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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.

January 2015

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Neil Young, Jimmy Page, Kate Bush, AC/DC and our ultimate review of 2014 all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out tomorrow (November 25). In the cover story, we look at Neil Young's productive, strange and compelling year - with help from his close compadres Graham Nash, Frank 'Poncho' Sampedro a...

Neil Young, Jimmy Page, Kate Bush, AC/DC and our ultimate review of 2014 all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out tomorrow (November 25).

In the cover story, we look at Neil Young’s productive, strange and compelling year – with help from his close compadres Graham Nash, Frank ‘Poncho’ Sampedro and the late Rick Rosas.

After two intensely personal albums, a possibly valedictory Crazy Horse tour, some revelatory solo shows and the start of a new relationship, we look at what could come next for Shakey in 2015… “I don’t think it’s a musical decade coming up, as much as it is one of fighting for mankind…”

Jimmy Page answers your questions in a special, extended ‘audience with…’ piece, discussing his musical future, his proudest moment, occult bookshops and Robert Plant’s suggestion of a possible acoustic reunion of Led Zeppelin.

Producer Andrew Powell and a host of musicians remember the recording of Kate Bush’s 1978 No 1 single “Wuthering Heights” – “the unusualness was key, this strange girl…”

Angus Young talks Uncut through AC/DC‘s new album, Rock Or Bust, and reveals more about his brother Malcolm Young’s departure from the group due to dementia.

Meanwhile, we present our review of the year, including the 75 best albums, 30 key reissues and finest films, books and DVDs of 2014, all chosen by Uncut’s staff and contributors.

St Vincent takes us through the five albums she’s recorded so far, including Love This Giant with David Byrne, and discusses her Disney soundtrack inspirations, hardcore work ethic and her experiences of playing with Mike Garson, The Polyphonic Spree, Byrne and Sufjan Stevens.

Also in the issue, Mark Kozelek of Sun Kil Moon and Red House Painters discusses his astounding 2014 album Benji, his career as a musician and songwriter and his feud with The War On Drugs, while SwansMichael Gira details eight songs or albums that have soundtracked his life, including music from Suicide, Howlin’ Wolf and an album of Tibetan chanting…

Elsewhere, Cream songwriter Pete Brown remembers Jack Bruce, while festival-goers recall the chaotic late-’70s Deeply Vale events, and we pay tribute to the Earls Court exhibition centre, soon to be demolished.

In our 40-page reviews section, we look at new albums from AC/DC, Smashing Pumpkins, Blake Mills, Einstürzende Neubauten, Swamp Dogg and more, while the archive reviews section features Bruce Springsteen, Pixies, Wilco and Joni Mitchell, among a host of others.

Our free CD, The Best Of 2014, includes songs from The War On Drugs, Gruff Rhys, St Vincent, Caribou, Stephen Malkmus, Real Estate, Mogwai, Swans, Sharon Van Etten, Toumani Diabaté, Sun Kil Moon and more.

ISSUE ON SALE FROM TUESDAY NOVEMBER 25

Uncut is now available as a digital edition, download it now

Watch exclusive footage of R.E.M. performing “So. Central Rain” in 1983

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The clip is from the band's forthcoming DVD compilation... Ahead of the release of their REMTV DVD set, R.E.M. have offered us exclusive footage of the band performing live. Scroll down to watch the band perform "So. Central Rain (I'm Sorry)" on Livewire, a kids' talk show on the American television cable network, Nickelodeon. The footage dates from 1983. REMTV is a six part R.E.M. DVD collection, which collects the band's appearances on MTV and related channels, from 1983 to 2008, and will also include a new documentary about the band as well as live performance and interview footage and awards show clips. The six DVDs will be available from Rhino on November 24. Speaking about the collection, the band's manager Bertis Downs commented: "It occurred to us that there's all this footage of some of the band's absolute career highlights sitting in some MTV vaults in London and New York and thanks to a lot of effort and digging and arranging, this is our chance to share that music with various generations of R.E.M. fans in a pretty unique release. And Alexander Young's documentary is a fine way to tell the story of R.E.M. through its various twists and turns, as captured in real time by MTV's cameras - it has some great funny bits too!" You can pre-order REMTV here. This clip is only available to UK viewers.

The clip is from the band’s forthcoming DVD compilation…

Ahead of the release of their REMTV DVD set, R.E.M. have offered us exclusive footage of the band performing live.

Scroll down to watch the band perform “So. Central Rain (I’m Sorry)” on Livewire, a kids’ talk show on the American television cable network, Nickelodeon. The footage dates from 1983.

REMTV is a six part R.E.M. DVD collection, which collects the band’s appearances on MTV and related channels, from 1983 to 2008, and will also include a new documentary about the band as well as live performance and interview footage and awards show clips. The six DVDs will be available from Rhino on November 24.

