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David Bowie announces Five Years 1969 – 1973 box set

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David Bowie has announced the first in a series of box sets spanning his career. David Bowie Five Years 1969 - 1973 features all of the material officially released by Bowie during the early stage of his career. It will be available across a number of formats: as a 12 CD box set, a 13 album vinyl ...

David Bowie has announced the first in a series of box sets spanning his career.

David Bowie Five Years 1969 – 1973 features all of the material officially released by Bowie during the early stage of his career.

It will be available across a number of formats: as a 12 CD box set, a 13 album vinyl set pressed on audiophile 180g vinyl and digital download.

Exclusive to the box sets will be Re:Call 1 a new 2-disc compilation of non-album singles, single versions & b-sides. It features a previously unreleased single edit of “All The Madmen“. Also included is the original version of “Holy Holy“, which was only ever released on the original 1971 Mercury single and hasn’t been available since.

Also exclusive to all versions of Five Years 1969 – 1973 will be a 2003 stereo remix of The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars by the album’s original co-producer Ken Scott, previously only available on DVD with the LP/DVD format of the 40th anniversary edition of the album.

The box set’s accompanying book, 128 pages in the CD box and 84 in the vinyl set, will feature rarely seen photos as well as technical notes about each album from producers Tony Visconti and Ken Scott, an original press review for each album and a short foreword by Ray Davies.

Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to David Bowie in UK shops now and also available to buy at our online store

David Bowie Five Years 1969 – 1973 tracklisting:

6 Original Studio Albums:
David Bowie AKA Space Oddity*
The Man Who Sold The World*
Hunky Dory*
The Rise and Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars
Aladdin Sane
PinUps*

(*New 2015 Remasters)

2 Live Albums:
Live Santa Monica ‘72
Ziggy Stardust: The Motion Picture Soundtrack

Exclusive To All Sets:
Re:Call 1
The Rise and Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars (2003 mix)

Re:Call 1 – Track Listing
CD1
Space Oddity (original UK mono single edit)*
Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud (original UK mono single version)*
Ragazzo Solo, Ragazza Sola
The Prettiest Star (original mono single version)*
Conversation Piece*
Memory Of A Free Festival (Part 1)
Memory Of A Free Festival (Part 2)
All The Madmen (mono single edit)*
Janine*
Holy Holy (original mono single version)*
Moonage Daydream (The Arnold Corns single version)*
Hang On To Yourself (The Arnold Corns single version)*

CD 2
Changes (mono single version)*
Andy Warhol (mono single version)*
Starman (original single mix)
John, I’m Only Dancing (original single version)
The Jean Genie (original single mix)
Drive-In Saturday (German single edit)
Round And Round
John, I’m Only Dancing (sax version)
Time (U.S. single edit)
Amsterdam
Holy Holy (Spiders version)
Velvet Goldmine

All tracks stereo except *mono.

David Bowie Five Years 1969 – 1973 is released by Parlophone Records on September 25.

Click here to learn more about Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to David Bowie

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

New Order announce new album, Music Complete

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New Order have announced details of their new album, Music Complete. It is the band's first new material since Waiting For The Sirens' Call in 2002 and the first to feature Gillian Gilbert since 2001's Get Ready. Music Complete is produced by New Order, except "Singularity" and "Unlearn This Hatre...

New Order have announced details of their new album, Music Complete.

It is the band’s first new material since Waiting For The Sirens’ Call in 2002 and the first to feature Gillian Gilbert since 2001’s Get Ready.

Music Complete is produced by New Order, except “Singularity” and “Unlearn This Hatred”, both produced by Tom Rowlands, while “Superheated” features additional production by Stuart Price.

It is the band’s first album for Mute Records and will be released on September 25, 2015.

The album will be released on CD, download and limited edition clear vinyl. In addition, there will be an exclusive 8-piece deluxe vinyl collection that includes the album plus extended versions of all 11 tracks on coloured vinyl. The album can be pre-ordered by clicking here.

The current line up of New Order is: Bernard Sumner, Gillian Gilbert, Stephen Morris, Tom Chapman and Phil Cunningham.

The tracklisting for Music Complete is:
Restless
Singularity
Plastic
Tutti Frutti
People On The High Line
Stray Dog
Academic
Nothing But A Fool
Unlearn This Hatred
The Game
Superheated

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

Donovan announces first UK tour in 10 years

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Donovan has announced his first UK tour in 10 years. Titled the 50th Anniversary Tour, the dates begin in October on October 3 in Glasgow and finish up on October 31 in London. "I am delighted to be going on tour in October, to thank all who have followed my work from the beginning and to all who ...

Donovan has announced his first UK tour in 10 years.

Titled the 50th Anniversary Tour, the dates begin in October on October 3 in Glasgow and finish up on October 31 in London.

“I am delighted to be going on tour in October, to thank all who have followed my work from the beginning and to all who have just discovered me,” Donovan said.

Ticket prices vary from £25-£30. Tickets are available direct from the venues themselves,  Ticketline (0161 832 1111) or from wegottickets.com.

Donovan will play:

October 3: The Pavilion Glasgow
4: Queens Hall Edinburgh
7: The Gardyne Dundee
8: Tyne Theatre Newcastle
9: Spa Theatre Scarborough
10: Town Hall Leeds
11: Truck Theatre Hull
13: Liverpool Philharmonic
15: Albert Hall Nottingham
16: The Montgomery Sheffield
17: Rncm Manchester
18: Rncm Manchester
20: The Key Peterborough
21: The Guildhall Gloucester
23: Birmingham Town Hall
24: The Guildhall Portsmouth
25: Colston Hall Bristol
26: New Theatre Cardiff
27: Town Hall Oxford
28: The Pavilion Bournemouth
30: The Assembly Hall Worthing
31: Cadogan Hall London

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

David Byrne: “I felt so socially inept, getting onstage was the only way I could express myself”

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David Byrne discusses his work with Talking Heads, Brian Eno and St Vincent in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2015 and out now. The singer, songwriter and author, who is curating this summer’s Meltdown festival in London, also recalls his early experiences on a stage, playing in a group whi...

David Byrne discusses his work with Talking Heads, Brian Eno and St Vincent in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2015 and out now.

The singer, songwriter and author, who is curating this summer’s Meltdown festival in London, also recalls his early experiences on a stage, playing in a group while still at school.

