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Extinct water pig with ‘tactile lips’ named after Mick Jagger

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An extinct 'water pig' with 'tactile lips' has been named after Mick Jagger. The 19-million-year-old anthracotheres - a species which has been likened to a kind of 'long-legged pig' - was named in honour of The Rolling Stones frontman because of its "tactile lips". Recently discovered in Egypt thanks to the finding of pieces of fossilised jaw, it has been named Jaggermeryx naida, which means 'Jagger's water nymph'. Associate professor at Wake University Ellen Miller co-authored the paper announcing the discovery in the Journal of Paleontology, revealing the naming of the species. "I'm a huge Stones fan," said Miller, adding that the creature's "highly innervated muzzle with mobile and tactile lips" reminded her of Jagger, reports The Guardian. "We imagine [the animal's] lifestyle was like that of a water deer, standing in water and foraging for plants along the river bank," added Miller. Meanwhile, the real life Mick Jagger is among more than 200 celebrities to sign an open letter urging Scottish voters to keep Scotland as part of the United Kingdom. An independence referendum will be held on September 18 which could see Scotland break away from the rest of the UK. The letter, which was organised by historians Dan Snow and Tom Holland, aims to let people in Scotland know that those who have endorsed the message "value the bond of citizenship" with those north of the border. The letter is part of the Let's Stay Together campaign that aims to give a voice to those who are not allowed to vote in the referendum. "We believe that the key missing message is a positive, emotional one: not telling the Scottish electorate what to do or what not to do, but telling them how we feel about Scotland, about being part of the UK and about our collective place in the world," Snow and Holland wrote on their website. Other notable Britons who have signed the bill include actors (Judi Dench, Helena Bonham Carter, Eddie Izzard, Patrick Stewart, Steve Coogan) and Olympians (Tom Daley, Steve Redgrave) plus David Attenborough, Stephen Hawking and Simon Cowell.

An extinct ‘water pig’ with ‘tactile lips’ has been named after Mick Jagger.

The 19-million-year-old anthracotheres – a species which has been likened to a kind of ‘long-legged pig’ – was named in honour of The Rolling Stones frontman because of its “tactile lips”. Recently discovered in Egypt thanks to the finding of pieces of fossilised jaw, it has been named Jaggermeryx naida, which means ‘Jagger’s water nymph’.

Associate professor at Wake University Ellen Miller co-authored the paper announcing the discovery in the Journal of Paleontology, revealing the naming of the species. “I’m a huge Stones fan,” said Miller, adding that the creature’s “highly innervated muzzle with mobile and tactile lips” reminded her of Jagger, reports The Guardian. “We imagine [the animal’s] lifestyle was like that of a water deer, standing in water and foraging for plants along the river bank,” added Miller.

Meanwhile, the real life Mick Jagger is among more than 200 celebrities to sign an open letter urging Scottish voters to keep Scotland as part of the United Kingdom. An independence referendum will be held on September 18 which could see Scotland break away from the rest of the UK. The letter, which was organised by historians Dan Snow and Tom Holland, aims to let people in Scotland know that those who have endorsed the message “value the bond of citizenship” with those north of the border.

The letter is part of the Let’s Stay Together campaign that aims to give a voice to those who are not allowed to vote in the referendum. “We believe that the key missing message is a positive, emotional one: not telling the Scottish electorate what to do or what not to do, but telling them how we feel about Scotland, about being part of the UK and about our collective place in the world,” Snow and Holland wrote on their website.

Other notable Britons who have signed the bill include actors (Judi Dench, Helena Bonham Carter, Eddie Izzard, Patrick Stewart, Steve Coogan) and Olympians (Tom Daley, Steve Redgrave) plus David Attenborough, Stephen Hawking and Simon Cowell.

Lykke Li reveals Bono told her she ‘blew everyone out of the water’ when recording with U2

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Lykke Li has claimed that Bono told her she "blew everyone out of the water" when she recorded vocals for U2's new album. The Swedish singer appears on the band's free album 'Songs of Innocence', contributing vocals on final track 'The Troubles'. Speaking to Rolling Stone, Lykke Li revealed details of the recording process and also the fact that Bono told her that 'Never Gonna Love Again' is his favourite song from her latest album 'I Never Learn'. "Bono was very kind," said Li - who explained that she recorded 'The Troubles' twice, first without the band and then again with them in the studio. "He was kind of like the quiet leader, instructing me how to sing in tune – which I usually don’t." "Mostly, they let me do my own thing," she continued, "but we tried different things like to whisper it to someone or to scream it to someone, but it was all about creating intimacy. We turned off all the music and sang only to the drums, so it was really getting to what the core of the song meant. I had a wonderful time." It was revealed yesterday (September 10) that free downloads of 'Songs Of Innocence' will be ineligible for the UK Albums Chart until it is released physically on October 13. The album is the band's first album since 2009's 'No Line On The Horizon' and was recorded with producers Danger Mouse, Flood, Paul Epworth and Ryan Tedder. It features a tribute to The Clash, 'This Is Where You Can Reach Me Now', as well as 'Iris (Hold Me Close)', a song about Bono's mother, who died when he was 14, while 'Raised By Wolves' is about a car bombing in Dublin. Bono has said of the record: "It has a lyrical cohesion that I think is unique among U2 albums. I don't want it to be a concept album, but the songs come from a place. Edge laughed and said this is our 'Quadrophenia'. We could be so lucky." The 'Songs Of Innocence' tracklisting is: 'The Miracle (Of Joey Ramone)' 'Every Breaking Wave' 'California (There Is No End To Love)' 'Song For Someone' 'Iris (Hold Me Close)' 'Volcano' 'Raised By Wolves' 'Cedarwood Road' 'Sleep Like A Baby Tonight' 'This Is Where You Can Read Me Now' 'The Troubles' Lykke Li is touring in November. Click here to buy tickets.

Lykke Li has claimed that Bono told her she “blew everyone out of the water” when she recorded vocals for U2’s new album.

