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Sinéad O’Connor joins Sinn Féin

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Singer calls for Sinn Féin leadership to step down... Sinéad O'Connor has announced she has joined Sinn Féin and has called on Gerry Adams and other veteran republicans to step down from the party’s leadership. The BBC reports that on December 7 O'Connor wrote on her blog: "I’m joining Sinn Fein now. If they’ll have me. Just as a regular punter who wants to learn and contribute with whatever strengths I might have or learn. I’d like to see a proper socialist Ireland. I’d like to be educated as to how ordinary people like me can help bring about the changes which would make every child equally cherished and make everyone have equal rights. I realised the best way to revolt is vote. And the only vote that’s gonna give anyone a chance of bringing to fruition paragraphs three and four of the Proclamation of 1916 is Sinn Fein, because no other party at the moment is going to honour that Proclamation. If they were inclined to honour it they’d just hand over and say lets have an election." A day later, she wrote on Facebook, "I joined Sinn Fein today. I might not even be the kind of person they want, because I'm gonna write here that I feel the elders of Sinn Fein are going to have to make 'the supreme sacrifice' and step down shortly in the same way the last Pope did. It was the smart thing for him to do because his association in people's minds with frightful things meant the church were losing bums on seats, if I may use a showbiz term. And now they have barely a seat to spare. Pure cold business. There'd be a zillion per cent increase in membership of Sinn Fein if the leadership were handed over to those born from 1983/1985 onward and no one associated in people's minds with frightful things. Frightful things belong where they are now, in the past."

Singer calls for Sinn Féin leadership to step down…

Sinéad O’Connor has announced she has joined Sinn Féin and has called on Gerry Adams and other veteran republicans to step down from the party’s leadership.

The BBC reports that on December 7 O’Connor wrote on her blog: “I’m joining Sinn Fein now. If they’ll have me. Just as a regular punter who wants to learn and contribute with whatever strengths I might have or learn. I’d like to see a proper socialist Ireland. I’d like to be educated as to how ordinary people like me can help bring about the changes which would make every child equally cherished and make everyone have equal rights. I realised the best way to revolt is vote. And the only vote that’s gonna give anyone a chance of bringing to fruition paragraphs three and four of the Proclamation of 1916 is Sinn Fein, because no other party at the moment is going to honour that Proclamation. If they were inclined to honour it they’d just hand over and say lets have an election.”

A day later, she wrote on Facebook, “I joined Sinn Fein today. I might not even be the kind of person they want, because I’m gonna write here that I feel the elders of Sinn Fein are going to have to make ‘the supreme sacrifice’ and step down shortly in the same way the last Pope did. It was the smart thing for him to do because his association in people’s minds with frightful things meant the church were losing bums on seats, if I may use a showbiz term. And now they have barely a seat to spare. Pure cold business. There’d be a zillion per cent increase in membership of Sinn Fein if the leadership were handed over to those born from 1983/1985 onward and no one associated in people’s minds with frightful things. Frightful things belong where they are now, in the past.”

Andrew Loog Oldham criticizes David Bowie’s new material: “Old people make old music”

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Former Rolling Stones manager also criticises Jools Holland in outspoken interview... Andrew Loog Oldham has compared David Bowie's new material to "the worst of Scott Walker" and criticised Jools Holland in an outspoken new interview. Loog Oldham, the former manager of The Rolling Stones, spoke to The Sabotage Times in a long interview which covers subjects including the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame to his love of BBC TV drama Peaky Blinders. However, it is when asked what he thinks of modern music that he is most harsh, specifically towards Later... presenter Jools Holland. "I was watching that great music show hosted by that awful Jools Holland," he said. "They really should inject his hands with cocaine so that he cannot play piano any more. I’ve watched him walk all over Bill Medley, Amy Winehouse, Paul Weller. I'm sure he went to the Russ Conway piano school….. Anyway, Later With Jools Holland, that's the show and a very good show it is apart from Jools (who looks like Bernard Cribbins in pimp gear)." Despite his opinions on the host, one band caught Loog Oldham's eye. "There was this band from Chicago – The Orwells – very, very good apart from the drummer. But great chops and a great figure. I was getting excited. Then they came on later in the show and showed they only had one song. Not enough, kiddies, not enough." He was similarly critical of Bowie. "I just heard the new Bowie single; he seems to be cloning the worst of Scott Walker. As I’ve said old people make old music." Photo credit: David Livingston/Getty Images Entertainment

Former Rolling Stones manager also criticises Jools Holland in outspoken interview…

Andrew Loog Oldham has compared David Bowie‘s new material to “the worst of Scott Walker” and criticised Jools Holland in an outspoken new interview.

Loog Oldham, the former manager of The Rolling Stones, spoke to The Sabotage Times in a long interview which covers subjects including the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame to his love of BBC TV drama Peaky Blinders. However, it is when asked what he thinks of modern music that he is most harsh, specifically towards Later… presenter Jools Holland.

“I was watching that great music show hosted by that awful Jools Holland,” he said. “They really should inject his hands with cocaine so that he cannot play piano any more. I’ve watched him walk all over Bill Medley, Amy Winehouse, Paul Weller. I’m sure he went to the Russ Conway piano school….. Anyway, Later With Jools Holland, that’s the show and a very good show it is apart from Jools (who looks like Bernard Cribbins in pimp gear).”

Despite his opinions on the host, one band caught Loog Oldham’s eye. “There was this band from Chicago – The Orwells – very, very good apart from the drummer. But great chops and a great figure. I was getting excited. Then they came on later in the show and showed they only had one song. Not enough, kiddies, not enough.”

He was similarly critical of Bowie. “I just heard the new Bowie single; he seems to be cloning the worst of Scott Walker. As I’ve said old people make old music.”

Photo credit: David Livingston/Getty Images Entertainment

Morrissey reveals he has written new album and “hopes to record in February”

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Singer revealed news on Serbian website... Morrissey has revealed that he has written his new album and will be recording it next year. In an interview with Serbia's B92 (via Morrissey-solo), the singer said: "We wrote a new album and I hope that we will record it in February." The news follows a year beset by label issues for Morrissey. World Peace Is None Of Your Business, the singer's first studio album in five years, was released in July of this year on Harvest Records. By August, however, Morrissey claimed the label had dropped him and complained about them botching the release. Soon after, Harvest pulled the record from all digital retailers and streaming services. Earlier today, Morrissey also claimed that he turned down an invitation from Channel 4 to record this year's alternative to The Queen's annual Christmas Day message. However, a spokesperson for Channel 4 has confirmed to NME that the station has extended no such offer. "We are not aware of any approach having been made to Morrissey to deliver Channel 4’s Alternative Christmas message," the spokesperson said in a statement. Meanwhile, Morrissey's European tour has been met with further setbacks after the singer was forced to cancel dates in Greece and Turkey this week. Previously, his gig in Germany was ended shortly after a stage invasion and he walked off stage during his Poland show after being heckled by a fan.

Singer revealed news on Serbian website…

Morrissey has revealed that he has written his new album and will be recording it next year.

In an interview with Serbia’s B92 (via Morrissey-solo), the singer said: “We wrote a new album and I hope that we will record it in February.”

The news follows a year beset by label issues for Morrissey. World Peace Is None Of Your Business, the singer’s first studio album in five years, was released in July of this year on Harvest Records. By August, however, Morrissey claimed the label had dropped him and complained about them botching the release. Soon after, Harvest pulled the record from all digital retailers and streaming services.

Earlier today, Morrissey also claimed that he turned down an invitation from Channel 4 to record this year’s alternative to The Queen‘s annual Christmas Day message.

However, a spokesperson for Channel 4 has confirmed to NME that the station has extended no such offer. “We are not aware of any approach having been made to Morrissey to deliver Channel 4’s Alternative Christmas message,” the spokesperson said in a statement.

Meanwhile, Morrissey’s European tour has been met with further setbacks after the singer was forced to cancel dates in Greece and Turkey this week. Previously, his gig in Germany was ended shortly after a stage invasion and he walked off stage during his Poland show after being heckled by a fan.

Bob Dylan announces new studio album, Shadows In The Night

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Ten tracks due in February 2015... Bob Dylan will release his new studio album, Shadows In The Night, on February 2, 2015. Featuring ten tracks of Frank Sinatra covers, the album is the 36th studio set from Bob Dylan and marks the first new music from the artist since 2012’s Tempest. Dylan commented, “It was a real privilege to make this album. I've wanted to do something like this for a long time but was never brave enough to approach 30-piece complicated arrangements and refine them down for a 5-piece band. That's the key to all these performances. We knew these songs extremely well. It was all done live. Maybe one or two takes. No overdubbing. No vocal booths. No headphones. No separate tracking, and, for the most part, mixed as it was recorded. I don't see myself as covering these songs in any way. They've been covered enough. Buried, as a matter a fact. What me and my band are basically doing is uncovering them. Lifting them out of the grave and bringing them into the light of day.” As Columba Records Chairman Rob Stringer explains, “There are no strings, obvious horns, background vocals or other such devices often found on albums that feature standard ballads. Instead, Bob has managed to find a way to infuse these songs with new life and contemporary relevance. It is a brilliant record and we are extremely excited to be presenting it to the world very soon.” When Dylan released his version of "Full Moon And Empty Arms" in May this year, Uncut speculated we might be in for an album of Sinatra covers. The tracklisting for Shadows In The Night is: 1. I'm A Fool To Want You 2. The Night We Called It A Day 3. Stay With Me 4. Autumn Leaves 5. Why Try to Change Me Now 6. Some Enchanted Evening 7. Full Moon And Empty Arms 8. Where Are You? 9. What'll I Do 10. That Lucky Old Sun

Ten tracks due in February 2015…

Bob Dylan will release his new studio album, Shadows In The Night, on February 2, 2015. Featuring ten tracks of Frank Sinatra covers, the album is the 36th studio set from Bob Dylan and marks the first new music from the artist since 2012’s Tempest.

Dylan commented, “It was a real privilege to make this album. I’ve wanted to do something like this for a long time but was never brave enough to approach 30-piece complicated arrangements and refine them down for a 5-piece band. That’s the key to all these performances. We knew these songs extremely well. It was all done live. Maybe one or two takes. No overdubbing. No vocal booths. No headphones. No separate tracking, and, for the most part, mixed as it was recorded. I don’t see myself as covering these songs in any way. They’ve been covered enough. Buried, as a matter a fact. What me and my band are basically doing is uncovering them. Lifting them out of the grave and bringing them into the light of day.”

As Columba Records Chairman Rob Stringer explains, “There are no strings, obvious horns, background vocals or other such devices often found on albums that feature standard ballads. Instead, Bob has managed to find a way to infuse these songs with new life and contemporary relevance. It is a brilliant record and we are extremely excited to be presenting it to the world very soon.”

When Dylan released his version of “Full Moon And Empty Arms” in May this year, Uncut speculated we might be in for an album of Sinatra covers.

The tracklisting for Shadows In The Night is:

1. I’m A Fool To Want You

2. The Night We Called It A Day

3. Stay With Me

4. Autumn Leaves

5. Why Try to Change Me Now

6. Some Enchanted Evening

7. Full Moon And Empty Arms

8. Where Are You?

9. What’ll I Do

10. That Lucky Old Sun

Joanna Newsom, Jonny Greenwood and Neil Young: Paul Thomas Anderson’s Inherent Vice previewed

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Interesting news last week in the Los Angeles Times, which reported that the Los Angeles apartment occupied by Elliot Gould’s Philip Marlowe in Robert Altman's great 1973 film The Long Goodbye is now available for rent. One bedroom, one bathroom, private parking, hardwood floors and a terrace, with access via a private elevator, it can be yours for around £1,790 a month. Serendipitously, Altman’s The Long Goodbye has been rattling round my head for a few weeks now, since I saw Paul Thomas Anderson’s new film, Inherent Vice. Adapted from a Raymond Chandler novel, Altman’s The Long Goodbye highlighted the difference between the hardboiled detective genre and California in the permissive Seventies. It’s the same location and decade that Anderson lovingly recreates for Inherent Vice: a crazy, out-of-whack principality where the funky hippie vibes of the previous decade have been replaced by Nixon, Manson, Vietnam, urban riots and assassinations. Anxiety and remorse are the principal emotions. There’s a sticky, faintly claustrophobic tone to the film, with its talk of “karmic thermals” and heroin addicts, midday naps and shapeless days. As one character says in voiceover, "American life was something to be escaped from.” Incidentally, Anderson’s film is based on a Thomas Pynchon novel, and the director battles (successfully, for the most part) to do justice to the author’s fizz of ideas and twisty, often exasperating subplots. In the middle of all this is muttonchopped private eye Larry "Doc" Sportello (Joaquin Phoenix), sporting what look conspicuously like a succession of Neil Young’s cast offs from the Buffalo Springfield days. Sportello is a man of professional bravado but personal confusion: befuddled by weed, his love life is in freefall. After having sat through Phoenix shouting his way through Anderson’s previous film, The Master, it’s quite pleasant to watch him mumble his way through Inherent Vice. He reminds me a little of Robert De Niro in Jackie Brown, who did great stoned acting in the background of a scene, where he spent about five minutes trying unsuccessfully to recradle a telephone receiver. Here, Phoenix has the slow, disassociative reactions of the perpetually wasted. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZfs22E7JmI Sportello is engaged by his ex girlfriend, Shasta (Katherine Waterston), who is having an affair with property developer Mickey Wolfmann (Eric Roberts); Shasta and Mickey promptly disappear; meanwhile, in a separate storyline, Sportello is engaged to find a missing husband, played by Owen Wilson who admirably out-acts Phoenix in the stoned stakes. What follows includes neo-Nazis, a shadowy cabal of dentists, anti-Communist subversives, teenage runaways and many more splendid examples of the counter culture at its strung-out and goofiest. Around Phoenix, Anderson has assembled an excellent supporting cast: Benicio Del Toro, Reece Witherspoon and Martin Short. The best work is done by Josh Brolin, modeling a spectacularly officious flattop, as Sportello’s nemesis on the LAPD - and also Joanna Newsom, who is terrific as Sortilège, a wise-owl astrologer friend of Sportello and Shasta who also deliver the film’s voiceover. It's gratifying to learn earlier today, by the way, that Newsom is at work on new material. Meanwhile, Jonny Greenwood, a regular Anderson collaborator, provides the film’s soundtrack: a beguiling mix of his own compositions (check out the loose, burbling rhythms of “Shasta Fey”) alongside Can and Neil Young. Indeed, Young’s “Journey Through The Past” is critical to the film. Anderson uses it principally to soundtrack flashbacks of Sportello and Shasta in happier times. But it also serves to articulate a deeper subtext at work in Pynchon’s novel; the sadness of lost potential. Pynchon seems to suggest that “the ancient forces of greed and fear” at work in today’s world have their roots in California during the period the film is set in. It’s one of Pynchon’s many, wonderfully digressive thoughts; using the cultural detritus generated by the era to consider bigger things. “Eggs break, chocolate melts, glass shatters,” says Del Toro’s character, a marine lawyer, as he explains the legal term that gave both the book and film its title. Namely: everything falls apart, even the times in which we live. Inherent Vice opens in the UK on January 30

Interesting news last week in the Los Angeles Times, which reported that the Los Angeles apartment occupied by Elliot Gould’s Philip Marlowe in Robert Altman’s great 1973 film The Long Goodbye is now available for rent. One bedroom, one bathroom, private parking, hardwood floors and a terrace, with access via a private elevator, it can be yours for around £1,790 a month. Serendipitously, Altman’s The Long Goodbye has been rattling round my head for a few weeks now, since I saw Paul Thomas Anderson’s new film, Inherent Vice.

