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The Grateful Dead announce new Spring 1990 box set

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The Grateful Dead have announced details of a new box set, Spring 1990 (The Other One). The release is a companion to the sold-out Spring 1990 boxed set from 2012. The 23-disc set covers eight complete shows, all previously unreleased, and will be available from September 9. The collection will b...

The Grateful Dead have announced details of a new box set, Spring 1990 (The Other One).

The release is a companion to the sold-out Spring 1990 boxed set from 2012.

The 23-disc set covers eight complete shows, all previously unreleased, and will be available from September 9.

The collection will be limited to 9,000 individually numbered copies and is currently available for pre-order exclusively from the band’s website, Dead.net.

It will also be released as an HD digital download on the same date.

In addition to its inclusion in the boxed set, a March 29, 1990 show at Nassau Coliseum with Branford Marsalis will also be released separately as a three-disc set.

“When we produced the first Spring 1990 box in 2012, there were a lot of tough choices to make about what shows to omit from that box. However, we knew we’d do this second box someday, so the choices of omission were easier to digest,” says Grateful Dead archivist David Lemieux. “Now we’re able to complete the picture the first box painted with music that’s every bit as good, and in some cases surpasses, the six shows in the original box. These are eight extremely high-level Dead shows, each and every one of which would make a terrific CD releases. It only seemed fitting that in the face of such an abundance of quality Dead, we should release it all at once.”

Eric Idle: “Monty Python never took very kindly to being told what to do”

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Eric Idle discusses Monty Python’s new boxset, which compiles all their albums, in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2014 and out now. The Python comedian and songwriter explains how the troupe’s best-selling record, 1989’s Monty Python Sings, was put together. “We found out we ‘owe...

Eric Idle discusses Monty Python’s new boxset, which compiles all their albums, in the new issue of Uncut, dated August 2014 and out now.

The Python comedian and songwriter explains how the troupe’s best-selling record, 1989’s Monty Python Sings, was put together.

“We found out we ‘owed’ Clive Davis and Arista an album,” says Idle. “Python never took very kindly to being told what they must do. So we threw a lot more songs in as an ironic gesture.

“This led to our best-selling album, Monty Python Sings, which I put together. You can listen to a funny song many more times than a sketch.”

The new Uncut, dated August 2014, is out now.

A Hard Day’s Night: 50 years on…

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Last week, the BFI hosted a Q&A session with director Richard Lester, as a prelude to the 50th anniversary re-release of A Hard Day’s Night. The BFI have kindly let us host the Q&A - which you can watch below. Lester, who's 82 now, is in formidable form during the session with author Ma...

Last week, the BFI hosted a Q&A session with director Richard Lester, as a prelude to the 50th anniversary re-release of A Hard Day’s Night.

The BFI have kindly let us host the Q&A – which you can watch below. Lester, who’s 82 now, is in formidable form during the session with author Mark Lewisohn. Watching the film again now – brushed up for its birthday – it’s reassuring to see how much it still sparkles. As Lester points out, much of that is to do with the way he and screenwriter simply let The Beatles be themselves, albeit in slightly exaggerated form. Perhaps most conspicuous is how funny the film is. “How did you find America?” a journalist asks Lennon: “Turn left at Greenland,” he pings back.

It’s interested to see how similar the portrayal of the band in A Hard Day’s Night is compared to the Albert and David Maysles’ documentary What’s Happening! The Beatles In The U.S.A, which offered a similarly freewheeling and candid snapshot of the band. As research for his script, Owen spent three days with the band in November 1963, three months before the Maysles’ filmed The Beatles’ first visit to America. The parity between the ‘reality’ created by Owen and director Richard Lester in A Hard Day’s Night is extraordinarily close to the band’s true lives as caught by the Maysles.

But of course, Lester’s film isn’t a documentary: part Marx Brothers slapstick, part Goons surrealism, part New Wave cinema, part satire on being The Beatles, it’s an incredibly multi-faceted piece, nowhere near as straightforward as it’s simple proposition and brisk pacing might suggest. There is some shenanigans with schoolgirls at the start, and Lennon’s ‘comedy German’ impressions in the bath (a Spike Milligan lift) inevitably appear slightly dubious in 2014. The scene where George Harrison teaches John Junkin how to shave using his reflection in the mirror is a brilliant piece of composition, predicated entirely on the location of the camera rather than what Harrison can really see of Junkin’s reflection. Fab gear, etc.


Incidentally, the interview with Richard Lester can also be watched on the BFI Player here.

A Hard Day’s Night runs at the BFI Southbank until July 17; you can find more details here. It will be released on DVD and Blu-ray on July 21

Bernard Sumner reveals details of his autobiography

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Bernard Sumner has confirmed details of his autobiography. Chapter And Verse (New Order, Joy Division And Me) will be published by Transworld on September 25. It had been announced in June 2013 that Sumner had signed a deal to publish his memoirs. The accompanying press release states that the boo...

Bernard Sumner has confirmed details of his autobiography.

Chapter And Verse (New Order, Joy Division And Me) will be published by Transworld on September 25. It had been announced in June 2013 that Sumner had signed a deal to publish his memoirs.

The accompanying press release states that the book will offer “a vivid and illuminating” account of Sumner’s childhood in Salford, before detailing his thoughts on Joy Division, New Order and the Hacienda nightclub. It continues: “Sometimes moving, often hilarious and occasionally completely out of control, this is a tale populated by some of the most colourful and creative characters in music history.”

The book is Sumner’s first.

New Order are currently on a North American tour which finishes on Sunday (July 13) at Los Angeles’ Greek Theater. They have previewed one new song, “Singularity”, a video of which can be seen below. A new album is provisionally due out next spring. The Chemical Brothers’ Tom Rowlands was working with the band in 2013, but it isn’t known who the final producers are on the album.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJ5idkbbSno

Brazil fans blame Mick Jagger for World Cup defeat

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Mick Jagger has been blamed by a Brazilian TV station for Brazil’s record-breaking 7-1 World Cup semi-final defeat by Germany yesterday (July 8). Jagger has endured a six-game losing streak at the World Cup since 2010, by publicly endorsing countries who promptly lose. It even led to Brazil fans ...

Mick Jagger has been blamed by a Brazilian TV station for Brazil’s record-breaking 7-1 World Cup semi-final defeat by Germany yesterday (July 8).

Jagger has endured a six-game losing streak at the World Cup since 2010, by publicly endorsing countries who promptly lose. It even led to Brazil fans dressing cut-outs of Jagger in the colours of Chile and Colombia before their victories over those countries. But they lost when Jagger and his son Lucas attended the Germany game in Belo Horizonte.

Jagger has been dubbed “The Angel Of Doom” by upset Brazilians, while TV station R7 called him “The biggest jinx in history” following the 7-1 thrashing, which was both Brazil’s biggest-ever defeat and the heaviest loss in a World Cup semi-final in the tournament’s 84-year history.

The run of bad luck began at the World Cup in South Africa in 2010, when Jagger watched England’s 4-1 second round defeat by Germany. He went with Bill Clinton to see the USA lose 2-1 to Ghana in the same round, before wearing a Brazil shirt during their 2-1 loss to the Netherlands in the quarter-final.

At the current World Cup, Jagger tweeted the England team a good luck message before they lost 2-1 to Italy, then announced during a Rolling Stones gig in Lisbon that Portugal would win the tournament. Portugal failed to reach the second round, as did Italy after Jagger said at a Stones show in Rome that Italy would win their vital group game against Uruguay. Italy lost 1-0.

Although Jagger wore a neutral’s England baseball cap during the semi-final, his 15-year-old son Lucas is Brazilian. Fans had carried a cut-out of Jagger in a Germany kit with a speech bubble saying “Let’s go, Germany!” outside the stadium.

Lucas’ mother, Brazilian model Luciana Giminez, defended Jagger, saying: “He’s suffering cyber-bullying, and I’d ask people to think before doing it. He’s been successful for 50 years and is a good friend and father to my son.”

AC/DC reveal new album details

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AC/DC have revealed that they have completed work on their new album. Brian Johnson, who collected an honorary doctorate from Northumbria University today, has said that the band have finished work on the LP, which they have been working on in Vancouver. It is likely to be released later this year...

AC/DC have revealed that they have completed work on their new album.

Brian Johnson, who collected an honorary doctorate from Northumbria University today, has said that the band have finished work on the LP, which they have been working on in Vancouver. It is likely to be released later this year or early next year.

“It was brilliant over there. We’re done. I’m very excited and we’ve got some great songs,” he told Metal Hammer.

