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Led Zeppelin announce final three deluxe reissues

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Led Zeppelin are to release a final batch of remasters on July 31, 2015. The band’s final 3 albums - Presence, In Through The Out Door and Coda - have been remastered by Jimmy Page and each comes with a companion disc of previously unreleased music related to the original release selected and com...

Led Zeppelin are to release a final batch of remasters on July 31, 2015.

The band’s final 3 albums – Presence, In Through The Out Door and Coda – have been remastered by Jimmy Page and each comes with a companion disc of previously unreleased music related to the original release selected and compiled by Page.

These follow on from Physical Graffiti and the band’s first three albums.

Presence has “Reference Mixes” of the album tracks, plus one unreleased song (“Pod”).

In Through The Out Door has “Rough Mixes” of the album tracks.

Coda has two unreleased songs (“St. Tristan’s Sword” and “Sugar Mama”), plus two very rare recordings from Page and Robert Plant’s trip to Bombay in 1972, an alternate version of “When The Levee Breaks” (“If It Keeps On Raining”) and alternate takes of “The Wanton Song” and another alternate version of “In The Light”.

Presence, In Through The Out Door, and Coda will each be available July 31 from Atlantic/Swan Song in the following formats:

Single CD – Remastered original album. Presence and Coda will be packaged in a gatefold card wallet. All CD and LP versions of In Through The Out Door will be wrapped in a brown paper page replicating its initial release.

Deluxe Edition (2CD and 3CD) – Remastered album, plus a second disc of unreleased companion audio. Coda will feature two companion audio discs.

Single LP – Remastered album on 180-gram vinyl, packaged in a sleeve that replicates the LP’s first pressing in exacting detail. All vinyl versions of In Through The Out Door will also include the water-sensitive insert that replicates the inner sleeve from the album’s initial release.

Deluxe Edition Vinyl – Remastered album and unreleased companion audio on 180-gram vinyl. Coda will feature two companion LPs.

Digital Download – Remastered album and companion audio will both be available.

Super Deluxe Boxed Set – This collection includes:
Remastered album on CD in vinyl replica sleeve.
Companion audio on CD in card wallet.
Remastered album on 180-gram vinyl in a sleeve replicating first pressing.
Companion audio on 180-gram vinyl.
High-def audio download card of all content at 96kHz/24 bit.
Hard bound, 72+ page book filled with rare and previously unseen photos and memorabilia.
High quality print of the original album cover, the first 30,000 of which will be individually numbered.

The full releases are:

Presence
Track Listing
1. “Achilles Last Stand”
2. “For Your Life”
3. “Royal Orleans”
4. “Nobody’s Fault But Mine”
5. “Candy Store Rock”
6. “Hots On For Nowhere”
7. “Tea For One”

Companion Audio
1. “Two Ones Are Won” (Achilles Last Stand – Reference Mix)
2. “For Your Life” (Reference Mix)
3. “10 Ribs & All/Carrot Pod Pod (Pod)” (Reference Mix)
4. “Royal Orleans” (Reference Mix)
5. “Hots On For Nowhere” (Reference Mix)

In Through The Out Door
Track Listing
1. “In The Evening”
2. “South Bound Saurez”
3. “Fool In The Rain”
4. “Hot Dog”
5. “Carouselambra”
6. “All My Love”
7. “I’m Gonna Crawl”

Companion Audio
1. “In The Evening” (Rough Mix)
2. “Southbound Piano” (South Bound Saurez – Rough Mix)
3. “Fool In The Rain” (Rough Mix)
4. “Hot Dog” (Rough Mix)
5. “The Epic” (Carouselambra – Rough Mix)
6. “The Hook” (All My Love – Rough Mix)
7. “Blot” (I’m Gonna Crawl – Rough Mix)

Coda
Track Listing
1. “We’re Gonna Groove”
2 “Poor Tom”
3. “I Can’t Quit You Baby”
4. “Walter’s Walk”
5. “Ozone Baby”
6. “Darlene”
7. “Bonzo’s Montreux”
8. “Wearing And Tearing”

Companion Audio
Disc One
1.  “We’re Gonna Groove” (Alternate Mix)
2.  “If It Keeps On Raining” (When The Levee Breaks – Rough Mix)
3.  “Bonzo’s Montreux” (Mix Construction In Progress)
4.  “Baby Come On Home”
5.  “Sugar Mama” (Mix)
6.  “Poor Tom” (Instrumental Mix)
7.  “Travelling Riverside Blues” (BBC Session)
8.  “Hey, Hey, What Can I Do”

Disc Two
1.  “Four Hands“ (Four Sticks – Bombay Orchestra)
2.  “Friends” (Bombay Orchestra)
3.  “St. Tristan’s Sword” (Rough Mix)
4.  “Desire” (The Wanton Song – Rough Mix)
5.  “Bring It On Home” (Rough Mix)
6.  “Walter’s Walk” (Rough Mix)
7.  “Everybody Makes It Through” (In The Light – Rough Mix)

Reviewed: the Amy Winehouse documentary

For an artist whose talents were in constant demand, Amy Winehouse meant different things to many people around her. To one, she was “the truest jazz singer I have ever heard”; another saw her as “an old soul in a young body”, while a third describes her as “a humble person caught up in a ...

For an artist whose talents were in constant demand, Amy Winehouse meant different things to many people around her. To one, she was “the truest jazz singer I have ever heard”; another saw her as “an old soul in a young body”, while a third describes her as “a humble person caught up in a bad situation”. These various perspectives are all broadly accurate; but if there is one lesson we can take away from Asif Kapadia’s documentary it is that if Amy Winehouse chose her female friends well, the same is not necessarily true of the men in her life. Watching Kapadia’s film – from her childhood in Southgate, north London through her remarkable success up to her death in 2011 aged 27 – it is possible to see how badly she was let down by the male figures closest to her: an absentee father, an exploitative husband, a manager who appears out of his depth. “You like a powerful man,” observes an ex-boyfriend: it transpires that the exact opposite would be more appropriate.

