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Jack White, Gillian Welch, Elvis Costello and more feature on Inside Llewyn Davis live album

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Nonesuch Records are releasing a live album inspired by the Coen Brothers film, Inside Llewyn Davis. The record, entitled Another Day, Another Time: Celebrating The Music Of Inside Llewyn Davis, will feature contributions from Jack White, Conor Oberst, The Decemberists' Colin Meloy, Elvis Costello, Joan Baez, Gillian Welch, The Avett Brothers, Carey Mulligan and more. The two-disc album will consist of 34 tracks in all recorded at a concert at Town Hall in New York in September 2013 to mark the release of the aforementioned film. It will come out on January 13, 2015. Directed by the Coen Brothers, Inside Llewyn Davis was released earlier, focusing on the folk scene in 1960s New York. You can read Uncut's review of the film here. Check out the tracklist for this release below. Disc One: Punch Brothers - 'Tumbling Tumbleweed' Punch Brothers - 'Rye Whiskey' Gillian Welch - 'Will the Circle Be Unbroken?' Gillian Welch & David Rawlings - 'The Way It Goes' Willie Watson - 'The Midnight Special' Dave Rawlings Machine - 'I Hear Them All/This Land Is Your Land' The Milk Carton Kids - 'New York' Secret Sisters - 'Tomorrow Will Be Kinder' Lake Street Dive - 'You Go Down Smooth' Elvis Costello, Oscar Isaac, and Adam Driver - 'Please Mr. Kennedy' Conor Oberst - 'Four Strong Winds' Conor Oberst - 'Man Named Truth' Colin Meloy - 'Blues Run the Game' Joan Baez, Colin Meloy, and Gillian Welch - 'Joe Hill' The Avett Brothers - 'All My Mistakes' The Avett Brothers - 'That's How I Got to Memphis' The Avett Brothers - 'Head Full of Doubt/Road Full of Promise' Disc Two: Jack White - 'Mama's Angel Child' Jack White - 'Did You Hear John Hurt?' Jack White - 'We're Going to Be Friends' Rhiannon Giddens - 'Waterboy' Rhiannon Giddens 'S iomadh rud tha dhith orm/Ciamar a ni mi 'n dannsa direach' Oscar Isaac - 'Hang Me, Oh Hang Me' Oscar Isaac - 'Green, Green Rocky Road' Keb' Mo' - 'Tomorrow Is a Long Time' Bob Neuwirth - 'Rock Salt and Nails' Chris Thile, Chris Eldridge, Paul Kowert, Marcus Mumford, Noam Pikelny, and Gabe Witcher - 'The Auld Triangle' Gillian Welch, Rhiannon Giddens, and Carey Mulligan - 'Didn't Leave Nobody But the Baby' Elvis Costello and Joan Baez - 'Which Side Are You On?' Joan Baez - 'House of the Rising Sun' Marcus Mumford and Joan Baez - 'Give Me Cornbread When I'm Hungry' Marcus Mumford - 'I Was Young When I Left Home' Oscar Isaac and Marcus Mumford - 'Fare Thee Well (Dink's Song)' Marcus Mumford and the Punch Brothers - 'Farewell'

Nonesuch Records are releasing a live album inspired by the Coen Brothers film, Inside Llewyn Davis.

The record, entitled Another Day, Another Time: Celebrating The Music Of Inside Llewyn Davis, will feature contributions from Jack White, Conor Oberst, The Decemberists’ Colin Meloy, Elvis Costello, Joan Baez, Gillian Welch, The Avett Brothers, Carey Mulligan and more.

The two-disc album will consist of 34 tracks in all recorded at a concert at Town Hall in New York in September 2013 to mark the release of the aforementioned film. It will come out on January 13, 2015.

Directed by the Coen Brothers, Inside Llewyn Davis was released earlier, focusing on the folk scene in 1960s New York. You can read Uncut’s review of the film here.

Check out the tracklist for this release below.

Disc One:

Punch Brothers – ‘Tumbling Tumbleweed’

Punch Brothers – ‘Rye Whiskey’

Gillian Welch – ‘Will the Circle Be Unbroken?’

Gillian Welch & David Rawlings – ‘The Way It Goes’

Willie Watson – ‘The Midnight Special’

Dave Rawlings Machine – ‘I Hear Them All/This Land Is Your Land’

The Milk Carton Kids – ‘New York’

Secret Sisters – ‘Tomorrow Will Be Kinder’

Lake Street Dive – ‘You Go Down Smooth’

Elvis Costello, Oscar Isaac, and Adam Driver – ‘Please Mr. Kennedy’

Conor Oberst – ‘Four Strong Winds’

Conor Oberst – ‘Man Named Truth’

Colin Meloy – ‘Blues Run the Game’

Joan Baez, Colin Meloy, and Gillian Welch – ‘Joe Hill’

The Avett Brothers – ‘All My Mistakes’

The Avett Brothers – ‘That’s How I Got to Memphis’

The Avett Brothers – ‘Head Full of Doubt/Road Full of Promise’

Disc Two:

Jack White – ‘Mama’s Angel Child’

Jack White – ‘Did You Hear John Hurt?’

Jack White – ‘We’re Going to Be Friends’

Rhiannon Giddens – ‘Waterboy’

Rhiannon Giddens ‘S iomadh rud tha dhith orm/Ciamar a ni mi ‘n dannsa direach’

Oscar Isaac – ‘Hang Me, Oh Hang Me’

Oscar Isaac – ‘Green, Green Rocky Road’

Keb’ Mo’ – ‘Tomorrow Is a Long Time’

Bob Neuwirth – ‘Rock Salt and Nails’

Chris Thile, Chris Eldridge, Paul Kowert, Marcus Mumford, Noam Pikelny, and Gabe Witcher – ‘The Auld Triangle’

Gillian Welch, Rhiannon Giddens, and Carey Mulligan – ‘Didn’t Leave Nobody But the Baby’

Elvis Costello and Joan Baez – ‘Which Side Are You On?’

Joan Baez – ‘House of the Rising Sun’

Marcus Mumford and Joan Baez – ‘Give Me Cornbread When I’m Hungry’

Marcus Mumford – ‘I Was Young When I Left Home’

Oscar Isaac and Marcus Mumford – ‘Fare Thee Well (Dink’s Song)’

Marcus Mumford and the Punch Brothers – ‘Farewell’

Fugazi share early demo of “Merchandise”

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The band will release First Demo on November 18... Fugazi's earliest recordings are set to be collected in a new release, with one of the tracks now airing online. First Demo, which will be issued by Dischord on November 18, consists of 11 tracks dating back to 1988. The songs were recorded during a session at Virginia’s Inner Ear Studios. Originally titled Turn Off Your Guns, the demo collection was originally distributed as a free cassette during the band's early years. It will now be released digitally, on CD and vinyl. You can hear "Merchandise" from the collection, below. The First Demo tracklist: 'Waiting Room' 'Merchandise' 'Furniture' 'Song #1' 'The Word' 'Badmouth' 'Break-In' 'Turn Off Your Guns' 'And The Same' 'In Defense Of Humans' 'Joe #1'

The band will release First Demo on November 18…

Fugazi‘s earliest recordings are set to be collected in a new release, with one of the tracks now airing online.

First Demo, which will be issued by Dischord on November 18, consists of 11 tracks dating back to 1988. The songs were recorded during a session at Virginia’s Inner Ear Studios.

Originally titled Turn Off Your Guns, the demo collection was originally distributed as a free cassette during the band’s early years. It will now be released digitally, on CD and vinyl.

You can hear “Merchandise” from the collection, below.

The First Demo tracklist:

‘Waiting Room’

‘Merchandise’

‘Furniture’

‘Song #1’

‘The Word’

‘Badmouth’

‘Break-In’

‘Turn Off Your Guns’

‘And The Same’

‘In Defense Of Humans’

‘Joe #1’

Inside the new Uncut…

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On the morning of July 29, 1966 Bob Dylan became distracted while out riding his Triumph motorbike. Writing about the incident later in Chronicles Volume 1, Dylan rather gnomically recalled, “I had been in a motorcycle accident and I’d been hurt, but I recovered.” Of course, there is more to Dylan’s accident than that. After a period of retreat and convalescence at his Woodstock home, he began recording songs with his touring band, Robbie Robertson, Garth Hudson, Rick Danko, Richard Manuel and Levon Helm. The material they recorded – in Dylan’s house and in the basement of another property nearby – has been the subject of much conjecture in the years since. But the true extent of the motorbike accident and the entire outlandish saga of the Woodstock recordings is finally revealed in this month's Uncut, as Dylan's biographer Clinton Heylin digs deep into the Basement Tapes for our exclusive cover story. There are more exclusives elsewhere in the issue. In a rare interview William Reid – along with his brother Jim and original band mates Douglas Hart and Murray Dalglish – recall the early days of The Jesus And Mary Chain. Among many fascinating revelations perhaps my favourite is William’s surprising admittance that, in his pre-band days, he worked in a cheese warehouse. Meanwhile, we visit Sharon Van Etten at home in New York – just down the road from Dylan’s old gaff, natch – and I tried to make sense of the labyrinthine career of Genesis, with a little help from Phil Collins, Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford, Steve Hackett and more. Our albums pages, meanwhile, are predictably busy with new releases from Pink Floyd, Neil Young, Bryan Ferry, Ariel Pink, the Thompson dynasty and also the T-Bone Burnett-produced project, Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes, which takes its cue from our cover story. In reissues, we take stock of a major new Captain Beefheart set, The Jam’s deluxe edition of Setting Sons and plenty more, including Sleater-Kinney, the Afghan Whigs, Hendrix, Terry Reid, Led Zeppelin and The Who. Over in our Film and DVD pages, you’ll find reviews of Dexys, Edwyn Collins, the Rolling Stones, Björk and Johnny Thunders. Live, we report on this year’s Austin City Limits – with performances from The Replacements, Pearl Jam and Outkast – plus Lauryn Hill in London and an all-star tribute to George Harrison in Los Angeles. John Lydon’s latest memoir and Hunter Davies’ study of The Beatles’ lyrics are reviewed in our Books section. In our regulars, Yusuf Cat Stevens answers your questions in An Audience With…, Big Star’s “September Gurls” is the subject of this month’s Making Of… story, Robert Wyatt looks back on his marvellous career in Album By Album and Bonnie “Prince” Billy talks us through the records that shaped him in My Life In Music. In Instant Karma, we preview a new anthology by seasoned rock photographer Danny Clinch, welcome Future Islands to our pages and explore a rich, neglected history of native North American folk rock. I should also bring you up to speed with our CD covermount which this month features tracks by Julian Casablancas, Sleater-Kinney, Deerhoof, These New Puritans, Willy Mitchell and more. And before I forget... the new issue is in shops today. It only remains for me to do some light plugging, if you’ll permit. As Christmas looms, I should mention the many benefits of a subscription to Uncut. This month, we’re offering a year’s subscription at a substantial 44% discount. As well as the magazine itself, you’ll also receive a free trial of Uncut for your iPad or iPhone. Click here for more details, and don’t forget to quote the reference code: BYZ4. Enjoy the rest of your week - and don't forget to drop us a line at uncut_feedback@timeinc.com. We'd love to hear from you!

