Home Blog Page 397

The Flaming Lips cover David Bowie and The Beatles in New York – watch

0
The Flaming Lips teamed up with Julianna Barwick to cover The Beatles' "She's Leaving Home'' and David Bowie's "Warszawa" at a benefit show in New York City on March 5 – watch videos of their versions below. The group were performing at the annual Tibet House Benefit Concert, at the city's Carnegi...

The Flaming Lips teamed up with Julianna Barwick to cover The Beatles’ “She’s Leaving Home” and David Bowie’s “Warszawa” at a benefit show in New York City on March 5 – watch videos of their versions below.

The group were performing at the annual Tibet House Benefit Concert, at the city’s Carnegie Hall, according to The Future Heart via Pitchfork. The evening also saw an appearance from Patti Smith, who performed her own “People Have The Power”, joined by Debbie Harry, Dev Hynes, Philip Glass and Miley Cyrus.

Julianna Barwick has form with the Lips – she performed on Wayne Coyne and co’s studio version of “She’s Leaving Home” on their Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band cover album, With A Little Help From My Fwends, released last year.

The Tibet House Benefit Concert is a yearly fundraiser in support of the institution, which works to preserve and celebrate Tibetan culture.

Watch the videos below:

 

The Rolling Stones’ 40 best songs

0
In this very special piece from the Uncut archives (January 2002 issue, Take 56), an all-star cast, including Johnny Marr, Ryan Adams, Frank Black, Chris Hillman, Michael Gira and more, pick the Stones' 40 greatest tracks. ____________________ Joe Strummer remembers it, too: that time in the S...

In this very special piece from the Uncut archives (January 2002 issue, Take 56), an all-star cast, including Johnny Marr, Ryan Adams, Frank Black, Chris Hillman, Michael Gira and more, pick the Stones’ 40 greatest tracks.

____________________

Joe Strummer remembers it, too: that time in the Sixties when it seems that whenever you turn on the radio, there’s something new and mindblowing by The Rolling Stones. In 1963, for instance, in the space of months, there’s “The Last Time”, “Satisfaction”, “Get Off My Cloud”. The following year, in breathtakingly brisk succession, there’s “19th Nervous Breakdown”, “Paint It Black”, “Mother’s Little Helper” and “Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing In The Shadows?”

The Stones at the time are for many of us the most formidable force in pop music, our band of choice. The Beatles are the nation’s darlings, fawned over by the public who hold them in what turns out to be an eternal affection, dutifully admired by critics for whom the Fab Four are rearranging the topography of popular culture.

The Stones often suffer by comparison. What they are doing in the studio is often as hair-raisingly original as anything by The Beatles, but this is frequently not acknowledged, which somehow adds to their outsider surliness. They know they are not liked as The Beatles are liked, but admirably they don’t give a fuck, appear to enjoy their notoriety – at least until things turn really nasty and the drug busts and constant harassment began to take a more fearsome toll. As Ian MacDonald memorably puts it on one of the following pages, the Stones were indeed “the first pop/rock act to make relentless transgression their main pitch”. Which, of course, is another reason why we loved them then: for their rebellious intransigence as much as the loud raw noise of their music.

As I think I’ve said before in these pages, apart from The Beatles and Dylan, no other act in rock history has left their signature on the times as indelibly as the Stones  because they grew old instead of dying when they looked their best – with their legend intact, that is. Even now in their grizzled dotage they still insist on calling themselves The Greatest Rock’n’Roll Band In The World, and it’s perhaps not as easy as it should be to recall a time when this is exactly what they were. The evidence is there, however, on the records they made and the impact they have had on successive generations of fans and fellow musicians, nearly 100 of whom contributed to the poll that follows.

My own favourites? Since you ask: “Street Fighting Man”, “Have You Seen Your Mother, Baby, Standing In The Shadow?”, “Gimme Shelter”, “Get Off Of My Cloud”,
“19th Nervous Breakdown”, “Tumbling Dice”, “Happy”, “Moonlight Mile”, “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking?” and “All Down The Line”.

Allan Jones

[Turn over for the Stones’ 40 best songs…]

The 8th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

A lot of good new things to carry us through this fraught editorial period of finishing an issue, though this morning I found myself stuck on the new Godspeed You! Black Emperor album and played it three or four times in a row. That’s one of this week's highlights, along with new arrivals from Ro...

A lot of good new things to carry us through this fraught editorial period of finishing an issue, though this morning I found myself stuck on the new Godspeed You! Black Emperor album and played it three or four times in a row.