Speaking about the collection, the band’s manager Bertis Downs commented: “It occurred to us that there’s all this footage of some of the band’s absolute career highlights sitting in some MTV vaults in London and New York and thanks to a lot of effort and digging and arranging, this is our chance to share that music with various generations of R.E.M. fans in a pretty unique release. And Alexander Young’s documentary is a fine way to tell the story of R.E.M. through its various twists and turns, as captured in real time by MTV’s cameras – it has some great funny bits too!”

You can pre-order REMTV here.

This clip is only available to UK viewers.

Joni Mitchell on Bob Dylan: “I am much more original musically”

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Singer also claims music is "pretty much" over for her... Joni Mitchell has stated that she believes she is far more creative than her fellow musician, Bob Dylan. In an interview in The Sunday Times, she claims “I am much more original musically, and a much more original thinker” than Dylan. Mitchell, who releases a new 4 disc box set compilation Love Has Many Faces today [November 24], also admitted “Music is over for me, pretty much. I can’t sing: I don’t want to. I want to paint, and I want to write. I can’t tour, I can’t travel, I’m sick; I can fly two flights a year. I’m old. You have to know when to give up.” She also spoke openly about her impressions of being a woman operating in a male dominated industry. “I’m a woman in a man’s world. There are hardly any women in my business. There are oppressive men and exploitative men. Georgia O’Keeffe used to talk about them — men this and men that — too. The men said, ‘You can’t paint New York City’ — she did some fantastic paintings of New York City. It’s all male-dominant, and you’re always with them. I’m on the road with 21 guys, and I love men’s company, don’t get me wrong. Even when they’re stupid little boys, I still like them. I mean, love the sinner, hate the sin.” She also expressed her views on being considered part of the hippie generation: “The hippie values were not mine, they were naive, they had no place, they were childish; the politics were stupid. When they became a large minority, the straights noticed, grew their hair long and took over.” Mitchell last released a studio album, Shine, in 2007.

Singer also claims music is “pretty much” over for her…

Joni Mitchell has stated that she believes she is far more creative than her fellow musician, Bob Dylan.

In an interview in The Sunday Times, she claims “I am much more original musically, and a much more original thinker” than Dylan.

Mitchell, who releases a new 4 disc box set compilation Love Has Many Faces today [November 24], also admitted “Music is over for me, pretty much. I can’t sing: I don’t want to. I want to paint, and I want to write. I can’t tour, I can’t travel, I’m sick; I can fly two flights a year. I’m old. You have to know when to give up.”

She also spoke openly about her impressions of being a woman operating in a male dominated industry.

“I’m a woman in a man’s world. There are hardly any women in my business. There are oppressive men and exploitative men. Georgia O’Keeffe used to talk about them — men this and men that — too. The men said, ‘You can’t paint New York City’ — she did some fantastic paintings of New York City. It’s all male-dominant, and you’re always with them. I’m on the road with 21 guys, and I love men’s company, don’t get me wrong. Even when they’re stupid little boys, I still like them. I mean, love the sinner, hate the sin.”

She also expressed her views on being considered part of the hippie generation: “The hippie values were not mine, they were naive, they had no place, they were childish; the politics were stupid. When they became a large minority, the straights noticed, grew their hair long and took over.”

Mitchell last released a studio album, Shine, in 2007.

Watch Peter Gabriel perform new song “What Lies Ahead” in concert

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Turin audiences are treated to new piano ballad... Peter Gabriel has debuted a new song live in concert. According to Stereogum, Gabriel opened his show at Turin, Italy on November 20 with a piano ballad, "What Lies Ahead". Gabriel also opened his set with the new song the following night in Bologna, Italy. Peter Gabriel released Up, his last collection of original music, in 2002. Prior to "What Lies Ahead", Gabriel's hadn't released an original studio song since "Down To Earth" from the 2008 film, WALL-E. "Down To Earth" was nominated for an Academy Award. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m96CjZpGJ98

Turin audiences are treated to new piano ballad…

Peter Gabriel has debuted a new song live in concert.

According to Stereogum, Gabriel opened his show at Turin, Italy on November 20 with a piano ballad, “What Lies Ahead“.

Gabriel also opened his set with the new song the following night in Bologna, Italy.

Peter Gabriel released Up, his last collection of original music, in 2002.

Prior to “What Lies Ahead”, Gabriel’s hadn’t released an original studio song since “Down To Earth” from the 2008 film, WALL-E.

“Down To Earth” was nominated for an Academy Award.

