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.
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?
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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)
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)
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 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.”
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.
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 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).
Motörhead have released a new song, "Thunder & Lightning".
The track is taken from their forthcoming new album, Bad Magic.
The album is due for release on August 28, 2015 through UDR Music/Motörhead Records, with a 40th anniversary tour to follow.
Bad Magic is the band’s 22nd studio albu...
Motörhead have released a new song, “Thunder & Lightning“.
The track is taken from their forthcoming new album, Bad Magic.
The album is due for release on August 28, 2015 through UDR Music/Motörhead Records, with a 40th anniversary tour to follow.
Bad Magic is the band’s 22nd studio album, recorded with producer Cameron Webb.
The albums contains a cover of the Rolling Stones’ “Sympathy For The Devil” while Queen’s Brian May guests on “The Devil”.
Sitting on a Los Angeles hillside in 1967, trying to make sense of the world as it spun out of control before his eyes, Arthur Lee eventually came to a dazed conclusion, of sorts. “Life goes on here day after day,” he sang in “The Red Telephone”. “I don't know if I'm living or if I'm suppo...
IT’S HARVEST TIME!
Four more Mick Head songs in the spirit of The Magical World…
SHACK
Al’s Vacation
GHETTO 1991
A wonderful one-off single that could be described, just about credibly, as insouciant skiffle. Acoustic guitars and bongos figure prominently, while the unadorned production properly showcases Head’s craftsmanship for the first time. Track it down on the 2007 compilation, Time Machine.
SHACK
Mood Of The Morning
MARINA 1995
The jazzy snap of this Waterpistol highlight is a precursor of what was to come on The Magical World. What begins as an acoustic stroll, however, gradually becomes psychedelically intense, with John Head’s lead guitar line taking a wayward and inspired path through his brother’s song.
SHACK
The Captain’s Table
LONDON 1999
A logical enough attempt to manoeuvre Shack into the Britrock elite of the late ‘90s, HMS Fable is the most rumbustious Head album. Delicate moments remain, though, none greater than this baroque fever dream, very much in the vein of “Queen Matilda”.
MICHAEL HEAD & THE RED ELASTIC BAND
Lucinda Byre
VIOLETTE 2013
The gorgeous highlight of the “Artorius Revisited” EP. “The song starts in a café having some acid,” Head told Uncut in 2013. “It’s about getting to the end of Bold Street – if you can. Even if you’re not tripping, there’s no way you can, without bumping into people you’ve not seen for 10 years.”
Ornette Coleman has died aged 85.
He suffered a cardiac arrest at home in Manhattan, according to The New York Times.
One of the major innovators of the free jazz movement, Coleman's debut album, Something Else!!!!, was recorded with trumpeter Don Cherry, drummer Billy Higgins, bassist Don Payne...
Ornette Coleman has died aged 85.
He suffered a cardiac arrest at home in Manhattan, according to The New York Times.
One of the major innovators of the free jazz movement, Coleman’s debut album, Something Else!!!!, was recorded with trumpeter Don Cherry, drummer Billy Higgins, bassist Don Payne and pianist Walter Norris.
A year later, he recorded his breakthrough album, The Shape Of Jazz To Come.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xxUXu8GmUC8
Coleman’s work outside jazz led to several interesting collaborations. He played twice with the Grateful Dead while Jerry Garcia played guitar on Coleman’s 1988 album, Virgin Beauty. Coleman additionally collaborated with Pat Metheny.
Coleman also appeared on Lou Reed‘s 2003 album, The Raven. Reed said, “I had Ornette Coleman play on my song ‘Guilty‘. He did seven versions – all different and all amazing and wondrous.” Four of those versions are available to stream on Reed’s website.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KehkiTw_BI0
Coleman won the Pulitzer Prize for music for his 2007 album Sound Grammar; that same year he received a Grammy lifetime achievement award.
In 1983, Coleman’s hometown of Fort Worth, Texas declared September 29th as “Ornette Coleman Day”.
