Home Blog Page 420

Neil Young’s Time Fades Away reissue finally confirmed

0
Neil Young's delayed vinyl reissue of Time Fades Away has finally been confirmed for release. It will form part of Young's Official Release Series Discs 5 - 8, which also includes remastered vinyl reissues of On The Beach, Tonight's The Night and Zuma. The set is now scheduled for release on Recor...

Neil Young‘s delayed vinyl reissue of Time Fades Away has finally been confirmed for release.

It will form part of Young’s Official Release Series Discs 5 – 8, which also includes remastered vinyl reissues of On The Beach, Tonight’s The Night and Zuma.

The set is now scheduled for release on Record Store Day’s Black Friday, on November 28, limited to 3,500 copies. T-shirts of On The Beach, Time Fades Away and Zuma are also due for release.

The albums were originally scheduled for release on Record Store Day on April 18.

However, Young decided to hold the release, with a press release citing the delay “due to several other projects that Young has in the works that he wishes to focus on.”

In an interview with East Village Radio, Record Store Day co-founder Michael Kurtz confirmed that the reissues had been manufactured and were sitting in a warehouse.

“One of the big projects we had for Record Store Day was the Neil Young box set, which was all of those last four albums of his iconic period of his career,” Kurtz explained. “And Neil had put it together, Warner Bros, who’s a good partner with Record Store Day created it, and they manufactured it, shipped it to the warehouse and then they got the call from Neil, ‘I don’t want to do that. We’re going to wait and put those out on Black Friday.’ They were already ordered, the stores were expecting to get it. But this is Record Store Day, there’s always a bit of chaos involved in it, because it does come down to the artist, what they want to do, and if they change their mind as Neil did in the last minute, those records are going to wait another six months before we all get a chance to get them.”

Kate Bush describes recent London shows as ‘truly special’ in message to fans

0

Singer describes her first live dates in 35 years as "One of the most extraordinary experiences of my life." Kate Bush has described her recent run of live dates in London as both "surreal" and "truly special" in a message posted on her official website. The singer played a total of 22 shows at the venue between August 26 and October 1 at London's Eventim Apollo in Hammersmith, combining elaborate theatrical devices and stage sets with tracks from throughout her career and an intricate section entitled 'The Ninth Wave', in what were her first live dates for 35 years. You can read Uncut's review here. In her post, which you can read in full below, Bush described the tour and all the work that went into making it happen as being "One of the most extraordinary experiences of my life." She goes on to thank everyone who came to the shows and explain that she wanted to perform live again to feel close to her audience. The message reads: "It was quite a surreal journey that kept its level of intensity right from the early stages to the end of the very last show. It was also such great fun. It was one of the most extraordinary experiences of my life. I loved the whole process. Particularly putting the band, the Chorus and the team together and watching it all evolve. It really was the ultimate combination of talent and artists, both from the music business and the theatre world. I never expected everyone in the team to be so lovely and we all grew very close. We became a family and I really miss them all terribly." "I was really delighted that the shows were received so positively and so warmly but the really unexpected part of it all was the audiences. Audiences that you could only ever dream of. One of the main reasons for wanting to perform live again was to have contact with that audience.They took my breath away. Every single night they were so behind us. You could feel their support from the minute we walked on stage. I just never imagined it would be possible to connect with an audience on such a powerful and intimate level; to feel such, well quite frankly, love. It was like this at every single show. Thank you so very much to everyone who came to the shows and became part of that shared experience. It was a truly special and wonderful feeling for all of us." Bush concluded her run of sold-out Before The Dawn shows at Hammersmith Apollo on October 1, speculating that it will be "a while" before she plays live again.

Singer describes her first live dates in 35 years as “One of the most extraordinary experiences of my life.”

Kate Bush has described her recent run of live dates in London as both “surreal” and “truly special” in a message posted on her official website.

The singer played a total of 22 shows at the venue between August 26 and October 1 at London’s Eventim Apollo in Hammersmith, combining elaborate theatrical devices and stage sets with tracks from throughout her career and an intricate section entitled ‘The Ninth Wave‘, in what were her first live dates for 35 years. You can read Uncut’s review here.

In her post, which you can read in full below, Bush described the tour and all the work that went into making it happen as being “One of the most extraordinary experiences of my life.” She goes on to thank everyone who came to the shows and explain that she wanted to perform live again to feel close to her audience.

The message reads:

“It was quite a surreal journey that kept its level of intensity right from the early stages to the end of the very last show. It was also such great fun. It was one of the most extraordinary experiences of my life. I loved the whole process. Particularly putting the band, the Chorus and the team together and watching it all evolve. It really was the ultimate combination of talent and artists, both from the music business and the theatre world. I never expected everyone in the team to be so lovely and we all grew very close. We became a family and I really miss them all terribly.”

“I was really delighted that the shows were received so positively and so warmly but the really unexpected part of it all was the audiences. Audiences that you could only ever dream of. One of the main reasons for wanting to perform live again was to have contact with that audience.They took my breath away. Every single night they were so behind us. You could feel their support from the minute we walked on stage. I just never imagined it would be possible to connect with an audience on such a powerful and intimate level; to feel such, well quite frankly, love. It was like this at every single show. Thank you so very much to everyone who came to the shows and became part of that shared experience. It was a truly special and wonderful feeling for all of us.”

Bush concluded her run of sold-out Before The Dawn shows at Hammersmith Apollo on October 1, speculating that it will be “a while” before she plays live again.

Tweedy – Sukierae

0

Tweedy & Son open for business: strong returns follow... In the three years since Wilco released their most recent studio album The Whole Love, Jeff Tweedy has been busy with a number of impressive extramural activities. As a producer, he oversaw new albums from Low, Mavis Staples and (in part) White Denim. He also helped put together Wilco’s latest Solid Sound Festival, toured alongside Bob Dylan on the Americanarama bill and even found time to cameo in Portlandia and Parks And Recreation. But despite such rewarding creative experiences, other aspects of Tweedy’s life have been far less kind. His elder brother, Greg, died in September 2013 from heart and kidney failure, while Tweedy’s wife Sue was diagnosed with a rare form of lymphoma in January this year. It’s hard not to imagine Sukierae (a compound of Sue Miller Tweedy’s nickname, Sukie Rae) as engulfed by these two personal tragedies; much as Wilco (The Album) was overshadowed by the death of his former band mate Jay Bennett. Some might scrutinize the lyrics for evidence of Tweedy’s response to his wife’s condition. “No one could protect you from the blood in your own veins,” he sings on “Hazel”; “I’ve always been certain nearly all my life / One day I’ll be your burden and you’ll be my wife” on “New Moon”. Evidence, surely, of an appalling pathos governing the record? But Sukierae rarely sinks into a miasma of post-diagnosis melancholy. Indeed, the first line of the album’s opening track, the spiky “Don’t Let Me Be So Understood”, is as defiant as it gets: “I don’t wanna give in”. Elsewhere in this issue, Tweedy explains that although work started on this album before his wife’s illness was detected, Sukierae has since assumed a salutary quality. “I’ve been able to make her feel less alone,” he explains. At any rate, Sukierae is very much a family affair. The band consists of Tweedy and his 18 year-old son Spencer on drums – although there is also discreet accompaniment from The Young Fresh Fellows and The Minus 5 bandleader Scott McCaughey on keyboards and backing vocals by Jesse Wolfe and Holly Laessig from indie pop band Lucius. Of course, this isn’t the first time Tweedy has stepped away from his band duties. In 2002, he released the (largely instrumental) score for Ethan Hawke's 2001 directorial debut, Chelsea Walls. But Sukierae is a full 20-track affair. Driven by warm acoustic notes, “High As Hello” and “World Away”, establish a honeyed, slightly stoned mood early on. Conspicuously, “Diamond Light Pt. 1” feels the most Wilco-esque of the first batch of songs – especially the scrabbling guitar lines reminiscent of Nels Cline. It also foregrounds Spencer’s skills behind the kit as he manfully sustains the song’s eccentric time signature. Songs like “Wait For Love”, meanwhile, bring to mind the lovely guitar and piano parts in “Country Disappeared” from Wilco (The Album). “Low Key” is one of the album’s few attempts at a straightforward pop song – a less raucous take on “I Might” from Wilco (The Album), if you like – with some charming George Harrison-style “aaah aahhs” from Tweedy, Wolfe and Leassig. Elsewhere, there are quiet, ruminative moments like “Pigeon” and “Nobody Dies Anymore”. The former, delivered in an intimate near-whisper by Tweedy, is tremendously affecting, despite its opaque chorus rhyming “pigeon” with “religion” and “Mt Zion” with “dandelion”. “Nobody Dies Any More”, which Tweedy says was written after his wife’s diagnosis, nevertheless appears weighed down with a weariness. “Desert Bell” possesses a deep, tormented spirit – “render me down / In a hole in the ground / Mixed with the earth” – while Tweedy’s delicate vocals on “Honey Combed” evoke the fragility of Elliott Smith. As the album winds towards its conclusion, Tweedy seems to consider the possibility of being separated from his loved one – “Will you take me?” he asks on “Down From Above” and “I couldn’t hold you long enough” on “Where My Love”. The frazzled electronic motif on “Slow Love” – reminiscent of the wiry static sound underpinning “Radio Cure” on Yankee Hotel Foxtrot – is a disquieting counterpoint to the song’s warm melodies. Fortunately, the introspective fug lifts for the airy “Summer Noon”, which might just recount Tweedy’s first meeting with Sue Miller at her Chicago club, Lounge Ax: “She spoke to me and provoked my band / And I broke in two in the heart of her hand”. The last song, “I’ll Never Know”, resurrects a memory from childhood concerning his mother; it is simultaneously deeply sad and also comforting. An album of great depth and richness, Sukierae finds Tweedy at his most dignified, addressing life-changing events across all aspects of the full emotional spectrum, from joy to sorrow. It is, then, nothing short of the whole love. Michael Bonner Q&A JEFF TWEEDY The album opens with “Please Don’t Let Me Be So Understood”: a really bratty, rock’n’roll nihilist song… It’s a subterfuge of some sort. There’s not really a concept to the record, but there is some desire to have it be a reflection of growing up. I think it is bullshit to not grow up! Your songs have sometimes seemed prophetic - as when “Jesus, Etc.” took on a new resonance after 9/11… I definitely notice that. There’s a lot of images from this record that have become surreal to me. I’m not agreeing with you in any way about a “prophetic” nature. But there’s a lyric - “It won’t take long to find a broken backbone”, in “Nobody Dies Any More”. That was written way before anything happened with my wife’s cancer diagnosis. And one of the ways that we discovered the malignancy in my wife’s bones is that she had a broken backbone, a collapsed vertebrae. And now when I sing that song, I think, ‘Oh my God, that’s so strange.’ What’s the song about? Well, a lot of lyrics start with something way more specific, and then I get very uncomfortable with things being too spelled out. But Chicago has a horrible problem with gun violence, and it was an attempt to write about that. It still has images of candlelight vigils on crappy, low-income street-corners, with beer being poured out on the street. INTERVIEW: NICK HASTED

Tweedy & Son open for business: strong returns follow…

In the three years since Wilco released their most recent studio album The Whole Love, Jeff Tweedy has been busy with a number of impressive extramural activities. As a producer, he oversaw new albums from Low, Mavis Staples and (in part) White Denim. He also helped put together Wilco’s latest Solid Sound Festival, toured alongside Bob Dylan on the Americanarama bill and even found time to cameo in Portlandia and Parks And Recreation. But despite such rewarding creative experiences, other aspects of Tweedy’s life have been far less kind. His elder brother, Greg, died in September 2013 from heart and kidney failure, while Tweedy’s wife Sue was diagnosed with a rare form of lymphoma in January this year.

