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Alabama Shakes announce live dates

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Alabama Shakes have announced three UK tour dates in May. The shows coincide with the release of their new album, Sound & Color, which is released on April 20. Alabama Shakes, Sound & Color sleeve The band will play Birmingham O2 Academy on May 13, Manchester O2 Apollo on May 16 and Londo...

Alabama Shakes have announced three UK tour dates in May.

The shows coincide with the release of their new album, Sound & Color, which is released on April 20.

Alabama Shakes, Sound & Color sleeve
Alabama Shakes, Sound & Color sleeve

The band will play Birmingham O2 Academy on May 13, Manchester O2 Apollo on May 16 and London O2 Academy Brixton on November 18.

A previously announced show as part of The Great Escape in Brighton on May 15 at The Dome has already sold out.

Tickets for the new shows go on general sale at 9am on March 27.

You can read our exclusive interview with Alabama Shakes in the new issue of Uncut; in shops now

Uncut, May 2015 issue
Uncut, May 2015 issue

Elvis Costello announces memoir, Unfaithful Music & Disappearing Ink

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Elvis Costello has announced details of his forthcoming memoir, Unfaithful Music & Disappearing Ink. According to a press release from the book's publisher, Penguin, the career-spanning book will include his early years, work with The Attractions right up to his position "in the pantheon of eld...

Elvis Costello has announced details of his forthcoming memoir, Unfaithful Music & Disappearing Ink.

According to a press release from the book’s publisher, Penguin, the career-spanning book will include his early years, work with The Attractions right up to his position “in the pantheon of elder statesmen musician/rockers”.

The publisher’s promise the book will be “rich with anecdotes about family and fellow musicians, introspective about the creation of his famous songs.”

Costello, meanwhile, tours the UK in May and June.

You can order The Ultimate Music Guide: Elvis Costello as a print or digital edition here

Ultimate Music Guide: Elvis Costello
Ultimate Music Guide: Elvis Costello

Two Gallants – We Are Undone

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There’s an underlying air of menace that squats at the bottom of Two Gallants fifth album like yeast in a bottle of beer, fermenting future discontent. The California guitar-drum duo have always had a dark view of the world and We Are Undone opens in high gothic fashion with a reverb-laden intro t...

There’s an underlying air of menace that squats at the bottom of Two Gallants fifth album like yeast in a bottle of beer, fermenting future discontent. The California guitar-drum duo have always had a dark view of the world and We Are Undone opens in high gothic fashion with a reverb-laden intro that sounds like a Hammer House organ.

It’s a suitably dramatic introduction to the world of Two Gallants, in which singer Adam Stephens castigates the perilous state of the world and the demise of his native San Francisco against a shifting sonic palate that makes light of the supposed limitations of a two-man band. Two Gallants can swagger and rage like the Black Keys, but they can also find moments of ambient bliss to complement songs of helplessness and regret.

After its B-movie intro, opening song “We Are Undone” is embellished by a distinctive, metal-ready guitar line, as Stephens introduces one of the album’s prevailing themes – the failure of art and creativity against the onslaught of commerce and capitalism. This is something Stephens revisits consistently, scratching the scab from different perspectives, never liking what he finds underneath After the catchy grunge of “Incidental”, the rollicking “Fools Like Us” picks up the thread. While Tyson Vogel builds a march, Stephens sings arrestingly about the limitations of his trade – “you search for authenticity until you become a fake, you think you’ll find salvation in a song” – and the tricks artists pull when “hunting muses”. “You force your heart to fall in love just to feel it break,” he roars, before concluding “fools like us just don’t belong”.

With a sense of impotence established, the pair take things down a notch with the strange “Invitation To A Funeral”, slow, simmering, sullen, with an ominous beat mirroring medieval lyrics of bitter resentment which end in wailing lament. It gives way to “Some Trouble”, wicked brooding blues albeit with box-ticking lyrics that would be trite if they didn’t fit so snug. Having reached midway and rarely straying from a blues rock template, there’s now a switch of style. “My Man Go” is probably the best song on the album, an undulating shanty on epic scale with an Eno-esque handling of dynamics and a desolate, heart-felt vocal: “In the ruins of my night, I can still pretend, close my eyes and see my life as it could have been.” Stephens is a powerful singer capable of lacerating heroics, but here he holds back, giving the song almost unbearable tension.

It feeds into “Katy Kruelly”, a folky, finger-picking intermission that’s strangely reminiscent of Ian Brown in its jaunty word play. Even this tender song is stoked by regret – “I think I loved you more than most, I tried to love you truly, but I couldn’t love you half as much as I did Katy Kruelly.” The mood of personal failure is maintained through “Heartbreakdown”, with Vogel effectively mimicking a malfunctioning machine, but with an overall impact that’s too slight to excite.

A bolder, broader sense of drama returns on the boiling hard rocker “Murder The Season/The Age Nocturne”, with Stephens providing a raucous, threatening vocal that warns of a near-distant future, an artificial age in which “their devices keep them real, frame their thoughts and print their meals, tame their hearts and paint their lawns, show pictures of a world that’s gone”. Again, Stephens is decrying the end of authentic experience, and our own complicity in allowing it to happen. The brilliant “There’s So Much I Don’t Know” brings it all into focus, as Stephens mourns his home town of San Francisco, a city he feels has sold out, “where all the strange has gone”. San Francisco represents everything Stephens stands against, and the pace is sad but stately, led by piano and punctuating by shimmering cymbals, with Stephens admitting his sense of bewilderment at a place that has been rendered unrecognisable, a world that has left him behind but which he still can’t quite let go.

Q&A
Adam Stephens
What are the advantages of being in a duo?
The ideas I have wouldn’t reach their potential without us being together, they don’t get anywhere until we sit down and start messing with it together. I’ve always seen being in a duo as a necessary obstacle and if there’s a consistency it comes from that limitation. It’s a bridge that we attempt to reach across with our respective instruments to meet in the middle.

Is there a sense of regret on this album?
It’s not personal regret, I see it more as a general regret for humanity. It’s not about somebody’s life falling apart because they made a bad choice, it’s all of humanity falling apart because of bad choices that have collectively been made. That creates a feeling of helplessness. That’s my response to a lot of what I feel, a sense of helplessness that can be stifling and frustrating.

What’s wrong with San Francisco?
We’re both native San Franciscans and we have to witness all these things happening that no native considers an improvement. Pretty much every change makes the city more uninviting and not very San Franciscan. It’s not an inviting place for anybody who wants to be weird and live a life based on self-expression. But I still do these futile searches for that last untouched corner of San Francisco that hasn’t been invaded by modernity and Google, looking for those things that don’t exist anymore.

The Who, live in London

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Approximately half way through “The Kids Are Alright”, we are visited by ghosts. John Entwistle and Keith Moon temporarily join their old band’s 50th birthday revels, their apparitions beamed at us on a giant screen suspended behind the band. We see them in glorious black and white TV footage,...

Approximately half way through “The Kids Are Alright”, we are visited by ghosts. John Entwistle and Keith Moon temporarily join their old band’s 50th birthday revels, their apparitions beamed at us on a giant screen suspended behind the band. We see them in glorious black and white TV footage, playing along with the song; more than just a neatly synchronised nostalgic nod to fallen comrades, it acts a humble reminder that in 2015, it takes eight musicians on stage to replicate the work once done by half that number. But perhaps the spectres of Entwistle and Moon are not the most pressing business The Who have to deal with in 2015. A question mark hangs over the future of The Who; not for the first time, of course, but while previously Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend have been lured back into the fray by anniversary or album specific tours, both men have confirmed this will be the band’s last tour on this scale.

But perhaps this is not the time to speculate about what may or may not be in store for The Who as they embark on their sixth decade together. Evidently, tonight’s show – rescheduled from December – is about basking in the band’s well-seasoned body of work. Next to the merchandise stand in the foyer, you can have your photograph taken on a replica of Jimmy’s Lambretta from Quadrophenia. Meanwhile, the giant screens above the band beam down footage and graphics foregrounding the band’s heyday: in one eye-opening collage, it is possible to watch the cork fly out of a champagne bottle embedded in a wall while seconds later a giant Tommy-era Daltrey emerges from between two tower blocks, calling to mind the ‘Kitten Kong’ episode from The Goodies. The early part of the show demonstrates Townshend’s remarkable gift for lean, thrilling pop moments – “I Can’t Explain”, “Substitute”, “Who Are You” and “I Can See For Miles” among them. Even among such exalted songs, “My Generation” is an early peak. Accompanied by Chris Stamp and Kit Lambert’s celebrated footage of The High Numbers from the Railway Hotel in 1964, Townshend rousts the song into a potent R&B stomp, summoning the sulphuric energies of the band’s youth.

Read Roger Daltrey’s track-by-track commentary on The Who’s 20 best songs

But while the purpose of The Who Hits 50! is to celebrate the band’s many creative peaks, the manner in which they chose to do so is itself revealing. Part of the reason why, as Daltrey claims, the band are to curtail their live activities is ageing. Daltrey himself is 71, while Townshend turns 70 in May. Daltrey’s between song patter contains references to ageing and memory – “Why did you write so many lyrics?” he asks Townshend, only half jokingly. But both men are on sprightly form; Townshend, particularly, seems especially agile as he whips through his customary windmill moves. The exchanges between the two men, meanwhile, are in themselves equally instructive. At one point a stool is brought on stage for Townshend. “Are you alright?” asks Daltrey good-naturedly. “Am I alright? Who gives a fuck?” shoots back Townshend. “I do,” says Daltrey simply, to which Townshend snarls back: “Awwwww…” It’s a strange dynamic; a bit Pete and Dud, with Daltrey coming across as the benign, chummy of the partnership while Townshend adopts a more sardonic attitude. “So did you come far?” He asks the audience at one point. “‘Did you come far’. That’s how fucking royal I am.” Thanking the audience for coming, Daltrey says, “It’d be boring without you.” To which Townshend adds, “We’d be broke without you.”

Watching all this play out in front of a capacity crowd seems to highlight the complex, perhaps different relationship Daltrey and Townshend have to The Who. Next to Daltrey’s warmth and joviality, Townshend seems less predictable. Occasionally, he can come across as derisive; but then his lengthy introductions outlining the origins of the songs suggest an almost neurotic attachment to the material. His playful introduction, though, for “My Generation” find him teasing the audience comparing the Live At Leeds version with the single version. These weird tensions between the two men is actually quite compelling as the evening progresses. After the initial foray into their early singles, they detour into “A Quick One, While He’s Away” and a medley from Tommy, before returning to a peerless home run of “See Me Feel Me”, “Baba O’Riley” and “Won’t Get Fooled Again”. An encore of “Magic Bus” – conveniently, my favourite Who song – closes with Daltrey and Townshend exiting together. Does it feel like the end of something; what Daltrey identified as “the beginning of the long goodbye“? It’s hard to tell at this point; they’re back in the O2 tonight, of course, and again at Hyde Park as part of the British Summer Time series in June, with overseas dates still to play. Certainly, a summation of a career so far, this was as dignified and thrilling as you could hope for.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Setlist for The Who, O2 Arena, London, March 22, 2015

I Can’t Explain
Substitute
The Seeker
Who Are You
The Kids Are Alright
I Can See For Miles
Pictures Of Lily
So Sad About Us
My Generation
Behind Blue Eyes
Join Together
I’m One
Love Reign O’er Me
Slip Kid
A Quick One While He’s Away
Amazing Journey
Sparks
Pinball Wizard
See Me Feel Me
Baba O’Riley
Won’t Get Fooled Again

Encore:
Magic Bus

This month in Uncut

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Van Morrison, Alabama Shakes, The Replacements and Ride all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2015 and out now. Morrison is on the cover, and inside we discover the secret stories behind 10 of his greatest albums, including Astral Weeks, Veedon Fleece and Common One. The man himself als...

