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Leonard Cohen to release new album

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Leonard Cohen has announced details of a new album. He will release Can’t Forget: A Souvenir Of The Grand Tour on May 11, 2015, on Columbia. The album contains two new songs, "Never Gave Nobody Trouble" and "Got A Little Secret", alongside rarities recorded on his recent Old Ideas tour. Cohen r...

Leonard Cohen has announced details of a new album.

He will release Can’t Forget: A Souvenir Of The Grand Tour on May 11, 2015, on Columbia.

The album contains two new songs, “Never Gave Nobody Trouble” and “Got A Little Secret“, alongside rarities recorded on his recent Old Ideas tour.

Cohen released his most recent studio album Popular Problems in September 2014, and a live album, Leonard Cohen: Live In Dublin, in December.

Click here to read an Uncut interview with Leonard Cohen

The tracklisting for Can’t Forget: A Souvenir Of The Grand Tour is:

1. Field Commander Cohen
2. I Can’t Forget
3. Light as a Breeze
4. La Manic ++ (originally by Georges Dor)
5. Night Comes On
6. Never Gave Nobody Trouble ***
7. Joan of Arc
8. Got a Little Secret ***
9. Choices ++ (originally by George Jones)
10. Stages

*** New original Leonard Cohen songs
++ Covers never previously recorded by Cohen

The Alabama Shakes, “Sound & Color”

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One record I've been playing a lot this year has been "Sound & Color", the second album by The Alabama Shakes, and a pretty adventurous step on from 2012's "Boys & Girls". Beyond the debut's original and entertaining garage-soul concept, "Sound & Color" is a richer, more spacious and wid...

One record I’ve been playing a lot this year has been “Sound & Color”, the second album by The Alabama Shakes, and a pretty adventurous step on from 2012’s “Boys & Girls”. Beyond the debut’s original and entertaining garage-soul concept, “Sound & Color” is a richer, more spacious and wide-ranging album; one that encompasses psychedelic funk (“Future People”), lovely Curtis Mayfield homages (“Guess Who”), Erykah Badu-ish nu-soul (“Over My Head”) and even Strokesy ramalam (“The Greatest”) as well as a couple of Otis-style showstoppers (“Gimme All Your Love” and “Miss You”).

It feels like a band working out how to show their eclecticism and, to a degree, weirdness, without undermining the strength and directness inherent in their songs. “I’m not sure what people will be expecting, but they won’t be expecting this,” Brittany Howard told me a few weeks ago, when I spent a day with them in their hometown of Athens, Alabama.

The next issue of Uncut is out next Tuesday (March 24), and among some other things I probably shouldn’t discuss for a day or two, I’ve written a feature on the Shakes; an explanation, hopefully, of how a raw and entertaining bar band can creatively capitalise on the opportunities presented by sudden success. “Boys & Girls” sold somewhere around a million copies worldwide, impressively, and it’s a little baffling why more bands haven’t sought to try and run with the band’s sound, or at least something like it.

A critical stumbling block, I guess, is that not many bands can effectively locate a talent like Brittany Howard in their ranks. Besides having a staggering voice (a London gig last month featured her singing, perfectly, all 12 varied and demanding songs from the new album), Howard’s quite a character, with stories to spare about haunted houses, tornados and the allure of Nashville, and plenty to say about how the Shakes aren’t necessarily in a Southern music tradition, while illustrating how embedded the band remain in their Alabama homeland.

We spent some time in her basement music room, and driving around the Athens area, looking at old houses, schools, abandoned country clubs and so on. At one point, Howard grabbed her iPhone, plugged it into her car stereo, and went searching for a few of her favourite songs. We’d been talking a lot about Curtis, Miles Davis, Funkadelic, Bjork, Badu, David Axelrod and Antony & The Johnsons, and she’d been playing an old Santana album, “Caravanserai”, while we were in the basement.

Now, though, she cued up Aaron Neville’s version of “Ave Maria” and listened reverently for a couple of minutes, then flicked round to a song I must admit I’d never come across before, “Basketball Jones” by Cheech & Chong, which was immeasurably better than I’d have expected. Next she was on to a kind of funky lounge version of Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s “Shimmy Shimmy Ya” by some band called the El Michels Affair, and our conversation about the Wu-Tang Clan ended up with me playing her a few tracks from another one of the albums I’ve been fixated on for the past month or two, Badbadnotgood & Ghostface Killah’s “Sour Soul”.

Have I mentioned much about “Sour Soul” here? Maybe not. Anyhow, the orchestrated sweep of the Wu-Tang Clan’s 2014 reunion album, “A Better Tomorrow”, might not have pleased all the band members, with Raekwon, in particular, reportedly mutinying against the RZA’s live aesthetic. I suspect, though, that Ghostface would have been less distressed, since “Sour Soul” is his third album in a row where the ’70s soul backdrops are provided by a live band – in this case Toronto jazzers Badbadnotgood, very much the Bar-Kays to the Ghost’s gruff Isaac Hayes. It’s a serendipitous hookup, with the trio providing nuanced, immersive contexts for the rapper’s narratives: occasionally dialled in (“Pimping ain’t easy, but it sure is fun,” etc); sometimes surprising, as when he extols the virtues of yoga, meditation and fish on the outstanding “Food”.

That one’s out now, I believe. The Alabama Shakes’ “Sound & Color”, meanwhile, is due on April 20, and comes vigorously recommended. Besides my interview with the Shakes, I got some enlightening quotes from Blake Mills, the solo artist and superb guitarist who also acted as the sensitive and enabling producer of “Sound & Color”.