That’s one of this week’s highlights, along with new arrivals from Rob St John, Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy and friends (including Bundy K Brown, post-rock fans), Daniel Bachman and, maybe best of all, Thee Oh Sees. Another key arrival has been our next Ultimate Music Guide, dedicated to Kate Bush, and out next Thursday (March 12) in the UK.

More about that when I get a moment next week, but in the meantime, let me know what you think of this lot…

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

 

1 Vetiver – Complete Strangers (Easy Sound)

2 Cannibal Ox – Blade Of The Ronin (iHip Hop)

http://soundcloud.com/ihiphop-distribution/cannibal-ox-harlem-knights

3 [REDACTED]

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

5 Rob St John – Surface Tension (Surface Tension)

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

7 Mbongwana Star – Malukayi (World Circuit)

8 Dean McPhee – Fatima’s Hand (Hood Faire/Blast First Petite)

9 The Alabama Shakes – Sound & Color (Rough Trade)

10 MC Taylor & Friends – NARAL NC Benefit, Durham Pinhook, 18/1/15 (www.nyctaper.com)

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

12 Daniel Bachman – River (Three-Lobed)

13 Hagerty-Toth band – Qalgebra (Three-Lobed)

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

15 Leon Bridges – Lisa Sawyer (Columbia)

16 Aye Aye – Aye Aye (Richie/Testoster Tunes)

17 Rhodri Davies – An Air Swept Clean Of All Distance (Alt.Vinyl)

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

19 [REDACTED]

20 Unknown Mortal Orchestra – Multi-Love (Jagjaguwar)

The Replacements announce box set details

0
The Replacements have announced details of a new box set. The Replacements: The Studio Albums 1981 - 1990 will also include their Stink EP form 1982. The set is released on April 14 on Rhino. Replacements press release Meanwhile, The Replacements will play their first full American tour for 24 ...

The Replacements have announced details of a new box set.

The Replacements: The Studio Albums 1981 – 1990 will also include their Stink EP form 1982.

The set is released on April 14 on Rhino.

Replacements press release
Replacements press release

Meanwhile, The Replacements will play their first full American tour for 24 years. The band are also due to play two shows at London’s Roundhouse on June 2 and 3.

The track listing for The Replacements box set is:

Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash (1981)
Stink (1982)
Hootenanny (1983)
Let It Be (1984)
Tim (1985)
Pleased to Meet Me (1987)
Don’t Tell a Soul (1989)
All Shook Down (1990)

Hyena

0
Much has been made of the strong work done in recent years by British filmmakers like Peter Strickland, Ben Wheatley and Jonathan Glazer. Between them, they favour a certain heightened, sensory type of filmmaking – rich in metaphor and explicitly tied to the experimental cinema of the Sixties a...

Much has been made of the strong work done in recent years by British filmmakers like Peter Strickland, Ben Wheatley and Jonathan Glazer.

Between them, they favour a certain heightened, sensory type of filmmaking – rich in metaphor and explicitly tied to the experimental cinema of the Sixties and Seventies.

Gerard Johnson, meanwhile, is pursuing a different agenda. His two films – Tony and Hyena – are both gruelling thrillers, set in London’s less salubrious districts. Both are scored by the director’s brother, The The’s Matt Johnson, and both feature the same lead actor, their cousin, Peter Ferdinando.

In Tony, Ferdinando played a serial killer stalking Bethnal Green; in Hyena, he plays Michael Logan, a policeman who employs violence indiscriminately and abuses his authority to take a cut from local gangs. Ferdinando plays Logan with commendable restraint, and even allows us to glimpse what remains of his moral code: he will not tolerate violence against women, particularly.

Hyena takes place in starkly lit nightclubs, grotty pubs and council flats, with Turkish gangs competing with their Albanian rivals for drug routes and prostitution rings.

In many respects, it operates like a sobering counterpoint to the early Noughties Brit crime flicks; but also the largely repugnant tranche of straight-to-video gangster films that propagate an especially brutal, geezerish type of violence.

Accordingly, there is little daylight in Hyena: the action largely occurs at night, and when scenes do take place during Logan’s office hours they have the clammy, hungover feel.

Matt Johnson’s score offers occasional bursts of dissonance and reverb-heavy loops. Gerard Johnson, meanwhile, brings a documentarian’s eye to the proceedings: even when a key character is disembowelled with a kebab knife, the filmmaker remains dispassionate.

Follow me on Twitter

Kurt Cobain’s childhood home up for sale

0
Kurt Cobain's childhood home is up for sale. The property, in Aberdeen, Washington, is on the market for $400,000 - £262,519 - according to a report in Billboard. The 1,522 square foot bungalow is currently listed on the website for Aberdeen Reality, Inc. "The childhood home of Kurt Cobain is be...