Jack White pays tribute to keyboardist Isaiah ‘Ikey’ Owens at London gig

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Owens passed away last week aged 39... Jack White has honoured keyboardist Isaiah 'Ikey' Owens, who passed away last month (October 14) while touring with White in Mexico. Owens had regularly played alongside White in recent years and performed on the 2014 album Lazaretto. The Grammy Award winner was also known for his work with Mars Volta and Free Moral Agents, among others. He died from a heart attack, aged 39. White subsequently cancelled the remainder of his tour dates in Mexico. Taking time out from his gig at London's O2 Arena on Wednesday (November 19), the former White Stripes frontman, as reportedby Consequence of Sound, urged the audience to applaud in Owens' memory. "I want to dedicate this show to the keyboard player and beautiful musician we lost this year 'Ikey' Owens," said White. "He's still with us today," he added before performing the song "Love Interruption". Click below to watch fan-recorded footage of the tribute, which appears around the 5.00 mark. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4q-KrgeCfw

Owens passed away last week aged 39…

Jack White has honoured keyboardist Isaiah ‘Ikey’ Owens, who passed away last month (October 14) while touring with White in Mexico.

Owens had regularly played alongside White in recent years and performed on the 2014 album Lazaretto. The Grammy Award winner was also known for his work with Mars Volta and Free Moral Agents, among others. He died from a heart attack, aged 39.

White subsequently cancelled the remainder of his tour dates in Mexico. Taking time out from his gig at London’s O2 Arena on Wednesday (November 19), the former White Stripes frontman, as reportedby Consequence of Sound, urged the audience to applaud in Owens’ memory.

“I want to dedicate this show to the keyboard player and beautiful musician we lost this year ‘Ikey’ Owens,” said White. “He’s still with us today,” he added before performing the song “Love Interruption”. Click below to watch fan-recorded footage of the tribute, which appears around the 5.00 mark.

Monty Python’s “Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life” tops UK poll of most popular funeral songs

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'Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life' finishes above songs by Robbie Williams and Frank Sinatra... Monty Python's "Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life" is the most popular song played at funerals in Britain, a new poll has discovered. The data gathered by Co-operative Funeralcare shows that the song, as featured in the 1979 film The Life Of Brian, was the most popular choice of the 30,000 funerals the group. Just nine of the top twenty are traditional pieces of music, with TV themes and pop songs becoming increasingly popular. Robbie Williams' "Angels" and "My Way" by Frank Sinatra both feature in the top ten alongside "You'll Never Walk Alone" by Gerry & The Pacemakers. Among the less expected choices that people have chosen to be buried to include the Match Of The Day theme tune as well as other songs from TV including Last Of The Summer Wine and Coronation Street. Hinting at a move in fashion between generations, Co-operative Funeralcare's operations director David Collingwood said: "We think we may be seeing a generational shift in attitudes towards funerals, and the choice of music being requested. Music plays such an important part in people's lives that it now acts as the theme tune to their passing. Modern funerals are very much about personal choice, which can be reflected in the choice of music, dress, coffin, flowers, hearses or memorials." The Funeralcare top twenty is as follows: 1. 'Always Look on the Bright Side of Life' - Monty Python 2. The Lord Is My Shepherd Psalm 23 3. 'Abide With Me' 4. Match Of The Day theme 5. 'My Way' - Frank Sinatra 6. 'All Things Bright And Beautiful' 7. 'Angels' - Robbie Williams 8. Enigma Variations - Elgar 9. 'You'll Never Walk Alone' - Gerry And The Pacemakers 10. 'Soul Limbo' - Booker T. & the MG's 11. 'Canon In D' - Pachelbel 12. 'My Heart Will Go On' - Celine Dion 13= Last Of The Summer Wine Theme Tune 13= Only Fools and Horses Theme Tune 14. 'Time To Say Goodbye' - Sarah Brightman & Andrea Bocelli 15. 'Four Seasons' - Vivaldi 16. 'Ave Maria' - Schubert 17. Coronation Street TV Theme Theme Tune 18= 'You Raise Me Up' - Westlife 18= 'Over The Rainbow' - Eva Cassidy 19. 'World In Union' - Dame Kiri Te Kanawa 20= 'Nessun Dorma' - Puccini 20= Adagio' - Bizet/Albinoni

‘Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life’ finishes above songs by Robbie Williams and Frank Sinatra…

Monty Python‘s “Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life” is the most popular song played at funerals in Britain, a new poll has discovered.

The data gathered by Co-operative Funeralcare shows that the song, as featured in the 1979 film The Life Of Brian, was the most popular choice of the 30,000 funerals the group.

Just nine of the top twenty are traditional pieces of music, with TV themes and pop songs becoming increasingly popular. Robbie Williams’ “Angels” and “My Way” by Frank Sinatra both feature in the top ten alongside “You’ll Never Walk Alone” by Gerry & The Pacemakers.

