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Hear Kurt Cobain cover The Beatles

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Kurt Cobain's unreleased version of The Beatles' "And I Love Her" has appeared online. The demo recording was discovered by Brett Morgen, director of the recent Cobain documentary, Montage Of Heck, while sifting through Cobain's extensive audiotape archive. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdc...

Kurt Cobain‘s unreleased version of The Beatles‘ “And I Love Her” has appeared online.

The demo recording was discovered by Brett Morgen, director of the recent Cobain documentary, Montage Of Heck, while sifting through Cobain’s extensive audiotape archive.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdcA_ozN17Q

Rolling Stone reports that while the track will be included in the film’s soundtrack — along with other never-before-heard tracks from Cobain’s archive —this full version has leaked online.

“Nobody in Kurt’s life — not his management, wife, bandmates — had ever heard his Beatles thing,” Morgen told Rolling Stone. “I found it on a random tape.”

AC/DC drummer Phil Rudd pleads guilty to threatening to kill and drugs charges

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AC/DC drummer Paul Rudd has entered a plea of guilty to charges of threatening to kill a former employee and drug possession. Rudd was originally charged with attempting to procure the murder of an associate last year. After the alleged threats were made, police raided Rudd's home on November 6 wh...

AC/DC drummer Paul Rudd has entered a plea of guilty to charges of threatening to kill a former employee and drug possession.

Rudd was originally charged with attempting to procure the murder of an associate last year.

After the alleged threats were made, police raided Rudd’s home on November 6 where they found 130g (4.6 ounces) of marijuana and 0.7g of methamphetamine.

BBC News reports that Rudd had previously denied all charges.

However, Rudd has since revised his plea ahead of the start of his trial at Tauranga district court, New Zealand.

According to The Independent, Rudd now faces a maximum jail sentence of seven years for the death threats. He faces a further three months for possession of cannabis and six months for possession of methamphetamine.

Rudd has been released on bail until June 26.

John Lennon solo albums box set announced

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John Lennon’s eight solo studio albums are to be collected in a new nine-disc set. Titled Lennon, the set features 180-gram vinyl remastered from the records original analogue masters. The set is due for release on June 8 by Universal Music Catalogue. The albums will also be released individual...

John Lennon’s eight solo studio albums are to be collected in a new nine-disc set.

Titled Lennon, the set features 180-gram vinyl remastered from the records original analogue masters.

The set is due for release on June 8 by Universal Music Catalogue.

The albums will also be released individually on Friday, August 21, 2015.

The albums feature replicated original album art. Imagine contains reproductions of its two postcards, poster and inner bag, Some Time In New York City includes reproductions of its original postcard and inner sleeve, Walls And Bridges includes its sleeve with two fold-over flaps, an eight-page booklet and inner sleeve, and Mind Games, Double Fantasy and Milk And Honey also include reproductions of their original inner sleeves.

The tracklisting for John Lennon: Lennon is:

John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band (1970)
Imagine (1971)
Some Time In New York City [2LP] (1972)
Mind Games (1973)
Walls And Bridges (1974)
Rock ‘n’ Roll (1975)
Double Fantasy (1980)
Milk And Honey (1984)

The 13th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

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Apologies for the delay getting this playlist out; the practical difficulties of finishing the next issue of Uncut rather got the better of me last week, and meant I had to neglect blogging duties for a few days. The slog of reading proofs and so on was helped, however, by a load of strong new arri...

Apologies for the delay getting this playlist out; the practical difficulties of finishing the next issue of Uncut rather got the better of me last week, and meant I had to neglect blogging duties for a few days.

The slog of reading proofs and so on was helped, however, by a load of strong new arrivals, as you’ll see below, not least the first album of formal songs by Jim O’Rourke in, what, 14 years? Can’t say much about it at this early stage, but fans of “Insignificance” won’t be disappointed, at the very least. Also recommended: new ones by Wolfgang Voigt, William Basinski and Rachel Grimes; and a great live set from the redoubtable Hiss Golden Messenger.

And before we start the hype around next week’s new issue, can I flag up a special offer that our subscriptions team have put together? The deal, in fairness, is a good one: if you take out an annual subscription to Uncut between now and midnight on Thursday, it’ll only cost £39.99, you’ll get immediate access to our digital edition, and they’re throwing in three of our Ultimate Music Guides – on Neil Young, Nick Cave and Depeche Mode – as an added incentive.

This excellent Uncut subscription offer is here, if you’re interested. JOIN US…

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

1 The Weather Station – Loyalty (Paradise Of Bachelors)

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

3 Sir Douglas Quintet – The Complete Mercury Masters (Hip-O Select)

4 Various Artists – Nu Yorica! Culture Clash in New York City: Experiments in Latin Music 1970-77 (Soul Jazz)

5 Jamie xx – In Colour (Young Turks)

6 Leftfield – Alternative Light Source (Infectious)

7 Meg Baird – Don’t Weigh Down The Light (Wichita/Drag City)

8 Wolfgang Voigt – Rückverzauberung 10 (Kompakt)

9 Trembling Bells – The Sovereign Self (Tin Angel)

10 David Bowie – The Man Who Sold The World (Mercury)

11 Michael Chapman – Fully Qualified Survivor (Harvest)

12 Czarface (Inspectah Deck + 7L & Esoteric) – Deadly Class (Feat Meyhem Lauren) (Brick)

13 Black Mountain – Black Mountain (Dead Oceans)

14 Amara Toure – 1973-1980 (Analog Africa)

15 Leon Bridges – Coming Home (Columbia)

16 S. Araw “Trio” XI – Trellis (Sun Ark)

17 Bob And Ron Copper – Traditional Songs From Rottingdean (Fledg’ling/Topic)

18 Martin Carthy – Martin Carthy (Topic)

19 Jon Gibson – Visitations (Superior Viaduct)

20 Tyler, The Creator – Cherry Bomb (Columbia)

21 Rachel Grimes – The Clearing (Temporary Residence)

22 Rob St John/Woodpigeon – Gin & Swearing (Song By Toad)

23 The Pre-New – The Male Eunuch (Cherry Red)

24 Kendrick Lamar – To Pimp A Butterfly (Top Dawg/Interscope)

25 William Basinski – The Deluge (Temporary Residence)

26 Dawn Of Midi – Dysnomia (Erased Tapes)

27 Pat Thomas & Kwashibu Area Band – Pat Thomas & Kwashibu Area Band (Strut)

28 [REDACTED]

29 Hiss Golden Messenger – April 17, 2015 Haw River Ballroom (www.nyctaper.com)

Bill Wyman announces first solo album in 33 years

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Bill Wyman will release Back To Basics, his first solo record in 33 years, on June 22, 2015. The 12-track album was recorded together with long time Wyman collaborators Terry Taylor, Guy Fletcher, Graham Broad and Robbie Mcintosh. His last album, the self-titled Bill Wyman, was released in 1982. ...