It’s hard not to imagine Sukierae (a compound of Sue Miller Tweedy’s nickname, Sukie Rae) as engulfed by these two personal tragedies; much as Wilco (The Album) was overshadowed by the death of his former band mate Jay Bennett. Some might scrutinize the lyrics for evidence of Tweedy’s response to his wife’s condition. “No one could protect you from the blood in your own veins,” he sings on “Hazel”; “I’ve always been certain nearly all my life / One day I’ll be your burden and you’ll be my wife” on “New Moon”. Evidence, surely, of an appalling pathos governing the record?

But Sukierae rarely sinks into a miasma of post-diagnosis melancholy. Indeed, the first line of the album’s opening track, the spiky “Don’t Let Me Be So Understood”, is as defiant as it gets: “I don’t wanna give in”. Elsewhere in this issue, Tweedy explains that although work started on this album before his wife’s illness was detected, Sukierae has since assumed a salutary quality. “I’ve been able to make her feel less alone,” he explains. At any rate, Sukierae is very much a family affair. The band consists of Tweedy and his 18 year-old son Spencer on drums – although there is also discreet accompaniment from The Young Fresh Fellows and The Minus 5 bandleader Scott McCaughey on keyboards and backing vocals by Jesse Wolfe and Holly Laessig from indie pop band Lucius.

Of course, this isn’t the first time Tweedy has stepped away from his band duties. In 2002, he released the (largely instrumental) score for Ethan Hawke’s 2001 directorial debut, Chelsea Walls. But Sukierae is a full 20-track affair. Driven by warm acoustic notes, “High As Hello” and “World Away”, establish a honeyed, slightly stoned mood early on. Conspicuously, “Diamond Light Pt. 1” feels the most Wilco-esque of the first batch of songs – especially the scrabbling guitar lines reminiscent of Nels Cline. It also foregrounds Spencer’s skills behind the kit as he manfully sustains the song’s eccentric time signature. Songs like “Wait For Love”, meanwhile, bring to mind the lovely guitar and piano parts in “Country Disappeared” from Wilco (The Album). “Low Key” is one of the album’s few attempts at a straightforward pop song – a less raucous take on “I Might” from Wilco (The Album), if you like – with some charming George Harrison-style “aaah aahhs” from Tweedy, Wolfe and Leassig.

Elsewhere, there are quiet, ruminative moments like “Pigeon” and “Nobody Dies Anymore”. The former, delivered in an intimate near-whisper by Tweedy, is tremendously affecting, despite its opaque chorus rhyming “pigeon” with “religion” and “Mt Zion” with “dandelion”. “Nobody Dies Any More”, which Tweedy says was written after his wife’s diagnosis, nevertheless appears weighed down with a weariness. “Desert Bell” possesses a deep, tormented spirit – “render me down / In a hole in the ground / Mixed with the earth” – while Tweedy’s delicate vocals on “Honey Combed” evoke the fragility of Elliott Smith. As the album winds towards its conclusion, Tweedy seems to consider the possibility of being separated from his loved one – “Will you take me?” he asks on “Down From Above” and “I couldn’t hold you long enough” on “Where My Love”. The frazzled electronic motif on “Slow Love” – reminiscent of the wiry static sound underpinning “Radio Cure” on Yankee Hotel Foxtrot – is a disquieting counterpoint to the song’s warm melodies. Fortunately, the introspective fug lifts for the airy “Summer Noon”, which might just recount Tweedy’s first meeting with Sue Miller at her Chicago club, Lounge Ax: “She spoke to me and provoked my band / And I broke in two in the heart of her hand”. The last song, “I’ll Never Know”, resurrects a memory from childhood concerning his mother; it is simultaneously deeply sad and also comforting.

An album of great depth and richness, Sukierae finds Tweedy at his most dignified, addressing life-changing events across all aspects of the full emotional spectrum, from joy to sorrow. It is, then, nothing short of the whole love.

Michael Bonner

Q&A

JEFF TWEEDY

The album opens with “Please Don’t Let Me Be So Understood”: a really bratty, rock’n’roll nihilist song…

It’s a subterfuge of some sort. There’s not really a concept to the record, but there is some desire to have it be a reflection of growing up. I think it is bullshit to not grow up!

Your songs have sometimes seemed prophetic – as when “Jesus, Etc.” took on a new resonance after 9/11…

I definitely notice that. There’s a lot of images from this record that have become surreal to me. I’m not agreeing with you in any way about a “prophetic” nature. But there’s a lyric – “It won’t take long to find a broken backbone”, in “Nobody Dies Any More”. That was written way before anything happened with my wife’s cancer diagnosis. And one of the ways that we discovered the malignancy in my wife’s bones is that she had a broken backbone, a collapsed vertebrae. And now when I sing that song, I think, ‘Oh my God, that’s so strange.’

What’s the song about?

Well, a lot of lyrics start with something way more specific, and then I get very uncomfortable with things being too spelled out. But Chicago has a horrible problem with gun violence, and it was an attempt to write about that. It still has images of candlelight vigils on crappy, low-income street-corners, with beer being poured out on the street.

INTERVIEW: NICK HASTED

The Charlatans announce new album Modern Nature – listen to new song “So Oh”

0

Tim Burgess and band will tour the UK in March 2015... The Charlatans have confirmed details of their new album Modern Nature. The 11-song LP is their 12th studio effort to date and will be released on January 26, 2015 via BMG Chrysalis. It'll be released on a variety of formats, including a coloured vinyl release that includes four bonus tracks. The band have also revealed their new single "So Oh", which will be released officially on December 1 and follows on from the previously-released 'Talking In Tones'. Scroll below to listen. Modern Nature will be the band's first album since the death of drummer Jon Brookes last year. Tony Rogers, the band’s keyboardist, stated that "Jon was adamant that there was going to be another Charlatans record, and you have to put that into your own thoughts." The Charlatans have also announced a UK tour for March. Tickets go on general sale 9am Friday (October 24) here. Check the dates below. Bristol Academy (March 3) Manchester Albert Hall (5) Leeds Academy (7) Hull University (9) Glasgow Barrowlands (10) Wolverhampton Civic Hall (13) Leicester Academy (14) London Roundhouse (16)

Tim Burgess and band will tour the UK in March 2015…

The Charlatans have confirmed details of their new album Modern Nature.

The 11-song LP is their 12th studio effort to date and will be released on January 26, 2015 via BMG Chrysalis. It’ll be released on a variety of formats, including a coloured vinyl release that includes four bonus tracks.

The band have also revealed their new single “So Oh“, which will be released officially on December 1 and follows on from the previously-released ‘Talking In Tones’. Scroll below to listen.

Modern Nature will be the band’s first album since the death of drummer Jon Brookes last year. Tony Rogers, the band’s keyboardist, stated that “Jon was adamant that there was going to be another Charlatans record, and you have to put that into your own thoughts.”

The Charlatans have also announced a UK tour for March. Tickets go on general sale 9am Friday (October 24) here. Check the dates below.

Bristol Academy (March 3)

Manchester Albert Hall (5)

Leeds Academy (7)

Hull University (9)

Glasgow Barrowlands (10)

Wolverhampton Civic Hall (13)

Leicester Academy (14)

London Roundhouse (16)

We want your questions for Mark Lanegan

0

The singer's set to answer your questions... Ahead of an extensive European tour running from January through to March 2015, Mark Lanegan is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask him? Why didn't he and Kurt Cobain finish their Lead Belly covers project? Of all his many collaborations, which is his favourite? Why did he choose to write much of his latest album, Phantom Radio, on a phone app called Funk Box? Send up your questions by noon, Monday, November 3 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com. The best questions, and Mark's answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

The singer’s set to answer your questions…

Ahead of an extensive European tour running from January through to March 2015, Mark Lanegan is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask him?

Why didn’t he and Kurt Cobain finish their Lead Belly covers project?

Of all his many collaborations, which is his favourite?

Why did he choose to write much of his latest album, Phantom Radio, on a phone app called Funk Box?

Send up your questions by noon, Monday, November 3 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com. The best questions, and Mark’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Paul McCartney shares unreleased duet with John Bonham

0
Paul McCartney has shared a duet he recorded with John Bonham. The duet is a previously unreleased version of McCartney 1976 song, "Beware My Love". McCartney unveiled the song during a Twitter Q&A last night [October 20], reports Rolling Stone. The duet appears on the expanded edition of Win...

Paul McCartney has shared a duet he recorded with John Bonham.

The duet is a previously unreleased version of McCartney 1976 song, “Beware My Love“.

McCartney unveiled the song during a Twitter Q&A last night [October 20], reports Rolling Stone.

The duet appears on the expanded edition of Wings At The Speed Of Sound, which will be reissued on November 4, along with Venus And Mars. Both albums include a bonus disc of material from the era, including B-sides, outtakes, alternate takes and demos.

Although Bonham’s version to “Beware My Love” didn’t make the final version of Wings At The Speed Of Sound, Bonham appeared on two songs on Wings’ final studio album, 1979′s Back To The Egg, as part of a supergroup of guest musicians called the Rockestra.

You can hear McCartney and Bonham’s recording of “Beware My Love” by clicking here.

A garage rock round-up: Ty Segall! Meatbodies! Wand! King Gizzard! Cool Ghouls!