The Swedish singer appears on the band’s free album ‘Songs of Innocence’, contributing vocals on final track ‘The Troubles’. Speaking to Rolling Stone, Lykke Li revealed details of the recording process and also the fact that Bono told her that ‘Never Gonna Love Again’ is his favourite song from her latest album ‘I Never Learn’.

“Bono was very kind,” said Li – who explained that she recorded ‘The Troubles’ twice, first without the band and then again with them in the studio. “He was kind of like the quiet leader, instructing me how to sing in tune – which I usually don’t.”

“Mostly, they let me do my own thing,” she continued, “but we tried different things like to whisper it to someone or to scream it to someone, but it was all about creating intimacy. We turned off all the music and sang only to the drums, so it was really getting to what the core of the song meant. I had a wonderful time.”

It was revealed yesterday (September 10) that free downloads of ‘Songs Of Innocence’ will be ineligible for the UK Albums Chart until it is released physically on October 13.

The album is the band’s first album since 2009’s ‘No Line On The Horizon’ and was recorded with producers Danger Mouse, Flood, Paul Epworth and Ryan Tedder. It features a tribute to The Clash, ‘This Is Where You Can Reach Me Now’, as well as ‘Iris (Hold Me Close)’, a song about Bono’s mother, who died when he was 14, while ‘Raised By Wolves’ is about a car bombing in Dublin.

Bono has said of the record: “It has a lyrical cohesion that I think is unique among U2 albums. I don’t want it to be a concept album, but the songs come from a place. Edge laughed and said this is our ‘Quadrophenia’. We could be so lucky.”

The ‘Songs Of Innocence’ tracklisting is:

‘The Miracle (Of Joey Ramone)’

‘Every Breaking Wave’

‘California (There Is No End To Love)’

‘Song For Someone’

‘Iris (Hold Me Close)’

‘Volcano’

‘Raised By Wolves’

‘Cedarwood Road’

‘Sleep Like A Baby Tonight’

‘This Is Where You Can Read Me Now’

‘The Troubles’

Lykke Li is touring in November. Click here to buy tickets.

The 34th Uncut Playlist Of 2014

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Thanks for all the nice feedback about the Liam Hayes/Plush piece I wrote earlier in the week. Lots of other good new arrivals in the list here, and you could do worse than start off by listening to the Cool Ghouls from San Francisco, especially if you're interested in the Allah-Las, the Ty Segall axis, Nuggets ad nauseam and so on. Meatbodies, meanwhile, are part of that Segall axis, sharing personnel with The Fuzz and Mikal Cronin's band, so you can guess pretty much how that one's going to sound. Please also take note of a new Neil Young track, give Julian Casablancas and Ariel Pink a chance, and check out Mirage, a sort of one-man teenage Grizzly Bear. Also, two terrific comps to recommend from Ace: "Where Country Meets Soul Volume 3" (that Ralph 'Soul' Jackson version of "Jambalaya" is mindblowing) and, especially, the Cosimo Matassa one from R&B. Perhaps it goes without saying this week, but not everything on my playlist comes with an unequivocal endorsement. Maybe a few of you have felt similarly these past two or three days? Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Liam Hayes & Plush - Korp Sole Roller (Bandcamp) 2 Liam Hayes & Plush - One Way Out (Soundcloud) 3 Deerhoof - La Isla Bonita (Upset The Rhythm) 4 Tindersticks - In Flanders Fields Museum Soundscapes (City Slang) 5 Meatbodies - Meatbodies (In The Red) 6 Scott Walker & Sunn O))) - Soused (4AD) 7 TV On The Radio - Happy Idiot (Sony) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tv3RgbA2UTo 8 Cave - Release (Drag City) 9 The See See - Once, Forever And Again (Dell'Orso) 10 Cool Ghouls - A Swirling Fire Burning Through The Rye (Empty Cellar) 11 H Hawkline - Salt Gall Box Ghouls (Heavenly) 12 [REDACTED] 13 Ariel Pink - Pom Pom (4AD) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ay3RO0MgwmM 14 Julian Casablancas + The Voidz - Tyranny (Cult) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8k3qB61lhk 15 Dean Blunt - Black Metal (Rough Trade) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQfwPziK-SA 16 [REDACTED] 17 U2 - Songs Of Innocence (iTunes) 18 Neil Young - Who's Gonna Stand Up (www.neilyoung.com) 19 Jordan De La Sierra - Gymnosphere: Song Of The Rose (Numero Group) 20 Various Artists - Cracking The Cosimo Code: '60s New Orleans R&B And Soul (Ace) 21 Duke Ellington - My People (Boplicity) 22 Various Artists - Cold Cold Heart: Where Country Meets Soul Volume 3 (Kent) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdQ_J24RgBw 23 Richard Dawson - Nothing Important (Weird World) 24 John McLaughlin - My Goal's Beyond (Douglas) 25 Greylag - Greylag (Dead Oceans) 26 The Flaming Lips - With A Little Help From My Fwends (Bella Union) 27 The Voyeurs - Rhubarb Rhubarb (Heavenly) 28 Mirage - Blood For The Return (Olde English Spelling Bee/Weird World)

Thanks for all the nice feedback about the Liam Hayes/Plush piece I wrote earlier in the week. Lots of other good new arrivals in the list here, and you could do worse than start off by listening to the Cool Ghouls from San Francisco, especially if you’re interested in the Allah-Las, the Ty Segall axis, Nuggets ad nauseam and so on.

Meatbodies, meanwhile, are part of that Segall axis, sharing personnel with The Fuzz and Mikal Cronin’s band, so you can guess pretty much how that one’s going to sound. Please also take note of a new Neil Young track, give Julian Casablancas and Ariel Pink a chance, and check out Mirage, a sort of one-man teenage Grizzly Bear. Also, two terrific comps to recommend from Ace: “Where Country Meets Soul Volume 3” (that Ralph ‘Soul’ Jackson version of “Jambalaya” is mindblowing) and, especially, the Cosimo Matassa one from R&B.

Perhaps it goes without saying this week, but not everything on my playlist comes with an unequivocal endorsement. Maybe a few of you have felt similarly these past two or three days?