“I think Brittany’s aware of what she’s capable of,” he said. “But I think the frustration comes from her desire to not just be somebody who displays what they’re capable of, but who actually has a discerning sense of what they want to achieve with that power. That’s where her fire and ferocity emanate from. She’s a young adult, travelling the world and listening to new records, and all of that is culminating in her trying to make something new or futuristic, and something that feels soulful, but not like soul music. Her fearlessness is something I hope doesn’t run out.”

Sinéad O’Connor to stop performing “Nothing Compares 2 U” live

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Sinéad O'Connor says she will no longer perform "Nothing Compares 2 U" in concert. Writing on her official Facebook page, O'Connor, who had a No 1 hit with the song in 1990, said that she "has ran out of anything I could use in order to bring some emotion to it" and that she can no longer "emo...

Sinéad O’Connor says she will no longer perform “Nothing Compares 2 U” in concert.

Writing on her official Facebook page, O’Connor, who had a No 1 hit with the song in 1990, said that she “has ran out of anything I could use in order to bring some emotion to it” and that she can no longer “emotionally identify” with the song.

O’Connor added: “If I were to sing it just to please people, I wouldn’t be doing my job right, because my job is to be emotionally available. I’d be lying. You’d be getting a lie. My job is to give you honesty.”

Read the full statement below:

“OK, the time has come for me to cease singing Nothing Compares 2U. The first principle of the manner in which I’m trained as a singer (Bel Canto) is we never sing a song we don’t emotionally identify with. After twenty-five years of singing it, nine months or so ago I finally ran out of anything I could use in order to bring some emotion to it. I don’t want audiences to be disappointed coming along to a show and then not hearing it, so am letting you know here that you won’t. If I were to sing it just to please people, I wouldn’t be doing my job right, because my job is to be emotionally available. I’d be lying. You’d be getting a lie. My job is to give you honesty. I’m trained in honesty. I can’t act. It just isn’t in my training. I have ceased singing other songs over the years for the same reason.”

The song was written by Prince in 1985.

Dan Aykroyd to launch Blues Brothers record label

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Dan Aykroyd is to launch a new record label, Blues Brothers Records. The label will be an offshoot of Blue Note Records and is a joint venture with Judith Belushi Pisano, the widow of Aykroyd's Blues Brothers co-star, John Belushi. Billboard reports that Blue Note president Don Was will look afte...

Dan Aykroyd is to launch a new record label, Blues Brothers Records.

The label will be an offshoot of Blue Note Records and is a joint venture with Judith Belushi Pisano, the widow of Aykroyd’s Blues Brothers co-star, John Belushi.

Billboard reports that Blue Note president Don Was will look after A&R, Judy Belushi will act as creative director and Blues Brothers manager Eric Gardner will run the administrative side of the label.

“Blues Brothers will sign and develop blues artists, both newcomers and veteran acts, with an eye toward employing Aykroyd’s multiple blues platforms for promotional purposes,” runs the Billboard story.

“[Aykroyd] has been a beacon for decades for the blues, one of the most challenging [genres] to get into the commercial marketplace,” said Eric Gardner. “In the digital age a lot of labels don’t have the wherewithal or the financing to have strong digital strategies and I think that has led to the paucity of strong blues labels. We’re almost thinking of this as a public service for dedicated blues enthusiasts.”

Directed by John Landis, The Blues Brothers was released in 1980, based around characters Aykroyd and Belushi created for Saturday Night Live.

In 1992, Aykroyd co-founded the House Of Blues venues.

Rolling Stone reports that he has hosted the syndicated radio showcase Elwood’s BluesMobile for over 22 years.

World’s biggest record collection to become vinyl library

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The world's biggest record collection is to be turned into a vinyl library, according to a report on BBC News. Brazilian collector Zero Freitas has amassed over 5 million records, which he employs a team of college interns to catalogue. Speaking to the BBC, Freitas - who owns a private bus line ...

The world’s biggest record collection is to be turned into a vinyl library, according to a report on BBC News.

Brazilian collector Zero Freitas has amassed over 5 million records, which he employs a team of college interns to catalogue.

Speaking to the BBC, Freitas – who owns a private bus line in the São Paulo suburbs – outlines his plans to create a searchable collection for public use.

“We hope people will be able to select records through our collection and listen to the music,” says Freitas. “The relationship people have with certain songs is subjective and personal. I want to share this with people and make it possible for them to recall their memories.”

You can read more on this story at Fact Magazine and The New York Times.

 

 

Robert Plant announces summer tour dates

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Robert Plant has announced details of an upcoming North American tour. Plant will hit the road with the Sensational Space Shifters in support of lullaby... and The Ceaseless Roar. He tours North America during May and June, with Pixies opening in Chicago, Philadelphia, Toronto, Rochester Hills ...

Robert Plant has announced details of an upcoming North American tour.

Plant will hit the road with the Sensational Space Shifters in support of lullaby… and The Ceaseless Roar.

He tours North America during May and June, with Pixies opening in Chicago, Philadelphia, Toronto, Rochester Hills and Raleigh. Meanwhile, singer-songwriter JD McPherson fills in on the remaining dates.

You can read our a long interview with Robert Plant here

Plant is due to release a new EP, More Roar, for Record Store Day. The EP will feature live versions of the …Ceaseless Roar tracks “Turn It Up” and “Arbaden” on Side A, with a medley of “Poor Howard” and “Whole Lotta Love” on Side B.

