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Squeeze to mark 50th anniversary with UK tour

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Squeeze have announced details of a 50th anniversary tour for October 2024.

Squeeze have announced details of a 50th anniversary tour for October 2024.

The band – Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook joined by bassist Owen Biddle, guitarist Melvin Duffy, percussionist Steve Smith, keyboardist Stephen Large and drummer Simon Hanson – will be supported by Badly Drawn Boy. The tour concludes with a show at London’s Royal Albert Hall.

Squeeze have confirmed that they will once again be supporting charity The Trussell Trust, which provides emergency food and support to people who cannot afford the essentials, while campaigning for change to end the need for food banks in the UK. Fans are invited on the tour to bring along food donations to the shows, where there will be collection points across the venue each night. There will also be collection buckets for any cash donations.  All donations will be distributed to people in crisis across the 1,300 food bank centres in the Trussell Trust network. Visit trusselltrust.org/donate-food to find out how to make a donation to your local food bank and the items they most need this winter. 

The Squeeze 50th Anniversary UK Tour dates are:

Fri 4 Oct 2024                 Sheffield City Hall

Sat 5 Oct 2024                Birmingham Symphony Hall

Tue 8 Oct 2024               Aberdeen Music Hall

Wed 9 Oct 2024             Edinburgh Usher Hall

Fri 11 Oct 2024                 Glasgow Royal Concert Hall

Sat 12 Oct 2024                Manchester O2 Apollo

Sun 13 Oct 2024               Newcastle O2 City Hall

Tue 15 Oct 2024               Stoke-On-Trent Regent Theatre

Thu 17 Oct 2024               Nottingham Royal Concert Hall

Fri 18 Oct 2024                 York Barbican

Sat 19 Oct 2024                Liverpool M&S Bank Arena 

Mon 21 Oct 2024             Llandudno Venue Cymru Theatre

Tue 22 Oct 2024               Leicester De Montfort Hall

Wed 23 Oct 2024             Cambridge Corn Exchange

Fri 25 Oct 2024                 Ipswich Regent

Sat 26 Oct 2024                Southend Cliffs Pavilion

Sun 27 Oct 2024               Southampton Mayflower Theatre

Tue 29 Oct 2024               Guildford G Live

Wed 30 Oct 2024             Bristol Beacon

Fri 1 Nov 2024                Cardiff Utilita Arena 

Sat 2 Nov 2024               Brighton Centre

Sun 3 Nov 2024              Plymouth Pavilions

Tue 5 Nov 2024              Aylesbury Waterside Theatre

Thu 7 Nov 2024             Reading Hexagon

Fri 8 Nov 2024                Swansea Arena

Sat 9 Nov 2024               Eastbourne Congress Theatre

Mon 11 Nov 2024            London Royal Albert Hall

Tickets on sale Friday, December 1 from 10AM HERE.

Watch Neil Young play “The Star-Spangled Banner”

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Neil Young has released a version of "The Star-Spangled Banner" to coincide with Thanksgiving.

Neil Young has released a version of “The Star-Spangled Banner” to coincide with Thanksgiving.

The video, directed by Daryl Hannah, finds Young playing the American national anthem on Old Black, in the style reminiscent of his Weld-era take on “Blowin’ In The Wind“.

The video ends with the messages “Be Brave” and “Stand With Peace” appearing on the screen while Young runs his guitar through his effects pedals.

 

Paul Weller announces tour dates for 2024

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Paul Weller has announced a run of UK dates for spring 2024.

Paul Weller has announced a run of UK dates for spring 2024.

Weller, whose last album Fat Pop (Volume 1) was released in 2021, heads out on April 4 at Poole’s Lighthouse and finished by at the Cambridge Corn Exchange on April 21. These new dates compliment a previously announced run of shows that take place in July.

April 4 – POOLE Lighthouse 

April 5 – BRISTOL Beacon 

April 6 – NEWPORT ICC Wales 

April 8 – SOUTHEND Cliffs Pavilion 

April 9 – LEICESTER De Montfort Hall 

April 11 – SHEFFIELD City Hall 

April 12 – STOKE Victoria Hall 

April 13 – STOCKTON Globe Theatre 

April 15 – DUNFERMLINE Alhambra 

April 16 – BLACKBURN King George’s Hall 

April 17 – YORK Barbican 

April 19 – LINCOLN Engine Shed 

April 20 – AYLESBURY Waterside 

April 21 – CAMBRIDGE Corn Exchange 

Previously announced shows for next year are: 

July 3 – LIMERICK IRELAND – King John’s Castle SOLD OUT 

July 4 – DUBLIN IRELAND – Trinity College SOLD OUT 

July 7 – SCARBOROUGH Open Air Theatre 

July 13 – EDINBURGH – Edinburgh Castle Esplanade SOLD OUT 

 Tickets for the April tour go on sale Friday, December a at 10am from www.Seetickets.comwww.Ticketmaster.co.uk and www.gigantic.com.

The Rolling Stones announce tour dates for 2024

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The Rolling Stones have announced a brand-new tour for 2024.

The Rolling Stones have announced a brand-new tour for 2024.

The Hackney Diamonds tour will play at 16 cities across North America and Canada, beginning on April 28 in Houston, Texas.

The Stones last toured America in 2021, during the No Filter tour. After opening the tour at Houston’s NRG Stadium, they will  visit Las Vegas, Glendale, East Rutherford, Seattle, Foxboro, Orlando, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Denver, Chicago, Vancouver, Los Angeles and Santa Clara. The Stones will also perform at this year’s New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. Full tour intinerary is below.

