Home Blog Page 396

Unheard Bill Hicks material to be released

0
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

0
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

0
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.

____________________

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.

____________________

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!”

0
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”

0
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”

0
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.

The 9th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

0
A quick reminder, first, that our new Ultimate Music Guide on Kate Bush has arrived in the shops on this beautiful - in London, at least, -spring morning. We have just done our inadvertent best to smash that mood of vernal optimism in the office by digging into the infernal drones of Jimmy Page's "...

A quick reminder, first, that our new Ultimate Music Guide on Kate Bush has arrived in the shops on this beautiful – in London, at least, -spring morning.

We have just done our inadvertent best to smash that mood of vernal optimism in the office by digging into the infernal drones of Jimmy Page’s “Lucifer Rising” score, from his new, none-more-black “Soundtracks” collection. Plenty here, though, of sunnier intent, not least Rob St John’s lulling “Surface Tension”, drawn in part from sound recordings of the wonderful River Lea, and the dramatic, kinetic new Holly Herndon album. See what you can find from this selection…

Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

1 The Weather Station – Loyalty (Paradise Of Bachelors)

2 Townes Van Zandt – The Nashville Sessions (Charly)

3 Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band – Velvets In The Dark/Koala Bears (Violette)

4 Bonnie Stillwatter – The Devil Is People (Temporary Residence)

5 Leon Bridges – Lisa Sawyer (Columbia)

6 Unknown Mortal Orchestra – Multi-Love (Jagjaguwar)

7 10,000 Maniacs – Twice Told Tales (Cleopatra)

8 Gnod – Infinity Machines (Rocket)

9 Daniel Bachman – River (Three-Lobed)

10 Godspeed You! Black Emperor – Asunder, Sweet And Other Distress (Constellation)

11 Gong – Camembert Electrique (Actuel/Charly)

12 Mbongwana Star – From Kinshasa (World Circuit)

13 [REDACTED]

14 Sun Kil Moon – Ali/Spinks 2 (Caldo Verde)

15 Tav Falco & Panther Burns – Hip Flask: An Introduction To Tav Falco & Panther Burns (Frinzy)

16 Booker T & The MGs – Hip Hug Her/Doin’ Our Thing (Rhino)

17 Thee Oh Sees – Mutilator Defeated At Last (Castle Face)

18 Procol Harum – Shine On Brightly (Regal Zonophone)

19 My Morning Jacket – The Waterfall (ATO)

20 Blanck Mass – Dumb Flesh (Sacred Bones)

21 Holly Herndon – Platform (4AD)

22 Rob St John – Surface Tension (Surface Tension)

23 Thurston Moore?John Moloney – Full Bleed (Northern Spy)

24 Vince Matthews & Jim Casey – The Kingston Springs Suite (Delmore Recordings)

25 Matthew E White – Fresh Blood (Domino)

26 Danny Kroha – Angels Watching Over Me (Third Man0

27 Todd Rundgren/ Emil Nikolaisen/Hans-Peter Lindstrøm – Runddans. (Smalltown Supersound.)

28 Jimmy Page – Soundtracks (Jimmy Page Productions)

29 Terakaft – Alone (Outhere)

Watch trailer for The Ecstasy Of Wilko Johnson documentary

0
A trailer has been released for The Ecstasy Of Wilko Johnson. The new documentary, directed by Julien Temple, will premier tomorrow [March 13] at the SXSW festival. Indiewire reports that the film documents what would've been Wilko Johnson's farewell tour; until he was given the all clear from can...

A trailer has been released for The Ecstasy Of Wilko Johnson.

The new documentary, directed by Julien Temple, will premier tomorrow [March 13] at the SXSW festival.

Indiewire reports that the film documents what would’ve been Wilko Johnson’s farewell tour; until he was given the all clear from cancer.

Wilko Johnson
Wilko Johnson

Temple previously filmed Johnson for his documentary on Dr Feelgood, Oil City Confidential.

Morrissey cancels gig ahead of UK shows

0
Morrissey cancelled a gig on Wednesday [March 10] in Holland due to ill health. The show was due to take place at the Poppodium 013 venue in Tilburg. The cancellation was confirmed by the venue, who issued the following statement: "We regret to inform you that Morrissey is forced to cancel tonigh...