0

By its very nature, garage rock can be a trashy, erratic business - inevitable given the unbridled spontaneity it privileges. One of the many amazing things about Ty Segall and the ever-expanding circle of artists around him, however, is how they've found a way of adding consistency to the volatile mix of productivity and excitement. There are times when it seems Segall is congenitally incapable of being involved with a duff record, or even a scrappy one. So while in the past few months his own "Manipulator" has taken most of the plaudits, there's also been an album on Segall's God? label by an LA band called Wand that deserves some attention, too. "Ganglion Reef", it's called, and it configures plenty of their benefactor's favourite modes of garage rock - brutish Blue Cheer riffs, dappled psychedelic whimsy - into moderately fresh, often terrific new shapes. The likes of "Clearer" and the outstanding "Fire On The Mountain (I-II-III)" smuggle in fey and ornate acid pop under the cover of lurching stoner rock: Pink Floyd's "Nile Song" feels like a useful, relatively underused reference point. Good drummer, too. Now, as well, there's a self-titled album from Meatbodies (pictured above) on In The Red, featuring Segall but focused on one Chad Ubovich, part of The Fuzz and sometime guitarist in Mikal Cronin's band. Again, surprises are reassuringly thin on the ground, but the quality of Ubovich's psych-tinged ramalams, mostly delivered at Ramones speed, is high. If you're looking for a specific Segall analogue, "Meatbodies" fits well alongside 2010's, "Melted", quite possibly my favourite of his albums. But on the thrumming, pinched "Off", it also feels like Ubovich has been listening pretty intently to recent Oh Sees records. No bad thing, obviously. Also listening to Thee Oh Sees, I suspect, are King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard on their "I'm In Your Mind Fuzz" album, which John Dwyer is releasing on Castle Face in the UK (Heavenly are doing the honours in the UK). I must confess, I didn't play this one for a while, finding the wacky name pretty offputting, but King Gizzard turn out to be an Australian band locked into the same streamlined hypnobeat that Thee Oh Sees perfected on "Floating Coffin". The album starts as if it's going to keep going as more or less one song (notionally divided into four tracks, including "Cellophane") for its duration, which might have made it even more fun; the boggle-eyed momentum drops off a little. Still, that would've meant the excellent "Hot Water" and "Empty" would've gone missing, two songs that both have the good taste to resemble the early Kraftwerk's optimum flute jam, "Ruckzuck". There's a nice fake of '70s Turkish pysch in the shape of "Satan Speeds Up", too, or at least its first minute or so. One last entry in this week's garage rock round-up: "A Swirling Fire Burning Through The Rye", the second album from San Francisco's Cool Ghouls (another not-terribly-encouraging name, there, but stick with it). "I'm trying to understand these times we are living," notes one of the band's multiple lead singers, Pat McDonald, in "Reelin'" and Cool Ghouls, it transpires, are an SF group riding a timewarp, singing about the tech-driven gentrification of their city in the style of their mid-'60s forebears. This second, much-improved, album paints them as a jangling beat group, with three harmonising frontmen making tentative forays towards a new frontier: Byrds-style raga rock, perhaps ("Insight"); or a Beach Boys-style hook-up with The Wrecking Crew (the outstanding "The Mile")? Exceptional tunes ensure A Swirling Fire is more substantial than a nostalgic art project - given the right push, Cool Ghouls could be as big as Moby Grape, or at least The Allah-Las… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey Meatbodies picture: Denee Petracek

By its very nature, garage rock can be a trashy, erratic business – inevitable given the unbridled spontaneity it privileges. One of the many amazing things about Ty Segall and the ever-expanding circle of artists around him, however, is how they’ve found a way of adding consistency to the volatile mix of productivity and excitement.

There are times when it seems Segall is congenitally incapable of being involved with a duff record, or even a scrappy one. So while in the past few months his own “Manipulator” has taken most of the plaudits, there’s also been an album on Segall’s God? label by an LA band called Wand that deserves some attention, too. “Ganglion Reef”, it’s called, and it configures plenty of their benefactor’s favourite modes of garage rock – brutish Blue Cheer riffs, dappled psychedelic whimsy – into moderately fresh, often terrific new shapes. The likes of “Clearer” and the outstanding “Fire On The Mountain (I-II-III)” smuggle in fey and ornate acid pop under the cover of lurching stoner rock: Pink Floyd’s “Nile Song” feels like a useful, relatively underused reference point. Good drummer, too.

Now, as well, there’s a self-titled album from Meatbodies (pictured above) on In The Red, featuring Segall but focused on one Chad Ubovich, part of The Fuzz and sometime guitarist in Mikal Cronin’s band. Again, surprises are reassuringly thin on the ground, but the quality of Ubovich’s psych-tinged ramalams, mostly delivered at Ramones speed, is high. If you’re looking for a specific Segall analogue, “Meatbodies” fits well alongside 2010’s, “Melted”, quite possibly my favourite of his albums. But on the thrumming, pinched “Off”, it also feels like Ubovich has been listening pretty intently to recent Oh Sees records. No bad thing, obviously.

Also listening to Thee Oh Sees, I suspect, are King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard on their “I’m In Your Mind Fuzz” album, which John Dwyer is releasing on Castle Face in the UK (Heavenly are doing the honours in the UK). I must confess, I didn’t play this one for a while, finding the wacky name pretty offputting, but King Gizzard turn out to be an Australian band locked into the same streamlined hypnobeat that Thee Oh Sees perfected on “Floating Coffin”.

The album starts as if it’s going to keep going as more or less one song (notionally divided into four tracks, including “Cellophane”) for its duration, which might have made it even more fun; the boggle-eyed momentum drops off a little. Still, that would’ve meant the excellent “Hot Water” and “Empty” would’ve gone missing, two songs that both have the good taste to resemble the early Kraftwerk’s optimum flute jam, “Ruckzuck”. There’s a nice fake of ’70s Turkish pysch in the shape of “Satan Speeds Up”, too, or at least its first minute or so.

One last entry in this week’s garage rock round-up: “A Swirling Fire Burning Through The Rye”, the second album from San Francisco’s Cool Ghouls (another not-terribly-encouraging name, there, but stick with it). “I’m trying to understand these times we are living,” notes one of the band’s multiple lead singers, Pat McDonald, in “Reelin'” and Cool Ghouls, it transpires, are an SF group riding a timewarp, singing about the tech-driven gentrification of their city in the style of their mid-’60s forebears.

This second, much-improved, album paints them as a jangling beat group, with three harmonising frontmen making tentative forays towards a new frontier: Byrds-style raga rock, perhaps (“Insight”); or a Beach Boys-style hook-up with The Wrecking Crew (the outstanding “The Mile”)? Exceptional tunes ensure A Swirling Fire is more substantial than a nostalgic art project – given the right push, Cool Ghouls could be as big as Moby Grape, or at least The Allah-Las…

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

Meatbodies picture: Denee Petracek

Sleater-Kinney announce first album in ten years

0

No Cities To Love out on January 19 on Sub Pop... Sleater-Kinney will release No Cities To Love, their first album in ten years January 19. The album is released on Sub Pop Records. The trio - Corin Tucker (vocals/guitar), Carrie Brownstein (guitar/vocals) and Janet Weiss (drums) - recorded No Cities To Love in secret at Tiny Telephone Recordings in San Francisco in early 2014, with additional sessions at Kung Fu Bakery Recording Studios in Portland, and Electrokitty Recording in Seattle. John Goodmanson, who helmed four previous Sleater-Kinney albums, produced No Cities. "We sound possessed on these songs," says Brownstein, “willing it all - the entire weight of the band and what it means to us - back into existence." No Cities To Love will be released on CD, vinyl and download. No Cities To Love tracklist: Price Tag Fangless Surface Envy No Cities to Love A New Wave No Anthems Gimme Love Bury Our Friends Hey Darling Fade The band have also announced North American and European tour dates around the album's release. Sleater-Kinney will play: February 8: Spokane, WA @ Knitting Factory - Spokane February 9: Boise, ID @ Knitting Factory - Boise February 10: Salt Lake City, UT @ The Depot February 12: Denver, CO @ Ogden Theater February 13: Omaha, NE @ Slowdown February 14: Minneapolis, MN @ First Avenue February 15: Milwaukee, WI @ Turner Hall February 17: Chicago, IL @ Riviera February 22: Boston, MA @ House of Blues February 24: Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club February 26: New York, NY @ Terminal 5 February 28: Philadelphia, PA@ Union Transfer March 18: Berlin @ Postbahnhof Tickets March 19: Amsterdam@ Paradiso Tickets March 20: Paris @ Cigale Tickets March 21: Antwerp, Belgium @ Trix Tickets March 23: London @ Roundhouse Tickets March 24: Manchester @ Albert Hall Tickets March 25: Glasgow @ O2 ABC Tickets March 26: Dublin @ Vicar Street Tickets Credit: Brigitte Sire

No Cities To Love out on January 19 on Sub Pop…

Sleater-Kinney will release No Cities To Love, their first album in ten years January 19.

The album is released on Sub Pop Records.

The trio – Corin Tucker (vocals/guitar), Carrie Brownstein (guitar/vocals) and Janet Weiss (drums) – recorded No Cities To Love in secret at Tiny Telephone Recordings in San Francisco in early 2014, with additional sessions at Kung Fu Bakery Recording Studios in Portland, and Electrokitty Recording in Seattle. John Goodmanson, who helmed four previous Sleater-Kinney albums, produced No Cities.

“We sound possessed on these songs,” says Brownstein, “willing it all – the entire weight of the band and what it means to us – back into existence.”

No Cities To Love will be released on CD, vinyl and download.

No Cities To Love tracklist:

Price Tag

Fangless

Surface Envy

No Cities to Love

A New Wave

No Anthems

Gimme Love

Bury Our Friends

Hey Darling

Fade

The band have also announced North American and European tour dates around the album’s release.

Sleater-Kinney will play:

February 8: Spokane, WA @ Knitting Factory – Spokane

February 9: Boise, ID @ Knitting Factory – Boise

February 10: Salt Lake City, UT @ The Depot

February 12: Denver, CO @ Ogden Theater

February 13: Omaha, NE @ Slowdown

February 14: Minneapolis, MN @ First Avenue

February 15: Milwaukee, WI @ Turner Hall

February 17: Chicago, IL @ Riviera

February 22: Boston, MA @ House of Blues

February 24: Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club

February 26: New York, NY @ Terminal 5

February 28: Philadelphia, PA@ Union Transfer

March 18: Berlin @ Postbahnhof Tickets

March 19: Amsterdam@ Paradiso Tickets

March 20: Paris @ Cigale Tickets

March 21: Antwerp, Belgium @ Trix Tickets

March 23: London @ Roundhouse Tickets

March 24: Manchester @ Albert Hall Tickets

March 25: Glasgow @ O2 ABC Tickets

March 26: Dublin @ Vicar Street Tickets

Credit: Brigitte Sire

Watch Bill Murray sing Bob Dylan!