Sunday, April 28, 2024 – ​​NRG Stadium, ​​​Houston, TX
Thursday, May 2, 2024​​ – Jazz Fest, ​​​New Orleans, LA
Tuesday, May 7, 2024 – ​​​State Farm Stadium​​, Glendale, AZ
Saturday, May 11, 2024​​ – Allegiant Stadium, ​​Las Vegas, NV
Wednesday, May 15, 2024​​ – Lumen Field​​​, Seattle, WA
Thursday, May 23, 2024​​ – MetLife Stadium, ​​East Rutherford, NJ
Thursday, May 30, 2024​​ – Gillette Stadium, ​​Foxboro, MA
Monday, June 3, 2024 – ​​​Camping World Stadium​, Orlando, FL
Friday, June 7, 2024​​​ – Mercedes-Benz Stadium, ​Atlanta, GA
Tuesday, June 11, 2024 – ​​Lincoln Financial Field, ​​Philadelphia, PA
Saturday, June 15, 2024​​ – Cleveland Browns Stadium, ​Cleveland, OH
Thursday, June 20, 2024​​ – Empower Field at Mile High​, Denver, CO
Thursday, June 27, 2024 – ​​Soldier Field, ​​​Chicago, IL
Friday, July 5, 2024​​​ – BC Place, ​​​Vancouver, BC
Wednesday, July 10, 2024 – ​​SoFi Stadium​​​, Los Angeles, CA
Wednesday, July 17, 2024 – ​​Levi’s® Stadium, ​​Santa Clara, CA

Tom Waits and Iggy Pop to co-host BBC radio show

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Tom Waits is to co-host Iggy Pop's BBC Radio 6 Music show on Sunday, December 3.

Tom Waits is to co-host Iggy Pop‘s BBC Radio 6 Music show on Sunday, December 3.

The show will air on Pop’s regular slot, so gather round the wireless at 4pm UK time on Sunday, December 3.

We learn from the announcement that “in between records, the pair share stories, including how Tom once hitched a ride with Eden Ahbez, the songwriter who composed ‘Nature Boy’, and how Iggy once came across Captain Beefheart eating breakfast in L.A. but was wise enough not to disturb him.”

Swordfishtrombones, Rain Dogs and Franks Wild Years – Waits’ spectacular run of albums, released on Island Records between 1983 and 1993 – have been newly remastered from the original tapes and are available now on vinyl and CD via Island/UMe.

Bob Dylan masters at auction

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A set of early Bob Dylan tapes will be auctioned in December. The three slipcased reels are from the collection of sculptor Steven Handschu who was given the tapes in the 1960s, and are a set of masters from Dylan’s first album, recorded at Columbia Studios in New York by John Hammond over two days in November 1961.

The tapes, marked “Bob Dylan, Job # 64937, 11-20-61 1D/2D/3D” are interesting to Dylan scholars as they contain not only the 13 songs which make up Dylan’s debut album, but also studio conversation and – apparently – additional takes and songs. The tapes have been digitally transferred at Steve Albini’s Electrical Audio studio in Chicago. Engineer Scott Steinman says: “The engineers established their recording levels during Dylan’s first run ‘You’re No Good.’ These are professionally formatted, first generation tapes; from a pure audio quality perspective, they are the best.”

The three track tapes, which feature Dylan’s voice and guitar on one, his guitar on a second, and Hammond’s talkback comments on a third require specialist equipment to play, and may not be unique. 

“It was often the practice to make valuable master tapes redundant,” Steinman notes. “If a tape was lost or damaged, a back-up existed. Studios could make multiple masters by recording simultaneously on two aligned recorders. Inasmuch as each reel number designated on these tape boxes ends with a letter “D” (i.e., 1D, 2D, 3D), these tapes could possibly be duplicates. If this is true, it would therefore be possible that another set of Dylan masters for this album exists. Research, however, into this possibility has not revealed such additional tapes.”

Mr Handschu, who is blind, was, the auction site says, given the tapes by his roommate in New York in 1966, a caretaker who was permitted to take tapes destined to be thrown away. A portion of the proceeds from the sale will benefit charities for the blind. 

The listing, with audio clips, can be viewed at www.guernseys.com

Watch the video for J Mascis’ “Can’t Believe We’re Here”

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J Mascis has announced details of his new studio album, What Do We Do Now - which is released on February 2 by Sub Pop.

J Mascis has announced details of his new studio album, What Do We Do Now – which is released on February 2 by Sub Pop.

To mark the occasion, he’s released a new song, “Can’t Believe We’re Here“, and accompanying video.

What Do We Do Now – Mascis’ fifth solo studio album – features guest musicians, including Western Mass local Ken Mauri of The B-52s on keys and Ontario-based polymath Matthew “Doc” Dunn on steel guitar.

The album is available for pre-order by clicking here.

The tracklisting for the album is:

Can’t Believe We’re Here

What Do We Do Now

Right Behind You

You Don’t Understand Me

I Can’t Find You

Old Friends

It’s True

Set Me Down

Hangin Out

End Is Gettin Shaky

Exclusive! Watch Sarabeth Tucek’s video for “Creature Of The Night”

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SBT (Sarabeth Tucek) has released a new track from her Joan Of All album.

SBT (Sarabeth Tucek) has released a new track from her Joan Of All album.

You can watch the exclusive video premier for the track below.

Joan Of All – one of Uncut’s Albums Of The Year 2023 – was released in May.

To accompany the video, here’s SBT’s live UK dates for 2024.

She plays:

January 19 – LUDLOW – ASSEMBLY ROOMS

January 20 – BRISTOL – DARE SHACK

January 22 – NORWICH – NORWICH ARTS CENTRE

January 23 – LONDON – THE WAITING ROOM

January 24 – LEICESTER – THE MUSICIAN PUB

January 26 – GLASGOW – THE HUG AND PINT

January 27 – GATESHEAD – THE GLASSHOUSE

Hear The Lemonheads’ new single, “Fear Of Living”

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The Lemonheads have today released their first new music since the 2019 covers album, Varshons II. "Fear Of Living" was was worked up by Evan Dando from a song written by Dan Lardner (of New York indie band QTY), who died in June of this year.

The Lemonheads have today released their first new music since the 2019 covers album, Varshons II. “Fear Of Living” was was worked up by Evan Dando from a song written by Dan Lardner (of New York indie band QTY), who died in June of this year.

“I met with Dan in 2022, he sent me ‘Fear Of Living’, I added some riffs and things, and he said he liked it,” explains Dando. “I shall miss you, Dear Prince, ever the most dignified person in the room.”

