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Neil Young bans his music from streaming services

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Neil Young has announced he intends to remove his music from streaming services. He made the announcement on Facebook, and said it was motivated by "the worst sound quality available in the history of broadcasting." Neil Young's Facebook page He wrote: "Streaming has ended for me. I hope this is ...

Neil Young has announced he intends to remove his music from streaming services.

He made the announcement on Facebook, and said it was motivated by “the worst sound quality available in the history of broadcasting.”

Neil Young's Facebook page
Neil Young’s Facebook page

He wrote: “Streaming has ended for me. I hope this is ok for my fans.
It’s not because of the money, although my share (like all the other artists) was dramatically reduced by bad deals made without my consent.

“It’s about sound quality. I don’t need my music to be devalued by the worst quality in the history of broadcasting or any other form of distribution. I don’t feel right allowing this to be sold to my fans. It’s bad for my music.
For me, It’s about making and distributing music people can really hear and feel. I stand for that.

“When the quality is back, I’ll give it another look. Never say never.
Neil Young”

Young is currently on the road with his Rebel Content tour with Promise Of The Real, in support of his new album, The Monsanto Years.

Among the highlights of the tour so far, Neil Young played “Hippie Dream” for the first time in 18 years during this show at Pinnacle Bank Arena, Lincoln, Nebraska on July 11, 2015.

“Hippie Dream” appeared on Young’s 1986 album, Landing On Water. Young last played the song on August 24, 1997 at the Coral Sky Amphitheatre, West Palm Beach, Florida.

During his 29 song set, Young also played “Bad Fog Of Loneliness” for the first time since 2008, “Words” and “Out On The Weekend” for the first time since 2009.

Young has also dusted down a number of other deep cuts on this current tour. On the opening night on July 5, 2015 at Marcus Amphitheatre, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, he played “Don’t Be Denied” for the first time in 12 years, Greendale’s “Double E” for the first time in 10 years and performed Ragged Glory track, “White Line”, live for only the sixth time.

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

Watch Arcade Fire’s trailer for The Reflektor Tapes film…

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Arcade Fire have released a trailer for their new film, The Reflektor Tapes. Pitchfork reports that the film has been directed by Kahlil Joseph, who has previously worked with Flying Lotus and Kendrick Lamar. According to a post on Arcade Fire tube, "The Reflektor Tapes will be a unique cinematic ...

Arcade Fire have released a trailer for their new film, The Reflektor Tapes.

Pitchfork reports that the film has been directed by Kahlil Joseph, who has previously worked with Flying Lotus and Kendrick Lamar.

According to a post on Arcade Fire tube, “The Reflektor Tapes will be a unique cinematic experience, meeting at the crossroads of documentary, music, art and personal history. Theater listings and tickets available soon at: www.TheReflektorTapes.com”.

This is not the first time Arcade Fire have been involved with film. They previously released a documentary in 2008. Called Mirror Noir, the film was a behind-the-scenes look at the band as they prepared for their 2007 album Neon Bible and set off on tour.

Directed and partly shot by themselves, the band have also enlisted the help of Vincent Morisset, who previously worked on the interactive video for Neon Bible.

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

Nigel Godrich shares new picture of Thom Yorke in the studio

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Nigel Godrich has posted a new photograph of Thom Yorke taken in the recording studio. Godrich posted the picture on Twitter yesterday, July 14, 2015. The image shows Yorke in front of a keyboard and an iPad with a psychedelic backdrop behind him. https://twitter.com/nigelgod/status/6210000115061...

Nigel Godrich has posted a new photograph of Thom Yorke taken in the recording studio.

Godrich posted the picture on Twitter yesterday, July 14, 2015.

The image shows Yorke in front of a keyboard and an iPad with a psychedelic backdrop behind him.

https://twitter.com/nigelgod/status/621000011506155521/

This is the second time that Godrich has posted a picture of Radiohead members since the band began work on their new record. In December 2014, he posted an image of Yorke and guitarist Jonny Greenwood together in front of a wall of modular systems.

Radiohead in the studio, 2014
Radiohead in the studio, 2014

Meanwhile, rare footage has surfaced on YouTube of Yorke’s previous band, Headless Chickens, performing “High And Dry” – which was eventually recorded by Radiohead on their debut, The Bends.

The gig took place at Exeter University‘s Lemon Grove during the late Eighties.

Yorke also has some live shows planned. He’ll perform at Pathway To Paris at Le Trianon theatre in Paris on December 4, 2015.

Pathway To Paris is planned to coincide with the UN Climate Change Conference, which runs in Paris from November 30 to December 11.

Patti Smith is also scheduled to appear on the bill.

Yorke is scheduled to play Tokyo’s Summersonic Festival on August 15, 2015.

Yorke will appear at Hostess Club’s all-nighter in Tokyo, which is part of the Summersonic Festival where he will perform a Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes show.

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

Watch Yo La Tengo cover The Cure…

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Yo La Tengo have released a video for their cover of The Cure's song, "Friday I'm In Love". Their cover will appear on the band's forthcoming album, Stuff Like That There, which is due on August 28 via Matador. You can watch the video below. Stuff Live That is modelled on the band's 1990 album, F...

Yo La Tengo have released a video for their cover of The Cure’s song, “Friday I’m In Love”.

Their cover will appear on the band’s forthcoming album, Stuff Like That There, which is due on August 28 via Matador.

You can watch the video below.

