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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.

Damon Albarn on Everyday Robots: “I’ve made very personal records before, but none with this kind of chronology”

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Damon Albarn discusses his forthcoming debut solo album, Everyday Robots, in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2014 and out on Friday (March 28). Albarn explains that much of the album recalls his childhood in Leytonstone in east London. “To do something completely retrospective…was a new th...

Damon Albarn discusses his forthcoming debut solo album, Everyday Robots, in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2014 and out on Friday (March 28).

Albarn explains that much of the album recalls his childhood in Leytonstone in east London.

“To do something completely retrospective…was a new thing for me,” he says. “I’ve made very personal records before, but none with this kind of chronology.

“There is a chronology to it, it doesn’t stick to it but sort of flies all over the place. But in a way, it’s my most narrative record, I suppose.”

Albarn also talks about working with Brian Eno on the album, and about writing a song for a baby elephant in Tanzania, in the new Uncut, out on Friday.

Michael Bloomfield – From His Head To His Heart To His Hands: An Audio/Visual Scrapbook

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Bloomfield is God? Long-overdue, career-spanning look at rock's foremost guitar trailblazer... Michael Bloomfield (affectionately: Bloomers) lit up the ‘60s. A guitarist of indomitable power and grace, an effervescent personality, a maestro likely to astound in virtually any environment, any genre, he was a shape-shifter, a transformer, an architect and an archetype—the original rock guitar superhero. Like flipping a switch, he could accelerate from sweetness to fury and back again in the blink of an eye. “At times,” remembers his friend and bandmate Barry Goldberg, “his solos would be like bombs going off.” As the blazing experimentalism and sense of discovery of the 1960s faded into the genre-codified, corporate rock of the '70s, the legend of Bloomfield's mind-melting guitar prowess could be felt and heard everywhere—in post-psychedelic San Francisco, in the distorted, cartoonish blues riffs of proto metal bands and arena rockers, in the playing of Eric Clapton, Carlos Santana, Jeff Beck, and, later, a Texas kid named Stevie Ray Vaughan. All of which, strangely enough, was anathema to Bloomfield himself. His high points are unassailable: Backing virtually every significant bluesman, from Sleepy John Estes to Muddy Waters; lynchpin of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, the interracial juggernaut that helped transform “pop” from shallow teenybopper fluff to serious “rock”. He accompanied Bob Dylan on his most momentous, gig ever—Newport 1965; spun out trippy, mesmerizing guitar on Al Kooper’s smash-hit Super Session. His low points are, sadly enough, unassailable too, including quarter-hearted ‘70s supergroup projects, a nasty heroin habit, and a kind of self-imposed exile. Decades in the making, curated by friend and frequent collaborator Kooper, Head Heart Hands collects 46 tracks, a dozen previously unreleased, abetted by a fine hour-long documentary—Sweet Blues—directed by Bob Sarles, which, through many interviews, captures some of the essence of the man. Less an authoritative scouring of the vaults, more of—as noted—a scrapbook, it supplements a discography that is as scattered and discordant as a typical Bloomfield guitar lead is fluid and pure. The set begins at New York’s Columbia Studios, Bloomfield auditioning for legendary producer John Hammond. He pours his heart into a sturdy acoustic blues, “I’m a Country Boy,” delivering enough intricate guitar figures to virtually overwhelm the song, before sliding effortlessly into the country fingerpicking flash of “Hammond’s Rag,” a Merle Travis rip, an anomaly, a fairly shocking one at that, in the Bloomfield repertoire. Hardcore blues, though, as filtered through the postwar generation of electrified giants like Waters, Wolf, and Williamson, was Bloomfield’s lifelong passion, and virtually his entire dossier reflects it. Standards like “I Got My Mojo Workin’” (a later Hammond demo) and “Born in Chicago” (embryonic, exhilarating Butterfield) are emblematic and revelatory, auguring a new, heavier, high-octane normal as rock merges with blues circa 1965-66. By the time of his 1968 improvisatory LP with Kooper and Stephen Stills — Super Session — Bloomfield’s approach had evolved ever so slightly. “Albert’s Shuffle,” a highlight, is typical—pure unsullied blues structures, but with notes twisted, stretched, battered, and bruised amid a sly mix of vibrato and sustain, draped over familiar rhythms, cut to fit any (usually dark) mood. “Stop,” a workout of Howard Tate’s soul smash, is even better, Bloomfield freewheeling, shooting out the lights and sparring with some electrifying Kooper’s stutter-step organ fills. Within easy hindsight, three-plus decades on from his sad death at just 37, one can sense that Bloomfield was boxed in, by audience expectations, by drug use and declining health, and by a blues purist’s self-imposed limitations. Never a great (or confident) singer, nor a particularly committed songwriter (though he had his moments), his expertise was in interpretation and embellishment, and as a classic ensemble player and ambassador, passionate in bringing substance, foundation, and a jazzman’s gravitas to an oftentimes ethereal pop world. Conversely, the more Bloomfield was challenged, the more he produced work of immense emotional intensity and stunning complexity. Instructed by Dylan on Highway 61 Revisited to avoid “any B.B. King shit,” he instinctively invented a new sonic language, reeling off stinging leads and fills of coruscating power. Head Heart Hands picks up two heretofore unreleased pieces therefrom, a mesmerizing instrumental run-through of “Like A Rolling Stone,” and a rare version of the incomparable “Tombstone Blues,” the Chambers Brothers on backing vocals, Bloomfield’s raw, caustic guitar dancing darkly, forcefully around Dylan’s every verse. The splendiferous Butterfield Band opus “East-West” is Bloomfield’s crown jewel, and one of the most audacious pieces of music produced in the pop pantheon. Blindingly ambitious, pushing boundaries at every level, it begins on a bluesy, cascading plane, but soon swerves—traditional musical structures melting in a fiery 13-minute rage of raga and eastern modalities, straight R&B, free jazz, classic pop, and back again, Bloomfield’s guitar set to stun. Though others were toying with this worldly fusion, Coltrane-meets-Shankar territory in the mid-60s, including the Byrds on “Eight Miles High”, one might easily argue that the preeminent aesthetic of “East-West”, especially when taken up by legions of west-coasters, ignited the psychedelic movement. That Bloomfield toyed with but never truly returned to its lofty heights is a shame, and one of his