Bill Wyman will release Back To Basics, his first solo record in 33 years, on June 22, 2015.

The 12-track album was recorded together with long time Wyman collaborators Terry Taylor, Guy Fletcher, Graham Broad and Robbie Mcintosh.

His last album, the self-titled Bill Wyman, was released in 1982.

Speaking about Back To Basics, Wyman said: “Initially I thought I’m a bit old for this but then I thought all the old blues musicians played till they dropped so why don’t I give it a go?â€

The news comes shortly after the Rolling Stones announced plans to reissue their 1971 album, Sticky Fingers.

Tracklist:

What & If & When & Why

I Lost My Ring

Love, Love, Love

Stuff (Can’t Get Enough)

Running Back To You

She’s Wonderful

Seventeen

I’ll Pull You Through

November

Just A Friend Of Mine

It’s A Lovely Day

I Got Time

Exciting (Bonus track for Itunes only)

Courtney Barnett – Sometimes I Sit And Think, And Sometimes I Just Sit

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“I was walking down Sunset Strip,†Courtney Barnett sings on “Kim’s Caravanâ€, the epic, noisy centrepiece of her debut album. A moment later, though, comes a wry clarification. “Philip Island, not Los Angeles…†This reference to the tourist hotspot near Melbourne is a relief; a sign...

“I was walking down Sunset Strip,†Courtney Barnett sings on “Kim’s Caravanâ€, the epic, noisy centrepiece of her debut album. A moment later, though, comes a wry clarification. “Philip Island, not Los Angeles…â€

This reference to the tourist hotspot near Melbourne is a relief; a sign that, despite the weight of worldwide acclaim on her shoulders, Barnett is still very much in touch with the Australian suburbs that have inspired her exceptional songs.

The best tracks on her first two EPs, compiled as 2013’s The Double EP: A Sea Of Split Peas, were glorious confections of alternative guitar rock, lazy sprechgesang vocals and artful lyrics, at once funny and deeply poignant. “Avant Gardener†was the ‘hit’, a true tale of Barnett suffering anaphylactic shock while trying to clear her yard, set to a charmingly repetitive groove studded with spacey guitars.

There are no humorous songs about falling ill while gardening here – although we do get a humorous song about falling ill in the pool while trying to hold your breath to impress a fellow swimmer. The track in question, two-minute sugar-rush “Aqua Profunda!â€, is punchier than most of Barnett’s previous work, setting a pattern for the majority of Sometimes…. The sprightly “Debbie Downer†could spring right from the early ’90s, organ and guitar seesawing over a baggy-ish beat, while “Nobody Really Cares If You Don’t Go To The Party†and “Dead Fox†move away from The Double EP’s more laidback, slacker-esque grooves to jaunty, poppy textures that are more Britpop in nature.

Sometimes… is not all three-minute garage-pop, though; some songs plough a grungier furrow, with Barnett, toughened up by a year of performing live in a loud trio format, channeling Mudhoney on the stomping “Pedestrian At Best†and closing thrilling, Pavement-esque waltz “Small Poppies†with a storm of ragged soloing.

With this artist, the music is really only half the story, though. Australian songwriters such as The Go-Betweens, Darren Hanlon, You Am I and The Lucksmiths, to name just a handful, have long mined similar lyrical seams, telling stories laced with black humour and poignancy; and Barnett, surpassing the global notoriety of these, is easily their peer. Her narrative skills position many of the tracks here closer to short stories than songs; take opener “Elevator Operatorâ€, apparently about a suicidal commuter drone, until a twist in the tale opens up the song’s horizons, literally – it turns out the guy’s just checking out the view from the roof of a building so he can pretend he’s “playing Sim Cityâ€.

At other moments, Barnett is increasingly impressionistic with her imagery, writing less about herself and more about the world as she sees it. On “Dead Foxâ€, she dreamily weaves together vignettes on organic fruit and vegetables, truckers’ dangerous driving and whether cars should be locked up in zoos instead of animals, until these disparate topics fold together with a beautiful sense of logic. “A possum Jackson Pollock painted on the tar,†is her most gloriously kaleidoscopic line.

The seven-minute-long “Kim’s Caravan†continues these ecologically driven themes over an atmospheric slow-build not dissimilar to Neil Young’s “Down By The Riverâ€. “The Great Barrier Reef, it ain’t so great anymore/It’s been raped beyond belief, the dredgers treat it like a whore…†Barnett murmurs, as an ominous bass riff is joined by echoed guitars on the edge of feedback. Highlights like this, and the caustic “Pedestrian At Bestâ€, suggest that the possibility of her pursuing more extended and out-there ideas in the future is an exciting prospect.

With such engaging and well-loved songs as “Avant Gardener†and “History Eraser†in her back catalogue, Sometimes I Sit And Think And Sometimes I Just Sit could in theory have been a tough follow-up. And yet Courtney Barnett has managed to expand her lyrical preoccupations and musical interests outwards and upwards, while still retaining the magic of her past peaks. In such skilful hands as hers, it seems, even an album about touring the world and becoming rich might not be something to fear, after all.

Q&A

Courtney Barnett

How was the recording process for Sometimes…?

We didn’t do too many overdubs, we didn’t fuck around too much. I think it took 10 days, I didn’t really wanna spend too much longer than that. You find yourself getting a bit too fussy, a bit too serious about it.

Have you been very concerned with ecological matters recently?

I guess these kind of things always have been, but I think in the last year it’s just kind of amplified a bit. I guess a lot of the time I’ve been writing and in my downtime, it’s just been playing on my mind a bit more maybe than usual. “Kim’s Caravan†is just about the helplessness of those situations.

Did you consciously try not to write songs about touring the world?

I wrote these songs between the second EP and last April. It wasn’t so much that I was trying to avoid those things, though we’d played America and Europe, but it was just that our three-month tour hadn’t happened yet! A lot of the stuff I’ve written since then has probably been about those kind of places or people I’ve met when I’m travelling around. I write about what I do and see, so there’s no point trying to not talk about it.

INTERVIEW: TOM PINNOCK

Neil Young: The inside story of a remarkable year

Overnight, we received exciting news of Neil Young's new album, The Monsanto Years, which is reportedly due for release later this year. It seems like an auspicious time, then, to post my cover story from last year: a detailed look at Neil's 2014, with help from some of his closest collaborators and...

