Home Blog Page 407

The Decemberists’ Colin Meloy: “I feel like I’m constantly trying to destroy this band”

0
Colin Meloy grew up with “Paul Westerberg in one ear and Morrissey in the other”. As hyper-literate frontman of The Decemberists, he has made rock currency out of landlocked sailors, Loyalist death squads and Japanese folk tales. In this piece from the Uncut archive (March 2011 issue, Take 166),...

Colin Meloy grew up with “Paul Westerberg in one ear and Morrissey in the other”. As hyper-literate frontman of The Decemberists, he has made rock currency out of landlocked sailors, Loyalist death squads and Japanese folk tales. In this piece from the Uncut archive (March 2011 issue, Take 166), we visit Meloy in Oregon to hear about the band’s improbably successful prog-folk concept album, and their straightahead REM homage co-starring Peter Buck… Words: Andrew Mueller

____________________

The speakers next to Colin Meloy’s computer monitor perch on blocks of wood. A handwritten inscription on the left reads “First Thought”, answered on the right by “Best Thought”. It’s not difficult to understand why Meloy instituted a reminder of this wisdom here, in the office/studio next to his house in the forest-covered hills north of Portland. His group, The Decemberists, named for a group of 19th-century Russian mutineers, pursue an unusually capricious muse. Lurking in The Decemberists’ discography are an EP based on a seventh-century Irish epic (2004’s “The Tain”), an album extrapolated from a Japanese folk tale and Shakespeare’s The Tempest (2006’s The Crane Wife) and an unabashed concept album (2009’s The Hazards Of Love). The Decemberists are probably the only band on Earth for whom making, as they just have, a country-rock record in a barn seems an act of wilful perversity.

“For sure,” nods Meloy, asked whether the relative simplicity of The Decemberists’ fine sixth album, The King Is Dead, is a reaction to the giddying flights that have preceded it. “Hazards Of Love especially was such a cerebral record, almost an academic thing where I was taking archetypes from old folk songs with the idea that if you fused them into this narrative it would make sense. It became a bit of a research project. I came out the other end thinking I’d rather do something a little less out of my brain.”

This, you sense quickly, would have been a struggle for Meloy. It’s not that he’s an unlikely rock star – he’s a charismatic performer, a confident singer – but it’s reasonable to suggest that he’d have been a likelier literary editor, or museum curator, or rock critic (he has written a book, about The Replacements’ album Let It Be, for Continuum’s 33 1/3 series). Meloy’s knowledge of music is vast, but his appreciation more analytical than visceral: he seems the sort who thinks things, rather than feels them.

____________________

Gillian Welch, who sings on The King Is Dead, says: “He’s like the really cool English professor at school. You know, he’s hip and probably throws great parties, but mostly he likes to sit around and talk about books.” The more Meloy talks, the more you understand why he moved up here from downtown Portland a couple of years ago. It’s remote, lofty, detached.

“I have,” he smiles, “quasi-agoraphobic tendencies.”

Meloy lives with his wife, the illustrator Carson Ellis, their four-year-old son, Henry – known as Hank. Meloy’s office/studio is in the downstairs part of the garage (Ellis works upstairs). It’s sparse, but welcoming. There are leather couches, a television, a piano, a drumkit, a framed poster of the recently voguish WWII admonishment “Keep Calm And Carry On”. Guitars adorn the walls, two acoustic, two electric – one of the latter, surprisingly, a Flying V, preferred weapon of the unreconstructed headbanger (“Because that’s what Bob Mould played in Hüsker Dü,” explains Meloy.) Squinting through the pines beyond the window, there’s a view of the Willamette River, which must slightly nourish Meloy’s recurrent fascination with the sea, evinced by the (Ellis-designed) tattoo of a clipper at full sail on his forearm, and by a model of something similar atop the piano.

Meloy grew up in Helena, Montana – about as landlocked as one can be on the North American continent.

“Yeah,” he says. “If you grew up in Montana, to go to the ocean was mindblowing. For anyone with a remotely imaginative predilection, that vast expanse of water really gets your head going. The Oregon coast in particular is pretty dramatic. When I moved to Portland, the ocean started cropping up in songs a lot.”

But in pre-internet times, becoming an alternative rock nerd can’t have been easy in Montana’s tiny capital.

“I had an uncle, 11 or 12 years my senior,” explains Meloy. “He went to school in Eugene, and he would send me mixtapes of music he was discovering. That was my lifeline. I remember him showing up at our house with Scritti Politti’s Cupid & Psyche ’85 and saying ‘This is like Wham!, but for smart people.’”

Meloy remembers one tape in particular, on which his uncle had compiled some local bands from Oregon, and in the space at the end included The Replacements’ “I Will Dare”, REM’s version of The Clique’s “Superman”, Hüsker Dü’s “Hardly Getting Over It” and The Smiths’ “The Queen Is Dead”.

“Those four songs,” says Meloy, “were the beginning of everything, for me.”

Meloy cheerfully admits that the title of The King Is Dead is a hat-tip to The Smiths. Later, driving to the photoshoot, he tells a typically wry story about being hopelessly starstruck when introducing himself to Johnny Marr, in Portland’s IKEA outlet, of all places.

Meloy learnt guitar from a Helena stoner whose lessons consisted of telling him to play along to The Jesus & Mary Chain’s “Psychocandy”. He formed his first band, the alt.country Tarkio, at college in Missoula, Montana. Tellingly, they titled an EP “Sea Songs For Landlocked Sailors”.

“Even though I was a massive Anglophile since I was about 14, I was channelling a lot of Americana,” he recalls. “Uncle Tupelo, Wilco, Son Volt, Gillian Welch’s first record. I was writing a lot in that style, but when I moved out here, I completely reacted against it.”

And how. Since forming after Meloy relocated to Portland in 2000, The Decemberists negotiated a path of singular strangeness. Early outings Castaways & Cutouts (2002) and Her Majesty (2003) were feverish, hyperliterate folk that suggested the more pastoral moments of XTC or The Waterboys rewritten by David Foster Wallace. Their third album, Picaresque (2005), collected rollicking sea-shanties, sumptuous pop, what sounded like excerpts from between-the-wars operettas – and still sounded an exercise in sanity compared to The Crane Wife, a dazzlingly eccentric work that included two ten-minute-plus epics and a nursery rhyme about a 1970s Loyalist death squad. “The Shankhill Butchers” might, to some in Northern Ireland, have seemed a bit, well, soon.

“It did,” Meloy nods. “We got emails from relatives of their victims, asking how I’d have felt if it had been my family.”

Did he write back?

“No. But I felt like their response was perfectly reasonable. What was interesting to me about that story was the fairytaleness of it, the fact that parents would use the Shankhill Butchers as bogeymen. It’s why Holocaust fiction is interesting, because it’s one of those times when humanity dissolves, and you see where folk tales come from.”

Meloy’s pursuit of this curiosity reached a fabulously deranged apotheosis on The Hazards Of Love, a full-blown prog-folk opera, replete with enchanted forests, shape-shifting fauna, and a musical palette that strode purposefully into the realm of Jethro Tull. It sounds like a record made by people wearing capes. It’s marvellous. It is also, Meloy would surely acknowledge, preposterous.

“Oh, absolutely,” he beams. “I mean, how could you make a concept album after about 1981 otherwise? The stuff of ours that is considered proggy, I think are our funniest records. They are done with a bit of a sense of humour. Hazards Of Love was, in a way, kind of a fuck-you.”

What, as in “You thought The Crane Wife was pretentious? Try this”?

“Yeah,” he says. “There was sort of a self-destructive thing at work, that sense of, well, if I can truly do whatever I want to do, then this is what I want to do. And I want to make something which will be potentially offensive to people, and confounding to the label, and certainly to my bandmates. I think it came out of a darker time. I was quite cynical about things, having just put out our first major-label record [The Decemberists signed to Capitol before The Crane Wife], even though our label had been nothing but sweet to us. I think there was a part of me that wanted to sink the ship.”

That’s a pretty quixotic act of vengeance.

“It is,” he laughs. “They’ll be sorry that they… gave me money, and a career. I think I misdirect anger and frustration, and I think that record is maybe one giant misdirection. It had a lot to do with discovering with that, okay, I’ve started living this lifelong dream that I could make a living making music. I also came to grips with the fact that it’s not always great. I hate being on the road – you get sick of your bandmates, sick of the people you work with, sick of yourself. And then you hate yourself for having wanted it, and for not wanting it.”

If Meloy wanted to condemn himself to terminal obscurity, he seemed to be going the right way about it. But The Decemberists have returned from their friends’ barn in Oregon’s Happy Valley with an album of catchy, radio-friendly orthodox country rock tunes, embellished by guests Welch, Laura Veirs and Peter Buck. Meloy asked Buck along upon noticing that some tracks he’d written for The King Is Dead were, to put it charitably, especially affectionate homages to REM.

“The hard part,” he says, lifting a guitar from the wall, “was keeping a straight face while sitting down with Peter, and saying right, well, this one goes…” He plays the riff from “Calamity Song”, which could be mistaken for the riff from REM’s “Talk About The Passion”.

“Might sound familiar to him, right?”

Buck confirms Meloy’s guilelessness about helping himself to the works of his heroes, even when they’re in the room: “Colin would say: ‘This one’s very REM, 1987,’ and I’d go: ‘Yeah, I can see that. How near or how far away do you need it to be?’”

The songs on The King Is Dead are playful and confessional, but one stands out for its transparency: “Rise To Me”, a gorgeous ballad of solidarity, addressed to his son.

“It is,” says Meloy, and pauses. “My son – and, you’re the first journalist I’ve talked to about this – is autistic. So that song is about mine and Carson’s challenges. Thankfully, Hank is high-functioning. He taught himself to read when he was three, and he can tell you the Greek and Roman pantheon of gods, but can’t use a door handle, and has trouble looking people in the eye – this would all be recognised by any parent with experience of autism.”

As would, presumably, the lines “Hey Henry, can you hear me?/Let me see those eyes/This distance between us/Can seem a mountain size”.

“Yeah. I don’t want to sensationalise it, but I would hate it if anyone thought that song was me singing: ‘Go get ’em, kid.’”

For all that, The King Is Dead sounds like an album that was written to be played live. Meloy sounds unenthused.

“I didn’t like touring from the very moment we climbed into a van,” he says.

Was it that weird combination of constant overstimulation and chronic boredom?

“Exactly that,” he nods. “It’ll melt your brain.”

But aren’t you on the cusp of the big-time?

“Maybe,” he allows. “But if you grow up loving Hüsker Dü, The Replacements, Robyn Hitchcock… I didn’t listen to stadium rock, so I never thought about playing arenas. The holy places for me were the 40 Watt in Athens, or 1st Avenue in Minneapolis, so to play those places quite quickly was weirdly anti-climactic.”

Could that have something to do with the college rock part of his roots, with its institutional disdain for success?

“Maybe,” he says. “It’s like growing up in a broken home with bad parents. I grew up with Paul Westerberg in one ear and Morrissey in the other. I think I might be a little broken. But there are other horizons I want to explore. I think we could stand to take a big chunk of time out.”

Meloy and his wife have finished work on an illustrated chidren’s novel called Wildwood, and have signed a three-book deal.

“It’s something that Carson and I have been talking about for years, since before The Decemberists,” he says. “We started writing one book, but it was completely unpublishable. I don’t think it was even remotely appropriate. The protagonist was a 15-year-old girl who gets pregnant and gives birth to a rabbit.”

None of that in this one, then.

“None of that. I think it’s still relatively edgy. I had to fight my editor on a lot of things!”

Meloy sounds noticeably more engaged by this than he does by anything his band are doing. Are The Decemberists done?

“No,” he says, uncertainly. “I don’t think I’ll ever be able to get away from it. That said, I feel like I’m constantly trying to destroy it. I increasingly enjoy isolation, and you couldn’t pick a less favourable environment than touring if you are that way. You know, we’re about to go and meet the band, and they’re the sweetest, kindest people. You’re gonna think ‘Man, this guy’s a dick.’”

____________________

After a photo session in an abandoned Masonic temple, The Decemberists repair to an oyster bar. Earlier, Meloy had described his role in The Decemberists as that of a “hopefully benign dictator” – an assessment confirmed by Tucker Martine, who has produced their last three albums:

“Colin definitely has clear ideas going in,” says Martine. “But if he hears something more interesting going on, he’s quick to recognise it.”

