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Ray Davies: Kinks reunion latest

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Ray Davies has been discussing his current relationship with his brother, Dave, and the possiblility of further Kinks activity. In a new interview with Rolling Stone, Davies said, "Over the years, I've been doing a few new tracks with Mick [Avory], our original drummer." He also discussed the ongo...

Ray Davies has been discussing his current relationship with his brother, Dave, and the possiblility of further Kinks activity.

In a new interview with Rolling Stone, Davies said, “Over the years, I’ve been doing a few new tracks with Mick [Avory], our original drummer.”

He also discussed the ongoing issues between Avory and Dave Davies, saying: “Those guys have been at each other’s throats for 50 years… I don’t work for the United Nations. I’m just a musician. I had a drink with Mick last week, and I asked, ‘What happened to you guys?’ They shared a house in the 1960s. I think some things went on there that created a rivalry… It’s like a bad Harold Pinter play.”

It was put to Davies that his brother, Dave, doesn’t want a potential Kinks tour to be the Ray Davies show, with the younger Davies in the corner, Ray Davies replied: “I don’t understand what that’s about. If we do a Kinks show, we’re the Kinks. Ray stands on the right of the stage and Dave stands on the left. Look, my brother is very intelligent. He’s a good writer. We actually put down a few demos last Christmas. He came to see me, and he played me a couple of new songs.”

When asked whether there would be a new tour in 2015, Davies answered: “I don’t know about next year. I’m doing a studio album of my songs from my book Americana, and I’m going to do a small tour. As for the Kinks, I have to talk to Dave.”

Wu-Tang Clan stream new album A Better Tomorrow in full – listen

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The album will be released on December 2... Wu Tang Clan have made their new album A Better Tomorrow available to stream in full – scroll down to listen. The album will be released officially on December 2 through Warners and is a celebration of the rap troupe's 20th anniversary. The group have previously shared new tracks 'Ruckus In B Minor', 'Keep Watch', 'Ron O'Neal' and 'Necklace' from the release, however the full LP is now available to listen to. The tracklist for A Better Tomorrow is: 'Ruckus In B Minor' 'Felt' '40th Street Black/We Will Fight' 'Mistaken Identity' 'Hold The Heater' 'Crushed Egos' 'Keep Watch' 'Miracle' 'Preacher’s Daughter' 'Pioneer The Frontier' 'Necklace' 'Ron O’Neal' 'A Better Tomorrow' 'Never Let Go' 'Wu-Tang Reunion' The band are also set to release new 'one-off' album Once Upon A Time In Shaolin – a concept record of which only one copy will be pressed. The one-off record would be exhibited and then sold to the highest bidder. However, recently, Wu-Tang member RZA has suggested that the album will now receive its debut airing at Art Basel in Florida. Art Basel takes place in Miami Beach from December 4-7. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=szrD1cxqvUg

The album will be released on December 2…

Wu Tang Clan have made their new album A Better Tomorrow available to stream in full – scroll down to listen.

The album will be released officially on December 2 through Warners and is a celebration of the rap troupe’s 20th anniversary.

The group have previously shared new tracks ‘Ruckus In B Minor’, ‘Keep Watch’, ‘Ron O’Neal’ and ‘Necklace’ from the release, however the full LP is now available to listen to.

The tracklist for A Better Tomorrow is:

‘Ruckus In B Minor’

‘Felt’

’40th Street Black/We Will Fight’

‘Mistaken Identity’

‘Hold The Heater’

‘Crushed Egos’

‘Keep Watch’

‘Miracle’

‘Preacher’s Daughter’

‘Pioneer The Frontier’

‘Necklace’

‘Ron O’Neal’

‘A Better Tomorrow’

‘Never Let Go’

‘Wu-Tang Reunion’

The band are also set to release new ‘one-off’ album Once Upon A Time In Shaolin – a concept record of which only one copy will be pressed.

The one-off record would be exhibited and then sold to the highest bidder. However, recently, Wu-Tang member RZA has suggested that the album will now receive its debut airing at Art Basel in Florida. Art Basel takes place in Miami Beach from December 4-7.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=szrD1cxqvUg

The Smiths’ drummer Mike Joyce appears in BBC Radio 4 play

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'My Dad Keith' will be broadcast tomorrow afternoon (November 28)... Mike Joyce, former drummer in The Smiths, made his radio acting debut on Friday, November 28, appearing in a play on BBC Radio 4. Joyce appeared in My Dad Keith, a play written by and starring the actress Maxine Peake. The 45-minute drama was broadcast at 2.15pm and is currently available to listen to on BBC iPlayer. Joyce spoke to NME about the play, which the BBC describes as "a tale of teenage angst, midlife crisis and drumming". He said: "There's strength through family community and closure in the death of a family member, [but] it's very funny! There's a lot in it. Maxine said to me she thought it was a little bit of fun, and I said, 'Yeah, that's just because you've been fucking playing Hamlet!' Anything's lightweight after that!" Joyce added that he agreed to take the role because he thought "it's not in my comfort zone and I'd find it quite challenging". When asked about actor James Franco's current Smiths-inspired musical project Daddy, which features the band's original bassist Andy Rourke, Joyce said: "I got sent a link for it and I couldn't open it, and that was it really! Andy's playing bass with him..." Would you have taken part if you'd been asked? "Obviously it would be lovely to play with Andy again, but there's the Atlantic in the way; Andy lives in New York now... I'd have to listen to it, to see if it'd float my boat [before] I'd say yes... I'm sure the basslines sound fantastic!" NME also discussed the Smiths convention set to take place in Salford's Kings Arms pub – owned by Beautiful South musician Paul Heaton – next April. When asked if he'd attend, Joyce joked: "I don't know – I've not been invited! If it's sold out, I might turn up and it's one out, one in!" He continued: "Anything like that is flattering. When you're starting a band, I defy anybody to not want to be successful – that's the idea. You want to be in a band where, in 20, 30 years' time, people will still play your music and be talking about you, and that's exactly what's happened with The Smiths. That is pretty unique – that doesn't happen to that many bands. It's a dream come true, really."

‘My Dad Keith’ will be broadcast tomorrow afternoon (November 28)…

Mike Joyce, former drummer in The Smiths, made his radio acting debut on Friday, November 28, appearing in a play on BBC Radio 4.

Joyce appeared in My Dad Keith, a play written by and starring the actress Maxine Peake. The 45-minute drama was broadcast at 2.15pm and is currently available to listen to on BBC iPlayer.

Joyce spoke to NME about the play, which the BBC describes as “a tale of teenage angst, midlife crisis and drumming”. He said: “There’s strength through family community and closure in the death of a family member, [but] it’s very funny! There’s a lot in it. Maxine said to me she thought it was a little bit of fun, and I said, ‘Yeah, that’s just because you’ve been fucking playing Hamlet!’ Anything’s lightweight after that!” Joyce added that he agreed to take the role because he thought “it’s not in my comfort zone and I’d find it quite challenging”.

When asked about actor James Franco’s current Smiths-inspired musical project Daddy, which features the band’s original bassist Andy Rourke, Joyce said: “I got sent a link for it and I couldn’t open it, and that was it really! Andy’s playing bass with him…” Would you have taken part if you’d been asked? “Obviously it would be lovely to play with Andy again, but there’s the Atlantic in the way; Andy lives in New York now… I’d have to listen to it, to see if it’d float my boat [before] I’d say yes… I’m sure the basslines sound fantastic!”

NME also discussed the Smiths convention set to take place in Salford’s Kings Arms pub – owned by Beautiful South musician Paul Heaton – next April. When asked if he’d attend, Joyce joked: “I don’t know – I’ve not been invited! If it’s sold out, I might turn up and it’s one out, one in!” He continued: “Anything like that is flattering. When you’re starting a band, I defy anybody to not want to be successful – that’s the idea. You want to be in a band where, in 20, 30 years’ time, people will still play your music and be talking about you, and that’s exactly what’s happened with The Smiths. That is pretty unique – that doesn’t happen to that many bands. It’s a dream come true, really.”

Shaun Ryder: “There’s all sorts of stories about me. I’ve stopped listening to them.”

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As Shaun Ryder turns 60 today, I thought I'd post my encounter with him from 2007. We met in Nottingham. I remember the interview was scheduled to place on the roof terrace at one of the town's Travelodges. But Shaun wouldn't leave the tour bus, which was parked outside the hotel. It took the ba...

As Shaun Ryder turns 60 today, I thought I’d post my encounter with him from 2007.

We met in Nottingham. I remember the interview was scheduled to place on the roof terrace at one of the town’s Travelodges. But Shaun wouldn’t leave the tour bus, which was parked outside the hotel. It took the band’s press officer the best part of two hours to cajole him to come out and do the interview. When he eventually appeared, he was incredibly nervous. I think this was one of the first interviews he’d done straight, and he really struggled at first. But when he warmed up – and showed me his then-brand new teeth – he was perfectly charming.

What I remember, too, is the generosity of everyone else I spoke to for the piece. Peter Hook, Mani and Damon Albarn all spoke warmly and at length about Shaun. But most pertinently, I remember having a 30 minute phone conversation with Tony Wilson, not long before his death. I rang him in hospital and while he evidently had other, far more serious issues to deal with, he still took the time to talk about Shaun and the Mondays.

