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Pavement announce rarities compilation album

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Pavement have announced details of a new 30-track rarities compilation album, The Secret History Vol 1. The album, the first in a new series of five retrospective releases from the band, is on sale on August 14. This first volume focussed on material recorded around their debut album, Slanted And ...

Pavement have announced details of a new 30-track rarities compilation album, The Secret History Vol 1.

The album, the first in a new series of five retrospective releases from the band, is on sale on August 14.

This first volume focussed on material recorded around their debut album, Slanted And Enchanted. The tracklist includes B-sides, unreleased session track, John Peel session recordings and live renditions dating back to 1992.

A deluxe double vinyl edition of the release will contain essays by members Stephen Malkmus and Spiral Stairs.

The Secret History Vol 1 tracklist reads:

‘Sue Me Jack’
‘So Stark’ (You’re A Skyscraper)
‘Summer Babe’ (7” Version)
‘Mercy Snack: The Laundromat’
‘Baptiss Blacktick’
‘My First Mine’
‘Nothing Ever Happens’
‘Here’ (Alternate Mix)
‘Greenlander’
‘Circa 1762’ (Peel Session 1)
‘Kentucky Cocktail’ (Peel Session 1)
‘Secret Knowledge Of Backroads’ (Peel Session 1)
‘Here’ (Peel Session 1)
‘Rain Ammunition’ (Peel Session 2)
‘Drunks With Guns’ (Peel Session 2)
‘Ed Ames’ (Peel Session 2)
‘The List Of Dorms’ (Peel Session 2)
‘Conduit For Sale’ [Live Brixton 1992]
‘Fame Throwa’ [Live Brixton 1992]
‘Home’ [Live Brixton 1992]
‘Perfume V’ [Live Brixton 1992]
‘Summer Babe’ [Live Brixton 1992]
‘Frontwards’ [Live Brixton 1992]
‘Angel Carver Blues Mellow Jazz Docent’ [Live Brixton 1992]
‘Two States’ [Live Brixton 1992]
‘No Life Singed Her’ [Live Brixton 1992]
‘So Stark’ (You’re A Skyscraper) [Live Brixton 1992]
‘Box Elder’ [Live Brixton 1992]
‘Baby Yeah’ [Live Brixton 1992]
‘In The Mouth Of A Desert’ [Live Brixton 1992]

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

Grateful Dead exclusive: hear an unreleased version of “Viola Lee Blues”

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On September 18, The Grateful Dead release 30 Trips Around The Sun - a mammoth, 80-disc box set containing previously unreleased live performances from the Dead's archive. On the same date, the band will also release 30 Trips Around The Sun: The Definitive Live Story 1965-1995, a more modest four d...

On September 18, The Grateful Dead release 30 Trips Around The Suna mammoth, 80-disc box set containing previously unreleased live performances from the Dead’s archive.

On the same date, the band will also release 30 Trips Around The Sun: The Definitive Live Story 1965-1995, a more modest four disc set includes 30 unreleased performances – one from each concert in the boxed set.

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

To coincide with this momentous Dead news, we’re delighted to be able to share exclusively a track from these sets – a live version of “Viola Lee Blues” recorded at the band’s October 10, 1967 show at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Jimmy Page previews final Led Zeppelin reissues: “This is it.”

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Jimmy Page has been previewing the final batch of Led Zeppelin reissues. Deluxe editions of Presence, In Through the Out Door and Coda are due on July 31, 2015. Speaking at a press conference in the former Olympic Studios in Barnes, west London, Page officially closed the Zeppelin vault. "As far ...

Jimmy Page has been previewing the final batch of Led Zeppelin reissues.

Deluxe editions of Presence, In Through the Out Door and Coda are due on July 31, 2015.

Speaking at a press conference in the former Olympic Studios in Barnes, west London, Page officially closed the Zeppelin vault.

“As far as the studio side of things [goes], this is it,” said Page. “Unless something might pop up on international Record [Store] Day or something like that. But it will be a long way off.”

Page has already previewed a previously unheard track, “Sugar Mama”, from the Coda package.

Rolling Stone reports that Page expressed his satisfaction with the reissue campaign, saying, “As far as I’m concerned, I’ve done my job.”

He also discussed the amount of unofficially released live Zeppelin material, noting that with the substantial number of bootlegs in circulation, it seemed unlikely he would pursue a live project on the scale of the studio reissues.

“Looking at the whole bootleg scene and knowing how much live material had already come out, and pretty good stuff at that, dealing with the studio outtakes seemed to be a more satisfying project,” he said. “I knew the chronology and the quality of what was going to turn up so I could really visualize it a lot easier than all the [live] bootlegs that are out there. This is what needed to be done – the whole Led Zeppelin world in the studio needed to be dealt with properly and seriously.”