Certainly, John Moen (drums), Nate Query (bass), Jenny Conlee (keyboards, accordion) and Chris Funk (guitar) seem far from mere hod-carriers to Meloy’s sonic architect. They’re four lively but easily complementary personalities, with firm opinions about the artists their guest should be hearing and the whiskies he should be drinking – although Funk’s entries in my commandeered notebook (Eagle Rare 10, George T Stagg, Black Maple Hill Farms) could be either, or both.

All have other attachments in Portland’s fertile music scene. Moen plays in Perhapst and Boston Spaceships, the latter the post-Guided By Voices vehicle of Robert Pollard. Query, Conlee and Funk are three-fifths of gloomy bluegrass outfit Black Prairie. Right now, though, Funk and Conlee are due in the latter’s basement for a rehearsal of their Pogues tribute group, Kmria (“All I contributed was the name,” says Meloy. “It’s a acronym of that line from Ulysses, ‘Kiss My Royal Irish Arse’.”) I’m hospitably invited, then happily deafened. Aside from the two Decemberists, Kmria include local songwriter Casey Neill, Eels drummer Derek Brown, and REM/Young Fresh Fellows/Minus 5 guitarist Scott McCaughey. Though Meloy has returned to his retreat in the hills, something of what makes his band special is discernible. Like The Decemberists, Kmria are serious, but they’re not that serious. There’s joy here, as well, a love of music as generous as it is learned.

Earlier, I’d called Meloy on his repeated use of the phrase “the old main drag” in a new Decemberists song, “Down By The Water”. An odd choice of language for an American, surely a borrowing from The Pogues.

“Yes,” he’d said. “Well, there are main drags in America. There was one in Helena. But I think I was conflating that song with my memories of the one in Helena. Jenny also inadvertently steals a Pogues melody in that song. We’re a very referential, and reverential, band.”

John Carpenter: “Why would I be a musical influence? I can barely play!”

0

Director John Carpenter discusses his forthcoming debut solo album in an interview in the new issue of Uncut, dated February 2015 and out now. Carpenter, who has in the past soundtracked many of his own films, including Halloween and Assault On Precinct 13, releases Lost Themes on February 3. “Why would I be a musical influence?” he says. “I can barely play! “This album is for the movie that’s playing in your head. So turn down the lights, put the album on and let that movie inside you go. I’ll be the music for it. I want to turn everybody crazy…” Find the full interview with John Carpenter in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

Director John Carpenter discusses his forthcoming debut solo album in an interview in the new issue of Uncut, dated February 2015 and out now.

Carpenter, who has in the past soundtracked many of his own films, including Halloween and Assault On Precinct 13, releases Lost Themes on February 3.

“Why would I be a musical influence?” he says. “I can barely play!

“This album is for the movie that’s playing in your head. So turn down the lights, put the album on and let that movie inside you go. I’ll be the music for it. I want to turn everybody crazy…”

Find the full interview with John Carpenter in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

And the 2015 Oscar nominations are…

0

Here we go, folks. Hot off the press, it's this year's Oscar nominations. First impressions: it's an incredibly predictable set of nominations this year. American Sniper, Birdman, Boyhood, The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Imitation Game and The Theory Of Everything essentially dominating the key categories. There's a bit more flexibility in the Best Actress category, but still, we're looking at one of the most unsurprising lists for a long time. That said, I am pleased, however, that Wes Anderson's The Grand Budapest Hotel has made it to the Best Picture and Best Director list - as well as Best Original Screenplay. A vindication, of sorts, for topping our Uncut's 20 Best Films Of 2014 list last year... But I fear it'll be muscled out on the night. It's also good to see Richard Linklater and his remarkable Boyhood in there, Emma Stone's Best Supporting Actress nod - she's certainly the best thing in the otherwise meretricious Birdman - and Mark Ruffalo for Foxcatcher. I don't want to get too down on this list, but having just written about American Sniper for the new issue of Uncut, I can't think of a film I've liked less in recent years that's made it to the Best Picture shortlist. Otherwise, the British are coming - yay - as the multiple nominations for The Theory Of Everything (a good film) and The Imitation Game (not such a good film) demonstrate. Anyway, all will be revealed on February 22... Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner. BEST PICTURE American Sniper Birdman Boyhood The Grand Budapest Hotel The Imitation Game Selma The Theory Of Everything Whiplash BEST DIRECTOR Alexandro G. Iñárritu, “Birdman” Richard Linklater, “Boyhood” Bennett Miller, “Foxcatcher” Wes Anderson, “The Grand Budapest Hotel” Morten Tyldum, “The Imitation Game” BEST ACTOR Steve Carell, “Foxcatcher” Bradley Cooper, “American Sniper” Benedict Cumberbatch, “The Imitation Game” Michael Keaton, “Birdman” Eddie Redmayne, “The Theory Of Everything” BEST ACTRESS Marion Cotillard, “Two Days One Night” Felicity Jones, “The Theory Of Everything” Julianne Moore, “Still Alive” Rosamund Pike, “Gone Girl” Reece Witherspoon, “Wild” BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Birdman Boyhood Foxcatcher The Grand Budapest Hotel Nightcrawler BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY American Sniper The Imitation Game Inherent Vice The Theory of Everything Whiplash BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Patricia Arquette, “Boyhood” Keira Knightley, “The Imitation Game” Emma Stone, “Birdman” Meryl Streep, “Into The Woods” Laura Dern, “Wild” BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Robert Duvall, “The Judge” Ethan Hawke, “Boyhood” Ed Norton, “Birdman” Mark Ruffalo, “Foxcatcher” JK Simmons, “Whiplash” BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM “Ida” “Leviathan” “Tangerines” “Timbuktu” “Wild Tales”

Here we go, folks. Hot off the press, it’s this year’s Oscar nominations. First impressions: it’s an incredibly predictable set of nominations this year.

American Sniper, Birdman, Boyhood, The Grand Budapest Hotel, The Imitation Game and The Theory Of Everything essentially dominating the key categories. There’s a bit more flexibility in the Best Actress category, but still, we’re looking at one of the most unsurprising lists for a long time.

That said, I am pleased, however, that Wes Anderson‘s The Grand Budapest Hotel has made it to the Best Picture and Best Director list – as well as Best Original Screenplay. A vindication, of sorts, for topping our Uncut’s 20 Best Films Of 2014 list last year…

But I fear it’ll be muscled out on the night. It’s also good to see Richard Linklater and his remarkable Boyhood in there, Emma Stone’s Best Supporting Actress nod – she’s certainly the best thing in the otherwise meretricious Birdman – and Mark Ruffalo for Foxcatcher. I don’t want to get too down on this list, but having just written about American Sniper for the new issue of Uncut, I can’t think of a film I’ve liked less in recent years that’s made it to the Best Picture shortlist. Otherwise, the British are coming – yay – as the multiple nominations for The Theory Of Everything (a good film) and The Imitation Game (not such a good film) demonstrate.

Anyway, all will be revealed on February 22…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

BEST PICTURE

American Sniper

Birdman

Boyhood

The Grand Budapest Hotel

The Imitation Game

Selma

The Theory Of Everything

Whiplash

BEST DIRECTOR

Alexandro G. Iñárritu, “Birdman”

Richard Linklater, “Boyhood”

Bennett Miller, “Foxcatcher”

Wes Anderson, “The Grand Budapest Hotel”

Morten Tyldum, “The Imitation Game”

BEST ACTOR

Steve Carell, “Foxcatcher”

Bradley Cooper, “American Sniper”

Benedict Cumberbatch, “The Imitation Game”

Michael Keaton, “Birdman”

Eddie Redmayne, “The Theory Of Everything”

BEST ACTRESS

Marion Cotillard, “Two Days One Night”

Felicity Jones, “The Theory Of Everything”

Julianne Moore, “Still Alive”

Rosamund Pike, “Gone Girl”

Reece Witherspoon, “Wild”

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY

Birdman

Boyhood

Foxcatcher

The Grand Budapest Hotel

Nightcrawler

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY

American Sniper

The Imitation Game

Inherent Vice

The Theory of Everything

Whiplash

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Patricia Arquette, “Boyhood”

Keira Knightley, “The Imitation Game”

Emma Stone, “Birdman”

Meryl Streep, “Into The Woods”

Laura Dern, “Wild”

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

Robert Duvall, “The Judge”

Ethan Hawke, “Boyhood”

Ed Norton, “Birdman”

Mark Ruffalo, “Foxcatcher”

JK Simmons, “Whiplash”

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM

“Ida”

“Leviathan”

“Tangerines”

“Timbuktu”

“Wild Tales”

Nick Mason annoyed Apple got away “scot free” with U2 album release

0

All iTunes users were given album for free in September 2014… Nick Mason has said he is suprised Apple got away "scot free" following the controversial release of U2's latest album on iTunes. Songs Of Innocence by the Irish band was automatically downloaded onto all Apple subscribers' iTunes accounts when it was released last September. In a new interview with GQ, Mason says that while the move certainly "backfired" for U2, he thinks Apple should also take some accountability. "It's made everyone think again about how they want their music delivered, given or sold. [...]it highlights a vital aspect to the whole idea of music in the 21st century," Mason said. 'What's also interesting is that Apple seem to have got off scot-free. No-one's blaming them. Apple has done great things, but it has also contributed to the devaluation process." Mason also has reservations about Spotify and streaming services in general. He said: "iTunes is already beginning to look rather passé, and instead it's Spotify that looks like the future. What we need is another two or three billion people using it, then it would make more sense for musicians. At the moment, the pay-out, particularly for unknowns and only slightly-knowns is… pathetic."

All iTunes users were given album for free in September 2014…

Nick Mason has said he is suprised Apple got away “scot free” following the controversial release of U2‘s latest album on iTunes.

Songs Of Innocence by the Irish band was automatically downloaded onto all Apple subscribers’ iTunes accounts when it was released last September. In a new interview with GQ, Mason says that while the move certainly “backfired” for U2, he thinks Apple should also take some accountability.

“It’s made everyone think again about how they want their music delivered, given or sold. […]it highlights a vital aspect to the whole idea of music in the 21st century,” Mason said. ‘What’s also interesting is that Apple seem to have got off scot-free. No-one’s blaming them. Apple has done great things, but it has also contributed to the devaluation process.”

Mason also has reservations about Spotify and streaming services in general. He said: “iTunes is already beginning to look rather passé, and instead it’s Spotify that looks like the future. What we need is another two or three billion people using it, then it would make more sense for musicians. At the moment, the pay-out, particularly for unknowns and only slightly-knowns is… pathetic.”

New vinyl subscription service launches

0

A new service called VYNL is launching which will offer subscribers the chance to receive albums through the post. The American-based company, who are funded via Kickstarter, will use hashtags to help subscribers form a queue, then send them three records every month based on the hashtags they chose. They will then have the option to purchase an album for $8-$12, and send back the rejects in a pre-paid carboard mailer. The service costs $15 a month and will be rolled out across the US in March, reports Rolling Stone. It is not the first vinyl subscription service in operation: Vinyl, Please Me costs $23 to $27 a month. It sends subscribers a record and pairs each one with a commissioned art print and cocktail recipe suited to that album's style.

A new service called VYNL is launching which will offer subscribers the chance to receive albums through the post.

The American-based company, who are funded via Kickstarter, will use hashtags to help subscribers form a queue, then send them three records every month based on the hashtags they chose.

They will then have the option to purchase an album for $8-$12, and send back the rejects in a pre-paid carboard mailer.

The service costs $15 a month and will be rolled out across the US in March, reports Rolling Stone.

It is not the first vinyl subscription service in operation: Vinyl, Please Me costs $23 to $27 a month. It sends subscribers a record and pairs each one with a commissioned art print and cocktail recipe suited to that album’s style.

Stevie Nicks on Fleetwood Mac: “We choose to stay, because we can’t do anything else.”