Kurt Cobain‘s childhood home is up for sale.

The property, in Aberdeen, Washington, is on the market for $400,000 – £262,519 – according to a report in Billboard.

The 1,522 square foot bungalow is currently listed on the website for Aberdeen Reality, Inc.

“The childhood home of Kurt Cobain is being offered for sale,” writes the agency. “There are a number of exciting possibilities for this unique property, including moving the building and incorporating it into a larger institution or private collection. This is a once in a lifetime opportunity to own a piece of rock history.”

Reuters notes that Cobain lived in the home when he was a few months old until he was 9, when his parents separated, and then again from age 16 until about 20.

Paul McCartney announces European tour dates

0
Paul McCartney has announced details of an upcoming UK tour. The shows, which are part on his Out There tour, will take place in London, Liverpool and Birmingham. Additionally, McCartney will play shows in France, Holland, Denmark, Norway and Sweden. The show at London's O2 Arena on May 23 is link...

Paul McCartney has announced details of an upcoming UK tour.

The shows, which are part on his Out There tour, will take place in London, Liverpool and Birmingham. Additionally, McCartney will play shows in France, Holland, Denmark, Norway and Sweden.

The show at London’s O2 Arena on May 23 is linked with the 50th anniversary of “Yesterday”, which was released as a single in August, 1965.

Speaking about the anniversary, McCartney said: “‘Yesterday‘ feels like it has taken on a life of its own over the years. The song still is and always has been an important part of our live show. It’s always very emotional for me to hear crowds singing it so loudly at my concerts and I’m looking forward to singing it along with the audience at the O2 in May.”

Paul McCartney will play:

Saturday May 23rd – The O2, London, Great Britain
Wednesday May 27th – Barclaycard Arena, Birmingham, Great Britain
Thursday May 28th – Echo Arena, Liverpool, Great Britain

Friday 5th June – Nouveau Stade Velodrome, Marseille, France
Sunday 7th June – ZiggoDome, Amsterdam, Holland
Thursday 11th June – Stade De France, Paris, France
Saturday 4th July – Roskilde Festival, Denmark
Tuesday 7th July – Telenor Arena, Oslo, Norway
Thursday 9th July – Tele2 Arena, Stockholm, Sweden

Tickets on sale Monday 9th March at 10am

Sufjan Stevens: “I had a lot of pretty dark moments”

0
Sufjan Stevens reveals the “dark moments” that have inspired his new album, speaking in the latest issue of Uncut, dated April 2015 and out now. Uncut travels to New York to meet the restlessly creative singer, musician and songwriter in the feature, hearing about the background to his new reco...

Sufjan Stevens reveals the “dark moments” that have inspired his new album, speaking in the latest issue of Uncut, dated April 2015 and out now.

Uncut travels to New York to meet the restlessly creative singer, musician and songwriter in the feature, hearing about the background to his new record, Carrie & Lowell.

“When you’re met with a very tragic event, you have to take stock of what’s real internally and emotionally and allow yourself to express those feelings,” he says.

“Up until the death of my mother, I’d evaded that deepness of feeling in general. But grief is an extremely refining process. I felt I needed to be honest with my feelings for the first time.”

“I found myself kind of feeling like my mother’s ghost was inhabiting me,” he says. “I had a lot of pretty dark moments. Oh god, it’s over, though, I’m so glad it’s over.”

The new issue of Uncut, featuring Joni Mitchell on the cover, is out now.

Mark E Smith: “I’m not going to give all my secrets away”

0
We caught the Fall frontman in sparkling form, holding forth on the ’70s (“a fucking nightmare”), today’s TV (“fucking pathetic”) and Peter Hook (“a fucking idiot”). You ready? Let’s go… From Uncut's April 2007 issue (Take 119). Interview: John Robinson _______________________ ...

We caught the Fall frontman in sparkling form, holding forth on the ’70s (“a fucking nightmare”), today’s TV (“fucking pathetic”) and Peter Hook (“a fucking idiot”). You ready? Let’s go… From Uncut’s April 2007 issue (Take 119). Interview: John Robinson

_______________________

When the revolving doors discharge Mark E Smith into the lobby of a plush central Manchester hotel, they reveal not the ravaged figure with a terrible temper that some reports might suggest, but a man looking well, and one not shy of extending considerable courtesy.

This much, of course, we should have known. If the leader of The Fall has done anything over the 30 years in which he has led his group through their bilious take on modern events, it has been to do exactly the opposite of what you might expect of him. Well, almost.

