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Roddy Frame – Seven Dials

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The Aztec Camera-man relives his early-'80s glories - slap bass and all... It’s been eight years since Roddy Frame’s last album, Western Skies, and over 30 since his arrival as a precocious prodigy from East Kilbride, the boy wonder whose remarkably worldly songs put Aztec Camera at the vanguard of the Sound of Young Scotland alongside Postcard labelmates Orange Juice and Josef K. Though their 1983 debut, High Land, Hard Rain, remains arguably the crowning achievement of that vibrant cultural moment, Frame swiftly ditched the arch aesthetic and Cali-donian jangle to indulge what seemed at times a wilful contrarian streak. He outraged indier-than-thou sensibilities by working with Mark Knopfler on Aztec Camera’s second album Knife, while Love – with its pop hit “Somewhere In My Heart” – was a slick pop-soul confection employing veteran US sessioneers Steve Gadd and Steve Jordan. Later releases bounced from Mick Jones to Ryuichi Sakamoto, before Frame ditched the band brand and went solo with 1998’s North Star. It’s been slow work since. Seven Dials is Frame’s fourth solo album in 16 years, evidence not just of a perfectionist streak, but also of someone who has occasionally seemed burdened by the expectations wrought by his exceptional early promise. On “English Garden”, a ballad of heartbreaking fragility and one of several stand-outs here, he contemplates swans on the Thames while paraphrasing L.P. Hartley: “The past is like another place, it’s a foreign land”. Yet at 50 Frame seems more at ease with returning there. He marked High Land, Hard Rain’s thirtieth birthday last year with a handful of gloriously nostalgic shows, and there are moments on Seven Dials which directly confront former glories. “Once, like the kid I reigned / King of all I surveyed,” he reflects on “The Other Side”, while “Postcard” – a knowing title – features a twanging one-note acoustic guitar solo which plants its tongue firmly in the cheek of “Oblivious”. Seven Dials seamlessly weaves many of the best elements of Frame’s past into a work of consummate craftsmanship which also references the likes of Steely Dan, The Cure, The Beatles, Bowie, Fleetwood Mac, Van Morrison and Bob Dylan. Within an orthodox pop/rock axis it exhibits admirably egalitarian and sometimes eccentric tastes. In “On The Waves”, the syncopated 80s rhythm track features slap-bass. At the end of ”The Other Side”, a soulful, slow-rolling showstopper with rippling piano arpeggios a la Hunky Dory, Frame’s unabashed guitar solo pays explicit homage to Brian May. “Rear View Mirror”, a seductively swaying bossa nova with a tough lyrical edge, finds him channelling his inner João Gilberto, while the sparkling west coast radio pop of “Postcard”, with its glistening guitar line and sun-ripened backing vocals, makes a neat meta-textual nod to the source of its inspiration as it travels “from San Francisco to Sausalito, where they started Rumours”. Elsewhere, the words hint at confession while remaining essentially impressionistic studies of time, place, memory and love. “From A Train”, the latest in a line of nimble finger-picking songs running from “Down The Dip” to 2002’s magnificent voice-and-acoustic album Surf, concludes, “Here’s the view: love is pain, rushing through.” There’s also much spiritual contemplation on the record, with its talk of Jesus’ children, the washing of hands, faith tested and often found wanting. “Forty Days Of Rain” pits the album’s most jaunty musical setting – a Dylanesque folk-rock rush of harmonica, organ and accordion – against its most explicitly racked lyric. Drenched in the quasi-biblical imagery of floods, ancient kings and swords, it depicts Frame as a “wretch”, broken by a period of extreme crisis, stumbling into salvation: “I fall and I pray, I was lost but I’m found.” A triumph of economy at ten songs and 38 minutes, Seven Dials succeeds in being both instantly accessible yet full of detail and depth. The apparently nourishing life/work balance Frame outlines in its hook-laden opener, “White Pony” – “Sometimes you’ve got to stop and look around” – may lead to increasingly lengthy pauses between releases, but smelling the flowers along the way has clearly done him the power of good. Graeme Thomson Q&A RODDY FRAME Eight years. Explain yourself. I’ve always been like that! I remember being a kid at school and the teacher saying, “When you start work you’re not going to be able to look out the window all day.” I was 12, and I said to her, “I’m not going to be working, I’m going to be a pop star.” Now people are asking why I’ve got gaps in my CV, but I didn’t think making music was ever about working to a schedule. Frankly, with some of the people I love, I wish they’d take more time and not make so many records. You’ve signed to Edwyn Collins’s label, AED. Yeah, Analogue Enhanced Digital – his little in-joke. I was wary at first. We’ve known each other since we were teenagers and we’re so close, but this is his turf. I was wondering if it would work, but [Edwyn’s wife] Grace said, “Look, I’ll never ask you to do anything you don’t want to do. You say no and that’s it.” I thought that sounded amazing, and I said, “Well, I promise I’ll never ring up and ask you why the record isn’t on the radio.” It’s a sensible arrangement. We’re old enough to know that the most important thing is that we stay friends. INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

The Aztec Camera-man relives his early-’80s glories – slap bass and all…

It’s been eight years since Roddy Frame’s last album, Western Skies, and over 30 since his arrival as a precocious prodigy from East Kilbride, the boy wonder whose remarkably worldly songs put Aztec Camera at the vanguard of the Sound of Young Scotland alongside Postcard labelmates Orange Juice and Josef K.

Though their 1983 debut, High Land, Hard Rain, remains arguably the crowning achievement of that vibrant cultural moment, Frame swiftly ditched the arch aesthetic and Cali-donian jangle to indulge what seemed at times a wilful contrarian streak. He outraged indier-than-thou sensibilities by working with Mark Knopfler on Aztec Camera’s second album Knife, while Love – with its pop hit “Somewhere In My Heart” – was a slick pop-soul confection employing veteran US sessioneers Steve Gadd and Steve Jordan. Later releases bounced from Mick Jones to Ryuichi Sakamoto, before Frame ditched the band brand and went solo with 1998’s North Star.

It’s been slow work since. Seven Dials is Frame’s fourth solo album in 16 years, evidence not just of a perfectionist streak, but also of someone who has occasionally seemed burdened by the expectations wrought by his exceptional early promise. On “English Garden”, a ballad of heartbreaking fragility and one of several stand-outs here, he contemplates swans on the Thames while paraphrasing L.P. Hartley: “The past is like another place, it’s a foreign land”. Yet at 50 Frame seems more at ease with returning there. He marked High Land, Hard Rain’s thirtieth birthday last year with a handful of gloriously nostalgic shows, and there are moments on Seven Dials which directly confront former glories. “Once, like the kid I reigned / King of all I surveyed,” he reflects on “The Other Side”, while “Postcard” – a knowing title – features a twanging one-note acoustic guitar solo which plants its tongue firmly in the cheek of “Oblivious”.

Seven Dials seamlessly weaves many of the best elements of Frame’s past into a work of consummate craftsmanship which also references the likes of Steely Dan, The Cure, The Beatles, Bowie, Fleetwood Mac, Van Morrison and Bob Dylan. Within an orthodox pop/rock axis it exhibits admirably egalitarian and sometimes eccentric tastes. In “On The Waves”, the syncopated 80s rhythm track features slap-bass. At the end of ”The Other Side”, a soulful, slow-rolling showstopper with rippling piano arpeggios a la Hunky Dory, Frame’s unabashed guitar solo pays explicit homage to Brian May. “Rear View Mirror”, a seductively swaying bossa nova with a tough lyrical edge, finds him channelling his inner João Gilberto, while the sparkling west coast radio pop of “Postcard”, with its glistening guitar line and sun-ripened backing vocals, makes a neat meta-textual nod to the source of its inspiration as it travels “from San Francisco to Sausalito, where they started Rumours”.

Elsewhere, the words hint at confession while remaining essentially impressionistic studies of time, place, memory and love. “From A Train”, the latest in a line of nimble finger-picking songs running from “Down The Dip” to 2002’s magnificent voice-and-acoustic album Surf, concludes, “Here’s the view: love is pain, rushing through.” There’s also much spiritual contemplation on the record, with its talk of Jesus’ children, the washing of hands, faith tested and often found wanting. “Forty Days Of Rain” pits the album’s most jaunty musical setting – a Dylanesque folk-rock rush of harmonica, organ and accordion – against its most explicitly racked lyric. Drenched in the quasi-biblical imagery of floods, ancient kings and swords, it depicts Frame as a “wretch”, broken by a period of extreme crisis, stumbling into salvation: “I fall and I pray, I was lost but I’m found.”

