Holland about 22 years ago with a new son, who was about six months old and in a backpack on my back. It was kind of an idyllic three weeks and I wanted to express it in a song. It’s probably the first time I have mentioned Rupert Murdoch in a song and hopefully the last. I have been addict of the Times crossword since I was 16, and it was nice to get the paper in the morning in Amsterdam, even though it’s owned by Murdoch. The song is full of all these little personal references which I shouldn’t be telling you about. If I tell you any more, I’d have to kill you.

Were you ever a beatnik?
I am a beatnik! My sister was an absolute beatnik for about a year – she spent a whole year without shoes, smoking Gauloises and hanging out in cafes, but then something else became fashionable. I always thought it was a very attractive lifestyle; slightly outside of society; a lot of poetry and jazz involved, and you can wear a fairly disheveled form of dress 24 hours a day. You can grow a beard!

“All Buttoned Up” seems to reflect the morality of the 1950s; do you remember that as an uptight era?
The 50s was a pretty oppressive time to grow up – humour became a very important way to deflect all that. Without the Beano comic, the Goon Show and Around the Horn – which gave you permission to be irreverent – I think we would have died of suffocation.

You have lived in California for decades, but are the characters in your songs still in the UK?
As a general thing they are. I am better at doing British than American. I am really nostalgic for industrial Britain: factories, tall industrial chimneys, and it really was dirty – you had to seriously work hard to get your shirts clean because you lived in London. I miss it – but it’s not there anymore.

“Guitar Heroes” celebrates Django Reinhardt, Les Paul, Chuck Berry, James Burton and the Shadows; why is that music so important to you?
It was the stuff that was thrown at me, really – it was the hand I was dealt. I’m a kid of the 50s – my dad had got some good records, Django Reinhardt and Les Paul, but at the same time rock’n’roll was hitting, and the hip stuff, the sexy stuff, was guys with guitars: Buddy Holly, Scotty Moore. What came before Elvis – I mean, “How Much Is That Doggie In The Window”, cloying novelty records, very schmaltzy dance music – was too sentimental, too suffocating for the post-war generation. Rock’n’roll was all about rawness and energy, throwing off the layers of sentiment and sophistication and returning to something a bit more earthy.

You are quite dismissive of a lot of your past albums; are you a harsh judge of your own work?
I don’t think you have to be a perfectionist to be unsatisfied with what you do. I really do think I do some good stuff – I have a certain amount of self-belief, but I know I am capable of being mediocre as well. It’s something you have to ask yourself all the time: how am I doing? I am not good at being commercial; I am not good at being Brian Wilson or the Travelling Wilburys.
INTERVIEW: JIM WIRTH

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Rolling Stones announce major retrospective exbition

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The Rolling Stones have announced details of their first major international exbition. EXHIBITIONISM will run from April 6 2016 - September 2016 at London's Saatchi Gallery, where it will occupy nine themed galleries spread across two entire floors. EXHIBITIONISM includes over 500 artefacts and wi...

The Rolling Stones have announced details of their first major international exbition.

EXHIBITIONISM will run from April 6 2016 – September 2016 at London’s Saatchi Gallery, where it will occupy nine themed galleries spread across two entire floors.

EXHIBITIONISM includes over 500 artefacts and will include original stage designs, dressing room and backstage paraphernalia; rare guitars and instruments, costumes, rare audio tracks and unseen video clips; personal diaries and correspondence; original poster and album cover artwork, and unique cinematic presentations.

It will include work by Andy Warhol, Shepard Fairey, Alexander McQueen, Ossie Clark, Tom Stoppard and Martin Scorsese.

Tickets go on sale July, 10 2015; you can find more information about the exhibition’s website, www.stonesexhibitionism.com.

After EXHIBITIONISM finishes its runs, it will visit eleven other cities around the world during a four year period.

Mick Jagger commented, “We’ve been thinking about this for quite a long time but we wanted it to be just right and on a large scale. The process has been like planning our touring concert productions and I think that right now it’s an interesting time to do it.”

Keith Richards said, “While this is about The Rolling Stones, it’s not necessarily only just about the members of the band. It’s also about all the paraphernalia and technology associated with a group like us, and it’s this, as well as the instruments that have passed through our hands over the years, that should make the exhibition really interesting.”

“The scene was great down the King’s Road in the 1960’s,” notes Ron Wood. “That was where you went to hang out to watch the fashions go by. So it is appropriate that our Exhibitionism will be housed at the wonderful Saatchi Gallery.”