0

Fleetwood Mac singer-songwriter also discussed ongoing relationship with Lindsey Buckingham... Stevie Nicks has revealed she could never leave Fleetwood Mac again, despite having left the band for a few years in the 1990s. "We choose to stay," she told Rolling Stone. "Because we can't do anything else. None of us are ever going to stand up and say, 'I'm going to make my own choice for the first time in my life, and I'm going away, and I don't know if I'm coming back." She also reveals that the only band she would consider leaving Fleetwood Mac for would be Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. "Had Tom Petty called me up one day and said, ‘If you want to leave Fleetwood Mac to be in the Heartbreakers, there's a place for you,' I might well have done it. Anytime! Today!" Nicks also speaks at length about the tensions that still exist between her and Lindsey Buckingham. "Relations with Lindsey are exactly as they have been since we broke up," she admits. "He and I will always be antagonizing to each other, and we will always do things that will irritate each other, and we really know how to push each other's buttons. We know exactly what to say when we really want to throw a dagger in. And I think that that's not different now than it was when we were 20. And I don't think it will be different when we're 80."

Fleetwood Mac singer-songwriter also discussed ongoing relationship with Lindsey Buckingham…

Stevie Nicks has revealed she could never leave Fleetwood Mac again, despite having left the band for a few years in the 1990s.

“We choose to stay,” she told Rolling Stone. “Because we can’t do anything else. None of us are ever going to stand up and say, ‘I’m going to make my own choice for the first time in my life, and I’m going away, and I don’t know if I’m coming back.”

She also reveals that the only band she would consider leaving Fleetwood Mac for would be Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. “Had Tom Petty called me up one day and said, ‘If you want to leave Fleetwood Mac to be in the Heartbreakers, there’s a place for you,’ I might well have done it. Anytime! Today!”

Nicks also speaks at length about the tensions that still exist between her and Lindsey Buckingham. “Relations with Lindsey are exactly as they have been since we broke up,” she admits. “He and I will always be antagonizing to each other, and we will always do things that will irritate each other, and we really know how to push each other’s buttons. We know exactly what to say when we really want to throw a dagger in. And I think that that’s not different now than it was when we were 20. And I don’t think it will be different when we’re 80.”

Ultimate Music Guide: Paul McCartney

Coming up! Paul McCartney is the subject of Uncut's latest Ultimate Music Guide - a fab extravaganza, even by the standards of this handsome and authoritative series. As ever, we've uncovered a host of remarkable Macca interviews from the archives of NME, Uncut and Melody Maker. Along with definitiv...

Coming up! Paul McCartney is the subject of Uncut’s latest Ultimate Music Guide – a fab extravaganza, even by the standards of this handsome and authoritative series. As ever, we’ve uncovered a host of remarkable Macca interviews from the archives of NME, Uncut and Melody Maker. Along with definitive new reviews of all his albums, they tell the story of how Paul McCartney changed the world, and what happened next. There are frank reflections on life past and present, bantering encounters with Wings, and a constant and fascinating narrative about how Macca tries to reconcile being “Mr Normal” with being, well, Sir Paul McCartney. In an epic Uncut interview from 2004 issue of Uncut, McCartney admits, “I’ve put out an awful lot of records. Some of them I shouldn’t have put out, sure.” Surprisingly for such a public genius, McCartney’s discography is full of odd excursions and experiments, of great songs hidden away and half-forgotten. This Uncut Ultimate Guide is, we hope, a key to the treasures of Macca’s long, engrossing career. Let us roll it!

Order Print Copy
Download Digital Edition onto other devices

Einstürzende Neubauten – Lament

0

Extreme noise terrorists conjure WW1... With the introduction of submachine guns, barbed wire jungles, high-explosive shells, massed tank offensives, and chlorine, mustard and phosgene gases, the First World War became the first truly industrial conflict. So as far as musical memorials go, an industrial group seems the perfect outfit to somehow make sense of the mechanised slaughter, not to mention having any hope of matching the sturm und drang of war. A project commissioned by the Flemish city of Diksmuide, Lament sees Blixa Bargeld and his Berlin cohorts create an eclectic song cycle examining those seismic events from a century ago. The extreme noise quintet have certainly done their research, delving into the archives at Berlin’s Humboldt University to uncover lost songs and texts from the period, imbuing them with all the terrible noise the group customarily conjure up. The first third of the LP acts as a kind of prelude, with the opening six-minute crescendo, aptly titled “Kriegsmaschinerie”, rising from disturbing creaks to a cacophony of squealing metal. The score used for this piece was a graph, ‘defence budget as a percentage of GDP between 1905 and 1913’ for the countries who would wage the war (here’s a clue: the percentages rise dramatically). Then, after a bastardised version of “God Save The King” performed in English, German and Flemish, we’re down in the trenches. Here, an adaptation of little-known writer Paul Van Den Broeck’s “In De Loopgraaf” with Blixa solemnly intoning the original Flemish words, is accompanied by the hollow knocking of the gruesome ‘barbed-wire harp’, the latest in a long line of percussionist NU Unruh’s infernal, homemade instruments. The 13-minute “Der 1. Weltkrieg (Percussion Version)” is another early highlight, albeit a mathematical one – every beat counts as one day of the war, with each country represented by a plastic pipe that resonates at a unique note when beaten. Blixa announces each state’s entry into the conflict, setting off a flurry of tuned pipes, while female voices dryly recite the names of notable battles or campaigns. It’s a surprisingly moving piece with its own strange, gripping momentum – “Champagne… Polygon Wood… The Kingdom Of Bulgaria…” Even without knowledge of Neubauten’s methods, though, Lament is a startling, eclectic listen. Every reverbed, metallic squeal or bone-cracking thud is intensely visual; but rather than, say, an elegant landscape of poppies, Lament brings to mind something rather more like Paul Nash’s wryly titled painting, We Are Making A New World, a barren waste of mud, wire, craters and splintered stumps. There is still beauty to be found among the destruction, though – the luscious, velvet-dark “How Did I Die” is worth every second of its seven minutes, as Bargeld enigmatically speaks of death in the trenches over melancholic piano, strings and softly ticking percussion. Other tracks utilise the collage techniques and sampling that the group have pursued since at least 1983’s Zeichnungen Des Patienten OT. The third part of the title suite, the string-led “Pater Pecavi”, sees crackling voices, taken from wax-cylinder recordings of German prisoners of war telling the story of The Prodigal Son, fade in and out among a thicket of funereal strings. There are also two covers of songs originally by the band of the 369th Infantry Regiment – better known as the Harlem Hellfighters, the first African-American regiment sent abroad to fight – with fragments of the original recordings interlaced. Bargeld insists Lament shouldn’t be seen as a proper Neubauten album, and he’s right; it’s admittedly hard to identify when any listener would find occasion to play it often – too uncomfortable to relax to, too disturbing for dinner parties, too dynamically varied for the car, and, at 77 minutes, a little too long. But then, the record is a document of the group’s performance for Diksmuide, after all, more of an art project than anything to do with rock’n’roll. It’s not too much of a stretch to imagine its best bits comprising part of an experimental Radio 4 play. Not everything works – surely, no-one would have missed “Der Beginn Des Weltkrieges 1914”, a six-minute spoken-word piece in German, from 1926, which tells the story of the war complete with animal impressions, or a version of Marlene Dietrich’s cover of Pete Seeger’s “Where Have All The Flowers Gone”, which is interesting but adds little. At its peak, though, Lament is a fittingly noisy reminder of the brutality and pointlessness of the First World War. Yet it’s also a potent warning, a look at what happens when industrialised states are propelled unwittingly into conflict through some terrible collective inertia. “War is not something that appears and disappears,” Blixa Bargeld told a Danish TV show recently. “War is something that is always there… It sometimes moves.” As the climate today turns ever frostier in Eastern Europe, Lament is a warning well worth heeding. Tom Pinnock

Extreme noise terrorists conjure WW1…

With the introduction of submachine guns, barbed wire jungles, high-explosive shells, massed tank offensives, and chlorine, mustard and phosgene gases, the First World War became the first truly industrial conflict. So as far as musical memorials go, an industrial group seems the perfect outfit to somehow make sense of the mechanised slaughter, not to mention having any hope of matching the sturm und drang of war.

A project commissioned by the Flemish city of Diksmuide, Lament sees Blixa Bargeld and his Berlin cohorts create an eclectic song cycle examining those seismic events from a century ago. The extreme noise quintet have certainly done their research, delving into the archives at Berlin’s Humboldt University to uncover lost songs and texts from the period, imbuing them with all the terrible noise the group customarily conjure up.

The first third of the LP acts as a kind of prelude, with the opening six-minute crescendo, aptly titled “Kriegsmaschinerie”, rising from disturbing creaks to a cacophony of squealing metal. The score used for this piece was a graph, ‘defence budget as a percentage of GDP between 1905 and 1913’ for the countries who would wage the war (here’s a clue: the percentages rise dramatically). Then, after a bastardised version of “God Save The King” performed in English, German and Flemish, we’re down in the trenches. Here, an adaptation of little-known writer Paul Van Den Broeck’s “In De Loopgraaf” with Blixa solemnly intoning the original Flemish words, is accompanied by the hollow knocking of the gruesome ‘barbed-wire harp’, the latest in a long line of percussionist NU Unruh’s infernal, homemade instruments.

The 13-minute “Der 1. Weltkrieg (Percussion Version)” is another early highlight, albeit a mathematical one – every beat counts as one day of the war, with each country represented by a plastic pipe that resonates at a unique note when beaten. Blixa announces each state’s entry into the conflict, setting off a flurry of tuned pipes, while female voices dryly recite the names of notable battles or campaigns. It’s a surprisingly moving piece with its own strange, gripping momentum – “Champagne… Polygon Wood… The Kingdom Of Bulgaria…”

Even without knowledge of Neubauten’s methods, though, Lament is a startling, eclectic listen. Every reverbed, metallic squeal or bone-cracking thud is intensely visual; but rather than, say, an elegant landscape of poppies, Lament brings to mind something rather more like Paul Nash’s wryly titled painting, We Are Making A New World, a barren waste of mud, wire, craters and splintered stumps.

There is still beauty to be found among the destruction, though – the luscious, velvet-dark “How Did I Die” is worth every second of its seven minutes, as Bargeld enigmatically speaks of death in the trenches over melancholic piano, strings and softly ticking percussion. Other tracks utilise the collage techniques and sampling that the group have pursued since at least 1983’s Zeichnungen Des Patienten OT. The third part of the title suite, the string-led “Pater Pecavi”, sees crackling voices, taken from wax-cylinder recordings of German prisoners of war telling the story of The Prodigal Son, fade in and out among a thicket of funereal strings. There are also two covers of songs originally by the band of the 369th Infantry Regiment – better known as the Harlem Hellfighters, the first African-American regiment sent abroad to fight – with fragments of the original recordings interlaced.

Bargeld insists Lament shouldn’t be seen as a proper Neubauten album, and he’s right; it’s admittedly hard to identify when any listener would find occasion to play it often – too uncomfortable to relax to, too disturbing for dinner parties, too dynamically varied for the car, and, at 77 minutes, a little too long. But then, the record is a document of the group’s performance for Diksmuide, after all, more of an art project than anything to do with rock’n’roll. It’s not too much of a stretch to imagine its best bits comprising part of an experimental Radio 4 play. Not everything works – surely, no-one would have missed “Der Beginn Des Weltkrieges 1914”, a six-minute spoken-word piece in German, from 1926, which tells the story of the war complete with animal impressions, or a version of Marlene Dietrich’s cover of Pete Seeger’s “Where Have All The Flowers Gone”, which is interesting but adds little.

At its peak, though, Lament is a fittingly noisy reminder of the brutality and pointlessness of the First World War. Yet it’s also a potent warning, a look at what happens when industrialised states are propelled unwittingly into conflict through some terrible collective inertia. “War is not something that appears and disappears,” Blixa Bargeld told a Danish TV show recently. “War is something that is always there… It sometimes moves.” As the climate today turns ever frostier in Eastern Europe, Lament is a warning well worth heeding.

Tom Pinnock

Rough Trade announce comprehensive 60 track compilation album

0
Rough Trade Shops is releasing a compilation album of the best music released by the indie label over the past 40 years. Entitled Recorded At The Automat: The Best of Rough Trade Records, the album, which is released March 23, will cover the early years of Rough Trade, when Geoff Travis first start...

Rough Trade Shops is releasing a compilation album of the best music released by the indie label over the past 40 years.

Entitled Recorded At The Automat: The Best of Rough Trade Records, the album, which is released March 23, will cover the early years of Rough Trade, when Geoff Travis first started the label in 1978, later to be joined by Jeannette Lee. It includes the likes of Swell Maps, Robert Wyatt, The Fall, The Raincoats, The Smiths, The Strokes, the Libertines, Arcade Fire and Sufjan Stevens.