A triumph of economy at ten songs and 38 minutes, Seven Dials succeeds in being both instantly accessible yet full of detail and depth. The apparently nourishing life/work balance Frame outlines in its hook-laden opener, “White Pony” – “Sometimes you’ve got to stop and look around” – may lead to increasingly lengthy pauses between releases, but smelling the flowers along the way has clearly done him the power of good.

Graeme Thomson

Q&A

RODDY FRAME

Eight years. Explain yourself.

I’ve always been like that! I remember being a kid at school and the teacher saying, “When you start work you’re not going to be able to look out the window all day.” I was 12, and I said to her, “I’m not going to be working, I’m going to be a pop star.” Now people are asking why I’ve got gaps in my CV, but I didn’t think making music was ever about working to a schedule. Frankly, with some of the people I love, I wish they’d take more time and not make so many records.

You’ve signed to Edwyn Collins’s label, AED.

Yeah, Analogue Enhanced Digital – his little in-joke. I was wary at first. We’ve known each other since we were teenagers and we’re so close, but this is his turf. I was wondering if it would work, but [Edwyn’s wife] Grace said, “Look, I’ll never ask you to do anything you don’t want to do. You say no and that’s it.” I thought that sounded amazing, and I said, “Well, I promise I’ll never ring up and ask you why the record isn’t on the radio.” It’s a sensible arrangement. We’re old enough to know that the most important thing is that we stay friends.

INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Paul McCartney postpones more tour dates

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Paul McCartney has postponed a number of US tour dates, as he continues to recover a virus which saw him hospitalised in Tokyo, Japan last month. Writing on his official website, McCartney said: "I'm sorry but it’s going to be a few more weeks before we get rocking in America again. I’m feelin...

Paul McCartney has postponed a number of US tour dates, as he continues to recover a virus which saw him hospitalised in Tokyo, Japan last month.

Writing on his official website, McCartney said: “I’m sorry but it’s going to be a few more weeks before we get rocking in America again. I’m feeling great but taking my docs’ advice to take it easy for just a few more days. Look forward to seeing you all soon.”

Concerts in Lubbock, Dallas, New Orleans, Atlanta, Jacksonville, Nashville and Louisville on his Out There tour have now been pushed back until October.

The tour will resume in Albany on July 5.

The shows continue through to mid-August, before picking up again in October.

Watch Morrissey debut new song, “Kick The Bride Down The Aisle” live

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Morrissey debuted a new album song "Kick The Bride Down The Aisle" onstage in Boston on Saturday night [June 7]. Click below to watch fan-shot footage of the live unveiling of the song at the Boston Opera House. The studio version of the track will feature on Morrissey's new album World Peace Is No...

Morrissey debuted a new album song “Kick The Bride Down The Aisle” onstage in Boston on Saturday night [June 7].

Click below to watch fan-shot footage of the live unveiling of the song at the Boston Opera House. The studio version of the track will feature on Morrissey’s new album World Peace Is None of Your Business, which is set for release on July 14.

Earlier this month Morrissey streamed another new song, entitled “Earth Is The Loneliest Planet“, which was trailed with a Pamela Anderson starring spoken word video.

Morrissey was recently forced to cancel a gig in Atlanta, Georgia through ill health as well as postpone a show at the Revel Casino Hotel in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

The World Peace Is None Of Your Business tracklisting is:

‘World Peace Is None Of Your Business’

‘Neal Cassady Drops Dead’

‘Istanbul’

‘I’m Not A Man’

‘Earth Is The Loneliest Planet’

‘Staircase At The University’

‘The Bullfighter Dies’

‘Kiss Me A Lot’

‘Smiler With Knife’

‘Kick The Bride Down the Aisle’

‘Mountjoy’

‘Oboe Concerto’

Jack White announces UK arena shows for November

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Jack White has announced plans for three UK arena tours set to take place this November. While play Leeds First Direct Arena on November 17, Glasgow SSE Hydro on November 18 and London O2 Arena on November 19. Tickets go on general sale on June 13 at 9am. The shows will follow White's sold-out gig ...

Jack White has announced plans for three UK arena tours set to take place this November.

While play Leeds First Direct Arena on November 17, Glasgow SSE Hydro on November 18 and London O2 Arena on November 19. Tickets go on general sale on June 13 at 9am. The shows will follow White’s sold-out gig at London’s Eventim Apollo on July 5 and his performance later this month at Glastonbury.

White’s second solo album Lazaretto is available now.

Jack White plays:

London Eventim Apollo (July 5)

Leeds First Direct Arena (November 17)

Glasgow SSE Hydro (18)

London O2 Arena (19)

The Ramones debut album finally certified gold 38 years after release

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The Ramones self-titled debut album has been certified gold - 38 years after it was first released. According to the Recording Industry Association of America, the trade organization that represents the recording industry in the United States, the album was certified gold on April 30, 2014. The al...

The Ramones self-titled debut album has been certified gold – 38 years after it was first released.

According to the Recording Industry Association of America, the trade organization that represents the recording industry in the United States, the album was certified gold on April 30, 2014.

The album was originally released on April 23, 1976.

According to the RIAA, an album is required to have sold 500,000 copies to qualify for gold status.

King Crimson release photos and video clip from 2014 tour rehearsals

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King Crimson have released images and a video clip taken from rehearsals for their forthcoming live dates. Nine photographs have appeared this morning [July 10] on Robert Fripp's DGMLive site. You can see them here. Meanwhile, Fripp has also posted a 5 second clip of the band rehearsing on his Fac...

King Crimson have released images and a video clip taken from rehearsals for their forthcoming live dates.

Nine photographs have appeared this morning [July 10] on Robert Fripp‘s DGMLive site. You can see them here.

Meanwhile, Fripp has also posted a 5 second clip of the band rehearsing on his Facebook page of drummers Gavin Harrison, Pat Mastelotto and Bill Rieflin which you can watch here. The clip is tagged “Elstree Studios Sunday 8th. June, 2014”.

This line-up – the 8th in the band’s history – is Fripp, Harrison, Rieflin, Mastelotto, bassist Tony Levin, saxophonist Mel Collins and guitarist Jakko Jakszyk.

They are all former Crimson members, except Rieflin and Jakszyk who have been involved on the fringes of Crimson for a few years. Rieflin collaborated with Chris Wong, Robert Fripp and Toyah Willcox in a project called The Humans, while Jakszyk played in Jakszyk Fripp & Collins, alongside Robert Fripp and Mel Collins.

On Saturday [June 7], Tony Levin posted on his blog: “We moved to a bigger rehearsal room, and combined the two parts of the band that had been rehearsing separately. Since February, the three drummers have been getting together, and this past week marked the second time I’d come to Jakko’s home studio to rehearse with him — this time joined by Robert and Mel.”

The band have also now announced the entire 17-show run of dates:

September 9 & 10 @ The Egg – Albany, NY

September 12 & 13 @ Kimmel Center – Philadelphia, PA

September 15 & 16 @ Colonial Theatre – Boston, MA

September 18, 19 & 20 @ Best Buy Theater – New York, NY

September 23 @ Barrymore Theatre – Madison, WI

September 25 & 26 @ The Vic Theatre – Chicago, IL

September 30 & October 1 @ Orpheum Theatre – Los Angeles, CA

October 3 & 4 @ Warfield Theater – San Francisco, CA

October 6 @ Moore Theatre – Seattle, WA

Announcing his plans to reform the band last year in Uncut, Robert Fripp said, “King Crimson is returning to active service. We are on-call to be ready for a live performance on September 1, 2014. Seven members. Four English, three American. Three drummers. It’s a different configuration of King Crimson than before. Some are familiar names, maybe more than others.”

Fripp went on to say, “The first performance will take place in either North or South America,” Fripp told Uncut. “There will be rehearsals primarily in England, and the final batch of rehearsals will most likely be in America in August or September 2014. There is a plan to include the UK in the tour dates, but it depends on a number of circumstances. Right now the primary geographical focus is the United States.”

