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The Jesus And Mary Chain confirm tracklisting for new box set

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The Jesus And Mary Chain have announced details of a new box set, due on December 2. The Complete Vinyl Collection is a deluxe, 11-album box set featuring remastered editions of the band's six studio albums, a double album set of BBC sessions, a live album and an LP of fan-selected B-sides and rari...

The Jesus And Mary Chain have announced details of a new box set, due on December 2.

The Complete Vinyl Collection is a deluxe, 11-album box set featuring remastered editions of the band’s six studio albums, a double album set of BBC sessions, a live album and an LP of fan-selected B-sides and rarities.

The set, which is released to coincide with the 30th anniversary of the band’s formation, will also include a 32 page hardback book containing interviews and photography.

To take part in the vote for the B-sides and rarities compilation, click here.

The box set can be pre-ordered here. You can watch a trailer for the box set below:

The tracklisting for the Complete Vinyl Collection is:

LP 1: Psychocandy

Just Like Honey

The Living End

Taste The Floor

The Hardest Walk

Cut Dead

In A Hole

Taste Of Cindy

Never Understand

Inside Me

Sowing Seeds

My Little Underground

You Trip Me Up

Something’s Wrong

It’s So Hard

LP 2: Darklands

Darklands

Deep One Perfect Morning

Happy When It Rains

Down On Me

Nine Million Rainy Days

April Skies

Fall

Cherry Came Too

On The Wall

About You

LP 3: Automatic

Here Comes Alice

Coast To Coast

Blues From A Gun

Between Planets

UV Ray

Her Way Of Praying

Head On

Take It

Half Way To Crazy

Gimme Hell

LP 4: Honey’s Dead

Reverence

Teenage Lust

Far Gone And Out

Almost Gold

Sugar Ray

Tumbledown

Catchfire

Good For My Soul

Rollercoaster

I Can’t Get Enough

Sundown

Frequency

LP 5: Stoned & Dethroned

Dirty Water

Bullet Lovers

Sometimes Always

Come On

Between Us

Hole

Never Saw It Coming

She

Wish I Could

Save Me

God Help Me

Girlfriend

Everybody I Know

You’ve Been A Friend

These Days

Feeling Lucky

LP 6 & 7: Munki

I Love Rock ‘N’ Roll

Birthday

Stardust Remedy

Fizzy

Moe Tucker

Perfume

Virtually Unreal

Degenerate

Cracking Up

Commercial

Super Tramp

Never Understood

I Can’t Find The Time For Times

Man On The Moon

Black

Dream Lover

I Hate Rock ‘N’ Roll

LP 8 & 9: The BBC Sessions

Tracks recorded 23/10/1984

In A Hole

You Trip Me Up

Never Understand

Taste The Floor

Tracks recorded 03/02/1985

The Living End

Inside Me

Just Like Honey

Tracks recorded 29/10/1985

Some Candy Talking

Psycho Candy

You Trip Me Up

Cut Dead

Tracks recorded 23/11/1986

Darklands

Down On Me

Deep One Perfect Morning

Tracks recorded 25/11/1986

Fall

In The Rain

Happy Place

Tracks recorded 31/05/1988

Sidewalking

Coast To Coast

Take It

My Girl

Tracks recorded 26/11/1989

Far Gone And Out

Silverblade

Here Comes Alice

Tracks recorded 06/07/1994

Come On

God Help Me (William Vocal)

Everybody I Know

The Perfect Crime

Tracks recorded 04/1998

Reverence

I Love Rock’n’Roll

Degenerate

Mo Tucker

LP 10: Live In Concert

Tracks recorded March 28, 1992 at Sheffield Arena

Catch Fire

Blues From A Gun

Head On

Reverence

Far Gone And Out

Halfway To Crazy

Sidewalking

Tracks recorded April 19, 1995 at Trinity, Bristol

Reverence

Snakedriver

Come On

Happy When It Rains

Teenage Lust

The Perfect Crime

Everybody I Know

Girlfriend

Hole

Head On

Sugar Ray

I Hate Rock ‘N’ Roll

LP 11: Fan Selected B-sides & Rarities LP

To Be Confirmed

Elvis Costello & The Roots – Wise Up Ghost

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EC’s metatextual affair with the jazz y neo-hip-hoppers... Elvis Costello has seldom played it safe in his choice of collaborators. From Billy Sherrill to the Brodksy Quartet, Anne Sofie von Otter to Wendy James, Bill Frisell to Burt Bacharach, eclectic and promiscuous just about covers it. His latest unlikely partnership is with The Roots, the jazzy neo-hip-hoppers who moonlight as the house band on NBC’s Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, which is where this union first sparked into life. Having been given carte blanche to deconstruct the likes of “High Fidelity” when backing Costello on the show, talk then turned to The Roots retooling a Costello classic for Record Store Day. That grew into a mooted EP, before both parties realised that they were already in the throes of making an album. The plan to re-record material from Costello’s past was dropped, but the outline of that idea remains visible. Wise Up Ghost is a metatextual affair: on one level its sights are set on new frontiers; on another it’s hugely self-referential, constantly recycling words and musical motifs from his back catalogue. Half of this curious but at times compelling collaboration sets lyrics from old songs to new tracks – though not always to their benefit. “Refuse To Be Saved” marries the words from Mighty Like A Rose’s “Invasion Hit Parade” to one of those strident non-melodies that Costello tends to throw at his music when inspiration isn’t returning his calls. The skeletal “(She Might Be A) Grenade” reconfigures “She’s Pulling Out The Pin” to similarly slight reward. At other times the past is resurrected more effectively. The tender “Trip Wire” revisits the circular doo-wop of “Satellite”, while “Wake Me Up” creates a convincing new home for the bloodied words to “Bedlam”, from The Delivery Man, setting them to the kind of sparse New Orleans funk which invokes the Dirty Dozen Brass Band’s contributions on Spike. There’s nothing random about any of it. These are some of Costello’s most acerbic, even apocalyptic words, and amount to a full-bore indictment of personal, corporate and political mendacity. The spectral dub of “Walk Us Uptown” sets the tone, Costello crowing: “Keep a red flag flying, keep a blue flag as well/And a white flag in case it all goes to hell.” Elsewhere there are swipes at “boom to bust” culture and those who insist that “two and two is five”. Musically, Wise Up Ghost is equally stark. A brooding rhythm record most closely resembling the claustrophobic beat-music of When I Was Cruel, it’s sweetened only slightly by Brent Fischer’s inventive string arrangements and Mexican-American singer La Marisoul, who duets on “Cinco Minutos Con Vos”. When the combination works it conjures a sense of foreboding. “Viceroy’s Row” – “where all of the nightmares go” – is malevolent and hypnotic, its dragnet groove filled with dubby bass, trippy flute and fluttering layers of backing vocals. “Sugar Won’t Work” welds a sharp guitar lick to one of the record’s few really persuasive melodies, while the title track is an ominous meditation intoned over feedbacking guitar and a string figure sampled from yet another corner of Costello’s past. It has drama, poise and – unlike many other tracks here – evolves, rather than staying locked in its rhythmic straitjacket. Such moments justify this collaboration, yet when Wise Up Ghost goes wrong it goes really wrong. The Roots are tight but a tad slow-footed – hip-hop you can happily take home to mother. “Come The Meantimes” is like G Love & Special Sauce tackling Portishead’s “Sour Times”, with Isleys guitar tacked to the end. “Stick Out Your Tongue” does unseemly things to “Pills And Soap”, laying out one of EC’s greatest lyrics like a corpse over a lacklustre jam. For all its purposeful intent, the prevalence of these and other misfires prevent Wise Up Ghost fulfilling its intriguing promise. It’s still better than that Anne Sofie von Otter album, though. Graeme Thomson Q+A Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson How did the idea for the album start to take shape? On the Fallon show, Elvis gave us the liberty to flip his songs, he trusted us so much, and after the last time he was on we thought, ‘Why don’t we do this for real instead of every six months?’ At first it was going to be to remix Elvis’ favourites, but I objected to that pretty quickly. I didn’t want to get the blame for messing with his classic stuff! How were the songs written? Elvis might come to us with a ghost of an idea and we would flesh it out, or sometimes the ghost of the idea was enough. We approached it like a hobby. It wasn’t until we had 13 songs we thought were great that we knew we had a record on our hands. He is the most open-minded artist I’ve ever encountered. We recorded this entire record in our dressing room [on Fallon], not even in the studio. The whole room can barely hold eight people. Any shows planned? Are you kidding? I can’t wait to put my spin on a 20-minute version of “I Want You”! I’ve got four separate song lists, and I guess by October or November we’ll start doing heavy rehearsals for our dream show. INTERVIEW BY GRAEME THOMSON