Van Morrison, Alabama Shakes, The Replacements and Ride all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2015 and out now.

Morrison is on the cover, and inside we discover the secret stories behind 10 of his greatest albums, including Astral Weeks, Veedon Fleece and Common One.

The man himself also speaks, lifting the lid on his extraordinary art. “I come from a different era,” he tells Uncut. “It was more esoteric.”

“Van was starting to go through musicians like McDonald’s go through hamburgers,” one of his musicians tells us…

Uncut editor John Mulvey heads to the Southern states to meet Alabama Shakes, hear about their brilliant and radical new album, and take a tour of their haunted Alabama homeland.

As rowdy and irrepressible as ever, The Replacements tell the complete story of their reunion, from hospitals to the megafestivals of North America, from new recording sessions to imminent UK shows. “Stop taking life so seriously,” says Paul Westerberg, “change your damn mind, and go out and do it again!”

“It wasn’t rock’n’roll, it was much more than that,” says Mark Gardener, as he and his bandmates in the reunited Ride revisit their Oxford haunts, relive their career and prepare to start all over again – in front of 70,000 people at the Coachella Festival. Uncut’s Michael Bonner hears their story.

Elsewhere in the new issue, Graham Coxon discusses the making of Blur’s new album, The Magic Whip, while the album itself is also extensively reviewed.

Motörhead’s Lemmy, “Fast” Eddie Clarke, Phil Campbell, and more, look back on 40 years of rock’n’roll overkill, remembering bad drugs, imperilled sheep and the enduring power of their mighty sound. “You’ve got to smack ’em in the mouth,” says Lemmy, “then give yourself time to get away.”

Bryan Ferry takes us through the highs of his solo career, from These Foolish Things to Avonmore, and explains just how he writes songs.

Also in the May issue, The B-52s tell Uncut how they made their offbeat classic “Rock Lobster”, inspired by ’60s adverts, Yoko Ono and broken guitar strings – and accidentally spurred John Lennon to return to the studio – while Jethro Tull’s Ian Anderson answers your questions and Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Gary Rossington reveals the albums and songs that changed his life.

In the front section, Todd Rundgren gives us the lowdown on his latest projects, Portishead’s Geoff Barrow talks soundtracks and Bitter Lake filmmaker Adam Curtis discusses his use of music, his next project and his dub reggae roots.

The 40-page reviews section features albums from Blur, Bill Fay, Torres, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Fotheringay and Townes Van Zandt, plus films including Kurt Cobain: Montage Of Heck, While We’re Young and Blade Runner: The Final Cut.

Our free CD, Into The Mystic, includes new songs from Todd Rundgren, Calexico, Waxahatchee and Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, among others.

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

May 2015

Van Morrison, Alabama Shakes, The Replacements and Ride all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2015. Morrison is on the cover, and inside we discover the secret stories behind 10 of his greatest albums, including Astral Weeks, Veedon Fleece and Common One. The man himself also speaks, li...

Van Morrison, Alabama Shakes, The Replacements and Ride all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2015.

Morrison is on the cover, and inside we discover the secret stories behind 10 of his greatest albums, including Astral Weeks, Veedon Fleece and Common One.

The man himself also speaks, lifting the lid on his extraordinary art. “I come from a different era,” he tells Uncut. “It was more esoteric.”

“Van was starting to go through musicians like McDonald’s go through hamburgers,” one of his musicians tells us…

Uncut editor John Mulvey heads to the Southern states to meet Alabama Shakes, hear about their brilliant and radical new album, and take a tour of their haunted Alabama homeland.

As rowdy and irrepressible as ever, The Replacements tell the complete story of their reunion, from hospitals to the megafestivals of North America, from new recording sessions to imminent UK shows. “Stop taking life so seriously,” says Paul Westerberg, “change your damn mind, and go out and do it again!”

“It wasn’t rock’n’roll, it was much more than that,” says Mark Gardener, as he and his bandmates in the reunited Ride revisit their Oxford haunts, relive their career and prepare to start all over again – in front of 70,000 people at the Coachella Festival. Uncut’s Michael Bonner hears their story.

Elsewhere in the new issue, Graham Coxon discusses the making of Blur’s new album, The Magic Whip, while the album itself is also extensively reviewed.

Motörhead’s Lemmy, “Fast” Eddie Clarke, Phil Campbell, and more, look back on 40 years of rock’n’roll overkill, remembering bad drugs, imperilled sheep and the enduring power of their mighty sound. “You’ve got to smack ’em in the mouth,” says Lemmy, “then give yourself time to get away.”

Bryan Ferry takes us through the highs of his solo career, from These Foolish Things to Avonmore, and explains just how he writes songs.

Also in the May issue, The B-52s tell Uncut how they made their offbeat classic “Rock Lobster”, inspired by ’60s adverts, Yoko Ono and broken guitar strings – and accidentally spurred John Lennon to return to the studio – while Jethro Tull’s Ian Anderson answers your questions and Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Gary Rossington reveals the albums and songs that changed his life.

In the front section, Todd Rundgren gives us the lowdown on his latest projects, Portishead’s Geoff Barrow talks soundtracks and Bitter Lake filmmaker Adam Curtis discusses his use of music, his next project and his dub reggae roots.

The 40-page reviews section features albums from Blur, Bill Fay, Torres, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Fotheringay and Townes Van Zandt, plus films including Kurt Cobain: Montage Of Heck, While We’re Young and Blade Runner: The Final Cut.

Our free CD, Into The Mystic, includes new songs from Todd Rundgren, Calexico, Waxahatchee and Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, among others.

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

Watch Robert Plant and Jack White perform Led Zeppelin’s “The Lemon Song” live

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Robert Plant and Jack White peformed together at Lollapalooza Argentina on Saturday night (March 21), covering Led Zeppelin's "The Lemon Song". The event took place during White's headlining set, when he invited Plant on stage to play the song; Rolling Stone claims it is the first time Plant has pe...

Robert Plant and Jack White peformed together at Lollapalooza Argentina on Saturday night (March 21), covering Led Zeppelin’s “The Lemon Song”.

The event took place during White’s headlining set, when he invited Plant on stage to play the song; Rolling Stone claims it is the first time Plant has performed “The Lemon Song” since 1995.

The Lemon Song” appeared on Zeppelin’s 1969 album, Led Zeppelin II.

Both Plant and White are also scheduled to appear at Lollapalooza Brazil on March 28 and 29.

Laura Marling – Short Movie

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As a result of her comparative youth and towering musical talent, it’s rarely noted that Laura Marling can be a very funny songwriter. Dryness is her strongest comic mode: she often sends up her own tendency towards capital-R romance, though usually it’s disappointing men who receive her witheri...

As a result of her comparative youth and towering musical talent, it’s rarely noted that Laura Marling can be a very funny songwriter. Dryness is her strongest comic mode: she often sends up her own tendency towards capital-R romance, though usually it’s disappointing men who receive her withering glances. At the end of the closing number on 2013’s Once I Was An Eagle, a song cycle lamenting another relationship, she remarked, “Thank you naivety for failing me again/He was my next verse”. Marling’s acknowledgement heartbreak as songwriting chattel recalled her oft-cited forebear Joni Mitchell introducing a new song, “Love Or Money”, on her 1974 live album, Miles Of Aisles: “It’s a portrait of disappointment, my favourite theme.”

Short Movie, Marling’s fifth album in seven years, starts similarly. On “Warrior” she casts herself as a steed throwing off an unworthy rider who would only abandon her on his path to self-discovery anyway. She cites bloodied tracks and horses with no name, these cosmic Americana jokes about solitude that she accompanies with a swarming fog of sound effects and weighty fingerpicked acoustic guitar that wouldn’t have sounded amiss on Steve Gunn’s Way Out Weather. “Tasting the memory of pain I have endured/Wondering where am I go to? Well looking back on a bloody trail, you think that I should know”, she sings distantly.

So far, so droll; another beguiling entry in Marling’s symbolic scheme, where, as with Bill Callahan, the attributes and identities of various recurring creatures are rarely made clear. But then immediately after comes “False Hope”, where a seasick groan of strings gives way to her plaintive question, “Is it still okay that I don’t know how to be alone?” and a charging account of a crisis during a torrential New York City storm. For about the first time in her catalogue, Laura Marling sounds panicked about the future in the same way that most 25-year-olds are.

Short Movie is Marling’s LA album, where she moved following the release of …Eagle, and returned from a few months ago. Having rarely spent more than two or three weeks in one place since becoming famous age 16, she wanted to give permanence a shot. What initially ensued was a period of indulgent Californian solitude – abandoning music, spending nights alone at Joshua Tree and experimenting with psychedelic transcendental practices. But before long the rudderless life began to repel her and she had to return to earth.

On this record Marling begins to resemble another sceptical LA transplant, the gimlet-eyed writer Joan Didion. Quite literally on the bluesy “Gurdieff’s Daughter” and the intermittently breezy and grave “Don’t Let Me Bring You Down”, both of which cut to LA’s contradictory heart, where spirituality coexists with cutthroat ambition. Almost every song is rife with cynical rhetorical questions: she sounds jaded as she dismantles the motives of deceptive lovers on the rootsy, racing “Strange” and “Feel Your Love”, a baroque tangle of guitar strings and a low cello drone.

The chorus to “How Can I” does sound unfortunately like LeAnn Rimes’ “How Do I Live”, but it contains a calm distillation of Marling’s intention to reclaim her own youth on her own terms: “I’m taking more risks now/I’m stepping out of line/I put up my fists now until I get what’s mine”. Two songs later, the title track races to a warm stream of piercing strings and jaunty fiddle, and her comic jabs return, piercing the anxiety she that she briefly cultivated in LA about whether she was making a valuable contribution to the world: “I got up in the world today/Wondered who it was I could save/Who do you think you are?/Just a girl that can play guitar”. Marling’s fifth album takes vast steps forward musically, as ever: it’s more defiant and distinct than anything she’s done before, testament to her first go at self-production. But what really sets it apart from her catalogue is her desire to break the cycle, to let go and let herself be young. Next verse? It’s anyone’s guess, including hers.

