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Happy Birthday, Basher! Nick Lowe at 65!

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It was Nick Lowe's 65th birthday this week, an occasion that had me pottering around the Memory Shed, where I came across the following story, written about a much younger Nick. Nick Lowe Glasgow, October 1975 About a week after announcing to anyone who’s listening that I’m just popping out for a couple of hours to interview Nick Lowe in west London, I call the Melody Maker office from a hotel in Glasgow. Safari-suited assistant editor Michael Watts is soon on the line. “Where are you?” he asks, feigning a vague nonchalance about my current whereabouts. I’m not fooled, though. I can tell he’s furious because the receiver I’m holding’s just started to melt, the heat of his anger an astonishing thing, even at this distance. Scotland, I tell him. “You’d better be fucking joking,” he splutters, blowing whatever a gasket is. There’s a ghastly silence now, and I can’t think of anything to say to fill the conversational void, that dreadful unoccupied tundra between us. Mick, however, has plenty to say, and I get a typically windy lecture on trust, responsibility, professionalism and other such virtues that I apparently lack in some abundance. I start to drift off. “Are you even listening to me?” he suddenly barks, and I can imagine the sniggers in the office as he works himself up into a conspicuous fury. “And exactly what,” he asks, trying to regain some degree of composure, “are you doing in Scotland?” I’m with Nick Lowe and the Five Live Stiffs Tour, I tell him. Another grim silence ensues. I can too clearly imagine Mick, white-knuckled, trying to regain what’s left of his composure, a tattered thing by now, his patience with me apparently fully expired, my head something, I’m given to understand, he’d like to see on a stick. Speaking with the measured diction of someone addressing a sadly impaired person with profound learning difficulties, Mick now reminds me that my pursuit of Nick for the feature I have promised him started a couple of weeks ago, on the opening night of the Stiff tour, in Hemel Hemspstead, from which show I return with a thunderous hangover after Nick suggests we do the interview in a nearby pub, where our chat is accompanied by an endless succession of beers and much laughter as Nick goes through an extraordinary repertoire of anecdotes, all of them hilarious, but few of them wholly pertinent to the piece I’m supposed to be writing. Which is why I arrange another chat, and head off to Stiff’s Alexander Street HQ, telling Mick, among others, that I will be out of the office for only as long as it takes to get across London to spend an hour with Nick before hot-tailing it as quickly as possible back to MM, whose offices at the time are in a bleak complex of huts in Waterloo that resemble a German POW camp, only searchlights, low swirling mist and snarling guard dogs missing from the mix. Anyway, that was the plan. “What went wrong?” Mick wants to know. I tell him that things start to go awry not long after I arrive at Stiff, when the first thing Nick suggests is a drink in a pub he knows. “Why was that a problem?” Mick asks, genuinely puzzled. The pub Nick had in mind was in Liverpool. “Let me get this straight,” Mick says, struggling to keep a lid on his temper. “You went to Liverpool for a drink?” Well, a couple actually. “That’s really not very funny,” Mick tells me sternly, breathing a bit heavily. I hope he’s not going to work himself up until something vital bursts, blood flooding into internal cavities, his entire system on the verge of haemorrhage and collapse, paramedics leaning over him the last thing he sees before waking up in intensive care, tubes in every orifice and loved ones sobbing at his bedside. “Are you still there?” Mick asks now, his voice shrill. I am, but I’ve been thinking of the night I spend with Nick in the British Rail bar on Lime Street station, Nick wanting to get away from the rowdy scenes backstage at the Liverpool Empire, where the Stiff tour is playing tonight. By now, Nick is happy to go on before everyone else on the bill - which famously includes Ian Dury & The Blockheads, Wreckless Eric, former Pink Fairy Larry Wallis and Elvis Costello And The Attractions – for reasons not much more complicated than having more time that way to spend in the pub. Anyway, in a corner of the Lime Street bar Nick knocks back vodka after vodka that make him eventually quite maudlin. “What do I want to do with my life?” he at one point slurringly muses, although this isn’t something I’ve asked him. “I dunno,” he says. “Sometimes I think I have no real talent, and absolutely nothing to offer as a producer or songwriter. I mean, what have I done? Fuck all, when you think about it. Produced a couple of albums by The Damned and Elvis Costello, released a couple of singles and an EP. It’s not a lot, and I don’t think it’s terribly distinguished. “What I’d really love to do is write a Eurovision Song Contest winner,” he says then, visibly brightening at the thought. “Otherwise, I’d settle for being Abba.” “So you’ve actually got an interview?” Mick says, breaking into my flashback, relieved that I won’t be returning empty-handed from my recent excursions. Of sorts, I tell him, not adding that not long after he gets maudlin, Nick decides that he’s not really in the mood for talking abut himself after all and launches instead into a very long and very funny anecdote about Rockpile touring America with Bad Company. “So when,” Mick asks wearily, like someone who’s life has become too miserable to endure, “do you think you’ll actually speak to him?” Confidently, I tell Mick that I’ll be meeting Nick shortly and I’ll definitely nail the interview today and be back in London not long after that. “If you’re not, you won’t have a job to come back to,” Mick says coldly, ending our conversation on an unpleasantly terse note. A little later, on the Stiff tour coach that’s going to take us to the Glasgow Apollo for this afternoon’ soundcheck, Larry Wallis collapses into the seat next to me, looking haggard. How are you feeling, Larry? “Like I’ve just been nutted by reality,” he sighs, blinking wearily behind his aviator shades. And now here’s Nick, looking chipper. I ask him if we can finally finish the interview we’d started in Hemel Hempstead. “No problem, AJ,” Nick fairly beams. “Tell you what,” he goes on. “I know this lovely little pub. We can have a quiet pint, maybe a bit of nosh and a good chat. It’ll be great.” Er, where’s the pub, Nick? “Sheffield,” he says with a big grin. In the distance, I am sure I can hear Mick Watt’s head hitting his desk with a dullish thud.

It was Nick Lowe’s 65th birthday this week, an occasion that had me pottering around the Memory Shed, where I came across the following story, written about a much younger Nick.

Nick Lowe

Glasgow, October 1975

About a week after announcing to anyone who’s listening that I’m just popping out for a couple of hours to interview Nick Lowe in west London, I call the Melody Maker office from a hotel in Glasgow. Safari-suited assistant editor Michael Watts is soon on the line.

“Where are you?” he asks, feigning a vague nonchalance about my current whereabouts. I’m not fooled, though. I can tell he’s furious because the receiver I’m holding’s just started to melt, the heat of his anger an astonishing thing, even at this distance.

Scotland, I tell him.

“You’d better be fucking joking,” he splutters, blowing whatever a gasket is. There’s a ghastly silence now, and I can’t think of anything to say to fill the conversational void, that dreadful unoccupied tundra between us. Mick, however, has plenty to say, and I get a typically windy lecture on trust, responsibility, professionalism and other such virtues that I apparently lack in some abundance. I start to drift off.

“Are you even listening to me?” he suddenly barks, and I can imagine the sniggers in the office as he works himself up into a conspicuous fury.

“And exactly what,” he asks, trying to regain some degree of composure, “are you doing in Scotland?”

I’m with Nick Lowe and the Five Live Stiffs Tour, I tell him.

Another grim silence ensues. I can too clearly imagine Mick, white-knuckled, trying to regain what’s left of his composure, a tattered thing by now, his patience with me apparently fully expired, my head something, I’m given to understand, he’d like to see on a stick.

Speaking with the measured diction of someone addressing a sadly impaired person with profound learning difficulties, Mick now reminds me that my pursuit of Nick for the feature I have promised him started a couple of weeks ago, on the opening night of the Stiff tour, in Hemel Hemspstead, from which show I return with a thunderous hangover after Nick suggests we do the interview in a nearby pub, where our chat is accompanied by an endless succession of beers and much laughter as Nick goes through an extraordinary repertoire of anecdotes, all of them hilarious, but few of them wholly pertinent to the piece I’m supposed to be writing.

Which is why I arrange another chat, and head off to Stiff’s Alexander Street HQ, telling Mick, among others, that I will be out of the office for only as long as it takes to get across London to spend an hour with Nick before hot-tailing it as quickly as possible back to MM, whose offices at the time are in a bleak complex of huts in Waterloo that resemble a German POW camp, only searchlights, low swirling mist and snarling guard dogs missing from the mix. Anyway, that was the plan.

“What went wrong?” Mick wants to know.

I tell him that things start to go awry not long after I arrive at Stiff, when the first thing Nick suggests is a drink in a pub he knows.

“Why was that a problem?” Mick asks, genuinely puzzled.

The pub Nick had in mind was in Liverpool.

“Let me get this straight,” Mick says, struggling to keep a lid on his temper. “You went to Liverpool for a drink?”

Well, a couple actually.

“That’s really not very funny,” Mick tells me sternly, breathing a bit heavily. I hope he’s not going to work himself up until something vital bursts, blood flooding into internal cavities, his entire system on the verge of haemorrhage and collapse, paramedics leaning over him the last thing he sees before waking up in intensive care, tubes in every orifice and loved ones sobbing at his bedside.

“Are you still there?” Mick asks now, his voice shrill. I am, but I’ve been thinking of the night I spend with Nick in the British Rail bar on Lime Street station, Nick wanting to get away from the rowdy scenes backstage at the Liverpool Empire, where the Stiff tour is playing tonight. By now, Nick is happy to go on before everyone else on the bill – which famously includes Ian Dury & The Blockheads, Wreckless Eric, former Pink Fairy Larry Wallis and Elvis Costello And The Attractions – for reasons not much more complicated than having more time that way to spend in the pub.

Anyway, in a corner of the Lime Street bar Nick knocks back vodka after vodka that make him eventually quite maudlin.

“What do I want to do with my life?” he at one point slurringly muses, although this isn’t something I’ve asked him. “I dunno,” he says. “Sometimes I think I have no real talent, and absolutely nothing to offer as a producer or songwriter. I mean, what have I done? Fuck all, when you think about it. Produced a couple of albums by The Damned and Elvis Costello, released a couple of singles and an EP. It’s not a lot, and I don’t think it’s terribly distinguished.