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Shaun William Ryder throws back his head and laughs; a great, long dirty cackle, full of mischief, that bubbles and crackles as it shifts the cigarette tar round his lungs.

“Are you fuckin’ trippin’, or what?” He fixes me with a squint. I’ve just asked Shaun whether he’s got any regrets, whether looking back on those long, lost years he spent as a junkie he’s now experiencing any pangs of remorse.

“Regretful? Am I fuck! No chance, no chance,” he lowers his head, runs his hand across his recently shaved scalp. “They were great times. I can’t remember any of them, mind. If you handed me some photographs, I wouldn’t know where I’d been.”

Start spreading the news: Shaun Ryder is straight. He’s tried to clean up before, but never, it seems, with complete success.

“It was methadone I was getting off. I haven’t touched heroin for five years. I took heroin and methadone at the same time for 20 fuckin’ years.”

Are you worried you might fall back off the wagon?

“No chance. Heroin and crack were my poison. I don’t miss any of it. It only took me nearly 40 years. No, sorry, I’m 44. How old was I when I started using? 16? 15? 13? 14?” He sighs and shakes his head. “My memory’s fuckin’ really bad now, really bad, which I’m probably thankful for. I can remember stuff from being under 13, and from 13 onwards, it’s just a fuckin’ blur.”

It’s early evening and we’re sitting on the roof terrace of a Nottingham hotel. Last night, Shaun played his first ever gig straight, at Bristol’s Academy 2; in an hour’s time, the Happy Mondays take the stage at Nottingham’s Rescue Rooms. They’re warm-up gigs for the Coachella festival in America; small, 350 capacity venues to road test material from the Monday’s new album, due in July, that’s probably called Dysfunktional. Shaun doesn’t like playing gigs this intimate. The experience is currently a little too raw for him without the drugs.

“You can see the audience breathing,” he says aghast. “It terrifies me. I don’t mind being straight, it’s cool, but getting on that stage for the first time… Plus the small venues. It never bothers me playing huge venues; it’s not personal, is it? You do a small venue and it’s fuckin’ real, too real.”

And after the gig last night?

“Pals came by I’ve not seen for a long time. We all went out on a club crawl. Got in about seven o’clock this morning. I’ve had about two hours kip.

“I’m not really good with hangovers. I’m terrible, terrible,” he smiles apologetically.

How does working clean compare with working stoned?

“It fuckin’ frightens me to death.”

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It’s hard to reconcile Shaun Ryder today with the swaggering, leery Shaun of legend. In the late Eighties, the antics of the Mondays were emblematic of a pre-Loaded, pre-Oasis world of hedonism, laddishness and pharmaceutical overload that dovetailed beautifully with the rise of Acid House and Ecstasy. The music the Mondays made – melodies held together with gaffer tape, scuzzy funk grooves topped off by Shaun’s surreal lyrics, rattled out with a brassy, sarcastic sneer – helped defined an era.

“I saw the Happy Mondays at their first, big London gig at the Astoria,” says Damon Albarn, who collaborated with Shaun on Gorillaz’ 2005 single “Dare”. “It was the first time I saw a mass of people turn into a deep ocean.”

“What’s very peculiar about the Mondays,” says former Factory Records boss Tony Wilson, “is that in the 24 Hour Party People movie, the acid house sequence begins with ‘Tart, Tart’, and it works brilliantly. But ‘Tart, Tart’ was on Squirrel & The G Man, the first album [1986]. Those dance rhythms coming over from Chicago and Detroit had already infiltrated Shaun’s consciousness.”

The Mondays music arrived pre-packed with madness and chaos. New Order’s Peter Hook remembers: “They supported us in Glasgow when they were at their naughtiest. While we were onstage, they loaded the rider in the van. They got all the booze – all the fresh fruit, all that bleeding lot – but they couldn’t resist the spotty meat platter. They came back to get it, but the venue manager caught them. He made them unload the whole rider and gave them all a cuff, him and his bouncers. Shaun is incensed by this, gets really pissed off, and he’s sat in the front of a double-wheeled transit they’re driving back to Manchester in, and he kicked the windscreen out. They couldn’t get it fixed, so they had to drive all the way back to Manchester with no windscreen in the van. I suppose our careers have been full of lovable little exchanges like that.”

“In those days, we was lucky to get four cans of lager between us,” laughs Shaun today when I recount Hook’s story to him. “There’s all sorts of stories about me. I’ve stopped listening to them. You’ve got to laugh at them, really…”

All the same, the stories – true or false – increasingly threatened to eclipse the music. While recording their second album, Bummed, in an army town, the band diffuse potential tension with the squaddies barracked there by selling them E. On their first visit to New York, Shaun and Bez are nearly shot leaving a Harlem crack den by a Puerto Rican street gang. Arriving in Rio following a drug-fuelled flight they discover the local press are claiming they were carrying one million E in their luggage. Shaun allegedly poisons 3,000 pigeons in Manchester by feeding them rocks of crack. Dropping his methadone phials at Manchester Airport, Shaun attempts to salvage his supply by filtering the broken glass through a pair of tights. Shaun strips bare Eddy Grant’s Barbados studio to subsidise his blossoming crack habit, rumoured to extend to 30 rocks a day…

“I grew up in New York in the 1970s, and I’ve seen a lot of people who live life on the edge,” explains ex-Talking Head Tina Weymouth, who produced the Monday’s Yes, Please! album. “But I’ve never before seen a group of people who had no idea where the edge is.”

You could hardly call the drug-propelled lunacy of the Mondays unique. But the tales accumulating around them became increasingly murky and more dangerous. Even taking into account the tabloid propensity to exaggerate and embellish, looking back at the Red Top headlines can make for pretty grim reading: “Shaun pulls a gun stunt”, “Pop stars exposed as drug pushers by their own manager”, and worst of all: “Shaun’s death bid.”

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Did you start using drugs as a form of escape, Shaun?

“I wouldn’t have said that at the time, but yeah. When you’re young, everything’s boring, basically. Of course it’s escaping. For me, it’s all about not feeling it, not giving a fuck, because I’ve got a really big heart. And it didn’t really do to be a caring, thoughtful geezer in this business.”

“Where he comes from, Little Hulton, there’s not a lot going on,” says former Stone Roses bassist Mani, who’s known Shaun since 1987. “We had similar things in my part of town, people getting fucked up because it’s Thatcher’s Britain and there’s nothing else to do. We used to go to the Hacienda and get complete banjoed on whatever substances were around at the time.”

“Drugs never make any record better, they only make making it better,” says Peter Hook. “When you listen to it in the cold light of day, the way normal people do, it’s all a load of bollocks. But it doesn’t stop us doing it. We’re all like pigs in a trough.”

“He’s an interesting person with a good soul,” says Damon Albarn, but: “I understand his subterranean side.”

The trajectory of Shaun’s chemical dependency reached its lowest point a few years back, when he seemed irrevocably damaged by the years of heroin and crack addiction, a busted flush. Watching him on the BBC3 documentary The Agony And The Ecstasy, he resembled a particularly cruel Peter Kaye impersonation of Shaun Ryder; bloated and wheezing, his voice at a weird, unnatural pitch. It was a terrible shock, the final act in the Mondays morality tale.

“He scared the hell out of me looking like death,” remembers Tony Wilson. “I always claimed, when did you last see such an awful white pallor and that viscous, white liquid on top of the skin? And the answer is: Elvis Presley, the last two years. But I’ve learned never to underestimate Shaun.”

It was Shaun’s own decision to clean up for good.

“It was time, I’d had enough,” he says.

When did you decide to get straight?

“About 15 years ago.”

How come it’s taken so long?

“It’s ongoing, innit, really? It’s actually easier than it ever has been before when I’ve tried.”

Why?

“Instead of moping about, I just got on my bike, went cycling with my iPod on. Just kicked myself up the arse.”

What constitutes straight for you? Are you off everything?

Apart from having a drink,” he sloshes some dark liquid round in a little plastic cup. “I’m really conscious about drinking, because the last thing you want to do is replace heroin with booze.”

“I’m not shocked that he’s clean, I’m shocked that he’s remained clean,” the Mondays long-standing drummer, and Shaun’s friend of 25 years, Gary Whelan observes. “You know when people aren’t going to stay off it, anytime they can go back. There’s that story – when you want to stop, you stop. Shaun used to say: ‘One day, I’ll get to that point.’ And he has.”

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If drugs drove the Mondays back in the day, I want to know what’s driving Shaun now he’s clean – but he’s shy and evasive, almost coy.

“Don’t know, fella. It’s my job, that’s it. I dig being in the studio. I really don’t like doing this [interviews], especially now I’m conscious about what I’m saying. Before, I couldn’t give a fuck. What’s driving me? No idea.”

Tony Wilson is more forthcoming: “Now he’s straight, Shaun is having some relationship with his art for a change,” he tells me. “He doesn’t like talking about that. But maybe, just maybe, he can understand it a bit now. There’s a song called ‘Somebody Else’s Weather’. Who else can contain the whole notion of Global Warming in three words? His lyrical power is unmatched, except by Alex Turner.”