Q&A

Laura Marling

After your six months off music, what drew you back in?

I got a bit worthy about whether being a musician was worthwhile to the planet: “Who do I think I am that I can just get up every day and play the guitar? That’s bullshit, I should be doing something more important.” But actually, that was the most self-important thought I’ve ever had, and only after being away from music for six months did I come back and think like, “actually, it’s pretty fucking great what I do, and I’m pretty fucking lucky to be doing it”. So my ego got a good bashing and it gave me proper perspective.

You’ve mentioned realising that you are actually young. Did you forget that because of constant remarks on your maturity, or something within you?

Probably both. Starting somewhere else completely fresh let me feel quite young. I’ve been having to conduct myself with the relatively functional level of grown-up-ness since I was 16, and I don’t think I let all that go but I allowed myself to take less control over things. That’s how I felt young again – just to stop trying to manipulate the world to how I think it should be.

It’s your first album that sounds panicked…

I hadn’t thought of it like that but that’s definitely how I felt. I felt suddenly awake, I felt like I was living in Blade Runner. I was like, “oh, holy shit, everything’s fucked and I am just one person in a giant country”.

Ask Ringo!

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With a new album Postcards From Paradise on sale March 31, Ringo Starr is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the former drummer with Rory Storm and the Hurricanes? How did he become interested...

With a new album Postcards From Paradise on sale March 31, Ringo Starr is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the former drummer with Rory Storm and the Hurricanes?

How did he become interested in skiffle?

What does he remember about working with Peter Sellers on The Magic Christian?

What’s his favourite Beatles album?

Send up your questions by noon, Thursday, April 2 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

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

Please include your name and location with your question.

While We’re Young: take a look inside Ben Stiller’s latest mid-life crisis…

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While We’re Young stars Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts as Josh and Cornelia, a fortysomething married couple living in New York, whose lives are upended by their new friendship with younger, hipper Jamie and Darcy (Adam Driver and Amanda Seyfried). For his last film, Frances Ha, writer-director Noah...

While We’re Young stars Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts as Josh and Cornelia, a fortysomething married couple living in New York, whose lives are upended by their new friendship with younger, hipper Jamie and Darcy (Adam Driver and Amanda Seyfried).

For his last film, Frances Ha, writer-director Noah Baumbach successfully conveyed both the anxiety and the excitement of youth; While We’re Young, meanwhile, is a sharp account of life in the trenches of the mid-40s.

Indeed, While We’re Young also has plenty to say about the generational differences; in particular, the gulf between busy fortysomething professionals and twentysomething urban hipsters. In their way, Stiller and Driver are both illustrative of their respective generations, and Stiller’s frustrated neurosis, increasingly aware of his place in the trenches of early middle age, plays well against Driver’s gangly affability.

This is a lively, buoyant comedy, sparkling the wit and insight, whose intellectual ambitions are perfectly matched by strong, intuitive performances.

See While We’re Young in cinemas from April 3
www.whilewereyoung.co.uk

End Of The Road festival: latest acts announced

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The End Of The Road Festival have announced the latest additions to their 2015 line up. They include Laura Marling, Low, Ryley Walker, Euros Childs and Metz. Scroll down the read the full list of newly confirmed acts for the festival. End Of The Road takes place between September 4-6 at Larmer Tr...

The End Of The Road Festival have announced the latest additions to their 2015 line up.

They include Laura Marling, Low, Ryley Walker, Euros Childs and Metz.

Scroll down the read the full list of newly confirmed acts for the festival.

End Of The Road takes place between September 4-6 at Larmer Tree Gardens, Wiltshire.

The headliners at this year’s festival are Tame Impala, Sufjan Stevens and The War On Drugs, while other recent additions to the bill include My Morning Jacket, the Mark Lanegan Band and St Etienne.

2015 Line Up Additions:
Laura Marling
Mac DeMarco
Low
Slow Club
Metz
Nadine Shah
Delines
Ryley Walker
Euros Childs
Gulp
Kiran Leonard
Julie Bryne
This is The Kit
Dolores Haze
Oscar
Human Pyramids
Crushed Beaks
Meilyr Jones
The Vryll Society
Love L.U.V.
Miracle Strip
Holy Crutches

Final tier tickets are now on sale at £195. You can find more information here. For additional information about the festival, click here.

Jimi Hendrix Park: construction due to start next month

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Construction work on a park honouring the legacy of Jimi Hendrix is likely to begin next month [April, 2015]. The 2.5-acre park is located in open green space adjacent to the Northwest African American Museum in Seattle's Central District. After four years of planning and fund-raising,the Califor...

Construction work on a park honouring the legacy of Jimi Hendrix is likely to begin next month [April, 2015].

The 2.5-acre park is located in open green space adjacent to the Northwest African American Museum in Seattle’s Central District.

After four years of planning and fund-raising,the California-based construction company ERRG, Inc. have won a bid to develop the site into the park.

“The Jimi Hendrix Park is the culmination of years of hard work, collaboration, creative input, and generosity invested in something we all believed in and constructed to commemorate an amazing human being,” says Hendrix’s sister, Janie L. Hendrix, who is also Founder and Director of Jimi Hendrix Park Foundation.

“It is our hope that for generations, it will exist as more than an attraction or point of interest, but a place of homage to one of Seattle‘s own. The landscaping, the artistic design, and the ambience all mimic the vibe of the persona of Jimi, whom this park honours.”

ERRG, Inc. will begin work in April on Phase 1 of the park development, designated “Little Wing“, will include a new stairway and grand entrance at the southeast corner of the park, paved pathways, a chronological timeline of Hendrix’s life and career, landscaping, seat wall benches, improved fencing, accessible walkways, gardens, a butterfly garden, and a central plaza for community gatherings and performances.

“Little Wing” is expected to open later this year.

Phase 2 is still in fundraising.

Neil Young makes surprise appearance at SXSW

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Neil Young made a surprise appearance at South By South West yesterday [March 19]. He attended a screening of his film, Human Highway: The Director's Cut, and took part in a Q&A session with the audience afterwards. Young previously promoted his new Director's Cut of the 1982 film at last year...

Neil Young made a surprise appearance at South By South West yesterday [March 19].

He attended a screening of his film, Human Highway: The Director’s Cut, and took part in a Q&A session with the audience afterwards.

Young previously promoted his new Director’s Cut of the 1982 film at last year’s Toronto Film Festival.

Speaking to the audience at the Paramount Theatre in Austin, Texas, Young said, “It has a life of it’s own. It refuses to die – we tried to kill it a couple of times. It was never satisfying to look at, because I knew there was more than what we were seeing… I always wanted to make it what it could be.”

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

Young explained that that the Director’s Cut will tour film festivals throughout the year before receiving a DVD release.

Speaking about his projects outside music, he commented: “You’ve got to do other things, because just music is not enough.

“I like people to look at it in the theatre – I like people to look at it with other people. I’m not a fan of the solitary art. I like to hear people react.”

Last year, Young unveiled his Pono audio system at SXSW.

The Unthanks – Mount The Air

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If you came for the clog dancing, prepare to be disappointed. The opening track on the fifth album proper by Rachel and Becky Unthank sets an uncompromising pace. Billowing up on clouds of strings and trumpet, "Mount The Air" meanders through the ten-minute barrier, the sisters' vocal mantra - a fra...

If you came for the clog dancing, prepare to be disappointed. The opening track on the fifth album proper by Rachel and Becky Unthank sets an uncompromising pace. Billowing up on clouds of strings and trumpet, “Mount The Air” meanders through the ten-minute barrier, the sisters’ vocal mantra – a fragment gleaned from a book of Dorset ballads – transforming it into a Catherine Cookson approximation of Gavin Bryars’ hobo rhapsody “Jesus Blood Never Failed Me Yet”. It is emblematic of an album which has a substantial undertow of progressive rock, a fair amount of jazz, and a smear of West End greasepaint, with the sinuous vocals that made the Unthanks the Watersons of the iPhone generation.

Those who have tracked the Northumberland sisters’ career closely may have seen this coming. The transition from Rachel Unthank and the Winterset to the Unthanks – effected in 2009, when Rachel Unthank’s husband Adrian McNally and his childhood friend Chris Price joined the band – changed their musical DNA. 2009’s Here’s The Tender Coming and 2011’s Last picked at the boundaries of folk music with an intensifying urgency. The extraordinary rendition of King Crimson’s Starless on Last was a milestone of sorts; the Unthanks’ more recent album of Robert Wyatt and Anthony and the Johnsons covers another.

Pieced together in the Unthanks’ newly-built studio, in a disused farm building down the road from McNally and Rachel Unthank’s family home, Mount The Air is an earnest push for something bigger. Over an hour long, it might be more McNally’s album than anyone’s; a Yorkshireman raised on King Crimson and Miles Davis, he is the primary writer and arranger, with his defence of progressive rock to Uncut a fair assessment of this quest for new ways to tell old stories. “By definition, if you are going to make progressive music, you are going to get it wrong half the time,” he explains. “And if you don’t, you’re not trying hard enough.”

The 11-minute set piece, “Foundling”, which dominates Price and McNally’s oddball east-west instrumental closer, “Waiting”, is another inconclusive experiment, as is the hand-cranked trip-hop of “Flutter”, but violinist Niopha Keegan at least finds a new slant on folk music’s fusion of the ephemeral and the eternal with “Dad’s Song”, which splices a recording of a 1978 studio chat with her musician father to an intense instrumental lament. It’s a rare stab of unfettered emotion on a record which is – vocally at least – a model of restraint.

The Unthanks’ readings of “Madam” and “The Poor Stranger” are elegantly clipped, while Rachel Unthank injects the wildly melodramatic “Died For Love” with a wonderfully weary froideur, the protagonist’s wish to be “a maid again” transformed from the lament of a wronged lover to the wistful thoughts of a mother of young children in dire need of a good night’s sleep.

And maybe that’s what Mount The Air needed most of all. It is a record seemingly following a 3.00AM quest for meaning when the Unthanks’ cold-light-of-day instincts tend to lead them to more interesting places. Evidence: the harmonium-bathed “Magpie“, the sisters whipping up a brilliantly eerie harmony arrangement around a chorus of “Devil, Devil, I defy thee,” the atmosphere so evocative that you can almost hear the sound of twig brooms scratching on church steps.

The rest of Mount The Air is tentative by comparison; stylish, and extremely skillful, but a bit too much arr and not enough trad.

Q&A

RACHEL UNTHANK

Mount The Air is another move away from pure folk music.

Obviously that core harmony sound is still the foundation of who we are, but we’re interested in all kinds of music, and the music is always the way to help tell the story. Me and Becky love working with Adrian cause he can take us on musical journeys that we could never have imagined. It’s important not to limit yourself.

Has parenthood much of a mark on this record?

Obviously it is very much in our consciousness, but when you’re looking for women’s songs in the folk vernacular, inevitably a lot of songs about womanhood are about children as well. Having the children really helps me recording. I used to get nervous and anxious, but now I will say ‘I’ve got an hour, I’ll do some singing’, and then go home again’. It helps me not to be precious and to just get on with it.