Stuff Live That is modelled on the band’s 1990 album, Fakebook, which featured covers alongside a few original songs.

Alongside “Friday I’m In Love”, Yo La Tengo’s new record includes covers of Hank Williams, Sun Ra and The Lovin’ Spoonful. It also features updated versions of their own songs (“All Your Secrets”, “The Ballad of Red Buckets”, and “Deeper Into Movies”), as well as two new tracks (“Rickety” and “Awhileaway”).

The tracklisting for Stuff Like That There is:

My Heart’s Not In It (Darlene McCrea)
Rickety
I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry (Hank Williams)
All Your Secrets
The Ballad Of Red Buckets
Friday I’m In Love (The Cure)
Before We Stopped To Think (Great Plains)
Butchie’s Tune (The Lovin’ Spoonful)
Automatic Doom (Special Pillow)
Awhileaway
I Can Feel The Ice Melting (The Parliaments)
Naples (Antietam)
Deeper Into Movies
Somebody’s in Love (The Cosmic Rays with Le Sun Ra and Arkestra)

The band will also tour in support of the new album.

They play:
September 05 – San Sebastian, ES @ Kuxta Kultur Festibla
September 23 – Troy, NY @ Troy Savings Bank Music Hall
September 24 – Glenside, PA @ Keswick Theatre
September 25 – Washington, DC @ Lincoln Theatre
September 26 – Durham, NC @ The Carolina Theatre of Durham
September 27 – Atlanta, GA @ Variety Playhouse
September 29 – Millvale, PA @ Mr. Smalls Theatre
September 30 – Toronto, ON @ Queen Elizabeth Theatre
October 03 – Boston, MA @ Wilbur Theatre
October 15 – Dublin, IE @ National Concert Hall
October 16 – Glasgow, UK @ The Garage
October 18 – Bristol, UK @ Colston Hall
October 19 – Coventry, UK @ Warwick Arts Center
October 20 – London, UK @ O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire
October 23 – Paris, FR @ La Cigale
October 24 – Holland, NL @ Paradiso
October 25 – Leuven, BE @ Het Depot
October 27 – Berlin, DE @ Heimathafen
October 28 – Koln, DE @ Kulturkirche
November 05 – Chicago, IL @ The Vic Theatre
November 06 – Madison, WI @ Barrymore Theatre
November 07 – Minneapolis, MN @ Pantages Theatre
November 09 – Boulder, CO @ Boulder Theater
November 13 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Theatre at Ace Hotel
November 14 – San Francisco, CA @ The Masonic
November 17 – Eugene, OR @ Wow Hall
November 18 – Portland, OR @ Revolution Hall
November 20 – Seattle, Neptune Theatre
November 21 – Vancouver, BC @ Vogue Theatre

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. 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 Ramones to star in a comic book…

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The Ramones are to appear in a crossover with Archie Comics. Archie Meets Ramones is due for publication next year. The comic book series - first published in 1942 - features the exploits of Archie Andrews and his teenager friends who live in the fictional American town of Riverdale. The Ramones ...

The Ramones are to appear in a crossover with Archie Comics.

Archie Meets Ramones is due for publication next year.

The comic book series – first published in 1942 – features the exploits of Archie Andrews and his teenager friends who live in the fictional American town of Riverdale.

The Ramones themselves are no strangers to comic books themselves. The band’s story was immortalised in a comic book included in their 2005 Weird Tales Of The Ramones box set.

In recent years, Archie Comics have organised crossovers with other unexpected characters, ranging from KISS to a Predator.

Speaking about the meeting between the hip teens of Riverdale and CBGBs finest, co-writer Matthew Rosenberg told Comics Alliance: “It might seem strange to some people to combine these things, but there’s really no divide for me… Archie is what got me into comics, the Ramones are what got me into punk rock, and those two things have always been connected for me. The Ramones are my punk rock heroes, they’re really very comic booky, and Archie has a long history of being connected to music, and being willing to try new things and do cool new stuff, so to me, this makes perfect sense.”

Co-write Alex Segura said: “Matt got in touch with the Ramones’ people, and they were super into it. We’re all huge Ramones fans, and though it took a while to work out the details, once things started moving, it actually went pretty quick. It’s gonna be a super-fun oversized one-shot, with covers by some truly amazing artists (whom I can’t announce just yet), and it syncs up nicely because it’ll be the 75th Anniversary of Archie, and the 40th Anniversary of the Ramones… It’s really kinda like a dream come true to be doing this.”

Continued artist Gisele Lagace: “I draw comics today for a living, but I’ve also played in bands; many of those punk rock. We’d often cover songs by The Ramones. Getting to draw Archie Meets Ramones has me fangirling in excitement. I will draw with the energy and passion of a Ramone to ensure my beloved Riverdale gets a Rock ‘N’ Roll High School.”

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. 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 Sex Pistols: The Ultimate Music Guide

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"What, you fucking nagging again? About what?" This is how John Lydon begins the next Public Image Ltd album, due out in early September. The record is called "What The World Needs Now…" and in that opening song, "Double Trouble", Lydon soon elucidates the latest cause of strife. "What? What?" he ...

“What, you fucking nagging again? About what?” This is how John Lydon begins the next Public Image Ltd album, due out in early September. The record is called “What The World Needs Now…” and in that opening song, “Double Trouble”, Lydon soon elucidates the latest cause of strife. “What? What?” he barks, “The toilet’s fucking broken again? I repaired that. I told you, get the plumber in again.”