Tickets for the tour go on sale this Friday (March 20). Full dates can be found at Plant’s official website.

Full North American tour dates:

MAY
24 – George, WA – Sasquatch! Festival
25 – Bend, OR – Les Schwab Amphitheater
27 – Salt Lake City, UT – The Depot #
28 – Las Vegas, NV – Brooklyn Bowl #
30 – Napa, CA – BottleRock Festival
31 – Santa Barbara, CA – Santa Barbara Bowl #

JUNE
2 – Los, Angeles, CA – Greek Theatre #
5 – Hunter, NY – Mountain Jam Festival
7 – Toronto, ONT – Molson Amphitheatre %
9 – Rochester Hills, MI – Meadowbrook Music Festival %
10 – Chicago, IL – FirstMerit Bank Pavilion @ Northerly Island %
12 – Memphis, TN – Mud Island Amphitheatre
12 – 14 – Manchester, TN – Bonnaroo Festival
15 – Raleigh, NC – Koka Booth Amphitheater %
17 – Philadelphia, PA – Mann Center %

# JD McPherson support
% Pixies support

Steve Earle & The Dukes – Terraplane

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Steve Earle has earned the indulgences and deferences of statesmanhood: the discography he has assembled these last thirty years is marvellous and important. Not for the first time, however, Earle has released an album which prompts the wish that he’d stop being quite so statesmanlike. Terraplane ...

Steve Earle has earned the indulgences and deferences of statesmanhood: the discography he has assembled these last thirty years is marvellous and important. Not for the first time, however, Earle has released an album which prompts the wish that he’d stop being quite so statesmanlike. Terraplane – the title alludes to Robert Johnson’s “Terraplane Blues” – is Earle’s blues album, the sort of thing artists of a certain age and gravitas tend to release when they feel they’re entitled to, akin to a distinguished bishop having a go at saying mass in Aramaic, as if to demonstrate that he could totally have mixed it with his legendary forebears.

Terraplane is a perfectly decent blues album. It’s beautifully played, and Earle’s songs are respectful of their heritage while (mostly) sufficiently confident and idiosyncratic to transcend pastiche. It’s just difficult to believe that this is the best imaginable use of Earle’s time and talents.

Click here to read Steve Earle on the best albums of his career

Even the title of the opening track, “Baby Baby Baby (Baby)”, self-mockingly admits a tendency towards the generic, and the song does not disappoint at least in that respect: a twelve-bar plod which sounds written as it went along. There’s a stretch too much of this sort of thing: see also “You’re The Best Lover That I Ever Had”, “Gamblin’ Blues” and “Acquainted The Wind”. The latter suffers especially from being irresistibly evocative of Spinal Tap’s early incarnation The Thamesmen playing their hit song “Gimme Some Money”.

The lighter the shade of blues, the better Terraplane sounds. “Ain’t Nobody’s Baby Now” is a winning back-porch strum, “Go Go Boots Are Back” revives the Stonesy sleaze of vintage Dukes, and “Baby’s Just As Mean As Me” is a lovely, waspish duet with Dukes violinist  y. But Earle’s last real classic, 2002’s Jerusalem, is now more than a decade behind him. Word is that Earle’s next album will be a determinedly country one: an appealing prospect, but perhaps less so than just letting Earle be Earle.

Toto bassist Mike Porcaro dies, aged 59

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Mike Porcaro, Toto's bass player, has died aged 59. Rolling Stone reports that Pocaro [above; far left] passed away on March 15 following a battle with Lou Gehrig's Disease, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The news was confirmed by Porcaro's brother, Steve - the band's keyboardist - v...

Mike Porcaro, Toto’s bass player, has died aged 59.

Rolling Stone reports that Pocaro [above; far left] passed away on March 15 following a battle with Lou Gehrig’s Disease, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

The news was confirmed by Porcaro’s brother, Steve – the band’s keyboardist – via Facebook.

“Our brother Mike passed away peacefully in his sleep at 12:04 AM last night at home surrounded by his family,” he posted. “Rest in peace, my brother.”

Porcaro joined his brothers Steve and Jeff as a member of Toto in 1984, playing on the band’s singles, “Rosanna” and “Africa“.

Jeff Porcaro died in 1992. Mike, meanwhile, stopped touring in the mid-2000s due to declining health, but was inducted into the Musician’s Hall of Fame alongside the band in 2009.

Toto are due to release a new album, Toto XIV, in March, with a European tour to follow in May.

Pops Staples – Don’t Lose This

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Roebuck “Pops” Staples left it until late in his seventh decade before embarking on a solo career. Until that point he had been the mentor of his family gospel group, the Staple Singers, guiding them through 30 years of progress to international fame. Only when Mavis, his younger daughter and th...

Roebuck “Pops” Staples left it until late in his seventh decade before embarking on a solo career. Until that point he had been the mentor of his family gospel group, the Staple Singers, guiding them through 30 years of progress to international fame. Only when Mavis, his younger daughter and the group’s lead singer, decided to strike out on her own did he take the chance to step into the spotlight himself.

Not that he made much of a fuss about it. Anyone who met Pops Staples before his death in 2000, at the age of 85, recognised that here was a man of quiet modesty, who lived by the words he sang. His gentle vocal delivery and his distinctive reverb-soaked guitar tone were of a piece with that wise humility.