darker mysteries. The Electric Flag was, potentially, even more revolutionary. Envisioned by Bloomfield — shades of Gram Parsons — as a repository for “all kinds of American music,” the group had flashes of brilliance, like a delirious, horn-driven swing through Howlin’ Wolf’s “Killing Floor,” as well as its emotional flipside, the subtle, oh-so-brief “Easy Rider.” But personality struggles, lack of strong original material, and, eventually, an appetite for hard drugs, did them in. Head Heart Hands adds a couple solid live Flag cuts and a generous section studio/live tracks from the Super Session period, before heading into Bloomfield’s ‘70s wilderness with nearly an entire disc of latter-day live material. These complete the picture, but yawning gaps remain: Though the fledgling Flag might have best exhibited their early ambitions on the psychsploitation soundtrack The Trip, that period is ignored; so too are two exemplary albums with Butterfield/Flag alumni, where Bloomfield relished his backing role — Barry Goldberg’s Two Jews Blues and Nick Gravenites My Labors. Surprisingly, no live 1960s Dylan material appears either, though the set winds down with the oft-bootlegged “Groom’s Still Waiting at the Altar”, Dylan at the Warfield 1980, Bloomfield riffing out turbo-charged monsters like it’s 1965 all over again. Luke Torn Q&A With the Electric Flag’s Barry Goldberg When did you first meet Michael? Well, you know, it goes way back, 16 years old, in high school. He was from the suburbs, I was from the city, and we had high school bands. Mike and I had a band called King Dennis and the Kingsmen. We would play Sweet 16 parties. Those were a big deal, because we’d make sure we were the only guys there. It was pretty much a rock and roll band, it wasn’t really a blues thing then. We’d cover the Ventures, Johnny and the Hurricanes, all those kinda early instrumental bands. When did Michael start checking out the blues scene? The south Side of Chicago might as well have been Russia or something, nobody ever went down there. Except Michael started going down there . . . playing on Maxwell Street, as early as 14, 15 years old, just playing on the street corners and the sidewalks. He did it because of his love and his passion for the blues. What do you most think attracted him most? It was a cultural thing … mystical. It wasn’t like rock and roll. You know, it unleashed certain things in our heads, our minds, and our souls, that rock and roll didn’t. It cast a spell. The great guitar players that Michael could listen to, because in rock and roll at that time, there wasn’t a Hendrix or anyone like a virtuoso guy. With the blues, Michael was into B. B. King, Otis Rush, Muddy Waters, and he wanted to learn, he also discovered the country blues thing, too—Blind Lemon [Jefferson] and all those people. He was playing both acoustic and electric in those days? Oh, yeah, along with the folk music. He was an MC at this coffeehouse on Rush Street, which was sort of like the bourbon Street of Chicago, and he would conduct those shows, and bring down all those guys from the south side and west side, like Big Joe Williams, to play for these college kids and introduce them to this whole other life. Like a switch was flipped? Went we down to a place called Silvio’s, where Howlin’ Wolf was playing, and I followed Michael in there. You know, he was my leader. He had that kind of personality—you would follow him into hell. You know, I loved him man. Later on we were inseparable. He inspired me. Did you see the Paul Butterfield Blues Band in their earliest days? I was actually asked to play keyboards in the Butterfield Band in Chicago. I did a couple of gigs with Paul, and Michael and Paul invited me to come to Newport [in 1965]. We got in the car, we drove to Rhode Island, when we got there, their producer, Paul Rothchild, said ‘I don’t hear keyboards with the band,’ and so that brought me right down. The Butterfield Band was a huge success, though. You were in the group for the Dylan set though... Michael introduced me to Bob. And Bob asked me to play keyboards. I was playing organ. I had known the song, “Like a Rolling Stone,” because Michael had brought home the demo from when he had done the sessions. I learned the changes, so that was ok. And we did “Maggie’s Farm.” And it was a controversial reaction—some people liking it and some feeling that Bob had betrayed them. Do you think Michael had a sense of the gravity of the moment? I thought he had a great time. Just smiling. And we were just on a mission, blazing through in the name of rock and roll. What was the reaction after the show that night? Well, we just did our thing. And of course, Bob was upset—I guess. But I thought at that moment that a new movement had been born—a new focus and a new direction in music, and it changed that thing forever. I understand Bloomfield was an ambassador for the blues in San Francisco, in the psych years? Yeah, he did that to return the favor. Later on, with the Electric Flag and when he played with Butterfield, he had a relationship with Bill Graham and he got Bill to book all these other acts. He said “Hey, they have agents, too.” You know, bring in Muddy, bring in Wolf, bring in B.B. King. Bill started doing that, and Michael was pretty much responsible for that. What was the blueprint of the Electric Flag? He was uncomfortable with the Butterfield Band, so he approached me to start the Electric Flag—he wanted to have an all-American music band, that could play every style of American music—from blues to Motown—and he liked that until it became on the verge of becoming a supergroup. What kind of a turning point was Monterey Pop? We premiered our first album, Long Time Comin’ there, and that was intense because all eyes were on us. Michael was freaked out by all of that. There was so much pressure on him because he was the leader of the band. His personality, his very intense personality, caught on fire, and consequently he couldn’t sleep. He couldn’t turn it off. And that was a part you could hear in his music, that made his music so special. No one ever had that intensity, that burning, in their playing. Unfortunately, it was a curse at the same time That led to the Electric Flag’s demise? To me, from the reaction of the crowd, we accomplished our goal, our mission. We had an above-average set, I think. After that, we had sorta like won the battle, won the war. We were on a course. And unfortunately, in those days, there were a lot of drugs around. Our manager tried to talk to us, ‘You know, hey man, if you guys just play it cool, you could retire at the age of 40.’ But we were on a different course, unfortunately, and let that get the best of us, and the band started to deteriorate. It became awful personality-wise. As Michael receded from the spotlight, do you think he was a misunderstood figure? He didn’t like the spotlight, he didn’t like the pressure. He had bad insomnia and he liked the comfort zone of his room. He didn’t really need the fame and glory, he shunned away from that. He was a private kind of guy. INTERVIEW: LUKE TORN