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

1 Liam Hayes & Plush – Korp Sole Roller (Bandcamp)

2 Liam Hayes & Plush – One Way Out (Soundcloud)

3 Deerhoof – La Isla Bonita (Upset The Rhythm)

4 Tindersticks – In Flanders Fields Museum Soundscapes (City Slang)

5 Meatbodies – Meatbodies (In The Red)

6 Scott Walker & Sunn O))) – Soused (4AD)

7 TV On The Radio – Happy Idiot (Sony)

8 Cave – Release (Drag City)

9 The See See – Once, Forever And Again (Dell’Orso)

10 Cool Ghouls – A Swirling Fire Burning Through The Rye (Empty Cellar)

11 H Hawkline – Salt Gall Box Ghouls (Heavenly)

12 [REDACTED]

13 Ariel Pink – Pom Pom (4AD)

14 Julian Casablancas + The Voidz – Tyranny (Cult)

15 Dean Blunt – Black Metal (Rough Trade)

16 [REDACTED]

17 U2 – Songs Of Innocence (iTunes)

18 Neil Young – Who’s Gonna Stand Up (www.neilyoung.com)

19 Jordan De La Sierra – Gymnosphere: Song Of The Rose (Numero Group)

20 Various Artists – Cracking The Cosimo Code: ’60s New Orleans R&B And Soul (Ace)

21 Duke Ellington – My People (Boplicity)

22 Various Artists – Cold Cold Heart: Where Country Meets Soul Volume 3 (Kent)

23 Richard Dawson – Nothing Important (Weird World)

24 John McLaughlin – My Goal’s Beyond (Douglas)

25 Greylag – Greylag (Dead Oceans)

26 The Flaming Lips – With A Little Help From My Fwends (Bella Union)

27 The Voyeurs – Rhubarb Rhubarb (Heavenly)

28 Mirage – Blood For The Return (Olde English Spelling Bee/Weird World)

Robert Plant: “I’m the sorcerer’s apprentice, waving my enthusiasm around…”

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Robert Plant explains the writing and recording process for his new album, lullaby and… The Ceaseless Roar, in the new issue of Uncut, dated October 2014 and out now. The singer discusses the record, his need to “believe in” his albums and his current band, the Sensational Space Shifters. ...

Robert Plant explains the writing and recording process for his new album, lullaby and… The Ceaseless Roar, in the new issue of Uncut, dated October 2014 and out now.

The singer discusses the record, his need to “believe in” his albums and his current band, the Sensational Space Shifters.

“We as musicians,” says Plant, “at this point in time and hopefully for a good time to come, have a partnership that brings in a lot of creativity from all sides.

“That allows me to be the sorcerer’s apprentice in a way, waving my enthusiasm around, if you’ll excuse the pun, and just melding it. It’s like running around with a soldering iron, bringing this, that, there… Let’s try and nuance that into…”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

Ultimate Music Guide: Tom Waits

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Roll up, roll up, for the latest in Uncut’s legendary and extravagant Ultimate Music Guides. This time, our subject is none other than Tom Waits – radical beatnik, one of the greatest singer-songwriters of the past 50 years, and a true American original. Once again, we’ve gone deep into the ar...

Roll up, roll up, for the latest in Uncut’s legendary and extravagant Ultimate Music Guides. This time, our subject is none other than Tom Waits – radical beatnik, one of the greatest singer-songwriters of the past 50 years, and a true American original. Once again, we’ve gone deep into the archives of NME, Melody Maker and Uncut to fish out the wildest and most surreal interviews with Waits, a man whose stories are every bit as good as his songs. And once you’ve learned that, among many other things, “A hero ain’t nothing but a sandwich,” we’ve given our team of Waitsian scholars the job of reviewing anew all of his storied albums: every one an eccentric and compelling winner, is the verdict. Throw in the usual blend of rare pictures, discographies, a complete collectables guide and all manner of junkyard weirdness, and you’re left with Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to Tom Waits. Hoist that rag!

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Ultimate Music Guide: The Cure

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The latest Uncut Ultimate Music Guide is a 148-page celebration of the wayward genius of Robert Smith and The Cure, the band he formed nearly four decades years ago and which almost from the very beginning of their illustrious career he seems to have almost every year promised to walk away from, eve...

The latest Uncut Ultimate Music Guide is a 148-page celebration of the wayward genius of Robert Smith and The Cure, the band he formed nearly four decades years ago and which almost from the very beginning of their illustrious career he seems to have almost every year promised to walk away from, even as they have become one of British rock’s most enduring and fascinating musical institutions.
As ever, we’ve braved the cobwebby dungeons in which the archive copies of Melody Maker and NME reside to return from those depths with the greatest Cure interviews from the last 36 years to reprint them in our Ultimate Music Guide, alongside revealing new reviews by the current team of Uncut writers, who bring their forensic attention to every Cure album. All this, plus a wealth of rare pictures, discographies, a complete collectables guide and that’s The Ultimate Music Guide: the Cure. . .Just Like Heaven!

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Ultimate Music Guide: Oasis

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What's the story? To celebrate the 20th anniversary of Oasis, Uncut's latest Ultimate Music Guide is a 148-page tribute to the wild genius of Noel and Liam Gallagher. As ever, we've tracked down the greatest Oasis interviews in the NME and Melody Maker archives, and reprinted them: chaotic, hilariou...

What’s the story? To celebrate the 20th anniversary of Oasis, Uncut’s latest Ultimate Music Guide is a 148-page tribute to the wild genius of Noel and Liam Gallagher. As ever, we’ve tracked down the greatest Oasis interviews in the NME and Melody Maker archives, and reprinted them: chaotic, hilarious, unabridged. And once you’ve read through all the bitching, battling and tales of legendary carnage, Uncut’s team of writers have filed revelatory new pieces on every album – from Oasis’ epochal debut, right up to Noel and Liam’s most recent adventures. Throw in an embarrassment of rare pictures, discographies, collectables and a new intro by Bonehead, and that’s The Ultimate Music Guide: Oasis… Definitely Mayhem!

