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Panda Bear – Panda Bear Vs The Grim Reaper

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From folk, via drugs and jazz, to somewhere considerably weirder. The journey made by Animal Collective – with a bit less jazz and a lot more synthesizers – isn’t completely unlike that made by The Byrds in the middle 1960s. In that context, there’s a case to be made for Panda Bear – 35 ye...

From folk, via drugs and jazz, to somewhere considerably weirder. The journey made by Animal Collective – with a bit less jazz and a lot more synthesizers – isn’t completely unlike that made by The Byrds in the middle 1960s. In that context, there’s a case to be made for Panda Bear – 35 year old Noah Lennox – as Animal Collective’s David Crosby. This is a man as yet without a cape, yacht or moustache, but there remain some powerful similarities: namely, a feel for the vibrations in a harmonious world, and of the visionary possibilities of the human voice.

 

In that respect, Panda Bear Vs The Grim Reaper, his fifth album, isn’t dissimilar to his work with Animal Collective or his own previous solo work, particularly 2007’s excellent Person Pitch or 2011’s Tomboy. A standout Lennox song, like “My Girls” from Animal Collective’s Merriweather Post Pavilion is a symphony of digital sequencing, ecstatic singing, and heartfelt sentiment: the song is about wanting to provide a house for his young family. Whether it fronts abstract folk strumming, or slick post-disco grooving (he was among the featured singers on Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories album of 2013) he’s the kind of singer whose voice you instinctively trust.

 

It’s a resource that brings continuity to a fifth album touching on greed, death and – more often than you might imagine – dogs; and moves between reference points as remote as the Prodigy, Howard Jones, the Beach Boys and 1960s girl group pop. At times it’s a wonderfully playful album. After the opening  “Sequential Circuits”, a fanfare of melancholic chording, we face the mighty single “Mr Noah”, where over churning beats, Lennox declaims a minimal text turning the words “That dog got bit on the leg” into a euphoric exhortation.

 

Like a mantra, and like Crosby, Panda Bear can make a little go a long way, revisiting a word or a short phrase, and taking it somewhere quite beyond its origin. On the lovely “Come To Your Senses”, a stirring and beautiful song about a learning experience, and not making the same mistakes repeatedly, he opens the song with a repeated question, “Are you mad?”, which grows by his treatment into something of considerably greater impact than it might appear baldly on the page.

 

True enough, Panda Bear is no longer completely alone in exploring the possibilities of raw electronica and the human voice, as good gallery rave records in the past couple of years by Maria Minerva, Holly Herndon and Laurel Halo will surely testify. Still, his work is possibly the most interesting as a collision point between hippy music old and new. Vs The Grim Reaper has room for pro-human peace riffing (“Selfish Gene” comes over like Withnail and I with its talk about a “total shift in the unconscious” and how wigs, and “making noise not songs” just “ain’t it”). Likewise, the restless detail of “Sequential Circuits” or “Butcher Baker Candlestick Maker” moves the game on from the crusty didgeridoo vibing of Megadog era techno.

 

For all its being named like a cartoon strip/Scientist dub album, however, there’s reason to suppose that the death alluded to in the title is often a real issue here. In the last two thirds of the album “Tropic Of Cancer” is followed by “Lonely Wanderer”. Both are sung in the remote and melancholic voice that has been heard echoing through timeless soda fountain dramas from Phil Spector girl group productions, through the Beach Boys, and even the Ramones.

 

Here, though, it tackles death, beginning with an electronic last post, and being accompanied by heavenly harps. The tune reaches something like the vulnerability of the Beach Boys’ “In My Room”, a fragile epic, which concludes “You won’t come back/You can’t come back…” a choir of Panda Bears sorrowfully answering each other. “Lonely Wanderer” then asks a kind of post-mortem life review/customer satisfaction questionnaire. “If you look back,” it asks in the same vulnerable voice. “Was it worthwhile….”

 

This is the big ask behind Panda Bear’s ecstasies, the yawping carpe diem of his music. As much as this resists being pigeonholed as a concept album, you can’t deny the power of the closing “Acid Wash”. The song declaims images of natural beauty in joyful voices reminiscent of the Proclaimers, and rises to a victorious electronic crescendo, announcing finally “You’ve won against the dark”. Was it worthwhile? Panda Bear has surely answered his own question.

John Robinson

 

Q&A

Noah Lennox

What comes first with you – your vocal melodies, or developing the track? Or is it all a bit more complex/evolving than that?

It depends on the set of songs but this round all the songs save two (the two floaty ones towards the end of the album) began as rhythms. as i developed the sounds and pieced together the framework of the rhythms over several months the singing parts materialized kind of like a polaroid picture oozes into focus. the words came last.

 

What did Sonic Boom/Pete Kember bring to the project? How do his ideas chime with yours?

Pete and I tend to hear things in different ways and our skill sets are varied in ways that complement each other. many of the intros are his alone although I’d often have an image or a movement in mind. He’s very good at finding the points at which sounds coalesce and has a keen ear for balance.

 

Was there anything about the experience of working with Daft Punk last year that fed into how you approached this record?

The track with Daft Punk was made while i was in the thick of these songs and perhaps more than anything felt like proof of concept. Making a track with them was a dream come true and a wave of inspiration for me.

INTERVIEW JOHN ROBINSON

Bob Dylan announces spring tour dates

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Bob Dylan has announced his first set of live dates for 2015. The 19 dates begin on April 10 at The Borgata in Atlantic City and then takes in venues in Georgia, Florida, North Carolina and Oklahoma before winding up in Texas on May 7 at the Majestic Theatre, San Antonio. Dylan released his most r...

Bob Dylan has announced his first set of live dates for 2015.

The 19 dates begin on April 10 at The Borgata in Atlantic City and then takes in venues in Georgia, Florida, North Carolina and Oklahoma before winding up in Texas on May 7 at the Majestic Theatre, San Antonio.

Dylan released his most recent studio album, Shadows In The Night, on February 3, 2015. You can read the Uncut review here.

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Bob Dylan plays:

April 10 – Atlantic City, NJ @ The Borgata
April 11 – Baltimore, MD @ Lyric Opera House
April 12 – Richmond, VA @ Altria Theater
April 14 – Savannah, GA @ Johnny Mercer Theater
April 15 – Montgomery, AL @ Montgomery PAC
April 17 – North Charleston, SC @ North Charleston Coliseum
April 18 – St. Augustine, FL @ St. Augustine Amphitheatre
April 19 – Orlando, FL @ Walt Disney Theater
April 20 – Clearwater, FL @ Ruth Eckerd Hall
April 21 – Fort Lauderdale, FL @ Au-Rene Theater
April 24 – Atlanta, GA @ Fox Theatre
April 25 – Durham, NC @ Durham PAC
April 27 – Nashville, TN @ Andrew Jackson Hall
April 29 – New Orleans, LA @ Saenger Theatre
May 02 – Thackerville, OK @ WinStar World Casino
May 03 – Oklahoma City, OK @ Civic Center Music Hall
May 05 – Houston, TX @ Bayou Music Center
May 06 – Austin, TX @ Bass Concert Hall
May 07 – San Antonio, TX @ Majestic Theatre

Nick Cave’s 30 best songs

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Here's a fascinating long-read from the archives – a look back at Nick Cave’s best songs (from our September 2010 issue), as chosen by his Bad Seeds and Grinderman bandmates, famous fans including Guy Garvey, Richard Hawley and Bobby Gillespie, and Cave himself… “I thought, ‘Fuck, that’s...


Here’s a fascinating long-read from the archives – a look back at Nick Cave’s best songs (from our September 2010 issue), as chosen by his Bad Seeds and Grinderman bandmates, famous fans including Guy Garvey, Richard Hawley and Bobby Gillespie, and Cave himself… “I thought, ‘Fuck, that’s pretty good…’”

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In 1980, a moody band of Australians moved to London, changed their name to The Birthday Party, and initiated a full-blooded assault on the music business. Volatile and chaotic, it seemed unlikely they would last long. Thirty years later, however, their leader Nick Cave has survived to become one of his generation’s pre-eminent singer-songwriters. This month, Uncut celebrates the wild and erudite maestro behind The Birthday Party, The Bad Seeds and Grinderman, and invites him, his friends and bandmates to select the 30 finest songs in his capacious repertoire.

“As far back as I can remember, there was something that thrilled me about telling a story, and it’s absolutely the way I think, and when I sit down and try and write a song, I think in a narrative way. I don’t think James Brown does that – it just comes rolling out of his heart. But lately, I’ve been trying to work out a way of writing so a listener doesn’t have to be hearing a story to enjoy what I do.