Assembled from home video and mobile phone footage, as well as contemporaneous interviews, Amy opens in 1988 in Southgate, in suburban north London. A 14th birthday party is in progress, which catches Winehouse mucking around with her friends, Juliette Ashby and Lauren Gilbert. To illustrate Winehouse’s remarkable gifts, she delivers a breathy version of “Happy Birthday”. Ashby and Gilbert – along with her first manager, Nick Shymansky – are essentially the heart of Kapadia’s film. It is they who care the most, want only to help, when around Winehouse swarm a growing number of people who have their own strategies. The early footage of Winehouse, Shymansky and her guitarist Ian Barter as they play pool or smoke weed in the downtime between touring engagements is among the warmest in the film. Her performances during this period are far more expressive and wide-ranging than her later material.

As the film progresses, we learn how her father, Mitch Winehouse, began an affair when his daughter was 18 months old. “She got over it pretty quick,” he says; an early indication that he is not the most intuitive witness. By the time she reaches her teens, she is on anti-depressants. Regrettably, Winehouse is serially drawn to men of a similar disposition to Mitch: chief among them, Blake Fielder-Civil. While Kapadia is keen not to point any fingers, neither father nor ex-husband emerge well from this film. It is her father who later advises her not to attend a drying-out facility and who then arrives during what is ostensibly a fragile period of recovery for the singer on St Lucia with a full documentary crew in tow. If one is looking for a moment that best sums up Fielder-Civil’s part in Winehouse’s story, it may well be the scene filmed in a bar on their wedding day, where he asks the camera, “Who’s paying for this? I’m broke. Amy? Get us a bottle of Dom Perignon.” Fresh from their honeymoon, he introduces his new bride to heroin and crack cocaine. Her promoter-turned-manager, Raye Cosbert, meanwhile, seems to think nothing of sending her on a European tour days before she died.

Much as with Kapadia’s previous film, Senna – and also the recently released Kurt Cobain documentaryAmy relies on diligently researched archive footage. But it is the involvement of Ashby, Gilbert and Shymansky who are perhaps the film’s strongest asset: with no particular agenda, theirs feels the most unfiltered version of events. At one point, Ashby confesses that she stole Winehouse’s passport in order to prevent her from going on tour overseas: she was subsequently reprimanded for her troubles. Such revelations only further enhance the suspicion that the professionals who were responsible for Amy Winehouse’s well-being singularly failed in their endeavours. But that’s not to suggest Kapadia’s film presents Winehouse as a victim: she was far too complex and mercurial a personality for that.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

AMY OPENS IN THE UK ON JULY 3

Ennio Morricone announces world tour dates

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Ennio Morricone has announced details of his 60 Years Of Music world tour to take place in early 2016. The announcement follows a hugely successful European arena tour in April this year. “Performing my work live in all these different cities for people of so many different ages and cultural bac...

Ennio Morricone has announced details of his 60 Years Of Music world tour to take place in early 2016.

The announcement follows a hugely successful European arena tour in April this year.

“Performing my work live in all these different cities for people of so many different ages and cultural backgrounds is an incredibly gratifying experience,” says Morricone. “Next year I will celebrate my professional career of 60 Years during which I composed over 600 works.

“Next year I will perform a whole new program with new highlights, which I am already working on. Of course there will always be the classic pieces from the great Sergio Leone westerns and The Mission. But overall the experience will be different this time. I plan to include a suite for example with pieces of music, which I composed for 7 different movies which all won Oscars!”

Morricone will play:

January 15, 2016: O2 Arena, Prague
January 17, 2016: Papp Laszlo Arena, Budapest
January 19, 2016: Slovnaft Arena, Bratislava
February 14, 2016: 3Arena, Dublin
February 16, 2016: The O2 Arena, London
February 18, 2016: Lanxess Arena, Cologne
February 20, 2016: Sportpaleis, Antwerp
February 21, 2016: Ziggo Dome, Amsterdam

The Grateful Dead announce 80-Disc live collection

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The Grateful Dead have announced details of an 80-disc live collection, 30 Trips Around The Sun. The set, which contains over 73 hours of music, will be released on September 18. A numbered, limited edition CD box set of 6,500 copies will also includes a gold-colored 7-inch vinyl single. The A-si...

The Grateful Dead have announced details of an 80-disc live collection, 30 Trips Around The Sun.

The set, which contains over 73 hours of music, will be released on September 18.

A numbered, limited edition CD box set of 6,500 copies will also includes a gold-colored 7-inch vinyl single. The A-side is “Caution (Do Not Stop On Tracks)” from the band’s earliest recording session in 1965 with the B-side of the last song the band ever performed together live, “Box Of Rain” recorded during their final encore at Soldier Field in Chicago on July 9, 1995.

The first four shows included in 30 Trips… have been announced and include a 1967 show at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles and a 1987 show at New York’s Madison Square Garden. The remaining shows will be revealed in the coming weeks on dead.net. All 30 of the unreleased shows in the set will not be made available for individual purchase on CD at any time in the future.

30 Trips Around The Sun also comes on a USB drive, which includes all of the music from the collection in both FLAC (96/24) and MP3 formats and is an individually numbered limited edition of 1,000 copies.

The band will also release a four-CD version of the collection on September 18, called 30 Trips Around The Sun: The Definitive Live Story 1965-1995. This set includes 30 unreleased performances – one from each concert in the boxed set.

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

Peter Cook and Dudley Moore’s Derek and Clive albums to be reissued

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The three studio albums recorded by Peter Cook and Dudley Moore under their aliases Derek and Clive are to be reissued on CD by Universal Music Catalogue. Titled A Right Pair Of C****: The Complete F****** Derek & Clive, the 5-CD set will be released on July 31. The set contains Derek and Cliv...

The three studio albums recorded by Peter Cook and Dudley Moore under their aliases Derek and Clive are to be reissued on CD by Universal Music Catalogue.

Titled A Right Pair Of C****: The Complete F****** Derek & Clive, the 5-CD set will be released on July 31.