Morrissey cancelled a gig on Wednesday [March 10] in Holland due to ill health.

The show was due to take place at the Poppodium 013 venue in Tilburg.

The cancellation was confirmed by the venue, who issued the following statement:

“We regret to inform you that Morrissey is forced to cancel tonight’s appearance in 013, Tilburg. Our stage crew, as well as Morrissey’s touring party were already setting up stage and all requirements for tonight’s show when we were informed by management that Morrissey is unable to perform tonight due to flu. At the moment we are trying to reschedule the date for later this month and will advise all ticket holders as soon as possible.”

Morrissey had previously postponed the same gig in December 2014.

Read The Smiths 30 best songs as chosen by the band and their famous fans

Meanwhile, Morrissey is scheduled to begin a UK tour this coming Friday, March 13.

Nottingham Capital FM Arena (March 13)
Bournemouth International Centre (14)
Cardiff Motorpoint Arena (18)
Leeds First Direct Arena (20)
Glasgow SSE Hydro (21)
Birmingham Barclaycard Arena (27)

Watch the trailer for the Kurt Cobain: Montage Of Heck documentary

0
The first trailer for the forthcoming Kurt Cobain documentary, Montage Of Heck, has been released. The documentary is released in the UK in April, following its premier at the Sundance Film Festival in January.It will receive an American television premiere on HBO on May 4 after showing at SXSW in ...

The first trailer for the forthcoming Kurt Cobain documentary, Montage Of Heck, has been released.

The documentary is released in the UK in April, following its premier at the Sundance Film Festival in January.It will receive an American television premiere on HBO on May 4 after showing at SXSW in Austin, Texas.

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

The documentary is directed by Brett Morgen, whose previous credits include The Rolling StonesCrossfire Hurricane, and executive produced by Cobain’s daughter, Frances Bean.

The film’s soundtrack will consist of previously unreleased Cobain songs, including a 12 minute acoustic number.

Hear new Sufjan Stevens track, “Should Have Known Better”

0
Sufjan Stevens has released a new track, "Should Have Know Better", from his upcoming album, Carrie & Lowell. Stevens has already released one track from the album, "No Shade In The Shadow Of The Cross". Sufjan Stevens Carrie & Lowell will be released March 30 on Stevens’ own Asthmatic...

Sufjan Stevens has released a new track, “Should Have Know Better“, from his upcoming album, Carrie & Lowell.

Stevens has already released one track from the album, “No Shade In The Shadow Of The Cross“.

Sufjan Stevens
Sufjan Stevens

Carrie & Lowell will be released March 30 on Stevens’ own Asthmatic Kitty Records.

You can read our exclusive interview with Stevens in the new Uncut; in shops now

Meanwhile, you can pre-order Carrie & Lowell by clicking here.

“Would you like to rehearse Bob Dylan for a week..?”

I interviewed Phil Manzanera in the current issue of Uncut for our regular An Audience With… feature. Among the questions he answered was one from a reader asking about the time he played with Bob Dylan in October 1991, when Manzanera was Musical Director of the Seville Guitar Legends festival. We...

I interviewed Phil Manzanera in the current issue of Uncut for our regular An Audience With… feature. Among the questions he answered was one from a reader asking about the time he played with Bob Dylan in October 1991, when Manzanera was Musical Director of the Seville Guitar Legends festival. We could only run an edited version of Manzanera’s reply, so I thought it would be fun to run the story here in its full glory…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

———-

I got asked, “Would you like to rehearse Bob Dylan for a week?” Because it’s 90 degrees, we were going to be underneath the stage in Seville, in an air conditioned room. I went out and bought all his albums, so I knew all the material. I got Jack Bruce on bass, I got the best drummer in the world, I got backing singers, I got everything you could possibly want. So Bob comes in with the manager. The manager says “Hi Phil, this is Bob…” Because I’m musical director of the whole bloody thing – and the tag is guitar legends – I had to say to him “We want to do ‘All Along The Watchtower‘. But we’re not doing your version we’re doing the Hendrix version.” So I held my breath. I’d read lots of instances of all these people like George Harrison working with Bob Dylan where they expect one thing and he doesn’t do it. So the manager says, “Bob might come on, he might not. If Bob doesn’t come on, then Jack, can you sing his song?” Jack Bruce is a fiery Scotsman and he replies, “Uh, fuck. I’m not bloody fucking singing songs.” So that was the way it progressed.