EC’s metatextual affair with the jazz y neo-hip-hoppers…

Elvis Costello has seldom played it safe in his choice of collaborators. From Billy Sherrill to the Brodksy Quartet, Anne Sofie von Otter to Wendy James, Bill Frisell to Burt Bacharach, eclectic and promiscuous just about covers it. His latest unlikely partnership is with The Roots, the jazzy neo-hip-hoppers who moonlight as the house band on NBC’s Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, which is where this union first sparked into life. Having been given carte blanche to deconstruct the likes of “High Fidelity” when backing Costello on the show, talk then turned to The Roots retooling a Costello classic for Record Store Day. That grew into a mooted EP, before both parties realised that they were already in the throes of making an album.

The plan to re-record material from Costello’s past was dropped, but the outline of that idea remains visible. Wise Up Ghost is a metatextual affair: on one level its sights are set on new frontiers; on another it’s hugely self-referential, constantly recycling words and musical motifs from his back catalogue.

Half of this curious but at times compelling collaboration sets lyrics from old songs to new tracks – though not always to their benefit. “Refuse To Be Saved” marries the words from Mighty Like A Rose’s “Invasion Hit Parade” to one of those strident non-melodies that Costello tends to throw at his music when inspiration isn’t returning his calls. The skeletal “(She Might Be A) Grenade” reconfigures “She’s Pulling Out The Pin” to similarly slight reward. At other times the past is resurrected more effectively. The tender “Trip Wire” revisits the circular doo-wop of “Satellite”, while “Wake Me Up” creates a convincing new home for the bloodied words to “Bedlam”, from The Delivery Man, setting them to the kind of sparse New Orleans funk which invokes the Dirty Dozen Brass Band’s contributions on Spike. There’s nothing random about any of it. These are some of Costello’s most acerbic, even apocalyptic words, and amount to a full-bore indictment of personal, corporate and political mendacity. The spectral dub of “Walk Us Uptown” sets the tone, Costello crowing: “Keep a red flag flying, keep a blue flag as well/And a white flag in case it all goes to hell.” Elsewhere there are swipes at “boom to bust” culture and those who insist that “two and two is five”.

Musically, Wise Up Ghost is equally stark. A brooding rhythm record most closely resembling the claustrophobic beat-music of When I Was Cruel, it’s sweetened only slightly by Brent Fischer’s inventive string arrangements and Mexican-American singer La Marisoul, who duets on “Cinco Minutos Con Vos”. When the combination works it conjures a sense of foreboding. “Viceroy’s Row” – “where all of the nightmares go” – is malevolent and hypnotic, its dragnet groove filled with dubby bass, trippy flute and fluttering layers of backing vocals. “Sugar Won’t Work” welds a sharp guitar lick to one of the record’s few really persuasive melodies, while the title track is an ominous meditation intoned over feedbacking guitar and a string figure sampled from yet another corner of Costello’s past. It has drama, poise and – unlike many other tracks here – evolves, rather than staying locked in its rhythmic straitjacket.

Such moments justify this collaboration, yet when Wise Up Ghost goes wrong it goes really wrong. The Roots are tight but a tad slow-footed – hip-hop you can happily take home to mother. “Come The Meantimes” is like G Love & Special Sauce tackling Portishead’s “Sour Times”, with Isleys guitar tacked to the end. “Stick Out Your Tongue” does unseemly things to “Pills And Soap”, laying out one of EC’s greatest lyrics like a corpse over a lacklustre jam. For all its purposeful intent, the prevalence of these and other misfires prevent Wise Up Ghost fulfilling its intriguing promise. It’s still better than that Anne Sofie von Otter album, though.

Graeme Thomson

Q+A

Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson

How did the idea for the album start to take shape?

On the Fallon show, Elvis gave us the liberty to flip his songs, he trusted us so much, and after the last time he was on we thought, ‘Why don’t we do this for real instead of every six months?’ At first it was going to be to remix Elvis’ favourites, but I objected to that pretty quickly. I didn’t want to get the blame for messing with his classic stuff!

How were the songs written?

Elvis might come to us with a ghost of an idea and we would flesh it out, or sometimes the ghost of the idea was enough. We approached it like a hobby. It wasn’t until we had 13 songs we thought were great that we knew we had a record on our hands. He is the most open-minded artist I’ve ever encountered. We recorded this entire record in our dressing room [on Fallon], not even in the studio. The whole room can barely hold eight people.

Any shows planned?

Are you kidding? I can’t wait to put my spin on a 20-minute version of “I Want You”! I’ve got four separate song lists, and I guess by October or November we’ll start doing heavy rehearsals for our dream show.

INTERVIEW BY GRAEME THOMSON

We want your questions for Lloyd Cole

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Lloyd Cole is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the legendary singer songwriter? Does he still favour cheekbones like geometry and eyes like sin? How on earth did he end up recording an album w...

Lloyd Cole is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the legendary singer songwriter?

Does he still favour cheekbones like geometry and eyes like sin?

How on earth did he end up recording an album with Krautrock supremo, Hans-Joaquim Roedelius?

What’s his current golf handicap?

Send up your questions by noon, Thursday, October 10 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Lloyd’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Thom Yorke labels Spotify ‘The last desperate fart of a dying corpse’

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Thom Yorke has attacked Spotify again, labelling the music streaming service "the last desperate fart of a dying corpse". The comments follow Yorke's decision, alongside producer Nigel Godrich, to remove the Atoms For Peace album they made together from the service while Yorke's solo album 'The Er...

Thom Yorke has attacked Spotify again, labelling the music streaming service “the last desperate fart of a dying corpse”.

The comments follow Yorke’s decision, alongside producer Nigel Godrich, to remove the Atoms For Peace album they made together from the service while Yorke’s solo album ‘The Eraser’ was also removed. Godrich went on to explain his position criticising the low royalty rates paid to artists – who he said received “f*ck all” from the service.

Now, in a new interview with Sopitas in Mexico, Yorke has issued his most direct statement on Spotify yet. Describing the situation as “a big transition” he says: “I feel like as musicians we need to fight the Spotify thing. I feel that in some ways what’s happening in the mainstream is the last gasp of the old industry. Once that does finally die, which it will, something else will happen. But it’s all about how we change the way we listen to music, it’s all about what happens next in terms of technology, in terms of how people talk to each other about music, and a lot of it could be really fucking bad. I don’t subscribe to the whole thing that a lot of people do within the music industry that’s ‘well this is all we’ve got left. we’ll just have to do this.’ I just don’t agree.”

Yorke goes on to add: “When we did the In Rainbows thing what was most exciting was the idea you could have a direct connection between you as a musician and your audience. You cut all of it out, it’s just that and that. And then all these fuckers get in a way, like Spotify suddenly trying to become the gatekeepers to the whole process. We don’t need you to do it. No artists needs you to do it. We can build the shit ourselves, so fuck off. But because they’re using old music, because they’re using the majors… the majors are all over it because they see a way of re-selling all their old stuff for free, make a fortune, and not die. That’s why to me, Spotify the whole thing, is such a massive battle, because it’s about the future of all music. It’s about whether we believe there’s a future in music”

Ending his thoughts by looking to the future, Yorke surmises: “To me this isn’t the mainstream, this is is like the last fart, the last desperate fart of a dying corpse. What happens next is the important part.”

Spotify has previously said that its long-term goal is to make sure artists are properly remunerated for putting their music on the service. Radiohead albums such as The Bends, OK, Computer and Kid A – all released on EMI and all produced by Godrich are still available to stream on Spotify.