Dando played all the instruments on the song, which was recorded and produced by Apollo Nove at A9 Audio in São Paulo, Brazil. Hear “Fear Of Living” below:

“Fear Of Living” will also be available on limited edition seven-inch vinyl, available exclusively at The Lemonheads‘ and Evan Dando’s upcoming US shows (see dates below). The B-side is a cover of Eugene Kelly’s “Seven Out”, with Jeff Berg on bass and Erin Rae on backing vocals. Dando is currently working on new Lemonheads material.

The Lemonheads US tour dates
29 Dec: The Space, Evanston, IL (performing It’s A Shame About Ray) SOLD OUT
30 Dec: The Space, Evanston, IL (performing Come On Feel The Lemonheads) SOLD OUT
31 Dec: The Space, Evanston, IL (New Year Extravaganza)


2024 Evan Dando solo tour dates (all shows with Willy Mason)
07 Feb: Metro Gallery, Baltimore, MD
08 Feb: Richmond Music Hall, Richmond, VA
09 Feb: The Grey Eagle, Asheville, NC
10 Feb: The Earl, Atlanta, GA
13 Feb: Jack Rabbits, Jacksonville, FL
14 Feb: The Social, Orlando, FL
15 Feb: Crowbar, Tampa, FL
16 Feb: The Handlebar, Pensacola, FL
17 Feb: Chelsea’s Live, Baton Rouge, LA
19 Feb: White Oak Music Hall (upstairs), Houston, TX
20 Feb: Parish, Austin, TX
21 Feb: Trees (downstairs), Dallas, TX
23 Feb: KTAO Solar Center, Taos, NM
24 Feb: Launch Pad, Albuquerque, NM
25 Feb: Rebel Lounge, Phoenix, AZ
27 Feb: Casbah, San Diego, CA
28 Feb: Pappy + Harriet’s (indoors), Pioneertown, CA
29 Feb: Constellation Room, Santa Ana, CA
01 March: The Roxy Theatre, Los Angeles, CA
02 March: Swedish American Hall, San Francisco, CA
04 March: Mississippi Studios, Portland, OR
05 March: Triple Door, Seattle, WA
08 March: Globe Hall, Denver, CO
09 March: The Armory, Fort Collins, CO

Bob Marley – Catch A Fire (50th Anniversary Edition)

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Bob Marley, Bunny Wailer and Peter Tosh were in a fix, stranded penniless in London after an ill-judged European venture with Johnny Nash – ludicrously, the Texan crooner was being hyped as 'The King of Reggae' – while Blackwell found himself drawn to the trio's mix of cool and intensity. They had also arrived with perfect timing. The previous week Jimmy Cliff, who Blackwell trusted to break reggae into the mainstream, had walked out in frustration at his career stasis. The Harder They Come, the film destined to make Cliff a star, was endlessly delayed in JA 'soon come' mode. Now here were the Wailers, especially lead singer and songwriter, the charismatic Bob Marley, who might just do the job. He handed the group £4,000 to make an album back home – a low risk bet, but one many thought he would lose.

Bob Marley, Bunny Wailer and Peter Tosh were in a fix, stranded penniless in London after an ill-judged European venture with Johnny Nash – ludicrously, the Texan crooner was being hyped as ‘The King of Reggae’ – while Blackwell found himself drawn to the trio’s mix of cool and intensity. They had also arrived with perfect timing. The previous week Jimmy Cliff, who Blackwell trusted to break reggae into the mainstream, had walked out in frustration at his career stasis. The Harder They Come, the film destined to make Cliff a star, was endlessly delayed in JA ‘soon come’ mode. Now here were the Wailers, especially lead singer and songwriter, the charismatic Bob Marley, who might just do the job. He handed the group £4,000 to make an album back home – a low risk bet, but one many thought he would lose.

The doubters were proved wrong. The Wailers, seasoned veterans of Jamaica’s cut-throat music business, were both ambitious and industrious. They cut deals with studios, recruited gifted players, recycled old numbers and wrote new material. When Marley resurfaced in London with the results, Blackwell was impressed, though he knew more was needed to win over an audience for whom Island meant Traffic, Cat Stevens and Roxy Music. By the time he and Marley had recast the Jamaican tapes, both knew they had a masterpiece on their hands.

From the outset, Catch A Fire was a game-changer, an album that redefined reggae and startled a world that had paid scant attention to Jamaican music or the Wailers’ four previous albums. Its combination of militancy and love song, immaculate harmonies and razor-sharp playing was lethal. Nominally, the triumvirate of the Wailers were still its creators, yet with seven of its nine tracks composed and led by Marley, he became the group’s emblematic focal point.

The opening two tracks assured as much. Led in by a winding, bluesy guitar part by Wayne Perkins, a young Muscle Shoals session player who serendipitously happened to be in Island’s studios, “Concrete Jungle” cast a mood of urban darkness in which “life, sweet life” was nowhere to be found. The song’s title was the nickname for a new housing project in Kingston but could apply to any soulless metropolis. As devastating was “Catch A Fire” itself, with its evocation of slavery and transportation – not subjects much addressed in popular music (though the O’Jays’ “Ship Ahoy” would shortly surface), but one that would soon be commonplace in reggae. 

Tosh’s “400 Years” echoed the historical perspective while making a plea for “the youths of today” – as elsewhere, Jamaica was in the midst of a post-WW2 youth boom – and his belligerent, rumbling baritone was further present on “Stop That Train” with its protest that “some are living big, most is living small”. 

Bringing sweetness and light into the mix came the languorous, seductive love call of “Stir It Up”, a recycled JA hit from 1967 that had recently supplied a hit for Johnny Nash. Here it’s reclaimed for its creator, with the sweeping synth of ‘Rabbit’ Bundrick (then playing with Free) adding novelty and drama. “Baby We Got A Date” extended the romantic mood (most of Marley’s hits would be love songs) while “Kinky Reggae” supplied a rude counterpoint while also flying the flag for reggae itself.