“What I’d really love to do is write a Eurovision Song Contest winner,” he says then, visibly brightening at the thought. “Otherwise, I’d settle for being Abba.”

“So you’ve actually got an interview?” Mick says, breaking into my flashback, relieved that I won’t be returning empty-handed from my recent excursions.

Of sorts, I tell him, not adding that not long after he gets maudlin, Nick decides that he’s not really in the mood for talking abut himself after all and launches instead into a very long and very funny anecdote about Rockpile touring America with Bad Company.

“So when,” Mick asks wearily, like someone who’s life has become too miserable to endure, “do you think you’ll actually speak to him?”

Confidently, I tell Mick that I’ll be meeting Nick shortly and I’ll definitely nail the interview today and be back in London not long after that.

“If you’re not, you won’t have a job to come back to,” Mick says coldly, ending our conversation on an unpleasantly terse note.

A little later, on the Stiff tour coach that’s going to take us to the Glasgow Apollo for this afternoon’ soundcheck, Larry Wallis collapses into the seat next to me, looking haggard. How are you feeling, Larry?

“Like I’ve just been nutted by reality,” he sighs, blinking wearily behind his aviator shades. And now here’s Nick, looking chipper. I ask him if we can finally finish the interview we’d started in Hemel Hempstead.

“No problem, AJ,” Nick fairly beams. “Tell you what,” he goes on. “I know this lovely little pub. We can have a quiet pint, maybe a bit of nosh and a good chat. It’ll be great.”

Er, where’s the pub, Nick?

“Sheffield,” he says with a big grin. In the distance, I am sure I can hear Mick Watt’s head hitting his desk with a dullish thud.

First Look – Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon in The Trip To Italy

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Coogan and Brydon return for more Michael Caine impressions: this time, in the sun... ‘It’s like second album syndrome, isn’t it?” asks Steve Coogan’s character, Steve Coogan rhetorically. He and his companion, Rob Brydon (played by Rob Brydon), are sitting in the spacious dining room at the Trattoria della Posta in Piemote, waiting for their first course to arrive. “Everyone has this amazing, expressive first album where they put everything into it, and the second album is a bit of a damp squib,” Coogan continues. “It’s like trying to do a sequel, isn’t it? It’s never going to be as good as the first time.” The “first time” Coogan refers to here was The Trip, Michael Winterbottom’s six-part comedy series from 2010, which found Coogan and Brydon on a gastronomic tour of the Lakes and Dales on assignment from The Observer. This time - call it a second helping - they are commissioned to do the same thing, six meals in six different locations, but in “La bella Italia,” as Brydon waxes lyrically, “beautiful countryside, beautiful wine, beautiful women, beautiful food.” In that witty metatextual way of the series, Coogan, however, is worried about the possibility that this second run might disappoint. And in this regard, Winterbottom follows the pattern traditionally followed by all makers of sequels: he repeats the best aspects of the original but on a much larger scale. If The Trip was about Coogan and Brydon trying to outdo each other impersonating Michael Caine in the best fine dining establishments the English countryside had to offer, then The Trip To Italy finds the two men once again trying to outdo each other impersonating Michael Caine – but in more glamorous settings like the Amalfi coast. There have been changes, however. Whereas the first series delved into the relationship between Coogan and Brydon, their differences and diverging careers, The Trip To Italy finds their fortunes reversed. In this second series, Coogan is the abstemious, calmer of the pair while it’s Brydon whose personal life is in a perilous state of flux and who embarks on amorous pursuit of an expat yacht attendant in episode 2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=930-WGuRJu0 Impersonations, inevitably, are a major selling point here. There are many familiar voices essayed over the calamari – DeNiro, Pacino, Caine – as well as some welcome new additions. The first episode features a brilliant exchange over lunch as they imagine an assistant director on The Dark Knight Rises asking Christian Bale and Tom Hardy to enunciate more clearly. The scenery, of course, is glorious, Winterbottom’s camera grazing leisurely on shots of the Tuscan countyside in June. Coogan and Brydon drift languidly through this beautiful landscape, Englishmen on their Grand Tour, sporting Panama hats and linen trousers. If it looks glorious, there is all the same a strain of melancholy shot through this. Certainly, the original The Trip deliberated on fame, success and the perils of middle age, but similar themes outlined seem unaccountably amplified here in the Italian summer heat. Yes, this is ostensibly the same as the thing before, but with extra linguine. It's no bad thing, though. The Trip To Italy begins on BBC Two on April 4 Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

Coogan and Brydon return for more Michael Caine impressions: this time, in the sun…

‘It’s like second album syndrome, isn’t it?” asks Steve Coogan’s character, Steve Coogan rhetorically. He and his companion, Rob Brydon (played by Rob Brydon), are sitting in the spacious dining room at the Trattoria della Posta in Piemote, waiting for their first course to arrive. “Everyone has this amazing, expressive first album where they put everything into it, and the second album is a bit of a damp squib,” Coogan continues. “It’s like trying to do a sequel, isn’t it? It’s never going to be as good as the first time.”

The “first time” Coogan refers to here was The Trip, Michael Winterbottom’s six-part comedy series from 2010, which found Coogan and Brydon on a gastronomic tour of the Lakes and Dales on assignment from The Observer. This time – call it a second helping – they are commissioned to do the same thing, six meals in six different locations, but in “La bella Italia,” as Brydon waxes lyrically, “beautiful countryside, beautiful wine, beautiful women, beautiful food.”

In that witty metatextual way of the series, Coogan, however, is worried about the possibility that this second run might disappoint. And in this regard, Winterbottom follows the pattern traditionally followed by all makers of sequels: he repeats the best aspects of the original but on a much larger scale. If The Trip was about Coogan and Brydon trying to outdo each other impersonating Michael Caine in the best fine dining establishments the English countryside had to offer, then The Trip To Italy finds the two men once again trying to outdo each other impersonating Michael Caine – but in more glamorous settings like the Amalfi coast.

There have been changes, however. Whereas the first series delved into the relationship between Coogan and Brydon, their differences and diverging careers, The Trip To Italy finds their fortunes reversed. In this second series, Coogan is the abstemious, calmer of the pair while it’s Brydon whose personal life is in a perilous state of flux and who embarks on amorous pursuit of an expat yacht attendant in episode 2.

Impersonations, inevitably, are a major selling point here. There are many familiar voices essayed over the calamari – DeNiro, Pacino, Caine – as well as some welcome new additions. The first episode features a brilliant exchange over lunch as they imagine an assistant director on The Dark Knight Rises asking Christian Bale and Tom Hardy to enunciate more clearly. The scenery, of course, is glorious, Winterbottom’s camera grazing leisurely on shots of the Tuscan countyside in June. Coogan and Brydon drift languidly through this beautiful landscape, Englishmen on their Grand Tour, sporting Panama hats and linen trousers. If it looks glorious, there is all the same a strain of melancholy shot through this. Certainly, the original The Trip deliberated on fame, success and the perils of middle age, but similar themes outlined seem unaccountably amplified here in the Italian summer heat.

Yes, this is ostensibly the same as the thing before, but with extra linguine. It’s no bad thing, though.

The Trip To Italy begins on BBC Two on April 4

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

Drive-By Truckers – English Oceans

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Alabama's finest return, recharged, and with a brilliant, balanced blast of rock'n'roll... You wouldn’t want to be a character in a Drive-By Truckers song. Whether it’s the frustrated titular timebomb of “When Walter Went Crazy”, the miserable housewife of “When’s He Gone” or the unnamed political fixer/arsehole of “The Part Of Him” (“He never worked an honest day, just kissed up to a better way”), few bands are as adept at painting deft studies of seething losers, loaded with sympathy, shorn of romance. But while English Oceans carries its quota of Truckers’ staples, there’s also much that sets this fantastic 12th album apart from its predecessors. The band took a break after 2011’s Go-Go Boots, allowing chief strategist Patterson Hood to rethink his approach. Having previously adopted what he admits was a ‘throw it all in and see what sticks’ attitude to albums, Hood decided to edit this one more succinctly. English Oceans subsequently sweeps through a graceful arc, from Mike Cooley’s brassy opener “Shit Shots Count” through the gentler territory that marks the bulk of the album’s second side and ending with elegant epic “Grand Canyon”. Brilliantly paced, it really holds together as a piece, in some ways surpassing even Decoration Day, the band’s brooding 2003 masterpiece. Further consistency comes from the fact Hood and Cooley are now the only songwriters, bassist Shonna Tucker having left to form her own band (and leaving behind a noticeably tighter rhythm section). To fill her shoes, Cooley has been busier, writing six songs to Hood’s seven and even singing the hell out of one of Hood’s, the smouldering “Til He’s Dead Or Rises”, an unprecedented act in the Truckers canon. Balance is the key and another change in personnel saw John Neff depart, allowing keyboard player Jay Gonzalez to double up on third guitar, making the songs a little leaner and providing better harmony between the band’s bludgeoning power and their superb, and often overlooked, technique. Gonzalez is a quietly critical presence throughout, even arranging horns on the brassy Exiles-like “Shit Shots Count”, which sets up the rocking first half. Here, the Truckers triple guitar attack is at full force on Hood’s growling “When He’s Gone”, the paisley jangle of Cooley’s “Primer Coat” and Hood’s excellent, insistent “Pauline Hawkins” (“Love is like cancer”), with “Layla”-style piano break. This first half ends with a magnificent brace of songs about politics, Hood’s splenetic march “The Part Of Him” (“His own mama called him an SOB”) and Cooley’s abstract, folky “Made Up English Oceans”, ostensibly about Republican attack dog Lee Atwater although with lyrics so oblique few would notice. Hood admits that both he and Cooley took a more intuitive view to lyrics. “I know what most of our songs are about, what inspired them,” he says, “but on this record there are multiple songs I don’t understand. We decided to let go lyrically and figure it out later.” Languid soft metal rocker “Hearing Jimmy Loud”, featuring the classic Cooley couplet “She’s like a talking leather couch/warm between the cushions where she hid whatever treasure fell out”, signals a change the pace and is followed by Hood’s sprawling “Til He’s Dead Or Rises”, with Cooley on vocals. That flows into the acoustic “Hanging On”, Hood’s immense, touching song about depression, strangely reminiscent of Blur. “You put it in a song that suddenly the whole world wants to sing”, he sings, “But sometimes in the silence of the night/that voice might try to tell you it’s not right/so you close your eyes and try with all your might/to hang on”. Did Hood write this about himself? Maybe, he says, but he really doesn’t know, yet. It’s followed by the equally outstanding “Natural Light”, Cooley’s warped country/Vegas torch song that recalls Howe Gelb and features a great drunken piano part from Gonzalez. The understated “When Walter Went Crazy” and gorgeous Willie Nelson country shuffle “First Air Of Autumn” reduce the intensity before Hood finishes with “Grand Canyon”, a quietly devastating elegy to the friend whose death inspired this invigorating album. Peter Watts Patterson Hood Q&A How did you use your break? We spent a lot more time at home and went months without seeing each other. It made us realise that part of this job is to have fun and when it’s not fun, you’re not doing your job. We needed to miss it. We had been on the treadmill so long. There’s a lot more Cooley on this album. I wanted him to be more a part of it than he had on the last few records. Cooley had come through a period when he wasn’t writing at all and he beat himself up a little bit which made it worse. So he came in with all those songs and that made me want to write extra hard because if I was putting a song between two of his, it had to be good or people would skip my track. How would you summarise English Oceans? A lot of our records have been anachronistic, songs and stories set in the past. This is our right now record. It’s dedicated to Craig Lieske, who did our merch and had a heart attack in January 2013. We had to go on tour two days later with his empty bunk on the bus. It was brutal and I wrote “Grand Canyon” for him. That redefined the record. We were really hard on ourselves. If anything was lacking we wanted to know now rather than find out a year later. We were openly critical of anything that came up short because we wanted to make something Craig would be proud of. INTERVIEW: PETER WATTS