On the morning of July 29, 1966 Bob Dylan became distracted while out riding his Triumph motorbike. Writing about the incident later in Chronicles Volume 1, Dylan rather gnomically recalled, “I had been in a motorcycle accident and I’d been hurt, but I recovered.” Of course, there is more to Dylan’s accident than that. After a period of retreat and convalescence at his Woodstock home, he began recording songs with his touring band, Robbie Robertson, Garth Hudson, Rick Danko, Richard Manuel and Levon Helm. The material they recorded – in Dylan’s house and in the basement of another property nearby – has been the subject of much conjecture in the years since. But the true extent of the motorbike accident and the entire outlandish saga of the Woodstock recordings is finally revealed in this month’s Uncut, as Dylan’s biographer Clinton Heylin digs deep into the Basement Tapes for our exclusive cover story.

There are more exclusives elsewhere in the issue. In a rare interview William Reid – along with his brother Jim and original band mates Douglas Hart and Murray Dalglish – recall the early days of The Jesus And Mary Chain. Among many fascinating revelations perhaps my favourite is William’s surprising admittance that, in his pre-band days, he worked in a cheese warehouse. Meanwhile, we visit Sharon Van Etten at home in New York – just down the road from Dylan’s old gaff, natch – and I tried to make sense of the labyrinthine career of Genesis, with a little help from Phil Collins, Tony Banks, Mike Rutherford, Steve Hackett and more.

Our albums pages, meanwhile, are predictably busy with new releases from Pink Floyd, Neil Young, Bryan Ferry, Ariel Pink, the Thompson dynasty and also the T-Bone Burnett-produced project, Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes, which takes its cue from our cover story. In reissues, we take stock of a major new Captain Beefheart set, The Jam’s deluxe edition of Setting Sons and plenty more, including Sleater-Kinney, the Afghan Whigs, Hendrix, Terry Reid, Led Zeppelin and The Who. Over in our Film and DVD pages, you’ll find reviews of Dexys, Edwyn Collins, the Rolling Stones, Björk and Johnny Thunders. Live, we report on this year’s Austin City Limits – with performances from The Replacements, Pearl Jam and Outkast – plus Lauryn Hill in London and an all-star tribute to George Harrison in Los Angeles. John Lydon’s latest memoir and Hunter Davies’ study of The Beatles’ lyrics are reviewed in our Books section.

In our regulars, Yusuf Cat Stevens answers your questions in An Audience With…, Big Star’s “September Gurls” is the subject of this month’s Making Of… story, Robert Wyatt looks back on his marvellous career in Album By Album and Bonnie “Prince” Billy talks us through the records that shaped him in My Life In Music. In Instant Karma, we preview a new anthology by seasoned rock photographer Danny Clinch, welcome Future Islands to our pages and explore a rich, neglected history of native North American folk rock.

I should also bring you up to speed with our CD covermount which this month features tracks by Julian Casablancas, Sleater-Kinney, Deerhoof, These New Puritans, Willy Mitchell and more.

And before I forget… the new issue is in shops today.

It only remains for me to do some light plugging, if you’ll permit. As Christmas looms, I should mention the many benefits of a subscription to Uncut. This month, we’re offering a year’s subscription at a substantial 44% discount. As well as the magazine itself, you’ll also receive a free trial of Uncut for your iPad or iPhone. Click here for more details, and don’t forget to quote the reference code: BYZ4.

Enjoy the rest of your week – and don’t forget to drop us a line at uncut_feedback@timeinc.com. We’d love to hear from you!

Bob Dylan album Basement Tapes Complete streaming online

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The Basement Tapes Complete will be released on November 4... Bob Dylan is streaming his forthcoming The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 release online. The entirety of Basement Tapes Complete is now streaming via NPR. The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 will be released on November 3 by Sony Music. The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 is a six disc set which will feature 138 songs. Meanwhile, a special two disc edition - The Basement Tapes Raw: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 - features 38 songs. The Basement Tapes Raw: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 will also be released on as 3 album set on 180-gram vinyl. You can read our exclusive cover story on the secret history of The Basement Tapes in the next issue of Uncut, on sale Tuesday, October 28

The Basement Tapes Complete will be released on November 4…

Bob Dylan is streaming his forthcoming The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 release online.

The entirety of Basement Tapes Complete is now streaming via NPR.

The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 will be released on November 3 by Sony Music.

The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 is a six disc set which will feature 138 songs.

Meanwhile, a special two disc edition – The Basement Tapes Raw: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 – features 38 songs.

The Basement Tapes Raw: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 will also be released on as 3 album set on 180-gram vinyl.

You can read our exclusive cover story on the secret history of The Basement Tapes in the next issue of Uncut, on sale Tuesday, October 28

Hiss Golden Messenger – Lateness Of Dancers

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Another step forward for this stately, down-home duo
... Easing yourself into “Lucia”, the opener on Lateness Of Dancers, the fifth album from M. C. Taylor and Scott Hirsch’s Hiss Golden Messenger, is a comforting, comfortable experience – even if the organ riff and drum tattoos might, momentarily, have you flashing back on the J. Geils Band’s “Centrefold”. Acoustic guitars jangle understatedly in the background, the wooden, leaven thunk of the drums plots the course of the rhythm, wah-wah guitar flecks in the sidelines, before Taylor’s voice sidles in: “Lucia’s on the skin of the river, the wise old river.” 
In that opening minute, you’ve got as good an indication of the expanse of Hiss Golden Messenger: Taylor’s already signposted the parameters in numerous interviews, where he spills some serious wisdom on his influences, and you can certainly hear the artists he’s mentioned in there, such as Traffic, The Grateful Dead, Ronnie Lane, and Richard & Linda Thompson. 
Taylor’s fandom courses through his songs, and it works perfectly until, well, it doesn’t. Americana suffers more than many genres from an overly semiotic turn, each production flourish and arrangement touch signifying back to older, mostly better records. So, listening to Lateness Of Dancers, you can hear, again, the simple, unadorned, folksy lilt of Ronnie Lane and Slim Chance; an upturn in the vocal lilt like Dylan at his least ornery; flourishes that remind of Tom Petty, the Dead circa American Beauty and Workingman’s Dead, or The Band’s self-titled album. So far, so many boxes ticked. 
The very good thing about Lateness Of Dancers is that, for significant stretches of the album, it doesn’t matter. “Lucia”’s opening leap and lift frames the album’s heart, a run of songs from the following “Saturday’s Song”, where Taylor really knuckles down and pins to his chest an almost atavistic, rural American vision. “Saturday’s Song” itself builds from understated beginnings to a beautifully scored ending, where the guitar figures that have intermittently punctuated the song form a filigree cascade of notes which recalls, of all things, the psychedelic coda to Shuggie Otis’s “Strawberry Letter 23”. 
Move through “Mahogany Dread”, whose bittersweet inevitability, tangles of tremolo guitar, and closely tracked backing vocals trace lines around your ears reminiscent of The Jayhawks’ “Wichita”, and Taylor enacts a kind of unilateral disarmament of his songs. On “Day O Day (A Love So Free)” and the following title track, the arrangements strip things to their very core, “Lateness Of Dancers” peeling back to acoustic guitar, piano, and the buzzing of the outside world, the song’s muted drama underscored by the sudden appearance of backwards guitar, humming organ, and female backing vocals. 
From there, Lateness Of Dancers mostly picks up either its pace or its mood, for a run of pleasant, though slightly underwhelming songs, before the closing “Chapter & Verse (Ione’s Song)” and “Drum” float out on acoustic guitars, piano and fiddle, essaying an American variant on Slim Chance’s roots music. While these two songs don’t pack the emotional punch of, say, “Saturday’s Song” or “Lateness Of Dancers”, they sign the album off with grace and understated humour. 
But there’s still something nagging away at the back of the mind: Taylor’s very believability. This is neither the time nor the place for an extended riff on authenticity, and yet there are moments on Lateness Of Dancers where it’s hard to take his lyrics seriously, with Taylor singing about leaving his “mandolin in the rain”, or unconvincingly drawling “I might get a little crazy”, as though he’s about to head down the shop for the evening’s supplies. 
Perhaps it’s to do with reinvigorating cliché. Those who do this well – Dylan circa The Basement Tapes, for example – inject new life into base material through alchemy. Taylor’s no alchemist – not yet at least – though Lateness Of Dancers suggests he can write songs that transcend the everyday by hymning its subtleties. Jon Dale Q&A MIKE TAYLOR I'm interested to know what you see as the connective forces across the album - what themes were you taking on? 
Part of Lateness is about the lies that we tell ourselves in order to make it through sundown without cracking up or losing control; it’s about making peace with self-deception. There’s a line in “Mahogany Dread” that goes: The misery of love is a funny thing; the more it hurts, the more you think you can stand a little pain. I’m interested in our thresholds, and how we convince ourselves to surpass them. Lateness of Dancers is an album that continues my search for a spiritual home and a position on faith, and reckons with what our obligations are to others and to ourselves. 
What did recording in Hillsborough bring to the sessions, and how do you find your environs feed into your work?
 The last several albums that we’ve made were primarily recorded in non-traditional spaces, either in old houses or barns. There is something aesthetically and artistically appealing about holing up in a place that feels secluded and cut off from clocks. I knew that Lateness of Dancers was going to be an album for the fall; we recorded it as all the leaves were turning and the air was mellowing, and I worked with Merge to make sure that it was released on the cusp of autumn. INTERVIEW: JON DALE

Another step forward for this stately, down-home duo
…

Easing yourself into “Lucia”, the opener on Lateness Of Dancers, the fifth album from M. C. Taylor and Scott Hirsch’s Hiss Golden Messenger, is a comforting, comfortable experience – even if the organ riff and drum tattoos might, momentarily, have you flashing back on the J. Geils Band’s “Centrefold”. Acoustic guitars jangle understatedly in the background, the wooden, leaven thunk of the drums plots the course of the rhythm, wah-wah guitar flecks in the sidelines, before Taylor’s voice sidles in: “Lucia’s on the skin of the river, the wise old river.”


In that opening minute, you’ve got as good an indication of the expanse of Hiss Golden Messenger: Taylor’s already signposted the parameters in numerous interviews, where he spills some serious wisdom on his influences, and you can certainly hear the artists he’s mentioned in there, such as Traffic, The Grateful Dead, Ronnie Lane, and Richard & Linda Thompson.