Musicians loved him. Ask Curtis Mayfield, who built his early hits songs on an adaptation of that guitar sound. Or Ry Cooder, who co-produced the two solo albums released during Pops’ lifetime: Peace To The Neighborhood (1992) and Father, Father (1994). They knew that this was a man who, born in 1914, grew up picking cotton on Will Dockery’s plantation in Sunflower County, Mississippi, where he heard Charley Patton play in front of the general store. At 12 years of age Roebuck got his first guitar, and learnt to play the blues – although later on he averred that his heart was never in it.

He made the classic migration north to Chicago in 1935, a handful of dollars in his pocket. Within a year his earnings from a job in the stockyards enabled him to call his wife and the first of their children to join him. He abandoned the guitar for 10 years, but hearing Big Bill Broonzy and others inspired him to buy a new instrument and rediscover his skills. Soon he was performing gospel songs in storefront churches, and teaching his growing family to sing along in simple harmony. Their recording career began in 1952 and the run of hits lasted until “Respect Yourself” and “I’ll Take You There” brought them a global audience 20 years later.

The first of his solo albums was nominated for a Grammy and the second actually won one. When he died he left a number of unfinished tracks in Mavis’s keeping; they now see the light of day as Don’t Lose This, restored and refurbished by Wilco’s Jeff Tweedy, who produced Mavis’s well received albums You Are Not Alone and One True Vine in 2010 and 2013 respectively.

The Wilco frontman knows not to try anything fancy with this material. There’s a hint of Americana in the rustic-sounding drums, but no post-production tricks are allowed to get in the way of the signature Staples sound. Roebuck’s lead vocals, with that confiding intimacy that made him sound like the precursor of Bill Withers, take centre-stage on songs such as “Somebody is Watching Me” and “Friendship”, while Mavis steps forward from time to time, notably on “Love On My Side”.

The guitar is at full strength on “Nobody’s Fault But Mine”, unaccompanied but as big as any band (interestingly, Roebuck seemed to be able to get his signature sound on any combination of equipment, from the Gibson Les Paul and matching amp set-up of his ’50s VeeJay sides to the Stratocaster and Fender Twin of his later years). On the slinky groove of “The Lady’s Letter”, the family vocal blend first supports him and then takes over for a nostalgic chorus (“Hmm,” Roebuck murmurs appreciately as the track ends). On “Better Home”, Mavis wraps her voice around his with infinite tenderness in a gorgeous duet. There’s an appealing remake of “Will The Circle Be Unbroken”, one of the Staple Singers’ early hits, and the album closes with a driving live version of Dylan’s gospel-blues “Gotta Serve Somebody”, reminding us that Bob once unsuccessfully proposed marriage to Mavis.

However much work Tweedy needed to do to complete this record, the result is never lacking in sensitivity, authenticity or integrity. “What do you think?” Pops asks his daughter as the last notes of the lovely “Sweet Home” die away. “I think it’s good, Daddy,” Mavis replies. I’ll go with that, and raise the mark a notch for the very fact of the album’s existence.

 

Jarvis Cocker rejects modern technology

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Jarvis Cocker has penned a "Nu-Troglodyte Manifesto" which extols the virtues of benefits of living offline. The manifesto, which has been published in Another Man, envisages "no phone reception. No wi-fi. No TV. No radio". "Now it's time to come home," he wrote. "Time to come back to the source. ...

Jarvis Cocker has penned a “Nu-Troglodyte Manifesto” which extols the virtues of benefits of living offline.

The manifesto, which has been published in Another Man, envisages “no phone reception. No wi-fi. No TV. No radio”.

“Now it’s time to come home,” he wrote. “Time to come back to the source. Time to escape the constant, endless, meaningless jabbering that distracts you from who you really are and what you really want to do.”

Meanwhile, Cocker has returned to BBC 6 Music, where his Sunday Service show resumed on March 1.

Record Store Day “is dying”, say independent labels

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Two independent labels, Sonic Cathedral and Howling Owl, have claimed that Record Store Day is "not beneficial to small labels." The labels have joined forces to release a new split single - Spectres and Lorelle Meets The Obsolete covering each others’ songs - one copy of which will be released ...

Two independent labels, Sonic Cathedral and Howling Owl, have claimed that Record Store Day is “not beneficial to small labels.”

The labels have joined forces to release a new split single – Spectres and Lorelle Meets The Obsolete covering each others’ songs – one copy of which will be released every day for the next year.

Their intention is highlight the way Record Store Day has become co-opted into the music industry calender to the detriment of smaller labels.

The labels have released a joint statement which list their motive as trying to illustrate “how every day should be record store day” and that the current Record Store Day “rules and regulations” mean that it’s “not beneficial to small, backs to the wall labels”.

Read the full statement below:

“We are releasing one copy a day for a whole year via selected shops and Recordstoredayisdying.com to make some sort of point about how every day should be record store day, and because it seemed like an amusing, foolhardy thing to do. Make no mistake, though, this is not a protest against record shops, because we love record shops (some copies of this record will actually be available in them). It’s not even really a protest against Record Store Day, which is essentially a good idea, or was when it began in 2007, even if it is far too focused on ‘product’ rather than the actual shop spaces and their role in the communities they serve.”