Asked what he’ll be doing now the reissue series is completed, Page said: “I won’t take it easy. I’ll be working on the guitar now, because that’s the next thing to be obsessive about.”

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

Beatles’ Abbey Road sessions made into musical

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A new musical chronicling The Beatles sessions at Abbey Road studios are to be re-created in a new musical showing albums such as Revolver and Sgt. Pepper’s were made. The show's director, Stig Edgren, told The Times, "It will be a musical documentary giving audiences an honest, respectful and ac...

A new musical chronicling The Beatles sessions at Abbey Road studios are to be re-created in a new musical showing albums such as Revolver and Sgt. Pepper’s were made.

The show’s director, Stig Edgren, told The Times, “It will be a musical documentary giving audiences an honest, respectful and accurate re-creation of how music history was made”.

The Times story reports that a replica of Abbey Road’s Studio Two will be built at London’s Royal Albert Hall for the production, which is set to open next April.

Edgren also insisted that actors will not impersonate The Beatles, adding: “I didn’t want it to be another lookalike show…We’re not trying to look like The Beatles. We [are] trying to sound like them. The idea is you’re watching them in recording session mode.”

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

Neil Young clashes with US Presidential candidate

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Neil Young had criticised US Presidential candidate Donald Trump for using his song, "Rockin' In The Free World", apparently without consent. Yesterday [June 16, 2015], Republican Trump announced he would run for President, using Young's 1989 track to launch his campaign. Rolling Stone reports tha...

Neil Young had criticised US Presidential candidate Donald Trump for using his song, “Rockin’ In The Free World“, apparently without consent.

Yesterday [June 16, 2015], Republican Trump announced he would run for President, using Young’s 1989 track to launch his campaign.

Rolling Stone reports that Young’s management company, Lookout, immediately issued a statement criticising Trump’s use of the song.

“Donald Trump was not authorized to use ‘Rockin’ in the Free World’ in his presidential candidacy announcement,” said the statement. “Neil Young, a Canadian citizen, is a supporter of Bernie Sanders for President of the United States of America.”

A spokesman for Trump replied, “Through a license agreement with [performance-rights organization] ASCAP, Mr. Trump’s campaign paid for and obtained the legal right to use Neil Young’s recording of ‘Rockin’ in the Free World’ at today’s event. Mr. Trump is a huge fan of Neil Young and his music and will continue to be regardless of Neil’s political views.”

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 Albums Of 2015: Halftime Report

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Someone pointed out to me on Twitter that this was due, so here are my favourites of the year so far (not, I should point out, a collective Uncut list), with some music to check out alongside nearly all of them. As you'll hopefully spot, I've listed them in alphabetical order: it seems a bit prematu...

61 Samba Toure – Gandadiko (Glitterbeat)

62 Trembling Bells – The Sovereign Self (Tin Angel)

63 Cath & Phil Tyler – The Song-Crowned King (Ferric Mordant)

64 Unknown Mortal Orchestra – Multi-Love (Jagjaguwar)

65 The Unthanks – Mount The Air (Rabble Rouser)

66 Sonny Vincent And Rocket From The Crypt – Vintage Piss (Swami)

67 Wolfgang Voigt – Rückverzauberung 10 (Kompakt)

68 Ryley Walker – Primrose Green (Dead Oceans)

69 Wand – Golem (In The Red)<

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fvp2dJc1Db8

70 Kamasi Washington – The Epic (Brainfeeder)

71 The Weather Station – Loyalty (Paradise Of Bachelors)

72 Matthew E White – Fresh Blood (Spacebomb/Domino)

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

The Clash’s debut would “fail miserably” says unearthed industry letter

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The Clash's debut album would "fail miserably", according to an industry note now unearthed. The letter was from Epic Records A&R executive Bruce Harris to punk fan Paul Dougherty, explaining why Epic weren't signing the group. Dougherty has now published the letter on his blog, Punk Before ...

The Clash‘s debut album would “fail miserably”, according to an industry note now unearthed.

The letter was from Epic Records A&R executive Bruce Harris to punk fan Paul Dougherty, explaining why Epic weren’t signing the group. Dougherty has now published the letter on his blog, Punk Before Punk.

Though Harris is clearly appreciative of the band, he compares the 1977 album’s production unfavourably with the same year’s Never Mind The Bollocks, Here’s The Sex Pistols record, calling the sound that of “an amateur act”.

“It’s not a valid artistic judgement to say that the production is deliberately shoddy,” Harris writes, “because this is new wave and new wave music doesn’t follow the same rules as other music, etc. This is a genuine copout. The Sex Pistols album, for instance, is produced properly and as a result sounds really strong and captures the band’s power.”