“I started performing in high school when I was 16 or so, in pop bands with friends, or at folk clubs,” Byrne says. “I took to it, but at that point I was more driven to do it: it was almost like I felt so socially inept that this was the only way I could express myself, by getting up on a stage and doing something, often somebody else’s song, but getting up onstage and asserting myself. And then retreating back into my shell the minute I’d step off stage.

“It was a curious kind of schizophrenic relationship. But if you don’t feel comfortable communicating any other way, if there’s an avenue open to you, you’ll take it.

“Then over the years, that whole thing lessened. And now, it’s a pleasure to step on stage. There’s no desperation. So there was some kind of weird edginess that got lost in that process, but something else was gained.”

The new issue of Uncut is out tomorrow.

Photo: Danny North

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.

 

 

ASBO threat to pensioners for playing Fleetwood Mac and Roy Orbison too loudly

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A retired couple from Plymouth have been threatened with an ASBO after neighbours complained they were constantly playing Fleetwood Mac and Roy Orbison hits too loudly. According to a story in Torquay's Herald Express, Robert and Christine Fox - both 68 - were visited by council officials last week...

A retired couple from Plymouth have been threatened with an ASBO after neighbours complained they were constantly playing Fleetwood Mac and Roy Orbison hits too loudly.

According to a story in Torquay‘s Herald Express, Robert and Christine Fox – both 68 – were visited by council officials last week, delivering a letter warning the couple about the complaints.

“I was annoyed that a neighbour of mine felt the need to report me and not come to me about it,” said Mr Fox, a retired lorry driver.

“Apparently, I’m unapproachable. I’m so upset by all of this. We’ve never done anything wrong all our lives and now we’ve got all this to deal with.

“We are both retired and we just enjoy spending our time out in the garden while the weather is so sunny. We’ve always made sure our music is turned off by 6.30pm every evening. I belong to the local over-’60s club and all my friends can’t believe it.”

Plymouth County Council have said they won’t take further action unless it the complaints continue. They have also promised to provide the Fox family with specialist equipment to monitor noise levels.

Meanwhile, Fleetwood Mac are scheduled to perform at London’s O2 Arena this week, before shows in Leeds, Manchester, Glasgow and Birmingham.

Fleetwood Mac play the following UK dates:

London O2 Arena (June 22, 24, 26, 27)
Leeds First Direct Arena (June 30, July 5)
Manchester Arena (July 1)
Glasgow SSE Hydro (July 8)
Birmingham Genting Arena (July 4)

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

Gene Simmons claims fans are “killing the next Elvis and The Beatles “

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Kiss' Gene Simmons has spoken out against the illegal downloading and sharing of music. Ultimate Classic Rock reports that Simmons believes illegal downloading is killing music. "I blame the fans," he said. "Because the fans have decided en masse — in other words, the masses have decided — tha...

Kiss’ Gene Simmons has spoken out against the illegal downloading and sharing of music.

Ultimate Classic Rock reports that Simmons believes illegal downloading is killing music.

“I blame the fans,” he said. “Because the fans have decided en masse — in other words, the masses have decided — that they should get free music, download, fileshare […] You’re killing the next Elvis [Presley] and The Beatles and the next Kiss and the next whoever, because you have to give your music away for free […] It’s disappointing, because they would prefer not to support a new band […] It affects the next great band, who won’t have a chance. Why? Because the talent isn’t out there? It sure is. The fans killed it. They killed the infrastructure.”

However Simmons was full of praise for the record labels of his day, saying the companies “gave bands money that they never had to pay back – ever! If the band failed and the records were a complete disaster, the advance money was all theirs. What other business would give you that? If you go to a bank and they give you a million dollars, and your business goes under, they don’t care it failed; they want their money back.”

He continued by dubbing labels “a gift from heaven. Yeah, they’re greedy, they’re this… but they wanna make money just like you do. But they gave you money – millions! And if it wasn’t for record companies, there’d be no Sex Pistols, there’d be no punk, there’d be no nothing. There would be punk, but it would be in a small club. It would never become huge.”

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

Reviewed! True Detective Season 2: Episodes 1 – 3

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In his 2014 song “Nevermind”, Leonard Cohen explores notions of exile and betrayal during wartime. “I had to leave my life behind,” he reflects. “I dug some graves you’ll never find / I was not caught, though many tried / I live among you, well disguised”. Part of Cohen’s song has no...

In his 2014 song “Nevermind”, Leonard Cohen explores notions of exile and betrayal during wartime. “I had to leave my life behind,” he reflects. “I dug some graves you’ll never find / I was not caught, though many tried / I live among you, well disguised”. Part of Cohen’s song has now been redeployed as the theme music for True Detective Season 2; allowing the song to take on a subtly different meaning in this fresh context. We can now infer that Cohen’s observations on defeat, dishonour and division are no longer restricted to the battlefield alone. In this instance, they also extend to the officers of different California law enforcement agencies, who are forced to work together to solve the grisly murder of a city manager. Describing a specific situation in this new series, one character says, “Two tons of shit. Collapse of civilization. Revenge flick.” Essentially, this is a useful shorthand for the show itself.

Looking back, the first series of True Detective posed a significant gamble for showrunner, Nic Pizzolatto. Fundamentally a standard police procedural, Pizzolatto’s witty chronology, auterist trappings and more outré plot points hinted tantalizingly at something weirder lurking behind its murder plot than just the usual serial-killer gubbins. But once you’d stripped away the cosmic jabbering, the allusions to Lovecraft, Vonnegut and Thomas Ligotti and the search for various esoteric truths, the show really did end up as a variation of the usual serial-killer gubbins. Carcosa and the Yellow King really were just fancy McGuffins: who knew? Pizzolatto might argue that the journey was more important than the destination itself, although for Season 2 he conspicuously dispenses with virtually everything that made the show a hit in the first place. On a superficial level, the setting is different – an industrial city a few miles south of Los Angeles replaces rural Louisiana – while the buddy-cop dynamic of the first series has been substituted for an expanded cast including three police officers and a career criminal trying to go legit. The hints of the supernatural are gone; though the pseudo-intellectual lingo remains: there is expansive talk of “a meaningless universe” and “the final age of man”.