The set contains Derek and Clive: (Live) (1976), Derek and Clive – Come Again (1977),  and Derek and Clive – Ad Nauseam (1978) as well as Rude & Rare The Best of Derek and Clive (2011).

Flying Saucer Attack announce first album in 15 years

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Flying Saucer Attack have confirmed details of their first album in 15 years. Instrumentals 2015 will be released on July 17 through Domino. It features fifteen instrumentals written solely by guitarist David Pearce. Instrumentals 2015 will be available on CD, digitally and on double heavyweight ...

Flying Saucer Attack have confirmed details of their first album in 15 years.

Instrumentals 2015 will be released on July 17 through Domino.

It features fifteen instrumentals written solely by guitarist David Pearce.

Instrumentals 2015 will be available on CD, digitally and on double heavyweight vinyl.

There’s also a video for album track “Instrumental 7”, which you can watch below. The video was directed by Berberian Sound Studio and The Duke Of Burgundy filmmaker, Peter Strickland.

Hear The Rolling Stones alternate version of “Brown Sugar” featuring Eric Clapton

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The Rolling Stones have shared online a previously unreleased version of "Brown Sugar" featuring Eric Clapton. The track appears on the band's forthcoming deluxe reissue of Sticky Fingers which is released on June 8; scoll down the page to hear it. Meanwhile, the Rolling Stones are on the cover of...

The Rolling Stones have shared online a previously unreleased version of “Brown Sugar” featuring Eric Clapton.

The track appears on the band’s forthcoming deluxe reissue of Sticky Fingers which is released on June 8; scoll down the page to hear it.

Meanwhile, the Rolling Stones are on the cover of the new Uncut – which is in shops now.

Inside the issue, Mick Jagger shares his memories of recording Sticky Fingers.

Jagger recalls the long recording process for the album, taking in adventures in Muscle Shoals  and Stargroves, backstage fights at the Marquee Club, and some help from Andy Warhol and the Goddess Kali.

We also speak to the album’s engineer Chris Kimsey about working with the Stones on this classic album, while photographer Peter Webb recalls the Sticky Fingers photo shoot and former Stones’ PR Keith Altham gives us an eyewitness account of the Stones’ 1971 UK tour.

Speaking to Uncut about this unreleased version of “Brown Sugar“, Chris Kimsey recalls, “Keith and Bobby Keys had a joint birthday party at Olympic [Studios]. I remember Al Kooper and Eric Clapton being there. I recorded this ‘Brown Sugar’ jam that went on for 15 minutes. Alan O’Duffy, who was booked to engineer the session, fancied a bit of this lovely birthday cake that was going around. It was hash cake. 15 minutes later he was gone, so I had to engineer that evening’s session. It was quite terrifying. All these people came in. We recorded this extended version of “Brown Sugar”. Everyone was playing live, like a big club. I remember George Harrison turning up as well.”

The new Uncut is also available to buy digitally

The Mark Kozelek problem

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At what point do you stop being able to make excuses for Mark Kozelek? When he calls a chattering audience in North Carolina "rednecks"? When he responds to criticism from one of that audience by calling her a "spoiled bitch, rich kid, blogger brat"? When he engages in a one-man hate campaign on The...

At what point do you stop being able to make excuses for Mark Kozelek? When he calls a chattering audience in North Carolina “rednecks”? When he responds to criticism from one of that audience by calling her a “spoiled bitch, rich kid, blogger brat”? When he engages in a one-man hate campaign on The War On Drugs, inspired by some dodgy sound levels at a festival?

Kozelek, it has seemed this past year or so, is a man with a shortish temper who has learned to channel his irritations into prolonged – and sometimes very funny – trolling campaigns; campaigns that have raised his profile at a time when his music – chiefly last year’s superb “Benji” – is doing a pretty good job of raising that profile by itself. His language is not often mediated in the same way mine might be; I guess suggesting strangers “suck my cock” might be standard banter for Kozelek in the locker room with Ben Gibbard and Justin Broadrick or whoever?

But anyhow, when Kozelek and the latest version of Sun Kil Moon roll up at the Barbican in London last night, the singer mostly seems in a more equable mood than usual. He talks about being happy to be in London, about what a nice audience we are, about how great the lighting is; not subjects about which he is usually magnanimous. In two and a half hours, there is not a single mention of the War On Drugs, and most of the jokes come at his own expense. There is a digression on how his jacket and drumming style remind him of Planet Of The Apes, which ends with the thought, “What would be more boring? Watching all the episodes of Planet Of The Apes or listening to all six CDs of Bob Dylan’s Basement Tapes?” Neil Halstead, from Slowdive, is on the tour as guest guitarist, and Kozelek tells us how much he loves him. But “one thing I hate about him is how he’s not gained a pound in 20 years and I’ve turned into fucking Los Lobos.”

Kozelek’s music is also, relatively speaking, unusually focused. Unlike his last London show – a messy, volatile, compelling epic in Hackney at the end of last year – the long, mostly beautiful songs that he has written in the last couple of years are given tranquil treatments by the band (two electric guitars, a drummer, Kozelek adding either third guitar or additional drums), even though tonight there’s not a single sighting of an acoustic guitar. The bellicose punk roar that Kozelek has added to his vocal arsenal – and which dominates stretches of the new “Universal Themes” – adds dynamic punctuation to these serpentine pieces, giving further heft to a song like “Richard Ramirez Died Today Of Natural Causes”.

“Richard Ramirez…” is one of a clutch of songs from “Benji” that continue to dominate the set, with “I Watched The Film The Song Remains The Same” handled with great subtlety. I could grouch about him only playing songs from the past few albums, about how he doesn’t even play my favourite songs from those albums. “Universal Themes”, for instance, is a complex and divisive work that is unlikely to be one of the most played albums in his generally magnificent catalogue, but I’m very happy that he’s experimenting with songform, that he’s radicalising and subverting what it means to be a confessional singer-songwriter. It does, though, contain two songs that feel like big additions to his store of great songs, “Birds Of Flim” and “Garden Of Lavender”, neither of which he plays here, preferring relatively coherent versions of scrappier pieces – “The Possum”, “Ali/Spinks 2”, “Little Rascals” (a song whose lyrics suggest it was written at precisely the same time as he was completing this interview), an excellent “This Is My First Day And I’m Indian And I Work At A Gas Station”: “I’m not used to spoken word stuff, but I’m gonna get better at it better at it, over time,” he proclaims, as the song winds movingly to a close.