Speaking about the current absence from the band due to health reasons of Malcolm Young, Johnson said: “We miss Malcolm obviously. He’s a fighter. He’s in hospital but he’s a fighter. We’ve got our fingers crossed that he’ll get strong again.”

His nephew, Stevie, has been filling in for his ill uncle during sessions.

“Stevie was magnificent,” said Johnson. “But when you’re recording with this thing hanging over you and your work mate isn’t well, it’s difficult.

“But I’m sure he [Malcolm] was rooting for us. He’s such a strong man. He’s a small guy but he’s very strong. He’s proud and he’s very private so we can’t say too much. But fingers crossed he’ll be back.”

Johnson admitted the band had discussed a number of album titles with the new release due to hit stores later this year or early 2015.

And he added: “I wanted to call the album Man Down. But it’s a bit negative and it was probably just straight from the heart. I like that.”

Johnson received his honorary degree from Northumbria University’s vice chancellor Prof Andrew Wathey, who says: “Brian has been an inspiration to the people of the North East and rock fans the world over.”

Bruce Springsteen debuts short film for “Hunter Of Invisible Game”

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Bruce Springsteen has debuted a 10-minute short film for his track "Hunter Of Invisible Game" on his website. The video for the song, which was included on the singer's last studio album High Hopes, was directed by Thom Zimny and stars Springsteen himself as he journeys through the wilderness. Wr...

Bruce Springsteen has debuted a 10-minute short film for his track “Hunter Of Invisible Game” on his website.

The video for the song, which was included on the singer’s last studio album High Hopes, was directed by Thom Zimny and stars Springsteen himself as he journeys through the wilderness.

Writing on his website, Springsteen said: “The past 2 plus years and nearly 170 shows have been a life changer. Thanks to you, we have dwelled deep within the transformative power of rock n’ roll. You’ve helped us bring a new and revitalized E St. Band into being. We take this break with a sense of joy, renewed purpose and filled with the spirit to bring you our best in the future. We’ve still got a few surprises for you.

“For a long part of the year, Thom Zimny and I have been talking about shooting a short film for ‘Hunter Of Invisible Game’. We’ve finally got the job done, and we think it’s one of our best. Thanks Thom for the hard work and brotherly collaboration. You and your crew bring it all. And to all of you out there in E St. Nation, we hope you enjoy! See ya up the road.”

High Hopes was Springsteen’s 18th studio album and was released in January of this year.

Nick Cave announces Q&A and live performance

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Nick Cave will participate in a Q&A and a live performance at London's Barbican Hall on September 17. The event will include a gala preview of the Nick Cave film, 20,000 Days On Earth. The screening will be followed by a unique 60-minute live experience that includes a live performance with Ni...

Nick Cave will participate in a Q&A and a live performance at London’s Barbican Hall on September 17.

The event will include a gala preview of the Nick Cave film, 20,000 Days On Earth.

The screening will be followed by a unique 60-minute live experience that includes a live performance with Nick Cave, Warren Ellis and Barry Adamson and a Q&A with the creative team behind the film including directors Iain Forsyth & Jane Pollard and special guests.

The event will be broadcast live by satellite to 150 UK cinemas.

Following this exclusive event, Picturehouse Entertainment will release 20,000 Days On Earth on September 19 in cinemas across the UK and Ireland.

Tickets will go on sale on Thursday, July 10 at 10am to Barbican members. They go on general sale on Friday, July 11 at 10am. Tickets are priced £60/£50/£40.

You can find more details here.

Read our first look preview of 20,000 Days On Earth here

Dave Alvin and Phil Alvin – Common Ground: Dave Alvin and Phil Alvin Play And Sing The Songs Of Big Bill Broonzy

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One of the highlights of Dave Alvin’s last solo album, 2011’s Eleven Eleven, was a track called “What’s Up With Your Brother?”, a droll blues about Dave’s famously fractious relationship with his brother, Phil, that ended hilariously with them having the kind of argument that put paid to The Blasters, the band they were in together before fraternal tensions drove them into a ditch. They split in 1985, after just five albums. While Dave became dedicated to life as a hard travelling road dog, Phil completed a master’s degree in mathematics and artificial intelligence. His own musical career has in the circumstances been restricted over the last 30 years to a couple of fine solo albums and a brief 2003 reunion tour with The Blasters that produced the Trouble Bound live album. The session for “What’s Up With Your Brother?” was the first time they’d been in the studio together since 1985, an occasion made even more memorable for Blasters fans by the additional presence of the band’s great piano player, Gene Taylor. Encouraged by Dave’s label to turn an EP project they had been discussing into a full album, their mutual regard for the music of Big Bill Broonzy provided them with an opportunity to work together without undue conflict. The results are spectacular. Broonzy‘s a towering figure in blues history, linking the acoustic rural blues of the Mississippi Delta and the electric blues forged in the urban crucible of Chicago’s South Side, where he was an early influence on the young Muddy Waters and other wild and rising stars of that legendary scene. He was also one of the first great American bluesmen to bring his music across the Atlantic, first touring Europe in 1951. He was especially revered in the UK, where his smitten fans included a generation of young musicians in thrall to the blues who would soon be forming bands themselves, including Keith Richards, Ray Davies, Ronnie Wood, Eric Clapton and Pete Townshend. “Back before it all caught fire,” Townshend later wrote, “we heard Big Bill and we knew that music could tell the truth as well as entertain.” Broonzy was one of the most prolific blues songwriters of his era, with more than 300 published titles that spanned acoustic Delta blues, the plugged-in Chicago version and also songs of social protest, like “Just A Dream”, that daringly for its time put Bill in the White House, having a conversation with the president. It’s the kind of thing you might expect to find on a recent Ry Cooder album, and is revived here by the Alvins in a hard-driving version. Common Ground on the whole gives a fabulous account of Bill’s versatile songbook, whose warmth, wit, generosity of spirit and chin-up good humour in the face of what must have been a lot of awfulness is brilliantly delivered here on an exuberant opening versions of two of Broonzy’s signature songs, “All By Myself” and “I Feel So Good”. The former is a boisterous tumble of acoustic guitars and raw harmonies, like something you might have heard on a plantation porch, bottles of moonshine being passed around, the song’s self-mockery and droll narrative bringing laughter to lives that needed it. “I Feel So Good” is even more raucous, driven by Dave’s stinging lead guitar and Gene Taylor’s barrel-house piano and topped off by Phil’s good-hearted holler, still strong and handsome even after a near-fatal health scare in 2012. There can’t be many professors of mathematical semantics who have sounded this hip. He brings a bracing gusto to unabashedly bawdy Broonzy songs like “How You Want It Done?” - kin to Muddy Waters’ fiercely carnal “Rollin’ And Tumblin’” – and the even more lubricious “Trucking Little Woman”, whose rockabilly twang and show-stopping guitar solos recall similarly steamy Blasters cuts like “Hollywood Bed”. The version, meanwhile, of another Broonzy standard, “Key To The Highway”, made famous in several version by Eric Clapton, is altogether more stately, the prominence given to Phil’s wailing harmonica part maybe a nod to the version of the song recorded as a tribute just after Big Bill’s death in 1958 by Little Walter and a gathering of Chicago blues nobility, including Muddy, Willie Dixon and Otis Spann. Best of all though is probably “Southern Flood Blues”, originally recorded as a country blues in 1937, something of a lamentation, but now recast as a hugely ominous rocker on the apocalyptic scale of Dylan’s “High Water (For Charley Patton)”, which is suitably drenched by torrential guitar, thunderous drums and spine-tingling harmonica. Allan Jones

One of the highlights of Dave Alvin’s last solo album, 2011’s Eleven Eleven, was a track called “What’s Up With Your Brother?”, a droll blues about Dave’s famously fractious relationship with his brother, Phil, that ended hilariously with them having the kind of argument that put paid to The Blasters, the band they were in together before fraternal tensions drove them into a ditch. They split in 1985, after just five albums. While Dave became dedicated to life as a hard travelling road dog, Phil completed a master’s degree in mathematics and artificial intelligence. His own musical career has in the circumstances been restricted over the last 30 years to a couple of fine solo albums and a brief 2003 reunion tour with The Blasters that produced the Trouble Bound live album.

The session for “What’s Up With Your Brother?” was the first time they’d been in the studio together since 1985, an occasion made even more memorable for Blasters fans by the additional presence of the band’s great piano player, Gene Taylor. Encouraged by Dave’s label to turn an EP project they had been discussing into a full album, their mutual regard for the music of Big Bill Broonzy provided them with an opportunity to work together without undue conflict. The results are spectacular.