“All Along The Watchtower” has only got three chords. Dylan would rehearse with us, and he would wait and wait and while we’d play them over and over before he came in singing anything. He really was playing with us. At one point he said, “You know, I think we should all be acoustic…” Thinking about it now, he probably thought I was Mexican or something, because of my name, and he said, “Do you know that Tex Mex song from 1948 called blah blah…” I said “Mmmm, no. Jack do you know that?” Jack shakes his head and says, “No.” Then I asked our drummer, Simon Phillips. “Simon, do you know this song?” It turns out, he doesn’t either. I ask everyone, they all say no, they don’t know it. So I said, “I tell you what, Bob. You start playing it and we’ll just pick it up.” He played it differently every time. Soon, people started making excuses to leave the room. “I got to make a phone call, can I just…” I was left there with Bob. But I thought to myself, ‘You know he’s Bob Dylan he can do what the fuck he likes. I admire him so much, I don’t give a shit.’ I think Phil Ramone was in the truck. He had produced him, and over lunch one day he gave me a piece of advice. “Take whatever you can from him if he turns up.” It’s nothing personal.

I knew he liked Richard Thompson, so I rang up Richard who was playing in Holland or somewhere, and said “Richard, would you like to play with Dylan?” “Yeah sure!” He arrived, so I sent him in before the concert to find out what numbers Bob was going to do. He came out and said, “Right, we’re doing this and this…” So we went on stage. The manager had said, “If Bob does come on, make sure you introduce him.” So we went on stage – “It’s Bob Dylan!” – and of course he doesn’t play any of the numbers we rehearsed. We’re all looking at each other, wondering what key he was playing… But you know, he’s a genius. So who cares…

Hear new Tame Impala track, “Let It Happen”

0
Tame Impala have released a taster for their forthcoming new album. The track, "Let It Happen", is available as a free download from the band's website. The eight-minute long track is the first music to be released from the forthcoming album, the follow-up to the 2012's Lonerism. The band are due...

Tame Impala have released a taster for their forthcoming new album.

The track, “Let It Happen“, is available as a free download from the band’s website.

The eight-minute long track is the first music to be released from the forthcoming album, the follow-up to the 2012’s Lonerism.

The band are due to play some shows in the UK this coming September.

They will play at Glasgow Barrowland on September 8 and Liverpool Olympia on September 9 before heading to Bestival.

Bob Dylan, David Bowie, the White Stripes, the Jesus And Mary Chain, The Who, Bruce Springsteen announce Record Store Day releases

0
Bob Dylan, David Bowie, the White Stripes, the Jesus And Mary Chain, The Who, Bruce Springsteen and more are confirmed for this year’s Record Store Day. This year, Record Store Day takes place on April 18. You can find a full list of UK releases here. In the meantime, here are some of the vinyl...

Bob Dylan, David Bowie, the White Stripes, the Jesus And Mary Chain, The Who, Bruce Springsteen and more are confirmed for this year’s Record Store Day.

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

You can find a full list of UK releases here.

In the meantime, here are some of the vinyl highlights you can expect this year:

David Bowie. “Changes” 7”

Bob Dylan. “The Night We Called It A Day”/“Stay With Me”. 7”

Grateful Dead. Wake Up To Find Out: Nassau Coliseum, 3/29/90. LP

The Jesus And Mary Chain. Psychocandy. Live. Barrowlands. LP

Robert Plant. More Roar. 10”

Roxy Music. “Ladytron” / “The Numberer”. 10”

Small Faces. “Afterlow Of Your Love” / “Up The Wooden Hills To Bedfordshire” 7”

Bruce Springsteen. Born In The USA / Nebraska / The River / Darkness On The Edge Of Town / The Wild, The Innocent & The E Street Shuffle / Greetings From Ashbury Park, NJ / Born To Run. All separate LP

The White Stripes. Get Behind Me Satan. LP

The Who. “Get Lucky”. 7”

The Pop Group – Citizen Zombie

0
Of all the iconic post-punk bands who have reformed in the last decade, the one least likely to do it well - to do it at all - were The Pop Group. Formed in Bristol by boys so cool that they had embraced and rejected the Sex Pistols by the end of 1976 for being too rockist, they lasted just three y...