Performed with a grace that isn’t always present in the recorded versions, it’s easier here to see this latest musical gear-shift as closer in tone to what has gone before: even the needling improvised skree passages of “Ali/Spinks 2” don’t feel out of place alongside lovely versions of “Ceiling Gazing” and “He Always Felt Like Dancing”, the latter performed by Kozelek stood on a chair, “so I can stay awake”.

Before “He Always Felt Like Dancing”, though, there is a glimpse of what tonight’s moody running joke will be. Spotting a few empty seats in the front rows, Kozelek whimsically decides that these have been allotted to absent journalists; “The fucking press. What a bunch of fucking weirdos.” The fucking press, he speculates, will decide that “Universal Themes” is not as good as “Benji”; with each album, British journalists apparently decide that he’s good, and then he’s bad. It’s a rueful and rather wearying take on the old ‘build ’em up/knock ’em down’ myth – I write this clearly as someone who’s been building Kozelek up fairly remorselessly for over 20 years – but not anything particularly toxic.

Two hours into the show, however, as Kozelek lurches back onstage for the encore, the theme takes a substantially nastier turn. First he names a British journalist who has, for reasons that are not entirely clear, annoyed him (full disclosure: that journalist is a friend and fellow Uncut writer. I would hope that my disgust at what Kozelek says is not materially affected by this, though he will doubtless beg to differ). Then he begins a spontaneous song about the writer – a woman – about how she “totally wants to fuck me” and how she should “get in line, bitch.”

So this, for me, is the tipping point: the exact moment when borderline dubious ragging becomes straight-up offensive misogyny. Kozelek would inevitably excuse it as his much-vaunted “great sense of humour” and indeed once he’s finished the next songs – “I Can’t Live Without My Mother’s Love” and “Caroline”, about probably the two most important women in his life, ironically enough – he returns to the subject. He calls the writer “nice”, “sweet”, “cute”, as if that would make things better, and claims he was “just kidding”. He then sings the song again.

Maybe he was just kidding, but that doesn’t really seem relevant; the language remains vile, whatever the motivation. Journalists need to be able to deal with the repercussions of what they dish out – that’s fair enough – but this feels like something quite different. So now we’re on the cusp of yet another Kozelek firestorm, one that he’ll probably seize upon as evidence of some nebulous media plot against him, that he’ll use as supposedly droll self-justification, as a means of manipulating his increasingly lucrative infamy. This time, though, I won’t be laughing along. I don’t want to be too melodramatic here, but Kozelek’s music has sustained me in myriad different ways for a very long time. This morning, I don’t want to hear any of it.

Watch Bryan Ferry’s new video

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Bryan Ferry has released a new video for "Johnny & Mary", from his current album Avonmore. The video was shot at the Chateau Marmont and Wolf's Lair Castle, Hollywood and features Ferry alongside model Eliza Cummings. Written by Robert Palmer, Ferrty's version was produced with Norwegian DJ To...

Bryan Ferry has released a new video for “Johnny & Mary“, from his current album Avonmore.

The video was shot at the Chateau Marmont and Wolf’s Lair Castle, Hollywood and features Ferry alongside model Eliza Cummings.

Written by Robert Palmer, Ferrty’s version was produced with Norwegian DJ Todd Terje.

“I have always liked Robert Palmer’s beautiful song ‘Johnny & Mary’ with its haunting lyrics,” says Ferry. “Initially we tried it fast like the original, but later Terje gave it a different slower feel, which was much better. I played some piano on this version which I hope compliments Terje’s futuristic programming. It is a real pleasure to collaborate with such a talent.”

Hear the first track from Beirut’s new album, No No No

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Beirut have announced details of their new album, No No No. Zach Condon and his band will release their fourth album on September 11 on 4AD. The album arrives four years after 2011's The Rip Tide and was recorded over two weeks in New York last winter. The tracklisting for No, No, No is: 'Gibral...

Beirut have announced details of their new album, No No No.

Zach Condon and his band will release their fourth album on September 11 on 4AD.

The album arrives four years after 2011’s The Rip Tide and was recorded over two weeks in New York last winter.

The tracklisting for No, No, No is:

‘Gibraltar’
‘No No No’
‘At Once’
‘August Holland’
‘As Needed’
‘Perth’
‘Pacheco’
‘Fener’
‘So Allowed’

Beirut will play a one-off London gig at O2 Academy Brixton on September 24.

Leonard Cohen – Can’t Forget: A Souvenir Of The Grand Tour

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Another live album a mere five months after the epic, three-hour Live In Dublin seems to be stretching the loyalty even of Cohen’s army of devoted fans. What is left to add to that career-spanning selection? More than one might expect; a brace of unexpected covers, a further brace of new songs and...

Another live album a mere five months after the epic, three-hour Live In Dublin seems to be stretching the loyalty even of Cohen’s army of devoted fans. What is left to add to that career-spanning selection? More than one might expect; a brace of unexpected covers, a further brace of new songs and a six-pack of lesser celebrated numbers from Cohen’s sprawling repertoire, some of the performances drawn from soundchecks that are described as ‘a concert before the concert’.

It is, as the title promises, a fine souvenir from the magnificent, unexpected third act of Cohen’s prodigious career, one that has seen him play to larger and more diverse audiences than he ever managed in earlier days. Here Len and fedora are stalking the boards in New Zealand, Germany, Australia, Ireland and Scandinavia, as well as the US and his Canadian homeland. Wherever Len lays his hat, however, it’s always the same Grand Tour, and the evenness of the performances here is striking. The group and backing singers purr along, leaving Cohen to emote in a voice that can be grating or soothing, commanding or apologetic.