“Pleased to meet you, sir,” he says, extending a hand. “Let’s go through there and get a drink, shall we?”

Later, as this drink continues in a more informal vein, Mark will charm star-struck Fall fans, strongly recommend married life, and state his conviction that Robert Plant’s band is paid by Hackney council.

In its early stages, however, Mark answers questions contributed by Uncut readers, and does so in the same way he has for many years. Not shy of offering an opinion, protective of his privacy, and particularly sensitive to the notion that he might be seen as a caricature of himself, on some level he’s like Arthur Seaton, the young man played by Albert Finney in Saturday Night And Sunday Morning – “Whatever you say I am, that’s what I’m not.”

Still, there’s no harm in asking him a question, is there?

Animal Collective to record new album this year

0
Animal Collective have confirmed plans to start work on a new album. In an interview on Lauren Laverne's BBC Radio 6 show, the band's Noah Lennox revealed the band intend to begin work on their first new album since 2012's Centipede Hz. Lennon - aka Panda Bear - recently released his latest solo a...

Animal Collective have confirmed plans to start work on a new album.

In an interview on Lauren Laverne’s BBC Radio 6 show, the band’s Noah Lennox revealed the band intend to begin work on their first new album since 2012’s Centipede Hz.

Lennon – aka Panda Bear – recently released his latest solo album, Panda Bear Vs The Grim Reaper.

“I’ve spent the past five weeks or so furiously trying to crank out stuff, and I’m sure Dave [Portner] is doing the same,” Lennox said. “I’m sure all of the guys are working on stuff. No concrete plans to go into the studio as of yet, no dates or anything, but I think it’s safe to say that some time this year we’ll record.”

Mark E Smith: Tony Blair to blame for lack of working class people in music

0
Mark E Smith has spoken out about the way the class system operates in music. Speaking to the NME, Smith blames Tony Blair for the deficit of working-class people in music. "To be honest I said about 12 years ago all this was happening," he said. "Blair started it. The posh dads don't say to their...

Mark E Smith has spoken out about the way the class system operates in music.

Speaking to the NME, Smith blames Tony Blair for the deficit of working-class people in music.

“To be honest I said about 12 years ago all this was happening,” he said. “Blair started it. The posh dads don’t say to their kids any more, ‘Don’t be in a group.’ They see U2 and they’re saying, ‘Be in a group, make money.'”

“There was always privilege in music. But nowadays you don’t have a chance in hell.”

In 2010, Smith criticised Mumford And Sons, calling them a “load of retarded Irish folk singers.” Meanwhile, last year, he hit out at the praise lavished on Kate Bush‘s comeback, saying “I never even liked her first time around.”

During the NME interview, Smith also spoke about The Fall’s forthcoming album, their 31st, Sublingual Tablet. “This one took quite long, about four or five months, but it’s all relative. Tour managers think I’m quick because they’ve worked with New Order and it took them about five years. I know when an album’s good now, and this one is great,” he says.

Laura Marling: “I questioned whether being a musician was worthwhile”

0
Laura Marling has revealed that she struggled to write new music after moving to Los Angeles. Speaking to the NME, she explained she suffered writer's block for six months, even wondered "whether being a musician was worthwhile." "There was noting I really wanted to do musically, so I couldn't hon...

Laura Marling has revealed that she struggled to write new music after moving to Los Angeles.

Speaking to the NME, she explained she suffered writer’s block for six months, even wondered “whether being a musician was worthwhile.”

“There was noting I really wanted to do musically, so I couldn’t honestly call myself a musician at the time,” she says. “I was sort of self-flagellating not telling people that I was a musician. I got a sick pleasure out of doing that.”

Marling – who’s latest album, Short Movie, is released on March 23 – continues that she too a break from writing, which allowed her time to focus her attentions elsewhere including environmental and social justice issues. “I think I got a bit worthy about whether being a musician was worthwhile to the planet in any way. Not like in an eco way, but I was just like, ‘Who do I think I am that I can just get up every day and play the guitar? That’s bullshit, I should be doing something more important.'”
She continues: “But actually, that thought of mine was the most self-important thought I’ve ever had, and only after being away from music for six months did I come back and think, ‘Actually, it’s pretty fucking great what I do, and I’m pretty fucking lucky to be doing it.'”

Laura Marling will support the record with the following UK tour dates:

London Queen Elizabeth Hall (April 20-21)
Cambridge Corn Exchange (22)
Manchester Albert Hall (24)
Glasgow O2 Academy (25)
Birmingham Institute (27)
London Queen Elizabeth Hall (29-30)
Southampton O2 Guildhall (May 4)
Bristol Colston Hall (5)
Dublin Olympia (7)
Belfast Waterfront Hall (8)

David Gilmour announces first solo tour for nine years

0
David Gilmour has announced details of his first solo tour in nine years. The tour, which covers the UK and Europe, will coincide with the release of a new solo album. Gilmour's tour begins on September 12 in Croatia and concludes with a three-night stand at London's Royal Albert Hall on September...