Of all the iconic post-punk bands who have reformed in the last decade, the one least likely to do it well – to do it at all – were The Pop Group.

Formed in Bristol by boys so cool that they had embraced and rejected the Sex Pistols by the end of 1976 for being too rockist, they lasted just three years, two albums (plus a compilation of early demos), a few dozen legendary shows and three singles that defined that puzzling but eternally underrated sub-genre called punk-funk even more perfectly than the Gang Of Four or James Chance. While Mark Stewart (vocals), Gareth Sager (guitar), Dan Catsis (bass) and Bruce Smith (drums) have all spent the last 35 years or so making worthwhile music, nothing came close to the legend of The Pop Group, whose sloganeering, conspiracy-theory socialism, manic free-jazz unpredictability and ironic band name gained a hipster frisson for simply being too perfect to last.

So the reunion for live shows in 2010 couldn’t help but provoke cynicism, none of which was helped by the news that super-producer Paul Epworth (Adele, Coldplay, Florence And The Machine, etc) was manning the helm on a comeback album. Nevertheless, from the opening testifying crackle and post-hip hop strut of the opener and title track, its clear that Mark Stewart’s life-long mission statement for The Pop Group – “uplifting, abrasive funk with something more weird and interesting than ‘I wanna shag you all night long’ going on over it” – is present and correct. “Your mind has been wiped clean,” Stewart’s distorted voice wails as “Citizen Zombie” drizzles to a standstill, the perennial Stewart theme of irrational denial of the system’s violence and injustice firmly re-established.

So, having been reassured that Citizen Zombie is less money-spinning nostalgia and more rabble-rousing surprise, it fits that the following “Mad Truth” is an altogether more forgiving beast, a joyous early ‘80s disco throwback where, as Sager does his best choppy Nile Rodgers impression, Stewart concedes, “Its hard to make a stand.” From there, any vague possibility that Citizen Zombie will be as dissonant as original albums Y and For How Much Longer Do We Tolerate Mass Murder is banished by “Nowhere Girl”, a dubwise love ballad scorched by Sager’s as-close-to-rock-as-its-polite-to-get guitar.

But the most striking thing about Citizen Zombie is how young and naïve and happy it all sounds. The blissfully dancey “S.O.P.H.I.A.” is a case in point. Stewart still talks fondly of the Bristol scene that spawned The Pop Group, a tribe who spent 1975-77 enthusing about books, politics and the clothes and attitude of the Sex Pistols before going out to dance to soul and funk at the city’s multi-racial blues nights and discos. “S.O.P.H.I.A.” channels that teenage joy, the delight in being white bohemians who play disco ever so slightly wrong. And as always, Stewart is unashamedly, deliberately hilarious, crooning “You took me to the edge of the night” like a drunk at a bus stop before hitting the Situationist hook with relish: “Assume nothing!/Deny everything!

The Pop Group have been given credit over the years for being original, subversive, prescient, clever, courageous… but rarely does anyone point out how funny they were. Epworth’s production – a perfect blend of 1979 surrealist angularity and 2015 machine-tooled gleam – emphasises and revels in this mischievous, celebratory side.

In other words, Citizen Zombie is The Pop Group album they were too at odds – with the world, with each other – to make 35 years ago. They were always inspired noise-mongers and sloganeers rather than great songwriters, and the likes of “Shadow Child”, “Box 9” and the obligatory anti-consumerist rant “Nations” probably won’t be making it into anyone’s Desert Island Discs. But Citizen Zombie has a coherence and warmth that only really surfaced, briefly and tantalisingly, first-time around, on the triptych of classic singles, “She Is Beyond Good And Evil”, “We Are All Prostitutes” and “Where There’s A Will”. In 2015, strangely, this makes The Pop Group finally sound like a pop group.

Q&A
Mark Stewart
Why did it take four years from the Pop Group live reunion in 2010 to releasing a new album?