The band’s debut would be finally released in the US two years later in 1979, through Epic, but with considerable changes in the running order.

Read the letter in full:

November 29, 1977

Dear Paul:

Now that you’ve explained to me how the net works, let me tell you a little about how the mummy crumbles.

Unfortunately, A&R decisions are not based entirely on taste and musical preference. Hard to believe as you may find this, I personally am an avid Clash fan. My responsibility is not, however, to release records I like but rather records which I feel will bring profit into this company. (You may dismiss this kind of view as immoral or whatever but I would consider myself immoral to accept payment from CBS and not fulfill that obligation to the best of my ability. It would be easy for me to sit here and say I like the Clash, I like the Vibrators, I like the Adverts, I like Blondie, but that’s no accomplishment. Your presumption that releasing a Clash record would change the complexion of the American music marketplace, FM radio, press, etc. is a false one. From my experience in the music business, it seems clear to me that the Clash’s album would fail miserably from that point of view.

Also, it is important to note that the Clash’s album for all its quality (which is evident in the overwhelming lyrics, the blistering music and the feverish performance) is not at all matched by the level of production which is an enormous drawback. The band’s live performance is many times better than what is on this record and one has to question the artistic integrity of creating an inferior sounding album. It’s not a valid artistic judgement to say that the production is deliberately shoddy because this is new wave and new wave music doesn’t follow the same rules as other music, etc. This is a genuine copout. The Sex Pistols album, for instance, is produced properly and as a result sounds really strong and captures the band’s power. I believe the Clash can make better records than their first album and those are the records we should choose to bring to the American marketplace.

I have a very deep interest in making punk rock happen in the U.S. but I believe that only the finest quality product (like the Sex Pistols album) can achieve that end.

The failing does not lie with record companies. Your comments about radio are certainly right but if you take the thought one step further, I think you will see that it’s radio that’s blocking the progress here not record manufacturers. Sire Records is releasing a number of new wave albums, none of which have gotten much airplay or sold any records as a result. Personally I expect that this is partially due to the low quality of much of this product. On the other hand, like any new movement, punk will take time. Maybe its the Talking Heads second album that will happen, and maybe the Dead Boys will get a little better at what they are doing.

I believe the Clash are better than anyone in the field except the Sex Pistols and I have been very involved in guiding the production of their second album. I don’t want them to sound like Fleetwood Mac—I want them to sound like the Clash that they are and not an amateur act.

Your interest is marvelous and though we disagree, I really was glad to hear your voice rise up from the street telling me where to go. Hopefully, the Clash’s next album will be more right for us and we will be releasing it here. Meanwhile, you will be happy to know that it appears that Columbia Records will release the Vibrators album next year, our Blue Sky label will be releasing David Johansen’s solo album and Epic will release an album by a new group from England called Masterswitch. Inorder for the new wave to become a permanent one, it has to get rolling right.

Best regards,
Bruce Harris

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

Photo:  Juan Jesus Garcia

James Murphy reveals more about his New York ‘Subway Symphony’

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James Murphy has revealed more about his New York 'Subway Symphony'. The LCD Soundsystem creator is planning to fit out all the New York subway system turnstiles "to make music", with each station featuring a unique sound. Murphy is planning to have the first of his turnstiles installed by the en...

James Murphy has revealed more about his New York ‘Subway Symphony’.

The LCD Soundsystem creator is planning to fit out all the New York subway system turnstiles “to make music”, with each station featuring a unique sound.

Murphy is planning to have the first of his turnstiles installed by the end of the summer this year. Watch a video announcing the project below.

In a press release, Murphy said: “New York City is a beautiful, one-of-a-kind place, and the people who are willing to do what it takes to live here – deal with the crowds and the commotion and the noise – deserve a little sonic gift like this. I want to turn the cacophony of the subway into unique pieces of music. It might seem like a small thing, but that’s exactly the point. This is such an easy way to make this great place I call home even greater.”

However, there is still some doubt whether the project will go ahead, with the Metropolitan Transportation Authority telling the Gothamist: “We have heard from him, and as we’ve told him many times, we cannot do it… The tones are an ADA element for the visually impaired, and we won’t mess with them – much less take turnstiles out of service and risk disabling them for an art project. (It would be a very cool project, don’t get me wrong, but we can’t mess with turnstiles that handle 6 million customers a day for it.) As a condition of filming in the subway, we made them acknowledge that we can’t and won’t do it.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BONL43eKi50

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

Ride announce UK tour to celebrate 25 years of debut album Nowhere

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Ride have announced a UK tour, set to place in October 2015. The gigs will celebrate 25 years since the release of their influential debut album, Nowhere. The album was originally released on October 15, 1990 – 25 years to the day that the reunited shoegazers play Liverpool's O2 Academy – and ...