“No More Trouble” and “Midnight Ravers” returned to darker strains, the former repeating the call for love (universal rather than romantic) against a brooding backdrop, while the latter added an almost apocalyptic flavour with visions of “ten thousand chariots” and “riders without faces” that might have been plucked from Revelation. 

The album was promoted cannily by Island, with a special show at London’s Speakeasy, the watering hole for elite rockerati, and 20,000 copies packaged in a lavish cover in the shape of a zippo lighter. Music aside, Catch A Fire marked the emergence of a self-contained reggae group that wrote, played and sang its own material and could tour it – a rock commonplace that was a necessity if the Wailers were to win a mainstream audience, white or black. Reggae’s musical economy, built on hit singles, sound systems and backing bands, was transformed, both in Jamaica and in the UK. The live material here, including previously unheard London performances, shows a fledgling outfit, rich in vocals and songs, and with an unfaltering rhythm section, but without the full sound that a couple of years later would help make Marley the third world’s first superstar.

EXTRAS 9/10: Available as a 3CD set or 3LP + 12”. Both sets include Live From The Paris Theatre London, and Sessions, plus three previously unreleased live tracks from the Sundown Theatre, Edmonton, London. There’s also a booklet with photos, liner notes by Chris Salewicz, press cuttings and more, and the 12” features an etched Zippo lighter.

Madness – Theatre Of The Absurd Presents C’est La Vie

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When Madness were growing up in north London, Camden Palace was a somewhat forlorn reminder of London’s once grand music halls, those proletariat venues that combined music, social commentary, satire and broad comedy. By the 1970s, Camden Palace was a live music venue – Suggs and Lee Thompson used to see shows by breaking in through the dome at the top of the building – but that original spirit of London music hall has always been present in the carnivalesque, slapstick, oversized songs of Madness, a debt made clear on their new record. Fittingly, Theatre Of The Absurd Presents C’Est La Vie will receive its live premiere at the Camden Palace – now known as Koko.

When Madness were growing up in north London, Camden Palace was a somewhat forlorn reminder of London’s once grand music halls, those proletariat venues that combined music, social commentary, satire and broad comedy. By the 1970s, Camden Palace was a live music venue – Suggs and Lee Thompson used to see shows by breaking in through the dome at the top of the building – but that original spirit of London music hall has always been present in the carnivalesque, slapstick, oversized songs of Madness, a debt made clear on their new record. Fittingly, Theatre Of The Absurd Presents C’Est La Vie will receive its live premiere at the Camden Palace – now known as Koko.

The desolate air of an empty music hall reflects another aspect of the Madness universe. There has always been a lot of melancholy in their music – although Suggs prefers to call it pathos – and these two elements, music hall and melancholy, combine to form a semi-concept album that, structurally, mirrors a Victorian melodrama. Between 14 songs, Martin Freeman delivers short snippets of spoken word – “Prologue”, “Act One” etc – to provide a sense of theatrical progression. It starts with Freeman referencing “Mr Beckett”, before Suggs takes over for his opening song, “Theatre Of The Absurd”, about the “cruellest comedy” in which “actors stumble on with masks but no real plot”.

The fusion of music hall and Samuel Beckett – Waiting For (Fred) Karno? – is the thread that holds together an album rife with unease and anxiety and occasionally feverish tomfoolery, a reflection of the fact many of the songs were written during lockdown. It was recorded in a lock-up in Cricklewood, originally a rehearsal space where they developed the material into a coherent album and then converted it into a studio.

Although the songs are written from multiple perspectives, they share a common mood – essentially life and its general absurdity. Some are intensely personal, such as Mike Barson’s “Hour Of Need”, which could be about insomnia, death or just general despair, or the more celebratory “In My Street”, on which Suggs lists some of the characters you can find in his neighbourhood – “a boxer, footballer, black cab driver, a gangster, a fraudster, a cheating conniver” like an updated “Our House” – although the musical reference to “Grey Day” hints at the darker undercurrent.

That’s a very London song, as one would expect from a band that have always embraced their native city. In many ways, Theatre Of The Absurd… resembles 2009’s The Liberty Of Norton Folgate and the capital is never far from the surface, whether it’s the reference to “some dark theatre in London” on “Theatre Of Absurd” or the mention of Hampstead Heath, Highgate Road and Highbury on Barson and Lee Thompson’s synth-pop epic “The Law According To Dr Kippah”. There’s deadpan humour too, of course. On Chris Foreman’s “Lockdown And Frack Off”, Suggs has a little chuckle at the line, “curtain twitch, get ready to snitch” as he recalls the lunacy of lockdown. Later, Foreman offers a double bill of “Run For Your Life” and “Set Me Free (Let Me Be)”, again digging into a sense of collective insanity and taking on all sides willy-nilly.

Musically, the most distinctive Madness traits are all present. “Lockdown And Frack Off” begins with a spidery sinister vibe that soon gives way to a steady skank, while Barson’s “C’est La Vie” has a classic Lee Thompson sax and ska-based rhythm, with hint of steel drums in the percussion. Suggs’s “If I Go Mad” has splendid Hammond from Barson, with a Suggs rap and relentless staccato rhythm from Dan “Woody” Woodgate. “Round We Go”, written by Woody, is sunny pop with a prominent piano and great Suggs lead vocal that would fit neatly on to 1980’s Absolutely. Comedy sound effects are present and correct, most notably on “If I Go Mad”, one of many Madness songs about sanity, where a member of the gang does a bad impression of a train. The woozy “What On Earth Is It (You Take Me For)?”, by Thompson and Chris Foreman, allows Thompson to deliver languid lead vocals.

The six members of the band are supported by backing singers, strings and a barking dog, and there are other musical innovations, such as the Grandmaster Flash references on the paranoid “What On Earth Is it (You Take Me For?)”, and the nods to Curtis Mayfield on apocalyptic stomper “Run For Your Life”. But the biggest spiritual influence is The Kinks, another band adept at exploring London’s darker undercurrents. On Theatre Of The Absurd…, Madness gleefully peer through the net curtains of life, revealing the moth-eaten carpets and peeling wallpaper obscured by the elaborate facades we all hide behind.