Broonzy‘s a towering figure in blues history, linking the acoustic rural blues of the Mississippi Delta and the electric blues forged in the urban crucible of Chicago’s South Side, where he was an early influence on the young Muddy Waters and other wild and rising stars of that legendary scene. He was also one of the first great American bluesmen to bring his music across the Atlantic, first touring Europe in 1951. He was especially revered in the UK, where his smitten fans included a generation of young musicians in thrall to the blues who would soon be forming bands themselves, including Keith Richards, Ray Davies, Ronnie Wood, Eric Clapton and Pete Townshend. “Back before it all caught fire,” Townshend later wrote, “we heard Big Bill and we knew that music could tell the truth as well as entertain.”

Broonzy was one of the most prolific blues songwriters of his era, with more than 300 published titles that spanned acoustic Delta blues, the plugged-in Chicago version and also songs of social protest, like “Just A Dream”, that daringly for its time put Bill in the White House, having a conversation with the president. It’s the kind of thing you might expect to find on a recent Ry Cooder album, and is revived here by the Alvins in a hard-driving version.

Common Ground on the whole gives a fabulous account of Bill’s versatile songbook, whose warmth, wit, generosity of spirit and chin-up good humour in the face of what must have been a lot of awfulness is brilliantly delivered here on an exuberant opening versions of two of Broonzy’s signature songs, “All By Myself” and “I Feel So Good”. The former is a boisterous tumble of acoustic guitars and raw harmonies, like something you might have heard on a plantation porch, bottles of moonshine being passed around, the song’s self-mockery and droll narrative bringing laughter to lives that needed it. “I Feel So Good” is even more raucous, driven by Dave’s stinging lead guitar and Gene Taylor’s barrel-house piano and topped off by Phil’s good-hearted holler, still strong and handsome even after a near-fatal health scare in 2012. There can’t be many professors of mathematical semantics who have sounded this hip.

He brings a bracing gusto to unabashedly bawdy Broonzy songs like “How You Want It Done?” – kin to Muddy Waters’ fiercely carnal “Rollin’ And Tumblin’” – and the even more lubricious “Trucking Little Woman”, whose rockabilly twang and show-stopping guitar solos recall similarly steamy Blasters cuts like “Hollywood Bed”. The version, meanwhile, of another Broonzy standard, “Key To The Highway”, made famous in several version by Eric Clapton, is altogether more stately, the prominence given to Phil’s wailing harmonica part maybe a nod to the version of the song recorded as a tribute just after Big Bill’s death in 1958 by Little Walter and a gathering of Chicago blues nobility, including Muddy, Willie Dixon and Otis Spann. Best of all though is probably “Southern Flood Blues”, originally recorded as a country blues in 1937, something of a lamentation, but now recast as a hugely ominous rocker on the apocalyptic scale of Dylan’s “High Water (For Charley Patton)”, which is suitably drenched by torrential guitar, thunderous drums and spine-tingling harmonica.

Allan Jones

Neil Young: new solo acoustic shows announced

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Neil Young has announced two new solo acoustic shows. These take place at the Wang Theatre, Boston, on Sunday October 5 and Monday October 6. Tickets are available here. Pre-sale on the tickets starts today, July 9. These follow on from previous solo acoustic earlier this year in Chicago, Dallas...

Neil Young has announced two new solo acoustic shows.

These take place at the Wang Theatre, Boston, on Sunday October 5 and Monday October 6.

Tickets are available here.

Pre-sale on the tickets starts today, July 9.

These follow on from previous solo acoustic earlier this year in Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles and New York, as well as four shows in Canada.

Young is currently on tour in Europe with Crazy Horse. They debuted a new song, reportedly called “Who’s Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?“, at the Reykjavík show on July 7.

Beck to release Song Reader album featuring Jack White, Jeff Tweedy, Laura Marling and Jarvis Cocker

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Beck is set to release a recorded version of his Song Reader project with an all-star cast including Jack White, Jeff Tweedy, Laura Marling and Jarvis Cocker. Two years ago, in 2012, Beck released the album in sheet music form, leaving it up to individual musicians around the world to interpret his...

Beck is set to release a recorded version of his Song Reader project with an all-star cast including Jack White, Jeff Tweedy, Laura Marling and Jarvis Cocker.

Two years ago, in 2012, Beck released the album in sheet music form, leaving it up to individual musicians around the world to interpret his compositions in their own style. Three live shows have been staged since that release and later this month, on July 28, the first Song Reader album will be officially released.

Beck himself contributes one song, titled Heaven’s Ladder.

The Song Reader tracklisting is:

Moses Sumney – ‘Title of this Song’

Fun – ‘Please Leave A Light On When You Go’

Tweedy – ‘The Wolf is on the Hill’

Norah Jones – ‘Just Noise’

Lord Huron – ‘Last Night You Were A Dream’

Bob Forrest – ‘Saint Dude’

Jack White – ‘I’m Down’

Beck – ‘Heaven’s Ladder’

Juanes – ‘Don’t Act Like Your Heart Isn’t Hard’

Laura Marling – ‘Sorry’

Jarvis Cocker – ‘Eyes That Say ‘I Love You”

David Johansen – ‘Rough On Rats’

Jason Isbell – ‘Now That Your Dollar Bills Have Sprouted Wings’

The Last Polka – ‘Marc Ribot’

Eleanor Friedberger – ‘Old Shanghai’

Sparks – ‘Why Did You Make Me Care?’

Swamp Dogg – ‘America, Here’s My Boy’

Jack Black – ‘We All Wear Cloaks’

Loudon Wainwright III – ‘Do We? We Do’

Gabriel Kahane with Ymusic – ‘Mutilation Rag’

Beck released his latest album, Morning Phase, in February of this year.

The 26th Uncut Playlist Of 2014

Last week, just as I was finishing off the 25th playlist of the year, the new Steve Gunn album arrived. This week, the last-minute radical guitar hero is Chris Forsyth, whose first studio album with the Solar Motel Band is absolutely killing it as I type. It reminds me that one of the most enjoyable things I did on my blog last year was compile - with a lot of help - this "Marquee Moon"/"Sailor's Life" Youtube playlist: a bunch of clips inspired by musicians currently operating in that elevated zone. Forsyth was one of the key inspirations for the list, and also one of the contributors, along with the other musicians like Cian Nugent, Tom Carter and Nathaniel Bowles. If you haven't heard it before, I can't recommend it enough. Other great stuff this week includes the new album by the amazing bluegrass vet Alice Gerrard, produced by MC Taylor of Hiss Golden Messenger, which comes strongly recommended. A quick reminder, too, that our new address for letters to the mag is uncut_feedback@ipcmedia.com: we'd love to hear from you. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 [REDACTED] 2 Steve Gunn – Way Out Weather (Paradise Of Bachelors) 3 Wand - Ganglion Reef (God/Drag City) 4 Syl Johnson – Diamond In The Rough (Fat Possum) 5 Spider Bags - Frozen Letter (Merge) 6 USA Out Of Vietnam - Crashing Diseases And Incurable Airplanes (Aurora Borealis) 7 Van Dyke Parks - Super Chief: Music For The Silver Screen (Bella Union) 8 Vashti Bunyan – Heartleap (FatCat) 9 Orlando Julius With The Heliocentrics - Jaiyede Afro (Strut) 10 Morrissey - World Peace Is None Of Your Business (Harvest) 11 Tweedy - Sukierae (dBpm) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iyO2EY38YcA 12 Alice Gerrard - Follow The Music (Tompkins Square) 13 A Winged Victory For The Sullen – Atomos (Erased Tapes) 14 Karen O - Crush Songs (Kobalt) 15 Blonde Redhead – Barragán (Kobalt) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPmd2CXGpXQ 16 Sinoia Caves - Forever Dilating Eye (Jagjaguwar) 17 Sterling Roswell - The Call Of The Cosmos (Fire) 18 Mark Fry - South Wind, Clear Sky (Second Language) 19 King Tuff - Eyes Of The Muse (Sub Pop) 20 Various Artists – Night Walker: The Jack Nitzsche Story Volume 3 (Ace) 21 Chris Forysth & The Solar Motel Band - Intensity Ghost (No Quarter)

Last week, just as I was finishing off the 25th playlist of the year, the new Steve Gunn album arrived. This week, the last-minute radical guitar hero is Chris Forsyth, whose first studio album with the Solar Motel Band is absolutely killing it as I type.