His last album, 2014’s New Vocabulary, was another collaboration, this time with young NYC musicians, Jordan McLean (trumpet), Amir Ziv (drums), and Adam Holzman (piano).
King Crimson have added new dates to their UK tour in September.
The band have second nights in Manchester, Birmingham and Edinburgh to their itinerary.
In 2013, Uncut broke the news of the band's return to active service.
The current line-up is: Gavin Harrison (drums), Bill Rieflin (drums), Pat ...
King Crimson have added new dates to their UK tour in September.
The band have second nights in Manchester, Birmingham and Edinburgh to their itinerary.
In 2013, Uncut broke the news of the band’s return to active service.
The current line-up is: Gavin Harrison (drums), Bill Rieflin (drums), Pat Mastelotto (drums), Tony Levin (bass and vocals), Mel Collins (Sax, flute), Jakko Jakszyk (guitar, vocals) and Robert Fripp (guitar).
August 31: Friars, Aylesbury Waterside Theatre September 1: Friars, Aylesbury Waterside Theatre September 3: St.David’s Hall, Cardiff September 5: Dome Concert Hall, Brighton September 7: Hackney Empire, London September 8: Hackney Empire, London September 11: Lowry, Manchester September 14: Symphony Hall, Birmingham September 17: Usher Hall, Edinburgh
Morrissey has claimed that "I officially died for nine minutes."
In an interview with Alternative Nation, he cites a 2013 incident on tour in South America, where he was hospitalised and forced to cancel a series of dates.
Asked what places he's looking forward to visiting on his upcoming American...
Morrissey has claimed that “I officially died for nine minutes.”
In an interview with Alternative Nation, he cites a 2013 incident on tour in South America, where he was hospitalised and forced to cancel a series of dates.
Asked what places he’s looking forward to visiting on his upcoming American tour, the singer replied: “I’m also always excited to be in South America, even though the last visit to Peru gave me food poisoning and I officially died for nine minutes. That was fun?”
Elsewhere in the interview, Morrissey voices his criticisms of Barack Obama, saying: “Obama has mystified me because he doesn’t appear to support black people when they need it most. Ferguson being an obvious example. If Michael Brown had instead been one of Obama’s daughters, I don’t think Obama would be insisting that the nation support the so-called security forces! How can they be called security forces if they make the people feel insecure? Obama seems to be white inside.”
Neil Young has debuted another new track from his forthcoming album, The Monsanto Years.
"Wolf Moon" features Young and Promise Of The Real; the accompanying video was shot at the Teatro Theater in Oxnard, California, where the album was recorded.
Last month, the band released a video for "A Rock ...
Neil Young has debuted another new track from his forthcoming album, The Monsanto Years.
“Wolf Moon” features Young and Promise Of The Real; the accompanying video was shot at the Teatro Theater in Oxnard, California, where the album was recorded.
One of my favourite records of the year so far has been the self-titled debut album by The Deslondes, a New Orleans band who mix a certain rowdy take on country with the R&B heritage of their hometown. I recently sent over a bunch of questions for them, and received these very thorough and fasci...
How easy is it to run a band as a democracy, with so many singers and songwriters in the ranks?
SAM: Every band has its challenges… operating as a co-operative of five equal members has its own set of kinks that have to be ironed out. It feels rewarding and worth it for everyone involved, though, when we’re all creatively invested in the project and each individual voice or idea is respected. It also keeps us integrating new ideas… Everyone has something important to bring to the table, and that’s exciting.
RILEY: Democracy just seemed natural for this band because we all have our own priorities so to come to a majority rules decision is sometimes the only way to come to agreement. We also did not become a band to be a business, at least not at first, so there was never any worry of how anybody else was doing it, we just did what seemed equal and fair to us.
Notwithstanding the way the album sounds, there aren’t that many references to New Orleans in the lyrics, “Still Someone” and “Out On The Rise” excepted. Was that a conscious decision?
SAM: I don’t believe that was a conscious decision. In many ways, this album feels like a homage to New Orleans and specifically our community of friends and musicians who live there. I didn’t feel the need to name drop New Orleans or have it be the lyrical focus. It’s in there though, just naturally, ya know?