“Me and Gareth had been writing the whole time while we got a five-year-plan together. Suddenly, out of the blue, I tweeted Paul Epworth because he’d been talking about us in an interview saying that we were a big influence. I asked him if he fancied doing anything with us and he came back in seconds and said it would be amazing. And the next week we were in the best studio in the world working on it. This was in September so it’s happening really, really fast… from four years to all engines go.”
What did Paul Epworth add to The Pop Group?
“He’s what they call in psychiatry an enabler. Paul had only just opened this studio and wanted us in to baptize it, and he was so excited about plugging all the machines in backwards… he was like a little tiny kid. We were allowed to play with the big boys’ toys… and cut their heads off.”
Your lyrics still demand revolution. You haven’t mellowed with age…
“Not at all. For me, it’s always about context. The fact that we’re using our own channels and distribution set-up means that at last we can do exactly what we wanna do. No censorship from outside capital. We’re more radical, to use an old word, than we ever were.”

INTERVIEW: GARRY MULHOLLAND

Ask Jim James!

0
With a new My Morning Jacket album The Waterfall due May 4 on ATO/Capitol Records, the band's Jim James 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 hirsuite frontman? How did he end up on the Lo...

With a new My Morning Jacket album The Waterfall due May 4 on ATO/Capitol Records, the band’s Jim James 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 hirsuite frontman?

How did he end up on the Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes album?
Why did he become involved with the Woody Guthrie tribute project, New Multitudes?
What are his memories of playing with Bob Dylan and Wilco on the AmericanaramA tour?

Send up your questions by noon, Friday, March 20 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

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

Please include your name and location with your question.

Unreleased acoustic Kurt Cobain song to appear on Montage Of Heck soundtrack

0
A previously unheard Kurt Cobain acoustic song is to appear on the soundtrack for the forthcoming documentary, Montage Of Heck. Writing on Twitter, the film's director Brett Morgen said: "Listening to a mind blowing 12 minute acoustic Cobain unheard track that will be heard on the montage of heck s...

A previously unheard Kurt Cobain acoustic song is to appear on the soundtrack for the forthcoming documentary, Montage Of Heck.

Writing on Twitter, the film’s director Brett Morgen said: “Listening to a mind blowing 12 minute acoustic Cobain unheard track that will be heard on the montage of heck soundtrack.”

Morgen, whose previous credits include the Rolling Stones’ documentary Crossfire Hurricane, debuted Montage Of Heck at the Sundance Film Festival in January. The film will be released in the UK on April 10.

Speaking to Rolling Stone, Morgen revealed that the score for the documentary consists of “unreleased Cobain music.

“They don’t have titles. Before people saw the movie, there were these weird press releases focusing on the unreleased music. And it’s like: It’s a movie. We’re not going to stop it and play a song for four minutes,” Morgen said. “But nobody in Kurt’s life — not his management, wife, bandmates — had ever heard his Beatles thing [a snippet of ‘And I Love Her’]. I found it on a random tape. It’s a Paul [McCartney] song. How’s that for shattering the myth?”

Introducing: Kate Bush – The Ultimate Music Guide

0
As usual with these things, editing Uncut's new Ultimate Music Guide: Kate Bush dug up a lot of strange, revealing old business from the NME and Melody Maker archives, not least an autumn 1980 piece which found an over-excited MM journalist in a Munich TV studio, watching Kate Bush put a double bass...

As usual with these things, editing Uncut’s new Ultimate Music Guide: Kate Bush dug up a lot of strange, revealing old business from the NME and Melody Maker archives, not least an autumn 1980 piece which found an over-excited MM journalist in a Munich TV studio, watching Kate Bush put a double bass through its paces while she performed “Babooshka”.

Once the show – and the problematically ripe descriptions – were over, though, the interview with Bush is fascinating, as you can see if you pick up the Ultimate Music Guide (it’s on sale in UK stores on Thursday, but is already available here). Bush talks about wanting to tour again, about the books and films that have influenced her, about the permeable lines between confession and fiction.

“I rarely write purely personal songs from experience,” she says. “I worry about being too indulgent and giving too much away.” A little later, she is discussing the specifics of “Army Dreamers”, sung from the perspective of a mother mourning a son killed in action. “I seem to link on to mothers rather well,” she admits. “I find it fascinating about mothers, that there’s something in there, a kind of maternal passion which is there all the time, even when they’re talking about cheese sandwiches. Sometimes it can be very possessive, sometimes it’s very real.”

