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A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night

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Intriguingly billed as an ‘Iranian vampire Western’, A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night is certainly a curious hybrid. Set in Iran but shot in California by a Margate-born director, and with Elijah Wood listed among its executive producers, the dialogue is entirely spoken in Farsi. To further disp...

Intriguingly billed as an ‘Iranian vampire Western’, A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night is certainly a curious hybrid. Set in Iran but shot in California by a Margate-born director, and with Elijah Wood listed among its executive producers, the dialogue is entirely spoken in Farsi. To further display it’s cross-cultural credentials, our nocturnal protagonist is also a skateboarding hipster, no less, with a taste for ‘80s 12” vinyl. The score, meanwhile, mixes Iranian pop, Morricone-inspired guitar riffs and Naughties English indie.

Taking place in the derelict Bad City – which resembles a cross between Detroit and a frontier town in a Western – it introduces the film’s titular vampire (Sheila Vand) as a kind of feminist avenger, meting out justice first to the abusive local pimp before gruesomely eliminating a number of male characters who have somehow transgressed. She befriends a prostitute (Mozhan Marno) and scares the Bejeezus out of a young boy; critically, she also strikes up a relationship Arash (Arash Marandi), a James Dean wannabe who improbably owns an impressive vintage Thunderbird. They meet, incidentally, when he’s high on Ecstasy, returning from a fancy dress party dressed as Dracula. She wheels him home on her skateboard.

Jim Jarmusch is evidently an influence on the film’s sharp black and white cinematography, coolly enigmatic characters, dry humour and pervasive mood of existential ennui. There’s a touch, too, of David Lynch, 1950s delinquent films; stylistically, it falls in with the current trend for original and stylized vampire films. But it would be disingenuous to suggest first time writer/director Ana Lily Amirpour’s film is simply the sum of its influences. Her camera work is lithe and fluid; she heightens drama through supple camera movements and otherworldly silence. A tracking shot of the girl skateboarding along a silent residential street at night, her chador flapping behind her like wings, is one of many memorable images.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Watch Tom Waits perform new song, “One Last Look”

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Tom Waits debuted a new song, "One Last Look", on The Late Show With David Letterman. The show took place on Thursday, May 14, 2015. It was Waits 10th and final appearance on The Late Night With David Letterman: the host is due to leave the show on Wednesday, May 20, to be replaced by Stephen Colb...

Tom Waits debuted a new song, “One Last Look“, on The Late Show With David Letterman.

The show took place on Thursday, May 14, 2015.

It was Waits 10th and final appearance on The Late Night With David Letterman: the host is due to leave the show on Wednesday, May 20, to be replaced by Stephen Colbert.

Waits first appeared with Letterman on December 21, 1983.

Commenting on Thursday night Waits said, “I don’t know when I will see Dave again. I guess from now on we’ll have to settle for bumping into each other at Pilates”.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKBFSU-LUw0

Jack White to be inducted into Nashville’s Walk of Fame

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Jack White is one of the inductees at the grand reopening of Nashville's Walk of Fame, which is due to take place next month. Loretta Lynn will also be inducted at the ceremony, which will take place at the newly-renovated Walk of Fame Park on June 4. "I can’t think of a better way to celebrate ...

Jack White is one of the inductees at the grand reopening of Nashville’s Walk of Fame, which is due to take place next month.

Loretta Lynn will also be inducted at the ceremony, which will take place at the newly-renovated Walk of Fame Park on June 4.

“I can’t think of a better way to celebrate the reopening of Walk of Fame Park than with the induction of Loretta Lynn and Jack White – two very diverse artists,” said Mayor of Nashville Karl Dean in a statement. “They represent what is best about Nashville with music that spans multiple genres and generations. They are great ambassadors for the creative community in our city, and I congratulate them on this wonderful honour.”

White recently finished up a five-date acoustic tour; which he has confirmed will be his final live shows for the forseeable future.

The show took place on April 26, 2015 in Fargo, North Dakota.

The Rolling Stones to host Twitter Q&A…

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The Rolling Stones are to take part in a Q&A on Twitter this coming Monday [May 18, 2015]. The session will take place at 6pm BST/10am PST, with the band fielding questions via their  official @RollingStones account and also the individual accounts: @mickjagger, @officialkeef and @ronniewood. ...

The Rolling Stones are to take part in a Q&A on Twitter this coming Monday [May 18, 2015].

The session will take place at 6pm BST/10am PST, with the band fielding questions via their  official @RollingStones account and also the individual accounts: @mickjagger, @officialkeef and @ronniewood.

The Q&A carries the hashtag, #AskTheStones.

The Stones are due to release their deluxe edition of Sticky Fingers through Universal Music on June 8.

Meanwhile, the band are currently preparing for their upcoming North American Zip Code tour.