Lydon himself, of course, is not exactly averse to the odd whinge. Over the course of nearly 40 years now, he has been a wild manifestation of the British culture of complaint: righteous, petty, sarcastic, apocalyptic. An orange-haired Cassandra, issuing dire warnings and surreal rants about everything from the iniquities of the British monarchy to domestic sanitation problems.

This latest Uncut Ultimate Music Guide – on sale in the UK on Thursday, but available now in our online store, tells Lydon’s whole story, through apparently infinite configurations of PiL. Our focus, though, is naturally on the dawn of Lydon’s career, and on the brief, revolutionary life of the Sex Pistols. In our new Ultimate Music Guide, you’ll find a wealth of punk reportage from the archives of NME and Melody Maker: manifestos from Malcolm McLaren and Tony Parsons; adventures with the band in Amsterdam, Stockholm and Uxbridge, and on their last fateful tour of America; plus many long-lost interviews that reveal the antic genius and secret depths of the Pistols… “The definition of a grown-up,” pontificates Sid Vicious, “is someone who catches on just as something becomes redundant.”

As the years go by, there are more surprises. A Sex Pistols reformation in 1996, which prompts Lydon to claim the band more or less invented rap. Another get-together in 2007, which the singer uses as an excuse to talk of his friendship with Pink Floyd and his love of Mozart. And always, the invective, alternately provocative and hilarious, that fuels this most singular and incendiary of great British musical careers.

“This country suffers from apathy,” Lydon tells one Melody Maker journalist in 1986. “Energy, that’s the thing that’s missing from this bleeding country… It makes me fucking sick. What becomes clear to me is that I’m needed here. Good God, you need me. I’m your conscience…”

In somehat different business from the Pistols, thanks for all your kind words about the long Grateful Dead article I posted last week. In case you missed that one, I should mention that the imminent next issue of Uncut features a very special free Dead CD; our attempt to piece together the album that should have followed “Workingman’s Dead” and “American Beauty”. I’ll have more info about that – and about the content of one of our strongest issues of the year so far – this time next week. Thanks, as ever, for your patience…

Reviewed… The Damned: Don’t You Wish That We Were Dead

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Watching Wes Orshoski’s excellent new documentary about The Damned, you might wonder why no-one’s ever made a film about them before. “They always gave the impression something bad could happen at any moment,” says a former associate of the band, and as one anecdote (usually involving alcoho...

Watching Wes Orshoski’s excellent new documentary about The Damned, you might wonder why no-one’s ever made a film about them before. “They always gave the impression something bad could happen at any moment,” says a former associate of the band, and as one anecdote (usually involving alcohol, violence, or most likely both) rolls into another, the story of The Damned emerges as one of punk’s more compelling, lesser-told yarns.

Orshoski charts the band’s trajectory from the toilets of Fairfield Halls, Croydon (“One day, I found a turd that just would not flush,” reveals former cleaner Captain Sensible) through the earliest days of punk (“They didn’t think we were up to it,” admits Mick Jones, a onetime band mate of guitarist Brian James) up to the band’s recent US tour. The picture that emerges is of a band who thrive on a certain kind of chaos.

The band’s many personnel changes make for a colourful, if convoluted history, while conflicts continue today – particularly acrimony between Sensible and original drummer Rat Scabies. Interviewed by Orshoski, the four original members – Dave Vanian, James, Sensible and Scabies – sound a little like Pete and Dud characters by way of The Young Ones.

Recalling an “average night” on The Damned’s 1979 US tour, drummer Rat Scabies remembers, “There’d be fire engineers, police, dogs, and in the middle there’d be us, throwing water over each other.” It is a rambling, complicated narrative, enlivened by complimentary interviews with the likes of Glen Matlock, Nick Mason and Lemmy, while Ian McKaye, Jello Biafra and Chris Stein provide an American perspective.

The NY-based Orshoski does a good job outlining the UK punk scene for US audiences; along the way, perhaps inadvertently, he helps illustrate just how out of step with their contemporaries The Damned’s larks were. “Can’t do the dole queues of discontent, that’s just not me,” admits Sensible. Their antics might account for the way they never quite achieved the notoriety or success of the Pistols or The Clash; a fact Orshoski’s film might go some way to rectifying.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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

Meanwhile, the 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.

John Fogerty sues former Creedence bandmates – again

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John Fogerty has filed a civil claim against his former Creedence Clearwater Revival bandmates. Associated Press (via Rolling Stone) reports Fogerty is suing Stuart Cook and Doug Clifford over unpaid royalties. Cook and Clifford currently perform under the name Creedence Clearwater Revisited. Fog...

John Fogerty has filed a civil claim against his former Creedence Clearwater Revival bandmates.

Associated Press (via Rolling Stone) reports Fogerty is suing Stuart Cook and Doug Clifford over unpaid royalties.

Cook and Clifford currently perform under the name Creedence Clearwater Revisited.

Fogerty previously sued the men over using the Creedence Clearwater name, but settled with them in 2001 for a share of their touring and merchandise income.

Forgerty’s lawsuit claims he hasn’t been paid his share since December 2011.

In December 2014, Cook, Clifford and Patricia Fogerty, the widow of rhythm guitarist Tom – John’s brother – preemptively sued Fogerty ahead of what they suspected was “pending litigation”.

