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 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 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.”
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!
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 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.”
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
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.
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.”
To coincide with Sufjan Stevens' current run of American tour dates, here's our extensive interview with Stevens from Uncut's June 2015 issue.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vj9s0U2U2o
The Prodigal Son
A very intimate interview with Sufjan Stevens. How road trips, rodeos, all-ou...
Carrie & Lowell sleeve
Even if he’d rather not discuss specifics, Stevens is glad that he’s releasing Carrie & Lowell: hopeful about its universality and the path it might offer fans out of their own grief. The experience has also taught him a lot about living more healthily, a process that has included “eradicating resentment, and refusing to feel entitled or take anything for granted,” he says.
Where Adz is manic and frazzled, Carrie & Lowell is utterly lucid. “When you’re met with a very tragic event, you have to take stock of what’s real internally and emotionally and allow yourself to express those feelings,” he says. “Up until the death of my mother, I’d evaded that deepness of feeling in general. But grief is an extremely refining process. I felt I needed to be honest with my feelings for the first time.”
To stay on course, he must remain nearsighted: “I have a problem when I start thinking cosmically because I lose sight of the exact nature of joy in my life, and I obscure it with grand, universal anxiety,” he says. But the album doesn’t indicate any kind of permanent musical volte-face: Lowell Brams mentions an “electronic noise album” that the pair are finishing. Before that, though, Stevens will make his first UK festival appearance headlining End Of The Road in September. It’s an appearance 10 years in the making, but perhaps strange timing given the quietness of the record. “It’s gonna be a challenge,” says Stevens. “I think it would be disingenuous to engage with the full-throttle back catalogue. So don’t come expecting a party.”
When Stevens returns to this office after the Carrie & Lowell tour is over, there will be no cute props awaiting transfer to his prosaic personal archive. Instead, his survival and recovery is its legacy.
“Love is incomprehensible,” he says. “It’s a very simple and stupid statement, but it feels extremely profound and necessary and helpful for me right now to wave that banner. There is no justice in love or in death, but I think that we as living survivors of this world and this life have a duty to give testament to a deeper joy that we’ve been given. I’m not exploiting my misery – I don’t want to do that. If that’s how the record comes across then I’ve failed as an artist.”
Pete Townshend, Paul Weller, My Morning Jacket and Ron Wood feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated June 2015 and out tomorrow.
The Who guitarist and songwriter is on the cover, and inside he comes clean on retirement, the future of the band and his still intense relationship with Roger Daltrey.
...
Pete Townshend, Paul Weller, My Morning Jacket and Ron Wood feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated June 2015 and out tomorrow.
The Who guitarist and songwriter is on the cover, and inside he comes clean on retirement, the future of the band and his still intense relationship with Roger Daltrey.
“There’s a desire I have to do a show which is crap,” he says. “Go out in front of a bunch of devoted Who fans and say, ‘Listen, you bunch of fucking cunts. Fuck off. Don’t come back…’”
Paul Weller discusses his new album, Saturns Pattern, and looks to the next chapter of his career – the epic LP also gets an extensive three-page review.
My Morning Jacket frontman Jim James answers your questions, revealing his thoughts on crème brûlée, meditation and the band’s new album, The Waterfall, as well as recalling snorkeling with the Grateful Dead and performing with Bob Dylan.
Ron Wood opens up his ’60s diary to reveal his formative years as a rock’n’roller in beat combo The Birds, and admits that he always wanted to be in The Rolling Stones.
“The Stones were simmering in the background,” he says, “they were the gauge for where I wanted to be.”
As the Violent Femmes return with new music, the original members tell us how they won a record contract worth zero dollars, wrote loser anthems and biblical freak-outs, and ended up one of the biggest cult bands of the 1980s. Also involved: Chrissie Hynde, The Modern Lovers, lawsuits, a special, near-naked performance for The Smiths.
Nile Rodgers takes us through the highlights of his recorded work, from Chic to Bowie and Daft Punk – “It sounds weird,” he laughs, “but when I run into young kids, they think Pharrell and I have a band called Daft Punk with robots behind us!”
Elsewhere, the incredible tale of the incomparable Texas cult hero Doug Sahm is told, and we delve into the archives to find an amazing Happy Mondays interview from 1990 – “we went drug potty!” – and Felt explain how they made their classic “Primitive Painters” single.
Our 40-page reviews section features Weller, The Rolling Stones, Joe Bonamassa, Leonard Cohen, Elliott Smith and more.
Also in the magazine, Canyon troubadour JD Souther reveals the records that changed his life, and we hear all about the new Karen Dalton project, a rediscovered Tom Waits animation, and Boredoms’ latest drum extravaganza.
This month’s free CD, Uncut’s High Numbers, includes great new songs from Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Giant Sand, The Weather Station, Mikal Cronin, My Morning Jacket, Thee Oh Sees, Wire and more.
The first wave of names has been announced for this year's Meltdown festival.
The festival - which this year is curated by David Byrne - runs at London's Southbank Centre from Monday, August 17 – 30.
The line-up includes Anna Calvi, Young Marble Giants, Benjamin Clementine, Estrella Morente, Sun...
The first wave of names has been announced for this year’s Meltdown festival.