0

If you've not already seen it, I hope you enjoy this a clip from Bill Murray's latest film, St Vincent. It's from the closing credits to the film - don't worry, there's no spoilers - which feature Murray's character, Vincent, lounging in his yard, listening to an old Sony Walkman and singing along to Dylan’s “Shelter From The Storm”. Bill sings Bob, indeed. Incidentally, I don't think this has much to do with the works of Annie Clark, the other St Vincent. Here, Murray plays - guess what? - a curmudgeonly alcoholic who offers to babysit his neigbhour's twelve-year-old boy to raise gambling money. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dgz88voETRM Astonishingly, it's Murray's first lead role in ten years - unless you count his voice talents in Garfield 2. Even more astonishing are the lengths director Theodore Melfi went through to secure the actor's involvement in the film. According to an interview for USA Today, Melfi said, "The nuts and bolts is (Murray) has no agent and manager, as everyone knows. You just call the 1-800 number. And I left, I don't know, a dozen messages. It's not his voice on there. It's a Skytel voicemail with a menu. You have to record the message and send the message. It's so confusing. I think if you can get through that and believe in it, he might call you back. "So I finally call his lawyer, it must have been at least six weeks later after all these messages. (The lawyer suggests Melfi write Murray a snail mail letter.) A 'Dear Bill' letter. To a post office box back in New York. Two weeks later, (Murray) calls his attorney and goes, 'OK the letter was swell. I'd like to read the script. Have him snail mail a script.' To another post office box on Martha's Vineyard. Bill is a nomad. He's never in one place for long. "And so we snail-mailed a script. Bill calls two weeks later, he picks up the phone and calls my producer's assistant (who is flabbergasted) and says, 'I never got that script.' So we Fed Ex the script to a place in North Carolina. Two or three weeks after that, driving down the road I'm in the middle of a commercial job and my phone rings and he goes, 'Ted? It's Bill Murray. Is this a good time?' Anyway, St Vincent opens in the UK in December.

If you’ve not already seen it, I hope you enjoy this a clip from Bill Murray‘s latest film, St Vincent. It’s from the closing credits to the film – don’t worry, there’s no spoilers – which feature Murray’s character, Vincent, lounging in his yard, listening to an old Sony Walkman and singing along to Dylan’s “Shelter From The Storm”. Bill sings Bob, indeed.

Incidentally, I don’t think this has much to do with the works of Annie Clark, the other St Vincent. Here, Murray plays – guess what? – a curmudgeonly alcoholic who offers to babysit his neigbhour’s twelve-year-old boy to raise gambling money.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dgz88voETRM

Astonishingly, it’s Murray’s first lead role in ten years – unless you count his voice talents in Garfield 2. Even more astonishing are the lengths director Theodore Melfi went through to secure the actor’s involvement in the film. According to an interview for USA Today, Melfi said, “The nuts and bolts is (Murray) has no agent and manager, as everyone knows. You just call the 1-800 number. And I left, I don’t know, a dozen messages. It’s not his voice on there. It’s a Skytel voicemail with a menu. You have to record the message and send the message. It’s so confusing. I think if you can get through that and believe in it, he might call you back.

“So I finally call his lawyer, it must have been at least six weeks later after all these messages. (The lawyer suggests Melfi write Murray a snail mail letter.) A ‘Dear Bill’ letter. To a post office box back in New York. Two weeks later, (Murray) calls his attorney and goes, ‘OK the letter was swell. I’d like to read the script. Have him snail mail a script.’ To another post office box on Martha’s Vineyard. Bill is a nomad. He’s never in one place for long.

“And so we snail-mailed a script. Bill calls two weeks later, he picks up the phone and calls my producer’s assistant (who is flabbergasted) and says, ‘I never got that script.’ So we Fed Ex the script to a place in North Carolina. Two or three weeks after that, driving down the road I’m in the middle of a commercial job and my phone rings and he goes, ‘Ted? It’s Bill Murray. Is this a good time?’

Anyway, St Vincent opens in the UK in December.

Damon Albarn plans new albums by Gorillaz and The Good, The Bad & The Queen

0

Animated band to return in 2016... Damon Albarn is set to reactivate two dormant projects. In an interview with Sydney Morning Herald to promote his solo album Everyday Robots, via Rolling Stone, Albarn reveals he intends to release a new album by animated group, Gorillaz, in 2016. He also reveals that he has written a new album for The Good, The Bad & The Queen, the band who also feature Paul Simonon, Tony Allen and The Verve's Simon Tong. The Sydney Morning Herald story also reports that Albarn is currently writing a West End theatre musical adaptation of a children's book. When asked about future plans for Blur, Albarn says, "I would imagine there's some kind of future," he says warily, "but at the moment there's no time for the future – only the present. Who knows? I'm reluctant to say anything, because if I do, it just gets taken out of context and then I'm accused of being a wind-up."

Animated band to return in 2016…

Damon Albarn is set to reactivate two dormant projects.

In an interview with Sydney Morning Herald to promote his solo album Everyday Robots, via Rolling Stone, Albarn reveals he intends to release a new album by animated group, Gorillaz, in 2016.

He also reveals that he has written a new album for The Good, The Bad & The Queen, the band who also feature Paul Simonon, Tony Allen and The Verve’s Simon Tong.

The Sydney Morning Herald story also reports that Albarn is currently writing a West End theatre musical adaptation of a children’s book.

When asked about future plans for Blur, Albarn says, “I would imagine there’s some kind of future,” he says warily, “but at the moment there’s no time for the future – only the present. Who knows? I’m reluctant to say anything, because if I do, it just gets taken out of context and then I’m accused of being a wind-up.”

Watch Pearl Jam premiere new song ‘Moline’ live

0

Band also performed their 1996 album 'No Code' from start to finish... Pearl Jam/strong> have unveiled new song "Moline" at a concert in the Illinois city that inspired the track. At the iWireless Center in the city of Moline on Friday night (October 17), Eddie Vedder performed the song unaccompanied. According to WQAD, Vedder revealed to the audience that the song was written specially for Moline and the Quad Cities – a group of cities at the Iowa-Illinois border – and marked the band's first ever gig in the area. Click below to watch a fan-recorded video of "Moline". The song followed a surprise performance on the band's 1996 album No Code from start to finish. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UudSNs6W6eE Last week, Vedder covered "You’ve Got To Hide Your Love Away" and "Imagine" on what would have been John Lennon's 74th birthday. Vedder first performed The Beatles cover for 2001 film I Am Sam, while "Imagine" has become a staple of recent Pearl Jam gigs.

Band also performed their 1996 album ‘No Code’ from start to finish…

Pearl Jam/strong> have unveiled new song “Moline” at a concert in the Illinois city that inspired the track.

At the iWireless Center in the city of Moline on Friday night (October 17), Eddie Vedder performed the song unaccompanied.

According to WQAD, Vedder revealed to the audience that the song was written specially for Moline and the Quad Cities – a group of cities at the Iowa-Illinois border – and marked the band’s first ever gig in the area. Click below to watch a fan-recorded video of “Moline”.

The song followed a surprise performance on the band’s 1996 album No Code from start to finish.

Last week, Vedder covered “You’ve Got To Hide Your Love Away” and “Imagine” on what would have been John Lennon‘s 74th birthday. Vedder first performed The Beatles cover for 2001 film I Am Sam, while “Imagine” has become a staple of recent Pearl Jam gigs.

Unheard Sleater-Kinney song discovered in new boxset – listen

0

Mystery 7" is marked with the date January 20 2015... The boxset reissue of Sleater-Kinney's discography has been revealed to contain a mystery 7" record featuring previously unheard music. Scroll down to hear a snippet of the new song below. The track, believed to be titled "Bury Our Friends", appears on a record included in the new Start Together boxset. Sub Pop Records will put out Start Together on October 20. The release is limited to 3,000 copies and will contain remastered versions of all seven of the band's albums on coloured vinyl as well as a hardback book featuring never-before-seen images of the band. A snippet of "Bury Our Friends" can be heard below. One fan who received his boxset early discovered the additional 7", which is marked with the date 1/ 20/ 2015 (January 20, 2015) on its label. "Kevin Zidek @KevinZidek @chrisdeville Just got the Sleater Kinney box set. Comes with a 7" that simply states "1/20/15." Plays a crazy good SK song I never heard." Wondering Sound subsequently discovered that searching for the song "Bury Our Friends" on Shazam leads to artwork for either a single or album titled No Cities To Love. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bjlY81YRRqY Sleater-Kinney released seven albums between 1995-2005 with their self-titled debut album being followed by Call The Doctor, Dig Me Out, The Hot Rock, All Hands On The Bad One and One Beat. The band's most recent album, The Woods, was released in 2005. Sleater-Kinney members Carrie Brownstein, Corin Tucker and Janet Weiss (along with REM's Peter Buck) joined Pearl Jam onstage at their Moda Center concert in Portland in November 2013, where they covered Neil Young's "Rockin' In The Free World". Speaking after that gig, Brownstein hinted at a reunion, saying that she felt the band had "more to say". Sleater-Kinney went on indefinite hiatus in 2006 with Brownstein going on to form Wild Flag with the band's drummer Janet Weiss as well as write and star in US TV show Portlandia.

Mystery 7″ is marked with the date January 20 2015…

The boxset reissue of Sleater-Kinney‘s discography has been revealed to contain a mystery 7″ record featuring previously unheard music. Scroll down to hear a snippet of the new song below.

The track, believed to be titled “Bury Our Friends“, appears on a record included in the new Start Together boxset.

Sub Pop Records will put out Start Together on October 20. The release is limited to 3,000 copies and will contain remastered versions of all seven of the band’s albums on coloured vinyl as well as a hardback book featuring never-before-seen images of the band. A snippet of “Bury Our Friends” can be heard below.

One fan who received his boxset early discovered the additional 7″, which is marked with the date 1/ 20/ 2015 (January 20, 2015) on its label.

“Kevin Zidek @KevinZidek

@chrisdeville Just got the Sleater Kinney box set. Comes with a 7” that simply states “1/20/15.” Plays a crazy good SK song I never heard.”

Wondering Sound subsequently discovered that searching for the song “Bury Our Friends” on Shazam leads to artwork for either a single or album titled No Cities To Love.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bjlY81YRRqY

Sleater-Kinney released seven albums between 1995-2005 with their self-titled debut album being followed by Call The Doctor, Dig Me Out, The Hot Rock, All Hands On The Bad One and One Beat. The band’s most recent album, The Woods, was released in 2005.

Sleater-Kinney members Carrie Brownstein, Corin Tucker and Janet Weiss (along with REM’s Peter Buck) joined Pearl Jam onstage at their Moda Center concert in Portland in November 2013, where they covered Neil Young’s “Rockin’ In The Free World”.

Speaking after that gig, Brownstein hinted at a reunion, saying that she felt the band had “more to say”.

Sleater-Kinney went on indefinite hiatus in 2006 with Brownstein going on to form Wild Flag with the band’s drummer Janet Weiss as well as write and star in US TV show Portlandia.