Adapted from a Raymond Chandler novel, Altman’s The Long Goodbye highlighted the difference between the hardboiled detective genre and California in the permissive Seventies. It’s the same location and decade that Anderson lovingly recreates for Inherent Vice: a crazy, out-of-whack principality where the funky hippie vibes of the previous decade have been replaced by Nixon, Manson, Vietnam, urban riots and assassinations. Anxiety and remorse are the principal emotions. There’s a sticky, faintly claustrophobic tone to the film, with its talk of “karmic thermals” and heroin addicts, midday naps and shapeless days. As one character says in voiceover, “American life was something to be escaped from.” Incidentally, Anderson’s film is based on a Thomas Pynchon novel, and the director battles (successfully, for the most part) to do justice to the author’s fizz of ideas and twisty, often exasperating subplots.

In the middle of all this is muttonchopped private eye Larry “Doc” Sportello (Joaquin Phoenix), sporting what look conspicuously like a succession of Neil Young’s cast offs from the Buffalo Springfield days. Sportello is a man of professional bravado but personal confusion: befuddled by weed, his love life is in freefall. After having sat through Phoenix shouting his way through Anderson’s previous film, The Master, it’s quite pleasant to watch him mumble his way through Inherent Vice. He reminds me a little of Robert De Niro in Jackie Brown, who did great stoned acting in the background of a scene, where he spent about five minutes trying unsuccessfully to recradle a telephone receiver. Here, Phoenix has the slow, disassociative reactions of the perpetually wasted.

Sportello is engaged by his ex girlfriend, Shasta (Katherine Waterston), who is having an affair with property developer Mickey Wolfmann (Eric Roberts); Shasta and Mickey promptly disappear; meanwhile, in a separate storyline, Sportello is engaged to find a missing husband, played by Owen Wilson who admirably out-acts Phoenix in the stoned stakes. What follows includes neo-Nazis, a shadowy cabal of dentists, anti-Communist subversives, teenage runaways and many more splendid examples of the counter culture at its strung-out and goofiest. Around Phoenix, Anderson has assembled an excellent supporting cast: Benicio Del Toro, Reece Witherspoon and Martin Short. The best work is done by Josh Brolin, modeling a spectacularly officious flattop, as Sportello’s nemesis on the LAPD – and also Joanna Newsom, who is terrific as Sortilège, a wise-owl astrologer friend of Sportello and Shasta who also deliver the film’s voiceover. It’s gratifying to learn earlier today, by the way, that Newsom is at work on new material. Meanwhile, Jonny Greenwood, a regular Anderson collaborator, provides the film’s soundtrack: a beguiling mix of his own compositions (check out the loose, burbling rhythms of “Shasta Fey”) alongside Can and Neil Young.

Indeed, Young’s “Journey Through The Past” is critical to the film. Anderson uses it principally to soundtrack flashbacks of Sportello and Shasta in happier times. But it also serves to articulate a deeper subtext at work in Pynchon’s novel; the sadness of lost potential. Pynchon seems to suggest that “the ancient forces of greed and fear” at work in today’s world have their roots in California during the period the film is set in. It’s one of Pynchon’s many, wonderfully digressive thoughts; using the cultural detritus generated by the era to consider bigger things. “Eggs break, chocolate melts, glass shatters,” says Del Toro’s character, a marine lawyer, as he explains the legal term that gave both the book and film its title. Namely: everything falls apart, even the times in which we live.

Inherent Vice opens in the UK on January 30

Sleater-Kinney – Start Together

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Trio’s war against definition / explanation, compiled... After forming in 1994, Sleater-Kinney spent most of the ‘90s trying to ensure their ascendant profile remained connected to their origins. “We are coming from somewhere, we’re not just an isolated entity without a context or a background,” said Carrie Brownstein, one of their two singers and guitarists. Her counterpart Corin Tucker could pinpoint where exactly: Valentine’s Day 1991, when, aged 18, she saw Bikini Kill at Olympia, WA’s North Shore Surf Club. “It was the first time I’d seen feminism translated into an emotional language,” she told Greil Marcus. “…You had the feeling they had started the week before and that you can do it too – stand up and speak in the town square, even if you have to create the town square yourself.” But by the time Sleater-Kinney recorded what their final album, 2005’s The Woods, they were trying to smash their town square, bristling against complacency and the limiting descriptors that trailed them: ‘feminist’, ‘punk’, ‘riot grrrl’, ‘political’. Having made all but one of their previous records with John Goodmanson in Seattle, the Pacific Northwest trio (Quasi drummer Janet Weiss joined in 1997) ventured cross-country to Dave Fridmann’s New York State studio and said they wanted to halve their audience. “We’re sick of people feeling they know who we are and what we’re capable of,” Brownstein told Eddie Vedder. “I remember thinking … I’d really love to make some of our fans angry.” It was an energy they had tapped into while supporting Pearl Jam at the beginning of the Iraq war. Sleater-Kinney’s own gigs were an echo chamber for anti-Bush rhetoric. Here they met 10,000 booing patriots whose indifference spurred them on to make an earth-razing record: a flood of stinging, Zep-indebted sludge populated by desperate characters clinging to hope in a crumbling world order. Their first for Sub Pop after leaving Kill Rock Stars, The Woods was acclaimed but divisive, letting them exit as a band apart when they declared a hiatus in 2006. Eight years later, this box collects Sleater-Kinney’s seven LPs, remastered by Greg Calbi (amplifying the bottom end in the absence of a bassist) and accompanied by a photo book. No liner notes, b-sides, rarities, demos. Sleater-Kinney were constantly asked to defend the legitimacy of their voice by critics and scene forbears who thought they’d sold out. This reissue does not ask for permission, eschewing context to let their catalogue stand as its own defiant rock monolith. As it should: while they’ve no agreed-upon classic, rarely has a band released this many records without faltering. Sleater-Kinney’s success (selling 100,000 copies per record by their conclusion) was often interpreted as transcending the limitations of being “women in rock”. In reality, their triumphant existence was a direct result of their lived experience: on 1995’s savage-but-hooky self-titled debut, Tucker and Brownstein turned society’s desire to marginalise women into a threat (“I’ll show you how it feels to be dead”). By Call The Doctor the following year, they were celebrating their own presence, singing “I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone” – pop-punk-meets-‘60s girlband-isms that maligned and celebrated rock cliché while laying bare their ambition. Sleater-Kinney were chops-proud rockists, which is how they convinced traditionalists (from Jack White to Greil Marcus, who declared them America’s best rock band) that they were getting rock on their own terms. But, as Tucker explained, “You can love rock’n’roll and be enraged by it.” 1997’s Dig Me Out celebrated the genre’s transformative potential while the more downbeat The Hot Rock (produced by Roger Moutenot) castigated the major label industry that wanted to mould them. After Woodstock ’99, with its gang-rapes and resurgence of main stage meat-heads, Sleater-Kinney swore off rock’s chauvinist pantomime with 2000’s All Hands On The Bad One. Ashamed of the peers’ reluctance to criticize Bush after 9/11, 2002’s One Beat documented new mother Tucker’s terror at almost losing her premature baby while “the world [exploded] in flames”. Sleater-Kinney’s story is of a band losing faith in humankind, god, country, even music, but making it their fight. By succeeding on their own terms – never ceding control or compromising, and going out on a high – they showed up rock’s self-serving rulebook as a sham, chiselling three new faces on its Mount Rushmore. Laura Snapes

Trio’s war against definition / explanation, compiled…

After forming in 1994, Sleater-Kinney spent most of the ‘90s trying to ensure their ascendant profile remained connected to their origins. “We are coming from somewhere, we’re not just an isolated entity without a context or a background,” said Carrie Brownstein, one of their two singers and guitarists. Her counterpart Corin Tucker could pinpoint where exactly: Valentine’s Day 1991, when, aged 18, she saw Bikini Kill at Olympia, WA’s North Shore Surf Club. “It was the first time I’d seen feminism translated into an emotional language,” she told Greil Marcus. “…You had the feeling they had started the week before and that you can do it too – stand up and speak in the town square, even if you have to create the town square yourself.”

But by the time Sleater-Kinney recorded what their final album, 2005’s The Woods, they were trying to smash their town square, bristling against complacency and the limiting descriptors that trailed them: ‘feminist’, ‘punk’, ‘riot grrrl’, ‘political’. Having made all but one of their previous records with John Goodmanson in Seattle, the Pacific Northwest trio (Quasi drummer Janet Weiss joined in 1997) ventured cross-country to Dave Fridmann’s New York State studio and said they wanted to halve their audience. “We’re sick of people feeling they know who we are and what we’re capable of,” Brownstein told Eddie Vedder. “I remember thinking … I’d really love to make some of our fans angry.”

It was an energy they had tapped into while supporting Pearl Jam at the beginning of the Iraq war. Sleater-Kinney’s own gigs were an echo chamber for anti-Bush rhetoric. Here they met 10,000 booing patriots whose indifference spurred them on to make an earth-razing record: a flood of stinging, Zep-indebted sludge populated by desperate characters clinging to hope in a crumbling world order. Their first for Sub Pop after leaving Kill Rock Stars, The Woods was acclaimed but divisive, letting them exit as a band apart when they declared a hiatus in 2006.

Eight years later, this box collects Sleater-Kinney’s seven LPs, remastered by Greg Calbi (amplifying the bottom end in the absence of a bassist) and accompanied by a photo book. No liner notes, b-sides, rarities, demos. Sleater-Kinney were constantly asked to defend the legitimacy of their voice by critics and scene forbears who thought they’d sold out. This reissue does not ask for permission, eschewing context to let their catalogue stand as its own defiant rock monolith. As it should: while they’ve no agreed-upon classic, rarely has a band released this many records without faltering.

Sleater-Kinney’s success (selling 100,000 copies per record by their conclusion) was often interpreted as transcending the limitations of being “women in rock”. In reality, their triumphant existence was a direct result of their lived experience: on 1995’s savage-but-hooky self-titled debut, Tucker and Brownstein turned society’s desire to marginalise women into a threat (“I’ll show you how it feels to be dead”). By Call The Doctor the following year, they were celebrating their own presence, singing “I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone” – pop-punk-meets-‘60s girlband-isms that maligned and celebrated rock cliché while laying bare their ambition.

Sleater-Kinney were chops-proud rockists, which is how they convinced traditionalists (from Jack White to Greil Marcus, who declared them America’s best rock band) that they were getting rock on their own terms. But, as Tucker explained, “You can love rock’n’roll and be enraged by it.” 1997’s Dig Me Out celebrated the genre’s transformative potential while the more downbeat The Hot Rock (produced by Roger Moutenot) castigated the major label industry that wanted to mould them. After Woodstock ’99, with its gang-rapes and resurgence of main stage meat-heads, Sleater-Kinney swore off rock’s chauvinist pantomime with 2000’s All Hands On The Bad One. Ashamed of the peers’ reluctance to criticize Bush after 9/11, 2002’s One Beat documented new mother Tucker’s terror at almost losing her premature baby while “the world [exploded] in flames”.

Sleater-Kinney’s story is of a band losing faith in humankind, god, country, even music, but making it their fight. By succeeding on their own terms – never ceding control or compromising, and going out on a high – they showed up rock’s self-serving rulebook as a sham, chiselling three new faces on its Mount Rushmore.