Ultimate Classic Rock claims they believed that Fogerty was about to go after them for unpaid royalties — which he appears to have just done.

Fogerty releases his autobiography, Fortunate Son: My Life, My Music, on October 6.

“I want to tell the story of how I fought – hard – to maintain my artistic integrity in the face of opposing forces,” he said in a statement issued through his publisher, Little, Brown.

“The kid from El Cerrito wanted to be the best musician in the world—my promise to myself,” Fogerty said. “I accomplished that goal against all odds, only to have it fall apart on top of me. The songs and the music stopped; you didn’t hear from John Fogerty for years. All of this took its toll on me. I couldn’t write a song, sing a song. And it was so hard on me, all of the lawsuits and betrayals. I was personally fading away. My story will share the ups and downs and how it all affected me. The road back was a bumpy one, and I knew that it would take years to come out of it, but I did. Happily, I did, with my dear wife, Julie, by my side.

“I have come to a place where I can look back and reflect on those stories and share what really happened. I am the guy who lived it, and you will hear me tell the story for the first time.”

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

John Lydon: “One Direction can really sing, fair play to them”

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It seems that John Lydon has apparently mellowed. Speaking to British tabloid The Sun ahead of the release of PiL's new album, What The World Needs Now..., Lydon was reportedly asked for his opinion on boyband, One Direction. "The thing with those boys is, they can really sing. Fair play to them,"...

It seems that John Lydon has apparently mellowed.

Speaking to British tabloid The Sun ahead of the release of PiL‘s new album, What The World Needs Now…, Lydon was reportedly asked for his opinion on boyband, One Direction.

“The thing with those boys is, they can really sing. Fair play to them,” Lydon reportedly said.

He added: “I’m never going to put another artist down. Anyone who wants to make music is all right by me.”

What The World Needs Now… is PiL’s tenth album. It is released on September 4, preceded by lead single “Double Trouble” on August 21.

PiL have also announced details of an upcoming tour of the UK and Europe. Lydon and co will undertake a 23-date run of shows, beginning in Glasgow on September 18, before playing Manchester, Bristol, London and other major cities.

The band will then play several Europeans dates, with North American shows to be announced. See their live schedule in full below.

Public Image Ltd will play:

Glasgow 02 ABC (September 18)
Manchester Academy (19)
Newcastle Riverside (20)
York Fibbers (22)
Coventry Warwick University (23)
Bristol 02 Academy (25)
Buckley Tivoli (26)
Reading Sub 89 (27)
Bexhill De La Warr Pavilion (29)
Norwich UEA (30)
London 02 Shepherds Bush Empire (October 2)
Frome Cheese and Grain (3)
Southampton Engine Rooms (4)

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

Thom Yorke, Patti Smith confirmed for climate change concert

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Thom Yorke and Patti Smith will both perform at Pathway To Paris at Le Trianon theatre in Paris on December 4, 2015. Pathway To Paris is planned to coincide with the UN Climate Change Conference, which runs in Paris from November 30 to December 11. Pathway To Paris was co-founded by Jesse Paris Sm...

Thom Yorke and Patti Smith will both perform at Pathway To Paris at Le Trianon theatre in Paris on December 4, 2015.

Pathway To Paris is planned to coincide with the UN Climate Change Conference, which runs in Paris from November 30 to December 11.

Pathway To Paris was co-founded by Jesse Paris Smith and Rebecca Foon, who will appear at the concert alongside featured speakers Bill McKibben, Naomi Klein and Vandana Shiva and other musicians including Flea and Dhani Harrison.

The concert, held in partnership with 350.org, follows Pathway to Paris’s 2014 event at New York’s Le Poisson Rouge, where Smith, Lenny Kaye and Thurston Moore performed.

Meanwhile, Yorke is scheduled to play Tokyo’s Summersonic Festival on August 15, 2015.

Yorke will appear at Hostess Club’s all-nighter in Tokyo, which is part of the Summersonic Festival.

The Hostess Club website bills Yorke’s performance as a Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes show.

Recently, Yorke recorded the soundtrack to a new exhibition by visual artist Stanley Donwood.

Donwood, who has been designing Radiohead’s artwork since The Bends, launched the showcase on May 21 at Carriageworks in Sydney, Australia. The exhibit, which spans 25 years’ worth of work, is titled The Panic Room and closed on June 6.

Yorke’s ambient soundtrack, “Subterranea“, last 432 hours – or 18-days. Billboard reports that the track was built from 25,920 pieces of music.

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

Kacey Musgraves – Pageant Material

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Kacey Musgraves meets an ancient country crossroads on her second major label album: having found success singing about suffocating small-town life, where next? 2013’s Same Trailer, Different Park offered a precisely observed portrait of Musgraves’ young life in Golden, Texas: population approx ...

Kacey Musgraves meets an ancient country crossroads on her second major label album: having found success singing about suffocating small-town life, where next? 2013’s Same Trailer, Different Park offered a precisely observed portrait of Musgraves’ young life in Golden, Texas: population approx 300, best known for its annual sweet potato festival. “We get bored so we get married/Just like dust, we settle in this town”, she sang on her poetic breakout single “Merry Go Round”. Even if the waitresses gossiped and the slipped-halo churchgoers frowned, Musgraves sympathised with her tradition-abiding characters while also cheering for gay relationships and getting stoned. Her stories were neat and funny without falling into country moralising: the friends-with-benefits of “It Is What It Is” didn’t get pregnant or wreck any homes, but decided to keep hooking up “‘til something better comes along”.