The Best Albums Of 2014: Halftime Report

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Always a bit of a gamble doing this, to be honest but, since it’s June, I’ve tried to put together a list of my favourite albums of 2014 thus far. Many caveats forthcoming, not least that my slightly ad hoc way of trying to remember what I’ve liked means I’ve almost certainly missed a few things. In theory, these are all records released between January and June of this year. I should also point out that this is a very personal selection, and in no way representative of what my 40-odd colleagues at Uncut might choose if we were running this as a proper poll. It’s also not exactly a Top 62, as I’ve organised them in alphabetical order rather than attempting any ranking at this early stage (ie don’t get too overexcited, Luke Abbott fans…). Still, now that I’ve all my excuses out of the way, I hope you’ll find plenty to dig into here. I’ve included links to music and extended reviews about many of these albums, so please let me know what you think. Your own charts and thoughts are as welcome as ever: besides the comments boxes at the bottom, letters to the magazine can be sent to me at uncut_feedback@ipcmedia.com. Click here to see the list in three easier-to-load chunks. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1. Luke Abbott – Wysing Forest (Border Community) 2. Afghan Whigs – Do To The Beast (Sub Pop) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ovhzeqIaggY 3. Damon Albarn – Everyday Robots (Parlophone) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rjbiUj-FD-o 4. Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires - Dereconstructed (Sub Pop) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YucWOXSCa4U ) Read my review here 5. Olga Bell – Krai (One Little Indian) 6. Black Bananas – Electric Brick Wall (Drag City) 7. Black Dirt Oak – Wawayanda Patient (MIE Music) Read my review here 8. Bohren & Der Club Of Gore – Piano Nights (PIAS) Read my review here 9. Bill Callahan – Have Fun With God (Drag City) Read my review here 10. Hans Chew – Life And Love (At The Helm) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QoelJhhIKcM 11. Morgan Delt – Morgan Delt (Trouble In Mind) 12. Toumani Diabaté & Sidiki Diabaté - Toumani & Sidiki (World Circuit) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCEeaERMfNo 13. Drive-By Truckers – English Oceans (ATO) 14. East India Youth – Total Strife Forever (Stolen) 15. Fennesz – Bécs (Editions Mego) 16. Grandma Sparrow - Grandma Sparrow & his Piddletractor Orchestra (Spacebomb) 17. Steve Gunn & Mike Cooper – FRKWYS VOL 11: Cantos De Lisboa (RVNG INTL) 18. The Hold Steady – Teeth Dreams (Washington Square) 19. Dylan Howe – Subterranean: New Designs On Bowie's Berlin (Motorik) 20. Howlin Rain – Live Rain (Agitated) 21. Hurray For The Riff-Raff – Small Town Heroes (ATO) Read my review here 22. Kasai All Stars – Beware The Fetish (Crammed Discs) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rod0kSInlgo 23. Kelis – Food (Ninjatune) 24. Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks – Wig Out At Jagbags (Domino) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zYC5JASqWnI 25. Mark McGuire – Along The Way (Dead Oceans) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KGxosUuBg0A 26. The Men – Tomorrow’s Hits (Sacred Bones) 27. Metronomy – Love Letters (Because) 28. Mogwai – Rave Tapes (Rock Action) 29. New Bums – Voices In A Rented Room (Drag City) 30. Thee Oh Sees – Drop (Castleface) 31. Angel Olsen – Burn Your Fire For No Witness (Jagjaguwar) 32. Doug Paisley – Strong Feelings (No Quarter) 33. Linda Perhacs – The Soul Of All Natural Things (Asthmatic Kitty) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3n-nWy6fB00 34. Plaid – Reachy Prints (Warp) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJ6I6J0yrHQ 35. Pye Corner Audio – Black Mill Tapes 3&4 (Type) Read my review here 36. Pye Corner Audio/Not Waving - Intercepts (Ecstatic) 37. Real Estate – Atlas (Domino) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pNvj_VLkEBg Read my review here 38. Gruff Rhys – American Interior (Turnstile) 39. Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Phosphorescent Harvest (Silver Arrow) 40. Noura Mint Seymali – Tzenni (Glitterbeat) 41. Dylan Shearer – Garagearray (Castleface/Empty Cellar) 42. Jesse Sparhawk & Eric Carbonara – Tributes & Diatribes (VHF) 43. D Charles Speer & The Helix – Doubled Exposure (Thrill Jockey) 44. Håkon Stene - Lush Laments for Lazy Mammal (Hubro) 45. Suarasama – Timeline (Space) 46. Sun Kil Moon – Benji (Caldo Verde) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UgaquGird4w Read my review here 47. Todd Terje – It’s Album Time (Olsen) 48. Tinariwen – Emmaar (PIAS) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PduOJidnB_M 49. Alexander Turnquist – Wildflower (Western Vinyl) 50. Sharon Van Etten – Are We There (Jagjaguwar) 51. Wolfgang Voigt – Rückverzauberung 9/Musik für Kulturinstitutionen (Kompkakt) 52. Terry Waldo – The Soul Of Ragtime (Tompkins Square) 53. Ryley Walker – All Kinds Of You (Tompkins Square) 54. The War On Drugs – Lost In The Dream (Secretly Canadian) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZ9IXScip68 55. Watter – This World (Temporary Residence) 56. Jack White – Lazaretto (Third Man/XL) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYF0LtfUvJs 57. Woo – When The Past Arrives (Drag City) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JvBTyNKm5-Q 58. Wooden Wand – Farmer's Corner (Fire) 59. Woods – With Light And With Love (Woodsist) 60. Girma Yifrashewa – Love And Peace (Unseen Worlds) 61. You Are Wolf – Hawk To The Hunting Gone (Stone Tape) 62. Neil Young – A Letter Home (Third Man/Reprise) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6H47jI6xanA Read my review here

Always a bit of a gamble doing this, to be honest but, since it’s June, I’ve tried to put together a list of my favourite albums of 2014 thus far. Many caveats forthcoming, not least that my slightly ad hoc way of trying to remember what I’ve liked means I’ve almost certainly missed a few things.

In theory, these are all records released between January and June of this year. I should also point out that this is a very personal selection, and in no way representative of what my 40-odd colleagues at Uncut might choose if we were running this as a proper poll. It’s also not exactly a Top 62, as I’ve organised them in alphabetical order rather than attempting any ranking at this early stage (ie don’t get too overexcited, Luke Abbott fans…).

Still, now that I’ve all my excuses out of the way, I hope you’ll find plenty to dig into here. I’ve included links to music and extended reviews about many of these albums, so please let me know what you think. Your own charts and thoughts are as welcome as ever: besides the comments boxes at the bottom, letters to the magazine can be sent to me at uncut_feedback@ipcmedia.com.

Click here to see the list in three easier-to-load chunks.

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

1. Luke Abbott – Wysing Forest (Border Community)

2. Afghan Whigs – Do To The Beast (Sub Pop)

3. Damon Albarn – Everyday Robots (Parlophone)

4. Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires – Dereconstructed (Sub Pop)

)

Read my review here

5. Olga Bell – Krai (One Little Indian)

6. Black Bananas – Electric Brick Wall (Drag City)

7. Black Dirt Oak – Wawayanda Patient (MIE Music)

Read my review here

8. Bohren & Der Club Of Gore – Piano Nights (PIAS)

Read my review here

9. Bill Callahan – Have Fun With God (Drag City)

Read my review here

10. Hans Chew – Life And Love (At The Helm)

11. Morgan Delt – Morgan Delt (Trouble In Mind)

12. Toumani Diabaté & Sidiki Diabaté – Toumani & Sidiki (World Circuit)

13. Drive-By Truckers – English Oceans (ATO)

14. East India Youth – Total Strife Forever (Stolen)

15. Fennesz – Bécs (Editions Mego)

16. Grandma Sparrow – Grandma Sparrow & his Piddletractor Orchestra (Spacebomb)

17. Steve Gunn & Mike Cooper – FRKWYS VOL 11: Cantos De Lisboa (RVNG INTL)

18. The Hold Steady – Teeth Dreams (Washington Square)

19. Dylan Howe – Subterranean: New Designs On Bowie’s Berlin (Motorik)

20. Howlin Rain – Live Rain (Agitated)

21. Hurray For The Riff-Raff – Small Town Heroes (ATO)

Read my review here

22. Kasai All Stars – Beware The Fetish (Crammed Discs)

23. Kelis – Food (Ninjatune)

24. Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks – Wig Out At Jagbags (Domino)