It reminds me that one of the most enjoyable things I did on my blog last year was compile – with a lot of help – this “Marquee Moon”/”Sailor’s Life” Youtube playlist: a bunch of clips inspired by musicians currently operating in that elevated zone. Forsyth was one of the key inspirations for the list, and also one of the contributors, along with the other musicians like Cian Nugent, Tom Carter and Nathaniel Bowles. If you haven’t heard it before, I can’t recommend it enough.

Other great stuff this week includes the new album by the amazing bluegrass vet Alice Gerrard, produced by MC Taylor of Hiss Golden Messenger, which comes strongly recommended. A quick reminder, too, that our new address for letters to the mag is uncut_feedback@ipcmedia.com: we’d love to hear from you.

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

1 [REDACTED]

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

3 Wand – Ganglion Reef (God/Drag City)

4 Syl Johnson – Diamond In The Rough (Fat Possum)

5 Spider Bags – Frozen Letter (Merge)

6 USA Out Of Vietnam – Crashing Diseases And Incurable Airplanes (Aurora Borealis)

7 Van Dyke Parks – Super Chief: Music For The Silver Screen (Bella Union)

8 Vashti Bunyan – Heartleap (FatCat)

9 Orlando Julius With The Heliocentrics – Jaiyede Afro (Strut)

10 Morrissey – World Peace Is None Of Your Business (Harvest)

11 Tweedy – Sukierae (dBpm)

12 Alice Gerrard – Follow The Music (Tompkins Square)

13 A Winged Victory For The Sullen – Atomos (Erased Tapes)

14 Karen O – Crush Songs (Kobalt)

15 Blonde Redhead – Barragán (Kobalt)

16 Sinoia Caves – Forever Dilating Eye (Jagjaguwar)

17 Sterling Roswell – The Call Of The Cosmos (Fire)

18 Mark Fry – South Wind, Clear Sky (Second Language)

19 King Tuff – Eyes Of The Muse (Sub Pop)

20 Various Artists – Night Walker: The Jack Nitzsche Story Volume 3 (Ace)

21 Chris Forysth & The Solar Motel Band – Intensity Ghost (No Quarter)

Jack White to release White Stripes live album, Live Under The Lights Of The Rising Sun

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A new live album from The White Stripes will be released through Jack White's Third Man subscription service later this year. Live Under The Lights Of The Rising Sun was recorded during the duo's first visit to Japan in October 2000 and will feature 31 tracks including covers of "I'm Bored" by Iggy Pop and Screaming Lord Sutch's "Jack The Ripper" plus an early version of "Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground". The album will be the 21st release from The Vault subscription service offered by White's Nashville-based label. The White Stripes Japan gigs marked their first ever trip out of America as a band and saw them supporting The 5.6.7.8's at Tokyo venues Jam and Urga over two consecutive nights. The live LP will include both performances in full plus unseen photos taken during one of the shows and a die-cut, gatefold jacket. A snippet of "Hello Operator" from the album can be heard below. As previously reported , subscribers to The Vault service will also receive a new single by White's band The Dead Weather as part of the next release. The seven-inch gold-coloured vinyl single 'Buzzkill(er)' will be backed with 'It's Just Too Bad'. The songs follow the release of 'Rough Detective' and 'Open Up (That's Enough)' which were revealed at the start of the year. A new Dead Weather album is mooted for release in 2015. Their last LP, Sea Of Cowards, was released in 2010.

A new live album from The White Stripes will be released through Jack White’s Third Man subscription service later this year.

Live Under The Lights Of The Rising Sun was recorded during the duo’s first visit to Japan in October 2000 and will feature 31 tracks including covers of “I’m Bored” by Iggy Pop and Screaming Lord Sutch’s “Jack The Ripper” plus an early version of “Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground”. The album will be the 21st release from The Vault subscription service offered by White’s Nashville-based label.

The White Stripes Japan gigs marked their first ever trip out of America as a band and saw them supporting The 5.6.7.8’s at Tokyo venues Jam and Urga over two consecutive nights.

The live LP will include both performances in full plus unseen photos taken during one of the shows and a die-cut, gatefold jacket. A snippet of “Hello Operator” from the album can be heard below.

As previously reported , subscribers to The Vault service will also receive a new single by White’s band The Dead Weather as part of the next release. The seven-inch gold-coloured vinyl single ‘Buzzkill(er)’ will be backed with ‘It’s Just Too Bad’.

The songs follow the release of ‘Rough Detective’ and ‘Open Up (That’s Enough)’ which were revealed at the start of the year. A new Dead Weather album is mooted for release in 2015. Their last LP, Sea Of Cowards, was released in 2010.

Watch Crosby, Stills & Nash cover Iggy Azalea’s “Fancy” with Jimmy Fallon’s ‘Neil Young’

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Crosby, Stills & Nash performed a cover of Iggy Azalea's "Fancy" on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon last night. Click below to watch it now. They teamed up with the host (doing his impersonation of Young) to perform "Fancy", which has been top of the Billboard chart for the last six weeks. This...

Crosby, Stills & Nash performed a cover of Iggy Azalea’s “Fancy” on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon last night. Click below to watch it now.

They teamed up with the host (doing his impersonation of Young) to perform “Fancy”, which has been top of the Billboard chart for the last six weeks.

This isn’t the first time that Fallon has taken on the persona of Neil Young. Back in 2012, he joined the trio to perform Miley Cyrus’ ‘Party In The USA’. Additionally, Fallon impersonated Neil Young to cover LMFAO’s track ‘Sexy And I Know It’ alongside Bruce Springsteen back in 2011.

Later on in the show, Crosby, Stills and Nash performed two original compositions, “Teach Your Children” and “So Begins The Task”.

Neil Young And Crazy Horse debut new song at Reykjavík show

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Neil Young And Crazy Horse began their summer European dates in Reykjavík on July 7. The set included one new song, as well as a two live rarities. The band debuted a new track, "Who's Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?". They also played "Separate Ways", from the Homegrown sessions, which hasn'...

Neil Young And Crazy Horse began their summer European dates in Reykjavík on July 7.

The set included one new song, as well as a two live rarities.

The band debuted a new track, “Who’s Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?“.

They also played “Separate Ways”, from the Homegrown sessions, which hasn’t had a live airing since 2008, and “Days That Used To Be” from Ragged Glory, which the band hadn’t played live since 1991.

It was the first show since the news broke that bassist Billy Talbot had suffered a mild stoke and would be sitting out the dates; his place was filled by Neil Young’s longtime bassist Rick Rosas.

Mahogany Blue’s Dorene Carter and YaDonna West also joined the tour, filling in for Talbot who also provided backing vocals.

The band’s next date is July 10 in Cork, Ireland, and then July 12 at London’s Hyde Park.

Neil Young And Crazy Horse set list for Laugardalshöllin, Reykjavík, Iceland:

Love And Only Love

Goin’ Home

Days That Used To Be

Don’t Cry No Tears

Love To Burn

Separate Ways

Only Love Can Break Your Heart

Blowin’ In The Wind

Heart Of Gold

Barstool Blues

Psychedelic Pill

Who’s Gonna Stand Up And Save The Earth?

Rockin’ In The Free World

Encore:

Like A Hurricane

Send us your questions for Steve Albini!

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As he prepares to release Shellac's first new album in seven years Dude Incredible, Steve Albini 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 the legendary frontman and producer? Who are his favourite rock trios? What are his memories of working on Plant and Page's Walking Into Clarksdale album? As a producer, what makes a good recording studios? Send up your questions by noon GMT, Thursday, July 17 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Steve's answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question. Photo credit: Jordi Vidal/Redferns via Getty Images

As he prepares to release Shellac’s first new album in seven years Dude Incredible, Steve Albini 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 the legendary frontman and producer?

Who are his favourite rock trios?

What are his memories of working on Plant and Page’s Walking Into Clarksdale album?

As a producer, what makes a good recording studios?

Send up your questions by noon GMT, Thursday, July 17 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Steve’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Photo credit: Jordi Vidal/Redferns via Getty Images

Jeff Tweedy interviewed: “This is the biological reason why Hell exists.”