Why does the world love Leonard Cohen? There’s the charm that few in showbiz can equal, of course (maybe Tony Bennett), but also because he takes us into complex and sometimes unfamiliar emotional landscapes. Who else would write a dialogue between Joan of Arc and the fire that consumed her at the stake in 1431? Is the song about misguided martyrdom, suppressed eroticism or the cruelty of desire? All and more. Here Cohen emotes with tenderness – it’s almost a spoken poem – while singer Hattie Webb takes the part of tormented Joan, who at this last moment wishes she’d given up her crusade for marriage. A klezmer fiddle adds sweetness while her imagined wedding dress is consumed in flames. It’s no easy ride for her, for the fire, or for us, the onlookers.

The metaphysics and conflicts of “Joan Of Arc” might seem a country mile from the late George Jones’ “Choices”, with its everyman’s assurance that “I hear voices that tell me right from wrong” (which was Joan’s problem), but the number slots neatly into Cohen’s contemplative, retrospective terrain. At the other end of the emotional spectrum is “La Manic” by the Quebec chansonnier Georges Dor, a song that Cohen has carried with him since it became a Canuck sensation in 1966, and which he praised in his acceptance speech at his 2006 induction into the Canadian Songwriters Hall Of Fame. It isn’t, however, a song that crosses borders easily; though sentiments like “What do your silken forehead and velvet eyes become when I am not there?” sound better in French, even the version spoken in Canada. Leonard delivers its rapid-fire romantic declarations and despair with suitably Gallic passion, his vocal more animated than for his own material. For the Quebec rehearsal audience, its delivery was clearly A Moment.

Field Commander Cohen” is the oldest song on the album (from 1974), and you can see why it’s performed so infrequently, its tumble of imagery – Fidel Castro, diplomatic cocktail parties, singing millionaires – too cryptic to absorb easily, or for Cohen’s more limited vocal powers to fully animate. He fares better on “Night Comes On”, slow and mournful in its original form and little changed here. A crawl through the torments of conscience and the inescapable bonds of ancestry, it manages, too, to be a love song ending with a visit to Bill’s Bar. “Can’t Forget” likewise sounds like its original (1988) incarnation, with Cohen’s baritone running smoothly as he grapples with motives he doesn’t fully understand. It’s a prickly love song – literally, so with its image of Len showing up at an ex’s home “with a bouquet of cactus”.

“Light As A Breeze”, from The Future, is even more barbed, a paean to a lover “who looks so graceful/And your heart’s hard and hateful.” It’s Cohen’s contradictions, his ability to hold opposing emotions in balance, that keep you on your toes. Of the two new songs “Never Gave Nobody Trouble” is an uncharacteristic foray into blues, cast in the silky nocturnal style of BB King (guitarist Mitch Watkins is clearly a fan). It’s a sly little piece, with Cohen claiming he’s never caused any bother, honest, before growling, “But it ain’t too late to start.” The other new number – sort of new since Leonard has featured it in shows for at least two years – is “Got A Little Secret”, another soul-tinged piece with a choogling Memphis organ, where Cohen confesses he’s unable to hold a woman he admires because he’s “got a full-length mirror and it ain’t a pretty sight.”

There’s more self-deprecatory references to his advancing years on the closing “Stages”, which is a droll rap about life’s sometimes cruel changes before it turns into “Tower Of Song” and fades, leaving one slightly unfulfilled. Maybe that was the intention. Always keep ’em wanting more. And we do Len, we do.

Watch Bruce Springsteen and The Who perform “My Generation” together on stage

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Bruce Springsteen played two songs with The Who at the MusiCares benefit concert in New York on May 28, 2015. Springsteen presented Pete Townshend with the Stevie Ray Vaughan Award for his work supporting the charity at the event in support of the MusiCares MAP Fund, a charity to assist musicians w...

Bruce Springsteen played two songs with The Who at the MusiCares benefit concert in New York on May 28, 2015.

Springsteen presented Pete Townshend with the Stevie Ray Vaughan Award for his work supporting the charity at the event in support of the MusiCares MAP Fund, a charity to assist musicians with addiction recovery.

Rolling Stone reports that artists including Joan Jett and Billy Idol paid musical tribute to Townshend.

Afterward, Springsteen joined Townshend and Roger Daltrey to perform “My Generation” and “Won’t Get Fooled Again”. Watch fan-shot footage below.

Rolling Stone have also reprinted Springsteen’s tribute to Townshend, in which he recalled the impact Townshend and The Who had on his career.

“I was a young pimply-faced teenager who managed to scrap enough together to go see my first rock concert ever. Pete and The Who were young pimply-faced teenagers with a record contract, a tour and a rude aggressive magic,” Springsteen said.

“The Who came out and they played for probably a little more than 30 minutes. Pete, in a cloud of smoke, demolished his guitar bashing it over and over into the floor and his amplifier.”

“All I knew, for some reason, this music and the demolishing of all these perfectly fine instruments filled me with incredible joy and I never looked back.”

“As I grew older, the Who’s music seemed to grow with me, the sexual frustration, politics, identity. These things course through my veins with every concurring Who album. I always found myself there somewhere in their music.”

Pete is the greatest rhythm guitarist of all time. He showed you, you don’t have to play any lead. It’s an amazing thing to behold, ” he continued. “Pete managed to take the dirty business of rock and roll and somehow make it spiritual and turn it into a quest. He may hate this, but he identified the place where it was noble, and he wasn’t afraid to go there.”

The Doors to reissue post Jim Morrison albums

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Two Doors albums, released after the death of Jim Morrison, are to be reissued later this year. Other Voices and Full Circle, the band's seventh and eighth albums, will be reissued in September by Rhino. These editions feature remastered audio by producer Bruce Botnick, while Full Circle CD is acco...

Two Doors albums, released after the death of Jim Morrison, are to be reissued later this year.