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Ultimate Music Guide: Lou Reed

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Uncut's latest Ultimate Music Guide is a 148-page tribute to the genius of Lou Reed. As with all of our Ultimate Music Guides, we've raided the archives of NME and Melody Maker to uncover a rich collection of old Lou Reed interviews: some of them legendary encounters, restored to their original and ...

Uncut’s latest Ultimate Music Guide is a 148-page tribute to the genius of Lou Reed. As with all of our Ultimate Music Guides, we’ve raided the archives of NME and Melody Maker to uncover a rich collection of old Lou Reed interviews: some of them legendary encounters, restored to their original and unexpurgated lengths; others just as debauched and gripping, but unseen for decades. Meanwhile, Uncut’s current team of unparalleled music writers bring a fresh perspective to Reed’s storied back catalogue, filing extensive new reviews of every one of his albums, from The Velvet Underground & Nico to his final and controversial collaboration with Metallica, Lulu. Add many rare and beautiful photographs, guides to Reed rarities and his entire discography, and some of the most startling yarns in the rock pantheon, and you have Lou Reed: The Ultimate Music Guide. Hey! Take a very long and rewarding walk on the wild side!

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Ultimate Music Guide: Neil Young

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This comprehensive, 148 page magazine includes brand new reviews by our crack team of writers covering all Young's albums - Buffalo Springfield, CSNY, with Crazy Horse and solo. Meanwhile, revealing interviews from the archives of Melody Maker and NME are revisited, plus incredible rare photographs ...

This comprehensive, 148 page magazine includes brand new reviews by our crack team of writers covering all Young’s albums – Buffalo Springfield, CSNY, with Crazy Horse and solo. Meanwhile, revealing interviews from the archives of Melody Maker and NME are revisited, plus incredible rare photographs and a round-up of Young Memorabilia.

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Ultimate Music Guide: Small Faces & The Faces

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“It was chaos, chaos, chaos!” Uncut’s latest Ultimate Music Guide tells the compelling story of The Small Faces and The Faces. Over 148 packed pages, we stitch together the tale of an extraordinary musical dynasty, with roistering interviews from the NME and Melody Maker archives and in-depth ...

“It was chaos, chaos, chaos!” Uncut’s latest Ultimate Music Guide tells the compelling story of The Small Faces and The Faces. Over 148 packed pages, we stitch together the tale of an extraordinary musical dynasty, with roistering interviews from the NME and Melody Maker archives and in-depth new reviews of all their records. Plus, there are extensive new pieces on Rod Stewart, Ronnie Lane, Steve Marriott and Humble Pie, and an introduction from Ian McLagan… “We did so many stupid things,” he says. The Small Faces and Faces Ultimate Music Guide – it’s all too beautiful!

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Ultimate Music Guide: Depeche Mode

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Uncut's latest Ultimate Music Guide is a 148-page special dedicated to the planet-conquering genius of Depeche Mode. From the depths of the NME and Melody Maker archives, we've dug out revealing, hilarious and harrowing interviews with the band, unseen for decades. We've commissioned in-depth new re...

Uncut’s latest Ultimate Music Guide is a 148-page special dedicated to the planet-conquering genius of Depeche Mode. From the depths of the NME and Melody Maker archives, we’ve dug out revealing, hilarious and harrowing interviews with the band, unseen for decades. We’ve commissioned in-depth new reviews of every Mode album by the best contemporary writers. Oh, and Martin Gore has provided an exclusive introduction. “We’re survivors, we’re like brothers,” he says. That’s Depeche Mode: The Ultimate Music Guide – it’s a black celebration!

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Ultimate Music Guide: Nick Cave

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Nick Cave is back with his stunning new album, Push Away The Sky, and what better way to celebrate than with a 148 page special revisiting his incredible music and wild times with the Birthday Party, the Bad Seeds and Grinderman. The Ultimate Music Guide features revealing interviews from the Melody...

Nick Cave is back with his stunning new album, Push Away The Sky, and what better way to celebrate than with a 148 page special revisiting his incredible music and wild times with the Birthday Party, the Bad Seeds and Grinderman. The Ultimate Music Guide features revealing interviews from the Melody Maker and NME archives alongside amazing photos and in-depth new reviews of all Cave’s albums to tell the complete story behind Cave’s remarkable rise to become one of the most acclaimed songwriters of his generation.

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Ultimate Music Guide: Paul Weller

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Wake up the nation! Over the past 35 years, Paul Weller has asserted himself, time and time again, as one of the most potent figures in British music: impassioned, tireless, single-minded, brilliant. In the latest Uncut Ultimate Music Guide, we tell Weller's complete story, from the seismic arrival ...

Wake up the nation! Over the past 35 years, Paul Weller has asserted himself, time and time again, as one of the most potent figures in British music: impassioned, tireless, single-minded, brilliant. In the latest Uncut Ultimate Music Guide, we tell Weller’s complete story, from the seismic arrival of The Jam, through the inventive subversions of The Style Council, and on to his rich and varied two decades as a solo artist.
For this impeccably turned-out special, we’ve dug deep into the NME and Melody Maker archives to find remarkable interviews with Weller and his bandmates, often unseen for years. We’ve commissioned in-depth new reviews of every one of his albums, from the Jam’s debut to 2012’s magisterial Sonik Kicks. And we’ve even hired Weller himself to write the introduction. “These songs take on a life of their own,” he says. “It’ll be interesting to see what people have got to say about them here…” It is, rest assured.
Paul Weller: The Ultimate Music Guide. Now that’s entertainment…

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Ultimate Music Guide: The Kinks

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Give the people what they want! The 12th Uncut Ultimate Music Guide tells the compelling story of The Kinks! An epic saga of warring brothers, wild concepts, worldwide hits and long sojourns in the wilderness. As usual, we've pored over old copies of NME and Melody Maker to locate revelatory intervi...