Critically, for Season 1 Pizzolatto had Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson as his two leads. For Season 2, it was unlikely he’d be able to successfully replicate their particular dynamic – or enjoy the benefits of a cultural spectacle like McConaughey’s career resurgence. But his casting choices this time round are, at the very least, interesting: Colin Farrell, Rachel McAdams, Taylor Kitsch and Vince Vaughn. All of these actors will generally profit from the show’s profile – from Farrell, whose box office stock is low, to McAdams, for whom the show could effectively break her free from vanilla, good girl roles. But perhaps it’s Vaughn who may enjoy his McConaughey moment as career criminal Frank Semyon. Witness his monologue at the start of episode two, where he recalls being locked in a cellar as a six year-old, beating rats to death with his hands; a valuable reminder that Vaughn is a capable actor (it reminded me, too, to revisit his chillingly blank performance in Gus Van Sant’s Psycho).

Admittedly, these are essentially familiar characters. Farrell’s detective Ray Velcoro drinks hard and is swift to anger; he is heavily compromised; outside the job, he is slipping into a custody battle with his ex-wife. McAdams’ sheriff Antigone “Ani” Bezzerides comes with her own set of dramas – an estranged father, a troubled relationship with her sister – but she is outwardly tough, presumably to compensate for being a woman in a largely male environment. Taylor Kitsch’s Paul Woodrugh potentially might be the most interesting of the three, simply because on the strength of the first free episodes he remains the least knowable: secretive, stoic, possibly sexually confused, very definitely troubled by his war experiences. It doesn’t take a lot to work out they all have issues and chunky secrets; hopefully subsequent episodes will subvert the clichés accompanying them. As it is, the heavy lifting done by Farrell, McAdams and Kitsch is strong: Farrell’s handgdog moustache arguably deserves its own show. Incidentally, Farrell gets a couple of memorably explosive moments. “I’ll butt-fuck your father with your mom’s headless corpse on this lawn,” he bellows at his son’s bully, after repeatedly beating the boy’s father in the face while wearing a set of knuckle-dusters.

All four of them are drawn into a Chinatown-style plot based involving the California transportation system. The setting is Vinci, a fictional city in Los Angeles county: restless overhead tracking shots show factories belching smoke into the air or the freeway system at night. Vinci is, we learn, the worst air polluter in the state. One of Pizzolatto’s themes here revolves around institutional corruption: out here on the fringes, the police, property developers and local government all appear to have their own things going on, and the grisly murder of city planner Ben Caspar might bring to light a number of misdeeds. There is certainly internecine conflict between the various police agencies, which looks set to pit Velcoro against Bezzerides. So far, the story looks as if it will also extend to the sex industry and a cult-like “institute” run by benevolent/creepy David Morse (though I wonder how good Peter Fonda would have been in the role).

All of this is admittedly pretty diverting viewing, misgivings and all. It’s a relief that Pizzolatto has dropped the quasi-mystical Donnie Darko-isms of the first series in favour of something than feels more like a recognisable noir. Instead of 19th century horror writers, the reference points this time out are Chandler, Ellroy, Lynch’s Mulholland Drive and Pizzolatto’s own (excellent) novel, Galveston. The sultry Southern Gothic vibes have been replaced by the murky Californian underworld. Uncut readers will also enjoy the show’s use of music – overseen by T Bone Burnett – which includes Nick Cave and Warren Ellis’ cover of The Gatlin Brothers “All The Gold In California” as well as tracks by Bonnie Prince Billy and Black Mountain. Indeed, just as it’s possible to glimpse the direction of this second series of True Detective by Leonard Cohen’s ruminative opening song, you might also deduce some additional clues from the Gatlins song: “Trying to be a hero, winding up a zero / Can scar a man forever, right down to your soul”. It feels very much on message with Pizzolatto’s own storytelling instincts.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

True Detective is on Sky Atlantic HD, Mondays at 9:00pm

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

Reviewed! Neil Young + The Promise Of The Real: The Monsanto Years

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Neil Young is evidently a man who still likes surprises. Patrons at the SLO Brewing Co. in San Luis Obispo, California, found themselves enjoying an unbilled show by Young in April this year. There, he not only unveiled a new album – The Monsanto Years – but a new backing band, too: The Promise ...

Neil Young is evidently a man who still likes surprises. Patrons at the SLO Brewing Co. in San Luis Obispo, California, found themselves enjoying an unbilled show by Young in April this year. There, he not only unveiled a new album – The Monsanto Years – but a new backing band, too: The Promise Of The Real, fronted by Willie Nelson’s son Lukas, with his brother Micah. Ardent Neil watchers will have already spotted that Young previously played with the Nelsons at last year’s Farm Aid, the Harvest For Hope benefit in Nebraska and the Bridge School event. But despite this influx of new blood, much of The Monsanto Years itself finds Young pursuing familiar goals. Ostensibly, he is championing the ecologically aware message of Greendale, Fork In The Road and “Who’s Gonna Stand Up”, delivered with the urgency of Living With War.

Click here to read Neil Young on the stories behind his greatest songs

The Monsanto Years was recorded in six weeks between January and February at Teatro Studios, a converted movie theatre in Oxnard, California owned by Daniel Lanois. The album’s nine songs share their rough-hewn, country punk qualities with Young’s liveliest studio recordings, while Promise Of The Real resemble a less expansive Crazy Horse. There is, perhaps, an understandable pragmatism on Young’s part in hooking up with these younger players, particularly since Billy Talbot’s stroke and the deaths of Rick Rosas and Tim Drummond last year depleted his pool of regular musicians – the last time Young engaged a group of musicians outside his regular collaborators was with Pearl Jam on 1995’s Mirror Ball: another bunch of eager acolytes sympathetic to Young’s cause.

Click here to read the story of Neil Young’s remarkable year

The result of their endeavours, The Monsanto Years is occasionally rambling, frequently sentimental and sometimes moving. Young opens the rough-and-tumble “New Day For Love” on a positive note – “It’s a new day for the planet/It’s a new day for the sun” – but soon allies himself with those fighting to “keep their lands away from the greedy”. The warm acoustic tones and discrete pedal steel on “Wolf Moon” recall the bucolic charms of Harvest Moon as Young grieves for the “thoughtless blundering” the “seeds of life” endure. “People Want To Hear”, meanwhile, criticises a general lack of engagement with Big Issues like – deep breath – political corruption, environmental disaster, civil liberties violations, world poverty, pesticides and voter apathy. It is a long list, and The Monsanto Years doesn’t entirely benefit from such a broad strokes approach: the album is at its strongest when telescoping in on specifics. Admittedly, Young gets close on “Big Box” – which comes with 8 minutes of thundering Old Black action. The lyrics itself cleave close to “Ordinary People”, Young’s attempt to frame the plight of working Americans against the hostile challenges of living with late-’80s Reaganomics. Here we learn of “main streets boarded up”, “display windows and broken glass/Not a car on the street” and “people working part time at Walmart/Never getting the benefits”.