Ride have announced a UK tour, set to place in October 2015.

The gigs will celebrate 25 years since the release of their influential debut album, Nowhere.

The album was originally released on October 15, 1990 – 25 years to the day that the reunited shoegazers play Liverpool’s O2 Academy – and featured fan favourites such as “Seagull”, “Polar Bear” and “Vapour Trail”.

Ride reunited earlier this year, with their first large gig taking place at California’s Coachella festival.

At the end of May, the group headlined London’s Roundhouse, their first full show in the capital for decades.

The band will play:

Leeds O2 Academy (October 11)
London O2 Academy Brixton (14)
Liverpool O2 Academy (15)
Bristol Anson Rooms (17)
Newcastle O2 Academy (18)
Edinburgh Corn Exchange (19)
Nottingham Rock City (21)
Birmingham Institute (22)

My Morning Jacket – The Waterfall

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In the four years since My Morning Jacket’s last record, 2011’s excellent Circuital, the Louisville band’s singer, songwriter and spirit-guide Jim James has assumed a more visible, perhaps even vaguely statesmanlike status in the landscape of American music. In 2013 James released his first s...

In the four years since My Morning Jacket’s last record, 2011’s excellent Circuital, the Louisville band’s singer, songwriter and spirit-guide Jim James has assumed a more visible, perhaps even vaguely statesmanlike status in the landscape of American music.

In 2013 James released his first solo album, Regions Of Light And Sound Of God, to widespread acclaim. Late last year he was one of the select group of musicians – among them Elvis Costello and Rhiannon Giddens – handpicked by T-Bone Burnett to bring the ‘new’ Basement Tapes project, Lost On The River, to fruition. James has, in effect, undergone a promotion up the ranks, from Championship contender to mid-table Premiership mainstay.

Such shifts in the internal dynamic of a band can often prove troublesome, but My Morning Jacket’s seventh studio album betrays no tell-tale signs of disharmony. The exact opposite, in fact. Recorded at Stinson Beach, a remote idyll an hour north of San Francisco, The Waterfall turns easily like the seasons: from light to dark, soft to heavy, from heady psych and heavy prog to 80s MTV-rock, fluting country, steamy R&B and soul. Through it all runs an ingrained psychedelic streak which is organic rather than synthetic, James and Co tripping out on the glory of a sunset, a beach at dawn, a mile-high mountain view.

The sense of California seeping through the pores and into the bones of this music is at its strongest on “Like A River”. With its skipping acoustic guitar figure, skittish rhythm and cascading harmonies redolent of The Byrds’ “Renaissance Fair”, it mainlines its vibe direct from Monterey. On “Spring (Among The Living)”, James emerges, as though reborn, from a hard winter – “Didn’t think I’d make it” – with a driving slab of pastoral psych rock. Harnessing a weighty but soulful groove, after six minutes it climaxes in the kind of high-stakes vocal sparring which wouldn’t sound out of place on Let It Bleed.

The Waterfall is, then, perfectly attuned to its immediate surroundings, but it also seeks to channel a more all-encompassing spirit. Long beholden to TM and the mysteries of the Universe with a capital U, James tells Uncut that the album was propelled by the feeling that, cosmically, “one chapter has ended, the page has been turned to start the next one, but nothing has been written down yet”. This is the message of surging opener “Believe (Nobody Knows)”, the words revelling in the promise of the coming flux, the music falling somewhere between the rush of The Who’s “Baba O’Riley” and the cheap but potent thrill of Journey’s “Any Way You Want It”.

Several other songs draw unironically on classic rock motifs of the 70s and 80s. “Big Decisions” is an almost perfect retro-rock confection, with its crunching power-pop riff and huge, radio-friendly chorus. Perhaps honouring the fact that Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours was recorded down the road in Sausalito, “In Its Infancy” bounces between sleek, sunshine-y pop and more rhythmically complex blues-rock, as though it were a cut-and-shut experiment in welding together “Dreams” and “The Chain”. “Compound Fracture” and “Thin Line” are embedded in plush R&B, nodding to Hall & Oates, the Isley Brothers and Bowie’s Young Americans. Lounging on a warm sound bed of analogue synths and fuzzy guitars, James’s ever-adaptable voice slinks around appealingly in falsetto.

It’s not all cosmic, slightly woolly theorizing. The album’s two most straightforward, unabashed musical moments are also the most lyrically direct, and reserved for affairs of the heart. “Get The Point” is a beautifully unaffected back-porch twinkle. Over supple finger picking, slide guitar and pattering drums, James’s intimate vocal bids a warm but firm farewell to a lover. The sentiment finds a bookend in the closing “Only Memories Remain”, another goodbye song in which “the names and places have all been changed, but the identity remains the same.” A sparse, soulful slow-burn, James channels Lennon’s “Jealous Guy” over the lush, unhurried groove, clipped guitar lines and bittersweet strings.

