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David Byrne to curate this year’s Meltdown Festival

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Festival runs in London during August... David Byrne has been announced as the curator of this year's Meltdown Festival. The festival runs from August 17 – 28 at London's Southbank Centre. The festival, now in its 22nd year, finds Byrne following in the footsteps of previous directors that include Jarvis Cocker, Patti Smith, David Bowie, Yoko Ono, Ray Davies and Ornette Coleman. "This is going to be exciting!" Said Byrne. "I plan to invite performers I've seen – and I do get out – and others I've missed or have dreamed of seeing. It's going to be a bit of fun puzzle-solving I imagine – seeing who's interested, who is available and what venues at Southbank Centre are appropriate. I really hope to find things that take this beyond sit-down concerts as well – but of course I'm speaking way too early as I'm still working on my wish list. “Hoping that I get to stay in the Room For London, on top of the Queen Elizabeth Hall Roof, for the whole time, but suspect that might expecting too much." The full line-up for Meltdown will be announced in the coming months.

Festival runs in London during August…

David Byrne has been announced as the curator of this year’s Meltdown Festival.

The festival runs from August 17 – 28 at London’s Southbank Centre.

The festival, now in its 22nd year, finds Byrne following in the footsteps of previous directors that include Jarvis Cocker, Patti Smith, David Bowie, Yoko Ono, Ray Davies and Ornette Coleman.

“This is going to be exciting!” Said Byrne. “I plan to invite performers I’ve seen – and I do get out – and others I’ve missed or have dreamed of seeing. It’s going to be a bit of fun puzzle-solving I imagine – seeing who’s interested, who is available and what venues at Southbank Centre are appropriate. I really hope to find things that take this beyond sit-down concerts as well – but of course I’m speaking way too early as I’m still working on my wish list.

“Hoping that I get to stay in the Room For London, on top of the Queen Elizabeth Hall Roof, for the whole time, but suspect that might expecting too much.”

The full line-up for Meltdown will be announced in the coming months.

The Rolling Stones to tour this summer..?

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Ron Wood says band are in discussions to make their live return... The Rolling Stones will return to playing live with live dates in America set to take place this summer. Guitarist Ron Wood let the information slip while speaking to Billboard. Quizzed on the possibility of seeing the band live again, Wood is quoted as saying: "Yeah, we had a meeting in New York with the boys and we're gonna come [to] North America again in the summer." No dates or cities have yet been confirmed for the gigs, which will be the band's first since the death of saxophone player Bobby Keys, who dies in December 2014 following an ongoing battle with cirrhosis of the liver.

Ron Wood says band are in discussions to make their live return…

The Rolling Stones will return to playing live with live dates in America set to take place this summer.

Guitarist Ron Wood let the information slip while speaking to Billboard.

Quizzed on the possibility of seeing the band live again, Wood is quoted as saying: “Yeah, we had a meeting in New York with the boys and we’re gonna come [to] North America again in the summer.”

No dates or cities have yet been confirmed for the gigs, which will be the band’s first since the death of saxophone player Bobby Keys, who dies in December 2014 following an ongoing battle with cirrhosis of the liver.

Leonard Cohen – Live In Dublin

Wah-wah scatting, grandad-dancing and fedoras... three hours in the presence of a legend... There's a lovely moment, midway through "Tower Of Song", when Leonard Cohen finishes picking his way through that song's stumbling electric piano break, and the audience bursts into applause. As the band vamps quietly behind him, Cohen regards the crowd with a wry smile and asks, "Are you humouring me?", immediately adding, "I accept it, thank you. If these are the crumbs of compassion that you offer to the elderly, I am grateful." It's another variant of a line he's been using for a few years now, but it's such a sweet sentiment, and so elegantly phrased, emblematic both of the mutual fondness radiating between performer and audience, and the shared degree of politesse assumed by both parties. And of course, the crowd responds with a massive cheer when he gets to the line about having been "born with the gift of a golden voice". He may be "a lazy bastard living in a suit", as acknowledged in another well-received line from "Going Home", but as he sails into his eighties, Leonard Cohen still puts in a serious shift: a generous 30 songs, spread over three hours, drawn from all but a few corners of his career, shot in gorgeous high definition on September 12, 2013. And while several of his musicians play seated, Cohen's on his feet the entire time, save for the moments where he drops to his knees in supplication, beseeching the audience, or urging a player to greater heights of artistry. He runs on stage, clutches the mic like an alkie's bottle, supping its emotional draught through opener "Dance Me To The End Of Love", and even manages to skip gaily off the stage at the end of each set, as if confirming that the older one gets, the more one reverts to childhood. His band are all dressed like Cohen, a legion of Leonards in grey suits and fedoras; but the colour is all in his imagery, and in their playing, particularly the rhapsodic violin of Alexandru Bublitchi and the exotic textures of Javier Mas. The latter's brief but telling bandurria flourish accompanying the line in "Everybody Knows" about there being "so many people you just had to meet without your clothes" is typical of the expressive fluency involved - it's like a little raise of eyebrows at the joke, no more, but wittily effective. And the tremulous archilaud solo that serves as an overture to "Who By Fire" is quite devastating, as befits this elegant valediction. Elsewhere, guitarist Mitch Watkins inserts a deftly sensitive blues solo into "Bird On The Wire", while keyboardist Neil Larsen furnishes the backing tones for Cohen's recitation of the poem "For Those Who Greeted Me", an ongoing rumination that was the root source of "A Thousand Kisses Deep". Drummer Rafael Gayol, meanwhile, steals the band solos section in "I Tried To Leave You" by halting momentarily mid-solo, leaning towards the camera and blowing us a kiss, before coming back in smack on the beat. The show is studded with moments like that, tiny gestures or musical flourishes that decorate the measured poise of the performance. These songs don't need a dazzling light-show or pyrotechnics to impress, and it would be perverse to expect more complex choreography than the sedate steps back and forth of backing singers Sharon Robinson and The Webb Sisters, generously accorded solo spots with "Alexandra Leaving" and "If It Be Your Will" respectively Apart from his jaunty departures, Cohen himself restricts his physical output to a subdued grooving, a grandad-dancing shuffle on the spot, punctuated by the occasional sink to his knees. He acts with his eyes, keeping them tightly shut, then opening them wide for lines like those in "The Future" about murder and repentance, like some blazing-eyed preacher castigating his flock. That song's mordantly-delivered cynicism about the declining moral certainties of modern life now seems like the seed of those concerns addressed in more recent albums; and although the concert pre-dates Popular Problems, the Old Ideas songs included here, such as "Amen" (kneeling, of course) and "Darkness" (for which Cohen indulges in weird wah-wah scat-singing) stand up well alongside classics like "First We Take Manhattan", "Hallelujah" and "Suzanne", the latter sounding as much like a hymn as any of the more overtly religious themed pieces. "Famous Blue Raincoat" ushers in a tranche of encores, culminating in a charming singalong cover of "Save The Last Dance For Me". It's a fitting conclusion to a beautiful union of souls, a concert with the warmth and fraternal devotion evident in Cohen's sweetly caring salutation, the kind of sentiment that just wouldn't occur to less zen-conscious performers: "May you be surrounded by family and friends all your life; but if this is not your lot, may the blessings find you in your solitude". EXTRAS: Performances of "Show Me The Place", "Anyhow" and "Different Sides" from Canadian shows. Andy Gill

Wah-wah scatting, grandad-dancing and fedoras… three hours in the presence of a legend…

There’s a lovely moment, midway through “Tower Of Song”, when Leonard Cohen finishes picking his way through that song’s stumbling electric piano break, and the audience bursts into applause. As the band vamps quietly behind him, Cohen regards the crowd with a wry smile and asks, “Are you humouring me?”, immediately adding, “I accept it, thank you. If these are the crumbs of compassion that you offer to the elderly, I am grateful.” It’s another variant of a line he’s been using for a few years now, but it’s such a sweet sentiment, and so elegantly phrased, emblematic both of the mutual fondness radiating between performer and audience, and the shared degree of politesse assumed by both parties. And of course, the crowd responds with a massive cheer when he gets to the line about having been “born with the gift of a golden voice”.