Alabama’s finest return, recharged, and with a brilliant, balanced blast of rock’n’roll…

You wouldn’t want to be a character in a Drive-By Truckers song. Whether it’s the frustrated titular timebomb of “When Walter Went Crazy”, the miserable housewife of “When’s He Gone” or the unnamed political fixer/arsehole of “The Part Of Him” (“He never worked an honest day, just kissed up to a better way”), few bands are as adept at painting deft studies of seething losers, loaded with sympathy, shorn of romance. But while English Oceans carries its quota of Truckers’ staples, there’s also much that sets this fantastic 12th album apart from its predecessors.

The band took a break after 2011’s Go-Go Boots, allowing chief strategist Patterson Hood to rethink his approach. Having previously adopted what he admits was a ‘throw it all in and see what sticks’ attitude to albums, Hood decided to edit this one more succinctly. English Oceans subsequently sweeps through a graceful arc, from Mike Cooley’s brassy opener “Shit Shots Count” through the gentler territory that marks the bulk of the album’s second side and ending with elegant epic “Grand Canyon”. Brilliantly paced, it really holds together as a piece, in some ways surpassing even Decoration Day, the band’s brooding 2003 masterpiece. Further consistency comes from the fact Hood and Cooley are now the only songwriters, bassist Shonna Tucker having left to form her own band (and leaving behind a noticeably tighter rhythm section). To fill her shoes, Cooley has been busier, writing six songs to Hood’s seven and even singing the hell out of one of Hood’s, the smouldering “Til He’s Dead Or Rises”, an unprecedented act in the Truckers canon.

Balance is the key and another change in personnel saw John Neff depart, allowing keyboard player Jay Gonzalez to double up on third guitar, making the songs a little leaner and providing better harmony between the band’s bludgeoning power and their superb, and often overlooked, technique. Gonzalez is a quietly critical presence throughout, even arranging horns on the brassy Exiles-like “Shit Shots Count”, which sets up the rocking first half. Here, the Truckers triple guitar attack is at full force on Hood’s growling “When He’s Gone”, the paisley jangle of Cooley’s “Primer Coat” and Hood’s excellent, insistent “Pauline Hawkins” (“Love is like cancer”), with “Layla”-style piano break. This first half ends with a magnificent brace of songs about politics, Hood’s splenetic march “The Part Of Him” (“His own mama called him an SOB”) and Cooley’s abstract, folky “Made Up English Oceans”, ostensibly about Republican attack dog Lee Atwater although with lyrics so oblique few would notice. Hood admits that both he and Cooley took a more intuitive view to lyrics. “I know what most of our songs are about, what inspired them,” he says, “but on this record there are multiple songs I don’t understand. We decided to let go lyrically and figure it out later.”

Languid soft metal rocker “Hearing Jimmy Loud”, featuring the classic Cooley couplet “She’s like a talking leather couch/warm between the cushions where she hid whatever treasure fell out”, signals a change the pace and is followed by Hood’s sprawling “Til He’s Dead Or Rises”, with Cooley on vocals. That flows into the acoustic “Hanging On”, Hood’s immense, touching song about depression, strangely reminiscent of Blur. “You put it in a song that suddenly the whole world wants to sing”, he sings, “But sometimes in the silence of the night/that voice might try to tell you it’s not right/so you close your eyes and try with all your might/to hang on”. Did Hood write this about himself? Maybe, he says, but he really doesn’t know, yet. It’s followed by the equally outstanding “Natural Light”, Cooley’s warped country/Vegas torch song that recalls Howe Gelb and features a great drunken piano part from Gonzalez. The understated “When Walter Went Crazy” and gorgeous Willie Nelson country shuffle “First Air Of Autumn” reduce the intensity before Hood finishes with “Grand Canyon”, a quietly devastating elegy to the friend whose death inspired this invigorating album.

Peter Watts

Patterson Hood Q&A

How did you use your break?

We spent a lot more time at home and went months without seeing each other. It made us realise that part of this job is to have fun and when it’s not fun, you’re not doing your job. We needed to miss it. We had been on the treadmill so long.

There’s a lot more Cooley on this album.

I wanted him to be more a part of it than he had on the last few records. Cooley had come through a period when he wasn’t writing at all and he beat himself up a little bit which made it worse. So he came in with all those songs and that made me want to write extra hard because if I was putting a song between two of his, it had to be good or people would skip my track.

How would you summarise English Oceans?

A lot of our records have been anachronistic, songs and stories set in the past. This is our right now record. It’s dedicated to Craig Lieske, who did our merch and had a heart attack in January 2013. We had to go on tour two days later with his empty bunk on the bus. It was brutal and I wrote “Grand Canyon” for him. That redefined the record. We were really hard on ourselves. If anything was lacking we wanted to know now rather than find out a year later. We were openly critical of anything that came up short because we wanted to make something Craig would be proud of.

INTERVIEW: PETER WATTS

Kate Bush “overwhelmed” as 22 London shows sell out in minutes

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Kate Bush's run of 22 London shows sold out this morning [March 28] in less than 15 minutes. According to a statement released by Bush's press agent, the tickets which went on sale at 9.30am this morning are now completely sold-out. “I’m completely overwhelmed by the response to the shows," sa...

Kate Bush‘s run of 22 London shows sold out this morning [March 28] in less than 15 minutes.

According to a statement released by Bush’s press agent, the tickets which went on sale at 9.30am this morning are now completely sold-out.

“I’m completely overwhelmed by the response to the shows,” said Bush. “Thank you so much to everyone. Looking forward to seeing you all later this year.”

The shows, called the Before The Dawn, were announced a week ago, with a further seven shows added on Wednesday. The shows will take place at London’s Eventim Apollo Hammersmith.

These are Bush’s first major live dates since 1979’s Tour Of Life, since when she has given only the occasional live performance.

This month in Uncut

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Bruce Springsteen, Van Morrison, Damon Albarn and Mama Cass Elliot all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2014 and out now. E Street Band guitarist Tom Morello reveals the truth about life on the road with Springsteen – “He takes these deep, serious songs and has everyone dancing on...

Bruce Springsteen, Van Morrison, Damon Albarn and Mama Cass Elliot all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2014 and out now.

E Street Band guitarist Tom Morello reveals the truth about life on the road with Springsteen – “He takes these deep, serious songs and has everyone dancing on the tables.”

Morello tracks his relationship with The Boss, from getting obsessed with his music in the late 1980s, through to meeting Springsteen and finally becoming a member of the E Street Band and accompanying Bruce on his most recent world tours.

We look at the roots of Van Morrison’s semi-forgotten masterpiece Veedon Fleece, with help from his bandmates and associates in the early 1970s.

Damon Albarn discusses his new album Everyday Robots, his childhood in east London, working with Brian Eno and singing songs to baby elephants, while Graham Nash, John Sebastian, Dave Mason and more recall the colourful life of Mama Cass Elliot, from her folky days with The Big 3, to huge success with The Mamas & The Papas and onwards.

Neil Innes answers your questions on the Bonzos, The Rutles, Monty Python and hanging out with The Beatles, while we head to Cardiff Bay to talk to Gruff Rhys about his 25-year rock odyssey, the future of Super Furry Animals and his new American Interior venture – an album, a book and a film…

The Damned recall the making of their classic hippy-baiting hit, “Smash It Up”, while original and later Caravan members look back over their greatest albums.

We look at William Burroughs’ incredible life and works, and his collaborations with musicians ranging from Kurt Cobain and Genesis P-Orridge to Sonic Youth and John Cale.

In our front section, we talk to The StoogesJames Williamson about his new album of lost Stooges songs, to artist Raymond Pettibon about his legendary punk artwork and to The RocketsGeorge Whitsell about losing most of his band to Neil Young, and his surprise resurgence with new Rockets album Lift Off.

Our 40-page reviews section takes a critical look at releases and reissues from the likes of Damon Albarn, The Afghan Whigs, Thee Oh Sees, The Delines, Slint, Bobby Charles and Emmylou Harris, while we check out new documentaries on The Clash and Rowland S Howard. Live, we catch Arcade Fire, Trans and Dave & Phil Alvin.

This month’s free CD, Keep The Fire Burning, features new tracks from The Men, Hurray For The Riff Raff, The Afghan Whigs, EMA, School Of Language, Ben Watt and Howlin Rain.

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

Animal Collective – Album By Album

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Enter The Slasher House, the debut album from Avey Tare’s Slasher Flicks, consisting of Dave Portner (aka Avey Tare), Angel Deradoorian and Jeremy Hyman, is released on April 7. Avey Tare’s psychedelic journey with Animal Collective, though, is also worth checking out – in this archive feature...

Enter The Slasher House, the debut album from Avey Tare’s Slasher Flicks, consisting of Dave Portner (aka Avey Tare), Angel Deradoorian and Jeremy Hyman, is released on April 7. Avey Tare’s psychedelic journey with Animal Collective, though, is also worth checking out – in this archive feature from Uncut’s September 2012 (Take 184) issue, Stephen Troussé chats to the band about their wide-ranging career so far. “We got terrible reviews…” Interview: Stephen Troussé

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From high-school friendship in mid-’90s Maryland through to the global acclaim of 2009’s Merriweather Post Pavilion, Animal Collective have charted an idiosyncratic, compelling course through modern American music: from psych-rock to avant-pop, via horror soundtracks, New York noise, the fringe of freak folk, Terry Riley minimalism and Brian Wilson harmonies. On the eve of their 10th album, Centipede Hz, they’ve somehow retained the enthusiasm of their teens, reminiscing about their work to Uncut with tenderness, and a certain pride. “Our friendship has always been more important than the music,” says Brian Weitz, aka Geologist, “I don’t know if we ever imagined we’d still be making music together after all these years. But I think we always knew our friendship would last.”

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SPIRIT THEY’RE GONE, SPIRIT THEY’VE VANISHED

(Animal, 2000)

Though credited to Avey Tare (Dave Portner) and Panda Bear (Noah Lennox), the first release of the Animal Collective era is a surreal psych-rock suite harking back to Forever Changes and Ocean Rain.

Dave Portner: I wrote all the songs apart from one in my first year at college. I had been having a bad time but that summer really hanged my perspective on things. I worked at an outdoor nature camp for kids. And the season ended in August and I was like, we should record something. The songs weren’t about college, they were fantasy songs, really, coming out of reading a lot of dark short stories by Guy de Maupassant, a lot of horror. I feel like the emotion is sad, moving on from childhood. Leaving Maryland behind in a way.

Noah Lennox: Josh (Dibb, aka Deakin), Dave and I had played quite a lot, just sort of jamming together in a room for a year or so before that. But we didn’t really talk to each other much.

Dave: So this was the first time of hanging one-on-one with Noah. I’d always really liked Noah’s drumming. I’d beatbox little parts for him to explain what I wanted. I got him to use brushes to get some of that Ocean Rain vibe, yeah. Also Forever Changes. Those two records were very cohesive statements to me.

Noah: But rhythmically, too, we were also into this Destiny’s Child track, “Bills, Bills, Bills”. And Aaliyah’s “Are You That Somebody?”.

Dave: I just wanted to take it to a new level: an album. I think high school represented the band we were in, Automine, playing indie rock, really. And then Brian and I did stuff on the side that was more experimental. And I wanted to find a way to fuse it all together, into psychedelic music. Not that I thought I was going to make a classic, but I wanted to make a record like Forever Changes, that had a full flow. I’m definitely impressed we pulled it off, in that we really made an album. But we were learning about recording and mixing. It was a nightmare to mix. It was all a learning experience.

DANSE MANATEE

(Catsup Plate, 2001)

Setting the pattern for the years to come, the second AC album was a radical departure: an esoteric adventure in noise and loops.

Brian Weitz: Danse Manatee was the first record I had an input into. My contribution was loops really, things I’d recorded on minidisc. Electronics. The summer that Spirit came out, Dave and I lived in a small apartment in SoHo and then Noah moved to New York to be with his girlfriend of the time. And the three of us would get together and improvise a lot. I think that’s the genesis of Danse Manatee, these longs improv sessions we would do. We recorded hundreds of hours of material but it was all stolen when I moved apartment. But I think everything that came after came from that material. At the time New York was quite exciting: The Strokes were happening and ARE Weapons. But I think we wanted to bring some of the excitement of the noise bands into more melodic music.

Dave: We played with Black Dice a lot. But The Rapture was probably also on the bill at our first gig at The Cooler. Did we alienate fans of the first record? Definitely! We got terrible reviews. We weren’t trying to. We thought we were next level!

HOLLINNDAGAIN

(St Ives, 2002)

A sprawling document of the Collective’s early improv-based live show.

Brian: The title isn’t Icelandic, it’s Dave-ish! It’s a live album but I think we do consider it part of the Animal Collective canon because most of the songs weren’t available elsewhere. It really documents the time when we were first beginning to go on the road, playing with bands with Black Dice.

Noah: They were a huge early inspiration for us.

Dave: We’d go on the road with this van that we borrowed from Noah’s family. We bought a roof case to hold all the gear, but then we discovered that the van didn’t have a rack to fit it. We had to kind of tie it on there with rope. We were beginning to get a following in New York, but some of the shows in places like Nashville there’d be like a handful of people showing up.

Noah: One time there was just one guy in the audience. And he left. Though he said he just wanted to check out the sound from outside the venue.

CAMPFIRE SONGS

(Catsup Plate, 2003)

Josh Dibb aka Deakin rejoins his comrades for this wintry, impressionistic suite of songs for frazzled Cub Scouts.

Noah: Doing an album of just acoustic songs, that had that kind of warmth, was an idea we had for a while.

Dave: We’d tried it out a couple of times. The album that was released was maybe the third or fourth attempt. We recorded it in November 2001 on my aunt’s porch in North Maryland. It was freezing! We just had three microphones and we played the songs through in one take.

Noah: We played one gig, just sitting on the floor with the audience around us, in New York. I think it might be the best show we’ve ever done.

Brian: Was it a post-9/11 epitaph to the early noughties New York scene? Maybe. Certainly a lot of the energy went out of Manhattan. People started to play in Brooklyn more.

HERE COMES THE INDIAN

(Paw Tracks, 2003)

The first release to feature the full Collective complement ironically seems to capture the sound of the band falling chaotically apart.

Dave: It’s the first record to be credited to Animal Collective because all four of us played on it, and Avey Tare, Panda Bear, Geologist and Deakin was going to look kinda long-winded on the cover. If it were up to us we would still use different names for each release. But it was becoming clear we’d have to settle on a single name if we wanted to continue to make records.

Brian: We’d always been into horror movie music, like the soundtrack to The Shining. And I guess you can hear that on tracks like “Infant Dressing Table”. But I think that the album sounds so hectic and scary because we were just so burnt out.

Dave: We’d been touring through the South with Black Dice, sleeping on people’s floors, scraping by with no money, dealing with broken-down vans…

Brian: I don’t know if we ever thought of giving up, but it was getting so hard. And when we were recording the album we couldn’t afford to finish it. We played it to labels and nobody was interested. I don’t know if it was a make or break album, but I think if we hadn’t finished it we might have gone our separate ways… I actually headed out to Arizona to go to grad school at this point. In the end, Todd Hyman at Carpark Records, who was a really big fan and supporter, offered to set up the Paw Tracks label so we could release it via them. I remember Dave playing the finished album to me back near our high school and being amazed – I did not think the finished album was going to end up sounding like this.

SUNG TONGS

(Fat Cat, 2004)

Back to basics for the album that suggested AC might be fellow travellers on the freak folk trail.

Dave: After Here Comes The Indian we were really burnt out. Noah and I were barely speaking to each other. So Sung Tongs was really an attempt to go back to basics with just the two of us. We started opening for acts like múm and Four Tet and that was a real change from the days of touring with Black Dice. Although the people hadn’t necessarily come to hear us, it was an eye-opener to play venues with decent sound and crowds. I remember doing an interview and getting stoned with some journalist in Europe, and then playing the gig and kind of freaking out at how many people were in the audience now…

Noah: There was an ambient element to Sung Tongs but it didn’t really come from múm or Four Tet – we were already fans of Kompakt’s Pop Ambient series. I guess we were kind of trying to do something similar just using acoustic guitars.

Dave: To record the album we went out to Colorado, where my parents lived, with Rusty Santos. Working with Rusty was great – getting that kind of input on mixing and mastering was something we’d never really had before.

FEELS

(Fat Cat, 2005)

The record that made the band’s name, an album of indie rock romanticism, suggesting that AC were lysergic heirs to the likes of Mercury Rev.

Dave: I think Sung Tongs was the record that introduced us to a lot of people but with Feels it really felt like a step up. If you’d got into us with Here Comes The Indian it might have seemed like a much more conventional record, but if you’d heard Spirit They’re Gone it might seem like we just took a detour for a few records.

Brian: A very long detour!

Noah: I remember a band we were touring with said, “Wow, that was like an indie rock show”, and a few reviews said something similar. We certainly noticed the crowds getting bigger.

Josh: I suppose in many ways it was our most accessible album. There were a lot of love songs on it. Dave was getting engaged [to múm member Kristín Anna Valtýsdóttir] and Noah had got married [to fashion designer Fernanda Pereira], had a daughter and moved to Portugal.

Noah: We started referring to it as our “love album” but it was really just the joy coming out in our music. A lot of our friends thought it was maybe too happy…

Josh: The success was great but a little scary. It felt important to try and stay in control. We had to start turning down more stuff. Who did we turn down? Well, we were asked if we’d support the Red Hot Chili Peppers. We didn’t really think that’d work.

STRAWBERRY JAM

(Domino, 2007)

Once again evading the obvious career path, with Strawberry Jam the Collective delivered an album of fruity but defiantly obtuse psych-pop jams.

Dave: I suppose after Feels and then Noah’s album [Panda Bear’s 2007 Person Pitch], there was a certain momentum building behind the band, but I don’t know if we consciously set out to wrongfoot people with Strawberry Jam. We’re not really a linear band. The growth of the band is more like a tree: we naturally branch off in different directions all the time. In the past we’d have a particular feel or a theme for an album, but here it felt like we were all doing our own thing. It was kind of a jagged process putting the record together.

Noah: We recorded in the desert in Arizona. We were after something kind of gnarled and spikey.

Brian: It’s difficult to tell what people think of as your “pop” album. For a lot of people Strawberry Jam is our pop record. I remember playing a gig at the time and a girl came up to us afterwards and complained, “I came all this way on crutches to see you and you never played ‘Winter Wonder Land’!” I suppose by the tour we were already playing material that would end up on Merriweather…

MERRIWEATHER POST PAVILION

(Domino, 2009)

Uncut’s album of the year for 2009 was the fulfilment of everything Animal Collective had ever promised: ecstatic anthems, psychedelic reels, natural rapture and hymns to the everyday.

Brian: Josh had told us he wasn’t going to take part in the next tour so we had to decide how we were going to make an album that wasn’t so much focused on guitar. So working on Merriweather did feel like starting something new, experimenting with new ways of putting songs together. Noah’s album [Person Pitch] had blown us away, so it seemed natural to start working with samplers.

Dave: In a funny way it did feel like a sequel to Danse Manatee. Just the three of us experimenting again. We recorded with Ben Allen down at the Sweet Tea Studio in Mississippi. That place was awesome.

Brian: We wanted to work with Ben because of his hip-hop experience – he’d worked with Gnarls Barkley and helped produce all those Bad Boy records, and we wanted to develop the low end of our music. But he grew up in Athens, Georgia on all those ’80s indie rock bands, too. He has a pop sensibility, as well: he was always trying to make the vocals a bit brighter, but we’d always be mixing them back down…

Noah: We’d always been into dance music, but this was the probably the first record where you could really hear that influence. A lot of people have mentioned that it sounded like an ecstasy record, but I don’t think we were ever into the full-blown rave thing.

Dave: We were a little surprised by the intensity of the reaction to Merriweather, but I don’t think we ever felt overwhelmed by it. It did feel like climbing a mountain, you know? It was a great trip, a really long trip, but by the end of the tour it was good to come back down to earth.

CENTIPEDE HZ

(Domino, 2012)

For their 10th album Animal Collective reconvene as a four-piece and return to their roots as a teenage jam band, albeit with results redolent of stadium Pink Floyd.

Dave: We’re all based in different cities now, so it’s great to get back together and play as a band again. I think that space away from each other has definitely helped us stick together as friends.

Noah: I guess it does sound like a stadium rock album in some ways. I think this was the first time I’ve played sit-down drums since Here Comes The Indian. I guess the big drum sound is pretty distinctive – we wanted that contact mic drum sound you hear on old Brazilian records.

Dave: We have been getting a few people saying it sounds like a prog record: someone in Japan mentioned Rush! A lot of the samples come from a CD of these weird pirate radio idents – we never knew who Johnnie Walker was. People have been asking if it’s a reference to the whisky!

Brian: I suppose it is unusual for us to still be good friends, to still be working together. I don’t know if we ever imagined that we’d still be making music together after all these years. But I think we always knew our friendship would last.

University announces Pink Floyd academic conference

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An American university is to host the world's first Pink Floyd academic conference. Called Pink Floyd: Sound, Sight, And Structure, the event will be held at Princeton University on April 13. According to a report on the website Open Culture, the keynote speaker at the event will be Pink Floyd producer and engineer James Guthrie. Princeton's website , meanwhile, describes the event as "an interdisciplinary conference celebrating the music, art, and culture of Pink Floyd". In addition to Guthrie’s talk, and his surround sound mix of the band’s music, the conference will offer “live compositions and arrangements inspired by Pink Floyd’s music,” an “exhibition of Pink Floyd covers and art,” and a screening of The Wall. Open Culture highlights papers including “The Visual Music of Pink Floyd”, “Space and Repetition in David Gilmour’s Guitar Solos” and “Several Species of Small Furry Animals: The Genius of Early Floyd”. Admission is free, but requires an RSVP . Last year, Bruce Springsteen was the subject of a theology class at Rutgers University in New Jersey.

An American university is to host the world’s first Pink Floyd academic conference.

Called Pink Floyd: Sound, Sight, And Structure, the event will be held at Princeton University on April 13.

According to a report on the website Open Culture, the keynote speaker at the event will be Pink Floyd producer and engineer James Guthrie.

Princeton‘s website , meanwhile, describes the event as “an interdisciplinary conference celebrating the music, art, and culture of Pink Floyd”. In addition to Guthrie’s talk, and his surround sound mix of the band’s music, the conference will offer “live compositions and arrangements inspired by Pink Floyd’s music,” an “exhibition of Pink Floyd covers and art,” and a screening of The Wall.

Open Culture highlights papers including “The Visual Music of Pink Floyd”, “Space and Repetition in David Gilmour’s Guitar Solos” and “Several Species of Small Furry Animals: The Genius of Early Floyd”.

Admission is free, but requires an RSVP .

Last year, Bruce Springsteen was the subject of a theology class at Rutgers University in New Jersey.

Iron Maiden’s Bruce Dickinson invests in ‘world’s biggest aircraft’

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Iron Maiden's Bruce Dickinson has invested $450,000 (£270,465) in the 'world's biggest aircraft'. The HAV Airlander is a 91.4 metre long airship, which is 18.2 metres longer than a Boeing 747, reports Top Gear. The ship is being made by the British company Hybrid Air Vehicles and its top speed is 100mph. It weighs 38 tonnes and can in addition carry 50 tonnes of cargo. Speaking to BBC News, Dickinson said he wants to fly it around the world. "It seizes my imagination. I want to get in this thing and fly it pole to pole. We'll fly over the Amazon at 20ft, over some of the world's greatest cities and stream the whole thing on the internet." He added: "It's a game changer, in terms of things we can have in the air and things we can do. The airship has always been with us, it's just been waiting for the technology to catch up." Last year, Dickinson denied receiving a $500 million (£316 million) contract from the US military to manufacture drones. The claim had been made on the blog Dorset Eye in a post titled: 'Bruce Dickinson: Rock'n'Roll Warmonger', which took as its source an announcement on a South African conference speakers' website. In a written statement to NME, a spokesperson for the band described the article as "spurious" and said: "This is a totally inaccurate and malicious piece of writing that seems to have stemmed from an unfortunate mistake in terminology on a South African website that the writer of said blog has since used as a starting point and catalyst to go off on a flight of sheer fantasy." They clarified: "Both Bruce Dickinson and Iron Maiden's manager Rod Smallwood were early investors in, and remain great supporters of, Hybrid Air Vehicles (HAV), a company that has nothing whatsoever to do with drones, 'lighter than air' or otherwise!"

Iron Maiden’s Bruce Dickinson has invested $450,000 (£270,465) in the ‘world’s biggest aircraft’.

The HAV Airlander is a 91.4 metre long airship, which is 18.2 metres longer than a Boeing 747, reports Top Gear. The ship is being made by the British company Hybrid Air Vehicles and its top speed is 100mph. It weighs 38 tonnes and can in addition carry 50 tonnes of cargo.

Speaking to BBC News, Dickinson said he wants to fly it around the world. “It seizes my imagination. I want to get in this thing and fly it pole to pole. We’ll fly over the Amazon at 20ft, over some of the world’s greatest cities and stream the whole thing on the internet.”

He added: “It’s a game changer, in terms of things we can have in the air and things we can do. The airship has always been with us, it’s just been waiting for the technology to catch up.”

Last year, Dickinson denied receiving a $500 million (£316 million) contract from the US military to manufacture drones. The claim had been made on the blog Dorset Eye in a post titled: ‘Bruce Dickinson: Rock’n’Roll Warmonger’, which took as its source an announcement on a South African conference speakers’ website.

In a written statement to NME, a spokesperson for the band described the article as “spurious” and said: “This is a totally inaccurate and malicious piece of writing that seems to have stemmed from an unfortunate mistake in terminology on a South African website that the writer of said blog has since used as a starting point and catalyst to go off on a flight of sheer fantasy.”

They clarified: “Both Bruce Dickinson and Iron Maiden‘s manager Rod Smallwood were early investors in, and remain great supporters of, Hybrid Air Vehicles (HAV), a company that has nothing whatsoever to do with drones, ‘lighter than air’ or otherwise!”

Fleetwood Mac announce tour dates with Christine McVie

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Fleetwood Mac have announced details of a reunion tour with Christine McVie. The On With The Show tour will be McVie's first time on the road with the band since 1998's The Dance tour. It begins on September 30 in Minneapolis, and sees the band performing 34 shows in 33 cities across North America....

Fleetwood Mac have announced details of a reunion tour with Christine McVie.

The On With The Show tour will be McVie’s first time on the road with the band since 1998’s The Dance tour. It begins on September 30 in Minneapolis, and sees the band performing 34 shows in 33 cities across North America. A story on Rolling Stone suggests this is the first leg of a world tour, and that a new studio album may follow.

The band made the announcement earlier today [March 27] on NBC’s Today.

According to Rolling Stone, the band have spent time in the studio this month [March] with both Christine McVie and her ex-husband, John McVie, who is recovering from cancer. “His health is on the up,” Christine McVie told Rolling Stone. “He’s still doing chemotherapy. He just came in to do his bass parts, so everyone is real excited about that. He gets tired quickly, but he’s definitely been on the mend. He’s been such a man about this whole thing. I have renewed respect and love for him.”