25. Mark McGuire – Along The Way (Dead Oceans)

26. The Men – Tomorrow’s Hits (Sacred Bones)

27. Metronomy – Love Letters (Because)

28. Mogwai – Rave Tapes (Rock Action)

29. New Bums – Voices In A Rented Room (Drag City)

30. Thee Oh Sees – Drop (Castleface)

31. Angel Olsen – Burn Your Fire For No Witness (Jagjaguwar)

32. Doug Paisley – Strong Feelings (No Quarter)

33. Linda Perhacs – The Soul Of All Natural Things (Asthmatic Kitty)

34. Plaid – Reachy Prints (Warp)

35. Pye Corner Audio – Black Mill Tapes 3&4 (Type)

Read my review here

36. Pye Corner Audio/Not Waving – Intercepts (Ecstatic)

37. Real Estate – Atlas (Domino)

Read my review here

38. Gruff Rhys – American Interior (Turnstile)

39. Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Phosphorescent Harvest (Silver Arrow)

40. Noura Mint Seymali – Tzenni (Glitterbeat)

41. Dylan Shearer – Garagearray (Castleface/Empty Cellar)

42. Jesse Sparhawk & Eric Carbonara – Tributes & Diatribes (VHF)

43. D Charles Speer & The Helix – Doubled Exposure (Thrill Jockey)

44. Håkon Stene – Lush Laments for Lazy Mammal (Hubro)

45. Suarasama – Timeline (Space)

46. Sun Kil Moon – Benji (Caldo Verde)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UgaquGird4w

Read my review here

47. Todd Terje – It’s Album Time (Olsen)

48. Tinariwen – Emmaar (PIAS)

49. Alexander Turnquist – Wildflower (Western Vinyl)

50. Sharon Van Etten – Are We There (Jagjaguwar)

51. Wolfgang Voigt – Rückverzauberung 9/Musik für Kulturinstitutionen (Kompkakt)

52. Terry Waldo – The Soul Of Ragtime (Tompkins Square)

53. Ryley Walker – All Kinds Of You (Tompkins Square)

54. The War On Drugs – Lost In The Dream (Secretly Canadian)

55. Watter – This World (Temporary Residence)

56. Jack White – Lazaretto (Third Man/XL)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYF0LtfUvJs

57. Woo – When The Past Arrives (Drag City)

58. Wooden Wand – Farmer’s Corner (Fire)

59. Woods – With Light And With Love (Woodsist)

60. Girma Yifrashewa – Love And Peace (Unseen Worlds)

61. You Are Wolf – Hawk To The Hunting Gone (Stone Tape)

62. Neil Young – A Letter Home (Third Man/Reprise)

Read my review here

Hiss Golden Messenger announce new album, Lateness Of Dancers

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Hiss Golden Messenger has announced details of a new album, Lateness Of Dancers. Lateness Of Dancers is the fifth by Hiss Golden Messenger - the alias of songwriter and singer M.C. Taylor. It is due for release on September 15 on Merge Records. Scroll down to watch a trailer for the album. The al...

Hiss Golden Messenger has announced details of a new album, Lateness Of Dancers.

Lateness Of Dancers is the fifth by Hiss Golden Messenger – the alias of songwriter and singer M.C. Taylor.

It is due for release on September 15 on Merge Records. Scroll down to watch a trailer for the album.

The album was recorded in Taylor’s home state of North Carolina, and includes many of his longtime collaborators including Phil and Brad Cook, William Tyler, Terry Lonergan, Matt McCaughan, Alexandra Sauser-Monnig and longtime recording partner and collaborator Scott Hirsch.

Meanwhile, Hiss Golden Messenger will play the following shows in the UK:

Friday, July 18 – Latitude Festival, Suffolk

Saturday, July 19 – Bush Hall, London

Sunday, July 20 – Somersault Festival, Devon

The tracklisting for Lateness Of Dancers is:

Lucia

Saturday’s Song

Mahogany Dread

Day O Day (A Love So Free)

Lateness of Dancers

I’m A Raven (Shake Children)

Black Dog Wind (Rose Of Roses)

Southern Grammar

Chapter & Verse (Ione’s Song)

Drum

You can hear another Hiss Golden Messenger track, “Brother, Do You Know The Road?”, which isn’t included on Lateness Of Dancers, here.

Pulp: A Film About Life, Death And Supermarkets

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Jarvis and co shoot for a happy ending... As anyone who has seen Svengali, 20 Feet From Stardom or Frank will have surely realised, we are not exactly living in a golden age of music films right now. Much of my problem with these films lies in the reductive treatment of their subjects – the Sto...

Jarvis and co shoot for a happy ending…

As anyone who has seen Svengali, 20 Feet From Stardom or Frank will have surely realised, we are not exactly living in a golden age of music films right now. Much of my problem with these films lies in the reductive treatment of their subjects – the Stone Roses, a clutch of (mostly) interesting backing singers, the life of Frank Sidebottom. That Pulp (subtitled A Film About Life, Death And Supermarkets) manages to drag the genre out of its slump is quite an achievement. As much as I like Pulp, it’s still hard to muster much enthusiasm for a band who – some spry reunion shows in 2011/12 aside – haven’t released any new music for over a decade and whose story has been rigorously documented elsewhere. arvis Cocker seems to implicitly understand the shortcomings of the proposal: “It didn’t feel like a good ending,” he admits. “I know that ‘tidying up’ isn’t the greatest rock’n’roll motivation but I did want to give the story a happy ending.” To reinforce how underwhelming all this might be, we then get some footage of Jarvis changing a flat tyre, feeding some ducks, riding a bicycle.

As it turns out, Jarvis is arguably the least interesting thing about this film from New Zealand based director Florian Habicht. The events in Pulp take place in Sheffield, on December 8, 2012, the day of the band’s last UK concert. It follows the individual band members, their fans and a handful of the city’s more colourful inhabitants as they prepare for this momentous event. The band themselves prove to be amiable, self-deprecating souls – in particular drummer Nick Banks, who we first meet coaching his daughter Jeannie’s football team, the Sheffield FC U14 Ladies, who are sponsored by Pulp. Elsewhere, interviewed in a local record shop, sometime member Richard Hawley notes of the 12 year gap between Pulp’s debut It and their creative peak Different Class, “marriages don’t last that long, governments don’t last that long.”

But the real stars are the good folks of Sheffield (“a medium sized city in the north of England,” says Jarvis helpfully): knife makers, fishmongers, school children, newspaper sellers, all of whom gamely offer their thoughts on Jarvis and Pulp. “When they first started out, I listened to their music with Blur,” says Josephine, a white-haired fan of uncertain age. “And of the two, I prefer Pulp.” Habicht also interviews the workers in the city’s Castle Market, where the teenage Cocker held down a Saturday job. Meanwhile, a dance troupe, U-nique, treat Habicht’s cameras to their routine for “Disco 2000” and the Sheffield Harmony vocal group deliver a fruity a cappella version of “Common People”. We also meet a nurse who’s travelled from Georgia for the show, and a local musician who found solace in Pulp’s music during an especially turbulent period in his life. “I thin the concert was OK,” reflects Cocker at the film’s close. ”It was important to do it, and I think it was good that we left Sheffield to the last thing. Life is a random process, I think, but you can add a narrative to it. And so by doing that, it just seemed logical that you would do this thing and finish in the place where it all started.”
Michael Bonner

Ozzy Osbourne: “I’m up for another Black Sabbath album and tour”

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Ozzy Osbourne has revealed that there is a possibility for a new Black Sabbath album. The band took part in a press conference at this years Sweden Rock Festival in Sölvesborg on Friday [June 6]. The group discussed their plans for the future, and hinted that a new album may be in the works. "We...

Ozzy Osbourne has revealed that there is a possibility for a new Black Sabbath album.

The band took part in a press conference at this years Sweden Rock Festival in Sölvesborg on Friday [June 6]. The group discussed their plans for the future, and hinted that a new album may be in the works.

“We haven’t really discussed it. It is possible there’s gonna be another album,” said Osbourne. “But we haven’t really sat down and decided what we’re gonna do yet. We just wanna finish this tour and then we’ll see.”

In May, Tony Iommi said that the band’s Hyde Park gig this July could be their last ever. He admitted that he and his bandmates currently have no plans to play live after the festival and that, combined with his ill health, could mark the last time Black Sabbath fans get to see the band perform live.

Commenting on Iommi’s remarks, Osbourne said: “If it’s goodbye, we’re ending it on a high note…But I’m up for another Black Sabbath album and tour. If we can, great. If not, I’ll just carry on doing my own thing.”

Black Sabbath discuss their greatest abums in this month’s Uncut, in shops now.