The festival – which this year is curated by David Byrne – runs at London’s Southbank Centre from Monday, August 17 – 30.
The line-up includes Anna Calvi, Young Marble Giants, Benjamin Clementine, Estrella Morente, Sunn O))), Atomic Bomb! The Music of William Onyeabor, David Longstreth, Matthew Herbert, Petra Haden and Hypnotic Brass Ensemble, with more artists to be announced.
The festival, now in its 22nd year, finds Byrne following in the footsteps of previous directors that include Jarvis Cocker, Patti Smith, David Bowie, Yoko Ono, Ray Davies and Ornette Coleman.
You can find more details about this year’s Meltdown by clicking here.
The first wave of acts are:
Estrella Morente – Royal Festival Hall (August 17) Bianca Casady & The CIA – Queen Elizabeth Hall (17, 18) Sunn O))) + Phurpa – Royal Festival Hall (18) Psapp – Queen Elizabeth Hall (19) Atomic Bomb – Royal Festival Hall (20) Maria Rodés – Purcell Room (20) Hypnotic Brass Ensemble – Queen Elizabeth Hall (20) Benjamin Clementine – Queen Elizabeth Hall (21) Petra Haden – Purcell Room (21) Carmen Consoli – Royal Festival Hall (21) Anna Calvi – Queen Elizabeth Hall (22) John Luther Adams: Across A Distance – Southbank Centre (23) Matthew Herbert – Queen Elizabeth Hall (23) Lonnie Holley – Queen Elizabeth Hall (24) David Longstreth + Gabi – Royal Festival Hall (25) Francois & The Atlas Mountains + Zun Zun Egui – Queen Elizabeth Hall (25) Young Marble Giants – Royal Festival Hall (27) Gob Squad: Western Society – Purcell Room (27) Young Jean Lee: We’re Gonna Die – Queen Elizabeth Hall (30)
It apparently took Johnny Rogan more than 30 years to write Ray Davies: A Complicated Life. Potential readers made faint-hearted by its imposing bulk might wonder if it will take as long to read, while Kinks fans of a certain age will be especially concerned that if they start it they might not live...
It apparently took Johnny Rogan more than 30 years to write Ray Davies: A Complicated Life. Potential readers made faint-hearted by its imposing bulk might wonder if it will take as long to read, while Kinks fans of a certain age will be especially concerned that if they start it they might not live long enough to finish the thing. The book is a little shy of 800 pages. Rogan’s notes, acknowledgements and a discography alone run to over 100 of them, rolling on interminably like the credits at the end of a Michael Bay film.
This is brevity itself for Rogan, however. His last book, Byrds: Requiem For The Timeless, weighed in at over 1200 pages, with more to follow in a still unpublished second volume. He’s the kind of biographer for whom no character in the story he is telling is too minor to be overlooked, no incident too small to be described at the fullest possible length, no anecdote, recollection, set list or song too insignificant to be duly logged, documented and discussed. A Complicated Life, therefore, teems with as much detail as a 19th century novel, an unbelievable early reference to Africa as “the Dark Continent” making Rogan more than ever sound like a fusty Victorian chronicler.
The Kinks’ story was well told by Nick Hasted in his 2011 biography, You Really Got Me, and more elliptically by Ray Davies in two memoirs, 1995’s X-Ray and 2013’s Americana: The Kinks, The Road and The Perfect Riff. Whatever’s been previously written about the band is rather overwhelmed, however, by Rogan’s book, with its illuminating interviews with Ray and Dave Davies and an abundance of supplementary testimony from usually deeply disgruntled former band members, managers, producers, agents, school friends, family and roadies, with especially telling contributions from Ray’s first wife, Rasa, a 16-year-old Bradford schoolgirl when Ray met her.
Whatever his regard for Davies as a songwriter of occasional genius, Johnny Rogan is unsparing about the flaws in Ray’s character that made him eventually insufferable to so many of the people who came into his ruinous orbit. At the heart of A Complicated Life is Ray’s lifelong conflict with his younger brother, a dismal history of largely pointless and destructive enmity, almost unreal in its relentless hostility and violence, and catalogued here in grim and exasperating detail. Their behaviour was not confined to incandescent fraternal dispute. It may even be that their greatest talent was bringing misery to themselves and everyone around them. However much you might love the best of their music, by the end of this enormous, gripping and hugely readable book, you are eventually glad to see the back of them and their toxic hatreds.
When a sprightly 56-year-old Bob Dylan released "Time Out Of Mind" in 1997, he inadvertently established a new paradigm for the first generation of rock superstars. While, at live shows, they were still expected to play the hits of their youth, they were no longer obliged to ignore the actual digits...
When a sprightly 56-year-old Bob Dylan released “Time Out Of Mind” in 1997, he inadvertently established a new paradigm for the first generation of rock superstars. While, at live shows, they were still expected to play the hits of their youth, they were no longer obliged to ignore the actual digits on their birth certificates. Now, their new music was often obliged to confront mortality; to admit, with appropriate gravitas, that they might soon, one way or another, fade away. “It’s not dark yet,” sang Dylan, “but it’s gettin’ there.”