Has having a new studio made much of a difference?

It is like literally down the lane. When we were recording, I would wheel my youngest son Arthur down and he would fall asleep on the way and then I would sing my song and then I’d wheel him back up again. It’s a godsend having the studio close but not in the house. There used to be wires down the stairs – the cupboard under the stairs was the vocal booth. We used to record at all hours and once you have children you can’t do that.

Record Store Day respond to accusations of “betraying” small labels

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The organisers of Record Store Day have rejected accusations that they have "betrayed" small labels. Last week, Sonic Cathedral and Howling Owl claimed that the event is "not beneficial" to small labels. In response, Entertainment Retailers Association, the company behind Record Store Day, have r...

The organisers of Record Store Day have rejected accusations that they have “betrayed” small labels.

Last week, Sonic Cathedral and Howling Owl claimed that the event is “not beneficial” to small labels.

In response, Entertainment Retailers Association, the company behind Record Store Day, have released a statement to The Vinyl Factory.

The statement begins: “Music arouses passions. The music business arouses passions. And when you’re dealing with something as emotive as music, that’s how it should be. But it does mean that almost any initiative you take in the music business, however benign, will find its detractors.”

It continues: “To make it clear, the purpose of Record Store Day is not to promote independent labels. It is to promote independent record shops (the clue is in the name).”

“Of course, because indie record shops disproportionately support independent labels, indie labels are among the biggest winners from RSD. While media coverage inevitably focuses on superstar acts often signed to major labels, in fact three out of four RSD releases are on indie labels. That’s hardly a ‘betrayal’ of indies.”

The statement ends: “Give us a break”.

This year’s Record Store Day includes releases from Bob Dylan, David Bowie, The Jesus And Mary Chain, The White Stripes and more.

Laura Marling: “I wondered if being a musician was worthwhile to the planet”

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Laura Marling discusses her forthcoming fifth album, Short Movie, in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2015 and out now. The singer-songwriter explains her state of mind during the time she took off from music while she lived in Los Angeles. “I got a bit worthy about whether being a musician w...

Laura Marling discusses her forthcoming fifth album, Short Movie, in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2015 and out now.

The singer-songwriter explains her state of mind during the time she took off from music while she lived in Los Angeles.

“I got a bit worthy about whether being a musician was worthwhile to the planet,” she says. “‘Who do I think I am that I can just get up every day and play the guitar? That’s bullshit, I should be doing something more important.’

“But actually, that was the most self-important thought I’ve ever had, and only after being away from music for six months did I come back and think like, ‘Actually, it’s pretty fucking great what I do, and I’m pretty fucking lucky to be doing it.’ So my ego got a good bashing and it gave me proper perspective.”

The new issue of Uncut, dated April 2015, is out now.

John Lennon’s 30 Best Songs

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Here's Uncut's rundown of John Lennon's 30 best songs, as chosen by an all-star panel (this article was originally published in 2007). Uncut's Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide to John Lennon is out now – purchase a copy by clicking here -------- Iceland, October 9, 2007. Yoko Ono is in Reykjav...

Here’s Uncut’s rundown of John Lennon’s 30 best songs, as chosen by an all-star panel (this article was originally published in 2007).

Uncut’s Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide to John Lennon is out now – purchase a copy by clicking here

——–

Iceland, October 9, 2007. Yoko Ono is in Reykjavik to unveil a tribute to John Lennon, the Imagine Peace Tower, on what would have been her husband’s 67th birthday. Located on nearby Videy Island, the tower consists of nine beams of light, rising up from a white wishing well that’s inscribed with the words “Imagine Peace” in 24 languages. Also attending the ceremony are Olivia and Dhani Harrison, Sean Lennon and his half-sister, Kyoko – and Ringo who, clearly feeling the bitter cold, suggests Yoko “have the next one in the Caribbean.” The ceremony climaxes with the crowd leaving the site to the strains of Lennon’s “Give Peace A Chance”.

We meet Yoko the night before the ceremony, in the grand presidential suite of her hotel, where despite suffering from extreme nerves she chats enthusiastically about John’s songwriting, particularly his formidable collection of peace songs.

“In 1965, I put the light house down as part of the sales list in my book Grapefruit,” she begins, explaining the origins of the Imagine Peace Tower as part of a conceptual art show. “In 1966, I put some prisms in the Indica Art Gallery as part of the light house. I met John there, and in 1967, he invited me to his house, Kenwood, to talk about it. It was funny: the light house was conceptual and it took John to visualise it. Now it’s a reality.

“About three years ago, I had to think about what to do with all the wishes that people tied to the wish trees at my museum shows. We have more than a million wishes. I thought, ‘I need a tower.’ Then I thought, ‘Oh… that should be John’s light tower.’ The light stands for empowerment, and for energy and wisdom. The wishes will be buried around the tower in capsules.

“It’s called Imagine Peace Tower because the word ‘imagine’ was a very important word between us. It’s very special because of John’s song ‘Imagine’, as well. I was there when he wrote it. We were in Ascot, in our bedroom upstairs. Because we were both artists, we showed each other everything. If I scribbled something I’d show it to John. He would scribble something and show it to me. That’s how he wrote his songs, too. He wasn’t one of those writers who’d write from ten until 12 in the morning. He used to think of an idea when we were in a plane or something. He just writes it down. And at the time he writes it down, he’s already got the melody.

“John didn’t have a narrow talent. He had all the different emotions he was able to express in his songs. If you want to analyse it, his mum wasn’t around, and his dad wasn’t around, and he wanted someone to listen to him when he was a little boy. When I went to Liverpool, to his childhood home, I cried, because I saw the little bedroom where it all started.

“‘Imagine’ is my favourite of John’s peace songs. I think he thought just like I do now – world peace is an inevitable thing. What are we going to do? Kill ourselves? We’re not that dumb.

“I think ‘All You Need Is Love‘ was the beginning of John’s peace writing. You notice that even when he was a Beatle, he wanted to dabble in different things, especially anti-war songs. But The Beatles were so successful he felt he couldn’t.

“‘Give Peace A Chance‘ is basically John’s idea. I might have thrown some words in. It happened spontaneously in the hotel room [Montreal’s Queen Elizabeth Hotel, during the 1969 Bed-In]. I thought it was great. But, you know, it’s a political song. When John writes something extremely artistic like ‘Scared‘ [from Walls & Bridges], that’s a different story. I really admire it, it’s fantastic. But with ‘Give Peace A Chance’, it’s very important when you try to communicate on a very wide level you have to choose very simple but powerful words to get the message across.

“Thank you Uncut for your continuing support of John’s work and for playing your part in keeping his spirit alive. It is important that new generations continue to discover John’s music and the message behind it. IMAGINE PEACE!”


30 BEAUTIFUL BOY (DARLING BOY)

From the John Lennon & Yoko Ono album, Double Fantasy (November 1980)
Written for son Sean, then 5, and partially inspired by the writings of French psychologist Emile Coue, “Beautiful Boy” sees Lennon extolling the simple joy of fatherhood…

Liam Gallagher: My song “Little James” was inspired by “Beautiful Boy” and “Hey Jude”. More “Beautiful Boy”. People who’ve got any soul will realise that there’s a day when you go home and put your feet up and cuddle your kids. If anyone slags it off, they’ve either got no heart or they don’t know what the meaning of life is. They just go out and do-do-do-do-do the same thing every day. So fuck them. You can’t win with these people. They’re going, “You’re the wild man of rock, you’re this, you don’t fucking care,” and when you do show a bit of caring, they call you a poof… Originally, I wanted it to be acoustic. Have you heard Lennon’s demos? They’re dead crackly, and it’s just on a guitar, and that’s the way I’d like to write music. But if it’s gonna go on an Oasis album, it’s gotta be big, hasn’t it? So then I played it Noel, he went away with the band and he goes: “What do you think of this?” I went: “It’s fucking top.”

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29 WHATEVER GETS YOU THRU THE NIGHT
From the John Lennon album, Walls And Bridges (October 1974); released as a single October 1974. Highest UK chart position: 36
Lennon’s first solo US No 1, with Elton John guesting on keyboards. Lennon later joined Elton on stage at Madison Square Gardens in November 1974, for what would be his last public performance…

Klaus Voormann: I got a call from John asking to come to New York to play on his new record. He was getting some friends together – Jim Keltner on drums, Jesse Ed Davis on guitar – so it sounded like a good idea. I think we did the whole of Walls & Bridges in two weeks.

We didn’t do any rehearsals. John would come in each day with a new song, play it to us and we’d go from there. We never got chord structure or anything like that, but he gave each of us a piece of A4 paper with the words on. We’d make our parts up on the spot and if he liked it, he’d give you a little grin.

He’d be wearing his denims, usually with his cap on, very low-key. He was completely on the level – you could tell he just wanted to be a member of a band again.

We’d start in the afternoon and work through the night, although by the end of the fortnight, we’d sometimes start about nine in the evening [laughs]. We would only break for food. John would say: “Let’s have Blintzes!” – he loved to have their pancakes with blueberries and cream – or we’d have Chinese – but then get back to work.

This was during his Lost Weekend and it was party time. There was booze, and people heading to the bathroom to sniff stuff. I never saw John drunk in the studio, or stoned, but there was a lot of cocaine around. John would say: “Fancy some nose?” So it was that and a little hot sake.

I remember the day we did “Whatever Gets You Thru the Night” John was very excited about it. It’s a happy song, but there’s a sadness to it. You could tell he was missing Yoko, and he was cutting loose. We’ve got an expression for it in German – he was painting over his pain.

The recording is way too fast. Elton John wasn’t there – he came in and did his overdubs later – but Arthur Jenkins [percussionist] and Bobby Keys [saxophonist] were, and as the night wore on, each time it got faster and faster. It ended up almost twice the speed it started out! Bobby was playing all the wrong notes, too, which didn’t help! But John was pleased with it -it was all about capturing the feel and atmosphere in one take. Who cares about the speed and a few bum notes, y’know? John was right, of course – it was his first solo number one in America.

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28 THIS BOY
B-side of The Beatles single, “I Want To Hold Your Hand” (November 1963). Highest UK chart position: 1
Inspired by Lennon’s love of doo-wop and home to the Beatles first great three-part harmony. An instrumental version appeared on the A Hard Day’s Night soundtrack…

Ian Hart, actor Backbeat/The Hours And The Times: This song of longing and lost love breaks my heart when I try to sing it. It’s a perfect short love song, but as always with John’s songs, there’s something more to it; the plaintive quality of Lennon’s voice in the chorus is enough to make you cry. I’ve always loved “This Boy” and have various memories of it. They sang it on Morecambe & Wise, and the Ed Sullivan show in the States, neither of which I probably saw until I started doing research for The Hours And The Times.

