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Joni Mitchell “speaking well” after aneurysm

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There have been a couple of updates regards Joni Mitchell's health over the weekend. In an interview with The Huffington Post published on Friday [June 26, 2015], David Crosby revealed that Mitchell "is home, she is in care, she is in recovery. How that's going to go, we don't know yet. She took a ...

There have been a couple of updates regards Joni Mitchell‘s health over the weekend.

In an interview with The Huffington Post published on Friday [June 26, 2015], David Crosby revealed that Mitchell “is home, she is in care, she is in recovery. How that’s going to go, we don’t know yet. She took a terrible hit. She had an aneurysm, and nobody found her for a while. And she’s going to have to struggle back from it the way you struggle back from a traumatic brain injury.”

Yesterday [June 28, 2015], Leslie Morris, Mitchell’s conservator, released a statement through official website JoniMitchell.com: “Joni did in fact suffer an aneurysm. However, details that have emerged in the past few days are mostly speculative. The truth is that Joni is speaking, and she’s speaking well. She is not walking yet, but she will be in the near future as she is undergoing daily therapies. She is resting comfortably in her own home and she’s getting better each day. A full recovery is expected.”

Morris was appointed Mitchell’s conservator in May.

Mitchell, 71, was found unconscious in her Los Angeles home on March 31. She was admitted to an area hospital after which conflicting reports emerged concerning her responsiveness.

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.

Q&A report from inside the Grateful Dead rehearsals – Plus! Win tickets to see the Dead’s final show broadcast in UK cinemas

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The Grateful Dead begin their Fare Thee Well dates tomorrow June 27 in Santa Clara, California; and we have not only an inside look at how the rehearsals are going but also the chance for UK readers to see the Dead's final show broadcast in UK cinemas. The Fare Thee Well shows will celebrate the ba...

The Grateful Dead begin their Fare Thee Well dates tomorrow June 27 in Santa Clara, California; and we have not only an inside look at how the rehearsals are going but also the chance for UK readers to see the Dead’s final show broadcast in UK cinemas.

The Fare Thee Well shows will celebrate the band’s 50th anniversary; but critically, these are the last shows to feature the four living original members of the band – bassist Phil Lesh, guitarist Bob Weir and percussionists Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann.

They will be joined by Phish’s Trey Anastasio along with pianist Bruce Hornsby and keyboardist Jeff Chimenti.

The full list of dates is June 27 and 28 in Santa Clara; followed by Chicago’s Soldier Field on July 3, 4 and 5.

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

The Dead‘s final Fare Thee Well show will be shown in 250 cinemas across the UK on July 6 thanks to CinemaLive.

In conjunction with CinemaLive, we’re delighted to be able to offer 5 pairs tickets.

To be in with a chance of winning a pair, just tell us:

What is the title of the first track on the Dead’s self-titled debut album?

Send your answers to uncutcomp@timeinc.com along with your name, address and preferred choice of cinema (the full list is on the CinemaLive site) by noon, June 30, 2015.

And now, here’s a sneak peek inside the Dead’s rehearsals courtest of Jeff Chimenti…

UNCUT: How are the rehearsals going?
CHIMENTI: Rehearsals are going just fine!… Long busy days but well worth the effort!… My behind is a little sore from all the sitting though!… Haha!

Are there many differences between this time and when you’ve played with these guys in the past?
Musically it feels just as good as in past but, for me personally, it is a blast to be able to share the keyboard role with Bruce!…He is awesome both musically and as a person!…

Has there been an extra emotional awareness that this really is the last time?
I think emotions will be more in play as shows are coming to a close!… As stated, rehearsals are very busy as lot’s to cover, so it’s more of a focus situation on that!…

How’s Trey Anastasio fitting in?
Trey has been kicking a**!!…He has worked hard and is evidenced in his performance, besides the “position” in the band that he has to deal with so to speak… I’m sure you know what i mean!…

What are your general feelings, as the shows approach?
I personally feel good and am just ready for the shows to get going and feel all are on the same page!… It’s been quite some time of anticipation to reach this point and glad it’s finally arrived!… Here we go!…

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.

Meanwhile, 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 and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Sleaford Mods: “I’m one of those twats who voted Green and wanted a Labour government”

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Sleaford Mods' Jason Williamson discusses politics and the duo's new album, Key Markets, in the latest issue of Uncut, dated August 2015 and on sale now. Williamson talks about his lyrics' increasing "randomness", and also reveals what sparked his criticism of model David Gandy on the song "Giddy O...

Sleaford ModsJason Williamson discusses politics and the duo’s new album, Key Markets, in the latest issue of Uncut, dated August 2015 and on sale now.

Williamson talks about his lyrics’ increasing “randomness”, and also reveals what sparked his criticism of model David Gandy on the song “Giddy On The Ciggies”.

Discussing how he voted in last month’s General Election, the vocalist and lyricist says: “[I voted] Green, which I regret. I’m one of these twats who voted Green and wanted a Labour government. I should’ve voted Labour. I hated their manifesto – so fucking vague, it could have been a recipe for a Bakewell tart. But they’d have brought some compassion.

“I’ve seen the people bearing the brunt of Tory policy – disabled people, single mothers who’ve lost benefits trying to survive on 17 hours work a week. I mean, fuck off.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

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.

Click back to Uncut.co.uk every day for news, reviews and blogs.

An interview with Spiritualized’s Jason Pierce: “What we were doing… was morally and legally wrong”

As a taster for Spritualized's Glastonbury appeareance this weekend, I thought I'd post an Album By Album interview I conducted with Jason Pierce, which originally appeared in Uncut's August 2009 issue [Take 147]. Subjects under discussion: Spacemen 3, Spiritualized, drugs, log burners, the benefits...