He may be “a lazy bastard living in a suit”, as acknowledged in another well-received line from “Going Home“, but as he sails into his eighties, Leonard Cohen still puts in a serious shift: a generous 30 songs, spread over three hours, drawn from all but a few corners of his career, shot in gorgeous high definition on September 12, 2013. And while several of his musicians play seated, Cohen’s on his feet the entire time, save for the moments where he drops to his knees in supplication, beseeching the audience, or urging a player to greater heights of artistry. He runs on stage, clutches the mic like an alkie’s bottle, supping its emotional draught through opener “Dance Me To The End Of Love”, and even manages to skip gaily off the stage at the end of each set, as if confirming that the older one gets, the more one reverts to childhood.

His band are all dressed like Cohen, a legion of Leonards in grey suits and fedoras; but the colour is all in his imagery, and in their playing, particularly the rhapsodic violin of Alexandru Bublitchi and the exotic textures of Javier Mas. The latter’s brief but telling bandurria flourish accompanying the line in “Everybody Knows” about there being “so many people you just had to meet without your clothes” is typical of the expressive fluency involved – it’s like a little raise of eyebrows at the joke, no more, but wittily effective. And the tremulous archilaud solo that serves as an overture to “Who By Fire” is quite devastating, as befits this elegant valediction.

Elsewhere, guitarist Mitch Watkins inserts a deftly sensitive blues solo into “Bird On The Wire“, while keyboardist Neil Larsen furnishes the backing tones for Cohen’s recitation of the poem “For Those Who Greeted Me”, an ongoing rumination that was the root source of “A Thousand Kisses Deep”. Drummer Rafael Gayol, meanwhile, steals the band solos section in “I Tried To Leave You” by halting momentarily mid-solo, leaning towards the camera and blowing us a kiss, before coming back in smack on the beat. The show is studded with moments like that, tiny gestures or musical flourishes that decorate the measured poise of the performance. These songs don’t need a dazzling light-show or pyrotechnics to impress, and it would be perverse to expect more complex choreography than the sedate steps back and forth of backing singers Sharon Robinson and The Webb Sisters, generously accorded solo spots with “Alexandra Leaving” and “If It Be Your Will” respectively

Apart from his jaunty departures, Cohen himself restricts his physical output to a subdued grooving, a grandad-dancing shuffle on the spot, punctuated by the occasional sink to his knees. He acts with his eyes, keeping them tightly shut, then opening them wide for lines like those in “The Future” about murder and repentance, like some blazing-eyed preacher castigating his flock. That song’s mordantly-delivered cynicism about the declining moral certainties of modern life now seems like the seed of those concerns addressed in more recent albums; and although the concert pre-dates Popular Problems, the Old Ideas songs included here, such as “Amen” (kneeling, of course) and “Darkness” (for which Cohen indulges in weird wah-wah scat-singing) stand up well alongside classics like “First We Take Manhattan”, “Hallelujah” and “Suzanne”, the latter sounding as much like a hymn as any of the more overtly religious themed pieces.

Famous Blue Raincoat” ushers in a tranche of encores, culminating in a charming singalong cover of “Save The Last Dance For Me”. It’s a fitting conclusion to a beautiful union of souls, a concert with the warmth and fraternal devotion evident in Cohen’s sweetly caring salutation, the kind of sentiment that just wouldn’t occur to less zen-conscious performers: “May you be surrounded by family and friends all your life; but if this is not your lot, may the blessings find you in your solitude”.

EXTRAS: Performances of “Show Me The Place”, “Anyhow” and “Different Sides” from Canadian shows.

Andy Gill

Thom Yorke: government guilt of “staggering hypocrisy” over tax avoidance

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Documentary scored by Yorke and Massive Attack's Robert Del Naja will air on TV later this month... The first clip of an upcoming documentary on tax avoidance in the UK, featuring music by Thom Yorke, has been revealed. Scroll down to watch now. The UK Gold will be broadcast later this month and was scored by Yorke and Massive Attack's Robert Del Naja. The full film soundtrack also features contributions from Guy Garvey, Rose Elinor Dougall and former Libertines member Anthony Rossomando and was mixed by Oscar nominated Banksy collaborator Jim Carey. The film, which explores the history of tax avoidance, is directed by Mark Donne and narrated by actor Dominic West. In the clip below, Channel 4 News host Jon Snow discusses the UK tax haven network. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i2Gm8rEkkf8 In an exclusive comment given to NME, Thom Yorke questions the goverment and their motives in allowing tax havens to exist under their rule. "For all the current governments talk of standards in the Financial Industry it comes as no surprise perhaps that the reality beneath reveals their staggering hypocrisy," Yorke says. He continues: "Now is the time to reveal the revolving doors between government and the City that has bred lies and corruption for so long, siphoning money through our tax havens for the global super rich, while now preaching that we the people must pay our taxes and suffer austerity. Just who does our government work for?" UK Gold airs on London Live on February 25.

Documentary scored by Yorke and Massive Attack’s Robert Del Naja will air on TV later this month…

The first clip of an upcoming documentary on tax avoidance in the UK, featuring music by Thom Yorke, has been revealed. Scroll down to watch now.

The UK Gold will be broadcast later this month and was scored by Yorke and Massive Attack’s Robert Del Naja. The full film soundtrack also features contributions from Guy Garvey, Rose Elinor Dougall and former Libertines member Anthony Rossomando and was mixed by Oscar nominated Banksy collaborator Jim Carey.

The film, which explores the history of tax avoidance, is directed by Mark Donne and narrated by actor Dominic West. In the clip below, Channel 4 News host Jon Snow discusses the UK tax haven network.

In an exclusive comment given to NME, Thom Yorke questions the goverment and their motives in allowing tax havens to exist under their rule. “For all the current governments talk of standards in the Financial Industry it comes as no surprise perhaps that the reality beneath reveals their staggering hypocrisy,” Yorke says.

He continues: “Now is the time to reveal the revolving doors between government and the City that has bred lies and corruption for so long, siphoning money through our tax havens for the global super rich, while now preaching that we the people must pay our taxes and suffer austerity. Just who does our government work for?”

UK Gold airs on London Live on February 25.