Country music radio refused to playlist this comparatively radical voice, but the record won Musgraves two Grammys, fans who had previously never touched the genre, and support slots both with Willie Nelson (who guests on an untitled bonus track here) and Katy Perry, indicating her place on the sliding scale between country gold and pop sparkle. The first two songs on Pageant Material deal astutely with this change in fortunes. Opener “High Time” sets the record’s rich, swooning tone – something like Glen Campbell at the luau – and sees the 27-year-old singing about ditching her flashy clothes to “[catch] up with the old me”. She sings of meeting Willie Nelson and travelling the world on “Dime Store Cow Girl”, but admits, “maybe for a minute I got too big for my britches”. So back home she goes, her perspective shifted by distance: on Same Trailer.. small towns were a trap, but here they offer lessons in surviving anything life throws at you.

Sadly, Pageant Material lacks some of the specific characters and touchstones that made Same Trailer… so sublime. There are several indistinct love songs, the shuffling “Family Is Family” boils down to ‘can’t live with ‘em, can’t live without ‘em’, and the mournful pedal steel of “Somebody To Love” has a similar structure, with opposing qualities (angels, devils; thorns, roses) stacked against each other to find humanity in the space between. Jaunty sing-along “Biscuits” is a funny warning against taking pleasure in your neighbour’s misfortune (“mind your own biscuits and life will be gravy”), though it feels too much like a rehash of Same Trailer…’s “Follow Your Arrow” without its radical queer-love message.

Songs about small towns usually come with some aspirational breakout message, but Musgraves dispenses with the idea that a proper job or any amount of possessions can bring redemption or happiness. The noir-ish “This Town” is a reminder that just because your area’s on the up (“a good Mexican restaurant, a beauty shop or two”) doesn’t mean that neighbourly kindness should be forgotten. On the sweet “Cup Of Tea”, Musgraves lists what would conventionally sound like a litany of failures – old clothes, crap job, reputation for being easy – only to suggest taking comfort in individuality instead of pat redemption in the form of god or gold at the end of the rainbow. And the goofy title track is Musgraves at her sharp, funny finest, paying lip service to smiling beauty queens over dreamy acoustic guitar, before admitting, “it ain’t that I don’t care about world peace, but I don’t see how I can fix it in my swimsuit on a stage”, demonstrating her rare gift for realism and empathy without cynicism.

Saying that, Musgraves shines when she calls out her enemy – dishonesty and pessimism. Pageant Material’s standout track is the strutting “Good Ol’ Boys’ Club”, a triumphant takedown of country’s corrupt backhanders from someone who’s succeeded without them. The only character who doesn’t receive sympathy here is the glass-half-full protagonist of “Miserable”, who Musgraves, the eternal optimist, has to cut loose. But as if to absolve her appearing judgmental, the following song, “Die Fun”, seems as if it should be a triumphant kiss off (“let’s love hard, live fast, die fun”) but it’s set to forlorn streaks of pedal steel, and sees her trying to make drinking and fleeing seem like romantic rebellion rather than dead-end fate: she’s as prone to fatalism as anyone.

If liberal listeners were attracted by the idea of Musgraves as a rebel voice, they might be disappointed by the message of Pageant Material, which is essentially: life’s too hard and short to waste time judging others. But as “Good Ol’ Boys’ Club” points out, Musgraves’ success is radical in its own way. Today’s most successful country acts are big-hatted men singing fairytale homilies about trucks and broads. Musgraves’ willingness to address a life built on knotty contradictions give her songs resonance far beyond Golden’s borders.

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

Watch the trailer for Roger Waters new The Wall concert film

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Roger Waters has released a new trailer for his upcoming concert film, Roger Waters The Wall. The film is scheduled for to screen at cinemas worldwide on September 29, 2015. Written and directed by Roger Waters and Sean Evans, the film debuted at last year's Toronto Film Festival. The film include...

Roger Waters has released a new trailer for his upcoming concert film, Roger Waters The Wall.

The film is scheduled for to screen at cinemas worldwide on September 29, 2015.

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

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

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

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

Neil Young plays “Hippie Dream” for the first time in 18 years

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Neil Young played "Hippie Dream" for the first time in 18 years during this show at Pinnacle Bank Arena, Lincoln, Nebraska. The show took place on July 11, 2015 during Young's Rebel Content tour with Promise Of The Real. "Hippie Dream" appeared on Young's 1986 album, Landing On Water. Young last p...

Neil Young played “Hippie Dream” for the first time in 18 years during this show at Pinnacle Bank Arena, Lincoln, Nebraska.

The show took place on July 11, 2015 during Young’s Rebel Content tour with Promise Of The Real.

“Hippie Dream” appeared on Young’s 1986 album, Landing On Water. Young last played it on August 24, 1997 at the Coral Sky Amphitheatre, West Palm Beach, Florida.

During his 29 song set, Young also played “Bad Fog Of Loneliness” for the first time since 2008, “Words” and “Out On The Weekend” for the first time since 2009.

Young has also dusted down a number of other deep cuts on this current tour. On the opening night on July 5, 2015 at Marcus Amphitheatre, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, he played “Don’t Be Denied” for the first time in 12 years, Greendale’s “Double E” for the first time in 10 years and performed Ragged Glory track, “White Line”, live for only the sixth time.