Eighteen years on, however, as Dylan and his peers march resolutely into their seventies, many have realised that they probably shouldn’t approach each new project as if it may be their last; half a dozen rueful valedictory albums would be enough for even Leonard Cohen. As a consequence, these artists are finding new ways to grow older – Dylan’s peculiar revenant games, for example, or Neil Young’s belated mid-life crisis – and are working out how to deal with playing 50-year-old anthems for a few years more, at least.
On May 19, Pete Townshend, notably vituperative voice of that generation, will turn 70. As Michael Bonner discovers in this month’s new issue of Uncut, out today, however, Townshend shows little enthusiasm for even acknowledging the landmark. Instead, he will be busy continuing a life’s exceptional and complex work: performing incendiary but conflicted gigs with The Who; re-imagining the music that has haunted him for decades (a symphonic rescoring of “Quadrophenia”, in this case); dreaming up radical plots to upset expectation; and, of course, baiting Roger Daltrey.
There’s a lot of the latter in our cover story, one which proves yet again that Townshend remains the king of interviewees. “There’s a desire that I have sometimes to do a show which is just crap,” Townshend says. “Go out in front of a bunch of devoted Who fans and say, ‘Listen, you bunch of fucking cunts. Fuck off. Don’t come back. This is the last time I’m every going to fucking say anything that’s even slightly nice to you.’ Then what you do is plug your guitar into overdrive and walk off stage… I don’t mean deliberately play crap. I mean allow a degree of experimentation that would allow you to make the kind of mistakes that people might say, ‘This is crap.’”
When I was editing Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to The Who, I uncovered a great tranche of Townshend features, consistently remarkable for their intelligence and candour. Obligatory hype aside, I genuinely believe this month’s instalment is one of the most compelling.
The rest of the issue isn’t bad, either, I guess. We have interviews with the Boredoms, My Morning Jacket, Ron Wood, Nile Rodgers, several ex-members of Felt, Paul Weller, Richard Dawson and, in this month’s Fractiously Reunited Legends slot, The Violent Femmes. There’s a great piece on Doug Sahm, which has kept me replaying Sir Douglas Quintet’s “Are Inlaws Really Outlaws” for most of the month, plus an archive romp with those incorrigible Happy Mondays. We’ve also got tributes to Daevid Allen, John Renbourn and Andy Fraser, an investigation into the success of Joe Bonamassa, and a reviews section that involves Holly Herndon, Leonard Cohen, the Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Lead Belly, The Rolling Stones, Red House Painters and, by me, an extended piece about the Weather Station album I’ve been mentioning a lot these past few weeks. To recap: this…
Neil Young and Stephen Stills performed together on Saturday, April 25 at the Hollywood Pantages Theatre in Los Angeles.
The pair reunited for a nine-song set as part of the third annual Light Up The Blues benefit concert in aid of autism.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHCXUWWKEkc
The event w...
Neil Young and Stephen Stills performed together on Saturday, April 25 at the Hollywood Pantages Theatre in Los Angeles.
The pair reunited for a nine-song set as part of the third annual Light Up The Blues benefit concert in aid of autism.
The event was hosted by Stills and his wife Kristen, and also featured sets from Steve Earle and Shawn Colvin.
The setlist from Young – who recently appeared onstage in New York to discuss his new album, The Monsanto Years – and Stills drew from their shared musical history, as well as new material.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dDBhjt2yRg4
Neil Young and Stephen Stills Light Up The Blues setlist: 1. Long May You Run (acoustic guitar) 2. Human Highway acoustic guitar) 3. I Don’t Know (acoustic guitar) [new Young song] 4. Virtual Here & Now (electric guitar) [new Stills song] 5. Don’t Want Lies (electric guitar) 6. For What It’s Worth (electric guitar) 7. Bluebird (electric guitar) 8. Mr. Soul (electric guitar) 9. Rockin’ In The Free World (electric guitar)
David Bowie has announced the latest in his ongoing 7″ anniversary picture disc series.
Bowie will release "Fame" as a limited-edition picture disc on July 24, 2015 backed by an alternate mix of the fellow Young Americans album track, "Right".
"Fame" was originally released as a single on Ju...
David Bowie has announced the latest in his ongoing 7″ anniversary picture disc series.
Bowie will release “Fame” as a limited-edition picture disc on July 24, 2015 backed by an alternate mix of the fellow Young Americans album track, “Right“.
“Fame” was originally released as a single on July 25, 1975.
The most recent in his anniversary picture disc series was “Young Americans“.
Recently, Bowie also released a blue vinyl 7” of the French-language version of “Heroes”, to mark the opening of David Bowie Is at the Philharmonie de Paris, and two 7″ singles on Record Store Day: a limited edition 7″ picture disc of “Changes” and a limited edition white/clear vinyl split 7″of “Kingdom Come” also featuring Tom Verlaine‘s version.
Jack White played the final night of his five-date acoustic tour last night [April 26, 2015].
The show took place 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.
White's Fargo show was st...
Jack White played the final night of his five-date acoustic tour last night [April 26, 2015].
The show took place 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.
White’s Fargo show was streamed live on Tidal, the newly-launched streaming music service, and it will be available on-demand at a later date.