Eric Clapton – Planes, Trains And Eric

A look inside Slowhand's [possible] farewell... "If I don't do it, I get cravings to come out and do it," says Eric Clapton at the start of the ungainly-titled but revealing Planes, Trains And Eric. Three or four decades ago, that might have referred to one of several corrosive indulgences, but the only addiction faced now is that of playing music live, amongst a mutually supportive group of players. Which rather calls into question the rumours, confirmed here by his manager Peter Jackson, that Clapton planned to quit touring when he turned 70. "I've been saying this since I was 18 years old," the guitarist chuckles when asked about retirement. "I retired when I left The Yardbirds - I was out, I wasn't going to do this anymore." Back then, his retreat was prompted by purism, by his belief that nobody else wanted to do things his way, that they were more concerned with grasping for the gold ring of pop and fame. But now, he confides, he's happy enough just rehearsing, without the need to perform. "I get quite resentful about the audiences coming in," he admits, "because they add a different dynamic." And there's the sheer physical demands of touring to contend with: as he revealed to Uncut recently, decades of hefting heavy guitars has given him recurrent back problems, which place limitations on his playing ability - and he's the kind of perfectionist that wouldn't want to perform below his peak. Accordingly, as Eric grew nearer his planned cut-off date, Jackson asked him to decide where in the world he would most prefer to play, given that the next tour could well be his last. Clapton was unequivocal: Japan. It has, he explains, always been his favourite tour stop, a "spiritual place" with kind, accommodating people and an aesthetic sensibility that appeals strongly to his interest in design. He likes the food, he likes the creative stimulation, he likes the way that the Japanese can be attentive without being overbearing - he marvels, for instance, at the way nobody bumps into you when you walk down the street, everybody giving everybody else their personal space. At one point, reflecting upon his friendship with his long-time Japanese promoter Mr. Udo, Clapton muses upon the shared honour systems of British and Japanese culture, our chivalric code paralleled by the Japanese code of bushido. Which is why this possibly final tour documentary tracks the guitarist across the Far East, lingering longest in the Land of the Rising Sun, with concert footage interspersed with band and associate interviews and backstage footage. His band for this jaunt is as top-drawer as you'd expect: Steve Gadd on drums, Nathan East on bass, Chris Stainton on piano, Paul Carrack on organ and vocals, and Michelle John and Shar White on backing vocals - a resilient outfit capable of accommodating whatever turns a song might take, allowing the guitarist to give free rein to his muse. The Layla highlight "Tell The Truth" is a relaxed, funky gospel-rock throwback on which Stainton's presence strengthens memories of a time when Clapton played alongside the likes of Leon Russell and Delaney & Bonnie. "Crossroads" is similarly unhurried, with Eric's vocal echoed soulfully by the backing singers, and compact solos from Stainton, Carrack and Clapton. And Charles Brown's "Driftin'" is beautifully played on a gorgeous blue acoustic with a lustrous tone, the camera going in close on Clapton's fingering as he delicately wrests quiet emotion from its strings. The guitarist's long association with Japan is confirmed when he is presented with a guitar-shaped crystal award backstage at the Budokan, marking that night's show as Clapton's 200th Japanese concert. Mr. Udo gives a little speech, and in return, Eric thanks him for his enduring friendship, even when he was being a bad boy. "I think you had to work hard to be a bad boy too," he smiles, recalling a fishing trip the pair had made decades ago. That night, the show includes an elegant version of Robert Johnson's "Little Queen Of Spades" featuring a coruscating Clapton solo, and an acoustic "Layla" prefaced by an extemporised lower-string preamble. Later on, returning from Japan, he reveals that whilst there he was stricken with some virus and had to be treated with antibiotics. It's another reminder of the depradations of age and health that have prompted serious thoughts of retirement. As Clapton admits, he would hate to be taken seriously ill thousands of miles from his home and family. On the homeward leg of the tour, the band stops off to play shows in Dubai and Bahrain, the latter arising from Clapton's friendship with Crown Prince Salman. It's a revealing glimpse of the rarefied world that the superstar guitarist inhabits, compared to lesser mortals - including his sidemen, whose regrets at EC's looming retirement are invariably accompanied by observations that they are in no condition to do likewise. Eric and Salman apparently first met at one of Jackie Stewart's shoots (guns, not films), and just as Stewart had persuaded the Crown Prince to build an F1 racing circuit to host Grands Prix, so Clapton suggested that he should erect an auditorium for the guitarist to perform in. Salman's generosity, it transpires, goes even further: he's had Clapton's Japanese personal assistant Aki secretly flown over with Eric's favourite chef and three cases of special meats and mushrooms, to re-create the Teppanyaki Grill backstage. It's great to be the king, eh? Andy Gill

A look inside Slowhand’s [possible] farewell…

“If I don’t do it, I get cravings to come out and do it,” says Eric Clapton at the start of the ungainly-titled but revealing Planes, Trains And Eric. Three or four decades ago, that might have referred to one of several corrosive indulgences, but the only addiction faced now is that of playing music live, amongst a mutually supportive group of players.

Which rather calls into question the rumours, confirmed here by his manager Peter Jackson, that Clapton planned to quit touring when he turned 70. “I’ve been saying this since I was 18 years old,” the guitarist chuckles when asked about retirement. “I retired when I left The Yardbirds – I was out, I wasn’t going to do this anymore.” Back then, his retreat was prompted by purism, by his belief that nobody else wanted to do things his way, that they were more concerned with grasping for the gold ring of pop and fame. But now, he confides, he’s happy enough just rehearsing, without the need to perform. “I get quite resentful about the audiences coming in,” he admits, “because they add a different dynamic.” And there’s the sheer physical demands of touring to contend with: as he revealed to Uncut recently, decades of hefting heavy guitars has given him recurrent back problems, which place limitations on his playing ability – and he’s the kind of perfectionist that wouldn’t want to perform below his peak.

Accordingly, as Eric grew nearer his planned cut-off date, Jackson asked him to decide where in the world he would most prefer to play, given that the next tour could well be his last. Clapton was unequivocal: Japan. It has, he explains, always been his favourite tour stop, a “spiritual place” with kind, accommodating people and an aesthetic sensibility that appeals strongly to his interest in design. He likes the food, he likes the creative stimulation, he likes the way that the Japanese can be attentive without being overbearing – he marvels, for instance, at the way nobody bumps into you when you walk down the street, everybody giving everybody else their personal space. At one point, reflecting upon his friendship with his long-time Japanese promoter Mr. Udo, Clapton muses upon the shared honour systems of British and Japanese culture, our chivalric code paralleled by the Japanese code of bushido.

Which is why this possibly final tour documentary tracks the guitarist across the Far East, lingering longest in the Land of the Rising Sun, with concert footage interspersed with band and associate interviews and backstage footage. His band for this jaunt is as top-drawer as you’d expect: Steve Gadd on drums, Nathan East on bass, Chris Stainton on piano, Paul Carrack on organ and vocals, and Michelle John and Shar White on backing vocals – a resilient outfit capable of accommodating whatever turns a song might take, allowing the guitarist to give free rein to his muse. The Layla highlight “Tell The Truth” is a relaxed, funky gospel-rock throwback on which Stainton’s presence strengthens memories of a time when Clapton played alongside the likes of Leon Russell and Delaney & Bonnie. “Crossroads” is similarly unhurried, with Eric’s vocal echoed soulfully by the backing singers, and compact solos from Stainton, Carrack and Clapton. And Charles Brown’s “Driftin'” is beautifully played on a gorgeous blue acoustic with a lustrous tone, the camera going in close on Clapton’s fingering as he delicately wrests quiet emotion from its strings.

The guitarist’s long association with Japan is confirmed when he is presented with a guitar-shaped crystal award backstage at the Budokan, marking that night’s show as Clapton’s 200th Japanese concert. Mr. Udo gives a little speech, and in return, Eric thanks him for his enduring friendship, even when he was being a bad boy. “I think you had to work hard to be a bad boy too,” he smiles, recalling a fishing trip the pair had made decades ago. That night, the show includes an elegant version of Robert Johnson‘s “Little Queen Of Spades” featuring a coruscating Clapton solo, and an acoustic “Layla” prefaced by an extemporised lower-string preamble. Later on, returning from Japan, he reveals that whilst there he was stricken with some virus and had to be treated with antibiotics. It’s another reminder of the depradations of age and health that have prompted serious thoughts of retirement. As Clapton admits, he would hate to be taken seriously ill thousands of miles from his home and family.

On the homeward leg of the tour, the band stops off to play shows in Dubai and Bahrain, the latter arising from Clapton’s friendship with Crown Prince Salman. It’s a revealing glimpse of the rarefied world that the superstar guitarist inhabits, compared to lesser mortals – including his sidemen, whose regrets at EC’s looming retirement are invariably accompanied by observations that they are in no condition to do likewise. Eric and Salman apparently first met at one of Jackie Stewart’s shoots (guns, not films), and just as Stewart had persuaded the Crown Prince to build an F1 racing circuit to host Grands Prix, so Clapton suggested that he should erect an auditorium for the guitarist to perform in. Salman’s generosity, it transpires, goes even further: he’s had Clapton’s Japanese personal assistant Aki secretly flown over with Eric’s favourite chef and three cases of special meats and mushrooms, to re-create the Teppanyaki Grill backstage. It’s great to be the king, eh?

Andy Gill

Hear unreleased Bob Dylan track, “Dress It Up, Better Have It All”

0

The Basement Tapes Complete will be released on November 4... A previously-unreleased Bob Dylan track dating back to the late 1960s is now available to listen online. The song, entitled "Dress It Up, Better Have It All", features on Dylan's upcoming six-disc set, The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11. The Basement Tapes Complete will feature 138 songs. A special two disc edition - The Basement Tapes Raw: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 - features 38 songs. According to a press release by Dylan's label, Columbia Records, "The Basement Tapes Complete brings together, for the first time ever, every salvageable recording from the tapes including recently discovered early gems recorded in the "Red Room" of Dylan's home in upstate New York. Garth Hudson worked closely with Canadian music archivist and producer Jan Haust to restore the deteriorating tapes to pristine sound, with much of this music preserved digitally for the first time. "The decision was made to present The Basement Tapes Complete as intact as possible. Also, unlike the official 1975 release, these performances are presented as close as possible to the way they were originally recorded and sounded back in the summer of 1967. The tracks on The Basement Tapes Complete run in mostly chronological order based on Garth Hudson's numbering system." "Dress It Up, Better Have It All", is now streaming ahead of the album's November 4 release. Click below to listen.

The Basement Tapes Complete will be released on November 4…

A previously-unreleased Bob Dylan track dating back to the late 1960s is now available to listen online.

The song, entitled “Dress It Up, Better Have It All“, features on Dylan’s upcoming six-disc set, The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11.

The Basement Tapes Complete will feature 138 songs. A special two disc edition – The Basement Tapes Raw: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 – features 38 songs.

According to a press release by Dylan’s label, Columbia Records, “The Basement Tapes Complete brings together, for the first time ever, every salvageable recording from the tapes including recently discovered early gems recorded in the “Red Room” of Dylan’s home in upstate New York. Garth Hudson worked closely with Canadian music archivist and producer Jan Haust to restore the deteriorating tapes to pristine sound, with much of this music preserved digitally for the first time.