Charlie Watts added – “It’s hard to believe that it’s more than fifty years since we began and it is wonderful to look back to the start of our careers and bring everything up to date at this exhibition.”

American readers! Uncut’s July 2015 issue [Take 218] featuring the Rolling Stones on the cover is now available in US stores and is also available digitally

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Grateful Dead + a round-up of newish releases

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A little glamorously jetlagged today, after making it back from the Grateful Dead's reunion show in California at the weekend. It was pretty strange following reaction to Kanye West's Glastonbury show on Twitter in my hotel room, then heading out to see a strikingly on-song Dead in front of 70,000 p...

A little glamorously jetlagged today, after making it back from the Grateful Dead’s reunion show in California at the weekend. It was pretty strange following reaction to Kanye West’s Glastonbury show on Twitter in my hotel room, then heading out to see a strikingly on-song Dead in front of 70,000 people in Santa Clara. I also met many excellent people, including one who’d lost his shoes and was looking to trade LSD for use of a phone charger.

I’ll be writing plenty about all this in the next Uncut, which will have one or two other nice things to entice Dead fans and the Dead-curious. In the meantime, try this for size: a blazing version of the garage nugget “Cream Puff War” from Saturday’s show…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K_Md4Lp6wpk

This week, though, I thought it might be useful to round up a few records I’ve liked recently, beginning with Meg Baird’s lovely “Don’t Weigh Down The Light”. Over various solo sets, collaborations with sister Laura, and three tremendous albums fronting Philadelphia’s Espers, Meg Baird has been a torchbearer for the kind of candlelit psych-folk that was briefly hip in the early ‘00s. Fashions change, but Baird’s music remains gorgeous, harbouring a kind of still magic without ever resorting to self-consciously wyrd affectations. Now relocated to San Francisco (where she’s also joined a blazing Comets On Fire offshoot called Heron Oblivion), the likes of “Back To You” are as close as Baird has come to the brackish atmospherics of Espers since their 2009 swansong. A strong companion piece, also, to another 2015 invocation of old California, Jessica Pratt’s “On Your Own Love Again”.

Baird wouldn’t have been out of place on “Remembering Mountains: Unheard Songs By Karen Dalton”, an engaging Tompkins Square comp that features Sharon Van Etten, Lucinda Williams, Diane Cluck and more tackle the legendary singer’s lost lyrics. Dalton’s uncanny music casts a long shadow over a clutch of latterday singer-songwriters, but it is this compilation’s fundamental strength and weakness that most of the 11 artists gifted here with unused Dalton lyrics do not imitate the late singer’s fragile style. Instead, Dalton’s words are discretely recast in the interpreters’ own musical images: most radically and successfully by Julia Holter on the hushed electronic nocturne, “My Love, My Love”. Marissa Nadler and the fine Josephine Foster come close, but the spirit of Dalton remains curiously evasive, so that “Remembering Mountains” feels more like a neat compendium of diverse female talents rather than a tribute to a transcendent one.

Cath & Phil Tyler’s “Dumb Supper” (2008) stands as one of the best, if relatively unheralded, British folk records of the last decade, and one whose unvarnished aesthetic straddled the worlds of traditional and experimental folk in much the same way as contemporary records by Alasdair Roberts. A compact and haunting six-tracker by the Newcastle-based couple, “The Song-Crowned King” operates in similar territory, with the opening take on the Child Ballad “Bonnie George Campbell” a notable stand-out. There’s also, though, an increased keenness to point up the raw affinities between British and Appalachian folk, especially on two instrumentals, “Puncheon Camps” and a droning fiddle jig, “Boys The Buzzards Are Flying”, that recall the Tylers’ Transatlantic fellow travellers, The Black Twig Pickers.

Once the dust has settled after Record Store Day, and the limited-edition Red House Painters box sets have been flipped multiple times on eBay, there may still be some excellent, less heralded albums still lurking out there in the racks. In 2014, one such gem was a flaming live album by Chris Forsyth’s “Solar Motel Band”, and this year there’s a decent chance you might still be able to track down “Deseret Canyon”, an understated instrumental set by another modern guitar master. William Tyler’s solo career is reasonably well-established now, thanks to expansive post-Fahey meditations like 2013’s “Impossible Truth”.