Even at her most elliptical, there is a clarity and consistency to Kate Bush which, looking back, seems a lot more obvious now than it might have done at the time. Latterly, for instance, the maternal fortitude implied in 1980 has become an explicit part of the most recent phase of her career, culminating in Before The Dawn – a theatrical spectacular inspired by her son Bertie McIntosh, and a showcase of his talents as a “very talented actor and beautiful singer,” as his mother wrote in her programme notes.

In the aftermath of Before The Dawn, it feels like the perfect time for us to consider, in depth, the whole story of Kate Bush. To that end, our latest Uncut Ultimate Music Guide features forensic new essays on every one of her albums, presented alongside a host of those long-unseen interviews. They show an artist who slowly gains the confidence to assert herself and – very slowly – gains the respect of the press. But also one whose idiosyncratic vision, and whose determination to bring that vision to fruition, has been there right from the start.

“There are always so many voices telling me what to do that you can’t listen to them,” she told another Melody Maker journalist in 1985, a genius on her own remarkable trajectory. “All I ever do is listen to the little voices inside me. I don’t want to disappoint the little voices that have been so good to me…”

 

 

 

The Pretty Things – Bouquets From A Cloudy Sky

0
The Pretties were one of the more dynamic proponents of the British R’n’B boom, perennially tipped for stardom, and admired by their peers: the young David Bowie, for one, was apparently so besotted with the band that he filed singer Phil May’s phone number under “God” in his address book....

The Pretties were one of the more dynamic proponents of the British R’n’B boom, perennially tipped for stardom, and admired by their peers: the young David Bowie, for one, was apparently so besotted with the band that he filed singer Phil May’s phone number under “God” in his address book. But their course was pitted with missteps and misfortune, mostly self-imposed by their anarchic reputation. May was famously reputed to possess the longest hair in the country, which helped make the band prime tabloid targets; and drummer Viv Prince was so drunkenly uncontrollable that he seemed to court antagonism everywhere he went – Fontana’s head of A&R head refused to have anything to do with the band after Prince puked over his drums in the studio.

Other decisions proved ill-judged. Their singles weren’t included on their albums. Their first original song, “We’ll Be Together”, was about prostitution. Another was called, somewhat bluntly, “LSD”. And due to one of their most potent singles, “Don’t Bring Me Down”, including the line “And then I laid her on the ground”, it was effectively denied the chance of widespread airplay, especially in America. Then, when they should have been capitalising on early inroads into the American market, they were instead shipped off to tour that hotbed of rock’n’roll fever, New Zealand – where they triggered such a riotous response that they were promptly shipped right back, banned from ever entering the country again. At every turn, it seemed The Pretty Things were determined to sabotage their own career.

Given which, it’s astonishing that they managed to come up with several of the most thrilling pieces of primal UK R’n’B, before going on to invent the rock opera, following one of the more creatively intriguing examples of ’60s pop’s transition from mod to psychedelia.

Their position in pop history is undeniable. Guitarist Dick Taylor founded The Rolling Stones with Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, before hooking up with fellow art student Phil May to form the Pretties. They would subsequently share a house – in Belgravia, no less – with Brian Jones; their raucous lifestyle there was celebrated in the song “13 Chester Street”, a “Not Fade Away” soundalike whose rhythm track featured Viv Prince’s leather belt being whipped against a chair. Prince’s avalanche drums were a crucial element of early successes like their visceral debut single “Rosalyn”, the musical embodiment of a primal urge with the waspish appeal of the early Stones. It’s one of the era’s emblematic recordings, as is its follow-up “Don’t Bring Me Down”, a blast of feral momentum periodically arrested by a sexually frustrated stop/start structure.

Their eponymous debut album was mostly R’n’B covers by the likes of Bo Diddley and Jimmy Reed, lusty plaints given a pulsing pep-pill throb by the band’s whipcord-thin sound and May’s louche, laconic vocal sneer. The follow-up Get The Picture? featured more of their own material alongside covers of Ike Turner and Solomon Burke songs, but was mostly notable for the broadening of their approach, with fuzz-guitar effects, reverbed harmony vocals and odd chord-changes featured on some tracks. But when Fontana, frustrated at the failure of singles like “Midnight To Six Man” and “Come See Me” (both of which sound stunning half a century on), saddled them with string and brass arrangers and Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich’s producer, the Pretties lost interest in the subsequent Emotions album, never playing any of its tracks live. By that time, anyway, they were a completely different band, in terms of outlook and lineup. Viv Prince had long since tried the others’ patience and been ditched in favour of Skip Alan, while further changes saw the recruitment of keyboardist Jon Povey and May’s childhood friend, multi-instrumentalist Wally Waller, both from The Fentones, who brought with them a love of West Coast harmonies that fed into the band’s broadening sound as the Pretties made the move from mod to an eclectic psychedelia.