An Audience With… Frank Black

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Pixies are back with new material and a world tour – but back in August 2006’s issue (Take 111), our forum of Uncut readers and famous fans were interrogating Frank Black about pissing off the band, his relationship with Kim Deal and why he went into therapy. Words: Nick Hasted _____________ ...

Pixies are back with new material and a world tour – but back in August 2006’s issue (Take 111), our forum of Uncut readers and famous fans were interrogating Frank Black about pissing off the band, his relationship with Kim Deal and why he went into therapy. Words: Nick Hasted

_____________

As one quarter of the Pixies, Frank Black helped create American indie rock. Across two landmark releases, ’87’s Come On Pilgrim and ’88’s Surfer Rosa, Black’s primal howl and lyrical obsessions – UFOs, Old Testament horror stories, classical mythology – coupled with the band’s sand-blasted mix of surf-pop-punk, blew away everything that was stale and overblown in US rock in the mid-’80s. In 1993, Black announced he was wrapping up the Pixies during a radio interview – news which came as something of a shock to the rest of the band. After the split, Black spent the best part of the next decade putting as much clear blue water as possible between himself and his past. Across 12 albums he’s reinvented himself as a rootsy solo artist, to varying degrees of success. Most recently he collaborated on Fast Man/Raider Man with a host of Nashville’s finest session players including Steve Cropper and The Band’s Levon Helm. After a spell in therapy and a bitter divorce, Black reformed the Pixies in 2004. The subsequent reunion tour saw them play some of the best shows of their career – “razor-tight and high-velocity”, we wrote at the time of their Brixton Academy dates. The band released a new song, “Bam Thwock”, through iTunes in 2004. Will they record a new album? Or have they only reformed for the money? And just how well do they get on now? These are just some of the questions you’ve put to Frank Black. “OK, I’m ready,” he smiles. “Let’s go.”

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The reunion… are you all in it for the money?

Mark Thornton, Holmes Chapel, Cheshire

We definitely enjoy ourselves. There is a little camaraderie, a gang mentality that takes over when we’re about to take the stage. I wish it could go a bit further again and we could make a record. Not all of the band members are willing to do that. Rather than make a big deal out of it, we’ve agreed to just continue to play live. We’re a little better at communicating with each other now. That’s not to say there aren’t problems. But before, there was almost no communication. Now, when there’s a breakdown, it’s followed by a conversation.

Were you amazed you got away with telling people your Pixies lyrics were meaningless?

Jerome Morris, London

At that time, probably not. Because we were young and hot and I was full of myself. I was probably being accurate when I said the words didn’t mean anything – as far as I was concerned then. Of course, they do have meaning, but it all depends on how in the mood you are to psychoanalyse yourself. If you’re not in the mood, then Pixies lyrics are just mumbo-jumbo.

How did the Pixies manage to write amazing pop songs and make them so twisted at the same time?

Richard Archer, Hard-Fi

It was the most natural thing in the world. Pop with a twist, or twisted pop. I guess that sums up pretty good where I’m coming from. I’m not avant-garde, certainly. And certainly not mainstream. But I guess there are elements of both in whatever it is that I do.

In an interview a couple of years back, you said: “Oh yeah, I’m human.” What did you feel like before?

Jonathan Salamon, Bristol

Someone that was afraid to be human probably. Someone walking very nervously through life. Afraid of when I was going to fall through the floor. Reticent. Then, going through a new type of pain, that I hadn’t experienced before – the dissolution of a marriage – is very dramatic, very adult, kind of weird. So suddenly I felt like I related to a lot of people who I wouldn’t have before. I think that when I first started out, I was just trying to make pop records. That’s still what I do, but there is a possibility to communicate emotions now. When I first started out, I didn’t know how.

Is it true you never thought the Pixies were that good?

Chris Warrington, Preston

No, I don’t think I ever thought that. I may have said things in certain interviews way back when [post-split] that appeared aloof. I felt like I wasn’t getting enough attention. And because I didn’t want to make too big a deal out of what it was that we were. The fact that we weren’t virtuoso players, we didn’t come up from a long line of different bands, the fact that we were so naïve, that was part of it. So people may have thought I was saying we weren’t any good. Really, I was saying we’re good. But we’re also naïve in what we do.

How has the Pixies payday changed your life?

Christian Davis, Port Jefferson, NY

It’s got me back to being marginally famous, which is amusing. People in the grocery store give me funny looks. I don’t know that it’s changed my life at all. There’s money in the bank – but I didn’t buy a speedboat. We don’t live in an extravagant home. It means that I can occasionally spend money foolishly. Stay at nice hotels. Buy that other car that I don’t really need. I’m very happy to have received what I have. But to really change your life, you need to get to the next level, where you’re dealing with more zeros. Then you’re talking about that second home in Paris. Which would suit me just fine.

What’s the lineup for your ideal band?

David Thomas, Pere Ubu

David’s in my band, of course – as co-vocalist and guru. Either vocalising, or if he wants to bring the whole show crashing to a halt and take it somewhere else – he has that power. And then on bass I’ll take Gerry Love from Teenage Fanclub. For drums, I once got to play in the studio with Dave Grohl, and he is the loudest drummer I’ve ever played with. It’s a rock band; might as well get the loudest. I’ll take Richard Hawley on guitar, because I like him very much personally. Mick Harvey of the Bad Seeds on keyboards. And I guess for a singer, to counter David Thomas, I’ll take Lisa Kekaula of The Bellrays.

Why did you have therapy? Did it change you?

Spencer Driscoll, Woodbridge, Suffolk

The main way that it changed me is that I have less temper tantrums. I respond more analytically. One of the great truths I learned in therapy is that everybody has an agenda driving them. Were I to get into a particular situation now – I could be on tour with the Pixies, for example – and there was some sort of problem, I apply that knowledge, instead of becoming a total hothead. Because I come from a long line of hotheads. We’re not violent to other people. But we break things. We shout, we stomp around. My dad was like that. We’re just loud – WAAH! It isn’t that you need therapy. It’s just a way of learning stuff. As esoteric as we are as people, our problems are all very plain.

Is it true you deprive yourself of sleep when you’re writing?

Emma Jones, Edinburgh

The most dramatic example I ever had of that was when the head of 4AD was coming to hear the tapes of my first solo album. And I’d done lots of work on the music, but had hardly written any lyrics, which was sort of my method at the time. So I stayed up two days writing and singing, which if you’re not a speed or cocaine freak is a long time. Then I slept on a hammock. My wife – ex-wife – said I slept with the spittle dried onto my face, like white paste. One thing that is constant through all of my songwriting and recording is the element of sleep deprivation. When you get excited about what you’re doing, you operate on deliberately less and less sleep. I like doing that. Which is not true in the rest of my life. I’m just as happy going to sleep as going out. Because I enjoy sleeping.

You explore some very specific inspirations in your lyrics – space travel, The Bible, unfaithfulness, Spain. Are these subjects you obsess over?

Ross Millard, The Futureheads

It’s a bit obsessional. The subject matter is a combination of a very conscious and very unconscious effort of the mind. I can see the world I’ve created sometimes, when I’m writing the song. Afterwards, I forget what it was about. But while I’m constructing the world, it’s like I’m inside of the egg itself as I’m creating. It’s a non-verbal, abstract way of mind, but I also have a very strong sense of what it is.

What did you think the first time you heard Nirvana?

Tim Havelock, Blackpool

I don’t know if it was the first time I heard them, but it was the first time it was discussed to my face. It was on the tourbus, and it was, of all people, Kim Deal, who was rockin’ out, and she was like, “You heard this new Nirvana record? It’s really good.” She was really impressed. So my reaction was to try very hard not to be. It wasn’t Nirvana’s fault. If someone becomes very hip or popular, I tend to fight against that grain. If there’s one person in the world who isn’t going to hear a Pixies influence on Nirvana, that person is going to be me. I’m too involved in it myself to hear it in other places.

Was it a big deal for you, when you started singing Pixies songs again in 2000?