SPIRITUALIZED
Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space (1997)
The ambitious scope of Ladies And Gentlemen… took in everything from the blissed-out sweep of the title track to the 16-minute free jazz epic “Cop Shoot Cop”. Its success was perhaps all the more remarkable considering the number of stumbling blocks – both personal and professional – that Pierce encountered along the way…
The songs were written ahead of my split with Kate [Radley, who left Pierce for The Verve’s Richard Ashcroft]. I didn’t split up with Kate and then write “Broken Heart” – that would be quite a weird thing to do. Honestly, I’d been listening to lots of Patsy Cline and Jimmy Scott, songs full of absolutely heartbreaking things. Where do lines like “Little’s Js a fucking mess” and “There’s a hole in my arm where the money goes in” come from? All of that happened before the split. And “the hole in my arm” – that’s a John Prine line. Can you make the connection between that and heroin? Yeah, and one should.
We’d done an amazing tour through America and we’d started playing songs like “Cop Shoot Cop” and “Electricity”, so this was the first time we were playing songs live ahead of recording an album. Initially, we put down live takes, they’re not studio constructs. We ran into a problem with the Elvis Presley estate over the title track. I sang a close harmony of “Can’t Help Falling In Love” over the end of the song. The label pressed 50,000 copies before Elvis’ people came back and said, “Yeah, you can use it, but it has to become our song.” I asked if we could share the writing credits, but they were adamant that if that piece remained then it would be called “Only Fools Rush In” and credited to their songwriters. So I took it out. It was like a Spacemen 3 flashback.
The album came in foil blister packs. What were we saying with that packaging? Music does exactly what medicine does. How much did it cost? In the scheme of things, pennies. We were leaking money all the way through. I’ve still never seen a royalty from any of it. The only people who can make that foil were the people who actually do the foil on medicine packets, while the little red sticker that goes on there with the dosage amount had to be made by a chemist on the chemist’s machine. The records were put together by people wearing white gloves and hairnets. It’s great, isn’t it?
Yeah, I sacked the band [after a show in October at London’s Royal Albert Hall]. So much was made of me being difficult to work with, but the simple fact is this is the only time I’ve gotten rid of people. Their demands just became… kind of weird. Like no consecutive touring – if we went to America we had to come home for the same amount of time before we could go anywhere else. The more I couldn’t make it how they wanted it, the more they ignored me – I’d walk into the back of a bus and they’d get up and leave. I wasn’t delivering what they thought they could have from this. They didn’t like me spending money on packaging, and taking time making records. And they insisted on contracts, to put everything they wanted into writing. So I let them go. I used their contract as the means. I had my one clause in there which was that I could let them go. So as soon as the names went down, that was that. It was heartbreaking, it was a hard thing to do.

SPIRITUALIZED
Amazing Grace
(2003)
Recorded in three weeks, Amazing Grace evokes the garage aesthetic of Nuggets, as well as strung-out ballads like “Lord Let It Rain On Me”…
I was working with Spring-Heeled Jack, recording a lot of free-form jazz. We weren’t writing songs as such, just experimenting with getting sound out of instruments. With Amazing Grace, I had this idea that I wanted to make a record where the musicians would only hear the song on the day of recording, so what we got was their immediate response to it. Then we’d try and make a record out of that. I really like that album, because it was so missed at the time. People were saying it’s a garage record, like The White Stripes, but it’s not. It’s simpler than Spacemen 3, but there’s something about the sound of the songs, they’ve got that sparkle in all Spiritualized records, something to do with the high frequencies, the air at the top of it. And it was good to make. But I’m still drawn back to the the same old, “Let’s try and mix it again…” I’d love to be able to make field recordings that capture a moment, but I still have to go through this process where I’ll try mixing it one way just to know that the way it’s been done is the right way. I don’t mind that. I find I have to work like this to be satisfied.

SPIRITUALIZED
Songs In A&E (2008)
Delayed by a lengthy illness, Songs In A&E is Pierce’s most conventional album. Extra-curricular work – a soundtrack for Harmony Korine, the orchestral Silent Sound installation and SpaceShipp, recorded with pianist Matthew Shipp – also appears to have got in the way…
Maybe, in an ideal world, you could have thrown it all into the album. But it’s quite good to cover things like SpaceShipp – just heavy drones – outside of an album. You can be more extreme. It’s the same with the Harmony soundtrack for Mister Lonely; it became more filmic because it wasn’t made in the context of a band. The songs on this LP were quite traditional for me, so I didn’t feel there was room for more abstract stuff. The thing about making records, it can’t be inconsequential, it can’t be like, “Here’s some sounds I’ve put together.” There has to be a thread.
Has my songwriting changed over the years? No, there’s still a particular kind of simplicity, but there’s a learning process going on. With Songs In A &E, I didn’t just want to use the tremolo that worked on that, or the fuzztone I know works for this. I wanted to look somewhere outside of it. Eventually all my records settle into a space, for good or bad, that’s my take on things. It’s my snobbery, that…

Watch Andy Warhol’s rare film starring the Velvet Underground

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Rare film footage shot by Andy Warhol featuring the Velvet Underground has recently appeared on Youtube. Dangerous Minds reports that the film, called Moe Gets Tied Up - or, alternatively, Moe In Bondage - dates from 1966. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ho43S6_4a1I The 32 minute film appears to ...

Rare film footage shot by Andy Warhol featuring the Velvet Underground has recently appeared on Youtube.

Dangerous Minds reports that the film, called Moe Gets Tied Up – or, alternatively, Moe In Bondage – dates from 1966.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ho43S6_4a1I

The 32 minute film appears to be excised from a longer, 66 minute piece. According to a Velvet Underground filmography, the full film lasts 66 minutes and “is a two-reel set for double screen projection. In this film, Moe Tucker sit tied up with ropes, while Lou Reed, Sterling Morrison and John Cale play with food and monkey around. 35-minutes unofficial video copies are circulating.”

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.

Meanwhile, 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 and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Gram Parsons’ 20 best songs

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Though he passed away aged just 26, Gram Parsons didn't mess around while he was here – a member of The Byrds, The Flying Burrito Brothers and The International Submarine Band, he also found time to make two sublime solo albums and partly invent country-rock as we know it. Here, Uncut present 20 o...

19 WE’LL SWEEP OUT THE ASHES IN THE MORNING
GP, 1973

Written by Joyce Allsup, this 1969 almost-hit for Carl & Pearl Butler is faithfully revisited as a duet by Parsons and Emmylou Harris, her crystalline certainty anchoring his more wayward vocals. A song about battling the illicit thrill of “stolen love” and “wild desire”, it almost certainly carried personal resonance for the pair.

________________________

20 SIN CITY
The Gilded Palace Of Sin, 1969

This superb Hillman-Parsons country-gospel ballad features Gram as Travis Bickle in a Nudie suit, toting a guitar rather than a gun and painting a ravaged portrait of a decaying LA. Though heavy with the old-time religious doomsaying of The Louvin Brothers, it also takes very modern sideswipes at consumerism and the record business. The man come to “clean up this town” is Bobby Kennedy, assassinated not long before.