The band play:

May 24: Petco Park, San Diego
May 30: Ohio Stadium, Columbus, Ohio
June 3: TCF Bank Stadium, Minneapolis, Minnesota
June 6: AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas
June 9: Bobby Dodd Stadium, Atlanta, Georgia
June 12: Citrus Bowl Stadium, Orlando, Florida
June 17: LP Field, Nashville, Tennessee
June 20: Heinz Field, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
June 23: Marcus Amphitheatre, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
June 27: Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri
July 1: Carter-Finley Stadium, Raleigh, North Carolina
July 4: Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Indianapolis, Indiana
July 8: Comerica Park, Detroit, Michigan
July 11: Ralph Wilson Stadium, Buffalo, New York
July 15: Le Festival d’ete de Quebec, Quebec City

 

BB King dies aged 89

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BB King has died aged 89. The news of King's death was confirmed by his lawyer, Brent Bryson who told the Associated Press [via The Guardian] that King died peacefully in his sleep on Thursday [May 14, 2015] at his home in Las Vegas. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WcMnpJtKdgk Born Riley B King o...

BB King has died aged 89.

The news of King’s death was confirmed by his lawyer, Brent Bryson who told the Associated Press [via The Guardian] that King died peacefully in his sleep on Thursday [May 14, 2015] at his home in Las Vegas.

Born Riley B King on September 16, 1925 in Mississippi, King began performing in the 1940s.

Of his early years, King wrote in his autobiography Blues All Around Me, “I’ve put up with more humiliation than I care to remember. Touring a segregated America – forever being stopped and harassed by white cops hurt you most cos you don’t realise the damage. You hold it in. You feel empty, like someone reached in and pulled out your guts. You feel hurt and dirty, less than a person.”

Among King’s best-known hits were “My Lucille“, “The Thrill Is Gone” and “Rock Me Baby”.

“He is without a doubt the most important artist the blues has ever produced,” Eric Clapton wrote in his 2008 biography, “and the most humble and genuine man you would ever wish to meet. In terms of scale or stature, I believe that if Robert Johnson was reincarnated, he is probably BB King.”

In 1988, he recorded “When Love Comes To Town” with U2 for their album Rattle And Hum.

In 2000 he collaborated with Eric Clapton on the album Riding With The King.

King was awarded his 15th Grammy in 2009 in the traditional blues album category for One Kind Favor.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRHV-HWhqWQ

King has battled Type II diabetes for more than 20 years Last October, he cancelled dates after falling ill.

He was admitted to hospital with high blood pressure and a diabetes-related illness in April this year.

Paul Weller: “My newest songs have got a New York Latino disco vibe”

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Paul Weller jokingly suggests his newest songs have a "New York Latino disco vibe", speaking in the current issue of Uncut, dated June 2015 and out now. Weller, whose new album, Saturns Pattern, is released on Monday (May 18), reveals that he's already working on new songs after being creatively re...

Paul Weller jokingly suggests his newest songs have a “New York Latino disco vibe”, speaking in the current issue of Uncut, dated June 2015 and out now.

Weller, whose new album, Saturns Pattern, is released on Monday (May 18), reveals that he’s already working on new songs after being creatively revitalised by the sessions.

“I could have kept on recording,” he says of the process of making Saturns Pattern,” we got into a creative flow at the time – but we had to stop as we had other things to do. There were a few things I started, new songs. I’d quite like to get on them some time.

“I’ve got a couple of things, but they’re a bit more New York disco… a New York Latino disco vibe going on. You can see it now, can’t you? Me with the little satin hot pants and roller skates on the front cover with a target T-shirt!”

Saturns Pattern is out on Monday, and the new Uncut is out now.

Eric Clapton: “I’m the master of the cliche”

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When Uncut meets Eric Clapton in the summer of 2014, he has just completed a new album, The Breeze, a tribute to his inspirational old friend, JJ Cale. It soon becomes clear, though, that it’s not just Cale’s death that has put Clapton in a reflective mood. In a frank and moving interview, he co...

When Uncut meets Eric Clapton in the summer of 2014, he has just completed a new album, The Breeze, a tribute to his inspirational old friend, JJ Cale. It soon becomes clear, though, that it’s not just Cale’s death that has put Clapton in a reflective mood. In a frank and moving interview, he confronts the messy past, the stable present, retirement, the prospect of diminishing powers and the reasons why touring has become “unbearable” to him. “In 10 or 15 years’ time,” he says, “driving will have become illegal!” Taken from Uncut’s August 2014 issue (Take 207). Interview: Graeme Thomson

_______________________

‘‘I’m getting old, man,” sighs Eric Clapton, establishing a theme of sorts for the hour that follows, much of which will be dedicated to contemplating the “age thing” from a number of often surprising angles.