“If it’s a protest against anything, it’s what Record Store Day has become: just another event in the annual music industry circus that begins with the BBC Sound Of… list and ends with the Mercury Prize, co-opted by major labels and used as another marketing stepping stone, like an appearance on ‘Later… With Jools Holland’ or bagging the sunset slot at Glasto. If you want to queue up from the early hours of April 18 to buy Mumford & Sons’ 7” or an overpriced Noel Gallagher 12” to flip on eBay, then fine, but what the hell has it got to do with us? U2 have already shat their album into our iTunes, why should they constipate the world’s pressing plants with it too? And there’s a picture disc of A-ha’s ‘Take On Me’ as well. Of course it’s a fine pop single, but there’s bound to be a copy in the Oxfam around the corner.”

“No, because of the rules and regulations (minimum pressing amounts, no direct to customer sales, blah blah blah) Record Store Day really isn’t fun, and it’s certainly not beneficial to small, backs to the wall labels like Sonic Cathedral and Howling Owl. But we are still affected by it. Badly. There are currently no copies of Spectres’ album ‘Dying’ on vinyl in the shops because the repress is somewhere towards the back of the queue after some Foo Fighters studio scrapings, a host of EPs by The 1975 and about a million heavyweight ‘heritage rock’ reissues that no-one really needs. Less Cheap Trick, more bloody expensive con.”

“The final irony was getting a call to say that this very 7” was going to be delayed and might not be shipped until after Record Store Day. We’ve switched plants, and fingers crossed they will appear on time for the first copy to go on sale on April 18. If they don’t, well, there are 364 other days on which to buy and release records…”

This year, Record Store Day takes place on April 18.

Paul Weller joined on stage by Mick Jones

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Paul Weller was joined on stage by Mick Jones last night [March 12]. The show, at Victoria Hall, Stoke-on-Trent, was part of Weller's current tour. The two played "The Changingman". Jones has recently been producing Sugarmen, the support band at the Stoke show, at Weller's Black Barn studios. ht...

Paul Weller was joined on stage by Mick Jones last night [March 12].

The show, at Victoria Hall, Stoke-on-Trent, was part of Weller’s current tour.

The two played “The Changingman“.

Jones has recently been producing Sugarmen, the support band at the Stoke show, at Weller’s Black Barn studios.

Weller releases his latest album, Saturns Pattern, on May 11 on his new label Parlophone. You can hear the first track from the album, “White Sky“, below.

 

Duke Garwood – Heavy Love

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Though Neil Young gave extensive instructions on how not to fade away, he declined to discuss the benefits of fading in. There are, of course, a great deal of positives to be taken from plying your trade in the gutter before heading for the spotlight, and Duke Garwood is a perfect example. Now in h...

Though Neil Young gave extensive instructions on how not to fade away, he declined to discuss the benefits of fading in. There are, of course, a great deal of positives to be taken from plying your trade in the gutter before heading for the spotlight, and Duke Garwood is a perfect example.

Now in his early forties, the Kent-born guitarist, singer and songwriter has been involved in music for decades. As well as releasing four previous albums under his own name, Garwood has played guitar with The Orb, been a member of Inchworm and Little Wet Horse, and provided horns on record for the likes of Savages (whose Jehnny Beth appears on “Heavy Love” itself) and the Archie Bronson Outfit; yet only in recent years has he received notable attention.

The unlikely patron who has helped Garwood reach a new audience is Mark Lanegan; recognising a kindred spirit, the former Screaming Tree and Queen Of The Stone Age organised for the pair to record an album as a duo, released in 2013 as Black Pudding, and much of Heavy Love was tracked at Josh Homme’s Pink Duck studio in Los Angeles after wrapping those sessions with Lanegan.

While Black Pudding featured primarily steel-string reveries, Heavy Love is mostly electric, though like its spiritual predecessor, and his previous albums, it takes its roots from the Delta. If the ten tracks here are closest to blues, though, they are wonderfully warped and narcotically sluggish mutations, as well as beautifully stripped-down. Lyrics are repeated abstractedly as if they’ve just come to mind, the music rarely strays from one chord or key, and deconstructed riffs circle ominously.

With songs as spectral and hushed as these, sympathetic production is crucial, and the subtle textures and atmospheric touches are perfectly tailored. “Burning Seas” features only Garwood’s single-tracked voice, a guitar woozy with vibrato, and some backwards tones, while “Sweet Wine” is just guitar and vocals, with a ghostly organ intruding, as though it’s being played softly by the neighbours.

On other cuts, the instrumentation is broader, though only just: “Disco Lights” is a sultry delight in swung 6/8, Paul May’s jazzy drums lifted by a mass of echoed guitars on the edge of feedback, while “Snake Man” floats by on a bed of muffled drums and grainy shaker. The whole trip is swathed in luminous reverb, threading a sumptuous twilight feel throughout the album; at times listening to Heavy Love is like happily drowning in honey.

Its blues is global, too; the sound of West Africa lurks like a watermark, as on the closing epic, “Hawaiian Death Song”, with its desert drones and sinuous, fingerpicked electric. It comes as little surprise to discover that Garwood has previously collaborated with the Master Musicians Of Jajouka and Tinariwen.

As his sound has matured and grown organically across his solo albums, Garwood has developed into an evocative lyricist and singer. Unsurprisingly, Heavy Love is deeply concerned with matters of the heart. Throughout, love is portrayed as a drug, an obsession that could at any point turn poisonous. “Love is all there is,” he mutters on the title track, before imploring his lover to crush his chest, so they “can take all of me”; on “Burning Seas”, he describes his paramour and he, deliciously, as “bound by sin”.