More current acts include Parquet Courts, Warpaint, Alabama Shakes and Benjamin Booker.

This is the first time Rough Trade has released an extensive collection from its catalogue. The record, which is made up of tracks selected by Travis and Lee and Rough Trade Shops’ Nigel House, Pete Donne, Sean Forbes and Simon Russell, will be out via a 20-track single CD, a 60-track deluxe triple CD, a 20-track double LP and a 60-track download album.

See the various tracklists below.

Triple CD

CD1

Metal Urbain – ‘Paris Maquis’

Cabaret Voltaire – ‘Do The Mussolini (Headkick)’

Kleenex – ‘Hedi’s head’

File Under Pop – ‘Heathrow’

Stiff Little Fingers – R’ough Trade’

The Monochrome Set – ‘Eine Symphonie Des Grauens’

The Feelies – ‘Fa Cé La’

The Pack – ‘King of Kings’

The Pop Group – ‘Where There’s A Will There’s A Way’

The Prats – ‘Disco Pope’

James Blood Ulmer – ‘Are You Glad To Be In America?’

Young Marble Giants – ‘Wurlitzer Jukebox’

The Raincoats – ‘Shouting out loud’

Swell Maps – ‘The Helicopter Spies’

Missing Scientists – ‘Big City Bright Lights’

Vic Godard & The Subway Sect – ‘Stop That Girl’

Chris & Cosey – ‘October (love song)’

Scritti Politti – ‘The “Sweetest Girl”‘

Robert Wyatt – ‘Born Again Cretin’

Tav Falco’s Panther Burns – ‘She’s The One That Got It’

Zounds – ‘More Trouble Coming Every Day’

The Fall – ‘The Man Whose Head Expanded’

CD2

Rainy Day – ‘I’ll Keep It With Mine’

The Stars of Heaven – ‘Sacred Heart Hotel’

The Motorcycle Boy – ‘Big Rock Candy Mountain’

Arthur Russell – ‘Being It’

The Smiths – ‘London’

AR Kane – ‘Baby Milk Snatcher’

The Sundays – ‘Here’s Where The Story Ends’

Galaxie 500 – ‘Blue Thunder’

Mazzy Star – ‘Blue Flower’

The Strokes – ‘The Modern Age’

The Libertines – ‘Time For Heroes’

Palma Violets – ‘Best Of Friends’

Arcade Fire – ‘Crown Of Love’

Babyshambles – ‘Albion’

Antony & The Johnsons – ‘I Fell In Love With A Dead Boy’

Micachu – ‘Golden Phone’

Warpaint – ‘Undertow’

Sufjan Stevens – ‘John Wayne Gacy, Jr’

Arthur Russell – ‘That’s Us / Wild Combination’

Jeffrey Lewis – ‘East River’

CD3

Belle & Sebastian – ‘I’m a Cuckoo’

Scritti Politti – ‘The Boom Boom Bap’

Mystery Jets – ‘It’s Too Late To Talk’

British Sea Power – ‘The Great Skua’

Emiliana Torrini – ‘Autumn Sun’

Jenny Lewis with The Watson Twins – ‘Rise Up With Fists!!’

Dylan LeBlanc – ‘Emma Hartley’

Alabama Shakes – ‘Always Alright’

Pulp – ‘After You’

1990s – ‘You Made Me Like It’

Benjamin Booker – ‘Violent Shiver’

Parquet Courts – ‘Sunbathing Animal’

Life Without Buildings – ‘The Leanover’

Brakes – ‘What’s In It For Me’

Spring Heel Jack – ‘Lee Perry’

Pantha du Prince – ‘Stick To My Side’

Gruff Rhys – ‘Candylion’

Jarvis – ‘Running The World’

Single CD

Metal Urbain – ‘Paris Maquis’

Kleenex – ‘Hedi’s head’

Stiff Little Fingers – ‘Rough Trade’

Young Marble Giants – ‘Wurlitzer Jukebox’

The Raincoats – ‘Shouting out loud’

Swell Maps – ‘The Helicopter Spies’

Scritti Politti – ‘The “Sweetest Girl”‘

The Fall – ‘The Man Whose Head Expanded’

Arthur Russell – ‘Being It’

The Smiths – ‘London’

The Strokes – ‘The Modern Age’

The Libertines – ‘Time For Heroes’

Palma Violets – ‘Best Of Friends’

British Sea Power – ‘Remember Me’

Arcade Fire – ‘Crown Of Love’

Babyshambles – ‘Albion’

Antony & The Johnsons – ‘I Fell In Love With A Dead Boy’

Micachu – ‘Golden Phone’

Warpaint – ‘Undertow’

Sufjan Stevens – ‘John Wayne Gacy, Jr’

Double LP

Side 1

Metal Urbain – ‘Paris Maquis’

Stiff Little Fingers – ‘Rough Trade’

The Prats – ‘Disco Pope’

The Raincoats – ‘Shouting out loud’

Swell Maps – ‘The Helicopter Spies’

Side 2

Scritti Politti – ‘The “Sweetest Girl”‘

The Fall – ‘The Man Whose Head Expanded’

Rainy Day – ‘I’ll Keep It With Mine’

Arthur Russell – ‘Being It’

The Smiths – ‘London’

Side 3

The Strokes – ‘The Modern Age’

The Libertines – ‘Time For Heroes’

Palma Violets – ‘Best Of Friends’

British Sea Power – ‘Remember Me’

Arcade Fire – ‘Crown Of Love’

Side 4

Babyshambles – ‘Albion’

Antony & The Johnsons – ‘I Fell In Love With A Dead Boy’

Micachu – ‘Golden Phone’

Warpaint – ‘Undertow’

Sufjan Stevens – ‘John Wayne Gacy, Jr’

Download album

Metal Urbain – ‘Paris Maquis’

Cabaret Voltaire – ‘Do The Mussolini (Headkick)’

Kleenex – ‘Hedi’s head’

File Under Pop – ‘Heathrow’

Stiff Little Fingers – ‘Rough Trade’

The Monochrome Set – ‘Eine Symphonie Des Grauens’

The Feelies – ‘Fa Cé La’

The Pack – ‘King of Kings’

The Pop Group – ‘Where There’s A Will There’s A Way’

The Prats – ‘Disco Pope’

James Blood Ulmer – ‘Are You Glad To Be In America?’

Young Marble Giants – ‘Wurlitzer Jukebox’

The Raincoats – ‘Shouting out loud’

Swell Maps – ‘The Helicopter Spies’

Missing Scientists – ‘Big City Bright Lights’

Vic Godard & The Subway Sect – ‘Stop That Girl’

Chris & Cosey – ‘October (love song)’

Scritti Politti – ‘The “Sweetest Girl”‘

Robert Wyatt – ‘Born Again Cretin’

Tav Falco’s Panther Burns – ‘She’s The One That Got It’

Zounds – ‘More Trouble Coming Every Day’

The Fall – ‘The Man Whose Head Expanded’

Rainy Day – ‘I’ll Keep It With Mine’

The Stars of Heaven – ‘Sacred Heart Hotel’

The Motorcycle Boy – ‘Big Rock Candy Mountain’

Arthur Russell – ‘Being It’

The Smiths – ‘London’

AR Kane – ‘Baby Milk Snatcher’

The Sundays – ‘Here’s Where The Story Ends’

Galaxie 500 – ‘Blue Thunder’

Mazzy Star – ‘Blue Flower’

The Strokes – ‘The Modern Age’

The Libertines – ‘Time For Heroes’

Palma Violets – ‘Best Of Friends’

Arcade Fire – ‘Crown Of Love’

Babyshambles – ‘Albion’

Antony & The Johnsons – ‘I Fell In Love With A Dead Boy’

Micachu – ‘Golden Phone’

Warpaint – ‘Undertow’

Sufjan Stevens – ‘John Wayne Gacy, Jr’

Arthur Russell – ‘That’s Us / Wild Combination’

Jeffrey Lewis – ‘East River’

Belle & Sebastian – ‘I’m a Cuckoo’

Scritti Politti – ‘The Boom Boom Bap’

Mystery Jets – ‘It’s Too Late To Talk’

British Sea Power – ‘The Great Skua’

Emiliana Torrini – ‘Autumn Sun’

Jenny Lewis with The Watson Twins – ‘Rise Up With Fists!!’

Dylan LeBlanc – ‘Emma Hartley’

Alabama Shakes – ‘Always Alright’

Pulp – ‘After You’

1990s – ‘You Made Me Like It’

Benjamin Booker – ‘Violent Shiver’

Parquet Courts – ‘Sunbathing Animal’

Life Without Buildings – ‘The Leanover’

Brakes – ‘What’s In It For Me’

Spring Heel Jack – ‘Lee Perry’

Pantha du Prince – ‘Stick To My Side’

Gruff Rhys – ‘Candylion’

Jarvis – ‘Running The World’

Hear Brian Wilson’s latest collaboration…

0

Wilson guests on Mini Mansions' track, "Any Emotions"... Brian Wilson has contributed vocals to a new song by LA band Mini Mansions. Scroll down to listen to the track, called "Any Emotions". Speaking about the contribution from Wilson, Zach Dawes, the band's bassist, told Rolling Stone: "As they got into harmonies Brian's name came up kind of as a pie-in-the-sky idea. I followed up with him and sent him a rough cut of the song. Then that rare moment occurred where the idealised version of something becomes a reality." Dawes also spoke about casting Colin Hanks in the video for the song, which will be released soon. "He had caught our set opening for the Arctic Monkeys last year and everybody agreed he would be perfect," he said. Last year, Alex Turner appeared on stage with Mini Mansions to perform 'Vertigo' when the bands were touring together in the US. Alex Turner's contribution to the new album from Mini Mansions has been compared to "Sinatra mixed with LL Cool J" by Michael Shuman of the band. Speaking to NME Shuman explained how Turner came to record 'Vertigo' with his band. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KaA_-53H1LI Shuman, who is also bass player in Queens Of The Stone Age, said: "He wrote the lyrics pretty quickly and knocked the whole thing out in one take." Shuman adds that the song is "like Sinatra mixed with LL Cool J. It's influenced by West Coast '90s rap and R&B." "We've become close with Alex and the rest of the Arctic Monkeys," explained Shuman. "He lives down the street in LA from the studio we were recording in, so he'd just drop by. We had this idea that the second verse of 'Vertigo' would be sung with a British-type Mark E Smith vocal. It seemed the obvious choice to have a real Brit on it." Mini Mansions release their album 'The Great Pretender' on March 23, through T Bone Burnett's Electromagnetic Recordings label.

Wilson guests on Mini Mansions’ track, “Any Emotions”…

Brian Wilson has contributed vocals to a new song by LA band Mini Mansions.

Scroll down to listen to the track, called “Any Emotions“. Speaking about the contribution from Wilson, Zach Dawes, the band’s bassist, told Rolling Stone: “As they got into harmonies Brian’s name came up kind of as a pie-in-the-sky idea. I followed up with him and sent him a rough cut of the song. Then that rare moment occurred where the idealised version of something becomes a reality.”

Dawes also spoke about casting Colin Hanks in the video for the song, which will be released soon. “He had caught our set opening for the Arctic Monkeys last year and everybody agreed he would be perfect,” he said. Last year, Alex Turner appeared on stage with Mini Mansions to perform ‘Vertigo’ when the bands were touring together in the US.

Alex Turner‘s contribution to the new album from Mini Mansions has been compared to “Sinatra mixed with LL Cool J” by Michael Shuman of the band. Speaking to NME Shuman explained how Turner came to record ‘Vertigo’ with his band.

Shuman, who is also bass player in Queens Of The Stone Age, said: “He wrote the lyrics pretty quickly and knocked the whole thing out in one take.” Shuman adds that the song is “like Sinatra mixed with LL Cool J. It’s influenced by West Coast ’90s rap and R&B.”

“We’ve become close with Alex and the rest of the Arctic Monkeys,” explained Shuman. “He lives down the street in LA from the studio we were recording in, so he’d just drop by. We had this idea that the second verse of ‘Vertigo’ would be sung with a British-type Mark E Smith vocal. It seemed the obvious choice to have a real Brit on it.”

Mini Mansions release their album ‘The Great Pretender’ on March 23, through T Bone Burnett’s Electromagnetic Recordings label.