Like the nine tracks which precede it, the song’s component parts are both reassuringly familiar yet never less than distinctive. It may be entirely fanciful to suggest that The Waterfall soundtracks the shift from one great cultural age to the next, but it does possess a beguiling Janus-like quality, at once looking to the past and gazing into the future with open-hearted warmth and curiosity.

Q&A
JIM JAMES
You could easily have called the album From Stinson Beach…
We try to switch it up every time we make a record. Do it somewhere different, and get the vibe of the place into the record. Stinson Beach was like living on another planet. I felt like it was on the moon. Everything is so grand, you feel like you’re jutting out into space. There are giant redwood trees, you’re right next to the ocean, you can climb up to the top of a mountain and watch the sunset on the beach. Every day we were really impacted by the power of the air, it felt special to us. We spent two months there – living, playing and recording. There was no rush, no pressure to complete it. It was real free and fun.

Style-wise, this record is more eclectic than ever.
Music is freedom. It’s there for every occasion, and the idea of limiting your musical experience is, to me, absurd. You’re always growing and learning, and hopefully you don’t repeat the same mistakes – at least make different mistakes, and make them with good intentions. At the end of day for us, we’re having so much fun doing it, I really don’t care what other people’s opinions are. Who fucking cares?

Your personal profile is higher than ever. Does that impact on the band?
We have a pretty free and open environment where we’re encouraged to do whatever we want to do while the band isn’t working. It enables everyone to explore stuff and get their ya-yas out, and when we come back together it’s always a warm feeling of comfort and togetherness and home. We really value the freedom that we have. It creates more of a bond.

INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

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!

Pete Townshend’s Quadrophenia upset

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Pete Townshend's Classic Quadrophenia album has been excluded from the Official UK Classical Chart. According to a statement, Townshend’s ‘symphonised’ version of The Who’s album has sold enough copies needed to secure the No.1 position in the Classical Charts. However, the orchestral rec...

Pete Townshend‘s Classic Quadrophenia album has been excluded from the Official UK Classical Chart.

According to a statement, Townshend’s ‘symphonised’ version of The Who’s album has sold enough copies needed to secure the No.1 position in the Classical Charts.

However, the orchestral record has not been accepted into the Classical Chart, due to the fact that the original material is rock music.

The album, which was released on Monday, has reached No. 32 in the UK Official Album Chart.

On discovering his exclusion from the Classical Chart last week, Townshend expressed his disappointment:

“So musical snobbery in the “classical” elite is still alive & kicking then? F**k ’em. There’s a huge team behind this album, entirely rooted in the practical world of recorded classical music, who deserve better than this petty slap-down. I know I’m a rock dinosaur and I’m happy to be one, but the team on Classic Quadrophenia are all young, creative and brilliant.”

Despite the work being disallowed from the UK Classical Chart, Townshend hopes Classic Quadrophenia will go on to become a regular part of the orchestral repertoire and boost attendance at classical concerts:

“A lot of major symphony orchestras are in trouble because their audience is getting old and the younger audiences prefer softer stuff, such as film soundtrack music,” he explains. “I think that Quadrophenia would reinvigorate their audiences and bring in people who might not otherwise go to see a symphony orchestra perform without lights and fireworks and a movie screen.”

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!

Van Morrison: knighthood “a huge honour”

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Van Morrison has released a statement following the news that he has been awarded an knighthood in the Queen's birthday honors. His knighthood has been granted for "services to the music industry and to tourism in Northern Ireland". In a statement on his website, Morrison wrote, "Throughout my car...

Van Morrison has released a statement following the news that he has been awarded an knighthood in the Queen’s birthday honors.

His knighthood has been granted for “services to the music industry and to tourism in Northern Ireland”.

In a statement on his website, Morrison wrote, “Throughout my career I have always preferred to let my music speak for me and it is a huge honour to now have that body of work recognised in this way. I would like to take this opportunity to thank all the fans who have supported me on my musical journey.”

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!

Hear Sufjan Stevens perform previously-unreleased track “Harsh Noise”

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Sufjan Stevens has premiered a previously unreleased track, "Harsh Noise". The track was composed for a collaborative music project, One Night Stand, arranged by cellist Gasper Claus. The event took place in Brooklin in 2012, and featured artists including Stevens and The National’s Bryce Dessner...

Sufjan Stevens has premiered a previously unreleased track, “Harsh Noise“.

The track was composed for a collaborative music project, One Night Stand, arranged by cellist Gasper Claus. The event took place in Brooklin in 2012, and featured artists including Stevens and The National’s Bryce Dessner and members of The Men.