Click back to Uncut.co.uk every day for news, reviews and blogs.

Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker: “I never wanted to do a song you couldn’t dance to”

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Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker discusses his new album, Currents, in the latest issue of Uncut, dated August 2015 and out now. The singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist also talks about the influences on their third record, the group’s live shows and his new synth-heavy sound. “The backbo...

Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker discusses his new album, Currents, in the latest issue of Uncut, dated August 2015 and out now.

The singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist also talks about the influences on their third record, the group’s live shows and his new synth-heavy sound.

“The backbone of Tame Impala has always been groove,” explains Parker. “I never wanted to do a song that you couldn’t dance to – or groove to at least, whatever the difference is between those things.

“I heard a few people say it was going to be more dance- or club-oriented, and ‘Let It Happen’ is a song where I was flexing that fantasy. But I wouldn’t say that the rest [of Currents] is like a dance album, not in the slightest.

“At the same time, I hate to say the album is this or that – I prefer people to judge it themselves.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

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.

Click back to Uncut.co.uk every day for news, reviews and blogs.

Fleetwood Mac, live in London

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For a band whose career has been so assiduously documented, Fleetwood Mac have always had a knotty relationship with their past. Great swathes of it are essentially ignored, while the domestic dramas of four decades ago are still the pivot for Fleetwood Mac’s live shows in 2015. Last time they pla...

For a band whose career has been so assiduously documented, Fleetwood Mac have always had a knotty relationship with their past. Great swathes of it are essentially ignored, while the domestic dramas of four decades ago are still the pivot for Fleetwood Mac’s live shows in 2015. Last time they played in London, for instance, the narrative privileged Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks as the tragic star-crossed former lovers reunited; this time round, it’s the return of Christine McVie after a 16 year absence that provides the show with its motor. Not that you’d necessarily forget such a momentous occasion, of course: the band have a weird, almost neurotic need to constantly refer back to the narrative in hand. Tonight, for instance, we are routinely told how delighted they are that McVie is back in the fold, while it falls to McVie herself to spell out the specifics of her return to the band: “It was two years ago I stood on this very stage and played ‘Don’t Stop’…” Meanwhile, Buckingham is eager to present McVie’s return as part of “a karmic, circular moment” in the band’s evolution. “We are a group of individuals that have seen their fair share of ups and downs,” he explains to anyone who’s not been paying attention since Rumours came out. “But we’re still here! And that’s what makes us what we are. With the return of the beautiful Christine, there is no doubt that we begin a brand new, prolific and profound and beautiful chapter in the story of this band, Fleetwood Mac.”

Despite Buckingham’s warm predictions for the future, tonight’s set is typically focussed on the band’s mid-Seventies era: half specifically from Rumours. Writing in his autobiography, Play On, Fleetwood admits to a “preservationist instinct” when it comes to his band’s history. “On my farm in Maui, Hawaii,” he begins, “I have a weather-sealed barn full of memorabilia: photographs, journals, clothes, cars, endless video tapes, concert recordings, all bits of Fleetwood Mac and my life. As much as I’ve always been driven creatively to move forward toward something bigger, brighter and unknown, I’m also a deeply-rooted nostalgic.” Although Fleetwood’s archivist sensibilities may be firmly entrenched, as a live proposition, the band has a prescribed cut-off point: you might not know, for instance, that Fleetwood Mac released 10 albums before Rumours. It’s a lovely thing that Christine McVie is back in the band; but for all the harmonic brilliance of “Everywhere” and “Little Lies”, it’d be wonderful to hear “Show Me A Smile” or “Come A Little Bit Closer”. It’d be even better to get Danny Kirwan on to play “Woman Of A 1000 Days“. Alas, the demarcation line between the early line-ups and the Buckingham/Nicks era is so rigorously enforced that we’re not treated to anything released prior to “the first album in this configuration” – as McVie rather formally describes the Fleetwood Mac record.

Admittedly, it is hard to argue with the sheer brilliance of the Buckingham/Nicks/McVie line-up. But with McVie back in the band, the set-list highlights the disjunct between the band’s three writers. This is most evident on the run of songs from “Rhiannon” to “Everywhere” and “I Know I’m Not Wrong”: Nicks’ is witchy and soft-focus, McVie’s is bright and nimble while Buckingham’s is left-field and surprisingly angry. Admittedly, McVie brings a balance to the show – both in terms of opening out the set list but also the way she softens the on-stage dynamic. Outwardly, at least, she appears less eccentric than Buckingham and more grounded than Stevie Nicks. She is also thankfully brisk when introducing her songs; unlike her bandmates. Nicks, particularly, takes an age to get to “Gypsy”, by way of a lengthy story from 1968 involving Hendrix, Joplin and a San Francisco clothing store. Buckingham, meanwhile, over shares considerably with his intro to “Big Love”. He begins with an unexpected defence of Tango In The Night – “A very difficult album to make, but as a producer I am proud of the result” – before taking the scenic route round to the song’s meaning. “It was a song about someone who was not in touch,” he says, finally getting there. “It was a contemplation of alienation but is now a meditation on the power and importance of change.”

Aside from this talk of change and new chapters, there is nonetheless something telling about the name of this tour: On With The Show. It conjures up images of the band as redoubtable showbiz troopers – which in a sense, is precisely what Fleetwood Mac are these days. For all Buckingham’s talk of “ups and downs” in the band’s history, there is a reassuring sense of professionals at work tonight. He may show-off slightly, but it’s useful to be reminded what a fine player he is, especially on “Big Love”, “Landslide” and “Songbird”. Only the overwhelming oddness of “Tusk” momentarily stops the show’s warm, comfortable vibes. But even Buckingham’s quirks are permissible. Among the most conspicuous of these is the giant image of Buckingham’s head that is beamed onto screen at the rear of the stage during “I Know I’m Not Wrong” – and then, bizarrely, can be seen floating upside down on screens in front of the stage. But for all Buckingham’s idiosyncracies and Nicks’ Twilight theatrics, the heavy lifting is done by the men with their names above the door. Mick Fleetwood might enjoy a little of the thesping done by his band mates – the gong and wind chimes ensemble he brings to bear on “World Turning”, for instance – but as with John McVie there is solid workmanship underpinning the Buckingham/Nicks flamboyance. Indeed, the most unfussy players on stage tonight appear to be the former Mr and Mrs McVie. She is very much Laura Ashley mum, cheerful and polite, effortlessly delivering many of tonight’s best songs; while John McVie remains inscrutable behind his cap and waistcoat. A rarity among Fleetwood Mac, the bassist is the only member of the band to keep his views entirely to himself.