It’s not hard to see why Mark Lanegan has long been enamoured with Garwood – the pair share similar tattered and guttural voices, which both reveal beautifully soulful nuance. The only real weakness in Heavy Love is the slight sense of artifice involved in Garwood’s transatlantic accent; a necessary evil, perhaps, as his native intonation would likely not blend into the smoky background so well.

One benefit of getting older is often a kind of acceptance of yourself, of feeling more comfortable in your own skin. With his fifth album, you get the impression Garwood is making precisely the kind of music he wants to make, with no thought for anything but self-expression. As a result, Heavy Love is a supremely self-confident record, ten brackish mood pictures that swell out of your stereo like the most redolent film soundtracks. If this is what Garwood has been working towards, then those decades spent honing his craft were surely worth it. After all, it takes a lot of effort to make something so gloriously effortless.

Q&A

Duke Garwood

You’re increasingly getting better known… is it good this is happening when you’re a bit older?

Yeah I think so. I had very high aspirations when I was young, and unfortunately my technique and maturity maybe couldn’t quite live up to them. And so my music might have sounded very ambitious, but like I was scratching at something rather than actually holding it. Now I’ve got the chops, and I’ve got the understanding to know when something isn’t working. Some people keep kicking at the thing until it falls over; I don’t really like treating music quite so harshly as that.

How was the writing process for the album?

There isn’t a song on there that hasn’t done quite a lot of gig time. Those tunes have been worked and worked and worked. You know, I’m playing all the time, and in however many hours of playing maybe a small song will appear, in the flow of it. But like I say those tunes are battle ready on that record. I can play them all, the only one I’ve never played live is Snakeman, which is kind of a sort of little strange piece on there, this unusual one in a sense, compared to the rest of them. I wouldn’t mind doing that live, maybe with Prince or something [laughs].

What was Mark Lanegan like to work with?

He’s inspiring because his internal editing machine is very good. He’s very sharp. So if something’s not happening, it’s out. It’s deleted. It’s not saved for a rainy day or something. And when he gets on the mic in the studio that’s when you see that he’s such a heavyweight, because he completely nails it so precisely. It was quite amazing. Inspiring cat.

Interview: Tom Pinnock

 

 

 

 

 

 

Daevid Allen: “Absurdism is the highest form of comedy”

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By way of tribute to Daevid Allen, whose death was confirmed earlier today, we thought we'd post John Lewis' Gong feature from Uncut, issue 149.  Featuring an extensive interview with Allen, as well as other key players in the Gong story, it's a predictably whimsical, meandering trip through A...

By way of tribute to Daevid Allen, whose death was confirmed earlier today, we thought we’d post John Lewis’ Gong feature from Uncut, issue 149.  Featuring an extensive interview with Allen, as well as other key players in the Gong story, it’s a predictably whimsical, meandering trip through Allen’s mind.

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Gong, Uncut issue 149
Gong, Uncut issue 149

Strange Brew

France, the late ’60s. A motley international band of beat poets, “space whisperers” and potheaded pixies set up a commune in the woods outside Paris. Here, they drop LSD, duet with kettles, watch out for UFOs and begin an extraordinary musical trip that has lasted 40 years. Bonjour, GONG…

“The problem always is that when aliens appear on Earth, most people are just going to be scared and they’ll want to kill them. This is why aliens have tried to prepare the way through my music, by creating a strange, new sound.”

This could be the ramblings of a Lee Scratch Perry, a Sun Ra, or a George Clinton. But the words are coming out of the mouth of Daevid Allen, an entirely plausible-sounding Australian, nursing a half-pint of lager while explaining the philosophy of his band, Gong.

“It sounds bonkers, but I always had a sense of being contacted by another planet of intelligent beings, who wanted to help the Earth people. They figured the way to do this was to find certain bands, use them as a vehicle for their strange noises, and prepare the way for a peaceful arrival. So, when they appear in the year 2032, if you’ve been listening to our music, there’s no reason to be afraid of them.” This strange mix of conspiracy theory and surrealist whimsy is classic Gong, a band who provide the missing link between vintage psychedelia and latterday rave culture. For the past 40 years Daevid Allen – together with a cast of sidekicks that’s almost as large as the alumni of the Fall – has sung about flying teapots and pothead pixies, about magic bananas and Foster’s lager, about aliens and electric cheese. It’s all been set to a strange and highly musicianly blend of psychedelia, beat poetry, jazz improvisation, tape loops, prog rock and Indian drones, and has proved enduringly popular to three generations of revolutionary socialists, anarchists, occultists, UFOlogists, hippies and crusties. Four decades after their birth, Gong find themselves headlining at Massive Attack’s Meltdown, and playing a pulsating, three-hour set at the Glades stage at Glastonbury in front of thousands of ravers.

Unheard Bill Hicks material to be released

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Bill Hicks' entire catalogue of stand-up comedy albums and specials are to be reissued, beginning next month. The late comedian's entire discography - Arizona Bay, Dangerous, Flying Saucer Tour Vol. 1, 12/16/1961, Love, Laughter And Truth, The Adventure, Philosophy, Rant In E-Minor, Relentless, Rev...

Bill Hicks‘ entire catalogue of stand-up comedy albums and specials are to be reissued, beginning next month.

The late comedian’s entire discography – Arizona Bay, Dangerous, Flying Saucer Tour Vol. 1, 12/16/1961, Love, Laughter And Truth, The Adventure, Philosophy, Rant In E-Minor, Relentless, Revelations and Salvation – will be made available digitally beginning April 28.