Taylor’s fandom courses through his songs, and it works perfectly until, well, it doesn’t. Americana suffers more than many genres from an overly semiotic turn, each production flourish and arrangement touch signifying back to older, mostly better records. So, listening to Lateness Of Dancers, you can hear, again, the simple, unadorned, folksy lilt of Ronnie Lane and Slim Chance; an upturn in the vocal lilt like Dylan at his least ornery; flourishes that remind of Tom Petty, the Dead circa American Beauty and Workingman’s Dead, or The Band’s self-titled album. So far, so many boxes ticked.


The very good thing about Lateness Of Dancers is that, for significant stretches of the album, it doesn’t matter. “Lucia”’s opening leap and lift frames the album’s heart, a run of songs from the following “Saturday’s Song”, where Taylor really knuckles down and pins to his chest an almost atavistic, rural American vision. “Saturday’s Song” itself builds from understated beginnings to a beautifully scored ending, where the guitar figures that have intermittently punctuated the song form a filigree cascade of notes which recalls, of all things, the psychedelic coda to Shuggie Otis’s “Strawberry Letter 23”.


Move through “Mahogany Dread”, whose bittersweet inevitability, tangles of tremolo guitar, and closely tracked backing vocals trace lines around your ears reminiscent of The Jayhawks’ “Wichita”, and Taylor enacts a kind of unilateral disarmament of his songs. On “Day O Day (A Love So Free)” and the following title track, the arrangements strip things to their very core, “Lateness Of Dancers” peeling back to acoustic guitar, piano, and the buzzing of the outside world, the song’s muted drama underscored by the sudden appearance of backwards guitar, humming organ, and female backing vocals.


From there, Lateness Of Dancers mostly picks up either its pace or its mood, for a run of pleasant, though slightly underwhelming songs, before the closing “Chapter & Verse (Ione’s Song)” and “Drum” float out on acoustic guitars, piano and fiddle, essaying an American variant on Slim Chance’s roots music. While these two songs don’t pack the emotional punch of, say, “Saturday’s Song” or “Lateness Of Dancers”, they sign the album off with grace and understated humour.


But there’s still something nagging away at the back of the mind: Taylor’s very believability. This is neither the time nor the place for an extended riff on authenticity, and yet there are moments on Lateness Of Dancers where it’s hard to take his lyrics seriously, with Taylor singing about leaving his “mandolin in the rain”, or unconvincingly drawling “I might get a little crazy”, as though he’s about to head down the shop for the evening’s supplies.


Perhaps it’s to do with reinvigorating cliché. Those who do this well – Dylan circa The Basement Tapes, for example – inject new life into base material through alchemy. Taylor’s no alchemist – not yet at least – though Lateness Of Dancers suggests he can write songs that transcend the everyday by hymning its subtleties.

Jon Dale

Q&A

MIKE TAYLOR

I’m interested to know what you see as the connective forces across the album – what themes were you taking on?


Part of Lateness is about the lies that we tell ourselves in order to make it through sundown without cracking up or losing control; it’s about making peace with self-deception. There’s a line in “Mahogany Dread” that goes: The misery of love is a funny thing; the more it hurts, the more you think you can stand a little pain. I’m interested in our thresholds, and how we convince ourselves to surpass them. Lateness of Dancers is an album that continues my search for a spiritual home and a position on faith, and reckons with what our obligations are to others and to ourselves.


What did recording in Hillsborough bring to the sessions, and how do you find your environs feed into your work?


The last several albums that we’ve made were primarily recorded in non-traditional spaces, either in old houses or barns. There is something aesthetically and artistically appealing about holing up in a place that feels secluded and cut off from clocks. I knew that Lateness of Dancers was going to be an album for the fall; we recorded it as all the leaves were turning and the air was mellowing, and I worked with Merge to make sure that it was released on the cusp of autumn.

INTERVIEW: JON DALE

Neil Young performs with Brian Wilson, Al Jardine, Pearl Jam, Norah Jones and more at annual Bridge School benefit

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Young plays two nights at annual benefit concert... Neil Young headlined the 28th Bridge School benefit concert on Saturday, October 25 and Sunday, October 26. Among the other artists performing at this year's concert were Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Tom Jones, Band Of Horses and Florence And The Machine. On Saturday, October 25, Young played solo and with special guests, including Brian Wilson and Al Jardine on a cover of Jardine's song,"California Saga". The song originally appeared on the Beach Boys' album Holland but from Jardine re-recorded on his solo record, A Postcard From California which featured Young, David Crosby and Stephen Stills on backing vocals. Young was joined by Eddie Vedder for "Who's Gonna Stand Up?", and Norah Jones and Puss N Boots for "Down By River". He also played two songs - "Mansion On The Hill" and "Country Home" with Willie Nelson's sons Lukas and Micah, who had previously appeared with Young at Farm Aid and the Harvest For Hope concerts earlier this year. The 1968 song "I Am A Child" made its first live appearance since 2011. Neil Young's set list for October 25, 2014: 1. Sugar Mountain 2. I Am A Child --- 3. Down By The River (w/ Norah Jones and Puss N Boots) --- 4. California Saga (w/ Brian Wilson and Al Jjardine) --- 5. Pocahontas 6. Heart Of Gold 7. I'm Glad I Found You 8. Mansion On The Hill (w/ Lukas Nelson, Micah Nelson, Promise Of The Real) 9. Country Home (w/ Lukas Nelson, Micah Nelson, Promise Of The Real) 10. Who's Gonna Stand Up? (+ Eddie Vedder) On Sunday, October 26, Young was once again joined by Norah Jones and Puss N Boots for "Down By River". Wilson and Jardine also guested on a version of the Beach Boys' "Surfin' USA" while Pearl Jam guested for the Mirror Ball track, "Throw Your Hatred Down", which Young has not played live since the 2006 Bridge School benefit. Lukas Nelson and his band Promise Of The Real once again played on "Mansion On The Hill" and "Country Home" as well as "Southern Man", accompanied on the latter by Florence Welch. Neil Young's set list for October 26, 2014: 1. Sugar Mountain 2. On The Way Home --- 3. Down By The River (guests with Norah Jones and Puss N Boots) --- 4. Surfin' USA (guests with Brian Wilson and Al Jardine) --- 5. Throw Your Hatred Down (guests with Pearl Jam) --- 6. Pocahontas 7. Heart Of Gold 8. Mother Earth 9. Mansion On The Hill (accompanied by Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real) 10. Country Home (accompanied by Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real) 11. Southern Man (accompanied by Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real and Florence Welch) 12. Who's Gonna Stand Up? (accompanied by Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real and others)

Young plays two nights at annual benefit concert…

Neil Young headlined the 28th Bridge School benefit concert on Saturday, October 25 and Sunday, October 26.

Among the other artists performing at this year’s concert were Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Tom Jones, Band Of Horses and Florence And The Machine.

On Saturday, October 25, Young played solo and with special guests, including Brian Wilson and Al Jardine on a cover of Jardine’s song,”California Saga”. The song originally appeared on the Beach Boys’ album Holland but from Jardine re-recorded on his solo record, A Postcard From California which featured Young, David Crosby and Stephen Stills on backing vocals.

Young was joined by Eddie Vedder for “Who’s Gonna Stand Up?”, and Norah Jones and Puss N Boots for “Down By River”.

He also played two songs – “Mansion On The Hill” and “Country Home” with Willie Nelson’s sons Lukas and Micah, who had previously appeared with Young at Farm Aid and the Harvest For Hope concerts earlier this year.

The 1968 song “I Am A Child” made its first live appearance since 2011.

Neil Young’s set list for October 25, 2014:

1. Sugar Mountain

2. I Am A Child

3. Down By The River (w/ Norah Jones and Puss N Boots)

4. California Saga (w/ Brian Wilson and Al Jjardine)

5. Pocahontas

6. Heart Of Gold

7. I’m Glad I Found You

8. Mansion On The Hill (w/ Lukas Nelson, Micah Nelson, Promise Of The Real)

9. Country Home (w/ Lukas Nelson, Micah Nelson, Promise Of The Real)

10. Who’s Gonna Stand Up? (+ Eddie Vedder)

On Sunday, October 26, Young was once again joined by Norah Jones and Puss N Boots for “Down By River”. Wilson and Jardine also guested on a version of the Beach Boys’ “Surfin’ USA” while Pearl Jam guested for the Mirror Ball track, “Throw Your Hatred Down”, which Young has not played live since the 2006 Bridge School benefit.

Lukas Nelson and his band Promise Of The Real once again played on “Mansion On The Hill” and “Country Home” as well as “Southern Man”, accompanied on the latter by Florence Welch.

Neil Young’s set list for October 26, 2014:

1. Sugar Mountain

2. On The Way Home

3. Down By The River (guests with Norah Jones and Puss N Boots)

4. Surfin’ USA (guests with Brian Wilson and Al Jardine)

5. Throw Your Hatred Down (guests with Pearl Jam)

6. Pocahontas

7. Heart Of Gold

8. Mother Earth

9. Mansion On The Hill (accompanied by Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real)

10. Country Home (accompanied by Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real)

11. Southern Man (accompanied by Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real and Florence Welch)

12. Who’s Gonna Stand Up? (accompanied by Lukas Nelson & Promise Of The Real and others)

This month in Uncut

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Bob Dylan, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Genesis and Sharon Van Etten all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated December 2014 (Take 211) and out tomorrow (October 28). In our cover feature, on the eve of the complete Basement Tapes’ release, renowned Dylan scholar Clinton Heylin takes an in-dept...

Bob Dylan, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Genesis and Sharon Van Etten all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated December 2014 (Take 211) and out tomorrow (October 28).

In our cover feature, on the eve of the complete Basement Tapes’ release, renowned Dylan scholar Clinton Heylin takes an in-depth look at the fascinating period in the late-’60s when Dylan wrote and recorded with The Band and recuperated from his motorcycle accident and the pressures of fame.

While bootlegs of The Basement Tapes have compiled over 100 of the tracks recorded, the forthcoming official Basement Tapes Complete is the first time that all 138 recordings have seen release – Heylin charts the incredible effort that has gone into the recovery of many of these tracks.

William and Jim Reid look back over the early years of The Jesus And Mary Chain, as they prepare to perform Psychocandy in full to celebrate their debut’s 30th anniversary.

The brothers discuss riotous gigs, startling records, leather trousers, animosities and a musical revolution born out of white noise. “We don’t punch each other in the face anymore. But it’s pretty intense,” says William.

As a new boxset chronicles Genesis’ whole career, Uncut travels to New York to try and make sense of the group’s shifting identity – Phil Collins, Mike Rutherford, Tony Banks and more provide the inside story.

Also in the Big Apple, Sharon Van Etten lets us into her Manhattan apartment to discuss love, loss, being the “female Conor Oberst” and her most recent album, Are We There.

Elsewhere, Robert Wyatt reveals that he’s stopped making music and explains why, along with talking us through his long career, record by record, from Soft Machine and Matching Mole to 2007’s solo Comicopera.