Björk announces new album Vulnicura, to be released in March

0

Singer announced the news via note on her Facebook page... Björk has announced that she will be releasing a new album Vulnicura, the follow up to 2011's Biophilia, in March. The Icelandic singer announced the news via a note on her Facebook page, including the title of the album and a tracklist. "Ladies and gentlemen, I am very proud to announce my new album is coming out in March," she wrote. "I do hope you will enjoy it." As previously reported, Björk worked with Arca - aka Alejandro Ghersi - and British producer Haxan Cloak on the album. Ghersi has in the past contributed to Kanye West's 'Yeezus' and collaborated with FKA Twigs. Cloak released his own self-titled debut in 2011 and then put out a follow-up, Excavation, in 2013. He also worked with US band The Body on their 2014 release 'I Shall Die Here'. Meanwhile, Björk is confirmed to perform at the Governers Ball in New York this summer alongside Drake and the Black Keys. In addition to the album, the singer will also release a career retrospective book in March titled Björk: Archives. The book, which features contributions from directors Chris Cunningham and Spike Jonze, will chart the singer's career through a mixture of poetry, academic analysis, philosophical texts and photographs. Vulnicura tracklist: Stonemilker Lionsong History Of Touches Black Lake Family Notget Atom Dance Mouth Mantra Quicksand

Singer announced the news via note on her Facebook page…

Björk has announced that she will be releasing a new album Vulnicura, the follow up to 2011’s Biophilia, in March.

The Icelandic singer announced the news via a note on her Facebook page, including the title of the album and a tracklist. “Ladies and gentlemen, I am very proud to announce my new album is coming out in March,” she wrote. “I do hope you will enjoy it.”

As previously reported, Björk worked with Arca – aka Alejandro Ghersi – and British producer Haxan Cloak on the album. Ghersi has in the past contributed to Kanye West’s ‘Yeezus’ and collaborated with FKA Twigs. Cloak released his own self-titled debut in 2011 and then put out a follow-up, Excavation, in 2013. He also worked with US band The Body on their 2014 release ‘I Shall Die Here’.

Meanwhile, Björk is confirmed to perform at the Governers Ball in New York this summer alongside Drake and the Black Keys. In addition to the album, the singer will also release a career retrospective book in March titled Björk: Archives. The book, which features contributions from directors Chris Cunningham and Spike Jonze, will chart the singer’s career through a mixture of poetry, academic analysis, philosophical texts and photographs.

Vulnicura tracklist:

Stonemilker

Lionsong

History Of Touches

Black Lake

Family

Notget

Atom Dance

Mouth Mantra

Quicksand

The Doors – Feast Of Friends

Morrison and co's oblique tour documentary... Not only was he singer, poet and lizard king, Jim Morrison was also a decent movie critic. Asked about the filming that ultimately ends up as A Feast Of Friends, he looks characteristically bemused but makes a wry observation. “It’s a fictional documentary,” he tells the camera. “It’s making itself…” He’s certainly on to something. Neither as tedious as a procedural rock doc, nor as abstract as a piece of period freaksploitation, A Feast For Friends – like most Doors-related film artifacts – occupies a place between home movie and next-level music piece, effortlessly over-reaching one role but falling short of the other. Filmed by Paul Ferrara, a UCLA Film School friend of Morrison’s, A Feast Of Friends doesn’t have much in the way of narrative, but it makes up for it in sheer beauty, a powerful Doors quality. Notionally an account of the band’s 1968 American tour, in truth that fact is more something that you discover for yourself than from the film. Faced with a wealth of good material, deriving from the madness and controversy of Doors performances at the time, Ferrara seems uncertain what to do. Undoubtedly a talented film-maker and editor, he montages stage invasions to the extent that a disproportionately large chunk of the film’s running time is spent watching a Keystone Cops slapstick of kids foiled by burly, nightstick-wielding policemen. Nor is any of this accompanied by live music. Better by far are the moments when he lets the film run, and observe the Doors being a great live band. No-one over the age of 19 is probably especially excited about hearing “The End” another time, but the long preamble here, where Morrison attempts to get the lights turned down in the auditorium raises warm laughter, as might greet an accomplished chat show guest, and casts Morrison in a different light. As much as by their music, the Doors worked by seduction, and a strength of his film is that Ferrara allows himself to be seduced. Never mind what they think their movie is about – there’s a great deal of pleasure to watch The Doors simply walking about in the modern America that charmed and horrified them. There is a beautiful vignette of the band on a yacht, and some nice stuff from a small plane. Watching the band on a scenic monorail, rubbing shoulders, just about, with John Q Public in his sports coat, is just wonderful – the band’s potential to charm and outrage right there in the carriage. The band and their public, specifically the fragile boundaries between them is the film’s tacit subject. The stage invasions are one thing, but what is almost accidentally recounted here is the band’s growing stature, and the elevation of Jim Morrison into a star – and about the contexts in which this has meaning, and those where it doesn’t. We follow the band silently cross a carpeted expanse en route to the stage, a mass of press and “industry” others behind a cordon. We are in the limousine as the band arrive at a venue: fans address Morrison, and one girl places her hand on his crotch, more to her disbelief than his. We are backstage with a girl who has been hit by a chair. She is sitting with Morrison, who explains to the camera what has happened, and wipes the blood that is streaming down her face. The moments are both incredibly intimate, of course. But what’s staggering about them is not so much the sense of a boundary being crossed, as a boundary simply not being there in the first place. You can’t imagine Mick Jagger wiping blood in ’72, or - as Morrison does here – having a conversation with an intense, pipe-chewing clergyman about the nature of his art. Later in 1968, the Doors entered a more dangerous arena – the British living room, in the run-up to Christmas. The first rock film to be commissioned by UK TV, The Doors Are Open (the supporting feature on this DVD) is a black and white film which captures the band in London, backstage, and on it at the Roundhouse just a few days after their US tour ended. The narrator advises that to his fans Jim Morrison is “poet, prophet and politician.” Where Ferrara’s camera has no agenda, The Doors Are Open has one set in stone: the Doors as a political band, and duly intercuts their music with footage of news events. Jim Morrison, to his credit, comes up with some mildly controversial supporting quotage (“These days to be a superstar you have to be a politician or an assassin”), but it is Robby Krieger who best articulates the band and the mood of this DVD as a whole. Is the band political? “Our music,” he says, “is more symbolic.” EXTRAS: Extra scenes: Morrison swimming, communing with rocks etc. 7/10 JOHN ROBINSON

Morrison and co’s oblique tour documentary…

Not only was he singer, poet and lizard king, Jim Morrison was also a decent movie critic. Asked about the filming that ultimately ends up as A Feast Of Friends, he looks characteristically bemused but makes a wry observation. “It’s a fictional documentary,” he tells the camera. “It’s making itself…”

He’s certainly on to something. Neither as tedious as a procedural rock doc, nor as abstract as a piece of period freaksploitation, A Feast For Friends – like most Doors-related film artifacts – occupies a place between home movie and next-level music piece, effortlessly over-reaching one role but falling short of the other.

Filmed by Paul Ferrara, a UCLA Film School friend of Morrison’s, A Feast Of Friends doesn’t have much in the way of narrative, but it makes up for it in sheer beauty, a powerful Doors quality. Notionally an account of the band’s 1968 American tour, in truth that fact is more something that you discover for yourself than from the film.

Faced with a wealth of good material, deriving from the madness and controversy of Doors performances at the time, Ferrara seems uncertain what to do. Undoubtedly a talented film-maker and editor, he montages stage invasions to the extent that a disproportionately large chunk of the film’s running time is spent watching a Keystone Cops slapstick of kids foiled by burly, nightstick-wielding policemen. Nor is any of this accompanied by live music.

Better by far are the moments when he lets the film run, and observe the Doors being a great live band. No-one over the age of 19 is probably especially excited about hearing “The End” another time, but the long preamble here, where Morrison attempts to get the lights turned down in the auditorium raises warm laughter, as might greet an accomplished chat show guest, and casts Morrison in a different light.

As much as by their music, the Doors worked by seduction, and a strength of his film is that Ferrara allows himself to be seduced. Never mind what they think their movie is about – there’s a great deal of pleasure to watch The Doors simply walking about in the modern America that charmed and horrified them. There is a beautiful vignette of the band on a yacht, and some nice stuff from a small plane. Watching the band on a scenic monorail, rubbing shoulders, just about, with John Q Public in his sports coat, is just wonderful – the band’s potential to charm and outrage right there in the carriage.

The band and their public, specifically the fragile boundaries between them is the film’s tacit subject. The stage invasions are one thing, but what is almost accidentally recounted here is the band’s growing stature, and the elevation of Jim Morrison into a star – and about the contexts in which this has meaning, and those where it doesn’t.

We follow the band silently cross a carpeted expanse en route to the stage, a mass of press and “industry” others behind a cordon. We are in the limousine as the band arrive at a venue: fans address Morrison, and one girl places her hand on his crotch, more to her disbelief than his. We are backstage with a girl who has been hit by a chair. She is sitting with Morrison, who explains to the camera what has happened, and wipes the blood that is streaming down her face. The moments are both incredibly intimate, of course. But what’s staggering about them is not so much the sense of a boundary being crossed, as a boundary simply not being there in the first place. You can’t imagine Mick Jagger wiping blood in ’72, or – as Morrison does here – having a conversation with an intense, pipe-chewing clergyman about the nature of his art.

Later in 1968, the Doors entered a more dangerous arena – the British living room, in the run-up to Christmas. The first rock film to be commissioned by UK TV, The Doors Are Open (the supporting feature on this DVD) is a black and white film which captures the band in London, backstage, and on it at the Roundhouse just a few days after their US tour ended. The narrator advises that to his fans Jim Morrison is “poet, prophet and politician.”

Where Ferrara’s camera has no agenda, The Doors Are Open has one set in stone: the Doors as a political band, and duly intercuts their music with footage of news events. Jim Morrison, to his credit, comes up with some mildly controversial supporting quotage (“These days to be a superstar you have to be a politician or an assassin”), but it is Robby Krieger who best articulates the band and the mood of this DVD as a whole. Is the band political? “Our music,” he says, “is more symbolic.”

EXTRAS: Extra scenes: Morrison swimming, communing with rocks etc. 7/10

JOHN ROBINSON

Kurt Cobain documentary Montage Of Heck to feature unheard songs

0

Forthcoming documentary will be released in April... HBO's forthcoming Kurt Cobain documentary will feature original and unheard music by the fllm's subject. Montage Of Heck will be broadcast for the first time in April, arriving in UK cinemas around the same time. In a new press release from HBO, as reported by Loudwire, the US network previewed a number of its documentaries for 2015, including the Cobain film. In the press release it is stated that "the film provides no-holds-barred access to Cobain's archives, home to his never-before-seen home movies, recordings, artwork, photography, journals, demos, personal archives and songbooks" and that is "features dozens of Nirvana songs and performances, as well as previously unheard Cobain originals". The film is directed by Brett Morgen and Cobain's daughter Frances Bean Cobain is acting as executive producer on the project. Montage Of Heck is named after one of Cobain's mixtapes, which was circulated widely online in 2014. It features clips of songs by The Beatles, Iron Maiden, The Monkees, Black Sabbath, The Jackson Five and many more.

Forthcoming documentary will be released in April…

HBO’s forthcoming Kurt Cobain documentary will feature original and unheard music by the fllm’s subject.

Montage Of Heck will be broadcast for the first time in April, arriving in UK cinemas around the same time. In a new press release from HBO, as reported by Loudwire, the US network previewed a number of its documentaries for 2015, including the Cobain film.

In the press release it is stated that “the film provides no-holds-barred access to Cobain’s archives, home to his never-before-seen home movies, recordings, artwork, photography, journals, demos, personal archives and songbooks” and that is “features dozens of Nirvana songs and performances, as well as previously unheard Cobain originals”.

The film is directed by Brett Morgen and Cobain’s daughter Frances Bean Cobain is acting as executive producer on the project.

Montage Of Heck is named after one of Cobain’s mixtapes, which was circulated widely online in 2014. It features clips of songs by The Beatles, Iron Maiden, The Monkees, Black Sabbath, The Jackson Five and many more.