Watch Arcade Fire cover The Smiths

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Arcade Fire covered The Smiths' "London" during their second show at London's Earls Court on Saturday night [June 7]. The band played the track during Saturday's show, which saw the band supported by Lorde. On the previous night's performance the band were joined by Ian McCulloch to perform the Ech...

Arcade Fire covered The Smiths‘ “London” during their second show at London’s Earls Court on Saturday night [June 7].

The band played the track during Saturday’s show, which saw the band supported by Lorde. On the previous night’s performance the band were joined by Ian McCulloch to perform the Echo And The Bunnymen track ‘The Cutter’.

During the Friday night gig Arcade Fire frontman Win Butler spoke about the band’s reasons for playing the venue, commenting: “We wanted to do Earls Court before they tear it down for condos. Get your bids in now. Hope they’re cheap.” In 2012 an online petition was launched to ‘save’ the venue, opposing plans to demolish the centre as part of redevelopment plans for the area.

Before Arcade Fire took to the stage last night the arena was transformed into a giant discotheque – featuring spotlights and glitter balls. The ‘fake’ Reflektors band played a cover of The Beatles ‘Helter Skelter’ on a second stage in the venue during the evening. As well as headlining this year’s Glastonbury Festival, Arcade Fire will also play a huge show at Hyde Park on July 3.

Arcade Fire played:

‘Reflektor’

‘Flashbulb Eyes’

‘Neighborhood #3 (Power Out)’

‘Rebellion (Lies)’

‘Joan Of Arc’

‘Month of May’

‘We Exist’

‘The Suburbs’/’The Suburbs (contd)”

‘Ready to Start’

‘Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)’

‘Intervention/’Antichrist Television Blues”

‘No Cars Go’

‘Haïti’

‘Afterlife’

‘It’s Never Over (Oh Orpheus)’

‘Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)’

‘Normal Person’

‘London’

‘Here Comes the Night Time’

‘Wake Up’

The Kinks discuss latest reunion plans

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The Kinks appear to be close to reuniting, according to Ray Davies in a new interview in The Sunday Times yesterday [June 8]. Speaking about the possibility of reuniting with his brother, Dave, Ray Davies confirmed, “I met Dave only last week to talk about getting back together again." “We’v...

The Kinks appear to be close to reuniting, according to Ray Davies in a new interview in The Sunday Times yesterday [June 8].

Speaking about the possibility of reuniting with his brother, Dave, Ray Davies confirmed, “I met Dave only last week to talk about getting back together again.”

“We’ve also spoken a few times on the phone and emailed. He’s been composing his own songs, but I’d really like to write with him again.”

“We both agree we don’t want to do old stuff or tour with past hits,” continued Davies. “It’s got to be something new.”

Earlier this year, Uncut carried an exclusive cover story where both Davies brothers and original drummer Mick Avory discussed the possibility of a Kinks reunion to mark the band’s 50th anniversary this year.

“It’s as close as it’s ever been to happening,” admitted Ray Davies.

Beastie Boys win $1.7 million lawsuit

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The surviving members of the Beastie Boys have won $1.7 million (£1.01 million) in their copyright lawsuit against Monster Beverage Corp. The case centred on a video created by the corporation which used five Beastie Boys songs in a "Beastie Boys Megamix" and flashed the message "RIP MCA" on screen to promote a show in 2012 without the band's knowledge or permission. The late Adam 'MCA' Yauch stated in his will that his likeness or art, including his work with the Beastie Boys, was not to be used for advertising purposes. Following an eight day trial the jury found in favour of the band, though Monster's lawyer, Reid Kahn, said the company would appeal, reports Reuters. When the verdict was read Adam Horovitz aka Ad-Rock hugged his partner Kathleen Hanna, formerly of Bikini Kill and Le Tigre and now fronting The Julie Ruin. He commented: "We're happy. We just want to thank the jury." During the trial Beastie Boys member Michael Diamond aka Mike D effectively announced the end of the band, saying that they promised the late MCA they would not make any new music after he passed away. "We have not been able to tour since MCA, Adam Yauch, died," Diamond said. "We can't make new music." When asked if the band would have given permission for their work to be used in the Monster promo, Mike D said: "Absolutely no".

The surviving members of the Beastie Boys have won $1.7 million (£1.01 million) in their copyright lawsuit against Monster Beverage Corp.

The case centred on a video created by the corporation which used five Beastie Boys songs in a “Beastie Boys Megamix” and flashed the message “RIP MCA” on screen to promote a show in 2012 without the band’s knowledge or permission. The late Adam ‘MCA’ Yauch stated in his will that his likeness or art, including his work with the Beastie Boys, was not to be used for advertising purposes.

Following an eight day trial the jury found in favour of the band, though Monster’s lawyer, Reid Kahn, said the company would appeal, reports Reuters. When the verdict was read Adam Horovitz aka Ad-Rock hugged his partner Kathleen Hanna, formerly of Bikini Kill and Le Tigre and now fronting The Julie Ruin. He commented: “We’re happy. We just want to thank the jury.”

During the trial Beastie Boys member Michael Diamond aka Mike D effectively announced the end of the band, saying that they promised the late MCA they would not make any new music after he passed away. “We have not been able to tour since MCA, Adam Yauch, died,” Diamond said. “We can’t make new music.” When asked if the band would have given permission for their work to be used in the Monster promo, Mike D said: “Absolutely no”.

Morrissey postpones another gig on American tour

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Morrissey has pulled another show on his current American tour. The singer was recently forced to cancel a gig in Atlanta, Georgia after being struck down by illness and he has now postponed tomorrow's show (June 6) at the Revel Casino Hotel in Atlantic City, New Jersey. A statement on Morrissey's ...

Morrissey has pulled another show on his current American tour.

The singer was recently forced to cancel a gig in Atlanta, Georgia after being struck down by illness and he has now postponed tomorrow’s show (June 6) at the Revel Casino Hotel in Atlantic City, New Jersey. A statement on Morrissey’s Facebook page says the gig will now take place at the same venue on June 22.

The statement reads: “As Morrissey and the touring party recover from a virus, the engagement in Atlantic City at the Revel Ovation Hall has been postponed to Sunday, June 22. All previously purchased tickets will be honored on the new date. The tour will resume as originally scheduled, without question, at the Boston Opera House on Saturday, June 7.”

The tour’s opening act Kristeen Young also revealed earlier today (June 5) that she will no longer be supporting Morrissey on the remaining dates. She wrote on Facebook: “We won’t be continuing as opening band for the Morrissey tour. Thanks to all who showed up early and gave us such life-sustaining enthusiasm. Thanks to Morrissey for his years of support and generosity. There are lots of plans and lots of possibilities and we can’t wait to tear into them.”

Robert Plant: Jimmy Page needs to “have a good rest”

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Robert Plant has responded to Jimmy Page's claim that he is "fed up" with the singer for delaying plans for reunion shows by saying the guitarist needs to "have a good rest". The band last played together in December 2007 at London's O2 Arena, but singer Plant has ruled out the possibility of a fol...

Robert Plant has responded to Jimmy Page’s claim that he is “fed up” with the singer for delaying plans for reunion shows by saying the guitarist needs to “have a good rest”.

The band last played together in December 2007 at London’s O2 Arena, but singer Plant has ruled out the possibility of a follow-up concert any time soon.

Speaking to The National, Plant said: “I think he needs to go to sleep and have a good rest, and think again. We have a great history together and like all brothers we have these moments where we don’t speak on the same page but that’s life.”

The band recently reissued their first three albums with new, previously unreleased material.

In a recent interview with the BBC guitarist Page said he was sure fans would be keen on another reunion show, but Plant has since said the chances of it happening are zero. Page commented: “I was told last year that Robert Plant said he is doing nothing in 2014, and what do the other two guys think? Well, he knows what the other guys think. Everyone would love to play more concerts for the band. He’s just playing games, and I’m fed up with it, to be honest with you. I don’t sing, so I can’t do much about it.”