“After the Crazy Horse tour finished,†remembers Poncho Sampedro. “I wrote to Neil and I said, ‘I’m home, I’m relaxed, I’m with my girl, we’re really settled in and I’m really enjoying life.’ I said, ‘I know you’re probably still working on something at this point. You haven’t stopped since the last day I shook hands and said goodbye to you and gave you a hug. You’re probably working on a couple of different projects. I just want you to know, I feel as if I could walk out in front of my house and put up a sign that says, “Mission Accomplishedâ€.’ But I know Neil doesn’t feel that way.â€

Although Sampedro isn’t certain what the future holds for Crazy Horse, he admires his old friend’s astonishing workrate during 2014. “Neil is ready to live until he’s 100 and something years old,†he laughs.

There are others, though, who draw different conclusions from the bustling narrative of Young’s year. Niko Bolas, for instance, makes a surprising deduction about how he believes all Young’s many different projects will shape the next period of his life. “If anything, he may have completed a lot of things so that he can take the next decade and triumph in the other things that he’s concerned about. I don’t think it’s a musical decade coming up, as much as it is one of fighting for mankind. He’s stood in a tar sand field and looked at dead animals and come out thinking, ‘Why isn’t anybody doing anything about this?’ If anybody has the ability to use fame to affect change, even in the slightest bit, he’s the guy that has the courage to do that.â€

“He’s become quite an activist,†confirms Rick Rosas. “He’s done things I’ve never seen him do before, like book signings and a lot of media. Which was never the case. Before, you’d be surprised if you saw Neil on TV. So things are changing. Obviously, he feels it’s time for him to be spoken on his environmental thoughts and hopefully provide awareness to people. It’s a good thing. But there are only forks in the road with Neil. Anything could happen. I wouldn’t put it past him.â€

Click here to read Neil Young on the making of his greatest hits

Neil Young announces new album + tour dates

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Neil Young is expected to release a new album on June 16, 2015. According to a report on Rolling Stone, Young's latest - titled The Monsanto Years - has been recorded with Promise Of The Real, featuring Willie Nelson's sons Lukas and Micah. Young and his latest band debuted new material at a smal...

Neil Young is expected to release a new album on June 16, 2015.

According to a report on Rolling Stone, Young’s latest – titled The Monsanto Years – has been recorded with Promise Of The Real, featuring Willie Nelson’s sons Lukas and Micah.

Young and his latest band debuted new material at a small club gig in San Luis Obispo, California on Thursday, April 16.

Speaking about Young to Uncut last year, Lukas Nelson said, “Neil’s always got so much going on. Even if he looks like he’s just standing there, his mind is working. To us, he’s like Yoda, or something. Dad’s like that, too. Those guys. it’s in their make-up. I have no doubt Neil’s gonna be rocking for a long time to come. Dad’s 81 and he’s still going. They’re cut from the same cloth, and Neil admires my dad for that very reason, too.”

Rolling Stone also reveal Young and Promise Of The Real will embark on the Rebel Content Tour to support the album, which is due to begin at Milwaukee’s Summerfest on July 5.

July 5 – Milwaukee, WI @ Summerfest
July 8 & 9 – Denver, CO @ Red Rocks
July 11 – Lincoln, NE @ Pinnacle Bank Arena
July 13 – Cincinnati, OH @ Riverbend Music Center
July 14 – Clarkston, MI @ DTE Energy Music Theatre
July 16 – Camden, NJ @ Susquehanna Bank Center
July 17 – Bethel, NY @ Bethel Woods Center for the Arts
July 19 – Essex Junction, VT @ Champlain Valley Expo
July 21 – Wantagh, NY @ Jones Beach
July 22 – Great Woods, MA @ Xfinity Center
July 24 – Oro-Medonte, ONT @ Wayhome Festival

David Borden – Music For Amplified Keyboard Instruments

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You can’t go far these days without coming across a reissue purported to be a landmark in the history of analogue synth. Music For Amplified Keyboard Instruments, though, is the real deal. David Borden was a friend of Bob Moog, who he met while composer-in-residence at New York’s Ithaca City Sch...

You can’t go far these days without coming across a reissue purported to be a landmark in the history of analogue synth. Music For Amplified Keyboard Instruments, though, is the real deal. David Borden was a friend of Bob Moog, who he met while composer-in-residence at New York’s Ithaca City School District in the late ‘60s. He and Borden struck up a relationship, and the inventor was keen to get his prototype into the hands of a promising young composer. Borden, more musician than technician, promptly fried much of Moog’s experimental circuitry. “But Bob thought it good,†says Borden. “He redesigned all of the modules so that no matter how they were hooked up they still functioned.â€

Borden later joked that Moog was out to idiot-proof his synthesizer, and he was the useful idiot. But 1981’s Music For Amplified Keyboards is proof Borden grasped this instrument’s possibilities in a way few others did. Its dense layering brings to mind a masterpiece of minimalism such as Reich’s Music For 18 Musicians, but the sweep of its melodies is altogether something else: the perfect collision of technology and composer.

Two pieces titled “The Continuing Story Of Counterpoint†come from a 12-part cycle Borden toiled on for 11 years, honed with his live group, Mother Mallard’s Portable Masterpiece Co. “We were the world’s first ongoing synthesizer ensemble,†says Borden. Mostly, this music was regarded as a curio. “Later, some critic called it electronic minimalism,†says Borden. “But we never paid attention to genres.â€

Borden is proud of Music For Amplified Keyboard Instruments, but it was no commercial success and has been out of print for years. Today, Borden has retired from teaching, but Mother Mallard is again a going proposition – albeit, now a laptop ensemble with USB keyboards. “So I am interested in modern technology,†he says, “And still seem to be ahead of the curve in some cases.”

Watch Paul McCartney induct Ringo Starr into the Rock’n’Roll Hall Of Fame

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Paul McCartney inducted Ringo Starr into the Rock'n'Roll Hall Of Fame on Saturday [April 18, 2015]. In his speech, quoted by Rolling Stone, McCartney said, "We were four guys from Liverpool that set out on this journey. Eventually we got on The Ed Sullivan Show and got really famous. "Ringo is jus...

Paul McCartney inducted Ringo Starr into the Rock’n’Roll Hall Of Fame on Saturday [April 18, 2015].

In his speech, quoted by Rolling Stone, McCartney said, “We were four guys from Liverpool that set out on this journey. Eventually we got on The Ed Sullivan Show and got really famous.

“Ringo is just something so special. When he’s playing behind you, you don’t have to look and wonder if he’s going to speed up or slow down. It’s just there. It’s a great honor for me to induce him — oh, induct him — into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.”

Later, McCartney joined Starr on stage to perform “A Little Help From My Friends“.

Starr is the final member of The Beatles to be inducted.

McCartney, John Lennon and George Harrison were inducted as solo artists in 1999, 1994 and 2004 respectively.