I've been playing the new Jeff Tweedy album, "Sukierae", a good deal these past few weeks - or, I should say, the new Tweedy album, since these quietly wired tracks are, strictly speaking, collaborations between the Wilco man and his eldest son, Spencer. I'm slowly beginning to think it might be the best studio album he's been involved with since "A Ghost Is Born". http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iyO2EY38YcA Yesterday, it occurred to me that I had a big and possibly interesting interview with Jeff Tweedy that I'd never posted online. It dates from 2005, around the time of Wilco's fantastic "Kicking Television" live album, when I hooked up with the band for a couple of dates: one a headline show in Asheville, North Carolina, that maybe still ranks as the finest Wilco show I've ever seen; the second, a support slot with The Rolling Stones in Atlanta. Reading the piece again, one detail near the start jumps out, when Tweedy talks about giving up smoking. “I promised my nine-year-old son that I would," he says. "He made up a legal document, and I haven’t smoked since I signed it.” That nine-year-old, of course, is now his drummer… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey Jeff Tweedy – affable, rumpled, 38 – has what most amateur psychologists would term an addictive personality. Fifteen years ago, while still a member of Uncle Tupelo, he beat alcoholism. Just under two years ago, he stopped taking vast amounts of painkillers essential, he thought, to combating the migraines which had debilitated him since childhood. Without a chemical crutch, he suffered panic attacks so bad he ended up in rehab for a month, where he was treated for the depression and anxiety that caused the headaches in the first place. “I remember thinking, My God, this is what happened when people started writing about Hell,” he says now. “This is what they were trying to relate, this is the biological reason why Hell exists.” Most Tweedy interviews over the past ten years, the ten years he has spent steering Wilco to the riskier extremes of Americana while selling hundreds of thousands more records than most of his peers, have fixated on his smoking. As if writing about the frontman’s omnipresent cigarette were a way of giving his compulsions a physical shape. Six months ago, though, he even abandoned that, a year to the day after he was discharged from hospital. “I promised my nine-year-old son that I would. He made up a legal document, and I haven’t smoked since I signed it.” What remains, in the wake of all these trials and rebirths, is an enduring obsession with music and its possibilities, a sense that rock’n’roll is a challenge as well as a consolation. It’s this imperative that has led Tweedy, over an eventful decade, to frequently reconfigure the sound and line-up of Wilco. It has seen him alienate the alt-country apparatchiks who once nurtured him; experiment with elaborately miserable power-pop; fall in with leftfield fixer Jim O’Rourke and add great swathes of radio interference to his songs; be dropped and rescued, triumphantly, by two wings of the same multinational entertainment company; punctuate his last album, A Ghost Is Born, with 12 minutes of enveloping drone and still get two Grammys for his trouble. Tweedy’s journey has been a heroic inversion of received music business wisdom: the more outré Wilco become, the more records they sell. “I’ve been driven,” he says, “to find something that I feel good about. Music is the one thing I’ve felt good about in my life. I wanted to cling to it. But at the same time it wouldn’t sustain me for very long. I had to keep moving.” Today, Wilco’s ongoing quest has brought them to Asheville, a small, hippyish college town in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina. A short tour culminates tomorrow night in Atlanta, where the sextet will support The Rolling Stones at the Phillips Arena. Then Tweedy will play a few solo shows and return to work on the sixth Wilco album. “What was most refreshing about the first session,” he laughs, “was that the songs were not weird at all.” For now, though, there is a wonderful live album, Kicking Television, to promote. Recorded in their hometown of Chicago last spring, it was initially designed as a full stop to the first decade of Wilco. Tweedy’s restless appetite for the next new sound has meant, however, that it is actually a document of a band in constant flux. Predominantly drawing on their last two albums, the latest and best lineup of Wilco (Tweedy, avant-guitarist Nels Cline, drummer Glenn Kotche, keyboardist Mikael Jorgensen, multi-instrumentalist Pat Sansone and surviving original member John Stirratt on bass) meddle, brilliantly, with their music. They add great skrees of noise to some of their most straightforward songs, and uncover the pop hearts of some of their most forbidding. “The record is basically the first glimpse of what the band is like now, going into the future,” suggests Tweedy, settling into a dressing room for an hour or so before his soundcheck. “I’m really at peace with a lot of what has happened for Wilco. I feel lucky, but I don’t think it’s all luck. We’ve got to this point without having made a whole lot of compromises.” Tweedy is sometimes perceived as a control freak, having dismissed so many Wilco members as his musical agenda has gradually evolved. In fact, he’s put up with a few abusive creative relationships for longer than now seems necessary, beginning with his Uncle Tupelo partner, Jay Farrar. “There are usually legitimate reasons for marriages to end,” he says. “People decide not to make each other miserable and they move on. A marriage is serious, but there’s nothing like that weighing a rock band down, so why do people want to be in a situation where nobody’s happy? I’m happy that I’m friends with my bandmates. But I’m sorry, I don’t really want to be friends if we’re not going to make great music together.” That said, it was Farrar – Tweedy’s angsty childhood friend from Belleville, Illinois – who chose to break up Uncle Tupelo in 1994. Tweedy had endured Farrar’s peculiar insecurities – he banned Tweedy from talking onstage, to sustain some kind of indie mystique – for four albums of battered country punk hybrids. By then, Tweedy had also given up drinking. “I thought I knew everything there was to know about alcoholism because I grew up in a house full of people who were alcoholics. My dad would be devastated to hear me say he’s an alcoholic, but the consensus would be that someone who drinks a 12-pack of beer every day is one. He’s a highly functioning alcoholic, he’s been able to maintain for a long time. My brothers, on the other hand, haven’t been able to and have suffered a lot. One of them is recovering and one of them is still very active in his addiction. “Even at a very young age I knew that I was an alcoholic, before I ever took a drink. But when I quit drinking, I thought I was saved for the rest of my life – which isn’t how addiction works. I had to find something else, because I really only treated a symptom.” To the rest of the world, however, Jeff Tweedy had always seemed the easygoing one in Uncle Tupelo – an emotional lightweight compared with the glowering Jay Farrar. Consequently when Tweedy and his other former bandmates from Tupelo – Stirratt, guitarist Max Johnston and drummer Ken Coomer – released their first album as Wilco, it came as little surprise that it was a relatively sunny country-rock collection. “I was so in love with where Uncle Tupelo was, I wanted to keep that audience, I didn’t want things to change,” he says of Wilco’s 1995 debut, AM. “But then I realised I don’t have any control over things changing. Even if I tried to make the record everybody wanted me to make, they were going to hate it.” That feeling was compounded by an executive at Wilco’s label, Reprise, telling Tweedy that AM was merely going to “create a buzz” for Farrar’s new band, Son Volt. For his next album, 1996’s Being There, Tweedy determinedly set out to “do everything”. A 2CD set that ranged confidently across myriad styles, Being There was a loose concept album about the significance of rock’n’roll and how it fitted in with other issues in his life. His first son, Spencer, had just been born, and the album’s working title had been Baby. Another new arrival figured prominently, too; a garrulous multi-instrumentalist and pop classicist called Jay Bennett, who became Tweedy’s new creative sparring partner. While AM had struggled, selling less than Son Volt’s debut, Trace, Being There dramatically ramped up expectations, shifting over half a million copies in the USA. Tweedy now found himself feted as a Great American Artist, a significant player. But ever the contrarian, he and Bennett started pushing Wilco in a different direction. 1999’s follow-up, Summer Teeth, was a masterpiece of pop baroque, though its rich Mellotron textures cloaked a misery and nastiness that seemed to chart a grim period in Tweedy’s relationship with Chicago club manager, Sue Miller. “There’s no doubt that was a tough time in our marriage,” he admits. “It can be a very harrowing record, and my wife hates it. But Summer Teeth was consciously constructed to work towards a place of light. One of the things that has helped me in my life has been an innate understanding that things could be better. If it wasn’t for that, I probably wouldn’t have been able to get through rehab, I wouldn’t have been able to get myself to rehab, I wouldn’t have been able to do the records we’ve done.” Tweedy, it transpires, is a remarkably stubborn man. On every rider, he jokingly demands a puppy for his dressing room: “What could be better than playing with a puppy before a gig to lower the blood pressure?” he reasons. Tonight, as ever, there’s no puppy in the dressing rooms. But Tweedy, you suspect, will not let this one drop. Similarly, when he has plotted a new trajectory for his band, nothing – not his record company, not even his bandmates – will knock him off course. Hence the tortuous gestation of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. Bennett left during the recording in 2001, as Tweedy’s long-simmering interest in the avant-garde manifested itself in the recruitment of Jim O’Rourke as mixer. No longer policed by the traditionalist Bennett, Tweedy constructed a dense backdrop of radio static, designed to emphasise the album’s themes of distance and ill communication. “We asked Jay Bennett to leave the band,” he confirms. “When we were making Summer Teeth he started aligning himself as Number Two, to the exclusion of other people’s input. He was impossible to work with, and it became clear that his idea of music, if he had one, was contrary to what I believed in.” Next the acting head of Reprise, David Kahne (producer of the forthcoming Strokes album), heard Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and disliked it so much he allowed the band to buy the album from the label. Relieved, Wilco uploaded the whole record onto their website, then sold it to Nonesuch, a more esoteric part of the AOL Time Warner conglomerate which also owned Reprise. Yankee Hotel Foxtrot became a huge critical and commercial success in 2002, but it also scared off some of Wilco’s more reactionary fans. Uncle Tupelo had seen the title of one of their albums, No Depression, adopted by a magazine which purported to represent the flourishing alt-country movement. Now, though, Tweedy’s adventurousness was being condemned by the arbiters of a scene increasingly limited in its outlook. “I always think that if Poco were around today they’d be considered some kind of cutting-edge alt-country band,” he smiles. “It has become a very conservative movement, that’s not really a movement. It’s stagnant.” On 2004’s career-topping A Ghost Is Born, Tweedy allowed the sketchy “Less Than You Think” to drift off into an epic drone indebted to ‘60s minimalist composers like Terry Riley and Lamonte Young. It was beautiful, but it provoked reviewers broadly supportive of Tweedy’s work to lash out at him. “That means it’s the most successful song Wilco’s ever done, in my mind,” he says. “People, y’know, it’s 2004 – this is shocking to you? It’s not an experiment. The experiments have all been done.” When Tweedy listens to the reverberant buzz of “Less Than You Think” now, though, it reminds him of a migraine. Throughout the sessions for A Ghost Is Born, the headaches which had plagued him for years were worse than ever. He had become addicted to painkillers to combat them, at around three times the dosage his doctor was prescribing. Tweedy would take “Anything I could get that would make my head stop hurting.” Once, in New York, Tweedy was hunting for Vicodin but hooked up with a dealer who only had morphine in stock. “I bought all this giant supply of morphine and took it for three months. Then I weaned myself off it. My experience has been that I quit and then feel very sure of myself.” By the time of A Ghost Is Born, he was predominantly using Vicoprofen. He would sing softly in the studio, to try and keep the pain at bay, then go home, sit in the bathtub for hours and panic. The spitting, rearing solo he plays at the climax of “At Least That’s What You Said” is, he thinks, a musical transcription of an anxiety attack. Just before the album was released, he decided to try the self-administered cold turkey he had used to successfully quit alcohol and morphine. This time, though, the panic episodes became so bad that he ended up in a hospital emergency room, and directed into a rehab programme. “Most addiction stems from a pre-existing mental condition,” he explains. “I was in the emergency room, I thought I was dying, and they asked me if I’d ever heard of dual diagnosis. It’s a mental ward but you go through rehab. They treat your panic disorder and your depression at the same time. I was like, ‘Can I go there now?’ “I haven’t had a migraine in a year and a half. The pain has stopped because I’ve been able to treat and stabilise the panic disorder. I’ve had headaches but I’ve been able to get rid of them. In the past they would escalate to migraines. They were a trigger.” At Wilco’s gig in Asheville, Tweedy’s guitar battles with his gifted new sidekick, Nels Cline, have a kinetic intensity and ambition that recalls Television. What’s most striking, though, is how effectively the show contradicts the rather worthy reputation that has blighted the band, especially in Britain. Certainly, Tweedy never shies away from serious issues. But there’s a celebratory aspect to Wilco, too, understood by the 2,500 “pretty rambunctious” people who dance around them for over two hours. For an addict, Tweedy seems to be in recovery. And for a depressive, his positivity is unusually convincing. “Almost everything I’ve ever done has been considered a fluke,” he says earlier. “After Being There people said, ‘This is playing way over his head. He’ll never make a record like this again.’ Summer Teeth came out and it was, ‘Jay Bennett is doing all of this.’ Then Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and obviously it’s ‘Jim O’Rourke and the story’s better than the record’. With A Ghost Is Born, ‘He exploited his addiction and went into rehab to sell his record.’” Tweedy looks rueful for a moment, then recovers his sarcasm. “Man, people don’t buy records like that. A rock star goes into rehab? ‘Wow, that’s a fascinating story – no-one’s ever heard that before! I’ve got to hear what this record sounds like!’ Come on!” The next night, Jeff Tweedy takes his band, his wife and two sons to meet The Rolling Stones. Keith Richards, a man whose tangles with drugs have kept millions vicariously gripped for decades, leans his elbow on Spencer’s head for photographs. Sam Tweedy, aged five, sleeps through “Sympathy For The Devil”. Ron Wood tells Wilco that they must play with the Stones again. Mick Jagger tells Wilco that Ron Wood says that to all the support acts. When they bound into the secure backstage room, the Stones remind Jeff Tweedy of the Marx Brothers, and he is surprised by how all four of them are the same height and weight. He is also relieved that no-one appears to have read a 2004 interview with Wilco where he ponders, “How many fucking people has Keith Richards killed?” Tweedy laughs when he’s reminded of this. “I’m obviously not saying by any intention of his own he killed anybody,” he qualifies. “But the persona that has been projected on him, through him, around him, is one that perpetuates a very destructive myth for a lot of people. And there’s no doubt in my mind that people have used it as an excuse to feed on things that are very bad for them. It’s a pretty safe bet that if Keith Richards wasn’t a rich and famous rock star, his constitution alone would not have kept him alive to this day. Most people aren’t that fortunate.” Then Jeff Tweedy inadvertently stumbles upon the reason why his own story of addiction and rehab is so interesting. His life might have superficially followed a rock’n’roll trajectory, but the details are critically different: the backstory, motivations and redemption far away from the wasted iconography of Keith and his acolytes. He’s embarrassed to talk about this stuff, but he just can’t stop. “It’s a pretty uncool thing to say in a magazine, but it’s also undeniable. It’s not just Keith, it’s everything that’s grown up around the drug culture and the rock’n’roll myth. That certainly never helped me.” Picture: Autumn De Wilde