Uncut’s New Music Playlist for November 2023

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It may be miserable outside, but in terms of new music, the outlook is glorious. Perhaps you already saw us unveil comeback singles this week by The Smile, Julia Holter and Hurray For The Riff Raff? Well, there's plenty more where that came from.

It may be miserable outside, but in terms of new music, the outlook is glorious. Perhaps you already saw us unveil comeback singles this week by The Smile, Julia Holter and Hurray For The Riff Raff? Well, there’s plenty more where that came from.

Witness the return of Jane Weaver, Sheer Mag, Grandaddy and MGMT; new solo gear from Stereolab’s Laetitia Sadier and Dinosaur Jr’s J Mascis; unheard Suede and live Yo La Tengo; plus an unexpected hook-up between Sleaford Mods and Pole. And lots of other great stuff besides. Hunker down, turn it up…

LES AMAZONES D’AFRIQUE
“Kuma Fo (What They Say)”
(Real World)

LAETITIA SADIER
“Une Autre Attente”
(Duophonic Super 45s)

JANE WEAVER
“Love In Constant Spectacle”
(Fire)

MARY TIMONY
“Dominoes”
(Merge)

SHARON VAN ETTEN
“Close To You”
(Interscope)

SHEER MAG
“Playing Favorites”
(Third Man)

J MASCIS
“Can’t Believe We’re Here”
(Sub Pop)

YO LA TENGO
“Apology Letter (Bunker Session)”
(Matador)

SUEDE
“The Sadness In You, The Sadness In Me”
(BMG)

HARP
“Throne Of Amber”
(Bella Union)

GRANDADDY
“Watercooler”
(Dangerbird)

ANGELO DE AUGUSTINE
“Another Universe (Live)”
(Asthmatic Kitty)

CALIFONE
“Antenna Mountain Death Blanket”
(Jealous Butcher)

MARRY WATERSON & ADRIAN CROWLEY
“Undear Sphere”
(One Little Independent)

MGMT
“Mother Nature”
(Mom+Pop)

CARDINALS
“Roseland”
(So Young)

DEARY
“Sleepsong”
(Sonic Cathedral)

NUSANTARA BEAT
“Kota Bandung”
(Bongo Joe / Lamunai)

ULTRASONIC GRAND PRIX
“Seamoon Rising”
(Non Delux)

POLE
“Stechmück (Sleaford Mods Rework)”
(Mute)

BADBADNOTGOOD & CHARLOTTE DAY WILSON
“Sleeper”
(XL)

Introducing our deluxe Ultimate Music Guide to Depeche Mode

A fully-updated 148 page edition

A fully-updated 148 page edition

As the band tour the world for their first shows without founder member Andy Fletcher, we present the deluxe and fully-updated Ultimate Music Guide to Depeche Mode. Contains classic archive interviews, from the band’s earliest meetings with the music press to David Gahan’s full and frank discussions of his brushes with death. Every album is reviewed in-depth, from their charming pop debut Speak and Spell to the latest, and heaviest work, Memento Mori. It’s the band’s journey from synthpop to earth-shaking electronica; from Basildon to the world. The magazine also includes Martin L Gore’s exclusive introduction to the magazine from 2013. 

“We are survivors,” he told us then of the band’s emotional journey to the top. “We are passionate about music – I don’t think if you gave us a choice, there’s anything else we would rather do. Or could actually do. We’re like brothers. We know each other inside out…” 

Reach out and touch it here

The Smile reveal new album, Wall Of Eyes

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The Smile have announced details of their second studio album, Wall Of Eyes. You can watch a video for the title track below, which is directed by Paul Thomas Anderson.

The Smile have announced details of their second studio album, Wall Of Eyes. You can watch a video for the title track below, which is directed by Paul Thomas Anderson.

Wall Of Eyes is the successor to Uncut’s 2022 Album Of The Year, A Light For Attracting Attention. This latest from Thom Yorke, Jonny Greenwood and Tom Skinner is released by XL Recordings on January 26 and available to pre-order by clicking here.

The album, which was recorded between Oxford and Abbey Road Studios, is produced and mixed by previous collaborator Sam Petts-Davies and features string arrangements by the London Contemporary Orchestra.

The tracklisting for Wall Of Eyes is:

Wall Of Eyes

Teleharmonic

Read The Room

Under Our Pillows

Friend Of A Friend

I Quit

Bending Hectic 

You Know Me!

The band are also touring in 2024:

Thursday 7th March – Dublin – 3Arena

Wednesday 13th March – Copenhagen – K.B. Hallen

Friday 15th March – Brussels – Forest National

Saturday 16th March – Amsterdam – AFAS Live 

Monday 18th March – Brighton – Brighton Centre

Tuesday 19th March – Manchester – O2 Apollo 

Wednesday 20th March – Glasgow – SEC Armadillo

Friday 22nd March – Birmingham – O2 Academy

Saturday 23rd March – London – Alexandra Palace

Hear Hurray For The Riff Raff’s new track, “Alibi”

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Alynda Segarra - aka Hurray For The Riff Raff - has released a new track, "Alibi", taken from the forthcoming Riff Raff album, The Past Is Still Alive.

Alynda Segarra – aka Hurray For The Riff Raff – has released a new track, “Alibi“, taken from the forthcoming Riff Raff album, The Past Is Still Alive.

You can hear “Alibi” below.

The Past Is Still Alive is the follow-up to their 2022 album, Life On Earth, and is produced by Brad Cook, mixed by Mike Mogis and features contributions from Conor Oberst, Hand Habits’ Meg Duffy and more. The new album is released on February 23 by Nonesuch Records. You can pre-order by clicking here.