Give the people what they want! The 12th Uncut Ultimate Music Guide tells the compelling story of The Kinks! An epic saga of warring brothers, wild concepts, worldwide hits and long sojourns in the wilderness. As usual, we’ve pored over old copies of NME and Melody Maker to locate revelatory interviews with Ray Davies and his fractious bandmates. Reprinted in full in this Ultimate Music Guide, most of them have been lost for decades. Uncut’s current writers, meanwhile, have produced new reviews of every single album in the Kinks’ catalogue, uncovering a few long-neglected gems in the process. To finish things off, none other than Ray Davies has contributed a brand new introduction to the mag. “I think it’s time to reappraise,” he says. “It’s great to have ‘Sunny Afternoon’ and ‘You Really Got Me’, but the value of the unheard work is still to be discovered. I’m educating myself on it now…”

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James Bond villain actor Richard ‘Jaws’ Kiel dies at 74

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James Bond star Richard Kiel, who played 007’s iconic foe Jaws, has died aged 74. The actor had broken his leg and was being treated in hospital in California where he died on Wednesday afternoon. According to TMZ the cause of death has not yet been revealed. The imposing actor stood over seven feet tall and appeared opposite Roger Moore in the 1977 James Bond adventure The Spy Who Loved Me. Due to his popularity Jaws returned as a more sympathetic character in 1979’s Moonraker. His face-offs with Bond were among the spy series’ most memorable. Leading the tributes to Kiel, Roger Moore posted on Twitter: "I am totally distraught to learn of my dear friend Richard Kiel's passing. We were on a radio programme together just a week ago. Distraught." On the BBC Radio 4 programme The Reunion, which aired on Sunday, Kiel talked with Moore about the role. “I was very put off by the description of the character and I thought, 'Well, they don't really need an actor, he's more a monster part,'" he said. "So I tried to change that view of it... I said if I were to play the part, I want to give the character some human characteristics, like perseverance, frustration." Kiel got his break on American television in 1959 appearing as the alien Kanamit in The Twilight Zone. He also starred with Adam Sandler in the 1996 golfing comedy Happy Gilmore and voiced Vlad in the 2010 Disney film Tangled. The creation of Jaws for the 10th Bond film was inspired by a character named Horror who reveals his steel-capped teeth in Ian Fleming’s novel The Spy Who Loved Me.

James Bond star Richard Kiel, who played 007’s iconic foe Jaws, has died aged 74.

The actor had broken his leg and was being treated in hospital in California where he died on Wednesday afternoon.

According to TMZ the cause of death has not yet been revealed.

The imposing actor stood over seven feet tall and appeared opposite Roger Moore in the 1977 James Bond adventure The Spy Who Loved Me. Due to his popularity Jaws returned as a more sympathetic character in 1979’s Moonraker. His face-offs with Bond were among the spy series’ most memorable.

Leading the tributes to Kiel, Roger Moore posted on Twitter: “I am totally distraught to learn of my dear friend Richard Kiel’s passing. We were on a radio programme together just a week ago. Distraught.”

On the BBC Radio 4 programme The Reunion, which aired on Sunday, Kiel talked with Moore about the role. “I was very put off by the description of the character and I thought, ‘Well, they don’t really need an actor, he’s more a monster part,'” he said. “So I tried to change that view of it… I said if I were to play the part, I want to give the character some human characteristics, like perseverance, frustration.”

Kiel got his break on American television in 1959 appearing as the alien Kanamit in The Twilight Zone. He also starred with Adam Sandler in the 1996 golfing comedy Happy Gilmore and voiced Vlad in the 2010 Disney film Tangled.

The creation of Jaws for the 10th Bond film was inspired by a character named Horror who reveals his steel-capped teeth in Ian Fleming’s novel The Spy Who Loved Me.

PJ Harvey receives honorary degree from Goldsmiths University

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PJ Harvey has received an honorary degree from Goldsmiths University. The singer, who was appointed an MBE last year, accepted the accolade from the London institution earlier today (September 10), alongside human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell and journalist Neal Ascherson. Goldsmiths University's musical alumnus includes Blur – who played their first gig in the Students Union bar – John Cale, Katy B and Rob Da Bank. Jools Holland, Columbia Records chairman Rob Stringer and Placebo frontman Brian Molko are among the musical figures who have been honoured with Goldsmiths degrees in previous years. "Our honorands this year are a remarkable group of people," Liz Bromley, Registrar and Secretary of Goldsmiths, said. "They have changed communities through their inspiring architectural designs. They have pointed out the ridiculous in the news and made us laugh. They have inspired us with their words, their music, and their art. They have fought for our rights. And they have helped us to understand who we are now by looking to the past." In December 2013, PJ Harvey guest edited BBC Radio 4's flagship current affairs programme Today, where she commissioned Wikileaks founder Julian Assange to deliver a special 'Thought For The Day', along with features from journalist John Pilger and former Archbishop Of Canterbury Rowan Williams. Actor Ralph Fiennes read the poems 'Austerities' by Charles Simic and 'They Fight For Peace' by Shaker Aamer and the show also featured extracts from works by Tom Waits and Joan Baez. Musically, PJ Harvey has been quiet since the release of a single track last year – her first new song since releasing her eighth album 'Let England Shake' in 2011. The track, 'Shaker Aamer', is a protest song designed to raise attention to the plight of a British resident imprisoned by the US in Guantanamo Bay since 2002. 'Let England Shake' received widespread critical acclaim and was named NME's Album Of The Year and won the Mercury Prize in 2011.

PJ Harvey has received an honorary degree from Goldsmiths University.

The singer, who was appointed an MBE last year, accepted the accolade from the London institution earlier today (September 10), alongside human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell and journalist Neal Ascherson.

Goldsmiths University’s musical alumnus includes Blur – who played their first gig in the Students Union bar – John Cale, Katy B and Rob Da Bank. Jools Holland, Columbia Records chairman Rob Stringer and Placebo frontman Brian Molko are among the musical figures who have been honoured with Goldsmiths degrees in previous years.

“Our honorands this year are a remarkable group of people,” Liz Bromley, Registrar and Secretary of Goldsmiths, said. “They have changed communities through their inspiring architectural designs. They have pointed out the ridiculous in the news and made us laugh. They have inspired us with their words, their music, and their art. They have fought for our rights. And they have helped us to understand who we are now by looking to the past.”

