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Grateful Dead to release 18-CD ‘Spring 1990’ box set

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The Grateful Dead are set to release an 18-CD box set on September 1. According to a report on Rolling Stone, the set - released by Rhino in America and available to pre-order at www.dead.net - is limited to 9,000 copies and includes six full concerts, one from each venue on that tour and a 60-page...

The Grateful Dead are set to release an 18-CD box set on September 1.

According to a report on Rolling Stone, the set – released by Rhino in America and available to pre-order at www.dead.net – is limited to 9,000 copies and includes six full concerts, one from each venue on that tour and a 60-page hardcover book.

The shows in Spring 1990 will not be sold individually, but Rhino also has in the works a two-CD compilation of material from the box.

It is not clear whether the Spring 1990 box set will be available in the UK.

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PIC CREDIT: IAN DICKSON/REDFERNS

Bob Dylan unveils his new album, Tempest

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Bob Dylan has been speaking about his new album, Tempest. In an interview with Rolling Stone, Dylan explained that the album - his 35th studio record - started out as "something more religious," he says. "I just didn't have enough [religious songs]. Intentionally, specifically religious songs is wh...

Bob Dylan has been speaking about his new album, Tempest.

In an interview with Rolling Stone, Dylan explained that the album – his 35th studio record – started out as “something more religious,” he says. “I just didn’t have enough [religious songs]. Intentionally, specifically religious songs is what I wanted to do. That takes a lot more concentration to pull that off 10 times with the same thread – than it does with a record like I ended up with.”

The album was recorded in Jackson Browne‘s studio in Los Angeles with Dylan’s touring band – bassist Tony Garnier, drummer George G. Receli, steel guitarist Donnie Herron, and guitarists Charlie Sexton and Stu Kimball – as well as David Hidalgo on guitar, violin and accordion.

The title track is a 14 minute epic about the Titanic disaster, with Dylan drawing from a number of sources including the Carter Family song, “The Titanic”.

“I was just fooling with that one night,” Dylan explains to author Mikal Gilmore. “I liked that melody – I liked it a lot. ‘Maybe I’m gonna appropriate this melody.’ But where would I go with it?”

Dylan also makes reference in the song to James Cameron‘s multi-Oscar winning movie about the disaster, which took place in April, 1912. “Yeah, Leo [DiCaprio],” says Dylan. “I don’t think the song would be the same without him. Or the movie.”

As to whether the title is, as some have suggested, a reference to Shakespeare’s play, The Tempest, Dylan was quick to make a distinction, explaining to Rolling Stone: “Shakespeare’s last play was called The Tempest. It wasn’t called just plain Tempest. The name of my record is just plain Tempest. It’s two different titles.”

You can read Uncut editor Allan Jones’ sneak preview of the album here.

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Bruce Springsteen breaks his own longest gig record with four-hour set

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Bruce Springsteen passed a whole new milestone last night [July 31] by playing a show that lasted for over four hours. The singer, who was played the final night of his European tour in the Finnish capital city of Helsinki, played a set that lasted for four hours and six minutes in the city's Olymp...

Bruce Springsteen passed a whole new milestone last night [July 31] by playing a show that lasted for over four hours.

The singer, who was played the final night of his European tour in the Finnish capital city of Helsinki, played a set that lasted for four hours and six minutes in the city’s Olympiastadion.

Springsteen’s set lasted for 33 songs and included four covers, John Fogerty‘s “Rockin’ All Over The World”, Southside Johnny’s “I Don’t Want To Go Home”, Jackie Wilson’s “(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher And Higher” and The Isley Brothers’ classic “Twist And Shout”.

All of Springsteen’s sets on this European tour have been lengthy and this caused a controversy during his set at London’s Hard Rock Calling. After the singer passed the show’s allotted end time, the decision was made to pull the plug while he was onstage with Paul McCartney.

The decision drew criticism from Mayor of London Boris Johnson and prompted consternation on Twitter, with Springsteen’s guitarist Steven Van Zandt leading a chorus of disapproval. He wrote: “Is there just too much fun in the world? We would have been off by 11 if we’d done one more. On a Saturday night! Who were we disturbing?”

Bruce Springsteen begins a US tour next month in support of his latest album Wrecking Ball, which came out earlier this year.

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Bill Doss of Olivia Tremor Control dead at 43

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Bill Doss of Olivia Tremor Control has died at the age of 43. A singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist, he was also a co-founder of the Elephant 6 collective, and played with the Sunshine Fix and Apples in Stereo, as well as being part of cult indie rock group, Olivia Tremor Control. The band announced the news on their website – via Rolling Stone - writing: "We are devastated by the loss of our brother Bill Doss… We are at a loss for words." A cause of death has not yet been announced. Doss started the band in Athens, Georgia with Will Cullen Hart and Jeff Mangum in 1994. The band went on hiatus in 2000 after the release of two albums - 'Music from the Unrealized Film Script: Dusk at Cubist Castle' in 1996 and 'Black Foliage: Animation Music Volume One' in 1999 - but reunited in 2005 to play a number of shows for All Tomorrow's Parties. Olivia Tremor Control were thought to be working on a new album, following the 2011 release of the single "The Game You Play Is In Your Head". Their last live show took place last week, on July 26 at The Georgia Theatre in Athens. Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12-month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks! Pic credit: Gary Wolstenholme/Redferns via Getty Images

Bill Doss of Olivia Tremor Control has died at the age of 43.

A singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist, he was also a co-founder of the Elephant 6 collective, and played with the Sunshine Fix and Apples in Stereo, as well as being part of cult indie rock group, Olivia Tremor Control.

The band announced the news on their website – via Rolling Stone – writing: “We are devastated by the loss of our brother Bill Doss… We are at a loss for words.” A cause of death has not yet been announced.

Doss started the band in Athens, Georgia with Will Cullen Hart and Jeff Mangum in 1994. The band went on hiatus in 2000 after the release of two albums – ‘Music from the Unrealized Film Script: Dusk at Cubist Castle’ in 1996 and ‘Black Foliage: Animation Music Volume One’ in 1999 – but reunited in 2005 to play a number of shows for All Tomorrow’s Parties.

Olivia Tremor Control were thought to be working on a new album, following the 2011 release of the single “The Game You Play Is In Your Head“. Their last live show took place last week, on July 26 at The Georgia Theatre in Athens.

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Pic credit: Gary Wolstenholme/Redferns via Getty Images

Tom Waits teases live shows?

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Tom Waits has released a cryptic picture, fuelling speculation that he is set to announce live shows, possibly of port cities or even aboard a boat. The photo, pictured above and entitled Permission To Come Aboard?, sees Waits dressed as a cigar chomping pirate - complete with cutlass and eye patch...

Tom Waits has released a cryptic picture, fuelling speculation that he is set to announce live shows, possibly of port cities or even aboard a boat.

The photo, pictured above and entitled Permission To Come Aboard?, sees Waits dressed as a cigar chomping pirate – complete with cutlass and eye patch – above the date August 7, on which a full announcement is expected to be made.

The eccentric singer-songwriter last toured in 2008, with the Glitter And Doom Tour, which comprised 13 shows in the United States and 15 in Europe, including two shows in Edinburgh.

Earlier this month, Tom Waits performed material from his most recent album, 2011’s Bad As Me, live for the first time. He appeared on the Late Show With David Letterman to sing “Chicago”, accompanied by his son Casey Waits on drums, bassist Larry Taylor, guitarist David Hidalgo, keyboardist Augie Myers and guitarist Big Bill Morganfield.

Waits also appeared on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon where he played another song from his 17th studio album, “Raised Right Men”. Scroll down to watch footage of both appearances.

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

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KISS announce full details of new album Monster

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KISS have revealed full details of their new studio album 'Monster'. The album, which is the 20th LP of the metal veterans' career, will be released on October 15 in the UK and October 16 in the US. You can see the album's artwork at the top of the screen. Monster contains a total of 13 tracks, i...

KISS have revealed full details of their new studio album ‘Monster’.

The album, which is the 20th LP of the metal veterans’ career, will be released on October 15 in the UK and October 16 in the US. You can see the album’s artwork at the top of the screen.

Monster contains a total of 13 tracks, including recent single “Hell Or Hallejulah”, which serves as the album’s opening track and which you can hear by scrolling down to the bottom of the page.

Speaking about the album, bassist Gene Simmons said that KISS are “going where no bands have gone before” and praised newer members Tommy Thayer and Eric Singer for their “work ethic”.

He said of Monster: “There are no symphony orchestras, boy choirs, keyboards, outside producers or songwriters on this album. The best thing we did was to turn inwards to ourselves.”

He continued: “Tommy and Eric have revitalised this band with a work ethic and the talent to back it up. This is a real band effort. Kiss has become a behemoth. We’re going where no bands have gone before.”

Kiss were due to headline this summer’s Sonisphere Festival, but instead played an intimate show at London’s HMV Forum last month after Sonisphere was cancelled. They are expected to return to the UK for a full tour in the coming months.

The tracklisting for Monster is as follows:

‘Hell Or Hallelujah’

‘Wall Of Sound’

‘Freak’

‘Back To The Stone Age’

‘Shout Mercy’

‘Long Way Down’

‘Eat Your Heart Out’

‘The Devil Is Me’

‘Outta This World’

‘All For The Love Of Rock & Roll’

‘Take Me Down Below’

‘Last Chance’

‘Right Here Right Now’

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Watch Blur perform 13 track “Caramel” for the first time

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Blur played two intimate gigs at London's Maida Vale Studios yesterday (July 31) and aired a number of rare tracks. The four-piece, who recently broadcast their two new songs, "Under The Westway" and "The Puritan" from a secret UK location via a live video stream performance on Twitter, first perfo...

Blur played two intimate gigs at London’s Maida Vale Studios yesterday (July 31) and aired a number of rare tracks.

The four-piece, who recently broadcast their two new songs, “Under The Westway” and “The Puritan” from a secret UK location via a live video stream performance on Twitter, first performed an intimate session for BBC Radio 6Music, which you can see at the bottom of the page.

Among the tracks aired in the BBC Radio 6Music session were “Caramel“, a track from the band’s 1999 album 13 which they had never previously played live, and “Young & Lovely”, a B-Side from 1993, which they’d only previously played live once.

The band then played a gig for BBC Radio 2 which was aired live. This saw Blur play a 12-song set, which included “Popscene”, “For Tomorrow”, “Tender”, new single “Under The Westway”, “The Universal” and the first airing of “Mr Briggs” since 1999.

Blur kick off an intimate UK tour tonight (August 1) at Margate Winter Gardens. They will then play two shows at Wolverhampton Civic Hall on August 5 and 6, before finishing off at Plymouth Pavilions on August 7.

