Home Blog Page 398

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.

Campaign fails to turn Ian Curtis’ former home into a museum

0
A campaign to buy Ian Curtis' house to convert it to a museum appears to have failed. The two-bedroom property in Macclesfield went up for sale last month. The house is listed on property website Rightmove as a "double-fronted character cottage... with two reception rooms, two double bedrooms, a g...

A campaign to buy Ian Curtis’ house to convert it to a museum appears to have failed.

The two-bedroom property in Macclesfield went up for sale last month.

The house is listed on property website Rightmove as a “double-fronted character cottage… with two reception rooms, two double bedrooms, a good size kitchen and a shared courtyard garden.”

Shortly after the house went onto the market, Zak Davies started a campaign to save the house, with the intention of turning it into a museum dedicated to Curtis.

At the time, he wrote on his website, “Rather than [the house] be taken by developers or sold for development, we feel a place with such cultural significance with such an important man attached deserves to be made into a museum and somewhere that Joy Division fans from around the world can come to pay respects and learn about Ian Curtis.”

According to a report in The Guardian, it seems that Davies campaign has not yet raised the selling price of £115,000. He has admitted that it is “unlikely” that the required money could be reached, adding that all the donations so far received would instead be passed on to the mental health charity Mind.

The Smiths were planning a disco album, claims Johnny Marr

0
Johnny Marr has apparently revealed that The Smiths were planning a disco album. He made the claim in an interview with The Guardian. When he was asked, 'Tell us a secret', he replied, "The Smiths were planning a disco album". Marr's statement has not been corroborated by any of his former band ma...

Johnny Marr has apparently revealed that The Smiths were planning a disco album.

He made the claim in an interview with The Guardian. When he was asked, ‘Tell us a secret’, he replied, “The Smiths were planning a disco album”.

Marr’s statement has not been corroborated by any of his former band mates.

Elsewhere in the interview, Marr said he was happiest “Waking up in a dark hotel room in Bayswater one winter’s evening in 1984, to find I’d recorded ‘How Soon Is Now‘ through the previous night.”

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

Watch Motörhead at work in the studio

0
Motörhead have posted clips on Instagram of the band working on their new album. The band are recording the follow-up to 2012's Aftershock in Los Angeles with regular producer, Cameron Webb. In related news, the band's long-serving engineer Dave Hilsden has died. News of Hilsden's death was confi...

Motörhead have posted clips on Instagram of the band working on their new album.

The band are recording the follow-up to 2012’s Aftershock in Los Angeles with regular producer, Cameron Webb.

In related news, the band’s long-serving engineer Dave Hilsden has died. News of Hilsden’s death was confirmed by the band’s guitarist Phil Cambell, who wrote on Twitter:

 

 

 

Watch Alabama Shakes perform “Gimme All Your Love” and “Don’t Wanna Fight”

0
Alabama Shakes appeared on Saturday Night Live on February 28, 2015. You can watch them play "Gimme All Your Love" above and "Don't Wanna Fight" below. Both songs are taken from the band's new new album, Sound And Color, which is released on April 20. Alabama Shakes Sound And Color is the follow...

Alabama Shakes appeared on Saturday Night Live on February 28, 2015.

You can watch them play “Gimme All Your Love” above and “Don’t Wanna Fight” below.

Both songs are taken from the band’s new new album, Sound And Color, which is released on April 20.

Alabama Shakes
Alabama Shakes

Sound And Color is the follow-up to the band’s debut, Boys & Girls, which was released in 2012.

The full tracklisting for Sound And Color is:

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

The Strokes and Beck to play London’s Hyde Park

0
The Strokes and Beck are due to play London's Hyde Park. The Guardian reports that they are due to play Barclaycard Presents British Summer Time on June 18. The show will be The Strokes first UK date for five years. Also on the bill are Future Islands, Temples, Public Service Broadcasting, The Wy...

The Strokes and Beck are due to play London’s Hyde Park.

The Guardian reports that they are due to play Barclaycard Presents British Summer Time on June 18.

The show will be The Strokes first UK date for five years.

Also on the bill are Future Islands, Temples, Public Service Broadcasting, The Wytches, Hinds, Gengahr, Yak anmd Kieran Leonard.

Tickets for the event go on sale on Friday, March 6 at 9am GMT.

You can find more details here.

The Strokes are the latest headliners to have been announced for this year’s British Summer Time season. Other acts who are also scheduled to perform at Hyde Park are The Who and Blur.

Sonic Youth to reissue Bad Moon Rising

0
Sonic Youth are reissuing their second studio album, Bad Moon Rising. Originally released in 1985, the album will now be made available on April 14 via the band's own record label. Pitchfork reports that the reissue will be available as a double vinyl and CD set, and will also feature bonus tracks...

Sonic Youth are reissuing their second studio album, Bad Moon Rising.

Originally released in 1985, the album will now be made available on April 14 via the band’s own record label.

Pitchfork reports that the reissue will be available as a double vinyl and CD set, and will also feature bonus tracks – “Satan Is Boring, “Echo Canyon” as well as both tracks from the “Flower” and “Halloween” single.

Scroll down to watch the official video for Bad Moon Rising track, “Death Valley ’69“, featuring Lydia Lunch.

These are the latest reissues by the band. Last year, saw a re-release of their Daydream Nation album as well as The Whitey Album, which they recorded under the alias, Ciccone Youth.