The 21st Uncut Playlist Of 2014

A few headline comebacks in this week’s playlist, and if you scroll down you should be able to hear strong new music from the likes of Jeff Tweedy, Caribou, David Kilgour and, though perhaps ‘new’ music might be a misnomer, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. The past few days, however, have been dominated by all the Tropicalia and Chilean psychedelia that our picture editor, Phil King, brought back from his tour of South America with The Jesus And Mary Chain. If you have time to listen to just one thing from the list this week, can I recommend the insanely great Los Jaivas track below? Reminds me a little of the Lula Cortes/Ze Ramalho album (like an Amazonian Amon Duul II, very roughly) that got reissued a few years back. And one bit of housekeeping, while I’m here: we have a new email address for your letters to Uncut. Please send brickbats, bouquets and all the usual associated business to uncut_feedback@ipcmedia.com. Thanks. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Sundown Songs – Far From Home (CD Baby) 2 David Kilgour & The Heavy Eights – End Times Undone (Merge) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k8WXo_CzaAE 3 Ruthann Friedman – Chinatown (Wolfgang) 4 Richard Thompson – Acoustic Classics (Proper) 5 Desertshore – Migrations Of Glass (Caldo Verde) 6 Los Vidrios Quebrados – Fictions (Anima) 7 Caetano Veloso – Transa (Philips) 8 Tamba Trio – Avanco (Philips) 9 Clementina – Cada Voce? (Museu Da Imagem E Do Som) 10 Los Jaivas – 1971: Primer Disco De Los Jaivas (Columbia) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=la2lYOsJ9Zc 11 Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young – CSNY 1974 (Rhino) 12 Jennifer Castle – Pink City (No Quarter) 13 Jack White – Lazaretto (Third Man/XL) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYF0LtfUvJs 14 Various Artists – Country Funk II: 1967-1974 (Light In The Attic) 15 Neil Young – A Letter Home (Reprise) 16 [REDACTED] 17 Sam Doores - True To My Luck: The Early Years (CDR) 18 Various Artists – C86 (Cherry Red) 19 The War On Drugs – Lost In The Dream (Secretly Canadian) 20 Caribou – Can’t Do Without You (City Slang) 21 Sinead O’Connor - I'm Not Bossy, I'm The Boss (Nettwerk) 22 Congregacion – Viene (Machitun) 23 Electric Würms – Musik, Die Schwer Zu Twerk (Bella Union) 24 Benjamin Booker - Benjamin Booker (Rough Trade) 25 Peter Broderick And Greg Haines - Greg Gives Peter Space (Erased Tapes) 26 Girma Yifrashewa – Love And Peace (Unseen Worlds) 27 Richard Reed Parry – Music For Heart And Breath (Deutsche Grammofon) 28 Jeff Tweedy – I’ll Sing It (dBpm) 29 Eastlink – Eastlink (In The Red) 30 Bob Carpenter – Silent Passage (No Quarter) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c8TMRjSpSoY 31 Alexander Turnquist – Wildflower (Western Vinyl)

A few headline comebacks in this week’s playlist, and if you scroll down you should be able to hear strong new music from the likes of Jeff Tweedy, Caribou, David Kilgour and, though perhaps ‘new’ music might be a misnomer, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.

The past few days, however, have been dominated by all the Tropicalia and Chilean psychedelia that our picture editor, Phil King, brought back from his tour of South America with The Jesus And Mary Chain. If you have time to listen to just one thing from the list this week, can I recommend the insanely great Los Jaivas track below? Reminds me a little of the Lula Cortes/Ze Ramalho album (like an Amazonian Amon Duul II, very roughly) that got reissued a few years back.

And one bit of housekeeping, while I’m here: we have a new email address for your letters to Uncut. Please send brickbats, bouquets and all the usual associated business to uncut_feedback@ipcmedia.com. Thanks.

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

1 Sundown Songs – Far From Home (CD Baby)

2 David Kilgour & The Heavy Eights – End Times Undone (Merge)

3 Ruthann Friedman – Chinatown (Wolfgang)

4 Richard Thompson – Acoustic Classics (Proper)

5 Desertshore – Migrations Of Glass (Caldo Verde)

6 Los Vidrios Quebrados – Fictions (Anima)

7 Caetano Veloso – Transa (Philips)

8 Tamba Trio – Avanco (Philips)

9 Clementina – Cada Voce? (Museu Da Imagem E Do Som)

10 Los Jaivas – 1971: Primer Disco De Los Jaivas (Columbia)

11 Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young – CSNY 1974 (Rhino)

12 Jennifer Castle – Pink City (No Quarter)

13 Jack White – Lazaretto (Third Man/XL)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYF0LtfUvJs

14 Various Artists – Country Funk II: 1967-1974 (Light In The Attic)

15 Neil Young – A Letter Home (Reprise)

16 [REDACTED]

17 Sam Doores – True To My Luck: The Early Years (CDR)

18 Various Artists – C86 (Cherry Red)

19 The War On Drugs – Lost In The Dream (Secretly Canadian)

20 Caribou – Can’t Do Without You (City Slang)

21 Sinead O’Connor – I’m Not Bossy, I’m The Boss (Nettwerk)

22 Congregacion – Viene (Machitun)

23 Electric Würms – Musik, Die Schwer Zu Twerk (Bella Union)

24 Benjamin Booker – Benjamin Booker (Rough Trade)

25 Peter Broderick And Greg Haines – Greg Gives Peter Space (Erased Tapes)

26 Girma Yifrashewa – Love And Peace (Unseen Worlds)

27 Richard Reed Parry – Music For Heart And Breath (Deutsche Grammofon)

28 Jeff Tweedy – I’ll Sing It (dBpm)

29 Eastlink – Eastlink (In The Red)

30 Bob Carpenter – Silent Passage (No Quarter)

31 Alexander Turnquist – Wildflower (Western Vinyl)

The Making Of… The Raconteurs’ Steady As She Goes

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As Jack White’s second solo album, Lazaretto, is released on Monday (June 10), it seemed time to check out some of the White pieces in our archive. Here, in this article from December 2006’s Uncut (Take 115), Jack, Brendan Benson and Patrick Keeler celebrate the irresistible rise of their three-...

As Jack White’s second solo album, Lazaretto, is released on Monday (June 10), it seemed time to check out some of the White pieces in our archive. Here, in this article from December 2006’s Uncut (Take 115), Jack, Brendan Benson and Patrick Keeler celebrate the irresistible rise of their three-minute garage pop classic. Interview: Barney Hoskyns

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If ever a record begged to be released on 7” vinyl it was The Raconteurs’ “Steady As She Goes”. Redolent of an era when singles not only counted, but jumped out of the speakers, grabbing you by the lapels of your ratty post-punk jacket, the debut by Jack White’s other band was an instant masterpiece of 21st-century garage rock.

If its four-chord sequence was hardly revolutionary, “Steady” was anthemic, slashingly exciting, even latently funky. The fact that it embraced the quiet life, the idea of settling down in a state of matrimonial monogamy, paradoxically made the song more thrilling. Inimitable White lines like “Your friends have shown a kink in the single life/You’ve had too much to think, now you need a wife” were priceless antidotes to the rebellion-by-numbers themes of so many young rock bands.

For White Stripes fans, any fears that White’s radical blues-rock primitivism would be compromised by The Raconteurs’ orthodox lineup were allayed within 30 seconds. Hearing that first stabbed chord, you knew everything was going to be OK. And when the classy Broken Boy Soldiers album followed on the single’s heels, it was clear The Raconteurs were more than a busman’s holiday.

As they come to the close of 2006, The Raconteurs themselves remain pleasantly astonished by what happened the day Jack White dropped by Brendan Benson’s house on Detroit’s East Grand Boulevard.

“We were making the second video for ‘Steady’, racing these soapbox cars down a hill,” says White. “Brendan came to a stop beside me, turned to me laughing and said, ‘Did you ever imagine when we were writing this song that it would lead to this?’”

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Jack White (vocals, guitar): Brendan only lived three blocks away from me, so I would stop by quite often just to say hey and what’s going on. Brendan said, “Jack, please help me write some lyrics, ’coz I’m all tapped out!” He played me the demo of “Steady As She Goes” that he’d done, which he’d played all the instruments on. It was like a slow reggae version, a lot slower, and he only had one line, “Find yourself a girl and settle down…” So I just took his book and started writing.

At first I thought it was funny, because Brendan’s always trying to find the beauty in the clichéd phrases and sometimes he catches flak for that. So I was trying to do my best, Brendan! I think the big notion in my head was we’re all getting older now and enough of goofing around. All our friends are musicians, so it was like, ‘How much of this world can we stay a part of and how much do we reject?’

The song changed identity when Patrick [Keeler, drummer] and Little Jack [Lawrence, bassist] showed up a few days later. They happened to be in town, so we said, “You guys should come over and play on this.”