According to Billboard, after closing the show with a cover of Leadbelly‘s “Goodnight, Irene”, White told the audience: “If you feel strongly about music and love music, tell people that. Tell people that music is sacred. Music is not disposable and worthless, it shouldn’t be treated that way”.
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”
The Replacements have debuted a new song, "Whole Food Blues".
The band have been playing the song live on their current tour; their first since reuniting in 2013.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UDyGdTbkH2Y
The tour began at Seattle's Paramount Theatre on April 10; the band will play their first ...
The Replacements have debuted a new song, “Whole Food Blues“.
The band have been playing the song live on their current tour; their first since reuniting in 2013.
The tour began at Seattle’s Paramount Theatre on April 10; the band will play their first UK shows in 24 years at London’s Roundhouse in June.
Last year, the band released a new song, “Poke Me In My Cage“, a 24-minute improvisational piece that appeared on the band’s Soundcloud.
Pete Townshend, Paul Weller, My Morning Jacket and Ron Wood feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated June 2015 and out now.
The Who guitarist and songwriter is on the cover, and inside he comes clean on retirement, the future of the band and his still intense relationship with Roger Daltrey.
“Th...
Pete Townshend, Paul Weller, My Morning Jacket and Ron Wood feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated June 2015 and out now.
The Who guitarist and songwriter is on the cover, and inside he comes clean on retirement, the future of the band and his still intense relationship with Roger Daltrey.
“There’s a desire I have to do a show which is crap,” he says. “Go out in front of a bunch of devoted Who fans and say, ‘Listen, you bunch of fucking cunts. Fuck off. Don’t come back…’”
Paul Weller discusses his new album, Saturns Pattern, and looks to the next chapter of his career – the epic LP also gets an extensive three-page review.
My Morning Jacket frontman Jim James answers your questions, revealing his thoughts on crème brûlée, meditation and the band’s new album, The Waterfall, as well as recalling snorkeling with the Grateful Dead and performing with Bob Dylan.
Ron Wood opens up his ’60s diary to reveal his formative years as a rock’n’roller in beat combo The Birds, and admits that he always wanted to be in The Rolling Stones.
“The Stones were simmering in the background,” he says, “they were the gauge for where I wanted to be.”
As the Violent Femmes return with new music, the original members tell us how they won a record contract worth zero dollars, wrote loser anthems and biblical freak-outs, and ended up one of the biggest cult bands of the 1980s. Also involved: Chrissie Hynde, The Modern Lovers, lawsuits, a special, near-naked performance for The Smiths.
Nile Rodgers takes us through the highlights of his recorded work, from Chic to Bowie and Daft Punk – “It sounds weird,” he laughs, “but when I run into young kids, they think Pharrell and I have a band called Daft Punk with robots behind us!”
Elsewhere, the incredible tale of the incomparable Texas cult hero Doug Sahm is told, and we delve into the archives to find an amazing Happy Mondays interview from 1990 – “we went drug potty!” – and Felt explain how they made their classic “Primitive Painters” single.
Our 40-page reviews section features Weller, The Rolling Stones, Joe Bonamassa, Leonard Cohen, Elliott Smith and more.
Also in the magazine, Canyon troubadour JD Souther reveals the records that changed his life, and we hear all about the new Karen Dalton project, a rediscovered Tom Waits animation, and Boredoms’ latest drum extravaganza.
This month’s free CD, Uncut’s High Numbers, includes great new songs from Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Giant Sand, The Weather Station, Mikal Cronin, My Morning Jacket, Thee Oh Sees, Wire and more.
“This is when Captain found his ear!” In 1979, the reformed London punks were shunted off to a studio to “make some noise” – result: a hippy-baiting powerpop hit of complex proportions. The band tell Peter Watts how it all happened – originally from Uncut's May 2014 (Take 204) issue.
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SCABIES: If anything, it was about the frustration of youth. We wanted to get rid of what was around and smashing it up is one way to go about it. The hippy thing hadn’t gone away. Punk wasn’t popular. People think everything changed when the first record came out, but we were still a minority.
ARMSTRONG: There was a story in a tabloid about how some punks had disrupted a middle-class suburban dinner party by singing “Smash It Up” while they wrecked the place. The BBC said forget it, they wouldn’t play it. It was a Top 10 record if it’d had radio play. It’s not even that controversial, it’s about frothy lager and blow-wave hairstyles. It’s hardly a call to revolution. Nobody was going to man the barricades on the back of that.
SENSIBLE: The middle eight was probably inspired by “I Feel Much Better”, the B-side of “Tin Soldier”, my favourite Small Faces single. I love the end of “I Feel Much Better” and you can actually sing the “frothy lager” bit over it to a certain extent. Lager was introduced just as I started frequenting pubs. We thought it was a joke and would never catch on. I blame Ralph for the “Glastonbury hippies” line. The song’s actually saying bollocks to everyone, not only hippies.
SCABIES: The BBC didn’t actually ban it, they were too smart for that. They knew that if they banned it we’d have sold a lot more. So they just didn’t play it.
ARMSTRONG: They band did play it on The Old Grey Whistle Test along with “I Just Can’t Be Happy Today”. The organ broke down and they really did smash it up, wrecking their equipment. Dave had suffered a bout of nerves so had self-medicated with whisky. If you look closely, the mic is gaffertaped to Dave’s hand.