But it’s the use of George Martin’s instrumental version in A Hard Day’s Night that provokes the greatest response in me. Ringo, egged on by Paul’s granddad, goes on his lonely journey, feeling like an outcast. It’s only a short scene, but the song perfectly matches the rejection and longing Ringo’s character feels in the movie. I owe my career in a way to John, and a lot more besides. I would never have worked with Ken Loach or Neil Jordan, and I wouldn’t have many of the friends I have. This boy wants you back again: cheesy but true.

27 MOTHER
Taken from the album, John Lennon: Plastic Ono Band (December 1970); released as a single, December 1970. Highest US chart position: 43
Inspired by primal-scream therapy, Lennon confronts his abandonment issues head on, delivering a raw, revelatory glimpse inside his psyche…

Lee Ranaldo, Sonic Youth: Like Dylan, Lennon’s someone who has done so much that your favourite song could change from day to day, depending on where you’re at. “Mother” came out of this Janov Scream Therapy, and he was the kind of person who could take things that were going on in his personal life and channel them into his musical life. That was impressive to me. It came out in early Beatles songs – like “You’ve Got To Hide Your Love Away” – he was starting to channel things into his songs, and those early solo records, like the vituperative condemnation of Paul in “How Do You Sleep”, he was channelling this stuff directly into his music in this incredible way.

I always loved “Mother” – it’s really bold and audacious in the way it ends with the screaming lines of lyrics. It’s so emotionally appropriate and so true to who he was and where he was. It never fails to move me.

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26 I’M SO TIRED
Taken from The Beatles album, The Beatles (November 1968)
Composed at the Maharishi’s retreat, and recorded during an all night session at Abbey Road, Lennon’s jaded ode speaks volumes for his boredom at being a Beatle.

Jarvis Cocker: John was my favourite Beatle. When I was a kid I thought I’d like to be like him, ’cause he had glasses. I thought that proves that you can be a pop star and wear glasses. “I’m So Tired”, I’ll have that. Lyrically I like the way he calls Sir Walter Raleigh such a stupid get, and the way he manages to get that mundanity into something quite intense. It made me realise that you could actually write songs like that. He’s just listing things that have pissed him off and he can’t sleep and he doesn’t know what to do with himself, ’cause he’s fallen in love. Getting all the little detail into it was an inspiration for me. Also, that’s one of the ones with the easiest chords. When I bought my Beatles’ Complete Guitar Book I got discouraged ’cause they always seemed to have all these sustained 9ths and I couldn’t play them. Then I realised “I’m So Tired” is quite simple and I managed to master that one.

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25 GOD
From the album, John Lennon: Plastic Ono Band (December 1970)
Bitter attack on idolatry, culminating in a denunciation of The Fabs themselves. “And so, dear friends, you just have to carry on…” is all the optimism Lennon can muster, consigning Sixties’ idealism to the dustbin…

John Leckie, engineer: I can’t say I was in awe of Lennon, because at that time, The Beatles weren’t that hip. I’d done George’s album [All Things Must Pass], which had so many different musicians that it became a challenge, but it was straightforward with John and Yoko. There were only three people in there and very focused. Yoko was there all the time, offering comments and guidance, and [co-producer] Phil Spector. Spector certainly wasn’t the tyrant in the studio. He was sitting back, letting John and Yoko do their thing. I’m not sure he understood it, though. I remember it being a lot of fun. It was Ringo, John and Klaus [Voorman] – mates. I went back into Abbey Road recently and got the old 8-track tapes out. That was fantastic in itself. You forget how many takes and experimentation went into that album. It was very conscientiously done, almost matter-of-fact. There’s about three days’ worth of recordings of “Mother”. He tried “God” out on electric guitar first, found it wasn’t working and tried it on piano. John would play a song through and through until he came up with the magic take. We’d start recording around six in the evening and often go on until eight in the morning.

24 #9 DREAM
From the John Lennon album, Walls And Bridges (October 1974); released as a single, January 1975. Highest UK chart position: 23
Inspired by Lennon’s fascination with the number 9, this piece of baroque pop featured backing vocals from May Pang, Lennon and Yoko’s PA who became his lover…

May Pang: John had just produced Harry Nilsson’s Pussy Cats album, and he’d created a beautiful string arrangement for the opening track, “Many Rivers To Cross”. John liked it so much he wanted to use it himself. He literally dreamed the rest of the song, including the words “Ah, bowakawa pousse pousse.” Like so many of his lyrics, people searched for the hidden meaning, but there was none. [In the dream], two women were calling his name, which he figured were me and Yoko. It was his idea to have me sing it. He had to turn the studio lights down because I was shy doing those sultry “John”s. When Yoko put together a video for the song in 2005, she included footage of her lip-syncing to my vocal, which is why some people may be confused. John wrote on his Martin acoustic, whenever inspiration struck, which was often. He’d play me his songs and tell me what he envisioned them to be. In the case of “#9 Dream,” he wrote the orchestral arrangements and produced the track in such a way to lull the listener into his dream. He always had his pen and paper ready to jot something down, even by his bed. One of my expressions at the time was “off the wall,” which appeared in “Steel And Glass.” I introduced him to beef jerky, which became the title of another song. He often asked what I thought about a lick or some words, but when he played “Surprise Surprise” [the song Lennon wrote for May], I teared up and was speechless. He joked to me, “It’s that bad, huh?”

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23 GIMME SOME TRUTH
From the John Lennon album, Imagine (October 1971)
A rip-roaring dig at “neurotic, psychotic, pig-headed politicians”, “paranoic prima-donnas” and anyone else who didn’t dig the Ono-Lennon’s Bed-Ins…

Tony James, Generation X/Carbon Silicon: I always loved The Beatles, but I became a real Lennon fan when I first heard Imagine. I used to babysit for Neil Aspinall, who was The Beatles’ personal assistant. I was saving up for gigs and records by babysitting. He said, “I must play you this album John’s just made.”

Here was someone talking about something more than just love songs. Years later, Billy [Idol] and I used to listen to “Gimme Some Truth”. What made it stand out was the lyrical content. We loved the word play – “No short-haired, yellow-bellied son of Tricky Dicky’s gonna Mother Hubbard soft-soap me…”‘ It was brilliant the way the words alliterated, and this cry of passion… We covered it in Generation X. When I last saw Primal Scream, they did “Gimme Some Truth” and they did the Generation X version. When I saw Bobby after the show, he came rushing up and said, “Did you hear ‘Gimme Some Truth’? It’s the Generation X version!”

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22 JEALOUS GUY
From the John Lennon album, Imagine (November 1971)
One of Lennon’s most covered songs, this was a public apology to Yoko over his behaviour following The Beatles split, when his heavy drinking put pressure on their relationship…

Roger Daltrey: My favourite? It’s “Jealous Guy”. I don’t have to tell you why. But I was listening to his voice the other day, his music was on a radio play – his version of “Stand By Me”. Fucking great voice, he had: he was lovely, but again, he had that side of him which could be quite cutting and come across quite nasty. But he was straight up and down – what you saw was what you got. I can’t imagine what their life must have been like. It must have a nightmare. I can see why people go completely mad in this business. How they dealt with it – they couldn’t go out. I suppose it makes you have to hang on to who you are: every day, you have to ask yourself, “Who the fuck am I?” We had a few years of screaming girls, but that was it.

21 HELP!
Taken from The Beatles album, Help! (August 1965); released as a single July 1965. Highest UK chart position: 1
An acknowledgement that entry into fame’s hall of mirrors doesn’t come for free, disguised as the perfect pop song…

Victor Spinetti: Of all The Beatles, I saw John the most. We wrote a play together, In His Own Write. I remember working on it at my flat in London and John said: “Let’s go somewhere warm”. I thought he meant another room and we ended up in Marrakesh. He was one of the first song-writing poets. It sounds like I’m eulogizing, but listen to his lyrics. Who else writes like that? It’s a reservoir of poetry that’s still here. He was misunderstood, too. When people listen to “Help!” and decide he was a troubled man, it’s not true. He was saying “I’m approaching 30 years of age. Is this it?” The pressure was on to be better and better. On the set of Help! I asked him: “Do you have lots of songs in a drawer that’ll be discovered after you’ve gone?” And he said: “No, I just ring up Paul and say it’s time we get together and write another hit.” In that sense, he was an artist like Picasso, in saying “I do not seek, I find”. It was finding things and making something out of it that was the key. There was no ego with John. People always thought he was full of it, but he wasn’t. He could be arrogant, but that’s a different thing.

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20 SHE SAID SHE SAID
From The Beatles album, Revolver (August 1966)
Perfect, paranoid pop, inspired by Lennon’s encounter with LSD-convert Peter Fonda, who wrong-footed the Beatle at a party with the words: “I know what it’s like to be dead”…

John Cale: There was always this competition between the Stones and The Beatles. Even though The Beatles could be brilliant, the Velvets would always side with the Stones, because they were darker, rougher. Then “She Said She Said” turned up and I could see The Beatles were changing. Lou [Reed] and I looked at each other and realised something was happening, which we zeroed in on. The way Lennon did it seemed so natural. It was obviously not just something he made up his mind to do, it was always part of who he was.

It’s got a very tricky time signature. He stops the beat at one point, which made me sit up. The mindset was so unusual – “you’re making me feel like I’ve never been born”. This is nihilism. What I liked about Lennon was his terseness. He could make a point very fast. I love that ability to be very piercing and savage. You get a physical sense of something from him. As soon as I saw him play, it was there too. He used his entire body when he sang. By ’66, The Beatles were a big deal, it was like a giant wave. We were in New York and every night on the radio there’d be Murray The K calling himself the Fifth Beatle. People would hang on to every word.

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19 DEAR PRUDENCE
Taken from The Beatles album, The Beatles (November 1968)
Inspired by Lennon’s efforts to coax Prudence Farrow from her shell while staying with the Maharishi, this is Lennon at his most warm-hearted…

Donovan: It has a particular connection to me because John wrote it while we were in India – the four Beatles, Mike Love, Paul Horn the jazz flutist and friends. We went in February 1968 to study Transcendental Meditation with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, which was a life change for us all. All we took were acoustic guitars. George brought in tablas for Ringo. It was very much an unplugged situation in the jungle in India. As I was acoustic all my life, I was playing guitar constantly, and John looked at me, and said: “How do you do that guitar pickin’?” So I taught John. It’s called the clawhammer. It was invented by Ma Carter in the Carter Family in the 1920s. She adapted a banjo style to guitar, and it changed folk music forever. Prudence is Mia Farrow’s sister. She had come to the ashram, as we all had, with various problems, and Maharishi kept her locked away in meditation for days on end. He was caring for her as she unfolded all her angst. But John felt: “Where is Prudence?” so he wrote this song. With the guitar style, and John’s caring attitude to Prudence, it was very touching.