It is expected that the band will additionally re-issue their Confusion Is Sex, EVOL and Sister albums.

Recently, Kim Gordon published her memoir, Girl In A Band.

 

 

Paul McCartney’s childhood home sold at auction

0
Paul McCartney's childhood home has been sold at auction. The house sold for £150,000, above the £100,000 guide price, reports BBC News. The auction was held at the Cavern Club. According to The Liverpool Echo, the property sold in six minutes. McCartney lived at the property - 72 Western Avenu...

Paul McCartney‘s childhood home has been sold at auction.

The house sold for £150,000, above the £100,000 guide price, reports BBC News.

The auction was held at the Cavern Club. According to The Liverpool Echo, the property sold in six minutes.

McCartney lived at the property – 72 Western Avenue, Speke – from 1947 until the mid-1950s.

Beatles guide Paul Beesley said: “This is an important house because it’s where Paul spent his formative schoolboy years.

In 2013, John Lennon‘s childhood home in Wavertree, Liverpool sold for £480,000.

Radiohead have “changed their method again” for new album sessions

0
Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood has revealed that the group has "changed [their] method again" during sessions for their new album. The band have been recording the follow-up to 2011's The King Of Limbs for a couple of months, with sessions reportedly "going well". "We've certainly changed our...

Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood has revealed that the group has “changed [their] method again” during sessions for their new album.

The band have been recording the follow-up to 2011’s The King Of Limbs for a couple of months, with sessions reportedly “going well”.

“We’ve certainly changed our method again,” Greenwood told Indian newspaper The Sunday Guardian. “It’s too involved [to explain how]. We’re kind of limiting ourselves; working in limits. So we’ll see what happens. It’s like we’re trying to use very old and very new technology together to see what happens.

“We’ve done a couple of months of recording, and it has gone really well. We haven’t listened to anything back yet, so at the moment we’re all very happy. Now, I guess we’re going to go and listen to what we’ve done and see if we were right to be so happy. But we left it at a good place when we last stopped.”

Greenwood is currently recording an album at the Mehrangarh fort in Jodhpur, India, with Israeli composer Shye Ben Tzur and a set of Rajasthani folk musicians.

“We’ve been living here for nearly three weeks and recording an album here, in the fort. The Maharaja allowed us use of the fort, and we’ve basically been living here with 12 Indian musicians and we’ve made a record. It’s been great.”

Super Furry Animals announce surprise May comeback gigs

0
Super Furry Animals have announced they will play five UK gigs in May – their first live shows since December 2009.The group revealed the tour and reissue via a video posted this morning today (February 27) – you can watch it below. Mwng, their fourth studio album, and so far their only LP to b...

Super Furry Animals have announced they will play five UK gigs in May – their first live shows since December 2009.The group revealed the tour and reissue via a video posted this morning today (February 27) – you can watch it below.

Mwng, their fourth studio album, and so far their only LP to be completely in the Welsh language, is also being reissued on double CD and triple-vinyl to mark the album’s 15th anniversary. The package features five tracks previously released on the US version of ‘Mwng’ under the name ‘Mwng Bach’ (Little Mwng), as well as a John Peel session and a live show recorded at ATP. The album will be released on Domino on May 1.

Super Furry Animals’ last studio album was 2009’s Dark Days/Light Years. In the intervening years, the members have worked on their own projects, with Gruff Rhys releasing albums solo, such as last year’s American Interior, and, with Boom Bip, as Neon Neon.

Speaking exclusively to NME about the reunion shows, Rhys explains: “It will be good just to play and hang out again. We’ll probably be doing a different set every night and songs off all our nine studio albums. We’ll be doing quite a lot of ‘Mwng’ because it’s fun to play, but probably not the whole thing.”

Super Furry Animals play:

Cardiff University (May 1, 2)
Glasgow O2 Academy (May 5)
Manchester Albert Hall (6)
London O2 Academy Brixton (8)

Björk: “Hopefully, Vulnicura could be a help to others”

0
Björk reveals more about her new album, Vulnicura, in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2015 and out now. Discussing the intensely personal nature of the album’s themes of heartbreak and separation, she explains that she hopes it will help others in similar situations. “First I was worried ...

Björk reveals more about her new album, Vulnicura, in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2015 and out now.

Discussing the intensely personal nature of the album’s themes of heartbreak and separation, she explains that she hopes it will help others in similar situations.

“First I was worried it would be too self-indulgent,” she says, “but then I felt it might make it even more universal.

“And hopefully the songs could be a help, a crutch to others and prove how biological this process is: the wound and the healing of the wound, psychologically and physically. It has a stubborn clock attached to it.”

Vulnicura, Björk’s ninth album, was produced by Arca, The Haxan Cloak and the artist herself. Originally scheduled for March 2015, it was rush-released on January 20, 2015, in reaction to an online leak.

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

Jimmy Page: “Forget the myths about Led Zeppelin”

0
Here’s an enlightening, in-depth interview with Jimmy Page, from Uncut’s May 2005 (Take 96) issue, taking in everything from the Grammy Awards to what it’s like being the keeper of the Led Zeppelin flame. Words: Nigel Williamson _____________________ Monday, February 14, 2005. It’s the morn...