Laura Snapes

Morrissey “politely declines” offer from Channel 4 to record alternative Christmas message

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Frontman says Christmas Day is "not quite the time to be trading slaps"... Morrissey has claimed that he turned down an invitation from Channel 4 to record this year's alternative to The Queen's annual Christmas Day message. The frontman has made his views about the monarchy clear for many years and states in a new message on official fan site True to You that he was asked by the broadcaster to record a message which would then be broadcast at the same time as the Queen's on Christmas Day. Other figures who have done the same in previous years include whistleblower Edward Snowden and Iran's then-president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in 2008. However, the invitation was declined with Morrissey saying that December 25 is not "quite the time to be trading slaps." In fact, he believes that the annual BBC broadcast of the Queen's speech shows the nation that "she has nothing to offer and nothing to say, and she has no place in modern Britain except as a figure of repression; no independent thought required." In a statement, he wrote: "My view that the monarchy should be quietly dismantled for the good of England is reasonably well-known, but I don’t think Christmas Day is quite the time to be trading slaps." "The Queen very well might be the most powerful woman in England, but she lacks the power to make herself loved, and the phoney inflation of her family attacks all rational intellect. All over the world highly civilised peoples exist without the automatic condescension of a ‘royal’ family. England can do the same, and will find more respect for doing so." Earlier this week Morrissey was forced to cancel dates in Greece and Turkey. The singer's current European tour has been met with numerous setbacks, including an incident in which a gig in Germany had to be ended shortly after a stage invasion and departed the stage mid-show after being heckled by a fan in Poland. He also cancelled a number of European tour dates due to a "flu outbreak" amongst his crew earlier in the year. This came after a string of US dates were scrappedrevealing that he had been treated for cancer.

Frontman says Christmas Day is “not quite the time to be trading slaps”…

Morrissey has claimed that he turned down an invitation from Channel 4 to record this year’s alternative to The Queen’s annual Christmas Day message.

The frontman has made his views about the monarchy clear for many years and states in a new message on official fan site True to You that he was asked by the broadcaster to record a message which would then be broadcast at the same time as the Queen’s on Christmas Day. Other figures who have done the same in previous years include whistleblower Edward Snowden and Iran’s then-president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in 2008.

However, the invitation was declined with Morrissey saying that December 25 is not “quite the time to be trading slaps.” In fact, he believes that the annual BBC broadcast of the Queen’s speech shows the nation that “she has nothing to offer and nothing to say, and she has no place in modern Britain except as a figure of repression; no independent thought required.”

In a statement, he wrote: “My view that the monarchy should be quietly dismantled for the good of England is reasonably well-known, but I don’t think Christmas Day is quite the time to be trading slaps.”

“The Queen very well might be the most powerful woman in England, but she lacks the power to make herself loved, and the phoney inflation of her family attacks all rational intellect. All over the world highly civilised peoples exist without the automatic condescension of a ‘royal’ family. England can do the same, and will find more respect for doing so.”

Earlier this week Morrissey was forced to cancel dates in Greece and Turkey. The singer’s current European tour has been met with numerous setbacks, including an incident in which a gig in Germany had to be ended shortly after a stage invasion and departed the stage mid-show after being heckled by a fan in Poland.

He also cancelled a number of European tour dates due to a “flu outbreak” amongst his crew earlier in the year. This came after a string of US dates were scrappedrevealing that he had been treated for cancer.

Joanna Newsom confirms she is working on new material

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The singer released her last album, Have One On Me, in 2010... Joanna Newsom has confirmed she is working on new material, her first in five years. Speaking to Dazed, the singer-songwriter commented: "I'm working on something new – I should hopefully have a little more news soon. I've been working hard for a lot of those five years on a new idea." Joanna Newsom released her third album, Have One On Me, in 2010. It followed her acclaimed 2004 debut The Milk-Eyed Mender and 2006's Ys. In 2012 Newsom unveiled two new songs during live performances, "The Diver's Wife" and "Look And Despair". Newsom will appear in new film Inherent Vice, which will hit UK cinemas in January 2015. Discussing her part in the production, she said: "This movie was so incredibly rewarding and fun for me, and it did maybe defer some of my music work for a while, but it was totally worth it."

The singer released her last album, Have One On Me, in 2010…

Joanna Newsom has confirmed she is working on new material, her first in five years.

Speaking to Dazed, the singer-songwriter commented: “I’m working on something new – I should hopefully have a little more news soon. I’ve been working hard for a lot of those five years on a new idea.”

Joanna Newsom released her third album, Have One On Me, in 2010. It followed her acclaimed 2004 debut The Milk-Eyed Mender and 2006’s Ys. In 2012 Newsom unveiled two new songs during live performances, “The Diver’s Wife” and “Look And Despair”.

Newsom will appear in new film Inherent Vice, which will hit UK cinemas in January 2015. Discussing her part in the production, she said: “This movie was so incredibly rewarding and fun for me, and it did maybe defer some of my music work for a while, but it was totally worth it.”

New James Murphy music revealed in first trailer for While We’re Young

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Beastie Boys Adam 'Ad-Rock' Horowitz also stars in new Noah Baumbach movie... The first trailer for new film While We're Young, featuring an original score from James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem, has been released. The film is directed by Noah Baumbach (The Squid And The Whale, Frances Ha) and also sees Beastie Boys' Adam 'Ad-Rock' Horowitz play a supporting role. Murphy previously worked with Baumbach on his film Greenberg. While We're Young tells the story of a middle-aged couple whose career and marriage breaks down when a younger couple come into their lives. It stars Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts in the lead roles, along with Amanda Seyfried, and Adam Driver. The trailer also features Wings song "Let 'Em In". Among his many musical projects, Murphy brought his Despacio soundsystem – a collaboration with Soulwax duo David and Stephen Dewaele – to Glastonbury Festival in June. Back in February, Murphy also revealed a brief preview of his plan to make every New York subway station have its own music, so that people will later associate each location with a specific sound. Murphy also shared two remixes of music he made using data from this year's US Open tennis tournament. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRUcm9Qw9io

Beastie Boys Adam ‘Ad-Rock’ Horowitz also stars in new Noah Baumbach movie…

The first trailer for new film While We’re Young, featuring an original score from James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem, has been released.

The film is directed by Noah Baumbach (The Squid And The Whale, Frances Ha) and also sees Beastie Boys’ Adam ‘Ad-Rock’ Horowitz play a supporting role. Murphy previously worked with Baumbach on his film Greenberg.

While We’re Young tells the story of a middle-aged couple whose career and marriage breaks down when a younger couple come into their lives. It stars Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts in the lead roles, along with Amanda Seyfried, and Adam Driver. The trailer also features Wings song “Let ‘Em In”.

Among his many musical projects, Murphy brought his Despacio soundsystem – a collaboration with Soulwax duo David and Stephen Dewaele – to Glastonbury Festival in June.

Back in February, Murphy also revealed a brief preview of his plan to make every New York subway station have its own music, so that people will later associate each location with a specific sound.

Murphy also shared two remixes of music he made using data from this year’s US Open tennis tournament.

Paul McCartney: Mark Chapman was “the jerk of jerks”

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Mark Chapman shot Lennon in New York in December 1980... Paul McCartney has described Mark Chapman, the man who killed John Lennon in 1980, as "the jerk of jerks." Speaking to Jonathan Ross in an interview broadcast by ITV on December 6, McCartney was asked about his relationship with his Beatles bandmate at the time of his murder. While acknowledging that things ended badly for the group, the singer said that their relationship had healed prior to his death. "There was acrimony in The Beatles", McCartney said (via The Mirror). "But when he got killed we were friends. We used to call each other up and swap bread recipes." "I was at home when he died. I got a phone call. It was so horrific. I could not take it in that he was gone. It was a very big shock. I was so sad that I was not going to see him again. And the guy who did it was the jerk of jerks. He was not politically motivated." Meanwhile, McCartney recently announced details of a new single, "Hope For The Future" – his first song to be specifically written for a video game. The track, due to be released with a variety of different mixes on December 8, was recorded for the soundtrack of the hit video game Destiny. Paul McCartney: The Ultimate Musis Guide is in shops now

Mark Chapman shot Lennon in New York in December 1980…

Paul McCartney has described Mark Chapman, the man who killed John Lennon in 1980, as “the jerk of jerks.”

Speaking to Jonathan Ross in an interview broadcast by ITV on December 6, McCartney was asked about his relationship with his Beatles bandmate at the time of his murder. While acknowledging that things ended badly for the group, the singer said that their relationship had healed prior to his death.

“There was acrimony in The Beatles“, McCartney said (via The Mirror). “But when he got killed we were friends. We used to call each other up and swap bread recipes.”

“I was at home when he died. I got a phone call. It was so horrific. I could not take it in that he was gone. It was a very big shock. I was so sad that I was not going to see him again. And the guy who did it was the jerk of jerks. He was not politically motivated.”

Meanwhile, McCartney recently announced details of a new single, “Hope For The Future” – his first song to be specifically written for a video game. The track, due to be released with a variety of different mixes on December 8, was recorded for the soundtrack of the hit video game Destiny.

Paul McCartney: The Ultimate Musis Guide is in shops now

David Bowie announces “Young Americans” 40th anniversary 7″ picture disc

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2007 Tony Visconti's 2007 mix is coming soon... David Bowie has announced the latest in his ongoing 7" anniversary picture disc series. He will release a 40th anniversary edition of "Young Americans" on February 23, 2015. Originally released in Spring 1975 and taken from the album of the same name, this 2007 Tony Visconti single mix is making its vinyl debut. The AA-side, which runs at 33 1/3 r.p.m, "It's Gonna Be Me (with strings)" is an alternate version of an outtake from the 1974 Sigma Sound sessions in Philadelphia. It was first released on the Young Americans album special edition in 2007 and is also making it first appearance on vinyl. The tracklisting is: A-Side Young Americans (2007 Tony Visconti mix single edit) (David Bowie) Produced & mixed by Tony Visconti 2007 Mix by Tony Visconti. Pro-Tools engineer Mario McNulty Mixed at Looking Glass Studio, Studio B. With thanks to Dave d'Arcy AA-Side (33 1/3 r.p.m) It's Gonna Be Me (with strings) (David Bowie) Produced & mixed by Tony Visconti Pro-Tools engineer Mario McNulty Mixed at Looking Glass Studio, Studio B. String arrangements by Tony Visconti Vocal arrangements by David Bowie & Luther Vandross Recorded at Sigma Sound, Philadelphia, PA.

2007 Tony Visconti’s 2007 mix is coming soon…

David Bowie has announced the latest in his ongoing 7″ anniversary picture disc series.

He will release a 40th anniversary edition of “Young Americans” on February 23, 2015.

Originally released in Spring 1975 and taken from the album of the same name, this 2007 Tony Visconti single mix is making its vinyl debut.

The AA-side, which runs at 33 1/3 r.p.m, “It’s Gonna Be Me (with strings)” is an alternate version of an outtake from the 1974 Sigma Sound sessions in Philadelphia. It was first released on the Young Americans album special edition in 2007 and is also making it first appearance on vinyl.

The tracklisting is:

A-Side

Young Americans (2007 Tony Visconti mix single edit)

(David Bowie)

Produced & mixed by Tony Visconti

2007 Mix by Tony Visconti.

Pro-Tools engineer Mario McNulty

Mixed at Looking Glass Studio, Studio B. With thanks to Dave d’Arcy

AA-Side (33 1/3 r.p.m)

It’s Gonna Be Me (with strings)

(David Bowie)

Produced & mixed by Tony Visconti

Pro-Tools engineer Mario McNulty

Mixed at Looking Glass Studio, Studio B.

String arrangements by Tony Visconti

Vocal arrangements by David Bowie & Luther Vandross

Recorded at Sigma Sound, Philadelphia, PA.

Sid Griffin – The Trick is To Breathe

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Former Long Rider takes a short trip home... Since the demise of The Long Ryders at the beginning of the ’90s, Kentucky native Griffin has made London his musical base, cutting records mostly with his band The Coal Porters, while carving out a dual career as a journalist and broadcaster. For his first solo album in a decade, however, he returned to his homeland, laying down these 12 tracks over an economical four-day period in Nashville. Griffin says the brevity of the sessions was inspired by Dylan’s Nashville Skyline and Billy Bragg’s Joe Henry-produced Tooth & Nail, and it’s the latter’s laconic mood that most informs these songs. Assembling a crack squad of Nashville’s finest, including members of Ricky Skaggs’ band, Griffin immerses himself in the myths of Americana, often dabbling in intriguingly novel reportage. “Ode To Bobbie Gentry” chronicles the country star’s rise to fame and subsequent retirement (“Christmas night in ’78 was my last gig/It was walk away softly, or stay until I flipped my wig”), and Griffin also adopts a first-person narrative for “Elvis Presley Calls His Mother After The Ed Sullivan Show” (“In pink, white and black/I’m like a heart attack”). Other songs are, understandably, less specific in their subject matter, but Sid’s scholarly approach to the hues and history of a nation’s patchwork of musical styles reaps rewards throughout. The bluegrass canter of “I’ll Forget You Very Well” waves a mandolin pick in the direction of Bill Monroe, “Between The General And The Grave” is a First World War saga that could have come from the pen of Kristofferson, while the sparse “Circle Bar” (written for a Long Ryders reunion but never recorded) addresses the death of a peer. Beyond the spontaneity and freshness of the arrangements, it’s Griffin’s innate skill as a storyteller that marks the album out as a high-water mark in a career that has always celebrated traditional American music with eloquence and boundless enthusiasm. Terry Staunton

Former Long Rider takes a short trip home…

Since the demise of The Long Ryders at the beginning of the ’90s, Kentucky native Griffin has made London his musical base, cutting records mostly with his band The Coal Porters, while carving out a dual career as a journalist and broadcaster. For his first solo album in a decade, however, he returned to his homeland, laying down these 12 tracks over an economical four-day period in Nashville.

Griffin says the brevity of the sessions was inspired by Dylan’s Nashville Skyline and Billy Bragg’s Joe Henry-produced Tooth & Nail, and it’s the latter’s laconic mood that most informs these songs. Assembling a crack squad of Nashville’s finest, including members of Ricky Skaggs’ band, Griffin immerses himself in the myths of Americana, often dabbling in intriguingly novel reportage.