WARD: Nah, we were just having fun. Then me and Scabies had words, more than words, there were a few broken noses, doing the “Smash It Up” video, and after that I lost interest. I enjoyed it up to then, it was good work, playing most days of the week, being famous, ha ha.
ARMSTRONG: They were the musicians of punk rock, streets ahead of the others, Captain and Rat especially. Punk rock had a ‘playing is for ponces’ attitude but musicians really got The Damned. That is the reason they are still around today. That, and the fact nobody died.
Florian Fricke was of the generation of West German musicians involved in the movement that would become known internationally as Krautrock. Yet the music he made in his group Popol Vuh between the years 1970 and his death in 2001 feels somewhat apart.
Groups like Can, Faust and Neu! were making mu...
Florian Fricke was of the generation of West German musicians involved in the movement that would become known internationally as Krautrock. Yet the music he made in his group Popol Vuh between the years 1970 and his death in 2001 feels somewhat apart.
Groups like Can, Faust and Neu! were making music for a modern Germany, exploring new techniques, technologies, and philosophies. In some ways Frickewas a modernist too. He was amongst the first Germans to own a Moog synthesizer, which powered Popol Vuh’s 1970 debut album Affenstunde, as well as the soundtrack he made for his friend Werner Herzog’s feature film about conquistadors searching for the mythical Inca city of El Dorado, Aguirre, The Wrath Of God. But Fricke would soon tire of the synthesizer, and albums from 1972’s Hosianna Mantra on would focus on a spiritual, devotional music, using piano and more exotic instruments such as the oboe, konga, and tamboura. The guiding principle was not progress, but peace – or as Fricke put it: “Popol Vuh is a mass for the heart. It is music for Love. Das ist alles.”
This new collection, sanctioned by Fricke’s family, draws from two sources. The first disc collects eight solo piano recordings, a mix of unheard improvisations and sketches of more developed Popol Vuh pieces (three “Spirit Of Peace” pieces are test runs for the title track of the 1985 album of the same name; others appear to be prototypes of tracks from 1972’s Hosianna Mantra). Fricke’s playing is minimal but purposeful. As a youth, he practised Bach and Schubert, and surely could have been a concert pianist had the mood taken him. Indeed, he released an album of Mozart pieces in 1991.
Perhaps more interesting, though, is the DVD and accompanying soundtrack disc, which contain the long-lost Kailash: A Pilgrimage To The Throne Of The Gods. A 53-minute film made by Fricke with Popol Vuh member Frank Fielder operating the camera, it’s a sort of travelogue charting the pair’s journey up the mountain of the same name, a 21,000-foot peak in west Tibet considered holy by Hindus and Buddhists alike. Its slow pans across remote encampments, wandering yak-herders, and pilgrims prostrating themselves as they make their ascent feel almost Herzogian in their craggy beauty. But the serenity of Fricke’s vision shines through, in large part thanks to the music. “Buddha’s Footprint” and “Valley Of The Gods” are billowing synthesizer pieces with subtle but effective ethnic flourishes that feel just one sheer face from the divine.
Very sad news overnight about the passing of David Roback. By way of a tribute, here's my career-spanning Mazzy Star interview which originally appeared in Uncut's October 2013 issue, around their then-new album, Seasons Of The Day.
Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner
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Hope Sp...
Very sad news overnight about the passing of David Roback. By way of a tribute, here’s my career-spanning Mazzy Star interview which originally appeared in Uncut’s October 2013 issue, around their then-new album, Seasons Of The Day.
Seventeen long and sad years after Mazzy Star last released an album, Hope Sandoval and Dave Roback are back, magnificent and unchanged. What happened? Uncut charts the uncanny journey of the pair, from The Rain Parade to the quietly triumphant comeback, Seasons Of Your Day. “We’re not so concerned about the outside world,” admits Roback. “They’re not your normal rock’n’roll people,” understates one of their associates…
Steve Wynn remembers an unexpected phone call he received one day in 1991, from David Roback, the guitarist and co-founder of Mazzy Star. As Wynn remembers it, Roback said to him, “I’ve been thinking, I want to do some sort intense, jammy band like Cream or something like that, and I’d like to do it with you.” Wynn had long admired Roback, and readily agreed. “But I think my instant enthusiasm took him aback,” says Wynn. “He said, ‘I mean, just in theory, maybe some day, not right away, maybe down the line, I just want to see what you thought about.’ So I said, ‘Hey, it sounds really fun, I’d love to play with you so give me a call when you’re ready.’ That was the last time I spoke to David Roback.”
Wynn has known Roback for 30 years, from the earliest days of their careers among the Paisley Underground movement, when Wynn was frontman for the Dream Syndicate and Roback the co-singer and guitarist with the Rain Parade. “Of all the people in that scene, I’ve stayed close to just about everybody in one way or another over the years,” claims Wynn. “But David, he wasn’t that easy to know.”