18 HOW DO YOU SLEEP?
From the album, Imagine (October 1971)
A scorching evisceration of Paul McCartney (“The only thing you done was yesterday/ And since you’ve gone you’re just another day”) supported by some stinging slide-guitar from George Harrison…

Ian Hunter, Mott The Hoople: He’s pissed off. He’s always good at that. He could be bad-tempered at times, and that worked with his vocal, with the nostrils flaring. With “How Do You Sleep”, he had a cause – real or imaginary – and it adds to the performance. The lyric was maybe uncalled for, but he and Paul were having a do at the time. It pissed me off that people picked sides between them after The Beatles split. It’s amazing those two wound up in a band. It was only a matter of time before they got fed up, because they weren’t the same. Paul was always middle, John was very left. It’s a great song. Simple, which was John’s strength. It has that great “Lennon sound”. He wasn’t keen on his voice, he double-tracked it and covered it with all kinds of shit, and that became very powerful. He wasn’t willing to suffer fools either, and sometimes treated people not too well. A lot of guys were like that then. And John would let ’em have it. Which is an honesty you don’t often see.

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17 THE BALLAD OF JOHN AND YOKO
The Beatles single (May 1969). Highest UK chart position: 1
“Christ, you know it ain’t easy,” sang Lennon, as he recounted life with Yoko, lived in the glare of the media spotlight…

Marianne Faithfull: I got to know Yoko through her exhibition at the Indica Gallery [in November 1966], through John Dunbar, the founding father of the British arts scene. I understood the attraction between John and Yoko. I could never see John happy being in Weybridge, in a normal bourgeois life. He was keen on The Beatles for a long time, maybe too keen in a way. He submerged himself too much, to the point where they were like one person. So John went in an extreme other direction. And Yoko was his way out. Nobody can imagine what it was like to be a Beatle. Then there’s all that incredible baggage they each had. I was fascinated with John and Yoko’s bravery – living their life so publicly. But they managed very well. “The Ballad Of John And Yoko” is a brilliant summary of their life so far, as well as being a great tune. It all rushes by, which is just how their life must have seemed then. I think John did manage to shake off The Beatles eventually, particularly with the Plastic Ono Band record. It’s a sparse record, the opposite of what the Beatles were doing. Yoko and I still keep in touch. I was invited to her tower of light ceremony [the Imagine Peace Tower in October 2007] in Reykjavik, which was very moving. It was fascinating because Yoko had a letter from John in which he said he’s seen the day when she would be able to do it. I love that.

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16 WORKING CLASS HERO
From the album, John Lennon: Plastic Ono Band (December 1970)
Brutal dissection of class, fame and religion furiously delivered by Lennon, armed only with an acoustic guitar…

John Lydon: The Beatles were poisoned for me when I was young because my mum and dad played them all the time, so it would drill into my head like rusty nails. You know what I mean? “She loves you, yeah yeah yeah…” It’s hard to get that stuff out of your head. I remember hearing “Working Class Hero” while I was in a pub with Malcolm McLaren, about 1975, when we were just starting the Pistols. He took us across the road for one drink each – ah, so kind that man! – and “Working Class Hero” was on the jukebox. It stuck in my mind, because it was such a relevant and important record. I’d heard it beforehand, but then it didn’t mean much. This time I related to it. The anger and the bitterness seemed utterly genuine, the words came out with such passion and violence. That was part of the building block for me, of songwriting in the Pistols. That you could shift into these larger aspects – class hatred, anger, resentment – and get it right.

15 HAPPY XMAS (WAR IS OVER)
John & Yoko/the Plastic Ono Band with the Harlem Community Choir single (November 1972). Highest chart position: 2
“Happy Xmas (War is Over)” inverts the usual pop bromide of the Christmas single, posing the question: “And what have you done?”..

Yoko Ono: There’s a funny story about “Happy Xmas (War Is Over)”. We were writing it in a New York hotel over breakfast, and we’d just completed it. Then a call came from George [Harrison], who wanted him to perform in the Bangladesh concert and John said no. I think George wanted John to perform on his own, not with me, but John could not say that to me. He didn’t want to hurt me. He said: “At drop of a hat, you want to sing.” I said: “I’d like to sing.” John got so angry he didn’t know what to do. He can’t tell me about it. I said: “How dare you say no to a charity concert,” not knowing the situation. By the time he and I made up, we’d forgotten about the song. And then it was getting very near to Christmas – “Oh, that song, we have to put it out because it’s so important.” Allen Klein [manager] said: “It’s too late.” John was adamant and, of course, it did make it. When we made the song, John was saying, “This is going to replace ‘White Christmas’.” But it just disappeared. Now it’s different. So I was thinking: John, do you see what’s happening? You were right. This one really says it. I think that people of our generation like this more [than other Christmas perennials] – it’s something to hang on to.

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14 A HARD DAY’S NIGHT
The Beatles single (July 1964). Highest UK chart position: 1
2 minutes 32 seconds of pure, adrenalised pop, introduced by the most famous opening chord in pop history…

Roger McGuinn, The Byrds: When we got The Byrds together, we wanted to be a Mersey-type band. When we went to see the Hard Day’s Night movie, it was a life-changing event. We took notes on what they were wearing and tried to emulate them as closely as we could. Once we’d met The Beatles, I realised we’d superimposed certain things on to them. We thought they were coming more from the bohemian side, but they were still very hip. We had a lot in common. We all did LSD, pot and amphetamines. I thought Lennon was an incredible songwriter. On “A Hard Day’s Night”, the arpeggio fade was really interesting, as well as that big opening chord. That song is a great indicator of what they were up to at that stage. Back then, hanging out with other bands was like being in a secret brotherhood. I remember George sending a tape of “If I Needed Someone” to tell me he got the idea from “The Bells Of Rhymney”. I think Lennon got the idea for wearing the granny glasses from me. I saw him in London and he said “What’s with the shades?” I was wearing those little rectangular ones. I got the idea from John Sebastian. I saw him in the Village one night wearing them. He told me to try them on: “Look up at the street lights and move your head around. It’s really groovy, man!”

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13 POWER TO THE PEOPLE
John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band single (March 1971). Highest UK chart position: 7
Ebullient sequel to “Revolution” sparked by an interview with Red Mole magazine in 1971. The rousing chorus was specifically designed to be sung for street demonstrations…

John Sinclair, ex-manager MC5: The first I knew of John was when he came down to Ann Arbor, Michigan, to play a concert to get me out of prison [the Free John Now Rally on December 10, 1971]. That was some first impression. Then my wife and I went to New York to say thank you. We sat around, smoked joints and shot the shit. He was a sweet guy, regular and down to earth. He was an intellectual. He wrote strange and twisted books and made movies. And John was a great composer. What more could you ask for? He saved my life. I loved the guy. I admired his solo work. He had that jacket from The Beatles, which on the one hand made him fabulously wealthy but at the same time shrunk his mental world. I loved “Power To The People”. This was something he believed in, and there was this whole concept of making records that expressed how he felt and he could get that over to millions of people. The impressive thing was that he was a rich guy trying to reach out to the other side and be one of the people. He was trying to figure out a way to be honest with himself. And that’s what an artist does.

12 IMAGINE
Taken from the John Lennon album, Imagine (October 1971); released as a single October 1975. Highest UK chart position: 7
Written in one morning, with a lyric inspired by Yoko’s 1964 book Grapefruit, “Imagine” espoused a utopian dream after the gritty realism of Plastic Ono Band…

Peter Tork, The Monkees: Unlike McCartney, who retreated into domestic treacle, Lennon came at me, talking about – however naively – the world situation. He wanted to work on issues of world peace and international interaction. In other words, instead of writing the “Fuck you, bitch” songs he might have written to be nasty, he started writing songs about “imagine” – just imagine, and war is over if you want it, the Bed-Ins, everything. He was interested in the political aspects of his behaviour and for me as an audience, that was a stride forward, not a retreat.

Mick Jagger: My favourite Lennon song? “Imagine”, I should think. Because it’s the most catchy. I mean, there are many others, obviously, but that’s one that I like.

Neil Young: I did “Imagine” for a benefit show because I love that song. It’s apparently religious but not in the way you think – because that’s not always a good thing. You could say it’s holy, but not Christian, and it tells the right story. A story that was right for those circumstances.

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11 ACROSS THE UNIVERSE
From The Beatles album, Let It Be (May 1970)
“One of the best lyrics I’ve ever written” according to Lennon. Composed on a late night songwriting roll, with added orchestra and celestial choir courtesy of producer Phil Spector…

Brian Wilson: My favourite Lennon song is “Across The Universe”. It had a great guitar sound. It flipped me out when I first heard it. And I thought his voice was especially good. He must have either taken some drugs or really concentrated hard, because he got a very special vocal sound on that one. The other thing was the lyrics. They were so heavenly [sings the chorus]. And they were most likely drug-inspired. I thought they were really great. People say that song reminds them of The Beach Boys, but not to me. It’s unique.

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10 I AM THE WALRUS
From The Beatles EP, “Magical Mystery Tour” (December 1967); released as the B-side to “Hello Goodbye”, November 1967. Highest UK chart position: 1
Lennon’s most out-there composition, written after he learned pupils at his old school were studying his lyrics. “Let the fuckers work that one out,” he apparently said…


Neil Innes, Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band/The Rutles
: At the end of Magical Mystery Tour, we had this party where the Bonzos got up and did their bit. John dressed as a biker, with a leather jacket and brylcreamed hair. When Larry [“Legs” Smith] came out wearing false breasts, John was shouting out “C’mon Larry, we’ve all seen them already!” We ended up having a jam with The Beach Boys, who were also there, doing “Oh Carol” for 20 minutes.

“I Am The Walrus” is code for what The Beatles understood about one another, the rest was Lear-like fun. You have to admire that grinding, angry melody. Most people would have put that anger into some kind of shouting, but this is mean and driving. I didn’t want to play John in The Rutles. It was daunting because he was sharp-tongued, quick and very funny. We forget the Bed-In was a satire of the advertising world. He wanted to make an advert for something as abstract as love. Everyone thought he was mad, but he wasn’t. He was just another bloody art student! Somebody apparently asked John what he thought of the Rutles, and he started singing “Cheese & Onions”. “Questionnaire” was a tribute to John. That song was the only reason I went ahead with [Rutles’ 1996 follow-up] Archaeology. I’d been to see George about doing a second Rutles album and his dark humour immediately came to the fore: “More Rutles? Which one of you is going to get shot?” But he said we should go ahead and do it, because it was all part of the soup.

9 COLD TURKEY
Plastic Ono Band single (October 1969). Highest UK chart position: 14
“Thirty-six hours/rolling in pain”- Lennon’s fierce hymn to kicking heroin is a chilling musical counterpart to the Primal Scream Therapy he and Yoko undertook with psychologist Arthur Janov…

Bob Gruen, photographer: When we first met, in ’72, he was making Some Time In New York City. They were all new songs, kinda powerful things like “Woman Is The Nigger Of The World”. He was very cool, grounded and very warm to his friends. A few months later, in the summer, he started rehearsing for the One To One concert at Madison Square Garden [August 1972]. By this time, we were getting to know each other. But when you heard that voice come through, it put a chill up your spine. Suddenly it wasn’t my New York buddy any more, it was a Beatle. Oh my God, it’s that John Lennon! But we’d been so comfortable and natural together, that suddenly hearing The Beatles’ songs made you see him in a different way. “Cold Turkey” was extremely powerful and, like many of his songs, very personal. And his contemporaries understood the feeling in the lyrics and what “Cold Turkey” is all about. It expresses that brilliantly. When they did it live at Madison Square Garden, it’s my favourite version. It was absolutely chilling to see him start screaming and mimicking the suffering you go through when you go through drug withdrawal. You just want and want and want and there’s no way to satisfy that. Everything hurts and you’d promise anybody anything to take yourself out of this hell.