I’ve been playing the new Jeff Tweedy album, “Sukierae”, a good deal these past few weeks – or, I should say, the new Tweedy album, since these quietly wired tracks are, strictly speaking, collaborations between the Wilco man and his eldest son, Spencer. I’m slowly beginning to think it might be the best studio album he’s been involved with since “A Ghost Is Born”.

Yesterday, it occurred to me that I had a big and possibly interesting interview with Jeff Tweedy that I’d never posted online. It dates from 2005, around the time of Wilco’s fantastic “Kicking Television” live album, when I hooked up with the band for a couple of dates: one a headline show in Asheville, North Carolina, that maybe still ranks as the finest Wilco show I’ve ever seen; the second, a support slot with The Rolling Stones in Atlanta.

Reading the piece again, one detail near the start jumps out, when Tweedy talks about giving up smoking. “I promised my nine-year-old son that I would,” he says. “He made up a legal document, and I haven’t smoked since I signed it.” That nine-year-old, of course, is now his drummer…

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

Jeff Tweedy – affable, rumpled, 38 – has what most amateur psychologists would term an addictive personality. Fifteen years ago, while still a member of Uncle Tupelo, he beat alcoholism. Just under two years ago, he stopped taking vast amounts of painkillers essential, he thought, to combating the migraines which had debilitated him since childhood. Without a chemical crutch, he suffered panic attacks so bad he ended up in rehab for a month, where he was treated for the depression and anxiety that caused the headaches in the first place. “I remember thinking, My God, this is what happened when people started writing about Hell,” he says now. “This is what they were trying to relate, this is the biological reason why Hell exists.”

Most Tweedy interviews over the past ten years, the ten years he has spent steering Wilco to the riskier extremes of Americana while selling hundreds of thousands more records than most of his peers, have fixated on his smoking. As if writing about the frontman’s omnipresent cigarette were a way of giving his compulsions a physical shape. Six months ago, though, he even abandoned that, a year to the day after he was discharged from hospital. “I promised my nine-year-old son that I would. He made up a legal document, and I haven’t smoked since I signed it.”

What remains, in the wake of all these trials and rebirths, is an enduring obsession with music and its possibilities, a sense that rock’n’roll is a challenge as well as a consolation. It’s this imperative that has led Tweedy, over an eventful decade, to frequently reconfigure the sound and line-up of Wilco. It has seen him alienate the alt-country apparatchiks who once nurtured him; experiment with elaborately miserable power-pop; fall in with leftfield fixer Jim O’Rourke and add great swathes of radio interference to his songs; be dropped and rescued, triumphantly, by two wings of the same multinational entertainment company; punctuate his last album, A Ghost Is Born, with 12 minutes of enveloping drone and still get two Grammys for his trouble. Tweedy’s journey has been a heroic inversion of received music business wisdom: the more outré Wilco become, the more records they sell.