Morrissey criticises “bogus” music awards

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Brit awards ceremony take place later this month (February).... Morrissey has criticised the Brit Awards in a lengthy post on fansite True To You, stating that the awards tend to end up being given to undeserving artists and that the event as a whole is "bogus". This year's Brit Awards take place on February 25 and Morrissey has received no nominations. His critical comments follow similar negativity from both Kasabian, and Noel Gallagher who said that the annual awards are "rigged". In his post, Morrissey states that "The object of the Brit Awards is to create the impression of national consensus as they award pop artists of untested stature or value with bogus awards that, it is slyly implied, have been dictated by you, the objective listener". He goes on to add that Taylor Swift, who will perform at this year's ceremony, "has nothing to do with Coventry or Wrexham" and that "it really is your own fault if you believe that this Awards show has any connection to anything other than the junk propaganda of the strongest labels gathering to share out awards for their own artists whom they plan to heavily promote in 2015". Don't forget: the current issue of Uncut carries a major retrospective on the making of The Smiths' Meat Is Murder album Morrissey tours the UK next month. The short outing begins at Nottingham's Capital FM Arena on March 13, taking in dates in Bournemouth, Cardiff, Leeds and Glasgow before wrapping up at Birmingham's Barclaycard Arena on March 27. Morrissey's 2014 tour – which the singer described as "what I may risk calling our best tour ever" – included just one UK date, at London's O2 Arena. The performer listed the London date as his favourite gig of the year in an end-of-tour message. Morrissey will play: Nottingham Capital FM Arena (March 13) Bournemouth International Centre (14) Cardiff Motorpoint Arena (18) Leeds First Direct Arena (20) Glasgow SSE Hydro (21) Birmingham Barclaycard Arena (27)

Brit awards ceremony take place later this month (February)….

Morrissey has criticised the Brit Awards in a lengthy post on fansite True To You, stating that the awards tend to end up being given to undeserving artists and that the event as a whole is “bogus”.

This year’s Brit Awards take place on February 25 and Morrissey has received no nominations. His critical comments follow similar negativity from both Kasabian, and Noel Gallagher who said that the annual awards are “rigged”.

In his post, Morrissey states that “The object of the Brit Awards is to create the impression of national consensus as they award pop artists of untested stature or value with bogus awards that, it is slyly implied, have been dictated by you, the objective listener”.

He goes on to add that Taylor Swift, who will perform at this year’s ceremony, “has nothing to do with Coventry or Wrexham” and that “it really is your own fault if you believe that this Awards show has any connection to anything other than the junk propaganda of the strongest labels gathering to share out awards for their own artists whom they plan to heavily promote in 2015”.

Don’t forget: the current issue of Uncut carries a major retrospective on the making of The Smiths’ Meat Is Murder album

Morrissey tours the UK next month. The short outing begins at Nottingham’s Capital FM Arena on March 13, taking in dates in Bournemouth, Cardiff, Leeds and Glasgow before wrapping up at Birmingham’s Barclaycard Arena on March 27.

Morrissey’s 2014 tour – which the singer described as “what I may risk calling our best tour ever” – included just one UK date, at London’s O2 Arena. The performer listed the London date as his favourite gig of the year in an end-of-tour message.

Morrissey will play:

Nottingham Capital FM Arena (March 13)

Bournemouth International Centre (14)

Cardiff Motorpoint Arena (18)

Leeds First Direct Arena (20)

Glasgow SSE Hydro (21)

Birmingham Barclaycard Arena (27)

Hear Jack White’s new track, “Blue Light, Red Light (Someone’s There)”

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The 'That Black Bat Licorice' b-side is a Harry Connick, Jr cover... Jack White has shared a new track, "Blue Light, Red Light (Someone's There)". Scroll down to listen to the song - a Harry Connick, Jr cover - that appears as the b-side to the 7" release of "That Black Bat Licorice", which comes out on White's own Third Man Records label on February 17. White recently shared an audio recording of his January 30 Madison Square Garden concert in New York. The show was his first at the venue since he performed there with The White Stripes in 2007. White played a 23-song set that included work from his two solo records, as well as songs from The White Stripes and The Raconteurs. White's concert was streamed live on the Pandora website, and a full recording is available here. Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

The ‘That Black Bat Licorice’ b-side is a Harry Connick, Jr cover…

Jack White has shared a new track, “Blue Light, Red Light (Someone’s There)“.

Scroll down to listen to the song – a Harry Connick, Jr cover – that appears as the b-side to the 7” release of “That Black Bat Licorice“, which comes out on White’s own Third Man Records label on February 17.

White recently shared an audio recording of his January 30 Madison Square Garden concert in New York. The show was his first at the venue since he performed there with The White Stripes in 2007. White played a 23-song set that included work from his two solo records, as well as songs from The White Stripes and The Raconteurs.

White’s concert was streamed live on the Pandora website, and a full recording is available here.

Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Bez begins week-long ‘bed-in’ protest against fracking

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He also announces Black Grape reunion concert in April... Bez and his girlfriend Firouzeh Razavi have begun their week-long 'bed-in' protest which intends to raise awareness of the UK anti-fracking movement. The protest, inspired by John Lennon and Yoko Ono's two anti-Vietnam war protests in 1969, has the support of Ono herself. In 2013 she penned the anti-fracking anthem "Don't Frack My Mother", which was performed by her son Sean Lennon. Bez told NME: "We're off to a great start because we've already attracted the attention of the world's media. The fact is that 69 per cent of our land has been licenced for fracking and it's been done without consultation with any of us. We haven't been told about the dangers." Fracking is a controversial process where underground rocks are fractured in order to stimulate oil wells. Critics argue that it often has unintended and severe environmental consequences. Bez took the opportunity to confirm that despite recent problems with the registration of the name of his political party, The Reality Party, he will still be contesting the Salford parliamentary seat at the General Election on May 7. He described the name setback as a "spanner in the works". He also told NME that his former band Black Grape will reform with Shaun Ryder and Kermit for a special concert in support of his campaign at the old Granada Studios in Manchester on April 11. Bez and Razavi will be staying in bed at the Motcalm Hotel at The Brewery in London until February 15, and live-streaming appearances by special guests every night from 9pm-10pm at www.bezinbed.co.uk Photo: Cheryl Atkinson/Press Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

He also announces Black Grape reunion concert in April…

Bez and his girlfriend Firouzeh Razavi have begun their week-long ‘bed-in’ protest which intends to raise awareness of the UK anti-fracking movement.

The protest, inspired by John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s two anti-Vietnam war protests in 1969, has the support of Ono herself. In 2013 she penned the anti-fracking anthem “Don’t Frack My Mother“, which was performed by her son Sean Lennon.

Bez told NME: “We’re off to a great start because we’ve already attracted the attention of the world’s media. The fact is that 69 per cent of our land has been licenced for fracking and it’s been done without consultation with any of us. We haven’t been told about the dangers.”

Fracking is a controversial process where underground rocks are fractured in order to stimulate oil wells. Critics argue that it often has unintended and severe environmental consequences.

Bez took the opportunity to confirm that despite recent problems with the registration of the name of his political party, The Reality Party, he will still be contesting the Salford parliamentary seat at the General Election on May 7. He described the name setback as a “spanner in the works”.

He also told NME that his former band Black Grape will reform with Shaun Ryder and Kermit for a special concert in support of his campaign at the old Granada Studios in Manchester on April 11.

Bez and Razavi will be staying in bed at the Motcalm Hotel at The Brewery in London until February 15, and live-streaming appearances by special guests every night from 9pm-10pm at www.bezinbed.co.uk

Photo: Cheryl Atkinson/Press

Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Hear new Paul Weller track + tour dates revealed!