Among the less expected choices that people have chosen to be buried to include the Match Of The Day theme tune as well as other songs from TV including Last Of The Summer Wine and Coronation Street.

Hinting at a move in fashion between generations, Co-operative Funeralcare’s operations director David Collingwood said: “We think we may be seeing a generational shift in attitudes towards funerals, and the choice of music being requested. Music plays such an important part in people’s lives that it now acts as the theme tune to their passing. Modern funerals are very much about personal choice, which can be reflected in the choice of music, dress, coffin, flowers, hearses or memorials.”

The Funeralcare top twenty is as follows:

1. ‘Always Look on the Bright Side of Life’ – Monty Python

2. The Lord Is My Shepherd Psalm 23

3. ‘Abide With Me’

4. Match Of The Day theme

5. ‘My Way’ – Frank Sinatra

6. ‘All Things Bright And Beautiful’

7. ‘Angels’ – Robbie Williams

8. Enigma Variations – Elgar

9. ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’ – Gerry And The Pacemakers

10. ‘Soul Limbo’ – Booker T. & the MG’s

11. ‘Canon In D’ – Pachelbel

12. ‘My Heart Will Go On’ – Celine Dion

13= Last Of The Summer Wine Theme Tune

13= Only Fools and Horses Theme Tune

14. ‘Time To Say Goodbye’ – Sarah Brightman & Andrea Bocelli

15. ‘Four Seasons’ – Vivaldi

16. ‘Ave Maria’ – Schubert

17. Coronation Street TV Theme Theme Tune

18= ‘You Raise Me Up’ – Westlife

18= ‘Over The Rainbow’ – Eva Cassidy

19. ‘World In Union’ – Dame Kiri Te Kanawa

20= ‘Nessun Dorma’ – Puccini

20= Adagio’ – Bizet/Albinoni

This month in Uncut

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Neil Young, Jimmy Page, Kate Bush, AC/DC and our ultimate review of 2014 all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out tomorrow (November 25). In the cover story, we look at Neil Young’s productive, strange and compelling year – with help from his close compadres Graham Nash, Frank ‘Poncho’ Sa...

Neil Young, Jimmy Page, Kate Bush, AC/DC and our ultimate review of 2014 all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out tomorrow (November 25).

In the cover story, we look at Neil Young’s productive, strange and compelling year – with help from his close compadres Graham Nash, Frank ‘Poncho’ Sampedro and the late Rick Rosas.

After two intensely personal albums, a possibly valedictory Crazy Horse tour, some revelatory solo shows and the start of a new relationship, we look at what could come next for Shakey in 2015… “I don’t think it’s a musical decade coming up, as much as it is one of fighting for mankind…”

Jimmy Page answers your questions in a special, extended ‘audience with…’ piece, discussing his musical future, his proudest moment, occult bookshops and Robert Plant’s suggestion of a possible acoustic reunion of Led Zeppelin.

Producer Andrew Powell and a host of musicians remember the recording of Kate Bush’s 1978 No 1 single “Wuthering Heights” – “the unusualness was key, this strange girl…”

Angus Young talks Uncut through AC/DC’s new album, Rock Or Bust, and reveals more about his brother Malcolm Young’s departure from the group due to dementia.

Meanwhile, we present our review of the year, including the 75 best albums, 30 key reissues and finest films, books and DVDs of 2014, all chosen by Uncut’s staff and contributors.

St Vincent takes us through the five albums she’s recorded so far, including Love This Giant with David Byrne, and discusses her Disney soundtrack inspirations, hardcore work ethic and her experiences of playing with Mike Garson, The Polyphonic Spree, Byrne and Sufjan Stevens.

Also in the issue, Mark Kozelek of Sun Kil Moon and Red House Painters discusses his astounding 2014 album Benji, his career as a musician and songwriter and his feud with The War On Drugs, while SwansMichael Gira details eight songs or albums that have soundtracked his life, including music from Suicide, Howlin’ Wolf and an album of Tibetan chanting…

Elsewhere, Cream songwriter Pete Brown remembers Jack Bruce, while festival-goers recall the chaotic late-’70s Deeply Vale events, and we pay tribute to the Earls Court exhibition centre, soon to be demolished.

In our 40-page reviews section, we look at new albums from AC/DC, Smashing Pumpkins, Blake Mills, Einstürzende Neubauten, Swamp Dogg and more, while the archive reviews section features Bruce Springsteen, Pixies, Wilco and Joni Mitchell, among a host of others.