Other Voices and Full Circle, the band’s seventh and eighth albums, will be reissued in September by Rhino. These editions feature remastered audio by producer Bruce Botnick, while Full Circle CD is accompanied by bonus track, “Treetrunk“.

Morrison died in July 1971 while The Doors were recording Other Voices. Following his death, keyboardist Ray Manzarek, guitarist Robby Krieger and drummer John Densmore, continued the recording with Krieger and Manzarek sharing vocal duties.

The vinyl editions of both albums will be pressed on 180g vinyl and will come with sleevenotes.

The albums will also be paired together for a 2CD set.

 

Watch the Rolling Stones perform “Hang On Sloopy” for the first time since 1966

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The Rolling Stones performed "Hang On Sloopy" in concert for the first time since 1966 on Saturday night [May 30,2015]. The band played the song at Ohio Stadium, Columbus as part of their Zip Code tour of North America. The song, taken to No 1 by The McCoys in 1965, is an anthem at sporting event...

The Rolling Stones performed “Hang On Sloopy” in concert for the first time since 1966 on Saturday night [May 30,2015].

The band played the song at Ohio Stadium, Columbus as part of their Zip Code tour of North America.

The song, taken to No 1 by The McCoys in 1965, is an anthem at sporting events throughout Ohio.

It was also a regular fixture in Stones’ setlists in 1966, but has been unplayed by the band since.

The Rolling Stones are on the cover of the new Uncut – which is in shops now

Inside the issue, Mick Jagger shares his memories of recording Sticky Fingers.

The new Uncut is also available to buy digitally

Meanwhile, British tabloids including The Sun and The Mirror are reporting that the Stones are in negotiations to play Knebworth this summer; they last played the country house in 1976.

Paul McCartney quit cannabis to “set an example to my kids and grandkids”

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Paul McCartney has admitted he gave up smoking cannabis in order to "set an example to my kids and grandkids". McCartney has experienced several run-ins with the law over cannabis possession in the past, first in Sweden in 1972 and most recently in 1984 during a holiday in Barbados. Speaking to Th...

Paul McCartney has admitted he gave up smoking cannabis in order to “set an example to my kids and grandkids”.

McCartney has experienced several run-ins with the law over cannabis possession in the past, first in Sweden in 1972 and most recently in 1984 during a holiday in Barbados.

Speaking to The Liverpool Echo, McCartney explained, “I don’t do it any more.

“Why? The truth is that these days I don’t really want to set an example to my kids and grandkids. It’s now a parent thing.

“Back then I was just some guy around London having a ball, and the kids were little so I’d just try and keep it out of their faces.

“But now it’s a question of not setting a bad example. So instead of smoking a spliff, I’ll now have a glass of red wine or a nice margarita.

“The last time I smoked was a long time ago.”

McCartney, along with the rest of The Beatles, was reportedly introduced to cannabis by Bob Dylan on August 28, 1964 at the Delmonico Hotel in New York.

Click here to read Uncut’s review of Paul McCartney live at London’s O2 Arena

Brian Wilson biopic Love & Mercy previewed…

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Even by the standards of his contemporaries, Brian Wilson has lived an unusually eventful life. The many remarkable musical highs have often been overshadowed by the vicissitudes of his personal and family life; and while a less intuitive filmmaker might be tempted to try and cram the whole kit and ...

Even by the standards of his contemporaries, Brian Wilson has lived an unusually eventful life. The many remarkable musical highs have often been overshadowed by the vicissitudes of his personal and family life; and while a less intuitive filmmaker might be tempted to try and cram the whole kit and kaboodle into a biopic, director Bill Pohlad and screenwriter Oren Moverman have opted instead for a more nuanced take on their subject. Love & Mercy cuts between Wilson in 1966 and in 1985, exploring resonances between the two stages of his life and attempting to show how Wilson got from ‘there’ to ‘here’. It is a canny strategy that mostly works; if admittedly it provides a narrative structure that at times feels a little too neat.

The idea of a Wilson biopic appears to have been under discussion for over 20 years: at one point, William Hurt was in talks to play Wilson with Richard Dreyfuss as his therapist, Eugene Landy. In this incarnation, the script comes from Moverman – who did such commendable work on the Bob Dylan film I’m Not There – while Pohlad is best known as a producer on films including Brokeback Mountain and 12 Years A Slave. Together, Pohlad and Moverman have concocted snapshots of Wilson at two key periods in his life: the recording of Pet Sounds in 1965/6 and the end of his troubling relationship with Landy two decades later. To aid them in this endeavour, they have two Brians: Paul Dano as the podgy ‘60s Brian, his head full of wonder, and John Cusack as the older version, still very much a “little boy in a man’s body”. They discretely attempt to tie the two periods together, suggesting that the breakdown Wilson suffers in the Sixties accounts for his condition in the later years. But it also attempts – perhaps a little too hard – to find parallels between the two eras. In the Sixties, Wilson is dominated by his father, Murry, and in the Eighties by Landy, another overbearing presence of questionable integrity. We are shown how Wilson’s love for music nearly broke him but also how love eventually redeemed him.

Both Dano and Cusack are excellent, although rather weirdly Cusack looks a lot like Nicolas Cage. We meet Dano’s Wilson at the point where he is becoming constricted by the parameters of the band’s early hits; he can already hear in his head the music that eventually coalesces into Pet Sounds. “I can take us further if you let me stay at home and work in the studio,” he explains, begging off the band’s forthcoming Japanese tour. The sequences recreating the sessions for Pet Sounds are unusually strong. Rock biopics often struggle to satisfactorily convey the creative processes, but Pohlad delivers strong material here as Wilson bustles around the studio with the Wrecking Crew, evidently at his happiest, finessing notes on sheet music or bringing in his two dogs, Banana and Louie, to provide backing vocals. “Can I get a horse in here?” He asks enthusiastically. Later, a 360 degree panning shot during the sessions for “Good Vibrations” shows how far Wilson has moved away from his fellow Beach Boys: while he intently discusses the tempo of the strings, his brothers and cousin are pictured listlessly staring at magazines, on the telephone or simply looking bored. It’s all too much for Murry – “There’s not a hit on that album” – and Mike Love: “You’re letting us down!” By the time of SMiLE, it has all overwhelmed Brian.