In December 2013, PJ Harvey guest edited BBC Radio 4’s flagship current affairs programme Today, where she commissioned Wikileaks founder Julian Assange to deliver a special ‘Thought For The Day’, along with features from journalist John Pilger and former Archbishop Of Canterbury Rowan Williams. Actor Ralph Fiennes read the poems ‘Austerities’ by Charles Simic and ‘They Fight For Peace’ by Shaker Aamer and the show also featured extracts from works by Tom Waits and Joan Baez.

Musically, PJ Harvey has been quiet since the release of a single track last year – her first new song since releasing her eighth album ‘Let England Shake’ in 2011. The track, ‘Shaker Aamer’, is a protest song designed to raise attention to the plight of a British resident imprisoned by the US in Guantanamo Bay since 2002.

‘Let England Shake’ received widespread critical acclaim and was named NME’s Album Of The Year and won the Mercury Prize in 2011.

Liam Gallager and Tim Burgess pay tribute to former Primal Scream guitatist Robert ‘Throb’ Young

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Former Primal Scream guitarist Robert 'Throb' Young has died, according to reports. As yet, there has been no official statement regarding the circumstances of Young's death, but several figures close to the musician have posted messages of condolences on Twitter. Young, who met Primal Scream frontman Bobby Gillespie when the two attended secondary school in Glasgow, was a pivotal member of the band and played on classic albums including 1991's 'Screamadelica' and 2000's 'XTRMNTR'. He left the band to go on sabbatical in 2006. Former Oasis members Liam Gallagher and Paul Arthurs (Bonehead) both paid tribute to Young on Twitter. "RIP Robert Young AKA 'Throb'. Live Forever LG x," wrote Gallagher, with Bonehead stating: "RIP Throb. A true Rock n Roller." Beady Eye's Andy Bell said: "Rest In Peace Robert Young of @ScreamOfficial. That big power chord in Loaded is ringing out on the other side now." Trainspotting author Irvine Welsh also paid tribute, writing: "RIP Robert Young. One of the best, the most beautiful, who WAS rock n roll. Big love bro, give them it big time over the other side. #Throb" Tim Burgess, meanwhile, said: "So sad to hear of the death of Rob 'Throb' Young … A real good un." More to follow.

Former Primal Scream guitarist Robert ‘Throb’ Young has died, according to reports.

As yet, there has been no official statement regarding the circumstances of Young’s death, but several figures close to the musician have posted messages of condolences on Twitter.

Young, who met Primal Scream frontman Bobby Gillespie when the two attended secondary school in Glasgow, was a pivotal member of the band and played on classic albums including 1991’s ‘Screamadelica’ and 2000’s ‘XTRMNTR’. He left the band to go on sabbatical in 2006.

Former Oasis members Liam Gallagher and Paul Arthurs (Bonehead) both paid tribute to Young on Twitter. “RIP Robert Young AKA ‘Throb’. Live Forever LG x,” wrote Gallagher, with Bonehead stating: “RIP Throb. A true Rock n Roller.”

Beady Eye’s Andy Bell said: “Rest In Peace Robert Young of @ScreamOfficial. That big power chord in Loaded is ringing out on the other side now.” Trainspotting author Irvine Welsh also paid tribute, writing: “RIP Robert Young. One of the best, the most beautiful, who WAS rock n roll. Big love bro, give them it big time over the other side. #Throb”

Tim Burgess, meanwhile, said: “So sad to hear of the death of Rob ‘Throb’ Young … A real good un.”

More to follow.

The Replacements play classic track ‘Alex Chilton’ on ‘The Tonight Show’

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The Replacements appeared on The Tonight Show last night (September 9). The cult alt rock band performed 'Alex Chilton' from their fifth album, 1987's 'Pleased to Meet Me', on the Jimmy Fallon hosted show. The performance comes 30 years after the group were banned from 'The Tonight Show' studio at 30 Rockefeller Center, New York after a chaotic performance on Saturday Night Live. Click above to watch their performance. The band are currently on tour in North America, and will play Austin City Limits festival next month. Billie Joe Armstrong joined The Replacements for their performance at the opening day of Coachella festival's second weekend in California earlier this year. The Green Day frontman appeared with the Minneapolis band as their own frontman Paul Westerberg played most of the set sitting on a sofa, having suffered a back injury. Armstrong, whose own music was heavily influenced by The Replacements, quipped at one point during the set: "Dreams really do come true!" The Replacements played live for the first time in 22 years at the Toronto leg of alt-rock roadshow Riot Fest in August 2013. Founding members Westerberg and Tommy Stinson have been joined in the reunion line-up by well-known session musicians Josh Freese and Dave Minehan. The Replacements formed in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1979 and went on to release seven studio albums, the most successful of which, 1989's 'Don't Tell A Soul', peaked at Number 59 on the US albums chart. The band played their final live show before breaking up in Chicago on July 21, 1991 and have since been hailed as an influence by Billie Joe Armstrong, who said attending a Replacements gig "changed my whole life", as well as by The Cribs, The Goo Goo Dolls and They Might Be Giants. The band's original lead guitarist Bob Stinson, older brother of Tommy, passed away in 1995.

The Replacements appeared on The Tonight Show last night (September 9).

The cult alt rock band performed ‘Alex Chilton’ from their fifth album, 1987’s ‘Pleased to Meet Me’, on the Jimmy Fallon hosted show. The performance comes 30 years after the group were banned from ‘The Tonight Show’ studio at 30 Rockefeller Center, New York after a chaotic performance on Saturday Night Live. Click above to watch their performance. The band are currently on tour in North America, and will play Austin City Limits festival next month.

Billie Joe Armstrong joined The Replacements for their performance at the opening day of Coachella festival’s second weekend in California earlier this year. The Green Day frontman appeared with the Minneapolis band as their own frontman Paul Westerberg played most of the set sitting on a sofa, having suffered a back injury. Armstrong, whose own music was heavily influenced by The Replacements, quipped at one point during the set: “Dreams really do come true!”