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.

Meanwhile, 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 and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The 22nd Uncut Playlist Of 2015

Bit of an inelegant rush this week, but please head over to Bandcamp and check out this new Four Tet album, which I think is maybe his best - certainly his most psychedelic - in a while. And hey, yet another strong Bitchin Bajas incoming; nothing to play you from that yet, but I'll link asap. Follo...

Bit of an inelegant rush this week, but please head over to Bandcamp and check out this new Four Tet album, which I think is maybe his best – certainly his most psychedelic – in a while. And hey, yet another strong Bitchin Bajas incoming; nothing to play you from that yet, but I’ll link asap.

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

2 Chris Connolly – Alameda (Caldo Verde)

3 Various Artists – Total 15 (Kompakt)

4 Spooner Oldham – Pot Luck (Light In The Attic)

5 Four Tet – Morning/Evening (Text)

6 Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats – Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats (Stax)

7 Hooton Tennis Club – Highest Point In Cliff Town (Heavenly)

8 Janet Jackson – No Sleep (Rhythm Nation/BMG)

9 William Basinski – The Deluge (Temporary Residence)

10 Alif – Aynama-Rtama (Nawa Recordings)

11 Public Image Ltd – What The World Needs Now… (PiL Official)

12 Bilal – In Another Life (BBE)

13 Eleventh Dream Day – Works For Tomorrow (Thrill Jockey)

14 The Cairo Gang – Goes Missing (God?)

15 Deradoorian – The Exploding Flower Planet (Anticon)

https://soundcloud.com/anticon/deradoorian-a-beautiful-woman-1

16 Arthur’s Landing – Second Thoughts (Buddhist Army)

17 Dungen – Allas Sak (Smalltown Supersound)

Early Richard Hell, Alex Chilton, Television singles to feature on new box set

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Television, Alex Chilton, Richard Hell, the Feelies, the dBs and more are to appear on a 4xLP/2xCD set collecting the output of early punk label Ork Records. Ork Records: New York, New York is released on October 30, 2015 by the Numero Group. Ork was formed by Television manager Terry Ork and Cha...

Television, Alex Chilton, Richard Hell, the Feelies, the dBs and more are to appear on a 4xLP/2xCD set collecting the output of early punk label Ork Records.

Ork Records: New York, New York is released on October 30, 2015 by the Numero Group.

Ork was formed by Television manager Terry Ork and Charles Ball in 1975, ostensibly to release Television’s debut single, “Little Johnny Jewel“. Rolling Stone reports that the two-CD or four-LP set Ork Records: New York, New York comes soon after the vinyl-only Ork: Box, which was released as a limited edition on Record Store Day.

All formats of Ork Records: New York, New York are accompanied by a deluxe 190-page book while a limited edition of both the CD and vinyl sets comes with a 45 featuring two previously unreleased tracks by the Feelies. “The Boy With The Perpetual Nervousness” is an unreleased studio track from 1978, backed with cover of Burt Bacharach’s “My Little Red Book” recorded live at CBGBs in December, 1976.

The tracklisting for Ork Records: New York, New York is:

Television – “Little Johnny Jewel”
Feelies – “Fa Ce La”
Richard Hell – “(I Belong to the) Blank Generation”
The Revelons – “The Way (You Tough My Hand)”
Erasers – “I Won’t Give Up”
Alex Chilton – “All of the Time”
Chris Stamey and the dBs – “(I Thought) You Wanted to Know”
Prix – “Zero”
Marbles – “Red Lights”
Alex Chilton – “Take Me Home & Make Me Like It”
Prix – “Girl”
The Idols – “Girl That I Love”
Mick Farren and the New Wave – “Lost Johnny”
Cheetah Chrome – “Still Wanna Die”
The Idols – “You”
The Student Teachers – “Christmas Weather”
Erasers – “It Was So Funny (The Song That They Sung)”
Richard Hell – “(I Could Live With You) (In) Another World”
Chris Stamey – “The Summer Sun”
Alex Chilton – “Free Again”
Richard Lloyd – “(I Thought) You Wanted to Know”
The Student Teachers – “Channel 13”
Chris Stamey – “Where the Fun Is”
Prix – “Everytime I Close My Eyes”
Feelies – “Forces at Work”
Marbles – “Fire and Smoke”
The Revelons – “97 Tears”
Cheetah Chrome – “Take Me Home”
Richard Hell – “You Gotta Lose”
Chris Stamey and the dBs – “If and When”
Mick Farren and the New Wave – “Play With Fire”
Richard Lloyd – “Get Off My Cloud”
Alex Chilton – “The Singer Not the Song”
Richard Lloyd – “Connection”
Alex Chilton – “Summertime Blues”
Mick Farren and the New Wave – “To Know Him Is to Love Him”
Link Cromwell – “Crazy Like a Fox”
Link Cromwell – “Shock Me”
Kenneth Higney – “I Wanna Be the King”
Lester Bangs – “Let It Blurt”
Alex Chilton – “Bangkok”
Peter Holsapple – “Big Black Truck”
Prix – “She Might Look My Way”
Alex Chilton – “Can’t Seem to Make You Mine”
Prix – “Love You All Day Long”
Alex Chilton – “Shakin’ The World”
Prix – “Love You Tonight”
Lester Bangs – “Live”
Kenneth Higney – “Funky Kinky”

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.

Meanwhile, 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 and more

The Monkees’ Micky Dolenz: “There’s really good stuff still sitting in the vaults”

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The Monkees talk us through their albums in the new issue of Uncut – dated August 2015, it's on sale in UK shops and available to download now. In the piece, Micky Dolenz and Peter Tork explain how they were essentially a garage band, recall making the film Head with Jack Nicholson and discuss th...

The Monkees talk us through their albums in the new issue of Uncut – dated August 2015, it’s on sale in UK shops and available to download now.

In the piece, Micky Dolenz and Peter Tork explain how they were essentially a garage band, recall making the film Head with Jack Nicholson and discuss the reasons they split after just a few productive years.

Talking about the group’s unheard recordings, Dolenz explains that there are still unreleased songs in the archives.

“When the [TV] show was on the air,” he explains, “they wanted at least a couple of new songs every week, so the producers and us were told, ‘Just get in there, and make stuff!’