The Past Is Still Alive is an album grappling with time, memory, love and loss, recorded in Durham, NC a month after losing my Father,” says Segarra. “‘Alibi’ is a plea, a last-ditch effort to get through to someone you already know you’re gonna lose. It’s a song to myself, to my Father, almost fooling myself because I know what’s done is done. But it feels good to beg. A reckoning with time and memory. The song is exhausted with loving someone so much it hurts. Addiction separates us. With memories of the Lower East Side in the early 2000s of my childhood, mixed with imagery of the endless West that calls to artists and wanderers.”

The tracklisting for The Past Is Still Alive is:

Alive

Buffalo

Hawkmoon

Colossus of Roads

Snake Plant (The Past Is Still Alive)

Vetiver 

Hourglass

Dynamo

The World Is Dangerous

Ogallala

Kiko Forever

Hurray For the Riff Raff will also be touring:

November 12 – Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Folk Fest 

February 25 – New Orleans, LA – Tipitina’s* 

February 27 – Atlanta, GA – Masquerade (Hell Stage)*  

February 28 – Durham, NC – Motorco Music Hall*  

February 29 – Washington, DC – Atlantis*  

March 1 – Philadelphia, PA – Foundry*  

March 3 – Woodstock, NY – Levon Helm Studio*  

March 5 – Brooklyn, NY – Music Hall of Williamsburg*  

March 6 – Boston, MA – Sinclair*  

March 9 – Burlington, VT – Higher Ground*  

March 10 – Toronto, ON – Great Hall*  

March 12 – Columbus, OH – Skully’s*  

March 14 – Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall*  

March 15 – St Paul, MN – Amsterdam Bar & Hall*  

March 21-24 – Knoxville, TN – Big Ears Festival 

March 28 – Portland, OR – Aladdin Theater 

March 30 – Seattle, WA – Neumos 

April 1 – San Francisco, SF – August Hall 

April 2 – Sacramento, CA – Harlow’s 

April 4 – San Diego, CA – Voodoo Room 

April 5 – Los Angeles, CA – Belasco 

April 6 – Pioneertown, CA – Pappy & Harriet’s 

April 7 – Phoenix, AZ – Valley Bar 

April 9 – Salt Lake City, UT – Urban Lounge 

April 10 – Denver, CO – Larimer Lounge 

April 12 – Fort Worth, TX – Tulips 

April 13 – Austin, TX – 3TEN 

April 14 – Houston, TX – White Oak Music Hall 

May 10 – Dublin, IE – Button Factory 

May 11 – Manchester, UK – Deaf Institute 

May 12 – Glasgow, UK – Mono 

May 14 – Leeds, UK – Brudenell Social Club 

May 15 – Birmingham, UK – Castle & Falcon 

May 16 – Bristol, UK – Strange Brew 

May 17 – London, UK – Electric Brixton 

May 19 – Paris, FR – La Maroquinerie 

May 20 – Brussels, BE – Botanique 

May 21 – Amsterdam, NL – Tolhuistuin 

May 23 – Berlin, DE – Privatclub 

*with NNAMDÏ

A sneak peek at Uncut’s essential Review Of 2023

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The latest issue of Uncut is now available and features our essential albums, reissues, films and books from the last 12 months.

The latest issue of Uncut is now available and features our essential albums, reissues, films and books from the last 12 months.

Inside, you will find a host of brand new and exclusive interviews. Find out what makes a good collaborator for John Cale, discover Arooj Aftab‘s pre-show rituals and why Corinne Bailey Rae is “pushing boundaries”…

Paul Simon looks back on 2023 – a year of brilliant music and “emotional searching” – how he’s still writing and recording new material despite potentially devastating setbacks: “It’s kind of an obsession… a sickness!”

There are more exclusives, including Ray Davies on The Kinks‘ glorious 60th anniversary – and what the venerable singer-songwriter plans to do next: “A folk-rock musical about singing families.” Elsewhere, PJ Harvey allows us behind the scenes of the sessions for her latest studio album, I Inside The Old Year Dying.

Our free CD brings together 15 of the year’s best tracks, including The Coral, Lisa O’Neill, Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit, Yo La Tengo, Israel Nash, Teenage Fanclub and many more.

Meanwhile, Shirley Collins reveals all about sad songs, soot-filled trains and he famous sloe gin – “to be sipped carefully.”

There’s J Mascis and co on the story behind Dinosaur Jr.’s track, “Start Choppin’” – their tyrannosaurus-sized hit against the backdrop of grunge’s peak.

This month’s Album by Album features avant-jazz trio The Necks, who walk us through his path from their expansive debut to multi-layered latest record, Travel, while former Go-Between Robert Forster choses the albums that lit his candle.

At the heart of our Review Of The Year, of course, are our essential lists of the 75 Best Albums, 30 Best Archival Releases, 20 Best Films and 10 Best Books of 2023.

Dig in and let us know what you think… letters@uncut.co.uk

“Bob always follows his path…” an eyewitness account of Dylan in Japan

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This month, Uncut digs deep into Bob Dylan's transformative 1978 - his ground-breaking Japanese tour that yielded the At Budokan album. In an extended outtake from our cover story, TOSHIYUKI 'HECKEL' SUGANO - CBS/Sony product manager for Dylan in Japan at the time - and producer of the 1978 At Budokan LP and the new Complete Budokan, recalls how it came about...

This month, Uncut digs deep into Bob Dylan’s transformative 1978 – his ground-breaking Japanese tour that yielded the At Budokan album. In an extended outtake from our cover story, TOSHIYUKI ‘HECKEL’ SUGANO – CBS/Sony product manager for Dylan in Japan at the time – and producer of the 1978 At Budokan LP and the new Complete Budokan, recalls how it came about…

UNCUT: Was it your idea to record a Bob Dylan live album in Tokyo? What response did you get at first?

SUGANO: When I heard from the promoter that Bob Dylan’s Japan dates were set in the fall of 1977, I immediately told my boss at CBS/Sony, Hiroshi Kanai, of my interest in making a live album. He started negotiating, and by the beginning of 1978, we obtained approval from Columbia Records in the U.S. and the Japanese promoter, pending Bob Dylan’s visit to Japan for the final decision.

Some of the band members told me they didn’t know they would be recording a live album until after they had already arrived in Japan. When did Dylan agree – when did you know for sure that the project would be going ahead?