The Bill Hicks Collection
The Bill Hicks Collection

On the same date, Hicks’ video catalogue will be made avaiable through Comedy Dynamics’ VOD streaming platform – It’s Just A Ride, One Night Stand, Totally Bill Hicks, Relentless, Revelations and Sane Man.

A DVD boxed set of video catalog will be released on August 18.

Meanwhile, an album of previously unreleased audio material will be available October 27.

Hicks died in 1994 aged 32.

Daevid Allen dies aged 77

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Daevid Allen has died aged 77. The Guardian reports that Allen's son, Orlando Monday Allen, confirmed the news earlier on Facebook. Allen, the leader of the prog-jazz group Gong, had been suffering from cancer. Orlando Monday wrote, "And so dada Ali, bert camembert, the dingo Virgin, divided alie...

Daevid Allen has died aged 77.

The Guardian reports that Allen’s son, Orlando Monday Allen, confirmed the news earlier on Facebook.

Allen, the leader of the prog-jazz group Gong, had been suffering from cancer.

Orlando Monday wrote, “And so dada Ali, bert camembert, the dingo Virgin, divided alien and his other 12 selves prepare to pass up the oily way and back to the planet of love. And I rejoice and give thanks… The gong vibration will forever sound and its vibration will always lift and enhance. You have left such a beautiful legacy and we will make sure it forever shines in our children and their children. Now is the happiest time of yr life. Blessed be.”

Allen was born in Melbourne, Australia, in 1938. He moved to the UK in the early Sixties, where in 1966 he became founding guitarist of the Soft Machine, along side Robert Wyatt, Kevin Ayers and Mike Ratledge.

While in France in 1967, Allen was denied re-entry back to the United Kingdom following a visa complication; he stayed behind, effectively leaving the Soft Machine.

His next project, Gong, became Allen’s defining life’s work, reflecting many of the best qualities of the era in its warm embracing of psychedelia, prog, avant garde music and poetry.

Gong released their debut album, Magick Brother, in 1970.

Meanwhile, Allen released his solo debut, Banana Moon in 1971; the same year as Gong’s Camembert Electrique.

Between 1973 and 1974, Gong recorded their Radio Gnome Trilogy, made up of the albums Flying Teapots, Angel’s Egg and You.

Allen left Gong in 1975; although he resurrected the name in the late Eighties.

In 1992, the band released the Shapeshifter album, which Allen considered a continuation of the Radio Gnome project.

Allen continued to play with Gong until 2014. In February this year, he released a statement outlining the status of his health.

“The cancer is now so well established that I have now been given approximately six months to live,” he wrote, saying he was “not interested in endless surgical operations and in fact it has come as a relief to know that the end is in sight. I am a great believer in ‘The Will of the Way Things Are’ and I also believe that the time has come to stop resisting and denying and to surrender to the way it is.”

The Clash’s 30 best songs

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This Top 30 originally appeared in Uncut's December 2003 issue... 30 This Is England Single A-side, September 1985, from the album Cut The Crap, November 1985 DON LETTS: I made a Clash documentary called Westway To The World. We stopped at Combat Rock, right? But to deny “This Is England” ...

This Top 30 originally appeared in Uncut’s December 2003 issue…

30 This Is England
Single A-side, September 1985, from the album Cut The Crap, November 1985

DON LETTS: I made a Clash documentary called Westway To The World. We stopped at Combat Rock, right? But to deny “This Is England” is a fantastic song is to not do Joe his full justice. It was a magic combination between Joe and Mick obviously, but this song points out what Joe’s part in that relationship was. I’m talking about lyrically and the ‘state of the country’ thing. That’s the reason I pick it out, and it’s a fantastic tune. I do agree with everybody that The Clash ended when Mick left, but “This Is England” is a tune that highlights what was great about Strummer. No disrespect to Mick, I even feel like saying ‘apologies to Mick’, but even he couldn’t take “This Is England” away from Joe as a great Clash record.

MARK RODGERS: Like so many of Joe’s songs, it’s just as relevant now as it was then. This is one of the great lost singles and the lines “I got my motorcycle jacket/ But I’m walking all the time” just about summed me up in ’85.

ANDREW WEATHERALL: I was disappointed by Cut The Crap, but “This Is England” still sounds a good song almost 20 years on. We talked about doing a cover of it when I was in Bocca Juniors, but the rest of the band told me to fuck off in the end.

ROB HUGHES: Guaranteed, no amount of revisionist thinking can save Cut The Crap from the turkey pile, but “This Is England” was the Jones-less Clash’s last great roar, in which Strummer seethes and writhes over a guttural guitar scrawl.

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29 Spanish Bombs
London Calling album track, December 1979

STEVE ERICKSON: Ricocheting back and forth across the 20th century, this is sweeping and cinematic, and works on every level it wants to, understanding that as dirty as the reality of the Spanish Civil War was – with communists selling out the revolution in order that Stalin could have his pact with Hitler – sometimes the power of a dream still supersedes history. Kind of like America, now I think about it. Images of Catalonia flaming in his eyes, Orwell might have hummed this in his bathtub in his last moments, dying like Marat or Morrison. At three-and-a-half minutes and 40 years long, it ends too soon.

BUTCH VIG: Joe didn’t have a really great voice by pop standards, but when you listen to a song like “Spanish Bombs”, he sounds like he’s on fire.

ROBERT ELMS: I love Spain, loved the heroic stories of the Civil War, loved the fact that The Clash also got into all that. Paul Simonon stayed at my house in Spain last year and I enjoyed the link.