“I’m fucking Barabbas mate,” says Shaun. “I’m the one that got away. I wrote some alright songs, I wrote some alright tunes,” he says, a model of self-deprecation. “It’s pretty easy, there’s nothing clever about it, it’s like writing cartoons. Whatever, taking the piss.”

“There’s a piece in The Independent recently about LS Lowry, talking about why he was never taken seriously,” says Gary Whelan. “It was because he always used to talk himself down, say ‘I’m not a fuckin’ artist, I’m just doing a bit of a doodle.’ It’s our insecure, north Mancunian, blue collar rules – you don’t admit to it, because if you do it’s over.”

“Being a singer when I grew up was for fuckin’ pooves,” claims Shaun. “I got saddled with a job, being a singer, writing lyrics. So I’ve had to do that. Us being in a band was just something to fuckin’ do, really. It was only ever meant for us lot. I didn’t even want to do gigs, I didn’t even want to make a fucking record.”

It’s taken Shaun a phenomenal degree of self-control to get where he is now, and even if he won’t quite admit it on record, he’s extremely proud of his achievement – as are those closest to him.

“He’s a very strong-willed character,” says Mani. “We’ve both had mates that have gone down the death path, but I think Shaun was always that little bit too wise for that.”

“One of the nicest things Shaun ever said about me was: ‘He used to be a cunt, but he’s alright now,'” laughs Peter Hook. “Now I can repay the compliment.”

“Mr Ryder is in his best form, it’s the best I’ve ever known him,” confirms Bez.

Shaun reflects ruefully on some of his previous attempts to get clean, including Naltrexone implants:

“I was one of the first to get them. Fuck me. Fuck that, terrible. You wake up, and you’re supposed to have done your rattle in the sleep. They put you out for 24 hours, induce you. And it’s a fucking nightmare, absolute nightmare.”

Today, despite his hangover, Shaun certainly looks in better shape. He’s slim, though his hands are a little jittery and he sucks hard on cigarettes, deep, lung stretching drags. There’s a new set of teeth courtesy of a “celebrity dentist” that he’s claimed cost £25,000. They’re almost comically white in contrast with Shaun’s sallow, ex-junkie complexion, and Mani notes with a laugh that the first time he saw Shaun with his new gnashers in place he thought he looked like “the mysterious seventh Osmond brother.”

Shaun has what appears to be a solid support network around him at present. Although there’s the apparently never-ending saga of Shaun’s legal wrangles with previous management, he has a pair of new managers, Elliot Rashman and Stuart Worthington. Rashman managed Simply Red before quitting the music industry a decade back. It was seeing the shocking state of Shaun in The Agony And The Ecstasy that made him want to return to music. Something of a philanthropist, perhaps, he describes managing Shaun to me as “voluntary social work”.

“He’s the only cunt who’s given me a really mad bollocking since I was 10 years old,” Shaun says of Rashman with respect verging on awe.

It’s Rashman and Worthington who negotiated the band’s current contract with Sanctuary Records, home to other Manchester luminaries Morrissey, The Fall and the Charlatans.

At the Rescue Rooms gig, the Mondays drop into their set four songs from the new album. The venue is packed, and it’s ridiculously hot, but the Mondays songs – both old and new – are greeted with a mini riot. You’d expect the audience to comprise almost exclusively thirtysomething men, families at home, pills at the ready, out to recapture something from their youth. As it transpires, they’re young, students mostly, experiencing the Mondays magic for the first time, screaming for Shaun and Bez. Shaun stays towards the back of the stage throughout – “I’ve got to get over these nerves,” he’d muttered to me earlier – while Bez does what Shaun calls “his Tigger thing”.

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Much later, Shaun, Gary and Bez sit upstairs in the tour bus, toasting the gig’s success over a few beers; a far cry, you presume, from the kind of celebrations they’d have indulged in a few years back. They’re the only three members of the original line-up to have made it this far, through the busts and arrests and wild, wild times.

Are you surprised you’ve survived this long?

Gary: “I am.”

Bez: “I’ve got blind faith. I believed in us all the time, 100%.”

Gary: “I never thought we were that good.”

Bez: “No, that’s why it’s good. Cos we was really shit, but we just got better. We couldn’t even play a tune all the same speed all the way through. Remember? We’d start off really slow, get faster in the middle, and really fast at the end.”

Shaun: “In the original band, the guitarist only listened to his guitar, Our Kid [Paul Ryder, his estranged brother] only listened to his bass, the keyboard player only listened to the fuckin’ imaginary messages he was getting from God…”

“The main thing is,” says Bez, “it’s nice to walk on stage knowing you can buzz off some new tunes. I was beginning to fuckin’ dread turning into cabaret. I’m so pleased, because in times of hardship, the Happy Mondays have been our lifeline, and without it we’d have been nothing. It’s the thing what keeps us alive and going.”

Shaun slugs from a cup brimming with Jameson’s and coke and for the second time today stares me straight in the eye.

“Our present is that we’re all still alive, mate.”

Mark Kozelek: “The War On Drugs tweet, I write songs. That’s how it works”

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Mark Kozelek of Sun Kil Moon speaks out about his feud with The War On Drugs in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2015 and out now. Kozelek has so far released two songs referring to the disagreement – which began when he claimed his set was disrupted by sound from The War On Drugs’ perfo...

Mark Kozelek of Sun Kil Moon speaks out about his feud with The War On Drugs in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2015 and out now.

Kozelek has so far released two songs referring to the disagreement – which began when he claimed his set was disrupted by sound from The War On Drugs’ performance on another stage at Canada’s Ottawa Folk Fest on September 14 this year – “War On Drugs: Suck My Cock” and “Adam Granofsky Blues”.

“The band tweeted they wanted confirmation of my stage banter,” says Kozelek, “and they got it. They tweet, I write songs. That’s how it works.”

Asked whether he regrets any of the language he used in “War On Drugs: Suck My Cock”, Kozelek replies: “Language? Who are you, Tipper Gore? I’ve got a great sense of humour and anyone who doesn’t share it is entitled to go cry about nothing.”

The new issue of Uncut, featuring a full, wide-ranging interview with Kozelek, is out now.

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

Prince – Art Official Age / Prince & 3rdeyegirl – Plectrumelectrum

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Two unique new albums from the purple pioneer... There have been 23 Prince LPs since Sign “O” The Times (1987), the double-album of protest funk, hot soul, screaming gospel-metal and gorgeous ballads which seemed designed to demonstrate that its creator, touched by genius, could do anything. Soon afterwards, Prince made that literally true, as he forcibly extracted himself from his Warner contract and the conventional music industry. Free at last, he began a policy of funk over-production, as his Paisley Park studio pumped out barely differentiated Prince product. Prodigious quantity replaced prodigious quality, and an exhausted public turned their backs. 23 LPs, and not a song on the last 20 has made any lasting impact. And still, before Kate Bush, there was no-one in 2014 whose gig tickets were so desperately sought. Prince’s records have, then, become largely irrelevant to Prince’s career. He survives on an enduring mystique which, in the absence of concrete facts, suggests he only leaves Paisley Park to knock on downtown Minneapolis doors as a bodyguard-flanked Jehovah’s Witness, and that sex, God, and music about both occupy all his waking hours. And then, there’s his reputation as one of the greatest live acts, who started a 21-night run at the O2 Arena in 2007 with “Purple Rain”, cockily noting how many exhilarating hits he had in reserve from his golden ’80s. Despondent at the internet’s impact on his control of and potential profit from recorded work, Prince has declared several times that gigs are his priority now. After the years of surfeit, the aptly titled 20Ten was his last album for four years. But now that his brilliantly conceived, rapturously received Hit And Run gigs in small London clubs have reminded the world how good he can be, he has two albums to meet our piqued hunger for him. He is also back on Warners, the label he left on such monstrously bad terms, with the word “Slave” outrageously scrawled on his head; the label, too, on which he had all his early success. It looks very much like a comeback. Or maybe just one last go at selling Prince records in the 21st Century. 3rdeyegirl’s Plectrumelectrum is the most interesting of the pair. Prince’s new all-female band (bar its writer, auxiliary singer and guitarist, of course) backed him on his London shows, and shared the glowing reviews. Having a proper band has always brought out the best in him, from his unbeatable ’80s run with the Revolution to the brief creative revival of his first album with the New Power Generation, Diamonds And Pearls. 3rdeyegirl was surely the stimulus for his current activity. Donna Grantis’ guitar has certainly inspired his own playing, and Grantis told Uncut earlier this year that the example of classic rock bands such as Led Zeppelin was discussed, as they recorded live “off the floor”. The high guitar whines of the instrumental title track and “Funknroll”’s swaggering riff are strong examples of this high-energy, back-to-basics approach. Prince squeals during the latter, getting off on his own music. “Fixurlifeup” uses his unique approach to feminism (previous form: “If I Was Your Girlfriend”) to sketch 3rdeyegirl’s rationale, in which “a girl with a guitar” is worth the “misogynistic wall of noise” made by men. Still, Prince naturally remains in sole creative charge. Supposedly only around for backing vocals as the women take the lead, he also regularly grabs the spotlight. Plectrumelectrum isn’t just an exercise in pseudo-feminist shredding. There’s also the signature Spartan Prince-funk of “Boytrouble”, while “Anotherlove”, “Tictactoe” and “Whitecaps” are hurt, keyboard-heavy ballads. 3rdeyegirl seem to serve all his needs, and though there are no songs here to touch past glories, their excitement in the studio is captured. Art Official Age, made with only multi-instrumentalist Joshua Welton aiding Prince, is by contrast the sort of goofily half-arsed concept album we’ve come to expect. Linking tracks find Prince being awoken from suspended animation by a posh young Englishwoman, who informs him of his newly evolved, healed and telepathic self. Doubtless this is the kind of science-fiction philosophy Prince, who has found great comfort in his Jehovah’s Witness faith, on some level believes. His existential crises are expressed more earthily on “Breakdown”, “the saddest story ever been told”, which begins on understated keyboards, and becomes a laser-blasted epic. The ecstatic screams it provokes reveal the splicing of Little Richard and Al Green in Prince’s DNA. “The Gold Standard” has funk guitar, and it longs for a time when “music was like a spiritual feeling”, similarly explodes into imaginary dance-moves (“New Power –slide!”). It finishes with Prince in full filthy funk mode, distractedly muttering, “Let me get in there – good God!” His pornographic obsessions are as usual disarmingly hilarious. Most unexpectedly, “Time” unveils Prince the bluesman, grunting despairingly at “another dirty hotel room, another lonely town”. An attempt at part-rapped, contemporary R&B, “Art Official Cage”, is only adequately successful, meanwhile, amid too many average slow jams. Taken together, these albums don’t resurrect Prince the genius. They just remind you he’s still around; short of a tune, but the unique inhabitant of a purple planet all his own. Nick Hasted Uncut is available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Two unique new albums from the purple pioneer…