So Robert wasn’t the first choice. But he became the best singer of them all in that style you once called “the primeval wail”, didn’t he?
Yes. Absolutely. And he was a damn fine lyricist as well. I was writing lyrics in the early days and encouraging him to write more because I knew he was going to be a much better lyricist than I ever was. Then it got to the point where he was writing all the lyrics, and I was very content with that because it allowed me to concentrate totally on the music.

I talked to him the other day and he’s very dissatisfied with his singing on the first couple of albums. Why do you think he’s so self-critical?
I know he’s not happy with the ad-libs on Led Zeppelin I, but I think he should be really pleased with his vocal approach. He was performing in a very inspired way, like everyone else in the band. What he did was really fitting in terms of where we were going. It was an essential element. And millions would agree with me and not with him on how great his singing was on those first couple of records.

Was it a conscious decision to move in a more acoustic direction on Led Zeppelin III?
There were a lot of bands at the time who had a hit and a format and they stuck to that. What we were doing was different. When we went in the studio, it was a summing up of where we were at that point in time. So there was no way the third album was going to be like the first. Then there was no way the fourth album was going to be like the third. If there was a Zeppelin philosophy, it was always: “Ever onwards. Let’s see what we can do next.”

A lot of people would say Physical Graffiti in 1975 was a kind of high-water mark for Zeppelin.
I’d probably agree with that.

Were the later records more difficult to make, with so many other things going on around the band?
Up to Graffiti, we hadn’t experienced any of the tragedies that happened. First of all there was Robert’s accident. The album that was done around that period was Presence. That was recorded in just over three weeks from beginning to end, and the urgency of it is there if you listen. But it’s not an easy album for a lot of people to access. And because a lot of people found that a difficult album to listen to, I think the writing took another shift on the next album, which was In Through The Out Door and was recorded in Stockholm, again over a quite short period of time. It wasn’t rushed. It was just that we worked so very fast. And again, it was a summing up of where we were at that moment in time. When Robert lost his son, that was another tragedy and it affected him deeply.

Then after the various traumas within the band and the punk onslaught on the so-called dinosaur bands, Knebworth was an amazing comeback, wasn’t it?
Look at the DVD and you can see we were really thrilled to be playing again. We were about to embark on the American tour and the game plan was definitely for another album, which I think would have been different again.

I was going to ask you that. Just when you seemed to have survived all of the traumas and come out the other side, John Bonham died. Where do you think Led Zeppelin might have gone if that hadn’t happened?
For my part, I’d already discussed the next album with him. We said we were going to resort to some really intense riffing. I don’t want necessarily to call it heavy, but you know what I mean by that. That’s the way I figured the next album should be, because the music had started to lighten up on In Through The Out Door and I wanted to get back to that sort of urgent intensity we managed to evoke. That was the discussion I had with Bonzo, anyway. But who knows? The potential was definitely still there.

Do you think it was inevitable that you and Robert would get back together again in the ’90s?
No, not necessarily. In fact, it wasn’t inevitable at all. But Unledded was great fun to do. We took it around the world again. The seductive playing of the Egyptians – thousands of people had never heard anything like that before, so it was great to represent that sort of musical tapestry. We even had Nigel Eaton playing hurdy-gurdy onstage with us. The album was like one dress rehearsal and then – “Let’s do it.” That was great, but on tour it got even better, like you always do on the road when things start to fall into place and mutate.

Did you feel that if you were going to do old Zeppelin material you had to represent the songs in a new way to make it meaningful, and not come over as some kind of nostalgia act?
But we never did the songs in the same way. Never. In Zeppelin we may have had the framework, but it would change all the time. That’s the way we played and I’d always played like that in all the bands I’d ever been with from day one. There was always the capability to improvise. You go onstage and you have a benchmark. But then you say, “Right, let’s see what’s going to happen tonight.” That not only keeps you on your toes, but it gives a sharp edge to the music as well.

What’s next? Is there going to be a new record?
Yes, there is. My main intention this year is to get up to speed. The way to look at it is that I took a year out. I had some things to sort out and that’s done and now it’s time to get back on a serious roll this year. And hopefully there will be some music. What I need to be doing is trying to make a new musical statement. I had some great fun playing with The Black Crowes. But we were doing a lot of Zeppelin material on that tour. Then I was busy doing the DVD and the How The West Was Won live album. That was great fun as well. But now’s the time to do something that makes people say, “I didn’t think you’d do that, but I can see why you’ve done it.” We’ll see what we come up with. I’m not retired yet, if that’s what you’re thinking.

One suggestion I read last year was that you might make a collaborative album with different singers and songwriters, as Carlos Santana has done recently.
That’s not what I’ve got in mind at the moment, although other people did make some overtures of that kind. There are so many avenues I could take at this point. Or maybe they’re footpaths. It’s just a question of which one to commit to, because when you get involved in a project it’s a time-consuming thing. Let’s put it this way: I’ve got a line drawing. I just haven’t filled the colour in yet.

Photo: Dave J Hogan/Getty Images

U2’s Joshua Tree vandalised

0
The tree which was photographed for the back cover of U2's album The Joshua Tree has been vandalised. The tree, which grows in California's Mojave Desert, was photographed by Anton Corbijn for the album cover. Consequence Of Sound report that one of the tree's limbs has recently been chopped off...

The tree which was photographed for the back cover of U2‘s album The Joshua Tree has been vandalised.