Neil Young pays tribute to bassist Tim Drummond

0

He also worked with James Brown, Miles Davis and the Beach Boys... Neil Young has paid tribute to bassist Tim Drummond, who has died aged 74. Writing on his here, Young said, "Rest in Peace Tim. You were a great bass player and songwriter. You had the fire, the magic. You played with James Brown, Conway Twitty and and Bob Dylan. You held the groove for JJ Cale. You played on many of my records too. I remember your humor, your life, your quickness, your love. Thanks man!" Drummond played with Young from 1972 through to 1980, playing on the Harvest album, then every studio album from On The Beach up until Hawks & Doves. He also played with Young's assorted backing bands during that era, including The Shocking Pinks, the Stray Gators and the International Harvesters. Drummond, who was born on April 20, 1940 in Canton, Illinois, also played live with CSNY on their 1974 tour. He reunited with Young for Harvest Moon and MTV Unplugged in 1992 and 1993. He was also an integral part of Bob Dylan's band between 1979 and 1981, playing on Dylan's trilogy of Gospel albums, Slow Train Coming, Saved and Shot Of Love. He co-wrote the title track for Saved with Dylan. But Drummond was also an in-demand session bassist who played with Eric Clapton, B.B. King, Joe Cocker, Miles Davis and James Brown among many others. His death follows on swiftly from that of Rick Rosas, another long-serving bassist with Neil Young who passed away two months ago. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xxpIdN6Jwzo Photo credit: Paul Natkin/Getty Images

He also worked with James Brown, Miles Davis and the Beach Boys…

Neil Young has paid tribute to bassist Tim Drummond, who has died aged 74.

Writing on his here, Young said, “Rest in Peace Tim. You were a great bass player and songwriter. You had the fire, the magic. You played with James Brown, Conway Twitty and and Bob Dylan. You held the groove for JJ Cale. You played on many of my records too. I remember your humor, your life, your quickness, your love. Thanks man!”

Drummond played with Young from 1972 through to 1980, playing on the Harvest album, then every studio album from On The Beach up until Hawks & Doves. He also played with Young’s assorted backing bands during that era, including The Shocking Pinks, the Stray Gators and the International Harvesters.

Drummond, who was born on April 20, 1940 in Canton, Illinois, also played live with CSNY on their 1974 tour. He reunited with Young for Harvest Moon and MTV Unplugged in 1992 and 1993.

He was also an integral part of Bob Dylan‘s band between 1979 and 1981, playing on Dylan’s trilogy of Gospel albums, Slow Train Coming, Saved and Shot Of Love. He co-wrote the title track for Saved with Dylan.

But Drummond was also an in-demand session bassist who played with Eric Clapton, B.B. King, Joe Cocker, Miles Davis and James Brown among many others.

His death follows on swiftly from that of Rick Rosas, another long-serving bassist with Neil Young who passed away two months ago.

Photo credit: Paul Natkin/Getty Images

Sufjan Stevens announces new album Carrie & Lowell

0

Follow up to 'The Age Of Adz' heralds Stevens' "return to folk roots"... Sufjan Stevens is to release new album Carrie & Lowell on March 30. Watch a trailer for the album below. Carrie & Lowell will be released on Stevens' own Asthmatic Kitty Records and is described as a return to his "folk roots" in a press release. The album's artwork can be seen above. The album will be the follow up to Stevens' last studio album The Age Of Adz, released in 2010. Prior to that album Stevens embarked on an ambitious plan to write and release an album representing each of the 50 US states. At present the mission has birthed two albums (Michigan and Illinois). Later this month will also see the release of Round-Up, Stevens' latest BAM commission. The piece is an instrumental accompaniment to slow-motion rodeo footage, will be performed at BAM’s Harvey Theater this month, between January 20 and 25. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vj9s0U2U2o

Follow up to ‘The Age Of Adz’ heralds Stevens’ “return to folk roots”…

Sufjan Stevens is to release new album Carrie & Lowell on March 30. Watch a trailer for the album below.

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

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

Later this month will also see the release of Round-Up, Stevens’ latest BAM commission. The piece is an instrumental accompaniment to slow-motion rodeo footage, will be performed at BAM’s Harvey Theater this month, between January 20 and 25.

Introducing… Radiohead: The Ultimate Music Guide

0

On December 3 last year, Nigel Godrich sent an early Christmas present to his 62,000 followers on Twitter. In a move doubtless sanctioned by his old friends, the producer posted a photograph of Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood poring over a fiendish tangle of studio kit, styled very much as radiophonic engineers absorbed in the process. Yorke's Tomorrow's Modern Boxes had recently been disseminated via the one-time pirate channel, Bittorrent (I reviewed Tomorrow's Modern Boxes here). Greenwood's score for another Paul Thomas Anderson movie, Inherent Vice, was being readied for release. Philip Selway had a run of solo dates booked for February. No other comments, from either Godrich or the perennially enigmatic band, were forthcoming. Nevertheless, the implication was clear: Radiohead were active once again. As another chapter in the Radiohead story begins to open, then, it feels like the perfect time to reconsider what has gone before. Our latest Uncut Ultimate Music Guide is dedicated to Radiohead, and is on sale in UK shops this Thursday - though you can buy a copy of Uncut's Radiohead special from our online shop now. Inside, you'll find a tranche of old interviews, from NME, Melody Maker and Uncut, that chart the band's long and sometimes tense relationship with the press and the music business, with their fans and even with themselves. Often, this manifests itself as wariness and frustration: Yorke's annoyance with an Uncut writer's flippantly provocative line of questioning in 2001 being a justifiable case in point. "Maybe you want to retract that..." Just as often, though, the terrific interviews compiled in the Uncut Ultimate Music Guide reveal a band whose reality is at odds with the morose stereotypes: an endlessly droll and charming group of men, whose wry contempt for the wearier rituals of rock'n'roll has informed most every professional and artistic move they've made in the past 20 odd years. "I’m not trying to define rock’n’roll," Thom Yorke told NME's Stuart Bailie in February 1993. "To me, rock’n’roll just reminds me of people with personal hygiene problems who still like getting blow-jobs off complete strangers. That’s not what being in a band means to me.” Radiohead's music is the product of notable hard work and no little angst. But, as we put together extensive new essays on each of their albums, patterns started falling into place, and certain inherent virtues recurred again and again. Images of fairy-tale forests and twilit roads. Songs that aren't exactly about a world on fire, but which could only have been written by men with consciences and aesthetics informed by very 21st Century anxieties. A creative desire to avoid the obvious, which at this point feels far more intuitive than self-conscious. How such an adventurous, uncompromising band also became such a successful one is among the best and strangest musical stories of the past two decades, and we hope we've done it justice in the Uncut Ultimate Music Guide: Radiohead. Optimistically: "It's the best thing that you ever had/The best thing that you ever, ever had…" Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

On December 3 last year, Nigel Godrich sent an early Christmas present to his 62,000 followers on Twitter. In a move doubtless sanctioned by his old friends, the producer posted a photograph of Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood poring over a fiendish tangle of studio kit, styled very much as radiophonic engineers absorbed in the process.

Yorke’s Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes had recently been disseminated via the one-time pirate channel, Bittorrent (I reviewed Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes here). Greenwood’s score for another Paul Thomas Anderson movie, Inherent Vice, was being readied for release. Philip Selway had a run of solo dates booked for February. No other comments, from either Godrich or the perennially enigmatic band, were forthcoming. Nevertheless, the implication was clear: Radiohead were active once again.

As another chapter in the Radiohead story begins to open, then, it feels like the perfect time to reconsider what has gone before. Our latest Uncut Ultimate Music Guide is dedicated to Radiohead, and is on sale in UK shops this Thursday – though you can buy a copy of Uncut’s Radiohead special from our online shop now.

Inside, you’ll find a tranche of old interviews, from NME, Melody Maker and Uncut, that chart the band’s long and sometimes tense relationship with the press and the music business, with their fans and even with themselves. Often, this manifests itself as wariness and frustration: Yorke’s annoyance with an Uncut writer’s flippantly provocative line of questioning in 2001 being a justifiable case in point. “Maybe you want to retract that…”

Just as often, though, the terrific interviews compiled in the Uncut Ultimate Music Guide reveal a band whose reality is at odds with the morose stereotypes: an endlessly droll and charming group of men, whose wry contempt for the wearier rituals of rock’n’roll has informed most every professional and artistic move they’ve made in the past 20 odd years. “I’m not trying to define rock’n’roll,” Thom Yorke told NME’s Stuart Bailie in February 1993. “To me, rock’n’roll just reminds me of people with personal hygiene problems who still like getting blow-jobs off complete strangers. That’s not what being in a band means to me.”

Radiohead’s music is the product of notable hard work and no little angst. But, as we put together extensive new essays on each of their albums, patterns started falling into place, and certain inherent virtues recurred again and again. Images of fairy-tale forests and twilit roads. Songs that aren’t exactly about a world on fire, but which could only have been written by men with consciences and aesthetics informed by very 21st Century anxieties. A creative desire to avoid the obvious, which at this point feels far more intuitive than self-conscious.

How such an adventurous, uncompromising band also became such a successful one is among the best and strangest musical stories of the past two decades, and we hope we’ve done it justice in the Uncut Ultimate Music Guide: Radiohead. Optimistically: “It’s the best thing that you ever had/The best thing that you ever, ever had…”

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

Morrissey praises bull for goring “serial killer” matador in Mexico City

0

Singer wrote scathing article on his fan site... Morrissey has said he was "delighted" to see a bull gore a "serial killer" matador in Mexico City recently, adding that he was "sad the bull did not come away with [her] ear". In a post on his fan site True to You entitled "The shame of beloved Mexico", the singer reprimanded the matador for her part in the "torment and slaughter" of the "defenseless" animal and for her subsequent interviews expressing a desire to kill it. "I felt delighted this week to see serial killer Karla de los Angeles justifiably gored in a bullring in Mexico City against her largely defenseless opponent," Morrissey wrote. "Make no mistake: there is no such thing as bullfighting. For the torment and slaughter of each bull there is an avowed plan and a strict script, so therefore there is no possibility of a contest of any kind. Yet there is the illusion of contest and action even if the order of events is very efficient – so efficient, in fact, that whenever the bull 'wins' it is reported that the event has 'gone wrong'." The singer went on to address the matador's radio interview last week, stating: "Driven by perverted impulse, Karla de los Angeles wants to kill another being that has actually posed no threat to her, and her radio comment following this week's failed attempt to out-wit a dying bull had de los Angeles confessing: 'I am sad because I could not cut off the bull's ear.' "Well, Karla, please understand this: we are sad that the bull did not come away with YOUR ear." Morrissey, a staunch vegetarian, has always been vocal about his pro-animal beliefs. In the past, he's banned the sale of meat from his concerts, and last year teamed up with animal rights group PETA - to which he has donated to - for an animated video against factory farmed chicken. Last summer, the singer also revealed a new song entitled "The Bullfighter Dies" from his latest album World Peace is None Of Your Business. The song, which was accompanied by a spoken word video in which Morrissey is seen reciting the lyrics, was a call for the abolition of bullfighting.

Singer wrote scathing article on his fan site…

Morrissey has said he was “delighted” to see a bull gore a “serial killer” matador in Mexico City recently, adding that he was “sad the bull did not come away with [her] ear”.

In a post on his fan site True to You entitled “The shame of beloved Mexico”, the singer reprimanded the matador for her part in the “torment and slaughter” of the “defenseless” animal and for her subsequent interviews expressing a desire to kill it. “I felt delighted this week to see serial killer Karla de los Angeles justifiably gored in a bullring in Mexico City against her largely defenseless opponent,” Morrissey wrote.

“Make no mistake: there is no such thing as bullfighting. For the torment and slaughter of each bull there is an avowed plan and a strict script, so therefore there is no possibility of a contest of any kind. Yet there is the illusion of contest and action even if the order of events is very efficient – so efficient, in fact, that whenever the bull ‘wins’ it is reported that the event has ‘gone wrong’.”

The singer went on to address the matador’s radio interview last week, stating: “Driven by perverted impulse, Karla de los Angeles wants to kill another being that has actually posed no threat to her, and her radio comment following this week’s failed attempt to out-wit a dying bull had de los Angeles confessing: ‘I am sad because I could not cut off the bull’s ear.’

“Well, Karla, please understand this: we are sad that the bull did not come away with YOUR ear.”