The shows will act as a warm-up for the band’s huge outdoor gig at London’s Hyde Park on August 12, which sees Blur topping a bill that also includes New Order and The Specials. The gig has been put on to coincide with the closing ceremony of the Olympic games. Blur are also scheduled to headline Sweden’s Way Out West festival in August.

Blur released a career-spanning boxset on Monday (July 30). Titled 21, the collection includes the band’s seven studio albums as well as over five hours of previously unreleased material including 65 tracks, rarities, three DVDs, a collector’s edition book and special limited edition Seymour seven-inch vinyl.

Blur played:

BBC Radio 6 Setlist

Jubilee’

‘The Puritan’

‘Caramel’

‘Trimm Trabb’

‘Young & Lovely’

‘Under The Westway’

BBC Radio 2 Setlist

‘Tracy Jacks’

‘Beetlebum’

‘Out Of Time’

‘Young & Lovely’

‘End Of A Century’

‘Mr. Briggs’

‘Tender’

‘This Is A Low’

‘Under The Westway’

‘Popscene’

‘For Tomorrow’

‘The Universal’

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Killing Joke appeal for information after singer Jaz Coleman goes missing

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Killing Joke have appealed for information about the whereabouts of their singer Jaz Coleman, who they say has gone missing. The band, who released their 15th studio album 2012 earlier this year, have posted a statement on their official Facebook page saying that they are "concerned for Coleman's w...

Killing Joke have appealed for information about the whereabouts of their singer Jaz Coleman, who they say has gone missing.

The band, who released their 15th studio album 2012 earlier this year, have posted a statement on their official Facebook page saying that they are “concerned for Coleman’s welfare” as they have not heard from him.

The band have posted the statement after a post on their Facebook page, purported to be from Coleman, suggested that they were pulling out of a tour with The Cult and The Mission.

They wrote: “A statement was posted on Facebook, reputedly by our singer, maligning both The Cult and The Mission and pulling us out of the shows. He is now AWOL and has not contacted any of his band mates. We are deeply embarrassed by this and offer our sincere apologies to all involved. We are all concerned about our missing singer’s welfare.”

They continued: “Killing Joke made a collective decision to play with The Cult and The Mission in September. It was agreed by all of the band that we would do these shows. Indeed, we thought that they were something to look forward to, even though they were downsized. We would still like to honour our commitment to this tour, the other bands, and all the Gatherers and people who have already bought tickets and made travel arrangements.”

They continued further: “If this proves not possible, Killing Joke will make alternative arrangements to compensate for the trouble caused. Meanwhile we are doing everything we can to make this tour happen and locate our missing singer.”

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Aerosmith team up with Julian Lennon and Johnny Depp on new album

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Aerosmith have revealed that Julian Lennon and Johnny Depp are set to feature on their forthcoming album Music From Another Dimension!. The album, which is the band's 15th, will be released on November 6 in the US. It was previously slated for August 28 but was pushed back because of that week's he...

Aerosmith have revealed that Julian Lennon and Johnny Depp are set to feature on their forthcoming album Music From Another Dimension!.

The album, which is the band’s 15th, will be released on November 6 in the US. It was previously slated for August 28 but was pushed back because of that week’s hectic release schedule.

Frontman Steve Tyler told Rolling Stone that he met Julian Lennon while he was in Los Angeles working on music reality TV show American Idol. John Lennon’s eldest son contributes vocals to the track “Love Three Times A Day”.

“He’s such a sweet fucking guy,” Tyler said. “And he’s John’s first son with that voice and sense of humor – gimme a break!”

Johnny Depp also features on the album – adding backing vocals to the track “Freedom Fighter”. However, guitarist Joe Perry says the song may end up on a later deluxe version of the album.

Perry added that he’s happy the band finally have new songs to play onstage: “Everyone wants to hear the same ‘Dream On’s and ‘Walk This Way’s, but that’s not what I had in mind to be in a band – to be the best cover band you can be,” he said. “We can be the best Aerosmith cover band out there, and I was getting tired of it. So I’m really glad to have this record.”

Speaking about his recent departure from American Idol, Tyler said: “I loved it and hated it. It was a great job, I sat next to J Lo and I made a ton of money. It was a moment in life and it became larger than life.”

“It was just hard work: seven-hour days and then I went and did the [Aerosmith] album for eight hours after that,” he said. “The show’s about kids and what you do to nurture their talent. They wanted me to take the piss out of the kids and I don’t have that in me. That’s not what I’m about. That’s more about that other guy. Not me.”

Music From Another Dimension! is the follow-up to 2004’s Honkin’ On Bobo and has been produced by Jack Douglas, the man behind 1975’s Toys In The Attic.

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Nick Cave’s Lawless

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I don’t have any more information on the new Bob Dylan album, Tempest, following last week’s newsletter and blog on Friday confirming the track listing, so apologies to all the readers who have written in, hungry for further details about the record. The absence of anything further I can tell yo...

I don’t have any more information on the new Bob Dylan album, Tempest, following last week’s newsletter and blog on Friday confirming the track listing, so apologies to all the readers who have written in, hungry for further details about the record. The absence of anything further I can tell you at the moment about Tempest gives me, however, the opportunity to briefly sing the praises of Lawless, the new movie from director John Hillcoat and Nick Cave, who’s written the screenplay, as he did for The Proposition, Hillcoat’s savage outback Western.