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Saturns Pattern aligns on May 11... Paul Weller has released a video for a track from his new studio album, Saturns Pattern. You can scroll down to watch the video for "White Sky". Saturns Pattern is released on May 11 on his new label Parlophone. Written and recorded at Black Barn Studios in Surrey, Saturns Pattern was produced by Jan “Stan” Kybert and Weller. Musicians on the album Steve Cradock, Andy Crofts, Ben Gordelier and Steve Pilgrim, as well as The Strypes’ Josh McClorey, original Jam guitarist Steve Brookes and members of Syd Arthur. The tracklisting for Saturns Pattern is: White Sky Saturns Pattern Going My Way Long Time Pick It Up I’m Where I Should Be Phoenix In The Car… These City Streets http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vARCtbWH-cE Saturns Pattern will be released as a download and on the following physical formats: Standard CD, special edition CD/DVD, heavyweight 12” vinyl LP (and download card), Deluxe Box Set containing heavyweight 12” coloured vinyl LP, CD (plus bonus tracks), DVD, expanded artwork booklet and poster. Weller will also tour during November and December. He wil play: November Fri 20 – Brighton – Centre Sat 21 – Bournemouth – BIC Sun 22 – Cardiff Motorpoint Arena Tue 24 – Glasgow – The Hydro Wed 25 – Newcastle – Metro Radio Arena Fri 27 – Birmingham – NIA Sat 28 – Manchester – Arena Sun 29 – Leeds – Arena December Fri 4 – London – Eventim Apollo Sat 5 – London – Eventim Apollo Ticket pre-sale starts – Thursday 12th February General on sale from – Saturday 14th February 24hr Ticket Hotline: 0844 338 0000 Online: BookingsDirect.com For more details see www.paulweller.com Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Saturns Pattern aligns on May 11…

Paul Weller has released a video for a track from his new studio album, Saturns Pattern.

You can scroll down to watch the video for “White Sky“.

Saturns Pattern is released on May 11 on his new label Parlophone. Written and recorded at Black Barn Studios in Surrey, Saturns Pattern was produced by Jan “Stan” Kybert and Weller.

Musicians on the album Steve Cradock, Andy Crofts, Ben Gordelier and Steve Pilgrim, as well as The Strypes’ Josh McClorey, original Jam guitarist Steve Brookes and members of Syd Arthur.

The tracklisting for Saturns Pattern is:

White Sky

Saturns Pattern

Going My Way

Long Time

Pick It Up

I’m Where I Should Be

Phoenix

In The Car…

These City Streets

Saturns Pattern will be released as a download and on the following physical formats:

Standard CD, special edition CD/DVD, heavyweight 12” vinyl LP (and download card), Deluxe Box Set containing heavyweight 12” coloured vinyl LP, CD (plus bonus tracks), DVD, expanded artwork booklet and poster.

Weller will also tour during November and December. He wil play:

November

Fri 20 – Brighton – Centre

Sat 21 – Bournemouth – BIC

Sun 22 – Cardiff Motorpoint Arena

Tue 24 – Glasgow – The Hydro

Wed 25 – Newcastle – Metro Radio Arena

Fri 27 – Birmingham – NIA

Sat 28 – Manchester – Arena

Sun 29 – Leeds – Arena

December

Fri 4 – London – Eventim Apollo

Sat 5 – London – Eventim Apollo

Ticket pre-sale starts – Thursday 12th February

General on sale from – Saturday 14th February

24hr Ticket Hotline: 0844 338 0000

Online: BookingsDirect.com

For more details see www.paulweller.com

Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Hear two tracks from the new Alabama Shakes album

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Alabama Shakes will release their new album Sound And Color on April 20. The follow-up to 2012's Boys & Girls comprises 12 tracks, including "Future People" and "Don't Wanna Fight", which you can hear below. The album was recorded in Nashville at the Sound Emporium studio, and the band co-produ...

Alabama Shakes will release their new album Sound And Color on April 20.

The follow-up to 2012’s Boys & Girls comprises 12 tracks, including “Future People” and “Don’t Wanna Fight”, which you can hear below. The album was recorded in Nashville at the Sound Emporium studio, and the band co-produced the album with Blake Mills. “We took our time to write this record, and I’m really glad we did,” says Brittany Howard. “We were able to sit down and think about what’s exciting to us. This record is full of genre-bending songs.”

The Sound And Color tracklisting is:

‘Sound and Color’

‘Don’t Wanna Fight’

‘Dunes’

‘Future People’

‘Gimme All Your Love’

‘This Feeling’

‘Guess Who’

‘The Greatest’

‘Shoegaze’

‘Miss You’

‘Gemini’

‘Over My Head’

Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Ultimate Music Guide: Kate Bush

'There are few British musicians who are as revered and elusive as Kate Bush - a fact brought home by the rapturous acclaim that greeted her return to live shows, after 35 years, in 2014. Now, Uncut's latest Ultimate Music Guide reveals the truth about Kate Bush, and examines every part of her momen...

‘There are few British musicians who are as revered and elusive as Kate Bush – a fact brought home by the rapturous acclaim that greeted her return to live shows, after 35 years, in 2014. Now, Uncut’s latest Ultimate Music Guide reveals the truth about Kate Bush, and examines every part of her momentous and often strange career.

As usual, we’ve dug deep into the archives of NME and Melody Maker to find revelatory interviews with Bush. “There are always so many voices telling me what to do that you can’t listen to them,” she told one Melody Maker journalist in 1985. “All I ever do is listen to the little voices inside me. I don’t want to disappoint the little voices that have been so good to me.”

From the striking arrival of “Wuthering Heights”, through to the magical comeback of Before The Dawn, the Ultimate Music Guide: Kate Bush tells her whole story. Uncut’s writers have revisited every one of her albums and provided detailed new reviews: every song reassessed and rated. And along with the interviews, they show a genius on her own trajectory, whose idiosyncratic vision, and whose determination to bring that vision to fruition, has been there right from the start.

That’s the Ultimate Music Guide: Kate Bush. We just know that something good is gonna happen…

 

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Download the Digital Edition

Yoko Ono to release two 10-inch vinyl records to mark 82nd birthday

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Yoko Ono is to release two 10-inch vinyl records to mark her 82nd birthday – 'Antony & Yoko' and 'Yoko Ono & John Zorn'. The singer collaborates with Antony Hegarty and John Zorn for the records, which will be released on February 18 as part of a Yoko Ono series that has included collab...

Yoko Ono is to release two 10-inch vinyl records to mark her 82nd birthday – ‘Antony & Yoko’ and ‘Yoko Ono & John Zorn’.

The singer collaborates with Antony Hegarty and John Zorn for the records, which will be released on February 18 as part of a Yoko Ono series that has included collaborations with Tune-Yards, Iggy Pop, and Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon.

On ‘Antony & Yoko’, Ono and Hegarty perform a vocal duet over piano on song ‘I Love You Earth’, while ‘Yoko Ono & John Zorn’ features an “intense and imaginative” improvisation, ‘Blink’.

Ono previously performed ‘Blink’ live on WNYC at the station’s Greene Space in November 2012. Proceeds from the sale of the song will go to The Stone, John Zorn’s non-profit New York performance space.

Ono’s birthday will also see the release of a new book by Bob Gruen and Judy Denberg called ‘See Hear Yoko’. It will include black and white photos of the singer, as well as 25 years’ worth of interviews.

‘ANTONY & YOKO’:

‘I Love You Earth’

‘I’m Going Away Smiling’

‘YOKO ONO & JOHN ZORN’:

‘Blink’

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Sleater-Kinney play first gig since 2006 in Washington

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Sleater-Kinney have played their first gig in nine years, in Spokane, Washington. The band started their run of comeback dates at the Knitting Factory venue on February 8, and were joined by Katie Harkin of the Leeds band Sky Larkin on back-up guitar and keys. Sleater-Kinney played a 23-song set,...