The Beatles themselves were inducted in 1988.

Led Zeppelin’s rarest vinyl record to be auctioned

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What is believed to be the rarest Led Zeppelin vinyl record is to be auctioned. The item - Led Zeppelin Past, Present And Future - is an official promotional album that was never released by the band's Swan Song Records. There are only two test pressings in existence of the record. The album cons...

What is believed to be the rarest Led Zeppelin vinyl record is to be auctioned.

The item – Led Zeppelin Past, Present And Future – is an official promotional album that was never released by the band’s Swan Song Records.

There are only two test pressings in existence of the record.

The album consists of an interview conducted at the August 11, 1979 Knebworth Festival concert with Robert Plant and John Paul Jones.

Led Zeppelin
Led Zeppelin

Click here to read our exclusive interview with Robert Plant

According to the website zeppelincollectables, a cover was designed by Led Zeppelin’s record company and a catalogue number assigned (Swan Song PR-342) before production ceased. Other than a very few test pressings, records were never manufactured.

The starting bid for the album is $6,000.00 and the auction will run until Sunday April 26, 2015.

You can find more details about the auction by clicking here.

David Bowie: Lou Reed’s collaboration with Metallica was his “masterpiece”

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David Bowie thinks Lou Reed's 2011 collaboration with Metallica, Lulu, is his "greatest work". The claim was made by Reed's widow Laurie Anderson during her speech at Reed's induction into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame on Saturday, April 18. "One of his last projects was his album with Metallica,...

David Bowie thinks Lou Reed‘s 2011 collaboration with Metallica, Lulu, is his “greatest work”.

The claim was made by Reed’s widow Laurie Anderson during her speech at Reed’s induction into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame on Saturday, April 18.

“One of his last projects was his album with Metallica,†she said. “And this was really challenging, and I have a hard time with it. There are many struggles and so much radiance. And after Lou’s death, David Bowie made a big point of saying to me, ‘Listen, this is Lou’s greatest work. This is his masterpiece. Just wait, it will be like Berlin. It will take everyone a while to catch up.’â€

Anderson added: “I’ve been reading the lyrics and it is so fierce. It’s written by a man who understood fear and rage and venom and terror and revenge and love. And it is raging.”

Click here to find out more about Uncut’s Lou Reed: The Ultimate Music Guide

Lou Reed: The Ultimate Music Guide
Lou Reed: The Ultimate Music Guide

Reed was inducted by Patti Smith, who said, “I made my first eye contact with Lou, dancing to the Velvet Underground when they were playing upstairs at Max’s Kansas City in the summer of 1970. And then somewhere along the line, Lou and I became friends. It was a complex friendship, sometimes antagonistic and sometimes sweet. Lou was sometimes emerge from the shadows at CBGBs. If I did something good, he would praise me. If I made a false move, he would break it down.”

She continued: “One night, when we were touring, separately, we wound up in the same hotel, and I got a call from him, and he asked me to come to his room. He sounded a little dark, so I was a little nervous. But I went up, and the door was open, and I found him in the bathtub dressed in black. So I sat on the toilet and listened to him talk. It seemed like he talked for hours, and he talked about, well, all kinds of things.”

“He spoke compassionately about the struggles of those who fall between genders. He spoke of pre-CBS fender amplifiers and political corruption. But most of all, he talked about poetry. He recited the great poets — Rupert Brooke, Hart Crane, Frank O’Hara. He spoke of the poets’ loneliness and of the poets’ dedication to the highest muses. When he fell into silence, I said, “Please, take care of yourself, so the world can have you as long as it can.” And Lou actually smiled.”

You can read the full transcript of her speech at Rolling Stone.

Neil Young debuts new songs at small club gig

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Neil Young debuted new songs during a small club gig last night [April 16, 2015]. The show took place at the SLO Brewing Co in San Luis Obispo, California. You can see footage from the show above. Neil Young Click here to read Neil Young on the making of his greatest hits The Neil Young fan sit...

Neil Young debuted new songs during a small club gig last night [April 16, 2015].

The show took place at the SLO Brewing Co in San Luis Obispo, California.

You can see footage from the show above.

Neil Young
Neil Young

Click here to read Neil Young on the making of his greatest hits

The Neil Young fan site, Sugar Mountain, which collates Young’s live appearances, lists Young as having performed with Lukas Nelson & The Promise Of The Real. They also have the following set list:

Country Home
New Song 1 – People Want To Hear About Love??
New Song 2 – New Day For The Planet??
Down By The River
New Song 3 – Too Big Too Fail??
New Song 4 – GMO – Starbucks??

Walk On
New Song 5 – Monsanto
New Song 6 – I Don’t Know You??
New Song 7 – Seeds??
Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
New Song 8 – Big Sky/Wolf Moon??
Love And Only Love
New Song 9
New Song 10
Country Home


Roll Another Number

One report on the Steve Hoffman music forums says: “Tickets were just $10.00 and nothing was revealed about the show until about an hour before show time. SLO Brewing is a small club that holds maybe 300 people. Neil did two sets mostly new material.”

In January, Uncut reported that Young was working on new material with Lukas Nelson and his brother, Mikah.

The San Luis Obispo Tribune quotes promoter Todd Newman, of Good Medicine Presents, as saying, “Lukas contacted us last week and asked to work on a secret show,. He didn’t offer many details. He simply said, ‘Let’s plan for a concert Thursday and we are going to bring something special to Good Medicine and SLO.’

â€It wasn’t until shortly before the show that we found that Neil was the special surprise.â€

You can see some photographs from the SLO Brewing Co show by clicking here.

Uncut’s greatest lost albums

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It’s quite hard to imagine that such a thing as a Great Lost Album could still exist, at a time when everything seems available. But amazingly, there are albums by Neil Young, Van Morrison, The Who, David Bowie and even The Beatles which cannot be bought as a new CD or as a legal download. Here, ...

NEIL YOUNG
Time Fades Away
(Reprise, 1973; very limited vinyl release, 2014)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BLv2VviaLX4

Neil Young was still laid up at his Broken Arrow ranch, just south of San Francisco, recovering from spinal surgery, when Harvest made him the biggest-selling solo artist in the world. During the long months of his recuperation, there had been a growing clamour for him to tour that had gone unanswered, although he knew there were big bucks to be made by everyone after the album’s phenomenal success. His record company had simultaneously been so hungry for a follow-up that in November 1972, they’d released the soundtrack from his unseen film, Journey Through The Past. It was a rag-bag of old tracks, studio outtakes, a couple of live cuts, bits of Handel’s “Messiahâ€, a cover of The Beach Boys’ “Let’s Go Away For Awhile†and only one new song, “Soldierâ€. Young hadn’t wanted it released at all, but Warners had told him they’d distribute the film if he gave them the soundtrack. They then tried to dress it up as his ‘new’ album, and promptly dumped the film.