“Harsh Noise” will appear on a new double-LP document of the night which will be available June 30 as a limited edition double-LP, called One Night Stand, through Microcultures.

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!

Ginger Baker: “I don’t think Led Zeppelin filled the void that Cream left”

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Ginger Baker has criticised Led Zeppelin - in particular drummer John Bonham - in a new interview with Forbes. Asked whether he considered Zeppelin to be a good band who came up in Cream's wake, Baker explained, "Jimmy's [Page] a good player. I don’t think Led Zeppelin filled the void that Cream ...

Ginger Baker has criticised Led Zeppelin – in particular drummer John Bonham – in a new interview with Forbes.

Asked whether he considered Zeppelin to be a good band who came up in Cream’s wake, Baker explained, “Jimmy’s [Page] a good player. I don’t think Led Zeppelin filled the void that Cream left, but they made a lot of money. I probably like about five percent of what they did – a couple of things were really cool. What I don’t like is the heavy bish-bash, jing-bap, jing-bash bullshit.”

Asked for his thoughts on John Bonham, Baker said “Years ago, John said, ‘There are two drummers in rock and roll, Ginger Baker and me’. There’s no way John was anywhere near what I am. He wasn’t a musician. A lot of people don’t realize I studied. I can write music. I used to write big band parts in 1960, ’61. I felt that if I was a drummer, I needed to learn to read drum music. I was so good at side reading, a guy in one of the big bands told me to get two books. I studied them at the same time. One was about the rules of basic harmony, the other how to break them all [laughs].”

Baker also voiced strong criticisms of heavy metal, calling it “incredibly repulsive”.

““I’ve seen where Cream is sort of held responsible for the birth of heavy metal. These people that dress up in spandex trousers with all the extraordinary makeup – I find it incredibly repulsive, always have. I’ve seen where Cream is sort of held responsible for the birth of heavy metal. Well, I would definitely go for aborting [laughs].

“I loathe and detest heavy metal. I think it is an abortion. A lot of these guys come up and say, ‘Man, you were my influence, the way you thrashed the drums’. They don’t seem to understand I was thrashing in order to hear what I was playing. It was anger, not enjoyment – and painful. I suffered on stage because of that [high amplifier] volume crap. I didn’t like it then, and like it even less now.”

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

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!

Hear Beck’s new single, “Dreams”

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Beck has released a new single, "Dreams", his first new material since 2014's Grammy-winning Morning Phase. In an interview on Los Angeles radio station Alt.98.7, Beck confirmed the song would appear on his forthcoming album. Speaking about the album, Beck said, “It started out as a heavy garag...

Beck has released a new single, “Dreams“, his first new material since 2014’s Grammy-winning Morning Phase.

In an interview on Los Angeles radio station Alt.98.7, Beck confirmed the song would appear on his forthcoming album.

Speaking about the album, Beck said, “It started out as a heavy garage rock thing and became much more of a dance — some kind of hybrid.”

The single is available on iTunes.

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!

Uncut’s 50 best singer-songwriter albums

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Back in our December 2013 issue (Take 199), the Uncut team took on the emotional task of compiling a Top 50 of the most powerful, confessional singer-songwriter albums. From Tim Hardin 1 to Once I Was An Eagle (in chronological order, that is)... are you ready to be heartbroken? ____________________...

46 Josh T Pearson
Last Of the Country Gentlemen
(Mute, 2011)

The Texan son of a preacher was living illegally in Berlin, his career stalled, when the failure of his marriage prompted an emotional and artistic spasm. Before fleeing to Paris, he spent two days in the studio, documenting his torment. The songs are as tough to listen to as they are emotionally honest; the hurt is only partly soothed by the grandiosity of Pearson’s language. He’s vicious to his ex on “Sweetheart, I Ain’t Your Christ”, though he’s just as hard on himself. The process was cathartic: “It really burned something out of me,” Pearson reflected.

____________________________
47 Sharon Van Etten
Tramp
(Jagjaguwar, 2012)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UnOe6QFyvts

As a student in Tennessee, New Jersey songwriter Van Etten was trapped in a psychologically abusive relationship, an experience that has permeated her three albums to date. But she only ever reveals awful details to fuel her self-growth, and on Tramp, steeled by raucous production, Van Etten sounds like she’s finally standing upright. “I want my scars to help and heal,” she sings on “All I Can”. “I’m biting my lip as confidence is speaking to me/I loosen my grip from my palm, put it on your knee,” on “Give Out”. It’s a small gesture, but a meaningful one.