Sleater-Kinney have played their first gig in nine years, in Spokane, Washington.

The band started their run of comeback dates at the Knitting Factory venue on February 8, and were joined by Katie Harkin of the Leeds band Sky Larkin on back-up guitar and keys. Sleater-Kinney played a 23-song set, opening with ‘Price Tag’, the first track on their new album, No Cities To Love.

The show also included a run of classic songs from the band, including ‘One Beat’, the title track of their 2002 album, ‘Dig Me Out’, the title track of their 1997 album, and ‘I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone’ from 1996’s Call The Doctor.

Sleater-Kinney played:

‘Price Tag’

‘Fangless’

‘Start Together’

‘Oh!’

‘No Anthems’

‘Get Up’

‘Ironclad’

‘One Beat’

‘Bury Our Friends’

‘What’s Mine Is Yours’

‘One More Hour’

‘No Cities to Love’

‘Surface Envy’

‘Words and Guitar’

‘Sympathy’

‘A New Wave’

‘Entertain’

‘Jumpers’

‘Gimme Love’

‘Dig Me Out’

‘I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone’

‘Turn It On’

‘Modern Girl’

‘No Cities To Love’ was released on January 19. The band will tour America this month and also play the 6 Music Festival in Tyneside on February 20, before touring Europe in March, taking in London, Manchester and Glasgow. See below for full tour dates.

Sleater-Kinney released seven albums between 1995 and 2005 with their self-titled debut album being followed by Call The Doctor, Dig Me Out, The Hot Rock, All Hands On The Bad One and One Beat. The band’s most recent album before No Cities To Love was The Woods, which was released in 2005.

Sleater-Kinney will play:

Newcastle O2 Academy (February 20)

London Roundhouse (March 23)

Manchester Albert Hall (24)

Glasgow O2 ABC 2 (25)

Dublin Vicar Street (26)

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The Jesus And Mary Chain discuss new album plans

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The Jesus And Mary Chain have confirmed that plans for a new album are in the works. The iconic band's last release was 1998's Munki, the group then split in 1999 after the relationship between frontman Jim Reid and his brother, guitarist William Reid crumbled. "We've got the material, we've tal...

The Jesus And Mary Chain have confirmed that plans for a new album are in the works.

The iconic band’s last release was 1998’s Munki, the group then split in 1999 after the relationship between frontman Jim Reid and his brother, guitarist William Reid crumbled.

“We’ve got the material, we’ve talked about doing an album for so long now,” Jim Reid told NME. “We got back together in 2007 and it was the plan then. We thought ‘We’ve got a bunch of songs, this would make a pretty good Mary Chain album’ – and then there was the usual slaps and scratches between my brother and myself. ‘I wanna do it here’ and ‘I don’t’ and then it was all ‘Fuck you’ and swinging at each other. The usual shit basically.”

However, Jim went on to say that since the band started touring their seminal ‘Psychocandy’ album, to celebrate its 30th anniversary, a new album seems more likely than ever. “We are kind of coming round to being in agreement, which is a bit weird for us, he commented. “There will be an album – we will get it together. I’m more convinced now than I ever have been that there will be a new Mary Chain album.”

Speaking about the problems that have plagued the recording of their seventh LP in the past, Jim explained: “We couldn’t agree how to approach the songs. At the time when the band got back together my kids were very young and William lives in LA and wanted to record out there, and I didn’t want to go and spend months away from my family. But my kids are a bit older now and I’m kind of in the middle of a divorce, so it seems like a good time to get the hell out of town.”

Following a run of dates in November of last year, which saw them playing 1985’s ‘Psychocandy’ in full, the band will tour the album again in the UK from next week.

The Jesus And Mary Chain will play:

Liverpool Guild of Students (February 16)

Leeds O2 Academy (17)

Newcastle O2 Academy (18)

Edinburgh Corn Exchange (19)

Norwich UEA (21)

Nottingham Rock City (22)

Brighton Dome (23)

Birmingham The Institute (25)

Bristol O2 Academy (26)

Cardiff University (The Great Hall) (27)

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The Fifth Uncut Playlist Of 2015

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Apologies for the lack of a playlist last week: I was out of the office on a short trip to the States, most of which was spent contemplating the view in the picture above (I also have a photo of a restaurant window featuring the rosette "Best Fried Dessert" which I was tempted to use here). An inter...

Apologies for the lack of a playlist last week: I was out of the office on a short trip to the States, most of which was spent contemplating the view in the picture above (I also have a photo of a restaurant window featuring the rosette “Best Fried Dessert” which I was tempted to use here). An interesting story came out of it, though, which I’ll reveal more about in a week or so.

In the meantime, I have an issue to finish at some speed – as I write, Michael is writing up an extraordinary interview with Alejandro Jodorowsky for that next Uncut – but here are the office hits of the past few days. Particular personal love for The Weather Station (I’ll find a track to embed ASAP), the Cannibal Ox comeback that turned up this morning, and that annoyingly redacted album. Again, sorry for the subterfuge; I’m hamstrung by a record company embargo here, which should lift any day now.

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

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

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ss24LSJqcqY

2 8:58 – 8:58 (ACP)

3 Toru Takemitsu – From Me Flows What You Call Time

4 Stick In The Wheel – Common Ground/Hasp (Static Caravan)

5 Turbo Fruits – No Control (Turbo Time)

6 Bop English – Constant Bop (Blood And Biscuits)

7 [REDACTED]

8 James Blackshaw – Summoning Suns (Important)

9 The Weather Station – Loyalty (Paradise Of Bachelors)

10 Elvin Bishop – Fooled Around And Fell In Love (Capricorn)

11 Follakzoid – III (Sacred Bones)

12 Bassekou Kouyaté & Ngoni Ba – Ba Power (Glitterbeat)

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

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

15 Olivia Chaney – The Longest River (Nonesuch)

16 The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion – Freedom Tower – No Wave Dance Party 2015 (Bronzerat)

17 Calexico – Edge Of The Sun (City Slang)

18 Torres – Sprinter (Partisan)

19 Kendrick Lamar – The Blacker The Berry (Top Dawg Entertainment)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6AhXSoKa8xw

20 Cannibal Ox – Iron Rose (Featuring MF Doom) (iHipHop Distribution)

David Bowie announces Record Store Day releases…

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There's two 7" singles... David Bowie has announced details of two 7" singles which will be released on Record Store Day 2015. The first is a limited edition 7" picture disc of "Changes". The AA-side for the 2015 picture disc is "Eight Line Poem (Gem Promo Version", which is making it's official release debut. It will be joined by a limited edition white/clear vinyl 'Side By Side' 7"of "Kingdom Come". One side features the Tom Verlaine version of the track and the other has Bowie's rendition from the album Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps). The full details of the releases are: DAVID BOWIE CHANGES LIMITED EDITION 7" PICTURE DISC FOR RECORD STORE DAY 2015 A-Side Changes (David Bowie) Produced by Ken Scott and David Bowie AA-Side Eight Line Poem (GEM promo version) (David Bowie) CHANGES is released on Parlophone April 18, 2015 DAVID BOWIE/TOM VERLAINE KINGDOM COME LIMITED EDITION 7" 'SIDE BY SIDE' WHITE/CLEAR VINYL FOR RECORD STORE DAY 2015 A-Side Kingdom Come by Tom Verlaine (1979) (Tom Verlaine) Produced by Michael Ewasko and Tom Verlaine AA-Side Kingdom Come by David Bowie (1980) (Tom Verlaine) Produced by David Bowie and Tony Visconti KINGDOM COME is released on Parlophone/Elektra April 18, 2015 Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

There’s two 7″ singles…

David Bowie has announced details of two 7″ singles which will be released on Record Store Day 2015.