SUGANO: On February 17, 1978, Bob Dylan arrived at Haneda Airport in Japan, and on the next day, February 18, the green light was lit to record a live album at the Budokan. Subsequently, it was decided to record the Tokyo concerts on February 28, March 1, and March 2, following his Osaka dates, allowing ample time to prepare recording equipment.

Were you at the airport when Dylan arrived? Can you describe the scene, the kind of response he received?

SUGANO: On February 17, 1978, when I arrived at Haneda Airport to welcome Dylan, media reporters flooded the area, causing a frenzy that is captured in a photo featured in The Complete Budokan booklet. The following day, headlines about Bob Dylan’s first visit to Japan made the front page news of numerous papers. CBS/Sony organized a press conference at the Haneda Tokyu Hotel right next to the airport, where I met Bob in person for the first time. As we exchanged greetings, I introduced myself and expressed my longtime admiration for his music. I distinctly remember the happy expression on Bob’s face as we shook hands.

You had been a Dylan fan for many years – when did you first see him live? What do you remember most about watching him perform live for the first time?

SUGANO: My first live Bob Dylan show was at Chicago Stadium on January 3, 1974, from his first extensive U.S. tour since 1966 with The Band. Uncertain whether I’d ever have a chance to see him live in Japan, I decided to travel to the U.S. But the twist was that Bob had just parted ways with Columbia Records in the fall of ’73, signed up with David Geffen’s Asylum Records, and released Planet Waves. As an employee of CBS/Sony, I took a month-long leave of absence and embarked on a personal tour across the U.S. to attend Dylan’s shows. I saw nine concerts in Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston, and New York. Since getting a hold of tickets from Japan back then, before the days of the internet, posed a challenge, I headed to Chicago without securing any tickets in advance. The opening song at Chicago Stadium puzzled me; as a self-proclaimed enthusiastic Dylan fan, I found it unrecognizable, and so did the rest of the crowd at the venue. It turned out to be the lesser-known “Hero Blues”.

How were you struck by the sound and style of the band Dylan had when he arrived in Japan in 1978? It was very different from previous Dylan shows. Were you surprised?

SUGANO: It came as quite a shock. Because the band, complete with a female chorus, performed new arrangements of well-known songs that were not immediately recognizable. In Japan, Dylan was revered as a “folk god,” and his image with an acoustic guitar was deeply ingrained. To my surprise, he never reached for an acoustic guitar during the Japan tour. Not once.

I think you only had two days of recording at Budokan. Were you able to enjoy the shows? Or were you too focused on the technical aspects of capturing the recording? What was the most difficult aspect of recording?

SUGANO: Initially, we had the approval to record for three days, but after two days, Bob said he was content with all his performances and didn’t need to record the third day. So we recorded only two days. I was at all the afternoon sound checks and watched the entire concert from the side of the stage. After each performance, Bob would approach me and ask, “How was the sound? How was the crowd’s reaction?” Despite having purchased tickets for every show during the Japan tour, I never had the chance to sit in the audience to enjoy the performance. On the recording day, I entrusted the technical aspects to Tom Suzuki, hoping everything would go smoothly and the entire concert would be captured flawlessly on tape.

Was there any video or film footage recorded?

SUGANO: NHK (Japanese public broadcaster) recorded the first three songs (“Lonesome Bedroom”, “Mr. Tambourine Man” and “I Threw It All Away”) from the February 20 concert on 16mm film. Portions of this footage were featured in their TV program Bob Dylan is Coming To Japan. Unfortunately, no other footage has survived.

This was Dylan’s first visit to Japan. Do you recall him exploring the country and the culture between the shows?

SUGANO: I have little insight into his off-stage activities. According to the promoter, he occasionally went to Shinjuku and Harajuku. However, during the Osaka show, Dylan and his entourage visited Kyoto for sightseeing. I had the privilege of accompanying Bob on this excursion, allowing me to witness his deep admiration for the stone garden at Ryoanji Temple and his genuine enjoyment of Japanese cuisine at a local restaurant. In a short note he wrote for the original Budokan, Bob expressed his thoughts about this experience.

How did you go about compiling the original At Budokan LP? How did you decide which songs and which recordings to use? What did you want to capture on the record?

SUGANO: Deciding on the songs and their order for the double LP, our plan from the beginning, posed a challenge. I aimed to capture the essence of the live performance on record faithfully. While conventional LP records usually accommodated a maximum of 20 minutes per side, I persuaded the engineer to push that limit, capturing nearly 30 minutes on each side. The song sequence differed from the actual concerts to fit each side’s recording length. To our regret, there were songs we couldn’t include, leading to the creation now of The Complete Budokan. I aimed to craft a compelling album where Bob’s vocals penetrated through, drawing inspiration from his impactful live album Hard Rain, released in 1977.

There’s a great photograph that you took of Dylan in Los Angeles, when you went to meet him there with the test pressings and proposed art mockups for At Budokan in June 1978. Were you nervous? Did Dylan say much to you about the record, the art, or anything else?

SUGANO: I was told in advance that Bob would personally review the test pressings and artwork to decide on the record’s release. I handed the test pressing and two art mockups to Dylan’s secretary on the first day of the LA concert, June 1. On the afternoon of June 7, the final day of the LA concert, his secretary called me and told me to come backstage for Bob’s response. Though I was confident in a positive outcome, there was still a lingering fear of rejection. Anxiously, I waited backstage at a large table in the open air. Eventually, Bob arrived, sat across from me, and almost simultaneously said, “Good album. When is it coming out?” At that moment, my heart leaped with joy.  All my anxiety went away, allowing me to approach him in a relaxed manner. Bob had just completed his new album, Street Legal, and was concerned about the release date of Budokan. So, we agreed to release it in November. He didn’t provide specific requests for the content and promptly chose a close-up profile photo for the cover. During our conversation, Bob asked if I had seen his new studio. Unaware that he had built a Rundown Studio in Santa Monica, I regretted not asking him to show it to me because, in retrospect, he might have said yes. However, I asked if I could take pictures of him with my cheap camera, and he agreed. That photo is featured in The Complete Budokan. Interestingly, after I took my picture of Bob, Bob used the same camera to capture my face.