Click here to read a long interview with Crazy Horse guitarist Poncho Sampedro

Despite its lighter tone – there is whistling, no less – for “A Rock Star Bucks A Coffee Shop” Young draws our attention to ongoing events in Vermont, where industrial food companies are challenging a legislation requiring the labelling of genetically modified food products. “Mothers want to know what they feed their children”, insists Young. Over a raucous backing track, “Workin’ Man” follows the case of Vernon Bowman, an Indiana farmer who was accused of infringing on Monsanto’s patent for its GM soyabeans. Such social commentary adds immediacy to The Monsanto Years; but Young drops this tenacious approach for the gentler “Rules Of Change”, where he sings wistfully of the “sacred seeds”. Incidentally, the sleeve for The Monsanto Years appears to depict Young and his partner Daryl Hannah as farmers in a psychedelicised take on Grant Wood’s painting American Gothic. Young further aligns himself with the farming community on the title track, which charts the lifecycle of a GM soyabean from soil to store. Grinding away on Old Black, Young laments, “The seeds of life are not what they once were/Mother Nature and God don’t own them any more”. The album closes with the melancholic “If I Don’t Know”, which features some strong free-roaming guitar interplay between himself and the Nelson brothers.

To gauge the strength of Young’s commitment to his cause, it’s instructive to look at where he was this time last year, veering between different projects: ongoing solo acoustic shows, a lo-fi covers album, a new audio system and an impending Crazy Horse tour among them. By comparison, this year seems relatively focused: his intentions clear. Indeed, Young’s message on this album is hardly subtle; after 28 mentions of Monsanto, you suspect he is keen to make his point as simply as possible. “If the melodies stay pretty and the songs are not too long,” he sings on “If I Don’t Know”, “I’ll try and find a way to get them back to you, the earth’s blood”.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The Monsanto Years is currently streaming on NPR: click here to listen to it

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 on Tuesday, June 23 – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard and more

The Strokes and Beck, live in London

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There comes a point during tonight’s set when Beck barricades the front of the stage with yellow tape with “Crime scene do not cross” printed on it. His guitarist Jason Falkner, meanwhile, is lying on his back by the amps grinding out feedback; a few yards away, bassist Justin Meldal-Johnsen i...

There comes a point during tonight’s set when Beck barricades the front of the stage with yellow tape with “Crime scene do not cross” printed on it. His guitarist Jason Falkner, meanwhile, is lying on his back by the amps grinding out feedback; a few yards away, bassist Justin Meldal-Johnsen is collapsed over the keyboards. This, then, is the suitably dramatic climax to Beck’s main set – which has remarkably proved to be a triumph of the will against the weather. Beck and his band took the stage at 7pm, in full sunlight, wearing blacks and greys: under such circumstances, it was hard enough to make themselves seen, let alone convincingly fill such a large space. Nevertheless, for the next hour Beck deploys every resource at his disposal: the funky freak power of “Devil’s Haircut”, the smouldering Latino swagger of “Qué Onda Guero”, the hip hop beats of “Hell Yes” and “Soul Of A Man”’s sludgy, Sabbath-like riffs. Elsewhere, there are digressions into library music, surf guitar, ‘60s chamber pop, ‘70s soul and ‘80s hardcore. “Thanks for sticking it out and spending a few precious minutes with us in a field,” he says in a rare let-up in the show’s pace.

Of course, Beck has always been one of music’s most progressive and eccentric shapeshifters – but evidently he is on a roll at the moment. Looking back, Beck’s trajectory over the last 12 months has been a period of subtle recalibration. Prior to the release of Morning Phase – and its Grammy win in February – Beck’s career appeared to be drifting out of focus. It had been six years since his previous album, Modern Guilt, and rather than knuckle down to the business of recording a follow up, Beck instead directed his attentions to other people’s music: producing the likes of Thurston Moore and Stephen Malkmus and covering albums by Leonard Cohen, INXS, Skip Spence and the Velvet Underground in his collaborative Record Club project. Even 2012’s Song Reader took the form of sheet music rather than a conventional album. Reflecting on that period before Morning Phase, you might wonder whether Beck wanted to do anything other than create his own songs. But palpably Beck in 2015 is far more engaged than in recent years. “New Pollution”, “Loser”, “Sex Laws” and a marvellous extended “Where It’s At” (complete with lengthy harmonica breakdown) are delivered with wit and a deftness of touch. Intriguingly, neither Beck nor the Strokes are on the promo circuit right now – Beck doesn’t even play his current single, “Dreams”. Beck explains his friendship with the headliners stretches back 15 years: today, he is happy “playing a few tunes to warm up for the Strokes.” If that’s the case, it’s a nice gesture, which adds to a sense of goodwill emanating round Hyde Park this evening.

The Stokes have suffered from their own set of creative frustrations – albeit ones different to those experienced by Beck. Essentially since Room On Fire, the Strokes have struggled to revisit the heights of their debut: their progress has been hampered by the jostle to establish solo careers, internal strife and a kind of weirdly non-committal approach to their principle career. Indeed, this is the Strokes’ first UK date in five years and nearly two years since their last album, Comedown Machine. Admittedly, Albert Hammond Jr’s recent comments on BBC 6Music that this show might be their last felt like the latest twist in the band’s weird, dramatic narrative. But if this is the end for the Strokes, tonight is a marvellous way to go out. Opening with “Is This It?” and “Barely Legal”, they cut back to the short, sharp thrills of their debut. But conspicuously, the sound is tight and muscular: the thin, metallic production of Is This It? now expertly filled out. Certainly, the rest of tonight’s set is full of hellacious energy: heavy guitars, howled vocals, metronomic drums, thunderous basslines. For his part, Julian Casablancas has some remarkable hair going on: essentially, he’s grown a mullet which has been dyed red down one side, as if someone’s spilled a tin of paint over him just before he came on stage. Elsewhere, drummer Fab Moretti sports a tangle of curly hair and a beard that makes him look like a young Tony Iommi; the hair shocks extend to bassist Nikolai Fraiture, who appears to have had his hair modelled on a Norman soldier’s helmet. Unable to compete in that department, Hammond Jr opts instead for a bright red jumpsuit.