Clapton’s new album, The Breeze, a tribute to his late friend JJ Cale, will almost certainly be the last record he releases before he turns 70 in March, 2015. On the cusp of that landmark, and with Cale’s death last year still fresh in his mind, Uncut finds Clapton in unusually reflective mood as he sits down in London to talk through the priorities of a 69-year-old guitar legend in his 51st year as a professional musician. Thoughtful, articulate, and disarmingly honest, he roams over past and present preoccupations, pondering his “selfish pursuits” and musical shortcomings; the “volatile” dynamic of Cream; why touring has become “unbearable”; his physical decline; how marriage has, at last, brought the stability he craved for so long; and whether this has been, all in all, a life well lived.

Certainly, if contentment can be attained through the gradual diminishing of worldly ambition, Clapton seems well on his way to achieving peace of mind. A combination of age and his willingness to embrace his responsibilities as a family man – Clapton married Melia McEnery in 2001, and they have three young daughters – has brought about a clear shift in his priorities. Bluesmen tend to go on for forever; Clapton insists he will not. More than once during a lengthy conversation he brings the subject around to the day – perhaps not so far away – when he will lay down his guitar for good. “I don’t want to have someone come up to me and say, ‘You know what? You shouldn’t be doing this any more’,” he says. “I’d rather come to that conclusion myself.”

These heavy intimations of the beginning of the end of one of the most celebrated careers in rock music lead to careful contemplation of his legacy, but first, there’s the matter of Clapton’s more recent activities. His last album, 2013’s Old Sock, was a gentle stroll through some of his favourite songs by other artists. The Breeze is a similarly retrospective affair, this time focusing on the songs of just one enduring influence. In the press release for the new record he describes his role as that of a “messenger”, an idea that cleaves to the old blues tradition of being an interpreter rather than a writer.

Paul Weller streams new album Saturns Pattern online

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Paul Weller is streaming his new album, Saturns Pattern, online. The album, which is released on May 18, can be heard on The Guardian's website. Written and recorded at Black Barn Studios in Surrey, Saturns Pattern was produced by Jan “Stan” Kybert and Weller. Saturns Pattern sleeve Musician...

Paul Weller is streaming his new album, Saturns Pattern, online.

The album, which is released on May 18, can be heard on The Guardian’s website.

Written and recorded at Black Barn Studios in Surrey, Saturns Pattern was produced by Jan “Stan” Kybert and Weller.

Saturns Pattern sleeve
Saturns Pattern sleeve

Musicians on the album Steve Cradock, Andy Crofts, Ben Gordelier and Steve Pilgrim, as well as The Strypes’ Josh McClorey, original Jam guitarist Steve Brookes and members of Syd Arthur.

The tracklisting for Saturns Pattern is:
White Sky
Saturns Pattern
Going My Way
Long Time
Pick It Up
I’m Where I Should Be
Phoenix
In The Car…
These City Streets

The 16th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

Bit of housekeeping: our new Ultimate Music Guide on Bob Dylan is on sale today (weird archive interviews, 36 new and in-depth new album reviews etc etc). In the meantime, a lot to listen to this week. Particular attention, please, to The Deslondes, who figured in my Hurray For The Riff Raff featur...

Bit of housekeeping: our new Ultimate Music Guide on Bob Dylan is on sale today (weird archive interviews, 36 new and in-depth new album reviews etc etc).

In the meantime, a lot to listen to this week. Particular attention, please, to The Deslondes, who figured in my Hurray For The Riff Raff feature that you can read here

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

1 Michael Head & The Strands – The Magical World Of The Strands (Megaphone)

2 Sun Kil Moon – Universal Themes (Rough Trade)

3 The Deslondes – The Deslondes (New West)

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

5 Jason Isbell – Something More Than Free (Southeastern)

6 Robert Glasper – Covered (The Robert Glasper Trio Recorded Live At Capitol Studios) (Blue Note)

7 Prince Featuring Eryn Allen Kane – Baltimore

https://soundcloud.com/prince3eg/baltimore

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

9 Shaun William Ryder – Close The Dam (Something In Construction)

10 Ezra Furman – Perpetual Motion People (Bella Union)

11 Tame Impala – Currents (Fiction)

12 Jamie xx – In Colour (Young Turks)

13 The Orb – Moonbuilding 2703 AD (Kompakt)

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

15 Pete Rock – PeteStrumentals 2 (Mello Music Group)

16 Unknown Mortal Orchestra – Multi-Love (Jagjaguwar)

17 Richard Thompson – Still (Proper)

18 Leon Bridges – Coming Home (Columbia)

19 Karin Krog – Don’t Just Sing: An Anthology 1963-1999 (Light In The Attic)

20 The Necks – Open (ReR)

21 William Basinski & Richard Chartier – Divertissement (Important)

22 Rachel Grimes – The Clearing (Temporary Residence)

23 Joan Shelley – Over And Even (No Quarter)

24 Jim O’Rourke – Simple Songs (Drag City)

25 Jim O’Rourke – The Visitor (Drag City)

26 Titus Andronicus – The Most Lamentable Tragedy (Merge)

27 [REDACTED]

Mad Max: Fury Road reviewed…

Last year, Uncut asked Jimmy Page what his best non-Zeppelin accomplishment was to date. It transpired that second in Page’s list of crowning achievements – after the mighty Zep, of course – was standing on top of a double decker bus playing “Whole Lotta Love” at the Closing Ceremony of th...