David Roback
It’s tempting to ask, does anyone really know David Roback? Along with Hope Sandoval, his creative partner in Mazzy Star, Roback comes across as elusive, often cryptic. Questions about the length of time it’s taken to record Mazzy Star’s new album Seasons Of Your Day – released a full 17 years after its predecessor – aren’t answered as fully as you’d like. Asked, for instance, what the first song was that they recorded for the album, Roback replies: “Well, we really weren’t working on Seasons Of Your Day as it exists now, we were just recording various things. We never really stopped. We just kept writing and recording.”
Such is the degree of mystery Mazzy Star seem to cultivate around their work that one musician contacted for this article wasn’t even aware that his contribution to Seasons Of Your Day had been used; not surprising, perhaps, as he recorded it nearly 25 years ago. Meanwhile, Roback and Sandoval’s interviews with Uncut are conducted via Skype, peppered with awkward pauses and elliptical responses.
“They’re not your normal rock ‘n roll people,” explains Geoff Travis, whose label Rough Trade distributed Mazzy Star’s 1990 debut, She Hangs Brightly. “I think they really do live in their own worlds. It’s a very typical musician thing in a way, in that they’re so obsessed with music and doing what they do, that it kind of removes them slightly from normal social mores.”
Looking back over a quarter of a century of Mazzy Star, I ask Sandoval what’s she most proud of.
“I’m proud of the music, and I’m proud of our friendship,” she replies after a typical hesitation. And when is she at her happiest? Is it when she’s writing songs? Or in the studio? Or after a record is completed? “I’m happy with all of the different aspects of it,” she replies instantly, her voice taking on an unexpected urgency. “But I’m also miserable with all of the aspects. They’re nice, they’re gratifying, but at the same time they can be difficult and emotional. Every phase, there’s happiness in it, there’s enjoyment in it, but there’s also torture.”
David Roback has been refining a melancholy strand of American Gothic – steering a course between third-album Velvet Underground and The Doors of “The End – since the late Seventies. He grew up in Brentwood, on the west side of Los Angeles. “There was constantly music on the radio,” he remembers. “The Beatles made a strong impression on me. The Doors. Love. Bands like that. I just thought they were speaking from a world I really wanted to be part of.”
Roback’s earliest collaborators included Steven – his younger brother by three years – and Susanna Hoffs, whose family lived across the street. “We all ended up at UC Berkeley at the same time,” explains Steven Roback. “Susanna and David were living together and they asked me to come and play with them. That’s the origin of a lot of things. It’s the origin of the Rain Parade in a way, and the origin of David’s focus on having a lead singer in a hypnotic, melodic context, the vision he had that ultimately ended up evolving into Clay Allison, Opal and Mazzy Star.”
After graduating, David Roback returned to Los Angeles, where he formed the Sidewalks with former school friend Matt Pucci, a guitarist and singer. They invited Steven Roback to join a few months later, on bass and vocals. The Sidewalks started out playing early Stones and Merseybeat covers before evolving, over a period of around six months, into the Rain Parade. “David was key in setting out the vision for the band,” admits his brother. “We all loved vintage instruments, the sounds of Richenbackers and Gretschs. We knew that they all sounded cool on their own and in context, and we put all those instruments together to see what we could get.”
“I think that there was some interesting music going on then, a lot of guitar interaction and electric organ,” says David Roback. “We were just experimenting with sounds and I was writing a lot of songs back then, singing with that band.”
The Rain Parade found themselves sharing both concert bills and artistic sensibilities (psychedelia, Nuggets, Big Star, the Velvet Underground) with a loose collection of bands on the fringes of the Los Angeles club scene during the early Eighties. “The Rain Parade were as Paisley as the Paisley Underground got,” remembers the Dream Syndicate’s Steve Wynn. “Of all the bands on the scene – the Dream Syndicate, the Salvation Army, Green On Red, even the Bangs who became the Bangles – all of us were coming from a more punk rock background. But the Rain Parade weren’t like that. They were happy just to be floating and gentle and trippy. Pink Floyd and the Byrds. Who didn’t love that?”
Opal, Happy Baby Nightmare sleeve
Roback stayed with the Rain Parade precisely long enough to record a single – 1982’s “What She’s Done To Your Mind?” – and an album, Emergency Third Rail Power Trip, the following year. Even before recording the album, Roback had already set in motion another musical project – Clay Allison, formed with his girlfriend and former Dream Syndicate vocalist, Kendra Smith.
“I remember the first Rain Parade tour, when we were in New York City, playing CBGBs with Green On Red,” pinpoints Steven Roback. “We had a couple of days off, and David did the first Clay Allison gig with Kendra at the Pyramid Club. It was David and Kendra, kind of acoustic, and Will [Glenn, Rain Parade’s keyboard player] was playing violin and I was playing piano.”
Clay Allison established the template for Roback’s subsequent work – a kind of dreamy psych-folk. After two EPs, Clay Allison quietly morphed into Opal, who recorded two EPs, Fell From The Sun and Northern Line, and an album, 1987’s Happy Nightmare Baby.
“Happy Nightmare Baby was a very electric record,” explains David Roback. “We were very orientated towards playing live at that point. What we’d been doing before that was very acoustic, and then we thought we’d make it very electric, so we went from being somewhat acoustic to very electric, like Happy Nightmare Baby.”