There have been 23 Prince LPs since Sign “O” The Times (1987), the double-album of protest funk, hot soul, screaming gospel-metal and gorgeous ballads which seemed designed to demonstrate that its creator, touched by genius, could do anything. Soon afterwards, Prince made that literally true, as he forcibly extracted himself from his Warner contract and the conventional music industry.

Free at last, he began a policy of funk over-production, as his Paisley Park studio pumped out barely differentiated Prince product. Prodigious quantity replaced prodigious quality, and an exhausted public turned their backs. 23 LPs, and not a song on the last 20 has made any lasting impact. And still, before Kate Bush, there was no-one in 2014 whose gig tickets were so desperately sought.

Prince’s records have, then, become largely irrelevant to Prince’s career. He survives on an enduring mystique which, in the absence of concrete facts, suggests he only leaves Paisley Park to knock on downtown Minneapolis doors as a bodyguard-flanked Jehovah’s Witness, and that sex, God, and music about both occupy all his waking hours. And then, there’s his reputation as one of the greatest live acts, who started a 21-night run at the O2 Arena in 2007 with “Purple Rain”, cockily noting how many exhilarating hits he had in reserve from his golden ’80s.

Despondent at the internet’s impact on his control of and potential profit from recorded work, Prince has declared several times that gigs are his priority now. After the years of surfeit, the aptly titled 20Ten was his last album for four years. But now that his brilliantly conceived, rapturously received Hit And Run gigs in small London clubs have reminded the world how good he can be, he has two albums to meet our piqued hunger for him. He is also back on Warners, the label he left on such monstrously bad terms, with the word “Slave” outrageously scrawled on his head; the label, too, on which he had all his early success.

It looks very much like a comeback. Or maybe just one last go at selling Prince records in the 21st Century.

3rdeyegirl’s Plectrumelectrum is the most interesting of the pair. Prince’s new all-female band (bar its writer, auxiliary singer and guitarist, of course) backed him on his London shows, and shared the glowing reviews. Having a proper band has always brought out the best in him, from his unbeatable ’80s run with the Revolution to the brief creative revival of his first album with the New Power Generation, Diamonds And Pearls. 3rdeyegirl was surely the stimulus for his current activity. Donna Grantis’ guitar has certainly inspired his own playing, and Grantis told Uncut earlier this year that the example of classic rock bands such as Led Zeppelin was discussed, as they recorded live “off the floor”. The high guitar whines of the instrumental title track and “Funknroll”’s swaggering riff are strong examples of this high-energy, back-to-basics approach. Prince squeals during the latter, getting off on his own music. “Fixurlifeup” uses his unique approach to feminism (previous form: “If I Was Your Girlfriend”) to sketch 3rdeyegirl’s rationale, in which “a girl with a guitar” is worth the “misogynistic wall of noise” made by men. Still, Prince naturally remains in sole creative charge. Supposedly only around for backing vocals as the women take the lead, he also regularly grabs the spotlight.

Plectrumelectrum isn’t just an exercise in pseudo-feminist shredding. There’s also the signature Spartan Prince-funk of “Boytrouble”, while “Anotherlove”, “Tictactoe” and “Whitecaps” are hurt, keyboard-heavy ballads. 3rdeyegirl seem to serve all his needs, and though there are no songs here to touch past glories, their excitement in the studio is captured.

Art Official Age, made with only multi-instrumentalist Joshua Welton aiding Prince, is by contrast the sort of goofily half-arsed concept album we’ve come to expect. Linking tracks find Prince being awoken from suspended animation by a posh young Englishwoman, who informs him of his newly evolved, healed and telepathic self. Doubtless this is the kind of science-fiction philosophy Prince, who has found great comfort in his Jehovah’s Witness faith, on some level believes. His existential crises are expressed more earthily on “Breakdown”, “the saddest story ever been told”, which begins on understated keyboards, and becomes a laser-blasted epic. The ecstatic screams it provokes reveal the splicing of Little Richard and Al Green in Prince’s DNA. “The Gold Standard” has funk guitar, and it longs for a time when “music was like a spiritual feeling”, similarly explodes into imaginary dance-moves (“New Power –slide!”). It finishes with Prince in full filthy funk mode, distractedly muttering, “Let me get in there – good God!”

His pornographic obsessions are as usual disarmingly hilarious. Most unexpectedly, “Time” unveils Prince the bluesman, grunting despairingly at “another dirty hotel room, another lonely town”. An attempt at part-rapped, contemporary R&B, “Art Official Cage”, is only adequately successful, meanwhile, amid too many average slow jams.

Taken together, these albums don’t resurrect Prince the genius. They just remind you he’s still around; short of a tune, but the unique inhabitant

of a purple planet all his own.

Nick Hasted

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

AC/DC’s Phil Rudd makes bizarre court appearance in New Zealand

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The drummer is charged with threatening to kill and drug possession... AC/DC drummer Phil Rudd made a bizarre court appearance in New Zealand last week (November 19), during which he jumped on a security guard's back and winked at reporters. Rudd, who is charged with threatening to kill and possession of methamphetamine and marijuana, appeared at the court for a brief appearance but did not act in line with expected court behaviour. As Billboard reports, the New Zealand Herald has stated that Rudd jumped on the back of one of his security guards outside the courthouse. The drummer is also said to have winked at journalists, drummed a rhythm on the dock and then driven away in a sports car. During the appearance, Rudd did not enter a plea regarding the charges, however a previous charge that alleged that the AC/DC musician tried to hire a hit man to kill two people was dropped due to lack of evidence. Rudd could still receive up to seven years imprisonment should he be found guilty of his current charge. Previously, the other members of AC/DC spoke out about the arrest, stating that Rudd must "get himself well". Guitarist Angus Young also stated that the band is still "committed to going forward and touring" in line with new album Rock Or Bust, which is released on Monday (November 28). AC/DC are still among the bookies' favourites to headline Glastonbury next year. Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

The drummer is charged with threatening to kill and drug possession…

AC/DC drummer Phil Rudd made a bizarre court appearance in New Zealand last week (November 19), during which he jumped on a security guard’s back and winked at reporters.

Rudd, who is charged with threatening to kill and possession of methamphetamine and marijuana, appeared at the court for a brief appearance but did not act in line with expected court behaviour.

As Billboard reports, the New Zealand Herald has stated that Rudd jumped on the back of one of his security guards outside the courthouse. The drummer is also said to have winked at journalists, drummed a rhythm on the dock and then driven away in a sports car.

During the appearance, Rudd did not enter a plea regarding the charges, however a previous charge that alleged that the AC/DC musician tried to hire a hit man to kill two people was dropped due to lack of evidence. Rudd could still receive up to seven years imprisonment should he be found guilty of his current charge.

Previously, the other members of AC/DC spoke out about the arrest, stating that Rudd must “get himself well”.

Guitarist Angus Young also stated that the band is still “committed to going forward and touring” in line with new album Rock Or Bust, which is released on Monday (November 28).

AC/DC are still among the bookies’ favourites to headline Glastonbury next year.