Pohlad is extremely good at recreating period detail – whether it be the warm, panelled interiors of United Western Recorders’ Studio 3 in 1965 or, later, the airless glass and metal environment of Eighties’ Los Angeles. If Dano’s iteration of Wilson is predicated around a kind of puppyish enthusiasm for music, Cusack’s older model is inevitably more damaged – a “Lonely scared frightened”, as he writes on the back of a business card. Cusack does well here; he artfully navigates Wilson’s medicated tics and mumbles in a way that allows for a warmer person to emerge in the background. While Dano pretty much carries the early period, Cusack is joined in the Eighties by Elizabeth Banks as Melinda Leadbetter – who becomes Wilson’s second wife – and Paul Giamatti as Eugene Landy. Leadebetter is very much presented as the rescuing angel who prises Wilson from Landy’s pernicious control; admittedly, this might be simplifying the truth to a degree, but it provides Pohlad and Moverman with the narrative resolution they require. Banks and Giamatti do the best with their roles, though this is closer to conventional drama in comparison with the more inspired handling of the Sixties’ period.

A climactic, 2001-style sequence which unites the two Brians to the heavenly sounds of the Beach Boys’ music might appear a trip too far: nevertheless, it is a poetic gesture that Pohlad and Moverman have arguably earned.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Unknown Mortal Orchestra – Multi-Love

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Psychedelia is typically characterised as an inward journey. Over the course of two albums with Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Ruban Nielson seemed to be following the prescribed route, with 2013’s slow-burner II defined by pensive, quasi-baroque guitar figures and woozy pleas for solitude. “I’d hi...

Psychedelia is typically characterised as an inward journey. Over the course of two albums with Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Ruban Nielson seemed to be following the prescribed route, with 2013’s slow-burner II defined by pensive, quasi-baroque guitar figures and woozy pleas for solitude. “I’d hide til the end of time… asleep and constantly floating away,” he daydreamed on standout track “Swim And Sleep (Like A Shark)”, sounding very much like a man content to while away his hours in the company of his own thoughts.

In both style and subject matter, the album felt like a companion piece to Tame Impala’s Lonerism, released a few month’s previously. Like Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker, Ruban Nielson plays almost everything on Unknown Mortal Orchestra records himself, the band only convening for live performances. And Nielson is originally from New Zealand, which made it easy for commentators to lump them in with the Antipodean psych revival. But Multi-Love finds Unknown Mortal Orchestra surging ahead of their fellow psych-pop voyagers, abandoning the hazy introversion of previous albums for frisky, rainbow-coloured optimism.

The album opens with a moody harpsichord motif – so far, so psych – but as soon as Nielson opens his mouth it’s clear he’s upped his game. There’s a whole new bluesy contour to his reedy falsetto, redolent of new-school R&B crooners like Miguel and The Weeknd. “Multi-love’s got me on my knees,” he testifies, a giddy submission to love’s three-pronged assault on head, heart and groin. “It’s not that this song’s about her / Most songs are about her.”

“Like Acid Rain” is even more of a revelation, a frenetic two-minute whirl of funky powerpop by way of “Alphabet Street”. By the third song, Nielson’s channelling Stevie Wonder and singing about sex in cars. For a man who’d previously expressed a desire to spend the rest of his life at the bottom of the sea to escape the burden of human interaction, it’s quite a transformation.

Nielson has evidently been listening to a lot of Sly & The Family Stone, but his interpretation of psychedelic soul is pleasingly broad: “Necessary Evil” – featuring a winning trumpet hook courtesy of his dad Chris – evokes Shuggie Otis while “The World Is Crowded” is an impressive stab at the kind of lush, weird neo-soul peddled by Bilal and D’Angelo. “Can’t Keep Checking My Phone” even works up a wonky psychedelic disco groove not unlike Caribou’s “Odessa”.

To be fair, there were harbingers of this new direction in the rubbery funk basslines and brisk rhythms that kept II zipping along nicely, even in its most solipsistic moments. Again, Nielson employs the distinctive technique of splicing and looping his live drums so they sometimes sound more like sampled beats, in tribute to the 90s breakbeat records that provided his gateway into soul music.

Combined with his idiosyncratic, lo-fi recording techniques – drums incredibly dry and present, everything else a little bit glazed – you’re unlikely to confuse Multi-Love with an actual R&B record. Perhaps the best comparison is with Beck’s funk fantasia Midnite Vultures, although Nielson’s songs retain a dreamy otherness that wards off accusations of pastiche. There’s even evidence of an emerging social conscience, judging by his game attempt to float the idea of failing relationship as political metaphor on “Extreme Wealth And Casual Cruelty”.

Containing only nine lithe and varied songs, Multi-Love is anything but a whimsical indulgence. In a climate where the tag “psychedelic” is applied to any band of mop-haired chancers with a delay pedal, Nielson has attached the rockets and blasted off somewhere new – acknowledgement that the true psychedelic voyage is not inward but onward ever onward.

Q&A
Ruban Nielson
Your last album was quite introspective, whereas this one’s almost the opposite. What changed?
I didn’t realise how sad the last record was until it was finished and I noticed that I’d used the word “lonely” three times. I didn’t want this one to come from the same place emotionally, I wanted it to to be a happy album. So I took a year off and I used my advance to buy time at home. That had a huge effect on me, to be off the road after three years of touring. A lot of it was just spending time with my family, especially my kids because they’re so funny and keep me from getting too cynical.

Your dad and your brother are on the album too, so it’s a real family affair…
It’s part of the whole idea of trying to make a happy record. I played with my brother Kody in my old band The Mint Chicks and we ended up not getting along so well because the band put a lot of pressure on our relationship. But I really missed him, so I flew him out to Portland so we could just hang out and make music again. My dad comes from a jazz background and this record is the first thing I’ve ever done that’s genuinely impressed him. I sent him  “Necessary Evil” and he said, ‘I’m hearing some horn parts!’ So I suggested he record what he was hearing and it was just perfect.