Our free CD, The Best Of 2014, includes songs from The War On Drugs, Gruff Rhys, St Vincent, Caribou, Stephen Malkmus, Real Estate, Mogwai, Swans, Sharon Van Etten, Toumani Diabaté, Sun Kil Moon and more.

The new Uncut is out on November 25.

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

Get On Up

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The Godfather of Soul biopic... “You cats ready?” Chadwick Boseman's James Brown asks the audience directly early in Get On Up. It’s a surprisingly audacious move for a rock biopic. Cinema has always enjoyed telling a good life story, and you could be forgiven for assuming that the ones accompanied with lashings of sex and drugs and a profitable spin-off soundtrack album would be among the best. But – as recent biopics of Ray Charles and Johnny Cash have proved – even the most transformative of performer can have his life story rendered in the most banal fashion. Todd Haynes’ I’m Not There, at least took a novel approach as it addressed the mass of contradictions Bob Dylan embodies by casting six different actors as the musician, including a young black boy and a woman. Now, it’s James Brown’s turn in the movie spotlight. Under the auspices of producer Mick Jagger, Get On Up carves out the usual Hollywood story arc of affliction, transcendence and – for the true believers – unadulterated affirmation. But, surprisingly, it is delivered – in the early stages, at least – with a welcome lightness of touch. The story opens in 1988, with the Godfather of Soul, wearing a dapper green velour tracksuit, blowing chunks out of the ceiling at his corporate offices with a shotgun. Anyone familiar with Pop Will Eat Itself’s “Not Now James, We’re Busy” will doubtless be aware of the events that follow, as the police chase Brown from South Carolina to Georgia. It’s a lively start, for sure. From there, the film loops back and forth, trying to unburden itself from the shackles of genre convention by breaking the fourth wall, shooting the early scenes of his hardscrabble childhood like weird, elemental Southern Gothic. But, alas, it doesn’t sustain the lively momentum. Before you know it, Basil Exposition has taken over (“If you stand up Lyndon Johnson and suck up to the Panthers, you ain’t going to be playing Vegas anytime soon,”) and the film begins to stumble through all the usual genre pitfalls. Chadwick Boseman is charismatic as Brown – a violent, manipulative perfectionist who is emotionally disconnected from those around him. The script, by British playwright Jez Butterworth and his brother John-Henry, is driving, constant, fluid; like Brown’s music. But director Tate Taylor – who gave us the woeful Oscar-bait of The Help – doesn’t quite seem able to grasp the liquidity of Boseman’s performance or the wit of the Butterworths’ script. Michael Bonner Uncut is also available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

The Godfather of Soul biopic…

“You cats ready?” Chadwick Boseman’s James Brown asks the audience directly early in Get On Up. It’s a surprisingly audacious move for a rock biopic. Cinema has always enjoyed telling a good life story, and you could be forgiven for assuming that the ones accompanied with lashings of sex and drugs and a profitable spin-off soundtrack album would be among the best. But – as recent biopics of Ray Charles and Johnny Cash have proved – even the most transformative of performer can have his life story rendered in the most banal fashion. Todd Haynes’ I’m Not There, at least took a novel approach as it addressed the mass of contradictions Bob Dylan embodies by casting six different actors as the musician, including a young black boy and a woman.

Now, it’s James Brown’s turn in the movie spotlight. Under the auspices of producer Mick Jagger, Get On Up carves out the usual Hollywood story arc of affliction, transcendence and – for the true believers – unadulterated affirmation. But, surprisingly, it is delivered – in the early stages, at least – with a welcome lightness of touch. The story opens in 1988, with the Godfather of Soul, wearing a dapper green velour tracksuit, blowing chunks out of the ceiling at his corporate offices with a shotgun.

Anyone familiar with Pop Will Eat Itself’s “Not Now James, We’re Busy” will doubtless be aware of the events that follow, as the police chase Brown from South Carolina to Georgia. It’s a lively start, for sure. From there, the film loops back and forth, trying to unburden itself from the shackles of genre convention by breaking the fourth wall, shooting the early scenes of his hardscrabble childhood like weird, elemental Southern Gothic. But, alas, it doesn’t sustain the lively momentum.

Before you know it, Basil Exposition has taken over (“If you stand up Lyndon Johnson and suck up to the Panthers, you ain’t going to be playing Vegas anytime soon,”) and the film begins to stumble through all the usual genre pitfalls. Chadwick Boseman is charismatic as Brown – a violent, manipulative perfectionist who is emotionally disconnected from those around him. The script, by British playwright Jez Butterworth and his brother John-Henry, is driving, constant, fluid; like Brown’s music. But director Tate Taylor – who gave us the woeful Oscar-bait of The Help – doesn’t quite seem able to grasp the liquidity of Boseman’s performance or the wit of the Butterworths’ script.