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

Sinéad O’Connor says Band Aid 30 critics should “shut the fuck up”

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The Irish singer was one of the artists featured on the charity single... Sinéad O'Connor has stated that critics of Band Aid 30 should "shut the fuck up". The singer was responding to a recent slew of criticisms posed by musicians including Damon Albarn, Lily Allen and Emeli Sande who have proposed that the song – which is raising money for the ebola crisis – is everything from "smug" to damaging the public perception of Africa. Allen has openly labeled the initiative "smug", while Albarn called into question Western ideas of charity. Now, O'Connor – who sings on the track – has responded, supporting the cause. “I think everyone should shut the fuck up. If you didn't like the lyrics you shouldn't have agreed to sing the song," she told The Telegraph. “I think it's smug of Lily Allen to say it's smug. The assumption that anyone performing on the record has not privately given money is exactly that, an assumption. And who gives a fuck what Damon fucking Albarn thinks?” Band Aid 30 features the likes of Bono, One Direction, Elbow, Bastille, Queen's Roger Taylor, Rita Ora, Jessie Ware, Ed Sheeran, Clean Bandit, Paloma Faith, Emeli Sandé, Ellie Goulding and more. The track has sold over 300,000 copies since its release last week and went straight to Number One last weekend (November 23). Geldof also recently requested that people delete and download the track again in an attempt to further the fundraising effort, however a loophole in the iTunes system means that this would not actually raise any further money. Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

The Irish singer was one of the artists featured on the charity single…

Sinéad O’Connor has stated that critics of Band Aid 30 should “shut the fuck up”.

The singer was responding to a recent slew of criticisms posed by musicians including Damon Albarn, Lily Allen and Emeli Sande who have proposed that the song – which is raising money for the ebola crisis – is everything from “smug” to damaging the public perception of Africa.

Allen has openly labeled the initiative “smug”, while Albarn called into question Western ideas of charity.

Now, O’Connor – who sings on the track – has responded, supporting the cause. “I think everyone should shut the fuck up. If you didn’t like the lyrics you shouldn’t have agreed to sing the song,” she told The Telegraph. “I think it’s smug of Lily Allen to say it’s smug. The assumption that anyone performing on the record has not privately given money is exactly that, an assumption. And who gives a fuck what Damon fucking Albarn thinks?”

Band Aid 30 features the likes of Bono, One Direction, Elbow, Bastille, Queen’s Roger Taylor, Rita Ora, Jessie Ware, Ed Sheeran, Clean Bandit, Paloma Faith, Emeli Sandé, Ellie Goulding and more.

The track has sold over 300,000 copies since its release last week and went straight to Number One last weekend (November 23).

Geldof also recently requested that people delete and download the track again in an attempt to further the fundraising effort, however a loophole in the iTunes system means that this would not actually raise any further money.

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

The 44th Uncut Playlist Of 2014

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To Cargo, earlier this week, for what I think might have been one of my favourite gigs of the year. I wrote about Xylouris White and their "Goats" album a few weeks ago, but even that excellent record was scant preparation for Jim White and George Xylouris' incandescent live show. As I tried to explain in that last blog, the roots here are in Cretan folk music, a fact emphasised by the large number of Greek people singing along and, eventually, dancing. Live, though, I kept thinking a lot about Sandy Bull's duels with Billy Higgins; a sense of folk music being stretched into dynamic new shapes by the rolling explosions of a jazz drummer. As the songs ebbed and flowed for ten minutes or more, Xylouris and White would hold each other in locked stares. White would raise a drumstick, spin another, mouth some kind of teasing encouragement, and accelerate his playing into something approaching hardcore velocity. Xylouris would respond with a bout of shredding on his lute that reminded me eventually of Sonny Sharrock. Sat hunched over the lute, his playing was so fierce that he ended up having to take a mid-set break, for ten minutes, to change two broken strings. It was all pretty amazing, really. Here's this week's playlist, anyhow. The presence of a new Sun Kil Moon track reminds me to plug the new Uncut, just out in the UK, with my long new Kozelek interview in there. I should also get round to putting together my own 100+ Best Albums Of 2014 list in the next week or so. Bear with me…   Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Africa Express Presents… - Terry Riley's In C (Transgressive) Read my review here 2 Cornershop - Hold On It's Easy (Ample Play) 3 Ghostface Killah - Double Cross (Feat. AZ) (Tommy Boy) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NmzW_Z06tTs 4 [REDACTED] 5 Xylouris White - Goats (Other Music) Read my review here 6 Schneider Kacirek - Shadows Documents (Bureau B) 7 Sun Kil Moon - The Possum (www.sunkilmoon.com) 8 Duke Garwood - Heavy Love (Heavenly) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FrcCGjIX6Zo 9 Various Artists - When I Reach That Heavenly Shore: Unearthly Black Gospel 1926-1936 (Tompkins Square) 10 Brian Eno - Neroli (Thinking Music Part IV) (All Saints) 11 Bitchin' Bajas - Bitchin' Bajas (Drag City) 12 The Clang Group - The Clang Group EP (Domino) 13 Silk Rhodes - Silk Rhodes (Stones Throw) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SoxbvE1Doog 14 David Holmes - '71: Original Soundtrack (Touch Sensitive) 15 The Pop Group - Citizen Zombie (Freaks R Us) 16 Father John Misty - I Love You, Honeybear (Bella Union) 17 Curtis Harding - Soul Power (Anti-) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qi6HgHgISws 18 [REDACTED] 19 Public Service Broadcasting - The Race For Space (Test Card) 20 Natalie Prass - Natalie Prass (Spacebomb) 21 Frazey Ford - Indian Ocean (Nettwerk) 22 Tigran Hamasyan, - Mockroot (Nonesuch) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sAn0r6wW4XQ 23 Various Artists - Black Fire! New Spirits! Radical And Revolutionary Jazz In The USA 1967-82 (Soul Jazz) 24 Elephant Micah - Where In Our Woods (Western Vinyl) Picture: Manolis Mathioudakis

To Cargo, earlier this week, for what I think might have been one of my favourite gigs of the year. I wrote about Xylouris White and their “Goats” album a few weeks ago, but even that excellent record was scant preparation for Jim White and George Xylouris’ incandescent live show.

As I tried to explain in that last blog, the roots here are in Cretan folk music, a fact emphasised by the large number of Greek people singing along and, eventually, dancing. Live, though, I kept thinking a lot about Sandy Bull’s duels with Billy Higgins; a sense of folk music being stretched into dynamic new shapes by the rolling explosions of a jazz drummer.

As the songs ebbed and flowed for ten minutes or more, Xylouris and White would hold each other in locked stares. White would raise a drumstick, spin another, mouth some kind of teasing encouragement, and accelerate his playing into something approaching hardcore velocity. Xylouris would respond with a bout of shredding on his lute that reminded me eventually of Sonny Sharrock. Sat hunched over the lute, his playing was so fierce that he ended up having to take a mid-set break, for ten minutes, to change two broken strings. It was all pretty amazing, really.

Here’s this week’s playlist, anyhow. The presence of a new Sun Kil Moon track reminds me to plug the new Uncut, just out in the UK, with my long new Kozelek interview in there. I should also get round to putting together my own 100+ Best Albums Of 2014 list in the next week or so. Bear with me…

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

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

Read my review here

2 Cornershop – Hold On It’s Easy (Ample Play)

3 Ghostface Killah – Double Cross (Feat. AZ) (Tommy Boy)

4 [REDACTED]

5 Xylouris White – Goats (Other Music)

Read my review here

6 Schneider Kacirek – Shadows Documents (Bureau B)

7 Sun Kil Moon – The Possum (www.sunkilmoon.com)

8 Duke Garwood – Heavy Love (Heavenly)

9 Various Artists – When I Reach That Heavenly Shore: Unearthly Black Gospel 1926-1936 (Tompkins Square)

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

11 Bitchin’ Bajas – Bitchin’ Bajas (Drag City)

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

13 Silk Rhodes – Silk Rhodes (Stones Throw)

14 David Holmes – ’71: Original Soundtrack (Touch Sensitive)

15 The Pop Group – Citizen Zombie (Freaks R Us)

16 Father John Misty – I Love You, Honeybear (Bella Union)

17 Curtis Harding – Soul Power (Anti-)

18 [REDACTED]

19 Public Service Broadcasting – The Race For Space (Test Card)

20 Natalie Prass – Natalie Prass (Spacebomb)

21 Frazey Ford – Indian Ocean (Nettwerk)

22 Tigran Hamasyan, – Mockroot (Nonesuch)

23 Various Artists – Black Fire! New Spirits! Radical And Revolutionary Jazz In The USA 1967-82 (Soul Jazz)

24 Elephant Micah – Where In Our Woods (Western Vinyl)

Picture: Manolis Mathioudakis

Pink Floyd’s The Endless River is fastest selling vinyl album of the century

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Pink Floyd's The Endless River, sold 6,000 copies in its first week of sales, the highest first-week sales of any vinyl LP released since 1997, and therefore the fastest-selling vinyl album this century. Pink Floyd's success comes with the news that annual sales of vinyl albums have surpassed a mil...

Pink Floyd‘s The Endless River, sold 6,000 copies in its first week of sales, the highest first-week sales of any vinyl LP released since 1997, and therefore the fastest-selling vinyl album this century.