Jamie Mills, Northampton

I thought it was going to be a big deal. I remember the first gig I did it, at the Shepherds Bush Empire. I think it was “Wave Of Mutilation”, for the encore. I’d sent a roadie out to buy a copy of the record that afternoon, because I was afraid I was going to forget the lyrics. I built it up leading up to the gig, and when I did it, it was just a song. The audience’s response was: “Oh.” A lot of people didn’t notice. I was totally nervous before I sang it. But I guess like a lot of other people in the world, I had built up that band in my own mind as this cosmic thing. It’s really self-important. [Portentously] “I wrote this song, and I have not sung it now for these many moons. They have gathered, and I will surprise them all, with a song I said I would never perform again!” I was a bit deflated afterwards. But in a good way.

I’d like to know which beach the Pixies are running on in the “Velouria” video?

Gruff Rhys, Super Furry Animals

Oh, that’s not a beach – that’s a quarry outside of Manchester. It was for a TV advert, and the director had us running towards the camera. And I had the brilliant idea – let’s stretch it over the length of a song in slo-mo, and there’s our video! I wish that the standard was different for video. I wish they could be more minimalistic and lower production. There’s something about the whole thing that just came out beautiful. It had the aura of a photograph, because it was slowed so much.

Did it depress you when your solo career was ridiculed?

Donna Murray, via email

Occasionally, yeah. It would bother me very much. But it’s something that I have grown used to. You have to take the old show business attitude – as long as they’re spelling my name right… And there’s something satisfying about having a record like Teenager Of The Year [1994] in my catalogue, which maybe didn’t set the world on fire when it came out. But now people are going back and saying, that’s a little gem. That’s more satisfying than having a hit record in some ways. It’s a battle that’s long fought. It’s still in print – not dead yet!

Do you regret splitting the Pixies without telling your bandmates?

Sean Peterson, Sheffield

Oh yeah. Because it has probably affected our relationship to this day. It’s a bone of contention that we’ve buried. I guess I really hurt their feelings. I don’t know. How are you supposed to break up a band? I just didn’t know how to do it.

How would you describe your relationship with Kim in 1991, when you were breaking up, and now?

Andy Murrell, Liverpool

In 1991, we found it hard to even look at each other, let alone speak. Now, if we’re on tour together, we hang out, we hug. I can’t say, though, that in 1991 our relationship had become full of rage, or hateful anger, or we were ready to lash out. It was this stalemate. A standstill. Now, it’s… less like that! We have some good conversations, I suppose. But I have a headstrong personality, and she’s very immovable, sometimes. I think now, we disagree on things, but we don’t really care. Whereas before it probably drove the other person crazy!

Vampire Weekend’s Ezra Koenig: “Being into preppy things aged 29 is a bit stunted”

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Ezra Koenig of Vampire Weekend explains how the band have rejected their self-consciously preppy image, in the new issue of Uncut (dated November 2013), out now. Koenig says the collegiate lifestyle and imagery was something the band were fascinated by, rather than their actual identity. “We were interested in things that were preppy in an emotional, visceral and intellectual way,” he explains. “I don’t know if people just thought we were being ourselves. It’s not who we were, but it’s something we were fascinated with. “On every album, we’ve made an ecosystem of the things we’re interested in and set out to involve listeners in that world. Obviously, being interested in preppy things as 29 year-olds would be weird. It would make people think we were a little… stunted.” In the piece, Vampire Weekend reflect on their impressive trilogy of albums, and wonder whether success has been quite what they imagined it would be. The November 2013 issue of Uncut is out now.

Ezra Koenig of Vampire Weekend explains how the band have rejected their self-consciously preppy image, in the new issue of Uncut (dated November 2013), out now.

Koenig says the collegiate lifestyle and imagery was something the band were fascinated by, rather than their actual identity.

“We were interested in things that were preppy in an emotional, visceral and intellectual way,” he explains. “I don’t know if people just thought we were being ourselves. It’s not who we were, but it’s something we were fascinated with.

“On every album, we’ve made an ecosystem of the things we’re interested in and set out to involve listeners in that world. Obviously, being interested in preppy things as 29 year-olds would be weird. It would make people think we were a little… stunted.”

In the piece, Vampire Weekend reflect on their impressive trilogy of albums, and wonder whether success has been quite what they imagined it would be.

The November 2013 issue of Uncut is out now.

Morrissey autobiography to be published on “October 17”

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In the latest twist in the ongoing saga concerning the publication of Morrissey's autobiography, a post appeared earlier today [October 3] on the quasi-official site Morrissey fan site, True To You, reporting that the book will now be published in two weeks' time. The post, which also contains the name and direct phone number of a press officer at Penguin Books which has been redacted for the purposes of this news story, reads: "On 17 October 2013, Penguin Classics will publish Autobiography by Morrissey. "Steven Patrick Morrissey was born in Manchester on May 22nd 1959. Singer-songwriter and co-founder of the Smiths (1982-1987), Morrissey has been a solo artist for twenty-six years, during which time he has had three number 1 albums in England in three different decades. "Achieving eleven Top 10 albums (plus nine with the Smiths), his songs have been recorded by David Bowie, Nancy Sinatra, Marianne Faithfull, Chrissie Hynde, Thelma Houston, My Chemical Romance and Christy Moore, amongst others. "An animal protectionist, in 2006 Morrissey was voted the second greatest living British icon by viewers of the BBC, losing out to Sir David Attenborough. In 2007 Morrissey was voted the greatest northern male, past or present, in a nationwide newspaper poll. In 2012, Morrissey was awarded the Keys to the City of Tel-Aviv. "It has been said 'Most pop stars have to be dead before they reach the iconic status that Morrissey has reached in his lifetime.' "Penguin Classics will publish in the UK & Commonwealth and Europe." Penguin's official site is carrying details of the publication here. The specific details of the physical edition of the book are "Paperback | 129 x 198mm | 480 pages | ISBN 9780141394817 | 17 Oct 2013 | Penguin Classics". It is also available as an ebook. The book is currently listed as available for pre-order on Amazon.co.uk here.

In the latest twist in the ongoing saga concerning the publication of Morrissey‘s autobiography, a post appeared earlier today [October 3] on the quasi-official site Morrissey fan site, True To You, reporting that the book will now be published in two weeks’ time.

The post, which also contains the name and direct phone number of a press officer at Penguin Books which has been redacted for the purposes of this news story, reads:

“On 17 October 2013, Penguin Classics will publish Autobiography by Morrissey.

“Steven Patrick Morrissey was born in Manchester on May 22nd 1959. Singer-songwriter and co-founder of the Smiths (1982-1987), Morrissey has been a solo artist for twenty-six years, during which time he has had three number 1 albums in England in three different decades.

“Achieving eleven Top 10 albums (plus nine with the Smiths), his songs have been recorded by David Bowie, Nancy Sinatra, Marianne Faithfull, Chrissie Hynde, Thelma Houston, My Chemical Romance and Christy Moore, amongst others.

“An animal protectionist, in 2006 Morrissey was voted the second greatest living British icon by viewers of the BBC, losing out to Sir David Attenborough. In 2007 Morrissey was voted the greatest northern male, past or present, in a nationwide newspaper poll. In 2012, Morrissey was awarded the Keys to the City of Tel-Aviv.

“It has been said ‘Most pop stars have to be dead before they reach the iconic status that Morrissey has reached in his lifetime.’

Penguin Classics will publish in the UK & Commonwealth and Europe.”

Penguin’s official site is carrying details of the publication here.

The specific details of the physical edition of the book are “Paperback | 129 x 198mm | 480 pages | ISBN 9780141394817 | 17 Oct 2013 | Penguin Classics”.

It is also available as an ebook.

The book is currently listed as available for pre-order on Amazon.co.uk here.

Hear new track from Jack White’s The Dead Weather

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Jack White has announced details of this year's final releases in the Third Man Vault series - from both The Dead Weather and the Raconteurs. The subscription-based Vault here package includes a 7-inch single from The Dead Weather and a live album from the Raconteurs. The Dead Weather will release...

Jack White has announced details of this year’s final releases in the Third Man Vault series – from both The Dead Weather and the Raconteurs.

The subscription-based Vault here package includes a 7-inch single from The Dead Weather and a live album from the Raconteurs.