Fleetwood Mac will play:

September 30 Minneapolis, Minnesota – Target Center

October 2 Chicago, Illinois – United Center

October 6 New York, New York – Madison Square Garden

October 10 Boston, Massachusetts – TD Garden

October 11 Newark, New Jersey – Prudential Center

October 14 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania – Consol Energy Center

October 15 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – Wells Fargo Center

October 18 Toronto, Ontario – Air Canada Centre

October 19 Columbus, Ohio – Nationwide Arena

October 21 Indianapolis, Indiana – Bankers Life Fieldhouse

October 22 Auburn Hills, Michigan – The Palace of Auburn Hills

October 26 Ottawa, Ontario – Canadian Tire Centre

October 31 Washington, DC – Verizon Center

November 1 Hartford, Connecticut – XL Center

November 10 Winnipeg, Manitoba – MTS Centre

November 12 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan – Credit Union Centre

November 14 Calgary, Alberta – Scotiabank Saddledome

November 15 Edmonton, Alberta – Rexall Place

November 18 Vancouver, British Columbia – Rogers Arena

November 20 Tacoma, Washington – Tacoma Dome

November 22 Portland, Orgeon – Moda Center

November 24 Sacramento, California – Sleep Train Arena

November 25 San Jose, California – SAP Center

November 28 Inglewood, California – The Forum

November 29 Inglewood, California – The Forum

December 2 San Diego, California – Viejas Arena

December 3 Oakland, California – Oracle Arena

December 10 Phoenix, Arizona – US Airways Center

December 12 Denver, Colorado – Pepsi Center

December 14 Dallas, Texas – American Airlines Center

December 15 Houston, Texas – Toyota Center

December 17 Atlanta, Georgia – Philips Arena

December 19 Ft. Lauderdale, Florida – BB&T Center

December 20 Tampa, Florida – Tampa Bay Times Forum

The Rockets’ George Whitsell: “I was angry at Neil Young for taking my band”

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George Whitsell has explained the impact that Neil Young had on him when the guitarist took most of Whitsell’s band, The Rockets, to form his own group, Crazy Horse. The Rockets first played with Young at Los Angeles’ Whisky A Go Go, but this surprise team-up turned out to effectively spell t...

George Whitsell has explained the impact that Neil Young had on him when the guitarist took most of Whitsell’s band, The Rockets, to form his own group, Crazy Horse.

The Rockets first played with Young at Los Angeles’ Whisky A Go Go, but this surprise team-up turned out to effectively spell the end of the band.

“We’d already started recording a second Rockets album,” says Whitsell, “and the word I’d gotten from Billy [Talbot], Ralph [Molina] and Danny [Whitten] was that Neil was going to bring them back and help us complete it.”

This, of course, never happened, and Talbot, Molina and Whitten continued as Crazy Horse.

“I was angry at Neil for taking my band, or what I considered my band, because I’d helped them along so much.”

Read more on Whitsell’s story, including the announcement of a surprise second Rockets album, in the new issue of Uncut, out tomorrow (March 28).

Johnny Cash: “four or five more albums” could be released

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Johnny Cash's son Johnny Cash has revealed that there is enough material left in the archives of his late father for several more posthumous albums and enough outtakes from the American Recordings sessions to fill another multi-disc box set. Speaking to The Guardian, Carter Cash said, There are a f...

Johnny Cash‘s son Johnny Cash has revealed that there is enough material left in the archives of his late father for several more posthumous albums and enough outtakes from the American Recordings sessions to fill another multi-disc box set.

Speaking to The Guardian, Carter Cash said, There are a few things that are in the works right now – probably four or five albums if we wanted to release everything. There may be three or four albums worth of American Recordings stuff, but some of it may never see the light of day.”

The most recent posthumous Johnny Cash album is Out Among The Stars, featuring 12 previously unreleased recordings from sessions in 1981 and 1984, which is on sale March 31, 2014.

Tyrannosaurus Rex / T.Rex – A Beard Of Stars / T.Rex / Tanx / Alloy And The Riders Of Tomorrow – Deluxe Editions

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The rise and fall of Marc Bolan and his glam phenomenon... At first glance, these four expanded reissues trace a familiar arc, from eager ascendancy to hubristic decline. The fourth Tyrannosaurus Rex release, A Beard Of Stars, and the first, eponymous T. Rex album, both dating from 1970, find Bolan in rapid evolution from fairy-folk poet to glam god. Within three years, following the star-making success of Electric Warrior and The Slider, the jig is all but up. Somewhere between Tanx (1973) and Zinc Alloy And The Riders Of Tomorrow (1974), the crown was whipped from atop Bolan’s corkscrew curls and tossed to the next piece of teenage wildlife. There is, then, much to digest. As well as the original albums we get stray singles, B-sides, John Peel Top Gear sessions, TV performances, studio outtakes, home demos and alternate takes: 159 tracks in total. It’s a moot point whether A Beard Of Stars (6/10) gains much from 28 additional songs, mostly home demos, given that the album is pretty rough to begin with. It’s a quietly auspicious record, what with the arrival of Mickey Finn on percussion, and the addition of electric guitar to the mix. The result is an odd, repetitive, but not displeasing collision between fey folkabilly – princes, moons and dragons remain consistent preoccupations – and the seeds of something meaner and leaner. In particular the wah-wah burst at the end of “Pavilions Of Sun” and the (admittedly underpowered) electric raunch of “Elemental Child” point onward. Within months Bolan had shortened the name of the band and tightened up the sound. Although the general approach on T. Rex (7/10) deviated little from A Beard Of Stars, there is more electric guitar, harder bass, less clutter, greater focus. Meaty updates of 1968 single “One Inch Rock” and a gargantuan version of “The Wizard”, originally recorded by Bolan’s old band John’s Children, capture the progression. Extras include the full 15-minute rendition of “The Children Of Rarn Suite”, already available, 17 previously unreleased demos and alternate takes, as well as the song that changed everything. Though “Ride A White Swan” wasn’t on T.Rex, their first hit single is included here in both its original version and the TOTP performance from November 1970. After it became a hit, the world opened out. These reissues leave Bolan on the cusp of T.Rexstasy and rejoin him and the band – now a full-blooded four-piece – in 1973, still on top of the world but beginning to teeter. Though derided at the time, Tanx (8/10) is a fine record, even without contemporaneous singles “Children Of The Revolution” and “20th Century Boy”, included among copious extras. (The additional tracks on Tanx and Zinc Alloy overlap significantly with previous Edsel re-releases, although there is sufficient new material to tempt fans.) By Tanx the quality control is waning slightly, but Bolan’s shunting grooves remain well-oiled on “Shock Rock” and “Born To Boogie”. “Electric Slim And The Factory Hen”, with its lush strings and slurpy sax, and glam-soul showstopper “Left Hand Luke”, point towards Zinc Alloy (7/10), on which Bolan, newly enchanted with singer Gloria Jones, gives fuller vent to funk and R&B influences, predating by several months Bowie’s and Elton John’s interest in disco and Philly soul. A shame, then, that the album title reeks of a desperate Ziggy Stardust knock-off. Though Bolan was still clearly capable of inspired creativity – the dark, twisted “Explosive Mouth” and “Change” are particularly great – Zinc Alloy is where the wheels really start to come off. Any band spirit had long gone – the album was credited to Marc Bolan and T. Rex – and drugs and ego were taking their toll. The enjoyably sub-Dylan melodrama of “Teenage Dream” – which ended an unbroken run of ten Top 10 singles – tacitly acknowledge that Bolan’s imperial phase is over. The results may not be as spectacular, or as coherent, as T. Rex at their ’71-72 peak, but they’re still pretty fine. The real problem lay in the fact that Bolan’s shtick had become so formulaic that no amount of genre window-dressing could quite obscure a fatal lack of progression. He had come a long way since “Woodland Bop”, but not, perhaps, quite far enough. Graeme Thomson

The rise and fall of Marc Bolan and his glam phenomenon…

At first glance, these four expanded reissues trace a familiar arc, from eager ascendancy to hubristic decline. The fourth Tyrannosaurus Rex release, A Beard Of Stars, and the first, eponymous T. Rex album, both dating from 1970, find Bolan in rapid evolution from fairy-folk poet to glam god. Within three years, following the star-making success of Electric Warrior and The Slider, the jig is all but up. Somewhere between Tanx (1973) and Zinc Alloy And The Riders Of Tomorrow (1974), the crown was whipped from atop Bolan’s corkscrew curls and tossed to the next piece of teenage wildlife.

There is, then, much to digest. As well as the original albums we get stray singles, B-sides, John Peel Top Gear sessions, TV performances, studio outtakes, home demos and alternate takes: 159 tracks in total.

It’s a moot point whether A Beard Of Stars (6/10) gains much from 28 additional songs, mostly home demos, given that the album is pretty rough to begin with. It’s a quietly auspicious record, what with the arrival of Mickey Finn on percussion, and the addition of electric guitar to the mix. The result is an odd, repetitive, but not displeasing collision between fey folkabilly – princes, moons and dragons remain consistent preoccupations – and the seeds of something meaner and leaner. In particular the wah-wah burst at the end of “Pavilions Of Sun” and the (admittedly underpowered) electric raunch of “Elemental Child” point onward.

Within months Bolan had shortened the name of the band and tightened up the sound. Although the general approach on T. Rex (7/10) deviated little from A Beard Of Stars, there is more electric guitar, harder bass, less clutter, greater focus. Meaty updates of 1968 single “One Inch Rock” and a gargantuan version of “The Wizard”, originally recorded by Bolan’s old band John’s Children, capture the progression.

Extras include the full 15-minute rendition of “The Children Of Rarn Suite”, already available, 17 previously unreleased demos and alternate takes, as well as the song that changed everything. Though “Ride A White Swan” wasn’t on T.Rex, their first hit single is included here in both its original version and the TOTP performance from November 1970.

After it became a hit, the world opened out. These reissues leave Bolan on the cusp of T.Rexstasy and rejoin him and the band – now a full-blooded four-piece – in 1973, still on top of the world but beginning to teeter. Though derided at the time, Tanx (8/10) is a fine record, even without contemporaneous singles “Children Of The Revolution” and “20th Century Boy”, included among copious extras. (The additional tracks on Tanx and Zinc Alloy overlap significantly with previous Edsel re-releases, although there is sufficient new material to tempt fans.)

By Tanx the quality control is waning slightly, but Bolan’s shunting grooves remain well-oiled on “Shock Rock” and “Born To Boogie”. “Electric Slim And The Factory Hen”, with its lush strings and slurpy sax, and glam-soul showstopper “Left Hand Luke”, point towards Zinc Alloy (7/10), on which Bolan, newly enchanted with singer Gloria Jones, gives fuller vent to funk and R&B influences, predating by several months Bowie’s and Elton John’s interest in disco and Philly soul. A shame, then, that the album title reeks of a desperate Ziggy Stardust knock-off.

Though Bolan was still clearly capable of inspired creativity – the dark, twisted “Explosive Mouth” and “Change” are particularly great – Zinc Alloy is where the wheels really start to come off. Any band spirit had long gone – the album was credited to Marc Bolan and T. Rex – and drugs and ego were taking their toll. The enjoyably sub-Dylan melodrama of “Teenage Dream” – which ended an unbroken run of ten Top 10 singles – tacitly acknowledge that Bolan’s imperial phase is over.

The results may not be as spectacular, or as coherent, as T. Rex at their ’71-72 peak, but they’re still pretty fine. The real problem lay in the fact that Bolan’s shtick had become so formulaic that no amount of genre window-dressing could quite obscure a fatal lack of progression. He had come a long way since “Woodland Bop”, but not, perhaps, quite far enough.

Graeme Thomson

Morrissey confirms details of Vauxhall And I 20th Anniversary edition

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Morrissey has confirmed details of the 20th Anniversary Definitive Master of Vauxhall And I. The new edition will be released on June 2 on Parlophone Records and will come with a bonus CD featuring an unreleased 1995 live concert recorded at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London. Originally releas...

Morrissey has confirmed details of the 20th Anniversary Definitive Master of Vauxhall And I.

The new edition will be released on June 2 on Parlophone Records and will come with a bonus CD featuring an unreleased 1995 live concert recorded at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London.

Originally released on March 14, 1994, Vauxhall And I was a UK No 1 album. The accompanying concert CD was recorded at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane on February 26, 1995.

The tracklisting for Vauxhall And I 20th Anniverary Definitive Master is:

CD 1, vinyl and digital download:

1. Now My Heart Is Full

2. Spring-Heeled Jim

3. Billy Budd

4. Hold On To Your Friends

5. The More You Ignore Me the Closer I Get

6. Why Don’t You Find Out For Yourself

7. I Am Hated For Loving

8. Lifeguard Sleeping, Girl Drowning

9. Used To Be A Sweet Boy

10.The Lazy Sunbathers

11.Speedway

CD 2 & DD 2: Morrissey – Live At The Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, 1995

1. Billy Budd

2. Have-A-Go Merchant

3. Spring-Heeled Jim

4. London

5. You’re The One For Me Fatty

6. Boxers

7. Jack The Ripper

8. We’ll Let You Know

9. Whatever Happens I Love You

10.Why Don’t You Find Out For Yourself

11.The More You Ignore Me the Closer I Get

12.National Front Disco

13.Moon River

14.Now My Heart Is Full

Kate Bush adds seven more shows to London residency

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Kate Bush has added seven more nights to her Before The Dawn engagement at London's Eventim Apollo Hammersmith starting on August 26. Tickets for all 22 shows will go on sale from 9.30am on Friday, March 28. These are Bush's first major live dates since 1979's Tour of Life, since when she has give...

Kate Bush has added seven more nights to her Before The Dawn engagement at London’s Eventim Apollo Hammersmith starting on August 26.

Tickets for all 22 shows will go on sale from 9.30am on Friday, March 28.

These are Bush’s first major live dates since 1979’s Tour of Life, since when she has given only the occasional live performance.

Tickets are available only from the following outlets: www.eventim.co.uk, www.gigsandtours.com and www.ticketmaster.co.uk.

Tickets are limited to 4 per booking and photo ID will be required to be presented by the lead booker on arrival at the venue on the night of the show.

The dates are:

August: 26, 27, 29, 30.

September: 2, 3, 5, 6, 9, 10, 12, 13, 16, 17, 19, 20, 23, 24, 26, 27, 30

October: 1

Tickets cost £49, £59. £79, £95 and £135 and are subject to a booking fee.

The 12th Uncut Playlist Of 2014

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Lots to get stuck into this week, though I think it’s worth drawing special attention to the superb William Tyler EP and, in the week the Pixies announce a newish album, a pointedly excellent Kim Deal track with Morgan Nagler. Watching the Gene Clark documentary the other week, I was reminded of an album I’ve spent a few years trying to track down; namely, the self-titled debut by “No Other”’s producer, Thomas Jefferson Kaye. I finally struck gold a couple of days ago, and it’s every bit as good as I hoped: a sort of cosmic Southern funk record – in the zone of Dr John, Leon Russell, Bobby Charles, maybe - given an expansive LA makeover by a crew that features Steely Dan and their associates. Can’t recommend this one enough; very much due a reissue, I think. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 The Wu-Tang Clan – Keep Watch (Featuring Nathaniel) (WuMusic Group) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3E14-IBTq-g 2 Glenn Jones – Welcomed Wherever I Go (Thrill Jockey) 3 William Tyler – Lost Colony (Merge) 4 The Black Keys – Turn Blue (Nonesuch) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZZUY32iCzU 5 Brian Reitzell – Last Summer (Featuring Kevin Shields) (Smalltown Supersound) 6 Grandma Sparrow - Grandma Sparrow & his Piddletractor Orchestra (Spacebomb) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xk_-JK9kYlU 7 Willie Watson – Folk Singer Vol. 1 (Acony) 8 Fucked Up – Glass Boys (Matador) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLQVVQIg9ME 9 Kim Deal & Morgan Nagler – The Root (Kim Deal Music)

Lots to get stuck into this week, though I think it’s worth drawing special attention to the superb William Tyler EP and, in the week the Pixies announce a newish album, a pointedly excellent Kim Deal track with Morgan Nagler.

Watching the Gene Clark documentary the other week, I was reminded of an album I’ve spent a few years trying to track down; namely, the self-titled debut by “No Other”’s producer, Thomas Jefferson Kaye. I finally struck gold a couple of days ago, and it’s every bit as good as I hoped: a sort of cosmic Southern funk record – in the zone of Dr John, Leon Russell, Bobby Charles, maybe – given an expansive LA makeover by a crew that features Steely Dan and their associates. Can’t recommend this one enough; very much due a reissue, I think.

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

1 The Wu-Tang Clan – Keep Watch (Featuring Nathaniel) (WuMusic Group)

2 Glenn Jones – Welcomed Wherever I Go (Thrill Jockey)

3 William Tyler – Lost Colony (Merge)

4 The Black Keys – Turn Blue (Nonesuch)

5 Brian Reitzell – Last Summer (Featuring Kevin Shields) (Smalltown Supersound)

6 Grandma Sparrow – Grandma Sparrow & his Piddletractor Orchestra (Spacebomb)

7 Willie Watson – Folk Singer Vol. 1 (Acony)

8 Fucked Up – Glass Boys (Matador)

9 Kim Deal & Morgan Nagler – The Root (Kim Deal Music)

Kim Deal and Morgan Nagler – ‘The Root’ [Official Video] from Kim Deal Music [Official] on Vimeo.

10 Watter – This World (Temporary Residence)

11 Toumani Diabaté & Sidiki Diabaté – Toumani & Sidiki (World Circuit)

12 Rodrigo Amarante – Cavalo (Mais Um Discos)

13 Various Artists – Too Slow To Disco (How Do You Are?/City Slang)

14 Thomas Jefferson Kaye – Thomas Jefferson Kaye (Probe)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eFef-3ssNac

15 Black Bananas – Electric Brick Wall (Drag City)

16 Bob Mould – Beauty & Ruin (Merge)

17 Gruff Rhys – American Interior (Turnstile)

18 Parquet Courts – Sunbathing Animal (Rough Trade)

19 Kim Deal – Are You Mine? (Kim Deal Music)

Kim Deal – Are You Mine? [Official Video] from Kim Deal Music [Official] on Vimeo.

20 Wooden Wand – Farmer’s Corner (Fire)

21 LCD Soundsystem – The Long Goodbye (Live At Madison Square Garden) (Parlophone)

22 Chuck E Weiss – Red Beans And Weiss (Anti-)

23 J Spaceman & Kid Millions – Misha (Northern Spy)

24 Håkon Stene – Lush Laments for Lazy Mammal (Hubro)

25 Pixies – Indie Cindy (Pixiesmusic)

26 Bo Ningen – III (Stolen)

Gene Clark No Other Band, Stephen Malkmus, St Vincent, Felice Brothers confirmed for End Of The Road festival

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The Gene Clark No Other Band - featuring members of Fleet Foxes, Grizzly Bear, Beach House and Fairport Convention - have been announced as the third headliner for this year's End Of The Road festival. They will join previously announced headliners The Flaming Lips and Wild Beasts at the festival, ...

The Gene Clark No Other Band – featuring members of Fleet Foxes, Grizzly Bear, Beach House and Fairport Convention – have been announced as the third headliner for this year’s End Of The Road festival.

They will join previously announced headliners The Flaming Lips and Wild Beasts at the festival, which runs from August 29 – 31 at Larmer Tree Gardens, Dorset.

Other acts confirmed today for this year’s festival are: Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, St Vincent, tUnE-yArDs, Jenny Lewis, Felice Brothers and Black Lips.

To compliment the addition of the Gene Clark No Other Band, the festival will be holding a special screening of The Byrd Who Flew Alone, 2013’s acclaimed documentary film about the extraordinary life and work of Gene Clark. You can read Uncut‘s review of the documentary here.

For further details about the line up and tickets for End Of The Road, click here. More acts will be added in due course.

You can read Uncut’s coverage of last year’s End Of The Road festival here.