RILEY: No it wasn’t really a conscience decision. Some of these songs were written on the road or at different times, years and places but mostly came together as songs in New Orleans.
A lot of the lyrics, written by all of you, betray a real love of classic simplicity, a sort of historically resonant and direct language that could maybe be seen, at times, as cliché. Would you agree?
SAM: I certainly agree that we have a lot of respect for simplicity, and timeless direct language. Whether or not that is seen as cliche is up to the listener. Hank Williams and Woody Guthrie are two of my favourite song writers and they wrote things as simple and straight forward as they come… Boiled big ideas down into their essence so that people from all walks of life could relate to their music. I have a tremendous respect for writers who are able to do this. As a side note, I just recently stumbled on my old High School poetry notebook, and if you were to make an attempt to read/decipher a page from it – you’d soon realize it hasn’t always been so simple. Hah, I had good reason for changing my style up a bit.
RILEY: No, I never thought of that as cliche. Not every song needs to be a ballad that tells every tiny detail, though I do enjoy those, and also enjoy saying more with less.
CAMERON: Our lyrics express our feelings and experiences. It’s often said that cliches are cliched because they speak to something true about the human condition, and classic lyrics can not only express emotions but also point listeners towards our influences and reference shared cultural experiences.
How do you feel about contemporary country music? Do you ever worry that your love for ’50s and ’60s music and culture might make you seem anachronistic?
SAM: I’ve thought about this quite a bit and really we just make the music we hear and feel and there’s no use in worrying about what people think. Our songs are modern songs about the times we live in and our own experiences. If we were a cover band I’d be more concerned with being written off as anachronistic I just can’t get into most contemporary country music lyrically or sonically. Of course, there are some exceptions and some exceptional up and coming artists in that field, but fitting into that seen has never been a priority.
RILEY: Had to look that word up. Haha no, I heard once that influence and repetition can be defined as style. I think we will always have a love for old music and new from all corners of the world and walks of life. In the US there is definitely an appreciation for rural culture that is on the rise so there is your country music/old time but I think it’s up to the individual to project what they have soaked up and feel closest to at the time. There’s also a lot of people who are just into the history of American music from the chart toppers to the guy who only made one 45 that you never heard of till you stumbled upon it in a junk shop. I guess let ’em talk if they think it’s cliché, makes no difference to me, I think musicians will do what they will.
DAN: I’d say we like all kinds of music, contemporary or not. We don’t worry about being anachronistic because we consider ourselves and our music to be contemporary. Whether or not others agree with that is up to them, and we’re not losing any sleep over that.
That being said, we do admittedly cherry-pick certain musical ideas and concepts from the past, including the ’50s and ’60s. There were some good ideas that came about then, and we’re gonna run with them. You being a journalist are also probably influenced by journalistic styles from the ’50s and ’60s, but I wouldn’t consider you to be a “throwback” if I noticed them in your writing.
Both fascinated and troubled by humankind’s increasingly intimate relationship with technology, Holly Herndon makes electronic music whose dense conceptual, theoretical and political elements are often eclipsed by their sheer ravishing beauty. Mixing the hard-cut collage methods of musique concre...
Both fascinated and troubled by humankind’s increasingly intimate relationship with technology, Holly Herndon makes electronic music whose dense conceptual, theoretical and political elements are often eclipsed by their sheer ravishing beauty. Mixing the hard-cut collage methods of musique concrete with sound-warping software and customised digital instruments, Herndon’s second album is not ashamed to embrace blissful melody and trance-like euphoria, yet remains constantly alive to the liberating power of dissonance and disruption. There is a great disturbance in the Force.
Born and raised in Tennessee but now based in San Francisco, Herndon’s track record to date includes performing in Berlin techno clubs, studying under legendary avant-rock guitarist Fred Frith, and composing ambient audioscapes tailored to the acoustics of car interiors. Currently working on her doctoral thesis at the Centre for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics at California’s Stanford University, her work has always balanced academic and populist, cerebral and sensual, Apollonian and Dionysian. But Platform is her most successful fusion of these elements so far, an ambitious album that propels Herndon into the avant-pop premier league alongside the likes of Bjork, Aphex Twin, Matthew Herbert and Flying Lotus.