Bloomfield is God? Long-overdue, career-spanning look at rock’s foremost guitar trailblazer…

Michael Bloomfield (affectionately: Bloomers) lit up the ‘60s. A guitarist of indomitable power and grace, an effervescent personality, a maestro likely to astound in virtually any environment, any genre, he was a shape-shifter, a transformer, an architect and an archetype—the original rock guitar superhero. Like flipping a switch, he could accelerate from sweetness to fury and back again in the blink of an eye. “At times,” remembers his friend and bandmate Barry Goldberg, “his solos would be like bombs going off.”

As the blazing experimentalism and sense of discovery of the 1960s faded into the genre-codified, corporate rock of the ’70s, the legend of Bloomfield’s mind-melting guitar prowess could be felt and heard everywhere—in post-psychedelic San Francisco, in the distorted, cartoonish blues riffs of proto metal bands and arena rockers, in the playing of Eric Clapton, Carlos Santana, Jeff Beck, and, later, a Texas kid named Stevie Ray Vaughan. All of which, strangely enough, was anathema to Bloomfield himself.

His high points are unassailable: Backing virtually every significant bluesman, from Sleepy John Estes to Muddy Waters; lynchpin of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, the interracial juggernaut that helped transform “pop” from shallow teenybopper fluff to serious “rock”. He accompanied Bob Dylan on his most momentous, gig ever—Newport 1965; spun out trippy, mesmerizing guitar on Al Kooper’s smash-hit Super Session. His low points are, sadly enough, unassailable too, including quarter-hearted ‘70s supergroup projects, a nasty heroin habit, and a kind of self-imposed exile.

Decades in the making, curated by friend and frequent collaborator Kooper, Head Heart Hands collects 46 tracks, a dozen previously unreleased, abetted by a fine hour-long documentary—Sweet Blues—directed by Bob Sarles, which, through many interviews, captures some of the essence of the man. Less an authoritative scouring of the vaults, more of—as noted—a scrapbook, it supplements a discography that is as scattered and discordant as a typical Bloomfield guitar lead is fluid and pure.

The set begins at New York’s Columbia Studios, Bloomfield auditioning for legendary producer John Hammond. He pours his heart into a sturdy acoustic blues, “I’m a Country Boy,” delivering enough intricate guitar figures to virtually overwhelm the song, before sliding effortlessly into the country fingerpicking flash of “Hammond’s Rag,” a Merle Travis rip, an anomaly, a fairly shocking one at that, in the Bloomfield repertoire.

Hardcore blues, though, as filtered through the postwar generation of electrified giants like Waters, Wolf, and Williamson, was Bloomfield’s lifelong passion, and virtually his entire dossier reflects it. Standards like “I Got My Mojo Workin’” (a later Hammond demo) and “Born in Chicago” (embryonic, exhilarating Butterfield) are emblematic and revelatory, auguring a new, heavier, high-octane normal as rock merges with blues circa 1965-66.

By the time of his 1968 improvisatory LP with Kooper and Stephen Stills — Super Session — Bloomfield’s approach had evolved ever so slightly. “Albert’s Shuffle,” a highlight, is typical—pure unsullied blues structures, but with notes twisted, stretched, battered, and bruised amid a sly mix of vibrato and sustain, draped over familiar rhythms, cut to fit any (usually dark) mood. “Stop,” a workout of Howard Tate’s soul smash, is even better, Bloomfield freewheeling, shooting out the lights and sparring with some electrifying Kooper’s stutter-step organ fills.

Within easy hindsight, three-plus decades on from his sad death at just 37, one can sense that Bloomfield was boxed in, by audience expectations, by drug use and declining health, and by a blues purist’s self-imposed limitations. Never a great (or confident) singer, nor a particularly committed songwriter (though he had his moments), his expertise was in interpretation and embellishment, and as a classic ensemble player and ambassador, passionate in bringing substance, foundation, and a jazzman’s gravitas to an oftentimes ethereal pop world.

Conversely, the more Bloomfield was challenged, the more he produced work of immense emotional intensity and stunning complexity. Instructed by Dylan on Highway 61 Revisited to avoid “any B.B. King shit,” he instinctively invented a new sonic language, reeling off stinging leads and fills of coruscating power. Head Heart Hands picks up two heretofore unreleased pieces therefrom, a mesmerizing instrumental run-through of “Like A Rolling Stone,” and a rare version of the incomparable “Tombstone Blues,” the Chambers Brothers on backing vocals, Bloomfield’s raw, caustic guitar dancing darkly, forcefully around Dylan’s every verse.

The splendiferous Butterfield Band opus “East-West” is Bloomfield’s crown jewel, and one of the most audacious pieces of music produced in the pop pantheon. Blindingly ambitious, pushing boundaries at every level, it begins on a bluesy, cascading plane, but soon swerves—traditional musical structures melting in a fiery 13-minute rage of raga and eastern modalities, straight R&B, free jazz, classic pop, and back again, Bloomfield’s guitar set to stun. Though others were toying with this worldly fusion, Coltrane-meets-Shankar territory in the mid-60s, including the Byrds on “Eight Miles High”, one might easily argue that the preeminent aesthetic of “East-West”, especially when taken up by legions of west-coasters, ignited the psychedelic movement. That Bloomfield toyed with but never truly returned to its lofty heights is a shame, and one of his darker mysteries.

The Electric Flag was, potentially, even more revolutionary. Envisioned by Bloomfield — shades of Gram Parsons — as a repository for “all kinds of American music,” the group had flashes of brilliance, like a delirious, horn-driven swing through Howlin’ Wolf’s “Killing Floor,” as well as its emotional flipside, the subtle, oh-so-brief “Easy Rider.” But personality struggles, lack of strong original material, and, eventually, an appetite for hard drugs, did them in.

Head Heart Hands adds a couple solid live Flag cuts and a generous section studio/live tracks from the Super Session period, before heading into Bloomfield’s ‘70s wilderness with nearly an entire disc of latter-day live material. These complete the picture, but yawning gaps remain: Though the fledgling Flag might have best exhibited their early ambitions on the psychsploitation soundtrack The Trip, that period is ignored; so too are two exemplary albums with Butterfield/Flag alumni, where Bloomfield relished his backing role — Barry Goldberg’s Two Jews Blues and Nick Gravenites My Labors. Surprisingly, no live 1960s Dylan material appears either, though the set winds down with the oft-bootlegged “Groom’s Still Waiting at the Altar”, Dylan at the Warfield 1980, Bloomfield riffing out turbo-charged monsters like it’s 1965 all over again.

Luke Torn

Q&A

With the Electric Flag’s Barry Goldberg

When did you first meet Michael?

Well, you know, it goes way back, 16 years old, in high school. He was from the suburbs, I was from the city, and we had high school bands. Mike and I had a band called King Dennis and the Kingsmen. We would play Sweet 16 parties. Those were a big deal, because we’d make sure we were the only guys there. It was pretty much a rock and roll band, it wasn’t really a blues thing then. We’d cover the Ventures, Johnny and the Hurricanes, all those kinda early instrumental bands.

When did Michael start checking out the blues scene?

The south Side of Chicago might as well have been Russia or something, nobody ever went down there. Except Michael started going down there . . . playing on Maxwell Street, as early as 14, 15 years old, just playing on the street corners and the sidewalks. He did it because of his love and his passion for the blues.

What do you most think attracted him most?

It was a cultural thing … mystical. It wasn’t like rock and roll. You know, it unleashed certain things in our heads, our minds, and our souls, that rock and roll didn’t. It cast a spell. The great guitar players that Michael could listen to, because in rock and roll at that time, there wasn’t a Hendrix or anyone like a virtuoso guy. With the blues, Michael was into B. B. King, Otis Rush, Muddy Waters, and he wanted to learn, he also discovered the country blues thing, too—Blind Lemon [Jefferson] and all those people.

He was playing both acoustic and electric in those days?