“So we ended up with a library [of songs], and there’s really good stuff to this day still sitting in the vaults.”

“Going our separate ways was a grave disappointment to me,” says Peter Tork. “I was hoping we had something as a band, but I didn’t know how to make it happen.”

The Monkees’ Micky Dolenz and Peter Tork perform at London’s Eventim Apollo on September 4th.

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

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.

Click back to Uncut.co.uk every day for news, reviews and blogs.

Robin Gibb – Saved By The Bell – The Collected Works Of Robin Gibb 1968-1970


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For some groups, it’s musical differences; for others, it’s too much blood under the bridge. For The Bee Gees, it was a b-side that ultimately caused the temporary break-up of the fraternal bond. Relations had become increasingly fractious between the three brothers, Robin, Barry and Maurice Gib...

For some groups, it’s musical differences; for others, it’s too much blood under the bridge. For The Bee Gees, it was a b-side that ultimately caused the temporary break-up of the fraternal bond. Relations had become increasingly fractious between the three brothers, Robin, Barry and Maurice Gibb, across 1968, as they worked on their semi-conceptual surrealist pop opus, 1969’s Odessa, but it was the decision to relegate Robin’s “Lamplight” to the b-side of brother Barry’s “First Of May”, as Odessa’s lead single, that acted as the catalyst. In March of 1969, Robin made his intentions plain; he was going solo, The Bee Gees were no more.

It’s an odd twist in a tale that gets odder the more you explore. If all you know of The Bee Gees is their pop-cultural presence as leonine, medallioned R&B/disco legends, their 1960s offer some surprises for you. In their first prolific blush, The Bee Gees rose from teen precociousness in Queensland, Australia to make increasingly strange, unpredictable records. Mournful pop songs like “New York Mining Disaster 1941”, “Massachusetts” and “I Started A Joke” were flooded with ornate strings, clanging Beatles guitars, and the quavering, fragile lilt of Robin Gibb’s lead vocals, a man whose voice was caught in perpetual vibrato.


The band had been wildly prolific. Still in their late teens, the brothers Gibb released four albums in two years, one a double – Bee Gees’ First (1967), Horizontal and Idea (both 1968), and Odessa – all swept up in the magic of pop’s halcyon days. No wonder relations were strained. But if Robin regretted the decision, he certainly didn’t show it. Entering one of his most prolific phases, he released a chart-topping single, “Saved By The Bell”, followed by 1970’s Robin’s Reign, his first solo album, which makes up the bulk of the first disc here.

The magic of Robin’s Reign lies in its idiosyncrasy, both lyrically and melodically. While The Bee Gees were pop craftspeople, they were also, on the side, quietly, but convincingly experimental. Here, the first sound you hear is a gently ticking drum machine – some claim this was the first appearance of the drum machine on record – before gilded strings swamp the sensorium, cosseted by the glittering mandolins of “August, October”. Robin’s songs were melancholy, sometimes haunted by real life experience, such as being in the 1967 Hither Green rail crash, sometimes grounded in his unexpected fascinations, like British military history, or everyday observations, such as the memories of family horse-riding trips, in “Cold Be My Days”.

That song is one of the more startling moments on Sing Slowly Sisters, Robin’s ‘lost second album’, finally reconstructed, after a fashion, and released on Saved By The Bell’s second disc. With the master tapes disappeared, or dispersed across the globe, producer Andrew Sandoval had a task pulling a convincing version of the album together, but to his credit, Sing Slowly Sisters as realized here feels of a piece with the hissy bootlegs that have done the rounds over the decades – but with a serious audio upgrade. It’s mind-boggling to think an album so strong could stay unreleased for so long; there are good grounds to claiming this was Robin’s masterpiece. It lights upon far richer territory than Robin’s Reign, which, by comparison, almost feels monomaniacal.

The baroque pop songs on Sing Slowly Sisters are reflective gems. The aforementioned “Cold Be My Days”, swathed in harpsichord and fragile strings, may be the only song in music history to hymn the Warwickshire town of Shipston-On-Stour; “The Flag I Flew” is breathtaking in its sweeping sadness; “Sky West & Crooked” is an acoustic guitar miniature, a glimmer of melancholy; while proposed first single, “Great Caesar’s Ghost”, is measured yet ravishing, Robin’s vibrato finding its perfect home, wrapped in orchestral drapery. While undeniably lush, the overwhelming tenor of these songs is one of almost unbearable sadness.

Saved By The Bell features other gems: BBC sessions, copious demos, and the psychedelically soused song suite, “Hudson’s Fallen Wind”, a twelve-minute mini-epic that suggests Robin could have cut it up there with the Syd Barretts and Arthur Lees of the world. But by returning Robin’s Reign to the land of the living, and finally giving form to Sing Slowly Sisters, this triple-disc set not only acts as public service: it also reminds of Robin Gibb’s wild, inspired two-year taste of freedom, before The Bee Gees regrouped for their second, unexpectedly world-beating run.
EXTRAS: Liner notes from Saint Etienne’s Bob Stanley.

Q&A
ANDREW SANDOVAL

I hadn’t realized, until I read your notes for the reissue, that this was a ten-year project. What was the most exciting moment for you?
Given that it was so long in the process, the most exciting thing was discovering a tape source for the song “Everything Is How You See Me”. It was on a four-track format, the session reels had vanished. [Also] locating other collectors, like Ben Sumner, who had Robin’s lost Scrooge opus, “Ghost Of Christmas Past”. It was on a reel to reel that Robin had taken home and recorded some demos over… A collector named Kenn Norman had Robin’s incredible “Hudson’s Fallen Wind” on a 12″ acetate and graciously loaned us the original.

There’s a particular intensity in the love that some fans have for this material – how were the responses to your project from the fanbase?
It was intense for sure, with not every fan being on board due to a lot of interpersonal rivalries. However, when the project really finally came together through Robin’s estate, there were some last minute discoveries that iced the cake for many. I have a feeling that following this release, more Robin recordings from this period will surface from fans.

What do you think Robin would make of this collection?
I think he would have been immensely proud; the Gibbs were never short of songs, so it made spotlighting one era of creativity difficult for them during his lifetime. Robin’s solo work in particular had come at a traumatic time in the family, with Robin spreading his artistic wings solo at the expense of brotherhood. They all grew in the process, but the period was dark for them. Taken on their own, his recordings marked the first time you could really see his contribution to their art.
INTERVIEW: JON DALE

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.