“Ode To Bobbie Gentry” chronicles the country star’s rise to fame and subsequent retirement (“Christmas night in ’78 was my last gig/It was walk away softly, or stay until I flipped my wig”), and Griffin also adopts a first-person narrative for “Elvis Presley Calls His Mother After The Ed Sullivan Show” (“In pink, white and black/I’m like a heart attack”). Other songs are, understandably, less specific in their subject matter, but Sid’s scholarly approach to the hues and history of a nation’s patchwork of musical styles reaps rewards throughout. The bluegrass canter of “I’ll Forget You Very Well” waves a mandolin pick in the direction of Bill Monroe, “Between The General And The Grave” is a First World War saga that could have come from the pen of Kristofferson, while the sparse “Circle Bar” (written for a Long Ryders reunion but never recorded) addresses the death of a peer.

Beyond the spontaneity and freshness of the arrangements, it’s Griffin’s innate skill as a storyteller that marks the album out as a high-water mark in a career that has always celebrated traditional American music with eloquence and boundless enthusiasm.

Terry Staunton

The Small Faces: Ian McLagan and Kenney Jones tell the story of their singles

In this piece from the Uncut archives (March 2014, Take 202), McLagan and Kenney Jones reveal the stories behind every one of the band’s historic 45s, and how Ronnie Lane “found beauty in a nettle patch in the East End of London.” Story: Garry Mulholland ________________________ https://www....

In this piece from the Uncut archives (March 2014, Take 202), McLagan and Kenney Jones reveal the stories behind every one of the band’s historic 45s, and how Ronnie Lane “found beauty in a nettle patch in the East End of London.” Story: Garry Mulholland

________________________

Whatcha Gonna Do About It?
Decca, August 1965. UK: 14; US: N/A
Spotted at London’s own Cavern club in Leicester Square by manager Don Arden, the Small Faces sign to Decca. Their debut single – an aspiring soul standard – is written for them.

Kenney Jones: “We recorded it at IBC Studios with Ian Samwell, who wrote the song with Brian Potter. IBC was opposite the BBC at Portland Place. We hadn’t fully established our own songwriting abilities – our stage show was mainly covers of things like Otis Redding’s ‘Shake’ – and this really suited the power of Steve’s voice. The style was very indicative of the time and we loved it. We never set out to be a mod band. We were just young and liked clothes. The feedback was Steve’s idea; he was pissing about in front of his old Marshall amp and it sounded lovely, so we kept it. ‘Sammy’ Samwell was charming. He wrote Cliff’s ‘Move It’ and was virtually a member of The Shadows. Did Don Arden spend £12,000 on buying it into the charts? That’s what he told us. Everybody did that at the time, including The Beatles. Probably still do.”

I’ve Got Mine
Decca, November 1965. UK: N/A; US: N/A
Steve Marriott and Ronnie Lane’s first self-penned single. A soulful mid-tempo ballad with a hint of The Kinks’ “See My Friends”, it bombs. Ian McLagan replaces original keyboardist Jimmy Winston.

Jones: “We’d had a hit after being in the business for about five minutes so we thought, ‘Well… we’ve written a song.’ I loved it ’cos it was more expressive on the drums and had this guitar line through a Leslie amp. Stunning. It’s underestimated and still one of my favourite Small Faces songs. But because it wasn’t a hit… that was it. Don Arden said, ‘We can’t afford to have another flop. I’m bringing Kenny Lynch in.’ Plus the film that was meant to promote it, Dateline Diamonds, didn’t come out until months after the single. But we did launch the first ever Transit van. It was some kind of tie-in with Radio Caroline, the film and Ford. This was the first phase of business greed.”
Ian McLagan: “‘I Got Mine’ came out the week I joined. I had to buy a guitar so I could play the part that Jimmy Winston played on the record. I still have that guitar to this day.”

Sha-La-La-La-Lee
Decca, Jan 1966. UK: 3; US: N/A
A charming-but-lightweight Kenny Lynch/Mort Shuman song, this is a big teenybop hit for the band. Lynch also wrote Marriott’s unsuccessful ’63 debut solo single, “Give Her My Regards”.

Jones: “This is where Don Arden steered us towards being a pop band when we wanted to be an experimental band, more like Booker T & The MG’s and The Yardbirds. It was stifling and we never entirely lost that pop idol thing. We recorded this at the Decca studios in West Hampstead. I was getting into the song and Kenny Lynch came over the tannoy: ‘Don’t play anything you can’t mime to!’ He’s the one singing the high harmonies on the chorus. We got along with him, though. Kenny was Jack-the-lad and I still see him as often as I can.”
McLagan: “I’d joined an R’n’B/soul band and almost immediately we’d become a pop group. The kids coming to our shows became mostly little girls.”

Early Bob Dylan lyric sheets fail to sell at auction

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The artifacts were expected to fetch around £57,000... Two sets of original early Bob Dylan lyrics have failed to sell at auction. The typed lyric sheets with handwritten notes correspond to early, unrecorded Dylan tracks "Talkin' Folklore Centre" and "Go Away You Bomb", but failed to find a buyer at Christies, New York yesterday (December 4). As Billboard reports, "Talkin Folklore Centre" - originally penned in 1962 - was written on request by Dylan's producer Izzy Young for a song about the Folklore Centre store. The lyric sheet for this track was expected to fetch between $40,000 and $60,000 (£25,000 – £38,000). 1963 track "Go Away You Bomb", meanwhile, was written for an unpublished book that Young was compiling about anti-nuclear songs. These lyrics were estimated at $30,000 - $50,000 (£19,000 - £30,000). Neither, however, found a buyer, meaning that the consignor must now decide what will happen to the lyrics. Other pieces of rock memorabilia have recent had more success at auction, however. In October a rare signed vinyl of The Beatles' Please Please Me fetched over £22,000, while Willie Nelson's hair plaits went for £23,000 the same month.

The artifacts were expected to fetch around £57,000…

Two sets of original early Bob Dylan lyrics have failed to sell at auction.

The typed lyric sheets with handwritten notes correspond to early, unrecorded Dylan tracks “Talkin’ Folklore Centre” and “Go Away You Bomb”, but failed to find a buyer at Christies, New York yesterday (December 4).

As Billboard reports, “Talkin Folklore Centre” – originally penned in 1962 – was written on request by Dylan’s producer Izzy Young for a song about the Folklore Centre store. The lyric sheet for this track was expected to fetch between $40,000 and $60,000 (£25,000 – £38,000).

1963 track “Go Away You Bomb“, meanwhile, was written for an unpublished book that Young was compiling about anti-nuclear songs. These lyrics were estimated at $30,000 – $50,000 (£19,000 – £30,000).

Neither, however, found a buyer, meaning that the consignor must now decide what will happen to the lyrics.

Other pieces of rock memorabilia have recent had more success at auction, however. In October a rare signed vinyl of The Beatles’ Please Please Me fetched over £22,000, while Willie Nelson’s hair plaits went for £23,000 the same month.

“We were like a little family”: an interview with Doug Yule and Moe Tucker about The Velvet Underground

I reviewed The Velvet Underground: 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition for new issue of Uncut. It's a comprehensive, six-disc set compiling the band's third album in an assortment of mixes, plus 1969 demos and a live recording from The Matrix in San Francisco. Of course, it marks the first album the band recorded after John Cale had left, with Doug Yule assuming bass and (some) vocal duties. I was fortunate enough to speak to both Yule and Moe Tucker for a Q&A to accompany my review. As usual, I ended up with far too much material, so I thought I'd share the full transcripts of both interviews below... ___________________ DOUG YULE You were in the fortunate position of seeing The Velvet Underground play before you joined the band. What were they like live? The first time I saw them was in Cambridge, Massachusetts at Harvard University. John was sick and all I saw was Lou, Sterling and Maureen and they were playing in a dark room. It was full of college age people. I remember Lou was wearing black leather. They were a presence right away. They had good volume, substantial volume. It set up a whole bunch of ideas about how to present music onstage to the point I went home from that night and I started writing notes and ideas down based on their theatrical presentation of music. Do you remember what you wrote down? Only as impressions, I just remember a sequence of events. The images I counted up after seeing them live kind of made me think of live theatre. There would be a black stage and suddenly there would be white ceramic vase in the middle of it and then the vase falls all over in place. That’s kind of the opening feature of the first songs. At the time I had just finished doing a year as theatre major, so theatre was kind of my thing. After you joined the band, you went into the studio only a few weeks later to start work on The Velvet Underground. What do you remember of that period? My memory works in a funny way. I have a picture of the band in a small studio room with a tiny control room attached to it. It was probably much roomier than that. I have little pictures with which some of them are connected and some of them are isolated and none of them are sequential. From the time I started playing with Lou, Maureen and Sterling until we end up in the studio it was kind of like walking down the street with people walking a lot faster than you. Your focus is to try and keep up, to try and stay with them and not fall behind. The first time we played together, the first weekend, was about trying to remember everything I need, like “What chords in this song? What do I play in this song? What key is this song in? What do I sing in this song?” constantly over and over again. By the time I got into the studio it had evaporated or was taken care of in the first few weeks. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xMSMLWrcN8 You were the new boy, but those guys were in the process of redefining how they worked together after Cale had left…. Was it a case of you all learning together..? In a lot of ways, yeah. John and Lou pushed against each other a lot. It was like a constant ongoing tug of war. Then when Lou found himself as the main guy, the main songwriter, everything was much more cooperative. He seemed to be having a good time and seriously enjoying himself. I can imagine with Sterling and Maureen it would be a totally different kind of thing. What do you remember from the sessions for The Velvet Underground album? You know, it’s my favourite album out of all the recordings we have done. We recorded the tracks with all four people and then overdubbed vocals and harmonies. It’s really the closest to the band sounding like playing live. We were staying at the same bungalow at Chateau Marmont. The band were like a little family during his period. We’d go to the studio together, we’d go to the Chateau together, we’d go out and eat together. It was kind of like we were a little band of gypsies. Normally we all lived in New York and went home over the weekends to live our own lives. I wouldn’t see them again until it’s time to go out on the road again. But for this period of time, we lived and worked as a group. We were very close and warm as a band. How would it work to go from demo to finished song? No song is ever finished whilst bands are stilling playing it. The contest for me is between this album and Loaded. Loaded was done in New York and we were all living separately. Like I said this one was done as a group. Loaded was focused and commercial and the manager [Steve Sesnick] wanted to have more FM play. He convinced me to think more commercially and so we started out softly, like you can hear on The Matrix tapes. We then wound up with Loaded being recorded with very FM oriented stuff like “Who Loves The Sun”, “Head Held High” and “Sweet Jane”. They are brilliant songs though… Yeah, but “Sweet Jane” started out as a soft ballad very much like the kind of song Lou liked to write, and then it became a power song. The manager wasn’t really pushing anything for us to write any hits. It’s pretty much the band who wanted to change a solo. We’d add a little touch. It wasn’t a major shift done in the production, it would be the way we’d play them live, and we were all playing them all except for “Murder Mysteries” on the Grey album, right? We only tried play that one time. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IBBlFfv4CAM What are your thoughts on the different mixes for the third album? The Valatan mix and the Closet mix? Mixes are like opinions, it’s just a viewpoint. It’s each person’s viewpoint on what is important to them. Certain people will bring up levels on certain things because they love the part, or it interests them or something like that. I was married to a woman who couldn’t play anything without cranking the bass up, it drove me crazy. You talked earlier about The Matrix, what were your memories playing The Matrix? The Matrix was kind of like the same situation as the third album. We were living in a motel, and played there for a week. We’d usually take a cab or sometimes we’d walk. We would travel together, live together, eat together and that’s the extent of our family that didn’t exist outside of tour. It’s an astonishing document of the band. Would you say that it’s the peak of The Velvet Underground live? It’s one of the peaks. It was memorable for various reasons. The period around the third album I think of as a long extended period of time because we did the west coast for six to eight weeks and we were like family during that whole time. It’s not the peak, but it was one of the high points in terms of the group’s mentality. What would I expect to see at one of The Matrix shows? It depends on what night you went. Some nights it was really crowded and some nights you’d get 15 – 20 people because it was an off night. It was laid back and very casual like a separate club where the act is unknown. Lou was talkative and it seems to be around the time where he started to pretend I was his brother. Isn’t there a story of David Bowie mistaking you for Lou? We played at the Electric Circus in New York, and somebody came up to us afterwards and said: “Someone here wants to meet you guys.” And I said: “Okay” So he came back and he was enthusiastic and we talked a little bit. He had an English accent, and since the invasion of The Beatles I have been enamoured of things out of England. I was thrilled to talk to someone with an English accent. We had a conversation and then he took off. About 15 – 20 years later he told that story to NPR that he thought it was Lou and he had no idea who he was talking to and I neither did I. You look back and think “Wow, did that really happen?” It’s just conversation. What do you do these days, Doug? I play music still, I play violin and guitar. I make violins and have a shop and I talk a bit more on the phone. Can you tell us about your music? I have two albums. I have a string band with 3 people, a guitar/banjo player and a mandolin player and I play fiddle. We’re called RedDog, the website is www.reddogseattle.com. We have two CDs and I keep threatening to put out this song that I wrote in 2000 and put out some a bit hear and there. My sister [Dorothy] is a book artist, she has a book in the Victoria and Albert Artist museum. She did this pop-up book called Memories Of Science. She won two or three prizes for it. She wrote this long poem out of the book and she wanted me to do music for it. Me and my son recorded it with the string band. What does your brother Billy do these days? He lives in Marysville, California, and he collects Mini Coopers. He has an estate wagon that he reconditioned. He’s got a bass drum at the back with a Beatles logo at the back. I assume there is going to be an anniversary edition of Loaded to come after this. Is there anything else in the archive that hasn’t been made commercially available? I don’t know, I really don’t know. My senses say there’s some stuff that I haven’t heard I know that was done, but I don’t know if anyone has it. There was stuff done at Record Plant. Dating from when? I don’t remember. I can remember the people involved. I remember it’s one of the times I ran into Jimi Hendrix as he was recording there too. Really? How was that? We first ran across him at the Whiskey in’69 on the tour of California. He was with Mitch Mitchell. During our set he was jumping up and down, banging his glass on the table, and really getting into it. He came up to us after, and we were talking a little bit. We were sitting there with our mouths open thinking “Did that really just happen?” with total disbelief. The next time we were in Record Plant, he came out from the studio, walking down the hall with a cup of coffee, and he goes, “I remember you guys from California.” And we had conversation. He went back into the studio, get high and jam, jam all night and he’ll record a track. He’ll go back and listen to the tape, take stuff out and then record the next stuff. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S3I71jqeKz8 MAUREEN TUCKER The process of John leaving and Doug joining was very fast. Was there a sense of the band trying to redefine how they worked together? Not that I am aware of. We knew Doug before he joined us. He was in Boston and we played there a lot, as you know, and we met him and I think we even stayed at his apartment one time. So we knew him a bit, and his abilities. What do you think Doug brought to the band? He brought sweetness, he could sew. Sewing isn’t one of those things that I immediately associate with The Velvet Underground… [Laughs] He’s one of those people who I admire, who can do all sorts of different things. He’s a good cook, he can sew, he’s a good singer, he’s a good musician. A great musician, actually. I guess he brought a little bit of calm after the storm. What was it like living together at Chateau Marmont? It was fun, it was like a little bungalow thing. I was up at four in the morning – still up, not up after sleeping – and I had the radio on, and it was announced that Lars Onsager, the father of our road guy, had just won the Nobel Prize. Isn’t that funny? That’s where we were, in that little cabin. What do you remember about the sessions for that album? Not a hell of a lot, to be honest. It was a long time ago. Heck, I don’t even remember what the hell’s on the album. Name a song and I’ll tell you if I remember something. “Pale Blue Eyes”. Yeah, I do remember recording that, actually. I love that song, I really love that song. You sang “After Hours” on the album. Yeah, I remember that. Yeah, okay. I was a nervous wreck. Took about eight takes, ‘cause I kept forgetting, or laughing, or whatever the hell I was doing, I don’t know! But it took seven or eight takes. Finally I had the sense to make everybody leave, leave the studio. I was really nervous, I’d never sung anything, obviously with the band, or anywhere else. I wanted to do a good job, so I was nervous. Were they daytime sessions or night-time sessions? Do you have any recollection of that? I would say day, and probably one into the night. It certainly wasn’t at 9 o’clock in the morning, but maybe it went into the night sometimes, or all the time, I don’t remember. But I do remember going into that other studio, that one in California, in the daytime… Yeah, probably afternoon, late afternoon, something like that. With John out of the picture, what was Lou like during the period of this album? I’m sure he was up; it’s always exciting to be in the studio. The 1969 sessions you recorded for MGM are also included in this box set. What were relations like with MGM at the time? Not great. We always wondered if maybe they just didn’t know what to do with us, ‘cause they barely distributed our records, and we were tired of that. So I think they honed in on The Mothers of Invention, and put all their efforts behind them, I don’t know, but they didn’t put much behind us. Why didn’t the material come out at the time? Was it for contractual reactions, or…? I would think it had to be something like that. When we were doing it, my recollection is that we were pretty much doing it to be done with the contract, that we owed them an album. But we didn’t go in and say, “Oh, screw it! Let’s just do this and be done, who cares.” We gave it our best, but we didn’t expect it to be coming out, as I recall. Not with MGM, anyway. The other additional content in this set is the Matrix live recordings. What was it like playing live in The Velvet Underground? Oh, it was fun! I always had fun. I really, really, really liked it. There’s very few songs where I can say, “Ah, I got sick of that one”, very few. I always enjoyed it, I was not particularly worried or anxious about the future. We were all, basically, having fun. And doing our best, and enjoying it, and being happy with our product – I hate that word! John maybe from when he was eight years old, and Lou by the time he was twelve, they knew that’s what they wanted to be: musicians. Sterling and I never had that in our mind, as a career, or even an attempt at a career. So to me, I was totally happy playing live, recording now and then; that was always very exciting to me, to be recording. So whatever I was feeling or thinking and Sterling too maybe, was a lot different than probably what Lou and John were worried about, or concerned or whatever. As I said, that was their career, they wanted music as a career. Sterling and I, we never though of that. Out of all the studio albums, where do you rank this third album? Hm. Good question. I mean I like it. But I love the first album, I love the sound of it, I like – a lot – White Light. Well, maybe they’re all fairly even. What were your favourite songs to play live? “Sister Ray”, “Heroin”, “I’m Waiting For The Man”, “Run Run”, “Pale Blue Eyes”. The Velvet Underground: 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition is available now from UMe