The first is a limited edition 7″ picture disc of “Changes“. The AA-side for the 2015 picture disc is “Eight Line Poem (Gem Promo Version”, which is making it’s official release debut.

It will be joined by a limited edition white/clear vinyl ‘Side By Side’ 7″of “Kingdom Come“. One side features the Tom Verlaine version of the track and the other has Bowie’s rendition from the album Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps).

The full details of the releases are:

DAVID BOWIE

CHANGES LIMITED EDITION 7″ PICTURE DISC FOR RECORD STORE DAY 2015

A-Side Changes

(David Bowie)

Produced by Ken Scott and David Bowie

AA-Side Eight Line Poem (GEM promo version)

(David Bowie)

CHANGES is released on Parlophone April 18, 2015

DAVID BOWIE/TOM VERLAINE

KINGDOM COME LIMITED EDITION 7″ ‘SIDE BY SIDE’ WHITE/CLEAR VINYL FOR RECORD STORE DAY 2015

A-Side Kingdom Come by Tom Verlaine (1979)

(Tom Verlaine)

Produced by Michael Ewasko and Tom Verlaine

AA-Side Kingdom Come by David Bowie (1980)

(Tom Verlaine)

Produced by David Bowie and Tony Visconti

KINGDOM COME is released on Parlophone/Elektra April 18, 2015

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The Decemberists – What A Terrible World…

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Their seventh studio album. Less words, more heart... In April 2007, Uncut reported on the rise of a new generation of North American college rock bands. Responding to the successes of bands like Arcade Fire, the Shins and Modest Mouse, we asked how literate, theatrical, geeky indie rock bands were...

Their seventh studio album. Less words, more heart…

In April 2007, Uncut reported on the rise of a new generation of North American college rock bands. Responding to the successes of bands like Arcade Fire, the Shins and Modest Mouse, we asked how literate, theatrical, geeky indie rock bands were all of a sudden taking charge of the charts and selling out arenas. Among the bands featured were Portland, Oregon’s The Decemberists, led by Colin Meloy, who had recently released their major label debut, The Crane Wife. As it transpired, things continued to progress propitiously for The Decemberists: their last album, 2011’s The King Is Dead, reached No 1 on the Billboard charts, selling 94,000 copies in its first week of release.

At their best, the earliest Decemberists recordings were playful and roguish, full of seafaring yarns and shape-shifting demons, whose detailed storylines and demanding arrangements often concealed a potentially popular sound beneath. But The King Is Dead tempered some of their fussier aspects; the album even featured extensive cameo work from Peter Buck, a musician not known for idiosyncratic noodling. The album’s success paid off: following its release, the band contributed to The Hunger Games soundtrack, and appeared on both The Simpsons and Parks And Recreation. What greater accolades could an indie band from the Pacific Northwest possibly want..?

Since then, the band have been on hiatus following multi-instrumentalist Jenny Conlee’s recovery from breast cancer treatment and Meloy’s burgeoning sideline as the author of a successful young adult fantasy franchise. They return with What A Terrible World, What A Beautiful World. The relative simplicity of The King Is Dead suited Colin Meloy’s strong melodic gifts; and What A Terrible World… continues to sharpen the band’s sound. The rough-and-tumble folk is suffused here with girl group ‘doo doos’, indie jangle, and even reaches for the loose, jazzy vibes of Astral Weeks – on the beautiful “Lake Song” and “Till The Water Is All Long Gone”.

That album opens with “The Singer Addresses His Audience”, a sardonic take on the slippery nature of rock’n’roll success and the compromises made along the way, in which a fictitious frontman confesses, “We’re aware that you cut your hair in the style that our drummer wore in the video / but with fame came a mounting claim for the evermore” topped off with the wryly disingenuous caveat: “We did it all for you”. It spins off into suitably histrionic string arrangements, Jim Steinman-style choirs and squawking guitar solos. So far, so droll. “Cavalry Captain” foregrounds the romantic aspect of Meloy’s songwriting – “we’ll be away on the light brigade / and if only for a second, if only for a time, and if only for a second / we’ll be alive” – set against thrilling brass arrangements. The Spectorish swoon of “Philomena” finds Meloy at his most Morrissey – “long summer days can lead to lazy vices / boys all at idle left to their own devices” – while “Make You Better” is more evidence of Meloy’s affinity for a certain kind of indie aesthetic (The Catchers or perhaps a rockier The Field Mice spring to mind). Later, with “The Wrong Year”, Meloy explicitly mirrors the deft melodic lilt of Johnny Marr in his Smiths’ heyday.

Meloy’s singing is at its best on “Lake Song” and “Till The Water’s All Long Gone”, both of which find him adopting a softer, more intimate delivery. On “Lake Song”, strip away the Morrisseyisms (“I, seventeen and terminally fey”) and you’re left with a wry, bookish yarn about the narrator’s formative romantic fumblings: “you, all sibylline, reclining in your pew, you tattered me, you tethered me to you”. Another highlight is the understated country blues of “Carolina Low”, which comes couched in violence – “Did you crack your lip? Did you skin your knee” – while the fate of the narrator remains ominously unspecified: “I’m bound for the hilltop”. Meloy has a tendency to overwrite, but “Carolina Low”, with its compact narrative, benefits from smart self-editing skills. Less successful is the ersatz folk of “Better Not Wake The Baby”, with its wheezy accordions and Mumfordized chorus. “Anti-Summersong” – a companion piece to “Summersong” from The Crane Wife album– has pleasing touches of early, alt-country Wilco. “Easy Come, Easy Go” is another opportunity for Meloy to flash his chops as a lyricist – “It was a moonless night, the stars a limning light” – for a pulpy, cautionary tale about lives lost through casual mishap.

Previous Decemberists albums have often been tied to a concept – none more so than 2009’s Hazards Of Love, a fairy tale about a maiden and her misadventures with vengeful forest sprites. If anything links What A Terrible World…, though, it’s more ruminative, first-person pieces like “Mistral” and “12/17/12”. In the former – a big song with a warm, uplifting chorus – the narrator finds himself abroad and “eking out a little joy from what awaits back in the States”. “12/17/12”, apparently written after watching Obama address the nation after the Newton school shootings, is carried on exquisitely simple, country-inflected melodies. “O my god, what a world you have made here”, Meloy half-whispers. It is the most straightforward and affecting song on the album, shorn of elaborate wordplay and quirky arrangements. You might wish he’d tackled more of the record in this way.
Michael Bonner

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Paul Weller releases short snippet of new music – listen

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More new music to be unveiled this Wednesday (November 11)... Paul Weller has shared a short clip of new music. Click below to listen. The instrumental snippet was uploaded to YouTube on Friday (November 6) and posted via the singer's official Twitter account. It was also revealed that more new music will be released this Wednesday (November 11). "3 years after his last release, Paul Weller is ready to unleash his new sound," read the Tweet. "More on 11th Feb, get in the mood here." The new clip is likely to preview a track taken from Weller's forthcoming album Saturn's Pattern. Speaking to Uncut recently, the 56-year-old described the LP as "progressive in the literal sense of the word. It’s defiantly 21st-Century music.” "It's a little bit of a leap into the unknown, really," he added. "I don't know where it will take me, I have no idea. I wouldn't say it's dance because I wouldn't do a dance record as such, but it's got a lot of movement to it. It's gone past my expectations, in a way." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJ2I7MbAkIM Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

More new music to be unveiled this Wednesday (November 11)…

Paul Weller has shared a short clip of new music. Click below to listen.