The same month, fuming at the label’s duplicity, he anyway started to assemble a large crew of technicians at his ranch to prepare for a three-month, 65-date tour, the largest and longest of its kind to date, which would find him playing nightly to audiences of up to 20,000 people in sports stadiums, basketball arenas, ice hockey rinks. Also at Broken Arrow were The Stray Gators, the band who’d played on Harvest, including veteran Nashville session drummer Kenny Buttrey, bassist Tim Drummond, pedal-steel player Ben Keith and on keyboards Jack Nitzsche, the producer and arranger who’d first worked with Young on his Buffalo Springfield epic, “Expecting To Flyâ€.

They would be his backing band on the forthcoming tour, rehearsals for which were interspersed with recording sessions for the official follow-up to Harvest. Young had already recorded four solo acoustic demos at A&M studios in LA – “Letter From Namâ€, “Last Danceâ€, “Come Along And Say You Will†and “The Bridge†– and worked up more new songs at Broken Arrow. The new record’s working title was ‘Last Dance’. There was even a track listing for it that included the songs “Time Fades Awayâ€, “New Mamaâ€, “Come Along And Say You Willâ€, “The Bridgeâ€, “Don’t Be Denied†on side one, with “Look Out Joeâ€, “Journey Through The Pastâ€, “Last Dance†and “Goodbye Christians On The Shore†completing the album.

As the recordings and rehearsals continued and perhaps the scale of the tour he was about to start became increasingly apparent, Young grew ever more fretful about his physical condition. He hadn’t played electric guitar on stage since a CSNY concert in Minneapolis on July 9, 1970. For most of the past 12 months, because of his debilitating spinal condition, he’d had to wear a back brace which sometimes made playing even acoustic guitar painful, and he’d therefore made only one public appearance during the last 18 months, at the Mariposa Folk Festival in Ontario in July 1971. With the tour now looming, he began to worry that he wouldn’t be able to carry an entire show on his own. He called Danny Whitten, guitarist with his estranged former backing group, Crazy Horse, with whom he’d recorded Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere.

Young had once proudly described Crazy Horse as “the American Rolling Stones†and throughout his career they would be his most spectacular musical sparring partners. But because of Whitten’s chronic heroin addiction, Neil had fired the band and scrapped most of the tracks they’d recorded together for the album that became After The Gold Rush.

No-one’s properly explained why Whitten turned to heroin, but there’s always been the suspicion that it had something to do with the rejection he felt when Neil decided to divide his time between Crazy Horse, with whom he would be successful, and CSNY, with whom he became a superstar. Whatever, his life was soon one long drugs binge. His heroin habit worsened, to the point where, unable any longer to work with him, Crazy Horse fired him during rehearsals for a tour to promote their eponymous ‘solo’ LP, which Jack Nitzsche had produced in late 1970. Being sacked by his own band was a humiliation Whitten responded to by sinking ever deeper into narcotic oblivion. According to Young biographer Jimmy McDonough, he’d spend weeks on end in his apartment, sitting in his bathtub, shooting up speedballs of heroin and cocaine. When he wasn’t mainlining, he was drinking heavily.

Answering Young’s call to join him and The Stray Gators at Broken Arrow, however, Whitten told Neil he was clean, finally off heroin, and he turned up at the ranch to join the rehearsals. He was a mess, though, unable to learn his parts, and still using, according to Nitzsche. Neil had offered his friend a lifeline, a way out of drugs and back into music. But Whitten was already too far gone. On November 18, 1872, Young made a painful decision and sacked him. He gave Whitten $50 and a plane ticket back to LA, where the same night Whitten fatally overdosed on a mix of alcohol and Valium. Young was devastated. He blamed himself for Whitten’s death, slipped into a brooding funk he carried with him into the tour that followed.

“Danny’s OD put a shadow over everything,†Ben Keith tells Uncut. “But we had to forget about it. Move on. Neil had a job to do and got on with it. The show must go on, I guess.â€

What became know as the ‘Time Fades Away’ tour opened on January 4, 1973, at the Dane County Coliseum in Madison, Wisconsin, and it was fraught from start to finish. Young would later describe it as one of the unhappiest times of his life, probably the worst tour of his career.

He’d already fallen out with the band, over their demands for more money than they’d originally signed up for and when they weren’t on stage, travelling together on the turbo-prop Lockheed Elektra jet Young had chartered for the tour, he tended to keep his distance from them. He stayed on separate floors in hotels, retreating to his room after most shows to get drunk on tequila and stoned on pot.

After only a few shows, he became frustrated with the way the band were playing, how they sounded in the cheerless arenas into which they’d been booked. His mood was worsened by the behaviour of the crowds. They were distracted and noisy during the acoustic parts, restless and inattentive elsewhere. Most had come to hear their favourite songs from Harvest. They were noisily indifferent to anything they were unfamiliar with, which turned out to be a lot. At least a third of every show was devoted to new songs, previously unheard. These were emotionally raw and came from a much darker place than Harvest.

Young’s performances became increasingly erratic, prone to hysteria, confrontational. He took to berating audiences. More than once, enraged, he quit the stage and took the startled band with him. There were few nights when Neil didn’t throw a major strop. His moods took a toll on everyone, especially the crew, who struggled with the inadequacies of the custom-built PA and the inhospitable acoustics of the huge sheds they were playing. Neither did the band escape his often boozy wrath. Kenny Buttrey had made his bones as a studio drummer, in which environment he had few equals. Nothing he played on tour seemed to satisfy Neil, however, and none of it was loud enough, even though he used bigger and bigger sticks and hit the drums so hard his hands bled. After 33 shows, he was replaced by Johnny Barbata, who’d played on the last CSNY tour.

“Neil called me up halfway through the tour and said, ‘Buttrey’s not making it, can you come out and play drums for me?’†Barbata tells Uncut. “Apparently, he wasn’t hitting the bass drum loud enough for Neil. Buttrey’s a studio musician, and a lot of studio musicians don’t play with any balls. I said, ‘Sure, when do you want me to come out?’ He said, ‘Tomorrow. We’ve got a show in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. There’s a plane ticket waiting, they’ll pick up your drums.’ I raced to the airport, barely made my flight. I got to the hotel before Neil did, with my drums in the back of my limo. Neil said, ‘All right, Barbata. You made it.’ I don’t know what he would have done if I hadn’t. He didn’t have Buttrey. He gave me 20 minutes’ rehearsal and they recorded a song onstage that night I’d never heard before. Tim Drummond had to give me all the cues. It was pretty wild.â€

By now, with a month of the tour left, Young’s voice was giving out. David Crosby and Graham Nash signed up for the last three weeks, although what they could have done to lighten the sour mood that had settled on things is unclear. Crosby’s mother was dying of cancer and Nash’s girlfriend had just been murdered by her brother in a drugs-related killing.