Meanwhile, 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 and more

Lead actor found for David Bowie’s Lazarus project

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The lead actor has been cast in David Bowie's forthcoming project, Lazarus. The off-Broadway production is co-written by Bowie and playwright Enda Walsh (Once) and based on Walter Tevis' 1963 British sci-fi novel The Man Who Fell To Earth. Bowie, of course, starred in Nic Roeg's 1976 film version....

The lead actor has been cast in David Bowie‘s forthcoming project, Lazarus.

The off-Broadway production is co-written by Bowie and playwright Enda Walsh (Once) and based on Walter Tevis’ 1963 British sci-fi novel The Man Who Fell To Earth.

Bowie, of course, starred in Nic Roeg‘s 1976 film version.

Click here to read the making of Nic Roeg’s film, The Man Who Fell To Earth

Billboard reports that Michael C. Hall will now play extra-terrestrial Thomas Newton in Lazarus, which is due to begin performances on November 18 at New York Theatre Workshop, with official opening night set for Dec. 7.

Hall recently finished playing the title role in serial killer drama Dexter; his other credits include Six Feet Under.

Lazarus will feature new songs by Bowie, as well as new arrangements of older songs.

Click here to discover Uncut’s Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide: David Bowie

James C. Nicola, the artistic director of New York Theater Workshop, said Lazarus been in secret development for some years.

He explained that Bowie been seeking to do a theatrical work inspired by Tevis’s novel, and brought the idea to Belgian director Ivo van Hove, who subsequently approached the New York theater.

“It’s going to be a play with characters and songs — I’m calling it music theater, but I don’t really know what it’s going to be like, I just have incredible trust in their creative vision,” Nicola said. “I’m really excited about it. These are three very different sensibilities to be colliding.”

Meanwhile, Bowie has recently announced details of Five Years 1969 – 1973, the first of three retrospective box sets. The box set goes on sale on September 25, 2015.

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.

Meanwhile, 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 and more

An interview with Pete Townshend: “I might retire… from making money…”

This weekend, The Who's splendid 50th anniversary tour reaches the climax of its UK leg, with celebratory shows at both London's Hyde Park and Glastonbury. To coincide with these momentous events in the Mod calendar, I thought I'd post my Pete Townshend cover story from the June 2015 issue of Uncut....

Do you see a point where you’ll retire?
I might do a Peter Blake and retire from making money. That’s what he did, about ten years ago. “I’m retiring, but I’m not retiring from painting. I’m retiring from painting in order to make a living.”

Robert Wyatt has announced his retirement…
… Has he? That’s a pain in the arse. I love his albums…

… And Clapton told Uncut last year, “The road has become unbearable.”
Yeah, but he sold his Gerard Richter for $40 million so he can keep his yacht for a couple more years. I don’t know. It’s not just about money. I know what Eric means, but… there’s two different things. There’s retiring from touring and retiring from performing and the road.

Are you saying that The Who are retiring from touring; but that’s not the same as retiring from performing or releasing new music?
Or travelling in order to perform. That’s correct. If Roger and I wanted to do a series of shows in Paris for some reason, we would get on a plane and do. I just think what we probably won’t do is what we’ve just done. Which is sell 65 shows to AEG so they take the burden of organising it and we just show up. It’s a bit like being in the army.

Do you think the best is yet to come?
Yeah. But I think the decisions that I have to make at this age… It would be easy to do an Eric and say, “I know the answer. I should stop touring. But I did that when I left The Who in 1982. Faber was a wonderful job, but I was only getting £7,000 a year. None of my books did that well. So I think having tried that, I thought, ‘The worst thing you can do is make a blanket statement.’ A couple of times in the last 15 years, I’ve said to Roger, “I really don’t want to do any more major touring.” He said, “Well, Pete. This is not about me. You keep changing your fucking mind. So what I recommend is, don’t make any announcements. Keep it in your head.’ It’s good advice.

Going back to Quadrophenia. What do you think Jimmy would make of Pete Townshend, age 70?
There are a few Jimmys out there. I think the elegance of it is that we don’t know what happens to Jimmy, you leave it to the audience. Did he jump off, did he not? This leads quite a people to see themselves as having tremendous propriety over Quadrophenia. They want to finish itself. Bill Curbishley is one of those. I think Roger might be one of those, too. I hear what they think of me, which is not particularly good. “Let me take Jimmy into Chapter 2, you cunt…” As a creative individual, I flirted with my audience, which is not what I wanted to do at all. Of course, the audience have the right – and other writers and creative people have the right – to take Jimmy and do whatever they like with him. That’s really how I wanted to deal with this. To be able to freely license everything that I’ve done to other people and other creatives to do what they will. Because I know it will happen when I die. I may as well start now.

Classic Quadrophenia is out now on Deutsche Grammophon

Brian Wilson: “This will be my final European tour”

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Brian Wilson has revealed his next European tour will be his last. The news came in a statement posted on Wilson's website. In it, Wilson announced he is to postpone his current scheduled UK tour due to commitments in America. The UK tour was planned for September 2015, but Wilson has now decided...

Brian Wilson has revealed his next European tour will be his last.

The news came in a statement posted on Wilson’s website.

In it, Wilson announced he is to postpone his current 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 his 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.”

Tickets holders are advised to get refunds for the 2015 shows from the point of purchase.

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.

Meanwhile, 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 and more

Rod Stewart announces new album, Another Country

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Rod Stewart has announced details of his new album, Another Country. The album - the follow-up to 2013's Time - will be released on October 23, 2015 on Decca Records as a 12-song standard edition or a 15-song deluxe album. “I’ve found that the only way to write songs is to be as personal and h...

Rod Stewart has announced details of his new album, Another Country.

The album – the follow-up to 2013’s Time – will be released on October 23, 2015 on Decca Records as a 12-song standard edition or a 15-song deluxe album.

“I’ve found that the only way to write songs is to be as personal and honest as possible,” Rod explains. “And when my last album [Time] was so well-received it gave me the confidence to keep on writing, and to examine and write about different things. It also gave me the freedom to experiment with different sounds like reggae, ska and Celtic melodies.”

All digital pre-orders of the Standard edition will receive a download of “Love Is“.

Meanwhile, deluxe album digital pre-orders will receive an instant download of “In A Broken Dream“.