The best part of “Steady” is that it was the first time the four of us ever recorded together. People always say, ‘God, my demos sounded so much better than my album.’ I mean, it was great to be in Brendan’s attic, where it was 120 degrees and we wanted to get the hell out of there. Most of The White Stripes’ albums are recorded in really harsh conditions in the dead of winter, and that’s the best way to record, because when you get comfortable you start messing it up.

We thought it was a good blessing for the band to start off on vinyl. The song sounded so immediate that it just felt right. Life since the single came out has been amazing. The band has changed so much since then and it hasn’t even been that long.

I have to honestly say that I’m divided totally 50/50 between The Raconteurs and The White Stripes. My brain now has two options for songs that I write, and it’s a really nice luxury to have as a songwriter. I have so many songs now for another White Stripes record: Meg and I are working on songs during the breaks from touring with The Raconteurs.

But this band is making me a much better guitar player. I’ve taken a 10-year-leap in terms of guitar playing, because in the White Stripes I didn’t have time to explore – I had to keep going back to rhythm guitar to keep the show going.

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Brendan Benson (vocals, guitar): I remember writing the main part of “Steady As She Goes” and recording a little demo on a little tape recorder. All it was, was “Find yourself a girl, find yourself a girl…”, just the same line over and over again. And then Jack came by the house and I played it for him. He liked it and we just started writing, as he does. He’s good at that, and he just finished the lyric.

The theme of settling down is kind of an ongoing discussion with myself. I haven’t really figured it out or come to any conclusions. It’s kind of an age-old topic. Jack’s approach was a little different, and I didn’t quite understand it at first. He came up with the phrase “Steady, as she goes” and I thought, “Yeah, that’s cool.” I never questioned the phrase ‘kink in the single life’ and I didn’t think about it too much because I guess I was so preoccupied with other things – just the fact that we were writing together.

The cool thing about The Raconteurs is that there are two approaches to the music. It’s like the duality of man, yin and yang, devil and angel. And I think this song is like that, too. I don’t always understand Jack’s part in it and he probably doesn’t always understand my part in it. What I like most about songwriting is sneaking an idea in where it doesn’t belong. A bunch of kids jumping up and down singing ‘Steady, as she goes!’ – if you think about it, it’s kind of ironic.

It’s debatable when the birth of The Raconteurs was. We wrote “Steady” but then we wrote “Broken Boy Soldier”, I think, on the same day. It all happened without talking, almost – screwing around, having fun.

Everything was done so fast. “Steady As She Goes” is an early take, if not the first take. Jack was like, “Okay, cool, I thought that was great.” I was like, “Wait, were we recording?”

I look at us like black sheep. I look at us next to what’s happening on the charts and it doesn’t look like it fits. At one point we were right behind the Red Hot Chili Peppers on the charts and I thought, ‘How can that be?’ I’m having a hard time figuring it out!

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Patrick Keeler (drums): Brendan and Jack just wrote the song to write it – they weren’t trying to make an album or anything. I heard it in Jack’s car when he played it for me, like, “Check out what me and Brendan made.” Little Jack and I were coming up anyway to record some demos with Brendan, so we all four happened to be in town at the same time. So we recorded that song. We kind of changed it up a little bit, making it more rocking.

It probably took five or six songs before we realised we were making a record. So we started naming songs and then started naming our band. We stopped around 10 songs because we figured we could’ve just gone on and on.

We’ve been really lucky with the people that come out to the shows, like the very first show in Liverpool in March. We’ve done nine or ten festivals over the summer, and the response has been great.

We’ve been writing the whole time for a new record. There was no problem with coming up with new songs; the hardest part was to stop! So I think we’re all excited about getting back into the studio.

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Fact File

Written by: Jack White and Brendan Benson

Performers: Jack White, Brendan Benson, Patrick Keeler, ‘Little’ Jack Lawrence

Produced by: Jack White, Brendan Benson, Patrick Keeler, ‘Little’ Jack Lawrence

Recorded at: Brendan Benson’s East Grand Studio, Detroit, Michigan

Released: April 2006

Highest UK chart position: 4

Highest US chart position: 55

Allen Toussaint: “I never thought of being a performer, never”

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Allen Toussaint looks back over his incredible career in the new issue of Uncut, dated July 2014 and out now. The New Orleans songwriter and performer discusses working with artists including Ernie K-Doe, Irma Thomas, Lee Dorsey, The Meters, Frankie Miller, The Band, Little Feat and Labelle. Tou...

Allen Toussaint looks back over his incredible career in the new issue of Uncut, dated July 2014 and out now.

The New Orleans songwriter and performer discusses working with artists including Ernie K-Doe, Irma Thomas, Lee Dorsey, The Meters, Frankie Miller, The Band, Little Feat and Labelle.

Toussaint also talks about the impact of Hurricane Katrina on his beloved city, and his lack of ambition as far as performing under his own name.

“I never thought of being a performer,” he explains. “Never. I only recorded myself by request from companies.

“But my comfort zone is behind the scene. People out front, I expect them to live and breathe that, like I live and breathe what I do. I do this, you do that. That’s what I believe.”

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

Listen to new Jeff Tweedy song, “I’ll Sing It”

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Jeff Tweedy has released a new song, "I'll Sing It", taken from his forthcoming album, Sukierae. According to Glide, the album is released on September 16 through Tweedy's own dBpm Records. Sukierae contains 20 new songs, performed by Tweedy along with his 18-year-old son, drummer Spencer. “Whe...

Jeff Tweedy has released a new song, “I’ll Sing It“, taken from his forthcoming album, Sukierae.

According to Glide, the album is released on September 16 through Tweedy’s own dBpm Records.

Sukierae contains 20 new songs, performed by Tweedy along with his 18-year-old son, drummer Spencer.

“When I set out to make this record, I imagined it being a solo thing, but not in the sense of one guy strumming an acoustic guitar and singing,” Tweedy said. “Solo to me meant that I would do everything – write the songs, play all the instruments and sing. But Spencer’s been with me from the very beginning demo sessions, playing drums and helping the songs take shape. In that sense, the record is kind of like a solo album performed by a duo.”

Other musicians on Sukierae are Jess Wolfe and Holly Laessig of the Brooklyn-band Lucius, who provide backing vocals, and keyboard player, Scott McCaughey (R.E.M., The Young Fresh Fellows and The Minus 5).

Grace Jones – Nightclubbing (Deluxe edition)