As the show proceeds, rumours of the Strokes mortality appear increasingly premature. Casablancas’ between song-patter – largely limited to “What’s up, sexies?” or “What’s going on?” – takes a hysterical turn before “Someday”, when he introduces a guest spot from Shabba Ranks. Sadly, he’s only joking – alas, the indie/dancehall crossover will have to wait – but it hardly seems appropriate behaviour for a man preparing to deliver Last Rites on his band. The newish songs – “Welcome To Japan”, “Under Cover Of Darkness”, “Machu Picchu” – sound strong alongside “Reptilia”, “Hard To Explain” and a propulsive “Last Nite”. Though it may be two years since they last released a record, the Strokes still radiate a reassuringly healthy disposition. “London, I like what you’ve done with this place,” says Casablancas approvingly as he looks out across Hyde Park, the sun at last going down.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Beck played:
Devil’s Haircut
Black Tambourine
Think I’m In Love/I Feel love
The New Pollotion
Qué Onda Guero
Gamma Ray
Hell Yes
Soul Of A Man
Blue Moon
Lost Cause
Go It Alone
Loser
Sex Laws
Debra
E-Pro

Encore
Where It’s At

The Strokes played:
Is This It?
Barely Legal
Welcome To Japan
You Talk Way Too Much
Someday
Heart In A Cage
Hard To Explain
Automatic Stop
Vision Of Division
Last Nite
Reptilia
Machu Picchu
Under Cover Of Darkness
One Way Trigger
New York City Cops

Encore
Juicebox
You Only Live Once
Take It Or Leave It

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 on Tuesday, June 23 – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard and more

James Taylor: “It was wonderful working with Joni Mitchell”

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James Taylor recalls the making of nine of his classic albums in the current issue of Uncut, dated August 2015 and out now. Discussing his 1971 album Mud Slide Slim And The Blue Horizon, the singer-songwriter remembers filming Two-Lane Blacktop, a road movie also starring The Beach Boys' Dennis Wil...

James Taylor recalls the making of nine of his classic albums in the current issue of Uncut, dated August 2015 and out now.

Discussing his 1971 album Mud Slide Slim And The Blue Horizon, the singer-songwriter remembers filming Two-Lane Blacktop, a road movie also starring The Beach Boys’ Dennis Wilson and Warren Oates, and his time spent with Joni Mitchell.

“In 1970, I made a movie, the only movie I ever made,” explains Taylor. “I’ve never seen it, it was a harrowing experience for me!

“Joni Mitchell came along with me [during filming]. We wrote in this camper across the southwest of America and had some of the most outrageous good times. It was really great.

“I had played on the album that Joni was making when we met, Blue. I played guitar and backed her up on a few of those songs. It was wonderful working with Joni. We had a great year together, we worked, we travelled.”

In the piece, Taylor also discusses his most recent album, Before This World, and recalls his long struggle to recover from drug addiction.

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 on Tuesday, June 23 – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard and more

The Byrds’ 20 best songs

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From “So You Want To Be A Rock’n’Roll Star” to “Mr Tambourine Man”, here are the greatest Byrds tracks, as chosen by famous fans, and introduced by Roger McGuinn himself. Originally published in Uncut’s November 2012 issue (Take 186). Interviews: Rob Hughes, Tom Pinnock and Graeme Thom...

1 EIGHT MILES HIGH
From Fifth Dimension (July 1966). Single March 1966. UK chart: 24. US chart: 14
A daring ascent into raga-rock, fusing modal jazz, Indian music and nascent psychedelia. Sounds as timeless and progressive today as it did in 1966.

ROGER McGUINN: We were on tour in the United States. We were always on tour! We were in the Midwest and we stopped at some town to visit a friend of David Crosby. David’s friend had copies of John Coltrane’s Africa/Brass and Impressions, which had the track “India” on it. I had a cassette recorder and recorded both Coltrane albums on one side of a blank cassette and some Ravi Shankar on the other. We strapped the cassette deck to the Fender amp on the bus and listened to both sides of that tape over and over again on that tour. This went on for a month, and we were so steeped in this music that by the time we got back to LA it all just spilled out, almost like we’d been brainwashed by Coltrane and Shankar.

“Eight Miles High” is out there. It’s spatial. I was trying to emulate Coltrane’s saxophone with my Rickenbacker. It’s got a lot of what Coltrane was going for on “India”, which was to capture the elephants in India with his wails, and there’s that tabla beat. He was trying to incorporate Indian music into jazz, and we were trying to incorporate his attempts to do that into a rock’n’roll song. So there’s a lot of things going on.

Gene Clark came up with a lot of it, but he didn’t write the whole song. The airplane thing was my idea, I was always into planes and spaceships. Gene and I were talking about the trip we’d taken when we’d gone to England on tour, and the fact that the altitude was 37,000 ft, which is seven miles high. He didn’t like the number seven, because the Beatles had “Eight Days A Week” out and he thought that was much cooler. So we changed it to “Eight Miles High”, even though commercial airliners didn’t go to 42,000 ft. They do now, some of them. When radio stations heard it they thought, ‘Wait a minute, they can’t be talking about planes because they don’t fly that high. They must be talking about some other kind of high!’ Then the Gavin Report came out with a tip sheet for radio and they banned the record because they thought it was a flagrant drug ad. Some of the band still like to pretend that it is. Crosby will always say, ‘Yeah, it’s about drugs, man!’ But it’s not. It’s about touring the UK: the British press, the cars, the girls in the crowds, the weather, the street signs on the side of the buildings which we weren’t used to and couldn’t find. It’s about cultural shock.