Academic theory is one of the forces shaping Platform, an album Herndon describes as a “paradisic gesture”, a bold appeal for electronic music to play a bigger role in forging optimistic, politically progressive new narratives to counter those of hegemonic right-wing elites. She quotes economics professor Guy Standing, who is credited with coining the modish term “precariat”, and cultural theorist Suhail Malik as influences on the album. But none of this is essential to enjoying Platform. No background reading is necessary, no apprenticeship on the arid avant-garde fringes. Just dive in and savour the lush sonic foliage.
Platform is awash with squelches clonks and loops, but the most immediately arresting feature is its variety of human voices. Herndon treats her own vocals and those of her multiple collaborators with equal irreverence: processed, stretched and desiccated, liberated from linguistic duty but never from emotional force. Drag performer Colin Self is spliced into gleaming shards on “Unequal”, while soprano singer Amanda DeBoer Bartlett provides staccato trilling and heavy breathing over the deconstructed whoosh and shudder of “DAO”.
There are some simply gorgeous vocalese collages here, including “Home”, a “breakup song” about communication devices revealed as unfaithful lovers by post-Snowden surveillance anxiety, or “New Ways To Love”, with its synthetic swirls of Liz Fraser-ish voluptuousness. An exploded cubist choir ripples over a sleek electro pulse on “Chorus”, which samples the sounds of Herndon’s online browsing habits, while sublimely intertwined sighs and sobs yoke together the skeletal rhythmic framework of “Home”. Occasionally, Herndon even allows herself a conventional vocal performance, notably on “Morning Sun”, which sounds like a big-haired 1980s power ballad refracted through a cracked mirror of post-glitch sonics and post-dubstep percussion.
Striking a darkly satirical note, the spoken-word monologue “Lonely At The Top” is the most incongruous digression here. It is voiced in menacingly soft tones by Claire Tolan, a Berlin-based artist and radio host who works in the niche field of Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response (ASMR), a quasi-fetishist subculture in which people experience a heightened tingling response to various sensory stimuli. Over a drifting bed of clammy sound effects, Tolan plays the role of a hostess administering some kind of non-specific pampering treatment to an important client, probably male, certainly wealthy and entitled. Reminiscent of Chris Morris’s cult “ambient radio” show Blue Jam, this boldly bizarre vignette is fifty shades of creepy.
Laptop electronica has now been around long enough to establish its own pantheon, its own hierarchies and its own lazy orthodoxies. In person and on record, Herndon has plenty to say about how too much digital music has become complacent and retrograde. latform is not a manifesto, but it feels like a galvanising challenge to Herndon’s peers to embolden their ideas, broaden their horizons and push on into an undiscovered continent of sound.
Q&A
Holly Herndon
You make left-field pop albums while studying for a doctoral thesis in experimental music, do you see these activities as separate or connected?
I was trying to separate them at the beginning, but not anymore. On the first record they definitely separated more track by track, but on this record I definitely tried to combine the things that I love. Platform is more pop and more experimental. I think it’s both.”
You have called Platform a “paradisic gesture”, can you explain that?
There’s a professor of economics based in London named Guy Standing, he talks about Paradise Politics and creating new fantasies. When the shit hits the fan with the economy, the right is very good at creating Paradise Politics for people to easily fall into, and the left sometimes fails at creating an alternative. That was the thought behind it: how can we come together collectively to create new realities?
So you think electronic musicians should have more political responsibility?
I don’t like being absolute and saying this is what everyone needs to be doing, I just really like the idea of music mattering. Recently experimental music has been invited to more mainstream stages, especially through dance music, but what comes with that? Do we just have the experimental hour and then we have the dance party, and that’s all that changed? Or are we also able to port over some of the values and ideas form that community? That would be the ideal.