There was one more flashpoint. On March 31, the ‘Time Fades Away’ tour fetched up at Oakland Coliseum, where during a version of “Southern Manâ€, Young saw a cop laying into a fan. “I can’t fuckin’ sing with this happening,†he announced, storming off, as the angry crowd pelted the stage with bottles.

“It was a weird night,†Barbata recalls. “He’d already done his acoustic set and we came on and did one song. A cop was hassling some girl in the front row and it pissed Neil off. He couldn’t concentrate, so he just told the band to leave the stage. He had to tell me twice, I was in shock – ‘Barbata, let’s go. Barbata, let’s go.’â€

Three nights later, on April 3, in Salt Lake City, after exactly 90 days, the ‘Time Fades Away’ tour was finally, to the relief of everyone, over.

Back at Broken Arrow, Young’s mood was dark. He continued to brood over Whitten’s death, which took on a symbolic significance.

“It just seemed like it really stood for a lot of what was going on,†Young told Melody Maker in 1985. “It was like the freedom of the ’60s and free love and drugs and everything… it was the price tag. This is your bill. Friends, young guys dying, kids that didn’t even know what they were doing, didn’t know what they were fucking around with. It hit me pretty hard, so at that time I did sort of exorcise myself.â€

Whatever he released next, in other words, would have to recognise the harsh new realities he’d recently had to face. In his present mood, the winsomeness of Harvest was far beyond him. Neither did he show much interest in returning to the tracks he’d recorded with The Stray Gators the previous November. Early in 1971, a double live album had been announced, along with a track listing. It had never been released. Now, however, Young’s thoughts turned again to a live album. Elliot Mazer, who’d produced Harvest, had recorded 45 of the dates on the ‘Time Fades Away’ tour and Young started to review them, discarding familiar songs in favour of the new material he’d played to an often hostile reaction from an audience who’d only wanted to hear the hits they knew.

Then as now, live LPs were often little more than contract-fillers, cash-ins, something to plug the gap when an artist had nothing new to say. Young was looking for something different and so what became the Time Fades Away album would reflect the strains, tensions and conflict of the recently completed tour, a documentary roughness, unflattering in many ways, but painfully honest, which was as much as Young could ask of himself at the time, his only reasonable response to the sombre place his world had become.

The album when it came out featured seven tracks recorded during the last month of the TFA tour, plus a 1971 live version of “Love In Mindâ€. It opens with the six-minute title track, a feverish narrative about junkies, politicians and the military, intercut with a running dialogue between a wayward son and his weak, pleading father. Musically, you can imagine it was perhaps intended to recall something like the lean howl of Dylan’s “Highway 61â€. Instead, it’s noisy, cantankerous, all over the place. Nitzsche’s frantic piano, high in the lop-sided mix, drowns out Young’s guitar and Ben Keith’s pedal steel. Half way through, there’s a wheezing harmonica solo, mercifully brief. Barbata should be driving all this along with some urgency, but nobody seems to have told him where the song is going and spends the entire number hammering away in the background like a man building a shed.

“Yonder Stands The Sinner†is no less reassuring, a demented 12-bar thrash, with Young barking the lyric like someone apparently possessed you’d walk around in the street. “LA†takes his elemental sense of right and wrong to new, wrathful limits. “When the suburbs are bombed and the freeways are crammed/And the mountains erupt and the valley is sucked/Into cracks in the earth/Will I finally be heard by you?†he rages. Uncut’s Bud Scoppa, writing about the album in Rolling Stone, compared Young’s performance here to “some neo-Israelite prophet, warning the unhearing masses of the inevitable apocalypseâ€.

The record’s three ballads – “Journey Through The Pastâ€, introduced as “a song without a homeâ€, “The Bridge†and the gorgeous “Love In Mind†– offer some respite on a record whose battered psychology is most bruisingly represented by the two long tracks that open and close its second side. “Don’t Be Deniedâ€, written the day after Whitten’s death, is graphically autobiographical, directly descended from “Helplessâ€. Its four verses cover Young’s childhood, his parents’ divorce, his troubled adolescence (“The punches came fast and hard/Laying on my back in the school yardâ€), the corruption of youthful optimism and the redemption offered by music.

“Last Danceâ€, meanwhile, much changed from the original A&M sessions, opens with a blast of feedback and over the next 10 minutes becomes a thing of relentless mayhem.  The song’s lyric is initially admonishing, a hippy’s ticking off of the ‘straight’ lifestyle of nine-to-five mundanity. “You can make it on your own time/Laid back and laughing,†Young sings, but he doesn’t sound terribly convinced that the alternative way of living he’s proposing is any more fulfilling than what he’s notionally criticising. His sudden acknowledgement of this is startling. The track has been in many ways limping towards a predictable end, and the band sound on the verge of packing up for the night, when from somewhere Young gets a second wind. “No, no, no,†he starts singing, hoarsely, apparently rejecting the somewhat self-righteous message of the song so far. “No… No… No…,†he goes on, screaming now. “NO! NO! NO!†There’s more feedback, the band sounding confused by what’s happening. “NONONO!!!†Young rants, out there, in a place you wouldn’t want to be for long, racking up something like 76 consecutive triple negatives. He sounds as close to being out of control as he ever will on record, or anywhere else. “Sing with us, c’mon!†you can hear Nash shouting, although you’re not sure who he’s talking to – the audience or the rest of the band. Barbata comes pounding back in about now, hauling everyone else behind him. The song ends in a kind of exhausted chaos, leaving behind it an ominous silence.

Anyone who’d sat, largely appalled, through performances like this on the ‘Time Fades Away’ tour would have been astonished if you’d told them they’d soon be released on a live album as a follow-up to Harvest.

Time Fades Away was released in October ’73, to the worst reviews of Young’s career to date.

“Time Fades Away proves once and for all that like so many others who get elevated to super-star status, Neil Young has now got nothing to say for himself,†opined Nick Kent in NME, a view widely shared, if spectacularly wrong.

Young archivist Joel Bernstein, whose photo of the audience at Philidelphia’s Spectrum was used for the LP cover, printed on a paper stock that was intended over time to fade, summed up the bafflement of many. “How does a guy go from being the mellow hippy smiling in the barn to the drunk, intentionally out-of-it guy screaming at the audience?†he asked. “The hippy’s gone. The hippy took a plane home.â€

And this is a clue to the significance of Time Fades Away. What Neil Young became, the wilful unpredictable iconoclast of subsequent legend, he started becoming here. Alone, really, of his superstar peers, he was clearly alert to the shifting mood of things and thus with Time Fades Away, he distanced himself at a stroke from the dreamy utopianism of the so-called Woodstock Nation and the sybaritic indulgence that now prevailed in the circles from which he had so dramatically with this record absented himself. Released in the same year as Raw Power, it was no less an acknowledgement that the pampered rock hierarchy of the early-’70s had had its day.