“The decision was made to present The Basement Tapes Complete as intact as possible. Also, unlike the official 1975 release, these performances are presented as close as possible to the way they were originally recorded and sounded back in the summer of 1967. The tracks on The Basement Tapes Complete run in mostly chronological order based on Garth Hudson’s numbering system.”

“Dress It Up, Better Have It All”, is now streaming ahead of the album’s November 4 release. Click below to listen.

Tom Waits writes poem for Captain Beefheart

0

Work features in sleevenotes for new Beefheart box... Tom Waits has written a poem dedicated to Captain Beefheart. "Don Is Like The Bones In A Watermelon" will feature in the sleeve notes for a new four-disc Beefheart collection, Sun Zoom Spark: 1970 To 1972. You can read the poem below. Sun Zoom Spark: 1970 To 1972 is released by Rhino on November 10, and includes the albums Lick My Decals Off, Baby, The Spotlight Kid and Clear Spot, which have been remastered for the first time, as well as an entire disc featuring 14 previously unissued outtakes from that era. Waits is a long-term fan of Beefheart - aka Don Van Vliet. Following Van Vliet's death on December 17, 2010, Waits told the Los Angeles Times: "He was like the scout on a wagon train. He was the one who goes ahead and shows the way. He was a demanding bandleader, a transcendental composer (with emphasis on the dental), up there with Ornette [Coleman], Sun Ra and Miles [Davis]. He drew in the air with a burnt stick. He described the indescribable. He’s an underground stream and a big yellow blimp. "I will miss talking to him on the phone. We would describe what we saw out of our windows. He was a rememberer. He was the only one who thought to bring matches. He’s the alpha and the omega. The high water mark. He’s gone and he won’t be back." Here's Waits poem in full: NOW DON IS LIKE THE BONES IN A WATERMELON OR THE SEEDS IN A FISH AND YOU CAN SEE HIM THROUGH THE BLUE SMOKE OF A TRAMPS FIRE IS HE STILL IN 1129 AT THE DAVENPORT HOTEL IN SILO, MISSOURI? NO...YOU SEE MY FRIEND YOU WILL NOT FIND HIM THERE. HE CAME FROM THE CLAY AND HE HAS GONE BACK...LIKE RATS, LIKE RAVENS ROOKS, AND COAL BLACK ROSES...SHARKS, SHADOWS, SHOES AND SHEEP. HE IS NOW LIKE THE PLACE ON THE COUNTER, WORN AWAY FROM YEARS OF MAKING CHANGE. HE IS NOW A SIREN IN THE NEXT TOWN OVER...ONLY HIS TAIL IS STICKING OUT OF THE GROUND. DON, HE WAS A GIANT AND HE WALKED AMONG US ON THIS EARTH, NOW LONG GONE... HE HAS GONE BACK INTO THE FROGS CROAKING THROAT... LISTEN, IN THE DESERT THERE IS A FORK STUCK IN A TREE... PUT YOUR EAR UP TO IT AND THUMP IT, BOW IT, SWALLOW THE SOUND AND THEN GROW IT... DON SEEMS TO BE TELLING US ALL...DO NOT FOLLOW HIM JUST TAKE WHAT CLUES HE LEFT AND WITH THEM, GO AND BUILD A STRANGE HOME OF YOUR OWN The Sun Zoom Spark: 1970 To 1972 box set can be pre-ordered here. The tracklisting for Sun Zoom Spark: 1970 To 1972 is: Lick My Decals Off, Baby (October 1970) 1. "Lick My Decals Off, Baby" 2. "Doctor Dark" 3. "I Love You, You Big Dummy" 4. "Peon" 5. "Bellerin' Plain" 6. "Woe-Is-uh-Me-Bop" 7. "Japan in a Dishpan" 8. "I Wanna Find a Woman That'll Hold My Big Toe Till I Have To Go" 9. "Petrified Forest" 10. "One Red Rose That I Mean" 11. "The Buggy Boogie Woogie" 12. "The Smithsonian Institute Blues (or the Big Dig)" 13. "Space-Age Couple" 14. "The Clouds Are Full of Wine (not Whiskey or Rye)" 15. "Flash Gordon's Ape" The Spotlight Kid (January 1972) 1. "I'm Gonna Booglarize You Baby" 2. "White Jam" 3. "Blabber 'n Smoke" 4. "When It Blows Its Stacks" 5. "Alice in Blunderland" 6. "The Spotlight Kid" 7. "Click Clack" 8. "Grow Fins" 9. "There Ain't No Santa Claus on the Evenin' Stage" 10. "Glider" Clear Spot (November 1972) 1. "Low Yo Yo Stuff" 2. "Nowadays a Woman's Gotta Hit a Man" 3. "Too Much Time" 4. "Circumstances" 5. "My Head Is My Only House Unless It Rains" 6. "Sun Zoom Spark" 7. "Clear Spot" 8. "Crazy Little Thing" 9. "Long Neck Bottles" 10. "Her Eyes Are a Blue Million Miles" 11. "Big Eyed Beans from Venus" 12. "Golden Birdies" Out-takes 1. "Alice in Blunderland" - Alternate Version 2. "Harry Irene" 3. "I Can't Do This Unless I Can Do This/Seam Crooked Sam" 4. "Pompadour Swamp/Suction Prints" 5. "The Witch Doctor Life" - Instrumental Take 6. "Two Rips in a Haystack/Kiss Me My Love" 7. "Best Batch Yet" - (Track) Version 1 8. "Your Love Brought Me To Life" - Instrumental 9. "Dirty Blue Gene" - Alternate Version 1 10. "Nowadays a Woman's Gotta Hit a Man" - Early Mix 11. "Kiss Where I Kain't" 12. "Circumstances" - Alternate Version 2 13. "Little Scratch" 14. "Dirty Blue Gene" - Alternate Version 3

Work features in sleevenotes for new Beefheart box…

Tom Waits has written a poem dedicated to Captain Beefheart.

Don Is Like The Bones In A Watermelon” will feature in the sleeve notes for a new four-disc Beefheart collection, Sun Zoom Spark: 1970 To 1972.

You can read the poem below.

Sun Zoom Spark: 1970 To 1972 is released by Rhino on November 10, and includes the albums Lick My Decals Off, Baby, The Spotlight Kid and Clear Spot, which have been remastered for the first time, as well as an entire disc featuring 14 previously unissued outtakes from that era.

Waits is a long-term fan of Beefheart – aka Don Van Vliet.

Following Van Vliet’s death on December 17, 2010, Waits told the Los Angeles Times: “He was like the scout on a wagon train. He was the one who goes ahead and shows the way. He was a demanding bandleader, a transcendental composer (with emphasis on the dental), up there with Ornette [Coleman], Sun Ra and Miles [Davis]. He drew in the air with a burnt stick. He described the indescribable. He’s an underground stream and a big yellow blimp.

“I will miss talking to him on the phone. We would describe what we saw out of our windows. He was a rememberer. He was the only one who thought to bring matches. He’s the alpha and the omega. The high water mark. He’s gone and he won’t be back.”

Here’s Waits poem in full:

NOW DON IS LIKE THE BONES IN A WATERMELON

OR THE SEEDS IN A FISH AND YOU CAN SEE HIM

THROUGH THE BLUE SMOKE OF A TRAMPS FIRE

IS HE STILL IN 1129 AT THE DAVENPORT HOTEL

IN SILO, MISSOURI? NO…YOU SEE MY FRIEND YOU

WILL NOT FIND HIM THERE. HE CAME FROM THE CLAY

AND HE HAS GONE BACK…LIKE RATS, LIKE RAVENS

ROOKS, AND COAL BLACK ROSES…SHARKS, SHADOWS,

SHOES AND SHEEP. HE IS NOW LIKE THE PLACE ON

THE COUNTER, WORN AWAY FROM YEARS OF MAKING CHANGE.

HE IS NOW A SIREN IN THE NEXT TOWN OVER…ONLY HIS

TAIL IS STICKING OUT OF THE GROUND.

DON, HE WAS A GIANT AND HE WALKED AMONG US ON THIS

EARTH, NOW LONG GONE…

HE HAS GONE BACK INTO THE FROGS CROAKING THROAT…

LISTEN, IN THE DESERT THERE IS A FORK STUCK IN A TREE…

PUT YOUR EAR UP TO IT AND THUMP IT, BOW IT, SWALLOW THE

SOUND AND THEN GROW IT…

DON SEEMS TO BE TELLING US ALL…DO NOT FOLLOW HIM

JUST TAKE WHAT CLUES HE LEFT AND WITH THEM, GO AND BUILD

A STRANGE HOME OF YOUR OWN

The Sun Zoom Spark: 1970 To 1972 box set can be pre-ordered here.

The tracklisting for Sun Zoom Spark: 1970 To 1972 is:

Lick My Decals Off, Baby (October 1970)

1. “Lick My Decals Off, Baby”

2. “Doctor Dark”

3. “I Love You, You Big Dummy”

4. “Peon”

5. “Bellerin’ Plain”

6. “Woe-Is-uh-Me-Bop”

7. “Japan in a Dishpan”

8. “I Wanna Find a Woman That’ll Hold My Big Toe Till I Have To Go”

9. “Petrified Forest”

10. “One Red Rose That I Mean”

11. “The Buggy Boogie Woogie”

12. “The Smithsonian Institute Blues (or the Big Dig)”

13. “Space-Age Couple”

14. “The Clouds Are Full of Wine (not Whiskey or Rye)”

15. “Flash Gordon’s Ape”

The Spotlight Kid (January 1972)

1. “I’m Gonna Booglarize You Baby”

2. “White Jam”

3. “Blabber ‘n Smoke”

4. “When It Blows Its Stacks”

5. “Alice in Blunderland”

6. “The Spotlight Kid”

7. “Click Clack”

8. “Grow Fins”

9. “There Ain’t No Santa Claus on the Evenin’ Stage”

10. “Glider”

Clear Spot (November 1972)

1. “Low Yo Yo Stuff”

2. “Nowadays a Woman’s Gotta Hit a Man”

3. “Too Much Time”

4. “Circumstances”

5. “My Head Is My Only House Unless It Rains”

6. “Sun Zoom Spark”

7. “Clear Spot”

8. “Crazy Little Thing”

9. “Long Neck Bottles”

10. “Her Eyes Are a Blue Million Miles”

11. “Big Eyed Beans from Venus”

12. “Golden Birdies”

Out-takes

1. “Alice in Blunderland” – Alternate Version

2. “Harry Irene”

3. “I Can’t Do This Unless I Can Do This/Seam Crooked Sam”

4. “Pompadour Swamp/Suction Prints”

5. “The Witch Doctor Life” – Instrumental Take

6. “Two Rips in a Haystack/Kiss Me My Love”

7. “Best Batch Yet” – (Track) Version 1

8. “Your Love Brought Me To Life” – Instrumental

9. “Dirty Blue Gene” – Alternate Version 1

10. “Nowadays a Woman’s Gotta Hit a Man” – Early Mix

11. “Kiss Where I Kain’t”