There are 8 dates remaining on the Rebel Content tour, which breaks at Wayhome Festival, Oro-Medonte, Ontario, Canada on July 24, before Young and Promise Of The Real reconvene for Farm Aid on September 19 and two shows at the Bridge School Benefit (October 24, 25).

Neil Young and Promise Of The Real’s set list for Pinnacle Bank Arena, Lincoln, Nebraska, July 11, 2015:

After The Gold Rush
Heart Of Gold
Long May You Run
Old Man
Mother Earth
Hold Back The Tears
Out On The Weekend
Unknown Legend
Peace Of Mind
From Hank To Hendrix
Field Of Opportunity
Wolf Moon
Harvest Moon
Words
Flying On The Ground Is Wrong
Bad Fog Of Loneliness
Walk On
A Rock Star Bucks A Coffee Shop
People Want To Hear About Love
A New Day For Love
Down By The River
Big Box
Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
If I Don’t Know
Monsanto Years
Love And Only Love


Hippie Dream
Cinnamon Girl

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. 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 Kinks’ Ray and Dave Davies: “It’s like Cain and Abel”

“I don’t want to see the legacy of The Kinks soured by two miserable old men doing it for the money,” says Dave Davies. In a series of frank interviews, Uncut discovers the state of The Kinks in the 21st Century – a saga involving Godfather-style confrontations, flamenco songs, cursed concep...

“I don’t want to see the legacy of The Kinks soured by two miserable old men doing it for the money,” says Dave Davies. In a series of frank interviews, Uncut discovers the state of The Kinks in the 21st Century – a saga involving Godfather-style confrontations, flamenco songs, cursed concept albums, a troublesome pet rabbit and the tantalising prospect of, at last, reconciliation…

Originally published in Uncut’s February 2014 issue (Take 201). Story: Nick Hasted.

______________________

In the late summer of 2013, two brothers, both in their late sixties, met in a pub in Highgate, north London. Ray and Dave Davies, the creative heart of The Kinks, were talking seriously for the first time in nine years. They were meeting to discuss whether as The Kinks’ 50th anniversary loomed there was any future for their great old band. “We got together in August, and the first few days were beautiful,” recalls Dave. “We went up the pub and had a few Guinnesses, and we were talking about all kinds of shit, the old days and what-ifs.”

Getting to this point had not been easy for the brothers. The last time Ray and Dave tried to write together was in late 2003, six years after The Kinks had played their last show at the Norwegian Wood festival near Oslo, on June 15, 1996. Then, before anything between them could be taken much further, two things happened. On January 4, 2004, Ray was shot in New Orleans; five months later, on June 30, Dave suffered a massive stroke. Any plans they may have had then for a reunion were duly scuppered. Following his stroke, Dave spent a month at Ray’s house – ostensibly they were both there to recuperate, but predictably the brothers found themselves arguing instead. “That was the last time we spent any significant time together,” admits Ray. In the interim, however, Dave recovered from his stroke and last May, he started playing live again, giving rise to speculation of a Kinks reunion to coincide with their 50th anniversary. That seemed increasingly unlikely, however, after comments Dave gave in an interview in Rolling Stone
in September last year, where he described his brother as a “cunt” and an “asshole”.

But over a series of exclusive interviews with Ray, Dave and original Kinks drummer Mick Avory, conducted during October and November 2013, it becomes apparent that plans for a reunion are very much alive. “It’s as close as it’s ever been to happening,” Ray confirms to Uncut. Of course, any new Kinks activity relies entirely on Ray and Dave getting on. Speaking to both Davies brothers, you can’t help but pick up on their frustrated fraternal love – as well as a mutual desire to give each other one more chance.

Johnny Marr on memoir: “I don’t want to be too self-important or pompous”

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Johnny Marr has shed light on his upcoming memoir, due for release in 2016, claiming he doesn't want the book to be too "pompous". "The important thing is that the people who like what I do still like me the same once they know everything," he tells NME. "I take writing seriously, but I also want i...

Johnny Marr has shed light on his upcoming memoir, due for release in 2016, claiming he doesn’t want the book to be too “pompous”.

“The important thing is that the people who like what I do still like me the same once they know everything,” he tells NME. “I take writing seriously, but I also want it to be entertaining, because I don’t want to be too self-important or pompous.”

The currently untitled book will cover the whole of Marr’s career, from his days with Morrissey and The Smiths, through to his time with The The and Electronic, and his work with Modest Mouse, The Cribs and most recently as a solo artist.

Discussing possible titles for the book, Marr explains: “It absolutely won’t be This Charming Marr, Isn’t It Marrvelous or any pun like that. I’ve been looking at those headlines all my adult life, thanks very much.”

Marr’s Smiths bandmate Morrissey released his own memoir, Autobiography, through Penguin Classics in 2013.

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

Keith Richards announces solo album, Crosseyed Heart

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Keith Richards has announced a new solo album, Crosseyed Heart. The album – the Rolling Stones guitarist's first release under his own name since 1992's Main Offender – is released on September 18 on EMI, and is reportedly inspired by "reggae, rock, country and the blues". In a press release, ...

Keith Richards has announced a new solo album, Crosseyed Heart.

The album – the Rolling Stones guitarist’s first release under his own name since 1992’s Main Offender – is released on September 18 on EMI, and is reportedly inspired by “reggae, rock, country and the blues”.