Michael Bonner

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

Arcade Fire’s Will Butler to release debut solo album in March

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Policy follows the Academy Award nominated Her score... Arcade Fire's Will Butler will release his debut solo album in March 2015. Pitchfork reports that Butler, who was nominated for an Oscar for his soundtrack to the Spike Jonze film Her will release the album Policy on March 10. The album will be released through Merge. As well as touring with Arcade Fire this year, including a headline set at this year's Glastonbury, Will Butler also scored a documentary about a Barack Obama impersonator living in New York. Meanwhile, Will's brother Win Butler has suggested that Arcade Fire will begin work on a new album this autumn. He told NME: "We're in a position now where we can have an idea and the people around us to make it happen. It starts when you get off the road. If I ever feel bored now, it's the best feeling in the world, because I know that's when the next idea is going to come into my brain and it will start again." Arcade Fire wrapped their Reflektor world tour in September. The band's Richard Reed Parry played his own solo dates in London last month following the release of his album 'Music For Heart And Breath'. Butler performed a rare solo set of original material at Brooklyn venue Baby's All Right last month. Footage of the multi-instrumentalist's performance in October is available to watch online (watch below). http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40IKXTdYBBE

Policy follows the Academy Award nominated Her score…

Arcade Fire’s Will Butler will release his debut solo album in March 2015.

Pitchfork reports that Butler, who was nominated for an Oscar for his soundtrack to the Spike Jonze film Her will release the album Policy on March 10. The album will be released through Merge.

As well as touring with Arcade Fire this year, including a headline set at this year’s Glastonbury, Will Butler also scored a documentary about a Barack Obama impersonator living in New York.

Meanwhile, Will’s brother Win Butler has suggested that Arcade Fire will begin work on a new album this autumn. He told NME: “We’re in a position now where we can have an idea and the people around us to make it happen. It starts when you get off the road. If I ever feel bored now, it’s the best feeling in the world, because I know that’s when the next idea is going to come into my brain and it will start again.”

Arcade Fire wrapped their Reflektor world tour in September. The band’s Richard Reed Parry played his own solo dates in London last month following the release of his album ‘Music For Heart And Breath’.

Butler performed a rare solo set of original material at Brooklyn venue Baby’s All Right last month. Footage of the multi-instrumentalist’s performance in October is available to watch online (watch below).

Big Star’s ‘September Gurls’ “inspired by Slade”

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Big Star drummer Jody Stephens, producer John Fry and engineer Richard Rosebrough recall the creation of the band’s classic “September Gurls” in the new issue of Uncut, dated December 2014 and out now. Regarding the title and subject matter of the single and Radio City track, Stephens sugge...

Big Star drummer Jody Stephens, producer John Fry and engineer Richard Rosebrough recall the creation of the band’s classic “September Gurls” in the new issue of Uncut, dated December 2014 and out now.

Regarding the title and subject matter of the single and Radio City track, Stephens suggests that it was inspired by the receptionist at Ardent recording studios as well as, unlikely as it seems, Slade.

“There were a couple of ‘September girls’,” explains Stephens, the only surviving member of the band, “one was Diane Wall, the receptionist at Ardent. September is probably the month they were born. Alex was into astrology then. Alex is a December boy. Chris and John and Alex were all December boys. Andy was born in January and I was October, but there were a lot of December guys around.

“The idea of spelling ‘girls’ phonetically was probably Alex’s. Slade were doing that around that time, so I think that’s where that came from.”

The new Uncut is out now.

The Making Of… The Moody Blues’ Nights In White Satin

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Next week The Moody Blues release a 50th anniversary edition of their debut album – here, we dig into the Uncut archives (June 2013 issue, 193) and hear the band tell the strange tale of their biggest hit, and how a Mellotron, swanky bed-sheets and a toilet-seat conspired to give Justin Hayward an...

Next week The Moody Blues release a 50th anniversary edition of their debut album – here, we dig into the Uncut archives (June 2013 issue, 193) and hear the band tell the strange tale of their biggest hit, and how a Mellotron, swanky bed-sheets and a toilet-seat conspired to give Justin Hayward and co a timeless hit (and Lonnie Donegan a lot of money)… Interviews: Nick Hasted

____________________

When Justin Hayward and John Lodge joined The Moody Blues in August 1966, the Midlands band appeared to be on the way out. Their 1964 No 1, “Go Now” was long gone, its R’n’B direction played out. It took keyboardist Mike Pinder’s purchase of a primitive, tape-based orchestral sampler, the Mellotron, and a lyric inspired by luxurious bed-sheets to revive their fortunes.