In 2008, however, he was a more anonymous figure in the background of Lambchop and Silver Jews sessions, with a solo album, on an obscure German label (Apparent Extent), released under the name of The Paper Hats. “Deseret Canyon” is that album, belatedly reissued under Tyler’s own name, and a critical part of a stealthily impressive solo catalogue. As with “Impossible Truth”, moments recall David Pajo’s dreamy rewiring of “Turn, Turn, Turn” (cf: “Parliament Of Birds”), but there’s a satisfying range here: stately Takoma School fingerpicking; scrabbling, fuzzed-out electric jams; even a phased ambience that further emphasises the widescreen possibilities of Tyler’s strikingly evocative music.

Those more ambient passages illustrate the potential space to exploit between kosmische and roots music, something Chicago’s Bitchin Bajas have managed on recent collaborations with Bonnie “Prince” Billy. In a surprisingly crowded field, the Bajas have gradually revealed themselves, in the past year or two, to be the best latterday exponents of a certain meditative and transporting strain of kosmische music. Last year’s self-titled fifth album, rich with Terry Riley allusions, probably remains their masterpiece, but “Transporteur”, a vinyl/cassette edition from Cooper Crain and his collaborators, is very nearly as good.

Lunar drones, deep space oscillations and reed jams proliferate, as usual, but the key touchstones on “Transporteur” are more likely Cluster and Harmonia, as exemplified by “Marimba”, which pulls off the rare Moebius and Roedelius trick of being at once jauntily playful and, in a psychedelically-adjusted way, rather serene. And if you missed this one, there’s yet another Bajas album, a collaboration with Natural Information Society called “Autoimaginary”, out pretty soon.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

First vinyl record shop opens in Mongolian capital Ulaanbaatar

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The first vinyl record shop has opened in the Mongolian capital, Ulaanbaatar. Dund Gol Records opened in the Children’s Book Palace of Mongolia in March, 2015, according to a report on The Vinyl Factory website. One of the world's most isolated record shops, Dund Gol Records is the brainchild of...

The first vinyl record shop has opened in the Mongolian capital, Ulaanbaatar.

Dund Gol Records opened in the Children’s Book Palace of Mongolia in March, 2015, according to a report on The Vinyl Factory website.

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.”

When asked what his most expensive items were, he replied: “The average prize is 50,000 MNT [£16]. Unique records are a bit more expensive. Old and used records are cheap.

“The most expensive record is by the Mongolian modern music band Soyol-Erdene and a record by Bayanmongol, which was recorded by a Russian company named ‘Melody’ in 1970. Vinyl record collectors around the world are interested in these two records because they are very rare.”

Dund Gol Records stocks a selection of western pop and classical music as well as local bands. You can find more information on their Facebook page.

Another store in Ulaanbaatar – HiFi CD Shop – specialises in Mongolian music CDs.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Little Richard – Directly From My Heart: The Best Of The Speciality & Vee-Jay Years

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To modern-day listeners, Little Richard’s seminal singles may sound quaint and lo-fi, distant echoes from another century. But in mid-’50s America, a society deeply divided by race and ideology, “Tutti-Frutti”, “Long Tall Sally”, “Lucille” and the rest of Richard Penniman’s breakou...

To modern-day listeners, Little Richard’s seminal singles may sound quaint and lo-fi, distant echoes from another century. But in mid-’50s America, a society deeply divided by race and ideology, “Tutti-Frutti”, “Long Tall Sally”, “Lucille” and the rest of Richard Penniman’s breakout singles hit with the force of a neutron bomb. For me, growing up in Atlanta, the point of impact is precise and indelible. During a visit to a friend’s house in the summer of 1956, I happened upon a portable record player with a single bearing a bright yellow label sitting tantalizingly on the platter, impulsively dropped the tonearm onto “Rip It Up” and was propelled into puberty in the space of 2:25. Countless members of my generation had similarly vivid transformative experiences dancing ecstatically to Little Richard records, as the Unholy Trinity of the Georgia Peach, Elvis and Chuck Berry combined to trigger a change so radical and absolute it had no precedent.

But Richard Penniman was an unlikely agent of change on such a grand scale. One of 11 kids in a Macon, Ga., family, he was effeminate and gimpy, having been born with one arm and leg shorter than the others, making him the target of constant psychological and physical abuse, his bootlegger dad being one of the abusers. Richard’s sanctuary was the Seventh Day Adventist services he attended with his family, singing in a voice so loud and attention-getting that during a Sister Rosetta Tharp concert he was brought on stage by the headliner, who then paid him for the impromptu performance. And in that moment, the story goes, Richard realized that showbiz was his calling, and his escape route. He worked the Southern vaudeville and frat-house circuits, frequently in drag, borrowing his look – slicked-up pompadour and generously applied Pancake 31 – from Atlanta singer Billy Price and his hammering piano style from New Orleans virtuoso Esquerita. But throughout his apprenticeship, which saw him cut eight sides for RCA Victor, Richard showed nary a hint of flash or originality. Indeed, his music was so undistinguished it’s difficult to understand why Specialty owner Art Rupe took a flier on the then-23-year-old, even if he’d been recommended by Lloyd Price, the label’s biggest star.