An A-Z list of all the new artists confirmed today is as follows:

Alice Boman

Archie Bronson Outfit

Arc Iris

Arrows of Love

Benjamin Booker

Black Lips

Celebration

Chad Vangallen

David Thomas Broughton

Felice Brothers

The Gene Clark No Other Band

Jenny Lewis

Kiran Leonard

Laish

Lapland

Lau

Lonnie Holley

Lucius

Lyla Foy

Mazes

Otti Albietz & the voices

Phox

The Rails

Robert Ellis

Samantha Crain

St Vincent

Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks

The Districts

Theo Verney

Tides of Man

Tramms

tUnE-yArDs

Wye Oak

Zachary Cale

Photo credit: Kyle Gustafson/For The Washington Post/Getty

The Hold Steady and Trans announced for the Uncut stage at this year’s Great Escape festival

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The Hold Steady and Trans will join Courtney Barnett, Arc Iris, Syd Arthur, The Rails, Alice Boman, PHOX and Ethan Johns on the Uncut stage at this year's Great Escape festival in Brighton. Meanwhile, the festival, which takes place at 35 venues in Brighton between May 8-10, have also confirmed det...

The Hold Steady and Trans will join Courtney Barnett, Arc Iris, Syd Arthur, The Rails, Alice Boman, PHOX and Ethan Johns on the Uncut stage at this year’s Great Escape festival in Brighton.

Meanwhile, the festival, which takes place at 35 venues in Brighton between May 8-10, have also confirmed details of another 100 artists who will be performing.

Last month, Wild Beasts and These New Puritans were confirmed for the event, along with Jon Hopkins and The Strokes’ guitarist Albert Hammond, Jr.

Other acts set to appear in Brighton this May include Telegram, East India Youth, Ratking, George Ezra, The Bohicas, Phantogram, Girl Band, Gorgon City, Blessa, All We Are, Big Ups, Eyedress, Jamie Isaac, Lizzo and The Neighbourhood.

As previously announced, Kelis will play Brighton Dome on May 10 in support of her sixth album Food, which is scheduled for release in April. Other names who appeared on the first line-up announcement in January included Jungle, Chlöe Howl, Royal Blood, Carli XCX, Circa Waves and Fat White Family.

Tickets can be purchased from The Great Escape website here, or in person at Resident records in Brighton.

You can read Uncut’s coverage of last year’s The Great Escape festival here.

Artists announced for The Great Escape today (March 26)

Albert Albert

Alice Boman

Amatorski

Ambassadeurs

Annie Eve

Antimatter People

Audience Killers

Badbadnotgood

Ballet School

Bang Bang Bang

Billy Lockett

Bite The Buffalo

Blizzard

Bo Saris

Boreal Sons

Brns

Brolin

Buffalo Daughter

Calling All Cars

Carnival Youth

Charlie Cunningham

Childhood

Claire

Clare Maguire

Clean Bandit

Coely

Coves

Dizraeli And The Small Gods

Dog Is Dead

Drowners

Eagles For Hands

Eliza And The Bear

Etches

Ethan Johns

Eyes And No Eyes

Ezra Furman

Frànçois And The Atlas Mountains

Freddie Dickson

Future Folk Orchestra

Gavin James

Glass Animals

God Damn

Gomad! & Monster

Grumbling Fur

Hannah Peel

Hidden Orchestra

His Clancyness

Hollie Cook

Honeyblood

I Have A Tribe

Ichi

Jargon V.A

Jenn Grant

Jess Glynne

Jlyy

Josh Flowers & The Wild

Josh Record

Jungle Doctors

Kate Miller-Heidke

Khushi

Kid Wave

Kieran Leonard

Kimberly Anne

Lay Low

Le1f

Lisa Knapp

Little Dragon

Lola Colt

Looks

Luke Howard

Major Look

Marmozets

Mayu Wakisaka

Mazes

Meanwhile

Men’s Adventure’s

Mise En Scene

Mister Wives

Misty Miller

Neighbour

Norma Jean Martine

Pale Grey

Panama Wedding

Pearls Negras

Persian Rabbit

Prides

Rachael Dadd

Rare Monk

Rhodes

Roger Molls

Salt Ashes

Seoul

Serafina Steer

Sheppard

Shift K3y

Smoove And Turrell

Sophie Jamieson

Sticky Fingers

Superfood

Taro&Jiro

Tcts

Team Me

Ted Zed

The Amazing Snakeheads

The Animen

The Coronas

The Diamond Age

The Rails

The Royal Concept

The Subways

The Wet Secrets

The Xcerts

Tomas Barfod

Trans

Twin Atlantic

Ulla Nova

Vimes

Werkha

Whilk And Misky

White Hinterland

William Carl Jr

Xxanaxx

Y.O.U

You Are Wolf

Young And Sick

Zhala

George Harrison “was unlucky to get a band with Lennon and McCartney in it”

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Neil Innes recalls his friendship with George Harrison in the new Uncut, dated May 2014 and out on Friday (March 28). The Rutle and former Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band guitarist and songwriter answers your questions, tackling topics such as Monty Python, disputes with Oasis, Douglas Adams and hanging o...

Neil Innes recalls his friendship with George Harrison in the new Uncut, dated May 2014 and out on Friday (March 28).

The Rutle and former Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band guitarist and songwriter answers your questions, tackling topics such as Monty Python, disputes with Oasis, Douglas Adams and hanging out with The Beatles during the filming of Magical Mystery Tour.

Remembering his good friend Harrison, Innes says: “He was an underrated songwriter. He was unlucky, George, to get a band with Lennon and McCartney in it. It’s a bit like Karl Marx was unlucky to get Russia.”

Innes is set to reunite The Rutles to tour the UK in May.

The new Uncut is out on Friday.

T Bone Burnett unveils Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes

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T Bone Burnett has unveiled details about his forthcoming Basement Tapes project. Called Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes, the album will be released later this year by Electromagnetic Recordings/Island Records/Harvest Records, and will feature artists including Elvis Costello, Rhiannon Gi...

T Bone Burnett has unveiled details about his forthcoming Basement Tapes project.

Called Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes, the album will be released later this year by Electromagnetic Recordings/Island Records/Harvest Records, and will feature artists including Elvis Costello, Rhiannon Giddens (Carolina Chocolate Drops), Dawes’ Taylor Goldsmith, Jim James and Marcus Mumford. The have created music for two-dozen recently discovered lyrics written by Bob Dylan in 1967 during the period he was working on The Basement Tapes.

The album will be accompanied by a documentary titled, Lost Songs: The Basement Tapes Continued, directed by Sam Jones who made the Wilco documentary, I Am Trying To Break Your Heart.

“Great music is best created when a community of artists gets together for the common good,” said Burnett. “There is a deep well of generosity and support in the room at all times, and that reflects the tremendous generosity shown by Bob in sharing these lyrics with us.”

You can read an interview with T Bone Burnett here

The new Uncut revealed! Bruce Springsteen, Van Morrison, Mama Cass, The Stooges, William Burroughs and The Damned in new issue!

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Bruce Springsteen is on the cover of the new Uncut, which also includes features on Van Morrison, Mama Cass, The Stooges, William Burroughs and The Damned. For our exclusive cover story, Rage Against The Machine’s Tom Morello, who had such a lead role on High Hopes, took a break from recent to...

Bruce Springsteen is on the cover of the new Uncut, which also includes features on Van Morrison, Mama Cass, The Stooges, William Burroughs and The Damned.

For our exclusive cover story, Rage Against The Machine’s Tom Morello, who had such a lead role on High Hopes, took a break from recent tours of South Africa, Australia and New Zealand to report direct for Uncut from the heart of the Springsteen camp.

He tells us how he first became friends with Springsteen and after guesting at various shows eventually ended up playing full time with the E Street Band as one of four guitarists, alongside Bruce, Nils Lofgren and Miami Steve Van Zandt.

“It’s like a guitar army onstage right now,” he says, his long-standing admiration for the band turned to awe now that he’s part of it, working alongside Springsteen and his veteran musical allies. “The way I look at it, the E Street band has been a great live band for 40 years. So rule No 1: don’t fuck up. They don’t need me to be great, they are already great. So play the songs, don’t fuck it up and when Bruce gives you the nod, blow the roof off the place.”

As well as a fascinating insight into how Springsteen works – spontaneously, a lot of the time, apparently, which keeps everyone on their toes – Morello also looks at Springsteen’s self-adopted role as a modern protest singer, in the tradition of Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger and the young Dylan, which we’ve supplemented with a Top 30 of Springsteen’s greatest political songs.

We also take a new look in the issue at Van Morrison in the 70s, specifically the circumstances that inspired his neglected 1974 masterpiece, the mystical and ravishing Veedon Fleece. Mama Cass, “the Queen Of Laurel Canyon” is meanwhile remembered by Graham Nash, John Sebastian, PF Sloan and Barry McGuire and on the 100th anniversary of his birth we celebrate the career of writer, addict, marksman and – yes! – rock icon, William Burroughs.

Elsewhere, we meet Super Furry Animal’s Gruff Rhys to find out more about his latest project – a 200-year-old quest for a tribe of Welsh-speaking Native Americans, Neil Innes of The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band and The Rutles answers your questions in An Audience With, The Damned tell us about the making of 1979 single, “Smash it Up” and Canterbury Scene veterans Caravan look back at their classic albums .

We also have Stooges guitarist James Williamson on the ‘lost’ follow-up to Raw Power and we find out what happened to the rest of The Rockets after Neil Young made off with Danny Whitten, Ralph Molina and Billy Talbot to form Crazy horse.

The Uncut Review is as usual bursting at the seams with great music – including news albums from Damon Albarn, The Delines, Hurray For The Riff Raff, The Afghan Whigs, Thee Oh Sees, and Ben Watt, plus reissues from Slint, Bobby Charles and Emmylou Harris.

The new Uncut is on sale from Friday, March 28. Let me know what you think of it, if you have time. You can reach me at allan_jones@ipcmedia.com.

Have a great week.