The tracklisting for Another Country is:

Love Is
Please
Walking In The Sunshine
Love And Be Loved
We Can Win
Another Country
Way Back Home
Can We Stay Home Tonight?
Batman Superman Spiderman
The Drinking Song
Hold The Line *
A Friend For Life *

Deluxe Edition:
Every Rock ‘n’ Roll Song To Me
One Night With You
In A Broken Dream *

* All songs except those marked with an asterisk were written & produced by Rod Stewart

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.

Meanwhile, 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 and more

August 2015

David Byrne, BB King, The Jam and Sly & The Family Stone all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2015: in UK shops now and also available digitally. The former Talking Heads mastermind is on the cover, and inside Byrne takes us through his long career, his work with Brian Eno and St...

David Byrne, BB King, The Jam and Sly & The Family Stone all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2015: in UK shops now and also available digitally.

The former Talking Heads mastermind is on the cover, and inside Byrne takes us through his long career, his work with Brian Eno and St Vincent, the Meltdown festival he’s curating in London this summer, and how he accidentally invented hip-hop.

“There was this temptation to really get into the pop machine and take it to the next level of pop arenas,” Byrne says, recalling the late ’80s when Talking Heads began scoring significant hits, “and you start building up this huge infrastructure which you then have to write and record to support.

“I sensed losing some freedom there, as regards what I can do; and I like too much being able to do all of those different sorts of things.”

In honour of David Byrne, Uncut also count down the 50 greatest New York albums, featuring The Velvet Underground, Patti Smith, Frank Sinatra, The Strokes and more.

Uncut salutes BB King and examines whether the blues that the guitarist helped to invent is facing extinction itself. “Right now, the blues isn’t cool to the young,” Paul Puccioni tells us.

On the eve of a major exhibition about The Jam, Paul Weller talks us through the rare exhibits on show, much of it collected by Weller’s own family.

“I didn’t keep anything,” he admits cheerfully. “I used to destroy my notebooks after every record, burn them or rip them up. I was always scorched earth, almost ceremonial. It’s been and done.”

Elsewhere, we investigate the early days of psych-funk genius Sly Stone, and the Family Stone, as a boxset of their epochal Fillmore East shows from 1968 emerges. “Sly Stone reinvented pop music in his own image,” says the Family Stone’s Cynthia Robinson.

Merle Haggard answers your questions, and queries from famous fans, in our Audience With… feature this month. “I’m thankful for the life I’ve been given,” the Bakersfield Bard tells us.

In an in-depth interview, Ezra Furman talks Lou Reed, protest music, self-harm and gender fluidity… “I’m gonna have unresolved issues until I’m dead,” he explains.

Peter Perrett and the rest of The Only Ones recall the creation of their cosmic classic “Another Girl, Another Planet”, a story taking in charisma, double-drum feats and various addictions. “At the time, I was more addicted to sex…” says Perrett today.

The Monkees take us through their career, album by album, from their self-titled debut, through mind-bending, psychedelic soundtrack Head, right up to 1996’s Justus.

“We were essentially a garage band,” says Micky Dolenz. “Even on the television show, remember, we never made it… it was that struggle for success that was so important, and I think that’s what made it so endearing to so many kids around the world.”

Elsewhere, The SupremesMary Wilson details her life in records, we look at a new exhibition on The Kinks, examine the return of David Pearce and Flying Saucer Attack, and speak to Gordon Lightfoot about his “beneficial” emotional stress.

In the reviews section, albums by Tame Impala, Jason Isbell, Sleaford Mods, Neil Young, Fraser A Gorman, Lloyd Cole, Miles Davis and The Dream Syndicate are all reviewed, along with gigs by Paul McCartney and Patti Smith, as well as films on The Damned, Wilko Johnson and Amy Winehouse.

The free CD, The Name Of This Band Is…, includes songs from Jason Isbell, Sleaford Mods, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman, Sonny Vincent & Rocket From The Crypt, The Deslondes, Stewart Lee and Omar Souleyman.

ISSUE ON SALE JUNE 23

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.

Click back to Uncut.co.uk every day for news, reviews and blogs.

Hear Iron & Wine and Ben Bridwell cover Talking Heads

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Iron & Wine's Sam Beam and Band Of Horses' Ben Bridwell have teamed up for a collaborative covers album, Sing Into Your Mouth. You can hear a track from the album, their cover of Talking Heads' "This Must Be The Place (Naive Melody)", on Soundcloud (via Pitchfork). https://soundcloud.com/bando...

Iron & Wine‘s Sam Beam and Band Of Horses‘ Ben Bridwell have teamed up for a collaborative covers album, Sing Into Your Mouth.

You can hear a track from the album, their cover of Talking Heads‘ “This Must Be The Place (Naive Melody)“, on Soundcloud (via Pitchfork).

https://soundcloud.com/bandofhorses/iron-wine-and-ben-bridwell-this-must-be-the-place-naive-melody

Sing Into Your Mouth is out on July 17 on Beam’s Black Cricket and Bridwell’s Brown record labels, via Caroline.

Alongside Talking Heads, the album also includes their covers of songs by John Cale, Spiritualized, Pete Seeger, JJ Cale, Ronnie Lane and more.

Meanwhile, David Byrne is on the cover of the new issue of Uncut: in shops and available to buy online

The tracklisting for Sing Into Your Mouth is:

This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody) (Talking Heads)
Done This One Before (Ronnie Lane)
Any Day Woman (Bonnie Raitt)
You Know Me More Than I Know (John Cale)
Bulletproof Soul (Sade)
There’s No Way Out of Here (Unicorn)
God Knows (You Gotta Give to Get) (El Perro del Mar)
The Straight and Narrow (Spiritualized)
Magnolia (JJ Cale)
Am I a Good Man? (Them Two)
Ab’s Song (Marshall Tucker Band)
Coyote, My Little Brother (Pete Seeger)

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.

Meanwhile, 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 and more

This month in Uncut

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David Byrne, BB King, The Jam and Sly & The Family Stone all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2015 on sale in UK shops and available to download now. The former Talking Heads mastermind is on the cover, and inside Byrne takes us through his long career, his work with Brian Eno an...

David Byrne, BB King, The Jam and Sly & The Family Stone all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2015 on sale in UK shops and available to download now.

The former Talking Heads mastermind is on the cover, and inside Byrne takes us through his long career, his work with Brian Eno and St Vincent, the Meltdown festival he’s curating in London this summer, and how he accidentally invented hip-hop.