David Gilmour has announced details of his first solo tour in nine years.

The tour, which covers the UK and Europe, will coincide with the release of a new solo album.

Gilmour’s tour begins on September 12 in Croatia and concludes with a three-night stand at London’s Royal Albert Hall on September 23, 24 and 25.

Gilmour last toured in support of his 2006 solo album, On An Island.

As yet, details of Gilmour’s new album have yet to be formally announced. However, Phil Manzanera, who is involved with the project, recently told Uncut that the record “sounds fantastic”.

Last year, Gilmour returned to the top of the album charts with the release of Pink Floyd’s final album The Endless River.

You can read Uncut’s piece on the making of The Endless River here.

David Gilmour’s tour dates are:

September 12, 2015:            CROATIA – PULA – ARENA PULA

September 14, 2015:            ITALY – VERONA – VERONA ARENA

September 15, 2015:            ITALY – FLORENCE – TEATRO LE MULINA

September 17, 2015:            FRANCE – ORANGE – THEATRE ANTIQUE

September 19, 2015:            GERMANY- OBERHAUSEN – KONIG-PILSENER-ARENA

September 23, 2015:            UK – LONDON – ROYAL ALBERT HALL

September 24, 2015:            UK – LONDON – ROYAL ALBERT HALL

September 25, 2015:            UK – LONDON – ROYAL ALBERT HALL

Tickets go on sale for all venues at 10:00am GMT on Friday 6 March 2015; Gilmour’s 69th birthday.

September 12, 2015: CROATIA – PULA

ARENA PULA

Ticket prices: From Kc 255

Ticket sales: www.Eventim.hr

 

September 14, 2015: ITALY – VERONA          

VERONA ARENA

Ticket prices: From €40

Information: www.arena.it/

Box office: +39.02.5300651 / +39.055.5520575

Ticket sales: www.livenation.it/artist/david-gilmour-tickets?omq=david%20gilmour

 

September 15, 2015: ITALY – FLORENCE

TEATRO LE MULINA

Ticket prices: From €50

Box office: +39.02.5300651 / +39.055.5520575

Ticket sales: www.livenation.it/artist/david-gilmour-tickets?omq=david%20gilmour

 

September 17, 2015: FRANCE – ORANGE         

THEATRE ANTIQUE

Ticket prices: From €50

Box office: Phone : +33 892 392 192 (0,34 €/min, France only)

or +33 149 975 191 (International)

Website:     http://www.levraibillet.fr/

Information: http://www.theatre-antique.com/en/home

 

September 19, 2015: GERMANY- OBERHAUSEN       

KONIG-PILSENER-ARENA

Ticket prices: From €60.00

Ticket Hotline:  (+49) 0208-82 000

Box Office (Central Booking Line):

CTS Eventim

Phone: +49-1806-570070

www.eventim.de

www.eventim.de/david-gilmour

 

September 23, 24 & 25 2015: UK, LONDON          

THE ROYAL ALBERT HALL

Ticket prices: From £65.00

Special terms and conditions apply

Box Office: 0845 401 5045 or +44 20 7589 8212

Information: http://www.royalalberthall.com/

Ticket sales also via: www.seetickets.com, www.ticketmaster.co.uk,

www.eventim.co.uk, www.stargreen.com

Wilco announce line-up for their Solid Sound Festival

0
Wilco have announce details of this year's line up for their Solid Sound Festival. The festival runs from June 26 to 28 and will take place in North Adams, Massachusetts. The line-up features Wilco, Tweedy, Richard Thompson, Real Estate, Parquet Courts, Jessica Pratt, Ryley Walker, Cibo Matto an...

Wilco have announce details of this year’s line up for their Solid Sound Festival.

The festival runs from June 26 to 28 and will take place in North Adams, Massachusetts.

The line-up features Wilco, Tweedy, Richard Thompson, Real Estate, Parquet Courts, Jessica Pratt, Ryley Walker, Cibo Matto and more.

wilco

You can find ticket details and more at the festival’s website.

Meanwhile, Richard Thompson has revealed that Jeff Tweedy has produced his new album. The as-yet-untitled record contains original material.