Did you attend any of those shows in Los Angeles on that trip? If so, how do you remember those? And how would you describe the difference between the American rock audiences and the audiences who watched Dylan in Japan?

SUGANO: I attended all seven shows from June 1 to 7 during the entire run. Jerry Scheff took over the bass seat, and there were changes in the chorus lineup. While the concert’s basic structure remained unchanged, the setlist changed. New additions like “Baby, Stop Crying” and “Senor”, along with well-known tracks such as “Tangled Up In Blue”, were included. Contrasting the tense atmosphere at the Budokan, where the attentive audience hung on to every single word of Bob’s songs, the atmosphere at the outdoor theater near Universal Studios was very relaxed. The concerts started at dusk, and the laid-back vibe was palpable. Some enthusiastic fans even danced in the back rows, which I found quintessentially L.A.

What did you think when you listened to the tapes for this expanded Complete Budokan? Does this new edition tell us anything more about those shows?

SUGANO: Astonishingly, this recording dates back 45 years, and the sound quality remains outstanding. I must thank the warehouse managers at CBS/Sony for preserving these recordings. Special thanks also go to Tetsuya Shiroki, the current product manager for Dylan at Sony Music, who tirelessly negotiated with Dylan’s team to realize my dream.

In creating The Complete Budokan, I wanted to share the thrill of that day’s concert at the Budokan with as many people as possible. Therefore, I chose to preserve the show exactly as it was, without adding anything to or removing anything from the remaining tapes. Bob’s vocals resonate through the audience as they must have moved many then. We are confident that we captured ‘Bob as he was that day.’ We crafted the artwork to capture Bob’s sentiments about Japan, including the jacket design, booklet and memorabilia, inspiring a generation that couldn’t witness what he was like 45 years ago. Bob’s 1978 world tour, which kicked off in Japan in February and continued through December, stirred controversy in various ways. The presence of a large band with a chorus, musicians donning beautiful stage costumes, and the incorporation of bold arrangements featuring trendy reggae rhythms led some to label Dylan as a showbiz artist. However, having witnessed Bob perform in over 300 concerts across different eras, including the recent Rough And Rowdy Ways tour, I firmly believe that Bob always follows his path and does what he truly wants to do. He is more than an entertainer; he is an artist and a creator. In his illustrious 60-year career, his 1978 tour is a pivotal moment. The Complete Budokan remains the only album that fully encapsulates that period of his life, and we take great pride in its release.

The Complete Budokan is released by Columbia Records and Legacy Recordings on November 17

Vote! The Beatles’ Red vs Blue albums

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It’s 50 years since the “Red” (1962 – 1966) and “Blue” (1967 – 1970) compilations were released. Much-loved ever since, their mix of hit singles and favourite album tracks distilled The Beatles’ career into eight sides of singalong joy.

It’s 50 years since the “Red” (1962 – 1966) and “Blue” (1967 – 1970) compilations were released. Much-loved ever since, their mix of hit singles and favourite album tracks distilled The Beatles’ career into eight sides of singalong joy.

To coincide with the release of “Now And Then” – “the last Beatles song” – the “Red” and “Blue” albums are being reissued in remastered and expanded form.

CLICK HERE TO BUY THE BEATLES – A LIFE IN PICTURES

For our poll, we want you to tell us which one is your favourite.

Red” – which majored in moptop-shakers and swooning ballads?

Or “Blue”, which brought together the band’s long-haired, mature work?

The Beatles 1962 – 1966 and The Beatles 1967 – 1970 (2023 editions) are released on November 10, 2023 via Apple/UMR

Hear Julia Holter’s first new music for five years

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Julia Holter has released "Sun Girl" - her first new music for five years. You can hear the track. below.

Julia Holter has released “Sun Girl” – her first new music for five years. You can hear the track. below.

ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and The Review Of 2023 star in the latest UNCUT

“Sun Girl” follows Holter’s 2018 album Aviary and is accompanied by a video by the artist and animator Tammy Nguyễn.

Holter’s Have You In My Wilderness was Uncut’s Album Of The Year in 2015.

“Sun Girl” is available from Domino.

Introducing Life In Pictures: The Beatles

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It’s now 60 years since the word “Beatlemania” entered the world’s vocabulary. In the UK the phenomenon bursts when John Lennon instructs Elizabeth the Queen Mother and other affluent attendees to rattle their jewellery at the Royal Variety Performance in October 1963. In the USA, it breaks when Capitol is forced to rush-release “I Want To Hold Your Hand” in December, after it’s played on a radio station in Washington DC.

It’s now 60 years since the word “Beatlemania” entered the world’s vocabulary. In the UK the phenomenon bursts when John Lennon instructs Elizabeth the Queen Mother and other affluent attendees to rattle their jewellery at the Royal Variety Performance in October 1963. In the USA, it breaks when Capitol is forced to rush-release “I Want To Hold Your Hand” in December, after it’s played on a radio station in Washington DC.

Those might be the facts of the news events, as newspapermen and TV stations try to get across an unprecedented phenomenon – but the sheer joy of that moment in time is something which The Beatles have continued to bring us down the decades since. 

The fresh selection of pictures in our latest publication gives a flavour of that enduring appeal. The group’s music was remarkable for its rate of change, and so were the band themselves, taking on new influences, new hairstyles, and whole new outlooks. What didn’t change was the band’s essential personality – throughout nearly all their career, they remained as charismatic, intelligent and playful as they were at the start.

A day in the life? This is the life of The Beatles, in 100 pages. From their residencies at disreputable Hamburg clubs, to recording their hits, charming a whole new medium – television – and conquering America, The Beatles: A Life In Pictures brings you closer to John, Paul, George and Ringo. On each spread here, you’ll also find instructive remarks from The Beatles themselves and their associates, selected from the archives of NME, Melody Maker and Uncut.

Step right this way to get your copy