I reviewed The Velvet Underground: 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition for new issue of Uncut. It’s a comprehensive, six-disc set compiling the band’s third album in an assortment of mixes, plus 1969 demos and a live recording from The Matrix in San Francisco. Of course, it marks the first album the band recorded after John Cale had left, with Doug Yule assuming bass and (some) vocal duties. I was fortunate enough to speak to both Yule and Moe Tucker for a Q&A to accompany my review. As usual, I ended up with far too much material, so I thought I’d share the full transcripts of both interviews below…



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DOUG YULE
You were in the fortunate position of seeing The Velvet Underground play before you joined the band. What were they like live?

The first time I saw them was in Cambridge, Massachusetts at Harvard University. John was sick and all I saw was Lou, Sterling and Maureen and they were playing in a dark room. It was full of college age people. I remember Lou was wearing black leather. They were a presence right away. They had good volume, substantial volume. It set up a whole bunch of ideas about how to present music onstage to the point I went home from that night and I started writing notes and ideas down based on their theatrical presentation of music.

Do you remember what you wrote down?
Only as impressions, I just remember a sequence of events. The images I counted up after seeing them live kind of made me think of live theatre. There would be a black stage and suddenly there would be white ceramic vase in the middle of it and then the vase falls all over in place. That’s kind of the opening feature of the first songs. At the time I had just finished doing a year as theatre major, so theatre was kind of my thing.

After you joined the band, you went into the studio only a few weeks later to start work on The Velvet Underground. What do you remember of that period?
My memory works in a funny way. I have a picture of the band in a small studio room with a tiny control room attached to it. It was probably much roomier than that. I have little pictures with which some of them are connected and some of them are isolated and none of them are sequential. From the time I started playing with Lou, Maureen and Sterling until we end up in the studio it was kind of like walking down the street with people walking a lot faster than you. Your focus is to try and keep up, to try and stay with them and not fall behind. The first time we played together, the first weekend, was about trying to remember everything I need, like “What chords in this song? What do I play in this song? What key is this song in? What do I sing in this song?” constantly over and over again. By the time I got into the studio it had evaporated or was taken care of in the first few weeks.



You were the new boy, but those guys were in the process of redefining how they worked together after Cale had left…. Was it a case of you all learning together..?
In a lot of ways, yeah. John and Lou pushed against each other a lot. It was like a constant ongoing tug of war. Then when Lou found himself as the main guy, the main songwriter, everything was much more cooperative. He seemed to be having a good time and seriously enjoying himself. I can imagine with Sterling and Maureen it would be a totally different kind of thing.

What do you remember from the sessions for The Velvet Underground album?
You know, it’s my favourite album out of all the recordings we have done. We recorded the tracks with all four people and then overdubbed vocals and harmonies. It’s really the closest to the band sounding like playing live. We were staying at the same bungalow at Chateau Marmont. The band were like a little family during his period. We’d go to the studio together, we’d go to the Chateau together, we’d go out and eat together. It was kind of like we were a little band of gypsies. Normally we all lived in New York and went home over the weekends to live our own lives. I wouldn’t see them again until it’s time to go out on the road again. But for this period of time, we lived and worked as a group. We were very close and warm as a band.

How would it work to go from demo to finished song?
No song is ever finished whilst bands are stilling playing it. The contest for me is between this album and Loaded. Loaded was done in New York and we were all living separately. Like I said this one was done as a group. Loaded was focused and commercial and the manager [Steve Sesnick] wanted to have more FM play. He convinced me to think more commercially and so we started out softly, like you can hear on The Matrix tapes. We then wound up with Loaded being recorded with very FM oriented stuff like “Who Loves The Sun”, “Head Held High” and “Sweet Jane”.

They are brilliant songs though…
Yeah, but “Sweet Jane” started out as a soft ballad very much like the kind of song Lou liked to write, and then it became a power song. The manager wasn’t really pushing anything for us to write any hits. It’s pretty much the band who wanted to change a solo. We’d add a little touch. It wasn’t a major shift done in the production, it would be the way we’d play them live, and we were all playing them all except for “Murder Mysteries” on the Grey album, right? We only tried play that one time.



What are your thoughts on the different mixes for the third album? The Valatan mix and the Closet mix?
Mixes are like opinions, it’s just a viewpoint. It’s each person’s viewpoint on what is important to them. Certain people will bring up levels on certain things because they love the part, or it interests them or something like that. I was married to a woman who couldn’t play anything without cranking the bass up, it drove me crazy.

You talked earlier about The Matrix, what were your memories playing The Matrix?
The Matrix was kind of like the same situation as the third album. We were living in a motel, and played there for a week. We’d usually take a cab or sometimes we’d walk. We would travel together, live together, eat together and that’s the extent of our family that didn’t exist outside of tour.

It’s an astonishing document of the band. Would you say that it’s the peak of The Velvet Underground live?
It’s one of the peaks. It was memorable for various reasons. The period around the third album I think of as a long extended period of time because we did the west coast for six to eight weeks and we were like family during that whole time. It’s not the peak, but it was one of the high points in terms of the group’s mentality.

What would I expect to see at one of The Matrix shows?
It depends on what night you went. Some nights it was really crowded and some nights you’d get 15 – 20 people because it was an off night. It was laid back and very casual like a separate club where the act is unknown. Lou was talkative and it seems to be around the time where he started to pretend I was his brother.

Isn’t there a story of David Bowie mistaking you for Lou?
We played at the Electric Circus in New York, and somebody came up to us afterwards and said: “Someone here wants to meet you guys.” And I said: “Okay” So he came back and he was enthusiastic and we talked a little bit. He had an English accent, and since the invasion of The Beatles I have been enamoured of things out of England. I was thrilled to talk to someone with an English accent. We had a conversation and then he took off. About 15 – 20 years later he told that story to NPR that he thought it was Lou and he had no idea who he was talking to and I neither did I. You look back and think “Wow, did that really happen?” It’s just conversation.

What do you do these days, Doug?
I play music still, I play violin and guitar. I make violins and have a shop and I talk a bit more on the phone.

Can you tell us about your music?
I have two albums. I have a string band with 3 people, a guitar/banjo player and a mandolin player and I play fiddle. We’re called RedDog, the website is www.reddogseattle.com. We have two CDs and I keep threatening to put out this song that I wrote in 2000 and put out some a bit hear and there. My sister [Dorothy] is a book artist, she has a book in the Victoria and Albert Artist museum. She did this pop-up book called Memories Of Science. She won two or three prizes for it. She wrote this long poem out of the book and she wanted me to do music for it. Me and my son recorded it with the string band.

What does your brother Billy do these days?
He lives in Marysville, California, and he collects Mini Coopers. He has an estate wagon that he reconditioned. He’s got a bass drum at the back with a Beatles logo at the back.

I assume there is going to be an anniversary edition of Loaded to come after this. Is there anything else in the archive that hasn’t been made commercially available?
I don’t know, I really don’t know. My senses say there’s some stuff that I haven’t heard I know that was done, but I don’t know if anyone has it. There was stuff done at Record Plant.

Dating from when?
I don’t remember. I can remember the people involved. I remember it’s one of the times I ran into Jimi Hendrix as he was recording there too.

Really? How was that?
We first ran across him at the Whiskey in’69 on the tour of California. He was with Mitch Mitchell. During our set he was jumping up and down, banging his glass on the table, and really getting into it. He came up to us after, and we were talking a little bit. We were sitting there with our mouths open thinking “Did that really just happen?” with total disbelief. The next time we were in Record Plant, he came out from the studio, walking down the hall with a cup of coffee, and he goes, “I remember you guys from California.” And we had conversation. He went back into the studio, get high and jam, jam all night and he’ll record a track. He’ll go back and listen to the tape, take stuff out and then record the next stuff.



MAUREEN TUCKER
The process of John leaving and Doug joining was very fast. Was there a sense of the band trying to redefine how they worked together?

Not that I am aware of. We knew Doug before he joined us. He was in Boston and we played there a lot, as you know, and we met him and I think we even stayed at his apartment one time. So we knew him a bit, and his abilities.

What do you think Doug brought to the band?
He brought sweetness, he could sew.

Sewing isn’t one of those things that I immediately associate with The Velvet Underground…
[Laughs] He’s one of those people who I admire, who can do all sorts of different things. He’s a good cook, he can sew, he’s a good singer, he’s a good musician. A great musician, actually. I guess he brought a little bit of calm after the storm.

What was it like living together at Chateau Marmont?
It was fun, it was like a little bungalow thing. I was up at four in the morning – still up, not up after sleeping – and I had the radio on, and it was announced that Lars Onsager, the father of our road guy, had just won the Nobel Prize. Isn’t that funny? That’s where we were, in that little cabin.

What do you remember about the sessions for that album?
Not a hell of a lot, to be honest. It was a long time ago. Heck, I don’t even remember what the hell’s on the album. Name a song and I’ll tell you if I remember something.

“Pale Blue Eyes”.
Yeah, I do remember recording that, actually. I love that song, I really love that song.

You sang “After Hours” on the album.
Yeah, I remember that. Yeah, okay. I was a nervous wreck. Took about eight takes, ‘cause I kept forgetting, or laughing, or whatever the hell I was doing, I don’t know! But it took seven or eight takes. Finally I had the sense to make everybody leave, leave the studio. I was really nervous, I’d never sung anything, obviously with the band, or anywhere else. I wanted to do a good job, so I was nervous.