The Dead Weather will release “Open Up (That’s Enough)” b/w “Rough Detective”. You can hear a preview below. The track is taken from the band’s new album, which is due in 2015.

Meanwhile, the Raconteurs will release a double live album, Live At The Ryman Auditorium, recorded at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium on September 15, 2011. The set will include a disc of “rich rawhide and tobacco colored vinyl” as well as one “luscious gold and oil colored” record. It will also be available as a DVD.

The Raconteurs’ Live at the Ryman Auditorium track list:

“Consoler of the Lonely”

“Hands”

“Level”

“Old Enough”

“Top Yourself”

“Many Shades of Black”

“The Switch and the Spur”

“Intimate Secretary”

“Broken Boy Soldier

“Blue Veins”

“Salute Your Solution”

“Steady, As She Goes”

“Carolina Drama”

Line-up revealed for Elliott Smith tribute concert

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Cat Power, Sky Ferreira, the Low Anthem and DIIV's Zachary Cole Smith will play an Elliott Smith tribute at Brooklyn's Glasslands on October 21 - the 10-year anniversary of Smith's death. Proceeds from the show will go to the Elliott Smith Memorial Fund, which benefits two charities: Portland's Out...

Cat Power, Sky Ferreira, the Low Anthem and DIIV’s Zachary Cole Smith will play an Elliott Smith tribute at Brooklyn’s Glasslands on October 21 – the 10-year anniversary of Smith’s death.

Proceeds from the show will go to the Elliott Smith Memorial Fund, which benefits two charities: Portland’s Outside In and Free Arts for Abused Children.

The confirmed line-up so far is: Cat Power, Zachary Cole Smith with Sky Ferreira, Yoni Wolf (WHY?), The Low Anthem, Luke Temple (Here We Go Magic), Marissa Nadler, Aaron Pfenning, Sadie Dupuis (Speedy Ortiz), Adam Schatz (Landlady / Man Man / Father Figures), The Perennials and Tereu Tereu.

You can find more details about the event and buy tickets here.

Linda Perhacs announces first ever European live dates

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Linda Perhacs has announced her first ever European dates. The singer songwriter will play seven dates in mainland Europe and one date in London. Perhacs, who is working on a follow-up to her 1970 album, Parallelograms, called The Soul of All Natural Things, will play: 18 November, Berghain, Berl...

Linda Perhacs has announced her first ever European dates.

The singer songwriter will play seven dates in mainland Europe and one date in London.

Perhacs, who is working on a follow-up to her 1970 album, Parallelograms, called The Soul of All Natural Things, will play:

18 November, Berghain, Berlin

20 November, Moderna Museet, Malmö

22 November, Jazzhouse, Copenhagen

24 November, Voxhall, AARHUS

27 November, Ancienne Belgique, Brussels

29 November, Le Guess Who? Festival, Utrecht

02 December, Divan du Monde, Paris

05 December, Cecil Sharp House, London

The 36th Uncut Playlist Of 2013

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Something nice in the post this morning: a copy of Donald Fagen’s memoir, “Eminent Hipsters”. It’s not always the greatest idea to judge a book by its chapter titles (though I do always think that Clive James’ “A Prong In Peril” and “The Sound Of Mucus” are a good example of delivering what they promise), but definitely looking forward to “Henry Mancini’s Anomie Deluxe” and “The Cortico-Thalamic Pause: Growing Up Sci-Fi” Gonna have a wingding, or such like, at the weekend, and will report back. In the meantime, good news here with the arrival of a characteristically brilliant new Necks album (a very spacious one-tracker that reminds me a bit of “Aether” or “See Through”), and a second set of 2013 from Lubomyr Melnyk. Plenty to play too, as you’ll see: please pay special attention to the Eiko Ishibashi clip (produced by and co-starring Jim O’Rourke, back in chamber pop mode), another White Denim leak (Thin Lizzy!), the amazing Desert Heat live set (stay tuned for the Velvet Underground cover), and the latest episode in Mark Kozelek’s ongoing soap opera (this month: James Gandolfini, more serial killers, Steve Shelley on drums, prostate issues…). I still can’t find anything to share from the Alasdair Roberts album, which gets stronger by the play. Next week, hopefully. Oh, and a final discreet word of warning. As usual, not everything here comes fully approved and endorsed (it’s just a checklist of stuff we’ve played in the office this past couple of days). One entry this week, though, is among the worst things I’ve heard this year. Tread carefully… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 The Necks – Open (Northern Spy) 2 The Limiñanas - Costa Blanca (Trouble In Mind) 3 Eiko Ishibashi – Resurrection (Drag City) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zN3r61gogrw 4 Toy – Join The Dots (sampler) (Heavenly) 5 Trans – Trans Red EP (Rough Trade) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJOFpcX6OV4 6 Daniel Bachman – Jesus I’m A Sinner (Tompkins Square) 7 Swearin’ – Surfing Strange (Wichita) 8 Connan Mockasin – Caramel (Phantasy) 9 Flower Travellin’ Band – Satori (Atlantic) 10 White Denim – Corsicana Lemonade (Downtown) 11 Cross Record – Maybe I’m Crazy (Ba Da Bing)

Something nice in the post this morning: a copy of Donald Fagen’s memoir, “Eminent Hipsters”. It’s not always the greatest idea to judge a book by its chapter titles (though I do always think that Clive James’ “A Prong In Peril” and “The Sound Of Mucus” are a good example of delivering what they promise), but definitely looking forward to “Henry Mancini’s Anomie Deluxe” and “The Cortico-Thalamic Pause: Growing Up Sci-Fi” Gonna have a wingding, or such like, at the weekend, and will report back.

In the meantime, good news here with the arrival of a characteristically brilliant new Necks album (a very spacious one-tracker that reminds me a bit of “Aether” or “See Through”), and a second set of 2013 from Lubomyr Melnyk. Plenty to play too, as you’ll see: please pay special attention to the Eiko Ishibashi clip (produced by and co-starring Jim O’Rourke, back in chamber pop mode), another White Denim leak (Thin Lizzy!), the amazing Desert Heat live set (stay tuned for the Velvet Underground cover), and the latest episode in Mark Kozelek’s ongoing soap opera (this month: James Gandolfini, more serial killers, Steve Shelley on drums, prostate issues…).

I still can’t find anything to share from the Alasdair Roberts album, which gets stronger by the play. Next week, hopefully.

Oh, and a final discreet word of warning. As usual, not everything here comes fully approved and endorsed (it’s just a checklist of stuff we’ve played in the office this past couple of days). One entry this week, though, is among the worst things I’ve heard this year. Tread carefully…

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

1 The Necks – Open (Northern Spy)

2 The Limiñanas – Costa Blanca (Trouble In Mind)

3 Eiko Ishibashi – Resurrection (Drag City)

4 Toy – Join The Dots (sampler) (Heavenly)

5 Trans – Trans Red EP (Rough Trade)

6 Daniel Bachman – Jesus I’m A Sinner (Tompkins Square)

7 Swearin’ – Surfing Strange (Wichita)

8 Connan Mockasin – Caramel (Phantasy)

9 Flower Travellin’ Band – Satori (Atlantic)

10 White Denim – Corsicana Lemonade (Downtown)

11 Cross Record – Maybe I’m Crazy (Ba Da Bing)

Cross Record – Maybe I’m Crazy (Official) from Lavalette on Vimeo.

12 Dean Wareham – Emancipated Hearts (Sonic Cathedral)

13 Lubomyr Melnyk – Three Solo Pieces (Unseen Worlds)

14 Evan Parker & Joe McPhee – What/If/They Both Could Fly (Rune Grammofon)

15 Luke Sital-Singh – Tornados (Parlophone)

16 Various Artists – New Orleans Funk 3 (Soul Jazz)

17 Desert Heat – Live at Hopscotch Music Festival 2013 (www.nyctaper.com)

18 Miles Davis – The Original Mono Recordings (Sony)

19 Cults – Static (Sony)

20 Gonga – Concrescence (Tonehenge)

21 Way Through – Clapper Is Still (Upset The Rhythm)

22 Yes – Close To The Edge (Panegyric)

23 Howlin Rain – Magnificent Fiend (Birdman)

24 Sun Kil Moon – Richard Ramirez Died Today Of Natural Causes (Caldo Verde)

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

25 Alasdair Roberts & Robin Robertson – Hrta Songs (Stone Tape)

26 Date Palms – USA & Europe Dusted Sessions Tour 2013 (Date Palms)

The Velvet Underground to release White Light/White Heat anniversary edition

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The Velvet Underground are to reissue their second album, White Light/White Heat, according to a story on Rolling Stone. The album, which celebrates its 45th anniversary this year, will reportedly be reissued as a three-disc deluxe edition on December 3 through Universal Music. Curated by Lou Reed...

The Velvet Underground are to reissue their second album, White Light/White Heat, according to a story on Rolling Stone.

The album, which celebrates its 45th anniversary this year, will reportedly be reissued as a three-disc deluxe edition on December 3 through Universal Music.

Curated by Lou Reed and John Cale, the White Light/White Heat 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition contains remastered versions of the original record in both mono and stereo, alongside bonus material including alternate versions of “Hey Mr. Rain,” new mixes of “Beginning To See The Light” and “Guess I’m Falling In Love” and previously unreleased vocal and instrumental versions of “The Gift”. Tracks recorded during John Cale‘s last studio session with the Velvet Underground will also appear.

In addition, the band’s live set at the Gymnasium in New York on April 30, 1967 will also be included.

Initial pre-orders of the Super Deluxe Box Set on the Boxset Store will received a limited edition white flexi disc featuring “Booker T – Live at the Gymnasium NYC. Limited to availability whilst stocks last. You can pre-order it here.

The tracklisting for White Light/White Heat 45th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition is:

DISC ONE:

WHITE LIGHT/WHITE HEAT (stereo version)

1 WHITE LIGHT/WHITE HEAT

2 THE GIFT

3 LADY GODIVA’S OPERATION

4 HERE SHE COMES NOW

5 I HEARD HER CALL MY NAME

6 SISTER RAY

7 I HEARD HER CALL MY NAME (alternate take)

8 GUESS I’M FALLING IN LOVE (instrumental version) *

9 TEMPTATION INSIDE YOUR HEART (original mix)

10 STEPHANIE SAYS (original mix)

11 HEY MR. RAIN (VERSION ONE) *

12 HEY MR. RAIN (VERSION TWO) *

13 BEGINNING TO SEE THE LIGHT (previously

unreleased early version) *

* New mixes

DISC TWO

WHITE LIGHT/WHITE HEAT

(mono version)

1 WHITE LIGHT/WHITE HEAT

2 THE GIFT

3 LADY GODIVA’S OPERATION

4 HERE SHE COMES NOW

5 I HEARD HER CALL MY NAME

6 SISTER RAY

7 WHITE LIGHT/WHITE HEAT (mono single mix)

8 HERE SHE COMES NOW (mono single mix)

9 THE GIFT (vocal version)

10 THE GIFT (instrumental version)

DISC THREE:

LIVE AT THE GYMNASIUM, NEW YORK CITY, APRIL 30, 1967

1 BOOKER T.

2 I’M NOT A YOUNG MAN*

ANYMORE

3 GUESS I’M FALLING IN LOVE

4 I’M WAITING FOR THE MAN*

5 RUN RUN RUN*

6 SISTER RAY*

7 THE GIFT*

* Previously unreleased

Beatles fans get reply from Paul McCartney after 50 years

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Paul McCartney has replied to two fans who first contacted him 50 years ago. BBC News reports that McCartney wrote a reply to Barbara Bezant and Lyn Phillips decades after they recorded a message on to tape in 1963 and sent it to the Finsbury Park Astoria in London, where The Beatles were performin...

Paul McCartney has replied to two fans who first contacted him 50 years ago.

BBC News reports that McCartney wrote a reply to Barbara Bezant and Lyn Phillips decades after they recorded a message on to tape in 1963 and sent it to the Finsbury Park Astoria in London, where The Beatles were performing live. The tape was later found at a car boot sale with its buyer deciding to try and locate the two women.

After contacting the BBC with the tape, David McDermott, a local historian, discovered that the two women had drifted apart in the subsequent years. Audio from the tape recorded in the ’60s includes the women saying: “This dream is just to come round the back and see you, but I don’t suppose that’ll ever happen. But we can always live in hope, can’t we?” However, the tape never made it to McCartney.

The BBC managed to reunite the two fans after 40 years and took them to The Beatles Story exhibition in Liverpool, where they were given a written reply from McCartney. Writing to Bezant and Phillips, McCartney wrote: “Hi Linda and Barbara, thanks very much for you lovely tape. It finally got through, better late than never. Great to hear that you found each other after all these years. Keep enjoying the music, love Paul.”

Damon Albarn to present Radio 2 show

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Damon Albarn will make his radio presenting debut this Saturday (October 5). The frontman will be covering for regular presenter Dermot O'Leary on his BBC Radio 2 show, which airs at 3pm. The BBC states that Albarn will be playing music "from all over world", and will also be joined by actor Idris ...

Damon Albarn will make his radio presenting debut this Saturday (October 5).

The frontman will be covering for regular presenter Dermot O’Leary on his BBC Radio 2 show, which airs at 3pm. The BBC states that Albarn will be playing music “from all over world”, and will also be joined by actor Idris Elba as well as Paul Simonon, Ken Dodd and a Pentecostal Choir.

A number of Albarn’s Britpop contemporaries have already branched out into the world of radio, with Jarvis Cocker hosting a popular show on BBC 6Music and Noel Gallagher previously sitting in for O’Leary.

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds announce intimate gig

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Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds have invited fans to attend a special London gig, which will be filmed for a new film about Cave, called 20,000 Days On Earth. The band will play an intimate sow at London's Koko on November 3. Fans wishing to attend can register to purchase tickets via a ballot on the b...

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds have invited fans to attend a special London gig, which will be filmed for a new film about Cave, called 20,000 Days On Earth.

The band will play an intimate sow at London’s Koko on November 3. Fans wishing to attend can register to purchase tickets via a ballot on the band’s website by Monday, October 7 at 9am.

20,000 Days On Earth will see Cave reunited with previous collaborator Kylie Minogue. Minogue will make a cameo appearance in the drama-documentary, which is directed by Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard and tells the story of Cave’s 20,000th day on earth. It is scheduled for release in 2014.

Peter Gabriel to release new single

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Peter Gabriel is to release a new single, "Courage" on November 4, 2013. The track was originally part of the sessions for the singer's 1986 album, So. It was 'rediscovered' during the search for materials for the So 25th anniversary box set “When So drew to a close I didn't feel the song was de...

Peter Gabriel is to release a new single, “Courage” on November 4, 2013.

The track was originally part of the sessions for the singer’s 1986 album, So. It was ‘rediscovered’ during the search for materials for the So 25th anniversary box set

“When So drew to a close I didn’t feel the song was delivering in the way I had hoped, so decided not to include it,” explains Gabriel. “When we were reviewing all the material from that time, we wanted to take a fresh look at it and get it finished. I always liked the track and very much enjoyed the playing on it, especially the energy of the drums.”

The original version of “Courage” was made available on the 12” vinyl within the So 25th anniversary box set. Now, a “finished” version of the song will be released, mixed by Tchad Blake and with new overdubs from Peter and guitarist David Rhodes.

A newly commissioned remix of the track ‘The Hexidecimal Mix’ by Steve Osborne is available as a free download from Peter Gabriel’s website for a limited period.

Gabriel’s So tour reaches the UK later this month.

Small Faces & Faces Ultimate Music Guide – in shops now!