Last year, Uncut asked Jimmy Page what his best non-Zeppelin accomplishment was to date. It transpired that second in Page’s list of crowning achievements – after the mighty Zep, of course – was standing on top of a double decker bus playing “Whole Lotta Love” at the Closing Ceremony of the 2008 Beijing Olympics. That scene is partly recreated in George Miller’s revamped action franchise: one preposterously decorated truck has a lead guitarist perched on the hood, blasting out an endless succession of riffs in front of a stack of amplifiers. It says much about George Miller’s creative vision that this is simply a minor spectacle in amidst the ridiculous, hugely implausible and bizarre cacophony the director whips up. If there is a message to Miller’s film – the first Mad Max film in 30 years – it is simply that the highways of Valhalla are littered with radioactive dust storms, inbred feral militia and two-headed lizards.

Mad Max: Fury Road
Mad Max: Fury Road

In case you thought Miller might have quietened down a little now he’s 70 years old, you would be much mistaken. Mad Max: Fury Road is a heavy metal fantasia so heavy and so metal, the credits are in molten red lettering. Admirers of the Max films, then, will be gratified that nothing much has changed since last we visited Miller’s post-apocalyptic wasteland. Petrol, water and bullets are still the principal currencies while outrageously pimped automobiles remain the main mode of transport. The denizens also largely retain their semi-bestial qualities; in this case, many of them can be found living in Citadel, a canyon stronghold ruled by fierce warlord Immortal Joe (Hugh Keays-Byrne). With his body marked with queasy-looking pustules, his mouth covered in a ventilator mask branded with a skull emblem and a shock of long white hair, Joe looks every inch the unreasonable tyrant. As you’d imagine, Joe is pretty narked when he learns that five of his “breeders” – impossibly beautiful women he has taken as his wives – have been smuggled out of Citadel by Impirator Furiosa (Charlize Theron), one of Joe’s principal allies who has turned rogue. Joe dispatches his shaven-headed, chalk-white Warboys in pursuit: a freakish convoy of heavily armed and nightmarishly decorated vehicles.

Into this thunderously loud set-up comes Max Rockatansky (Tom Hardy) – “a crazy smeg eats schlinger”, whatever that may be. The former cop turned scavenger, Max forms an alliance with Furiosa, her cargo and Nux (Nicholas Hoult), a Warboy with an unusual connection to Max. They spend the best part of two hours thundering one way across the desert being pursued by Joe and his goons, then the other way. As you’d expect, vehicles get blown up in the most inventive manner possible. Indeed, Mad Max: Fury Road is a remarkable achievement for Miller. It is hard to tell where stunts and real traffic end and CGI begins. In a movie culture dominated by green screen work, Miller’s long takes and handcrafted feel offer a palpable sense of detail to the action. Credit in particular is due to Brendan McCarthy, the comic book artist and Miller’s chief collaborator here, who has essentially been finessing his pitch for Max since 1983’s post-apocalyptic surf comic, Freakwave. Indeed, fans of that series might have hoped for a cameo from Mickey Death in Fury Road; alas, it was not to be. As it is, McCarthy’s remarkable work is evident in the outlandish production design. The film looks fantastic, too: shot by cinematographer John Seale in a rich Technicolor, giving the desert (Namibia doubling for the Outback) rich, orange hues. The editing and sound design – never admittedly by most pressing concerns in a film – are top-notch here.

Mad Max: Fury Road
Mad Max: Fury Road

Hardy, in some respects, offers up a variation on the character he played in Locke: another man in transit and in crisis. Hardy – never knowingly shy of an accent – gives Max a gruff broque, which sounds sort of like Richard Burton doing an especially fruity impression of an Australian. Although Max is required to do little more than drive, look sullen, drive, shoot people, drive some more, Hardy brings a craggy, impassive quality to the part; he is a far more brooding figure than Mel Gibson in the original films. Theron, meanwhile, does equally staunch work as the righteous and strong-willed Furiosa. But characterisation (and indeed dialogue) is secondary to the stunts and the transport. For all its futuristic gallimaufry, Mad Max: Fury Road has noticeably old-fashioned antecedents – this is a straight update of a western, with Furiosa’s beleaguered 18-wheeler replacing the stagecoach and the Warboys analogous to a tribe of pursuing Red Indians.

Essentially, the film is a remarkable achievement for George Miller, who should really be looking forward to putting his feet up rather than charging round Africa with several hundred souped-up cars of various delineation. It is far more fun than any other action movie in recent memory; and no doubt a sweet vindication for Miller’s admirable perseverance.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Sgt Pepper to be taught to music students

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Britain’s biggest exam board, the AQA, is to make Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band a central theme of a refreshed GCSE music course. BBC News reports that as part of the new course, expected to be introduced next year, pupils will study three songs from the album – “Lucy In The Sky With...