Rupe assigned his assistant, Robert “Bumps” Blackwell to oversee a recording date for Richard, which was set for September 14, 1955, in New Orleans at Cosimo Matassa’s J&M Studios, with a killer studio band that included drummer Earl Palmer and saxman Lee Allen. Neither these legends nor Blackwell could summon anything inspired out of Richard, whose vocal performances that day were interchangeable with those of countless R’n’B journeymen. Frustrated, Blackwell took Richard to the nearby Dew Drop Inn for a restorative beverage, and was stunned when Richard sat down at the piano and underwent an instant transformation into a wild man, shrieking his way through a bawdy fast-paced tuner whose chorus contained the lines “A-wop-bop-a-loo-bop-a-good-God-damn!” and “Tutti-frutti, good bootie,” punctuated with androgynously lusty falsetto WHOOs.

Stunned and desperate to keep his gig, Blackwell asked songwriter Dorothy LaBostrie, who’d witnessed the impromptu performance, to clean up the lyrics pronto. They raced back to J&M, rapidly worked up an arrangement and banged out three takes of “Tutti-Frutti” during the last 30 minutes of the session. Blackwell brought the recording back to LA, mastered the first take and soon thereafter watched “Tutti-Frutti” explode, hitting #2 on the R’n’B chart, going Top 20 pop, remarkably enough, and inspiring an even bigger-selling cover version by milquetoast crooner Pat Boone.

For the next 18 months, Richard and Bumps were on fire, fashioning a string of hits that would form the very blueprint for rock’n’roll, including “Slippin’ And Slidin’”, “Long Tall Sally”, “Rip It Up”, “Ready Teddy”, “The Girl Can’t Help It”, “Lucille”, “Jenny, Jenny”, “Good Golly Miss Molly” and “Keep A-Knockin’”. That extraordinary run came to a lurching halt during a late-’57 performance at Sydney Stadium, when, in a historically bizarre intersection of high-flying midcentury icons, Richard looked up, saw a red fireball shooting across the heavens and took it as a sign from the Lord to change his sinful ways – not realizing that what he’d seen was the orbiting Sputnik 1.

Thus, Little Richard rejected the devil’s music and became a man of God, remaining so until 1962, when he embarked on a comeback tour of Britain organized by Don Arden. On a side trip to Hamburg, he headlined the Star Club, and Paul McCartney of opening act the Beatles was so blown away that he pressed Richard to teach him how to summon up that trademark WHOO. But chapter two of Little Richard’s secular career yielded little of commercial or artistic consequence. A series of mid-’60s recordings for Vee-Jay, cut mostly with his so-so road band the Upsetters, comprises the final disc of Directly From My Heart, making the set “definitive” according to the ad copy, through it would have been just as satisfying if limited to the 43 Specialty sides that make up the first two discs.

Though much of Little Richard’s story is well-documented, certain of the more delectable details vary from one account to the next, including this one, in keeping with John Ford’s essential directive, “When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.”

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Dan Auerbach’s The Arcs share new song “Outta My Mind” — listen

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The Arcs - the band formed by Black Keys frontman, Dan Auerbach - have shared a new song, "Outta My Mind". Their debut album - called Yours, Dreamily, - is released on September 4 through Nonesuch Records. The band have already premiered one song from the album, "Stay In My Corner". The Arcs are ...

The Arcs – the band formed by Black Keys frontman, Dan Auerbach – have shared a new song, “Outta My Mind“.

Their debut album – called Yours, Dreamily, – is released on September 4 through Nonesuch Records.

The band have already premiered one song from the album, “Stay In My Corner“.

The Arcs are Dan Auerbach, Leon Michels, Richard Swift, Homer Steinweiss, and Nick Movshon.

Yours, Dreamily, is available for pre-order now on iTunes and at thearcs.com and nonesuch.com.

Each pre-order provides a download of both album tracks “Outta My Mind” and “Stay In My Corner“.