INTERVIEW: STEPHEN DALTON
Hot Chip have been covering Bruce Springsteen's "Dancing In The Dark" while on tour.
The band introduced the cover into their UK set lists in early May and now Stereogum has footage of the band performing the song at the Turner Hall Ballroom, Milwaukee, Wisconsin on the current American leg of thei...
Hot Chip have been covering Bruce Springsteen‘s “Dancing In The Dark” while on tour.
The band introduced the cover into their UK set lists in early May and now Stereogum has footage of the band performing the song at the Turner Hall Ballroom, Milwaukee, Wisconsin on the current American leg of their tour to promote their latest album, Why Make Sense?.
Hot Chip tour the UK later this year:
Bristol O2 Academy (October 13) Portsmouth Pyramid Centre (14) Glasgow Barrowland (16) Manchester Albert Hall (17) Leeds Beckett University (18) Nottingham Rock City (20) Cambridge Corn Exchange (21) London O2 Brixton Academy (22)
Wilco have announced details of a new documentary, Every Other Summer.
According to a report on Pitchfork, the documentary focuses on the band's Solid Sound Festival which takes place at Mass MoCA in North Adams, Massachusetts.
Pitchfork quote a press release which says that the film "offers a pee...
Wilco have announced details of a new documentary, Every Other Summer.
According to a report on Pitchfork, the documentary focuses on the band’s Solid Sound Festival which takes place at Mass MoCA in North Adams, Massachusetts.
Pitchfork quote a press release which says that the film “offers a peek into the festival’s utopian vibe and the positive impact it has had on the small rust belt town in The Berkshires where it takes place”.
Every Other Summer was directed by Christoph Green and Brendan Canty. The documentary was filmed at the most recent Solid Sound Festival (2013) and features performances by Wilco, Neko Case, Yo La Tengo, The Dream Syndicate, Lucius, Foxygen, Sam Amidon, Sean Rowe, and The Relatives.
Paul Weller has once again dismissed any possibility of reforming The Jam.
Speaking to The Guardian, Weller explains that “I’m not a nostalgic person,” saying that there is "Not enough money in the world” that would persuade him to get his old band back together.
“I like now," he continu...
Paul Weller has once again dismissed any possibility of reforming The Jam.
Speaking to The Guardian, Weller explains that “I’m not a nostalgic person,” saying that there is “Not enough money in the world” that would persuade him to get his old band back together.
“I like now,” he continues. “I like today. I don’t want to spend my time trying to recapture something that can’t be recaptured.”
Weller also admits he thinks that he has only written”three perfect songs” during his career: “Wings Of Speed” off Stanley Road; The Jam’s “Strange Town” and “Going My Way”, on his new album, Saturns Pattern.
Weller releases a new single, “Going My Way”, from Saturns Pattern on July 24.
You can watch Weller play the song below, from the BBC’s One Show.
“Going My Way” is released as a 2-track download and 7” vinyl with a new song, “I Spy”.
The single will also be released as a special bundle via paulweller.com which includes the 7” single, plus a download of both tracks, an art print and a special collectable extra – a Weller plectrum.
To coincide with the release of Yours, Dreamily, the debut album by his new project, The Arcs, Dan Auerbach 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 Black Keys guitarist and vocalist?
To what ...
To coincide with the release of Yours, Dreamily, the debut album by his new project, The Arcs, Dan Auerbach 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 Black Keys guitarist and vocalist?
To what does he attribute his long friendship with fellow Black Key, Patrick Carney?
How influential was Robert Quine – a second cousin – on his guitar playing?
What’s the best piece of advice Dr John gave him, when Dan produced the doctor’s Locked Down album?
Send up your questions by noon, Monday, June 15 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.
The best questions, and Dan’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine.
Please include your name and location with your question.
Yours, Dreamily, is released by Nonesuch on Friday, September 4. It is available for pre-order on iTunes and at thearcs.com and nonesuch.com with a download of the album track “Stay In My Corner“.