____________________________
48 John Murry
The Graceless Age
(Rubyworks, 2013)

Murry told Uncut earlier this year that his debut solo album was “certainly autobiographical – perhaps insanely so given our modern aversion to reality and truth.” Central to the story arc is his struggle with heroin, documented on the 10-minute centrepiece, “Little Coloured Balloons”, which details Murry’s near fatal overdose in San Francisco’s Mission District. On this song, and several others (“Things We Lost In The Fire”, “Southern Sky”), The Graceless Age is also an appeal for forgiveness directed at Murry’s estranged wife Lori and their young daughter: “You say this ain’t what I am,” he sings to them both, “but this is what I do.

____________________________
49 Alela Diane
About Farewell
(Rusted Blue, 2013)

The fifth album by the Portland-based singer was written in a fortnight, following the realisation that her marriage to guitarist Tom Bevitori was over. Diane refuses to take refuge in metaphor – the language is as clear and stark as the accompaniment, tracing the arc of a relationship from its unromantic beginnings in “Hazel Street”, taking in the snowbound revelation of “Colorado Blue”, the singer with “one foot out the door” on the title track, and the two road musicians marking time in “Before The Leaving”. By the end “Rose & Thorn”, with its cry of “Oh! The mess I’ve made…”, it feels not unlike leafing through a discarded diary.

____________________________
50 Laura Marling
Once I Was An Eagle
(Rough Trade, 2013)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jxP_crjAg-s

An artist whose sensibilities cleave remarkably close to Joni Mitchell’s, Marling recorded her fourth album on the cusp of leaving for LA, with a failed love affair trailing in her wake. The result is a dramatic reckoning with past and future, and a character study of Marling and her ex: the “I”, the “eagle”, in the breathless opening suite feels clearly autobiographical, while the “you”, the “dove”, the “freewheeling troubadour”, she is singing to is similarly hewed from real life. Not quite as straightforward as a break-up record, Once I Was An Eagle begins as a full-blooded reliving of a broken-down relationship before coolly addressing the long-term ramifications.

Written by Rob Hughes, John Lewis, Damien Love, Alastair McKay, Andrew Mueller, Bud Scoppa, Laura Snapes, Neil Spencer, Terry Staunton, Graeme Thomson, Luke Torn

Richard Thompson: “I do some good stuff, but I know I’m capable of being mediocre”

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Richard Thompson discusses his latest album, recorded with Wilco's Jeff Tweedy, in the new issue of Uncut, dated July 2015 and out now. The singer-songwriter and guitarist reveals what it was like being produced by Tweedy on Still, and discusses his sometimes critical attitude towards his back cata...

Richard Thompson discusses his latest album, recorded with Wilco‘s Jeff Tweedy, in the new issue of Uncut, dated July 2015 and out now.

The singer-songwriter and guitarist reveals what it was like being produced by Tweedy on Still, and discusses his sometimes critical attitude towards his back catalogue.

“I don’t think you have to be a perfectionist to be unsatisfied with what you do,” he replies when asked about his previous work.

“I really do think I do some good stuff – I have a certain amount of self-belief, but I know I am capable of being mediocre, too.

“It’s something you have to ask yourself all the time: how am I doing? I am not good at being commercial; I am not good at being Brian Wilson or The Traveling Wilburys.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

The 20th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

OK so I'm going to refrain from adding those annoying [REDACTED] entries into the playlist from now on, after some justifiable ridicule last week. I can, though, unveil one album that I've been evasive about for a while: The Arcs' "Yours, Dreamily," which is by some distance my favourite Dan Auerbac...

OK so I’m going to refrain from adding those annoying [REDACTED] entries into the playlist from now on, after some justifiable ridicule last week. I can, though, unveil one album that I’ve been evasive about for a while: The Arcs’ “Yours, Dreamily,” which is by some distance my favourite Dan Auerbach project since the Dr John album.

Elsewhere I can massively recommend this Phil Cook album, which I would glibly suggest fills a slot as this year’s “Lateness Of Dancers”; glibly because Cook has been a critical part of the Hiss Golden Messenger family these past few years (you can hear him on the new live set, below), besides being one-third of Megafaun and working on a bunch more of my favourite recent albums by Frazey Ford, Matthew E White and the Justin Vernon-fronted Shouting Matches. “Southland Mission” has a lot of Ry Cooder and The Staples Singers about it, and I suspect I’ll be banging on about it all summer.

Also Angel Deradoorian, once of Dirty Projectors, has finally followed up her amazing “Mind Raft” EP from God knows how long ago; and some heroic Twitter activity yesterday, following my request for info about Phish, brought “Down With Disease” to my attention. Fellow Phish neophytes should at least try to tough out the first five minutes or so: after that, it gets surprisingly rewarding.

Yesterday I hit 5,000 followers on Twitter, and the whole Phish escalation was a great example of what a rewarding community it can be. Someone suggested I celebrate by posting a Best Of 2015: Halftime Report, which struck me as an excellent idea. I’ll try and do that early next week. Until then, thanks, as ever, for reading.