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8 REVOLUTION
B-side to The Beatles single, “Hey Jude” (August 1968). Highest UK chart position: 1
Inspired, perhaps, by the student riots in Paris during May 1968, this loud, fuzz-heavy track featured Stones’ collaborator Nicky Hopkins on keyboards. A more subdued version appeared on The Beatles album…

Tommy Smothers, co-host of The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour: I first met John in 1968. I was invited to the launch for The White Album. Then they picked our show to premier “Hey Jude”. Later, I played on “Give Peace A Chance”. The funniest thing about recording it was that we were sitting playing and John stops, turns to me and says: “Hey Tom, I don’t like what you’re playing. Just do exactly what I’m doing. That’s the sound I want.” I think I was doing D or G and putting a passing chord in here and there. Harry Nilsson was a buddy of mine and he’d started hanging out with John. Because of the television show, I had to be straight, but Harry and John were doing nose-blow and cognac. Around 1970, my brother Dick and I were making the show in LA and Harry and John came and ripped into us, throwing stuff and yelling things. They thought they were helping me! The next day, they sent me flowers. John never did things halfway. I loved “Revolution”. Musically, it was cool, but I loved the wordplay: “solution… evolution… contribution… constitution”. But if John was around today and could see what’s happening, he might have wished he’d changed those lines: “Don’t you know it’s gonna be alright?” It was appropriate at the time because a lot of Americans got out there and protested. “Revolution” summed up that era.

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7 GIVE PEACE A CHANCE
Plastic Ono Band single (June 1969). Highest UK chart position: 2
Recorded during the Montreal Bed-In, the climactic shout-out to “Timmy Leary, Tommy Cooper, Allen Ginsberg, Hare Krishna” added a typically dry touch of humour to this call for world peace.

Julian Cope: As someone who loathes the Beatles, but realises that it’s me who’s out of step, I love Lennon’s Plastic Ono Band period, when he was reinventing himself as an American counter-cultural icon. Liverpool shares a lot with Detroit, and around this time Lennon was at his most Detroit-informed. Look at his song titles – “Come Together” was borrowed from the MC5, as was “I Want You (She’s So Heavy)”. He wanted to do the Bed-In in Detroit but they wouldn’t let him so he had to do it on the other side of the Windsor Bridge, in Toronto. He’s often mocked around this period – all that Che Guevara posturing – but I think the only way you can get anywhere, politically, is by making ludicrous demands that are impossible to achieve. When he sings “Woman Is The Nigger Of The World”, “Give Peace A Chance” or “Power To The People” an entire generation was having to think – even if only momentarily – of a new world paradigm, be it feminism, revolutionary socialism, or peace. On top of that, he’s taking a woman – not just any woman, but a Jap, the enemy! – and declaring her his muse. She’s not even a cute Japanese woman, she’s older, a nutcase, a performance artist. That, to me, gives him more kudos in Heaven or Hell or Valhalla or wherever he’s gone than anything else he did.

6 IN MY LIFE
From The Beatles album, Rubber Soul (December 1965)
Nostalgic, even in 1965, for a world he’d already left far behind, “In My Life” took on the form of a personal epitaph following Lennon’s death…

Alex Turner, Arctic Monkeys: I’ve always loved that tune. I think it might be my mum and dad’s favourite Beatles tune too, it’s got that harmonium solo on it, with George Martin playing. “Happiness Is A Warm Gun” is probably our favourite Beatles tune as a band. Do I prefer Lennon to McCartney? Yeah, that goes without saying. I was watching that Gimme Some Truth film the other day, when he’s playing that tune that’s supposed to be about McCartney, “How Do You Sleep?” He plays it on the piano to George Harrison and its like he’s *growling*. It’s mad to look at that and think that’s where it went. And they’re talking about the Beatles around the table, taking the piss out of the whole thing, saying: “So have you seen any of The Beatles…?” “From one Beatle to another…” Probably to them it did get to be a joke. I bet they did always take the piss out of it. It’s like that with us, we already take the piss out of ourselves.

5 YOU’VE GOT TO HIDE YOUR LOVE AWAY
From The Beatles album, Help! (August 1965)
Vulnerable, acoustic ballad – perhaps inspired by Dylan’s “I Don’t Believe You [She Acts Like We Have Never Met]” – written and recorded in just two hours.

Ray Davies: When he got killed, I was doing the Palladium in New York a week or so later. I wanted to play this. I copped out because I couldn’t rehearse it with The Kinks, and in those days I had to do everything with them. Me and Dave should’ve just got up and done it on acoustic guitars. John could be a cruel man. He was very hurtful to me once, early on. But this is my favourite song by him because it shows the vulnerability he felt he had to press down, back then; the softness he had to hide.

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4 ALL YOU NEED IS LOVE
The Beatles single (July 1967). Highest UK chart position: 1
The defining statement for a generation, famously beamed into homes around the globe through a live TV broadcast featuring many famous friends – including the Stones…

Billy Bragg: For Lennon, it’s pretty un-cynical. He often leavened his political songs with a bit of cynicism, as was his way. But here he’s talking about the one thing that typified his generation. Songs had previously only addressed love in purely relationship terms, and “All You Need Is Love” suddenly takes on the status of a global movement. As with the greatest political songs, like “The Times They Are A Changing” or “Blowin’ In The Wind”, it doesn’t offer a solution, so you can bring your own perspective to it. The political songs that endure are the most accessible to people, and this is incredibly accessible, isn’t it? “There’s no one you can save that can’t be saved”. That’s a pretty powerful line to put in a love song. That song showed me that the most commercial band of the Sixties were able to reflect what was happening in the world, that pop music wasn’t about escapism. After Sgt Pepper had blown everybody’s mind, to come back in the Summer Of Love with that song and for it to be broadcast all around the world as the message from a generation – “All you need is love” – Lennon created the high water mark of the Sixties. What happens next is Epstein dies within a month and The Beatles just lose their innocence, that ability to turn everything they touch into gold. Magical Mystery Tour gets a right spanking, although the songs are great. And then in 1968, Martin Luther King is killed, Bobby Kennedy is killed. The White Album is a clear message that something’s not right now. Where do you go “After All You Need Is Love”?

3 INSTANT KARMA
John Lennon single (February 1970). Highest UK chart position: 5
Written, recorded and released in 10 days, “Karma” illustrated the volcanic rush of idea’s experienced by the newly-free Beatle. “We wrote it for breakfast, recorded it for lunch, and we’re putting it out for dinner!” he announced…

Chris Frantz, Talking Heads/Tom Tom Club: I distinctly remember the first time I heard it, driving across the Highland Park Bridge in Pittsburgh and this fantastic heavy drum sound came on the radio. I turned it up and thought, wow, this is cool and was surprised to hear Lennon’s voice. I was a big fan of The Beatles, but I guess by that time they’d broken up and I was more interested in experimental stuff. I certainly wasn’t looking to Beatles solo projects as a source of inspiration, but that track caught my attention. I’m a sucker for the production, the shuffle beat of the drums, with plenty of gated reverb on the mikes, and that echo on the vocal. The message of the lyric – emphasizing a personal spiritual odyssey – is wonderful, but the appeal is more about the production, which I suppose was all Phil Spector’s work. The song is so highly rhythmic and heavy.

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2 YER BLUES
From The Beatles album, The Beatles (November, 1968)
Taut, Dylan-referencing slice of dues-payin’, sex’n’death blues – a fuck-you to the more purist critics.


Frank Black, Pixies
: Someone in the British music press had commented that it was too bad The Beatles would never be able to tackle the blues. And John Lennon was so incensed that he set about proving them wrong. “Yer Blues” has a lot of rhythm and blues moves, almost showbiz style. The tempo changes and even some of the guitar motifs are like that. There’s one descending guitar line that’s almost humorous, but it has a beautiful grit to it. But then to balance it out, the main guitar riff is just scary. Call me a stupid white guy, but that guitar line is as scary and provocative as anything you’re going to hear on a Howlin’ Wolf record. It’s totally legitimate. There’s nothing white about it at all. It has so much attitude and confidence. It’s almost like he’s saying “Yeah, I know I’m really bad. Get the fuck out of my way.” That combination of strength and swagger is what makes it so powerful, elevating it to the next level. The lyric is just beautiful, contemporary and modern. I mean, he references Bob Dylan in it. That line [sings] “If I ain’t dead already / Ooh girl you know the reason why” is just so fucking bad. It’s sexual, but references death at the same time. It just doesn’t get any better than that.

Some years later, Ringo had a hit with a song that went “Got to pay your dues if you wanna sing the blues” [“It Don’t Come Easy”] and “Yer Blues” is a perfect example of The Beatles doing that. When they played The Star Club in Hamburg all those years before, four or five sets a night on speed and trying to keep drunk servicemen happy, that’s where they really paid their dues. Some of those Star Club recordings came out here in the US as a double-live album and was one of the first records I had as a kid. You can hear it all in there. They were tough mutherfuckers.

1 STRAWBERRY FIELDS FOREVER
The Beatles single (February 1967). Highest UK chart position: 2
Written while on location in Spain filming Richard Lester’s How I Won The War, this stylised portrait of Lennon’s youth remains British pop’s most timeless moment…

Paul Weller: Lennon’s a singer I admire not so much for the technical side but for the honesty and power. I was listening to “Don’t Stand Me Down” and he was just letting go on that track. I love it. And songs like “Twist And Shout”, “Money”, “Dizzy Miss Lizzy” and “Bad Boy” really put him up there as one of the great rock’n’ roll bawlers. They sound like he was gargling with razor blades before recording ’em. The flipside, of course, is songs like “Jealous Guy” and “Beautiful Boy” which show the more sensitive, soulful side to his voice. He’s been a massive influence on me right across the board… as a writer, lyricist and singer.

There are so many of Lennon’s tracks that I think are absolutely amazing. I’m currently into some of the less obvious ones like “Remember Love” [B-side of “Give Peace A Chance”]. But when it comes down to it, “Strawberry Fields Forever” is my all time favourite. I can still remember when I first heard it on the radio; I was only nine at the time. I didn’t know anything about drugs or psychedelia, I just knew it was a great, great tune. I was already well into pop music. My mum was quite young and she was still buying records – so I’d already absorbed the Beatles and The Kinks, but that song just blew me away, it took me to a different place. I only had four teachers at school – John, Paul, George and Ringo – but you could say my education really started with “Strawberry Fields”. I got really into them after that.