The Arcs are Dan Auerbach, Leon Michels, Richard Swift, Homer Steinweiss, Nick Movshon, Kenny Vaughan, and Mariachi Flor de Toloache.
In anticipation of the release, “Stay In My Corner” premieres today. The Arcs will be touring in support of the album; details will be announced soon.
Allan Jones, founding editor of Uncut, tells a great story about his first meeting with David Bowie, the subject of our latest updated Ultimate Music Guide: Deluxe Remastered Edition. It is September 1977, and Jones is in the penthouse suite at the Dorchester Hotel on London's Park Lane; sat in an a...
After a while, Jones is led into the main suite, which appears empty. “I look around and notice the windows to the balcony are open,” he recalls. “Lace curtains are billowing into the room, sunlight streaming through them. Then, surrounded by a glowing halo of light that can only be described as celestial, David Bowie steps into the room from the balcony and stands there. I’m dazzled, rooted to the spot, slack-jawed.”
“Allan,” says Bowie, “so very pleased to meet you at last. Brian’s told me so much about you.” That’s Brian Eno, who Jones has interviewed several times. Now, though, the young journalist has moved into a different world entirely – bowled over, he notes, by “The D-Day of charm offensives”.
Extraordinary charisma. Disconcerting attention to detail. Perfect timing. An endless capacity to surprise. In a single dramatic entrance, David Bowie managed to encapsulate a good few reasons why his journey through the past five decades of popular music has been so fantastical and compelling. From the era-defining dislocation of “Space Oddity”, to the startling return presaged by “Where Are We Now?”, our plush, upgraded Ultimate Music Guide to Bowie (in UK shops on Thursday June 11, but available to buy now at our online store reveals many things – not least that, while Bowie’s career may regularly be read as a sequence of changes, there is an odd consistency that underpins all of those radical, now-mythic reinventions.
Here, then, are a selection of bewitching interviews from the archives of NME and Melody Maker, and in-depth reviews of every single Bowie album right up to “The Next Day”. Stitched together, they tell the complete story of a singular, multi-faceted artist – one whose enduring potency remains undimmed. Soon, Bowie’s Broadway musical will open: The Man Who Fell To Earth has become Lazarus, the man who came back from the dead. In the meantime, this is the story of what happened in between…
While I have you, can I give an early plug to another rather opulent magazine we have in the pipeline? In July, we’re launching a new monthly out of the Uncut stable called The History Of Rock. Like our Ultimate Music Guides, it draws extensively on the riches of the NME and Melody Maker archives. This time, though, we’re aiming to tell a big story – nothing less than the saga of the music that changed our world, unravelling year by year, as it happened.
Each issue we’ll focus on a specific year, and our story begins 50 years ago. The History Of Rock: 1965 finds the Beatles on location, filming Help. Dylan tussling with Donovan. The Kinks, The Who and the Stones causing chaos. The Byrds and The Walker Brothers taking the UK by storm. There’s an extraordinary cast that includes John Coltrane and Dusty Springfield; Bert Jansch and PJ Proby; Marianne Faithfull, The Hollies, Paul Simon and Ken Dodd. Plus, a wealth of generous advice from young Jimmy Page…
The History Of Rock goes on sale in the UK on July 9, the heavy-duty and highly collectable first part of what we believe is going to be a comprehensive new series. While we’re finishing off the first issue, we’ve set up a History Of Rock page to keep you informed. More soon…
J Mascis and Kim Gordon have teamed up to record a new track for Converse's CONS EP series.
You can hear the song, "Slow Boy", below; and it's also available to download by clicking here.
Mascis and Gordon have a lengthy shared history: the Sonic Youth song, "Teenage Riot", was reportedly written ...
J Mascis and Kim Gordon have teamed up to record a new track for Converse’s CONS EP series.
You can hear the song, “Slow Boy“, below; and it’s also available to download by clicking here.
Mascis and Gordon have a lengthy shared history: the Sonic Youth song, “Teenage Riot”, was reportedly written in tribute to Mascis, while Sonic Youth and Dinosaur Jr have both been signed to SST and Homestead records. Both bands also toured together over the years.