Britain’s biggest exam board, the AQA, is to make Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band a central theme of a refreshed GCSE music course.

BBC News reports that as part of the new course, expected to be introduced next year, pupils will study three songs from the album – “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds”, “With A Little Help From My Friends” and “Within You Without You” – looking at topics including, harmony structure and rhythm and the meaning of the lyrics.

The course will also give pupils the option to prove their DJ credentials for the first time as part of the performance section of the qualification.

In related news, Paul McCartney recently debuted The Beatles’ song, “Another Girl”, live in concert. The song had never been performed live before. You can watch footage here.

The Thurston Moore Band announce tour dates

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The Thurston Moore Band have announced a spring UK tour dates. The band feature Moore alongside James Sedwards of Nought on guitar, My Bloody Valentine's Deb Googe on bass and Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley will play this weekend at the Great Escape in Brighton; their last scheduled date takes p...

The Thurston Moore Band have announced a spring UK tour dates.

The band feature Moore alongside James Sedwards of Nought on guitar, My Bloody Valentine‘s Deb Googe on bass and Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley will play this weekend at the Great Escape in Brighton; their last scheduled date takes place at Latitude Festival on July 18.

The band released an album The Best Day last year. You can read Uncut’s review of the band’s first ever show – on August 14, 2014 show at London’s Café Oto – by clicking here.

The Thurston Moore Band will play:

May 14: The Great Escape, Brighton
May 15: Oslo, London – Sold Out
May 16: Oslo, London
May 18: Phoenix, Exeter
May 19: Birmingham, Hare & Hounds
May 20: Cluny, Newcastle
May 22: Trades Club, Hebden Bridge
May 23: Sound City, Liverpool
July 18: Latitude, Suffolk

Stephen Hawking to make Glastonbury appearance

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Professor Stephen Hawking has been added to the bill for this year's Glastonbury festival. According to the organisers, he has been added to the bill for the Kidz Field childrens area, along with the magician Dynamo. It is not yet known in what capacity Hawking will be a guest. Recently, The Who ...

Professor Stephen Hawking has been added to the bill for this year’s Glastonbury festival.

According to the organisers, he has been added to the bill for the Kidz Field childrens area, along with the magician Dynamo.

It is not yet known in what capacity Hawking will be a guest.

Recently, The Who were confirmed as closing this year’s festival.

Patti Smith, Alabama Shakes, Mavis Staples, Suede and more are among the other acts confirmed to play Worthy Farm.

Pete Townshend reveals advice he gave Ray and Dave Davies…

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Pete Townshend has revealed how he urged Ray and Dave Davies to reform The Kinks and tour America. “Last year would have been The Kinks 50th anniversary," Townshend explains in the latest issue of Uncut, out now. "There’s no question that The Kinks, if Dave had been in better shape physically, ...

Pete Townshend has revealed how he urged Ray and Dave Davies to reform The Kinks and tour America.

“Last year would have been The Kinks 50th anniversary,” Townshend explains in the latest issue of Uncut, out now. “There’s no question that The Kinks, if Dave had been in better shape physically, and they’d managed to get together before Pete Quaife died, they would have been the only band that could have done a tour with all the original members. They could have gone to America.

“I’ve said this to Dave and to Ray whenever I had the chance, usually in emails: ‘You have no fucking idea!’ I don’t think they’ve really played in America. ‘You could go and do pub gigs – that’s all the Stones do – to fucking stadiums full of people. The love, the respect and the passion that you would get and the joy that you would get would just be monumental. Apart from that, you’d come back multi-millionaires.’”

Read the full interview with Townshend – in which talks about the future of The Who, retirement, his current relationship with Roger Daltreyin the May 2015 issue of Uncut (#217).

Click to buy this issue on line here

Leonard Cohen releases five songs from his new live album

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Leonard Cohen has released five songs from his new live album, Can’t Forget: A Souvenir Of The Grand Tour. He has posted the tracks on his official Vevo page. Three of them are from his back catalogue - "Field Commander Cohen", "Light As The Breeze" and "Night Comes On" - while "Stages" is ta...

Leonard Cohen has released five songs from his new live album, Can’t Forget: A Souvenir Of The Grand Tour.

He has posted the tracks on his official Vevo page.

Three of them are from his back catalogue – “Field Commander Cohen“, “Light As The Breeze” and “Night Comes On” – while “Stages” is taken from his spoken word introduction to “Tower Of Song”.

One song, “Got A Little Secret“, is new.

Click here to read Leonard Cohen’s 20 Best Songs as chosen by his collaborators and famous fans

Can’t Forget: A Souvenir Of The Grand Tour was recorded at soundchecks and concerts on the 2012 and 2013 legs of Cohen’s Old Ideas world tour.