“I’ve been driven,” he says, “to find something that I feel good about. Music is the one thing I’ve felt good about in my life. I wanted to cling to it. But at the same time it wouldn’t sustain me for very long. I had to keep moving.”

Today, Wilco’s ongoing quest has brought them to Asheville, a small, hippyish college town in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina. A short tour culminates tomorrow night in Atlanta, where the sextet will support The Rolling Stones at the Phillips Arena. Then Tweedy will play a few solo shows and return to work on the sixth Wilco album. “What was most refreshing about the first session,” he laughs, “was that the songs were not weird at all.”

For now, though, there is a wonderful live album, Kicking Television, to promote. Recorded in their hometown of Chicago last spring, it was initially designed as a full stop to the first decade of Wilco. Tweedy’s restless appetite for the next new sound has meant, however, that it is actually a document of a band in constant flux. Predominantly drawing on their last two albums, the latest and best lineup of Wilco (Tweedy, avant-guitarist Nels Cline, drummer Glenn Kotche, keyboardist Mikael Jorgensen, multi-instrumentalist Pat Sansone and surviving original member John Stirratt on bass) meddle, brilliantly, with their music. They add great skrees of noise to some of their most straightforward songs, and uncover the pop hearts of some of their most forbidding.

“The record is basically the first glimpse of what the band is like now, going into the future,” suggests Tweedy, settling into a dressing room for an hour or so before his soundcheck. “I’m really at peace with a lot of what has happened for Wilco. I feel lucky, but I don’t think it’s all luck. We’ve got to this point without having made a whole lot of compromises.”

Tweedy is sometimes perceived as a control freak, having dismissed so many Wilco members as his musical agenda has gradually evolved. In fact, he’s put up with a few abusive creative relationships for longer than now seems necessary, beginning with his Uncle Tupelo partner, Jay Farrar.

“There are usually legitimate reasons for marriages to end,” he says. “People decide not to make each other miserable and they move on. A marriage is serious, but there’s nothing like that weighing a rock band down, so why do people want to be in a situation where nobody’s happy? I’m happy that I’m friends with my bandmates. But I’m sorry, I don’t really want to be friends if we’re not going to make great music together.”

That said, it was Farrar – Tweedy’s angsty childhood friend from Belleville, Illinois – who chose to break up Uncle Tupelo in 1994. Tweedy had endured Farrar’s peculiar insecurities – he banned Tweedy from talking onstage, to sustain some kind of indie mystique – for four albums of battered country punk hybrids. By then, Tweedy had also given up drinking.

“I thought I knew everything there was to know about alcoholism because I grew up in a house full of people who were alcoholics. My dad would be devastated to hear me say he’s an alcoholic, but the consensus would be that someone who drinks a 12-pack of beer every day is one. He’s a highly functioning alcoholic, he’s been able to maintain for a long time. My brothers, on the other hand, haven’t been able to and have suffered a lot. One of them is recovering and one of them is still very active in his addiction.

“Even at a very young age I knew that I was an alcoholic, before I ever took a drink. But when I quit drinking, I thought I was saved for the rest of my life – which isn’t how addiction works. I had to find something else, because I really only treated a symptom.”

To the rest of the world, however, Jeff Tweedy had always seemed the easygoing one in Uncle Tupelo – an emotional lightweight compared with the glowering Jay Farrar. Consequently when Tweedy and his other former bandmates from Tupelo – Stirratt, guitarist Max Johnston and drummer Ken Coomer – released their first album as Wilco, it came as little surprise that it was a relatively sunny country-rock collection.

“I was so in love with where Uncle Tupelo was, I wanted to keep that audience, I didn’t want things to change,” he says of Wilco’s 1995 debut, AM. “But then I realised I don’t have any control over things changing. Even if I tried to make the record everybody wanted me to make, they were going to hate it.”

That feeling was compounded by an executive at Wilco’s label, Reprise, telling Tweedy that AM was merely going to “create a buzz” for Farrar’s new band, Son Volt. For his next album, 1996’s Being There, Tweedy determinedly set out to “do everything”.

A 2CD set that ranged confidently across myriad styles, Being There was a loose concept album about the significance of rock’n’roll and how it fitted in with other issues in his life. His first son, Spencer, had just been born, and the album’s working title had been Baby. Another new arrival figured prominently, too; a garrulous multi-instrumentalist and pop classicist called Jay Bennett, who became Tweedy’s new creative sparring partner.

While AM had struggled, selling less than Son Volt’s debut, Trace, Being There dramatically ramped up expectations, shifting over half a million copies in the USA. Tweedy now found himself feted as a Great American Artist, a significant player. But ever the contrarian, he and Bennett started pushing Wilco in a different direction. 1999’s follow-up, Summer Teeth, was a masterpiece of pop baroque, though its rich Mellotron textures cloaked a misery and nastiness that seemed to chart a grim period in Tweedy’s relationship with Chicago club manager, Sue Miller.

“There’s no doubt that was a tough time in our marriage,” he admits. “It can be a very harrowing record, and my wife hates it. But Summer Teeth was consciously constructed to work towards a place of light. One of the things that has helped me in my life has been an innate understanding that things could be better. If it wasn’t for that, I probably wouldn’t have been able to get through rehab, I wouldn’t have been able to get myself to rehab, I wouldn’t have been able to do the records we’ve done.”

Tweedy, it transpires, is a remarkably stubborn man. On every rider, he jokingly demands a puppy for his dressing room: “What could be better than playing with a puppy before a gig to lower the blood pressure?” he reasons. Tonight, as ever, there’s no puppy in the dressing rooms. But Tweedy, you suspect, will not let this one drop.

Similarly, when he has plotted a new trajectory for his band, nothing – not his record company, not even his bandmates – will knock him off course. Hence the tortuous gestation of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. Bennett left during the recording in 2001, as Tweedy’s long-simmering interest in the avant-garde manifested itself in the recruitment of Jim O’Rourke as mixer. No longer policed by the traditionalist Bennett, Tweedy constructed a dense backdrop of radio static, designed to emphasise the album’s themes of distance and ill communication.

“We asked Jay Bennett to leave the band,” he confirms. “When we were making Summer Teeth he started aligning himself as Number Two, to the exclusion of other people’s input. He was impossible to work with, and it became clear that his idea of music, if he had one, was contrary to what I believed in.”

Next the acting head of Reprise, David Kahne (producer of the forthcoming Strokes album), heard Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and disliked it so much he allowed the band to buy the album from the label. Relieved, Wilco uploaded the whole record onto their website, then sold it to Nonesuch, a more esoteric part of the AOL Time Warner conglomerate which also owned Reprise.

Yankee Hotel Foxtrot became a huge critical and commercial success in 2002, but it also scared off some of Wilco’s more reactionary fans. Uncle Tupelo had seen the title of one of their albums, No Depression, adopted by a magazine which purported to represent the flourishing alt-country movement. Now, though, Tweedy’s adventurousness was being condemned by the arbiters of a scene increasingly limited in its outlook.

“I always think that if Poco were around today they’d be considered some kind of cutting-edge alt-country band,” he smiles. “It has become a very conservative movement, that’s not really a movement. It’s stagnant.”

On 2004’s career-topping A Ghost Is Born, Tweedy allowed the sketchy “Less Than You Think” to drift off into an epic drone indebted to ‘60s minimalist composers like Terry Riley and Lamonte Young. It was beautiful, but it provoked reviewers broadly supportive of Tweedy’s work to lash out at him.

“That means it’s the most successful song Wilco’s ever done, in my mind,” he says. “People, y’know, it’s 2004 – this is shocking to you? It’s not an experiment. The experiments have all been done.”

When Tweedy listens to the reverberant buzz of “Less Than You Think” now, though, it reminds him of a migraine. Throughout the sessions for A Ghost Is Born, the headaches which had plagued him for years were worse than ever. He had become addicted to painkillers to combat them, at around three times the dosage his doctor was prescribing. Tweedy would take “Anything I could get that would make my head stop hurting.”

Once, in New York, Tweedy was hunting for Vicodin but hooked up with a dealer who only had morphine in stock. “I bought all this giant supply of morphine and took it for three months. Then I weaned myself off it. My experience has been that I quit and then feel very sure of myself.”