In a press release, Richards says: “I had a ball making this new record and working with [drummer] Steve Jordan and [guitarist] Waddy Wachtel again. There’s nothing like walking into a studio and having absolutely no idea what you’re going to come out with on the other end.”

Crosseyed Heart is Richards’ third solo album, following Main Offender and 1988’s Talk Is Cheap. Wachtel and Jordan have appeared on all the guitarist’s solo work.

The new album features a number of other musicians, including saxophone from Bobby Keys, recorded before he died in December 2014.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. 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 24th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

One of the several hundred things I didn’t manage to mention in my Grateful Dead feature this week was the role played by Neal Casal in Fare Thee Well, as composer of interval music which felt beamed in from the middle of a particularly serpentine jam at the Fillmore circa 1968. Before witnessing...

One of the several hundred things I didn’t manage to mention in my Grateful Dead feature this week was the role played by Neal Casal in Fare Thee Well, as composer of interval music which felt beamed in from the middle of a particularly serpentine jam at the Fillmore circa 1968.

Before witnessing the excellence of Trey Anastasio in action, Casal was my dark horse pick as Garcia sub for these shows, chiefly thanks to his work in the Chris Robinson Brotherhood – the one band I’ve encountered, these past few years, who seem to most effectively channel the possibilities presented by the Dead. A few weeks ago, I also came across this amazing set by Phil Lesh And Friends featuring Casal; a Fare Thee Well Pre-Compression warm-up, with a focus on the same heavy ’60s repertoire that dominated Night One in Santa Clara.

By some serendipitous karma, just as I was finishing my Dead piece, a new album prominently featuring Casal turned up at the office. “Pacific Surf Line” is by a band called Gospelbeach that features the Beachwood Sparks’ Brent Rademaker alongside Casal, and it’s a knowing but hugely enjoyable attempt to cut a vintage path between Topanga Canyon and Marin County.

You can find a Gospelbeach track below, along with plenty more music from what has been an unusually great week: the wild mercury return of Robert Forster, a genuine personal hero for upwards of 30 years now; this week’s James Elkington appearance, this time in cahoots with Nathan Salsburg (wait ’til you hear their mind-blowing Takomised take on the Smiths’ “Reel Around The Fountain”); a brilliant find by Numerophon, in the shape of the Elyse Weinberg album from ’69, produced by David Briggs and featuring some deep contributions from Neil Young; and last but definitely not least, the Julia Holter album, which I’ve been dying to mention for weeks, and which may well end up as one of the key albums of 2015. Dig in…

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

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

1 Robert Forster – Songs To Play (Tapete)

2 Various Artists – Total 15 (Kompakt)

3 Various Artists – Ork Records: New York New York (Numero Group)

4 The Edge Of Daybreak – Eyes Of Love (Numero Group)

5 The Grateful Dead – Live In Chicago, July 3, 2015 (nyctaper.com)

6 The Grateful Dead – Live In Chicago, July 4, 2015 (nyctaper.com)

7 Gospelbeach – Pacific Surf Line! (Alive Naturalsound)

8 Alela Diane & Ryan Francesconi – Cold Moon (Believe Recordings)

9 Various Artists – Low Down: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (Light In The Attic)

10 Elyse Weinberg – Greasepaint Smile (Numerophon)

11 Duane Pitre – Bayou Electric (Important)

12 Bilal – In Another Life (BBE)

13 Bill Callahan – Dream River (Drag City)

14 Bill Callahan – Rough Travel For A Rare Thing (Drag City)

15 Phil Cook – Southland Mission (Thirty Tigers)

16 James Elkington & Nathan Salsburg – Ambsace (Paradise Of Bachelors)

17 Joan Shelley – Over And Even (No Quarter)

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

The Rolling Stones exhibition poster banned by London Underground

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The Rolling Stones' poster ad for their forthcoming EXHIBITIONISM retrospective has been banned from the London Underground by Transport for London. The Guardian reports that Exterion Media, which regulates advertisements on the tube, and Clear Channel, a regulator for bus shelters, told the band t...

The Rolling Stones‘ poster ad for their forthcoming EXHIBITIONISM retrospective has been banned from the London Underground by Transport for London.

The Guardian reports that Exterion Media, which regulates advertisements on the tube, and Clear Channel, a regulator for bus shelters, told the band that the poster was not suitable to run in its original form.

The poster was the work of British designer Mark Norton. It shows the crotch of a woman in a bikini along with the band’s famous lips logo; both regulators deemed the placing of the logo was too risqué and suggestive.

Instead, London stations and bus stops will see an altered version of the poster featuring the logo positioned over the woman’s belly button instead. They will launch on Monday [July 13, 2015], while the original posters will be unveiled elsewhere nationwide.

A spokesperson for the Rolling Stones said: “We are dumbfounded and perplexed at this rather silly decision. Perhaps something to do with the fact that it’s the Rolling Stones and controversy still seems to follow them everywhere.”

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.

The career-spanning exhibition 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.

In related news, the Rolling Stones are reportedly readying the next archival release in their From The Vault series.

This latest addition is dedicated to the band’s Hyde Park concert from July 5, 1969, reports the Superdeluxeedition website.

DVD and Blu-ray editions are currently listed on Amazon.com and also Amazon’s Canadian site.

The release date on both Amazon sites is listed as July 24, 2015.

As yet, there is no confirmed UK release date; nor is it known whether this release will be available on vinyl and CD, as per the previous releases in the series.