Were they daytime sessions or night-time sessions? Do you have any recollection of that?
I would say day, and probably one into the night. It certainly wasn’t at 9 o’clock in the morning, but maybe it went into the night sometimes, or all the time, I don’t remember. But I do remember going into that other studio, that one in California, in the daytime… Yeah, probably afternoon, late afternoon, something like that.

With John out of the picture, what was Lou like during the period of this album?
I’m sure he was up; it’s always exciting to be in the studio.

The 1969 sessions you recorded for MGM are also included in this box set. What were relations like with MGM at the time?
Not great. We always wondered if maybe they just didn’t know what to do with us, ‘cause they barely distributed our records, and we were tired of that. So I think they honed in on The Mothers of Invention, and put all their efforts behind them, I don’t know, but they didn’t put much behind us.

Why didn’t the material come out at the time? Was it for contractual reactions, or…?
I would think it had to be something like that. When we were doing it, my recollection is that we were pretty much doing it to be done with the contract, that we owed them an album. But we didn’t go in and say, “Oh, screw it! Let’s just do this and be done, who cares.” We gave it our best, but we didn’t expect it to be coming out, as I recall. Not with MGM, anyway.

The other additional content in this set is the Matrix live recordings. What was it like playing live in The Velvet Underground?
Oh, it was fun! I always had fun. I really, really, really liked it. There’s very few songs where I can say, “Ah, I got sick of that one”, very few. I always enjoyed it, I was not particularly worried or anxious about the future. We were all, basically, having fun. And doing our best, and enjoying it, and being happy with our product – I hate that word! John maybe from when he was eight years old, and Lou by the time he was twelve, they knew that’s what they wanted to be: musicians. Sterling and I never had that in our mind, as a career, or even an attempt at a career. So to me, I was totally happy playing live, recording now and then; that was always very exciting to me, to be recording. So whatever I was feeling or thinking and Sterling too maybe, was a lot different than probably what Lou and John were worried about, or concerned or whatever. As I said, that was their career, they wanted music as a career. Sterling and I, we never though of that.

Out of all the studio albums, where do you rank this third album?
Hm. Good question. I mean I like it. But I love the first album, I love the sound of it, I like – a lot – White Light. Well, maybe they’re all fairly even.

What were your favourite songs to play live?
“Sister Ray”, “Heroin”, “I’m Waiting For The Man”, “Run Run”, “Pale Blue Eyes”.

The Velvet Underground: 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition is available now from UMe


The 45th Uncut Playlist Of 2014

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First off, thanks for all your kind and indulgent comments about my 154 best albums of 2014 blog; I'm genuinely grateful and touched by the feedback. Beyond that, this week I've been listening - not unusually, I guess - to a lot of Mark Kozelek. I reviewed Sun Kil Moon's brilliant but it seems divisive Hackney gig here; please take the time to read some very thoughtful and interesting comments at the bottom of the page. I've also been enjoying a glut of new Ghostface Killah material (three albums, of which the new Wu set is the least strong), and a great live recording of Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band. Not many live bands out there I want to see live more than them, right now. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Run The Jewels - Run The Jewels 2 (Mass Appeal) 2 Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band - Live In Lafayette, Indiana (No label) 3 Samba Toure - Gandadiko (Glitterbeat) 4 Syd Arthur - A Monstrous Psychedelic Bubble: Remixes By The Amorphous Androgynous (Monstrous Bubble) 5 Badbadnotgood & Ghostface Killah - Sour Soul (Lex) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-qmZ_J7WGc 6 Frisk Frugt - Den Europaeiske Spejilbue (Tambourhinoceros) 7 Gang Of Four - What Happens Next (Membran) 8 Bettye Lavette - Worthy (Cherry Red) 9 Africa Express Presents - Terry Riley's In C (Transgressive) Read my review here 10 [REDACTED] 11 Ghostface Killah - 36 Seasons (Tommy Boy) 12 Natural Child - Dancin' With Wolves (Burger) 13 The Wu Tang Clan - A Better Tomorrow (PArlophone) 14 The Clang Group - The Clang Group EP (Domino) 15 The Unthanks - Mount The Air (Rabble Rouser) 16 Thom Yorke - Tomorrow's Modern Boxes (Self-Released) 17 Robert Stillman - Leap Of Death (Archaic Future) 18 Will Butler - Take My Side (Merge) 19 Jan St Werner - Miscontinuum (Thrill Jockey) 20 Sleater Kinney - No Cities To Love (Sub Pop) 21 [REDACTED] 22 Hiss Golden Messenger - Southern Grammar EP (Merge) 23 Sun Kil Moon - Ghosts Of The Great Highway (Jetset) 24 Brian Eno - Neroli (Thinking Music Part IV) (All Saints) 25 Jake Xerxes Fussell - Jake Xerxes Fussell (Paradise Of Bachelors) 26 Red House Painters - Old Ramon (Sub Pop) 27 Fraser A Gorman - Book Of Love (House Anxiety/ Marathon Artists/ Milk!) 28 Natalie Prass - Natalie Prass (Spacebomb)

First off, thanks for all your kind and indulgent comments about my 154 best albums of 2014 blog; I’m genuinely grateful and touched by the feedback.

Beyond that, this week I’ve been listening – not unusually, I guess – to a lot of Mark Kozelek. I reviewed Sun Kil Moon’s brilliant but it seems divisive Hackney gig here; please take the time to read some very thoughtful and interesting comments at the bottom of the page.

I’ve also been enjoying a glut of new Ghostface Killah material (three albums, of which the new Wu set is the least strong), and a great live recording of Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band. Not many live bands out there I want to see live more than them, right now.

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

1 Run The Jewels – Run The Jewels 2 (Mass Appeal)

2 Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band – Live In Lafayette, Indiana (No label)

3 Samba Toure – Gandadiko (Glitterbeat)

4 Syd Arthur – A Monstrous Psychedelic Bubble: Remixes By The Amorphous Androgynous (Monstrous Bubble)

5 Badbadnotgood & Ghostface Killah – Sour Soul (Lex)

6 Frisk Frugt – Den Europaeiske Spejilbue (Tambourhinoceros)

7 Gang Of Four – What Happens Next (Membran)

8 Bettye Lavette – Worthy (Cherry Red)

9 Africa Express Presents – Terry Riley’s In C (Transgressive)

Read my review here

10 [REDACTED]

11 Ghostface Killah – 36 Seasons (Tommy Boy)

12 Natural Child – Dancin’ With Wolves (Burger)

13 The Wu Tang Clan – A Better Tomorrow (PArlophone)

14 The Clang Group – The Clang Group EP (Domino)

15 The Unthanks – Mount The Air (Rabble Rouser)

16 Thom Yorke – Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes (Self-Released)

17 Robert Stillman – Leap Of Death (Archaic Future)

18 Will Butler – Take My Side (Merge)

19 Jan St Werner – Miscontinuum (Thrill Jockey)

20 Sleater Kinney – No Cities To Love (Sub Pop)

21 [REDACTED]

22 Hiss Golden Messenger – Southern Grammar EP (Merge)

23 Sun Kil Moon – Ghosts Of The Great Highway (Jetset)

24 Brian Eno – Neroli (Thinking Music Part IV) (All Saints)

25 Jake Xerxes Fussell – Jake Xerxes Fussell (Paradise Of Bachelors)

26 Red House Painters – Old Ramon (Sub Pop)

27 Fraser A Gorman – Book Of Love (House Anxiety/ Marathon Artists/ Milk!)

28 Natalie Prass – Natalie Prass (Spacebomb)

Cream “was nearly juvenilia for Jack Bruce”, says co-writer Pete Brown

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Cream lyricist Pete Brown pays tribute to the late Jack Bruce in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2015 and out now. Brown discusses his memories of collaborating with the bassist for nearly 50 years, on both Cream hits like “Sunshine Of Your Love” and “White Room”, and Bruce’s solo...

Cream lyricist Pete Brown pays tribute to the late Jack Bruce in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2015 and out now.

Brown discusses his memories of collaborating with the bassist for nearly 50 years, on both Cream hits like “Sunshine Of Your Love” and “White Room”, and Bruce’s solo work.

“Of course, things like Cream, where the songs become almost standards, do haunt you,” he explains. “Cream was nearly juvenilia for Jack – I think some of his more mature work will eventually be seen to be just as good, if not better than that.

“I generally kept out of things musically with Jack – he was an incredible composer and arranger, I was in awe of him as a musician. I learnt a lot from him, especially as a singer.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

Photo: Roz Kelly/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

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

Reviewed: Sun Kil Moon live at St John’s, Hackney, London, December 3, 2014

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Tuesday night, I went to see the War On Drugs guy again. I mention this, in relation to Mark Kozelek and Sun Kil Moon's Hackney show, because Kozelek doesn't stop mentioning it himself for much of the two and a half hour show; a show which, by the by, is one of the very best and certainly most surprising I've ever seen him play. He begins, then, with some droll justification; "I'm a nice guy," repeated several times, talks about a third War On Drugs-related song, tries to find out if anyone can actually pronounce "Granduciel", refers to him disparagingly by way of a "Stevie Nicks t-shirt", mentions "two words: Soul Asylum", and eventually starts apologising to the band, before the caveat tag of "Bob Dylan parody shit". But if at times the whole business has seemed like a weird pathology on Kozelek's part, here it's much more clearly a schtick, part of his stand-up comedian strategy of looping back again and again to the same remorseless riff. When I interviewed him recently for the current print edition of Uncut, he was at obsessive pains to present himself as "a funny guy". At this show, more than most of his recent London gigs I think, he proves it. He also proves, usefully, that his current relative success is pushing him into a startling and brilliant new live persona. God knows how long it's been since I saw Kozelek play with a band, but he turns up this time with a drummer, electric guitarist and keyboard player, allowing him to concentrate for at least half the set on his vocals, pacing the stage and, at times - in the lovely opening "He Always Felt Like Dancing", closer here to hip-hop - ducking and weaving so he isn't so far from dancing himself. Such freedom could plausibly have made Kozelek more self-conscious, but it seems to embolden him - as does the big 1,400-strong crowd, most of whom are standing. The fractionally rowdier, celebratory, though still respectful, atmosphere is evidently strong enough to get to the singer. Instead of berating the audience, he's thankful, flattering and good-natured. At the end, as a symbolic act of gratitude, he takes the mic he's been using, superstitiously and consistently, for the past seven or eight years - the one he used, he stresses, to call out both "fucking hillbillies" and "beer commercial rock" - and flings it into the audience. First, though, he diligently wraps it in two towels and seals the bundle with some of the drummer's gaffatape. A nice guy, to recap. A great singer, too, even when he's bawling "The Possum" - played live for the first time here - while lurching back and forth, reading the lyrics from a lectern. I have a faint residual memory of Kozelek's first teenage music being made in hardcore bands (apologies if I've got this wrong), and it's a strain that resurfaces here, as his vocal range becomes more potent and expansive. If he sings "He Always Felt Like Dancing" and "I Watched The Film The Song Remains The Same" with the trademark dolorous delicacy that became his trademark, he can also switch up into a reverberant croon that can be sometimes arch and tender ("The Christmas Song"), at others so loud and powerful (on the closing "Carissa", say) that it actually adds even more emotional heft to these already significantly freighted songs. Measured and discreet, this version of Sun Kil Moon can be roiling and punchy, too, and the straight-up rock songs are a revelation: "War On Drugs: Suck My Cock", "Hey You Bastards I'm Still Here", "Richard Ramirez Died Today Of Natural Causes" and, best of all, "Dogs". For a man who talks about only listening to classical music and Spanish guitars, Kozelek's take on rock is currently full-blooded and innovative. And while the false starts of "The Possum" are understandably rough - milked for James Brown-style theatre by Kozelek, ever alert to exploiting his own absurdity - one striking aspect of the whole show is how many of the songs have been fleshed out and sound more conventionally finished than the original, sometimes purposefully scrappy recorded versions. Kozelek's much-stated current method is to write songs as spontaneously as possible, and move on from them pretty quickly; none of the songs he plays here predate 2012's "Among The Leaves". Nevertheless, it's interesting to see how this stuff has evolved: not just the louder, faster songs, but the Jimmy Lavalle pieces, "He Always Felt Like Dancing" and "Ceiling Gazing"; on both, the electric guitarist's work is discreet but critical. The interplay with Kozelek, when he does pick up his steel-string acoustic for "Black Kite", is exceptional, too. The song's meticulous structure is faithfully rendered, but not before a related bout of self-deprecation involving his right-hand action, its relationship with masturbation, and masturbation's relationship with a man in his late 40s. Middle age is very much part of Kozelek's schtick, of course, not least when he summons a woman from the audience to play Cher to his Sonny in a funny, affectionate version of "I Got You Babe" that skirts agonisingly close to, but just about avoids, sleaziness. This is where Kozelek is right now, full of slightly awestruck good vibes, self-deprecating bad ones, enduring beefs, expanding musical perspectives, and a desire to play one or two feelgood songs like "I Got You Babe" - none of his own, he suggests ruefully, are up to the job. The thing is, the show feels like a tremendous validation and culmination of not just Kozelek's weird and strong last 24 months, but also of the whole extraordinary 22 years of his career. Bad things happen, people die, girls leave, life on the road can be grim but, as many of his best songs of late make clear, there's often a point of acceptance and contentment that you can reach on the other side of it all. That's how this magnificent gig shapes up. Somehow, as that guy once put it, the wonder of life prevails… Some more things I’ve written about Mark Kozelek projects: On Benji On the Desert Shore and Jimmy Lavalle albums On Among The Leaves On Lost Verses On April On Admiral Fell Promises Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey SETLIST 1. He Always Felt Like Dancing 2. Micheline 3. The Possum 4. I Can't Live Without My Mother's Love 5. I Watched the Film the Song Remains the Same 6. Dogs 7. Black Kite 8. Hey You Bastards I'm Still Here 9. I Got You Babe 10. The Little Drummer Boy 11. The Christmas Song 12. Richard Ramirez Died Today Of Natural Causes 13. Ceiling Gazing 14. Caroline Encore: 15. War on Drugs: Suck My Cock 16. Carissa

Tuesday night, I went to see the War On Drugs guy again. I mention this, in relation to Mark Kozelek and Sun Kil Moon’s Hackney show, because Kozelek doesn’t stop mentioning it himself for much of the two and a half hour show; a show which, by the by, is one of the very best and certainly most surprising I’ve ever seen him play.