Morrissey, a staunch vegetarian, has always been vocal about his pro-animal beliefs. In the past, he’s banned the sale of meat from his concerts, and last year teamed up with animal rights group PETA – to which he has donated to – for an animated video against factory farmed chicken. Last summer, the singer also revealed a new song entitled “The Bullfighter Dies” from his latest album World Peace is None Of Your Business. The song, which was accompanied by a spoken word video in which Morrissey is seen reciting the lyrics, was a call for the abolition of bullfighting.

Fleet Foxes frontman Robin Pecknold scores off-Broadway play, Wyoming

0

The play opens at New York’s Theater later in January... Fleet Foxes singer Robin Pecknold is set to score an off-Broadway play in New York. The play called Wyoming and opens at New York’s Theater later in January. The score is an original composition and was written with Bill Callahan and Joanna Newsom collaborator, Neal Morgan. According to Stereogum, Pecknold "has no plans to record or release the score", while the movie's music supervisor Scott Thomas called the piece "unlike any score for theater that I’ve ever heard". Meanwhile, Pecknold last year posted a Facebook post on his band's official page, accounting for their lack of activity since 2011's Helplessness Blues, revealing that he has enrolled at university. Pecknold wrote: "For anyone who’s curious, this is a short Fleet Foxes update – been a while! So, after the last round of touring, I decided to go back to school. I never got an undergraduate degree, and this felt like the right time to both see what that was about and to try something new after a while in the touring / recording lifestyle. I moved to New York and enrolled at Columbia, and I’ve mostly been doing that, but I’m working on songs and excited for whatever happens next musically, even if it’s down the line. Hope all is well out there." Outside of Fleet Foxes, Robin Pecknold appeared at last year's End Of The Road festival as part of The Gene Clark No Other Band. The collaborative project also involved both members of Beach House (Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally), Grizzly Bear's Daniel Rossen, former Walkmen member Hamilton Leithauser, ex-Fairport Convention member Iain Matthews and members of Lower Dens, Wye Oak and Celebration. The group reconstructed the 1974 album No Other by Gene Clark.

The play opens at New York’s Theater later in January…

Fleet Foxes singer Robin Pecknold is set to score an off-Broadway play in New York.

The play called Wyoming and opens at New York’s Theater later in January. The score is an original composition and was written with Bill Callahan and Joanna Newsom collaborator, Neal Morgan. According to Stereogum, Pecknold “has no plans to record or release the score”, while the movie’s music supervisor Scott Thomas called the piece “unlike any score for theater that I’ve ever heard”.

Meanwhile, Pecknold last year posted a Facebook post on his band’s official page, accounting for their lack of activity since 2011’s Helplessness Blues, revealing that he has enrolled at university.

Pecknold wrote: “For anyone who’s curious, this is a short Fleet Foxes update – been a while! So, after the last round of touring, I decided to go back to school. I never got an undergraduate degree, and this felt like the right time to both see what that was about and to try something new after a while in the touring / recording lifestyle. I moved to New York and enrolled at Columbia, and I’ve mostly been doing that, but I’m working on songs and excited for whatever happens next musically, even if it’s down the line. Hope all is well out there.”

Outside of Fleet Foxes, Robin Pecknold appeared at last year’s End Of The Road festival as part of The Gene Clark No Other Band. The collaborative project also involved both members of Beach House (Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally), Grizzly Bear’s Daniel Rossen, former Walkmen member Hamilton Leithauser, ex-Fairport Convention member Iain Matthews and members of Lower Dens, Wye Oak and Celebration. The group reconstructed the 1974 album No Other by Gene Clark.

Bob Dylan announces casting call for new video

0

Men and women wanted for new Dylan video... An casting call for a new Bob Dylan video has been revealed. According to a report on Billboard, the video is being directed by Nash Edgerton who previously worked with Dylan on the videos for "Must Be Santa Claus", "Beyond Here Lies Nothin'" and "Duquesne Whistle". Billboard says that the video is due to shoot in Los Angeles imminently. It will presumably accompany a track from Dylan's forthcoming album, Shadows In The Night which features songs popularised by Frank Sinatra. The music video casting call is: [DANCER] Female, 40+, full figured. Burlesque dancer, will need to dance in audition. Think timeless a la Lana Turner or Ava Gardner. [SKETCHY GUY] 50s, rough trade, pock marked face, etc. [FAT GUY] 45+, all around huge. [BARTENDER] Male, 30s+, looking for characters. Shadows In The Night is released by Columbia on February 3.

Men and women wanted for new Dylan video…

An casting call for a new Bob Dylan video has been revealed.

According to a report on Billboard, the video is being directed by Nash Edgerton who previously worked with Dylan on the videos for “Must Be Santa Claus”, “Beyond Here Lies Nothin'” and “Duquesne Whistle”.

Billboard says that the video is due to shoot in Los Angeles imminently.

It will presumably accompany a track from Dylan’s forthcoming album, Shadows In The Night which features songs popularised by Frank Sinatra.

The music video casting call is:

[DANCER] Female, 40+, full figured. Burlesque dancer, will need to dance in audition. Think timeless a la Lana Turner or Ava Gardner.

[SKETCHY GUY] 50s, rough trade, pock marked face, etc.

[FAT GUY] 45+, all around huge.

[BARTENDER] Male, 30s+, looking for characters.

Shadows In The Night is released by Columbia on February 3.

PJ Harvey on Let England Shake, poetry and her career: “I was quite prepared to fail”

0
In tempestuous times, Let England Shake confirmed PJ Harvey as one of the most important musicians of the last two decades. In our January 2012 issue (Take 176), Uncut headed west to encounter Polly Jean Harvey on her Dorset home turf, and to reveal the vision behind Let England Shake and its illust...

In tempestuous times, Let England Shake confirmed PJ Harvey as one of the most important musicians of the last two decades. In our January 2012 issue (Take 176), Uncut headed west to encounter Polly Jean Harvey on her Dorset home turf, and to reveal the vision behind Let England Shake and its illustrious predecessors. “It is,” she says, “such a dangerous tightrope to walk.” Words: Stephen Troussé

__________________

It’s the last morning of the blazing Indian summer and London feels like a movie set. Across town a raggle-taggle platoon marches to St Paul’s with plans to occupy the Stock Exchange. Here at Waterloo, the station is thronged with ladies in implausible hats and booted, suited wideboys studying the Racing Post, all waiting for the early train to Ascot. We’re here for a different pilgrimage, a journey to the deep green heart of the country to meet the artist who has charted, more acutely than anyone, the latest uncanny episode in England’s dreaming.

Back to the engine, gazing out through the window, with PJ Harvey’s Let England Shake soundtracking the speeding trainscape, it’s as if you’re being dragged backwards into the past by ghosts of the nation’s unquiet dead. Through the dozing, dappled home counties, across the Downs, out past multiplexes and retail parks to the docks, container sheds and glittering ocean, and into the album’s vale of myth and mortality – of “the grey, damp filthiness of ages and battered books/And fog rolling down behind the mountains/On the graveyards and dead sea captains”, as she sings on “The Last Living Rose”. Intoxicated by this potent cocktail of song and landscape, you step off the train half expecting to find Polly Harvey holding court in some ancient smuggler’s dell, stalking a bombed-out church or addressing the English Channel from the Cobb of a storm-wracked bay. (Patti Smith, for one, seems similarly enchanted. “I like her,” she tells Uncut. “I like her range. She is fiercely modern and has the heart of a shepherd girl.”)

In fact, we meet in a bright, British-modern hotel in a Dorset market town, where wine glasses tinkle to the sound of Adele and the mushy peas fancy themselves as purée. Polly appears dressed head-to-toe in black, but more in the style of a discreetly hip curator than the East End funeral-horse look she has adopted for recent performances. As we talk, though she maintains the poise that characterises every aspect of her art these days, there’s one unsettling reminder of the strife that has fed it. On the street outside the hotel window, there’s a market stall. But where you might expect a display of surfwear and stoner T-shirts, instead it seems to be doing brisk trade selling paramilitary surveillance kit and camouflage combat gear for children.

Congratulations, Polly, on an incredible year. Short of a No 1 record, it’s hard to imagine how it could have gone better…

“It’s been a wonderful year. Really amazing. Obviously whenever you make a new piece of work, you don’t think how it might be received at that point, you just follow the direction the work is taking you. And I had no idea how people would receive the record, even when we had finished it. I knew I was very pleased with it. And I knew that I had achieved what I set out to do, which isn’t always the case. Often when I start recording I think I’m heading in one direction, but find myself veering off somewhere else and don’t quite get where I want to. But I knew with this record it had absolutely gone where I had hoped it would.”

Your Mercury Prize felt almost more like a coronation than a simple album of the year award. Yet you received similar acclaim for Stories From The City…, which you’ve subsequently said isn’t your favourite album. How do you measure the success of your work?

“For me the most important thing is to hopefully create and achieve what I desire at the onset of the project. And I’m quite a good judge myself of whether I’ve managed to do that or not. And it’s not often that I will make a record like Let England Shake, where I know after I’ve finished writing it that that’s a very strong piece of work and I couldn’t have done any better. That doesn’t happen very often. Having said that, I knew that for me, White Chalk was an album like that, too. I had a very clear idea of what I was setting out to do with that piece and I felt that I did it, and I think it’s a really strong album. For me it’s a very successful album! But in terms of how many it sells it doesn’t make sense at all.”

By fearful symmetry the campaign for Let England Shake was bookended by two television appearances on Andrew Marr’s Sunday morning politics show. In the first – in April 2010, a couple of weeks before the General Election – she appeared strumming an autoharp and singing the album’s title siren song before Gordon Brown, visibly crumpled in the desperate final days of his premiership. And then in September 2011, she challenged the oleaginous David Cameron on his part in steering us towards a world where “economic gain is the only goal of worth”, before singing a death-defying “The Last Living Rose”.

Did you get any sense of whether Brown or Cameron engaged with your songs?

“In those situations you have no opportunity, really, to talk to them. It’s all so fleeting. Understandably, because there’s so many other people around and they are doing 30 different things at any one time. I had a brief word with David Cameron, but in no way was I able to have a conversation.”

It must have felt like a remarkable opportunity, to sing directly to people in power?

“Of course. It was an amazing opportunity. It almost felt surreal, to be in that situation, very early in the morning in a brightly lit television studio, having that moment, when I could sit down next to David Cameron and then perform a song like ‘The Last Living Rose’. I was so glad to have been asked to do that.”

In the brief time you were in the studio together, Cameron said his wife, Samantha, had bought the album following the Mercury Prize and was enjoying it. Johnny Marr famously forbade Cameron from liking The Smiths. Do you think that’s silly? Do you worry about the wrong people liking your work? In some ways it’s quite easy to imagine very conservative people enjoying Let England Shake. And they might not be wrong?

“I think it’s open to many interpretations, an album like this. I wanted very much to write a piece that was open to many different interpretations and was quite ambiguous. But I’ve always had a strong belief that when a record is finished and when it goes into the public domain I let go of it and have no power over it. It belongs to the people.”

It’s fair to say that Polly Harvey herself sometimes talks with the guardedness of a well-drilled politician. The hint of any spin on a question, any murmur of interpretation or the suggestion of intention, is met with the straightest of bats, an almost Boycottian, steadfast deliberation. Ask, for example, whether there isn’t something slightly dangerous, a Morrissey-esque frisson of provocation, in singing about “goddamn Europeans”, of stagnant English blood and foreign soil, and the response is polite but diffusive.

“Yes, it’s provocative in that way,” she admits. “And I’ve always wanted to be an artist that provokes a response in a listener, always. I want people to think about things. At the same time, I don’t hang on to something when it’s gone out to the public, because it would drive me mad! You can’t survive like that as an artist – I’m just speaking for myself, maybe other people can! But I have to let go of it. I can’t look after that work and tell people how to take it. In some ways, it doesn’t matter who the artist was who created the piece, ultimately it has to exist on its own. After I’m dead and gone, hopefully people will still want to listen to that record. That leaves the work much more open to travel.”

She learned very soon not to give too much of herself, except in her art.

“Everything happened very fast when I was very young,” she says, remembering her early days in London 1991/’92, the media storm that greeted “Sheela-Na-Gig”, her first NME cover, the intensity of the response she inspired. “I had to learn very quickly how to cope with interviews, things like becoming more public, being on stage more, being recognised. It’s very difficult at a young age to deal with, especially coming from a very sheltered upbringing.”