One admirer of both Roback and Smith’s work was a young music fan, Hope Sandoval, who Steve Wynn remembers “used to come to Dream Syndicate soundchecks, in like ’82, when I think she was like 14 or 15. Her mum would bring her. She couldn’t come to our shows because she was too young. We talked to her and she seemed nice, but I got the feeling that she was particularly mesmerised by Kendra. The beginning of the All About Eve saga!”
“I’ve always loved music,” begins Hope Sandoval. “I grew up with older brothers and sisters who were into music, played The Beatles and the Rolling Stones and Aretha Franklin. I grew up in an area of East LA… I think it’s called Maravilla area. It’s Spanish. I had a project called Going Home with my good friend Sylvia Gomez, and when we met David and Kendra they knew that we had this little music thing we were doing, and they were interested in it. David asked us if we’d like to go into the studio and make a record. I thought David was shy. Yeah, and sort of mysterious. What do I think connected us? We liked each other’s music. That’s really what it was. We didn’t really communicate a lot other than just enjoying each other’s music. I was asked to do some live shows [with Opal] because Kendra didn’t want to be the front person, and I think it just got really difficult for her. It was during a tour that they were doing with the Jesus And Mary Chain, so I got a call from David asking me if I would fly out to New York and finish the tour. That’s what it was. That’s how I started working with his band.”If the creative union of Roback and Sandoval was borne out of pragmatic necessity – to finish the Jesus And Mary Chain tour – it began to take on a more solid shape in early 1988.
“I’d gone into the studio with David’s band, Opal,” explains Sandoval. “I wasn’t writing, I was just singing the songs that he had written and it wasn’t really working out for me. I don’t think for him, either. And I suggested that maybe we write together.”
“We were performing a lot of Opal material and one day we just thought, let’s just start something completely new and different, and that was Mazzy Star,” continues Roback. “We started to write a lot of songs together, that’s really what got us – we really got into that.”
“I asked David to send me some of his guitar ideas,” says Sandoval. “He sent me maybe five or seven beautiful rhythm guitar ideas. Did I have lyrics for them? No, I didn’t. Usually what I do is I write my vocal melody over guitar parts and then I come up with lyrics.”
The songs became Mazzy Star’s debut album, 1990’s She Hangs Brightly.
Mazzy Star, She Hangs Brightly sleeve
“The majority of that record was recorded in San Francisco at a place called Hyd Street Studios,” reveals Roback. “We were recording up there and a little bit in Los Angeles as well, we were back and forth between the two cities, between Berkeley and Los Angeles. We really were just experimenting with different pieces of recording, as we still do mostly. Live music in the studio.”
The album was released by Rough Trade – who had previously handled the UK distribution for Happy Nightmare Baby.
“I remember the first time I met them in person,” says Geoff Travis. “In Los Angeles at the Roosevelt Hotel. It’s got a remarkably lifelike statue of Charlie Chaplin in the entrance, and a pool designed by David Hockney. I met David and Hope together, they were sitting beside the side of the pool. Hope was very quiet. Probably slightly more in thrall to David at that point, than later when she exerted her own individuality. She’s a really good soul, Hope. She’s very queenly, in a way. I think of her as the Queen of East LA: softly spoken, but definite and intelligent and bright, lovely. David is a bit more of an elder statesman when it comes to music, but with immaculate musical taste. Again, he’s quite quiet, speaks quite quietly, but very much alive, great sense of humour. But quite an odd individual, really, David.”
For all its strengths, She Hangs Brightly is best summed up by its opening track, the quietly enfolding “Haleh”: a definitive Mazzy Star composition characterised by gently rolling rhythms, guitar reverb and Sandoval’s husky vocals. The album had been on sale for a year when Rough Trade went into receivership.
“We sat down with David and Hope and we made a deal with Capitol to move them from Rough Trade to Capitol to help avoid the bankruptcy,” explains Travis.
To support the album, Mazzy Star toured America in 1990 supporting the Cocteau Twins. “They were quite different,” remembers former Cocteaus bassist, Simon Raymonde. “David was quite serious, quite thoughtful, didn’t say an awful lot. I quite liked him. Hope was super shy. There was often a bit of tension between them. Sometimes she’d just storm of stage. I didn’t get the impression that she particularly enjoyed the live thing. It was never dull, that’s for sure.”
The period following She Hangs Brightly was one of transition for Mazzy Star. In 1993, they added to their line-up Jill Emery, former bassist with Hole, who remained with them until 1996. “I went to their rehearsal studio,” she says. “Everyone was so reserved. It was quite a shock, coming from Hole, with an aggressive Courtney Love. Strangely, their quietness matched Hole’s abrasiveness, just on a different level.”
1993 also saw the band settle in London around the time they released their second album, So Tonight That I Might See. Continuing the soft-focus, slow motion jams of its predecessor, the album featuring the band’s only hit single – a dusty, lilting ballad, “Fade Into You”.
“To their credit, Capitol worked ‘Fade Into You’ for about nine months in radio, which I’ve very rarely seen in America,” says Geoff Travis. “They sold a million copies of So Tonight That I Might See, which when you think about it today seems an extraordinary number.”
If it can be considered a barometer of the song’s success in the mainstream, “Fade Into You” has appeared in no less than five separate episodes of the CSI franchises. There are countless other appearances in films and TV shows – most recently, it’s been covered by J Mascis – but perhaps the song’s most incongruous appearance is in Paul Verhoven’s sci-fi shoot-em-up, Starship Troopers.