The Replacements played live for the first time in 22 years at the Toronto leg of alt-rock roadshow Riot Fest in August 2013. Founding members Westerberg and Tommy Stinson have been joined in the reunion line-up by well-known session musicians Josh Freese and Dave Minehan.

The Replacements formed in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1979 and went on to release seven studio albums, the most successful of which, 1989’s ‘Don’t Tell A Soul’, peaked at Number 59 on the US albums chart.

The band played their final live show before breaking up in Chicago on July 21, 1991 and have since been hailed as an influence by Billie Joe Armstrong, who said attending a Replacements gig “changed my whole life”, as well as by The Cribs, The Goo Goo Dolls and They Might Be Giants. The band’s original lead guitarist Bob Stinson, older brother of Tommy, passed away in 1995.

Swans announce biggest ever UK headline show

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Swans have announced plans for their biggest ever UK headline show. The experimental rock band will play London's Roundhouse on May 21, 2015. The band released their most recent album 'To Be Kind' earlier this year. Produced by Swans' own Michael Gira, it has a running time of over two hours and features appearances from St Vincent, Cold Specks, Little Annie and Bill Rieflin. Swans latest album was funded by fans following a campaign by Gira in 2013 which saw the frontman offer to write a personalised song for anybody willing to contribute money toward the recording. The majority of the money arrived primarily through the sale of 2013 live album 'Not Here/Not Now'. The band, who reformed in 2010, have also spoken about their next project, with Gira telling Nowness: "I want to make it into a total, wipeout sonic event, performed in classical music venues. The problem is the volume; they're not able to allow the amount of decibels that we excrete." Swans' current label Mute will reissue the band's debut LP, 1983's 'Filth', on October 27. Swans play: London Roundhouse (May 21, 2015) For tickets, click here.

Swans have announced plans for their biggest ever UK headline show.

The experimental rock band will play London’s Roundhouse on May 21, 2015. The band released their most recent album ‘To Be Kind’ earlier this year. Produced by Swans’ own Michael Gira, it has a running time of over two hours and features appearances from St Vincent, Cold Specks, Little Annie and Bill Rieflin.

Swans latest album was funded by fans following a campaign by Gira in 2013 which saw the frontman offer to write a personalised song for anybody willing to contribute money toward the recording. The majority of the money arrived primarily through the sale of 2013 live album ‘Not Here/Not Now’.

The band, who reformed in 2010, have also spoken about their next project, with Gira telling Nowness: “I want to make it into a total, wipeout sonic event, performed in classical music venues. The problem is the volume; they’re not able to allow the amount of decibels that we excrete.”

Swans’ current label Mute will reissue the band’s debut LP, 1983’s ‘Filth’, on October 27.

Swans play:

London Roundhouse (May 21, 2015)

For tickets, click here.

Ty Segall – Manipulator

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California's noisy, ever-changing adventurer crafts a double al;bum consolidation of his sounds... To date, the records of Ty Segall have darted around as if in open defiance of the importance of the definitive statement. The cherubic Californian, 27 years old this year, evidently sees virtue in covering a lot of ground, and quick. From the sun-baked songcraft of 2011’s Goodbye Bread to the Satanic Hawkwind space-rock of the Ty Segall Band’s 2012 LP Slaughterhouse to the depressive acoustic balladry of last year’s Sleeper - no two of his releases feel quite the same in either sound, influence, or vibe. You might well question the wisdom of this approach, but it’s hard to deny that Ty’s quicksilver muse is a good fit for his abundant work rate. Even if you’ve picked up the lion’s share of his albums to date, you still don’t yet feel like you won’t have space for another. Manipulator might be the point when all this changes. Ty’s seventh solo album in seven years, it’s a double LP and 17 tracks long, clocking in just shy of an hour. It’s an album that feels quintessentially – perhaps definitively – Ty, touching on aspects of all his previous records: the volatile fuzz guitar, the gleefully villainous beat group pop, the noble string orchestration, the sweetly sardonic lyricism. But in contravention of the familiar rules of the double LP, Manipulator is neither a sprawling and chaotic thing, nor constructed along boldly conceptual lines. No song here exceeds the five-minute mark, and each one feels finely honed, melodically generous, and designed to penetrate your consciousness. As ever, Ty’s music feels wise to rock history, but wickedly playful in the manner he chooses to use it; he’s not so much out to exhume corpses as make them stand up and dance. On Manipulator, Arthur Lee’s Love is an evident touchstone – most notably on “The Clock”, with its spry, flamenco-like guitar runs and genteel swoons of violin. “Feel” channels the beefier end of Nuggets garage, the likes of The Chocolate Watch Band and The Mystery Trend, with visionary-paranoid lyrics (“Feel the creeps in the sky/Let them live in each other’s eyes”) and a heroic percussion breakdown that tips back into a sea of fuzz. Strings get another outing on the glorious “The Singer”, a falsetto-flirting waltz reminiscent of the more Lennon-tinged material from last year’s Sleeper, but with a decidedly sprightlier footing. But whereas Sleeper found Ty exploring his acoustic side, Manipulator is every inch an electric record, and we often find its diverse styles are often merely a rocky atoll from which Ty can trigger a variety of extravagant guitar detonations. The glammy Bolan shimmy of “Tall Man Skinny Lady” would be a perfectly loveable song in its own right, even before it’s caked in burnt-amp fuzz, squalls of top-of-the-fretboard shred, and a fade-out in which we hear dead strings thrashed without mercy. A careful mix ensures that the songs themselves keep their integrity even during such roughhouse treatment – although live, of course, we can fully expect them to fry like bacon. As a symbol of Manipulator’s consistency, much of its goodies crop up towards the tail end. The febrile hippy balladry of “Don’t You Want To Know? (Sue)” ushers you gently towards the vitriolic Fuzz War churn of “The Crawler”. Here, too, there’s space for Ty’s introspective side to fan out, as on “The Feels”. “And when I look into your eyes/I realise/You’re the same as me/You’ll never be free,” he sings. A sobering thought: if a figure as flighty as Ty Segall feels chained down, what hope is there for the rest of us? So it’s over to the growing cohort of Ty aficionados to quibble over whether Manipulator is their hero’s definitive statement to date. It lacks, for instance, the sustained punk-rock dementia of Slaughterhouse, or the thematic fullness of Goodbye Bread, with its visions of Californian paradise gone rotten on the vine. But to consider it from another direction: are we going to turn our noses up at a record that comes on, in its spirited catchiness and daring scope, like the Greatest Hits of Ty Segall? No, we’re not. Louis Pattison Q&A Ty Segall Your records often focus in on one particular area. But Manipulator feels broad, all-encompassing. I definitely wanted to make a record that had a little bit of every sound I have worked with in the past, and hopefully to expand on these sounds. It was wild to do, and it definitely only really glued together fully in the studio. I wanted to go as far down the writing rabbit hole that I could go... Your records sometimes feel like they pick up from unfinished moments in pop history – that weird space between folk, glam and psych in that period of Rex and Bowie… These are huge influences of mine... I definitely like pulling sounds from things I like and putting them in different places or contexts and seeing how they exist in that place, and that was a definite thing we went for. Like, glam drums in a punk song. The guitar sounds on Manipulator are particularly hot. What's the secret? [Engineer] Chris Woodhouse, my amp and the ol’ Fuzz War pedal. But if I told you the secret I would have to kill you. INTERVIEW BY LOUIS PATTISON