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“We weren’t concerned with reputation then, and I’m not concerned with it now,” writes Ian McLagan in the introduction to our new Ultimate Music Guide. “If you’re thinking seriously about your career, you’re not having any fun, and that transfers to the audience.” This latest edition of the Ultimate Music Guide is dedicated to the Small Faces and the Faces, both bands who mastered the art of having fun. As you’ll be able to read in an amazing collection of features from the archives of Melody Maker and NME, there was barely a moment when either the Small Faces or, later, the Faces weren’t up to their necks in some kind of colourful scrape, usually involving an over-abundance of liquid refreshment. But aside from the capers, there was some terrific music - and alongside the archive features, the Ultimate Music Guide carries new, in-depth reviews of every album by the Small Faces, the Faces, Humble Pie and Ronnie Lane, as well as Rod Stewart’s early solo outings, plus a full discography and a comprehensive guide to the various bands' rarities. This edition of the Ultimate Music Guide is in shops now, but you can also order it online here. It's also available through the Uncut app on the iTunes store. To whet your appetite, here's a couple of clips. First up, the Small Faces are on brilliant form tearing through "All Or Nothing" in 1966, then Marriott, Lane and co are joined by PP Arnold for "Tin Soldiers" on French TV. And lastly, Rod, Ronnie and the rest of the Faces deliver a scorching performance of "Stay With Me" from 1971. And don't forget - the current issue of Uncut is also in the shops, featuring a Pink Floyd cover. You can read all about it here. Enjoy the rest of your week. Michael Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUuuHLaSLR0 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-i_Bu1tmDrA

“We weren’t concerned with reputation then, and I’m not concerned with it now,” writes Ian McLagan in the introduction to our new Ultimate Music Guide. “If you’re thinking seriously about your career, you’re not having any fun, and that transfers to the audience.”

This latest edition of the Ultimate Music Guide is dedicated to the Small Faces and the Faces, both bands who mastered the art of having fun. As you’ll be able to read in an amazing collection of features from the archives of Melody Maker and NME, there was barely a moment when either the Small Faces or, later, the Faces weren’t up to their necks in some kind of colourful scrape, usually involving an over-abundance of liquid refreshment.

But aside from the capers, there was some terrific music – and alongside the archive features, the Ultimate Music Guide carries new, in-depth reviews of every album by the Small Faces, the Faces, Humble Pie and Ronnie Lane, as well as Rod Stewart’s early solo outings, plus a full discography and a comprehensive guide to the various bands’ rarities.

This edition of the Ultimate Music Guide is in shops now, but you can also order it online here. It’s also available through the Uncut app on the iTunes store.

To whet your appetite, here’s a couple of clips. First up, the Small Faces are on brilliant form tearing through “All Or Nothing” in 1966, then Marriott, Lane and co are joined by PP Arnold for “Tin Soldiers” on French TV. And lastly, Rod, Ronnie and the rest of the Faces deliver a scorching performance of “Stay With Me” from 1971.

And don’t forget – the current issue of Uncut is also in the shops, featuring a Pink Floyd cover. You can read all about it here.

Enjoy the rest of your week.

Michael

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-i_Bu1tmDrA

The Allman Brothers Band – Brothers & Sisters

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Deluxe four-disc reissue of first post-Duane album... The Allman Brothers began work on their fifth album at Capricorn Sound Studios in their adopted hometown of Macon, Georgia, in October 1972. It must still have been as much as they could do to get out of bed in the mornings. It was only a year since the group’s leader, influential guitar prodigy Duane Allman, had been killed in a motorcycle accident in Macon, aged 24. The group had not been able to bring themselves to replace him, instead promoting his abundantly capable duelling partner Dickey Betts to sole lead guitarist to finish 1972’s Eat A Peach, and eventually fleshing out their soulful boogie with the addition of pianist Chuck Leavell. On November 11, 1972, not long after the Allmans had cut an amiable choogle called “Ramblin’ Man”, bass player Berry Oakley’s motorcycle collided with a bus, a few blocks from where Allman had crashed just over a year earlier. Oakley died a few a hours later; he, too, was just 24 years old. An understandably careworn Gregg Allman later sighed to Rolling Stone’s Cameron Crowe, “It was so hard to get into anything after that second loss.” Somehow, Allman – and the Allmans – summoned the will to continue, finishing Brothers & Sisters with new bass player Lamar Williams. The result was their indisputable commercial peak and arguable creative apogee – and at the very least, an extraordinary recovery from the loss of virtuosi the calibre of Allman and Oakley (the former, in particular, ranks as one of the most tantalising, heartbreaking, career-that-never-was hypotheticals in all of rock’n’roll). It’s likely that the sales and acclaim Brothers & Sisters gathered upon release were inflated somewhat by a forgivable sympathy vote. But if one can make the effort necessary to hear it as other than a brave and determined confrontation of grief – or distraction from it – Brothers & Sisters is a comprehensive summary of the virtues of what is now known as southern rock. “Ramblin’ Man”, which became the album’s – and the Allmans’ – biggest hit, was a deceptive choice of lead-off single. It’s a cute, sweet country rocker with trilling harmonies, surely inspired in part by The Eagles’ debut album – with particular reference to “Take It Easy” – which had been released a few months previously. The rest of Brothers & Sisters is altogether more ambitious. It is more than anything else a showcase for Dickey Betts, who wrote most of the album, and stamped it with one of the great solo guitar performances: subtly melancholy on the slow blues “Jelly Jelly”, laying down the tracks for Stevie Ray Vaughn and subsequent blues swaggerers on “Southbound”, sprightly and frisky on the instrumental “Jessica” (now better known as the theme from Top Gear). There are two versions of this reissue of “Brothers & Sisters”. The two-disc package contains the original album as well as a mildly diverting bunch of rehearsals, outtakes and a new track recently disinterred from the archive – entitled “A Minor Jam”, it is, regrettably, exactly what it says it is, for sixteen somewhat trying minutes. Of considerably greater interest is the concert performance included with the four-disc incarnation. Recorded live at San Francisco’s Winterland Ballroom on September 26, 1973, it captures the Allmans at their unbound best, for better (the meandering versions of “Jessica” and “Southbound” are glorious, unselfconscious recollections of a time when rock’n’roll musicians saw themselves as explorers of musical worlds yet unconquered) and for worse (there are drum solos). It ranks as a lost post-Duane companion piece to the live album which founded the reputation the Allmans were trying to protect – 1971’s At Fillmore East. Brothers & Sisters would turn out to be as good as it got for the Allmans. Ahead lay drugs, hubris, fallings-out, ill-advised reunions and worse-advised marriages to Cher. But when they were great, the Allman Brothers were magnificent: defining their own time, and the parameters of a still-evolving genre. Southern rock started here. Andrew Mueller Q&A DICKEY BETTS It’s hard to imagine more difficult circumstances for an album to be recorded in. How close did you all come to giving up on “Brothers & Sisters” altogether? Under the stress of losing band members at a young age we thought about breaking up the band, but decided to stick it out – and we’re glad that we did. We came up with a wonderful album under the worst of circumstances. Were you surprised by the success of “Brothers & Sisters”? And were you all able to enjoy that success fully? I was surprised at the success of Brothers & Sisters. At the time, we were trying not to be an FM pop band and avoided that type of music. And yes, I have enjoyed the success. What do you think of the album now? I still think it’s a great album to this day. Specifically, what do you think of the version of "Jessica" that gets used as the theme for Top Gear? I really don’t know much about Top Gear. That was a deal my manager made. Anytime my music gets heard I think it's a great thing.” INTERVIEW: ANDREW MUELLER

Deluxe four-disc reissue of first post-Duane album…

The Allman Brothers began work on their fifth album at Capricorn Sound Studios in their adopted hometown of Macon, Georgia, in October 1972. It must still have been as much as they could do to get out of bed in the mornings. It was only a year since the group’s leader, influential guitar prodigy Duane Allman, had been killed in a motorcycle accident in Macon, aged 24. The group had not been able to bring themselves to replace him, instead promoting his abundantly capable duelling partner Dickey Betts to sole lead guitarist to finish 1972’s Eat A Peach, and eventually fleshing out their soulful boogie with the addition of pianist Chuck Leavell.

On November 11, 1972, not long after the Allmans had cut an amiable choogle called “Ramblin’ Man”, bass player Berry Oakley’s motorcycle collided with a bus, a few blocks from where Allman had crashed just over a year earlier. Oakley died a few a hours later; he, too, was just 24 years old. An understandably careworn Gregg Allman later sighed to Rolling Stone’s Cameron Crowe, “It was so hard to get into anything after that second loss.”