Lawless is a violent hillbilly gangster epic set in Franklin Country, Virginia, in 1931, towards the end of the Prohibition era. The Bondurant brothers – Forrest, Howard and Jack – are infamous bootleggers, flagrant law-breakers but hugely popular with the local folk thirsty for the moonshine they brew at their secret stills. For the close-knit community they were born into, the Bondurants – Forrest and Howard, especially – are almost mythical figures, thought to be invincible, beyond the jurisdiction of the law, untouchable. This is a view shared by the Bondurants themselves, especially Forrest, who is both fearsome and fearless and in the hulking shape of a bulked-up Tom Hardy absolutely larger than life.

Things are going well for everyone until the arrival of Special Deputy Charlie Rakes, whose mission it is to destroy the Bondurants and their bootlegging empire. Played with sinister panache by an unrecognisable Guy Pearce, looking as outlandish as the villain in a super-hero movie, Rakes is a sadistic dandy. He’s not on the scene for long before the bodies start piling up, some of them in mounds as his crackdown on the Bondurants’ operation escalates into something approaching all-out war. Gary Oldman’s in the mix, too, in scene-stealing overdrive as a deranged mobster, devilishly handy both with a shovel and a submachine gun.

The performances on all fronts are outstanding, with Hardy and Jason Clarke as the older Bondurant brothers especially impressive, Hardy moving through the film like a be-vested, cigar-chomping force of nature. Shia LaBoeouf, looking at times uncannily like a very young Russell Crowe, is good, too, as feckless young Jack Bondurant, even if his transition from likeable family runt to a kind of hillbilly Tony Montana doesn’t quite convince.

Cave’s screenplay is based on a novel called The Wettest County In The World by Matt Bondurant, a descendent on the film’s three brothers and based, we are therefore asked to believe, on a true story. The basic storyline of Lawless, however, could have been spliced together from a number of earlier movies – Robert Altman’s Thieves Like Us came to mind a couple of times, as did Walter Hill’s Last Man Standing and also The Long Riders, Hill’s tremendous 1980 Western about Jesse James, which similarly pitted a rural southern outlaw clan against repressive authority.

Cave has also composed the film’s incidental music with Bad Seed/Grinderman cohort Warren Ellis (with whom he also wrote the terrific score for The Proposition and Hillcoat’s adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road). Cave and Ellis also feature alongside fellow Bad Seed and Grinderman bassist Martyn Casey as members of The Bootleggers, who provide a secondary soundtrack. This is an amazing concoction of covers of songs by Link Wray, Townes Van Zandt, John Lee Hooker and Captain Beefheart, the most spectacular of which is an unbelievable version of The Velvet Underground’s “White Light/White Heat” by 85-year old bluegrass legend Ralph Stanley, whose “O Death” was one a highlight of the soundtrack for O Brother, Where Art Thou that T-Bone Burnett put together for the Coen brothers.

Lawless opens in the UK on September 7, hopefully at a cinema near you, meanwhile have good week.

The 31st Uncut Playlist Of 2012

A distinct late ‘80s/early ‘90s feel to the list this week, with generally good new releases in here from Bob Mould, Mark Eitzel and Sebadoh. Couple of other things to flag up, though. Fuck Buttons make an appearance thanks to their unlikely but magnificent presence on the score of the Olympics opening ceremony (Somewhere just after Jamaica entered the stadium, incidentally, I had a look at my timeline and discovered, hearteningly, the least cynical collection of posts I’ve ever seen on Twitter. Quite a night). Bill Wilson’s “Ever Changing Minstrel” (that's the front cover at the top of the page), meanwhile, is an incredible find by Josh from Tompkins Square: a 1973 album produced by Bob Johnston, and featuring a lot of the crew who figured on “Blonde On Blonde”, that fits very snugly into a space between Mickey Newbury and Townes Van Zandt. Haven’t asked this for a while, too: what are you all listening to at the moment? Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Daphni – JIAOLONG (JIAOLONG) 2 Bob Mould – Silver Age (Edsel) 3 4 Wooden Wand – Blood Oaths Of The New Blues (Fire) 5 Mark Eitzel – Don’t Be A Stranger (Décor) 6 Michael Mayer – Mantasy (Kompakt) 7 Fuck Buttons – Tarot Sport (ATP Recordings) 8 Sebadoh – Secret EP (http://sebadoh.bandcamp.com/album/secret-ep) 9 Bill Wilson – Ever Changing Minstrel (Tompkins Square) 10 Arizona Dranes - He Is My Story: The Sanctified Soul of Arizona Dranes (Tompkins Square) 11 Liminanas – Crystal Anis (Hozac) 12 Spectre Folk – The Ancient Storm (Vampire Blues) 13 Jerry Douglas – Traveler (Proper)

A distinct late ‘80s/early ‘90s feel to the list this week, with generally good new releases in here from Bob Mould, Mark Eitzel and Sebadoh. Couple of other things to flag up, though.

Fuck Buttons make an appearance thanks to their unlikely but magnificent presence on the score of the Olympics opening ceremony (Somewhere just after Jamaica entered the stadium, incidentally, I had a look at my timeline and discovered, hearteningly, the least cynical collection of posts I’ve ever seen on Twitter. Quite a night).

Bill Wilson’s “Ever Changing Minstrel” (that’s the front cover at the top of the page), meanwhile, is an incredible find by Josh from Tompkins Square: a 1973 album produced by Bob Johnston, and featuring a lot of the crew who figured on “Blonde On Blonde”, that fits very snugly into a space between Mickey Newbury and Townes Van Zandt.