Pink Floyd’s success comes with the news that annual sales of vinyl albums have surpassed a million for the first time since the 1990s.

An upturn in sales for the physical format, beloved of collectors but once considered obsolete, has matched a peak last seen in 1996, when sales of Britpop LPs were a driving force behind 1,083,206 sales.

The news was announced today (November 27) by the BPI, the trade body which represents the nation’s record labels. They report that the best-selling vinyl album of the year to date is AM by Arctic Monkeys, which was released in 2013, though this week’s best-seller is David Bowie’s Nothing Has Changed. A spokesperson for the BPI also cited Royal Blood and the annual Record Store Day event as helping to drive the sales.

Official Charts Chief Executive, Martin Talbot, said: “In scoring the biggest opening week for a vinyl album this millennium, Pink Floyd’s The Endless River illustrates the British public’s renewed love for this format, which is on course to become a £20million business this year – an incredible turnaround from barely £3m just five years ago. This resurgence also underlines music fans’ continuing fascination with the album.”

The total sales of vinyl albums in 2013 amounted to 780,674.

Vinyl sales still only account for around two per cent of all UK album revenue. CD sales stand at around 64 percent and digital album sales at around 35 percent.

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

Angus Young: “Everything AC/DC have ever done has been do or die”

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Angus Young has spoken about the retirement of his brother Malcolm Young from the group they co-founded, AC/DC, in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2015 and out now. Malcolm Young is no longer with the band, who release new album Rock Or Bust on December 1, after being diagnosed with dementi...

Angus Young has spoken about the retirement of his brother Malcolm Young from the group they co-founded, AC/DC, in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2015 and out now.

Malcolm Young is no longer with the band, who release new album Rock Or Bust on December 1, after being diagnosed with dementia.

“Rock Or Bust is a thing we’ve always done,” Young says. “When we play live, it’s always been a do or die effort. And everything we’ve ever done has always had that approach.

“[Malcolm] said, I wanna do this as long as I can keep doing it. He’s got a do or die spirit – it’s the strength of his character. It is a big thing that he’s not there.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

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

Kurt Cobain documentary executive produced by Frances Bean set for 2015

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Montage Of Heck will premiere on HBO in the US next year... A new documentary about Kurt Cobain is set for release in 2015. The Brett Morgen film is called Montage Of Heck and will premiere next year on the HBO channel in the US. Pitchfork reports that it is the first "fully authorised" film about the Nirvana frontman. His daughter Frances Bean Cobain is acting as executive producer on the project. Speaking about the film, filmmaker Morgen explained that the film has been eight years in the works. "I started work on this project eight years ago," he said in a press release. "Like most people, when I started, I figured there would be limited amounts of fresh material to unearth. However, once I stepped into Kurt's archive, I discovered over 200 hours of unreleased music and audio, a vast array of art projects (oil paintings, sculptures), countless hours of never-before-seen home movies, and over 4000 pages of writings that together help paint an intimate portrait of an artist who rarely revealed himself to the media." The film is named after one of Cobian's mixtapes, which was circulated widely online earlier this month. Cobain's former partner Tracy Marander spoke to The Guardian about the tape recently. "He made it using records, some TV, and random sounds he recorded. It was all made in Aberdeen [Washington], I believe. It took him quite a while." Marander – who was given a copy of the tape by Cobain, as numerous others were too – said Cobain "may have been stoned" while making the tape, and said that he liked to listen to it while smoking. "He used to listen to it while stoned or on acid too. It always trips people out," she said. Montage Of Heck features clips of songs by The Beatles, Iron Maiden, The Monkees, Black Sabbath, The Jackson Five and many more. Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Montage Of Heck will premiere on HBO in the US next year…

A new documentary about Kurt Cobain is set for release in 2015.

The Brett Morgen film is called Montage Of Heck and will premiere next year on the HBO channel in the US. Pitchfork reports that it is the first “fully authorised” film about the Nirvana frontman. His daughter Frances Bean Cobain is acting as executive producer on the project.

Speaking about the film, filmmaker Morgen explained that the film has been eight years in the works. “I started work on this project eight years ago,” he said in a press release. “Like most people, when I started, I figured there would be limited amounts of fresh material to unearth. However, once I stepped into Kurt’s archive, I discovered over 200 hours of unreleased music and audio, a vast array of art projects (oil paintings, sculptures), countless hours of never-before-seen home movies, and over 4000 pages of writings that together help paint an intimate portrait of an artist who rarely revealed himself to the media.”

The film is named after one of Cobian’s mixtapes, which was circulated widely online earlier this month. Cobain’s former partner Tracy Marander spoke to The Guardian about the tape recently. “He made it using records, some TV, and random sounds he recorded. It was all made in Aberdeen [Washington], I believe. It took him quite a while.”

Marander – who was given a copy of the tape by Cobain, as numerous others were too – said Cobain “may have been stoned” while making the tape, and said that he liked to listen to it while smoking. “He used to listen to it while stoned or on acid too. It always trips people out,” she said.

Montage Of Heck features clips of songs by The Beatles, Iron Maiden, The Monkees, Black Sabbath, The Jackson Five and many more.

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

The War On Drugs’ Lost In The Dream named Uncut’s Album Of The Year 2014

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Adam Granduciel and co hit the Uncut No 1 spot... The War On Drugs album Lost In The Dream has been named Uncut's Album Of The Year 2014. The band's third album, Lost In The Dream was released in March. You can hear a track from the album, "Burning", on Uncut's free Best Of 2014 CD, which is available with the new issue. The issue also contains full lists of our Albums Of The Year, Reissues Of The Year, Films Of The Year and Books Of The Year. You can read more about what's in the new issue of Uncut - in shops now - here. Uncut is now available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Adam Granduciel and co hit the Uncut No 1 spot…

The War On Drugs album Lost In The Dream has been named Uncut’s Album Of The Year 2014.

The band’s third album, Lost In The Dream was released in March.

You can hear a track from the album, “Burning”, on Uncut’s free Best Of 2014 CD, which is available with the new issue.

The issue also contains full lists of our Albums Of The Year, Reissues Of The Year, Films Of The Year and Books Of The Year.

You can read more about what’s in the new issue of Uncut – in shops now – here.

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

Graham Nash: “Will there be any more CSNY? Right now, it looks pretty bleak”

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Graham Nash has described the future of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young as “pretty bleak” in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2015 and out now. After a recent public disagreement between Neil Young and David Crosby, culminating in Young stating that there will never be another CSNY reun...

Graham Nash has described the future of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young as “pretty bleak” in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2015 and out now.

After a recent public disagreement between Neil Young and David Crosby, culminating in Young stating that there will never be another CSNY reunion, Nash has revealed that he would nonetheless be “incredibly sad” if the four never performed or recorded together again.

“Will there be any more CSNY? Right now, it looks pretty bleak,” he says. “Neil is a little upset with me because of my book, Wild Tales. And he’s obviously upset with David [Crosby].

“But we’ve been here before, hearing people saying CSNY will never go forward, but we always manage to do something. If a few oddly chosen words in the press from David and a paragraph of mine in my book stopped CSNY making music again, that would be incredibly sad.”

The new issue of Uncut, featuring Neil Young on the cover and an interview with Nash inside, is out now.

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

We want your questions for Ennio Morricone

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The great composer is set to answer your questions... Ahead of his concert at London's O2 on Thursday, February 5 2015, Ennio Morricone is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With… feature. So is there anything you've always wanted to ask the legendary composer? What are his memories of working with Sergio Leone on the Dollars films? Of all his many film scores, which is his favourite? How did he come to compose the string arrangements for Morrissey's "Dear God Please Help Me"? Send up your questions by noon, Monday, December 1 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com. The best questions, and Snr Morricone's answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

The great composer is set to answer your questions…

Ahead of his concert at London’s O2 on Thursday, February 5 2015, Ennio Morricone is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the legendary composer?

What are his memories of working with Sergio Leone on the Dollars films?

Of all his many film scores, which is his favourite?

How did he come to compose the string arrangements for Morrissey’s “Dear God Please Help Me”?