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

1 Phil Cook – Southland Mission (Thirty Tigers)

2 Chris Connolly – Alameda (Caldo Verde)

3 The Cairo Gang – Goes Missing (God?)

4 Ultimate Painting – Green Lanes (Trouble In Mind)

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

6 Jarvis Cocker – 20 Golden Greats (Red Bull Music Academy)

7 Adrian Younge/Ghostface Killah – Twelve Reasons To Die II (Linear Labs)

8 Beirut – No No No (4AD)

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

10 Various Artists – Musique Non Stop: A Tribute To Kraftwerk (EMI)

11 Todd Rundgren/Emil Nikolaisen/Hans-Peter Lindstrøm – Put Your Arms Around Me (Stereolab/The High Llamas Remix) (Smalltown Supersound)

12 The Arcs – Yours, Dreamily, (Nonesuch)

13 Ezra Furman – Perpetual Motion People (Bella Union)

14 Seven Davis Jr – Universes (Ninja Tune)

15 Deradoorian – The Exploding Flower Planet (Anticon)

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

16 The Deslondes – The Deslondes (New West)

Read my Deslondes interview and hear their music here

17 Black Dirt Oak/Jantar – Presage (MIE)

18 Pigeons – The Bower (MIE)

19 Various Artists – Gnaoua: Festival D’Essaouira (No Label)

20 Hiss Golden Messenger – 2015-06-02 Music Hall of Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY (www.nyctaper.com)

21 Laura Cannell – Beneath Swooping Talons (Front And Follow)

22 Phish – Down With Disease (Star Lake 98) (Jemp)

Tom Russell – The Rose Of Roscrae

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A songwriter, painter, essayist and thriller writer, Tom Russell could never be described as unambitious. Among his exceptional back catalogue of driving country, folk and sand-speckled Tex-Mex ballads, Russell has released a couple of albums – The Man From God Knows Where (1999) and Hotwalker (20...

A songwriter, painter, essayist and thriller writer, Tom Russell could never be described as unambitious. Among his exceptional back catalogue of driving country, folk and sand-speckled Tex-Mex ballads, Russell has released a couple of albums – The Man From God Knows Where (1999) and Hotwalker (2005) – which used a combination of original compositions, spoken word, guest voices, refrains and folk recordings to explore aspects of America’s past. Rose Of Roscrea completes this cinematic trio, telling the story of an Irish vagabond on the loose in the America West, chased by sheriffs and dreams of home, as he flits from Mexico to Canada through prairie, prison and fairground. This is Russell’s take on how the West was won by “Irish drunks, ex-slaves and Mexicans”.

It is an epic tale, a blend of Rodgers & Hammerstein, Bertolt Brecht, Cormac McCarthy and Louis L’Amour, thick with references to American history, music and myth as well as a John Ford-style appreciation of the Old Country. The roll call of guest stars is immense – contributors include Johnny Cash, Jimmy Dale Gilmore, Ramblin’ Jack Elliott, Guy Clark, Gretchen Peters, Augie Meyers, Walt Whitman, Joe Ely, Tex Ritter, Leadbelly – some dredged from old recordings, others singing or speaking to fill out the story. Snippets of traditional songs (“St James Hospital”, “Sam Hall”, “Ain’t No More Cane On The Brazos”, “The Unfortunate Rake”) add atmosphere and provide context for 25 or so original compositions.

Russell is a hell of a songwriter, and here are several fantastic examples of his craft: “Johnny Behind The Deuce”, a rollicking country anthem; “Rose Of Roscrae”, a gloriously sentimental Irish ballad; “He Wasn’t A Bad Kid, When He Was Sober”, a brilliant rocker; the southern boogie of “Doin’ Hard Time In Texas”; and the gospel love song “Resurrection Mountain”. All told, it’s an awful lot to listen to, sprawling over two albums and featuring so many locations and characters it can be hard to keep track of what’s happening. But the scope is majestic, the ambition outrageous and the music magnificent. A unique accomplishment.

Beck teases new music…

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Beck might be about to release new music. The artist has reportedly been working on a new album, the follow-up to his Grammy-winning Morning Phase. Now, he has taken to Twitter to post what appears to be the artwork for an upcoming release, "Dreams". It is unclear whether this is simply a new trac...

Beck might be about to release new music.

The artist has reportedly been working on a new album, the follow-up to his Grammy-winning Morning Phase. Now, he has taken to Twitter to post what appears to be the artwork for an upcoming release, “Dreams“.

It is unclear whether this is simply a new track or something more substantial, such as a full-length album.

However, Kyle Smith – the musical director of the Pittsburgh radio station WYEP – has Tweeted to announce that the station will air a new Beck song on Monday (June 15, 2015).