The tree, which grows in California’s Mojave Desert, was photographed by Anton Corbijn for the album cover.

Consequence Of Sound report that one of the tree’s limbs has recently been chopped off.

The Joshua Tree back cover
The Joshua Tree back cover

There is also a photograph online showing the damage done to the tree.

Meanwhile, a user on a U2 message board wrote, “I’ve been visiting U2’s Joshua Tree in the California desert for nearly 20 years now; the Mojave is my home. This past Sunday, I made my proverbial yearly hike out to the Tree with my dog to reminisce only to find that some hack and I do mean hack, decided it was a bright idea to take a hacksaw to one of the Tree’s limbs – evidently to remove an inch thick cross section as a souvenir.”

Adding: “Are you kidding me? I won’t even elaborate as to how pathetic this is. Let’s just say It was a good thing I didn’t happen upon this ignorant low-life degenerate in his course of action. Yes, I wrote “his” …there’s no way a woman would have done this. It’s hard to imagine that someone would be so motivated, to travel that far into the desert, to commit this selfish deed.”

“In the late 1990s the tree fell over due to a meandering stream that, by bad luck, developed just under the roots and caused it to weaken and fall. My cynical belief is that some jack-ass climbed the tree and while saying “take my picture dude” the additional weight keeled the tree over.”

“In short, leave the damn Tree alone, so that future fans can enjoy it. Left alone, the Tree will be there for many, many decades to come.”

Watch trailer for Brian Wilson biopic

0
The first trailer for the upcoming Brian Wilson biopic has been released. Called Love And Mercy, the film stars Paul Dano as the young Brian Wilson during the 1960s with John Cusack playing him during the Eighties. The film also stars Paul Giamatti as Dr Eugene Landy, Wilson's psychotherapist, and...

The first trailer for the upcoming Brian Wilson biopic has been released.

Called Love And Mercy, the film stars Paul Dano as the young Brian Wilson during the 1960s with John Cusack playing him during the Eighties.

The film also stars Paul Giamatti as Dr Eugene Landy, Wilson’s psychotherapist, and Elizabeth Banks as Melinda, Wilson’s second wife.

Brian Wilson
Brian Wilson

Love And Mercy is directed by Bill Pohlad, who has previously produced 12 Years A Slave and The Tree Of Life.

The film premiered at the Toronto Film Festival in July 2014, and is scheduled for a US release on June 5. As yet, there is no confirmed UK or European release date.

Brian Wilson has already endorsed Dano, saying “I am thrilled that Paul Dano has signed on to play me during one of my most creative explosions and most fulfilling musical times in my career.”

According to an official synopsis, “the film will take an unconventional look at seminal moments in Wilson’s life, his artistic genius, his profounds struggles, and the love that kept him a live.”

Meanwhile, Wilson is due to release his new album, No Pier Pressure on April 6. He recently shared a track from the album, “The Right Time” which features Al Jardine and David Marks.

Warren Ellis tells the inside story of life in Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds

0
The inside story of working with Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds is told by Warren Ellis in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2015 and out today (February 24). Ellis, who has performed with Cave and his collective for over two decades, reveals just how the group operate in the studio, and just what...

The inside story of working with Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds is told by Warren Ellis in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2015 and out today (February 24).

Ellis, who has performed with Cave and his collective for over two decades, reveals just how the group operate in the studio, and just what makes their leader tick.

“The thing about Nick is, Nick works,” says Ellis. “He loves to work, he has this incredible drive and a belief in what he’s doing. He’s always challenging himself.

“He’s very encouraging. I remember buying a mandolin – in 2000 or so, before folk music was popular – and he said, ‘What an inspired choice.’ He doesn’t seem to stop. People talk about ‘the drug years’ and so on, but he just works non-stop.

“He won’t let things go: this thing of trying to get things through, not giving up on an idea. There’s things we’ve had for 10 years that we’re trying to get through and probably never will. It’s funny.”

The whole feature can be found in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

Leonard Cohen interviewed: “I didn’t have the interior authority to tackle some of my greatest songs”

0
In this rare, amazing interview from Uncut’s December 1997 issue (Take 7), Cohen, then a Zen monk, looks back on 30 years as the laureate of romantic gloom and erotic distress. Words: Nigel Williamson _____________________ Leonard Cohen is running two hours behind schedule. After a hectic day of...

By this time, Cohen’s basso profundo had dropped almost another octave, reaching improbable depths.

“I knew I was no great shakes as a singer but I always thought I could tell the truth about a song. I liked those singers who would just lay out their predicament and tell their story, and I thought I could be one of those guys. But I didn’t know where to put my voice and I didn’t have the interior authority to tackle some of my greatest songs. On I ‘m Your Man, my voice had settled and I didn’t feel ambiguous about it. I could at last deliver the songs with the authority and intensity required.”

The follow-up, The Future, appeared in 1992 and remains Cohen’s last studio album. The themes of love and redemption are still dominant but, for the first time, there is a political edge as well, with songs such as the title track and “Democracy” name-checking Tiananmen Square, Stalin, Hiroshima and the Berlin Wall.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DsdAnYLvGe4

“I was living in LA through the riots and the earthquakes and the floods,” he remembers. “And even for one as relentlessly occupied with himself as I am it is very hard to keep your mind on yourself when the place is burning down, so I think that invited me to look out of the window.”