By the time of A Ghost Is Born, he was predominantly using Vicoprofen. He would sing softly in the studio, to try and keep the pain at bay, then go home, sit in the bathtub for hours and panic. The spitting, rearing solo he plays at the climax of “At Least That’s What You Said” is, he thinks, a musical transcription of an anxiety attack.

Just before the album was released, he decided to try the self-administered cold turkey he had used to successfully quit alcohol and morphine. This time, though, the panic episodes became so bad that he ended up in a hospital emergency room, and directed into a rehab programme.

“Most addiction stems from a pre-existing mental condition,” he explains. “I was in the emergency room, I thought I was dying, and they asked me if I’d ever heard of dual diagnosis. It’s a mental ward but you go through rehab. They treat your panic disorder and your depression at the same time. I was like, ‘Can I go there now?’

“I haven’t had a migraine in a year and a half. The pain has stopped because I’ve been able to treat and stabilise the panic disorder. I’ve had headaches but I’ve been able to get rid of them. In the past they would escalate to migraines. They were a trigger.”

At Wilco’s gig in Asheville, Tweedy’s guitar battles with his gifted new sidekick, Nels Cline, have a kinetic intensity and ambition that recalls Television. What’s most striking, though, is how effectively the show contradicts the rather worthy reputation that has blighted the band, especially in Britain. Certainly, Tweedy never shies away from serious issues. But there’s a celebratory aspect to Wilco, too, understood by the 2,500 “pretty rambunctious” people who dance around them for over two hours. For an addict, Tweedy seems to be in recovery. And for a depressive, his positivity is unusually convincing.

“Almost everything I’ve ever done has been considered a fluke,” he says earlier. “After Being There people said, ‘This is playing way over his head. He’ll never make a record like this again.’ Summer Teeth came out and it was, ‘Jay Bennett is doing all of this.’ Then Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and obviously it’s ‘Jim O’Rourke and the story’s better than the record’. With A Ghost Is Born, ‘He exploited his addiction and went into rehab to sell his record.’”

Tweedy looks rueful for a moment, then recovers his sarcasm.

“Man, people don’t buy records like that. A rock star goes into rehab? ‘Wow, that’s a fascinating story – no-one’s ever heard that before! I’ve got to hear what this record sounds like!’ Come on!”

The next night, Jeff Tweedy takes his band, his wife and two sons to meet The Rolling Stones. Keith Richards, a man whose tangles with drugs have kept millions vicariously gripped for decades, leans his elbow on Spencer’s head for photographs. Sam Tweedy, aged five, sleeps through “Sympathy For The Devil”. Ron Wood tells Wilco that they must play with the Stones again. Mick Jagger tells Wilco that Ron Wood says that to all the support acts. When they bound into the secure backstage room, the Stones remind Jeff Tweedy of the Marx Brothers, and he is surprised by how all four of them are the same height and weight. He is also relieved that no-one appears to have read a 2004 interview with Wilco where he ponders, “How many fucking people has Keith Richards killed?”

Tweedy laughs when he’s reminded of this.

“I’m obviously not saying by any intention of his own he killed anybody,” he qualifies. “But the persona that has been projected on him, through him, around him, is one that perpetuates a very destructive myth for a lot of people. And there’s no doubt in my mind that people have used it as an excuse to feed on things that are very bad for them. It’s a pretty safe bet that if Keith Richards wasn’t a rich and famous rock star, his constitution alone would not have kept him alive to this day. Most people aren’t that fortunate.”

Then Jeff Tweedy inadvertently stumbles upon the reason why his own story of addiction and rehab is so interesting. His life might have superficially followed a rock’n’roll trajectory, but the details are critically different: the backstory, motivations and redemption far away from the wasted iconography of Keith and his acolytes. He’s embarrassed to talk about this stuff, but he just can’t stop.

“It’s a pretty uncool thing to say in a magazine, but it’s also undeniable. It’s not just Keith, it’s everything that’s grown up around the drug culture and the rock’n’roll myth. That certainly never helped me.”

Picture: Autumn De Wilde

Motörhead fan suffers blood clot on the brain after headbanging

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A Motörhead fan had to be treated for a blood clot on the brain after headbanging at a recent gig by the metal band. The unnamed German man developed the condition after attending a gig by the band with his son, though doctors at the Hanover medical school where the 50 year old was treated were keen to stress that they do not believe that headbanging is a dangerous activity. German doctors, via The Guardian, claim that the man developed a blood clot after seeing Motörhead live. He received medical attention after "suffering a constant, worsening headache that affected the whole head," for two weeks after the live performance. The patient had no history of head injuries but was a regular headbanger at live concerts. Doctors were able to allieviate the man's headaches by drilling a hole into his brain and draining the blood. "We are not against headbanging," said Dr Ariyan Pirayesh Islamian, one of the doctors at the Hanover medical school. "The risk of injury is very, very low. But I think if [the patient] had gone to a classical concert, this would not have happened." This is the fourth documented case of subdural haematoma linked to headbanging – which can cause the brain to bash off the skull and cause injury to the headbanger.

A Motörhead fan had to be treated for a blood clot on the brain after headbanging at a recent gig by the metal band.

The unnamed German man developed the condition after attending a gig by the band with his son, though doctors at the Hanover medical school where the 50 year old was treated were keen to stress that they do not believe that headbanging is a dangerous activity.

German doctors, via The Guardian, claim that the man developed a blood clot after seeing Motörhead live. He received medical attention after “suffering a constant, worsening headache that affected the whole head,” for two weeks after the live performance. The patient had no history of head injuries but was a regular headbanger at live concerts.

Doctors were able to allieviate the man’s headaches by drilling a hole into his brain and draining the blood. “We are not against headbanging,” said Dr Ariyan Pirayesh Islamian, one of the doctors at the Hanover medical school. “The risk of injury is very, very low. But I think if [the patient] had gone to a classical concert, this would not have happened.”

This is the fourth documented case of subdural haematoma linked to headbanging – which can cause the brain to bash off the skull and cause injury to the headbanger.

Death metal band to play in air-tight box until they run out of oxygen

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Death metal band Unfathomable Ruination are to play in an air-tight, soundproof cube until they run out of oxygen – repeating the feat three nights a week until August 1. The performances, held outside London's Gherkin building at 6pm every Wednesday to Friday, will be inaudible to the public and are part of an installation titled "Box Sized Die" by Portugese artist João Onofre. Onofre said: "The performance's duration is limited to the length of time in which oxygen is expended. Outside the cube, viewers observe its strange vibrations, only viewing the band’s entrance and exit to the performance space." London five-piece Unfathomable Ruination formed in 2011 and have released two albums, Musical Album and Misshapen Congenital Entropy. The video for their song "Carved Inherent Delusion" can be seen below. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l7VqNSWgTs8

Death metal band Unfathomable Ruination are to play in an air-tight, soundproof cube until they run out of oxygen – repeating the feat three nights a week until August 1.

The performances, held outside London’s Gherkin building at 6pm every Wednesday to Friday, will be inaudible to the public and are part of an installation titled “Box Sized Die” by Portugese artist João Onofre.

Onofre said: “The performance’s duration is limited to the length of time in which oxygen is expended. Outside the cube, viewers observe its strange vibrations, only viewing the band’s entrance and exit to the performance space.”

London five-piece Unfathomable Ruination formed in 2011 and have released two albums, Musical Album and Misshapen Congenital Entropy. The video for their song “Carved Inherent Delusion” can be seen below.

Preview The Dead Weather’s new single, “Buzzkill(er)”

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The Dead Weather have teased new single "Buzzkill(er)" by streaming a short clip from the track. Click below to listen to the audio snippet from the band, which features Jack White and The Kills' Alison Mosshart. The 7" single will be backed with "It's Just Too Bad" and released as part of Third M...

The Dead Weather have teased new single “Buzzkill(er)” by streaming a short clip from the track.

Click below to listen to the audio snippet from the band, which features Jack White and The Kills’ Alison Mosshart.

The 7″ single will be backed with “It’s Just Too Bad” and released as part of Third Man Records’ ‘Vault’ subscription series on ‘gold’ vinyl.

The songs follow the release of “Rough Detective” and “Open Up (That’s Enough)” which were revealed at the start of the year.

A new album from the band is mooted for release in 2015. Their last LP was Sea Of Cowards in 2010. A press release for the two new songs calls them “further examples that this band, in their downtime from Queens of the Stone Age, the Kills and JW solo, are more deadly than 99% of the rest of the also-rans out there.”