Four years before punk’s howling disenchantment, Young was already challenging the old order. By the time it came out, he had already recorded Tonight’s The Night, a tequila-soaked musical wake for Danny Whitten and CSNY guitar roadie Bruce Berry, who had recently died from a heroin OD. There would be no turning back from here.

Forty years after its release, Time Fades Away and the Journey Through The Past soundtrack are the only albums from Young’s copious back catalogue that have never been available on CD. Plans for a November 1995 CD release were scrapped at the last moment, for unexplained reasons, perhaps to do with Young’s own view of the album – “the worst record I ever made†– and the painful place in his history that it occupies. It was also conspicuously absent from the August 2003 Neil Young Archives Digital Masterpiece Series releases, which included CD debuts for On The Beach, American Stars’N Bars, Hawks & Doves and Re-Ac-Tor. In 2007, the word from his management in reply to the continued petitioning from fans for its re-release was that a CD version remained unlikely [to sign the online petition for the release of Time Fades Away on CD, go to www.thrasherswheat.org].

More recently, though, there’s been mention of a Time Fades Away II, which may be included in the second volume of the Archives series, possibly an expanded edition including performances of more familiar songs played on the tour, but purposely excluded from the original album, or songs recorded on the first half of the tour, with Buttrey on drums.

It being the way with Neil, however, it could be something else entirely.

EXPECT TO PAY: £25. You won’t be disappointed.

Written by: Mark Bentley, Michael Bonner, David Cavanagh, Kitty Empire, Mick Houghton, Rob Hughes, Allan Jones, Phil King, Damien Love, Alastair McKay, Piers Martin, John Mulvey, Louis Pattison, Chris Roberts, Luke Torn, Jimmy Young, Rob Young and Bill Drummond

Some thoughts on that Star Wars: The Force Awakens trailer…

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Last night, it was all about seeing familiar faces again. First, there was Ed Miliband on the final leaders debate trying his best not to play into Tory hands by allying himself with Nicola Sturgeon and the SNP; a tactic that may not entirely play out in his favour come election day. It seems unlik...

Last night, it was all about seeing familiar faces again. First, there was Ed Miliband on the final leaders debate trying his best not to play into Tory hands by allying himself with Nicola Sturgeon and the SNP; a tactic that may not entirely play out in his favour come election day.

It seems unlikely, on the strength of the new trailer, that Star Wars: The Force Awakens will turn out to be as disappointing as the leader’s debate. The internet, perhaps predictably, exploded at the glimpse of Han Solo and Chewbacca, reunited on screen for the first time in over 30 years. Their appearance in this new instalment was hardly a secret, of course. Nevertheless the sight of them together on board the Millennium Falcon in the closing seconds of the trailer – coupled with Solo’s “Chewie, we’re home†line – provided a comforting familiarity necessary to salve frustrated fans with painful memories of the wretched Prequels.

Certainly, it is romantic to see The Force Awakens as an attempt by JJ Abrams – who’s assumed stewardship of the series from George Lucas – to smooth over the cracks left by the series’ creator. The Force Awakens (iffy title, admittedly) is a new chapter with new characters, sure; but also reassuringly there are old friends to catch up with.

Among other topics buzzing round cyberspace last night was, Star Wars vs The Avengers: which will take more at the box office? However playfully it might have been phrased, it’s a predictably reductive playground fight, a bit like, “My Dad’s bigger than yours.” You never quite hear the same debate raging about, say, Iranian cinema: who’s better, Parvis Kimiavi or Bahram Baizai?

Some Stormtroopers, yesterday
Some Stormtroopers, yesterday

It never ceases to amaze me how much emotive pull Star Wars continues to exert. I remember attending an exhibitors screening of The Phantom Menace early one morning at the Empire Leicester Square. The audience totalled six: me and five middle aged men who ran the country’s biggest cinema chains. These were, it should be noted, not exactly the film’s core audience and their response to the film isn’t a matter of public record. All the same, in this basically empty, cavernous cinema there was still something incredibly powerful about the opening text crawl, the John Williams’ score and, later, the appearance of two much-loved droids from the original movies. Similarly, when Attack Of The Clones launched at the Cannes Film Festival, I can quite clearly recall the childlike delight of the world’s most distinguished film critics as a phalanx of Stormtroopers filed down the Croisette to the strains of Williams’ “Imperial Marchâ€. Such is the power of la Force.

Star Wars: The Force Awakens..Ph: Film Frame..©Lucasfilm 2015

Essentially, Star Wars fulfils the same function between an audience and an object as a favourite band or book or TV programme. There are music fans who will bury themselves in the cornflake detail of their beloved artist or band, voraciously soaking up all the miscellanea they can. Ranking albums in order of preference is, essentially, no different from ranking favourite Star Wars characters.

Anyway, apologies for the slightly perambulatory nature of the blog today. It’s hard to make a considered judgement on 2 minutes and 1 second of footage; however top loaded that is with fan bait. What is certain is that it’ll be hard to keep me out of the cinema come December 18.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The Rolling Stones to release 1971 Marquee Club show

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The Rolling Stones are to release a rare gig from 1971 filmed at London's Marquee Club. The show was filmed for American television and took place a month before the release of the Sticky Fingers album. The gig marked the live debut of album tracks, “Brown Sugarâ€, “Dead Flowersâ€, “Bit...

The Rolling Stones are to release a rare gig from 1971 filmed at London’s Marquee Club.

The show was filmed for American television and took place a month before the release of the Sticky Fingers album.

The gig marked the live debut of album tracks, “Brown Sugarâ€, “Dead Flowersâ€, “Bitch†and “I Got The Bluesâ€.

It is the third release in the band’s From The Vault series, following on from the Live At The LA Forum and Hampton Coliseum.

The release of From The Vault: The Marquee – Live In 1971 also coincides with the forthcoming Sticky Fingers deluxe reissue and the band’s North American tour dates.