Oh, yeah, along with the folk music. He was an MC at this coffeehouse on Rush Street, which was sort of like the bourbon Street of Chicago, and he would conduct those shows, and bring down all those guys from the south side and west side, like Big Joe Williams, to play for these college kids and introduce them to this whole other life.

Like a switch was flipped?

Went we down to a place called Silvio’s, where Howlin’ Wolf was playing, and I followed Michael in there. You know, he was my leader. He had that kind of personality—you would follow him into hell. You know, I loved him man. Later on we were inseparable. He inspired me.

Did you see the Paul Butterfield Blues Band in their earliest days?

I was actually asked to play keyboards in the Butterfield Band in Chicago. I did a couple of gigs with Paul, and Michael and Paul invited me to come to Newport [in 1965]. We got in the car, we drove to Rhode Island, when we got there, their producer, Paul Rothchild, said ‘I don’t hear keyboards with the band,’ and so that brought me right down. The Butterfield Band was a huge success, though.

You were in the group for the Dylan set though…

Michael introduced me to Bob. And Bob asked me to play keyboards. I was playing organ. I had known the song, “Like a Rolling Stone,” because Michael had brought home the demo from when he had done the sessions. I learned the changes, so that was ok. And we did “Maggie’s Farm.” And it was a controversial reaction—some people liking it and some feeling that Bob had betrayed them.

Do you think Michael had a sense of the gravity of the moment?

I thought he had a great time. Just smiling. And we were just on a mission, blazing through in the name of rock and roll.

What was the reaction after the show that night?

Well, we just did our thing. And of course, Bob was upset—I guess. But I thought at that moment that a new movement had been born—a new focus and a new direction in music, and it changed that thing forever.

I understand Bloomfield was an ambassador for the blues in San Francisco, in the psych years?

Yeah, he did that to return the favor. Later on, with the Electric Flag and when he played with Butterfield, he had a relationship with Bill Graham and he got Bill to book all these other acts. He said “Hey, they have agents, too.” You know, bring in Muddy, bring in Wolf, bring in B.B. King. Bill started doing that, and Michael was pretty much responsible for that.

What was the blueprint of the Electric Flag?

He was uncomfortable with the Butterfield Band, so he approached me to start the Electric Flag—he wanted to have an all-American music band, that could play every style of American music—from blues to Motown—and he liked that until it became on the verge of becoming a supergroup.

What kind of a turning point was Monterey Pop?

We premiered our first album, Long Time Comin’ there, and that was intense because all eyes were on us. Michael was freaked out by all of that. There was so much pressure on him because he was the leader of the band. His personality, his very intense personality, caught on fire, and consequently he couldn’t sleep. He couldn’t turn it off. And that was a part you could hear in his music, that made his music so special. No one ever had that intensity, that burning, in their playing. Unfortunately, it was a curse at the same time

That led to the Electric Flag’s demise?

To me, from the reaction of the crowd, we accomplished our goal, our mission. We had an above-average set, I think. After that, we had sorta like won the battle, won the war. We were on a course. And unfortunately, in those days, there were a lot of drugs around. Our manager tried to talk to us, ‘You know, hey man, if you guys just play it cool, you could retire at the age of 40.’ But we were on a different course, unfortunately, and let that get the best of us, and the band started to deteriorate. It became awful personality-wise.

As Michael receded from the spotlight, do you think he was a misunderstood figure?

He didn’t like the spotlight, he didn’t like the pressure. He had bad insomnia and he liked the comfort zone of his room. He didn’t really need the fame and glory, he shunned away from that. He was a private kind of guy.

INTERVIEW: LUKE TORN

Pixies to release first album in 23 years

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Pixies have announced details of Indie Cindy, their first new album in 23 years. The album will be released on April 28 and comprises of the EPs, 'EP1' and 'EP2', released in September 2013 and January 2014 respectively, plus 'EP3'. Indie Cindy marks the first time all three releases have been ava...

Pixies have announced details of Indie Cindy, their first new album in 23 years.

The album will be released on April 28 and comprises of the EPs, ‘EP1’ and ‘EP2’, released in September 2013 and January 2014 respectively, plus ‘EP3’. Indie Cindy marks the first time all three releases have been available as one collection.

On April 19, a week before the official release date and exclusively for Record Store Day, Pixies will make Indie Cindy available as a special limited edition, two-disc, deluxe gatefold, 180-gram vinyl set, only available from independent record stores participating in the event around the world.

Pixies last album, Trompe Le Monde, was released in 1991.

Indie Cindy tracklist:

‘What Goes Boom’

‘Greens and Blues’

‘Indie Cindy’

‘Bagboy’

‘Magdalena 318’

‘Silver Snail’

‘Blue Eyed Hexe’

‘Ring the Bell’

‘Another Toe in the Ocean’

‘Andro Queen’

‘Snakes’

‘Jaime Bravo’

The Black Keys confirm album track listing and reveal new track, “Fever”

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The Black Keys have revealed details of their brand new album, Turn Blue. The record, which is set for release on May 12, will feature 11 tracks. Scroll down for a full tracklisting. Turn Blue will be The Black Keys' eighth album, and follows their 2011 release El Camino. Turn Blue was produced by...

The Black Keys have revealed details of their brand new album, Turn Blue.

The record, which is set for release on May 12, will feature 11 tracks. Scroll down for a full tracklisting. Turn Blue will be The Black Keys’ eighth album, and follows their 2011 release El Camino.

Turn Blue was produced by Danger Mouse alongside Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney of the band and was recorded at Sunset Sound in Hollywood last summer. Additional recording was done at the Key Club in Benton Harbor, Michigan as well as frontman Auerbach’s own Easy Eye Sound studio in Nashville earlier this year.

The duo have also revealed that they will be performing at Glastonbury Festival on Sunday June 29 – the final night of the festival – after recently being announced as the final headliner for this year’s Latitude festival in July.

The band have also released a new song called “Fever“. Fans who pre-order the album will receive “Fever” for free immediately. Scroll down to listen to the song.

The Turn Blue tracklisting is:

‘Weight of Love’

‘In Time’

‘Turn Blue’

‘Fever’

‘Year in Review’

‘Bullet in the Brain’

‘It’s Up to You Now’

‘Waiting on Words’

’10 Lovers’

‘In Our Prime’

‘Gotta Get Away’

The Who! Fela Kuti! Frank Sidebottom! Sundance London line-up revealed…

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News just in: the programme has been announced for this year’s Sundance London festival. Following on from last year’s festival, which gave us an appearance from The Eagles, a documentary about Muscle Shoals and a new Steve Coogan film, this year promises an appearance from Jarvis Cocker, a documentary about Fela Kuti and a new Steve Coogan film. The festival runs at London's O2 from April 25 - 27. Here, at any rate, are five of the most promising looking events and films cherry-picked for you from the full line-up... Lambert & Stamp. Despite reports that the band themselves are slowing down, it is nonetheless an exciting year to be a Who fan. There is a biopic in the works about Kit Lambert, the band’s first manager, but in advance of that comes this documentary about Lambert and his management partner Chris Stamp. Director James D Cooper has reportedly been given full access to the band’s archives; Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend and among the interviewees. Finding Fela. Director Alex Gibney has made a number of hefty, ambitious projects about polarising individuals including Lance Armstrong and Julian Assange. Here he turns his attention to Fela Kuti, with the intention of documenting the musical and political careers of the Afrobeat pioneer, as well as offering a more personal account of his extravagant, impulsive personality. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MfONUKkzjPg Frank. Michael Fassbender is Frank Sidebottom! Presumably taking a sabbatical from the Hollywood A-list, Fassbender dons the famous papier mâché headpiece to play Timperley’s favourite son. Maggie Gyllenhaal and Dromhall Gleeson co-star; the script is by Jon Ronson who played in Sidebottom’s band in the late 1980s. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-catC4tBVyY Blue Ruin. Taking a break from the music documentaries, it’s worth flagging up this American indie which rather conveniently finds the point where the best aspects of Sundance’s programming and Uncut’s film coverage converge. Enticingly dubbed ‘backwoods-Gothic’ by Variety, it follows a drifter out to avenge the murder of his parents. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U_1mgieaGvY Hybrid Vigour: When Music, Art and Documentary Collide. Potentially interesting gear, as the title suggests this takes in to account the role of artists and musicians in documentary filmmaking with a panel including Jarvis Cocker, Edwyn Collins and filmmakers/artists Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard. You can find more details about the rest of the programme, including times and prices, over at the Sundance London here. Incidentally, the Coogan film I mentioned at the top is The Trip To Italy, but I'll blog about that separately later this week... Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

News just in: the programme has been announced for this year’s Sundance London festival.

Following on from last year’s festival, which gave us an appearance from The Eagles, a documentary about Muscle Shoals and a new Steve Coogan film, this year promises an appearance from Jarvis Cocker, a documentary about Fela Kuti and a new Steve Coogan film.

The festival runs at London’s O2 from April 25 – 27. Here, at any rate, are five of the most promising looking events and films cherry-picked for you from the full line-up…

Lambert & Stamp. Despite reports that the band themselves are slowing down, it is nonetheless an exciting year to be a Who fan. There is a biopic in the works about Kit Lambert, the band’s first manager, but in advance of that comes this documentary about Lambert and his management partner Chris Stamp. Director James D Cooper has reportedly been given full access to the band’s archives; Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend and among the interviewees.

Finding Fela. Director Alex Gibney has made a number of hefty, ambitious projects about polarising individuals including Lance Armstrong and Julian Assange. Here he turns his attention to Fela Kuti, with the intention of documenting the musical and political careers of the Afrobeat pioneer, as well as offering a more personal account of his extravagant, impulsive personality.

Frank. Michael Fassbender is Frank Sidebottom! Presumably taking a sabbatical from the Hollywood A-list, Fassbender dons the famous papier mâché headpiece to play Timperley’s favourite son. Maggie Gyllenhaal and Dromhall Gleeson co-star; the script is by Jon Ronson who played in Sidebottom’s band in the late 1980s.

Blue Ruin. Taking a break from the music documentaries, it’s worth flagging up this American indie which rather conveniently finds the point where the best aspects of Sundance’s programming and Uncut’s film coverage converge. Enticingly dubbed ‘backwoods-Gothic’ by Variety, it follows a drifter out to avenge the murder of his parents.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U_1mgieaGvY

Hybrid Vigour: When Music, Art and Documentary Collide. Potentially interesting gear, as the title suggests this takes in to account the role of artists and musicians in documentary filmmaking with a panel including Jarvis Cocker, Edwyn Collins and filmmakers/artists Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard.

You can find more details about the rest of the programme, including times and prices, over at the Sundance London here.

Incidentally, the Coogan film I mentioned at the top is The Trip To Italy, but I’ll blog about that separately later this week…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

New Chrissie Hynde album to feature Neil Young and John McEnroe

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Chrissie Hynde has announced details of her first solo album, Stockholm. The album will be released on June 9. It was recorded at Ingrid Studios in Stockholm with co-writer, guitarist and producer Bjorn Yttling (Peter, Bjorn and John) and features cameos from Neil Young and John McEnroe. A single,...

Chrissie Hynde has announced details of her first solo album, Stockholm.

The album will be released on June 9. It was recorded at Ingrid Studios in Stockholm with co-writer, guitarist and producer Bjorn Yttling (Peter, Bjorn and John) and features cameos from Neil Young and John McEnroe.

A single, “Dark Sunglasses“, will be released on April 21; a limited edition 7” will also be available two days previously as part of Record Store Day.

You can hear “Dark Sunglasses” here.

The tracklisting for Stockholm is:

You Or No One

Dark Sunglasses

Like In The Movies

Down The Wrong Way

You’re The One

A Plan Too Far

In A Miracle

House Of Cards

Torniquet (Cynthia Ann)

Sweet Nuthin

Adding The Blue

Wilko Johnson & Roger Daltrey – Going Back Home

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Down but not out: Wilko revisits his catalogue in good company... It would be impossible not to feel distress at the prospect of losing Wilko Johnson, who was diagnosed with terminal cancer in January 2013. An equally understandable reaction would be to seek solace in those fizzing early Dr Feelgood records and recall with rheumy-eyed nostalgia the youthful verve of a life lived to the full and now drawing to a close. But Johnson himself has favoured a more practical approach. Told that he had only months to live, he resolved to make the most of his time and headed out on the road for a tour that everyone - including Wilko and his doctors - anticipated would be his last. When he confounded medical science and was still around to see in 2014, he declared that he'd had "a brilliant year" and announced another tour, taking in dates in both Britain and Japan. In between these intended farewells, last November he went into the studio with Roger Daltrey to record Going Back Home. If there is an intimation of mortality in the album's title, there is no hint of in the music, which is vibrant and vigorous with all its vital signs pumping. Recorded in a tiny studio in Sussex near Daltrey's country estate with Johnson's touring band of Blockheads bassist Norman Watt-Roy and drummer Dylan Howe, the sessions were concluded in seven days. The briskness may have been partly enforced by the knowledge that the sands in Wilko's hourglass are running out; but in truth it was all the time two such seasoned old pros needed to crunch their no nonsense way through a collection of ten Johnson originals from his Dr Feelgood days and solo years, plus a robust take on Dylan’s sardonic "Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window". The idea had been vaguely kicking around since Daltrey and Johnson found themselves sitting together at an awards ceremony in 2010. Bonding over a mutual admiration for Johnny Kidd & the Pirates they mused that it would be a wheeze one day to collaborate on a raw and unvarnished old-school r&b album. Such conversations, you'd imagine, are not uncommon and are usually soon forgotten, the muso's equivalent of 'let's do lunch'. Three years later they still hadn't broken bread when Wilko's grim diagnosis seemed to confirm they never would. But when Daltrey had finished with the Who's 2013 tour and found that Wilko was not only still around but ready to roll, realising the project took on a sense of urgency. It's a collaboration that makes perfect sense for there is a maximum r&b shiver that runs down the backbone of three generations of British rock'n'roll from the Pirates to the Who to the Feelgoods, constructed around a traditional powerhouse guitar/drums/bass trio fronted by a charismatic and characterful lead singer. Daltrey's full-throated roar on the Pirates' 1960 hit "Shakin' All Over" was a showpiece of the Who's set when Johnson saw the band as a student in the late '60s. Six years later, Johnson teamed up with the Pirates' guitarist Mick Green to write "Going Back Home" for the Feelgoods' second album, '75's Malpractice. The song makes for a talismanic opener and title track, Johnson's trademark choppy chords and tough, terse solos sounding as invigorating as ever. Daltrey, consciously or not, adopts a clipped, deeper register closer to Lee Brilleaux's muscular r&b growl than his familiar Who rockisms and adds wailing blues harmonica to several tracks, including the Dylan cover. Feelgood classics "All Through The City", and "Sneaking Suspicion" and the title track from Johnson's '81 solo debut Ice On The Motorway are stirringly revived, as is the rockabilly-tinged "Everybody's Carrying A Gun" from Johnson's under-rated post-Feelgoods '78 album with the Solid Senders. Not so much a last will and testament. More a case of business as usual, for as long as he still can. Nigel Williamson Q&A WILKO JOHNSON AND ROGER DALTREY How did you chose the material? ROGER: Finding out Wilko's condition, I just said to him 'you chose the songs and I'll have a go at singing whatever you throw at me'. It was all done in a real rush. But so much modern music is over-polished and this album has a freshness. Fast, three-minute r&b songs. No bullshit. Just great songs. WILKO: Imagine Roger Daltrey saying to you, 'I'll sing whatever you like'. So I took advantage… Did you feel you had to work so fast because there wasn't much time left? WILKO: Well I was meant to be dead in October! I accepted it. I wasn't going to fight it and decided I’d just enjoy my time. But it's going on and on and having gone past October, now I don’t know. I haven't been back to the doctors since last year when they said I’d be dead in eight months.. My spirit has been very good. Making the record I thought 'this feels really nice. I'm really sorry I've got to die because I want to do a lot more of this. It was a great atmosphere.' What do you take from the project? ROGER: I've such admiration for Wilko. I think in some ways our post-war rock'n'roll generation taught people how to live and enjoy their lives. Now here's Wilko showing us how to die. We should learn be more accepting of the reality of death. WILKO: Death ain't so bad, you know… INTERVIEW: NIGEL WILLIAMSON

Down but not out: Wilko revisits his catalogue in good company…

It would be impossible not to feel distress at the prospect of losing Wilko Johnson, who was diagnosed with terminal cancer in January 2013. An equally understandable reaction would be to seek solace in those fizzing early Dr Feelgood records and recall with rheumy-eyed nostalgia the youthful verve of a life lived to the full and now drawing to a close. But Johnson himself has favoured a more practical approach. Told that he had only months to live, he resolved to make the most of his time and headed out on the road for a tour that everyone – including Wilko and his doctors – anticipated would be his last. When he confounded medical science and was still around to see in 2014, he declared that he’d had “a brilliant year” and announced another tour, taking in dates in both Britain and Japan.

In between these intended farewells, last November he went into the studio with Roger Daltrey to record Going Back Home. If there is an intimation of mortality in the album’s title, there is no hint of in the music, which is vibrant and vigorous with all its vital signs pumping. Recorded in a tiny studio in Sussex near Daltrey’s country estate with Johnson’s touring band of Blockheads bassist Norman Watt-Roy and drummer Dylan Howe, the sessions were concluded in seven days. The briskness may have been partly enforced by the knowledge that the sands in Wilko’s hourglass are running out; but in truth it was all the time two such seasoned old pros needed to crunch their no nonsense way through a collection of ten Johnson originals from his Dr Feelgood days and solo years, plus a robust take on Dylan’s sardonic “Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window”.

The idea had been vaguely kicking around since Daltrey and Johnson found themselves sitting together at an awards ceremony in 2010. Bonding over a mutual admiration for Johnny Kidd & the Pirates they mused that it would be a wheeze one day to collaborate on a raw and unvarnished old-school r&b album. Such conversations, you’d imagine, are not uncommon and are usually soon forgotten, the muso’s equivalent of ‘let’s do lunch’. Three years later they still hadn’t broken bread when Wilko’s grim diagnosis seemed to confirm they never would. But when Daltrey had finished with the Who’s 2013 tour and found that Wilko was not only still around but ready to roll, realising the project took on a sense of urgency.

It’s a collaboration that makes perfect sense for there is a maximum r&b shiver that runs down the backbone of three generations of British rock’n’roll from the Pirates to the Who to the Feelgoods, constructed around a traditional powerhouse guitar/drums/bass trio fronted by a charismatic and characterful lead singer.

Daltrey’s full-throated roar on the Pirates’ 1960 hit “Shakin’ All Over” was a showpiece of the Who’s set when Johnson saw the band as a student in the late ’60s. Six years later, Johnson teamed up with the Pirates’ guitarist Mick Green to write “Going Back Home” for the Feelgoods’ second album, ’75’s Malpractice. The song makes for a talismanic opener and title track, Johnson’s trademark choppy chords and tough, terse solos sounding as invigorating as ever. Daltrey, consciously or not, adopts a clipped, deeper register closer to Lee Brilleaux’s muscular r&b growl than his familiar Who rockisms and adds wailing blues harmonica to several tracks, including the Dylan cover. Feelgood classics “All Through The City”, and “Sneaking Suspicion” and the title track from Johnson’s ’81 solo debut Ice On The Motorway are stirringly revived, as is the rockabilly-tinged “Everybody’s Carrying A Gun” from Johnson’s under-rated post-Feelgoods ’78 album with the Solid Senders. Not so much a last will and testament. More a case of business as usual, for as long as he still can.

Nigel Williamson

Q&A

WILKO JOHNSON AND ROGER DALTREY

How did you chose the material?

ROGER: Finding out Wilko’s condition, I just said to him ‘you chose the songs and I’ll have a go at singing whatever you throw at me’. It was all done in a real rush. But so much modern music is over-polished and this album has a freshness. Fast, three-minute r&b songs. No bullshit. Just great songs.

WILKO: Imagine Roger Daltrey saying to you, ‘I’ll sing whatever you like’. So I took advantage…

Did you feel you had to work so fast because there wasn’t much time left?