Hear track from My Morning Jacket’s new album

0
My Morning Jacket have released a track from their new album. You can hear "Big Decisions" below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gE3DgcECSn8#action=share The song is from The Waterfall, their first studio album since 2011's Circuital. The Waterfall is released on May 4 on ATO/Capitol Records a...

My Morning Jacket have released a track from their new album.

You can hear “Big Decisions” below.

The song is from The Waterfall, their first studio album since 2011’s Circuital.

The Waterfall is released on May 4 on ATO/Capitol Records and has been produced by Tucker Martine. It is the first of two albums intended for release before the end of 2016.

Jim James
Jim James

Speaking to Uncut for our 2015 Album Preview, Jim James said, “It’s the longest it’s ever taken us to make a record. We were out in Stinson Beach [California] for about a month recording and then in Louisville and then in Portland. We’ve been mixing in Portland for about a month. We recorded 24 songs, ten are going to be on this record. We divided them up into what we feel are two really cool records.

“Because this album took a year to make, I see a lot of the seasons in this record. There is a song called ‘Spring’, which doesn’t take a lot to work out. I see waterfalls and I see leaves blowing and I see plants dying. I see those kinds of images throughout this record.”

The band are scheduled to play at the End Of The Road festival on September 5 and London’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire on September 7.

The tracklisting for The Waterfall is:

1. ‘Believe (Nobody Knows)’
2. ‘Compound Fracture’
3. ‘Like A River’
4. ‘In Its Infancy (The Waterfall)’
5. ‘Get The Point’
6. ‘Spring (Among The Living)’
7. ‘Thin Line’
8. ‘Big Decisions’
9. ‘Tropics (Erase Traces)’
10. ‘Only Memories Remain’

The White Stripes announce Record Store Day release

0
The White Stripes are to release their album, Get Behind Me Satan, on vinyl for Record Store Day. The release, which has never previously been commercially available on vinyl, come as a double album pressed on 180-gram vinyl, with one disc coloured red, the other coloured white. It will also f...

The White Stripes are to release their album, Get Behind Me Satan, on vinyl for Record Store Day.

The release, which has never previously been commercially available on vinyl, come as a double album pressed on 180-gram vinyl, with one disc coloured red, the other coloured white.

It will also feature a new lenticular gatefold jacket and new artwork.

Rolling Stone reports that it will receive a wider release later in the year, on black vinyl.

Get Behind Me Satan was originally released in 2005.

The White Stripes
The White Stripes

In related news, The White Stripes recently announced details of a new live album. Under Amazonian Lights, which was recorded in Manaus, Brazil on June 1, 2005, and will come out as part of the Third Man Records subscriber-only service, The Vault. The release will additionally include a DVD featuring footage recorded at Teatro Amazonas Opera House.

Watch Bob Dylan’s video for “The Night We Called It A Day”

0
Bob Dylan has unveiled a new video. The promo is for "The Night We Called It A Day", which features on Dylan's current album, Shadows In The Night. In January, Uncut reported news on an open casting call for the video, which has been directed by Nash Edgerton, who previously worked with Dylan on t...

Bob Dylan has unveiled a new video.

The promo is for “The Night We Called It A Day“, which features on Dylan’s current album, Shadows In The Night.

In January, Uncut reported news on an open casting call for the video, which has been directed by Nash Edgerton, who previously worked with Dylan on the videos for “Must Be Santa Claus”, “Beyond Here Lies Nothin’” and “Duquesne Whistle”.

Bob Dylan's Shadows In The Night sleeve
Bob Dylan’s Shadows In The Night sleeve

Steve Gunn & The Black Twig Pickers, Sir Richard Bishop, Dean McPhee and Imaginational Anthem Vol 7 Reviewed

0
I spent yesterday at home, working on a feature for the next issue of Uncut and worrying, as I suspect a few of you may have been, about secondary school places. Back in the office this morning, there was quite a glut of new music to play: the comeback album by one of my favourite hip hop acts, Cann...

I spent yesterday at home, working on a feature for the next issue of Uncut and worrying, as I suspect a few of you may have been, about secondary school places. Back in the office this morning, there was quite a glut of new music to play: the comeback album by one of my favourite hip hop acts, Cannibal Ox; the monstrous new Godspeed You! Black Emperor record, “Asunder, Sweet And Other Distress”; and something else that, once again, I’m forbidden to mention by name thanks to the brutal necessities of the Major Label Embargo.