___________________________

Cohen seems to have cracked the art of growing old gracefully. Three years ago he split up with the actress, Rebecca DeMornay, his partner of several years’ standing. She admitted publicly that the age gap – she is almost 30 years his junior – played its part, so I asked him how he dealt with ageing.

“It’s the only game in town,” he said. “But it puts you off a lot of other games you’ve become attached to, like romance, because there’s nothing more inappropriate than seeing an old guy coming on.

“You still feel like an 18-year-old full of hunger and desire, but there is a certain restraint because as you grow older the possibility for humiliation in these matters becomes more abundant and you have a few little experiences that cement your determination not to put yourself in dangerous situations. But the perspective that age brings, dismal as some of the views are, is fascinating.”

And Cohen’s own future work?

“I’ve got a lot of songs half-finished. There’s a few perplexing lyrics that I’ve been working on for a long time. Things are still moving on that level but it’s on the backburner and touring seems an even more remote possibility.”

Yet he is contemplating another novel, which would be his first since 1966.

“Just lately, I’ve been thinking about blackening some pages, that enterprise of writing which I blew when I got into this songwriting racket. I don’t know exactly what I would say, but I feel I’ve had some experience and would like to lay some things out.”

Nor does Cohen rule out a return to what he calls civilian life.

“Roshi is now 90,” he says, “and I want to take advantage of his time. I’ve committed myself for the duration but I don’t know how long that is and I don’t really care.

“The devil laughs when you make plans.”

Photo: Lorca Cohen

The 7th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

0
Last night, after dinner, I listened to the Arsenal match on the radio, watched the last episode of Silicon Valley on DVD and, because I am addicted, looked at Twitter from time to time. Like most other people in the UK, I guess, my timeline was full of people watching the BRIT Awards, splenetically...

Last night, after dinner, I listened to the Arsenal match on the radio, watched the last episode of Silicon Valley on DVD and, because I am addicted, looked at Twitter from time to time. Like most other people in the UK, I guess, my timeline was full of people watching the BRIT Awards, splenetically. What did we all do before social media, I wondered? Avoid TV shows we knew we’d hate?

That’s what I do, or at least have done for the past few years: there are too many things I like out there for me to expend so much time and energy on things I dislike. It’s bad for my health. And, while I appreciate the cultural and professional imperative that lies behind a bunch of music journalists feeling obliged to watch an awards show that’s central to their industry, it still all left me a bit confused and disappointed; much more disappointed, in a way, than I was by the fact that a load of successful musicians I’m not much interested in won some awards.

Plenty of what people were writing on Twitter was undoubtedly funny (though the glee which greeted Madonna’s accident wasn’t entirely edifying, on reflection). It occurred to me, though, that Twitter provides a very easy option for critical snark: how much easier to be droll about Ed Sheeran in 140 characters than to actually analyse what is so interesting about him to so many music fans? Or, indeed, how much more apparent fun it is to take the piss out of George Ezra’s music than to recommend music that you find genuinely exciting?

As Tim Jonze pointed out in his Guardian piece a couple of days ago, there’s a disconnect right now between journalists (or tastemakers) tipping a certain breed of new artists (cf James Bay), then complaining when the same, expertly bland new artists become successful. I’ve written plenty in the past about the invidious nature of the start-of-year tipping business, and it’s odd that, say, the Natalie Prass album has been so lavishly reviewed in the past couple of months without her really showing up in any of the start of 2015 business.

The sanctimonious point I’m building to, of course, is that I’ve been writing about Prass for years, and that I’m immensely lucky to be able to ignore all these mainstream pressures in my job, and concentrate on the great weight of records coming out every month that, contrary to doomsayers’ perspectives on the industry, are still compelling. Hence these weekly playlists, which hopefully give a positive insight into the musical riches to be found if you switch off the BRITS and dig deeper. Not as many good gags, I’ll admit, but I’ll take new Michael Head, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Cannibal Ox and Godspeed You Black Emperor over Paloma Faith jokes, anyday…

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

1 Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe & Ariel Kalma – FRKWYS Vol 12: We Know Each Other Somehow (RVNG INTL)

2 Cannibal Ox – Harlem Knights (iHip Hop)

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

3 Iron & Wine – Archive Series: Volume One (Self-Released)

4 Colin Stetson & Sarah Neufeld – Never Were The Way She Was (Constellation)

5 Unknown Mortal Orchestra – Multi-Love (Jagjaguwar)

6 Blanck Mass- Dumb Flesh (Sacred Bones)

7 Various Artists – Sherwood At The Controls Volume 1: 1979-1984 (On U Sound)

8 Animal Collective & Vashti Bunyan – Prospect Hummer (FatCat)

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

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

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

11 Follakzoid – III (Sacred Bones)

12 This Is The Kit – Bashed Out (Brassland)

13 B Gascoigne, D Briscoe, D Vorhaus, S Yamashta – Phase IV: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (Waxwork)

14 Hurray For The Riff Raff – Everybody Knows (For Trayvon Martin) (Download here)

15 Goran Kajfeš Subtropic Arkestra – The Reason Why Vol 2 (Headspin)

16 Hot Chip – Why Make Sense? (Domino)

17 Godspeed You! Black Emperor – Peasantry Or ‘Light! Inside Of Light!’ (Constellation)

18 Sam Lee & Friends – The Fade In Time (Nest Collective)

19 Thom Yorke & 3D – The UK Gold (UK Uncut)

20 The Weather Station – Loyalty (Paradise Of Bachelors)

21 [REDACTED]

22 East India Youth – Culture Of Volume (XL)

Broadcast announce vinyl reissues

0
Broadcast are to have their back catlogue reissued on vinyl by Warp Records on March 9, 2015. The reissues include their three studio albums, two compilations and a collaboration with The Focus Group. Broadcast's soundtrack for Berberian Sound Studio is not included.   Trish Keenan The ful...

Broadcast are to have their back catlogue reissued on vinyl by Warp Records on March 9, 2015.

The reissues include their three studio albums, two compilations and a collaboration with The Focus Group.

Broadcast’s soundtrack for Berberian Sound Studio is not included.

 

Trish Keenan
Trish Keenan

The full list of albums due for reissue are:

Work And Non Work

The Noise Made By People

HaHa Sound

Tender Buttons

The Future Crayon

Broadcast And The Focus Group Investigate Witch Cults Of The Radio Age

A free, 8 page 10″ x 10″ booklet, featuring album artwork, will also be available for initial orders through Bleep and other independent record shops.

Sam Lee’s “The Fade In Time”: Review & Q&A

0
On the occasion of his 70th birthday in late January, I was re-reading my 2007 interview with Robert Wyatt. We were talking about national identity and about how, in spite of all his cosmopolitan influences and interests, Wyatt is always seen as an indelibly British artist. "No-one," he said, "has a...

On the occasion of his 70th birthday in late January, I was re-reading my 2007 interview with Robert Wyatt. We were talking about national identity and about how, in spite of all his cosmopolitan influences and interests, Wyatt is always seen as an indelibly British artist. “No-one,” he said, “has allowed and welcomed, as a xenophile, non-English cultures so wholeheartedly into their lives and into their brains and into their food more than I have. And yet I don’t feel the slightest bit compromised or diluted or melted as a human being. I’m as English as my Staffordshire great-grandparents.”

The second terrific album by Same Lee, “The Fade In Time”, is driven by a fundamentally similar mindset. Lee is, notionally, a folk singer, and the 12 old songs on “The Fade In Time” are all drawn from British tradition, in many cases learned from gypsies and travellers. For all his meticulous historical research, however, Lee is not much of a traditionalist. Instead of preserving the songs in aspic, he treats his material as part of a living tradition, and subjects it to radical, internationalist treatments.

So a mystical Scottish hunting song like “Jonny O’The Brine” is given a woody, organic momentum, tablas to the fore, that makes it sound like a kind of acoustic techno, then layered with horns inspired by Tajikistan wedding bands. Japanese kotos and Indian shruti boxes underpin Romany laments and tales of sacred hares. Jazz trumpets and chamber strings tangle, elegantly, with banjos and fiddles. And, on the outstanding “Bonny Bunch Of Roses”, a Napoleonic ballad is played out over a crackly Serbian 78. But whatever Lee throws at the songs, their Britishness is never diminished, but critically augmented and expanded.

This kind of cross-cultural experiment is still a risky business, of course. Often, self-consciously modern updates of folk songs can end up compromised, driven by good intentions rather than sound aesthetic choices. Nevertheless, Lee and his large band of friends (among them co-producers Arthur Jeffes and Jamie Orchard-Lisle, lynchpins of the latterday Penguin Café Orchestra) prove uncannily empathetic in their decision-making; for all the ideas and juxtapositions that illuminate these songs, none feel jarring or tokenistic.

The “Fade In Time” is a phrase lifted from “Over Yonders Hill”, but Lee characterises it as “the textural decays, the transience of time we pass through while listening, and that temporal trance we enter into when listening.” In that spirit, Lee slips field recordings of old singers into his mix (as he did on his 2012 debut, “Ground Of Its Own”), prefacing his subtly orientalised version of the Scottish “Lord Gregory” with a moving recitation by one Charlotte Higgins, recorded in 1956. Time, cultures, national identities collapse again and again, with uncommon empathy and grace.

Lee is a charismatic figure at the heart of all this, as theatrically attuned as he is scholarly: other details on his CV include burlesque dancing, anthropology, performing with the Yiddish Twist Orchestra and being taught wilderness skills by Ray Mears. Occasionally, his adventurousness – and his serene, inflected voice – can recall Damon Albarn. On “Moorlough Maggie” and “The Moon Shone On My Bed Last Night”, Jonah Brody’s koto and ukulele – a frequently twee instrument transformed into something ethereal – are reminiscent of the way a kora added exotic, harmonious new dimensions to Albarn’s “Dr Dee” project.

“Moorlough Maggie”, too, exemplifies the force of Lee’s own personality on these songs, laden as they are with so much inherent and applied cultural baggage. A love song that involves grand promises of flocks of sheep, herds of cows and, perhaps optimistically, about a hundred ships, “Moorlough Maggie” is taken with such measure and emotional investment that it becomes Lee’s own “Song To The Siren”. In the midst of it all, he provides a calm, steadying anchor; ambitious, eclectic but, ultimately, dedicated to the enduring passions that resonate through this treasure trove of great song.

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

“Memorials, Forensics!? This stuff is alive!…”: A Q&A with SAM LEE

JM: I was thinking about Robert Wyatt a while back, and about how, while he’s so often described as “quintessentially English”, he’s also such a committed internationalist, and anything but parochial. It occurs to me that this seems really relevant to The Fade In Time; is it something you recognise in your work?

Sam Lee: Yes, completely so. I look at my work and my representation of folk a little bit the way we imagine a walk in an English country garden. To anyone in it, it feels unquestionably like you’re in a garden in England, but in actuallity we are surrounded by imported plants from all over; the Himalayan mountainsides, South American temperate forests, Roman apothecaries etc. I want my music to feel local, a ‘home from home’. The sonic beddings which appeal to me most are ones that have an ability to induce, to transport, to alter the state of the listener and give the sense also of being part of a much deeper and geographically indefinite place. I don’t want to get stuck on how folk (or any song for that matter) should sound. To me, it’s a more ephemeral thing.

JM: Does having such a strong connection to Gypsy/travelling culture allow you to see British folk songs in a broader international context?

SL: I guess the nature of being close to a community seen as pariahs and ‘outsiders’ permits me to see the music with an objective freedom and not be so bound by too many assumptions or affectations. The Gypsy Travellers are imaginative geniuses, especially when it comes to appropriation and assimilation, which I admire and aspire to.

JM: Of the many tricks you pull off on The Fade In Time, I think my favourite might be the way you plant the old Serbian record into “Bonny Bunch Of Roses”. Can you tell us a little about this, and the thinking behind it?

SL: Am really glad you like that one. You have picked out exactly where I’m sonically trying to explore the idea or process of ‘The Fade in Time’; the textural decays, the transience of time we pass through while listening, and that temporal trance we enter in when listening… I wanted to touch upon the boldness of that Slavic choral music in this east meets west, as it kind of honours my own Eastern European Ashkenazi routes. Some of my predecessors were tailors to the Tzars’ army, so I wanted to explore the sonic landscapes of the east. This is folk song which I’ve loved for so long.

JM: How do the old singers and folk musicians that you know react to your experiments with tradition? I guess I’m thinking especially of Stanley Robertson; does The Fade In Time exist in part as a memorial to his cultural knowledge?

SL: Less memorial, more safari.. It’s certainly not dead, even if most carriers of the ‘keepers of the lore’, as Stanley called them, have passed on. They seem, for the most part, thrilled by the music – sometimes overwhelmed by the journey it has taken and get very emotional.. When I played back “Bonny Bunch Of Roses” to Freda Black (the 86-year-old Gypsy who taught me the song) she cried and said it gave her a feeling of her mother singing. That meant a lot…

I am actually making a film at the moment capturing the act of returning these album tracks to the families and then asking the singers to take me to where the song came from, be it a known location or tell me about their history of the song. It’ss really fascinating seeing their reactions to the material. Most of the time…

JM: What are your favourite memories of/stories about Stanley?

SL: Our first meeting will never leave me… It was in a mighty gale, climbing the cliffs at Whitby. He reached the top, with me, nervously, following behind, waiting to introduce myself. Stanley was clutching a giant whale bone arch. I stopped him to thank you for his songs in the concert I had just discovered and he turned around ‘wee a stern look in his ee’ and he growled out in full proud drama “ I ken a thoosand ballads”. It was awesome, like a moment out of Tolkien… You just sensed this ancient magic about him and a power… he had such incredible psychic abilities. He would tell me everything about my life, even things I would deem very private… He’d just announce them as they hit him, usually in really inappropriate moments, too. He would travel alongside me when I went abroad and tell me on the telephone things that were happening in my life he had no way of knowing (he called it the astral travelling). To me it seemed real and indisputable, nothing was private and nothing could be hidden. That is the Travellers for you. They are a very gifted people.

JM: Do you think the possibilities of history and tradition are underused in contemporary British music?

SL: ‘History’ and ‘tradition’ are such loaded words. The world of contemporary music is all about the forward thinking, the now, the new, the next. The closest thing we get to history in a lot of music I hear is all the stuff that references the ’70/’80s, electronica or sounds that were engineered within recent memory. That’s history for a lot of listeners and makers. And I think that is great! I love modern sounds and the ephemerality of it. However, I think there is much more scope to marry these styles with a musical connection to the more distant past, dare I say to explore a more ‘spiritual realm’ – without being millstoned by stereotypes. I’m interested in re-wilding and getting back to the roots of things.

JM: How long does it take for you to put together an album like this? It strikes me that, long before the music is even started, there’s an incredible amount of forensic fieldwork involved?

SL: Memorials, Forensics!? This stuff is alive! I guess this new album has taken a couple of years to put together, but that’s only in a very practical sense. It’s not been a direct journey from field to table (record) with many of these songs. Some I’ve sung for years and are longtime friends who have just found their way into the record. Others I’ve been told about, heard other singers along the way – or have developed songs with the band until they felt right to include. There are a few songs on the album which didn’t spend very long in transit till they reached the pot. Others, I feel I’ve known my whole life.

JM: Could you ever envisage yourself making a record without that level of deep research? A set of original songs, say?

SL: Yes. I’m sure that time will come, but right now I have the luxury of being able to forage for these songs, an experience I love. I love the people who I learn them from. I feel a profound honour in both spending time with these ancient remenants of an ancient world and helping to bring a bit of attention to their unbelievable treasures. I think the world can probably wait for my own latest heartbreak/confession etc a bit longer.

JM: What do you find so appealing about singing stereotypically “women’s” songs – songs from someone else’s perspective?

SL: Funnily enough, I don’t see these as women’s songs at all. They have been sung for generations by men and women alike; with no particular rules of appropriateness to gender or sexuality. That seems like a relatively recent way of looking at things. I like to sing songs that bare their heart, and those songs told from the women’s point of view are often ones that deal with universal themes most honestly abandonment, rejection, loss and compassion. These are things men and women experience equally. Folk music allows men and women to tackle big issues in a powerful way. It’s a bit like group therapy. I often get grown-men crying at my gigs. I think that’s pretty cool.

Led Zeppelin – Physical Graffiti

0
Led Zeppelin’s sixth album, was also, to varying extents, Led Zeppelin’s third, fourth and fifth albums – the fifteen-track running order, consuming 82 minutes and four side of vinyl, consisted of eight new songs, amalgamated with seven out-takes from III, IV and Houses Of The Holy. When Zeppe...

Led Zeppelin’s sixth album, was also, to varying extents, Led Zeppelin’s third, fourth and fifth albums – the fifteen-track running order, consuming 82 minutes and four side of vinyl, consisted of eight new songs, amalgamated with seven out-takes from III, IV and Houses Of The Holy. When Zeppelin began work on Physical Graffiti, in what proved to be abortive early sessions in late 1973, they were – with apologies possibly due to The Rolling Stones – arguably the biggest, certainly the most infamous, rock’n’roll band in the world.

All that remained was the creation of a definitive magnum opus – their own gatefolded masterpiece to file alongside Exile On Main St, the White Album and Quadrophenia. Physical Graffiti could – and in less adroit hands, assuredly would – have been preposterous, the moment at which Zeppelin’s imperial phase collapsed in a goutish wheeze of decadent hubris. Instead, it’s magnificent: the Rome that wouldn’t fall.

This reissue appears in a panoply of formats. There’s a straightforward double CD, a triple CD including a bunch of hitherto unreleased stuff, vinyl and digital equivalents of both those options, and a “super deluxe” box set including all of the above along with alternate cover art, a book of previously unseen photographs, and a print of the original cover, the first 30,000 of which will be individually numbered. It has also been remastered by Jimmy Page, indefatigable curator of Zeppelin’s legacy, who may be unique in being able perceive significant difference between this and the original, or in thinking there was much wrong with the way Physical Graffiti sounded the first time.

The enticement of this reissue is a batch of previously unheard early versions of seven of the fifteen tracks which comprise the epic sprawl of Physical Graffiti. These latest exhumations from Jimmy Page’s attic contain few forehead-slapping revelations. “Brandy & Coke”, an early take on “Trampled Under Foot”, comes much cleaner on the finished song’s debt to Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition”. “Driving Through Kashmir”, part of the journey to one of Zeppelin’s loftiest peaks, suggests that there was a point at which an argument was made for turning up the trumpets slightly.

A shorter, softer instrumental version of “Sick Again” permits appreciation of how pretty Zeppelin were capable of being when dropping to the swaggering priapic metal colossi schtick for a couple of minutes, and also spares the listener Robert Plant’s exposition of the sexual politics of Hollywood’s groupie scene of the early 70s (“The fun of comin’/The pain in leavin’,” etc – arguably, you had to be there.) Of the new versions of “In My Time Of Dying”, “Houses Of The Holy”, “Everybody Makes It Through The Night” and “Boogie With Stu”, it is difficult to sum up much reaction beyond the thought that they’re not as good as the familiar, finished versions – of some interest to completists and/or musicologists, perhaps, but not worth the price of re-purchase.

This is, of course, the nature of early takes – although, at the risk of prompting another deluge of expensive reissues, it might be more interesting to hear some really early takes. Where, for example, does one even begin assembling something as monumental as “Kashmir”? What were the first notes plucked or prodded that eventually became “In The Light”? From where did Zeppelin find the nerve to run “In My Time Of Dying” out to eleven – still utterly compelling – minutes?

It’s this ironclad – metalclad, if you will – confidence that makes Physical Graffiti such a gripping listen. So very many things could have gone wrong; none of them do. When Zeppelin are silly and puerile, they manage to sound guileless and charming – just as Plant is possibly not really singing about a car when he begs to be permitted to pump gas and dig under the hood on “Trampled Under Foot”, it’s plausible that “Custard Pie” is not actually about dessert. When Zeppelin are pompous and preposterous, they’re also perfectly poised – in the years ahead, many would seek to conquer the heights of “Kashmir”, and most would pratfall spectacularly. And the rare excursions into modesty are all the more affecting amid the sturm and drang elsewhere – Page’s acoustic instrumental noodle “Bron-Yr-Aur”, named for the Welsh cottage where Zeppelin composed much of III, and originally recorded for that album, is a deceptively nonchalant expression of his mastery of his instrument.

In retrospect, Physical Graffiti stands as Peak Zeppelin. Its sheer size and scope, and the epoch-spanning, piecemeal nature of its assembly, give it the feeling of an accidental best-of. And while Zeppelin’s two subsequent proper studio albums, Presence and In Through The Out Door, had their moments, they also – substantially as a function of having to follow Physical Graffiti – felt somewhat like exercises in decline management. The album endures as a bequest to the bogglement of the ages.