The first declaration of this new intent came with the landmark single “Defecting Grey”, a multi-sectioned psychedelic extravaganza of rasping guitar, electric sitar, backward guitar and looming bass. Helmed by the inventive Beatles/Pink Floyd engineer/producer Norman Smith, “Defecting Grey” is the Pretties’ “Lazy Sunday”, their “Tomorrow Never Knows”, and an indication of the untapped reserves of musical ambition and imagination that would bear fruit on SF Sorrow, the world’s first rock opera. Somehow, SF Sorrow failed to hoist the band into the first rank of psych-rockers, remaining instead a cult classic, but it stands up better nearly half a century on than most of their contemporaries’ efforts. Based on a Phil May story following the titular Sorrow from cradle to grave, it’s a densely textured work woven from threads of layered guitars, keyboards, horns and gorgeous harmonies, with Mellotron and sitar “borrowed” from The Beatles’ studio down the hall, and Smith ladling on all manner of bespoke effects. But compared with the single-minded R’n’B approach that the band were famed for, it was perhaps too confusingly diverse, with tracks like the martial, rhythmic “Private Sorrow”, the ebullient “SF Sorrow Is Born” and the soaring prog-scape “The Journey”flying off at disparate tangents.

The follow-up, Parachute, a pastoral-psych  album themed around the contrast between urban and rural lifestyles – a voguish concern at the time, with hippies intent on getting back to the land – proved similarly outré, despite again featuring intelligent material, ambitiously treated. It’s at this point that the band’s career started to drift seriously off course, with the slick cover to Freeway Madness signalling the desperate urge to please American punters that would take up the Pretties’ next decade. There were occasional highlights – the blend of jaunty, offbeat piano interspersed with darker intimations gave Silk Torpedo’s “Dream/Joey” something akin to the ambivalence of The Doors – but the hook-up with Led Zep’s SwanSong label inevitably led to a coke-fuelled hedonism that gradually eroded the group’s integrity. Following several further personnel changes, even Phil May was moved to quit, displeased at how money was becoming the driving force behind creative decisions.

Without him, the band collapsed – though there’s a certain poetic justice in their eventual reformation resulting from the other Pretties joining him on a solo project. And there’s something heroically noble at their continued existence, intermittently performing and releasing LPs like 2007’s Balboa Island, whose “The Beat Goes On” offers an autobiographical overview of the life and times of those “dirty Pretty Things… back in the day we stole the blues”. The fame has gone, they concede, but regardless, “the beat goes on inside me and you”. And always will, no doubt.

Beatles and Rolling Stones filmmaker Albert Maysles dies

0
Albert Maysles, the documentarian, has died aged 88. He passed away on Thursday, March 5 from natural causes. Along with his brother David, Albert Maysles was one of the great documentary filmmakers of the Sixties and Seventies. The Maysles brothers' filmed both The Beatles and the Rolling Stones...

Albert Maysles, the documentarian, has died aged 88.

He passed away on Thursday, March 5 from natural causes.

Along with his brother David, Albert Maysles was one of the great documentary filmmakers of the Sixties and Seventies.

The Maysles brothers’ filmed both The Beatles and the Rolling Stones, among many other subjects.

In 1964, the Maysles followed The Beatles on their first American tour for a  documentary titled What’s Happening! The Beatles In The U.S.A.

Gimme Shelter, meanwhile, they followed the Stones on the band’s infamous 1969 tour of the States, which culminated with the free concert at Altamont Speedway.

Outside of music, Albert and David Maysles shot documentaries on Orson Welles, Marlon Brando and, in 1975, Grey Gardens, a mother and daughter both named Edith Beale who were aunt and cousin of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.

A restored version of Grey Gardens has recently been released in American cinemas.

Following David’s death in 1987, Albert  continued to make documentaries, including 2001’s Oscar-nominated LaLee’s Kin: The Legacy Of Cotton, about an impoverished African-American family living in the souther, of the United States.