Haven’t asked this for a while, too: what are you all listening to at the moment?

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

1 Daphni – JIAOLONG (JIAOLONG)

2 Bob Mould – Silver Age (Edsel)

3

4 Wooden Wand – Blood Oaths Of The New Blues (Fire)

5 Mark Eitzel – Don’t Be A Stranger (Décor)

6 Michael Mayer – Mantasy (Kompakt)

7 Fuck Buttons – Tarot Sport (ATP Recordings)

8 Sebadoh – Secret EP (http://sebadoh.bandcamp.com/album/secret-ep)

9 Bill Wilson – Ever Changing Minstrel (Tompkins Square)

10 Arizona Dranes – He Is My Story: The Sanctified Soul of Arizona Dranes (Tompkins Square)

11 Liminanas – Crystal Anis (Hozac)

12 Spectre Folk – The Ancient Storm (Vampire Blues)

13 Jerry Douglas – Traveler (Proper)

Listen to new St. Vincent and David Byrne track, “Weekend In The Dust”

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David Byrne and St Vincent have released a second track from their forthcoming album, Love This Giant. The track, "Weekend In The Dust", follows "Who", which they released in June. You can hear "Weekend In The Dust" here. It can be downloaded when you pre-order Love This Giant. The album is rele...

David Byrne and St Vincent have released a second track from their forthcoming album, Love This Giant.

The track, “Weekend In The Dust”, follows “Who”, which they released in June.

You can hear “Weekend In The Dust” here.

It can be downloaded when you pre-order Love This Giant. The album is released on September 11 on 4AD/Todo Mundo.

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Singer Tony Martin dies aged 98

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Singer Tony Martin has died at the age of 98. The legendary crooner, who was best known for his hit singles "I Get Ideas", "Begin The Beguine" and "There's No Tomorrow", passed away on Friday (July 27) from natural causes at his home in West Los Angeles, reports Reuters. Martin, who enjoyed the most successful periods of his career in the 1930s and 1950s, was a contemporary of the likes of Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra and sold over one million copies of his most successful single "To Each His Own". He also appeared in over 25 Hollywood musicals, with roles in the likes of Kentucky Moonshine, Two Tickets To Broadway, Here Come The Girls and Meet Me In Las Vegas. Paying tribute to Martin, musician and long-time friend Gabriel Guerrero said: "He's the ultimate crooner who outlasted all his contemporaries. He has truly remained the butterscotch baritone until he was 98." Martin enjoyed two high-profile marriages during his life, first to musical star Alice Faye, and secondly to actress Cyd Charisse, who he remained married to until her death in 2008. He will be buried in the coming days at a memorial park near Los Angeles that is also the resting place of Charisse. Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12-month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks! PIC CREDIT: NBC via Getty Images

Singer Tony Martin has died at the age of 98.

The legendary crooner, who was best known for his hit singles “I Get Ideas”, “Begin The Beguine” and “There’s No Tomorrow”, passed away on Friday (July 27) from natural causes at his home in West Los Angeles, reports Reuters.

Martin, who enjoyed the most successful periods of his career in the 1930s and 1950s, was a contemporary of the likes of Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra and sold over one million copies of his most successful single “To Each His Own”.

He also appeared in over 25 Hollywood musicals, with roles in the likes of Kentucky Moonshine, Two Tickets To Broadway, Here Come The Girls and Meet Me In Las Vegas.

Paying tribute to Martin, musician and long-time friend Gabriel Guerrero said: “He’s the ultimate crooner who outlasted all his contemporaries. He has truly remained the butterscotch baritone until he was 98.”

Martin enjoyed two high-profile marriages during his life, first to musical star Alice Faye, and secondly to actress Cyd Charisse, who he remained married to until her death in 2008.

He will be buried in the coming days at a memorial park near Los Angeles that is also the resting place of Charisse.

Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12-month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

PIC CREDIT: NBC via Getty Images

Muddy Waters & The Rolling Stones – Live At The Checkerboard Lounge

Momentous all-star blues jam in Chicago... Aside from sitting humbly at the feet of Howlin' Wolf on '60s TV shows like Shindig and Ready, Steady, Go!, footage of the Stones with their seminal blues influences is rare. Recorded in November 1981, just a couple of years before his death, this Muddy Waters performance at Buddy Guy's Checkerboard Lounge remains the only time the group ever actually shared a stage with the iconic blues master. Muddy's band are spruced up for the occasion - waistcoats are de rigueur, except for pianist Lovie Lee, who's wearing a nice black and white cardigan and matching cap, while blues-harpist George 'Mojo' Buford sports a fetching leather bandolier to house his harmonicas. Muddy himself appears a few songs into the set, in a light-grey three-piece, the remnants of his once mighty pompadour swept into a matching steel-grey monkish tonsure at the rear of his head. Even perched on a high stool, he's a majestic, magisterial presence, wringing snarling slide lines from his battered old Telecaster on "Country Boy", in flurries of stinging, biting slashes. Invited up onstage during "Baby Please Don't Go", Mick Jagger has rather less stylish couture sense, his red Ellesse jogging-suit making him appear all the more like Muddy's court jester as he attempts his characteristic prancing in a space barely big enough to stand in. Keith joins him, clambering over the tables to reach the stage, followed by Ronnie, both guitarists clearly on their mettle for this trip to the fount of blues truth. Mick and Muddy swap verses through "Hoochie Coochie Man", "Long Distance Call" and "Mannish Boy", the tiny stage getting ever more crowded as more blues legends join the throng, notably Junior Wells and Buddy Guy, who beams the smile of the club-owner who knows he's got the best show in town tonight. Mick tries talking in tongues on "Mannish Boy", before Muddy and he vacate the stage awhile, leaving Keith and Ron, ciggies akimbo, to swap lines with Buddy Guy. The evening comes to a suitably unkempt ending with "Champagne & Reefer", Mick nipping in right at the close to steal Muddy's thunder with an admonishment to stick to reefer and stay away from that cocaine. As if! EXTRAS: None. Andy Gill PIC CREDIT: MICHAEL HALSBAND

Momentous all-star blues jam in Chicago…

Aside from sitting humbly at the feet of Howlin’ Wolf on ’60s TV shows like Shindig and Ready, Steady, Go!, footage of the Stones with their seminal blues influences is rare. Recorded in November 1981, just a couple of years before his death, this Muddy Waters performance at Buddy Guy’s Checkerboard Lounge remains the only time the group ever actually shared a stage with the iconic blues master.

Muddy’s band are spruced up for the occasion – waistcoats are de rigueur, except for pianist Lovie Lee, who’s wearing a nice black and white cardigan and matching cap, while blues-harpist George ‘Mojo’ Buford sports a fetching leather bandolier to house his harmonicas. Muddy himself appears a few songs into the set, in a light-grey three-piece, the remnants of his once mighty pompadour swept into a matching steel-grey monkish tonsure at the rear of his head. Even perched on a high stool, he’s a majestic, magisterial presence, wringing snarling slide lines from his battered old Telecaster on “Country Boy“, in flurries of stinging, biting slashes.

Invited up onstage during “Baby Please Don’t Go”, Mick Jagger has rather less stylish couture sense, his red Ellesse jogging-suit making him appear all the more like Muddy’s court jester as he attempts his characteristic prancing in a space barely big enough to stand in. Keith joins him, clambering over the tables to reach the stage, followed by Ronnie, both guitarists clearly on their mettle for this trip to the fount of blues truth.

Mick and Muddy swap verses through “Hoochie Coochie Man”, “Long Distance Call” and “Mannish Boy”, the tiny stage getting ever more crowded as more blues legends join the throng, notably Junior Wells and Buddy Guy, who beams the smile of the club-owner who knows he’s got the best show in town tonight. Mick tries talking in tongues on “Mannish Boy“, before Muddy and he vacate the stage awhile, leaving Keith and Ron, ciggies akimbo, to swap lines with Buddy Guy. The evening comes to a suitably unkempt ending with “Champagne & Reefer”, Mick nipping in right at the close to steal Muddy’s thunder with an admonishment to stick to reefer and stay away from that cocaine. As if!

EXTRAS: None.

Andy Gill

PIC CREDIT: MICHAEL HALSBAND

Paul McCartney paid £1 for Olympic gig

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Paul McCartney was reportedly paid only £1 for his performance at the Olympic Opening Ceremony on Friday [July 27]. According to Associated Press, McCartney, as well as fellow performers Mike Oldfield, Emeli Sandie and Dizzee Rascal, were paid nominal fees of £1 ($1.57) to make the Olympic contra...

Paul McCartney was reportedly paid only £1 for his performance at the Olympic Opening Ceremony on Friday [July 27].

According to Associated Press, McCartney, as well as fellow performers Mike Oldfield, Emeli Sandie and Dizzee Rascal, were paid nominal fees of £1 ($1.57) to make the Olympic contracts binding.

The ceremony was watched by an average of 42 million people worldwide. However, many music fans in America were left outraged after NBC’s broadcast of the Opening Ceremony failed to include a number of key musical segments.

Arctic Monkeys‘ version of The Beatles’s “Come Together” was included in the broadcast, but their performance of “I Bet That You Look Good On The Dancefloor” was replaced by an advert break, as was Scottish singer Emeli Sande’s version of “Abide With Me”, which was sung in tribute to the victims of the terrorist bombings in London on July 7, 2005.

The segment which featured the Sex Pistols‘ “Pretty Vacant” was cut from the final NBC broadcast and Frank Turner’s appearance in the prologue to the ceremony was also ignored. 24 advert breaks were placed into the four hour long Opening Ceremony, reports Yahoo.

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Happy Mondays’ Shaun Ryder: ‘We didn’t want to get as skint as the Stone Roses did!’

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Happy Mondays singer Shaun Ryder has said he's happy his band didn't as wait as long as The Stone Roses to reform. When asked by The Guardian if he wished he had left it longer to reform the Mondays after finding out the amount of money the Roses were offered to reform, which has been estimated at...

Happy Mondays singer Shaun Ryder has said he’s happy his band didn’t as wait as long as The Stone Roses to reform.

When asked by The Guardian if he wished he had left it longer to reform the Mondays after finding out the amount of money the Roses were offered to reform, which has been estimated at £26 million, he replied: “What, and got as skint as they did? No thanks! I’ve got six kids who’ve all gotta go to private school!”

Speaking about the Roses’ return, he added: “Good music always sticks around. That’s just how it is. I haven’t seen The Stone Roses, though, I’ve been away.”

The singer also revealed that he’s recently given up on music in favour of a talking pig: “I don’t get involved with the music scene any more. It’s just alien to me. For at least the last four years the only artist I’ve been involved with is Peppa Pig.” He added: “We’ve done Peppa Pig World too, it was really good. It was all good! We went on all the rides. On the teacups and everything.”

Last week, the band confirmed that they are planning a new album, which will be the first time all the original line-up have recorded an album of new material since 1992’s Yes Please!.

The band’s manager Warren Askew told NME: “Yes, we are now planning to record a new album, after the success of the tour and with the band all getting on so well. Shaun has been writing and the band have been getting together in the studio putting ideas down. I’m sure it will be a great Happy Mondays album.”

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Arctic Monkeys’ Olympic cover of The Beatles’ ‘Come Together’ climbs download charts

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Arctic Monkeys' cover of The Beatles' 'Come Together' is racing up the singles chart. The track – which featured as part of Danny Boyle's four-hour Olympic Opening Ceremony extravaganza on Friday – has climbed to Number 14 in the iTunes download chart. "Caliban's Dream" – the Underworld-penn...

Arctic Monkeys‘ cover of The Beatles’ ‘Come Together’ is racing up the singles chart.

The track – which featured as part of Danny Boyle’s four-hour Olympic Opening Ceremony extravaganza on Friday – has climbed to Number 14 in the iTunes download chart.

“Caliban’s Dream” – the Underworld-penned track sung by Two Door Cinema Club frontman Alex Trimble is currently at Number Five.

Other tracks to appear on the night include Frank Turner’s “I Still Believe”, which is at Number 32 and Emile Sande’s version of “Abide With Me” at Number 26. Arctic Monkeys’ debut single “I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor” is back in the charts at Number 78.

The compilation of all the music featured in the Opening Ceremony, named Isles Of Wonder, is Number One in the iTunes store album chart in Britain, France, Belgium and Spain, and is Number Five in the US.

It went on sale digitally shortly after the show came to an end in the early hours of Saturday, with more than 10,000 copies being sold immediately afterwards. After being on sale for 24 hours the album reached Number 5 on the Official Charts Company’s list of top-selling compilation albums of 2012.

The tracklisting to ‘Isles Of Wonder’ is as follows:

The Who, ‘Baba O’Riley’

Muse, ‘Map Of The Problematique’

Fuck Buttons, ‘Surf Solar’

Sex Pistols, ‘God Save The Queen’

The Clash, ‘London Calling’

Mike Oldfield, ‘Tubular Bells’

OMD, ‘Enola Gay’

The Jam, ‘Going Underground’

The Rolling Stones, ‘(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction’

The Beatles, ‘She Loves You’

Millie Small, ‘My Boy Lollipop’

Led Zeppelin, ‘Trampled Under Foot’

The Specials, ‘A Message To You Rudy’

David Bowie, ‘Starman’

Queen, ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’

Eric Clapton, ‘Wonderful Tonight’

Sex Pistols, ‘Pretty Vacant’

New Order, ‘Blue Monday’

Frankie Goes To Hollywood, ‘Relax’

Soul II Soul, ‘Back To Life’

Happy Mondays, ‘Step On’

Eurythmics, ‘Sweet Dreams Are Made Of This’

The Prodigy, ‘Firestarter’

Blur, ‘Song 2’

Underworld, ‘Born Slippy’

Dizzee Rascal, ‘Bonkers’

Amy Winehouse, ‘Valerie’

Muse, ‘Uprising’

Tinie Tempah, ‘Pass Out’

David Holmes, ‘I Heard Wonders’

Arctic Monkeys, ‘I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor’

The Beatles, ‘Come Together’ (covered by Arctic Monkeys)

Underworld/Alex Trimble, ‘Caliban’s Dream’

Pink Floyd, ‘Eclipse’

The Beatles, ‘The End’

The Beatles, ‘Hey Jude’

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Radiohead close Fuji Rock with headline performance

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Radiohead closed Fuji Rock festival in Japan with a 23-song headline set last night (July 29). Walking on stage at the stroke of 9.30pm, the five-piece strolled through "Lotus Flower" and "Bloom" from The King Of Limbs and "15 Step" from In Rainbows in quick succession, to the delight of the 50,000...

Radiohead closed Fuji Rock festival in Japan with a 23-song headline set last night (July 29).

Walking on stage at the stroke of 9.30pm, the five-piece strolled through “Lotus Flower” and “Bloom” from The King Of Limbs and “15 Step” from In Rainbows in quick succession, to the delight of the 50,000-strong crowd.

Songs from The King Of Limbs and In Rainbows made up most of the rest of the set, with just a handful of songs from The Bends, OK Computer, Kid A, Amnesiac and Hail To The Thief featuring.

Thom Yorke barely spoke between songs, although appeared bowled over by the reaction from the ecstatic crowd. When he did speak, it was to thank them, which he did in Japanese. He also joked before playing “Separator” about videos that appear of him online. He said: “You can get live versions of this on YouTube. There’s probably a lot of me on YouTube, but there you go.”

Radiohead played two encores, the second and final time finishing with “Bodysnatchers” from ‘In Rainbows’ and an epic “Paranoid Android” from 1997’s OK, Computer.

Earlier in the day, Michael Kiwanuka, The Shins and Jack White were among the performers. The latter, this time with his all-female band, drew one of the biggest crowds of the weekend and left the stage to the riff of White Stripes hit “Seven Nation Army” ringing out across the festival site.

Radiohead played:

‘Lotus Flower’

‘Bloom’

’15 Step’

‘Weird Fishes/Arpeggi’

‘Kid A’

‘Morning Mr Magpie’

‘The Gloaming’

‘Separator’

‘Pyramid Song’

‘Nude’

‘Staircase’

‘There There’

‘Karma Police’

‘Myxomatosis’

‘Feral’

‘Idioteque’

‘Give Up The Ghost’

‘You And Whose Army?’