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Pull up to her bumper! Disco diva’s 1981 new-wave masterpiece pimped out with b-sides and unreleased material... Grace Jones had already been typecast as a supernatural being by the fashion world in the 1970s while she held court in the bohemian hotspots of New York and Paris. Still, it it took a leap of faith by Island Records’ Chris Blackwell and Alex Sadkin to launch the Jamaican diva as a radical new artist at the turn of the ’80s. Released in 1981, Nightclubbing is the album that came to define Jones as the complete performer, in her own way, as singer, muse, actress, alien and androgyne. Its sound, a sublime mix of reggae, funk, new wave and disco, was as arresting as its cover image, a painting of Jones by her partner Jean-Paul Goude, her sinuous masculinity accentuated by a flat top hairstyle and modern Armani tailoring. The indigo mood, cool gaze and cigarette suggested Marlene Dietrich, the gender-bending a touch of Bowie. No one had seen or heard anything quite like this, though. She had form, of course, having made, in tandem with her modelling career, three decent disco albums with master mixer Tom Moulton, but by the end of the ’70s it was time to step off that treadmill. Sensing her potential, Blackwell invited Jones to his studio, Compass Point, near Nassau in the Bahamas, and assembled a band who, under his charismatic stewardship, would interpret contemporary hits and compose original material for Jones. Though A Certain Ratio had been considered for the gig, it quickly became apparent that Blackwell’s boys were no ordinary outfit. The backbone of countless dub and reggae grooves, bassist Sly Dunbar and drummer Robbie Shakespeare could claim to be the finest rhythm section in the world, while alongside guitarists Mikey Chung and Barry Reynolds (ex-Blodwyn Pig) and percussionist Uziah ‘Sticky’ Thompson, Parisian keyboard player Wally Badarou brought continental flair to the mix. Dubbed the Compass Point All Stars, they eased themselves into the task at hand with fairly orthodox covers of The Pretenders, Roxy Music and The Normal for 1980’s Warm Leatherette before hitting their stride on the edgier material that would form Nightclubbing. Only 12 months separates the two albums – Jones’ altercation with chat show host Russell Harty, in December 1980, occurred midway between releases – yet they’re very different beasts. Perhaps the All Stars, by now a well-oiled unit, had sussed out what Blackwell and Sadkin were after because on Nightclubbing they’re cavalier enough to dismantle Flash And The Pan’s “Walking In The Rain” and Bill Withers’ “Use Me” and rebuild them in Jones’ image: exotic, sensual, funky and – uniquely for a woman who devoured the spotlight – somehow endlessly mysterious. On “Nightclubbing” they construct a synth-funk chassis over which Jones decadently drapes her long limbs, transforming Iggy’s neurotic narrator into a champion athlete. “Demolition Man”, a song Sting wrote for Jones and later recorded with The Police, is gobbled up and spat out over a booming, rubbery groove. There are lighter moments that highlight the breadth of the producers’ tastes – the snaking, sultry “I’ve Seen That Face Before (Libertango)” and “I’ve Done It Again”, written by Reynolds and Marianne Faithfull, on which Jones sings rather than commands – but it’s the All Stars’ “Pull Up To The Bumper” that will always be the real head-turner. A raunchy post-punk dub underpinned by a classic Sly & Robbie riddim, “Pull Up…” is supposedly about parallel parking, but when Jones instructs, “Pull up to my bumper, baby / In your long black limousine / Pull up to my bumper, baby / Drive it in between”, she’s not thinking about the Highway Code. Five extended versions of “Pull Up…” appear on Disc 2 amid sundry other 12-inch mixes. The key track here is the unreleased cover of Gary Numan’s “Me! I Disconnect From You” which finds Jones coasting on a warm, rolling groove, the original’s angst thawing beneath a palm tree. This didn’t feature on ’82’s (i)Living My Life(i), the passable final instalment of Jones’ Compass Point trilogy, but it wouldn’t have fitted. Even by then, Jones had moved on, her sights set on Hollywood. The nightclub veteran knew when to make the perfect exit. Piers Martin Q+A Wally Badarou, Compass Point All Stars keyboard player What was the atmosphere like at Compass Point when you joined? A bit tense at the beginning, as apart from Chris (Blackwell) and Alex (Sadkin), no one really knew what was in the game: disco or reggae? Luckily, things unfolded without verbal or written explanation. What are you enduring memories of making Nightclubbing? The smile on Sly’s face when I improvised the keys on “Pull Up To The Bumper”; Chris’ astonishment when he realised I did the solo on “Walking In The Rain” with a synth; Alex and Chris’ relief when I came up with the high-pitch introduction to “I’ve Seen That Face Before”… Each song had its special moments. How did the sessions unfold? We would start at sunset and carry on until we felt we were not productive anymore. No drinking, barely smoking, nothing unusual for the times. Concentrated and relaxed. What do you remember of the Gary Numan cover? I had plans for overdubs, but never did them because the song was no longer scheduled. It still sounds unfinished to my ear. It is always interesting that people might like what you felt was unfinished: it is all about where we place the cursor in purposefulness. Fans love it, so be it. Was there a sense you were making something special with Grace? At the time, no. So many massive hits from the US and UK were attracting so much attention wordwide, we hardly had a clue about making any durable impact.

Pull up to her bumper! Disco diva’s 1981 new-wave masterpiece pimped out with b-sides and unreleased material…

Grace Jones had already been typecast as a supernatural being by the fashion world in the 1970s while she held court in the bohemian hotspots of New York and Paris. Still, it it took a leap of faith by Island Records’ Chris Blackwell and Alex Sadkin to launch the Jamaican diva as a radical new artist at the turn of the ’80s. Released in 1981, Nightclubbing is the album that came to define Jones as the complete performer, in her own way, as singer, muse, actress, alien and androgyne. Its sound, a sublime mix of reggae, funk, new wave and disco, was as arresting as its cover image, a painting of Jones by her partner Jean-Paul Goude, her sinuous masculinity accentuated by a flat top hairstyle and modern Armani tailoring. The indigo mood, cool gaze and cigarette suggested Marlene Dietrich, the gender-bending a touch of Bowie. No one had seen or heard anything quite like this, though.

She had form, of course, having made, in tandem with her modelling career, three decent disco albums with master mixer Tom Moulton, but by the end of the ’70s it was time to step off that treadmill. Sensing her potential, Blackwell invited Jones to his studio, Compass Point, near Nassau in the Bahamas, and assembled a band who, under his charismatic stewardship, would interpret contemporary hits and compose original material for Jones. Though A Certain Ratio had been considered for the gig, it quickly became apparent that Blackwell’s boys were no ordinary outfit. The backbone of countless dub and reggae grooves, bassist Sly Dunbar and drummer Robbie Shakespeare could claim to be the finest rhythm section in the world, while alongside guitarists Mikey Chung and Barry Reynolds (ex-Blodwyn Pig) and percussionist Uziah ‘Sticky’ Thompson, Parisian keyboard player Wally Badarou brought continental flair to the mix. Dubbed the Compass Point All Stars, they eased themselves into the task at hand with fairly orthodox covers of The Pretenders, Roxy Music and The Normal for 1980’s Warm Leatherette before hitting their stride on the edgier material that would form Nightclubbing.

Only 12 months separates the two albums – Jones’ altercation with chat show host Russell Harty, in December 1980, occurred midway between releases – yet they’re very different beasts. Perhaps the All Stars, by now a well-oiled unit, had sussed out what Blackwell and Sadkin were after because on Nightclubbing they’re cavalier enough to dismantle Flash And The Pan’s “Walking In The Rain” and Bill Withers’ “Use Me” and rebuild them in Jones’ image: exotic, sensual, funky and – uniquely for a woman who devoured the spotlight – somehow endlessly mysterious.

On “Nightclubbing” they construct a synth-funk chassis over which Jones decadently drapes her long limbs, transforming Iggy’s neurotic narrator into a champion athlete. “Demolition Man”, a song Sting wrote for Jones and later recorded with The Police, is gobbled up and spat out over a booming, rubbery groove. There are lighter moments that highlight the breadth of the producers’ tastes – the snaking, sultry “I’ve Seen That Face Before (Libertango)” and “I’ve Done It Again”, written by Reynolds and Marianne Faithfull, on which Jones sings rather than commands – but it’s the All Stars’ “Pull Up To The Bumper” that will always be the real head-turner. A raunchy post-punk dub underpinned by a classic Sly & Robbie riddim, “Pull Up…” is supposedly about parallel parking, but when Jones instructs, “Pull up to my bumper, baby / In your long black limousine / Pull up to my bumper, baby / Drive it in between”, she’s not thinking about the Highway Code.

Five extended versions of “Pull Up…” appear on Disc 2 amid sundry other 12-inch mixes. The key track here is the unreleased cover of Gary Numan’s “Me! I Disconnect From You” which finds Jones coasting on a warm, rolling groove, the original’s angst thawing beneath a palm tree. This didn’t feature on ’82’s (i)Living My Life(i), the passable final instalment of Jones’ Compass Point trilogy, but it wouldn’t have fitted. Even by then, Jones had moved on, her sights set on Hollywood. The nightclub veteran knew when to make the perfect exit.

Piers Martin

Q+A

Wally Badarou, Compass Point All Stars keyboard player

What was the atmosphere like at Compass Point when you joined?

A bit tense at the beginning, as apart from Chris (Blackwell) and Alex (Sadkin), no one really knew what was in the game: disco or reggae? Luckily, things unfolded without verbal or written explanation.

What are you enduring memories of making Nightclubbing?

The smile on Sly’s face when I improvised the keys on “Pull Up To The Bumper”; Chris’ astonishment when he realised I did the solo on “Walking In The Rain” with a synth; Alex and Chris’ relief when I came up with the high-pitch introduction to “I’ve Seen That Face Before”… Each song had its special moments.

How did the sessions unfold?

We would start at sunset and carry on until we felt we were not productive anymore. No drinking, barely smoking, nothing unusual for the times. Concentrated and relaxed.

What do you remember of the Gary Numan cover?

I had plans for overdubs, but never did them because the song was no longer scheduled. It still sounds unfinished to my ear. It is always interesting that people might like what you felt was unfinished: it is all about where we place the cursor in purposefulness. Fans love it, so be it.

Was there a sense you were making something special with Grace?

At the time, no. So many massive hits from the US and UK were attracting so much attention wordwide, we hardly had a clue about making any durable impact.