The album was released on May 11, 2015.

Exclusive! Hear Jeff Beck’s new studio track, “Tribal”

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Jeff Beck releases his new live album, Jeff Beck Live +, through Rhino on May 18, 2015. As a bonus, the album also contains two brand new studio tracks, "Tribal" and "My Tiled White Floor". We're delighted to be able to share with you "Tribal": Beck's first new music since 2010 and a thrilling tas...

Jeff Beck releases his new live album, Jeff Beck Live +, through Rhino on May 18, 2015.

As a bonus, the album also contains two brand new studio tracks, “Tribal” and “My Tiled White Floor“.

We’re delighted to be able to share with you “Tribal“: Beck’s first new music since 2010 and a thrilling taster for his new studio album, which is reportedly due later this year.

Jeff Beck Live + features 14 live tracks recorded on tour during 2014. Beck is backed by vocalist Jimmy Hall, bassist Rhonda Smith, drummer Jonathan Joseph and guitarist Nicolas Meier.

It can be pre-ordered by clicking here.

Jeff Beck Live +
Jeff Beck Live +

Click here to read An Audience With… Jeff Beck

The track listing for Jeff Beck Live+ is:

“Loaded”
“Morning Dew”
“You Know You Know”
“Why Give It Away”
“A Change Is Gonna Come”
“A Day In The Life”
“Superstition”
“Hammerhead”
“Little Wing”
“Big Block”
“Where Were You”
“Danny Boy”
“Rollin’ And Tumblin’”
“Going Down”
“Tribal”
“My Tiled White Floor”

Ask Merle Haggard!

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With a new album Django And Jimmie on sale June 2, Merle Haggard 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 legendary outlaw? To what does he attribute his long friendship with Willie Nelson? ...

With a new album Django And Jimmie on sale June 2, Merle Haggard 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 legendary outlaw?

To what does he attribute his long friendship with Willie Nelson?

Does he have a favourite cover version of one of his songs?

What advice would he give to a young musician who’s just be starting out?

Send up your questions by noon, Friday, May 15 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

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

Please include your name and location with your question.

Introducing Bob Dylan: The Ultimate Music Guide

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Early 1973. The Melody Maker's Michael Watts is on a plane from Durango to Mexico City, with at least some of the cast and crew of Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid. Across the aisle from Watts is the amiable and forthcoming star of the movie, Kris Kristofferson, generous enough to be sharing his bott...

Early 1973. The Melody Maker’s Michael Watts is on a plane from Durango to Mexico City, with at least some of the cast and crew of Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid. Across the aisle from Watts is the amiable and forthcoming star of the movie, Kris Kristofferson, generous enough to be sharing his bottle of Jameson’s with the writer.

Just behind Kristofferson, with a straw hat pulled right down over his face, sits another member of the cast; one who shares a trailer with Kristofferson on set, but can let days go by without even speaking to his supposed friend. A newcomer to acting, whose pathological guardedness leads the film’s publicist to describe him to Watts as, “just rude”. A man renamed, for the purposes of Sam Peckinpah’s movie, as Alias.

“This guy can do anything,” says Kristofferson, marvelling. “In the script he has to throw a knife. It’s real difficult. After 10 minutes or so he could do it perfect. He does things you never thought was in him. He can play Spanish-style, bossa nova, flamenco…one night he was playing flamenco and his old lady, Sara, had never known him do it at all before.”

Watts, possibly emboldened by the liquor, confides in Kristofferson that he is scared to speak to this glowering enigma. “Shit, man,” Kristofferson roars. “You’re scared. I’m scared, and I’m making a picture with him!”

Fear. Mystery. Confusion. Awe. The magnetic strangeness of Bob Dylan has now dominated our world for over half a century, casting a long shadow over most everyone who has followed in his wake. The prospect of compiling an Ultimate Music Guide dedicated to the great man was itself rather daunting, which may explain why it’s taken us so long to put together this very special issue (It’s in UK shops on Thursday, but you can order a Dylan Ultimate Music Guide from our online store right now).

Anyhow, we pursue rock’s most capricious and elusive genius through the back pages of NME and Melody Maker, revisiting precious time spent with Dylan over the years: from a relative innocent in a Mayfair hotel room, complaining about how, already, “people pick me apart”; to a verbose prophet of Armageddon revealing, with deadly intent, “Satan’s working everywhere!”

To complement these archive reports, we’ve also written in-depth new pieces on all 36 of Dylan’s storied albums, from 1962’s “Bob Dylan” to this year’s “Shadows In The Night”; 36 valiant, insightful attempts to unpick a lifetime of unparalleled creativity, in which the rich history, sounds and stories of America have been transformed, again and again, into something radical and new. In which Dylan has revolutionised our culture, several times, more or less single-handedly.