Send up your questions by noon, Monday, December 1 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com. The best questions, and Snr Morricone’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Mark Lanegan Band – Phantom Radio

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Mournful, loner blues-folktronica from America's deepest growl... Mark Lanegan, it would appear, has not been someone for the hugely productive life, which feels admirable in these split-second days of cultural overkill. He’s someone who tills the ground slowly, folding his songs carefully into their shadow worlds, each penumbral melody carefully arranged and sung with just the right gravitas. But the past few years have seen an unexpected upping of the pace – 2012’s Blues Funeral, last year’s covers album, Imitations, and recent collaborations with Duke Garwood. Phantom Radio, though, feels like Lanegan upping his game yet again: it’s a beautiful set of songs that balances Lanegan’s ongoing interest in blues and folk with further explorations of the new terrain he started to sketch out, sometimes startlingly, with Blues Funeral songs like “The Gravedigger’s Song”. Indeed, part of what makes Phantom Radio so arresting is Lanegan’s approach to electronics. As he explains further elsewhere, many of the songs here were initially demoed on the Funkbox app, and many of those preset sounds are echoed in the final arrangements on the album. Somehow, though, Lanegan manages to make programmed drums, simple electronics, washes of synth come across as rustic, as though formed and carved from the very Earth. Perhaps it’s in the tension between the electronics and Lanegan’s weathered voice, which is in fine form on Phantom Radio, at times possessing, or possessed by, the material entirely, at other times shading the contours of the melodies spectrally. The descending guitar figure that opens “Harvest Home” spirals the listener directly into the guts of a song whose lyrics work through the thematic of cause and effect, of the dialectic of life, that moves through Phantom Radio – “I reap, I sow, my harvest, my home”. From there, “Judgement Time” immediately drops to a sad, low, churchy tenor, with a humming harmonium repeatedly cratered by simply strummed acoustic guitar, each downward stroke a rupture of the song’s fabric, while Lanegan sighs, bleary and wraith-like, “I was blistered, just a strung-out angel”. For all their subtlety, “Harvest Home” and “Judgement Time” are seductive openers, a double-tease that immerses Phantom Radio in the plaint of the blues – just look at those song titles. This makes the glistening arpeggios that open “The Floor Of The Ocean” all the more striking, particularly as they’re immediately pulled under by funereal synth drones – and here’s where we start to glimpse the '80s post-punk influence that Lanegan has talked about when explaining Phantom Radio’s architecture. A beautiful, cavernous song, “The Floor Of The Ocean” could be pulled from New Order’s Movement, particularly when the Bernard Sumner-esque single note guitar line snakes from the song’s depths; elsewhere, there are hints of Echo & The Bunnymen in the grey-coat hypnotism of the rhythms, or the thick strokes of electronics that Lanegan often paints his songs in. From there, it gets weirder, and even better. “Seventh Day” allows you, for one moment, to imagine what might have happened if Lanegan had been locked in the Paisley Park Studio for 24 hours – clanking rhythms and slippery wah-wah guitar bring the home-studio funk to Phantom Radio, before they’re again dosed by humming, fuzzing electronics. But soon, Lanegan turns back to more familiar climes, with “I Am The Wolf”’s loner, minimalist drama, a simple acoustic guitar shadowed by reverbed-out string noise; and then to the album’s highlight, the perfectly downcast pop of “Torn Red Heaven”, which opens with lines that are pulled from any sixth-former’s poetry chapbook (“you don’t love me/what’s to love anyway”) made somehow grand and eloquent by an arrangement that slowly draws the curtains on Phil Spector’s girl group era, bathing the room in a starlit glow, oddly reminiscent, of all things, of Beach House at their most transcendent. After this, “Wild People”’s recourse to Whiskey For The Holy Ghost-esque acoustic blues feels a little like a retroactive gesture, though it’s hard to deny the strength and beauty of both song and performance. But by this stage, Lanegan’s pitched Phantom Radio to plenty of fabulous, unexpected places. Anyone who’s followed his career won’t be surprised by this move – after all, he’s incorporated electronics before, most notably on Blues Funeral – but he’s rarely done it with the elegance and craft of these ten jewel-like songs. Jon Dale 
Q&A What do you see as the connections, the overarching themes that run through and ultimately bind these songs? Listening to it just now, I feel like there's a sort of melancholy that runs through the whole record, not sure why that is or where it comes from. I also think there's a great deal of beauty to it as well. You used an app to demo material. It's fascinating to think that the humble phone app has allowed for a kinda similar intimacy to what musicians used to get with Portastudios... Yeah, I used the funk box vintage drum machine app to demo some of these tunes and I’m pretty sure a lot of the sounds we used on the record were informed by the demo process. Most of the same tools and instruments used for demoing also appear on the finished thing. You’ve mentioned that “Torn Red Heart” is a particularly moving song for you. Can you tell me about the sessions for that song in particular, how it came together, your response when you heard it back? I like that song because it’s ultra simple and direct, it’s the type of song I love when someone else is doing it. It came together really quickly; producer Alain Johannes sang a great harmony vocal and my friend Brett Netson of Built To Spill and Caustic Resin did the killer guitar part at the end of the song. INTERVIEW: JON DALE

Mournful, loner blues-folktronica from America’s deepest growl…

Mark Lanegan, it would appear, has not been someone for the hugely productive life, which feels admirable in these split-second days of cultural overkill. He’s someone who tills the ground slowly, folding his songs carefully into their shadow worlds, each penumbral melody carefully arranged and sung with just the right gravitas. But the past few years have seen an unexpected upping of the pace – 2012’s Blues Funeral, last year’s covers album, Imitations, and recent collaborations with Duke Garwood. Phantom Radio, though, feels like Lanegan upping his game yet again: it’s a beautiful set of songs that balances Lanegan’s ongoing interest in blues and folk with further explorations of the new terrain he started to sketch out, sometimes startlingly, with Blues Funeral songs like “The Gravedigger’s Song”.

Indeed, part of what makes Phantom Radio so arresting is Lanegan’s approach to electronics. As he explains further elsewhere, many of the songs here were initially demoed on the Funkbox app, and many of those preset sounds are echoed in the final arrangements on the album. Somehow, though, Lanegan manages to make programmed drums, simple electronics, washes of synth come across as rustic, as though formed and carved from the very Earth. Perhaps it’s in the tension between the electronics and Lanegan’s weathered voice, which is in fine form on Phantom Radio, at times possessing, or possessed by, the material entirely, at other times shading the contours of the melodies spectrally.

The descending guitar figure that opens “Harvest Home” spirals the listener directly into the guts of a song whose lyrics work through the thematic of cause and effect, of the dialectic of life, that moves through Phantom Radio – “I reap, I sow, my harvest, my home”. From there, “Judgement Time” immediately drops to a sad, low, churchy tenor, with a humming harmonium repeatedly cratered by simply strummed acoustic guitar, each downward stroke a rupture of the song’s fabric, while Lanegan sighs, bleary and wraith-like, “I was blistered, just a strung-out angel”. For all their subtlety, “Harvest Home” and “Judgement Time” are seductive openers, a double-tease that immerses Phantom Radio in the plaint of the blues – just look at those song titles.

This makes the glistening arpeggios that open “The Floor Of The Ocean” all the more striking, particularly as they’re immediately pulled under by funereal synth drones – and here’s where we start to glimpse the ’80s post-punk influence that Lanegan has talked about when explaining Phantom Radio’s architecture. A beautiful, cavernous song, “The Floor Of The Ocean” could be pulled from New Order’s Movement, particularly when the Bernard Sumner-esque single note guitar line snakes from the song’s depths; elsewhere, there are hints of Echo & The Bunnymen in the grey-coat hypnotism of the rhythms, or the thick strokes of electronics that Lanegan often paints his songs in.

From there, it gets weirder, and even better. “Seventh Day” allows you, for one moment, to imagine what might have happened if Lanegan had been locked in the Paisley Park Studio for 24 hours – clanking rhythms and slippery wah-wah guitar bring the home-studio funk to Phantom Radio, before they’re again dosed by humming, fuzzing electronics. But soon, Lanegan turns back to more familiar climes, with “I Am The Wolf”’s loner, minimalist drama, a simple acoustic guitar shadowed by reverbed-out string noise; and then to the album’s highlight, the perfectly downcast pop of “Torn Red Heaven”, which opens with lines that are pulled from any sixth-former’s poetry chapbook (“you don’t love me/what’s to love anyway”) made somehow grand and eloquent by an arrangement that slowly draws the curtains on Phil Spector’s girl group era, bathing the room in a starlit glow, oddly reminiscent, of all things, of Beach House at their most transcendent.

After this, “Wild People”’s recourse to Whiskey For The Holy Ghost-esque acoustic blues feels a little like a retroactive gesture, though it’s hard to deny the strength and beauty of both song and performance. But by this stage, Lanegan’s pitched Phantom Radio to plenty of fabulous, unexpected places. Anyone who’s followed his career won’t be surprised by this move – after all, he’s incorporated electronics before, most notably on Blues Funeral – but he’s rarely done it with the elegance and craft of these ten jewel-like songs.

Jon Dale

Q&A

What do you see as the connections, the overarching themes that run through and ultimately bind these songs?

Listening to it just now, I feel like there’s a sort of melancholy that runs through the whole record, not sure why that is or where it comes from. I also think there’s a great deal of beauty to it as well.

You used an app to demo material. It’s fascinating to think that the humble phone app has allowed for a kinda similar intimacy to what musicians used to get with Portastudios…

Yeah, I used the funk box vintage drum machine app to demo some of these tunes and I’m pretty sure a lot of the sounds we used on the record were informed by the demo process. Most of the same tools and instruments used for demoing also appear on the finished thing.

You’ve mentioned that “Torn Red Heart” is a particularly moving song for you. Can you tell me about the sessions for that song in particular, how it came together, your response when you heard it back?

I like that song because it’s ultra simple and direct, it’s the type of song I love when someone else is doing it. It came together really quickly; producer Alain Johannes sang a great harmony vocal and my friend Brett Netson of Built To Spill and Caustic Resin did the killer guitar part at the end of the song.