“Nights In White Satin” was one of the most immediately recognisable classics of 1967, with its allusive lyrics and atmospheric arrangement built on a flute solo and epic harmonies. “We used to practise coming back from gigs by singing dirty rugby songs like ‘Eskimo Nell’ in close harmony,” flautist Ray Thomas explains. “We gave Elton John a lift back then, and he was quiet as a mouse, listening.”

“Nights In White Satin” also inspired one of the first full-blown concept albums, Days Of Future Passed, commissioned by Decca as a humble demonstration record for a new stereo system. The single has been a transatlantic hit three times – but it’s only recently, says Hayward, that he feels he’s understood the song. “I wrote it when I was immature, it’s a naïve song,” he explains. “And that’s nice. But I never heard it until about two years ago, I was in bed and somebody sent me a version by Bettye LaVette. And I played it on my computer, and I burst into tears. My wife came in and said, ‘What on earth’s the matter?’ I heard the lyrics for the first time. That’s bizarre, isn’t it? It’s not that I’d been going through the motions. Every time I’d sung it, it had been heartfelt. But she took every line and made it something about herself that was transparent and clear. She explained it to me, somehow.”

____________________

John Lodge (bass): I don’t think there were any bookings when I joined, except in Belgium. We realised we wanted to write our own music. The era of coloured suits was over.

Justin Hayward (vocals, acoustic guitar): I’m not sure that any of us could see a way forward for the group.

Ray Thomas (flute): We played some cabaret dates in the Northern clubs, and halfway through the set you’d hear, “Scampi and chips twice.” One night, Justin burst into tears. So we said, “Let’s write our own stuff.” We called it shit or bust. If they don’t like it, we’re knackered.

Hayward: A couple of days after that, Mike rediscovered an instrument called the Mellotron, and I went with him to the Dunlop factory social club in Birmingham, and bought it for about £25.

Mike Pinder (Mellotron): I remember paying £300 for it. I used to work at the factory in Birmingham that made them. This one had tapes hanging out the back of the LSO moonlighting, which were triggered by a keyboard. What came out of that was “Nights In White Satin”.

Hayward: Graeme and I were sharing two rooms with our girlfriends in Bayswater, and we came back very late at night. They were all asleep, and I sat on the side of the bed with my old 12-string I was renovating for Lonnie Donegan, and I wrote the basic two verses. One part of it was that I lived out of a suitcase then, I never had any possessions, and a previous girlfriend had bought me some white satin sheets. I was at the end of one big love affair and the beginning of another, and there was a lot of random thoughts by a 19-year-old boy. There’s quite a lot of truth in it. I did write letters, never meaning to send. “Just what you want to be, you will be in the end” is a philosophical thing.

Thomas: Justin won’t own up to it now, but he had the idea for “Nights…” sitting on the loo – with the lid down. Nice acoustics, normally.

Hayward: We had a rehearsal room near where Mike lived in Barnes, and I played it to the guys. Then Mike added his Mellotron riff, and suddenly the others were interested.

Graeme Edge (drums): Mike’s riff is one of the oldest licks in music. For me it happened when we recorded “Nights” on the BBC Radio’s Saturday Club, which sounded very much as the record eventually turned out.

Lodge: None of us had got the full picture of “Nights” until then. When we went into the control room and listened to it, it was mesmerising. It was a time when we all felt we were floating on air. We were going to the clubs every night, and there was a particular buzz going on, with Sgt Pepper and “A Whiter Shade Of Pale”, all the Jimi Hendrix things. The energy was flying all over the place.

Hayward: We had a huge slice of luck when Decca asked us to do a demonstration record for the Deramic Stereo System, so their consumer division could sell stereos. That’s what Days Of Future Passed was, really. We had a debt to Decca, and they asked us to do a version of Dvořák’s ‘New World Symphony’. Peter Knight, who was supposed to be doing the orchestral stuff, came down to see us at the 100 Club, and it was his idea to change it around to a concept album about a day and night. We did “Nights” first.

Derek Varnals (engineer): In fact, it was originally recorded as a stand-alone mono single. Looking at my diary, we recorded it [at Decca Studio One] on Sunday, October 8.

Lodge: It couldn’t have taken long to record. But harmonically, the spread is huge. And also there’s no middle-eight, which all pop songs had then. But this was totally different. The scene is set with Justin’s singing at the beginning. Every instrument on that record has its own space. Nothing gets in the way of anything else. Because everything has its own space, everything sounds bigger. I think that’s what gives it its lushness, and the dynamics. Your imagination takes over. Your brain is filling in the picture. It was like we were recording in CinemaScope. We used to talk about that. “How wide is the colour on this song?”

Hayward: Tony Clarke was a boffin producer who could see the whole thing cinematically. He’d describe it in this Stanley Kubrick way – “And then we fade across the setting sun, and sparks come out!” He was straight, four of us were pretty stoned – not John.