California’s noisy, ever-changing adventurer crafts a double al;bum consolidation of his sounds…

To date, the records of Ty Segall have darted around as if in open defiance of the importance of the definitive statement. The cherubic Californian, 27 years old this year, evidently sees virtue in covering a lot of ground, and quick. From the sun-baked songcraft of 2011’s Goodbye Bread to the Satanic Hawkwind space-rock of the Ty Segall Band’s 2012 LP Slaughterhouse to the depressive acoustic balladry of last year’s Sleeper – no two of his releases feel quite the same in either sound, influence, or vibe. You might well question the wisdom of this approach, but it’s hard to deny that Ty’s quicksilver muse is a good fit for his abundant work rate. Even if you’ve picked up the lion’s share of his albums to date, you still don’t yet feel like you won’t have space for another.

Manipulator might be the point when all this changes. Ty’s seventh solo album in seven years, it’s a double LP and 17 tracks long, clocking in just shy of an hour. It’s an album that feels quintessentially – perhaps definitively – Ty, touching on aspects of all his previous records: the volatile fuzz guitar, the gleefully villainous beat group pop, the noble string orchestration, the sweetly sardonic lyricism. But in contravention of the familiar rules of the double LP, Manipulator is neither a sprawling and chaotic thing, nor constructed along boldly conceptual lines. No song here exceeds the five-minute mark, and each one feels finely honed, melodically generous, and designed to penetrate your consciousness.

As ever, Ty’s music feels wise to rock history, but wickedly playful in the manner he chooses to use it; he’s not so much out to exhume corpses as make them stand up and dance. On Manipulator, Arthur Lee’s Love is an evident touchstone – most notably on “The Clock”, with its spry, flamenco-like guitar runs and genteel swoons of violin. “Feel” channels the beefier end of Nuggets garage, the likes of The Chocolate Watch Band and The Mystery Trend, with visionary-paranoid lyrics (“Feel the creeps in the sky/Let them live in each other’s eyes”) and a heroic percussion breakdown that tips back into a sea of fuzz. Strings get another outing on the glorious “The Singer”, a falsetto-flirting waltz reminiscent of the more Lennon-tinged material from last year’s Sleeper, but with a decidedly sprightlier footing.

But whereas Sleeper found Ty exploring his acoustic side, Manipulator is every inch an electric record, and we often find its diverse styles are often merely a rocky atoll from which Ty can trigger a variety of extravagant guitar detonations. The glammy Bolan shimmy of “Tall Man Skinny Lady” would be a perfectly loveable song in its own right, even before it’s caked in burnt-amp fuzz, squalls of top-of-the-fretboard shred, and a fade-out in which we hear dead strings thrashed without mercy. A careful mix ensures that the songs themselves keep their integrity even during such roughhouse treatment – although live, of course, we can fully expect them to fry like bacon.

As a symbol of Manipulator’s consistency, much of its goodies crop up towards the tail end. The febrile hippy balladry of “Don’t You Want To Know? (Sue)” ushers you gently towards the vitriolic Fuzz War churn of “The Crawler”. Here, too, there’s space for Ty’s introspective side to fan out, as on “The Feels”. “And when I look into your eyes/I realise/You’re the same as me/You’ll never be free,” he sings. A sobering thought: if a figure as flighty as Ty Segall feels chained down, what hope is there for the rest of us?

So it’s over to the growing cohort of Ty aficionados to quibble over whether Manipulator is their hero’s definitive statement to date. It lacks, for instance, the sustained punk-rock dementia of Slaughterhouse, or the thematic fullness of Goodbye Bread, with its visions of Californian paradise gone rotten on the vine. But to consider it from another direction: are we going to turn our noses up at a record that comes on, in its spirited catchiness and daring scope, like the Greatest Hits of Ty Segall? No, we’re not.

Louis Pattison

Q&A

Ty Segall

Your records often focus in on one particular area. But Manipulator feels broad, all-encompassing.

I definitely wanted to make a record that had a little bit of every sound I have worked with in the past, and hopefully to expand on these sounds. It was wild to do, and it definitely only really glued together fully in the studio. I wanted to go as far down the writing rabbit hole that I could go…

Your records sometimes feel like they pick up from unfinished moments in pop history – that weird space between folk, glam and psych in that period of Rex and Bowie…

These are huge influences of mine… I definitely like pulling sounds from things I like and putting them in different places or contexts and seeing how they exist in that place, and that was a definite thing we went for. Like, glam drums in a punk song.

The guitar sounds on Manipulator are particularly hot. What’s the secret?

[Engineer] Chris Woodhouse, my amp and the ol’ Fuzz War pedal. But if I told you the secret I would have to kill you.

INTERVIEW BY LOUIS PATTISON