There was also a long email from Dean McPhee, a Telecaster soloist from West Yorkshire who is something of an outlier among the current crop of guitar soli. I’d asked him a few questions about his serene new album, “Fatima’s Hand”, about how he thinks he relates to the bedraggled hordes of John Fahey acolytes that I write about most weeks. “While there are also some really great players who are carrying on the American Primitive/Takoma style of playing,” Dean wrote, “I tend to be more drawn to outsiders who are working in a more singular, unusual space, and I feel that’s an approach that I fit in with better.”

http://soundcloud.com/deanmcphee/glass-hills

Michael Chapman is an obvious kindred spirit, and McPhee has played live with that questing Yorkshireman. In general, though, McPhee’s hermetic, electric folk meditations are closer in sound to those of Vini Reilly or, on the modestly ornate “Smoke And Mirrors”, Sir Richard Bishop. As on his 2011 debut, “Son Of The Black Peace”, a sort of desolate twang predominates. Horizons expand once, magnificently, for “Effigy Of Clay”, where delay moves McPhee toward the dappled vistas of Fripp & Eno’s “Evening Star”.

Bishop, meanwhile, has his own new album out right now, which is also worth investigating. Myths and quasi-mystical arcana have always clustered around Bishop and his old band, The Sun City Girls. The story appended to “Tangier Sessions” is less pranksterish and more plausible than most, involving a late 19th century guitar bought in a Geneva lutier’s shop, used for a week of inspirational sessions in a rooftop Tangiers apartment. The resulting album has fewer overt Middle Eastern influences than much of Bishop’s work (notably 2009’s “Freak Of Araby”), focusing instead on courtly improvisations that feel closer to the work of John Renbourn or, perhaps, Peter Walker’s flamenco studies. Mostly, though, “Tangiers Sessions” reasserts Bishop’s status as a wide-ranging guitar master, gently amused by any such assumptions of grandeur.

The “Imaginational Anthem” series of compilations on Tompkins Square has long documented the state of American Primitive guitar music; when Volume One was released in 2004, its collection of tracks by Fahey, his contemporaries and 21st Century followers seemed a noble but finite concept. Eleven years down the line, however, the series continues to locate wave after wave of new guitar soli: even for dedicated fans of this questing instrumental music, most of the names on the new instalment, Volume Seven, will be unfamiliar. Volume Seven mostly avoids straight-up Fahey acolytes (Christoph Bruhn and Dylan Golden Aycock being strong exceptions), showcasing players who favour delicate atmospheres over blues and folk extrapolations. A generally lovely listen, albeit one which maybe lacks the breakout stars – Jack Rose, Chris Forsyth, William Tyler – of previous volumes.

Finally, as with most months, Steve Gunn (another Imaginational alumnus) has a new record to savour. “Seasonal Hire” is a hook-up with Virginia’s reliably ornery Black Twig Pickers, that finds a common ground we might usefully term Psychedelic Appalachian. Gunn has collaborated with sundry Twigs before: “Dive For The Pearl” figured in sparser form on his 2014 duo album with frontman Mike Gangloff, while banjoist Nathan Bowles currently moonlights in Gunn’s road band. Old friendships contribute to the general good vibes, and an atmosphere that’s at once rambunctious and exploratory: “Trailways Ramble”, last attempted on Gunn’s 2013 solo set, Time Off, is a brackish highlight. Next up, in theory, is a duo album with his old Violators bandmate, Kurt Vile. I’ll let you know when that one shows up; first news may well check up on my Twitter feed: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey.

Father John Misty – I Love You, Honeybear

0
Until recently, Josh Tillman was best known for drumming in Fleet Foxes between 2008 and 2012. Before and during that time Tillman made several slow, sad solo albums which seemed specifically designed to make tiny ripples rather than big waves, but his departure from the band after Helplessness Blue...

Until recently, Josh Tillman was best known for drumming in Fleet Foxes between 2008 and 2012. Before and during that time Tillman made several slow, sad solo albums which seemed specifically designed to make tiny ripples rather than big waves, but his departure from the band after Helplessness Blues, seemed to trigger a creative rebirth.

Rechristening himself Father John Misty, in 2012 Tillman released Fear Fun. Escaping the shadow of Fleet Foxes and the weight of his own moroseness, here was a funnier, truer writer exploring a more adventurous palette of sounds. If that record marked a significant step forward, the follow-up is even more impressive. An epic creation which takes its cues from the likes of Harry Nilsson, Randy Newman, Dory Previn and John Grant, it belongs to that honourable tradition of American songwriting which sets beautifully orchestrated pop and AOR against brutally honest and sometimes comically profane sentiments, sung with dramatic, edge-of-the-cliff conviction.