On July 10, the band will release a 7-inch single featuring “Outta My Mind” and an additional non-album track “My Mind“.

The tracklisting for Yours, Dreamily, is:

Once We Begin (Intro)
Outta My Mind
Put A Flower In Your Pocket
Pistol Made Of Bones
Everything You Do (You Do for You)
Stay In My Corner
Cold Companion
The Arc
Nature’s Child
Velvet Ditch
Chains Of Love
Come & Go
Rosie (Ooh La La)
Searching The Blue

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Grateful Dead exclusive! Hear an unreleased version of “Shakedown Street”

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Following on from our exclusive live version of “Viola Lee Blues”, at the band’s October 10, 1967 show at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, we're delighted to offer you more exclusive Grateful Dead goodies. This time, get ready for a live version of “Shakedown Street” recorded in 1981...

Following on from our exclusive live version of “Viola Lee Blues”, at the band’s October 10, 1967 show at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, we’re delighted to offer you more exclusive Grateful Dead goodies.

This time, get ready for a live version of “Shakedown Street” recorded in 1981 at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York.

This exclusive live track is taken from 30 Trips Around The Sun: The Definitive Live Story 1965-1995, a four disc set containing previously unreleased live performances from the Dead’s archive, which is released on September 18 by Rhino.

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

Click here to read our exclusive Q&A report inside the Grateful Dead tour rehearsals

On the same day, the Dead release 30 Trips Around The Sun – a career-spanning 80 disc box set featuring 30 unreleased live shows, one for each year the band was together from 1966 to 1995.

The tracklisting for 30 Trips Around The Sun: The Definitive Live Story 1965-1995 is:

Disc One
“Caution (Do Not Stop On Tracks)” – 1965
“Cream Puff War” – 1966
“Viola Lee Blues” – 1967
“Dark Star” – 1968
“Doin’ That Rag” – 1969
“Dancing In The Street” – 1970
“The Rub” – 1971
“Tomorrow Is Forever” – 1972
“Here Comes Sunshine” – 1973

Disc Two
“Uncle John’s Band” – 1974
“Franklin’s Tower” – 1975
“Scarlet Begonias” – 1976
“Estimated Prophet” – 1977
“Samson and Delilah” – 1978
“Lost Sailor>Saint Of Circumstance” – 1979
“Deep Elem Blues” – 1980

Disc Three
“Shakedown Street” – 1981
“Bird Song” – 1982
“My Brother Esau” – 1983
“Feel Like A Stranger” – 1984
“Let It Grow” – 1985
“Comes A Time” – 1986
“Morning Dew” – 1987
“Not Fade Away” – 1988

Disc Four
“Blow Away” – 1989
“Ramble On Rose” – 1990
“High Time” – 1991
“Althea” – 1992
“Broken Arrow” – 1993
“So Many Roads” – 1994
“Visions Of Johanna” – 1995

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Brian May leads tributes to Yes bassist Chris Squire

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Brian May has led the tributes to Chris Squire, bassist with Yes, who has died aged 67. The news of his death was made public yesterday [June 28, 2015], only a month after revealing he had been diagnosed with leukemia. Squire’s bandmate Geoffrey Downes first announced Squire’s death on Twitter...

Brian May has led the tributes to Chris Squire, bassist with Yes, who has died aged 67.

The news of his death was made public yesterday [June 28, 2015], only a month after revealing he had been diagnosed with leukemia.

Squire’s bandmate Geoffrey Downes first announced Squire’s death on Twitter.

The band confirmed the news on their Facebook page, writing: “It’s with the heaviest of hearts and unbearable sadness that we must inform you of the passing of our dear friend and Yes co-founder, Chris Squire. Chris peacefully passed away last night in Phoenix Arizona. We will have more information for you soon.”

Squire formed Yes with singer Jon Anderson in 1968 and was the only member of the group to feature on all 21 of their studio albums.

Squire also released a solo album, A Fish Out Of Water, in November 1975 on Atlantic Records.

Meanwhile, Brian May led the tributes to Squire, calling him “truly unique bass player”.

https://twitter.com/DrBrianMay/status/615291541096112128/photo/1

Writing on Facebook, Bill Bruford called Squire “an individualist in an age when it was possible to establish individuality, Chris fearlessly staked out a whole protectorate of bass playing in which he was lord and master. I suspect he knew not only that he gave millions of people pleasure with his music, but also that he was fortunate to be able to do so.”