“There was this temptation to really get into the pop machine and take it to the next level of pop arenas,” Byrne says, recalling the late ’80s when Talking Heads began scoring significant hits, “and you start building up this huge infrastructure which you then have to write and record to support.

“I sensed losing some freedom there, as regards what I can do; and I like too much being able to do all of those different sorts of things.”

In honour of David Byrne, Uncut also count down the 50 greatest New York albums, featuring The Velvet Underground, Patti Smith, Frank Sinatra, The Strokes and more.

Uncut salutes BB King and examines whether the blues that the guitarist helped to invent is facing extinction itself. “Right now, the blues isn’t cool to the young,” Paul Puccioni tells us.

On the eve of a major exhibition about The Jam, Paul Weller talks us through the rare exhibits on show, much of it collected by Weller’s own family.

“I didn’t keep anything,” he admits cheerfully. “I used to destroy my notebooks after every record, burn them or rip them up. I was always scorched earth, almost ceremonial. It’s been and done.”

Elsewhere, we investigate the early days of psych-funk genius Sly Stone, and the Family Stone, as a boxset of their epochal Fillmore East shows from 1968 emerges. “Sly Stone reinvented pop music in his own image,” says the Family Stone’s Cynthia Robinson.

Merle Haggard answers your questions, and queries from famous fans, in our Audience With… feature this month. “I’m thankful for the life I’ve been given,” the Bakersfield Bard tells us.

In an in-depth interview, Ezra Furman talks Lou Reed, protest music, self-harm and gender fluidity… “I’m gonna have unresolved issues until I’m dead,” he explains.

Peter Perrett and the rest of The Only Ones recall the creation of their cosmic classic “Another Girl, Another Planet”, a story taking in charisma, double-drum feats and various addictions. “At the time, I was more addicted to sex…” says Perrett today.

The Monkees take us through their career, album by album, from their self-titled debut, through mind-bending, psychedelic soundtrack Head, right up to 1996’s Justus.

“We were essentially a garage band,” says Micky Dolenz. “Even on the television show, remember, we never made it… it was that struggle for success that was so important, and I think that’s what made it so endearing to so many kids around the world.”

Elsewhere, The SupremesMary Wilson details her life in records, we look at a new exhibition on The Kinks, examine the return of David Pearce and Flying Saucer Attack, and speak to Gordon Lightfoot about his “beneficial” emotional stress.

In the reviews section, albums by Tame Impala, Jason Isbell, Sleaford Mods, Neil Young, Fraser A Gorman, Lloyd Cole, Miles Davis and The Dream Syndicate are all reviewed, along with gigs by Paul McCartney and Patti Smith, as well as films on The Damned, Wilko Johnson and Amy Winehouse.

The free CD, The Name Of This Band Is…, includes songs from Jason Isbell, Sleaford Mods, Flying Saucer Attack, Ezra Furman, Sonny Vincent & Rocket From The Crypt, The Deslondes, Stewart Lee and Omar Souleyman.

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

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.

Click back to Uncut.co.uk every day for news, reviews and blogs.

What’s inside the new Uncut?

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As we were finishing the new issue of Uncut the other day (It has David Byrne on the cover, and is on sale now), I was thinking about the first time I visited New York in the early 1990s. I fetched up with a band at CBGB one quiet soundcheck afternoon, sometime after the club's heyday, when it was m...

As we were finishing the new issue of Uncut the other day (It has David Byrne on the cover, and is on sale now), I was thinking about the first time I visited New York in the early 1990s. I fetched up with a band at CBGB one quiet soundcheck afternoon, sometime after the club’s heyday, when it was more likely to be hosting a major label showcase of some gauche Britpop aspirants rather than the authentic, unmediated voice of the New York streets.

Nevertheless, the club still had a certain cachet, however historical, which was why the band (and the NME journalist trying to put a new spin on an optimistic plot to take America by storm) were at CBGB in the first place. That day, Hilly Kristal and his dog were encountered, fleetingly. The toilets seemed more like a museum installation about punk interior design than an actual functioning WC. The critical moment occurred when the photographer and I tried to have a game of pool on the worn-out baize table near the door. As I leaned over to take my first shot, a fat cockroach scuttled out of one pocket, swerved the cueball, and disappeared down another. It was a magically horrible moment: a tale of mythic squalor where nothing really bad happened and no-one got hurt.

The legends of New York, of course, and the phenomenal music that has been made there, often come intertwined with grimmer details. The city’s old, edgy reputation is fetishised so much, you’d be forgiven for thinking that the only good art to come out of the place was dependent on a climate of risk. “New York felt so much more real,” Kim Gordon reminisced in Girl In A Band. “When people would ask [me] why Sonic Youth’s music was so dissonant, the answer was always the same: our music was realistic, and dynamic, because life was that way, filled with extremes.”

The truth, then, is probably a bit more complex than the stereotypes, something we’ve strived to take into account while compiling a list of 50 great New York albums for the new issue. It would be disingenuous to pretend that seediness hasn’t had any role to play – if we’d been so daft as to try and rank these 50 vivid records, I’m sure The Velvet Underground & Nico would have ended up somewhere near the top. But it’s a city, and a list, that contains multitudes: from George Gershwin to Nas; The Fania All-Stars to Jeff Buckley; Sinatra to Hendrix; Woody Allen to Talking Heads.

Our excuse for the list, of course, was to complement Andy Gill’s exclusive David Byrne interview, timed to coincide with his curating of the Meltdown festival in London this summer. I would say this, of course, but there’s a lot of good writing in this month’s Uncut: David Cavanagh on BB King and the blues at a crossroads; Laura Snapes on the fascinating Ezra Furman; John Lewis on the early days of Sly & The Family Stone; John Robinson on the multi-faceted Paul McCartney, Michael Bonner on “The Monsanto Years”. Plus, in a notably eclectic selection of interviewees, we can also boast Merle Haggard, Flying Saucer Attack, The Only Ones, The Monkees, Gordon Lightfoot, Mary Wilson and Paul Weller.

Oh, and the free CD features Sleaford Mods and Duke Ellington as well as Omar Souleyman, Stewart Lee and Rocket From The Crypt, besides some more predictable faithful retainers (Jason Isbell, Shelby Lynne, The Dream Syndicate). Something for everyone might be pushing it, a bit, but hopefully you appreciate Uncut’s horizons broadening.

Follow me on Twitter @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. The August 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now.