What does the phrase Multi-Love mean to you?
Well, how many forms of love do we have? Obviously not enough. We’re always figuring out new futuristic ways to hate people but not really equalling that with any kind of movement in the other direction.
INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS

Allen Ginsberg, LSD poetry and sacrificing chickens: the birth of the ’60s hippie underground revealed

This Saturday [May 30, 2015], celebrations take place to mark the 50th anniversary of the International Poetry Incarnation, which saw over seven thousand people flock to London's Royal Albert Hall to witness the birth of the 60’s counterculture. Among those taking part in the original event were p...

THE FAMOUS FRIENDS OF THE ALBERT HALL SHOWS…

John Lennon and Yoko Ono
Dan Richter met Yoko Ono in Japan after he left America in 1963 and later lived with John and Yoko for four years from 1969. Lennon was said to have attended the Royal Albert Hall reading in disguise. He met Yoko at the Indica Gallery, founded by Albert Hall organiser Barry Miles.

Bob Dylan
Met Ginsberg in 1963 and the two formed a close relationship. A photograph of Ginsberg appears on the back of Bringing It All Back Home and the two recorded together in 1971. Ginsberg also toured with the Rolling Thunder Revue.

Leonard Cohen
When Trocchi fled America on drugs charges in 1961, he was met in Montreal by Cohen, then a poet. Trocchi almost killed Cohen with opium; Cohen later wrote a poem called Alexander Trocchi, Public Junkie, Priez Pour Nous.

Stan Tracey
Legendary British jazz pianist who was house pianist at Ronnie Scott’s in the 1960s and recorded 1964 album Jazz Departures with British beat poet Michael Horovitz. Also did settings of longer poems like Dylan Thomas’s Under Milk Wood.

Pink Floyd
Pete Brown, who read at the Albert Hall, organised the Spontaneous Underground, a series of happenings at London’s Marquee Club as a direct response to the Albert Hall gig. Performers included Donovan, Graham Bond (then backed by Cream’s Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker), and early sets by Pink Floyd.

Paul McCartney
After the 1965 reading, Miles and Hoppy founded London’s first alternative newspaper, the International Times. Guests at the launch party at the Roundhouse included Paul McCartney, who dressed in an arab headdress. Soft Machine (accompanied by a motorbike) and Pink Floyd played sets. Hoppy went on to found the UFO Club, where Pink Floyd regularly performed.

The 18th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

  A track from the new Neil Young album to showcase among this lot, but please also check out some of the other stuff, not least a fantastically Byrdsy new one from Emmett Kelly's Cairo Gang. Also, I'm not historically the biggest fan of the Daptone label, but this Saun & Starr label is re...

 

A track from the new Neil Young album to showcase among this lot, but please also check out some of the other stuff, not least a fantastically Byrdsy new one from Emmett Kelly’s Cairo Gang. Also, I’m not historically the biggest fan of the Daptone label, but this Saun & Starr label is really nice.

Apologies about the redacted albums; I can’t list them properly at the moment because they haven’t been formally announced.

In the meantime; Liquid Liquid reissues!

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

1 The Deslondes – The Deslondes (New West)

2 Omar Souleyman – Bahdeni Nami (Monkeytown)

3 Orange Humble Band – Depressing Beauty (Citadel)

4 Peacers – Peacers (Drag City)

5 [REDACTED]

6 Mac DeMarco – Another One (Captured Tracks)

7 Destroyer – Poison Season (Dead Oceans)

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

9 Fine Points – Hover (Dine Alone)

10 Duke Ellington & His Orchestra – The Conny Plank Sessions (Grőnland)

11 Duke Ellington – The Far East Suite (RCA)

12 The Cairo Gang – Ice Fishing (God?)

13 Bob Mould – Workbook 25 (Edsel)

14 Adrian Younge – Linear Labs: Los Angeles (Linear Labs)

15 Robert Glasper – Covered (Blue Note)

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

17 Saun & Starr – Look Closer (Daptone)

18 Liquid Liquid – Liquid Liquid (Superior Viaduct)

19 Liquid Liquid – Optimo (Superior Viaduct)

20 Liquid Liquid – Liquid Idiot/Idiot Orchestra (Superior Viaduct)

21 Fraser A Gorman – Slow Gum (House Anxiety/Marathon Artists)

22 William Basinski – The Deluge (2062/Temporary Residence)

23 Baio – Brainwash Yyrr Face (Glassnote)

24 [REDACTED]

25 Hiss Golden Messenger/Michael Chapman/Caught On Tape/Bishop-Orcutt-Corsano/Bardo Pond/William Tyler/Six Organs Of Admittance/Yo La Tengo/Kurt Vile/Steve Gunn – Parallelogram (Three Lobed Recordings)

26 Sonny Vincent & Rocket From The Crypt – Vintage Piss (Swami)

27 William Basinski – Cascade (2062/Temporary Residence)

Black Sabbath announce vinyl reissues

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Black Sabbath are reissuing their first eight albums on the vinyl. They'll kick off the reissue programme on June 22 with their self-titled debut album (1970), Paranoid (1970) and Master Of Reality (1971). On June 29, they'll re-release Vol. 4 (1972), Sabbath Bloody Sabbath (1973) and Sabotage (19...

Black Sabbath are reissuing their first eight albums on the vinyl.

They’ll kick off the reissue programme on June 22 with their self-titled debut album (1970), Paranoid (1970) and Master Of Reality (1971).

On June 29, they’ll re-release Vol. 4 (1972), Sabbath Bloody Sabbath (1973) and Sabotage (1975).

They’ll conclude the run on July 13 with Technical Ecstacy (1976) and Never Say Die (1978) – the band’s last album to feature Ozzy Osborne until 13 in 2013.

The albums will be released on heavyweight 180g vinyl, as well as CD.

The band have previously re-released these records on vinyl in 2012 as a box set, The Vinyl Collection: 1970-1978.