Drummer Jody Stephens, producer John Fry and engineer Richard Rosebrough reveal how they created Big Star’s powerpop gem, “September Gurls”, Slade influence and all, while Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy, aka Will Oldham, takes us through eight records that have soundtracked his life, including The Fall and Don Williams.

Yusuf, formerly known as Cat Stevens, answers your questions about his upbringing, his new album and touring with Jimi Hendrix and The Walker Brothers, while Future Islands reflect on their sudden success and their desire to do things “the old-fashioned way and blow people’s minds!”

In our 40-page reviews section, we take a look at new releases from Pink Floyd, Neil Young, Ariel Pink, Bryan Ferry and Thompson, as well as reissues from Captain Beefheart, The Jam, Sleater-Kinney and more.

Outkast, Belle And Sebastian, Lauryn Hill and the George Harrison tribute George Fest are all reviewed in our live section, along with films including the Dexys doc Nowhere Is Home, The Drop, The Grandmaster and Gone Girl.

The new issue also features a free CD, Beyond The Basement, which includes tracks from Julian Casablancas + The Voidz, Sleater-Kinney, Deerhoof, These New Puritans and Anaïs Mitchell.

The new issue of Uncut, dated December 2014 (Take 211), is out tomorrow (October 28).

Handwritten John Lennon letter sold at auction for £17,500

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Letter among 350 items of rock memorabilia sold at Boston auction... A letter handwritten by John Lennon to television host Joe Franklin has sold at auction in the US for more than $28,000 (approximately £17,500). Rolling Stone reports that the letter was penned on Apple Records stationary in 1971, with Lennon encouraging talk show host Frankln to listen to his wife Yoko Ono's latest album Fly. "Of course Yoko can explain her music better in person, this is a kind of introduction. For something rather more 'straight,' a track called 'Mrs Lennon' on 'Fly' is an example of her more conservative side," Lennon writes. "She was trained as a classical musician, and took music composition in Sarah Lawrence College as her major. It's far out, but don't let it frighten you." The Boston-based RR Auction also sold a batch of stock transfer sheets from 1969 signed by each of the four Beatles for over $16,000 (approximately £10,000). A Fender Precision bass guitar once belonging to Dee Dee Ramone proved the most expensive of the 350 items of rock memorabilia, going for $38,000 (approximately £23,500). Lennon's entire solo back catalogue was recently made available on Spotify. The availability of the music is significant given that The Beatles remain one of the few bands who have yet to make their music available via the music streaming service or any of the company's rivals.

Letter among 350 items of rock memorabilia sold at Boston auction…

A letter handwritten by John Lennon to television host Joe Franklin has sold at auction in the US for more than $28,000 (approximately £17,500).

Rolling Stone reports that the letter was penned on Apple Records stationary in 1971, with Lennon encouraging talk show host Frankln to listen to his wife Yoko Ono’s latest album Fly.

“Of course Yoko can explain her music better in person, this is a kind of introduction. For something rather more ‘straight,’ a track called ‘Mrs Lennon’ on ‘Fly’ is an example of her more conservative side,” Lennon writes.

“She was trained as a classical musician, and took music composition in Sarah Lawrence College as her major. It’s far out, but don’t let it frighten you.”

The Boston-based RR Auction also sold a batch of stock transfer sheets from 1969 signed by each of the four Beatles for over $16,000 (approximately £10,000). A Fender Precision bass guitar once belonging to Dee Dee Ramone proved the most expensive of the 350 items of rock memorabilia, going for $38,000 (approximately £23,500).

Lennon’s entire solo back catalogue was recently made available on Spotify. The availability of the music is significant given that The Beatles remain one of the few bands who have yet to make their music available via the music streaming service or any of the company’s rivals.

Roger Daltrey: “With the world in the state it is in, we’ve got One Direction”

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Singer claims it's hard to start a movement "unless it's ISIS"... Roger Daltrey has bemoaned the current generation of music artists for lacking "angst and purpose". In an interview with the Mail on Sunday, the singer claimed there is no current musical "movement" comparable to seventies mod and punk, with the singer singling out boy band One Direction for criticism. "Here we are with the world in the state it is in, and we've got One Direction," said Daltrey. "Where are the artists writing with any real sense of angst and purpose?" "There are no movements at the moment: we had mod and then there was punk, but it's so hard to start a movement now. Unless it's ISIS." One Direction had been accused of plagiarising The Who's "Baba O'Reilly" on their single "Best Song Ever". Guitarist Pete Townshend, however, has dismissed the controversy as not "important enough to get excited about". "I could hear a bit of The Who in it, but so what? Considering the stuff we ripped off over the years, it doesn't really matter," said Townshend. Earlier this month, Daltrey confirmed that The Who are currently writing and recording a new studio album. The band recently revealed new song "Be Lucky", their first in eight years.

Singer claims it’s hard to start a movement “unless it’s ISIS”…

Roger Daltrey has bemoaned the current generation of music artists for lacking “angst and purpose”.

In an interview with the Mail on Sunday, the singer claimed there is no current musical “movement” comparable to seventies mod and punk, with the singer singling out boy band One Direction for criticism.

“Here we are with the world in the state it is in, and we’ve got One Direction,” said Daltrey. “Where are the artists writing with any real sense of angst and purpose?”

“There are no movements at the moment: we had mod and then there was punk, but it’s so hard to start a movement now. Unless it’s ISIS.”

One Direction had been accused of plagiarising The Who‘s “Baba O’Reilly” on their single “Best Song Ever”. Guitarist Pete Townshend, however, has dismissed the controversy as not “important enough to get excited about”.

“I could hear a bit of The Who in it, but so what? Considering the stuff we ripped off over the years, it doesn’t really matter,” said Townshend.

Earlier this month, Daltrey confirmed that The Who are currently writing and recording a new studio album. The band recently revealed new song “Be Lucky”, their first in eight years.

Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker lead tributes to Jack Bruce

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Cream colleagues issue statements... Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker have both paid tribute to their former Cream bandmate Jack Bruce, who died yesterday aged 71. Writing on his Facebook page, Eric Clapton said, "He was a great musician and composer, and a tremendous inspiration to me." Ginger Baker, meanwhile, issued his own tribute tribute to Bruce via his official fanclub saying, "I am very sad to learn of the loss of a fine man, Jack Bruce... My thoughts & wishes are with his family at this difficult time." Other tributes have been paid to Bruce, who reportedly died of liver failure. Black Sabbath's Geezer Butler Tweeted, "So sad to hear of Jack Bruce passing. My biggest influence and favourite bass player. Thank you, Jack. RIP." Ringo Starr Tweeted "We lost Jack Bruce today an incredible musician writer and a good friend peace and love to all his family". Born in the Glasgow suburb of Bishopbriggs in 1943, Bruce played in a number of bands throughout the early 60s, including John Mayall's Blues Breakers and Alexis Korner's Blues Inc before forming Cream in 1966 with Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker. Bruce wrote and sang many of the band's songs, including "I Feel Free", "White Room" and "Sunshine Of Your Love", which Bruce co-wrote with Clapton. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gd9q5I69azM Cream split in November 1968 but Bruce continued to release music under his own name and put out 14 solo albums in total. The most recent of these, Silver Rails, was released in March 2014. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuzSToefLUc Photo credit: Dezo Hoffmann/REX

Cream colleagues issue statements…

Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker have both paid tribute to their former Cream bandmate Jack Bruce, who died yesterday aged 71.

Writing on his Facebook page, Eric Clapton said, “He was a great musician and composer, and a tremendous inspiration to me.”

Ginger Baker, meanwhile, issued his own tribute tribute to Bruce via his official fanclub saying, “I am very sad to learn of the loss of a fine man, Jack Bruce… My thoughts & wishes are with his family at this difficult time.”

Other tributes have been paid to Bruce, who reportedly died of liver failure.

Black Sabbath’s Geezer Butler Tweeted, “So sad to hear of Jack Bruce passing. My biggest influence and favourite bass player. Thank you, Jack. RIP.”

Ringo Starr Tweeted “We lost Jack Bruce today an incredible musician writer and a good friend peace and love to all his family”.

Born in the Glasgow suburb of Bishopbriggs in 1943, Bruce played in a number of bands throughout the early 60s, including John Mayall’s Blues Breakers and Alexis Korner’s Blues Inc before forming Cream in 1966 with Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker.

Bruce wrote and sang many of the band’s songs, including “I Feel Free”, “White Room” and “Sunshine Of Your Love”, which Bruce co-wrote with Clapton.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gd9q5I69azM

Cream split in November 1968 but Bruce continued to release music under his own name and put out 14 solo albums in total. The most recent of these, Silver Rails, was released in March 2014.

Photo credit: Dezo Hoffmann/REX

Jack Bruce dies aged 71

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Scottish musician passes away following liver failure... Jack Bruce has died aged 71. The news was confirmed by both Bruce's publicist (via BBC News) and by his family on the musician's official Facebook page. Bruce died of liver failure. The family statement reads: "It is with great sadness that we, Jack’s family, announce the passing of our beloved Jack: husband, father, granddad, and all round legend. The world of music will be a poorer place without him, but he lives on in his music and forever in our hearts." Bruce's publicist Claire Singers confirmed the news saying, "He died today at his home in Suffolk surrounded by his family." No other details were revealed but the Press Association reports that the bassist suffered from liver disease. Born in the Glasgow suburb of Bishopbriggs in 1943, he played in a number of bands throughout the early 60s, including John Mayall's Blues Breakers and Alexis Korner's Blues Inc before forming Cream in 1966 with Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker. Bruce wrote and sang many of the band's songs, including "I Feel Free", "White Room" and "Sunshine Of Your Love", which Bruce co-wrote with Clapton. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gd9q5I69azM Cream split in November 1968 but Bruce continued to release music under his own name and put out 14 solo albums in total. The most recent of these, Silver Rails, was released in March 2014. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kuzSToefLUc Photo credit: Dezo Hoffmann/REX

Scottish musician passes away following liver failure…

Jack Bruce has died aged 71.

The news was confirmed by both Bruce’s publicist (via BBC News) and by his family on the musician’s official Facebook page. Bruce died of liver failure.

The family statement reads: “It is with great sadness that we, Jack’s family, announce the passing of our beloved Jack: husband, father, granddad, and all round legend. The world of music will be a poorer place without him, but he lives on in his music and forever in our hearts.”

Bruce’s publicist Claire Singers confirmed the news saying, “He died today at his home in Suffolk surrounded by his family.” No other details were revealed but the Press Association reports that the bassist suffered from liver disease.

Born in the Glasgow suburb of Bishopbriggs in 1943, he played in a number of bands throughout the early 60s, including John Mayall’s Blues Breakers and Alexis Korner’s Blues Inc before forming Cream in 1966 with Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker.

Bruce wrote and sang many of the band’s songs, including “I Feel Free”, “White Room” and “Sunshine Of Your Love”, which Bruce co-wrote with Clapton.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gd9q5I69azM

Cream split in November 1968 but Bruce continued to release music under his own name and put out 14 solo albums in total. The most recent of these, Silver Rails, was released in March 2014.