INTERVIEW: JON DALE

Patti Smith to play Horses in its entirety at UK festival

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Field Day takes place next June... Patti Smith will play her 1975 album Horses in its entirety at Field Day 2015. Smith has previously confirmed she will be celebrating the 40th anniversary of her debut album with shows in New York, Paris and London. It has not yet been confirmed whether she will play any further UK dates. Other acts confirmed for Field Day include Ride, Django Django, Caribou and Owen Pallett. You can find more details about the Field Day bill here.

Field Day takes place next June…

Patti Smith will play her 1975 album Horses in its entirety at Field Day 2015.

Smith has previously confirmed she will be celebrating the 40th anniversary of her debut album with shows in New York, Paris and London.

It has not yet been confirmed whether she will play any further UK dates.

Other acts confirmed for Field Day include Ride, Django Django, Caribou and Owen Pallett.

You can find more details about the Field Day bill here.

Bob Dylan plays a gig for one person

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The special show took place as part of a Swedish film series called Experiment Alone... Bob Dylan played a concert for just one person at Philadelphia's Academy of Music on Sunday, November 23. Dylan performed for 'superfan' Fredrik Wikingsson, who was sat alone in the second row of the venue. The gig took place as part of a Swedish film series called Experiment Ensam (Experiment Alone), in which one person is able to take part in an experience normally only open to large groups of people - such as comedy clubs and karaoke nights - reports Rolling Stone. Dylan performed four songs with his band: covers of Buddy Holly's "Heartbeat", Fats Domino's "Blueberry Hill" and Chuck Wills's "It's Too Late (She's Gone)", as well as one unidentified blues jam. Wikingsson said of the show: "I was smiling so much it was like I was on ecstasy. My jaw hurt for hours afterwards because I couldn't stop smiling." Bob Dylan is releasing his new album Shadows In The Night in 2015. You can read our speculative blog here. Dylan, who is currently performing multiple nights at venues across north America, is also to be honoured in a Gala next year after being chosen as the 2015 MusiCares Person of the Year. Jack White, Neil Young, The Black Keys and others are set to perform at the event which takes place in February.

The special show took place as part of a Swedish film series called Experiment Alone…

Bob Dylan played a concert for just one person at Philadelphia’s Academy of Music on Sunday, November 23.

Dylan performed for ‘superfan’ Fredrik Wikingsson, who was sat alone in the second row of the venue. The gig took place as part of a Swedish film series called Experiment Ensam (Experiment Alone), in which one person is able to take part in an experience normally only open to large groups of people – such as comedy clubs and karaoke nights – reports Rolling Stone.

Dylan performed four songs with his band: covers of Buddy Holly‘s “Heartbeat”, Fats Domino’s “Blueberry Hill” and Chuck Wills’s “It’s Too Late (She’s Gone)”, as well as one unidentified blues jam. Wikingsson said of the show: “I was smiling so much it was like I was on ecstasy. My jaw hurt for hours afterwards because I couldn’t stop smiling.”

Bob Dylan is releasing his new album Shadows In The Night in 2015. You can read our speculative blog here.

Dylan, who is currently performing multiple nights at venues across north America, is also to be honoured in a Gala next year after being chosen as the 2015 MusiCares Person of the Year. Jack White, Neil Young, The Black Keys and others are set to perform at the event which takes place in February.

Inside The New Uncut… The Best Albums Of 2014!

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At some point in October, I started receiving emails from record labels and publicists about their Tips For 2015. A new year loomed, distantly, and with it the annual music business imperative to embrace a tranche of new artists. Around the same time, the 2014 Mercury Prize hoopla culminated with a victory for the Scottish hip hop act, Young Fathers, and their "Dead" album, one of seven debuts in the shortlist of 12. It is hard not to conclude from all this that the British music business has abandoned the idea of sticking with artists for the long haul: not always the most expedient commercial approach, but one which had at least a little bit of traction before neurotic short-termism went into overdrive. The subtext, perhaps, is that the industry, the media and, both would presume, the general public, find artists who grow incrementally to be boring underachievers. If you don't start with a major success, then you're expendable. Soon enough, there'll be another new year and another horde of contenders to fling optimistically in the direction of the BBC's Sound Of 2015 poll; some, in fairness, I'll be championing myself. Today, though, the new issue of Uncut arrives in UK shops, and our Best Albums Of 2014 chart tells quite another story. Four hundred and one releases were nominated by our 42 voters. In the Top 75 albums, only seven were technically debuts, and three of those were by artists with considerable careers in other bands behind them. Plenty of the acts felt fresh and exciting (Sleaford Mods, for instance, or Future Islands), but had in fact discreetly worked at their art for a few years, just off the radar, cumulatively growing with every release. Take Mark Kozelek, who came up with what may be his masterpiece, Benji, 22 years into a career mostly conducted on the margins. "I felt confident that Benji would be received poorly, that people would find it to be middle-aged ramblings about dead relatives," Kozelek told me for this month's issue, in his most in-depth interview in years. "But something about it resonated with people." Kozelek's career - and those of Sharon Van Etten, The War On Drugs, St Vincent, Caribou, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Steve Gunn, Chris Forsyth and many other key players of 2014, to say nothing of Neil Young, our cover star - is an object lesson in how things can be done differently. This end-of-year Uncut special, we hope, is a testament to the enduring creative health of our corner of the music scene; a place where many inspiring albums are still being made, regardless of the Death Of Rock thinkpieces that will doubtless proliferate, as they do every year, in the next month or two. As a further antidote to those, please have a look at our Best Of 2014 special and then send us your own end-of-year charts. What do you think we've underrated or overrated this year? And what have we missed? As ever, it'd be great to hear from you all: uncut_feedback@timeinc.com. Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

At some point in October, I started receiving emails from record labels and publicists about their Tips For 2015. A new year loomed, distantly, and with it the annual music business imperative to embrace a tranche of new artists. Around the same time, the 2014 Mercury Prize hoopla culminated with a victory for the Scottish hip hop act, Young Fathers, and their “Dead” album, one of seven debuts in the shortlist of 12.

It is hard not to conclude from all this that the British music business has abandoned the idea of sticking with artists for the long haul: not always the most expedient commercial approach, but one which had at least a little bit of traction before neurotic short-termism went into overdrive. The subtext, perhaps, is that the industry, the media and, both would presume, the general public, find artists who grow incrementally to be boring underachievers. If you don’t start with a major success, then you’re expendable. Soon enough, there’ll be another new year and another horde of contenders to fling optimistically in the direction of the BBC’s Sound Of 2015 poll; some, in fairness, I’ll be championing myself.

Today, though, the new issue of Uncut arrives in UK shops, and our Best Albums Of 2014 chart tells quite another story. Four hundred and one releases were nominated by our 42 voters. In the Top 75 albums, only seven were technically debuts, and three of those were by artists with considerable careers in other bands behind them. Plenty of the acts felt fresh and exciting (Sleaford Mods, for instance, or Future Islands), but had in fact discreetly worked at their art for a few years, just off the radar, cumulatively growing with every release.

Take Mark Kozelek, who came up with what may be his masterpiece, Benji, 22 years into a career mostly conducted on the margins. “I felt confident that Benji would be received poorly, that people would find it to be middle-aged ramblings about dead relatives,” Kozelek told me for this month’s issue, in his most in-depth interview in years. “But something about it resonated with people.”

Kozelek’s career – and those of Sharon Van Etten, The War On Drugs, St Vincent, Caribou, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Steve Gunn, Chris Forsyth and many other key players of 2014, to say nothing of Neil Young, our cover star – is an object lesson in how things can be done differently. This end-of-year Uncut special, we hope, is a testament to the enduring creative health of our corner of the music scene; a place where many inspiring albums are still being made, regardless of the Death Of Rock thinkpieces that will doubtless proliferate, as they do every year, in the next month or two.

As a further antidote to those, please have a look at our Best Of 2014 special and then send us your own end-of-year charts. What do you think we’ve underrated or overrated this year? And what have we missed? As ever, it’d be great to hear from you all: uncut_feedback@timeinc.com.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

Jimmy Page: “My greatest non-Zeppelin achievement? Doing the Olympics with Leona Lewis”

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Jimmy Page discusses Led Zeppelin, his musical future and new photo autobiography in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2015 and out now. Asked to name his greatest achievement outside of Led Zeppelin, Page picked an occasion that he said would “surprise everyone”. “I’d be very since...

Jimmy Page discusses Led Zeppelin, his musical future and new photo autobiography in the new issue of Uncut, dated January 2015 and out now.

Asked to name his greatest achievement outside of Led Zeppelin, Page picked an occasion that he said would “surprise everyone”.

“I’d be very sincere if I said that doing the Olympics [Beijing, 2008] with Leona Lewis was phenomenal,” he explained. “She’s really plucky, she’s superb, and she sang ‘Whole Lotta Love’ brilliantly.

“We managed to do the full length of ‘Whole Lotta Love’ – it wasn’t edited – and she sang it beautifully. It was so cool the way she approached it. For that audience, and the fact we didn’t fuck it up… we’re really going to do this and we’re going to do it proud. That was important. It was a Led Zeppelin number but it took on another persona. I was proud to be able to play that riff for the handover.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

Photo: Dave J Hogan/Getty Images

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