ANDREW WEATHERALL: They did over-romanticise left-wing rebellion, but they were never too earnest or self-indulgent. They sang from the heart and wrote about what they knew about. That’s what marked them out and that’s why their records still sound so valid. Listening to “Spanish Bombs” is like looking at an old photo album.

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28 The Guns Of Brixton
London Calling album track, December 1979

DON LETTS: I think lyrically what Paul was trying to get out here he probably did better on “Red Angel Dragnet”, but “The Guns Of Brixton” is just a lot more personal. I’m a south London guy, I was in the Brixton riots and all that stuff. In fact, y’know that dread walking up to the policemen on the cover of Super Black Market Clash. Well, that’s me! It was actually taken in Notting Hill, not Brixton, but not a lot of people know that. Anyway, this song just captures the mood of what was going on in Brixton with the SUS laws and everything. Another south London thing, but one that was particularly poignant to black people.

JEFF KLEIN: I’m a huge guitar fan and this is incredible. It’s one of those songs you just put on and want to immediately jump around the room. A lot of their songs feel like huge anthems. I remember going to the movies as a kid and going to see Rocky, and when you come out you’re thinking you can kick everyone’s ass! And that’s what it was like listening to “The Guns Of Brixton”. When it’s over, you think, “All right! Bring on the establishment!”

JAY FARRAR: Paul Simonon at his best. It seems to me that The Clash used inspiration from Jamaican music to create their own art in the same way The Rolling Stones drew from American blues to create theirs. Great things happen when a cross-cultural influence takes hold.

STEVE WYNN: I remember the first time I heard London Calling and I knew instantly that I was listening to one of the best albums ever made. But when this final track of Side One came on, everything jumped to another level. Comparisons to classic albums by the Stones or Beatles give way to flashes of Scorsese or Coppola – I mean, “The Guns Of Brixton” feels more like a mini-movie than just another song on a record. It’s absolutely cinematic, dark, mysterious, and has one of the best bass lines ever. Oh, and the Jew’s harp. Who puts a Jew’s harp on a ‘punk rock’ record. Fearless, I tell you. Fearless.

Dave Clark Five: “We didn’t even go professional when we hit No 1!”

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Dave Clark explains how the Dave Clark Five created their huge hit “Glad All Over” in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2015 and out now. Clark and associates recall the mania that greeted them once they hit it big in the US, appearing on The Ed Sullivan Show just after The Beatles, and becom...

Dave Clark explains how the Dave Clark Five created their huge hit “Glad All Over” in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2015 and out now.

Clark and associates recall the mania that greeted them once they hit it big in the US, appearing on The Ed Sullivan Show just after The Beatles, and becoming the first British Invasion group to tour in America.

“We were selling between 120,000 and 180,000 copies a day [of ‘Glad All Over’] in the UK,” Clark recalls. “The record ended up selling over a million and a half to knock The Beatles off No 1. And the final tally was over 2,500,000.

“We were semi-professional, so the boys were still in offices and I was still doing stunt work. In fact, we were the only band in England where we actually topped the bill on Sunday Night At The London Palladium, and we were all still working. We didn’t even go professional when we had ‘Glad All Over’ at No 1. It was after that.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

Roger Daltrey: “There’s not enough anger in modern music”

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Roger Daltrey has spoken out about the current state of music. In a new interview with London's free newspaper, The Standard, Daltrey said, "There's not enough anger out there in the music," he said. "And theres not a lot of contemplation in the lyrics, it's all very sweet… but that's the iPhone ...

Roger Daltrey has spoken out about the current state of music.

In a new interview with London’s free newspaper, The Standard, Daltrey said, “There’s not enough anger out there in the music,” he said. “And theres not a lot of contemplation in the lyrics, it’s all very sweet… but that’s the iPhone generation.”

He continued to criticise the music industry, saying, “it’s been stolen. Nobody wants to put in any money on nurturing artists – if you don’t have the first hit, ‘Goodbye!’ In our days, people wanted to take chances and we were allowed to. The artists ran the business. Now, business runs the artists. You get accountants and lawyers basically deciding who’s going to make it and who’s not.”

You can read The Who’s 30 best songs as chosen by the band and their famous fans here

The Who are scheduled to play London’s Hyde Park on June 26 as part of their The Who Hits 50 tour. Daltrey confirmed it will be their last tour of this magnitude. “We will always do shows for charity, when we can, because it’s of enormous value to people and Pete [Townshend] and I love to play. But we won’t do long, schlepping tours. It’s killing us,” he explained.

Meanwhile, The Who are to release a seven-inch boxset of their first seven singles in April.

Watch Björk’s video for “Lionsong”

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Björk has released a video for "Lionsong", the latest track to be taken from her new album, Vulnicura. The video has been directed by Inez Van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin. Björk "Björk’s character for 'Lionsong' had to be smooth like a spider waiting in her web and seductive like a Baline...

Björk has released a video for “Lionsong“, the latest track to be taken from her new album, Vulnicura.

The video has been directed by Inez Van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin.

Björk
Björk

“Björk’s character for ‘Lionsong’ had to be smooth like a spider waiting in her web and seductive like a Balinese dancer cast in bronze,” Inez and Vinoodh told Noisey. “She is seen as if under a microscope, baring her heart while luring us inside the bloody galaxy of her own wound.”

Meanwhile, Björk’s exhibition at New York’s Museum of Modern Art opened earlier this week, on March 8. It runs until June 7.