He begins, then, with some droll justification; “I’m a nice guy,” repeated several times, talks about a third War On Drugs-related song, tries to find out if anyone can actually pronounce “Granduciel”, refers to him disparagingly by way of a “Stevie Nicks t-shirt”, mentions “two words: Soul Asylum”, and eventually starts apologising to the band, before the caveat tag of “Bob Dylan parody shit”.

But if at times the whole business has seemed like a weird pathology on Kozelek’s part, here it’s much more clearly a schtick, part of his stand-up comedian strategy of looping back again and again to the same remorseless riff. When I interviewed him recently for the current print edition of Uncut, he was at obsessive pains to present himself as “a funny guy”. At this show, more than most of his recent London gigs I think, he proves it. He also proves, usefully, that his current relative success is pushing him into a startling and brilliant new live persona.

God knows how long it’s been since I saw Kozelek play with a band, but he turns up this time with a drummer, electric guitarist and keyboard player, allowing him to concentrate for at least half the set on his vocals, pacing the stage and, at times – in the lovely opening “He Always Felt Like Dancing”, closer here to hip-hop – ducking and weaving so he isn’t so far from dancing himself.

Such freedom could plausibly have made Kozelek more self-conscious, but it seems to embolden him – as does the big 1,400-strong crowd, most of whom are standing. The fractionally rowdier, celebratory, though still respectful, atmosphere is evidently strong enough to get to the singer. Instead of berating the audience, he’s thankful, flattering and good-natured. At the end, as a symbolic act of gratitude, he takes the mic he’s been using, superstitiously and consistently, for the past seven or eight years – the one he used, he stresses, to call out both “fucking hillbillies” and “beer commercial rock” – and flings it into the audience. First, though, he diligently wraps it in two towels and seals the bundle with some of the drummer’s gaffatape. A nice guy, to recap.

A great singer, too, even when he’s bawling “The Possum” – played live for the first time here – while lurching back and forth, reading the lyrics from a lectern. I have a faint residual memory of Kozelek’s first teenage music being made in hardcore bands (apologies if I’ve got this wrong), and it’s a strain that resurfaces here, as his vocal range becomes more potent and expansive. If he sings “He Always Felt Like Dancing” and “I Watched The Film The Song Remains The Same” with the trademark dolorous delicacy that became his trademark, he can also switch up into a reverberant croon that can be sometimes arch and tender (“The Christmas Song”), at others so loud and powerful (on the closing “Carissa”, say) that it actually adds even more emotional heft to these already significantly freighted songs.

Measured and discreet, this version of Sun Kil Moon can be roiling and punchy, too, and the straight-up rock songs are a revelation: “War On Drugs: Suck My Cock”, “Hey You Bastards I’m Still Here”, “Richard Ramirez Died Today Of Natural Causes” and, best of all, “Dogs”. For a man who talks about only listening to classical music and Spanish guitars, Kozelek’s take on rock is currently full-blooded and innovative. And while the false starts of “The Possum” are understandably rough – milked for James Brown-style theatre by Kozelek, ever alert to exploiting his own absurdity – one striking aspect of the whole show is how many of the songs have been fleshed out and sound more conventionally finished than the original, sometimes purposefully scrappy recorded versions.

Kozelek’s much-stated current method is to write songs as spontaneously as possible, and move on from them pretty quickly; none of the songs he plays here predate 2012’s “Among The Leaves”. Nevertheless, it’s interesting to see how this stuff has evolved: not just the louder, faster songs, but the Jimmy Lavalle pieces, “He Always Felt Like Dancing” and “Ceiling Gazing”; on both, the electric guitarist’s work is discreet but critical.

The interplay with Kozelek, when he does pick up his steel-string acoustic for “Black Kite”, is exceptional, too. The song’s meticulous structure is faithfully rendered, but not before a related bout of self-deprecation involving his right-hand action, its relationship with masturbation, and masturbation’s relationship with a man in his late 40s.

Middle age is very much part of Kozelek’s schtick, of course, not least when he summons a woman from the audience to play Cher to his Sonny in a funny, affectionate version of “I Got You Babe” that skirts agonisingly close to, but just about avoids, sleaziness. This is where Kozelek is right now, full of slightly awestruck good vibes, self-deprecating bad ones, enduring beefs, expanding musical perspectives, and a desire to play one or two feelgood songs like “I Got You Babe” – none of his own, he suggests ruefully, are up to the job.

The thing is, the show feels like a tremendous validation and culmination of not just Kozelek’s weird and strong last 24 months, but also of the whole extraordinary 22 years of his career. Bad things happen, people die, girls leave, life on the road can be grim but, as many of his best songs of late make clear, there’s often a point of acceptance and contentment that you can reach on the other side of it all. That’s how this magnificent gig shapes up. Somehow, as that guy once put it, the wonder of life prevails…

Some more things I’ve written about Mark Kozelek projects:

On Benji

On the Desert Shore and Jimmy Lavalle albums

On Among The Leaves

On Lost Verses

On April

On Admiral Fell Promises

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

SETLIST

1. He Always Felt Like Dancing

2. Micheline

3. The Possum

4. I Can’t Live Without My Mother’s Love

5. I Watched the Film the Song Remains the Same

6. Dogs

7. Black Kite

8. Hey You Bastards I’m Still Here

9. I Got You Babe

10. The Little Drummer Boy

11. The Christmas Song

12. Richard Ramirez Died Today Of Natural Causes

13. Ceiling Gazing

14. Caroline

Encore:

15. War on Drugs: Suck My Cock

16. Carissa

Rod Stewart pays tribute to Ian McLagan: “I’ll miss you, mate”

0
Rod Stewart has paid tribute to Ian McLagan, who died yesterday [December 3]. In a statement sent to Uncut, Stewart said, "I'm absolutely devastated. Ian McLagan embodied the true spirit of the Faces. Last night I was at a charity do, Mick Hucknall was singing 'I'd Rather Go Blind', and Ron Wood te...

Rod Stewart has paid tribute to Ian McLagan, who died yesterday [December 3].

In a statement sent to Uncut, Stewart said, “I’m absolutely devastated. Ian McLagan embodied the true spirit of the Faces. Last night I was at a charity do, Mick Hucknall was singing ‘I’d Rather Go Blind’, and Ron Wood texted to say Ian had passed. It was as if his spirit was in the room. I’ll miss you, mate.”

Stewart is the latest musician to mourn the passing of McLagan.

Writing on Twitter, The Who said: “So very sad to hear of the news about #IanMcLagan who passed away following a stroke on Wednesday 2 December. RIP Mac.”

Meanwhile, Wood paid tribute to both his former bandmate Ian McLagan and the Rolling Stones’ saxophone player Bobby Keys, who died on December 2. Wood Tweeted: “God bless Bobby and Mac”.

Earlier, Kenney Jones had commented, “I am completely devastated by this shocking news and I know goes for Ronnie and Rod also.”

The keyboard player’s death was confirmed in a post on his website yesterday evening [December 3].

“It is with great sadness and eternal admiration that we report the passing of rock and roll icon Ian McLagan. Ian was a member of the Small Faces and Faces and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame in 2012. He died today, December 3, 2014, surrounded by family and friends in his adopted hometown of Austin, Tx, due to complications from a stroke suffered the previous day. He was 69 years old.”

Photo credit: Ron Howard/Redferns

Captain Beefheart And His Magic Band – Sun Zoom Spark 1970 – 1972

0

The trout mask slips: Captain Beefheart’s commercial ambitions revealed... One of the best things you can do on the Internet is a YouTube search for “Beefheart” and “German TV”. Your results will offer up clips of varying length from an appearance by the Beefheart band on the German TV show Beat Club in 1972, in which Don Van Vliet, in fine voice and apparently benign control of proceedings as the Captain, is very much the least interesting thing on display. Behind him, one guitarist duckwalks in and out of shot wearing a silver suit. Another, hugely tall and thin, wails on slide guitar with the animal grace of a giraffe on a bouncy castle. A third guitarist stays nearly still, camouflaged (were his long beard and hair insufficiently doing so) behind dark glasses, the previous generation’s fears about the counterculture in a single human entity. The drummer is wearing a monocle. Individually, these were Mark Boston, Bill Harkleroad, Elliot Ingber, and Art Tripp. Collectively, this was the latest incarnation of Beefheart’s storied Magic Band, essentially the one anthologized on this four disc box set: covering 1970’s Lick My Decals Off, Baby, through 1972’s The Spotlight Kid and the band’s third masterpiece, Clear Spot (also 1972). It is an indication of the singularity of Beefheart’s vision that this was not only the version of his group he felt would bring him some mainstream success, but the one he put together while opposing himself to “freak” culture. While it culminated in the sleek blues architecture of Clear Spot it, the period covered by Sun Zoom Spark is certainly not untouched by freakdom. Six months previously, the band had been living in a shared house in Woodland Hills, California subsisting on a diet of welfare cheese amd soya beans, sustained mainly by the Captain’s aggressively disciplinarian ideas about group composition. The regime yielded the double album splurge Trout Mask Replica, but was not incorrectly described by Frank Zappa, the album’s producer, as the “anthropological” incarnation of the group. A testimony to Beefheart’s persuasiveness is that after the trauma of completing this essentially unmarketable work, he had managed to get the band signed to Warner Brothers. Lick My Decals Off, Baby (here for the first time remastered on CD) was major label funded, rehearsed on a Warners film lot amid Bonanza stage sets, and even had its own TV commercial. It was, however, still very much the product of Van Vliet’s autocratic composition – the songs were assembled from his taped piano fragments on guitar by Bill Harkelroad, as they had once been transcribed by drummer John French. These Trout Mask-style works were then recorded by Phil “Boogie” Schier, and transformed into a record of hellacious intensity. There are some incredible things on Decals. “Peon” and “One Red Rose That I Mean” find Bill Harkleroad on courtly solo guitar, or pursued by Art Tripp (a Zappa alumnus) on marimba. “I Love You You Big Dummy” grooves oddly, while “Smithsonian Institute Blues” amusingly excavates trad sources. In the TV ad, masked Magic Band members played egg whisks and cheese graters, while Beefheart, with his foot, gently overturned a bowl of bread mix in the middle of a road. For all its artistic success, in commercial terms, Decals was no less a waste of dough. Mindful of the commercial inroads that had historically been made by bands like The Doors, Creedence, and Canned Heat with something like his own blues source material, on The Spotlight Kid, Beefheart changed his approach. The tempos on the album are slower, and the material – say “I’m Gonna Booglarize You Baby” or “Click Clack”, a magnificently odd train song – attempt to reconcile commercially successful blues and boogie idioms with his own oblique approach. Free playing – freedom generally – wasn’t encouraged in the Magic Band, but having retained his services after the Decals tour of 1971, Elliot Ingber’s untameably hairy wailing on guitar was accommodated here on “When It Blows Its Stacks” and the later instrumental showpiece, “Alice In Blunderland”. According to Lowell George, Jimi Hendrix was intimidated by Ingber’s playing, and no wonder: his “Blunderland” solo promotes a goodwill which lasts through The Spotlight Kid, all the way to the version on the extras disc, an hour or so later. Warners bankrolled hours of studio time at the Record Plant in late 1971, allowing Beefheart to work on ideas not just destined for this record, but filling a well which sustained him for future albums. As bootlegs from the period have shown, there’s a good three hours of stuff out there from these and the so-called “Brown Star Sessions” for Clear Spot. On the fourth disc here, you can find the pick of it: a tender, jazzy take on “Harry Irene” (later on Bat Chain Puller), and the amusing “Kiss Where I Kaint”, which sounds like a cartoon theme. “Two Rips In A Haystack” is a lovely, soulful composition with harmonica. There are also songs the fan will know. “Best Batch Yet”, and “Dirty Blue Gene” (here in two different versions) were to make up the backbone for 1980’s Doc At The Radar Station. “Run Paint Run Run”, and “The Witch Doctor Life” threw a full decade into the future and the final Beefheart album Ice Cream For Crow. It’s exciting stuff, but you wonder if this had been curated with the care of Revenant’s Grow Fins 15 years ago, this wouldn’t have developed from a taster to a fully-indexed trove. With Elliot Ingber’s skybound soloing, Art Tripp’s bony marimba and Bill Harkleroad’s perversely swinging stop-start riff, “Pompadour Swamp” (whose title was used on Bluejeans And Moonbeams and which ultimately made it on to Shiny Beast/Bat Chain Puller as “Suction Prints”), is the true transitional oddity of the disc. The first escape act it performed, however, was from Clear Spot. Recorded with Ted Templeman, who later helmed commercial successes for the Doobie Brothers and Van Halen, Beefheart’s technical plans for the record were met with a firm rebuttal. With Templeman taking care of recording, Beefheart’s bigger blues picture received a spectacular update. A close cousin to Safe As Milk, Clear Spot fairly jumps with raw modern blues and soul. In the absence of Ry Cooder, guest slide was played by Cooder’s brother in law, Russ Titleman. Every bit as odd as a Beefheart record should be (have you heard “Big Eyed Beans From Venus”?), the album found room for everything the band had to offer: the intricacies of Harkleroad’s playing, the stately and powerful swing, and Beefheart’s own ambition. There was even an unsuspected quality: soul. It remains a magnificent, truly indispensible album. Commercially, it peaked at #191 in the US charts, 60 places lower than the previous record. JOHN ROBINSON Q&A ART TRIPP The band had only recently come out of its most intense period – Trout Mask Replica and the communal living in Woodland Hills, a time of intermittent psychological warfare. Why did you get involved in that kind of scene? Don was really after me to join the band. I was disgusted with the way that the Mothers had ended, and I told Don that I wanted something solid. He readily agreed. Later, after I’d joined the band, I could see that Don wasn’t much interested in personally rehearsing as he was in challenging the others, and finding excuses why he couldn’t rehearse. He’d start band “talks” just to avoid rehearsing. It was all very psychological, you know, but looking back, it was pure horse pucky. To some of the other guys, it seemed as if Don’s meeting (wife) Jan marked a turning point in his behaviour toward the band. What was your impression of him, and of Jan? Jan was a wonderful gal: attractive, always smiling, great sense of humor, and very bright. Don was in love. I don’t know if his behavior changed, or if it was simply that there was less of it, since she had most of his attention. Soon he realized that he couldn’t be married to her and still live in that little house. Don and she got a little place nearby. How did the Decals relate to Trout Mask? “We’d composed and rehearsed “Decals” at the Trout House, and also at my place in Laurel Canyon. The music, of course, was fascinating. Some of the parts were written for guitar, which I transcribed for myself on marimba. Bill would play the parts, and I would write them down in score form. I think the single most telling thing about the “Decals” period was that Don and I actually believed that the music would be commercial! Shows you how far out we were at the time. In many ways “Decals” was more advanced than was “Trout Mask”. It was better arranged and performed. How far was there an attempt to shoot for commercial success with The Spotlight Kid? “Oh, yes. I was one of the promoters of attempting to be more commercial. But Don and management felt it too. The “starving artist” label is captivating only in hindsight. I believed that we’d skyrocket right into obscurity with the art material. But looking back, it was a mistake on a lot of levels to try to make such radical changes.” You moved to Northern California to live in a compound. What was that like? Was money was tight? “We all had separate apartments in a compound probably intended for tourists. I liked it in Ben Lomond (near Santa Cruz), once I got used to the change from L.A. During the Hippie era Santa Cruz, as was the whole state of California, loads of fun. Unfortunately they’re now totalitarian nightmares. If morale was low it was because we weren’t making any money, and a few of the guys weren’t getting enough to eat. I went to town a lot and hustled money by playing pool. That kept me in food, cigarettes and beer. Whenever guys are together with no money, but pouring a lot of energy into music projects, there’s going to be strife and stridency. Clear Spot is a fantastic album. How much of that would you put down to the skills of Ted Templeman? “Ted Templeman was certainly the catalyst for “Clear Spot”. He was able to add a more commercial sound, and assured that we keep things simple. I think Ted was probably the only guy who could have gotten that high quality of an album from our material.” How long had it taken to develop this material. How were you working on these songs now? “Many of the songs were simply germs of ideas that had been floating around for a couple of years. There was an increased effort after (i)Spotlight Kid(i) to continue in a more commercial vein. Most often, Don’s notion of a completed “song” was a single line or phrase on a tape or a cocktail napkin, with nothing embellished further than that. Bill was a big help in developing the material.” Don was still interested in making a commercial record? “Yes, we were all tired of poverty. There was a concerted effort to head in a more commercial vein. In hindsight, that new direction confused and disappointed many of our arts fans; and it may have perplexed record labels over what type of act they were being asked to back and promote. Our existing fans were not ready to accept us as a mainstream rock band.” It sounds as if it might have been a fun album to make – “Big Eyed Beans From Venus” is magnificent. Was it enjoyable? “Yes, it was very enjoyable. For one thing it was a pleasure to have a top producer like Templeman to keep things moving along. He was a very low key guy with loads of talent and experience. He was also something of a baffle or anchor with Don. That is, Ted was able to keep Don's mouth shut, and the sessions on track. "Big Eyed Beans" was fun to play, and very exciting. For several tours, we always ended the main portion of the show with that song.” INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON

The trout mask slips: Captain Beefheart’s commercial ambitions revealed…

One of the best things you can do on the Internet is a YouTube search for “Beefheart” and “German TV”. Your results will offer up clips of varying length from an appearance by the Beefheart band on the German TV show Beat Club in 1972, in which Don Van Vliet, in fine voice and apparently benign control of proceedings as the Captain, is very much the least interesting thing on display.

Behind him, one guitarist duckwalks in and out of shot wearing a silver suit. Another, hugely tall and thin, wails on slide guitar with the animal grace of a giraffe on a bouncy castle. A third guitarist stays nearly still, camouflaged (were his long beard and hair insufficiently doing so) behind dark glasses, the previous generation’s fears about the counterculture in a single human entity. The drummer is wearing a monocle.

Individually, these were Mark Boston, Bill Harkleroad, Elliot Ingber, and Art Tripp. Collectively, this was the latest incarnation of Beefheart’s storied Magic Band, essentially the one anthologized on this four disc box set: covering 1970’s Lick My Decals Off, Baby, through 1972’s The Spotlight Kid and the band’s third masterpiece, Clear Spot (also 1972). It is an indication of the singularity of Beefheart’s vision that this was not only the version of his group he felt would bring him some mainstream success, but the one he put together while opposing himself to “freak” culture.

While it culminated in the sleek blues architecture of Clear Spot it, the period covered by Sun Zoom Spark is certainly not untouched by freakdom. Six months previously, the band had been living in a shared house in Woodland Hills, California subsisting on a diet of welfare cheese amd soya beans, sustained mainly by the Captain’s aggressively disciplinarian ideas about group composition. The regime yielded the double album splurge Trout Mask Replica, but was not incorrectly described by Frank Zappa, the album’s producer, as the “anthropological” incarnation of the group. A testimony to Beefheart’s persuasiveness is that after the trauma of completing this essentially unmarketable work, he had managed to get the band signed to Warner Brothers.

Lick My Decals Off, Baby (here for the first time remastered on CD) was major label funded, rehearsed on a Warners film lot amid Bonanza stage sets, and even had its own TV commercial. It was, however, still very much the product of Van Vliet’s autocratic composition – the songs were assembled from his taped piano fragments on guitar by Bill Harkelroad, as they had once been transcribed by drummer John French. These Trout Mask-style works were then recorded by Phil “Boogie” Schier, and transformed into a record of hellacious intensity.

There are some incredible things on Decals. “Peon” and “One Red Rose That I Mean” find Bill Harkleroad on courtly solo guitar, or pursued by Art Tripp (a Zappa alumnus) on marimba. “I Love You You Big Dummy” grooves oddly, while “Smithsonian Institute Blues” amusingly excavates trad sources. In the TV ad, masked Magic Band members played egg whisks and cheese graters, while Beefheart, with his foot, gently overturned a bowl of bread mix in the middle of a road. For all its artistic success, in commercial terms, Decals was no less a waste of dough.

Mindful of the commercial inroads that had historically been made by bands like The Doors, Creedence, and Canned Heat with something like his own blues source material, on The Spotlight Kid, Beefheart changed his approach. The tempos on the album are slower, and the material – say “I’m Gonna Booglarize You Baby” or “Click Clack”, a magnificently odd train song – attempt to reconcile commercially successful blues and boogie idioms with his own oblique approach.

Free playing – freedom generally – wasn’t encouraged in the Magic Band, but having retained his services after the Decals tour of 1971, Elliot Ingber’s untameably hairy wailing on guitar was accommodated here on “When It Blows Its Stacks” and the later instrumental showpiece, “Alice In Blunderland”. According to Lowell George, Jimi Hendrix was intimidated by Ingber’s playing, and no wonder: his “Blunderland” solo promotes a goodwill which lasts through The Spotlight Kid, all the way to the version on the extras disc, an hour or so later.

Warners bankrolled hours of studio time at the Record Plant in late 1971, allowing Beefheart to work on ideas not just destined for this record, but filling a well which sustained him for future albums. As bootlegs from the period have shown, there’s a good three hours of stuff out there from these and the so-called “Brown Star Sessions” for Clear Spot. On the fourth disc here, you can find the pick of it: a tender, jazzy take on “Harry Irene” (later on Bat Chain Puller), and the amusing “Kiss Where I Kaint”, which sounds like a cartoon theme. “Two Rips In A Haystack” is a lovely, soulful composition with harmonica.

There are also songs the fan will know. “Best Batch Yet”, and “Dirty Blue Gene” (here in two different versions) were to make up the backbone for 1980’s Doc At The Radar Station. “Run Paint Run Run”, and “The Witch Doctor Life” threw a full decade into the future and the final Beefheart album Ice Cream For Crow. It’s exciting stuff, but you wonder if this had been curated with the care of Revenant’s Grow Fins 15 years ago, this wouldn’t have developed from a taster to a fully-indexed trove.

With Elliot Ingber’s skybound soloing, Art Tripp’s bony marimba and Bill Harkleroad’s perversely swinging stop-start riff, “Pompadour Swamp” (whose title was used on Bluejeans And Moonbeams and which ultimately made it on to Shiny Beast/Bat Chain Puller as “Suction Prints”), is the true transitional oddity of the disc. The first escape act it performed, however, was from Clear Spot. Recorded with Ted Templeman, who later helmed commercial successes for the Doobie Brothers and Van Halen, Beefheart’s technical plans for the record were met with a firm rebuttal.

With Templeman taking care of recording, Beefheart’s bigger blues picture received a spectacular update. A close cousin to Safe As Milk, Clear Spot fairly jumps with raw modern blues and soul. In the absence of Ry Cooder, guest slide was played by Cooder’s brother in law, Russ Titleman. Every bit as odd as a Beefheart record should be (have you heard “Big Eyed Beans From Venus”?), the album found room for everything the band had to offer: the intricacies of Harkleroad’s playing, the stately and powerful swing, and Beefheart’s own ambition. There was even an unsuspected quality: soul. It remains a magnificent, truly indispensible album. Commercially, it peaked at #191 in the US charts, 60 places lower than the previous record.

JOHN ROBINSON

Q&A

ART TRIPP

The band had only recently come out of its most intense period – Trout Mask Replica and the communal living in Woodland Hills, a time of intermittent psychological warfare. Why did you get involved in that kind of scene?

Don was really after me to join the band. I was disgusted with the way that the Mothers had ended, and I told Don that I wanted something solid. He readily agreed. Later, after I’d joined the band, I could see that Don wasn’t much interested in personally rehearsing as he was in challenging the others, and finding excuses why he couldn’t rehearse. He’d start band “talks” just to avoid rehearsing. It was all very psychological, you know, but looking back, it was pure horse pucky.

To some of the other guys, it seemed as if Don’s meeting (wife) Jan marked a turning point in his behaviour toward the band. What was your impression of him, and of Jan?

Jan was a wonderful gal: attractive, always smiling, great sense of humor, and very bright. Don was in love. I don’t know if his behavior changed, or if it was simply that there was less of it, since she had most of his attention. Soon he realized that he couldn’t be married to her and still live in that little house. Don and she got a little place nearby.

How did the Decals relate to Trout Mask?

“We’d composed and rehearsed “Decals” at the Trout House, and also at my place in Laurel Canyon. The music, of course, was fascinating. Some of the parts were written for guitar, which I transcribed for myself on marimba. Bill would play the parts, and I would write them down in score form. I think the single most telling thing about the “Decals” period was that Don and I actually believed that the music would be commercial! Shows you how far out we were at the time. In many ways “Decals” was more advanced than was “Trout Mask”. It was better arranged and performed.

How far was there an attempt to shoot for commercial success with The Spotlight Kid?

“Oh, yes. I was one of the promoters of attempting to be more commercial. But Don and management felt it too. The “starving artist” label is captivating only in hindsight. I believed that we’d skyrocket right into obscurity with the art material. But looking back, it was a mistake on a lot of levels to try to make such radical changes.”

You moved to Northern California to live in a compound. What was that like? Was money was tight?

“We all had separate apartments in a compound probably intended for tourists. I liked it in Ben Lomond (near Santa Cruz), once I got used to the change from L.A. During the Hippie era Santa Cruz, as was the whole state of California, loads of fun. Unfortunately they’re now totalitarian nightmares. If morale was low it was because we weren’t making any money, and a few of the guys weren’t getting enough to eat. I went to town a lot and hustled money by playing pool. That kept me in food, cigarettes and beer. Whenever guys are together with no money, but pouring a lot of energy into music projects, there’s going to be strife and stridency.

Clear Spot is a fantastic album. How much of that would you put down to the skills of Ted Templeman?

“Ted Templeman was certainly the catalyst for “Clear Spot”. He was able to add a more commercial sound, and assured that we keep things simple. I think Ted was probably the only guy who could have gotten that high quality of an album from our material.”

How long had it taken to develop this material. How were you working on these songs now?

“Many of the songs were simply germs of ideas that had been floating around for a couple of years. There was an increased effort after (i)Spotlight Kid(i) to continue in a more commercial vein. Most often, Don’s notion of a completed “song” was a single line or phrase on a tape or a cocktail napkin, with nothing embellished further than that. Bill was a big help in developing the material.”

Don was still interested in making a commercial record?

“Yes, we were all tired of poverty. There was a concerted effort to head in a more commercial vein. In hindsight, that new direction confused and disappointed many of our arts fans; and it may have perplexed record labels over what type of act they were being asked to back and promote. Our existing fans were not ready to accept us as a mainstream rock band.”

It sounds as if it might have been a fun album to make – “Big Eyed Beans From Venus” is magnificent. Was it enjoyable?

“Yes, it was very enjoyable. For one thing it was a pleasure to have a top producer like Templeman to keep things moving along. He was a very low key guy with loads of talent and experience. He was also something of a baffle or anchor with Don. That is, Ted was able to keep Don’s mouth shut, and the sessions on track. “Big Eyed Beans” was fun to play, and very exciting. For several tours, we always ended the main portion of the show with that song.”

INTERVIEW: JOHN ROBINSON