12. “Circumstances” – Alternate Version 2

13. “Little Scratch”

14. “Dirty Blue Gene” – Alternate Version 3

The 39th Uncut Playlist Of 2014

0

A lot to get through here, but I'm indebted once more to the resource that is www.nyctaper.com, who this week have posted two amazing live sets by Steve Gunn and Ryley Walker. Elsewhere, there's a new Waterboys track to check out, plus something from the Rhyton LP I listed last week, more Greek-tinged jams from Jim White and George Xylouris, and our stream of the great Bruce Langhorne "Hired Hand" soundtrack. I like the new Bowie song, too. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Loscil - Sea Island (Kranky) 2 Loscil - Sketches From New Brighton (Kranky) 3 David Bowie - Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime) (Parlophone) 4 Rhyton - Kykeon (Thrill Jockey) 5 [REDACTED] 6 Thom Yorke - Tomorrow's Modern Boxes (Bittorrent!) Read my review of " Tomorrow's Modern Boxes" here… 7 [REDACTED] 8 Steve Gunn - Way Out Weather (Paradise Of Bachelors) Read my review of Steve Gunn's "Way Out Weather" here… 9 LFO - We Are Back (Warp) 10 Bitchin' Bajas - Bitchin' Bajas (Drag City) 11 The Waterboys - Modern Blues (Harlequin And Clown) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_4EhpohXNQ 12 David Bowie - Nothing Has Changed (Parlophone) 13 Terry Reid - River (BGO) 14 AC/DC - Play Ball (Columbia) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HGD3dJ52vsI 15 Kendrick Lamar - I (Interscope) 16 Antemasque - Antemasque (Nadie Sound) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=avcE90WXEcE 17 Xylouris White - Goats (Other Music Recording Co) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rQipk3cH-SI 18 Bruce Springsteen - The Wild, The Innocent and The E Street Shuffle (Columbia) 19 Fennesz - Bécs (Editions Mego) 20 Rag Lore - Misr Environs: Cairo Road Recordings And Other Half Truths (Cabin Floor Esoterica) 21 Bruce Langhorne. - The Hired Hand (Scissor Tail) Hear Uncut's stream of Bruce Langhorne's "Hired Hand" 22 King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard - I'm In Your Mind Fuzz (Heavenly/Castle Face) 23 Neil Young - Storytone (Reprise) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NkiRR3T_3NY 24 Steve Gunn - October 12, 2014 Rough Trade NYC (www.nyctaper.com) 25 The Necks - Aethenaeum, Homebush, Quay, And Raab (Fish Of Milk) 26 Ryley Walker: September 6, 2014 Hopscotch Music Festival, Fletcher Opera Theater, Raleigh, NC (www.nyctaper.com) 27 The Aphex Twin - Syro (Warp)

A lot to get through here, but I’m indebted once more to the resource that is www.nyctaper.com, who this week have posted two amazing live sets by Steve Gunn and Ryley Walker. Elsewhere, there’s a new Waterboys track to check out, plus something from the Rhyton LP I listed last week, more Greek-tinged jams from Jim White and George Xylouris, and our stream of the great Bruce Langhorne “Hired Hand” soundtrack. I like the new Bowie song, too.

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

1 Loscil – Sea Island (Kranky)

2 Loscil – Sketches From New Brighton (Kranky)

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

4 Rhyton – Kykeon (Thrill Jockey)

5 [REDACTED]

6 Thom Yorke – Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes (Bittorrent!)

Read my review of ” Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes” here…

7 [REDACTED]

8 Steve Gunn – Way Out Weather (Paradise Of Bachelors)

Read my review of Steve Gunn’s “Way Out Weather” here…

9 LFO – We Are Back (Warp)

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

11 The Waterboys – Modern Blues (Harlequin And Clown)

12 David Bowie – Nothing Has Changed (Parlophone)

13 Terry Reid – River (BGO)

14 AC/DC – Play Ball (Columbia)

15 Kendrick Lamar – I (Interscope)

16 Antemasque – Antemasque (Nadie Sound)

17 Xylouris White – Goats (Other Music Recording Co)

18 Bruce Springsteen – The Wild, The Innocent and The E Street Shuffle (Columbia)

19 Fennesz – Bécs (Editions Mego)

20 Rag Lore – Misr Environs: Cairo Road Recordings And Other Half Truths (Cabin Floor Esoterica)

21 Bruce Langhorne. – The Hired Hand (Scissor Tail)

Hear Uncut’s stream of Bruce Langhorne’s “Hired Hand”

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

23 Neil Young – Storytone (Reprise)

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

25 The Necks – Aethenaeum, Homebush, Quay, And Raab (Fish Of Milk)

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

27 The Aphex Twin – Syro (Warp)

First Look – Jimi: All Is By My Side

0

Of the recent slew of rock biopics, this Jimi Hendrix film is the one that seems to get it just about right. The traditional route followed by film makers tasked with bringing a life to the big screen is to attempt to cover the entire arc of a career. This cradle to the grave strategy often yields disappointment: there’s too little time to get into the grain of the characters and the need to condense a full life history into two hours ultimately favours brisk broad strokes rather than chunky, rewarding detail. Writer-director John Ridley – whose screenwriting credits include U-Turn, Three Kings and, most recently, 12 Years A Slave – jettisons this rather unwieldy strategy in favour of focussing on a transitional year in Hendrix’ life. As it transpires, this is a satisfying way of doing business. The year in question is 1966 – ’67, as Ridley charts Hendrix trajectory from playing with Curtis Knight & The Squires in New York’s Cheetah Club to headlining London’s Saville Theatre with Paul McCartney and George Harrison among the audience; less than two weeks later, Hendrix was on a plane to the Monterey Pop Festival. Ridley, in the first instance, has on significant problem: the Hendrix Estate have no given permission for any of Hendrix’ music to be used in the film. Ridley gets round it by using clips from Hendrix’ cover (“Wild Thing”, etc) or, in the case of the Saville Theatre show, by filming the Jimi Hendrix Experience covering “Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Heart’s Club Band” in its entirety, as they did at the gig. Perhaps wisely, Ridley doesn’t attempt to explain Hendrix’ mercurial gifts; instead he concentrates firstly on Hendrix’ relationship with the two women who helped break Hendrix in the UK and, secondly, by exploring the times themselves. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-KPOxqMazI The two woman are Linda Keith (Imogen Poots), the 20-year old British model who became his unlikely svengali and brought him to the attention of his future manager, Chas Chandler; and Kathy Etchingham (Hayley Atwell), his girlfriend during his British sojourn. Both Poots and Atwell are excellent – the former wise and poised but increasingly drained by Hendrix, while the latter a rawer, more passionate presence. As Hendrix, Andre Benjamin captures Hendrix’ feline gracefulness, but also a more infuriating aspect: he can be both remarkably clued up and curiously naïve, both passive and stubborn. There is a selfishness, too, about him, that he is motivated only by the things he’s interested in and less concerned with the thoughts or feelings of those around him. Ridley – directing for the first time here – also does much good work in depicting Sixties’ London. He finds the place in transition: Corrie on the TV, Salvation Army bands in the park, racist policeman and grubby, sooty streets. The evidence of Swinging London in the Summer of Love is scant; it is, we discern, really only a few people – the rock star elite and their associated – who are enjoying the benefits of being tuned in and turned on. The Regent Street Polytechnic, where Hendrix joins Cream on stage, is a grubby, flyblown hall, the band squeezed in at the end of the room. There is little sense of history being made, or myths taking shape here. It's just a lot of sitting around in clubs and hanging out, giving the film a meandering Altmanesque vibe that's entirely to its credit. Jimi: All Is By My Side opens in the UK on October 24

Of the recent slew of rock biopics, this Jimi Hendrix film is the one that seems to get it just about right.

The traditional route followed by film makers tasked with bringing a life to the big screen is to attempt to cover the entire arc of a career. This cradle to the grave strategy often yields disappointment: there’s too little time to get into the grain of the characters and the need to condense a full life history into two hours ultimately favours brisk broad strokes rather than chunky, rewarding detail. Writer-director John Ridley – whose screenwriting credits include U-Turn, Three Kings and, most recently, 12 Years A Slave – jettisons this rather unwieldy strategy in favour of focussing on a transitional year in Hendrix’ life. As it transpires, this is a satisfying way of doing business. The year in question is 1966 – ’67, as Ridley charts Hendrix trajectory from playing with Curtis Knight & The Squires in New York’s Cheetah Club to headlining London’s Saville Theatre with Paul McCartney and George Harrison among the audience; less than two weeks later, Hendrix was on a plane to the Monterey Pop Festival.

Ridley, in the first instance, has on significant problem: the Hendrix Estate have no given permission for any of Hendrix’ music to be used in the film. Ridley gets round it by using clips from Hendrix’ cover (“Wild Thing”, etc) or, in the case of the Saville Theatre show, by filming the Jimi Hendrix Experience covering “Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Heart’s Club Band” in its entirety, as they did at the gig. Perhaps wisely, Ridley doesn’t attempt to explain Hendrix’ mercurial gifts; instead he concentrates firstly on Hendrix’ relationship with the two women who helped break Hendrix in the UK and, secondly, by exploring the times themselves.

The two woman are Linda Keith (Imogen Poots), the 20-year old British model who became his unlikely svengali and brought him to the attention of his future manager, Chas Chandler; and Kathy Etchingham (Hayley Atwell), his girlfriend during his British sojourn. Both Poots and Atwell are excellent – the former wise and poised but increasingly drained by Hendrix, while the latter a rawer, more passionate presence. As Hendrix, Andre Benjamin captures Hendrix’ feline gracefulness, but also a more infuriating aspect: he can be both remarkably clued up and curiously naïve, both passive and stubborn. There is a selfishness, too, about him, that he is motivated only by the things he’s interested in and less concerned with the thoughts or feelings of those around him.

Ridley – directing for the first time here – also does much good work in depicting Sixties’ London. He finds the place in transition: Corrie on the TV, Salvation Army bands in the park, racist policeman and grubby, sooty streets. The evidence of Swinging London in the Summer of Love is scant; it is, we discern, really only a few people – the rock star elite and their associated – who are enjoying the benefits of being tuned in and turned on. The Regent Street Polytechnic, where Hendrix joins Cream on stage, is a grubby, flyblown hall, the band squeezed in at the end of the room. There is little sense of history being made, or myths taking shape here. It’s just a lot of sitting around in clubs and hanging out, giving the film a meandering Altmanesque vibe that’s entirely to its credit.

Jimi: All Is By My Side opens in the UK on October 24

The Making Of… Suede’s The Drowners

0
Suede’s second album, Dog Man Star, is released on Monday (October 20) as an expansive 20th-anniversary super-deluxe boxset, so we thought we’d dig out this piece from Uncut’s July 2012 issue (Take 182), where Brett Anderson, Bernard Butler, Ed Buller, Mat Osman and Simon Gilbert remember the ...