Other tributes were paid by Geezer Butler, Gene Simmons and Tom Morello.

https://twitter.com/genesimmons/status/615258838321754112

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

What Happened, Miss Simone?

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In 1976, Nina Simone performed at the Montreaux Jazz Festival. Dressed in a knee-length brown dress, she strode onstage, took a low, long bow and then stood for 30 seconds, long enough for the audience applause to die down and then, slightly self-consciously, rise again. Watching the footage of this...

In 1976, Nina Simone performed at the Montreaux Jazz Festival. Dressed in a knee-length brown dress, she strode onstage, took a low, long bow and then stood for 30 seconds, long enough for the audience applause to die down and then, slightly self-consciously, rise again. Watching the footage of this at the start of Liz Garbus’ documentary, you’d be forgiven for finding Simone’s response to such adulation rather strange. Her facial expression appears blank and distant, while her body language is imperious; it’s hard to tell whether or not she is happy to be on this stage.

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

As Garbus’ film unspools, it becomes evident that this reaction was typical not only of Simone’s complicated relationship with her success but also indicative of her own emotional state. As many of those friends, family and former colleagues attest, being Nina Simone was a difficult business to maintain. “She paid a huge price,” admits her daughter, Lisa Simone Kelly. “People seem to think that when she went out on stage that was when she became Nina Simone. My mother was Nina Simone 24/7. And that’s where it became a problem.”

Accordingly, Garbus’ film weaves together Simone’s public successes with her personal struggles. From a dramatic point of view, she is fortunate that much of Simone’s tumultuous career took place on camera. Here the singer is being introduced by Hugh Heffner’s to viewers on his Playboy’s Penthouse show in 1959; playing at the Newport Jazz Festival a year later; asserting “Freedom is to me no fear,” during a filmed interview in New York in 1968. Indeed, much of What Happened, Miss Simone? is essentially narrated by the artist herself, the voice over assembled from hours of audio tapes.

The beats of her life are remarkable. She dreamed of becoming the first black concert pianist; she changed her name from Eunice Waymon to avoid offending her religious mother; she married an ex-NYPD officer who helped turn her into a star; radicalized, she performed “Mississippi Goddamn” during the Selma-Montgomery march in the presence of Martin Luther King. Cripped by depression and bipolar disorder, she played gigs in Paris cafés, barely able to support herself financially. It’s evidently rich material, although Garbus’ rather programmatic approach doesn’t quite allow for the digressions the film merits on occasion. Hopefully a wider release will follow from its Netflix transmission.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch the Dalai Lama join Patti Smith at Glastonbury

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The Dalai Lama joined Patti Smith on stage at the Glastonbury festival this weekend. During her Pyramid Stage set yesterday [June 28, 2015], Smith brought out the Dalai Lama so that festivalgoers could wish His Holiness a happy 80th birthday. "We are grateful to him for all his love of humanity an...

The Dalai Lama joined Patti Smith on stage at the Glastonbury festival this weekend.

During her Pyramid Stage set yesterday [June 28, 2015], Smith brought out the Dalai Lama so that festivalgoers could wish His Holiness a happy 80th birthday.

“We are grateful to him for all his love of humanity and making people aware of the importance of saving the planet,” Smith said, before reading a poem she had written for him.

Glastonbury organiser Emily Eavis then bought the Dalai Lama onto the stage to huge cheers from the crowd. “I think it would be nice if Glastonbury wished the Dalai Lama a happy birthday,” said Smith, before leading the audience in a rendition of “Happy Birthday”.

The Dalai Lama then blew out a single candle on a birthday cake, before cutting it. “Thank you, thank you,” he said. “Dear brothers and sisters, I really appreciate so many people’s expression of warm feeling.” He then went on to joke about the age of Smith and her band. “These singers and musicians have white hair, but they look very youthful! That gives me encouragement, I should be more like you – more active!”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2XPO8B2QZ1g

Click here to read our review of Patti Smith performing Horses live in London

Rolling Stone reports that the Dalai Lama also participated in a panel where he called on the United States and Russia to scrap their nuclear weapons and demanded that nations begin to view the environment as a global issue.

In another appearance at the festival, the Dalai Lama delivered an impromptu speech to hundreds of festivalgoers gathered at the Stone Circle.

“In this very moment, in some parts of the world, like Syria, Iraq, Nigeria and some other places – they’re killing, human to human being. Unthinkable. And the worst thing [is that] conflict, killing each other, in the name of their faith.”

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – goes on sale in the UK on July 9. Click here for more details.

The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard, the Only Ones, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.