CHRIS HILLMAN: What I’m most proud of about The Byrds is that within 18 months we went from covering Bob Dylan to making “Eight Miles High”. We had grown as musicians. We stumbled into something without really thinking, which is how you should make music. It was so creative. It was a truly exciting time. People talk about the guitars and the lyrics on “Eight Miles High”, but Michael Clarke played brilliantly on that, and what about the singing? David was just a beautiful vocalist, as were Gene and Roger. They would double the lead and David would come in with a vocal that was just beautiful. It would have been interesting to have seen where we would have gone had we all stayed together, taking “Eight Miles High” as a launching point. Where would we have gone? It wouldn’t necessarily have ended up at Sweetheart Of The Rodeo.

I have to pay credit to Columbia, they really didn’t put a lot of pressure on us over what we recorded. The only pressure was that we had to do two albums a year no matter what, but they weren’t too strict about content. The business was still pretty artistically orientated. The label supported “Eight Miles High” until it stopped getting played on the radio, which really killed it. That meant it fell off the charts. It’s amazing to think that it didn’t make the Top 10, but I felt so lucky to be in that band at that time. From ’65 to ’67, I think, was the best of The Byrds. Magic. And “Eight Miles High” might just be the best of the best.

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 July 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring the Rolling Stones, 13th Floor Elevators, Jim O’Rourke, Ringo Starr and more!

Mercury Rev announce new album, The Light In You

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Mercury Rev have announced details of their new album, The Light In You. The band's eighth studio album, it will be released on September 18 with a European to follow. It's the first album since 2008's Snowflake. Speaking about the lengthy gap between albums, Jonathan Donahue said, "It was one of ...

Mercury Rev have announced details of their new album, The Light In You.

The band’s eighth studio album, it will be released on September 18 with a European to follow.

It’s the first album since 2008’s Snowflake. Speaking about the lengthy gap between albums, Jonathan Donahue said, “It was one of those otherworldly life sequences, when everything you think is solid turns molten. But also, when something is worth saying, it can take a long time to say it, rather than just blurt it out.”

“You can go as deep as you want with the title, on a metaphorical, spiritual level, or just poetic license,” he adds. “It’s the beacon that shines and allows us to see ourselves – and then there’s the music between Grasshopper and I, which is how we reflect each other. The arc of the album, lyrically, is someone who’s gone through an incredible period of turbulence, sadness and uncertainty, and as the album progresses, a light appears on the water.”

The tracklisting for The Light In You is:

‘The Queen Of Swans’
‘Amelie’
‘You’ve Gone With So Little For So Long’
‘Central Park East’
‘Emotional Freefall’
‘Coming Up For Air’
‘Autumn’s In The Air’
‘Are You Ready?’
‘Sunflower’
‘Moth Light’
‘Rainy Day Record’

Mercury Rev will play:

September 18: Tilburg, Netherlands – Incubate Festival
October 04: Leeds, England – Brudenell Social Club
October 05: Bristol, England – Trinity
November 06: Copenhagen, Denmark – DR Studio 2
November 08: Brussels, Belgium – Botanique Orangerie
November 09: Köln, Germany – Studio 672
November 11: Berlin,Germany – Postbahnhof
November 13: Zagreb, Croatia – Lauba
November 14: Ravenna, Italy – Bronson
November 15: Munich, Germany – Kranhalle
November 16: Paris, France – Alhambra
November 17: Brighton, England – Komedia
November 19: Gateshead, England – The Sage
November 20: Glasgow, Scotland – Art School
November 22: Dublin, Ireland – Button Factory
November 23: Manchester, England – RNCM
November 24: London, England – Oval Space

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 on Tuesday, June 23 – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard and more

The 21st Uncut Playlist Of 2015

What's new? Kurt Vile. A live set from Hurray For The Riff Raff. A nice solo guitar record from Seabuckthorn (recommended via Dean McPhee). Big Isleys and Womack reissue packages. The return of Bilal. And maybe the thing I've played most this week, Kompakt's latest immersive "Total" comp. Lots more ...

What’s new? Kurt Vile. A live set from Hurray For The Riff Raff. A nice solo guitar record from Seabuckthorn (recommended via Dean McPhee). Big Isleys and Womack reissue packages. The return of Bilal. And maybe the thing I’ve played most this week, Kompakt’s latest immersive “Total” comp. Lots more things to play here, too…

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 Beck – Dreams (Geffen)

2 Various Artists – Total 15 (Kompakt)

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

4 Hurray For The Riff Raff: June 7, 2015 Mountain Jam (www.nyctaper.com)

https://soundcloud.com/nyctaper/hurray-for-the-riff-raff-living-in-the-city-live-at-mountain-jam

5 Muddy Waters – Sail On (Chess/Traffic Ent)

6 Deradoorian – The Exploding Flower Planet (Anticon)

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

7 Yo La Tengo – Stuff Like That There (Matador)

8 Jackson C Frank – The Complete Recordings (Ba Da Bing)

9 Phil Cook – Southland Mission (Thirty Tigers)

10 The Isley Brothers – The Complete RCA Victor And T-Neck Album Masters (Sony)

11 Seabuckthorn – They Haunted Most Thickly (Bookmaker)

12 Chris Connolly – Alameda (Caldo Verde)

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

14 Advance Base – Nephew In The Wild (Tomlab)

15 Tav Falco – Command Performance (Twenty Stone Blatt)

16 Bobby Womack – The Preacher (Charly)

17 Neil Young & The Promise Of The Real – The Monsanto Years (Reprise)

18 The Arcs – Yours, Dreamily, (Nonesuch)

19 Pavement – The Secret History Vol 1 (Domino)

20 The Cairo Gang – Goes Missing (God?)

21 Beirut – No No No (4AD)

22 Baio – The Names (Glassnote)

23 Bilal – Another Life (BBE)

24 The Deslondes – The Deslondes (New West)

Read my Deslondes interview and hear their music here

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

Iron Maiden announce new double album, The Book Of Souls

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Iron Maiden have announced details of a new album, Book Of Souls. The band's first double album, it is due for release on September 4 and has been made with regular producer Kevin Shirley. The tracklisting for Book Of Souls is: Disc 1 'If Eternity Should Fail' 'Speed Of Light' 'The Great Unknown'...

Iron Maiden have announced details of a new album, Book Of Souls.

The band’s first double album, it is due for release on September 4 and has been made with regular producer Kevin Shirley.