__________________

If Let England Shake is the album of 2011 it’s because of the richness of its conception and writing, the ghostly dramatic polyphony that suggests that the English Civil War never really ended. But it’s also because of the maturity and majesty of its delivery – the marching, fighting, drinking and mourning songs, tunes that feel like they’ve already lived a century or two, coupled with a voice in its forties still discovering new characters to play, and, on “Battleship Hill”, giving the performance of a lifetime. And finally, because of the way it has chimed so uncannily and powerfully with the times.

What happened between those two Andrew Marr performances? A seismic year and a half of regime change, fiscal brutality, occupations, demonstrations, crumbling media dynasties, financial panic, riot and ultimately English cities in flames. If they were ever to bring back The Rock & Roll Years, the old BBC TV show that rubbed news footage up against the hit parade of the day and watched the sparks fly, for the episode on 2011 they could do worse than simply set the rolling news cycles to the sound of Let England Shake.

“I was just responding to what I felt compelled to do at the time,” Polly says now, a little mystified at the suggestion that the artist might be, in Ezra Pound’s words, “the antenna of the race”. “It was just responding to the world we live in,” she admits. “It’s just coincided with this continuing seismic action, to use your words, with what’s happening now. I could never have foreseen it would fit in today, or even the time it came out, because I began writing it two and a half, three years ago. So it’s just the way things have evolved suit the record really well.”

Ask what was the first mystical inkling she had of the mood and direction of the album and she is quick to steer the conversation back on-message.

“I had wanted for many, many years to begin to explore my feelings towards the wider world in song, to what goes on that we read about and hear about through the news. I’ve always been very affected by what’s happening in the world. Profoundly so. I feel so moved by things every day. And such a feeling of impotence, like we all do. What can you possibly do to change anything? I’d long wanted to be able to start to bring these feelings into songs and I didn’t know how. And I also knew that I would have to do it very well or not do it all. It’s such a dangerous tightrope to walk. I really didn’t want to write bad songs on such important matters. And often your heart can be in the right place, but that doesn’t mean you’re going to do good work. So I was very wary of that.

“Part of the reason this album happened was that, as a writer, I was finally at the stage where I was more confident that I could carry it off. I had more craft of language at my disposal than I had before. And it was that coupled with the greater sense of urgency and frustration, and that feeling of impotence. It was those two things that made me think, ‘OK, if I’m feeling this profoundly moved, upset, frustrated by what’s happening, can I use that in song?’”

Throughout Let England Shake there are echoes and allusions to earlier artists wrestling with national disgrace, from the seedy homesickness of “The Last Living Rose”, recalling both “The Queen Is Dead” and William Blake, through to the chords of “The Dark Places” echoing “There Is A Light That Never Goes Out”, and “The Colour Of The Earth” picking up something of The Clash’s “Straight To Hell”. Polly herself has suggested that two major inputs were the dreamy devastation of The Doors and the bilious poetry of the first two Pogues albums. Founding Pogue Spider Stacy is touchingly gobsmacked at the suggestion of influence.

“I am beyond flattered that she should have been listening to us while making a record of such beauty as Let England Shake. There is no one else like her. She’s peerless, one of the very few contemporary artists in any discipline whose clarity and profundity of vision have sharpened and deepened over the years to a point where she now seems to be working in a field defined only by herself. Her empathy, her erudition, the sense of the connection between blood and clay and the bones and roots of the world echo something that could so nearly be lost, but is always somewhere to be found, hovering in the air or lying in the soil below us: the dark red life of these rainy islands.”

Polly, were you conscious of contributing to this canon of state-of-the-nation albums?

“No, I wasn’t conscious of joining a wider body of what had gone before. Although some of those artists are my favourites: The Clash – fantastic! The Smiths – amazing! But I knew that whatever I ended up with would be my own language, my own way of doing it. When I embarked on Let England Shake I was quite prepared to fail. There’d been a number of times I’d worked towards writing an album like this and abandoning it because it wasn’t very good. I was quite prepared for that to happen again. I wasn’t imagining joining some band of brothers who’d gone before and done it well. I didn’t know whether I’d be able to do it all, let alone do it well.”

It’s a tradition in writing about PJ Harvey that each album is presented as a reaction to the one before: so after the bleeding raw Rid Of Me, the darkly cinematic To Bring You My Love; after the glittering pinnacles of Stories From The City…, the wilfully sketchy Uh Huh Her.

In this narrative, Let England Shake has been covered as an escape from the harrowing autobiographical grief of White Chalk into the wider world of Issues – war, politics and history. It’s a simplified reading, ignoring the deeper currents and continuities of her career. Let England Shake in particular has suffered from a certain literal-mindedness, read as though it were a straightforward history project, complete with footnotes and references to Wilfred Owen and Harold Pinter, Goya and Gallipoli. As though it were documentary rather than poetry.

Warfare and conflict has long been part of Harvey’s metaphorical arsenal, her way of writing about the battlefields of love and life. Way back on “Plants And Rags”, from 1992’s Dry, she sang of easing herself into a bodybag. On her 2009 collaboration with John Parish, A Woman A Man Walked By, on “The Soldier”, an eerie song that lays the ground for Let England Shake, she sang “I imagine a dream in which I’m a soldier/And I’m walking on the faces of dead women/And everyone I left behind me…”

“There are many others,” Polly agrees. “On White Chalk there was ‘The Mountain’. Even as far back as Dance Hall At Louse Point there was ‘Civil War Correspondent’.”

So the opposition between White Chalk and Let England Shake, between supposed autobiography and historical research, is really not so clear-cut?

“I totally agree with you. The last two records are a progression in my capabilities as a writer. I think I’m a better songwriter now, just through having a bit more experience. So the songs on both those records are much more cohesive or strong, they hang together better. They just seem more accomplished.”

If the run of albums from To Bring You My Love through Is This Desire? to Stories From The City… and Uh Huh Her might be subtitled, after one her songs, “The Desperate Kingdom Of Love”, White Chalk and Let England Shake, could be the sequel: “The Treacherous Kingdom Of Death”. The albums feel like parallel explorations of the same theme in different keys, like the fugue Virginia Woolf managed in Mrs Dalloway, between the domestic dissatisfactions of Clarissa and the war trauma of Septimus.

“I think my work has always been a desire to move forward and away from what I’ve done before. But for years I’ve tried to explain that my work’s not autobiographical. And White Chalk wasn’t any more than this one, but it was a time when I was very interested in exploring the inner psyche, the inner mind, the edge of things. I was reading a lot of novels that did that – a lot of Russian novels, Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, where characters were really inhabiting their inner mind, right on the edge of losing things. That’s was what I was interested in and that’s where that album came from.

“And before that, I can see that an album like Uh Huh Her was really reaching to find something that it didn’t quite find. I think there were some good songs on it and there were some dreadful songs on it! I wasn’t sure where I was going. I think I learned a lot from that record, of knowing to bide my time in the future and just wait until something’s finished. Because the album hadn’t found its direction when I put it out. In hindsight I should have waited. The albums I’ve done since then, for me, I think are two of my strongest pieces of work, because I was prepared to wait and really find the direction the record was going in.”

Would you describe yourself primarily as a writer these days?

“Oh! These days… I still would put singer-songwriter. I feel that is what I’m best at. Though the largest per cent of my time is spent writing. I write separately from music these days because I find I can strengthen my words. I’m not a great writer, I’m not a great poet, I’m not a great novelist. But I can sing songs. I write songs, that is my strength – as frustrating as that is to me! Because I would love to be a better poet. But I realise that absolutely is not where my strengths are.”

Reading about your research, I was reminded of the section in Dylan’s Chronicles, where he describes reading old newspapers from the American Civil War. “I wasn’t so much interested in the issues as intrigued by the language and rhetoric of the times,” he writes. “It wasn’t like it was another world, but the same one only with more urgency.”

“Exactly, that’s exactly it! Although I did read a lot about history, the more I read, the more it was just talking about the language of today. And that’s also why it was useful to draw upon those reference points in the songs, because it is the same language. It doesn’t really matter what the actual date was, it’s still happening now. And it always will. That was the thing that I learned most of all through all of my reading: the language hasn’t changed, it’s remained the same since any record of war has ever been made. It’s the same language used to describe the end results of it. And I found that that really shocked me to begin with. Nothing has changed in hundreds and thousands of years.”

Are those ancient paths of Dorset your equivalent of Dylan’s Highway 61, where the Old Testament, the Civil War and the Civil Rights movement seem to be happening simultaneously?

“It’s not just Dorset; I spend a lot of time in other places. But I’m very aware of that always, and more so as I get older. That’s the nature of any artist. If you want to make something out of the world we live in, you’ve got to be open to really seeing things, really hearing things. That does mean you have to be open to absorb it. So you don’t just see the moment you’re in, you see the years beforehand and the years to come.”

Spend an hour with Polly Harvey and your overwhelming impression is of steadfast dedication to the life of the artist; a sense of vocation that is almost old-fashioned. It’s this commitment that’s seen her outlast the Too Pure kids and the riot grrrls, the grunge mavens and the Britpop boys, and remain vital into the 21st century.

“I remember having long talks with Polly about creativity and not having confidence in what you’re doing,” says Adrian Utley, guitarist and multi-instrumentalist with artistic fellow-travellers Portishead. “The thing with Polly is she always seems to know exactly where she’s going. Even when she says she doesn’t! She’s always seemed to me very strong and very focused. It’s really heartening for all of us – the fact that 20 years into her career she’s creating her strongest work. Her dedication is absolute, really. She’s completely driven by her creativity. I think it’s that superb, that really strong confidence when she’s made up her mind about what’s she’s doing. Including the way she looks and what she wears on stage. You might get the impression that she’s can’t be like that in reality… But in fact she is!”

Where did your commitment come from, Polly?

“Maybe it was my mother. Maybe it was growing up around lots of creative people – musicians, artists, photographers. I was always ambitious: I knew that I wanted to go into art of some kind. I didn’t know of what kind, whether it was going to be art or sculpture or painting or performance or acting – it could have been any of those things. But whatever field I went into I wanted to be the best. That was what I would aim for. Whether I got there or not was a different matter. I wanted to do the best work. And something new. That was very important.”

Has that conviction ever wavered?

“There’s been a couple of times, which I think is quite normal in anyone’s life. You find yourself going down a certain road, and you stop and think, and rightly so, ‘Is this the best I could be doing?’”

Is being an artist quite a selfish way to live?

“It is and it isn’t. In some ways it’s very selfless. You have to make many sacrifices in order to do it. But you find yourself looking at other people and thinking ,‘I wouldn’t mind living a more simple life’. But I think it’s very normal to any human being that you reach these certain markers in your life and you think, ‘Is this still feeling right or is there something else I could be doing with my life that would be more beneficial to me and to others?’ I’ve been through a couple of times like that.”

After the success of the year you’ve just had, do you think the 14-year-old Polly would think “mission accomplished”?

“Yeah. But I think I felt that from the moment I was able to continue to make records… And that was a long time ago. I got to the point after the first two records where I realised I was in a position where I was going to be able to continue to write and put out songs and people would be interested. It was back then that I had got to the point I had dreamed and hoped of getting to. That was what I wanted to do: do the thing that I feel so compelled to do, and take very seriously. I want to give something back of worth, I want to make something worthwhile and meaningful.”

Are you aware of having become an influence on younger artists, becoming as inspirational as Captain Beefheart was to you? On Laura Marling or Anna Calvi?

“I don’t know if that’s the case. You’d have to ask them. From what I gather those two artists were influenced by many, many different things, many different people. I don’t know if I feature largely in that. So no, and I’m not the kind of person who is aware of that, were it the case anyway.”

Having had this year of success, was there ever a danger of becoming too embraced, almost respectable – the worthy darling of the broadsheets? Are you tempted to now make a sensationally scandalous record that would make Andrew Marr choke on his Danish pastry?

“Ha! I’m not sure where I’ll go next. It takes quite some time for me to work out what feels right. All I do know is I won’t be doing the same thing again. I’ve also enjoyed discovering this new way of writing and I would like to continue that more.”

You must feel emboldened, having made, 20 years into your career, a record like Let England Shake. Do you feel at the peak of your powers? Firing on all cylinders?

“No I don’t feel like that. I feel like at this moment in time this album came together in all the right conditions. That’s really rare. I’m quite prepared that all of those things might not happen again for another 10 years.

“The only thing I need to hold onto is honouring the place I feel l need to go with my work, and just try to make that as good as I can. It’s all I can do. But it’s not going to happen every time.”

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