The Stones recently released a recording of their Sticky Fingers club gig, from May 20, 2015, on iTunes.

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

Read David Crosby’s latest anti-Kanye West rant

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David Crosby has launched into a fresh tirade against Kanye West. Asked during one of his regular Twitter Q&As, 'How do you feel about Kanye at Glastonbury saying he is the greatest Rock Star of all time?', Crosby replied: "He is an egomaniac He is dumb as a post He creates nothing" https://tw...

David Crosby has launched into a fresh tirade against Kanye West.

Asked during one of his regular Twitter Q&As, ‘How do you feel about Kanye at Glastonbury saying he is the greatest Rock Star of all time?’, Crosby replied: “He is an egomaniac He is dumb as a post He creates nothing”

https://twitter.com/adamweiler_/status/618983191899193345

Screen Shot 2015-07-09 at 08.44.28

This isn’t the first time Crosby has expressed his strong views against the rapper.

In March, 2015, during a similar Twitter Q&A, Crosby called West “an idiot and a poser….has no Talent at all”.

In June, Crosby reinforced his position during an interview with The Huffington Post.

“It all stands on what you produce; what you actually put down,” Crosby said. “Kanye West can’t write, sing or play. So I have trouble with him as anything but a poser. Produce? That means he sits in a chair while the engineer does the work. He’s a poser! And I’m not backing off it.”

Meanwhile, Crosby will be taking part in Rock Camp, an all-star music school which will be held in Hollywood, California from November 5 to 8.

Crosby will mentor the camp participants, along with former Cream drummer Ginger Baker.

Time reports that the Crosby/Baker package costs $5,999. The camp offers other packages as well, including a youth camp for 12 to 16-year-olds and a recording studio session.

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

Fare Thee Well, The Grateful Dead…

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Three hours before The Grateful Dead begin their brief and poignant farewell tour in Santa Clara, California, a couple called Jeremy and Karen are setting up their stall of bespoke tie-dyed articles in the parking lot. As they arrange the $70 silk shirts and $10 bandannas, they are talking of their ...

Three hours before The Grateful Dead begin their brief and poignant farewell tour in Santa Clara, California, a couple called Jeremy and Karen are setting up their stall of bespoke tie-dyed articles in the parking lot. As they arrange the $70 silk shirts and $10 bandannas, they are talking of their times on the road following the band; journeys which began in the 1970s for both of them, and which reached a sustained climax for Jeremy between 1987 and 1995, when he was present at every one of the Dead’s last 300-odd shows.

“It wasn’t just music,” he says now, looking like a cross between Jerry Garcia and John Goodman. “The term Utopia is very maligned in society, especially in this age. What we had wasn’t a working blueprint for Utopia, but it was an unfolding better way of living, away from the safety net of a society that acts as either a sieve or a meat grinder. It was a different way of doing things. It had all the regular trappings and problems of society, but it offered hope.”

 

A few hundred metres away, Santa Clara’s year-old Levi’s Stadium, normally home to the San Francisco 49ers, awaits today’s influx of 83,000 multifarious Deadheads. Lifers like Jeremy and Karen mingle with new young fans, and a great many middle-aged men and women whose love of the Dead has endured long after their own quests for Utopia have ended. Over the next two weekends, the four remaining core members of the Grateful Dead and their accomplices will play five Fare Thee Well shows, two here and three in Chicago, which will reportedly net $40 million in ticket sales alone. Out in the parking lots, however, a more idiosyncratic brand of entrepreneurship is flourishing, even while cops patrol the aisles on golf buggies.

This is Shakedown Street, storied hub of the grey economy that has long clustered around the Dead, an ad hoc marketplace for all your quainter hippy needs. Hash pipes proliferate, as do conch shells and vegetarian burritos. There are drum circles, hackysack players, dogs in bandannas, and t-shirt memorials to Brent Mydland, one of the multiple keyboard players who died during the Grateful Dead’s original lifespan between 1965 and 1995. A large man loudly advertises the hash brownies that he is selling, neatly packaged in branded plastic containers. Another wanders through the crowds, carrying a mysterious box labelled “Take a gift”.

Jeremy, though, has a living to make. The day Jerry Garcia died, Tuesday August 9, 1995, he postponed thoughts of getting a job for a good 24 hours. The next day he found work at the University of Santa Cruz, but soon took to the road again, selling his tie-dyes at festivals through the summers, until it became harder and harder to survive the winters. Finally, he had an idea; America’s only make-your-own tie-dye store, A Brighter World. “Jeremy’s one of the few people who made it,” says Karen. “Everybody had their little things – I crocheted crazy stuff to get me across the country – but he actually turned it into a business. People who can combine the hippy thing with a work ethic, they can find a really interesting way to live.”

Jeremy claims he is mostly here to promote his business. After several hundred shows, though, a profound emotional attachment to the Dead remains, transcending his cynicism over the premise of Fare Thee Well, and his scepticism that the band can still be meaningful without Garcia. “I just hope they play like it’s their last one, as opposed to going through the motions,” he finally decides. “It could be like going to someone’s house for a home-cooked meal but they got sick, so they ordered out. It’s OK, but I hope it won’t be like that…”

 Heads up! Next month’s Uncut – on sale July 28 in the UK – comes with a FREE GRATEFUL DEAD CD: our historic attempt to piece together the album that should have followed “Workingman’s Dead” and “American Beauty”…