The tracklisting for Book Of Souls is:

Disc 1
‘If Eternity Should Fail’
‘Speed Of Light’
‘The Great Unknown’
‘The Red And The Black’
‘When The River Runs Deep’
‘The Book Of Souls’

Disc 2
‘Death Or Glory’
‘Shadows Of The Valley’
‘Tears Of A Clown’
‘The Man Of Sorrows’
‘Empire Of The Clouds’

Meanwhile, Bruce Dickinson was recently given the all-clear after cancer treatment. He was diagnosed just before Christmas after a small tumour was found at the back of his tongue. Dickinson underwent a seven-week course of radiotherapy and chemotherapy treatment for cancer.

In a statement, Dickinson said: “I would like to thank the fantastic medical team who have been treating me for the last few months, resulting in this amazing outcome. It’s been tough on my family and, in many ways, it was harder for them than me.”

Iron Maiden manager Rod Smallwood said Dickinson’s recovery meant the band would be unable to play any shows until next year. Smallwood said: “Although Bruce is naturally eager to resume Maiden activities, it will take a while before he is completely back to full strength, as we explained previously. Because of this, the band will not be touring or playing any shows until next year. We know our fans will understand the situation and, like us, would prefer to wait until Bruce is back to his usual indefatigable levels of fitness before going out on the road.”

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 on Tuesday, June 23 – featuring David Byrne, Sly & The Family Stone, BB King and the death of the blues, The Monkees, Neil Young, Merle Haggard and more

End Of The Road festival: acts confirmed for the Uncut stage

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The acts appearing on the Uncut stage at this year's End Of The Road festival have been revealed. Jacco Gardner, Jane Weaver, Sam Amidon and Jessica Pratt are among 22 acts who'll be appearing on the Tipi Tent during the festival, which takes place between September 4-6 at Larmer Tree Gardens, Wilt...

The acts appearing on the Uncut stage at this year’s End Of The Road festival have been revealed.

Jacco Gardner, Jane Weaver, Sam Amidon and Jessica Pratt are among 22 acts who’ll be appearing on the Tipi Tent during the festival, which takes place between September 4-6 at Larmer Tree Gardens, Wiltshire.

A Q&A will also take place on-stage each day: check back here for updates.

Elsewhere at this year’s End Of The Road festival, Laura Marling, Ryley Walker and Low will join headliners My Morning Jacket, Sufjan Stephens and The War On Drugs.

You can find more details about tickets and line-up at the festival’s website.

End of the Road – Tipi Tent in association with Uncut line up:

FRIDAY
Jacco Gardner
Jane Weaver
R. Seiliog
Diagrams
Gulp
Andy Shauf
Meilyr Jones
Aero Flynn

SATURDAY
Euros Child
Kiran Leonard
Holy Crutches
Flo Morrissey
Stephen Steinbrink
Madisen Ward and The Mama Bear
Mark Wynn

Sunday
Sam Amidon
Julie Byrne
Jessica Pratt
Lisa O’Neill
Bernard and Edith
This is the Kit
Miracle Strip

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 July 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring the Rolling Stones, 13th Floor Elevators, Jim O’Rourke, Ringo Starr and more

Radiohead: new album update

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Jonny Greenwood has given a progress report on the new Radiohead album. During a recent interview with Dutch music website 3voor12, Greenwood confirmed that the band are working in the studio "in periods" and that restarting the process "took a lot of time." Consequence Of Sound report that the in...

Jonny Greenwood has given a progress report on the new Radiohead album.

During a recent interview with Dutch music website 3voor12, Greenwood confirmed that the band are working in the studio “in periods” and that restarting the process “took a lot of time.”

Consequence Of Sound report that the interview has since been translated by the Radiohead community on Reddit.

“We didn’t do anything together for too long, so restarting took a lot of time,” Greenwood said. “We’re working in periods now. This afternoon, Thom and I will work on a song we started yesterday, see what it will lead to.”

He went on to reveal that the band were re-visiting a 1996 track, “Lift“.

“What people don’t know is that there’s a very old song on each album, like ‘Nude’ on In Rainbows. We never found the right arrangement for that, until then. ‘Lift’ is just like that. When the idea is right, it stays right. It doesn’t really matter in which form.”

Watch Radiohead perform an early version of “Lift” live at Pinkpop Festival in 1996.

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 July 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring the Rolling Stones, 13th Floor Elevators, Jim O’Rourke, Ringo Starr and more

Ask Julien Temple!

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To coincide with the release of his new film The Ecstasy Of Wilko Johnson, the great documentary-maker Julien Temple is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the director? What are his memories of...

To coincide with the release of his new film The Ecstasy Of Wilko Johnson, the great documentary-maker Julien Temple is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the director?

What are his memories of filming David Bowie’s “Blue Jean” video?

How did he first meet the Sex Pistols?

Which aspect of the Kinks’ story is he most looking forward to telling in his forthcoming Kinks biopic, You Really Got Me?

Send up your questions by noon, Wednesday, July 1 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

The best questions, and Julien’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine.

Please include your name and location with your question.

The Ecstasy Of Wilko Johnson opensinn the UK on July 17

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 July 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring the Rolling Stones, 13th Floor Elevators, Jim O’Rourke, Ringo Starr and more

The Best Films Of 2015: Halftime report

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Following on from John's Best Albums Of 2015: Halftime Report, I thought I'd post my favourite films of the year so far. In keeping with John's list, these run in alphabetical order: though even with six months left to go, I suspect a good number of these will make it through to our final Films Of T...

21 She’s Funny That Way

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZyL4VBd4Dk

22 Timbuktu

23 Top 5

24 While We’re Young

25 Whiplash

John Lennon’s In His Own Write gets stage adaptation

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John Lennon's 1964 book In His Own Write is to be adapted for the stage. A production of the book - which consists of stories, scenes and poems - will debut at this year's Edinburgh Fringe festival. The project has received the full support and cooperation of Yoko Ono. Jonathan Glew of Baldynoggi...

John Lennon‘s 1964 book In His Own Write is to be adapted for the stage.

A production of the book – which consists of stories, scenes and poems – will debut at this year’s Edinburgh Fringe festival.

The project has received the full support and cooperation of Yoko Ono.

Jonathan Glew of Baldynoggin Productions, who is behind the production, told Examiner: “I’m happy to say that they (and Yoko) have been very gracious in accommodating all of my requests with regards to the production.”