“‘Tombstone Blues’ proved Dylan had not exactly abandoned protest music, more broadened the scope of his protest to accurately reflect the disconcerting hyper-reality of modern western culture,” writes Andy Gill, in his exemplary essay on “Highway 61 Revisited”. “It was a transformation which would change the way that both artists and audiences alike regarded their relationship with the world. No mean feat for rock’n’roll.”

Foo Fighters – Sonic Highways

A living refutation of the “stupid drummer” joke, Dave Grohl has moved from the back of the stage with Nirvana to the front of his own band, the insistent, enormously successful Foo Fighters. For the band’s most recent album, Sonic Highways Grohl moved somewhere less prominent again: behind th...

A living refutation of the “stupid drummer” joke, Dave Grohl has moved from the back of the stage with Nirvana to the front of his own band, the insistent, enormously successful Foo Fighters. For the band’s most recent album, Sonic Highways Grohl moved somewhere less prominent again: behind the camera, becoming the producer/director/narrator of this ‘making of’ documentary with a difference.

Sonic Highways follows the Foo Fighters as they record tracks for their upcoming album in eight different American cities of musical note. Hang on, though. With quality research, first-hand knowledge gathered while schlepping around the country on tour, and an ear for both a scene and a good story, this becomes both a personal geography and an extremely engaging history lesson.

A case in point would be Chicago. It’s the home to Steve Albini’s Electrical Audio, which serves as a gateway into Albini’s enthusiasms, morality and history – not least with Nirvana. As you will already know, the city was also the laboratory of the electric blues, and duly Grohl (a scrupulous off-camera interviewer) gets brilliant, brilliant stuff from Buddy Guy, who tells an anecdote about Muddy Waters that will leave you beaming helplessly. The long-haired contextual authority is played by Rolling Stone’s David Fricke, while celeb pals provide additional colour.

Studios are more interesting than you’d think, it turns out. In New York, Fricke recalls walking past Electric Lady, the bespoke facility of Jimi Hendrix, complete with – as Gene Simmons explains – underground river. Jimmy Iovine, the face of the modern record business, recalls being the second engineer on Record Plant recordings, and how he came to be called “Jimmy Shoes”. Bowie is present anecdotally, via James Murphy.

Steve Rosenthal runs New York’s Magic Shop, a sonically-perfect cupboard in Hell’s Kitchen, which has hosted recordings by Lou Reed, Patti Smith, Ramones and other local acts. When the boyband wave broke in ’98, the studio, with its Neve console, didn’t try to compete, but went deeper into what it loved – launching a sound restoration business which has since performed Lazarine work on historic recordings by the likes of Woody Guthrie. Might Nora Guthrie on hand to speak movingly on this topic, by any chance? Oh, of course, there she is.

There are, in among these joys, it must be added, the sequences during which Foo Fighters go through the process of recording their new compositions, and then play them in a full-tilt Reading Festival manner rather at odds with the sensitive work that we’ve been watching. Nor can Grohl can’t quite subdue his urge to clown cleverly in situations that excite him. In such moments he seems a little too pleased with himself, but then if you were him, watching this, you’d have every reason.

EXTRAS: extended interviews with Barack Obama, Dan Auerbach, Chuck D, Billy Gibbons, Gibby Haynes, Joan Jett, Ian Mackaye, Dolly Parton, Carrie Underwood and Joe Walsh.

Torres – Sprinter

Mackenzie Scott’s 2012 debut, the self-titled Torres, was one of those records that impressed, despite it being clear that what laid within may not quite be the finished product. It was recorded in five days while Scott was a 22-year-old student, in a Tennessee studio owned by Tony Joe White – a...

Mackenzie Scott’s 2012 debut, the self-titled Torres, was one of those records that impressed, despite it being clear that what laid within may not quite be the finished product. It was recorded in five days while Scott was a 22-year-old student, in a Tennessee studio owned by Tony Joe White – a veteran Louisiana musician who last year jammed with Foo Fighters on Letterman, but may be best remembered for writing Tina Turner’s “Steamy Windows”. Torres had the feel of a record made quickly and on the cheap, all emotional purge, bare electric guitar and raw emotion. The final track, “Waterfall”, found her contemplating a suicide plunge. “The rocks beneath they bare their teeth/They all conspire to set me free…” Morbid, perhaps; but what was interesting is that it felt more like a beginning than an ending.

Torres’ second album follows a process of maturing and uprooting. There was graduation from university, in English and songwriting; tours with Sharon Van Etten and Strands Of Oak; then a move from Nashville to Brooklyn. But Sprinter was made even further from home. Specifically, Bridport, Dorset, where she holed up in the studio of Rob Ellis, producer and sometime drummer for PJ Harvey. Sprinter also features bass from original PJ Harvey bassist Ian Olliver – which constitutes his and Ellis’ first studio work together since 1992’s Dry – not to mention guitar and synth from Portishead’s Adrian Utley, in whose Bristol studio the record was completed. If Torres felt naked and pared back, this record is ambitious and multi-faceted, sometimes a thing of quiet, folksy restraint, but as likely to dive into a watery sonic netherworld, or strap on some grungy dynamics to get its kicks.