WILKO: Well I was meant to be dead in October! I accepted it. I wasn’t going to fight it and decided I’d just enjoy my time. But it’s going on and on and having gone past October, now I don’t know. I haven’t been back to the doctors since last year when they said I’d be dead in eight months.. My spirit has been very good. Making the record I thought ‘this feels really nice. I’m really sorry I’ve got to die because I want to do a lot more of this. It was a great atmosphere.’

What do you take from the project?

ROGER: I’ve such admiration for Wilko. I think in some ways our post-war rock’n’roll generation taught people how to live and enjoy their lives. Now here’s Wilko showing us how to die. We should learn be more accepting of the reality of death.

WILKO: Death ain’t so bad, you know…

INTERVIEW: NIGEL WILLIAMSON

Arcade Fire report theft of one of their papier mâché heads

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The papier mâché head worn by Arcade Fire band member Richard Reed Parry as part of the band's live show has gone missing. The stage prop was taken during Reflektor Tour show in Bridgeport, Connecticut on March 18. A statement from the band, relayed by Brooklyn Vegan, states that the band have photos of the theft in progress. They are appealing for the return of the mask. The statement reads: "Richy's bobblehead mask was taken from our show in Bridgeport, CT. This mask is a one of a kind piece that is an essential component to our live show. We have photos of the theft but rather than press charges we would prefer if the person who took it would get in touch with us to return it. Perhaps this is all an innocent mistake and you meant to leave the venue with your own oversized paper mache rendition of Richard Parry's head? Please contact: info@quest-management.com with any information." Arcade Fire are set to bring their tour to the UK in June, where they'll play three shows at London's Earls Court on June 6 and 7. They have also been announced as Friday night's headliner at Glastonbury, which takes place between June 25 and 29.

The papier mâché head worn by Arcade Fire band member Richard Reed Parry as part of the band’s live show has gone missing.

The stage prop was taken during Reflektor Tour show in Bridgeport, Connecticut on March 18.

A statement from the band, relayed by Brooklyn Vegan, states that the band have photos of the theft in progress. They are appealing for the return of the mask.

The statement reads: “Richy’s bobblehead mask was taken from our show in Bridgeport, CT. This mask is a one of a kind piece that is an essential component to our live show. We have photos of the theft but rather than press charges we would prefer if the person who took it would get in touch with us to return it. Perhaps this is all an innocent mistake and you meant to leave the venue with your own oversized paper mache rendition of Richard Parry‘s head? Please contact: info@quest-management.com with any information.”

Arcade Fire are set to bring their tour to the UK in June, where they’ll play three shows at London’s Earls Court on June 6 and 7. They have also been announced as Friday night’s headliner at Glastonbury, which takes place between June 25 and 29.

The Rolling Stones to headline Roskilde Festival

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The Rolling Stones have been confirmed as the third headliners of Denmark's Roskilde festival. They join previously announced headliners Arctic Monkeys at the festival, which takes place from June 29 to July 6, 2014. A statement from the festival's organiser says they have been pursuing the Ston...

The Rolling Stones have been confirmed as the third headliners of Denmark’s Roskilde festival.

They join previously announced headliners Arctic Monkeys at the festival, which takes place from June 29 to July 6, 2014.

A statement from the festival’s organiser says they have been pursuing the Stones for some time. “For years, we have dreamed of the moment when we got the opportunity to reunite The Rolling Stones with the Orange Stage at Roskilde Festival,” says head of programme Anders Wahrén.

The Roskilde line-up also includes Damon Albarn, Outkast, Warpaint, Merchandise, Deerhunter, Earl Sweatshirt, Haim, Kasabian, Major Lazer, Moderat, Pusha T, Rob Zombie, Trentemøller and MØ.

The announcement is the latest in a series of European dates for The Rolling Stones.

The Rolling Stones will play:

Pinkpop Festival, Holland (June 7)

Berlin Waldbühne (10)

Düsseldorf Esprit Arena (19)

Rome Circus Maximus (22)

TW Classic Festival, Belgium (28)

Roskilde Festival, Denmark (29 to July 6)

Tom Morello: “Bruce Springsteen puts his hand on the E Street Band’s shoulder and says, ‘It’s going to be great.’ It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy”

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Tom Morello reveals what it’s really like touring with Bruce Springsteen in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2014 and out on Friday (March 28). The former Rage Against The Machine guitarist explains how Springsteen runs the band, calming the group when they worry about performing lengthy sets ...

Tom Morello reveals what it’s really like touring with Bruce Springsteen in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2014 and out on Friday (March 28).

The former Rage Against The Machine guitarist explains how Springsteen runs the band, calming the group when they worry about performing lengthy sets with minimal rehearsal.

“We’ve been opening shows with a new song pretty much every night,” says Morello, “and sometimes there’s no soundcheck. So there’s a nine-minute rehearsal with an 18-piece band of a song we’ve never played before, and then we open a show in front of 25,000 people with it.

“This is what Bruce does. He puts his hand on the band’s shoulder and says, ‘This is what we’re going to do, and it’s going to be great.’ It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy.”

The new issue of Uncut is out on Friday (March 28).

Kim Deal reveals new single

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Kim Deal has unveiled a new track and video titled "The Root" – click below to watch. A collaboration with Morgan Nagler of the group Whispertown, the video was filmed guerrilla-style in the carpark of the Dayton, Ohio supermarket where he works. "The Root" is the latest in Deal's series of so...

Kim Deal has unveiled a new track and video titled “The Root” – click below to watch.

A collaboration with Morgan Nagler of the group Whispertown, the video was filmed guerrilla-style in the carpark of the Dayton, Ohio supermarket where he works.

The Root” is the latest in Deal’s series of solo 7″ singles, following “Are You Mine”, “Hot Shot” and “Walking With A Killer”. The single will be released digitally on April 1 and will be available as a white label 7-inch from Deal’s website the same day.

Deal quit Pixies in June 2013. The band’s remaining members Black Francis, Joey Santiago and David Lovering issued a statement that read: “We are sad to say that Kim Deal has decided to leave the Pixies. We are very proud to have worked with her on and off over the last 25 years. Despite her decision to move on, we will always consider her a member of the Pixies, and her place will always be here for her. We wish her all the best.”

The Black Keys announce new album Turn Blue via Mike Tyson’s Twitter feed

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The Black Keys have announced their new album will be called Turn Blue via Mike Tyson's Twitter feed. The boxer posted a tweet on Friday evening (March 21) which read "Turn Blue" followed by a link to the duo's new teaser clip for the record, set to drop on May 13. You can watch the video at the b...

The Black Keys have announced their new album will be called Turn Blue via Mike Tyson‘s Twitter feed.

The boxer posted a tweet on Friday evening (March 21) which read “Turn Blue” followed by a link to the duo’s new teaser clip for the record, set to drop on May 13. You can watch the video at the bottom of the page.

Meanwhile, Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney will bring the record to the UK this summer, with the pair recently announced as the final headliner for this year’s Latitude festival. The event takes place at Southwold’s Henham Park between July 17-20.

Sex Pistols, David Bowie and Paul Weller among artists set for exclusive Record Store Day releases

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Nirvana, Paul Weller and Oasis are among the artists who have contributed releases to Record Store Day 2014. Paul Weller will release new material on a seven-inch, with the single limited to just 2,500 copies. Meanwhile, Nirvana's 'Pennyroyal Tea' will be released on the same format and Oasis' debut single 'Supersonic' will be re-released on 12-inch. A full list of all of this year's releases can be found on the official Record Store Day website. David Bowie has outlined plans to release a seven-inch picture disc of 'Rock'N'Roll Suicide' in the UK. First released as a single in 1974, the new version is backed with 'Farewell Speech', recorded at the final Ziggy Stardust concert at London's Hammersmith Odeon in July, 1973. Sex Pistols will release a limited-edition numbered seven-inch vinyl boxset which features alternate takes of 'Never Mind The Bollocks' tracks, plus two 1977 studio mixes of 'Belsen Was A Gas', including a previously unreleased demo version of the song. 'Live At Silver Platters, Seattle' is a four-track EP recorded by Jake Bugg at the singer-songwriter's January 20, 2014 instore show in the US city. It sees Bugg performing acoustic versions of tracks from his debut album and 2013 follow-up 'Shangri La', including breakthrough hit 'Lightning Bolt'. Meanwhile, LCD Soundsystem's farewell concert, 'The Long Goodbye: LCD Soundsystem Live At Madison Square Garden', will come out as a five-LP set for Record Store Day, with a wider vinyl and digital release set for May 19. The recording will be an unabridged version of the band's final gig, coming in at almost four hours long. Suede will put out their single 'Let Go' on vinyl for the first time. The track was originally released as a limited-run CD single in Sweden in 1999. The seven-inch will feature 'Heroin' as a B-side. Green Day have announced plans to release 18 demos, including a previously unreleased track from recording sessions from the 2012 '¡Uno!', '¡Dos!' and '¡Tré!' trilogy. The release will be available on coloured vinyl, CD and cassette. Savages, Drenge and Summer Camp are among the bands set to appear on a charity album released in conjunction with Record Store Day UK and War Child. War Child will be the official charity for this year's event and, together with XFM, a limited-edition record has been produced featuring the best of DJ John Kennedy’s X-Posure Sessions. Other big name artists contributing to this year's event include Damon Albarn, The Beach Boys, Chvrches, Edwyn Collins, Disclosure, Fleetwood Mac, Haim, Joy Division, Kings Of Leon, Metronomy, OutKast, Slipknot and The Rolling Stones, while Temples and Jagwar Ma have teamed up for a split seven-inch. A number of mystery artists have contributed to the Secret 7" project in which seven tracks are pressed onto vinyl 100 times before artists are invited to design one-of-a-kind sleeves for the records. The names of the seven artists and musicians will be revealed this Monday (March 24). Chuck D has been named as the official ambassador of Record Store Day 2014. Speaking about his appointment, he commented: "In this age where industry has threaded the music sound with virtual sight and story I am honoured to be called upon to be Record Store Day Ambassador of 2014. With the masses, neck bent into their smartphones, let all of us music lovers GPS our way into a reality that is the record store. It's worth a great try, let's do this." Record Store Day was launched in the US seven years ago, coming to the UK a year later.

Nirvana, Paul Weller and Oasis are among the artists who have contributed releases to Record Store Day 2014.

Paul Weller will release new material on a seven-inch, with the single limited to just 2,500 copies. Meanwhile, Nirvana’s ‘Pennyroyal Tea’ will be released on the same format and Oasis’ debut single ‘Supersonic’ will be re-released on 12-inch. A full list of all of this year’s releases can be found on the official Record Store Day website.

David Bowie has outlined plans to release a seven-inch picture disc of ‘Rock’N’Roll Suicide’ in the UK. First released as a single in 1974, the new version is backed with ‘Farewell Speech’, recorded at the final Ziggy Stardust concert at London’s Hammersmith Odeon in July, 1973.

Sex Pistols will release a limited-edition numbered seven-inch vinyl boxset which features alternate takes of ‘Never Mind The Bollocks’ tracks, plus two 1977 studio mixes of ‘Belsen Was A Gas’, including a previously unreleased demo version of the song.

‘Live At Silver Platters, Seattle’ is a four-track EP recorded by Jake Bugg at the singer-songwriter’s January 20, 2014 instore show in the US city. It sees Bugg performing acoustic versions of tracks from his debut album and 2013 follow-up ‘Shangri La’, including breakthrough hit ‘Lightning Bolt’.

Meanwhile, LCD Soundsystem’s farewell concert, ‘The Long Goodbye: LCD Soundsystem Live At Madison Square Garden’, will come out as a five-LP set for Record Store Day, with a wider vinyl and digital release set for May 19. The recording will be an unabridged version of the band’s final gig, coming in at almost four hours long.

Suede will put out their single ‘Let Go’ on vinyl for the first time. The track was originally released as a limited-run CD single in Sweden in 1999. The seven-inch will feature ‘Heroin’ as a B-side.

Green Day have announced plans to release 18 demos, including a previously unreleased track from recording sessions from the 2012 ‘¡Uno!’, ‘¡Dos!’ and ‘¡Tré!’ trilogy. The release will be available on coloured vinyl, CD and cassette.

Savages, Drenge and Summer Camp are among the bands set to appear on a charity album released in conjunction with Record Store Day UK and War Child. War Child will be the official charity for this year’s event and, together with XFM, a limited-edition record has been produced featuring the best of DJ John Kennedy’s X-Posure Sessions.

Other big name artists contributing to this year’s event include Damon Albarn, The Beach Boys, Chvrches, Edwyn Collins, Disclosure, Fleetwood Mac, Haim, Joy Division, Kings Of Leon, Metronomy, OutKast, Slipknot and The Rolling Stones, while Temples and Jagwar Ma have teamed up for a split seven-inch.

A number of mystery artists have contributed to the Secret 7″ project in which seven tracks are pressed onto vinyl 100 times before artists are invited to design one-of-a-kind sleeves for the records. The names of the seven artists and musicians will be revealed this Monday (March 24).

Chuck D has been named as the official ambassador of Record Store Day 2014. Speaking about his appointment, he commented: “In this age where industry has threaded the music sound with virtual sight and story I am honoured to be called upon to be Record Store Day Ambassador of 2014. With the masses, neck bent into their smartphones, let all of us music lovers GPS our way into a reality that is the record store. It’s worth a great try, let’s do this.”

Record Store Day was launched in the US seven years ago, coming to the UK a year later.