The play will include rare footage of Lennon. “Most recently I was granted permission to use some little seen footage of John reciting a piece from the book for inclusion in our production. I have, of course, invited Yoko to come and see the show during its 22-show run in Edinburgh alongside other members of the Lennon estate, Paul and Ringo and John’s contemporaries.”

The hour-long production runs daily at the Voodoo Rooms, Edinburgh, from Saturday, August 8 to Sunday, August 30. You can find more details by clicking here.

Entry is free as part of the PBH Free Fringe.

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 July 2015 issue of Uncut is in shops now – featuring the Rolling Stones, 13th Floor Elevators, Jim O’Rourke, Ringo Starr and more

Paul Weller – Saturns Pattern

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Last May, Paul Weller explained how his writing processes have changed over the last few years. Sitting in a busy west London café, Weller told Uncut that the demands of a young family coupled with his own restless spirit had found him abandoning traditional songwriting methods in favour of less fa...

Last May, Paul Weller explained how his writing processes have changed over the last few years. Sitting in a busy west London café, Weller told Uncut that the demands of a young family coupled with his own restless spirit had found him abandoning traditional songwriting methods in favour of less familiar practices. “I needed to look for different ways of writing,” he outlined over the chatter of the lunchtime crowd. “A good song is a good song whichever way you do it. I know I can do it in the more traditional way. But I’ve also learned that there are other ways of doing it.”

Recently, these “other ways” have manifested themselves as creative sessions at Weller’s Black Barn studios in Ripley, Surrey where the nine songs on Saturns Pattern were formed. Weller is on a roll at the moment, and Saturns Pattern feels like the fourth in an ongoing series of experimental albums, beginning with 2008’s 22 Dreams and including 2010’s Wake Up The Nation and 2012’s Sonik Kicks. While those albums involved rewarding digressions into Krautrock, pastoral psychedelia, dub, freeform jazz and electronia, Saturns Pattern – Weller’s 12th solo album – is characterized by cut-ups and sound collages, built around riffs and grooves. There are fade outs and fade ins mid-song, vocals come heavily treated, instruments are strafed with sound effects; essentially, Weller is making a virtue of his processes here.

Such progressive thinking is evident in the first 60 seconds of the album’s opening track, “White Skies”, which shifts from an ambient intro to metallic-sounding guitar riffs, crashing “Kashmir”-style drums and electronically-treated vocals. The heavy lifting here has been done by the Amorphous Androgynous, who appear to have succeeded the Chemical Brothers as the go-to remixers for rock stars looking to free their minds: Noel Gallagher among them. Indeed, Gallagher once promised us an album produced by Amorphous Androgynous, but shelved it in favour of the pedestrian High Flying Birds. Weller himself worked on a further seven tracks with Amorphous Androgynous, but only “White Skies” make it onto the album. Whereas Gallagher’s decision implied a chronic reluctance to abandon a successful formula, in Weller’s case “White Skies” appears to be a catalyst for something more evolved and expansive.

Saturns Pattern” arrives on a sprightly piano refrain and uptempo bass lines, with Weller apparently embracing his inner astrologer, “You gotta clear the decks / It’s Saturn’s peak”. But there is a fake fade out, a treated harmonica and percussion loops; it’s hard not to draw the conclusion that Weller is willing to push any song into experimental territory, if only to see what happens. Even the rather pretty piano ballad “Going My Way” is spun out in unexpected directions. From its deceptively placid beginning, it’s animated with Beach Boys-style multi-tracked vocals and a pastoral folk interlude before guitars forcefully drive it towards a crescendo. “Long Time” continues the album’s momentum; it’s dense riffs recall Bowie’s “Suffragette City” while intriguingly, Black Barn’s long-serving studio manager Charles Rees is credited with “egg whisk”. Incidentally, “Long Time” also features slide guitar from the Strypes’ Josh McClorey, one of only a handful of guests on Saturns Pattern. Unlike the storied cast list on his recent records – Kevin Shields, Graham Coxon, Noel Gallagher and Bruce Foxton among them – this is comparatively low key business: McClorey, Syd Arthur’s Liam McGill and Raven Bush alongside old Jam cohort Steve Brookes.

Perhaps, though, the work done by co-producer Jan “Stan” Kybert – who also receives five music co-writes – shouldn’t be overlooked. A Black Barn veteran since 2002’s Illumination album, Kybert now seems to have been promoted to the role of chief creative foil previously occupied by Brendan Lynch and Simon Dine. If Kybert brings anything new to the party, it is a discrete refining of Weller’s anti-formula formula.

The album’s centerpiece is “Pick It Up”, an ambitious, 6 minute psych-soul opus that brings to mind Minnie Riperton’s “Les Fleurs” or the Rotary Connection. Guitars and Hammond swirl round a layered vocal chant – “Rise / As we / And we go / As we go / Rise”. If “Pick It Up” appears steeped in a kind of Sixties vernacular, it’s tempting to view “I’m Where I Should Be” as the 56-year-old Weller reflecting on matters closer to home. Unlike the impressionistic cut-up lyrics on the rest of the album, “I’m Where I Should Be” finds Weller adopting a more literal approach. “I know exactly why / I’m where I should be / Not trapped by the burden of parody”, he sings over a taut bassline and vaguely New Order-y guitars and synth. The summery “Phoenix” – “The blue of the sky / The cool of morning” – scoots along on chipper Northern Soul keys and tight grooves while Weller lays out an upbeat and positive message: “The birds and bees / The sun through the trees / There’s a scent in the air / And beauty everywhere / I find it”.

The albums last two songs, “In The Car” and “These City Streets”, share a thematic link – travel – but also the guitar work of Steve Brookes. Predictably, “In The Car” shifts from bluesy beginnings to a more full-on glam stomp via a brief folky stop-over. “I could spend my summer nights / Driving round the M25” he sings. “I’m self contained / And the music’s loud / No one can get in / And I don’t wanna get out”. Saturns Pattern closes with the 8 minute “These Streets”. Ostensibly a love song – “I look into your eyes / And I know why / I’m in love with you” – it is more an exercise in sustaining a consistent tone (moody, epic) than continuing any of the investigative compositional techniques on the rest of the album. “We still got a way to go…” Weller sings as the song fades out: a statement of his creative endeavour, perhaps, as much as anything else. Wherever next?

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner