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Percy Sledge dies aged 73

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Percy Sledge has died aged 73. According to a report on ABC News, he died earlier today [April 14, 2015] at home in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The network says he had been battling cancer. Steve Green from his talent agency Artists International Management Inc told the BBC, "He was one of my first ac...

Percy Sledge has died aged 73.

According to a report on ABC News, he died earlier today [April 14, 2015] at home in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The network says he had been battling cancer.

Steve Green from his talent agency Artists International Management Inc told the BBC, “He was one of my first acts, he was a terrific person and you don’t find that in this business very often,” said Green. “He was truly a standout.”

Sledge’s most famous hit, “When A Man Loves A Woman“, reached No 1 in 1966.

He was inducted into the Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall Of Fame in 2005.

His last album was 2013’s The Gospel Of Percy Sledge.

Bob Marley & The Wailers – Easy Skanking In Boston ’78

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By the spring of 1978 Bob Marley was ready for a new challenge. His media status as ‘The First Third World Superstar’ was attested by soaring global record sales. That he had ended 15 months of exile from Jamaica following the attempt on his life – returning to play the ‘Peace Concert’ tha...

By the spring of 1978 Bob Marley was ready for a new challenge. His media status as ‘The First Third World Superstar’ was attested by soaring global record sales. That he had ended 15 months of exile from Jamaica following the attempt on his life – returning to play the ‘Peace Concert’ that brought a truce to Kingston’s bullet-prone streets – also marked a turning point. He’d done his bit for his country. What was next?

Marley’s answer was to undertake the biggest tour of his career, one that renewed his wooing of the all-important North American market and which would take him to Milwaukee, Maryland and Montreal as well as the already conquered capitals of the East and West coasts. Also in his sights were Japan, Australia and, of course, Africa. All would fall to Trenchtown’s conquering lion and his strange music – strange because for most of the world roots reggae was still an odd, scarcely heard quantity.

But first we take Manhattan…and Boston, a city that had always been kind to the Wailers, and whose Music Hall hosted two shows (early and late) on June 8, the former supplying this live album, the fifth in Marley’s canon after Live! (cut 1975), Babylon By Bus (cut 1977), and the posthumous Live At The Roxy (cut 1976) and Live Forever (his last performance, cut 1980).

Unusually, Marley had personally allowed dispensation to a young fan to film the show from the front row. The resulting footage is an engaging addition, though better concert film is already freely available (the Boston stadium show of 1979 for example).

It proves a sweet enough set, entirely typical of the well-drilled band Marley oversaw in his pomp (and make no mistake, Bob ruled over his group with an iron hand). The rhythm section of the Barrett brothers had always synchronised effortlessly, Family Man’s loping bass lines weaving around Carly’s snapping rim shots. The duo were the lynchpin around which the Wailers turned – for much of this set Tyrone Downie’s keyboards and the guitars of Junior Marvin and Al Anderson do little more than punctuate their rhythms, at last in this somewhat muddy sound mix. Most of the musical action is otherwise contained by Marley’s vocals – always committed and rarely less than extraordinary, even in the midst of a gruelling tour – and the under-valued choral counterpoints of the I Three, a trio more distinguished than the usual ‘backing vocals’ description suggests, and whose discipline allows Marley to improvise and wander.

Though this was the ‘Kaya Tour’ – said album had been released in March – the only track from that record is “Easy Skanking”, which drifts past unremarkably. Kaya was a kick-back album. In concert, something tougher was called for, and Marley invariably relied on a mix of militant anthems and greatest hits – the opening quartet of “Slave Driver”, “Burning’ and Lootin’”,  “Them Belly Full” and “Heathen” is a salvo of anger and defiance, after which comes a clutch of lighter crowd-pleasers; “Rebel Music”, “I Shot The Sheriff”, “No Woman No Cry” and “Lively Up Yourself”, a number that featured in almost every show Marley and his band played.

By 1978 other constants had emerged. “War”, containing the words of Hailie Selassie, was like scripture for Marley, and he and the band had cleverly segued it into “No More Trouble”, thus balancing the songs’ messages. “Lively Up Yourself”, a number that had started life as languid rock steady back in the Bob/Bunny/Tosh era, had evolved into a high-spirited celebration of livity. “Get Up Stand Up” (co-written with Peter Tosh let’s not forget) was another ever-present, a catchy singalong on one level that was also combative and Rastafarian in outlook.

As the show proceeds, the numbers grow longer, partly to allow Marley to do more dancing and gesticulating, but also to let the twin guitar attack of Anderson and Marvin more space. Their squealing blues-rock guitars had always been a bone of contention among reggae fans, with accusations of ‘sell-out’ not uncommon. The squalls of guitar over the last 30 minutes of this show certainly have their tedious moments. The reality was that Marley was engaged in the reinvention of reggae, and just as black American acts like Funkadelic had adopted rock elements, so had he. Transforming the Wailers from a studio-stuck vocal trio into a fully functioning band had itself been a revolutionary act; turning Jamaican music into something less alien to a global audience was, for Marley, a continuation of the same process.

His real aim, one that would never be fulfilled in his lifetime, was to engage and revolutionise black America, to fulfil the prophecy of “Exodus”. That number ends Easy Skanking in a thunder of double beats that the sound quality here turns into an uninteresting thump. It isn’t really reggae at all, but it is uniquely Bob Marley.

Revealed: The Ultimate Music Guide to Pink Floyd

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For the past, I think, seven years now, many of you will know we've been producing Ultimate Music Guides to complement our monthly editions of Uncut. This week - on Thursday, April 16, to be specific - we're flinging something else onto the shelves: deluxe remasters of some of our most popular Ultim...

For the past, I think, seven years now, many of you will know we’ve been producing Ultimate Music Guides to complement our monthly editions of Uncut. This week – on Thursday, April 16, to be specific – we’re flinging something else onto the shelves: deluxe remasters of some of our most popular Ultimate Music Guides, beginning with an upgraded and updated version of our edition dedicated to Pink Floyd.

To launch this series of plush new bookazines – as you’ll see when you get your hands on one, they’re closer in feel to books than mags – Pink Floyd seemed the ideal place to start. It’s long been a risky game predicting where the Floyd story might actually finish, and the first edition of the Pink Floyd Ultimate Music Guide felt like it came at the end of, at the very least, a closing chapter, coming as it did soon after David Gilmour and Nick Mason had guested at a Roger Waters London performance of “The Wall”.

In the wake of “The Endless River”, 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 Words”, 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…”

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 River”, 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.”

Interested? The Ultimate Music Guide: Pink Floyd is available now from our online shop. As ever, please let us know what you think when you’ve had a look.

Patti Smith announces new memoir, M Train

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Patti Smith has revealed details about her new memoir, M Train. The follow up to Just Kids, M Train will be published on October 6 by Knopf. Via Pitchfork and EW, the book's description reads: "M Train is a journey through eighteen 'stations'. It begins in the tiny Greenwich Village café where S...

Patti Smith has revealed details about her new memoir, M Train.

The follow up to Just Kids, M Train will be published on October 6 by Knopf.

Via Pitchfork and EW, the book’s description reads:

“M Train is a journey through eighteen ‘stations’. It begins in the tiny Greenwich Village café where Smith goes every morning for black coffee, ruminates on the world as it is and the world as it was, and writes in her notebook. We then travel, through prose that shifts fluidly between dreams and reality, past and present, across a landscape of creative aspirations and inspirations: from Frida Kahlo‘s Casa Azul in Mexico, to a meeting of an Arctic explorer’s society in Berlin; from the ramshackle seaside bungalow in New York’s Far Rockaway that Smith buys just before Hurricane Sandy hits, to the graves of Genet, Plath, Rimbaud, and Mishima. Woven throughout are reflections on the writer’s craft and on artistic creation, alongside signature memories including her life in Michigan with her husband, guitarist Fred Sonic Smith, whose untimely death was an irremediable loss. For it is loss, as well as the consolation we might salvage from it, that lies at the heart of this exquisitely told memoir, one augmented by stunning black-and-white Polaroids taken by Smith herself.”

You can read An Audience With… Patti Smith by clicking here

Smith is due to play Horses in its entirety at this year’s Field Day festival in the UK in June.

She released her most recent studio album, Banga, in 2012.

Jeff Beck announces new live album + new studio tracks

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Jeff Beck is to release his first new studio material since 2010. Two new tracks, "Tribal” and “My Tiled White Floor”, will appear on Beck's forthcoming album, Live+. The album will be available from Atco Records, an imprint of Rhino Entertainment, on May 4 on CD and will also be available d...

Jeff Beck is to release his first new studio material since 2010.

Two new tracks, “Tribal” and “My Tiled White Floor”, will appear on Beck’s forthcoming album, Live+.

The album will be available from Atco Records, an imprint of Rhino Entertainment, on May 4 on CD and will also be available digitally. A career-spanning set, it was recorded at various venues during 2014 and includes a cover of The Beatles’ “A Day In The Life”.

The track listing for Jeff Beck Live+ is:

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

Meanwhile, Beck has extended his current American tour.

In addition to already announced dates, Beck will now also play:

May 12 — Louisville, KY @ The Kentucky Center – Whitney Hall
May 14 — Ann Arbor, MI @ Michigan Theater
May 15 — Northfield, OH @ Hard Rock Live
May 16 — Cincinnati, OH @ PNC Pavilion at Riverbend Music Center
May 17 — Nashville, TN @ Ryman Auditorium
May 19 — St. Louis, MO @ Fox Theater
May 21 — Chicago, IL @ Chicago Theatre
May 22 — Milwaukee, WI @ Riverside Theatre
May 23 — Minneapolis, MN @ State Theater

Watch Stephen Hawking cover Monty Python for Record Store Day

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Professor Stephen Hawking has covered Monty Python's "The Galaxy Song" for Record Store Day. The song was originally sung by Eric Idle in the Python's last full-length film, 1983's The Meaning Of Life. Hawking's version will be released on limited edition seven-inch vinyl on Saturday, April 18, av...

Professor Stephen Hawking has covered Monty Python‘s “The Galaxy Song” for Record Store Day.

The song was originally sung by Eric Idle in the Python’s last full-length film, 1983’s The Meaning Of Life.

Hawking’s version will be released on limited edition seven-inch vinyl on Saturday, April 18, available now digitally.

You can watch the video above, which also features a cameo from Professor Brian Cox. The original version for The Meaning Of Life appears at the end of this story.

Hawking had previously appeared with the Pythons during their reunion shows in 2014.

He also recently appeared on Pink Floyd’s album, The Endless River, on the track “Talkin’ Hawkin'”.

Morrissey brands Glastonbury’s Michael Eavis an “animal hater”

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Morrissey has attacked Glastonbury Festival's Michael Eavis, branding him an "animal hater". Writing on his quasi-official website, True To You, in a post headlined 'Glastonbury Festival is not animal friendly', the singer said Eavis censored his show at the festival back in 2011, when he wished to...

Morrissey has attacked Glastonbury Festival’s Michael Eavis, branding him an “animal hater”.

Writing on his quasi-official website, True To You, in a post headlined ‘Glastonbury Festival is not animal friendly’, the singer said Eavis censored his show at the festival back in 2011, when he wished to broadcast a video displaying “the evils of factory farming” during a performance of “Meat Is Murder“.

Morrissey writes: “I was told that Michael Eavis had stopped the screening of the film because it wasn’t indicative of how his dairy farm operated… Michael Eavis also went on to justify banning the film by saying it would “upset” younger people. What Michael Eavis was saying, in effect, was: “it’s OK for our belly, but not for our eyes … and at all costs don’t educate anyone on animal cruelty because it might damage the financial profits of our happy Glastonbury Farm.” If he had thought the film gave an incorrect view of dairy farming, he wouldn’t have cared if the film had been shown, but he banned the film because he knew the film was truth.” He adds: “Like most animal haters, Michael appears to be one of those people who love dead animals, yet hate live ones.”

You can read The Smiths 30 Best Songs by clicking here

Morrissey recently announced an 18-date US tour for June and July, with Blondie and Amanda Palmer among his support acts.

David Bowie’s new songs are “classics”, says Lazarus musical director

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David Bowie's new songs for stage musical Lazarus are about "romance" and "the ugly world surrounding us", says director Ivo van Hove. Speaking to the BBC, the theatre veteran describes Bowie's new songs as "classics", though he confirmed that the artist will not be appearing onstage in the product...

David Bowie’s new songs for stage musical Lazarus are about “romance” and “the ugly world surrounding us”, says director Ivo van Hove.

Speaking to the BBC, the theatre veteran describes Bowie’s new songs as “classics”, though he confirmed that the artist will not be appearing onstage in the production. The forthcoming show is based on The Man Who Fell To Earth, a novel by Walter Tevis, which was later turned into a Bowie-starring film in 1976.

“Some of the songs sound as if you have heard them for ever – like classics,” says van Hove. “I started with [1975 album] Young Americans as a young man and went onto Station to Station, Low, Lodger, and Heroes, but I really loved his last album The Next Day – it’s a mixture of all these things.

“There are romantic songs – because his songs are deeply romantic – and there are songs about violence and the ugly world surrounding us. That’s what these new songs are about.”

Bowie is working on Lazarus, scheduled to be debuted in New York in December, with playwright Enda Walsh.

“He told me he is going to give his songs a new skin,” van Hove said of Bowie’s contributions, which will also some include re-worked songs from his catalogue. “He will not be onstage – I don’t think that is the thing he likes most in his life. But as far as I can judge, it is a very important project in his life.”

Arctic Monkeys, Radiohead and Pink Floyd albums revealed as biggest-selling vinyl of the decade

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Albums by Arctic Monkeys, Radiohead and Pink Floyd have been revealed as the best-selling vinyl releases of the decade so far.The news comes as the Official Charts Company launch a new vinyl chart, collecting the top-selling singles and albums on the resurgent format. Arctic Monkeys' 2013 album, AM...

Albums by Arctic Monkeys, Radiohead and Pink Floyd have been revealed as the best-selling vinyl releases of the decade so far.The news comes as the Official Charts Company launch a new vinyl chart, collecting the top-selling singles and albums on the resurgent format.

Arctic Monkeys’ 2013 album, AM, is the best-selling vinyl album of the decade, with Radiohead’s The King Of Limbs (2011), Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side Of The Moon (1973), Daft Punk‘s Random Access Memories (2013) and Pink Floyd’s The Endless River (2014) also charting in the Top 5.

David Bowie has scored the top-selling vinyl single of the decade, with his 2013 picture disc reissue of “Life On Mars”. Completing the Top 5 are two reissues, “Love Me Do” by The Beatles at No 2, and Morrissey‘s “Everyday Is Like Sunday” at No 5, and two songs released this decade – Lady Gaga & Beyonce‘s “Telephone” and Paul Weller‘s “No Tears To Cry”/”Wake Up The Nation”.

The highest-selling vinyl album and single so far this year are both from Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds – LP Chasing Yesterday and single “The Ballad Of Mighty I”.

The new vinyl charts will be published every Sunday at 7pm. They were created in response to rising vinyl sales over the past decade, and following the news that in 2014 vinyl sales figures hit a 20-year high. That trend has continued into the first quarter of 2015, with vinyl album sales up 69 per cent and vinyl single sales up 23 per cent.

Godspeed You! Black Emperor reviewed…

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When they emerged, clandestinely, in the late 1990s, Montreal's Godspeed You! Black Emperor seemed less like an orthodox rock band, and more like a superbly-orchestrated doomsday cult. Their pessimism was ill-defined but oddly exciting. As technophobes fretted about impending millennial meltdown, Go...

When they emerged, clandestinely, in the late 1990s, Montreal’s Godspeed You! Black Emperor seemed less like an orthodox rock band, and more like a superbly-orchestrated doomsday cult. Their pessimism was ill-defined but oddly exciting. As technophobes fretted about impending millennial meltdown, Godspeed provided a soundtrack, apparently constructed from arcane prophesy, survivalist paranoia and the most expansive post-rock of the day.

It was hard to work out the precise nature of Godspeed’s angst – or, indeed, a clear sense of what their solution to the world’s problems might be. In the few interviews that they granted around the time, anarcho-syndicalism was tangentially discussed. But as the band strived to operate as a democracy, living communally at their “filthy, dirty” Hotel2Tango studio, it seemed likely the nine equal members would never be able to agree upon anything so reductive as a coherent statement of intent.

“The end of the world isn’t coming. I don’t think 1999 is any worse than 1952 or 1918,” guitarist Efrim Menuck told NME for a rare and neurotic cover story. It did little, though, to detract from the mythologizing that surrounded the band. Tortured inarticulacy and disdain for the mainstream had their advantages, intensifying the focus on Godspeed’s sad, rousing, wordless music. With every crescendo and drone, their records and gigs suggested a band desperately – or at least creatively – aware of the end of days.

Sixteen years on, that still seems to be the case. Asunder, Sweet And Other Distress is Godspeed’s seventh awkwardly-named album, if one counts 1994’s All Lights Fucked On The Hairy Amp Drooling (a cassette limited, legendarily, to 33 copies) and 1999’s Slow Riot For New Zero Kanada (a 29-minute trinket originally classified as an EP). 1997’s breakthrough F♯ A♯ ∞ began with a scorched statement of intent called “The Dead Flag Blues”. Among the gloomily lavish packaging of Asunder…, there is a grainy poster of the Maple Leaf flag, flying at half-mast, captioned, “We love you so much our country is fucked.”

In a perennially wretched geo-political climate, though, there is a comfort to be had from Godspeed’s glowering predictability. Before a hiatus that stretched through much of the ’00s, the band’s most notable change came in 2002, when the exclamation mark shifted from the end of their name to the middle. Asunder is a relatively abbreviated album by their standards – four tracks, 41 minutes – and follows a familiar trajectory: martial climaxes and blackened ambient passages, bombast and afterburn.

Rarely, though, has that trajectory been charted so effectively. Much of Asunder… has been a staple of Godspeed live sets for the past few years, evocatively known as “Behemoth” by their followers, and the opening “Peasantry Or ‘Light! Inside Of Light!” (10 minutes, 28 seconds) might be as close to trad rock as they’ve ever come, a next step on from “Mladic”, the highlight of 2012’s Allelujah! Don’t Bend! Ascend!. “Peasantry…” isn’t exactly a radical departure, with its mix of Mogwai, Amon Duul II and Ennio Morricone, but there’s also something of an exotic swagger, a heaviness that’s almost bluesy, which brings to mind Led Zeppelin and “Kashmir”.

The closing “Piss Crowns Are Trebled” (13 minutes, 50 seconds), meanwhile, is the sort of widescreen drama that the band have been enacting for the best part of two decades, with Sophie Trudeau’s violin urging the massed guitars on from one windswept summit to another. At least 15 years after post-rock’s quiet-loud math became tedious for all but the most doughty fans, Godspeed’s relentless ability to repeat and reinvigorate a very similar musical formula remains uncanny, perhaps even rather absurd.

They also persist in disrupting the cumulative sweep of their epics, so that while “Peasantry” and “Piss Crowns” could have rumbled magisterially into one another, the band’s self-consciousness means that their flow is interrupted by “Lambs’ Breath” and “Asunder, Sweet”, together constituting 16 minutes of amp burn, approaching menace, brackish white noise and drone. The void opens wider when, on the vinyl version, the ending of “Lambs’ Breath” is stretched indefinitely by a locked groove.

Even at this late date, however, there is something endearing about such contrariness. On every album, Godspeed compose a heroic ascending progression, then become tormented anew by its obviousness and seek to derail it in exactly the same way as they have always done. The marvel of Asunder, Sweet And Other Distress is how, once again, the band’s constancy is ultimately an asset rather than a curse. In 1997, muting the TV news and playing a Godspeed record felt less like an act of adolescent futility, more one of heartfelt naysaying, an aesthetic revolt against the world’s iniquities. In 2015, for good and – much more significantly – for ill, nothing at all has changed.

Johnny Dowd – That’s Your Wife On The Back Of My Horse

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Johnny Dowd has never run shy of a little self-mythology. The title of his latest effort cops a line from Johnny ‘Guitar’ Watson’s 1957 tune, “Gangster Of Love”, in which a no-good cowboy makes off with the town’s womenfolk on his white steed, taunting the local sheriff as he heads for t...

Johnny Dowd has never run shy of a little self-mythology. The title of his latest effort cops a line from Johnny ‘Guitar’ Watson’s 1957 tune, “Gangster Of Love”, in which a no-good cowboy makes off with the town’s womenfolk on his white steed, taunting the local sheriff as he heads for the prairie. “Around my neck is your mother’s locket,” scowls Dowd, like a man who’s just decided that his is the only law that counts around here. “Your sisters will dance at my wake / Your brother will blow out the candles on my birthday cake.” It’s a fabulously cocky introduction to a record that, like the very best of Dowd’s work, fizzes with wild tales and a mongrel approach to traditional American forms.

That’s Your Wife On The Back Of My Horse, the thirteenth album of his career, finds Dowd dispensing with his usual band and, save for the guest vocals of Anna Coogan, doing everything himself. In some ways it’s a return to first impulses. Dowd has dusted off the same drum machine that was the bedrock of 1997 debut Wrong Side Of Memphis, concocting tart rhythms and overlaying them with distorted bursts of guitar and busy electronica. These are songs about getting laid and getting dumped, about women, devilry and familial dysfunction, often funny and invariably dark. As such it twists from blues and soul to punk and experimental rock, though Dowd’s terrific voice (like a Texan panhandle Mark E Smith) roots everything in country soil.

The lovely, gliding “Why?”, a resigned ballad about the one who got away, finds a sort of companion piece in the woozy “Dear John Letter”. At other times Dowd is in full swagger, ramping up the machismo on rap-rocker “White Dolemite” and laying down an evil guitar riff as he recalls blue-eyed Linda Lou on “Cadillac Hearse”. And “Words Are Birds” is an everyday tale of killer dads, grinding moms and clever-clever morticians. Suffice to say, this is vintage Dowd.

Some thoughts on Kurt Cobain: Montage Of Heck

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In the final chapter of her excellent memoir, Girl In A Band, Kim Gordon writes about performing with the surviving members of Nirvana last April, during their induction into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame. Gordon describes the “the furious sadness” she still felt at Kurt Cobain’s death, 20 ye...

In the final chapter of her excellent memoir, Girl In A Band, Kim Gordon writes about performing with the surviving members of Nirvana last April, during their induction into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame. Gordon describes the “the furious sadness” she still felt at Kurt Cobain’s death, 20 years previously. Cobain – and Nirvana – continue to exert a particular pull; indeed, one of the most surprising things about Brett Morgen’s documentary is that this is only the first authorised film to appear since Cobain’s death in April, 1994. What’s also a surprise is how good Kurt Cobain: Montage Of Heck actually is. Filmed with unrestricted access to Cobain’s archive – audio material, diaries, home videos – Morgan’s film is the whole thing.

Kurt Cobain in Montage Of Heck
Kurt Cobain in Montage Of Heck

Morgan’s tacit thread running through Montage Of Heck concerns families. At first, this means Cobain’s own relationship with his mother (good) and father (difficult); later on, the equally tricky one that he experiences with his wife, Courtney Love, and daughter Frances Bean. Cobain was raised in Aberdeen, Washington, described as “a lovely, awesome place to raise children” by his mother, Wendy. At this point, would have been instructive to hear more from Cobain’s estranged father, Don; if only to hear his side of the story in more detail.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cw5nZeptzEU

Like all teenagers, Cobain struggled to fit in. In his teens, there is marijuana – “the ultimate form of expression” – and then punk rock. “I was completely blown away,” he says in a recording. “It expressed the way I felt, socially and politically.” Cobain’s immersion into the underground, and the friendships and alliances he forms with likeminded souls; chief among them, Krist Novoselic, who becomes Nirvana’s bassist. Novoselic is one of Morgen’s key interviewees: an articulate man, whose relatively low profile since Cobain’s death lends a freshness to the documentary.

Novoselic provides a sympathetic guide us through the first hour or so of the film, as Nirvana find an excitable and hungry audience for their music. Morgen’s film considers the complex, self-conscious relationship Cobain and Nirvana had with their success. The arrival of Courtney Love offers a change of perspective. Considering the way Love and Cobain’s relationship became embedded in the tabloid landscape, there’s inevitably something uncomfortable about watching the home footage of them larking about, semi-clothed, in bedrooms.

They are not easy company to like: infantile and, considering their status, mostly embittered, they routinely goad each other into increasing levels of snark. The footage of Cobain, bouncing Frances Bean on his knee, mumbling The Muppets’ “Mahna Mahna” to his infant daughter, is sad and shocking for the unflinching way it depicts the debilitating influence of heroin on Cobain. His face is covered in scabs, his eyes barely focussing. The film ends with Nirvana’s performance of “In The Pines” on MTV Unplugged. “I’ll shiver the whole night through” Cobain sang, in doing so transforming this traditional American folk song into a haunting piece about addiction.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Ride’s Mark Gardener: “It wasn’t rock’n’roll, it was much more than that”

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Ride take Uncut round their Oxford haunts and reveal all about their reunion in the new issue, dated May 2015 and out now. Original members Mark Gardener, Andy Bell, Steve Queralt and Loz Colbert announced their reunion late last year, and play their first gig at California’s Coachella festival o...

Ride take Uncut round their Oxford haunts and reveal all about their reunion in the new issue, dated May 2015 and out now.

Original members Mark Gardener, Andy Bell, Steve Queralt and Loz Colbert announced their reunion late last year, and play their first gig at California’s Coachella festival on April 10.

“We were an exciting band,” Gardener says. “[That period] was the last time people tried to experiment with music. It wasn’t rock’n’roll, it was far more than that.”

“I realised there was something indestructible about the music,” adds Andy Bell, “if you can pick up where you left off after 20 years and it makes you feel that same way.”

During their initial incarnation, the group released four albums, including 1990’s Nowhere and 1992’s Going Blank Again.

The new issue of Uncut is out now

Paul Simon: “I knew I’d never make another Bridge Over Troubled Water”

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With the songwriting veteran returning to British shores for a tour with Sting, it seems a good time, then, to revisit this wide-ranging conversation about his long and extraordinary journey. In this piece from Uncut's April 2011 issue (Take 167), Simon takes us from New York to London, from Kingsto...

With the songwriting veteran returning to British shores for a tour with Sting, it seems a good time, then, to revisit this wide-ranging conversation about his long and extraordinary journey. In this piece from Uncut’s April 2011 issue (Take 167), Simon takes us from New York to London, from Kingston to Soweto, from his first adolescent songs, through the triumphs of Simon & Garfunkel and his early solo career, onto troubled movies and musicals, creative crises, and the commercial and political dramas of Graceland… Interview: Allan Jones

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paulsimonspread

You think of the people who wrote the soundtrack for the 1960s, those days of miracle and wonder, your youth, and here’s one of them, opening the door of his hotel room, Paul Simon.

“Welcome,” he says, a dapper dude, grey around the edges at 69, but otherwise trim and hale. He’s looking good, is your first impression, as he leads you into his suite at the Four Seasons hotel in Washington DC. The day outside is bright but bitterly cold, a raw wind coming off the Potomac, snow on the way. He looks dressed for the weather in a thick blue woollen top, zipped to the throat, good jeans and the kind of boots he might wear for a bracing walk in the woods near his home in New Canaan, Connecticut.

He’s in Washington for a gala concert tonight to commemorate the 50th anniversary of John F Kennedy’s presidential inauguration, which he’ll close with a version of “The Sound Of Silence”, written only a few months after Kennedy’s assassination in November 1963. It was Simon & Garfunkel’s first US No 1 and is a reminder to those of us of a certain age of a time when Simon as much as Dylan, The Beatles, whoever, was re-defining the art of popular songwriting.

Uncut, meanwhile, is in town to talk to Simon about his new album, his first since Surprise, a 2006 collaboration with Brian Eno, and the 11th of a solo career that began when Simon and Garfunkel, friends from a shared New York childhood, split in 1970 at the peak of their popularity, with Bridge Over Troubled Water on its way to becoming one of the biggest-selling albums ever.

So Beautiful Or So What is a stripped-down late-career classic, a mordant meditation on love, mortality, several kinds of contemporary woe and not much less on songs like “Questions For The Angels”, “The Afterlife” and the title track than the meaning of life. Musically, it reminds him of his first solo album, Paul Simon, though there are powerful echoes too of Still Crazy After All These Years and Graceland.

“Without having intended it to be,” he says, “the album became something of a recapitulation of the whole trip that I’ve been on, my whole career.”

Which, as well as the new album, is what we now talk about. He sits with his back to the afternoon light coming through the window. By the time we’re through, nearly three hours hence, there won’t be much of it left.

Hear new Robert Smith release…

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Robert Smith has unveiled a new track. It's a cover of "There's A Girl In The Corner" by The Twilight Sad. The track appears on the B-side to The Twilight Sad's latest single, "It Was Never The Same". You can hear a clip of Smith's cover below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZC2pt3XkhzI You c...

Robert Smith has unveiled a new track.

It’s a cover of “There’s A Girl In The Corner” by The Twilight Sad.

The track appears on the B-side to The Twilight Sad‘s latest single, “It Was Never The Same”.

You can hear a clip of Smith’s cover below.

You can order The Cure: The Ultimate Music Guide by clicking here

The Cure revealed details of a new album last year, although a release date has yet to be confirmed.

Watch Nick Cave perform at Allen Ginsberg tribute concert

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Nick Cave was one of the artists participating in a tribute concert which took place in Los Angeles last night [April 7, 2015] in honour of Beat poet Allen Ginsberg. Cave performed "The Ship Song" with Beth Orton, which you can watch in footage below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LKtLE7oUrb0 ...

Nick Cave was one of the artists participating in a tribute concert which took place in Los Angeles last night [April 7, 2015] in honour of Beat poet Allen Ginsberg.

Cave performed “The Ship Song” with Beth Orton, which you can watch in footage below.

The show was organised by the David Lynch Foundation and took place at the Theatre at the Ace Hotel to celebrate the 60th anniversary Ginsberg’s most famous poem, “Howl“.

Aside from Cave, Amy Poehler, Peaches, Courtney Love, Devendra Banhart and Macy Gray were among the guests.

Watch the trailer for Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic project

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Jack White and T Bone Burnett have announced details of their new American Epic project. According to a report on White's Third Man website, "American Epic takes us on a journey across time to the birth of modern music, when the musical strands of a diverse nation first combined, sparking a cultur...

Jack White and T Bone Burnett have announced details of their new American Epic project.

According to a report on White’s Third Man website, “American Epic takes us on a journey across time to the birth of modern music, when the musical strands of a diverse nation first combined, sparking a cultural renaissance that forever transformed the future of music and the world. The three-part historical documentary follows the trail of record company talent scouts from the late 1920s as they toured America with a recording machine to capture the raw expression of an emerging culture whose recordings would lead to the development of the Blues, Country, Gospel, Hawaiian, Cajun, and Folk music.”

AmericanEpic

American Epic will comprise a three-part historical documentary and The American Epic Sessions feature length recording studio film, which will air this Autumn on PBS in America and in the UK on BBC Arena.

The project is co-produced by Robert Redford.

A longread from the Uncut archives: Jack White, interviewed in depth…

Additionally, American Epic will include companion music releases of archival recordings featuring groundbreaking audio restoration of original 1920s and 1930s recordings, The American Epic Sessions contemporary performance recordings, and a deluxe vinyl box set.

Speaking previously to Uncut, T Bone Burnett said, “It’s the story of the American recording industry from 1926 to 1936, this incredible occurrence. In 1926 the record industry fell off 80 per cent in one year because of the proliferation of radio in the big cities. The middle-class people and the wealthy people who were able to buy radios no longer wanted to buy records, because they could get music for free – why buy a record? So the recording companies, having equipment and nothing to do, decided to go down south, where people didn’t have electricity, and therefore didn’t have radios. So they started recording people down south – they started recording the poorest people in the country and broadcasting their voices all around the world.”

Win all of The Who’s studio albums on vinyl

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The Who have reissued all their studio albums on 180 gram vinyl. The 11 albums include Quadrophenia - which comes with a reprint of the original pressing's 22-page booklet - and Endless Wire, which has never been available on vinyl before. Now it is possible to experience again on vinyl the th...

The Who have reissued all their studio albums on 180 gram vinyl.

The 11 albums include Quadrophenia – which comes with a reprint of the original pressing’s 22-page booklet – and Endless Wire, which has never been available on vinyl before.

Now it is possible to experience again on vinyl the thrill of the band’s early run of albums – My Generation, A Quick One and The Who Sell Out – before they enter their imperial phase with Tommy, Who’s Next and Quadrophenia. There are jewels further along, too, including the remarkable maturity that they brought to their last studio album to date, Endless Wire.

The albums, released by Universal, are in shops now – and we’re delighted to have one complete set to give away.

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To be in with a chance of winning, just tell us the correct answer to this question:

What is the opening track on the band’s debut album, My Generation?

Send your entries to UncutComp@timeinc.com by noon, Friday, April 17, 2015. Please include your full name, address and a contact telephone number.

A winner will be chosen by the Uncut team from the correct entries. The editor’s decision is final.

Click here to read Roger Daltrey on The Who’s 20 Best Songs

The Who’s 11 studio albums are:

My Generation, 1965

A Quick One, 1966

The Who Sell Out, 1967

Tommy, 1969

Who’s Next, 1971

Quadrophenia, 1973

The Who By Numbers, 1975

Who Are You, 1978

Face Dances, 1981

It’s Hard, 1982

Endless Wire, 2006

The Who play London’s Hyde Park as part of British Summer Time on June 26

Ray Davies announces UK festival appearance

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Ray Davies is to headline this year's Victorious Festival in Southsea. The festival is scheduled to take place over the August Bank Holiday weekend, Saturday August 29 and Sunday August 30. Joining Davies on the bill are Primal Scream, Johnny Marr and Super Furry Animals. You can find full detail...

Ray Davies is to headline this year’s Victorious Festival in Southsea.

The festival is scheduled to take place over the August Bank Holiday weekend, Saturday August 29 and Sunday August 30.

Joining Davies on the bill are Primal Scream, Johnny Marr and Super Furry Animals.

You can find full details of the line up and tickets by clicking here.

To date, Davis only other confirmed festival appearance for 2015 is at Glastonbury Abbey on Saturday, August 8.

The Specials – Specials, More Specials, In The Studio

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In ’70s Britain, a mixed-race band from the Midlands emerged in an era of industrial strife and social disorder. They revived music and fashions that were at least two decades’ old, played riotous gigs to rowdy audiences, and had a string of massive Top 10 hits. They were called Showaddywaddy, a...

In ’70s Britain, a mixed-race band from the Midlands emerged in an era of industrial strife and social disorder. They revived music and fashions that were at least two decades’ old, played riotous gigs to rowdy audiences, and had a string of massive Top 10 hits. They were called Showaddywaddy, and nobody mentions them much anymore.

We still talk a lot about The Specials, though, and for good reason. Unlike Showaddywaddy, their revivalism was utterly rooted in the here and now. The band’s frontmen – the fey, oddly camp football hooligan Terry Hall and the growling jailbird Neville Staple – were the very ideology of Rock Against Racism made flesh. Their leader, Jerry Dammers, seemed to have rebuilt Jamaican music from rain-sodden English industrial concrete. His lyrics – kitchen-sink dramas of fighting and fucking, fear and loathing – resonated so strongly with teenagers that few of them thought of it as being in any way “retro”.

The band’s 1979 debut, Specials, includes some pretty faithful cover versions of old Jamaican ska singles. “A Message To You, Rudy” even features Rico Rodriguez, the veteran trombonist who played on Dandy Livingstone’s 1967 original. But, generally, The Specials’ versions blow the genteel originals out of the water, with producer Elvis Costello recording them virtually live and capturing the manic energy of their shows. Dammers’ organs and Lynval Golding’s rhythm guitars bubble and skank in all the correct places, but Horace Panter’s basslines punch hard while Roddy Radiation’s punky guitar snarls and fizzes, all the time kept on a tight leash by Costello (who never much liked his histrionic blues solos).

Often the covers mutate into whole new songs. Prince Buster’s 1965 Blue Beat single “Al Capone” is reworked as the ferociously punky “Gangsters” (a reference to an ugly gun-related episode that happened when Bernie Rhodes took the band to Paris). George Fame’s 1964 version of Rufus Thomas’ “Do The Dog” is completely rewritten by Dammers as a state-of-the-nation address (“All you punks and all you teds/National Front and natty dreads/Mods, rockers, hippies and… skin-heads”). And an obscure Lloyd Charmers single, “Birth Control”, is transformed into “Too Much Too Young”, the bawdy, Benny Hill lyrics replaced by a sense of disgust (“Try wearing a cap!”).

If the debut album was teenage male fear writ large, 1980’s follow-up, More Specials, presents a dread that’s more existential than adolescent. Even the daft opener “Enjoy Yourself”, a Prince Buster-inspired reading of Guy Lombardo’s 1949 big-band anthem, hints at impending nuclear war, as does Terry Hall’s first songwriting credit (“I’m just a man at C&A/and I don’t have a say in the war games that they play”), while the well-upholstered exotica of “International Jet Set” tells of a plane crash that kills the narrator along with the “well-dressed chimpanzees” in business class. But the most interesting development is the sonic shift from monochrome into Technicolor: the complicated, Bach-like chord cycles on “Stereotypes”; Dick Cuthell’s mariachi flugelhorn flourishes; and the Yamaha home organ rhythms – beguine, cha-cha, bossa nova – that came plastered all over Side Two (Dammers saw it as a DIY punk appropriation of Muzak). “Ska was just a launching point,” said Dammers, years later. “I didn’t want us to end up like Bad Manners.”

As the band fractured, Dammers’ studioholic tendencies started to overwhelm proceedings. Smash Hits readers jokingly voted the (newly rechristened) Special AKA as 1983’s “most miserable group” and they weren’t far wrong. “There was a whiff of mental illness in the air,” says vocalist Rhoda Dakar of the joyless, endless sessions for the third album, while bassist Horace Panter says that attending rehearsals was “like going to a funeral every day”.

In The Studio was eventually released in 1984 after three cripplingly expensive years of sessions. Aside from the literally world-changing anthem “Nelson Mandela”, it’s often dismissed as preachy and sanctimonious. A reappraisal is due: “What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend” is a hilariously spiteful slice of lovers rock, sung by Dammers himself in a demented falsetto; “The Lonely Crowd” has that same prowling skank, fronted by Stan Campbell’s keening tenor; while “Alcohol” is a suitably woozy reprise of “Ghost Town”. Even if the didactic lyrics on tracks like “Racist Friend” get on your nerves, CD2 here has dub versions of each song, which suggest that this incarnation of The Specials could well have been Britain’s finest ever reggae band.

This was an era when bands were reluctant to put singles on LPs
for fear of shortchanging loyal fans. As a result there are plenty of stand-alone singles, B-sides and 12” mixes that pack out the second discs of each reissued album, alongside live recordings and radically different Radio 1 sessions.