“Round the (Birthday Party’s) Junkyard album, I wrote a song called ‘King Ink’ that I listened to and finally felt that I’d done something that seemed original and authentic to myself – that I’d arrived somewhere with that lyric. I think before that I was floundering around all my various influences, and people I wanted to write like: poets, writers. I started to get a voice in that particular song.

“I try and make them work on the page – that’s the way I usually write songs. I don’t write with an instrument in my hand. I write a bunch of lyrics and take them to the piano or the guitar. So on some level they have to work on the page, though on some level I think that’s a fault with what I do.

“When I get too tangled up in the language, I get to a point with lyric-writing where I start to disappear up my own rectum and it’s always nice to pull back and go back to something that is basic and from the heart. I always return to the blues – especially John Lee Hooker. He has a certain style of writing that begins with one idea in mind, and by riffing on a theme, ends up with something very different. It makes for a very perplexing, structurally strange kind of lyric and I love that kind of thing.

“I think when you’re making something, you really think like you’re making the greatest thing that the world has ever known. Then you get the record, and you realise it’s just another record and there’s a terrible sucking of perspective on things, which just makes you want to run away and make the next thing that’s going to change the world. You see things for what they are. Fifteen albums later, I’m still trying…”

Click to the next page to begin our top 30…

Yoko Ono retrospective exhibition announced

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Yoko Ono is to be the subject of a retrospective exhibition at New York's Museum of Modern Art. The exhibition - titled Yoko Ono: One Woman Show, 1960 - 1971 - will include 125 pieces including works on paper, installations, recordings, films and performances. Rolling Stone reports that the exhibi...

Yoko Ono is to be the subject of a retrospective exhibition at New York’s Museum of Modern Art.

The exhibition – titled Yoko Ono: One Woman Show, 1960 – 1971 – will include 125 pieces including works on paper, installations, recordings, films and performances.

Rolling Stone reports that the exhibition will run from May 17 – September, 2015.

In 1971, Ono staged an unofficial exhibition at the same venue, called Museum of Modern [F]art.

Björk is also the subject of a major retrospective at MoMA which is due to run from March 7 until June 7, 2015.

Neil Young fronts ad campaign for skatewear label

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Neil Young has appeared in a new advertising campaign for streetwear company, Supreme. Young follows on from artists including Lou Reed and Shane MacGowan, who have appeared in previous campaigns for the label. You can buy a t-shirt with Young's image from the Supreme website.   Supreme...

Neil Young has appeared in a new advertising campaign for streetwear company, Supreme.

Young follows on from artists including Lou Reed and Shane MacGowan, who have appeared in previous campaigns for the label.

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You can buy a t-shirt with Young’s image from the Supreme website.

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Supreme was founded in 1984 and is best known for their skateboarding and street clothing.

The news of Young’s affiliation with the label follows last month’s announcement that Joni Mitchell is the new face of Saint Laurent.

Young is currently working on new material with Willie Nelson‘s sons, Lukas and Micah.

Mark Kozelek interviewed

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From Mark Kozelek's living room window, he can see the Golden Gate Bridge, the San Francisco Marina and, he points out to Uncut, the Tiburon neighbourhood where Robin Williams killed himself. "It's hard for middle-aged people to see San Francisco taken over by young, Silicon Valley money," he says ...

From Mark Kozelek’s living room window, he can see the Golden Gate Bridge, the San Francisco Marina and, he points out to Uncut, the Tiburon neighbourhood where Robin Williams killed himself.

“It’s hard for middle-aged people to see San Francisco taken over by young, Silicon Valley money,” he says of the city he’s lived in for most of his adult life. Kozelek’s favourite restaurant closed down a few weeks ago, and the grocery store down the street, and the Lumiere movie theatre. “That stuff bothers me,” he continues,” and makes me feel old. But I’ve got this gorgeous view and a pretty good set-up and I’m still inspired every day – so why fix what isn’t broke?”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UgaquGird4w

Today, Kozelek is answering questions by email, having avoided old-fashioned interviews for the past few years – “So I don’t get quoted with words like ‘dunno’,” he claims. Last night, Sun Kil Moon played a show at the Fonda Theatre in Los Angeles, part of a 2014 campaign which has been, even by Kozelek’s industrious standards, intense. It began with the release of Benji, the most critically-acclaimed album of his 22-year career, and is ending, more or less, with a tender, dolorous collection entitled Mark Kozelek Sings Christmas Carols.

Over roughly 17 albums, mostly using the band names Red House Painters and Sun Kil Moon, Kozelek has forensically documented his life: a compelling patchwork of family anecdotes, love stories, tragedies, tour grouches, bereavements and small talk about cats and boxing. In the past two years, though, four remarkable albums (Among The Leaves, Perils From The Sea, Mark Kozelek And Desertshore and Benji) have seen Kozelek accelerate his creative process with an evolved, off-the-cuff way of writing songs; a diaristic vigour that gives even greater intimacy to what he calls, archly, “middle-aged ramblings about dead relatives.”

Kozelek runs his own label (Caldo Verde), usually tours solo, and releases a steady stream of live albums to make a pragmatic living as a cult artist. But the rapturous reviews for Benji, especially, have given him a greater prominence than ever before, and exposed some other aspects of his personality to a wider – and slightly shocked – audience.

It has been an eventful autumn. On September 5, at the Hopscotch Festival in North Carolina, Kozelek’s characteristically grumpy stage persona found him lambasting a talkative crowd as “fucking hillbillies”. Online indignation duly followed, and by September 9 Kozelek was selling t-shirts with the slogan “All You Fuckin’ Hillbillies Shut The Fuck Up” on his website. Then, on September 14, Kozelek’s performance at the Ottawa Folk Festival was disrupted by the War On Drugs playing, at somewhat louder volume, on a neighbouring stage. “Who the fuck is that?” Kozelek asked the crowd. “I hate that beer commercial lead-guitar shit.” He then introduced his next song as “The War On Drugs Can Suck My Fucking Dick”.

A bewildered War On Drugs later took to social media to try and find out what had been going on, which only served to amuse, or provoke, Kozelek further. By October 7, he had written, recorded and released “War On Drugs: Suck My Cock”, in which he also referred to a journalist who’d taken offence at his “hillbillies” jibe as a “spoiled bitch rich kid blogger brat”. After ranting in similar fashion for two decades, Kozelek’s cantankerous humour had suddenly been turned into rolling indie-rock news. The War On Drugs’ Adam Granduciel eventually responded, exasperated. Kozelek, now pathological in his pursuit, released “Adam Granofsky Blues”, in which he read out Granduciel’s quotes punctuated by increasingly hysterical laughter.

This last phase of the story happened after our interview, however; one in which Kozelek talks unrepentantly about his “banter”, scathingly about social media and seriously, and in depth, about his art. Again and again, too, there’s a sense of him asserting his credentials as a decent human being. “I have love in my heart,” he says, “and I’m kind to people every single day of my life…”

Watch Matthew E White’s video for “Rock & Roll Is Cold”

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Matthew E White has released a video for a new song, "Rock & Roll Is Cold".

Matthew E White has released a video for a new song, “Rock & Roll Is Cold“.

The track will appear on his upcoming album, Fresh Blood.

Introducing the video, White said: “This video was about highlighting and making use of pre-existing beauty and grandeur. The images I wanted were John Ford’s America – part Badlands, part Bonnie And Clyde.

“To that end, I used a team in Salt Lake City known much more for shooting spectacular outdoor shots than any music videos. That was really fresh for me, not to mention extraordinarily physically challenging at times – but these guys are world traveling, mountain climbing pros and brought out the tremendous beauty of the landscape we shot in.

“Not to mention the extraordinary beauty of my lady, Miss Merry George. Mirroring the family involvement of the Fresh Blood album cover (shot at my Grandma’s house in Alabama) the final scene of this was shot at my Aunt’s house. It’s nice to keep the family involved when you can.”

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Fresh Blood will be released in the UK on Domino on March 9, 2015.

White has announced live dates to coincide with the album’s release.

He will play:

Tuesday 3 March – Brooklyn, NY @ BRIC
Monday 9 March – Paris, France @ New Morning (solo)
Tuesday 10 March – London, UK @ St Luke’s (solo) SOLD OUT

Tuesday 14 April – Glasgow, Oran Mor
Wednesday 15 April – Leeds, Brudenell Social Club
Thursday 16 April – Manchester, Gorilla
Friday 17 April – Gateshead, Sage
Saturday 18 April – Liverpool, Leaf
Sunday 19 April- Bristol, Marble Factory
Monday 20 April – London, Village Underground

Van Morrison announces new album

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Van Morrison has released details of his new album. Duets: Reworking The Catalogue features reinterpretations of 16 Van Morrison songs by Morrison along with artists including Bobby Womack, Steve Winwood, Mark Knopfler and Mavis Staples. Scroll down to read the full tracklisting. The album was ...

