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Ron Wood: “My whole career was like one long audition to join The Rolling Stones”

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Ron Wood recalls his early days on the London beat scene in the new issue of Uncut, out now. The Stones and Faces guitarist remembers his time with The Birds and seeing The Rolling Stones around on the London scene. "You’d see the Stones around and my ambition was always to be one of them. I nev...

Ron Wood recalls his early days on the London beat scene in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

The Stones and Faces guitarist remembers his time with The Birds and seeing The Rolling Stones around on the London scene.

“You’d see the Stones around and my ambition was always to be one of them. I never thought The Birds would be the next Stones. They were just a stepping stone. The limitations were obvious and it was no surprise when it ground to a halt. It was a great learning curve… but I had higher ambitions.

“Sometimes I feel that my whole career with The Birds, Jeff Beck and The Faces was one long audition to join The Rolling Stones. I still think of myself as a fan as much as a bandmember. When I first heard their stirring music coming from the tent at the Richmond Jazz And Blues festival in 1963 something happened inside me and I knew that was the band I wanted to be in.

“The thought of being in the Stones is what gave me the drive to carry on. It was the atmosphere that lured me as much as the music, the raggedness, the glory, the image – it looked like a good job.”

Wood is releasing his diaries from the ’60s as How Can It Be? A Rock & Roll Diary, out in May in a limited run of 1,965 signed copies.

The new issue of Uncut is out now

Heaven Adores You

There is an instructive anecdote that video director Ross Harris tells in Heaven Adores You about the first time he worked with Elliott Smith. In 1995, Harris was commissioned by Smith’s manager to film a video for “Coming Up Roses”. After explaining that he didn’t want to make an “LA vide...

There is an instructive anecdote that video director Ross Harris tells in Heaven Adores You about the first time he worked with Elliott Smith. In 1995, Harris was commissioned by Smith’s manager to film a video for “Coming Up Roses”. After explaining that he didn’t want to make an “LA video”, Smith instead, he stayed with Harris and his family in the country north of Los Angeles for almost a fortnight. “We just shot a little bit every day,” explains Harris. “Certain days, we’d wake up and he’d be like, ‘I don’t really want to film today.’ And we’d just hang out.” The image of an artist who is creative on his own terms, supported by likeminded and sympathetic collaborators, is very much on-message with the rest of Nickolas Dylan Rossi’s strong if admittedly faintly precious documentary.

Rossi follows Smith from a suburban childhood in Texas, then on to the insular music scene in Portland, Oregon, his gradual success, move to New York and California and, finally, his death in October 2003 aged 34. Rossi makes strong use of the wealth of archival material he is granted access to: cassettes, photographs, handwritten lyrics, radio interviews, live recordings. He also has a cast list of Smith’s friends, collaborators and peers, including Smith’s sister Ashley Welch and former girlfriend Joanna Bolme. Admittedly, it’s a good haul. Although with no objective, critical voice it’s hard to see beyond the overriding view reinforced here of Smith as a troubled, saintly genius.

Heaven Adores You poster
Heaven Adores You poster

There is, though, one revelation that suggests another side to Smith, as his friend and Jackpot! studio owner Larry Crane explains. “One day he [Smith] snuck Gus [Van Sant] in when I wasn’t there and played it [‘Miss Misery’] for him. Then they pretended he wrote it for the movie so it could get nominated.” It seems uncharacteristic behavior for a man who admits in one archive interview “I’m the wrong kind of person to be really big and famous.” But there are other disparities between what Smith says and does. When things get too hot in Portland, he moves to New York, apparently in pursuit of greater anonymity. Such behaviour seems at odds with his appearance at the Oscars, in front of a domestic audience of 57 million viewers, or on a high profile TV chat show like The Late Night With Conan O’Brien. We know the music is good. But essentially, this film could do with a little more rigorous investigation about who Smith was and what drove him.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Study shows people stop listening to new music at 33

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A new online study claims that people stop listening to new music at 33. The study was conducted using data from US Spotify listeners by Ajay Kalia of website Skynet and Ebert. His results found that people, on average, stopped listening to new music at the age of 33. He writes, "While teens' musi...

A new online study claims that people stop listening to new music at 33.

The study was conducted using data from US Spotify listeners by Ajay Kalia of website Skynet and Ebert.

His results found that people, on average, stopped listening to new music at the age of 33. He writes, “While teens’ music taste is dominated by incredibly popular music, this proportion drops steadily through peoples’ 20s, before their tastes ‘mature’ in their early 30s,” continuing, “Until their early 30s, mainstream music represents a smaller and smaller proportion of their streaming. And for the average listener, by their mid-30s, their tastes have matured, and they are who they’re going to be.”

The study also shows that there’s a slight gender gap at play (“Women show a slow and steady decline in pop music listening from 13-49, while men drop precipitously starting from their teens until their early 30s, at which point they encounter the ‘lock-in’ effect”), also stating that becoming a parent “has an equivalent impact on your ‘music relevancy’ as aging about 4 years”.

Kalia attempts to explain the tendency to gravitate towards less mainstream, non-current music, writing, “Two factors drive this transition away from popular music. First, listeners discover less-familiar music genres that they didn’t hear on FM radio as early teens, from artists with a lower popularity rank. Second, listeners are returning to the music that was popular when they were coming of age – but which has since phased out of popularity.”

Grateful Dead members planning full-scale tour?

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Members of the Grateful Dead are apparently planning an October tour with John Mayer. Billboard reports that Mayer and "select members of the group" are already in rehearsals. The Billboard story specifically cites Bob Weir as one of the musicians. The Grateful Dead are due to play five shows in t...

Members of the Grateful Dead are apparently planning an October tour with John Mayer.

Billboard reports that Mayer and “select members of the group” are already in rehearsals. The Billboard story specifically cites Bob Weir as one of the musicians.

The Grateful Dead are due to play five shows in total on their Fare Thee Well tour, scheduled for June 27 and 28 in Santa Clara, California and July 4, 5 and 6 in Chicago.Billboard estimates a potential haul of $50 million from ticket sales for the five shows.

The band have recently announced plans to broadcast the Fare Thee Well shows on pay-per-view and also via online streaming.

Bob Dylan announces UK live dates

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Bob Dylan has announced a run of UK tour dates, including three nights at London's Royal Albert Hall. He will play: October 21; Royal Albert Hall, London October 22; Royal Albert Hall, London October 23; Royal Albert Hall, London October 27: 02 Apollo, Manchester October 28; 02 Apollo, Manches...

Bob Dylan has announced a run of UK tour dates, including three nights at London’s Royal Albert Hall.

He will play:

October 21; Royal Albert Hall, London

October 22; Royal Albert Hall, London

October 23; Royal Albert Hall, London

October 27: 02 Apollo, Manchester

October 28; 02 Apollo, Manchester

October 29; Motorpoint Arena, Cardiff

Dylan has previously announced a run of 9 shows in Europe this summer.

Dylan last played the Albert Hall in November 2013. Click here to read the Uncut review.

Pete Townshend: “I don’t find The Who’s shows fulfilling – but I’m brilliant at it”

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Pete Townshend discusses his relationship with Roger Daltrey, retirement and the future of The Who in the new issue of Uncut, dated June 2015 and out now. The guitarist and songwriter admits that he’s not “particularly excited” about heading out on tour with The Who - who are reportedly the f...

Pete Townshend discusses his relationship with Roger Daltrey, retirement and the future of The Who in the new issue of Uncut, dated June 2015 and out now.

The guitarist and songwriter admits that he’s not “particularly excited” about heading out on tour with The Who – who are reportedly the final headliner for this year’s Glastonbury – stating that he finds the performances too easy.

“The shows? I don’t like them. I don’t find them fulfilling. But I’m brilliant at it. I find it incredibly easy. I drift through it.

“I get out the other end and the next day, somebody comes up to me and says, ‘You were fucking amazing yesterday!’

“It’s like being able to make a pair of shoes and knowing that you’ve got to a point that whenever you make a pair of shoes for somebody they’re going to last them for life. I don’t get particularly excited about it, but I do find it easy.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now

Photo: William Snyder/Trinifold Archive

Bop English – Constant Bop

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White Denim are not a band you can accuse of sticking with a formula. Beginning life as a wily, Hendrixy garage trio, they have matured into freewheeling rock’n’soul groovers, via profitable diversions into windmilling prog, blue-eyed soul, jazzy post-rock and Afro-Cuban funk. There are still a ...

White Denim are not a band you can accuse of sticking with a formula. Beginning life as a wily, Hendrixy garage trio, they have matured into freewheeling rock’n’soul groovers, via profitable diversions into windmilling prog, blue-eyed soul, jazzy post-rock and Afro-Cuban funk. There are still a few genres, however, they have yet to explore – which is where Constant Bop comes in.

While his bandmates Austin Jenkins and Josh Block have recently been helping to nurture the more conventional talents of retro soulman Leon Bridges, White Denim frontman James Petralli has been quietly cultivating his alter-ego, Bop English. In the amusingly deadpan promo photo accompanying this release, he can be seen playing a banjo with a snake on his lap while sporting a 1990 England football tracky top. If that suggests a foolhardy fusion of bluegrass and Britpop, then the truth isn’t <so> far removed. At least, Petralli’s usual rootsy raw materials are refracted more strongly than ever through an arch, Anglophile filter: witness the impish Bolan boogie of “Dani’s Blues (It Was Beyond Our Control)” or the way that “Long Distance Runner” playfully subverts classic songwriting conventions in a manner reminiscent of 70s Macca at his best.

On the other hand, Petralli hasn’t diverged too drastically from his previous body of work: “Sentimental Wilderness” resembles one of D’s more serene moments (distinguished by subtle use of a vocoder); “Fake Dog” harnesses some the frenetic daftness of “I Start To Run”; and “Trying” sounds like a frisky cousin to Corsicana Lemonade’s “Pretty Green”. It’s no surprise to learn that the three other members of White Denim are among the dozens of contributors to Constant Bop, though they were never in the room at the same time, hence the priority of taut song structures over virtuosic flourishes and extended jams. Yet the album still rollicks and rolls like a White Denim record, with the addition of ribald brass and jaunty piano, giving the impression of having been recorded during a boozy studio all-nighter rather than on a sun-dappled Texan porch.

Certainly, Petralli hasn’t fallen prey to the usual indulgences afflicting solo side-projects. There are no half-finished experimental sketches here, nor clumsy forays into world music or electronica. He’s even managed to resist the opportunity for faux-humble soul-baring. In fact, Bop English – the moniker given to Petralli by a former roommate – turns out to be quite a slippery character: a skilled raconteur and dispenser of crooked homilies (“There ain’t nothing free that didn’t cost somebody something”) whose waggish manner isn’t always appreciated (“My intended hyperbole goes unnoticed at the counter”) and who suffers from paranoid visions of his own demise (“I like to imagine a killing spree where every victim is me”). By inhabiting this garrulous and charming yet over-analytical and secretly vulnerable character, Petralli actually reveals more about himself than a straightforward confessional singer-songwriter record might have done. These quirky and compelling vignettes are clearly the work of a man constantly trying to balance his pragmatic and creative sides, his duties as a new father with those of a good-time rock’n’roll ringleader.

Handily, Bop can also do love songs, or at least songs that remind us that love requires constant, careful tending. If the psych-country shuffle of “Falling At Your Feet” is a teensy bit sentimental, then “The Hardest Way” – a hint of Nick Drake and even Bernard Butler to this one – is gloriously honest about the daily battle to suppress our own pride and pettiness so that love can prevail. He may dress like a cross between Davy Crockett and David Seaman, but when it comes to affairs of the heart, it turns out that Bop English knows exactly what he’s talking about.

A fast-paced, multi-faceted, furiously entertaining record that gradually reveals hidden emotional depths? Chalk another one up to the man in White Denim.

Q&A
James Petralli
Why did your college roommate dub you Bop English?

It’s obvious, but I was studying English Lit and listening to a lot of Eric Dolphy and John Coltrane. Which technically is post-bop. But I was just happy to have a nickname.

Did you write these songs specifically for the album or have you been amassing them over a longer period?
It’s been an ongoing process for a long time. Some of the tunes were written for White Denim, but something wasn’t right about them for the band. I didn’t have a grand scheme or anything. It was actually 28 songs when I handed it into the label. They just said, ‘Hey man, you can’t put this out, nobody’s going to listen to that!’ It was going to be a double album where the first half was really trippy and haphazard and the second half was more straightforward and romantic. So the final album is just selected works from the double I was making. I’ll probably do a ‘complete edition’ in a very limited run at some point.

What did you learn from the acid trip described on “Struck Matches”?
It was actually salvia. I was handed a pipe and it turned out to not be pot, so it blindsided me… It was a really intense out-of-body experience where I saw these little snapshots of my life. But my biggest takeaway was to be much more cautious about what I’m smoking in future.

Is there going to be a live Bop English show?
Yeah, we’re coming over in May. I have a pretty cool band of freaky musicians. It’s not quite as groovy as White Denim has gotten over the last few years – it’s a little more aggressive and we do a lot of heady improv, which is fun.
INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS

Watch Ryan Adams cover Bryan Adams’ “Summer Of ’69″…

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Ryan Adams has covered Bryan Adams' song, "Summer Of '69". Adams performed the song on April 28, 2015 during the first of two nights at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ni_-e5Mb3hU As Rolling Stone reports, Adams once had an audience member ejected from a show at the ...

Ryan Adams has covered Bryan Adams’ song, “Summer Of ’69”.

Adams performed the song on April 28, 2015 during the first of two nights at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium.

As Rolling Stone reports, Adams once had an audience member ejected from a show at the same venue for repeatedly heckling him to play the Bryan Adams’ song.

Watch Alabama Shakes new video for “Sound & Color”

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Alabama Shakes have released a video for the title track of their current album, Sound & Color. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=faG8RiaANek Meanwhile, the band play the UK in May, with one date also confirmed for November. Birmingham O2 Academy (May 13) Brighton The Dome (15) Manchester O2 Ap...

Alabama Shakes have released a video for the title track of their current album, Sound & Color.

Meanwhile, the band play the UK in May, with one date also confirmed for November.

Birmingham O2 Academy (May 13)
Brighton The Dome (15)
Manchester O2 Apollo (16)
London O2 Academy Brixton (November 18)

The tracklisting for Sound & Color is as follows:

‘Sound And Color’
‘Don’t Wanna Fight’
‘Dunes’
‘Future People’
‘Gimme All Your Love’
‘This Feeling’
‘Guess Who’
‘The Greatest’
‘Shoegaze’
‘Miss You’
‘Gemini’
‘Over My Head’

Read Morrissey’s open letter to Al Gore

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Morrissey has written an open letter to the American politican and climate change activist Al Gore. In the letter, Morrissey urges Gore to serve a vegan menu at Live Earth, the forthcoming climate change event which is scheduled to place on June 18 at venues around the world. The letter, which has...

Morrissey has written an open letter to the American politican and climate change activist Al Gore.

In the letter, Morrissey urges Gore to serve a vegan menu at Live Earth, the forthcoming climate change event which is scheduled to place on June 18 at venues around the world.

The letter, which has been published on Rolling Stone, was addressed to Gore and his co-organiser Kevin Wall on behalf of PETA.

Morrissey compares “serving meat and dairy products at an event to combat climate change is like selling pistols at a gun-control rally” and that it is Gore and Wall’s “moral duty” to promote a vegan diet at Live Earth.

“If you choose to serve animal flesh at Live Earth, you’ll be making a mockery of the very concept of the event, in which case it should be renamed “Dead Earth: We Contributed!’,” Morrissey adds.

The letter in full:

Dear Mr. Gore and Mr. Wall,

I am writing to ask you to do the one thing that will do the most good for the planet and the majority of its inhabitants: not serve meat or dairy products at Live Earth 2015. I don’t mean offering a vegan option-I mean not serving animal products at all. Otherwise, the event will make no sense-it’ll be “greenwashing.” Serving meat and dairy products at an event to combat climate change is like selling pistols at a gun-control rally. Your responsibility is to alert people to a crisis, not sell out to the vendors responsible for it.

Not only is it possible for venues to provide a 100 percent meat-free menu-as is done now at every concert venue in which I perform, including Madison Square Garden, where I have a show at the end of June-it’s also a moral duty.

We already know that raising animals for food is a leading cause of climate change and that moving toward a vegan diet is necessary to combat climate change’s worst effects. Animal agriculture severely affects the world’s freshwater supply and is a major contributor to global greenhouse-gas emissions, deforestation, loss of biodiversity, and air and water pollution, among many other harmful effects.

Since you can’t miss the fact that meat consumption is killing the planet-your own sponsor organization, the United Nations, states this-and since venues can and will cater vegan food for events, if you choose to serve animal flesh at Live Earth, you’ll be making a mockery of the very concept of the event, in which case it should be renamed “Dead Earth: We Contributed!”

Don’t be a denier of the causes of climate change. You know the facts. Make the right choice.

Sincerely, Morrissey

Watch the trailer for the new Nina Simone documentary

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As you might have already noticed, it's shaping up to be a strong year for music documentaries. We're already had films on the Dave Clark Five, Kurt Cobain and the Chilean Woodstock; on the horizon, there's Lambert & Stamp, the Elliott Smith film Heaven Adores You and also docs on Wilko Johns...

As you might have already noticed, it’s shaping up to be a strong year for music documentaries. We’re already had films on the Dave Clark Five, Kurt Cobain and the Chilean Woodstock; on the horizon, there’s Lambert & Stamp, the Elliott Smith film Heaven Adores You and also docs on Wilko JohnsonThe Wrecking Crew and The Last Poets’ Hustler’s Convention. And, it should be noted, all these are due out before summer.

Add to that burgeoning pile What Happened, Miss Simone?, a handsome new trailer for which has just been released.

The film, directed by Liz Garbus [Ghosts Of Abu Ghraib; Bobby Fischer Against The World], weaves together Simone’s story from extensive audio tapes recorded over the course of three decades, as well as concert footage and archival interviews, diaries and letters.

The film launches on Netflix on June 26, with a full release soon after.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=moOQXZxriKY&feature=youtu.be

An Audience With Willie Nelson

To mark Willie Nelson's birthday today [April 29], I thought I'd post my interview with him for our regular An Audience With... feature. This originally appeared in Uncut's Take 208 [November 2014]. Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner ---------- A few days before Uncut speaks to Willie Nelson, hi...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SnU2Tmqqv9g

When did you become interested in the Martial Arts?
Angus Stewart, Glasgow
In Abbot, there wasn’t a lot to do but fight and throw rocks. I got into it from the comic books judo and ju-jitsu, Charles Atlas and Bruce Lee. I got into that pretty early. It’s something that I’ve been interested in and enjoy doing. Then later on I got into kung fu when I was in Nashville. For the last 20 years, I’ve been into taekwondo in Austin. It’s a lot of fun. It’s probably good for you. I’ve got a fifth degree black belt. I think a lot of it is honorary, more than anything else. I’m fairly familiar with the Korean mixed martial arts, Gongkwon Yusul and the various martial arts techniques. You know, talking of sports, I’m a good friend of Muhammad Ali. I think Kris Kristofferson introduced us. A year or so ago, he gave me a pair of his boxing gloves. I met him a few years back. I’ve always been a fan, all the way back to when he was Cassius Clay. I was really glad to get to meet him. He came on my bus one time. I’ve got a punch bag in the back of the bus and I got him back there punching my bag. I was thrilled to be able to know him.

What do you remember about working with The Highwaymen?
Bea Sheridan, Farnborough

Some of the best memories I’ve had in my life was working with the Highwaymen, Kris, John and Waylon. We went around the world a couple of times on tours, had a couple of albums together. I had a whole lot of fun working with those guys. Bonnie Carr, who did the travel for us when we were on I guess the last tour that we did around the world, we went to Singapore, a lot of different places, Brazil. We all took our families and everything with us when we travelled. Bonnie was telling me, she handled all the luggage and the ticket co-ordinations, and we had 278 pieces of luggage every day that she had to keep up with.

Do people mythologise your marijuana intake?
Toby Speller, Essex

It’s probably not exaggerated a lot. I enjoy smoking. But I use a Vaporizer these days. If you’re a singer, they’re better for your voice and your lungs. There’s no smoke and no heat on the Vaporizer. Even though marijuana smoke is not as dangerous as cigarette smoke, any time you put any kind of smoke in your lungs it takes a toll of some kind.

Willie Nelson
Willie Nelson

Nile Rodgers: “Mick Jagger wanted me to produce The Rolling Stones”

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Nile Rodgers, speaking in the new issue of Uncut, has revealed that Mick Jagger wanted him to produce The Rolling Stones in the late '70s. However, the Chic guitarist, songwriter and producer turned the band down, saying his hands-on production style would not have worked for the group. “As a ma...

Nile Rodgers, speaking in the new issue of Uncut, has revealed that Mick Jagger wanted him to produce The Rolling Stones in the late ’70s.

However, the Chic guitarist, songwriter and producer turned the band down, saying his hands-on production style would not have worked for the group.

“As a matter of fact, [Jagger] wanted me to produce the Stones,” Rodgers says. “That would’ve been interesting because the Stones were the first superstar act that was offered to us, and instead we did Sister Sledge.

“Bernard [Edwards] and I knew it would’ve been a bad move to work with the Stones. How do you tell The Rolling Stones, ‘Right, we’re going to write all your songs and then you come in and you play like this’?”

Chic’s first album for two decades, It’s About Time…, is released later this year.

The new issue of Uncut is out now

Watch Jack White’s final acoustic show in full

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Jack's White's final acoustic show is now streaming online on Youtube. The show was the final night of White's five-date acoustic tour and took place on April 26, 2015 in Fargo, North Dakota. The tour found White playing the five US states he had not previously performed in, including Alaska, Idah...

Jack’s White‘s final acoustic show is now streaming online on Youtube.

The show was the final night of White’s five-date acoustic tour and took place on April 26, 2015 in Fargo, North Dakota.

The tour found White playing the five US states he had not previously performed in, including Alaska, Idaho, Wyoming and South Dakota.

Previously the show had only been available on Tidal.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZYiwalgmSw4

Jack White’s setlist at Fargo Theatre:
1. “Just One Drink”
2. “Temporary Ground”
3. “Hotel Yorba”
4. “Alone in My Home”
5. “Do”
6. “Love Interruption”
7. “Inaccessible Mystery”
8. “We’re Going to Be Friends”
9.”A Martyr for My Love for You”
10. “Blunderbuss”
11. “Carolina Drama”
12. “The Same Boy You’ve Always Known”
13. “You’ve Got Her in Your Pocket”
14. “Goodnight, Irene”

Townes Van Zandt – The Nashville Sessions

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It could have been the record that made him; maybe, even the record that saved him. In 1972, the 28-year-old Texan prodigy Townes Van Zandt had released his sixth studio album in five productive years, The Late Great Townes Van Zandt. It was arguably his best album to that point, and certainly conta...

It could have been the record that made him; maybe, even the record that saved him. In 1972, the 28-year-old Texan prodigy Townes Van Zandt had released his sixth studio album in five productive years, The Late Great Townes Van Zandt. It was arguably his best album to that point, and certainly contained what would become Van Zandt’s best-known song – “Pancho & Lefty”, since duetted upon by Merle Haggard and Willie Nelson, and recorded or performed by Emmylou Harris, Hoyt Axton, Bob Dylan and Steve Earle, among uncountable others. Keen to keep up with songs pouring out of him, in early 1974 Van Zandt returned to the studio to begin work on his seventh album, surely the big breakthrough, to be entitled Seven Come Eleven.

Seven Come Eleven ended up being lost as collateral damage in a dispute between Van Zandt’s manager Kevin Eggers, and producer Cowboy Jack Clement. The label concerned, Poppy, went bust. Van Zandt wouldn’t release another album for five years – an interregnum substantially spent living in a tin shack outside Nashville with a teenage second wife named Cindy and a wolf-husky crossbreed called Geraldine, passing his days drinking, shooting narcotics and guns, and watching reruns of Happy Days. Six tracks originally cut for Seven Come Eleven would eventually be reworked for that long-delayed next album, 1978’s Flyin’ Shoes; others would surface on the later “Live At The Old Quarter” and “At My Window”. Seven Come Eleven itself would languish unheard for 20 years, until released as The Nashville Sessions in 1993, by which time Van Zandt had barely three years left to live.

This re-release of The Nashville Sessions heralds a welcome programme of reissues of Van Zandt’s recordings for Poppy, and its later reincarnation, Tomato. It includes a lavish sleeve featuring Milton Glaser’s original artwork, an illustrated twelve-page booklet, and splendid liner notes by Rob Hughes of this parish. It has also been remastered from the original tapes – work more urgent in the case of The Nashville Sessions than for most albums. According to persistent legend, the record only exists at all because Eggers, afeared that a vengeful Clement was about to erase the master tapes, crept into Jack’s Tracks Studios one night and transferred Van Zandt’s semi-complete work onto cassettes.

As such, no amount of buffing, polishing and scrubbing is ever going to make Seven Come Eleven sound like much beyond a bunch of half-baked demos – the sound overall is muddy and crackly, esses fizz against the microphone, a background tape hiss is perceptible throughout, and Van Zandt’s vocals, many of which are surely guide tracks, are far from his most adroit. But a forgiving listener can nevertheless still enjoy this raw, lo-fi work-in-progress as, say, Van Zandt’s “Nebraska”: certainly, the songs are good enough.

Some, indeed, rank high among his finest. The opening tune “At My Window”, later the title track of Van Zandt’s 1987 album, is an especially heartbreaking hint of what might have been, 14 years earlier – “Living is sighing,” croons Van Zandt, nailing one of his trademark nihilist aphorisms over a swell of sumptuous countrypolitan strings, “dying says nothing at all.” “No Place To Fall” waltzes between a knelling piano and a gently giddy accordion, Van Zandt pleading for pre-emptive forgiveness of the troubadour’s unreliability: “I ain’t much of a lover, it’s true/I’m here then I’m gone/And I’m forever blue”. “Loretta”, a few tracks later, sounds a sketch of the infinitely tolerant ideal imagined recipient of such an apology: “Oh, Loretta, won’t you say to me/Darling put your guitar on/Have a little shot of booze/Play a blue and wailing song”. Between the whisper of rueful self-mockery in his delivery, and the the upbeat zydeco swing of the melody, Van Zandt just about gets away with it.

Despite this, and the case made by bluegrass shuffle “White Freight Liner” and the closing gospel rave “Upon My Soul”, upbeat was never Van Zandt’s natural habitat. As a general rule, on The Nashville Sessions as throughout Van Zandt’s catalogue, the more wretched he sounds, the better – and on the best parts of “The Nashville Sessions” he almost makes melancholy sound a condition to be envied. “Two Girls”, a recognisable musical cousin to “Pancho & Lefty”, is a surreal, hungover delusion (“All Beaumont’s full of penguins/And I’m playing it by ear”), and “When She Don’t Need Me” says all Van Zandt ever had to say, pretty much: “Cling to the darkness/Until you’ve turned to song.”

Lloyd Cole and the Commotions to release career-spanning box set

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Lloyd Cole And The Commotions have announced details of a career-spanning box set. Lloyd Cole And The Commotions – Collected Recordings 1983-1989 is due for release on June 29, 2015 through Universal Music Catalogue. The box set will consist of 5CDs and 1 DVD. It features the band's three studio...

Lloyd Cole And The Commotions have announced details of a career-spanning box set.

Lloyd Cole And The Commotions – Collected Recordings 1983-1989 is due for release on June 29, 2015 through Universal Music Catalogue.

The box set will consist of 5CDs and 1 DVD. It features the band’s three studio albums, Rattlesnakes, Easy Pieces and Mainstream, as well as B-sides, rarities and outtakes and the band’s television appearances and promotional videos.

The tracklistist is:

Disc one – Rattlesnakes

1 Perfect Skin
2 Speedboat
3 Rattlesnakes
4 Down on Mission Street
5 Forest Fire
6 Charlotte Street
7 2cv
8 Four Flights Up
9 Patience
10 Are You Ready to be Heartbroken?

Disc two – Easy Pieces

1 Rich
2 Why I Love Country Music
3 Pretty Gone
4 Grace
5 Cut Me Down
6 Brand New Friend
7 Lost Weekend
8 James
9 Minor Character
10 Perfect Blue

Disc three – Mainstream

1 My Bag
2 From the Hip
3 29
4 Mainstream
5 Jennifer she said
6 Mr. Malcontent
7 Sean Penn Blues
8 Big Snake
9 Hey Rusty
10 These Days

Disc four – B-Sides, Remixes & Outtakes

1. The Sea and The Sand (B-side to Perfect Skin)
2. You Will Never Be No Good (B-side to Perfect Skin)
3. Andy’s Babies (B-side to Forest Fire)
4. Glory (B-side to Forest Fire)
5. Sweetness (B-side to Rattlesnakes)
6. Perfect Blue (Hardiman mix; B-side to Jennifer She Said)
7. Jesus Said (B-side to My Bag)
8. Brand New Friend (1985 Wessex Studio recording. Previously unreleased)
9. From Grace (Unfinished; 1985 Wessex Studio recording. Previously unreleased)
10. Her Last Fling (B-side to Brand New Friend)
11. Big World (B-side to Lost Weekend)
12. Nevers End (B-side to Lost Weekend)
13. Mystery Train (Recorded live at The World, New York, 1986) B-side to Jennifer She Said)
14. I Don’t Believe You (Recorded live at The World, New York, 1986) B-side to Jennifer She Said)
15. Love Your Wife (B-side to From The Hip)
16. Lonely Mile (B-side to From The Hip)
17. Please (B-side to From The Hip)
18. My Bag (Dancing Mix; 12” single)

Disc five – Demo Recordings & Rarities

1. Down At The Mission [Unreleased single A-side]
2. Are You Ready To Be Heartbroken? [Unreleased single B-side (appeared previously on Rattlesnakes Dlx edition 2004)]
3. Patience [Demo recording]
4. Eat My Words [Demo recording (Never before heard)]
5. Forest Fire [Demo recording]
6. Perfect Skin [Demo recording (appeared previously on Rattlesnakes Dlx edition 2004)]
7. Poons [Demo recording (Never before heard)]
8. Old Hats [Demo recording]
9. You Win [Demo recording (Never before heard)]
10. Old Wants Never Gets [Demo recording (Never before heard)]
11. Another Dry Day [Demo recording. (Never before heard)]
12. 29  [Demo recording]
13. Jennifer She Said [Demo recording]
14. Hey Rusty [Demo recording]
15. Everyone’s Complaining [Unreleased recording. Studio Grande Armée (Paris). Produced by Chris Thomas]
16. Mr Malcontent [Unreleased recording. Studio Grande Armée (Paris). Produced by Chris Thomas]
17. Jennifer She Said (Polished Rough Mix) [Unreleased recording. Sarm Studios (London). Produced by Stewart Copeland and Julian Mendelsohn]
18. Hey Rusty [Unreleased recording. Sarm Studios (London). Produced by Stewart Copeland and Julian Mendelsohn]

DVD – Promotional videos & television performances

Promotional videos
1 Perfect Skin
2 Forest Fire
3 Rattlesnakes
4 Brand New Friend
5 Lost Weekend
6 Cut Me Down
7 My Bag
8 Jennifer She Said
9 From The Hip
10 Mainstream

Television performances
11 Perfect Skin (Top of the Pops, June 1984)
12 Rattlesnakes (The Old Grey Whistle Test, November 1984)
13 Speedboat (The Old Grey Whistle Test, November 1984)
14 Brand New Friend (Wogan, September 1985)
15 Brand New Friend (Top of the Pops, September 1985)
16 Lost Weekend (Top of the Pops, November 1985)
17 Mister Malcontent (Recorded live in concert at Ibrox Park, Glasgow, June 1986)
18 My Bag (Wogan, September 1987)

Joni Mitchell latest update: “A full recovery is expected”

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Joni Mitchell is expected to make a full recovery contrary to reports that she had slipped into a coma. Mitchell, was hospitalized on March 31, 2015 after being found unconscious in her home. Last night [April 28, 2015], American website TMZ reported that Mitchell is in a coma, "unconscious in a h...

Joni Mitchell is expected to make a full recovery contrary to reports that she had slipped into a coma.

Mitchell, was hospitalized on March 31, 2015 after being found unconscious in her home.

Last night [April 28, 2015], American website TMZ reported that Mitchell is in a coma, “unconscious in a hospital, unable to respond to anyone, with no immediate prospects for getting better”.

The website also published legal documents allegedly confirming their claims.

Leslie Morris, a friend of Mitchell’s for more than 40 years, had filed a petition on Tuesday seeking to be named as Mitchell’s conservator.

Subsequently, TMZ’s claims have been refuted in a post on Mitchell’s official website. “Contrary to rumors circulating on the Internet today, Joni is not in a coma. Joni is still in the hospital – but she comprehends, she’s alert, and she has her full senses. A full recovery is expected. The document obtained by a certain media outlet simply gives her longtime friend Leslie Morris the authority – in the absence of 24-hour doctor care – to make care decisions for Joni once she leaves the hospital. As we all know, Joni is a strong-willed woman and is nowhere near giving up the fight. Please continue to keep Joni in your thoughts.”

Watch Paul McCartney play a Beatles song live for the very first time

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Paul McCartney debuted The Beatles' song "Another Girl", which had never been performed live before. The show took place on April 28, 2015 at the Nippon Budokan, Tokyo as part of McCartney's current 'Out There' tour. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZBtVSI30N4 McCartney had first played the venue...

Paul McCartney debuted The Beatles‘ song “Another Girl”, which had never been performed live before.

The show took place on April 28, 2015 at the Nippon Budokan, Tokyo as part of McCartney’s current ‘Out There‘ tour.

McCartney had first played the venue 49 years ago with The Beatles. Speaking about the show, McCartney said, “It was sensational and quite emotional remembering the first time and then experiencing this fantastic audience tonight. It was thrilling for us and we think it was probably the best show we did in Japan and it was great to be doing the Budokan 49 years later. It was crazy. We loved it.”

Another Girl” appeared on the 1965 on the album Help!

McCartney plays London’s O2 Arena on May 23.

Paul McCartney’s set list at the Budokan, April 28, 2015:
‘Can’t Buy Me Love’
‘Save Us’
‘All My Loving’
‘One After 909’
‘Let Me Roll It’
Paperback Writer’
‘My Valentine’
‘1985’
‘Maybe I’m Amazed’
I’ve Just Seen A Face’
‘Another Day’
‘Dance Tonight’
‘We Can Work It Out’
‘And I Love Her’
‘Blackbird’
‘New’
‘Lady Madonna’
‘Another Girl’
‘Got To Get You Into My Life’
‘Mr Kite’
‘Obla Di Obla Da’
‘Back in the USSR’
‘Let It Be’
‘Live and Let Die’
‘Hey Jude’
‘Yesterday’
‘Birthday’
‘Golden Slumbers’

Richard Thompson announces new Jeff Tweedy-produced album + tour dates

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Richard Thompson has announced details of his new album. Still has been produced by Jeff Tweedy and will be released on Proper Records on June 29, 2015. The album was recorded in Wilco's rehearsal loft in Chicago over the course of nine days. Musicians on the album include Thompson's long-term ba...

Richard Thompson has announced details of his new album.

Still has been produced by Jeff Tweedy and will be released on Proper Records on June 29, 2015.

The album was recorded in Wilco‘s rehearsal loft in Chicago over the course of nine days. Musicians on the album include Thompson’s long-term bassist Taras Prodaniuk and drummer Michael Jerome along with guitarist Jim Elkington and vocalists Loam and Sima Cunningham who have all recently appeared on Tweedy’s recent album, Sukierae.

Sill will be available in several configurations including a twelve-track CD, a twelve-track double 180-gram vinyl album and a deluxe CD package that includes a five-song EP from a previously un-released session.

“Jeff is musically very sympathetic,” says Thompson. “Although some of his contributions are probably rather subtle to the listener’s ear, they were really interesting and his suggestions were always very pertinent.

“I really tried to not have any preconceived ideas,” Thompson says of working with Tweedy, “but of course you do. I tried to shove those to the back of my mind. You don’t really know until you turn up — what the studio is like, what the gear is like. It ended up being a nice unfolding of surprises.”

“Richard’s been one of my favorite guitar players for a very long time,” said Tweedy. “When I think about it, he’s also one of my favorite songwriters and favorite singers. He’s the Ultimate Triple Threat. Getting to work closely with him on this record was a truly rewarding experience, not to mention a great thrill. And he keeps alive my streak of working exclusively with artists who make me look good as a producer.”

Click here to read Richard Thompson on his greatest albums

The track listing for Still is:
She Never Could Resist A Winding Road
Beatnik Walking
Patty Don’t You Put Me Down
Broken Doll
All Buttoned Up
Josephine
Long John Silver
Pony In The Stable
Where’s Your Heart
No Peace No End
Dungeons For Eyes
Guitar Heroes

The album can be pre-ordered from Amazon, iTunes or Proper Records.

Meanwhile, the Richard Thompson Electric Trio will tour the UK in August and September.

They play:

August 28: Purbeck Valley Folk Festival, Wareham, Dorset (solo)

August 30: Shrewsbury Folk Festival, Shrewsbury

September 1: Vicar Stree, Dublin

September 2: Perth Concert Hall, Perth

September 3: Aberdeen Music Hall, Aberdeen

September 5: Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh

September 6: Sage, Gateshead

September 8: Philharmonic Hall, Liverpool

September 9: Lowry, Salford

September 10: City Hall, Sheffield

September 12: Royal Centre, Nottingham

September 13: Symphony Hall, Birmingham

September 15: St David’s Hall, Cardiff

September 16: Colston Hall, Bristol

September 18: Regent Theatre, Ipswich

September 19: Corn Exchange, Cambridge

September 20: Royal Festival Hall, London

You can find more information by clicking here.

Neil Young announces new benefit concert

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Neil Young has announced a new benefit concert as part of his Honor The Treaties series. Young previously played four other Honor The Treaties shows in January 2014 in Toronto, Winnipeg, Regina and Calgary to support the Athabasca Chipewyan's First Nation Legal Defence. Young, who reunited on...

Neil Young has announced a new benefit concert as part of his Honor The Treaties series.

Young previously played four other Honor The Treaties shows in January 2014 in Toronto, Winnipeg, Regina and Calgary to support the Athabasca Chipewyan’s First Nation Legal Defence.

Young, who reunited on stage with Stephen Stills recently at an autism benefit concert, will now play a benefit concert at Edmonton’s Rexall Place on July 3, 2015.

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

Quoted by CBC News, Allan Adam, chief of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation, said the money raised will help his people fight oilsands development they say destroys their traditional land and infringes on their legal rights.

“With the support of Neil Young and fans we are creating more accountability from our governments for the safeguarding of our lands, rights and future generations in Alberta, Canada and beyond,” Adams said in a statement.

“Our people, our climate and our planet can no longer afford to be economic hostages in the race to industrialize the earth. We must act now for the future generations.”

Click here to read Neil Young: A Remarkable Year

Meanwhile, Young has recently been discussing his forthcoming album, The Monsanto Years.