Not to dwell on PJ Harvey, but Sprinter shares some things with the oeuvre of Polly Jean. At first glance, it has the ring of a raw confessional, but on closer inspection, is plainly the result of some fastidious authorship, crammed with vivid vignettes surely rooted in life experience, but ringing like the best fiction. Standout is “New Skin”, a ragged, theatric guitar lament that vacillates between exhaustion, guilt and steely resolve, and rallies with a repeated entreaty: “But if you’ve never known the darkness/Then you’re the one who fears the most.” Too many good lines here, though, from the bleary-eyed southern states hedonism of “Cowboy Guilt” (“You had us in stitches/With your George W impressions/You sang of reparations/With the Native Americans”) to “Ferris Wheel”, in which a wallow in unrequited affection becomes a lonely visit to the fairground: “My friends just laugh and roll their eyes/When I tell them I don’t mind the way it feels/To ride an empty Ferris wheel.”

The weight of a religious upbringing hangs heavy, leaving a sense of issues unresolved. On “The Harshest Light” she quotes the Yahweh of the Old Testament, while the title track contemplates a pastor who preaches to his students of Zacchaeus, the hated tax collector redeemed by Jesus; but the man of God receives no such redemption, sent down “for pornography”. Such tantalising narrative glimpses nudge up against blasts of raw feeling. “Strange Hellos” is an explosive Nirvana lope that shoves its chorus in your face like a scarred wrist: “I was all for being real/But if I don’t believe then no-one will…” “Son You Are No Island”, meanwhile, channels romantic revenge into audacious sonics. To a creeped-out drone, Scott multitracks her voice into eerie chorus, and at the denouement – “Son, you’re not a man yet/You fucked with a woman who would know” – the voices suddenly scatter, like a flock of admonishing harpies.

An album that frequently feels to be about growing pains, Sprinter may, like its predecessor, not quite be Mackenzie Scott’s defining moment. All the same, it shows enough promise that we should take that as a profound positive. Like Torres, it ends on a note of watery despair, albeit one so beautifully rendered it feels almost triumphant. Across its eight minutes, “The Exchange” contemplates the uncomfortable feeling of watching our heroes age, why lost souls choose the touring life, her mother’s adoption, and a family tree severed at the bough. “I pray to Jesus Christ/Incessantly/I shine my shoes for the/Fat Lady” she sings, and at the end she’s imagining herself underwater, calling out to her parents, sinking deeper and deeper into the murk. A certain morbidity may become a hallmark of Torres’ writing; but then, it’s in the darkness that she finds herself.

Q&A
Torres
You lived in Nashville, which is commonly thought of as a big music city – but recently moved to New York. Why the change of scene?

I love Nashville, and it is a big music city. It just isn’t a big city. At least, it isn’t the big city. I’ve wanted to live in New York City since I was 14 years old. It was always my plan to move here once I’d earned my degree in Tennessee.

Many of your songs have an almost fictive but there’s a strong sense of autobiography that runs through Sprinter, too.
I’m dependent on my life experience. It provides a foundation for the writing. If I didn’t have experience to speak of then I wouldn’t be a credible source. I try to try out different interpretive lenses in viewing my experiences, though, because otherwise I think the writing would get stale. I really love this Sylvia Plath quote from an interview she did with Peter Orr in 1962: “I think my poems immediately come out of the sensuous and emotional experiences I have, but I must say I cannot sympathise with these cries from the heart that are informed by nothing except a needle or a knife, or whatever it is. I believe that one should be able to control and manipulate experiences […] with an informed and an intelligent mind.”

Dorset is a long way from home. Why did you decide to come to the UK to record Sprinter? Was it recommended to you, or was it an idea you’d always had in your head?
Rob Ellis lives in Bridport. We’ve known each other for a couple of years and I was willing to do almost anything to work with him on this record. So I traveled to him!

There seems to be more emphasis on musical atmosphere-building than on your debut – and of course you have figures like Adrian Utley, Robert Ellis and Ian Olliver on board. How did you envisage it sounding? Did you succeed?
I got exactly what I wanted out of those handsome Brits! Seriously. I kept telling Rob (when we were talking pre-production) that I wanted the record to have a distinct (albeit nebulous when I tried to articulate my vision to him) atmosphere, and he kept assuring me that the friends he’d asked to play on the record were right for the job. All of the musicians who played on the record took direction really well; I actually had chills listening to Olly and Adrian play their bass and guitar parts, respectively. Also, Rob’s drum work is phenomenal. He’s one of those rare drummers that you just watch and become mesmerized. He uses his entire body when he plays.
INTERVIEW: LOUIS PATTISON