Van Morrison has released details of his new album.

Duets: Reworking The Catalogue features reinterpretations of 16 Van Morrison songs by Morrison along with artists including Bobby Womack, Steve Winwood, Mark Knopfler and Mavis Staples.

Scroll down to read the full tracklisting.

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The album was produced by Van Morrison along with Don Was and Bob Rock. It will be released on RCA Records.

The ful tracklisting for Duets: Reworking The Catalogue is:

Some Peace Of Mind” with Bobby Womack (original version released on Hymns To The Silence, 1991)
Lord, If I Ever Needed Someone” with Mavis Staples (His Band And The Street Choir, 1970)
Higher Than The World” with George Benson (Inarticulate Speech Of The Heart, 1983)
Wild Honey” with Joss Stone (Common One, 1980)
Whatever Happened to P.J. Proby” with P.J. Proby (Down The Road, 2002)
Carrying A Torch” with Clare Teal (Hymns To The Silence, 1991)
The Eternal Kansas City” with Gregory Porter (A Period Of Transition, 1977)
Streets Of Arklow” with Mick Hucknall (Veedon Fleece, 1974)
These Are The Days” with Natalie Cole (Avalon Sunset, 1989)
Get On With The Show” with Georgie Fame (What’s Wrong With This Picture, 2003)
Rough God Goes Riding” with Shana Morrison (The Healing Game, 1997)
Fire In The Belly” with Steve Winwood (The Healing Game, 1997)
Born To Sing” with Chris Farlowe (No Plan B, 2012)
Irish Heartbeat” with Mark Knopfler (Irish Heartbeat, 1988)
Real Real Gone” with Michael Bublé (Enlightenment, 1990)
How Can A Poor Boy” with Taj Mahal (Keep It Simple, 2008)

Bruce Springsteen’s 40 greatest songs

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Bruce Springsteen's 40 greatest songs are picked by an all-star cast – including Daniel Lanois, Howe Gelb, Mike Scott, Holly Johnson, Ed Harcourt, Ben Harper, Susan Sarandon and more – in this gem from the Uncut archives (originally in our April 2003 issue, Take 71). “He extracts magic from th...

Bruce Springsteen’s 40 greatest songs are picked by an all-star cast – including Daniel Lanois, Howe Gelb, Mike Scott, Holly Johnson, Ed Harcourt, Ben Harper, Susan Sarandon and more – in this gem from the Uncut archives (originally in our April 2003 issue, Take 71). “He extracts magic from the everyday!” Compiled by Allan Jones

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Bruce Springsteen as idol, hero and inspiration by Steve Wynn

It’s hard today to convey the radical and profound impact of Bruce Springsteen in the mid-’70s. In the years since, he’s become more of an icon, a Walking Statement and, through no fault of his own, a prototype of a caricature that has been embraced by lesser sax-driven, good-time party bands over the years. But in the mid-’70s it was almost a revelation to see a performer who was so low on pretence and so devoted and committed to the possibilities and magic of rock’n’roll. On record, and especially in concert, Springsteen broke down the walls between himself and his fans (most likely because he was first and foremost a fan himself) and used catharsis, devotion and boundless energy as the method, the goal and ends in themselves.

When I tell people that a Bruce Springsteen show in 1978 led directly to the formation of The Dream Syndicate, they’re usually surprised. I was back home in LA after my first year in college and was finally able to see Springsteen and The E Street Band play a show at the LA Forum. I had loved his records for years and was excited to see the songs performed live but was unprepared for the gospel-like fervour that he put across at the time.

And I was so blown away by the show that I went home and called my college pal Kendra Smith (who was home for the summer in San Diego) and told her that I was driving down the next night and taking her to the next show on the tour (yes, you could buy Springsteen tickets the day of the show back then). In 1978, Kendra and I were already firmly under the sway of punk rock and had, in fact, met over plans to share a ride to see The Jam in San Francisco. But she was equally knocked out by Springsteen’s show – his genuine enthusiasm and fearless excitement provided a stark contrast to even the punk rock shows we had seen, many of which were just as staged and posed and stilted as any prog-rock event. As we left the San Diego Arena, still buzzed from what we had seen, we decided that we had to form a band as soon as possible.

Kendra had sung a bit in school and I had written songs and played guitar in a few bands. But Springsteen’s show (much like the best punk music) made it seem that we had every right to be on a stage, the only qualification being desire and love for what we were doing and a belief in the power and transcendence of great music. The band we formed was called Suspects and didn’t exactly set the world on fire, but a few years later we formed a new band in LA. The Dream Syndicate mixed many of the things we loved – the noise and psychedelia of the Velvets, Stooges and garage bands, as well as the attitudes and trash aesthetic of punk rock – but I can honestly say that the evangelical qualities that we saw at that Springsteen show in 1978 was also a big part of what we ended up doing with the Syndicate, and is still an influence on my live shows today.

No retreat, baby, no surrender. And that’s true even 25 years later.

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40 Dead Man Walking
Theme song of Tim Robbins’ 1995 film

SUSAN SARANDON: Being from New Jersey, I admire most everything Springsteen’s done from Day One, but this song triggers an obvious connection with the movie we made. Bruce is still a good friend of Tim Robbins and me, and his wife and kids are adorable. I liked him back in the day and I like him now, because he’s managed to keep awake, and keep changing. He’s committed as a writer, and a great musician, and I like what he’s about.
Eddie Vedder’s also a great guy and a really thoughtful person… ha ha, Goldie Hawn is now ribbing me about going for the ‘brain’ thing in men. She says she liked Jim Morrison’s looks, but the drug problem put her off. That would’ve been tough. Given that we’ve just made a film about ageing groupies, I’ll add that I did live with a rock star once – but not as a groupie! The problem with being a groupie, or even too much of a fan, is living through someone else, y’know? But hooking up with somebody and finding him interesting outside his job, well, that I have done. Been on the road, the works. But not with somebody I met on my knees in the dressing room – c’mon, let’s get real! Yes, Goldie, a sense of humour and a brain mean a lot to me, yeah. I like to have somebody I can look at in the morning and not be embarrassed. She’s not buying it. She’s still fantasising about what one no-repercussions night with Jim Morrison would’ve been like. But I’m still voting for Bruce.
TIM ROBBINS: Thanks, Bruce.
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39 Brilliant Disguise
Tunnel Of Love album track, 1987

ADAM DURITZ: I think Tunnel Of Love is a vastly underrated album, at least by songwriting standards. I’m not crazy about some of the changes in instrumentation on this record. They certainly haven’t aged particularly well. But every artist has the right to try new things and, anyways, if you can get past that shit, the songs are truly beautiful.
HEATHER NOVA: It’s a great song about relationships because it’s about insecurity. That’s what makes relationships both scary and fun, that element of “Do I really know you and do you really know me or are we just two strangers in this bed?” He has a macho image but I think he is really soft and sensitive and I think he is a really thoughtful writer and his songs are really sensual and emotional.
SAF MANZOOR: This is a love song in three dimensions that goes beyond the comforting simplicities offered by most pop songs. In fact “Brilliant Disguise” is less about love than it is about faith, doubt and self-deception; it is about the fear that comes with knowing that we never truly know anyone, even ourselves. It is always tempting to speculate as to how autobiographical this is, but perhaps the fact that Springsteen divorced Julianne Phillips less than a year after the release of Tunnel Of Love suggests that he did not have to look too far for source material to inspire his songwriting. Springsteen’s songs had tended to dwell on how external factors prevented his characters from finding peace and happiness; but in “Brilliant Disguise”, it is his personal demons that stop the protagonist from being content. The character in the song wants to believe that he loves his new wife and that she loves him, but he is plagued by doubt and guilt. He is not a bad man and yet the final lines of “Brilliant Disguise” see him in bed with a woman he is not sure he truly knows, praying that “God have mercy on the man who doubts what he’s sure of”. Springsteen has referred to Nebraska as an album about American isolation – what happens when people are alienated from their friends, community and government. Frightening a prospect as that is, “Brilliant Disguise” was about something perhaps even more terrifying: the consequences of becoming isolated from yourself.

Jimmy Page to receive Rock’N’Roll Soul Award at NME Awards 2015 with Austin, Texas

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Led Zeppelin guitarist to receive special one-off award at London ceremony on Wednesday (February 18)... Jimmy Page will be honoured with a special one-off award, the Rock'N'Roll Soul Award, at the NME Awards 2015 with Austin, Texas. Page will be at the ceremony, which takes place at London's O2 Academy Brixton on Wednesday (February 18), to collect the award in person. Tickets are available here. The Rock'N'Roll Soul Award recognises the unique genius of Jimmy Page and celebrates one of rock's most important and influential guitar players, writers and producers. Truly in a field of his own, Jimmy Page has given so much to the world of rock'n'roll, with his influence continuing to reverberate amongst today’s artists. NME editor Mike Williams says: "This special, one-off award has been created to reflect one of the most important and iconic figures to have ever picked up an instrument. There is nobody in popular culture quite like Jimmy Page, and we are honoured to be giving him the Rock'N'Roll Soul Award at this year's ceremony." In addition to the announcement that Jimmy Page will receive the Rock'N'Roll Soul Award, it was also recently confirmed that Suede are to be the recipients of this year's Godlike Genius Award. Suede will perform live on the night, as well as Charli XCX, Run The Jewels, The Vaccines and Royal Blood. Radio 1 DJ Huw Stephens will return to host the show for the second year. Last year's big winners included Arctic Monkeys, Paul McCartney and Damon Albarn. The line-up for the NME Awards Tour 2015 with Austin, Texas has already been confirmed. Palma Violets, Fat White Family, The Amazing Snakeheads and Slaves will tour the UK, kicking off on February 19 and tickets are available here. Meanwhile, Page has announced details of a Sound Tracks box set containing expanded scores for Lucifer Rising and Death Wish II. You can hear music from the box set here. The box set will be released on March 6.

Led Zeppelin guitarist to receive special one-off award at London ceremony on Wednesday (February 18)…

Jimmy Page will be honoured with a special one-off award, the Rock’N’Roll Soul Award, at the NME Awards 2015 with Austin, Texas.

Page will be at the ceremony, which takes place at London’s O2 Academy Brixton on Wednesday (February 18), to collect the award in person. Tickets are available here.

The Rock’N’Roll Soul Award recognises the unique genius of Jimmy Page and celebrates one of rock’s most important and influential guitar players, writers and producers. Truly in a field of his own, Jimmy Page has given so much to the world of rock’n’roll, with his influence continuing to reverberate amongst today’s artists.

NME editor Mike Williams says: “This special, one-off award has been created to reflect one of the most important and iconic figures to have ever picked up an instrument. There is nobody in popular culture quite like Jimmy Page, and we are honoured to be giving him the Rock’N’Roll Soul Award at this year’s ceremony.”

In addition to the announcement that Jimmy Page will receive the Rock’N’Roll Soul Award, it was also recently confirmed that Suede are to be the recipients of this year’s Godlike Genius Award.

Suede will perform live on the night, as well as Charli XCX, Run The Jewels, The Vaccines and Royal Blood.

Radio 1 DJ Huw Stephens will return to host the show for the second year. Last year’s big winners included Arctic Monkeys, Paul McCartney and Damon Albarn.

The line-up for the NME Awards Tour 2015 with Austin, Texas has already been confirmed. Palma Violets, Fat White Family, The Amazing Snakeheads and Slaves will tour the UK, kicking off on February 19 and tickets are available here.

Meanwhile, Page has announced details of a Sound Tracks box set containing expanded scores for Lucifer Rising and Death Wish II. You can hear music from the box set here. The box set will be released on March 6.

March 2015

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The Smiths, The War On Drugs, Kraftwerk and Bob Dylan all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated March 2015. Morrissey is on the front cover, and inside we celebrate the 30th anniversary of Meat Is Murder with an in-depth, inside look at the making of the record. With help from band members, clo...

The Smiths, The War On Drugs, Kraftwerk and Bob Dylan all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated March 2015.

Morrissey is on the front cover, and inside we celebrate the 30th anniversary of Meat Is Murder with an in-depth, inside look at the making of the record.

With help from band members, close associates and contemporaries – even Neil Kinnock – we learn about awkward moments in Little Chefs, car races with OMD and the use of sausages as an offensive weapon… “We were unmanageable!”

Adam Granduciel discusses The War On Drugs‘ 2014, a rollercoaster of a year which saw their third album, Lost In The Dream, achieve huge acclaim. The frontman even looks forward to the band’s next album, and finally talks at length about the little matter of Mark Kozelek

Elsewhere, Kraftwerk members and associates tell the full story of Autobahn, a record that changed the world’s idea of Germany and revolutionised electronic music.

Bob Dylan‘s Shadows In The Night, a collection of Frank Sinatra covers, gets the full Uncut analysis in our reviews section, while we also look at Sinatra’s dealings with rock, a genre he once called “brutal, ugly, degenerate, vicious…”

Also in the issue, Allan Jones pays tribute to the late Joe Cocker, we examine Tim Buckley‘s overlooked final years, and put your questions to the master of soundtracks, Ennio Morricone, who discusses Sergio Leone, Quentin Tarantino and Morrissey.

Steve Cropper takes us through 10 of the greatest songs he played on and co-wrote – from Stax cuts from Wilson Pickett, Otis Redding and Booker T & The MG’s, to later work with John Lennon, Big Star, Neil Young and the Blues Brothers – while Phosphorescent‘s Matthew Houck reveals eight records that have soundtracked his life.

Tim Burgess recalls The Charlatans‘ storied career in our ‘album by album’ piece this month, while Devo describe the inspirations behind their gleefully warped classic, Jocko Homo – from witnessing the tragic Kent State shootings to jamming with David Bowie in Cologne…

This month’s 40-page reviews section includes Dylan, Led Zeppelin, Emmylou Harris, Slowdive, Father John Misty, The Pretty Things, The Pop Group, The Unthanks and more, while the Instant Karma section at the front of the magazine features Clive Langer, Man and Blake Mills, among others.

Meanwhile, our free CD, Fresh Meat, includes tracks from Phosphorescent, Father John Misty, Duke Garwood, Rhiannon Giddens, Dutch Uncles, The Unthanks and more.

ISSUE ON SALE FROM JANUARY 27

Uncut is now available as a digital edition, download it now

Hear new Sufjan Stevens song “No Shade In The Shadow Of The Cross”

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Details of UK listening parties for new album Carrie & Lowell announced... Sufjan Stevens has revealed new song "No Shade In The Shadow Of The Cross" as well as details of listening parties for new album 'Carrie & Lowell'. Stevens will release Carrie & Lowell on March 30. Stream "No Shade In The Shadow Of The Cross" below, now. Carrie & Lowell will be released on Stevens' own Asthmatic Kitty Records and is described as a return to his "folk roots" in a press release. The album's artwork can be seen above. Asthmatic Kitty Records will host local listening parties with independent record stores and venues in the next month. These listening parties will take place in Tokyo, Indianapolis, Hamburg and Berlin. There will also be British events on March 10 held at the following locations: London, Rough Trade East Nottingham, Rough Trade Bristol, Rise Dublin, Tower/Douglas Hyde Gallery http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qx1s_3CF07k Carrie & Lowell is the follow up to Stevens' last studio album The Age Of Adz, released in 2010. Prior to that album Stevens embarked on an ambitious plan to write and release an album representing each of the 50 US states. At present the mission has birthed two albums (Michigan and Illinois).

Details of UK listening parties for new album Carrie & Lowell announced…

Sufjan Stevens has revealed new song “No Shade In The Shadow Of The Cross” as well as details of listening parties for new album ‘Carrie & Lowell’.

Stevens will release Carrie & Lowell on March 30. Stream “No Shade In The Shadow Of The Cross” below, now.

Carrie & Lowell will be released on Stevens’ own Asthmatic Kitty Records and is described as a return to his “folk roots” in a press release. The album’s artwork can be seen above.

Asthmatic Kitty Records will host local listening parties with independent record stores and venues in the next month. These listening parties will take place in Tokyo, Indianapolis, Hamburg and Berlin. There will also be British events on March 10 held at the following locations:

London, Rough Trade East

Nottingham, Rough Trade

Bristol, Rise

Dublin, Tower/Douglas Hyde Gallery

Carrie & Lowell is the follow up to Stevens’ last studio album The Age Of Adz, released in 2010. Prior to that album Stevens embarked on an ambitious plan to write and release an album representing each of the 50 US states. At present the mission has birthed two albums (Michigan and Illinois).

Original recordings of The Beatles’ early Hamburg shows to be auctioned

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Tapes expected to fetch more than a million pounds at London auction... Original recordings of The Beatles' early Hamburg shows are going to auction in London and are expected to fetch more than a million pounds. The venue - Hamburg's Star Club – is thought to be one of the places where the Beatles transformed themselves into global superstars during a series of gigs in December 1962. The shows saw the group perform their own songs, as well covers, to small audiences. According to The Observer, collectors will now have the chance to own recordings of the shows, as Ted Owen and Co auctioneers are selling a package of tapes that feature 33 tracks recorded at the club, including 'Twist And Shout', 'I Saw Her Standing There,' a cover of Chuck Berry's 'Roll Over Beethoven' and a cover of Phil Spector's 'To Know Her Is to Love Her'. The recordings are being sold by Larry Grossberg, the business manager of Andy Warhol and Muhammad Ali, who spent £100,000 on remixing them and releasing 26 of the finished tracks on an album released in 1977. "I’m 74 and it’s time to sell," Grossberg said. "I don’t want my family to have the burden of going through my things and liquidating everything." The tapes have a reserve price of between £100,000 and £150,000 but they are expected to sell for considerably more. "When they were playing the gigs in Hamburg they were basically a comedy act," Owen said. "You had John Lennon coming out with a toilet seat around his head and imitating Hitler on stage. They had to keep people entertained because it was basically a strip club."

Tapes expected to fetch more than a million pounds at London auction…

Original recordings of The Beatles‘ early Hamburg shows are going to auction in London and are expected to fetch more than a million pounds.

The venue – Hamburg’s Star Club – is thought to be one of the places where the Beatles transformed themselves into global superstars during a series of gigs in December 1962. The shows saw the group perform their own songs, as well covers, to small audiences.

According to The Observer, collectors will now have the chance to own recordings of the shows, as Ted Owen and Co auctioneers are selling a package of tapes that feature 33 tracks recorded at the club, including ‘Twist And Shout’, ‘I Saw Her Standing There,’ a cover of Chuck Berry’s ‘Roll Over Beethoven’ and a cover of Phil Spector’s ‘To Know Her Is to Love Her’.

The recordings are being sold by Larry Grossberg, the business manager of Andy Warhol and Muhammad Ali, who spent £100,000 on remixing them and releasing 26 of the finished tracks on an album released in 1977. “I’m 74 and it’s time to sell,” Grossberg said. “I don’t want my family to have the burden of going through my things and liquidating everything.”

The tapes have a reserve price of between £100,000 and £150,000 but they are expected to sell for considerably more. “When they were playing the gigs in Hamburg they were basically a comedy act,” Owen said. “You had John Lennon coming out with a toilet seat around his head and imitating Hitler on stage. They had to keep people entertained because it was basically a strip club.”

Rhiannon Giddens’ “Tomorrow Is My Turn” reviewed…

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Working on a monthly magazine like Uncut, with early promos and advanced deadlines, it can sometimes be easy to forget when specific albums actually come out. That's been the case with Rhiannon Giddens' "Tomorrow Is My Turn", which I noticed over the weekend actually came out last week. For someone...

Working on a monthly magazine like Uncut, with early promos and advanced deadlines, it can sometimes be easy to forget when specific albums actually come out. That’s been the case with Rhiannon Giddens’ “Tomorrow Is My Turn”, which I noticed over the weekend actually came out last week.

For someone who’s called her record “Tomorrow Is My Turn”, Giddens often seems mighty preoccupied with history. With her old-time string band, the Carolina Chocolate Drops, she’s meticulously celebrated the role of African-Americans in their country’s folk music. More recently, she figured on the New Basement Tapes, a distaff presence in the group tasked by T Bone Burnett to at least try and pick up where Dylan left off in 1967.

Giddens’ place in that project, alongside marquee names like Elvis Costello and Marcus Mumford, earmarked her as a singer of whom great things were expected. An artful repositioning as a kind of new Norah Jones, with a conservatory-trained voice that could be as stentorian as it was tender, did not seem implausible.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bHnh8_8Cx7E

A scholarly long view, however, means that Giddens’ first solo album has turned out rather differently. While “Tomorrow Is My Turn” is certainly an expansive sampler of her range, it’s also an eloquent disquisition on the cultural paths that have kept intersecting, time and again, through the last century of American popular music. A key text here is the elemental field holler “Waterboy”, rendered pretty faithfully to Odetta’s version. Giddens’ performance of “Waterboy” stole the show at the Inside Llewyn Davis concert in New York, September 2013, and the clarity and force of her vocal make it an obvious highlight, But it’s also only a taster of what this supple, ambitious singer can do.

The exceptionally well-curated material is all drawn from women singers – if not always women writers – and does a fine job of placing Giddens at the nexus of a multiplicity of traditions. There’s a polished effortlessness to the way she can switch from the uncanny blues of Geeshie Wiley’s “Last Kind Words” to the tender swagger of “Don’t Let It Trouble Your Mind”, an early Dolly Parton gem. A rambunctious tilt at Sister Rosetta Tharpe’s proto-rock’n’roller, “Up Above My Head”, leads into to an exquisite, torchy take on Charles Aznavour’s “Tomorrow Is My Turn”, based on a Nina Simone version that Giddens found during one of her fact-finding missions on Youtube.

“O Love Is Teasin'”, meanwhile, learned from Peggy Seeger and Jean Ritchie, moves in the misty hinterland between Celtic folk and the Appalachians, not unlike some work by another T Bone client, Alison Krauss. It’s at this point, perhaps, that “Tomorrow Is My Turn” starts to feel kin to one of the real masterpieces in Burnett’s production catalogue, Krauss and Robert Plant’s “Raising Sand”. Like that album, there’s a prevailing intelligence, craftsmanship and good taste, which even a human beatbox-powered version of “Black Is The Color” can’t quite undermine. And Giddens, for all her poise, is an emotionally resonant as well as academically precise musician; Elizabeth Cotten’s “Shake Sugaree”, in particular, benefits from a striking lightness of touch.

“Tomorrow Is My Turn” ends with a play that seems both poignant and strategic. “Angel City”, the album’s sole new composition, was written by Giddens during the New Basement Tapes sessions, and has a measure, a stillness, that collapses the genre adventures which have preceded it, and eventually transcends them. Its theme, too, is the implicit theme of the whole album, and captures Giddens’ perspective as a new phase of her career begins. When you’ve learned so much, so diligently from the past, the possibilities of where you can go next are tantalising.

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

Q&A

Did you always think you’d make a solo record?

Rhiannon Giddens: Eventually. The timing of it was a little surprising, because I was settling in to work on the next Carolina Chocolate Drops record. Then this lightning bolt happened [the response to her performance at the Inside Llewyn Davis concert] and everything changed. It was kind of… accelerated.

How do you think the Carolina Chocolate Drops’ concept connects to Tomorrow Is My Turn?

RG: It’s the same idea of highlighting history, highlighting the struggles of African Americans in the history of America, and the creation of American music, and all these very rich, deep things. But on this record I’ve been really thinking about women, and just being so grateful for the opportunities I’ve had, as a 21st Century woman in a First World country, realising that not everybody has that opportunity, and they didn’t in the past. I got really inspired by Nina Simone and Dolly Parton: these women are my heroes, they’re the reason I can do what I do.

The album’s a very effective sampler of your range – was that something you were conscious of when you were selecting the songs?

RG: I’ve always been a mimic, ever since I was a kid. I really try and crawl inside a style. But I didn’t so much want to showcase my ability, I wanted to show how well country and blues and celtic and gospel and all of this stuff go side by side. It’s like they’re not so far apart. We’re too genre-fied and too specialised and we should be able to have these things next to each other, mixing together to make the music that we love.

Jessica Pratt – On Your Own Love Again

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Fine second helping by an ageless voice... That Jessica Pratt is releasing music at all feels like an accident of fate. A few years back, wholly by coincidence, she was living in the same house as Sean Paul Presley, brother of Tim Presley of San Francisco psych revivalists White Fence. It was there, in their shared kitchen, where she first came across, and fell for White Fence’s music. But it wasn’t until Pratt’s boyfriend played Presley a few of her four-track recordings – intimate voice and guitar pieces, made merely for curiosity and play – that she ever considered they might even be releasable. Presley was smitten, and founded a label, Birth Records, just to put these strange, beautiful songs out into the world. “I never wanted to ever start a record label,” he wrote. “Ever. But there is something about her voice I couldn’t let go of.” A couple of years on from the release of Jessica Pratt, and many would count themselves similarly enchanted. Pratt’s voice is indeed something special – a curled, spry thing that, like that of Joanna Newsom, feels oddly ageless, somewhere between childlike and crone-like. But whereas Newsom is by nature a belter, Pratt’s songs have a close intimacy, nearer to a Vashti Bunyan or Sibylle Baier. It lends her music an odd, otherworldly feel, leaving the impression that she’s too delicate for this world, or floats a couple of inches off the ground. As a mark of the warm reception afforded to her debut, its follow-up comes to us on a rather more established imprint, Drag City. But while On Your Own Love Again finds Pratt writing with an audience in mind for the very first time, there’s no drastic overhaul. Arrangements are slightly more involved, with subtle guitar layering, and collaborator Will Canzoneri adding organ to “Wrong Hand” and clavinet to “Moon Dude”. The fidelity is much the same – on four-track, to analogue tape – although it feels not so much an affectation as crucial to the whole enterprise, a way of best capturing her voice’s queer grain. As well as a distinctive singer, Pratt is a talented songwriter. “Wrong Hand” is a tranquil thing guided by Leonard Cohen-like chord changes that subtly shift the song’s shade from light to dark. “Moon Dude” is a dreamy reverie in the vein of Nick Drake’s “Hazey Jane I”, addressed to some out-there dude who can’t or won’t come back down to earth. Her command of language is poetic. “People’s faces blend together/Like a watercolour you can’t remember,” she purrs on “Game That I Play”. “I’ve Got A Feeling”, meanwhile, commences circling on some forbidden, Satanic chord that recalls the dissonant tunings of Jandek, before Pratt’s multi-tracked voice sweeps in to bathe everything in warmth. It’s a love song, but pensive, uneasy: “Well here I am/Another thousandth sister to the night/And mouthing tricks into my ears/The cigarette you light.” Loneliness and distance are recurring themes: a tale of severed friendship on “Jacquelyn In The Background”, the line of girls left “empty handed” on the title track. But Pratt’s music isn’t bereft, exactly: rather, there’s the feeling that she thrives off of solitude, the measured, steady fingerpicking of “Strange Melody” and “Greycedes” weaving a cocoon to keep the world out. Perhaps for this reason, right now it’s hard to imagine her hitching these peculiar, private songs to a band, a la Marissa Nadler or Angel Olsen. But maybe these are unhelpful points of comparison. In interview, Pratt has expressed admiration for Ariel Pink, another artist whose music is rooted in a home-recorded, four-track sensibility. On Your Own Love Again’s analogue genesis is alluded to midway through “Jacquelyn In The Background”, where Pratt’s voice slows and slurs, and the guitar slides out of tune, as if being played on a turntable that might be just about to give up the ghost. It gives you a little jolt – the musical equivalent, perhaps, of an actor breaking the fourth wall and addressing the audience. Used here, it feels like a sort of acknowledgement that these are new songs that sound like the old songs, the kind you might treasure till your vinyl is pockmarked and warped. That you can easily imagine playing On Your Own Love Again to death in precisely this way should be taken as the highest of compliments. Louis Pattison Q&A JESSICA PRATT How did it feel when people turned out to like Jessica Pratt? Nice? Weird? The whole thing was quite surreal. Tim [Presley] sort of just materialised out of thin air like Glenda the Good Witch, ready to put it out, so when it was well-received by an audience, it was just another layer of pleasant strangeness. So presumably this time, you had to think in terms of a body of work for the first time… “It’s definitely the first time I’ve approached songwriting with the idea of some collective whole in mind. It’s a very different state of mind, creating things for a tangible audience versus habitual idea spewage for your own private pleasure or sanity maintenance. Having an intended purpose has leant me confidence and made me a bit more self-aware, in good and bad ways. It’s important to keep the dream gauze fixed tightly to your head.” There's a lot of loneliness on the record - the “lonely boy” on Greycedes, the Moon Dude in outer space, “you're just a lonely ride: on “You've Got A Feeling”. Any thoughts on why these sorts of lyrics recur? “I think the way that songs utilise the mind’s own lexicon of symbols and imagery is very similar to the processing of those things in dreams, in the way that themes will reappear until you’ve dealt with them, or move on to more relevant ones. I think it’s easy to imagine the sort of scenario responsible for the content of these songs. A majority of the record functions like an altar of trinkets, constructed for a frosty and unreachable muse.” INTERVIEW: LOUIS PATTISON

Fine second helping by an ageless voice…

That Jessica Pratt is releasing music at all feels like an accident of fate. A few years back, wholly by coincidence, she was living in the same house as Sean Paul Presley, brother of Tim Presley of San Francisco psych revivalists White Fence. It was there, in their shared kitchen, where she first came across, and fell for White Fence’s music. But it wasn’t until Pratt’s boyfriend played Presley a few of her four-track recordings – intimate voice and guitar pieces, made merely for curiosity and play – that she ever considered they might even be releasable. Presley was smitten, and founded a label, Birth Records, just to put these strange, beautiful songs out into the world. “I never wanted to ever start a record label,” he wrote. “Ever. But there is something about her voice I couldn’t let go of.”

A couple of years on from the release of Jessica Pratt, and many would count themselves similarly enchanted. Pratt’s voice is indeed something special – a curled, spry thing that, like that of Joanna Newsom, feels oddly ageless, somewhere between childlike and crone-like. But whereas Newsom is by nature a belter, Pratt’s songs have a close intimacy, nearer to a Vashti Bunyan or Sibylle Baier. It lends her music an odd, otherworldly feel, leaving the impression that she’s too delicate for this world, or floats a couple of inches off the ground.

As a mark of the warm reception afforded to her debut, its follow-up comes to us on a rather more established imprint, Drag City. But while On Your Own Love Again finds Pratt writing with an audience in mind for the very first time, there’s no drastic overhaul. Arrangements are slightly more involved, with subtle guitar layering, and collaborator Will Canzoneri adding organ to “Wrong Hand” and clavinet to “Moon Dude”. The fidelity is much the same – on four-track, to analogue tape – although it feels not so much an affectation as crucial to the whole enterprise, a way of best capturing her voice’s queer grain.

As well as a distinctive singer, Pratt is a talented songwriter. “Wrong Hand” is a tranquil thing guided by Leonard Cohen-like chord changes that subtly shift the song’s shade from light to dark. “Moon Dude” is a dreamy reverie in the vein of Nick Drake’s “Hazey Jane I”, addressed to some out-there dude who can’t or won’t come back down to earth. Her command of language is poetic. “People’s faces blend together/Like a watercolour you can’t remember,” she purrs on “Game That I Play”.

“I’ve Got A Feeling”, meanwhile, commences circling on some forbidden, Satanic chord that recalls the dissonant tunings of Jandek, before Pratt’s multi-tracked voice sweeps in to bathe everything in warmth. It’s a love song, but pensive, uneasy: “Well here I am/Another thousandth sister to the night/And mouthing tricks into my ears/The cigarette you light.”

Loneliness and distance are recurring themes: a tale of severed friendship on “Jacquelyn In The Background”, the line of girls left “empty handed” on the title track. But Pratt’s music isn’t bereft, exactly: rather, there’s the feeling that she thrives off of solitude, the measured, steady fingerpicking of “Strange Melody” and “Greycedes” weaving a cocoon to keep the world out.

Perhaps for this reason, right now it’s hard to imagine her hitching these peculiar, private songs to a band, a la Marissa Nadler or Angel Olsen. But maybe these are unhelpful points of comparison. In interview, Pratt has expressed admiration for Ariel Pink, another artist whose music is rooted in a home-recorded, four-track sensibility. On Your Own Love Again’s analogue genesis is alluded to midway through “Jacquelyn In The Background”, where Pratt’s voice slows and slurs, and the guitar slides out of tune, as if being played on a turntable that might be just about to give up the ghost. It gives you a little jolt – the musical equivalent, perhaps, of an actor breaking the fourth wall and addressing the audience.

Used here, it feels like a sort of acknowledgement that these are new songs that sound like the old songs, the kind you might treasure till your vinyl is pockmarked and warped. That you can easily imagine playing On Your Own Love Again to death in precisely this way should be taken as the highest of compliments.

Louis Pattison

Q&A

JESSICA PRATT

How did it feel when people turned out to like Jessica Pratt? Nice? Weird?

The whole thing was quite surreal. Tim [Presley] sort of just materialised out of thin air like Glenda the Good Witch, ready to put it out, so when it was well-received by an audience, it was just another layer of pleasant strangeness.

So presumably this time, you had to think in terms of a body of work for the first time…

“It’s definitely the first time I’ve approached songwriting with the idea of some collective whole in mind. It’s a very different state of mind, creating things for a tangible audience versus habitual idea spewage for your own private pleasure or sanity maintenance. Having an intended purpose has leant me confidence and made me a bit more self-aware, in good and bad ways. It’s important to keep the dream gauze fixed tightly to your head.”

There’s a lot of loneliness on the record – the “lonely boy” on Greycedes, the Moon Dude in outer space, “you’re just a lonely ride: on “You’ve Got A Feeling”. Any thoughts on why these sorts of lyrics recur?

“I think the way that songs utilise the mind’s own lexicon of symbols and imagery is very similar to the processing of those things in dreams, in the way that themes will reappear until you’ve dealt with them, or move on to more relevant ones. I think it’s easy to imagine the sort of scenario responsible for the content of these songs. A majority of the record functions like an altar of trinkets, constructed for a frosty and unreachable muse.”

INTERVIEW: LOUIS PATTISON

Public Enemy – It Takes A Nation Of Millions…

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Chuck D amd co's political, lyrical and downright pioneering peaks re-released and expanded... It’s received wisdom now, but in the late ‘80s, when things weren’t quite so clear-cut it felt revolutionary to declare that Public Enemy were the “greatest rock’n’roll band in the world”. I...

Chuck D amd co’s political, lyrical and downright pioneering peaks re-released and expanded…

It’s received wisdom now, but in the late ‘80s, when things weren’t quite so clear-cut it felt revolutionary to declare that Public Enemy were the “greatest rock’n’roll band in the world”. If the comment, often spilling from the pens of earnest music-crit types, feels like the kind of hype PE were urging us to disregard, drilling further down into Public Enemy’s history, motives and influences reveals its wisdom. Producer Hank Shocklee set his sights on rock’s energy and mid-frequency range, and created a noise to reflect the chaotic nature of the times.

With It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back, Fear Of A Black Planet, and indeed their precursor, 1987’s Yo! Bum Rush The Show, Public Enemy managed the near-impossible: music that convincingly, articulately, held a mirror up to its multi-faceted, complex, media-saturated times, speaking with equal measures of righteous fury and retribution. Shocklee and leader Chuck D came up and met through studying at Adelphi University – Chuck D earned a degree in graphic design – but they were also involved in New York’s hip-hop underground: an early effort from Chuck D, the Shocklee brothers and Eric Sadler, Spectrum City’s “Lies”, led Rick Rubin – whose label, Def Jam, is celebrating its 30th anniversary, hence these reissues – to headhunt Chuck D, desperate to sign him to his label.

With the benefit of rewritten history, early Public Enemy comes across as invincible, inevitable – and yet, their debut album, Yo! Bum Rush The Show, for all its daring and innovation, only sold 300,000 copies in its year of release. Perhaps the production’s deceptive minimalism, pulsing noise, threaded together to create The Bomb Squad’s “sonic walls”, was a too distilled for broader consumption. Yet this approach to production would become Public Enemy’s sonic imprimatur, something they’d ramp up on subsequent albums.

Indeed, listening back to It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back and Fear Of A Black Planet, the eloquence of the production still startles. The Bomb Squad’s manipulation of noise is a process of alchemy, transmuting base elements through careful distillation and arrangement. This also echoes the intensification of the mass media-scape that Public Enemy both reflected and were part of. Before Public Enemy, Chuck D was a radio broadcaster, presenting the Spectrum City Radio Hour on university station WBAU, and Public Enemy’s albums come across as deftly woven broadcasts, using samples as earworms, pulled together with a jump-cut logic that suggests musique concrète just as much as it does the magpie aesthetic of hip-hop. Not unreasonably did Chuck D claim that rap was “black America’s CNN”.

Feeding into this was Chuck D and the group’s canny reading of the political turmoil of the time, and their ability to historicise this political awareness. As Shocklee says, “There was so much going on with the black community, a lot of tension, racial tension was happening amongst the races at that time, and crack had devastated our community… [So] that was a big part of it, to give black people a sense of hope, a sense of pride, a sense of the fact that we can get through, and we can become greater than what we’re being programmed to be.” This understanding of the complexity of race relations in the United States was further cross-wired with an in-depth reading of histories of black criticism, leadership and activism, from the Black Panther Party and Black Nationalist Marcus Garvey, through to the Nation Of Islam organisation and its leader, Louis Farrakhan.

It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back is in many ways the defining moment for Public Enemy, often considered their classic set, and the one that brought them their first taste of wider success. In truth it lacks some of the pure shock factor of Yo! Bum Rush The Show, and the concept of a one-hour album, no breaks, thirty minutes each side, which plays out with the heavyweight implications of Marvin Gaye’s What’s Goin’ On, doesn’t always convince. But these are minor criticisms, and Millions has a number of PE classics in its armoury, and if anyone needs convincing that Public Enemy rocked harder than 99% of rock music of its time, just turn to the breathtaking “She Watch Channel Zero”, whose scaffold is built from Slayer‘s “Angel Of Death”.

Elsewhere, “Black Steel In The Hour Of Chaos”, later queered by Tricky, is stentorian and unrelenting, while “Bring The Noise” is all sparking noise, a magnesium flare of a track. Throughout, Chuck D fine-tunes his vocal delivery: drawing from a rich black oratory tradition, it’s a voice that has the same wall-shaking authority as Prince Far I. But if the reality of Millions, at times, is overshadowed by its legend, there are no such problems for Fear Of A Black Planet, which is even more tightly constructed. It allows Flavor Flav to come into his own, particularly on “911 Is A Joke”, has the group playing at a heightened pitch on classics like “Brothers Gonna Work It Out” and “Burn Hollywood Burn”, and features their most thrilling five minutes, with the panic rush drone – almost Wild Pitch in its powers – of “Welcome To The Terrordome”.

Closing down the first, wildest phase of Public Enemy’s career, Fear Of A Black Planet was a peerless summary both of the possibilities of hip-hop, and of the conflicts and intensities that the group manifested through their music. Reflecting on Public Enemy in their prime, music critic Simon Reynolds once wrote that they “did what no rock band… could: not just comment on, but connect with real issues and real stakes in the outside world: aggravating the contradictions and making the wounds rawer and harder to ignore.” It’s hard to disagree with such an observation: but just as much, Public Enemy were the weapon salve, the powder of sympathy applied to the powers that created the wound.
EXTRAS: Each album comes with an extra disc of contemporaneous remixes, b-sides, etc. 8/10
Jon Dale

Q&A
HANK SHOCKLEE
What can you tell me about the pre-Public Enemy days – your time with Chuck D at Adelphi University, for example…

I had a DJ outfit called Spectrum City, and I was DJing for years. I ran across Chuck when I was throwing one of my events. He was interested in doing design work for the flyers. From that point we developed a relationship, at least from a friendship perspective. I didn’t ask him to join my crew until later. [Eventually,] I wanted to add an MC component to my DJ crew, so I was on the hunt for MCs. I went to Adelphi University, and they’d have these parties late at night. These parties were a magnet for attracting a lot of wannabe MCs, because at the time, that was the only place you could go where you could grab the mic. There was a whole herd of people who was trying to show their skills. I heard a lot of MCs who weren’t really all that good, but then I heard this guy grab the mic and make an announcement for an upcoming party that was happening. He wasn’t MCing or anything. I just heard his voice, and fell in love with his voice. I approached him to be part of my DJ outfit. It took me two years to convince him!

Chuck was a graphic design major at Adelphi, which makes sense given the visual impact and importance of presentation for Public Enemy.
Chuck and I did the Public Enemy logo. I did the letters, Chuck did the logo… Originally there were two separate group logos that we made, one was Funky Frank & The Street Force, one was Public Enemy. Public Enemy had a different logo, and Funky Frank & The Street Force had the target. So Chuck said, “You know what? I’m gonna take this target, because it works better, and put it with Public Enemy.” So Public Enemy came from the concept first, before it became anything else. At the time, there was a black consensus that hip-hop was being targeted, by mainstream America, mainstream radio, mainstream press. It was being targeted by the musicians, who said that it really wasn’t music, it was a bunch of kids sampling and stealing beats, the chord structures were wrong, the fact that there were no melodies was wrong. Everything was wrong about rap. There was this big thing about rap not lasting, “It’s a fad, it’s gonna die out”.

The Bomb Squad called their production style “organised noise”.
I started working with Eric [Sadler] first, and I started coming up with sound design concepts, ideas for a sound. I brought Eric up because he was a musician. He could play a little guitar, a little drums. I needed somebody that had an understanding of chord structure, musical scales, because I had ideas of sound. Since I had a library of over 10,000 records, I started experimenting with creating ideas and tracks, because the records that I had gave me the knowledge of understanding a lot about intros, breakdowns, turnarounds. I ripped records apart in terms of how they build up their arrangement structures, what is the most exciting part of the record… I wanted to take this rap thing and push it. I wanted to push it almost to the point where you keep the pressure on it – kind of like if you look at something being pressed against glass: I wanted to create a sonic signature that represents something being so pressurised that it’s being pushed up against the glass, and has no room. I didn’t want too much relief – I wanted all tension.

How did you feel about Public Enemy being called the ‘greatest rock’n’roll band in the world’? Because you drew inspiration from rock’n’roll for your production…
Nobody could sound like Public Enemy, because it doesn’t sound like a dance group. It comes from my rock’n’roll background. I didn’t want to produce rock’n’roll that had guitars in it, because that would be clichéd. I wanted to create the same kind of intensity, going back to the pressure – because that’s what rock does, rock is real compressed, and the pressure is constant. I wanted to speak that language with other instruments.
There are two things that Public Enemy was patterned after, there were two main groups I loved the most. One was Iron Maiden, and the other was Megadeth. The reason why is because those two particular groups, every record that they put out was a continuation of the last. So they created, in my mind, sequels. Every record, to me, has to have a sequel event. So, Yo! Bum Rush The Show, the sequel to that would be, It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back. After we bum rush the door, it’s gonna take a nation of millions to hold us back. Now that we’re taking over the spot, now it’s Fear Of A Black Planet, now we’ve taken it over.

Watch Björk’s trailer for her forthcoming exhibition at New York’s Museum of Modern Art

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The exhibition will run from March 8 to June 7 at the New York venue... Björk has teased her upcoming exhibition at New York's Museum of Modern Art by releasing a trailer for "Black Lake". "Black Lake" is "an immersive 10-minute music and film experience" by director Andrew Thomas Huang which runs alongside the song of the same name from her new album Vulnicura and is a main part of the exhibition. Simply titled Björk, the retrospective dedicated to her career will will use "sound, film, visuals, instruments, objects, costumes, and performance" to detail Björk's career, reads a statement from the museum. "The installation will present a narrative, both biographical and imaginatively fictitious, co-written by Björk and the acclaimed Icelandic writer Sjón," continues the press release. The exhibition will run from March 8 to June 7 and begin at the same time as the artist's series of live dates in New York. Vulnicura was released in January, two months early, as it had been unofficially leaked. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EiXQ5qaUGDI The Icelandic singer will perform two shows at New York's Carnegie Hall and a further four at the City Center venue between March 7 and April 4 this year. In addition to the new album and exhibition, the singer will also release a career retrospective book in March titled Björk: Archives. The book, which features contributions from directors Chris Cunningham and Spike Jonze, will chart the singer's career through a mixture of poetry, academic analysis, philosophical texts and photographs. Björk will play: New York Carnegie Hall (March 3, 14) New York City Center (March 25, 28, April 1, 4)

The exhibition will run from March 8 to June 7 at the New York venue…

Björk has teased her upcoming exhibition at New York’s Museum of Modern Art by releasing a trailer for “Black Lake”.

Black Lake” is “an immersive 10-minute music and film experience” by director Andrew Thomas Huang which runs alongside the song of the same name from her new album Vulnicura and is a main part of the exhibition. Simply titled Björk, the retrospective dedicated to her career will will use “sound, film, visuals, instruments, objects, costumes, and performance” to detail Björk’s career, reads a statement from the museum.

“The installation will present a narrative, both biographical and imaginatively fictitious, co-written by Björk and the acclaimed Icelandic writer Sjón,” continues the press release. The exhibition will run from March 8 to June 7 and begin at the same time as the artist’s series of live dates in New York. Vulnicura was released in January, two months early, as it had been unofficially leaked.

The Icelandic singer will perform two shows at New York’s Carnegie Hall and a further four at the City Center venue between March 7 and April 4 this year.

In addition to the new album and exhibition, the singer will also release a career retrospective book in March titled Björk: Archives. The book, which features contributions from directors Chris Cunningham and Spike Jonze, will chart the singer’s career through a mixture of poetry, academic analysis, philosophical texts and photographs.

Björk will play:

New York Carnegie Hall (March 3, 14)

New York City Center (March 25, 28, April 1, 4)

Ian Curtis’ former home up for sale

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The two bed Macclesfield property has an asking price of £115,000... The former home of Joy Division's Ian Curtis is up for sale. The two bedroom property at 77 Barton Street, Macclesfield is featured on Rightmove. The listing reads: "Situated in a popular and central location, this double fronte...

The two bed Macclesfield property has an asking price of £115,000…

The former home of Joy Division’s Ian Curtis is up for sale.

The two bedroom property at 77 Barton Street, Macclesfield is featured on Rightmove. The listing reads: “Situated in a popular and central location, this double fronted character cottage offers spacious accommodation with two reception rooms, two double bedrooms, a good size kitchen and a shared courtyard garden.”

The house has an asking price of £115,000. The property was on the market for £64,950 in 2002. The house was used as a location in the 2007 Anton Corbijn-directed film Control. Curtis took his own life in the property on May 18 1980 at the age of 23, days before the band were due to undertake a US tour.

Joy Division’s debut EP An Ideal For Living was released for last year’s Record Store Day. The record was made in 1978, shortly after the band dropped their original name Warsaw. The new version was remastered at Abbey Road Studios in London by the band’s longtime engineer, Frank Arkwright.

Slint’s David Pajo recovering from suspected suicide bid

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The musician has also played with Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Interpol... Slint guitarist David Pajo is recovering from a suspected suicide bid. The musician [pictured, right] was taken from his New Jersey home by emergency services to a local hospital, reports Pitchfork. Pajo has since posted a picture on Instagram of himself in his hospital bed. A message posted on his official Facebook page earlier today (February 13) reads: "There will be things said about our friend David in the press these coming days and he'll need our love and support. Feel free to comment here. Thank you." As well as playing with Slint, the prolific Pajo has performed with Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Interpol, Tortoise, Stereolab and Zwan, as well as Bonnie "Prince" Billy and Royal Trux, releasing solo records under a range of aliases, including Pajo, Papa M, Aerial M, and M.

The musician has also played with Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Interpol…

Slint guitarist David Pajo is recovering from a suspected suicide bid.

The musician [pictured, right] was taken from his New Jersey home by emergency services to a local hospital, reports Pitchfork. Pajo has since posted a picture on Instagram of himself in his hospital bed.

A message posted on his official Facebook page earlier today (February 13) reads: “There will be things said about our friend David in the press these coming days and he’ll need our love and support. Feel free to comment here. Thank you.”

As well as playing with Slint, the prolific Pajo has performed with Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Interpol, Tortoise, Stereolab and Zwan, as well as Bonnie “Prince” Billy and Royal Trux, releasing solo records under a range of aliases, including Pajo, Papa M, Aerial M, and M.

AC/DC confirm drummer Chris Slade will replace Phil Rudd on 2015 tour

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Slade played with band during their Grammy performance last week... AC/DC have confirmed that Chris Slade will replace Phil Rudd on their 2015 tour. "Chris Slade will be on drums for the upcoming Rock or Bust world tour," the band announced in a statement. Slade, who was AC/DC's drummer between 1989 and 1994, played with the band during their performance at the Grammy Awards last week. He was standing in for estranged drummer Rudd, who is at home in New Zealand awaiting trial on charges of threatening to kill and possession of methamphetamine and cannabis. Last month, Rudd's AC/DC band mates Brian Johnson and Malcolm Young both addressed the problem their band is facing. While Young said that the band have yet to "resolve" whether Rudd is still a member of AC/DC, Johnson suggested Rudd would not performing on the 2015 tour. Slade, who played on album The Razor’s Edge wrote on his Facebook page, "This is an amazing opportunity for me, after all most people don’t ever get to play with their favourite band once, let alone twice!" I would like to thank everyone for the overwhelming support I have been shown personally, on the Facebook page and other social media, not one comment has gone unread, and it has been very humbling, thanks so much." Slade added: "We apologise for the secrecy, please understand this was for all the right reasons."

Slade played with band during their Grammy performance last week…

AC/DC have confirmed that Chris Slade will replace Phil Rudd on their 2015 tour.

“Chris Slade will be on drums for the upcoming Rock or Bust world tour,” the band announced in a statement.

Slade, who was AC/DC’s drummer between 1989 and 1994, played with the band during their performance at the Grammy Awards last week. He was standing in for estranged drummer Rudd, who is at home in New Zealand awaiting trial on charges of threatening to kill and possession of methamphetamine and cannabis.

Last month, Rudd’s AC/DC band mates Brian Johnson and Malcolm Young both addressed the problem their band is facing. While Young said that the band have yet to “resolve” whether Rudd is still a member of AC/DC, Johnson suggested Rudd would not performing on the 2015 tour.

Slade, who played on album The Razor’s Edge wrote on his Facebook page, “This is an amazing opportunity for me, after all most people don’t ever get to play with their favourite band once, let alone twice!” I would like to thank everyone for the overwhelming support I have been shown personally, on the Facebook page and other social media, not one comment has gone unread, and it has been very humbling, thanks so much.”

Slade added: “We apologise for the secrecy, please understand this was for all the right reasons.”