Photo credit: Dezo Hoffmann/REX

First Look – Paul Thomas Anderson’s Inherent Vice trailer

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At the moment, I'm compiling our films of the 2014 for the end of year issue. By sheer coincidence, one of the films I'm most looking forward to for next year is Inherent Vice. In case you're not up to speed on it, this is Paul Thomas Anderson's adaptation of the Thomas Pynchon novel - a Seventies-set noir about a stoner Private Investigator, Larry "Doc" Sportello, who's investigating the disappearance of a former girlfriend. The book was a gloriously deep-fried crime caper; and the evidence from the trailer suggests that Anderson has successfully nailed Pynchon's turbulent, screwball tone. Anderson's film stars Joaquin Phoenix as Sportello, along with Josh Brolin, Owen Wilson, Reese Witherspoon and Benicio Del Toro. There is also a rumour circulating that the notoriously reclusive Pynchon himself has also made an uncredited cameo in the film. Having watched the trailer a couple of times now, I must admit that Phoenix bears more than a passing resemblance to Neil Young in some angles - it might be the muttonchops and green jacket, though... Anderson's long-term musical collaboration Jonny Greenwood has scored film, and has reportedly slipped in an instrumental Radiohead track which dates back to 2006. And other music news, Joanna Newsom is on hand to provide the film's voiceover. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZfs22E7JmI Inherent Vice opens in the UK on January 30

At the moment, I’m compiling our films of the 2014 for the end of year issue. By sheer coincidence, one of the films I’m most looking forward to for next year is Inherent Vice. In case you’re not up to speed on it, this is Paul Thomas Anderson‘s adaptation of the Thomas Pynchon novel – a Seventies-set noir about a stoner Private Investigator, Larry “Doc” Sportello, who’s investigating the disappearance of a former girlfriend.

The book was a gloriously deep-fried crime caper; and the evidence from the trailer suggests that Anderson has successfully nailed Pynchon’s turbulent, screwball tone.

Anderson’s film stars Joaquin Phoenix as Sportello, along with Josh Brolin, Owen Wilson, Reese Witherspoon and Benicio Del Toro. There is also a rumour circulating that the notoriously reclusive Pynchon himself has also made an uncredited cameo in the film.

Having watched the trailer a couple of times now, I must admit that Phoenix bears more than a passing resemblance to Neil Young in some angles – it might be the muttonchops and green jacket, though…

Anderson’s long-term musical collaboration Jonny Greenwood has scored film, and has reportedly slipped in an instrumental Radiohead track which dates back to 2006. And other music news, Joanna Newsom is on hand to provide the film’s voiceover.

Inherent Vice opens in the UK on January 30

Bob Dylan shares four unreleased tracks from The Complete Basement Tapes

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A sneak preview from The Complete Basement Tapes... Bob Dylan has previewed four tracks from his forthcoming The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11. The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 will be released on November 3 by Sony Music. The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 is a six disc set which will feature 138 songs. Meanwhile, a special two disc edition - The Basement Tapes Raw: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 - features 38 songs. The Basement Tapes Raw: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 will also be released on as 3 album set on 180-gram vinyl. You can read our exclusive cover story on the secret history of The Basement Tapes in the next issue of Uncut, on sale Tuesday, October 28. You can hear a cover of John Lee Hooker's "Tupelo" on Stereogum. Meanwhile, Spin are hosting "900 Miles From My Home". Brooklyn Vegan are streaming an unreleased take of "Yea! Heavy And A Bottle Of Bread". You can also hear "Ain’t No More Cane (Take 2)" on Death And Taxes.

A sneak preview from The Complete Basement Tapes…

Bob Dylan has previewed four tracks from his forthcoming The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11.

The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 will be released on November 3 by Sony Music.

The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 is a six disc set which will feature 138 songs.

Meanwhile, a special two disc edition – The Basement Tapes Raw: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 – features 38 songs.

The Basement Tapes Raw: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 will also be released on as 3 album set on 180-gram vinyl.

You can read our exclusive cover story on the secret history of The Basement Tapes in the next issue of Uncut, on sale Tuesday, October 28.

You can hear a cover of John Lee Hooker’s “Tupelo” on Stereogum.

Meanwhile, Spin are hosting “900 Miles From My Home”.

Brooklyn Vegan are streaming an unreleased take of “Yea! Heavy And A Bottle Of Bread”.

You can also hear “Ain’t No More Cane (Take 2)” on Death And Taxes.

Brian Eno to reissue four albums along with rare and unreleased material

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Four albums plus rarities due in December... Brian Eno has announced expanded editions of his albums Nerve Net, The Shutov Assembly, Neroli and The Drop. The reissues span the period 1992 – 1997 and will be reissued as a 2CD set containing the original album as well as an additional disc of unreleased and rare work specific to each record. Nerve Net includes the first ever commercial release of legendary lost Eno album My Squelchy Life; The Shutov Assembly features an album's worth of unreleased recordings from the same period; Neroli includes an entire unreleased hour-long Eno ambient work New Space Music; and The Drop includes 9 rarely heard tracks from the Eno archives. Each album comes in deluxe casebound packaging and is accompanied by a 16 page booklet compiling photos, images and writing by Eno that is relevant to each release. three of the albums are also being made available as gatefold double vinyl release containing the original audio only, but accompanied by a download card and containing printed inner sleeves with the content from the CD booklets. All are released on December 1 on All Saints Records. Nerve Net: CD track listing Disc 1 - Nerve Net 1. Fractal Zoom 2. Wire Shock 3. What Actually Happened? 4. Pierre In Mist 5. My Squelchy Life 6. Juju Space Jazz 7. The Roil, The Choke 8. Ali Click 9. Distributed Being 10. Web 11. Web (Lascaux Mix) 12. Decentre Disc 2 - My Squelchy Life 1. I Fall Up 2. The Harness 3. My Squelchy Life 4. Tutti Forgetti 5. Stiff 6. Some Words 7. Juju Space Jazz 8. Under 9. Everybody's Mother 10. Little Apricot 11. Over Vinyl track listing Side A A1. Fractal Zoom A2. Wire Shock A3. What Actually Happened? Side B B1. Pierre In Mist B2. My Squelchy Life B3. Juju Space Jazz B4. The Roil, The Choke Side C C1. Ali Click C2. Distributed Being C3. Web Side D D1. Web (Lascaux Mix) D2. Decentre The Shutov Assembly CD track listing Disc 1 - The Shutov Assembly 1. Triennale 2. Alhondiga 3. Margraph 4. Lanzarote 5. Francisco 6. Riverside 7. Innocenti 8. Stefelijk 9. Ikebukuro 10. Cavallino Disc 2 - bonus material 1. Eastern Cities 2. Empty Platform 3. Big Slow Arabs 4. Storm 5. Rendition 6. Prague 7. Alhondiga Variation Vinyl edition Side A A1. Triennale A2. Alhonidga A3. Markgraph Side B B1. Lanzarote B2. Francisco B3. Cavallino Side C C1. Riverside C2. Innocenti C3. Stefelijk Side D D1. Ikebukro Neroli (Thinking Music Part IV) CD track listing Disc 1 - Neroli Disc 2 - New Space Music (There is no vinyl edition of Neroli due to the artist's wish not to break up the music with side splits) The Drop CD track listing Disc 1 - The Drop 1. Slip, Dip 2. But If 3. Belgian Drop 4. Cornered 5. Block Drop 6. Out / Out 7. Swanky 8. Coasters 9. Blissed 10. M.C. Organ 11. Boomcubist 12. Hazard 13. Rayonism 14. Dutch Blur 15. Back Clack 16. Dear World 17. Iced World Disc 2 - bonus material 1. Never Stomp 2. Systems Piano 3. Bonk 12 4. Luxor Night Car 5. Targa Summer 6. Cold 7. Little Slicer 8. Surf Birds 9. Targa Vinyl edition Side A A1. Slip, Dip A2. But If A3. Belgian Drop A4. Cornered A5. Block Drop A6. Out / Out A7. Swanky Side B B1. Coasters B2. Blissed B3. M.C. Organ B4. Boomcubist B5. Hazard Side C C1. Rayonism C2. Dutch Blur C3. Back Clack C4. Dear World C5. Slicing System C6. Sharply Cornered Side D D1. Iced World

Four albums plus rarities due in December…

Brian Eno has announced expanded editions of his albums Nerve Net, The Shutov Assembly, Neroli and The Drop.

The reissues span the period 1992 – 1997 and will be reissued as a 2CD set containing the original album as well as an additional disc of unreleased and rare work specific to each record.

Nerve Net includes the first ever commercial release of legendary lost Eno album My Squelchy Life; The Shutov Assembly features an album’s worth of unreleased recordings from the same period; Neroli includes an entire unreleased hour-long Eno ambient work New Space Music; and The Drop includes 9 rarely heard tracks from the Eno archives.

Each album comes in deluxe casebound packaging and is accompanied by a 16 page booklet compiling photos, images and writing by Eno that is relevant to each release.

three of the albums are also being made available as gatefold double vinyl release containing the original audio only, but accompanied by a download card and containing printed inner sleeves with the content from the CD booklets.

All are released on December 1 on All Saints Records.

Nerve Net:

CD track listing

Disc 1 – Nerve Net

1. Fractal Zoom 2. Wire Shock 3. What Actually Happened? 4. Pierre In Mist 5. My Squelchy Life 6. Juju Space Jazz 7. The Roil, The Choke 8. Ali Click 9. Distributed Being 10. Web 11. Web (Lascaux Mix) 12. Decentre

Disc 2 – My Squelchy Life

1. I Fall Up 2. The Harness 3. My Squelchy Life 4. Tutti Forgetti 5. Stiff 6. Some Words 7. Juju Space Jazz 8. Under 9. Everybody’s Mother 10. Little Apricot 11. Over

Vinyl track listing

Side A A1. Fractal Zoom A2. Wire Shock A3. What Actually Happened?