Somehow, Allman – and the Allmans – summoned the will to continue, finishing Brothers & Sisters with new bass player Lamar Williams. The result was their indisputable commercial peak and arguable creative apogee – and at the very least, an extraordinary recovery from the loss of virtuosi the calibre of Allman and Oakley (the former, in particular, ranks as one of the most tantalising, heartbreaking, career-that-never-was hypotheticals in all of rock’n’roll). It’s likely that the sales and acclaim Brothers & Sisters gathered upon release were inflated somewhat by a forgivable sympathy vote. But if one can make the effort necessary to hear it as other than a brave and determined confrontation of grief – or distraction from it – Brothers & Sisters is a comprehensive summary of the virtues of what is now known as southern rock.

Ramblin’ Man”, which became the album’s – and the Allmans’ – biggest hit, was a deceptive choice of lead-off single. It’s a cute, sweet country rocker with trilling harmonies, surely inspired in part by The Eagles’ debut album – with particular reference to “Take It Easy” – which had been released a few months previously. The rest of Brothers & Sisters is altogether more ambitious. It is more than anything else a showcase for Dickey Betts, who wrote most of the album, and stamped it with one of the great solo guitar performances: subtly melancholy on the slow blues “Jelly Jelly”, laying down the tracks for Stevie Ray Vaughn and subsequent blues swaggerers on “Southbound”, sprightly and frisky on the instrumental “Jessica” (now better known as the theme from Top Gear).

There are two versions of this reissue of “Brothers & Sisters”. The two-disc package contains the original album as well as a mildly diverting bunch of rehearsals, outtakes and a new track recently disinterred from the archive – entitled “A Minor Jam”, it is, regrettably, exactly what it says it is, for sixteen somewhat trying minutes. Of considerably greater interest is the concert performance included with the four-disc incarnation. Recorded live at San Francisco’s Winterland Ballroom on September 26, 1973, it captures the Allmans at their unbound best, for better (the meandering versions of “Jessica” and “Southbound” are glorious, unselfconscious recollections of a time when rock’n’roll musicians saw themselves as explorers of musical worlds yet unconquered) and for worse (there are drum solos). It ranks as a lost post-Duane companion piece to the live album which founded the reputation the Allmans were trying to protect – 1971’s At Fillmore East.

Brothers & Sisters would turn out to be as good as it got for the Allmans. Ahead lay drugs, hubris, fallings-out, ill-advised reunions and worse-advised marriages to Cher. But when they were great, the Allman Brothers were magnificent: defining their own time, and the parameters of a still-evolving genre. Southern rock started here.

Andrew Mueller

Q&A

DICKEY BETTS

It’s hard to imagine more difficult circumstances for an album to be recorded in. How close did you all come to giving up on “Brothers & Sisters” altogether?

Under the stress of losing band members at a young age we thought about breaking up the band, but decided to stick it out – and we’re glad that we did. We came up with a wonderful album under the worst of circumstances.

Were you surprised by the success of “Brothers & Sisters”? And were you all able to enjoy that success fully?

I was surprised at the success of Brothers & Sisters. At the time, we were trying not to be an FM pop band and avoided that type of music. And yes, I have enjoyed the success.

What do you think of the album now?

I still think it’s a great album to this day.

Specifically, what do you think of the version of “Jessica” that gets used as the theme for Top Gear?

I really don’t know much about Top Gear. That was a deal my manager made. Anytime my music gets heard I think it’s a great thing.”

INTERVIEW: ANDREW MUELLER

John Lennon’s childhood home up for auction

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The childhood home of John Lennon is to go up for auction at Liverpool's Cavern Club this month (October 29). Lennon lived in the red-bricked terrace house at 9 Newcastle Road in Wavertree, Liverpool, with his parents and grandparents from his birth on October 9 1940 until the age of five, when he went to live with his aunt and uncle, Mimi and George Smith. It is also the place he is believed to have have written "One After 909" later in his life. Located near Penny lane, the three-bedroomed property has a guide price of between £150,000 and £250,000. Only a few people are believed o have owned the property since the 1940s. The current owner said in a statement: "I have made sure original features have been preserved so that they reflect the 1960s period, when the Beatles wowed the whole world with their rock and roll music. The main structure of the house and features, such as the original Victorian sliding sash windows, are as they were when John Lennon lived here with his parents and his grandparents from 1940 onwards." Stephen Giddins, Regional Sales Director of estate agent Entwistle Green, said: "Although the property in need of some modernisation it retains some of the original features that I’m sure a new owner would wish to keep. Taking into consideration the location, the property itself and the background we expect a lot of interest locally and internationally."

The childhood home of John Lennon is to go up for auction at Liverpool’s Cavern Club this month (October 29).

Lennon lived in the red-bricked terrace house at 9 Newcastle Road in Wavertree, Liverpool, with his parents and grandparents from his birth on October 9 1940 until the age of five, when he went to live with his aunt and uncle, Mimi and George Smith. It is also the place he is believed to have have written “One After 909” later in his life.

Located near Penny lane, the three-bedroomed property has a guide price of between £150,000 and £250,000. Only a few people are believed o have owned the property since the 1940s.

The current owner said in a statement: “I have made sure original features have been preserved so that they reflect the 1960s period, when the Beatles wowed the whole world with their rock and roll music. The main structure of the house and features, such as the original Victorian sliding sash windows, are as they were when John Lennon lived here with his parents and his grandparents from 1940 onwards.”

Stephen Giddins, Regional Sales Director of estate agent Entwistle Green, said: “Although the property in need of some modernisation it retains some of the original features that I’m sure a new owner would wish to keep. Taking into consideration the location, the property itself and the background we expect a lot of interest locally and internationally.”

Eurythmics’ Dave Stewart: “Thom Yorke should worship Spotify”

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Dave Stewart has claimed that Thom Yorke and Nigel Godrich made a "mistake" in their attitudes towards Spotify and says that musicians should "worship" the music streaming service. In July of this year, Godrich and Yorke removed music made by their group Atoms From Peace from Spotify, in addition ...

Dave Stewart has claimed that Thom Yorke and Nigel Godrich made a “mistake” in their attitudes towards Spotify and says that musicians should “worship” the music streaming service.

In July of this year, Godrich and Yorke removed music made by their group Atoms From Peace from Spotify, in addition to the debut album by Godrich’s band Ultraista and Yorke’s The Eraser project. Producer Godrich also criticised the service in a series of lengthy Tweets, describing it as “bad for new music” and describing the system as being run by the “same old industry bods trying to get a stranglehold”.

Speaking to the Guardian, however, Stewart spoke up in defence of Spotify and said it should be praised for trying to offer a solution for musicians. “Thom Yorke made a mistake there, him and Nigel Godrich,” he said. “They were misinformed. I think they just suddenly got a bee in their bonnet, because Spotify is one of the few companies that is transparent and actually pays properly – as a songwriter you should worship Spotify, because they’ve come along with a solution.”

Stewart – who had claimed in a 2012 interview with Stuff magazine that he would only earn $47 if one of his albums was streamed non-stop for three years, and also said that emerging artists would make more money “selling their albums out of the boot of a car” – added: “It’s a volume business. If they had 100 million subscribers, which is possible, the payment [for the Eurythmics catalogue] would be equal to the band’s income back at the peak of selling.”

Last month, it was reported that Ministry Of Sound were suing Spotify. They filed a lawsuit for copyright infringement because the streaming service has allegedly refused to delete users’ playlists that “copy” the tracklistings of its compilation albums.

Spotify has previously defended critics of its business model. Earlier this year, a spokesperson told NME: “During 2012 Spotify saw dramatically increased revenues while maintaining a free to paid conversion rate of well over 20 per cent – unheard of for a freemium business, and a clear demonstration of the success of the business model. In 2012 the business focused on driving user growth, international expansion and product development, resulting in soaring user numbers and increased market penetration. Our key priority throughout 2013 and beyond remains bringing our unrivalled music experience to even more people while continuing to build for long-term growth – both for our company and for the music industry as a whole.”