Edge: It is the gelling quality of the harmonies – three of us were in the choir, we’d been trained over years to feel uplifting. It does sound huge at the end, but if you put a dB meter on it, it doesn’t alter that much. Your brain makes huge differences.

Varnals: We did three bounces from one four-track to another, with a view to getting lots of Mellotron on, because its sound needed layering and smoothing out. But by the time we put the backing vocals on, the record had its own ethos, grand and dramatic, and it encouraged us to blend the voices in with the Mellotron. It starts quietly and builds. It’s quite an intense lyric. They’d been playing it onstage, so they knew how to do it. But it needed a lot of reverb to round it out.

Hayward: I sometimes hear it on the radio, and I think, ‘Nothing’s happening!’ I never really got why it was a hit.

Varnals: It’s a very empty, simple arrangement. It’s really just the layers of the Mellotron and the backing vocals that give it that drama. And the way the voices sparked off the echo-chamber just right.

Thomas: John, Justin, Mike and myself got round the mic. We only had four tracks, so we put four voices on one track, and four on another. When Tony mixed the two together, he said, “You’ve got to come and have a listen to this.” When he played it back to us, it freaked us out that we could make such a big sound. We thought, ‘Christ, that sounds bloody good.’

Varnals: We tried it on other songs later, to give them a similar approach to “Nights In White Satin”, but the voices never worked like that again. Then at the weekly A&R meeting on the 16th, somebody said, “It’s not a single – should we do it on an LP?” That’s when one of the A&R people, Michael Dacre-Barclay, grabbed it for a sound series he was already doing, to demonstrate the Deramic Stereo System.

Hayward: Dacre-Barclay was very shrewd, very suave – I never saw him again, and he took a royalty and a share of the publishing.

Thomas: Decca wanted Peter Knight’s orchestra to play Dvořák’s ‘New World Symphony’, interspersed with us playing rock’n’roll like “Hound Dog”. It would have sounded absolutely fucking awful.

Varnals: On the 20th, the Friday morning, I went to a meeting when they knocked around the idea of doing a rock band with orchestral bits, in the same way that “A Day In The Life” had. But nobody mentioned Dvořák. I think that’s when the concept of an album set over a day was developed, with “Nights In White Satin” at the end.

Lodge: We asked for 24-hour studio time, so we could have a lock-out, which was unheard of. We’d be recording till 5, 6am. I actually cannot remember going home to bed. I can only remember being in the studio. If you said to me right now where were you living when you did that, I’d have to think about that.

Thomas: In fact, they were pretty strict. We started in the morning and we finished at 5pm.

Varnals: There’s two versions of “Nights In White Satin”. We overdubbed the orchestra on the last third of it on the stereo mix on the album, because Peter wanted to fit it into the big finale, which made “Nights” over seven minutes. I can’t remember when the poem was added.

Edge: I see the poem I wrote, “Late Lament”, as homogenous to “Nights”. But I wasn’t upset it wasn’t on the single.

Hayward: A girl in France, Patricia, covered “Nights” and had a big hit with it first, then our version was a hit there. It was all a bit half-cocked.

Thomas: France really put bacon on the table for us. We played with Josephine Baker there. She still got into the feathers and tights. She was an old lady then, and she’d still got one ’ell of a figure on her.

Lodge: We got a phone-call from England and it was No 19, and selling 20,000 copies a day.

Edge: They said this is going to be a hit, and we’ll pull it off as a single, so go and cut it down to three minutes, and we said, “No, it’s four minutes, 20 seconds.” That became the reason it was a hit in America. It was big on FM radio in Seattle first. We found out years later that the DJ picked the longest record so he could go out the back and smoke his bong! The second time he did it, the switchboard lit up like a Christmas tree.

Hayward: Then in ’72 it was No 2 in the US, and in ’79 it came back in the UK, thanks to Jonathan King. But I get very little financially from it, because when I was 18, I innocently and stupidly signed away my copyrights ’til I was 26 to Lonnie Donegan and his family for life, a deal a judge later described as “onerous”. He was a deeply unpleasant man, and he became a parasite on the Moodies. He even sent someone to take the guitar I’d written “Nights” on while I was out, which was bizarre. But I’m the only person who has the joy to sing it, and for the audience to go, “That guy did that, and he’s singing it for us.”

Edge: It’s the last but one song in the set when we play it now. By then, I’ve picked my people to play it to. It brings old emotions back to the surface for some of them. It brushes the cobwebs off. When we were making an album later, Justin was a little quiet and depressed. I said, “Don’t worry, Justin. ‘Nights In White Satin’ is way too good to disappear.”

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