Side B B1. Pierre In Mist B2. My Squelchy Life B3. Juju Space Jazz B4. The Roil, The Choke

Side C C1. Ali Click C2. Distributed Being C3. Web

Side D D1. Web (Lascaux Mix) D2. Decentre

The Shutov Assembly

CD track listing

Disc 1 – The Shutov Assembly

1. Triennale 2. Alhondiga 3. Margraph 4. Lanzarote 5. Francisco 6. Riverside 7. Innocenti 8. Stefelijk 9. Ikebukuro 10. Cavallino

Disc 2 – bonus material

1. Eastern Cities 2. Empty Platform 3. Big Slow Arabs 4. Storm 5. Rendition 6. Prague 7. Alhondiga Variation

Vinyl edition

Side A A1. Triennale A2. Alhonidga A3. Markgraph

Side B B1. Lanzarote B2. Francisco B3. Cavallino

Side C C1. Riverside C2. Innocenti C3. Stefelijk

Side D D1. Ikebukro

Neroli (Thinking Music Part IV)

CD track listing

Disc 1 – Neroli

Disc 2 – New Space Music

(There is no vinyl edition of Neroli due to the artist’s wish not to break up the music with side splits)

The Drop

CD track listing

Disc 1 – The Drop

1. Slip, Dip 2. But If 3. Belgian Drop 4. Cornered 5. Block Drop 6. Out / Out 7. Swanky 8. Coasters 9. Blissed 10. M.C. Organ 11. Boomcubist 12. Hazard 13. Rayonism 14. Dutch Blur 15. Back Clack 16. Dear World 17. Iced World

Disc 2 – bonus material

1. Never Stomp 2. Systems Piano 3. Bonk 12 4. Luxor Night Car 5. Targa Summer 6. Cold 7. Little Slicer 8. Surf Birds 9. Targa

Vinyl edition

Side A A1. Slip, Dip A2. But If A3. Belgian Drop A4. Cornered A5. Block Drop A6. Out / Out A7. Swanky

Side B B1. Coasters B2. Blissed B3. M.C. Organ B4. Boomcubist B5. Hazard

Side C C1. Rayonism C2. Dutch Blur C3. Back Clack C4. Dear World C5. Slicing System C6. Sharply Cornered

Side D D1. Iced World

Martin Scorsese to produce Grateful Dead documentary

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As yet untitled documentary to commemorate the band's 50th anniversary... The Grateful Dead are to the be the subject of a major documentary to be produced by Martin Scorsese. The film will be their first official career-spanning documentary and released to coincide with the band's 50th anniversary celebration. It will be directed by Amir Bar-Lev. Eric Eisner, Nicholas Koskoff, and Justin Kreutzmann will serve as producers. Executive Producers are Martin Scorsese, Emma Tillinger Koskoff, Andrew Heller, Sanford Heller and Rick Yorn. Longtime Grateful Dead archivist David Lemieux will serve as the film's music supervisor. "The Grateful Dead were more than just a band. They were their own planet, populated by millions of devoted fans. I'm very happy that this picture is being made and proud to be involved," says Scorsese. Surviving members Micky Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, Phil Lesh and Bob Weir in a joint statement, "Millions of stories have been told about the Grateful Dead over the years. With our 50th Anniversary coming up, we thought it might just be time to tell one ourselves and Amir is the perfect guy to help us do it. Needless to say, we are humbled to be collaborating with Martin Scorsese. From The Last Waltz to George Harrison: Living In The Material World , from Bob Dylan to the Rolling Stones, he has made some of the greatest music documentaries ever with some of our favorite artists and we are honored to have him involved. "The 50th will be another monumental milestone to celebrate with our fans and we cannot wait to share this film with them."

As yet untitled documentary to commemorate the band’s 50th anniversary…

The Grateful Dead are to the be the subject of a major documentary to be produced by Martin Scorsese.

The film will be their first official career-spanning documentary and released to coincide with the band’s 50th anniversary celebration.

It will be directed by Amir Bar-Lev.

Eric Eisner, Nicholas Koskoff, and Justin Kreutzmann will serve as producers. Executive Producers are Martin Scorsese, Emma Tillinger Koskoff, Andrew Heller, Sanford Heller and Rick Yorn. Longtime Grateful Dead archivist David Lemieux will serve as the film’s music supervisor.

“The Grateful Dead were more than just a band. They were their own planet, populated by millions of devoted fans. I’m very happy that this picture is being made and proud to be involved,” says Scorsese.

Surviving members Micky Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, Phil Lesh and Bob Weir in a joint statement, “Millions of stories have been told about the Grateful Dead over the years. With our 50th Anniversary coming up, we thought it might just be time to tell one ourselves and Amir is the perfect guy to help us do it. Needless to say, we are humbled to be collaborating with Martin Scorsese. From The Last Waltz to George Harrison: Living In The Material World , from Bob Dylan to the Rolling Stones, he has made some of the greatest music documentaries ever with some of our favorite artists and we are honored to have him involved.

“The 50th will be another monumental milestone to celebrate with our fans and we cannot wait to share this film with them.”

Siouxsie And The Banshees: “We were losing our minds”

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Siouxsie And The Banshees are set to reissue expanded versions of their later albums, including Peepshow and Through The Looking Glass, on October 27 – here, in this feature from Uncut’s November 2012 issue (Take 186), the band explain how they created their opulent, psychedelic masterpiece, A K...

Siouxsie And The Banshees are set to reissue expanded versions of their later albums, including Peepshow and Through The Looking Glass, on October 27 – here, in this feature from Uncut’s November 2012 issue (Take 186), the band explain how they created their opulent, psychedelic masterpiece, A Kiss In The Dreamhouse, dealt with the unraveling of their brilliant guitarist and froze microphones in buckets… Words: Garry Mulholland

_____________________

When the bass player and the manager of Siouxsie And The Banshees arrive at The Priory, they get a shock. Their guitarist, who has recently been sectioned by his wife, is here primarily to be treated for a worsening drink problem. But he is currently, they are informed, in the pub. Steven Severin and Dave Woods walk around the corner to the bar in question, and find John McGeoch surrounded by strangers. He kisses them. He’s shaved his head completely bald and is sporting a fresh tattoo. He looks nuts.

“He’d gone to the pub with some day-release people from the home,” recalls Severin, 30 years later. “It sounds funny, you walk into the pub and there’s 10 nutters! We couldn’t see… there was no end in sight. What the hell do we do?”

The band was starting a UK and Far East tour in seven days. Severin had been abandoned by bandmates mid-tour before. Never again. He left the pub and made a call. By the end of the day, The Cure’s Robert Smith was, for the second time, the guitarist of Siouxsie And The Banshees.

On the day after the visit to Roehampton, the Banshees released their fifth and best album, A Kiss In The Dreamhouse. It had already received the most adoring reviews of their career, and would reposition its makers as purveyors of an opulent, sensual new form of ’80s psychedelia. Its star, some would argue, was the Scottish guitar genius that Severin had just fired. “We’d been through a lot together and it had just felt really solid,” Siouxsie Sioux tells Uncut, recalling the end of the Banshees’ imperial phase with a mixture of dry amusement and regret. “Nothing could derail us. Except,” she adds, knowingly, “ourselves.”

_____________________

In the summer of 1981, Siouxsie And The Banshees were a happy band. Or at least as happy as a group of confrontational characters and mercurial talents with a history of dramatically changing lineups could ever be. They had survived the traumatic mid-tour departures of drummer Kenny Morris and guitarist John McKay in September 1979, which prompted Smith’s first spell as temporary Banshees guitarist, and had since recruited the outstanding reggae and African-influenced drummer Peter ‘Budgie’ Clark from The Slits. After some lobbying, they had also eventually persuaded guitarist John McGeoch to leave Howard Devoto’s Magazine to become a full-time Banshee. This was the lineup that in November 1981 completed a five-month European, UK and American tour in support of the Top 10 success of their fourth album, Juju.

What should have been a moment of celebration, however, was soured by the reaction of manager Nils Stevenson to the growing romance between Siouxsie and Budgie, which had developed during sessions for the “Wild Things” EP, the debut by their side-project, The Creatures, the sleeve of which pictured the champagne-happy couple cavorting in the shower of a Newcastle hotel room, bare nipples, ecstatic faces and all. This wasn’t a problem for McGeoch or even Sioux’s one-time beau, Severin. But Stevenson, another of Siouxsie’s former lovers, freaked. Unresolved feelings towards Sioux led him back to a heroin habit he’d kicked when first managing the group.

“He became erratic and unreliable,” says Sioux now. “He came out to the last show in New York at The Peppermint Lounge and just… lost it. One particular situation got out of control and John pinned him against a wall and said, ‘Just fucking go home.’ He was too obsessive towards me and I felt suffocated by it. It was almost a Play Misty For Me scenario. He’d be waiting outside my house… it was almost scary.”

Stevenson was fired in the spring of 1982, just as the Banshees started work on their fifth album, despite Sioux losing her voice while on tour in Scandinavia in March. The follow-up to Juju would be “lush and exotic, and as aurally seductive as possible”, Sioux recalls. Severin had even come up with a title, inspired by a piece of twisted Hollywood history that author James Ellroy would subsequently make famous in 1990 novel LA Confidential. “I was watching some hour-long TV show and it was all about the ’40s when they apparently had these brothels where the women had been surgically altered to resemble the stars of the day. The title just came to me after that. It was funny when the movie of LA Confidential came out, because that’s exactly where it came from.”

The heady imagery of A Kiss In The Dreamhouse needed a willing facilitator of a different sound. In October 1981, the Banshees had attempted to record a proposed new single, “Fireworks”, with Kaleidoscope/Juju producer Nigel Gray. The recording hadn’t gelled, so the band turned to Mike Hedges, who had produced The Creatures’ “Wild Things” EP at his Camden Town studio Playground in Bayham Street, London NW1. The torrid, string-driven wall-of-sound The Cure producer helped sculpt for May 1982’s “Fireworks” single opened a new direction for an increasingly confident Banshees.

The main bulk of the Dreamhouse sessions took place at Playground between June 10 and July 18, 1982, and were both the most productive The Banshees had ever been involved in and a disaster waiting to happen. The feverish desire to write, record, experiment, party and avoid sleep bore extraordinary creative fruit while taking an immense toll on each member of the band.

“With Dreamhouse, it was the intensity,” recalls Budgie, with the hint of a shudder. “Not the hard work, but the intensity of being in the studio and living it. It felt round-the-clock. It felt like we never went home.”

“The band drank a lot,” laughs Mike Hedges. “Every day they came in someone would go back out and buy four or five bagfuls of wine which would then go in the fridge. That was at about five in the afternoon and we knew it would be an all-nighter. We were working 14-hour days, and I don’t think I was drinking as much as the band, because I couldn’t have done my job.”

“The boys started experimenting with cocaine and speed during the making of Juju,” says Sioux. “John was very organised on the getting-the-cocaine front.”

Sioux had discovered a more interesting fuel than speed and cocaine. Hedges had introduced her to a brand of LSD called California Sunshine. When a drunken 5am studio jam produced an oddly beguiling take on cocktail jazz, led by McGeoch’s atonal piano, Sioux took the tape home and proceeded to edit and write the song that would become “Cocoon” while tripping. The lyric sees Sioux recede into childhood, lying in a cot, hugging her knees, imagining the thoughts of a caterpillar hiding “in the cotton wool cocoon” as a metaphor for infant insecurity. “When we were doing these sessions and I first took acid, I remember thinking, ‘I wonder if I should go and see my mum and just say, “Here, Mum… let’s take some acid together.”’ I remember thinking, ‘Is that a good idea, or could she die from it?’ I really wanted to understand everything about where she came from and my childhood.”