I remember being desperate to watch Magical Mystery Tour when it was first on TV – Boxing Day 1967. My mum and dad wanted to watch some crappy film on ITV, so I’d switch the TV over during the ad breaks to see it! That was the extent of my authority over the TV back then! From that point on I was obsessed. We had relations in Chester, and one time I went on a pilgrimage over to Liverpool with my dad. We went to Menlove Avenue, and Paul’s house in Allerton, but we never made it to Strawberry Fields itself, sadly.

Technically, the production on “Strawberry Fields” is phenomenal. There was a documentary on a few months ago where bands tried to recreate the tracks played on Sgt Pepper using the original gear with engineer Geoff Emerick, and it showed how difficult it must have been to make. There was no Pro Tools or any of that business – if you got it wrong you had to start again, it was as simple as that.

For me, it’s the first psychedelic record. People talk about “See My Friends” by The Kinks, but “Strawberry Fields” is far more experimental. George Martin did a brilliant job editing together the two different sections; the key change in the middle is amazing. I still always return to it. It’s one of those tracks where you still hear something new every time you hear it, it’s got so many textures. For me it’s still unsurpassed.

INTERVIEWS BY MICHAEL BONNER, CAROL CLERK, STEPHEN DALTON, NICK HASTED, ROB HUGHES, JOHN LEWIS, ALASTAIR McKAY, PAUL MOODY, TOM PINNOCK AND JOHN ROBINSON

Matthew E White, Fresh Blood + Q&A

Matthew E White sets out his expansive musical philosophy early on Fresh Blood. On the second track, “Rock & Roll Is Cold”, the bandleader offers cautionary advice to the listener: rock‘n’roll, he counsels, has no soul, R&B doesn’t have a key, and “gospel licks, they don’t have...

Matthew E White sets out his expansive musical philosophy early on Fresh Blood. On the second track, “Rock & Roll Is Cold”, the bandleader offers cautionary advice to the listener: rock‘n’roll, he counsels, has no soul, R&B doesn’t have a key, and “gospel licks, they don’t have no tricks”. Point made, he concludes: “Everybody likes to talk / Everybody likes to talk shit”. The song is lighthearted and playful – imagine the Velvets’ “What Goes On” by way of Curtis Mayfield, set to lavish R&B horns and a deep rolling piano groove. But if anything, it is also emblematic of White’s way of doing things: don’t look too deeply into process, any attempts to codify music will essentially rob it of its magic and malleability.

It is a policy that has stood White in good stead since his 2012 debut album Big Inner, a lustrous country soul rhapsody recorded in White’s attic HQ at his Richmond, Virginia studio-cum-label, Spacebomb. Since then, White has been kept rather busy. There has been the small matter of an 18-month tour in support of Big Inner, along with the phenomenal heat the album generated. White aside, Spacembomb’s other significant release has been Natalie Prassself-titled debut album, which further underscored the soulful musical qualities privileged by the label.

Natalie Prass
Natalie Prass

Fresh Blood finds White’s aims coming closer to fulfillment. It feels like a natural continuation of the easy-going, R&B-driven sound dominant on Big Inner; but it is a more energetic, and in places darker, record than its predecessor. The focus is wide-ranging: subjects include the death of Philip Seymour Hoffman and abuse within the Catholic Church, while one song is written from the perspective of a woman as she prepares to take her own life. The opener, “Take Care My Baby”, telescopes out from intimate, piano and guitar beginnings to incorporate soft and low Bacharach-style trumpets before blooming into full-on psychedelic R&B.

Fresh Blood sleeve
Fresh Blood sleeve

As it turns out, White’s strong grasp of layering is critical to the momentum of his songs. For instance, the choir’s call-and-response vocal line (a sassy “Ooh la la ooh la la / Ooh la la ooh la la”) that runs through the background of “Rock & Roll Is Cold”, or the additional percussion that arrive for the final minute or so, contribute discreetly and incrementally to the song’s propulsive dynamic. Each song features choir, horns and strings, as well as his house band, accounting for a minimum of 30 people per track: that’s naturally incurs a lot of administrative work, writing and arranging their respective parts. White – and his co-arranger Trey Pollard evidently thrive on this assiduous attention to detail. “Fruit Trees”, for instance, with its stop-start melodies, burnished brass and staccato strings sees them fully flex their grand songwriting ambitions.

Holy Moly”, meanwhile, foregrounds White’s more intimate qualities as a songwriter. Written in response to the child abuse scandal within the Catholic Church, it seems deliberately to reflect Marvin Gaye’s socially conscious protest songs – the title is likely a gentle nod to “Wholy Holy” from What’s Going On. “What’s wrong you you?” White admonishes repeatedly while the strings are goaded towards a rapturous crescendo by Spacebomb compadre Cameron Ralston’s percussive basslines and some urgent soloing. The gorgeous gospel tones of “Circle ‘Round The Sun”, however, cushion the song’s subject matter: suicide. “I’m screaming and crying, seeking shelter from the storm / Put your arms around me, Jesus, tonight”, whispers White.

Big Inner sleeve
Big Inner sleeve

In fact, “Circle ‘Round The Sun” ushers in a more reflective phase for Fresh Blood. It’s followed by “Feeling Good Is Good Enough”, a breakup song – “I know we didn’t make it, but sometimes late at night I like to fake it” – that comes buoyed along on melancholic strings and sympathetic brass parps. White gracefully tackles the death of Philip Seymour Hoffman on “Tranquility” – “The strong and gentle fade, the lights on Broadway dim” – his double tracked whisper oddly unsettling as it disappears underneath the sporadic flourishes of guitar feedback and keening strings. The song’s closing line – “Rid my heart of all that resists tranquility” – harks back to the idiom of Seventies soul. The slower pace prevails with “Golden Robes”, another gorgeously performed love song. Meanwhile “Vision” recalls the psychedelic soul force of The Undisputed Truth or Rotary Connection at full-tilt, driven by soaring brass and strings.

White brings Fresh Blood to a close with “Love Is Deep”. Across the song’s blissful grooves, he communes across the decades with his old soul masters: “Love is deep and twisted / Ain’t it so Marvin? / Ain’t it so Steveland?” Additionally, he namechecks Billie Holiday, Judee Sill, Sam Cooke and Sister Rosetta Tharpe. These are the big cheeses in White’s world, and while the sentiment of the song rings true, there is nevertheless something typically good-humored and teasing about the way White not only addresses his storied predecessors but also in the way he interprets the song’s inherent message. “Love is sweet,” he coos. “Love is sweet shit”.

Matthew E White by Pieter Van Hattem
Matthew E White by Pieter Van Hattem

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Q&A
Matthew E White
When did you start work on Fresh Blood?
I’ve been working on it kind of in a conceptual way for a long time. I recorded Big Inner in 2011 and it didn’t come out till like late 2012. Then I was touring for almost 18 months and during that time, I had some ideas for what songs I wanted to write and the direction of the record and things like that. So, I was focused on what it was I was after, even at that early stage.

In what ways does Fresh Blood differ from Big Inner?
Big Inner was such a ‘setting up the canvas’ for me. I was figuring out what the tools were gonna be and whether I could actually do this. Fresh Blood is taking the next step. I had a plan. The record is bigger, it’s groovier, it’s intensely personal at times. It’s not a 180 degree spin on Big Inner. It has a lot of the same people, it’s the same process and it will develop from that. But it’s focused and louder. I’m excited.

Who are the key collaborators on this record?
There are three notable people, who are in the Spacebomb family. Trey Pollard produced the record with me and he did the string arrangements. There’s Cameron Ralston, he’s working bass and drums. It’s important to realise, these are more than bass players and drummers and producers to me. They are a creative team I go to them with ideas. I also co-wrote all the songs with Andy C. Jenkins.

Hear new Alabama Shakes song, “Future People”

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Alabama Shakes have released a new song, "Future People". The track is taken from their forthcoming album, Sound & Color, which is released on April 20. The band recently performed two songs taken from the album on Saturday Night Live. The album was recorded in Nashville at the Sound Emporium...

Alabama Shakes have released a new song, “Future People“.

The track is taken from their forthcoming album, Sound & Color, which is released on April 20.

The band recently performed two songs taken from the album on Saturday Night Live.

The album was recorded in Nashville at the Sound Emporium studio, and the band co-produced the album with Blake Mills.

The Sound & Color tracklisting is:

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

Eric Clapton reveals new career-spanning collection

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Eric Clapton is released a new career-spanning compilation, Forever Man. The retrospective collection is released on May 11, 2015. Forever Man includes 51 tracks spread across three CDs. It will also be released digitally, on a 2CD edition and on double vinyl. You can read the tracklisting for th...

Eric Clapton is released a new career-spanning compilation, Forever Man.

The retrospective collection is released on May 11, 2015.

Forever Man includes 51 tracks spread across three CDs. It will also be released digitally, on a 2CD edition and on double vinyl.

You can read the tracklisting for the 3CD and digital edition below.

Meanwhile, Clapton – who turns 70 on March 30 – has announced two shows at Madison Square Garden on May 1 and May 2.

He is also due to play London’s Albert Hall on May 14, 15, 17, 18, 20, 21 and 23.

3CD and Digital Download Edition:

CD1 – Studio
1. Gotta Get Over
2. I’ve Got A Rock ‘N’ Roll Heart
3. Run Back To Your Side
4. Tears In Heaven
5. Call Me The Breeze
6. Forever Man
7. Believe In Life
8. Bad Love
9. My Father’s Eyes
10. Anyway The Wind Blows – with J.J. Cale
11. Travelin’ Alone
12. Change The World
13. Behind The Mask
14. It’s In The Way That You Use It
15. Pretending
16. Riding With The King – with B.B. King
17. Circus
18. Revolution

CD2 – Live
1. Badge
2. Sunshine Of Your Love
3. White Room
4. Wonderful Tonight
5. Worried Life Blues
6. Cocaine
7. Layla (Unplugged)
8. Nobody Knows You When You’re Down & Out (Unplugged)
9. Walkin’ Blues (Unplugged)
10. Them Changes – with Steve Winwood
11. Presence Of The Lord – with Steve Winwood
12. Hoochie Coochie Man
13. Goin’ Down Slow
14. Over The Rainbow

CD3 – Blues
1. Before You Accuse Me
2. Last Fair Deal Gone Down
3. Hold On, I’m Comin’ – with B.B. King
4. Terraplane Blues
5. It Hurts Me Too
6. Little Queen Of Spades
7. Third Degree
8. Motherless Child
9. Sportin’ Life Blues – with J.J. Cale
10. Ramblin’ On My Mind
11. Stop Breakin’ Down Blues
12. Everybody Oughta Make A Change
13. Sweet Home Chicago
14. If I Had Possession Over Judgement Day
15. Hard Times Blues
16. Got You On My mind
17. I’m Tore Down
18. Milkcow’s Calf Blues
19. Key To The Highway – with B.B. King