The instrumental snippet was uploaded to YouTube on Friday (November 6) and posted via the singer’s official Twitter account. It was also revealed that more new music will be released this Wednesday (November 11).

“3 years after his last release, Paul Weller is ready to unleash his new sound,” read the Tweet. “More on 11th Feb, get in the mood here.”

The new clip is likely to preview a track taken from Weller’s forthcoming album Saturn’s Pattern. Speaking to Uncut recently, the 56-year-old described the LP as “progressive in the literal sense of the word. It’s defiantly 21st-Century music.”

“It’s a little bit of a leap into the unknown, really,” he added. “I don’t know where it will take me, I have no idea. I wouldn’t say it’s dance because I wouldn’t do a dance record as such, but it’s got a lot of movement to it. It’s gone past my expectations, in a way.”

Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Neil Young, Jack White, Bruce Springsteen honor Bob Dylan at gala tribute; read setlist + watch footage

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Plus Dylan gives 30 minute acceptance speech... Bob Dylan delivered a 30 minute acceptance speech at MusiCares Person Of The Year 2015 Gala on Friday night (February 6) that saw him thank Jimi Hendrix, Johnny Cash, Joan Baez and many others for supporting his music, Rolling Stone reports. Although Dylan did not perform any music at the event, Bruce Springsteen, Neil Young, Jack White and Beck were among the musicians to take to the stage. Scroll down for the full set list. "We can't forget Jimi Hendrix," said Dylan. "I actually saw Jimi perform when he was with a band called Jimmy James and the Blue Flames. Something like that. And Jimi didn't even sing. He was just the guitar player. He took some small songs of mine that nobody paid any attention to and brought them up into the outer limits of the stratosphere, turned them all into classics. I have to thank Jimi, too. I wish he was here. "Johnny Cash recorded some of my songs early on, too," Dylan continued. "I met him about '63, when he was all skin and bones. He travelled long, he traveled hard, but he was a hero of mine. I heard many of his songs growing up. I knew them better than I knew my own. 'Big River', 'I Walk the Line'. 'How High's the Water, Mama?' I wrote 'It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)' with that song reverberating inside my head." The MusiCares Person of the Year is presented annually as a part of Grammy Week to honour musicians for their achievement in the music industry and dedication to philanthropy. You can read the full transcript of Dylan's speech here. MusiCares Person Of The Year 2015 setlist: Beck – 'Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat' Aaron Neville – 'Shooting Star' Alanis Morissette – 'Subterranean Homesick Blues' Los Lobo – 'On A Night Like This' Willie Nelson – 'Señor (Tales Of Yankee Power)' Jackson Browne – 'Blind Willie McTell' John Mellencamp – 'Highway 61 Revisited' Jack White – 'One More Cup Of Coffee' Tom Jones – 'What Good Am I?' Norah Jones – 'I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight' Dereck Trucks And Susan Tedeschi – 'Million Miles' John Doe – 'Pressing On' Crosby, Stills & Nash – 'Girl From The North County' Bonnie Raitt – 'Standing In The Doorway' Sheryl Crow – 'Boots Of Spanish Leather' Bruce Springsteen – 'Knockin' On Heaven’s Door' Neil Young – 'Blowin' In The Wind' Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Plus Dylan gives 30 minute acceptance speech…

Bob Dylan delivered a 30 minute acceptance speech at MusiCares Person Of The Year 2015 Gala on Friday night (February 6) that saw him thank Jimi Hendrix, Johnny Cash, Joan Baez and many others for supporting his music, Rolling Stone reports.

Although Dylan did not perform any music at the event, Bruce Springsteen, Neil Young, Jack White and Beck were among the musicians to take to the stage. Scroll down for the full set list.

“We can’t forget Jimi Hendrix,” said Dylan. “I actually saw Jimi perform when he was with a band called Jimmy James and the Blue Flames. Something like that. And Jimi didn’t even sing. He was just the guitar player. He took some small songs of mine that nobody paid any attention to and brought them up into the outer limits of the stratosphere, turned them all into classics. I have to thank Jimi, too. I wish he was here.

Johnny Cash recorded some of my songs early on, too,” Dylan continued. “I met him about ’63, when he was all skin and bones. He travelled long, he traveled hard, but he was a hero of mine. I heard many of his songs growing up. I knew them better than I knew my own. ‘Big River’, ‘I Walk the Line’. ‘How High’s the Water, Mama?’ I wrote ‘It’s Alright Ma (I’m Only Bleeding)’ with that song reverberating inside my head.”

The MusiCares Person of the Year is presented annually as a part of Grammy Week to honour musicians for their achievement in the music industry and dedication to philanthropy.

You can read the full transcript of Dylan’s speech here.

MusiCares Person Of The Year 2015 setlist:

Beck – ‘Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat’

Aaron Neville – ‘Shooting Star’

Alanis Morissette – ‘Subterranean Homesick Blues’

Los Lobo – ‘On A Night Like This’

Willie Nelson – ‘Señor (Tales Of Yankee Power)’

Jackson Browne – ‘Blind Willie McTell’

John Mellencamp – ‘Highway 61 Revisited’

Jack White – ‘One More Cup Of Coffee’

Tom Jones – ‘What Good Am I?’

Norah Jones – ‘I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight’

Dereck Trucks And Susan Tedeschi – ‘Million Miles’

John Doe – ‘Pressing On’

Crosby, Stills & Nash – ‘Girl From The North County’

Bonnie Raitt – ‘Standing In The Doorway’

Sheryl Crow – ‘Boots Of Spanish Leather’

Bruce Springsteen – ‘Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door’

Neil Young – ‘Blowin’ In The Wind’

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Jack White’s tour rider leaked…

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Jack White's management have issued a statement after the artist's tour rider was leaked online by the University of Oklahoma school paper, leading to booking agency to blacklist the university. William Morris Endeavor Entertainment vowed to keep their clients, who in addition to White include Foo ...

Jack White‘s management have issued a statement after the artist’s tour rider was leaked online by the University of Oklahoma school paper, leading to booking agency to blacklist the university.

William Morris Endeavor Entertainment vowed to keep their clients, who in addition to White include Foo Fighters and Pharrell, away from the University in future after details of White’s rider were published in a student newspaper.

Among White’s requests when he played the venue earlier this month (February) were his own personal chunky guacamole recipe as well as four bottles of fresh juice smoothies, one pound of “freshly sliced, high-quality prosciutto and aged salami with a sharp knife.” and a New York strip steak, cooked medium. Notably, bananas are banned from the entire tour. (“This is a no bananas tour”).

In printing this information, William Morris Endeavor Entertainment blacklisted the campus from hiring any of its clients with a spokesperson telling The Oklahoma Daily that this ban would remain until its “policy is modified not to disseminate private information.”

Furthermore, Jack White’s management Monotone Inc. responded to a request for comment from Pitchfork and clarified that the rider was not solely for their client’s consumption and explained that the tour crew all need to be fed on the night of the performance.

“Contrary to what some believe, Jack doesn’t write the rider nor make demands about his favorite snacks that must be in his dressing room,” a section of the statement reads. “We’re not even sure he likes guacamole but we do know that the folks who work hard to put on the show do enjoy it.”

Jac White is currently touring his 2014 album Lazaretto around America.