Looking at Sioux’s Dreamhouse lyrics as a kind of once-removed regression therapy makes “Circle” – an experimental song based around an ever-circling loop of a section of orchestra from “Fireworks”, with a lyric that Sioux describes as ‘the depressing realisation that you’re doomed to repeat the sins of your parents’ – especially disturbing. Because when Sioux was still nine-year-old Susan Janet Ballion of Chislehurst, she had been sexually abused by a neighbour. Was this childhood horror the backstory for “Circle”?

‘“Circle’ isn’t linked to that. But that incident has shaped me and the way I protect myself. Seeing through the idea of pure sexual allure and understanding that it’s usually a controlling thing. It can be in an extreme situation, like an older person abusing a much younger person… but most relationships can be broken down into someone being manipulated and overpowered by someone else.”

Similarly, “Obsession”’s tale of twisted love – wherein a spurned lover breaks into their ex’s home and places locks of hair on their pillow – can’t help but be informed by Sioux’s experience with Nils Stevenson. But this stalker testimony – with an appropriately stalking rhythm provided by Sioux stomping on a mic’ed up drum riser, rather than drums – is not exactly what it seems.

“This all came about from the Juju tour in America,” Sioux explains. “What I found most intoxicating about New York was the amazing bars and I had this amazing conversation with a tattooed sailor. He told me this story of someone who became so obsessed by their ex-lover that they’d break into their flat and leave their pubic hair on their pillow. It was like a folklore tale. Was I applying my experience with Nils to the story? Well… it’s a connection. It made the story more poignant and allowed me to live in the place of the song.”

But the psycho-sexual nastiness of the themes was being constantly undercut by the playful experimentation of Hedges. “Hedges would invent things for us to do when we got bored,” says Budgie. “These were either, a) very constructive, or b) a complete waste of time. We let off hundreds of indoor fireworks. We found out that fire extinguishers do very strange things to fabric. We froze buckets of water with microphones in them to see what would happen as they thawed out.”

The black comedy reached a peak on “Slowdive”. Over a motorik Budgie beat, Siouxsie mocked old-school lists of dance moves like “The Locomotion”: “Put your knees into your face/And see if you can race real slow”; “Taking honeysuckle sips/From your rolling hips”. “I wanted to turn the Jane Fonda Workout on its head,” Sioux laughs.

When violinist Anne Stephenson let out a cry of pain during the recording of “Slowdive”, she unwittingly gave The Banshees their very own “I’ve got blisters on me fingers!” moment. On the released recording, Stephenson’s “Oh my God!” provides the song’s false ending, an expulsion of eroticised exhaustion before the song simply starts again from the top, and eventually fades. “Of course I was pleased,” Stephenson laughs. “I know it sounds like an orgasmic gasp… the best one I’ve ever done, I suspect.”

This hint of “Helter Skelter” was fitting. The Banshees had covered “Helter Skelter” way back on The Scream in ’78, and, as far as Severin is concerned, The White Album is the major influence on Dreamhouse. “We were listening to it a lot, in terms of the variety of songs, the kind of instrumentation they would use. We were trying to launch ourselves into a post-psychedelic opulence, I guess. Hence the strings, hence a lot of really lush imagery. I would say something like ‘Green Fingers’ is our ‘Savoy Truffle’, our quirky little George Harrison song.”

So, when Budgie spurted an entire bottle of warm champagne over a desk at Playground, where else could The Banshees go but Abbey Road? In Studio 2, the band and Hedges continued work on “Melt!” and “Obsession”. When Playground was once again ready for action, the hard work of honing the sprawling sessions into a focused suite of songs was completed by Sioux and Hedges alone in a week of intense editing and vocal overdubs. It put a dangerous strain on a voice that had gone completely in Sweden just a few months before. One doctor in Gothenburg had advised Sioux to give up singing altogether. “Sioux was struggling a bit,” confirms Hedges. “It wasn’t easy for her. But Sioux’s not the sort of person who would accept that if she didn’t stop singing she’d lose her voice. She’d just go, ‘Oh – fuck off’ and sing anyway. I think the vocals on that record are really brilliant.”

At the end of July, the Banshees played one-off shows in Milan and at the Elephant Fayre in Cornwall. Sioux worked on the Gustav Klimt-inspired Dreamhouse sleeve with Al McDowell of design company Rocking Russian and photographer Michael Costiff. “Slowdive” was chosen as a single and a video made where the boys had to do a corny dance routine behind Sioux, and John McGeoch struggled with the relatively simple physical demands. McGeoch was quickly unraveling, and, while the band had seen signs at the end of the Dreamhouse sessions, they had chosen to ignore them.

“He wasn’t spending as much time at the studio by the end,” says Budgie. “There was a problem with ‘She’s A Carnival’. It was like, ‘Hang on… this guitar’s not really doing it,’ from Mike and Steven. And that was the first time I’d heard that. There was a more serious problem for John that none of us were aware of, and we didn’t realise until we got to those gigs in Madrid.”

On October 29, the Banshees flew to Spain for two shows at Madrid’s Rock Ola Club. John McGeoch arrived in a shocking state of disrepair. Recalls Severin: “At the first gig, we started playing ‘Arabian Knights’ and he started playing ‘Spellbound’ – that’s the funny side of it. But it wasn’t funny. He was in a bad way. When Nils left, John and I had spent a lot of time trying to get to grips with the finances. It was really stressful. I think John had some kind of nervous breakdown.”

“It became obvious that he didn’t know where he was,” says Budgie. “I thought he’d just gone too far that night, but much later he admitted that he’d been given a Valium to calm his nerves, ’cos he was shaking either from withdrawal or too much drinking. If we’d been noticing this we might have said the show can’t go on. But we weren’t.”

On the band’s return to England, McGeoch was sectioned and sent to The Priory. After the Severin and Woods visit, the decision to sack McGeoch was made instinctively and instantly. There wasn’t even a band meeting. “It sounds very callous,” Sioux acknowledges. “I wish it hadn’t happened. But alcoholism is not something that gets fixed overnight, or even in a year. It takes a lifetime. Maybe even then it never truly happens.’

On November 7, 1982, six days before the Banshees set off on a UK tour with Robert Smith on guitar, A Kiss In The Dreamhouse was released to rapturous acclaim. In the NME, Richard Cook, a Banshees-sceptic, called the album: “…a feat of imagination scarcely ever recorded” before concluding, “I promise, this music will take your breath away.” Melody Maker’s Steve Sutherland called it “an intoxicating achievement”. All the reviews noted the change of direction, away from the occasionally studied blackness that made the Banshees “goth”, towards what Cook called “pure, open-minded ambiguity” and “flooded radiance and flame”.

At the back end of 1982, the Banshees found themselves competing with records as sonically disparate as the Associates’ Sulk, Too-Rye-Ay by Dexys Midnight Runners, The Lexicon Of Love by ABC, New Gold Dream by Simple Minds and Forever Now by the Psychedelic Furs – all records which, in very different stylistic ways, declared the end of arty, doubt-ridden, cynical and critical post-punk’s hold on British alternative rock. By the beginning of 1983, The Jam had split, The Clash had imploded and U2 had made War, an album that transformed punk’s political protest into air-punching, feelgood, stadium rock. Dreamhouse enabled the Banshees to survive the punk culling by wiping the slate clean and making them into the kind of smart, glamorous pop group who could have a huge hit in 1983 with a cover of The Beatles’ “Dear Prudence”, and have the moment feel like natural progression rather than desperate sell-out.

But, despite Dreamhouse achieving healthy sales, reaching No 11 on the UK album charts, and remaining in the Top 40 for almost three months, its singles resolutely flopped. Both “Slowdive” and “Melt!” (which was backed by a version of a French Christmas carol, “Il Est Ne Le Divin Enfant”, that John McGeoch had refused to work on) failed to reach the Top 40.

Severin still feels that the lack of ‘a star turn’ is Dreamhouse’s one flaw. “In some senses, it’s my favourite Banshees album. As a collection of songs, it’s probably more cohesive and has a greater atmosphere than any of our other albums. But it could have benefitted from one more song where we sat down and said, ‘Let’s write a single to go along with this album.’”

The Banshees continued until 1995, briefly reforming for the Seven Year Itch reunion tour in 2002, and all without John McGeoch. The guitarist went on to work with the short-lived The Armoury Show before a stint in PiL that lasted until 1992. But LA’s den of rock’n’roll iniquity took its toll, and McGeoch quit music and retrained to be a nurse. He never got entirely clean and died in his sleep in 2002, aged 48. Budgie still feels guilty. “When he died, it really shook me. I felt I’d let him down. As a band we rarely discussed how each other was doing. And when you get to the nitty-gritty of Dreamhouse, what you find is that we really could have done that a lot better.”

And that is a key element of Dreamhouse’s tragic majesty. It’s a product of addiction, stress, old, sick love and new, dangerous love, money woes and a darkness that would eventually claim three lives: McGeoch, Nils Stevenson, who died of a heart attack in 2002 without ever reconciling with Sioux, and the co-owner of Playground, who died of a heroin overdose soon after the finishing of the album, forcing the closure of the studios. But, as none of the protagonists could talk openly to each other about what they were going through, the terror, desire, depression and anger was poured into the stunningly beautiful music that emerged from a small room in Camden Town.

“We were caught up in the insanity of that moment,” says Budgie. “We were losing the studio. We were losing a member. We were losing our minds. You try to manufacture those things, where you’re trying to live on the edge, take away the safety-net, risk everything, and you’re hoping that, out of the risk-taking, comes something magic. And that’s what Dreamhouse is. But you can’t continue that way.”

Photo: Rex/Sheila Rock

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

Ry Cooder: “I’d like to make some money sometime!”

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Ry Cooder talks to Uncut about his soundtrack work in the new issue, dated November 2014 and out now. The guitarist and composer, speaking as he prepares to release a boxset of some of his film scores from 1980 onwards, suggests he may even return to soundtracks, after some encouragement from his...

Ry Cooder talks to Uncut about his soundtrack work in the new issue, dated November 2014 and out now.

The guitarist and composer, speaking as he prepares to release a boxset of some of his film scores from 1980 onwards, suggests he may even return to soundtracks, after some encouragement from his son.