The Rolling Stones From The Vault: The Marquee – Live In 1971 is available in four formats:

DVD

Main tracklisting & bonus features

SD Blu-ray

Main tracklisting & bonus features

DVD + CD

The DVD and a single CD

DVD + LP

DVD and a single LP (main tracklisting only)

TRACKLISTING:

Live With Me

Dead Flowers

I Got The Blues

Let It Rock

Midnight Rambler

(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction

Bitch

Brown Sugar

BONUS TRACKS:

I Got The Blues – Take 1

I Got The Blues – Take 2

Bitch – Take 1

Bitch – take 2

Brown Sugar (Top Of The Pops, 1971)

The Rolling Stones From The Vault: The Marquee – Live In 1971 is released via Eagle Rock Entertainment on 22 June 2015

Exclusive! Watch A Short Film About Ryley Walker

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The Chicago-based guitarist Ryley Walker is the subject of a new short film, which you can watch at the top of this page. Walker, whose Primrose Green album is a former Uncut Album Of The Month, is currently on tour in the UK. He'll be playing four shows during Record Store Day tomorrow April 18...

The Chicago-based guitarist Ryley Walker is the subject of a new short film, which you can watch at the top of this page.

Walker, whose Primrose Green album is a former Uncut Album Of The Month, is currently on tour in the UK.

He’ll be playing four shows during Record Store Day tomorrow April 18, 2015:
12:30pm – Rough Trade West instore
2:00pm – Sister Ray Instore
5:30pm – Sister Ray Ace Hotel inshore

He will also play a sold out show at the Sebright Arms in London’s Bethnal Green later that evening.

Ryley Walker, Primrose Green sleeve
Ryley Walker, Primrose Green sleeve

Walker will also play:

04/19/15 Manchester, UK – The Castle [sold out]
04/20/15 Bristol, UK – Start The Bus
04/21/15 Cardiff, UK – Clwb lfor Bach
04/22/15 Coventry, UK – The Tin at the Coal Vaults
04/23/15 Leeds, UK – Brudenell Cards Room
04/24/15 Brighton, UK – The Hope & Ruin [sold out]

He returns to the UK to play the Shacklewell Arms on September 2, 2015.

Black Sabbath reunion latest: Ozzy Osbourne accuses Bill Ward of “playing the victim”

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Ozzy Osbourne has responded to a statement issued by Bill Ward earlier in the week, in which the drummer said only a personal apology from Osbourne could tempt him to rejoin Black Sabbath. In a post on Facebook, Osbourne claims he has "no option but to respond honestly" to Ward's comments. "Wow,...

Ozzy Osbourne has responded to a statement issued by Bill Ward earlier in the week, in which the drummer said only a personal apology from Osbourne could tempt him to rejoin Black Sabbath.

In a post on Facebook, Osbourne claims he has “no option but to respond honestly” to Ward’s comments.

“Wow, Bill. What the fuck are you on about? I cannot apologize for comments or opinions I may have made about you in the press during Sabbath’s ‘13‘ album and tour– physically, you knew you were fucked. Tony, Geezer and myself didn’t think you could have done a two hour set with a drum solo every night, so we made the decision to move on. With Tony’s condition we felt that time was not on our side.”

He adds: “Bill, stop this smokescreen about an ‘unsignable contract’ and let’s be honest. Deep down inside you knew you weren’t capable of doing the album and a 16 month tour. Unfortunately for you, our instincts were correct as you were in hospital several times during 2013. Your last hospitalization was for a shoulder surgery that you now say you’ve only just recovered from. This would have meant that our world tour would have been canceled. So how is all of this my fault? Stop playing the victim and be honest with yourself and our fans.”

Osbourne ends the post by reaching out to Ward, saying “Bill, we go back a long way, let’s stop this now before it gets out of hand. God bless you.”

Todd Rundgren: “If you make music, you have to deal with some weirdnessâ€

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Todd Rundgren discusses his two new albums, a Roots collaboration and ‘Bat Out Of Hell: The Musical’ in the new Uncut, out now. The singer, multi-instrumentalist and producer also talks about the ToddStock festivals for fans that he organises at his homes. “We had one in my home in Hawaii,â€...

Todd Rundgren discusses his two new albums, a Roots collaboration and ‘Bat Out Of Hell: The Musical’ in the new Uncut, out now.

The singer, multi-instrumentalist and producer also talks about the ToddStock festivals for fans that he organises at his homes.

“We had one in my home in Hawaii,†he says, “where people camped on the lawn and drank my booze. Last year, we took everyone around some breweries in California, which was fun but a bit more touristy.

“I’m not sure when the next one will be – I’m hoping that we might end up in Havana. That’d be fun.â€

Asked whether he’s been concerned about getting so close to fans – fanatic Mark Chapman claims he murdered John Lennon in fealty to Rundgren – he says: “Oh man, you can’t live your life like that. If you’re gonna make music that affects people, you inevitably have to deal with some weirdness.â€

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

 

Photo: J Bloomrosen

Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide: Pink Floyd

In the wake of “The Endless Riverâ€, though, a significant arc has been completed, and a critical, previously obscured part of the Floyd story has been brought into view. As David Gilmour sings on “Louder Than Wordsâ€, the closing track of what was presented as their valedictory album; “Letâ...

In the wake of “The Endless Riverâ€, though, a significant arc has been completed, and a critical, previously obscured part of the Floyd story has been brought into view. As David Gilmour sings on “Louder Than Wordsâ€, the closing track of what was presented as their valedictory album; “Let’s go with the flow, wherever it goes/We’re more than alive…â€

The Ultimate Music Guide to Pink Floyd, then, now tells the complete story of an extraordinary band, a tale that encompasses epic power struggles, intimate confessions, preposterous experiments and, of course, madness, and which stretches back for the best part of five decades. The legend of a great, sometimes oracular British band so potent, in fact, that even their tribute bands play arenas.

There’s a persuasive idea that those tribute bands have been so successful because Pink Floyd themselves are, in a way, anonymous. Who cares about the identity of the musicians playing these awe-inspiring songs, goes the argument: just check out the light show! Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to Pink Floyd proves, we think, that this is nonsense. The tale of Pink Floyd is one as human, passionate and compelling as any in the rock canon.

The band’s dramas were played out in the pages of NME, Melody Maker and Uncut, and in the Ultimate Music Guide you’ll find uncut, revelatory interviews conducted with the band between 1967 and 2014. We begin with the brief psychedelic flowering of Syd Barrett, and chart the band’s years of questing until they arrive at The Dark Side Of The Moon. We dive into the intensely personal psychodramas of Roger Waters and the more becalmed stewardship of David Gilmour, and provide in-depth reviews of every Pink Floyd album. We have, of course, added extensive new material on “The Endless Riverâ€, to bring the story right up to date.

“Looking through the Pink Floyd songbook surprises me sometimes,†says Gilmour. “There are hundreds of songs, we go through lots of different styles of music, three different leaders and at least three different singers, and dozens of guests. But everything’s linked by this collective psyche. You have a sound in your head and you try to replicate it. I’m always looking for new sounds.â€

Order Print Copy