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Pond – Man It Feels Like Space Again

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Less guitar, more synth, on ever-evolving psych rockers playful sixth... Over the last decade much has been written about the music industry denying bands the chance to experiment and grow. That may be true on major labels, but on the fringes there are still groups churning out great records in fits of creativity, following whatever crazy ideas appear in their heads at that moment. Nowhere is this truer than in the current Australian scene, where bands like Total Control, Eastlink and, especially, Pond are doing just that. Led by frontman Nick Allbrook, a touring member of Tame Impala until 2013 (all are, or have been, involved with Kevin Parker's project), each of Pond's five records so far have pushed the boundaries of the band’s sound. Many of their albums have been recorded quickly, capturing the group’s eccentricities (psychedelic flute solos are a speciality), with 2012 breakthrough Beard, Wives, Denim cut in just one week. Their last album, 2013’s Hobo Rocket, was their heaviest yet, a maelstrom of acid rock guitar riffing, bizarre synth interludes and excellent, if oblique, song structures.Man It Feels Like Space Again is the polar counterpart to Hobo Rocket. Instead of “man rock”, as drummer Jay Watson described their sound on KEXP recently, the tracks here, written over the same period, are much more accessible and subdued. In contrast to their usual speedy studio style, the band spent time sculpting the sounds and production, even agonising over mixes with Impala’s Kevin Parker – hence 2014 being the first year without a Pond album release since they formed. Where Hobo’s opener came on like Rage Against The Machine jamming with Cluster – exciting but very, very awkward – the first track on Man…, the splendid “Waiting Around For Grace”, is a silver-toned, synth-led stomper, jammed with so many euphoric moments that it might have been created for a hook-writing competition. The drums are crisp and processed, the synths buzz beautifully and the guitars are brittle with chorus effects, yet the group have lost none of their sense of free-ranging melody present since their 2009 debut, Psychedelic Mango. “Don't it make you wonder how God found the time?” deadpans Allbrook in the Mercury Rev-esque introduction. Lead-off track “Elvis’ Flaming Star” is the most immediate moment on the album, another lysergic glam gallop. One major touchstone here, and throughout this playful album, is Supergrass, especially Life On Other Planets, their underrated 2002 album which explored '70s synth tones and glam rhythms. Coincidentally, or not, it even featured a track, “See The Light”, which referred to Elvis. Man… is, according to Allbrook, the first time the band have gone minimalist, paring back tracks until each song shines. This turns out especially well on slower pieces such as the psychedelic soul of “Holding Out For You”, which sounds like The Flaming Lips covering the Abbey Road medley (and not making a hash of it a la With A Little Help From My Fwends). The least immediate, but perhaps most rewarding song here is the closing title track, which, across eight and a half minutes, spans prog, funk, kosmiche and folk. What's more, it doesn't feel stitched together as a laugh like some of their earlier work, but properly mapped out, branching sideways to woozy, Beatles-esque climes but always returning to the same cleansing, crystalline guitar and synth melody. At times, the elfin Allbrook sounds almost identical to MGMT's Andrew VanWyngarden, his lyrics reaching a similar peak of impressive, non-sensical profundity; though it's hard to distinguish many of the Gnomic lines under all those space echo repeats. For all the plaudits that Tame Impala receive, then, Pond have proved that they're possibly the braver band, willing to squeeze out ideas as soon as they have them, with playful abandon. Their influences are clear, but they combine them in a unique, joyful way, as they endlessly evolve their sound. Here, the extra care and attention to production and arrangements has paid off, making Man… as consistently enjoyably as their older albums were unevenly thrilling. The question is, though, where do Pond go from here? We have no idea and, gloriously, Pond probably don't either. The well is not yet dry – stay tuned. Tom Pinnock Credit: Matthew Saville Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Less guitar, more synth, on ever-evolving psych rockers playful sixth…

Over the last decade much has been written about the music industry denying bands the chance to experiment and grow. That may be true on major labels, but on the fringes there are still groups churning out great records in fits of creativity, following whatever crazy ideas appear in their heads at that moment. Nowhere is this truer than in the current Australian scene, where bands like Total Control, Eastlink and, especially, Pond are doing just that.

Led by frontman Nick Allbrook, a touring member of Tame Impala until 2013 (all are, or have been, involved with Kevin Parker’s project), each of Pond’s five records so far have pushed the boundaries of the band’s sound. Many of their albums have been recorded quickly, capturing the group’s eccentricities (psychedelic flute solos are a speciality), with 2012 breakthrough Beard, Wives, Denim cut in just one week.

Their last album, 2013’s Hobo Rocket, was their heaviest yet, a maelstrom of acid rock guitar riffing, bizarre synth interludes and excellent, if oblique, song structures.Man It Feels Like Space Again is the polar counterpart to Hobo Rocket. Instead of “man rock”, as drummer Jay Watson described their sound on KEXP recently, the tracks here, written over the same period, are much more accessible and subdued. In contrast to their usual speedy studio style, the band spent time sculpting the sounds and production, even agonising over mixes with Impala’s Kevin Parker – hence 2014 being the first year without a Pond album release since they formed.

Where Hobo’s opener came on like Rage Against The Machine jamming with Cluster – exciting but very, very awkward – the first track on Man…, the splendid “Waiting Around For Grace”, is a silver-toned, synth-led stomper, jammed with so many euphoric moments that it might have been created for a hook-writing competition. The drums are crisp and processed, the synths buzz beautifully and the guitars are brittle with chorus effects, yet the group have lost none of their sense of free-ranging melody present since their 2009 debut, Psychedelic Mango. “Don’t it make you wonder how God found the time?” deadpans Allbrook in the Mercury Rev-esque introduction.

Lead-off track “Elvis’ Flaming Star” is the most immediate moment on the album, another lysergic glam gallop. One major touchstone here, and throughout this playful album, is Supergrass, especially Life On Other Planets, their underrated 2002 album which explored ’70s synth tones and glam rhythms. Coincidentally, or not, it even featured a track, “See The Light”, which referred to Elvis.

Man… is, according to Allbrook, the first time the band have gone minimalist, paring back tracks until each song shines. This turns out especially well on slower pieces such as the psychedelic soul of “Holding Out For You”, which sounds like The Flaming Lips covering the Abbey Road medley (and not making a hash of it a la With A Little Help From My Fwends).

The least immediate, but perhaps most rewarding song here is the closing title track, which, across eight and a half minutes, spans prog, funk, kosmiche and folk. What’s more, it doesn’t feel stitched together as a laugh like some of their earlier work, but properly mapped out, branching sideways to woozy, Beatles-esque climes but always returning to the same cleansing, crystalline guitar and synth melody. At times, the elfin Allbrook sounds almost identical to MGMT‘s Andrew VanWyngarden, his lyrics reaching a similar peak of impressive, non-sensical profundity; though it’s hard to distinguish many of the Gnomic lines under all those space echo repeats.

For all the plaudits that Tame Impala receive, then, Pond have proved that they’re possibly the braver band, willing to squeeze out ideas as soon as they have them, with playful abandon. Their influences are clear, but they combine them in a unique, joyful way, as they endlessly evolve their sound. Here, the extra care and attention to production and arrangements has paid off, making Man… as consistently enjoyably as their older albums were unevenly thrilling.

The question is, though, where do Pond go from here? We have no idea and, gloriously, Pond probably don’t either. The well is not yet dry – stay tuned.

Tom Pinnock

Credit: Matthew Saville

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