“He’s after me to do this work again,” explains Cooder. “He said, ‘You’re missing the boat. People are copying you right and left. All these TV shows you never watch…’

“So we went to see a film agent… I’d like to take a shot again. It’s good work. I’d like to make some money sometime.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

Photo: Susan Titelman

The 40th Uncut Playlist Of 2014

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A glut of very exciting 2015 music this week, but before you get to that, maybe check out the Milton Nascimento track below which, as KidVinil Vinil pointed out in the comments section beneath last week's Uncut Playlist, is worth comparing with David Bowie's "Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)". Then have a listen to this lot. 8:58, by the way, is Paul Hartnoll, one half of Orbital until they split up the other day. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 The Necks - Drive By (ReR) 2 Liam Hayes - Slurrup (Fat Possum) 3 Badbadnotgood & Ghostface Killah - Gunshowers Ft Elzhi (Lex) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-qmZ_J7WGc 4 Wild Billy Childish & CTMF - Acorn Man (Damaged Goods) 5 David Bowie - Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime) (Parlophone) 6 Milton Nascimento - Cais (RPM) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3x8ekLRCMaA 7 Sleater-Kinney - Bury Our Friends (Sub Pop) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tRNDB9VqI3Q 8 King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard - I'm In Your Mind Fuzz (Heavenly/Castle Face) 9 The Aphex Twin - Syro (Warp) 10 8:58 - Eight Fifty Eight (ACP) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vpQkFM5puL4 11 Various Artists - Black Fire! New Spirits! Radical And Revolutionary Jazz In The USA 1957-1982 (Soul Jazz) 12 Ryley Walker - September 6, 2014 Hopscotch Music Festival, Fletcher Opera Theater, Raleigh, NC (www.nyctaper.com) 13 Steve Gunn - October 12, 2014 Rough Trade NYC (www.nyctaper.com) 14 Flying Lotus - You're Dead (Warp) 15 Dave Davies - Rippin' Up Time (Red River Entertainment) 16 Verckys Et L'Orchestre Vévé - Congolese Funk, Afrobeat And Psychedelic Rumba 1969-1978 (Analog Africa) 17 Einsturzende Neubauten - Lament (BMG/Mute) 18 Natalie Prass - Why Don't You Believe In Me? (Spacebomb) 19 Jessica Pratt - On Your Own Love Again (Drag City) 20 Doug Paisley & Bonnie "Prince" Billy - Until I Find You (No Quarter) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uVfFx9JvH4Y 21 Tinariwen - Inside/Outside EP (Wedge) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FZElWp6wpXU&list=UUZ3wH-v5zOcq4ZZWI58TGKA 22 Torres - New Skin (Shaking Through) 23 Wilco - Alpha Mike Foxtrot (dBpm) 24 [REDACTED] 25 Swamp Dogg - The White Man Made Me Do It (Alive Natural Sound)

A glut of very exciting 2015 music this week, but before you get to that, maybe check out the Milton Nascimento track below which, as KidVinil Vinil pointed out in the comments section beneath last week’s Uncut Playlist, is worth comparing with David Bowie’s “Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)”.

Then have a listen to this lot. 8:58, by the way, is Paul Hartnoll, one half of Orbital until they split up the other day.

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

1 The Necks – Drive By (ReR)

2 Liam Hayes – Slurrup (Fat Possum)

3 Badbadnotgood & Ghostface Killah – Gunshowers Ft Elzhi (Lex)

4 Wild Billy Childish & CTMF – Acorn Man (Damaged Goods)

5 David Bowie – Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime) (Parlophone)

6 Milton Nascimento – Cais (RPM)

7 Sleater-Kinney – Bury Our Friends (Sub Pop)

8 King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – I’m In Your Mind Fuzz (Heavenly/Castle Face)

9 The Aphex Twin – Syro (Warp)

10 8:58 – Eight Fifty Eight (ACP)

11 Various Artists – Black Fire! New Spirits! Radical And Revolutionary Jazz In The USA 1957-1982 (Soul Jazz)

12 Ryley Walker – September 6, 2014 Hopscotch Music Festival, Fletcher Opera Theater, Raleigh, NC (www.nyctaper.com)

13 Steve Gunn – October 12, 2014 Rough Trade NYC (www.nyctaper.com)

14 Flying Lotus – You’re Dead (Warp)

15 Dave Davies – Rippin’ Up Time (Red River Entertainment)

16 Verckys Et L’Orchestre Vévé – Congolese Funk, Afrobeat And Psychedelic Rumba 1969-1978 (Analog Africa)

17 Einsturzende Neubauten – Lament (BMG/Mute)

18 Natalie Prass – Why Don’t You Believe In Me? (Spacebomb)

19 Jessica Pratt – On Your Own Love Again (Drag City)

20 Doug Paisley & Bonnie “Prince” Billy – Until I Find You (No Quarter)

21 Tinariwen – Inside/Outside EP (Wedge)

22 Torres – New Skin (Shaking Through)

23 Wilco – Alpha Mike Foxtrot (dBpm)

24 [REDACTED]

25 Swamp Dogg – The White Man Made Me Do It (Alive Natural Sound)

Robbie Robertson’s son writes children’s book about his father

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The Band's Robbie Robertson is the subject of a new children's book, written by his son, Sebastian. Rock And Roll Highway: The Robbie Robertson Story recounts the entire arc of Robertson's career and includes appearances by Buddy Holly, Ronnie Hawkins and Bob Dylan. Sebastian Robertson has previou...

The Band‘s Robbie Robertson is the subject of a new children’s book, written by his son, Sebastian.

Rock And Roll Highway: The Robbie Robertson Story recounts the entire arc of Robertson’s career and includes appearances by Buddy Holly, Ronnie Hawkins and Bob Dylan.

Sebastian Robertson has previously written Legends, Icons & Rebels: Music That Changed The World, co-written with his father, which was published in 2013.

Rolling Stone reports that the book is aimed at 6 to 9 year-olds and includes illustrations by musician Adam Gustavson.

The book is on sale now, published by Henry Holt And Co.

Various Artists – Calypso Craze: 1956-57

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173 cuts from calypso's thrilling, if brief, mainstream heyday... In Chronicles, Bob Dylan delivers a passionate appraisal of Harry Belafonte’s career saying that he was ‘the best balladeer in the land’. It was Belafonte who effectively launched the calypso craze, commanding an entire disc on this handsome new box set. His 1956 LP Calypso featuring the ubiquitous “Banana Boat Song” became the first million-seller – even in the face of competition from Elvis. Belafonte’s smooth singing style appealed to both folk and easy listening fans but a fascination with Caribbean styles had already impacted in America in the ‘30s and ‘40s. Calypso Comes To America, the first of seven discs, mixes earthy, risqué originals by Sir Lancelot, Duke of Iron and Lord Invader with pop bastardisations by The Andrews Sisters (‘Rum and Coca Cola’), and Eartha Kitt (‘Somebody Bad Stole de Wedding Bell’). By 1957, calypso music was open season among folk acts such as The Tarriers and The Kingston (as in Kingston, Jamaica) Trio, jazz musicians like Sonny Rollins, who adapted Invader’s “Don’t Stop the Carnival” (later covered by The Alan Price Set), country artist Hank Snow, and old stagers Fred Astaire and Nat King Cole. Comedian Stan Freberg’s “Banana Boat (Day-O)” was a classic novelty hit and, even in Britain Bernard Cribbins and Lance Percival (covering Sir Lancelot’s “Scandal in the Family”) recognised a phenomenon popular among the growing West Indian community. Lord Kitchener and Lord Beginner had both arrived in 1948 on the symbolic ‘first’ passenger ship Empire Windrush. Kitch brilliantly portrayed immigrant life; racism, difficulty finding work, the cold weather and lousy food while, in 1950, Lord Beginner celebrated West Indian cricket in “Victory Test Match”, better known as “Cricket, Lovely, Cricket”. By the ‘60s, as more Jamaicans than Trinidadians arrived, bluebeat and ska eventually eclipsed calypso. Chris Blackwell’s Jump Up label, formed in 1963, still imported calypso singles, notably the barely-innuendo at all, “Dr Kitch” (“I can’t stand the size of your needle” indeed), soon appropriated by Georgie Fame. Authentic calypso remained popular with mods. Jimmy Soul’s sexist R’n’B hybrid “If You Wanna Be Happy”, for example, bookends Calypso Craze with Robert R. Charles 1934 original “Marry an Ugly Woman’.   Elsewhere, this wonderfully exhaustive collection chronicles calypso’s influence in movies and on Broadway and its spread world-wide. A bonus DVD includes lightweight 1957 cash-in film Calypso Joe, featuring Lord Flea and Duke of Iron. 173 calypso tracks may seem daunting but there are plenty of intriguing deviations. The accompanying hardcover book is an absolute delight, clued in and filled with fantastic artwork, posters and photographs. Mick Houghton

173 cuts from calypso’s thrilling, if brief, mainstream heyday…

In Chronicles, Bob Dylan delivers a passionate appraisal of Harry Belafonte’s career saying that he was ‘the best balladeer in the land’. It was Belafonte who effectively launched the calypso craze, commanding an entire disc on this handsome new box set. His 1956 LP Calypso featuring the ubiquitous “Banana Boat Song” became the first million-seller – even in the face of competition from Elvis.

Belafonte’s smooth singing style appealed to both folk and easy listening fans but a fascination with Caribbean styles had already impacted in America in the ‘30s and ‘40s. Calypso Comes To America, the first of seven discs, mixes earthy, risqué originals by Sir Lancelot, Duke of Iron and Lord Invader with pop bastardisations by The Andrews Sisters (‘Rum and Coca Cola’), and Eartha Kitt (‘Somebody Bad Stole de Wedding Bell’).

By 1957, calypso music was open season among folk acts such as The Tarriers and The Kingston (as in Kingston, Jamaica) Trio, jazz musicians like Sonny Rollins, who adapted Invader’s “Don’t Stop the Carnival” (later covered by The Alan Price Set), country artist Hank Snow, and old stagers Fred Astaire and Nat King Cole. Comedian Stan Freberg’s “Banana Boat (Day-O)” was a classic novelty hit and, even in Britain Bernard Cribbins and Lance Percival (covering Sir Lancelot’s “Scandal in the Family”) recognised a phenomenon popular among the growing West Indian community.

Lord Kitchener and Lord Beginner had both arrived in 1948 on the symbolic ‘first’ passenger ship Empire Windrush. Kitch brilliantly portrayed immigrant life; racism, difficulty finding work, the cold weather and lousy food while, in 1950, Lord Beginner celebrated West Indian cricket in “Victory Test Match”, better known as “Cricket, Lovely, Cricket”. By the ‘60s, as more Jamaicans than Trinidadians arrived, bluebeat and ska eventually eclipsed calypso.

Chris Blackwell’s Jump Up label, formed in 1963, still imported calypso singles, notably the barely-innuendo at all, “Dr Kitch” (“I can’t stand the size of your needle” indeed), soon appropriated by Georgie Fame. Authentic calypso remained popular with mods. Jimmy Soul’s sexist R’n’B hybrid “If You Wanna Be Happy”, for example, bookends Calypso Craze with Robert R. Charles 1934 original “Marry an Ugly Woman’.  

Elsewhere, this wonderfully exhaustive collection chronicles calypso’s influence in movies and on Broadway and its spread world-wide. A bonus DVD includes lightweight 1957 cash-in film Calypso Joe, featuring Lord Flea and Duke of Iron. 173 calypso tracks may seem daunting but there are plenty of intriguing deviations. The accompanying hardcover book is an absolute delight, clued in and filled with fantastic artwork, posters and photographs.

Mick Houghton