Suede’s second album, Dog Man Star, is released on Monday (October 20) as an expansive 20th-anniversary super-deluxe boxset, so we thought we’d dig out this piece from Uncut’s July 2012 issue (Take 182), where Brett Anderson, Bernard Butler, Ed Buller, Mat Osman and Simon Gilbert remember the creation of Suede’s debut single. Inspired by glam and “engorged flesh”, it earned the band celebrity fans and a record deal, and helped change the course of ’90s indie… Words: John Robinson

______________

For Suede, it was, in many ways, the worst of times. Singer Brett Anderson had broken up with girlfriend Justine Frischmann, losing along the way his residence in her plush Kensington flat, and her hustle as ersatz band manager.

It was also the best of times. In his new, meaner lodgings in London’s seamier Westbourne Park, Anderson made a giant leap forward as a writer, shedding his Momus-indebted flourishes for a new style of lyrics that romantically recast his own penurious lifestyle. He grew closer to guitarist Bernard Butler, and their songwriting partnership gave up its first real fruits.

“When someone is going out with someone in the band and they’re going home together you can never break that down,” remembers Butler. “Brett was a hidden character behind Justine. So when that ended, that’s when we started writing good things together. Justine lent me the money for a Les Paul, for which I’m eternally grateful.”

Suede had been ignored in their first incarnation. Now, revelling in this anonymity, the definitive lineup began to develop their personality and present it in their songs.

“We started to see ourselves as a little force,” says Butler. “We used to say, ‘We have the power’, like from Bowie’s ‘Quicksand’. It didn’t matter what anybody else thought, as long as you had hold of this thing called The Power.”

Equipped with this Crowley-derived mantra, Suede began working in a Hackney rehearsal room on their new, glam-inspired sound. They recorded a three-track demo, and offered it to the music business. One small corner of the music business listened, and, with Morrissey and Blur looking on, an underclass anthem was born.

______________

Mat Osman (bass): “The Drowners” was from the first batch of stuff we did that sounded fully formed and not like what we had been doing before at all – it had weird edges to it that other stuff we had written didn’t. The stuff we’d been doing before was… Smithsier. But “The Drowners” doesn’t jangle at all.

Brett Anderson (vocals): Me and Bernard were starting to click as songwriters when we wrote “The Drowners”. We thought it was a pretty amazing song, and we demoed it and “To The Birds” (and “My Insatiable One”, at Rocking Horse Studios in South London) and sent it to people in the record industry. No-one was particularly interested [laughs]. We were quite shunned early on, with exactly the same material that we were later hailed for, which was quite a strange situation.

Bernard Butler (guitar): Justine left the band in the middle of 1991. The whole thing with Justine was a massive slap round the face for Brett, in creatively a very positive way. He started singing in a different way and we dropped all our material. We would cancel rehearsals until we had a brilliant song – then we’d go to rehearsal with one song and play it for four hours. Then we’d record it and go home.

Osman: Justine had more money than the rest of us put together, so we were OK for rehearsing and stuff like that. “The Drowners” was recorded when we were the most poor we’d ever been.

Anderson: “The Drowners” was a sort of celebration of that kind of lifestyle, I suppose… a drifting, stonery, specifically British lifestyle, wandering about roundabouts. That’s kind of how I spent much of the 1990s. There’s something deeply suspect about social tourism, but this was saying, “This is how I live, and I’m proud of it. I won’t join the rat race. I won’t be a puppet to advertising. I won’t buy into what society tells me to buy into. I’ll just live within my means.” There’s something quite pure and quite beautiful about that.

Osman: We took it to every record company and they were completely uninterested. We’d go out every night having written “The Drowners” and watch bands, thinking, ‘How the fuck are they signed and we’re not?’ And not really realising that cyclical thing that happens – that at that time every record company was looking for the next Ride.

Butler: I remember me and him [Anderson] used to walk round London at that time, like Withnail and I or something, thinking we were really fantastic. Actually looking like an absolute couple of pricks, with our Oxfam clothes. We really didn’t mean anything.

Osman: Signing to Nude [for a two-single deal] was the most fantastic feeling, after the voicelessness of it. Saul [Galpern, Nude records boss] and Ed [Buller, Suede producer] took you seriously and would talk about you in the same terms as your heroes. It’s tremendously empowering. Otherwise, you’re thinking, ‘Am I just being deluded?’ One of the reasons the records sound as confident and as joyful as they do is because we’d found those people – people who had seen great gigs and made great records.

Simon Gilbert (drums): Once we’d signed with Nude, we had EastWest after us… Once word got out you were signed, everyone started knocking on your door. We got flown over to LA by Geffen and then a couple of weeks later by Sony. It was a free for all. The best thing was that they would open the record cupboard for you after these meetings, and you’d leave with a bag full of free records.

Osman: Our main income for six months was getting free records from these record companies, then racing each other to the Record And Tape Exchange in Notting Hill. I remember going there with this Bruce Springsteen live boxset which we had got off Columbia and thinking, ‘Fucking hell, this is going to be worth thirty quid…’ I got in there and the guy said “Sorry mate, the rest of the band have been in first…” and seeing three of them up on the wall.

Ed Buller (producer): Suede were signed to a good friend of mine that I hadn’t seen for a while – Saul Galpern. I knew Saul when I worked at Island Records. He liked some stuff that I’d done since I left Island, so he rang me up. He didn’t have a lot of money but he knew that I was fairly proficient at doing quick little records fairly proficiently and on the cheap. He knew I was a big glam fan, so he said, “I think I’ve got a band that are right up your street.”

Anderson: I think Ed respected that the songs were very fully formed. It wasn’t a Frankie Goes To Hollywood situation. The songs sounded great when we played them live, and it was more of a question of capturing that and that vibe, and adding a few touches. He didn’t treat it as another scruffy record that nobody really cares about. We very much believed in the songs, and what the band was about and the spirit of the band. It was very special and kind of against the grain.

Butler: I really liked Ed, he was a great inspiration because he’s quite an ordinary kind of fella, but he had this depth of technical nous that I was desperate to mine. He was easy to take the piss out of and have a laugh with, and you need someone like that in a band. He got what I wanted to do. I had all the parts – we all did. We didn’t want to record live to prove we could play live, we wanted to make great pop records.

Buller: A massive thing for me was Bernard, because he was a proper virtuoso guitarist. I’ve known a few. I did a session with Eric Clapton about three years before that – he’s a nice bloke and he can play the guitar, but it isn’t my style of guitar playing. I just got Bernard straight away – I thought it was going to be so much fun. That was a big part of it: Bernard was very easygoing but analytical. What we didn’t want to do was make it a clone of a ’70s record, we wanted to visit it in a different way. The guitar parts were all showing off – it was like a fight for who was more important, the guitarist or the singer. At the end of the day, you know who’s going to win, but for a minute it was touch and go.

Anderson: “The Drowners” was a strong statement. No disrespect to anyone else, but I’ve always liked that “us and them”, it’s inspired me in my music tastes: growing up in the early 1980s there were lots of tribes in the playground, and I wanted Suede to be like that, a love-us-or-hate-us situation.

Buller: Brett, like a lot of great singers, put on a performance, an inflection, like David Bowie and Marc Bolan, a “singing voice”. If you imagine there’s a dial attached to a singer’s forehead that measures their mannerisms from low to extreme. I knew the only thing I had to do with Brett was to dial that down a bit. “She’s taking me over…” being an example. When we started on that, it was very extreme, because of the live thing, a way of getting the spotlight back on him. I know he looks back on some of those early recordings with a certain discomfort. I tell him he shouldn’t, as it made them so distinctive at the time. The only direction I ever gave Brett was “Dial it back a bit on that line…” He took it well. He trusted me.

Butler: The homoerotic references, it was something I had no knowledge of or interest in until people started talking to him about it in interviews. It hadn’t occurred to me that we were behaving in a camp sort of a way or anything like that. It wasn’t a homoerotic kind of thing. We behaved in quite an effeminate way because that was the kind of boys we’d grown up to be. Baggy had been quite macho, quite masculine. I didn’t see any homosexual references, it was just the way we were as people. We were happy to explore all aspects of who we were as people.

Anderson: It’s a very sensual sort of song, isn’t it, “The Drowners”? It’s got kind of sexual signposts which you can follow… at your peril, wherever you wanna go with it. I don’t really know what the fucking thing’s about. I don’t think any writer does, anyone who tells you what it’s about is misunderstanding their art. It’s a writer’s job to lead you somewhere, to offer flavours. It’s about a sort of desperate state of… flailing around in yards of engorged flesh. Of course, everything you write is from experience. But a song isn’t a book, isn’t a page from a diary. You’re taking the art in a different direction. It’s closer to poetry, though not as close as people think – you’re suggesting things and playing with words a lot of the time.

Osman: “The Drowners” was the Suede badge. I remember doing a Christmas show to four people, so selling out the Camden Falcon was like selling out Madison Square Garden. We don’t work well without an audience. That was the first time people were singing stuff back to us.

Anderson: When you first play gigs, there’s a “D”-shaped-space in front of the stage, which people don’t really dare to go in before the band is signed, because they’re frightened that they might infect them with their failure. But suddenly, there were people there. We played the Camden Falcon and Morrissey turned up and Suggs turned up, and there were people right in my face at the front of the stage. There wasn’t this… gulf of horror in front of me. It suddenly changed from four people standing at the back, to full-on hysteria. It was kind of wonderful.

Butler: I think it’s probably the best-sounding thing we ever did. It still sounds really raw and fresh and colourful. I’m proud of it – it didn’t sound like anybody else. We were very focused on making great records. We didn’t want to be successful. Our hearts were set on making something great.

Photo: Pat Pope

The Guess Who’s Randy Bachman: “Radio didn’t realise ‘American Woman’ was anti-war until it was too late – it was No 1”

0
The Guess Who take us through the making of their classic song, “American Woman”, in the new issue of Uncut, dated November 2014 (Take 210) and out now. The group explain how the No 1 song was written live on stage at a curling rank, how they may have narrowly missed being drafted to fight in...

The Guess Who take us through the making of their classic song, “American Woman”, in the new issue of Uncut, dated November 2014 (Take 210) and out now.

The group explain how the No 1 song was written live on stage at a curling rank, how they may have narrowly missed being drafted to fight in Vietnam, and how they performed it to Prince Charles but were advised not to play it at The White House.

“They wouldn’t play anti-war music [on the radio] in the States,” says Randy Bachman. “Because of our momentum with ‘These Eyes’ and ‘Laughing’, they played it anyway.

“And then they said, ‘I think they’re protesting the war, they’re singing “we don’t need your war machines…”’, but by then it was too late, it was a No 1 record.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

December 2014

0
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 ...

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 on sale from October 28.

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