As Tillman explained in last month’s Uncut feature, it’s searingly personal stuff. Ostensibly, the album follows what Paul Simon called the arc of a love affair, covering the period when he met, romanced and committed to his wife Emma, but it’s really about one man’s struggle to accept love and hope into his life. In a record peppered with colourful lines, the key lyric is a matter-of-fact one, buried amid the thick, soulful stomp of “When You’re Smiling And Astride Me”: “I can hardly believe I found you / And I’m terrified by that.”

This is love red in tooth and claw. There is romance here, but there’s also raw sexual need, jealousy, druggy paranoia, hissy fits, over-sharing and megalomania. “Chateau Lobby #4 (In C For Two Virgins)” manages to be both bawdy – “I want to take you in the kitchen / Lift up your wedding dress…” – and touchingly innocent, depicting the couple’s first sexual tryst as though it was the very first time for them both. An instantly memorable SoCal pop confection, with its mariachi flourishes and wonderful swelling bridge it’s like Love in love. That first euphoric flush gives way to the jealously of the long distance lover on the plush, artfully conceived country-soul of “Nothing Good Ever Happens At The Goddamn Thirsty Crow”, where Tillman stares into the abyss from an Ibis hotel in Germany. “Holy Shit”, written the day before his wedding, compiles all the reasons stacked up against taking the plunge. The very act of falling in love clearly defies all logic, and yet Tillman is defiant: “I fail to see what all of that has to do with you and me.”

Co-produced again with Jonathan Wilson, the album bristles with richness and bespoke detail. “Bored In The USA” is a spare piano ballad lifted to sublime heights by restrained strings, disquieting sampled laughter and one of several stunning vocal performances. The sparkling “Strange Encounter” has Spectoresque drums and a buzzing guitar solo, while the Byrdsy “The Night Josh Tillman Came To Our Apt.” (I Love You, Honeybear is the kind of self-portrait in which autobiography frequently elides into self-mythology) is another sweet and sour pick-and-mix of unspeakably tender music and hilariously caustic lyrics. Only “True Affection” seems misjudged, a synthetic pop song which fits the narrative but which roams too far from the defining mood of the album.

Otherwise, there is a neatly circularity to it all. On the opening title track Tillman is content to settle for solidarity in mutual distress, as though finding another damaged person with whom to share his sadness is about the best he can hope for. The prize that emerges as the record unfolds, however, is not merely solace but transformation. By the closing track, the bewitching “I Went To The Store One Day”, Tillman seems dazed to discover that his world could be so completely turned upside down. “Seen you around, what’s your name?” he sings, remembering the very first encounter with Emma outside the local store. From such banal beginnings a new life – and a truly compelling new album – have bloomed.

Josh Tillman
Josh Tillman

Q&A
Josh Tillman
You’ve talked about “chasing the sound” for this record. Can you elucidate?
This album is a monument to second guessing. I was afraid that it was going to be sentimental, because of the subject matter, and I was terrified of trivialising the experiences that inform the album. I couldn’t get the soufflé to rise, and I couldn’t until Emma said to me, “You just can’t be afraid to let these songs be beautiful.” Once I got that I wasn’t making the album I made last time, and that I didn’t know myself artistically as well as I thought I did, things really started to come together.

Was it a struggle to allow yourself to reveal so much?
If you’re going to write songs about this topic, they really have to be written in the moment. There are a lot of ugly sentiments on the album – there are some emotions that I’m not particularly proud of, or are not a good prescription for human living, but everything had to stay in there or else it was going to be garbage. From a distance it’s a love album, but the closer you get it’s really about me and my problems with intimacy.

Is it a concept album?
I think to all intents and purposes it’s a conceptual album. Every time you insert yourself into your art, you become a character.
INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Rare Elliott Smith demos for vinyl release

0
Rare demos featuring Elliott Smith are set for vinyl release on Record Store Day. In the early 1990s, Smith was a member of a Portland band, Heatmiser. Following their split in 1991, the band's Neil Gust formed a new group, called No. 2. According to a report on Pitchfork, No. 2's 1999 debut album...

Rare demos featuring Elliott Smith are set for vinyl release on Record Store Day.

In the early 1990s, Smith was a member of a Portland band, Heatmiser. Following their split in 1991, the band’s Neil Gust formed a new group, called No. 2.

According to a report on Pitchfork, No. 2’s 1999 debut album, No Memory, is due to make its belated vinyl debut on Record Store Day.

Smith contributed backing vocals to two of the album’s tracks, “Critical Mass” and “So Long”.

The new pressing, which is limited to 1,500 copies, features eight previously unheard bonus tracks as mp3s, four of which are demos featuring Smith.

Diffuser.fm quotes record label Jackpot as saying No Memory is the “missing link between the end of Heatmiser and the beginning of Elliott Smith’s major label debut.