“It’s not our film, you know,” says Roback with a dry laugh. “Incredibly violent. Quite a contradiction in a way. But it was interesting. People play your music in a bar. It’s not uncommon to hear your music in any context, or anybody’s music for that matter you could be walking down the street or you could, you know, be at a funeral, and somebody’s driving by playing the Beach Boys.”
Characteristically, the question of how they’d follow-up a hit single and million-selling album never particularly seemed to concern Roback or Sandoval.
“We’re not so concerned about the outside world,” explains Roback. “It’s a very internal process that we’re involved in. The outside world is really not on our minds, in so far as the music is concerned. We’re really doing it in our own world for ourselves. We’re engaged in the stories of each individual song. It is its own world unto itself.”
Hope Sandoval
“I was always working with David,” says Hope Sandoval, as she looks back on the years between Mazzy Star’s third album, Among My Swan, and Seasons Of Your Day. “I think we thought maybe we’d release something, but we weren’t really so preoccupied with it. We were working on other things.”
Certainly, Sandoval has kept the highest profile since Among My Swan, contributing vocals to songs by the Jesus And Mary Chain, the Chemical Brothers, Death In Vegas, Massive Attack and Bert Jansch, and running a successful second band – Hope Sandoval And The Warm Inventions, with My Bloody Valentine drummer, Colm Ó Cíosóig. “I’m lucky, I’m very, very lucky,” she says. “I work with some of the most amazing artists.”
Roback, meanwhile, produced tracks for Beth Orton in the late Nineties and relocated to Norway, where he became involved with Norwegian artists and musicians including Mari Boine, Helga Sten and Guri Dahl, making experimental music for films and installations. He also acted – as himself – in Olivier Assayas’ film, Clean, for which he wrote four songs sung in the film by actress Maggie Cheung. Meanwhile, he and Sandoval continued working on Mazzy Star material. “She would come to Norway, or we would work in London, or we’d work in California,” he explains. “We really weren’t working on Seasons Of Your Day as it exists now, we were just recording various things.”
Mazzy Star, Seasons Of Your Day sleeve
Sandoval is quick to echo Roback: “We didn’t record songs for Seasons Of Your Day, we titled the collection of songs after one of the songs.”
“In the studio, I’m usually playing guitar or keyboards,” continues Roback. “We like to get a live version we like. That’s what really appeals to us. Someone asked me recently if we were perfectionists, and I think perfection in music is really a dull thing, the imperfections of music are what give it character. Live, things happen in the moment.”
Among the musicians credited on Seasons Of Your Day are longstanding collaborators drummer Keith Mitchell and keyboard player Suki Ewers – both Opal veterans – and the band’s old friend, Bert Jansch. Reinforcing how long Roback and Sandoval have been working on these songs, Rain Parade keyboard player Will Glenn is also credited on the album: he died in 2001. Steven McCarthy believes his credit on the album stems from a session he played with the band in the early Nineties. “They asked me to bring my steel guitar down,” he remembers. “So for maybe an afternoon, I did some demos. David gave me a cassette tape with that and then said, ‘Will you come and do some more recording with us later, we’re going into a real studio.’ I went and the only thing I can remember him saying to me was, ‘Can you do it like you did on the demo.’ I do recall David seeming like he didn’t know who I was, which was kind of confusing to me because we had played quite a bit. I wasn’t quite sure what he was doing. It’s one of those things.”
Hope Sandoval, meanwhile, is already looking beyond Seasons Of Your Day. “We’re planning to start touring around November in the US and we’ll come out to Europe and do a few shows,” she explains. “I’m excited about it. I’m looking forward to getting together with everybody and playing some of the old songs, and having dinner and wine, catching up with everybody.”
And her aversion of singing live?
“It hasn’t changed. It’s difficult, but it’s there.”
And are there more unreleased songs?
“Oh, yeah. There’s loads of songs,” she confirms.
Will we ever hear them?
“I don’t know,” she says after a pause. “Probably. Once our families inherit everything after we’re dead and gone, I’m sure people will hear everything…”
Pete Townshend is to be honoured for his charity work at a special benefit concert.
Rolling Stone reports that Townshend will also perform live at the event, with Joan Jett, Billy Idol and Foreigner's Mick Jones also scheduled to appear.
Bruce Springsteen will present Townshend with the Stevie Ray...
Pete Townshend is to be honoured for his charity work at a special benefit concert.
Rolling Stone reports that Townshend will also perform live at the event, with Joan Jett, Billy Idol and Foreigner’s Mick Jones also scheduled to appear.
Bruce Springsteen will present Townshend with the Stevie Ray Vaughan Award for his work supporting MusiCares, a charity that assists musicians with addiction recovery.
The event takes place at the Best Buy Theater in New York on May 28.
Meanwhile, Townshend will also participate in a tribute to The Who which takes place at Chicago’s Rosemont Theater on May 14.
Pete Townshend speaks exclusively to Uncut about the future of The Who, retirement and his current relationship with Roger Daltrey; all in our new issue, on sale Tuesday, April 28, 2015