The Specials package sees “Gangsters” fittingly installed as the intro to CD1, with CD2 featuring live sessions, including the chart-topping “Too Much Too Young” EP. But it’s CD2 of More Specials that’s the pick of the bunch. A version of “Rude Buoys Outa Jail” – taken from a bonus 7” that came with early copies of the LP – mixes Dammers’ boogie-woogie piano with Neville Staple’s extended toasting (although this package curiously omits its flipside, “Braggin’ And Tryin’ Not To Lie”, a track that Roddy describes as “the birth of ska-billy”). And the triumphant three-sided single that closes the More Specials chapter – “Ghost Town”, “Why” and “Friday Night, Saturday Morning” – might still be the finest 7” package in pop history.

All three LPs were re-released 13 years ago, without the abundance of extra tracks, but now seem rather more relevant. What then appeared to document a sealed-in, closed-off aberration in British popular culture has been re-energised by the reunion shows. Amy Winehouse, Lily Allen, Kasabian, Arctic Monkeys, Damon Albarn, Hard-Fi and Jamie T have covered Specials songs, while others – Tricky, Mike Skinner, Hollie Cook and dozens of grime, 2step and garage acts – have drawn explicitly from band’s music. Their gleefully grey take on Jamaica is now an inescapable component of British pop. Unlike dear old Showaddywaddy.

Q+A

Jerry Dammers

Tell us about your songwriting process? How did you usually write? How did it change as each album went on?
My songs were normally autobiographical or personal political statements of my opinion. Mainly things I wasn’t happy about. Sometimes words came first, sometimes a tune, sometimes both together. With the second album our lives had changed so completely, “International Jet Set” was still autobiographical but I was aware the public probably wouldn’t be able to relate so easily. “Stereotype” and “Pearls Café” were more or less invented characters with elements of different real people.

How much collaboration was there when it came to the writing and arranging?
I was very generous with credits. “Gangsters”, “Blank Expression”, “It’s Up To You”, “Nite Klub”, are sometimes credited to the whole band, but really I wrote those songs. Roddy added guitar licks, Terry contributed one line to “Nite Klub”– “All the girls are slags and the beer tastes just like piss”. I also contributed lyrics to Lynval’s two songs “Do Nothing” and “Why?” and contributed some lyrics to Neville’s toasts on “Stupid Marriage” and “Why?”. I also helped Terry with the music on “Friday Night And Saturday Morning”, all without credit. On “Man At C&A” I wrote the music and Terry and I collaborated on the lyrics. The rest of the credits are more or less as it was.
I was arranger overall but people contributed some bits. Roddy made up most of his guitar lines. His songs were basic punk, Lynval’s very basic reggae. I wrote a lot of the bass lines. “Concrete Jungle”… I think Horace may have contributed the high bits and I wrote the heavy dub bass line, those made the song what it was – jungle 15 years before jungle! As we moved towards the second album my idea was to move from monochrome to Technicolor, sonically as well. I added plucked piano to “Rat Race”, Ice Rink Strings to “Do Nothing”. I think it would be fair to say that the more arranged the songs became, the more resistance I encountered from Roddy and Lynval. Roddy didn’t like the ironic “shoo-bee-doos” on “Hey little Rich Girl”. Lynval thought the horns on “Ghost Town” sounded “wrong! wrong! wrong!”

Did you write specifically for Terry or Neville to sing?
I was aware that Terry and Neville were the lead singers, I wrote some of “Ghost Town” and some of my contributions to Neville’s toasts in patois, and I intended him to sing those bits, but I didn’t tailor any of my lyrics or what I wanted to say specifically to any singer . In fact, a lot of my songs were written or part written before the band was formed , or before Terry and Neville joined. (“Nite Klub”, “Doesn’t Make It Alright”, “Blank Expression”, “Too Much Too Young”, “I Can’t Stand It”, “Little Bitch” – written when I was 15 !) “Pearls Café” and “Man At C&A” were new lyrics to tunes I’d written before the band.

How “live” was the first album?
It was more or less recorded with everyone playing at once, then some vocals redone and maybe some brass done as overdubs. On the second album, we started moving towards recording Roddy’s guitar and my additional keyboard parts separately as overdubs, even the drums where I used the cheesy home organ rhythm machines and arpeggiators. I thought that was quite a “punk” idea, but Roddy didn’t really see it that way. I was getting more interested in the sonic possibilities of the studio.

On the second album, it sounds like you’ve been picking up influences from lots of different sources…
I went out of my way to listen to anything that had been regarded as rubbish in the rock world, muzak, exotica, it was quite groundbreaking, everyone from electro pop to 2 Tone were trying to consign rock music to the dustbin of history at that time.

With In The Studio, was The Special AKA actually a “band” or was it more a collection of hired hands?
No, it was intended to be a proper band, and the few sessions we did for TV or radio actually sounded quite good. It’s a shame everyone had left before we attempted a gig.

Did the experience of the last album put you off recording for a while?
I ended up on my own, imprisoned in the record contract, with
a large debt to the record company, so there was no real point involving anybody else in doing any more recording until they released me from the contract.

How did you meet the son of ANC President Oliver Tambo?
After I wrote “Free Nelson Mandela”, Dali Tambo approached me to organise the British Artists Against Apartheid. I couldn’t really record for the reasons I explained above, so I did four years hard work unpaid in an office! During that time an agent of Apartheid walked in the ANC office in Paris and shot Dulcie September dead so I wouldn’t describe it as fun times, exactly. There was creativity, of course, in approaching artists like The Smiths and New Order for the series of concerts, and putting the bill together for the massive concert on Clapham Common with Gil Scott-Heron, Hugh Masekela, Peter Gabriel, Paul Weller, Big Audio Dynamite and more. That attracted 200,000 people. Then I secured the commitment of Simple Minds, and Dire Straits followed, which got the Mandela 70th Birthday concert at Wembley off the ground. My musical creativity was put on hold, apart from playing “Free Nelson Mandela” at Clapham, and then at Wembley, which was broadcast to millions around the world, then again when Mandela came and spoke. Those were the proudest days of my life.
INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS