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Iron Maiden’s Bruce Dickinson treated for cancer

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Iron Maiden's Bruce Dickinson has been diagnosed with cancer. A statement on the band's website said he was diagnosed just before Christmas after a small tumour was found at the back of his tongue. The prognosis is positive, and Dickinson is expected to make a full recovery. The statement reads: ...

Iron Maiden‘s Bruce Dickinson has been diagnosed with cancer.

A statement on the band’s website said he was diagnosed just before Christmas after a small tumour was found at the back of his tongue.

The prognosis is positive, and Dickinson is expected to make a full recovery.

The statement reads: “Just before Christmas, Maiden vocalist Bruce Dickinson visited his doctor for a routine check-up. This led to tests and biopsies which revealed a small cancerous tumour at the back of his tongue. A seven week course of chemotherapy and radiology treatment was completed yesterday. As the tumour was caught in the early stages, the prognosis thankfully is extremely good. Bruce’s medical team fully expect him to make a complete recovery, with the all clear envisaged by late May.

“It will then take a further few months for Bruce to get back to full fitness. In the meantime we would ask for your patience, understanding and respect for Bruce and his family’s privacy. Bruce is doing very well considering the circumstances and the whole team are very positive.”

Further information to come.

Blur announce first new album in 12 years

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Blur have announced details of their first new album since 2003's Think Tank. The Magic Whip will be released on April 27. The announcement was made via a live streamed press conference from a Chinese restaurant in London. Blur, Magic Whip sleeve Initially conceived in Hong Kong during downtime ...

Blur have announced details of their first new album since 2003’s Think Tank.

The Magic Whip will be released on April 27.

The announcement was made via a live streamed press conference from a Chinese restaurant in London.

Blur, Magic Whip sleeve
Blur, Magic Whip sleeve

Initially conceived in Hong Kong during downtime following a cancelled show in Japan, the band spent five or six days laying down ideas, then enlisted regular producer Stephen Street to develop them.

The band will also headline this year’s British Summer Time in London’s Hyde Park on 20 June, the fourth time they have played the venue.

The tracklisting for The Magic Whip is:

‘Lonesome Street’
‘New World Towers’
‘Go Out’
‘Ice Cream Man’
‘Thought I Was A Spaceman’
‘I Broadcast’
‘My Terracotta Heart’
‘There Are Too Many Of Us’
‘Ghost Ship’
‘Pyongyang’
‘Ong Ong’
‘Mirrorball’

The 6th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

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As you've hopefully noticed, we've had something of a makeover at www.www.uncut.co.uk this week. Not to get too bogged down in technical hype at this point, but the whole site should be easier and more satisfying to use, not least on your phone or whatever, where you won't need to try and read 5,000...

As you’ve hopefully noticed, we’ve had something of a makeover at www.www.uncut.co.uk this week. Not to get too bogged down in technical hype at this point, but the whole site should be easier and more satisfying to use, not least on your phone or whatever, where you won’t need to try and read 5,000 words of prime Uncut feature in a microscopic point size any more.

Anyhow, this is the music which soundtracked our surprisingly non-traumatic website migration (God knows what the developers, who did the actual hard work, were listening to down on the third floor). Can I especially flag the first track to surface from the wonderful Weather Station album, the new Unknown Mortal Orchestra, and a new live epic from Chris Forsyth and his Solar Motel Band? Thanks…

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

 

 

1 Cannibal Ox – Harlem Knights (iHiphop)

 

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

 

2 Brian Wilson – No Pier Pressure (Capitol)

 

3 Various Artists – Highlife On The Move: Selected Nigerian & Ghanaian Recordings From London & Lagos 1954-66 (Soundway)

 

4 Blanck Mass- Dumb Flesh (Sacred Bones)

 

5 The Weather Station – Loyalty (Paradise Of Bachelors)

 

 

6 Hot Chip – Why Make Sense? (Domino)

 

 

7 Unknown Mortal Orchestra – Multi-Love (Jagjaguwar)

 

 

8 Colleen – Captain Of None (Thrill Jockey)

 

9 Bop English – Constant Bop (Blood And Biscuits)

 

 

10 D’Angelo – Voodoo (Virgin)

 

11 The Replacements – Poke Me In My Cage

 

 

12 Stone Jack Jones – Love And Torture (Western Vinyl)

 

13 Trio Da Kali – EP (World Circuit)

 

14 Waxahatchee – Ivy Tripp (Wichita)

 

15 Alabama Shakes – Sound & Color (Rough Trade)

 

 

16 Dean McPhee – Fatima’s Hand (Hood Faire)

 

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

 

17 D’Angelo & The Vanguard – Black Messiah (RCA)

 

18 Kenny Knight – Crossroads (Paradise Of Bachelors)

 

19 Zachary Cale – Duskland (No Quarter)

 

20 Speedy Ortiz – Foil Deer (Carpark)

 

21 Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band – The Rarity Of Experience, Parts 1-2 > High Castle Rock (Live at Johnny Brenda’s, Philadelphia)

 

https://soundcloud.com/solar-motel-band/the-rarity-of-experience-parts-1-2-high-castle-rock-johnny-berndas-philadelphia-2615?utm_source=soundcloud&utm_campaign=share&utm_medium=twitter

 

22 Michael Rother – Katzenmusik (Sky)

 

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

 

 

24 Geoff Barrow & Ben Salisbury – Ex_Machina (Invada)

Richard Thompson announces new album produced by Jeff Tweedy

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Richard Thompson has revealed details of his new studio album. Speaking to Addicted To Noise, Thompson confrms that the album has been produced by Jeff Tweedy. “We’ve worked with Jeff live,” Thompson said. “In fact, last year in the States we toured with Wilco. They’re very conscious of ...

Richard Thompson has revealed details of his new studio album.

Speaking to Addicted To Noise, Thompson confrms that the album has been produced by Jeff Tweedy.

“We’ve worked with Jeff live,” Thompson said. “In fact, last year in the States we toured with Wilco. They’re very conscious of the roots of music so we think in a similar way about how to make records. So I think it was a fairly easy single-minded process.”

Jeff Tweedy
Jeff Tweedy

The new album will contain original songs, although Thompson admits that as yet he does not have a title for the record. “We’re still going backwards and forwards with it,” he said. “We’re very close. Don’t quite have it yet.”

“I’m very happy with it,” he added.

You can read our Album By Album interview with Richard Thompson here.

David Bowie’s 30 best songs

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In this mammoth piece from Uncut's March 2008 issue (Take 133), a host of famous fans and collaborators pick David Bowie's 30 best songs! "Bowie represented a way to get out of myself, an escape, a hope that there was something else..." _____________________ TONY VISCONTI: "When I first met B...

In this mammoth piece from Uncut’s March 2008 issue (Take 133), a host of famous fans and collaborators pick David Bowie’s 30 best songs! “Bowie represented a way to get out of myself, an escape, a hope that there was something else…”

_____________________

TONY VISCONTI: “When I first met Bowie in 1967, he couldn’t get arrested. The music business and journalists just weren’t looking in his direction for the Next Big Thing. Even when Hunky Dory came out, I think the industry was still scratching their heads. David had to pull his socks up big time and invent his Ziggy Stardust persona.

“I love to work with him because I think we make really good records. His talents are exceptional, and he has rarely inhibited his creativity. I think other recording artists regard him enviably as someone who’s reached the pinnacle of unbridled creativity. He’s multi-dimensional. For most of his career, he’s been an iconoclast, not a trend follower. But then, he also has a charm and charisma usually associated with movie actor legends. Although he never denies his working-class upbringing, he’s like royalty. These days, we keep in touch via email. Instead of watching a film together we send each other links to YouTube. We also send each other all types of music we’ve either discovered or rediscovered. During the making of the last two albums, Heathen and Reality [which Visconti produced, along with earlier Bowie LPs Young Americans, Low, “Heroes”, Lodger and Scary Monsters…] we used to watch episodes of The Fast Show and The Office, respectively, on our lunch breaks. We both love British comedy.

“We’ve known each other for 40 years. There’s no pretension, no awe, just a mutual love of creating something from nothing. On the other hand, we don’t take each other for granted. I respect him more than ever. He’s one of the few people I know who actually keeps on growing. He’s always full of surprises and revelations.

“Who hasn’t been inspired by Bowie’s music? Certainly not the über and unter peers contributing to this collection. David Bowie has long ago achieved Gandalf status in the rock world, and his songs have become potent magic spells.

“Welcome to Uncut’s Top 30 Bowie songs, picked to praise by an all-star cast.”

____________________

30 In The Heat Of The Morning
Available on Bowie At The Beeb: The Best Of The BBC Radio Sessions 1968-1972 (recorded 1968, released 2004)
An early track that catches the newly solo artist in mid-transformation – part mod King Bee, part theatrical Tony Newley trouper

ALEX TURNER (Arctic Monkeys/Last Shadow Puppets): For the B-side of [the Last Shadow Puppets’] “The Age Of The Understatement” single we’ve done “In The Heat Of The Morning”, which is the first track on Bowie At The Beeb. It’s got a great melody – it’s one of them, where we both had the CD, and we were both like, “The first tune on that!” And we were both like, “Yeah, yeah!” It was very much part of the world we were in when we started writing stuff for The Age Of The Understatement, so when it came to recording B-sides, there were some tunes we definitely wanted to do: “The Girls And The Dogs” by Scott Walker, “Wondrous Place” by Billy Fury, and this.

MILES KANE: I also like “Time” on Aladdin Sane, and “Five Years”. Does the aspect of re-inventing myself appeal? You should see me at the weekend. Eyeliner, the lot…

____________________

29 Boys Keep Swinging
From Lodger (May 1979); released as a single, April 1979. Highest UK chart position: 7
Neurotic funk à la Talking Heads, released ahead of Lodger, with Bowie dragging up as three different backing singers for the video

ADRIAN BELEW: Bowie was a very charismatic person to be around. Musically, he gave me complete freedom to go wild and have lots of ideas. Recording Lodger in Lake Geneva, David and [co-producer] Brian Eno played me some tapes, wanting my initial reaction to certain music. Eno had a chart of favourite chords on the wall. He’d point to a chord and you’d just go along and improvise. He and David were great advocates of getting you to do things you never realised you could. You wouldn’t even hear the songs – no tempo, no key – and it immediately threw you into a different space. It was one giant brainstorm. I had a go at playing “Heroes” and remember walking in on David and Brian and they were just laughing. Nobody told me the original was made of various guitar parts spliced together. They thought it was hilarious I’d been able to play all those composites live! In New York, David was doing vocals for “Boys Keep Swinging”. He played me it and said: “This is written after you, in the spirit of you.” I think he saw me as a naïve person who just enjoyed life. I was thrilled with that.

28 Moonage Daydream
From The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust… (June 1972)
Originally written for Bowie’s 1971 Arnold Corns side-project, subsequently dusted down to herald the arrival of the space-invading alligator and “rock’n’rolling bitch” Ziggy Stardust

DAVE GAHAN (Depeche Mode): Bowie represented a way for me to get out of myself, and also to escape from where I was. Basildon was a factory, working-class town. Bowie gave me a hope that there was something else. This world that he seemed to be a part of – where was it? I wanted to find it. I just thought he wasn’t of this earth. And that was really attractive to me, to live in a different persona.

“Moonage Daydream” still gives me the goosebumps. I couldn’t really tell you what the hell he’s singing about. It’s about feeling and emotion first, it doesn’t really have to make any sense. It makes more sense melodically, it’s abstract musically. That’s with me now, every time I’m trying to write. It inspired me. Without it, I would have been resolved to a life of petty crime. Over the years, it’s the one staple I’ve stayed with. When it comes down to it, The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars… or David Live goes on.

I had the wonderful experience of actually meeting him, a couple of years back. I felt like he was just as much out of sorts as I imagined he would be. Even though he seemed to have it really together, and was very healthy. But I think that stuff doesn’t go away: that longing to belong, somehow.

____________________
27 Station To Station
From Station To Station (January 1976)
Twisting, coldly funky, 10-minute epic that namechecked the “Thin White Duke/throwing darts in lovers’ eyes ”. The only track from its eponymous album not to be released on a single

STEPHEN MORRIS (New Order): I got into Bowie early on, when Hunky Dory came out. I remember going to see him at the [Manchester] Free Trade Hall with Ian [Curtis] in 1972. Bowie apparently asked Ian if there was a club he could go to, where he could hear some Northern soul. This was the same day that “Starman” came out, and Bowie bore a startling resemblance to my best friend’s mother. She had red hair and the same boots. I sort of fell out with Bowie when he jacked Ziggy in, but thanks to the Britannia Music Club, I got Station To Station. It was bloody weird, with The Thin White Duke and the cabbalistic lyrics.

The title track itself gave strong hints as to where Bowie was going, with various Kraftwerk-isms in there. At the same time, it has soulfulness too, but it’s mutating into something else. Listening to it now, it reminds me of something by Van Der Graaf Generator. There’s prog-ness about it, but it has a real energy and drive. Christ knows what he’s singing about, but it was a stepping stone to Joy Division for me, in that it moves from funk towards the experimentalism of Low and “Heroes”. It completely restored my faith in Bowie.

26 Always Crashing In The Same Car
From Low (January 1977)
“Every chance that I take, I take it on the road…” Three minutes of bleak, breathtakingly nihilist melodrama, and a powerful metaphor for making the same mistakes over and over again…

RICKY GARDINER (Low guitarist): I was surprised when I got the call to play guitar on Low. I wasn’t as familiar with David’s work as I might have been. My impression of David was of a man who took life seriously and who understood the need to keep working, irrespective of what else may have been going on in his life. That is worthy of respect. He also kept working when not necessarily feeling in top form. David, Iggy Pop and I are near contemporaries [Gardiner also played on Iggy’s Lust For Life, and composed the music for “The Passenger” ] – there is something like 18 months between us. Brian [Eno] is not far away in age either. What makes this generation of musicians tick is creative expression. It is pleasure and release. It is identity and purpose. It’s love at a deep level, together with the challenge that brings.

I wasn’t instructed in any way at all regarding modes of approach or specific techniques. When it came to overdubbing the solo in “Always Crashing…”, David hummed the first few notes he wanted and I took it from there. These things don’t evolve as such. They happen spontaneously and the engineer has to catch them. I believe it was generally well received at the time. People do ask me about that solo so it must mean something out there!

____________________
25 Can’t Help Thinking About Me
By David Bowie & The Lower Third. Released as a single, January 1966.
Did not chart. Available on David Bowie: Early On (1964-66)
The first song released as Bowie: a would-be mod anthem about leaving home and making it on your own

STEVE VAN ZANDT: This is one of those really classic garage rock things that I have in my permanent playlist. I’m not really a Bowie expert, but he was quite a good, mod-ish rocker before he went into the John Lennon-slash-glam thing. I love his early stuff. He had a blues band, The King Bees, who were great, and then The Lower Third. I play early things by people in spite of their success. All of that British scene were good – The Move, The Pretty Things, The Creation, The Animals. But Bowie was a great blues singer, a great interpreter. There’s a song or two later on – “Rebel Rebel” is a wonderful track – but that era for me is it. There was a lot going on there, and he was a big part of it.

24 Drive-In Saturday
From Aladdin Sane (April 1973); released as a single, April 1973
Highest UK chart position: 3
Bowie’s sci-fi take on American Graffiti, imagining future teens boning up on romance from old movies and pop songs…

MORRISSEY: I’ve covered the song, and even recorded a version last year in Omaha, Nebraska. It was a very strong song in its time, and a very clever song too. I prefer the Jobriath version, but nevertheless “Drive-In Saturday” was a fascinating piece of art at the time, infiltrating a very, very drab Top 30. Yes, Bowie’s a human vampire, but I’m grateful, very grateful, for some of the songs.
____________________
23 Kooks
From Hunky Dory (December 1971)
Charmingly ramshackle and oddly touching British pop pastiche, dedicated to Bowie’s new-born son, Zowie (later Joey) Bowie

RUFUS WAINWRIGHT: I always loved this, and “Fame,” and “Heroes”. When I grew up David Bowie was still in the mainstream, in the prime of his career. But I got into it when I moved to New York and met a bunch of hip drag queens who wanted to sleep with straight rock boys. I have a very special relationship with David only because we share a guitar player in Gerry Leonard. He plays with David a lot, so David has come to a lot of my shows and always been very supportive, which is such an amazing honour.
I’ve talked a lot with Gerry about the insides of the workings of David’s mind – and it’s pretty amazing. I think the main thing I’ve realised is that he’s actually quite shy: there’s a real kind of Wizard Of Oz quality to him, by which I mean that behind the flamboyance, the fire and green lasers and stuff there’s this little guy there, working away in his attic. Really, he’s very, very sensitive about being an artist – trying to be in sync. He’s a very vulnerable, and very affected by the world around him, and by what people say. He’s not at all jaded.

22 Sunday
From Heathen (June 2002)
Low-key opening track from Heathen, with Bowie reunited with Tony Visconti for the first time since Scary Monsters…

TONY VISCONTI: “Sunday” is absolutely stunning. It took a long time to make and every time we added a layer of sound from either us or a visiting musician, the song grew to be more and more of an emotional experience. I think Heathen was a very spiritual album. David wrote some great lyrics, wore his heart on his sleeve for that album. This is all my assumption. He rarely “explains” his lyrics to me. But I have to make something of them so I can help to create his musical settings. Sometimes he would specifically tell me his meaning, to keep the recording focussed. I don’t know what [2003 album] Reality really is. We created it under completely different conditions. Heathen was made in an isolated studio in upstate New York and it sounds as lofty as where the studio was located, on a mountain top. Reality was made on the border of SoHo and NoHo in New York City. It has more angst than Heathen and sounds like a teeth-grinding record to me. Was he on the way to another great trilogy of albums? Yes, David was very keen to do a third album and it would’ve been perfect. There might be a third in the series someday. He’s very fit now.

____________________

21 The Bewlay Brothers
From Hunky Dory (December 1971)
Mysterious but moving closing track on Hunky Dory, reputedly about Bowie’s relationship with troubled half-brother Terry Burns

JAMES MURPHY (LCD Soundsystem): Where I grew up, it was a small town. I always played music. I don’t remember not playing music or writing songs since I was four or five. My older brothers and sisters were 10 years older than me so I listened to a lot of classic rock. My first records were “Alone Again Naturally” by Gilbert O Sullivan and “Fame” by David Bowie.

People say that “New York I Love You” [from LCD’s Sound Of Silver album] sounds like Bowie’s production on Transformer. But are we really in a time where the problem is that there are too many bands that sound like Transformer? How is this a problem?! I WISH we had the kind of problem!

“The Bewley Brothers” is just so beautiful and sad. It really uses his voice. It’s one of those songs that would be a very hard cover. Maybe that’s why I like it most. His best songs are just so wonderfully coverable, because they’re such good songs. But “The Bewley Brothers”? So sad, and it really uses his voice in a really cheesy, borderline hack-Broadway kind of way. But it’s so good!

20 Letter To Hermione
From David Bowie – US title: Man Of Words/Man Of Music – (November 1969); reissued as Space Oddity (November 1972)
Dreamy acoustic farewell dedicated to Bowie’s ex-girlfriend and fellow Lindsay Kemp dance student, Hermione Farthingale

RICKY GERVAIS: It was a surprise. I discovered it probably in reverse order. It’s on the Space Oddity album in 1969. When I first got into Bowie it was for “Heroes” and I worked my way backwards to Ziggy Stardust and Aladdin Sane. And, then I heard this song and of course the badge I was wearing of Bowie was one of this artistic, fashionable, trendsetting, androgyne – “I’m different.” What I wasn’t wearing was, “I’m a brilliant songwriter of love songs.” And, it’s a total surprise. It’s stripped down. Just like Bob Dylan surprises you sometimes. Just as most people think Dylan is a political singer-songwriter and then he comes out with “If You See Her, Say Hello”, and you go, “Oh my God.” The same with Bowie. “Letter To Hermione” starts off, “The hand that wrote this letter sweeps the pillow clean…” It sounds like Keats. And then, “Something tells me that you hide/When all the world is warm and tired/You cry a little in the dark/Well, so do I.” That’s amazing. “Did you ever call my name just by mistake?” This guy just hoping. It’s beautiful. It’s beautiful.

____________________

19 Oh! You Pretty Things
From Hunky Dory (December 1971)
Stomping, melodious album cut that somehow proposed a pop collaboration between Paul McCartney and Friedrich Nietzsche

PHIL MAY (The Pretty Things): With The Pretty Things, you’d have lots of people who’d come around the stage at the end, from Bromley or Sidcup, even at the early art school shows we did. Lost souls who, like us, thought they were weird and different and yet, when they were in a place where music was played, suddenly didn’t feel such a weirdo. David was the one who struck me like a jackdaw. He was collecting, storing and taking in music like a sponge. He wasn’t like a fan. We talked about art, too – we’d been at the same art school.

I’ve always interpreted this song as a fantasy of outsiders taking over. In terms of using our name, I think we were a beacon to him. I’ve never had a conversation with him about it, but there was “Pretty Things Are Going To Hell”, too [from 1999’s hours…]. I think the phrase is a euphemism for how he saw our band when he was starting up – somebody shining a light on his situation, when for the rest of his life, he was on his own.

18 Rock’n’Roll Suicide
From The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars (June 1972); released as a single, April 1974. Highest UK chart position: 22
Epic, defiantly show-stopping closer to the Ziggy live show, a rock’n’roll update of Jacques Brel’s “My Death”

MARC ALMOND: There are so many Bowie songs of the late ’60s and early ’70s that represent so much to me, but I have to single out “Rock’N’Roll Suicide”. As a skinny, spotty 14-year-old, bloody from being bottled by thugs on the way to Liverpool Empire in 1972, I climbed over the orchestra pit at the front of the stage. And as Bowie sang “Give me your hand!”, he reached down and took my hand. I was a mess of blood, glitter and cheap, badly applied make-up, but in a state of near religious ecstasy. “Rock’N’Roll Suicide” is a wonderfully structured song. It’s Bowie at his theatrical, Jacques Brel-inspired best. Sometimes I still sing it live to bring back that moment.

I loved all his work throughout the ’70s. That’s an incredible body of work, brilliant and innovative. I can’t think of any other artist that’s made so much impact in a short period. A year ago, at an opera in New York, he sat opposite me. We smiled at each other, but I’m not even sure he knew who I was, though Bowie probably knows who everyone is. I quite like it that we’ve never really met, as I can still be a fan that admires him from a distance.

____________________

17 Young Americans
From Young Americans (March 1975); released as a single, February 1975
Highest UK chart position: 18 Highest US chart position: 28
Stateside, Bowie hopes to catch some of the Philly Sound, and winds up inventing post-Nixonian Plastic Soul

SLASH: I remember this track really well. I was about 11 years old and my mom had worked as a costume designer on the Nic Roeg movie that he starred in, The Man Who Fell To Earth, and Bowie was around the family a lot. He and my mum were kinda dating. And this was the record that had come out when my mom was first hanging out with him. I didn’t know anything about him before that, he was just this cool-looking guy who’d come round the house. So this period of Bowie’s work – the whole white funk thing, Young Americans, Station To Station – that was my introduction to his work. What I love about it is that it’s funk, but there’s no sense of pastiche or parody. He’s taken this music and made it his own – cool, icy, stylish, sexy, a bit frightening – to the point that it couldn’t be anyone else. After that I worked backwards into Aladdin Sane and Ziggy Stardust, and I got heavily into “Heroes”, which is a fantastic single, and I loved all the Low period, like “Warszawa”. But it’s stuff like “Young Americans” that had the biggest effect on me.

16 The Man Who Sold The World
From The Man Who Sold The World (April 1971)
The title track of Bowie’s third album, a cryptic sci-fi lyric but an unforgettable riff, covered by everyone from Lulu to Nirvana

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6x5OubSeb-U

LULU: I first met Bowie on tour in the early ’70s, when he invited me to his concert. And back at the hotel, he said to me, in very heated language, “I want to make an MF of a record with you. You’re a great singer.” I didn’t think it would happen, but he followed up two days later. He was über-cool at the time and I just wanted to be led by him. I didn’t think “The Man Who Sold The World” was the greatest song for my voice, but it was such a strong song in itself. In the studio, Bowie kept telling me to smoke more cigarettes, to give my voice a certain quality. We were like the odd couple. Were we ever an item? I’d rather not answer that one, thanks!

For the video, people thought he came up with the androgynous look, but that was all mine. It was very Berlin cabaret. We did other songs, too, like “Watch That Man”, “Can You Hear Me?” and “Dodo”. “The Man Who Sold The World” saved me from a certain niche in my career. If we’d have carried on, it would have been very interesting.

____________________

15 Sound & Vision
From Low (January 1977); released as a single, February 1977
Highest UK chart position: 3; Highest US chart position: 69
A gleaming two-minute intro of Krautrock easy listening – featuring Mary Hopkin singing backup – leads into one of Bowie’s bleakest Berlin lyrics

ALEX KAPRANOS (Franz Ferdinand): We were asked to cover a song from 1977 [for the Radio 1: Established 1967 LP] and when I looked down the list, “Sound And Vision” jumped out as my favourite song of that year. I love it because it does what my favourite pop songs do: it’s out there, it’s unpredictable and does things you’d never heard in music. Yet it’s immediate at the same time. Because it takes so long for the vocals to come in, the pattern of the melody is so unpredictable and takes so long to evolve, and the fact it fades out at a bizarre point, you immediately want to put it on again. You feel like the song is playing for eternity in some other universe. It’s like you caught a snippet of something that will always be playing. And that’s not really like a standard pop song. There’s no start, middle and finish.

I grew up listening to Bowie. It’s one of the few things you inherit from your parents, something with edge. I’ve met him a couple of times at our gigs, which is always a little disconcerting. I remember him looking at the setlist and saying, “Oh good, you’re doing ‘Evil And A Heathen’. I’m looking forward to that one.”

14 John, I’m Only Dancing
Released as a single, September 1972, re-released January 1980; “John, I’m Only Dancing (Again)” (1975) released as a single, December 1979; Highest UK chart position: 12
Bowie’s first successful follow-up single, six months after “Starman”, consolidated his career and cemented the “Hi, I’m bi!” pose

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6VrqCBsbeuc

SIOUXSIE SIOUX: It always takes me back to when I was 14. I just remember the feeling of that time. I think “School’s Out” by Alice Cooper was out, too. I was just getting ready to turn, I think. When Bowie’s music happened, it was a lifeline. I’d always grown up with music, but to be into something that was happening currently, something of my own that my sister and my brother hadn’t played first… it felt personal. I liked the subversiveness of Bowie. That was his appeal, and the fact that there was all that confusion about “Is it a boy? Is it a girl?” And I was pretty confused about myself, and that really tapped into something. I’d never be tempted to cover “John, I’m Only Dancing”. It’s perfect as it is. It’s so of a time. I wouldn’t want to mess with that.

____________________

13 Diamond Dogs
From Diamond Dogs (May 1974); released as a single, June 1974; highest UK chart position: 21
The title track from Bowie’s George Orwell concept opera once again mines Stones riffola and wasted Iggyish hijinks

HERBIE FLOWERS (Diamond Dogs bassist): The first time I played with Bowie was on the session for “Space Oddity”. Dear Gus [Dudgeon] was quaking in his boots. It might have been the first thing he ever produced. “Space Oddity” was this strange hybrid song. Rick Wakeman went out to buy a little Stylophone for seven shillings from a small shop on the corner where Trident Studios was. With that and all the string arrangements, it’s like a semi-orchestral piece.

We did Diamond Dogs very fast, doing basic tracks in three days in the little studio at Olympic. Bowie was writing a lot of the stuff as we were going. I think it was a semi-rescue attempt from his proposed George Orwell musical. The music was weird. I have to say I found it mildly unattractive at the time, but it was interesting stuff. Touring Diamond Dogs across America afterwards, it felt like those new songs were anarchic, all about tearing things down. It was prophetic in many ways. And the music was so loud and angry. Those shows were well organised. Strange things were going on, too. There was some in-fighting and maybe a lot of other things going on. But the band stuck together.

12 All The Young Dudes
Bowie’s version was never released on a studio album, but is available on a number of compilations and David Live (November 1974)
After Mott The Hoople rejected “Suffragette City”, Bowie came up with this career-saving track that they took to No 3

ROBERT WYATT: On the chorus of “All The Young Dudes” there’s a slight out-of-sync-ness between the chords as they go under the vocal melody. The chords start marching off before the tune comes in, so the word “dudes” is already on the third chord. Then there’s a great catch-up at the end of the chorus where the chords stamp their feet a couple of times waiting for the melody to catch up. Most writers would strum and hum, having the melody and chords coming in at the same time, but Bowie gives the song a great sense of motion. It’s got the immediate appeal of a timeworn folk melody, or one of the better football chants. I think it’s extraordinary and very generous that Bowie chose to give this song away and that his own role in it was so modestly placed.

I only met David for the first time very recently. We were guests at a David Gilmour concert at the Albert Hall. He came in to do a couple of old Pink Floyd songs. He was an extremely nice young man – I call him young, I’m in my sixties – and what he was doing on stage was blindingly good. All due respect to Syd, but his songs couldn’t have been realised any better. David’s voice is terrific now – it’s got a warm weight to it, and real authority.

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11 The Jean Genie
From Aladdin Sane (April 1973); released as a single, November 1972. Highest UK chart position: 2; Highest US chart position: 71
Inspired by a combination of Jean Genet and Iggy Pop, hitched to a quasi Yardbirds riff, this proved Bowie’s biggest hit to date

JOHNNY MARR: It’s one of those amazing bits of noise that existed as a commercial release. It’s got sex and subversion and artistry in it. But it’s not so obscure that it couldn’t get on the radio. It really is a superb advertisement for what was once called rock’n’roll . Of course Mick Ronson’s guitar-playing is fantastic, but it’s the atmosphere created by the vocal and the attitude of the singer: it’s remote and scary and… quite alluring. It’s all the things that attracted me to rock music in the first place. And that it’s all wrapped up in a 7-inch 45 format is just perfect. It’s also really funny! The actual words themselves are a great example of why you don’t need to be earnest in pop music. And a great example of a sort of nonsense. It’s all about imagery over message. It’s just… cool!

10 Let’s Dance
From Let’s Dance (April 1983); released as a single, March 1983. Highest UK chart position: 1; Highest US chart position: 1
Bowie straightest pop song yet, white funk immaculately produced by Nile Rogers and Bernard Edwards, eases him into stadium megastardom

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N4d7Wp9kKjA

JIMMY PAGE: I played on his records, did you know that? His very early records, when he was Davy Jones & The Lower Third. The Shel Talmy records. I can think of two individual sessions that I did with him. He said in some interview that on one of those sessions I showed him these chords, which he used in “Space Oddity” – but he said, “Don’t tell Jim, he might sue me.” Ha ha!

There’s a lot of Bowie stuff that’s just terrific. He’s multi-faceted, multi-talented, isn’t he? I’m going to say “Let’s Dance” because it introduced everybody to Stevie Ray Vaughan. People were always saying, “Who’s the guitarist on that?” In the early days [Page is presumably referring to the 1970s] he was prolific and he put out some really important work. He was taking from various sources and putting it together, but that’s an art form in itself. And then the application of images… that whole Ziggy Stardust period and the build-up to Aladdin Sane, it captured the imagination. I knew people who couldn’t get enough of that world he created, couldn’t wait for the next release, the next tour. People still refer to his work from that time, and I think they always will. He’s a really important figure.

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9 Life On Mars
From Hunky Dory (December 1971); released as a single June 1973 Highest UK chart position: 3
Bowie’s rejected English lyrics for the French original of “My Way” form the backbone of this astonishing song, and relocate the Dame as a kind of glam Sinatra…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oAo7YeRkJYo

MICK ROCK (photographer): Bowie wasn’t very well-known when I first met him. There were about 400 people at Birmingham Town Hall in March 1972. But I was fascinated with him. Even though they were small audiences, he projected very big. I made videos for him – “Moonage Daydream”, “John, I’m Only Dancing” and “The Jean Genie”. Then “Life On Mars” was released as a single in the summer of ’73. The video production values are minimal, all born of necessity. There was no budget at all. I shot “Life On Mars” in a day at Earls Court. I loved Hunky Dory, but there was something about “Life On Mars” that really got me. I still couldn’t tell you what it’s about, but that’s art. I wouldn’t go as far as saying it’s like reading Rimbaud, but it is rock’n’roll poetry. There’s something Zen-like about that song, even though it’s so emotional. It was the song that sold me on David. It triggered me towards wanting to write something about him and take some pictures. And as a result, our relationship developed from that. All that came afterwards, from Iggy and Lou to Queen, came in the wake of the stimulation provided by that LP and, specifically, “Life On Mars”. It’s the most significant Bowie song for me.

8 Changes
From Hunky Dory (December 1971); released as a single, January 1972, re-released December 1974. Highest UK chart position: 41; Highest US chart position: 66
The first single taken from Hunky Dory was a commercial flop, but proved an enduring artistic manifesto for Bowie’s pop mutations

GUY GARVEY (Elbow): Hunky Dory was my entry point into music. One of my sisters had a cassette tape of it and when I got my first player, I put it on. I loved it as a kid, mainly because of the sing-a-long nature of the tunes. When I came back to it in my teens, I started to realise what Bowie was singing about. It made it exist on a whole different level. It was organic and personal, a beautiful piece of work. From the outset, the chord progression of “Changes” is so dramatic. It starts off uneasy, gets a little less uneasy and then suddenly becomes so excited. The last chord of the intro is quite disconcerting, then this riff drops in that’s very sure of itself. It’s very well-constructed. It’s also the first time you hear this spiky kind of character emerge in his singing. The way he sings those first few lines is like he’s adopted some really bizarre character, like a wizened old scientist.

KEITH RICHARDS: Can’t remember. Who is he? Oh, he went to the same art school as me. “Changes”, maybe. That’s about it. Not a large fan, no. It’s all pose. It’s all fucking posing. It’s nothing to do with music. He knows it, too. I can’t think of anything else he’s done that would make my hair stand up.

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7 Rebel Rebel
From Diamond Dogs (May 1974); released as a single, February 1974. Highest UK chart position: 5; Highest US chart position: 64
Bowie says farewell to glam with an irresistably Keefy riff and gender-bending lyric, originally written for a proposed Ziggy musical

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Tz2qjyDTM4

RODNEY BINGENHEIMER, DJ: In early 1971, I was working for Mercury Records in LA and took Bowie around Hollywood. We stayed at my friend Tom Ayres’ house. I remember Gene Vincent being there and Bowie writing the lyrics for “Hang On To Yourself” and talking about the Ziggy character. He was talking about making it into a stage play. I think LA was a culture shock for Bowie. His mind was blown, everything was so big and bright. But it was a culture shock for others, too, because he was wearing a dress, the same one from the cover of The Man Who Sold The World. One party was at [socialite, columnist] Dianne Bennett’s house and [Warhol acolyte] Ultra Violet was there, in a milk bath. Bowie sat on the bed and played stuff from Hunky Dory and Ziggy on acoustic guitar. Everyone loved it.

In London, Bowie took me to the Cellar club, where they played music by Slade and T.Rex. That was where he gave me the idea for doing Rodney’s English Disco in LA. I always loved Bowie’s glam stuff. When I had the club, he would send me acetates and test pressings of those songs. “Rebel Rebel” was such a great dance song. It was really the glam rock song. It was like an anthem.

6 Ashes To Ashes
From Scary Monsters (September 1980); released as a single, August 1980. Highest UK chart position: 1
Bowie’s second No 1: an audaciously self-referential junkie confessional, matched with a sublime video, perfectly timed to catch the New Romantic wave

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CMThz7eQ6K0

ROBERT DEL NAJA (Massive Attack): I was 16 when it came out, just left school. I was sniffing too much glue, messing around with chemicals. Growing up with Bowie as a kid, with the references in the song, I bound them into this idea of addiction, and personality development, and change. As well as being a beautiful pop song, it dealt with those issues in an accessible way. The sense of impending change and doom was interesting to a boy of my age. Major Tom’s so strung out he’s in outer space. I was going through a time where I’d lost my grip. That line, “My mother said, to get things done, you’d better not mess with Major Tom” was really resonant for me. That record was an echo of what was going on inside my head, questions I couldn’t answer.
“Ashes to Ashes” sounds so distinct. It’s got a strange start-stop quality, there’s something very beautiful about the way it rolls. Although it’s electronic construction, with its synths, it’s still one of the great songs of that time which managed to convey absolute human spirit. You were totally captivated by the song and the voice.

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5 Space Oddity
First released as a single, July 1969; re-issued September 1975. Highest UK chart positions: 1
His first hit, rush-released to cash-in on the Apollo 11 moon landing, this snapshot of cosmic alienation was also – six years later – Bowie’s first UK No 1

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYMCLz5PQVw

SUFJAN STEVENS: It’s so beautiful, bizarre and otherworldly. It’s everything that Bowie does in one song: there’s humour, a political thrust, great guitar sounds and beautiful melodies. The countdown especially gives it a childlike feel. It’s got that comic-book quality, similar to what The Beatles achieved with “Yellow Submarine”, and yet it’s vast and psychedelic like a Pink Floyd song. Bowie sings it like an alien.
I suppose “Space Oddity” is the song on which he started to explore the idea of becoming a character, as followed through later on Ziggy Stardust. I first remember seeing Bowie doing “Let’s Dance” on MTV in the ’80s. Then I saw the film Labyrinth – I loved that when I was a kid. Bowie was so odd, so magical, and… I don’t know… sexually ambiguous. And that’s a very strange impression to take away as a kid! His art is so multi-faceted. He has many faces. I mean, even his eyes are two different shades.

4 Starman
From The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars (June 1972); released as a single, April 1972. Highest UK chart position: 10; Highest US chart position: 65
The last song to be recorded for Ziggy Stardust, supposedly because nobody heard a single on the album. The chorus octave-leap self-consciously apes “Somewhere Over The Rainbow”

WOODY WOODMANSEY (Spiders From Mars drummer): I first met David in 1969 at his place, Haddon Hall in Kent. Mick [Ronson] had been working with him for a few months. My only knowledge of him was “Space Oddity”, and a Hull festival flyer showing him with what looked like an afro hairstyle. So I met this guy wearing red cords, red slip-on shoes with a blue star painted on them, and a rainbow-striped T-shirt. His hair was long, so I didn’t immediately recognise him. We chatted about music. He even did a bit of mime. My impression was that this guy’s serious about making it, he’s already living it. For me the whole trip was a leap of faith. By Ziggy, we were all focused. We all lived in Haddon Hall. David was writing almost on a daily basis, He’d just started writing on the piano. I love “Starman” as it’s the concept of hope that the song communicates. That “we’re not alone” and “they” contact the kids, not the adults, and kind of say “get on with it”. “Let the children boogie”: music and rock’n’roll! It lifted the attention away from the depressing affairs in the ’70s, made the future look better. “Starman” was the first Bowie song since “Space Oddity” with mass appeal. After “Starman”, everything changed.

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3 Fame
From Young Americans (March 1975); released as a single, July 1975. Highest UK chart position: 17; Highest US chart position: 1
Bowie meets Lennon in New York, and talk naturally turns to celebrity team-up – superbly soundtracked by Carlos Alomar’s irresistible guitar riff

DAVE GROHL: I’d like to pick one that not everyone else is going to pick. I love “Fame”, it’s fucking amazing. The drums, the vocals, the arrangement, the performance. That song is fucking slimy. I think it’s classic Bowie – the guitar tones just sound dirty, it sounds like a fucking garage band and could have been a Sub Pop single. There’s also“Hello Spaceboy”. We [Foo Fighters] played it with him at his 50th birthday party, at Madison Square Garden. Fuck man, the four of us onstage with his band – it was so fucking brutal. But for classic Bowie I’d have to say “Fame”.

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2 Ziggy Stardust
From The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars (June 1972); released as the B-side to “The Jean Genie”, April 1972
Supposedly inspired by a combination of Brit rocker Vince Taylor and C&W weirdo The Legendary Stardust Cowboy, and the first of Bowie’s many adventures in rock’n’roleplay

PETER BUCK, REM: I lived in a small town called Roswell, Georgia, which
is now pretty much part of Atlanta but back then was like the Moon. “Ziggy Stardust” was about as weird as anything that existed anywhere. I remember buying the LP and learning four or five of those songs. I loved “Ziggy” particularly – Mick Ronson’s guitar lines are just beautiful. As someone who was trying to figure out a way to be a guitar player, but who didn’t want to be a Southern rock boogie guitar player, it was nice to see a soloist playing something angular and forward looking, and not rooted in “Hoochie-Coochie Man”. Ronson was very much an influence – the pithiness and intelligence of his playing. He does a lot of single-note stuff that doesn’t sound like he’s soloing away – it’s very melodic and very smart guitar-playing.

Living where I did, when I did, there weren’t any glam people in my town. But I did see the New York Dolls when I was 15. Bowie wasn’t quite underground – some radio stations would play him – but it didn’t make you popular to like that stuff. It would call your sexuality into question. But there were about five of my friends who would put on a little makeup, or wear one black thumbnail. Getting beaten up by guys in pick-up trucks was always a threat but, you know, all those guys are selling insurance somewhere or working for fertiliser companies.

1 “Heroes”
From “Heroes” (October 1977); released as a single, September 1977 Highest UK chart position: 24
“There’s old wave. There’s new wave. And there’s David Bowie…” ran the press ads for the “Heroes” album, and Bowie never caught a better balance between epic romantic alienation and cool ironic poise than on the title track. Originally an instrumental composition partly inspired by Neu!’s track “Hero”, Bowie and producer Tony Visconti conjured up a Phil Spector dream of krautrock, from Robert Fripp’s endless feedbacking guitar to Eno’s droning synth discordance. The result is the greatest song of Bowie’s career

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3SjCzA71eM

JOHN CALE: My first encounter with David was when I was doing A&R at Warners in 1971. I was there to bring in the strange and freaky stuff, the underground stuff. So there we were with Hunky Dory, the deal was on the table and everyone was trying to figure out how this cabaret-ish, Brit art-rock could work. At that time, Warners had The Doobie Brothers and Alice Cooper and all of that, which they understood. But coming around to the art side of things, they just didn’t get what David was doing. It was [producer] Ted Templeman and I who went to [Warners head] Joe Smith and told him the rest of the A&R department was really divided about Hunky Dory. It’s a very difficult thing to fight for in a large corporation like that if no-one understands where they’re going with it. It really wasn’t fair, certainly not to David. There were certain things you knew you weren’t going to get your hands on in those days and that was one of them. You were struggling in the trenches. But I loved Hunky Dory. I saw the Anthony Newley/Lionel Bart vein in it. It was unique, strange and very unorthodox. But if you tried to explain Anthony Newley and British music hall tradition to the executives, they just wouldn’t get it. So I was really disappointed I couldn’t do anything at Warners with him. I think, later on in the ’70s when I saw the whole thing build with David, it all started to make sense to people.

David and I didn’t actually meet until I first went back to New York, after I’d done Patti [Smith; Cale produced Horses in 1975]. When we did that bootleg [Cale and Bowie recorded “Piano-La” and “Velvet Couch” in New York in October 1979], it was like the good old bad old days. We were partying very hard. It was exciting working with him, as there were a lot of possibilities and everything, but we were our own worst enemies at that point. We also played that show for Steve Reich and Philip Glass [1979’s ‘The First Concert Of The Eighties’]. That was a lot of fun. That was when we were hanging out, so I asked David if he’d like to come and play “Sabotage” with me. I ended up teaching him the viola part, which he had a whack at and then ended up playing on stage for the first time. Did I ever want to produce Bowie? After spending time with him, I realised the answer was no. The way we were then would have made it too dangerous. Nowadays it would be different, though. He could improvise songs very well, which was what that bootleg was all about. The great thing about when we met and then started hanging out in the ’70s was that he would say [puts on thick Welsh accent] “That’s Dai Jones from Wales, isn’t it?” He loved all that. That set us off. We got along really well, but most of what we were doing was just partying.

I suppose David and I were similar in that we were coming from the European art side of things as much as rock’n’roll. What struck me about “Heroes” was that branded hammer piano. There was a lot of layering, too, a lot of orchestral stuff on it, but it’s really that two-chord special. It was that “Waiting For The Man” thing, though when we eventually met, we didn’t really talk about The Velvet Underground at all. Aside from the repetitive hammer piano, there’s a real groove in “Heroes”, but it’s very horizontal. And then it was layered with all Brian [Eno]’s stuff. If anything, I think it was their dissimilarity that drew David and Brian together. It was kind of how the VU was with Lou and I: put two people from very different backgrounds in the same room and you get a third thing. And I think that’s what happened with David and Brian. Did I see my own influence on Low and “Heroes”? If you’re talking about David’s use of drone, then yes. It’s all through that stuff. That’s why Brian was involved. But I think the tapestry idea of “Heroes” and blanketing the music to give it depth was a very good idea. I could see David’s progression to making it rhythm-oriented and then disco-oriented, which was the style of the day. Against what was happening with disco, if you had that sustained tapestry of sound behind you, it really helped. Especially if you had material like David had. It wasn’t like doing The Village People.

The imagery in “Heroes” is interesting. Hansa Studios was an interesting place to be at the time. The Berlin Wall was still up. I saw the two lovers by the Wall as two Brits adrift in Berlin, when Berlin was really something you couldn’t pin down at all. You’d have to drive through East Germany to get there. Being in West Berlin was very different from what it is now: everyone was nuts, living on the edge. It was a real circus over there. When Brian and I did that Nico concert where she insisted on singing “Deutschland Über Alles” [in October 1974 at The Nationalgalerie], they really went nuts. All the young people there were living with the Wall. And it was a fiery place to be.

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Interviews by David Cavanagh, Carol Clerk, Nick Hasted, Rob Hughes, Tim Jonze, John Lewis, Dan Martin, Andrew Mueller, Sam Richards, John Robinson, Marc Spitz and Stephen Troussé

 

Watch Jack White’s new video for “That Black Bat Licorice”

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Jack White has unveiled a "three-in-one" video for his new single, "That Black Bat Licorice".The interactive clip features a live action video directed by White himself, an animated version directed by James Blagden, as well as a "headbang" edition directed by Brad Holland. Watch all three by tog...

Jack White has unveiled a “three-in-one” video for his new single, “That Black Bat Licorice”.The interactive clip features a live action video directed by White himself, an animated version directed by James Blagden, as well as a “headbang” edition directed by Brad Holland.

Watch all three by toggling the keys in the embed above.

Jack White is currently touring his 2014 album Lazaretto around America. He recently shared an audio recording of his show at Madison Square Garden in New York, White’s first at the venue since he performed there with The White Stripes in 2007. It saw White perform a 23-song set that included work from his two solo records, as well as songs from The White Stripes and The Raconteurs.

Hear My Bloody Valentine’s Kevin Shields on new track “The House”

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My Bloody Valentine's Kevin Shields has teamed up with French-born, London-based musician Charlotte Marionneau. https://soundcloud.com/rtamusic-1/le-volume-courbe-the-house Marionneau's Le Volume Courbe have unveiled a new single, with "The House" featuring Shields, who also appeared on 2005 debut...

My Bloody Valentine’s Kevin Shields has teamed up with French-born, London-based musician Charlotte Marionneau.

https://soundcloud.com/rtamusic-1/le-volume-courbe-the-house

Marionneau’s Le Volume Courbe have unveiled a new single, with “The House” featuring Shields, who also appeared on 2005 debut ‘I Killed My Best Friend’. You can stream “The House” above.

Meanwhile, the single’s other track “Monte Dans Mon Ambulance” features Primal Scream’s Martin Duffy, with both tracks mixed by PJ Harvey collaborator John Parish.

The Smiths’ 30 best songs

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To coincide with the 35th anniversary of The Smiths' debut album, here's a very special piece on The Smiths - from the March 2007 issue of Uncut (Take 118). Famous fans including Noel Gallagher and Ian Brown, as well as the band themselves, select the very finest songs written by Morrissey and Marr....

To coincide with the 35th anniversary of The Smiths’ debut album, here’s a very special piece on The Smiths – from the March 2007 issue of Uncut (Take 118). Famous fans including Noel Gallagher and Ian Brown, as well as the band themselves, select the very finest songs written by Morrissey and Marr. Come on, let’s talk about precious things…

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Interviews: Michael Bonner, Stephen Dalton, Simon Goddard, Rob Hughes, Sarah-jane, Damian Jones, Tim Jonze, Paul Moody, Sam Richards, Marc Spitz, Paul Stokes, Anthony Thornton, Stephen Troussé

You can see Stephen Wright’s photos at www.smithsphotos.com

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JOHNNY MARR: “Well, well, The 30 Greatest Smiths Songs. It’s amazing to think that what we did still means so much to so many people.

“From the very first writing session that Morrissey and I had in my attic lodgings, we were excited and high with it. We couldn’t get our ideas out fast enough and that feeling remained in the studio for all of us when we were making the records.

“Greatness is the best achievement, greatness and recognition from your peers and other artists you respect. We had and still have that, plenty of other stuff too, good and bad and dramatic. But that’s The Smiths.

“We loved each other and we loved what we were doing more than anything. That’s probably why we still sound good. There’s love in it, inspired musicians, great words and some pretty good tunes, too.

“Bless you.”

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30 BARBARISM BEGINS AT HOME
From the album Meat Is Murder (February 1985, highest chart position: 1)

The bluntest expression of Morrissey’s second album violence fixation. A real curio in the Smiths catalogue, unfurling into an extended funk coda where pained operatic wails meet Andy Rourke’s slap bass.

IAN BROWN: I met Andy Rourke at a party when I was 16. My favourite memory of those days is that he used to wear a ’60s sheepskin coat, which belonged to the mother of my friend, Simon Wolstencroft [pre-Reni Roses drummer and later sticksman for The Fall]. I thought it was really funny that he had me mate’s mum’s coat on. But it was dead fashionable at the same time.

I didn’t meet Johnny until a few years later. There’s a great story of Johnny going into a pub in Sale called The Vine when he was 17 and telling everyone he was going to have a No 1 album – and a year or two later, he did! He always had that belief.

The thing about The Smiths that never got written about was that the pre-Smiths groups that Andy and Johnny were in, the Paris Valentinos and White Dice, were funk outfits. When everyone else was a punk rocker, Andy was into The Fatback Band and Parliament. I think that’s what gave The Smiths the groove; Andy played the melody like a McCartney, but he had that funk undercarriage that he learned when he was a kid, when he first picked that bass up. That’s what gave Morrissey the cradle to jump on top. So my favourite Smiths track is “Barbarism…” because that bassline is what Andy would’ve playing when he was about 14.

That Morrissey sang with his own accent was a big deal. Obviously, the lyrics are great. The way that he arranges his songs… no one else arranges their songs like that. He repeats lines, but each one’s got a different melody.

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29 SHEILA TAKE A BOW
Single (April 1987). Highest chart position: 10

Following in the footsteps of “Panic”, “Sheila…” equalled the band’s highest ever single placing, paid mispelled homage to A Taste Of Honey author Shelagh Delaney, and even doffed a hat to Bowie’s “Kooks”.

BETH DITTO, THE GOSSIP: For me, it’s like when you’re on tour and you have to associate with people you don’t like, and then you come home and go to your favourite dance night and the music connects with you. It reminds you that you do have a place where you belong and this song hits the nail on the head. It’s rare for a man to sing about a woman this way. To let you know that you’re not alone is empowering for me and I think it’s important in music to alienate the alienators and for the alienated to feel comfortable.

I used to hate The Smiths. Every time I heard them I got mad. It just brought up some creepy emotions inside me that I cannot explain. Now I can’t get enough, because one day the genius of it clicked in my head. Johnny Marr and Morrissey together were amazing. They’re the most dynamic songwriting duo of all time. The Smiths were about the pure ache of raw emotion and at that time for Morrissey it was all so secretive. It was very cryptic and the fact you had to break the code was interesting. It’s smart music. You have to sit down and appreciate it. The Smiths and Morrissey were very elitist, but only to the people who didn’t understand it – when you do, it’s a welcoming place.

28 YOU JUST HAVEN’T EARNED IT YET, BABY
From the compilation album The World Won’t Listen (February 1987, highest chart position: 7)

Supposedly Rough Trade boss Geoff Travis’ verdict on why success eluded The Smiths – a phrase that so irked Morrissey he recycled it both here and on “Paint A Vulgar Picture”. Marr and producer John Porter construct a dazzling wall of guitars, while Morrissey portrays himself as the hapless victim of petty thugs and bullies.

BRANDON FLOWERS, THE KILLERS: This LP had the biggest impact on me. I was living in a small town in Utah and kids my age were into Korn and Tool, but I was on the other end of the spectrum. Years later, I went to Salford Lads Club and took pictures. We played a gig at Manchester Academy, and across the street is the same church Morrissey sings about in “Vicar In A Tutu”. Even driving by a cemetery, I was thinking: “Is this the cemetery he was talking about?” You can walk down the streets and you can hear the songs come to life. “You Just Haven’t Earned It Yet, Baby” is the best Smiths song – it lit a fire in me when I heard it. I l loved it immediately.

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27 LAST NIGHT I DREAMT THAT SOMEBODY LOVED ME
From the album Strangeways, Here We Come (September 1987, highest chart position: 2)

Following “Stop Me…” on Strangeways, “Last Night…” was another acknowledgement of lyrical repetition – but if the former was comically wry, here it was tragically pained: “This story is old, I know, but it goes on,” croons Morrissey, with a subtle lyrical homage to Joni’s “Amelia” and an orchestral flourish worthy of Morricone.

GERARD WAY, MY CHEMICAL ROMANCE: It’s the bleakest one. It’s even bleaker than “Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want” which I used to think was the bleakest. Waking up with the feeling described in “Last Night…” is the worst feeling in the world. It takes the cake for bleakness, irony and melody.

_______________________

26 REEL AROUND THE FOUNTAIN
From the album The Smiths (Feb 1984, highest chart position: 2)

Sublime opener from the band’s debut album. It established Morrissey as a new kind of pop romantic comedian, the rueful, amused spectator of his own emotional tragedies.

BRETT ANDERSON, SUEDE: This track perfectly captures The Smiths’ dark beauty and brooding soul. Looking back, the debut album was flawed, but I still loved every bruised moment. I was fascinated with the wordplay in this song; the way the phrase “15 minutes with you” seemed to allude to the pursuit of fame in the Warholian sense. But The Smiths were always about so much more than the lyrics, and like any great band, they blended the interplay between melody and meaning expertly. They went on to make better records, possibly making the LP of the decade in The Queen Is Dead, but those early moments like “Reel Around The Fountain” are still special.

Sun Kil Moon announce new album

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Sun Kil Moon have announced details of a new album, Universal Themes. Caldo Verde Records will release the follow-up to Benji on June 2, reports Pitchfork. The tracklisting for Universal Themes is: The Possum Birds of Flims With a Sort of Grace I Walked to the Bathroom to Cry Garden of Lavende...

Sun Kil Moon have announced details of a new album, Universal Themes.

Caldo Verde Records will release the follow-up to Benji on June 2, reports Pitchfork.

The tracklisting for Universal Themes is:

The Possum
Birds of Flims
With a Sort of Grace I Walked to the Bathroom to Cry
Garden of Lavender
Cry Me a River Williamsburg Sleeve Tattoo Blues
Ali/Spinks 2
Little Rascals
This Is My First Day and I’m Indian and I Work at a Gas Station

You can read Uncut’s interview with Mark Kozelek here.

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

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Jimmy Page has been awarded the Rock'N'Roll Soul Award at the NME Awards 2015 with Austin, Texas.Page was given the special award at London's O2 Academy Brixton by Royal Blood, who won Best New Band supported by Replay earlier in the evening and also performed. The duo said they were "honoured" to b...
Jimmy Page has been awarded the Rock’N’Roll Soul Award at the NME Awards 2015 with Austin, Texas.Page was given the special award at London’s O2 Academy Brixton by Royal Blood, who won Best New Band supported by Replay earlier in the evening and also performed. The duo said they were “honoured” to be handing out the prize. On receiving the award, Page said:

“Well, well, well… Thank you to Royal Blood. They said it’s an honour to be giving this award but it’s an honour for me. I trust so much in Royal Blood. Thanks so much for this award, NME. It’s a real honour to get it, [but] as far as whatever I’ve managed to do in music, I’ve learned from records and my heroes. I’m only just passing on the baton. I got the music and passed it on. There it is, for everyone.”
The NME Awards 2015 with Austin, Texas winners:Best British Band supported by Marshall Amplification
Kasabin

Best Album
Kasabian – ’48:13′

Best International Band supported by Austin, Texas – The Live Music Capital Of The World®
Foo Fighters

Best Live Band supported by Dead Crow Spirit Flavoured Beers
Royal Blood

Best New Band
Royal Blood

Best Solo Artist
Jake Bugg

Best Festival
Glastonbury

Best Track supported by Tito’s Handmade Vodka
Jamie T – ‘Zombie’

Best Video
Jamie T – ‘Zombie’

Best Music Film
Pulp: A Film About Life, Death And Supermarkets

Best Film
Northern Soul

Best TV Show
Game Of Thrones

Best Quote
Kasabian

Dancefloor Filler
Iggy Azalea feat. Charli XCX – ‘Fancy’

Worst Band
5 Seconds Of Summer

Villain Of The Year
Nigel Farage

Hero Of The Year
Alex Turner

Music Moment Of The Year
Jamie T’s comeback

Best Fan Community
Muse

Small Festival Of The Year
Liverpool Psych Fest

Book Of The Year
Viv Albertine – Clothes Clothes Clothes Music Music Music Boys Boys Boys

Reissue Of The Year
Manic Street Preachers – ‘The Holy Bible’

Best Band Social Media
Liam Gallagher’s Twitter

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…’”

________________

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.

loutee180215

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

shanetee180215

 

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.”

matta170215_W

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.

vanmorrison280612w

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

___________________

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.

______________________

 

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.
______________________

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.