‘Planet Telex’

‘Everything In Its Right Place’

‘Reckoner’

‘Bodysnatchers’

‘Paranoid Android’

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Interview: Six Organs Of Admittance

Been talking for a while now about how I think Six Organs Of Admittance’s “Ascent” is one of the best albums of 2012, and I’ve finally written about it at length in the new issue of Uncut. Anyhow, Ben Chasny responded to a bunch of questions I sent over with a characteristic diligence, and I figured it was worth posting the whole exchange here. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey Can you tell us how the reunion with Comets On Fire came about? I should say that I've never really considered Comets to have broken up. We truly are just on a hiatus. We don't live close to each other any more and there are families and jobs and other projects to consider. It's more a matter of logistics. This record came about because we were supposed to have recorded an electric record under the Six Organs name ten years ago, but then I joined Comets instead, so the project fell by the wayside. It's been a bit of a thorn in my side that we never finished it. Another factor is that I just missed playing with those guys so much and missed recording with Tim at Louder Studios. Also, logistics finally lined up with Noel not being on tour with Sic Alps and Ethan had finally finished his “Russian Wilds” record so he could have some clear head space. I know three of these songs were on the lost Six Organs/Comets album from 2002. Why now? Two of those songs are electric versions of acoustic songs that are on older Holy Mountain records. I've actually performed them live and electric quite a bit over the years with various configurations of Six Organs, such as with Alex Neilson and Elisa Ambrogio, or John Moloney and Keith Wood. Once we even played “A Thousand Birds” with Elisa's dad on drums in Boston. That was pretty sick. “Even if You Knew” was a song that hadn't been played in ten years but it was always a favourite to play live. I refigured some of the lyrics to go with the theme of the record and bring it up to date with what we were feeling now. Did you have any great plans/influences/aims when you embarked on the sessions this time? The record has a vague storyline inspired by a dream that I had of a spacecraft being constructed by a moon. I realized that I keep doing these records that are influenced by ideas rather than stories, so I wanted to try my hand at something new. It doesn't have an explicit narrative that one could probably deduce from listening. My plan was to write the songs with the story as the backdrop. I won't give away the narrative behind it all, but it does have some themes that are pretty well spelled out by the record cover and the lyrics. I guess part of the adventure of being a musician is the possibilities presented by different groups of collaborators. But it must have been emotional and satisfying on some level to return to this gang? It was a blast to get together and make music again. The last time we were all in the same room was during the Sub Pop 20th anniversary festival in Seattle about five years ago. As soon as we all got together again and plugged in and just started riffing in the practice space it all came back as if no time had passed at all. I think when you are in a band that tours and plays together as much as Comets did it's natural that everyone respects each other's space, both musically and personally. I also feel that everyone plays a bit different in Six Organs than they would in Comets. For one, I do all the solos rather than Ethan and I trading off. Another thing is Noel plays guitar rather than manning a tower of noise. And of course I am doing the singing and writing of lyrics instead of Ethan. But besides all of that, the approach is a bit different. In Comets there was a thrust toward excess in all parts. In Six Organs there is an attempt to make a solid foundation on top of which to build that excess. What was it like to be leading the Comets, and how did Ethan adjust to playing your songs? When we got together for this project there was never a sense that we were Comets On Fire. We all played as Six Organs so it never felt as if I was leading Comets. I don't think Comets can be led. Comets is a 100 per cent democracy where any vote of negation from any one member can throw an entire idea out the window. Since this was Six Organs we just followed the lead of where the sound of Six Organs took us. Sometimes it feels as if Six Organs leads itself. I don't need to tell anyone what to do. I think Ethan brought a great sound to the record. His guitar is the one in the right channel and very reverbed out in a train-tunnel-doom-surf way. Since the songs were recorded live with all of in one room, sometimes we weren't even aware of how much we were playing off of each other at the time. When I listened back to the recording during mixing I definitely heard the subconscious connections that had been made over the years. On his blog, Ethan tells a story about you burying the master tapes of a session to dig up and release at a much later date. Have you really done that? I did that with one song a while ago. There was a song on “Luminous Night” that I recorded the basic tracks on a 4-track and then buried the cassette in the ground and dug it up a year later. Randall Dunn, who was recording the record at the time, had the idea to play it back on the 4-track running through a Sunn Model T at full volume and we recorded that, which became the song “Cover Your Wounds With The Sky”. I learned some things during the process that would make it much better the next time I do it, such as to not wind the tape up on the spools of the cassette so tight so next time I can get mould growing on the play-side of the tape. And at the risk of using Ethan as the source of all my questions, he says of those 2002 sessions, “There is this incredible blend of spiritualism and nihilism. I guess to me that’s often been the complex, struggling and overwhelming element of Six Organs in any of its forms, but I feel like that battle is laid out in a very raw and explicit duel in these three songs.” Is that something you agree with, especially with these new sessions? That's very nice of him to say and a bit curious. Ethan has that writer's way with descriptions that make things sound pretty glorious. That said, I wouldn't say I agree that spiritualism and nihilism are necessarily exclusive in the first place, but I guess that depends on how you define each of those terms. I don't equate dissonance, noise or non-melody to nihilism. Is Morton Feldman nihilistic? I'd say one of my goals in life is to fight nihilism and I see it in the hearts of more people than even know. But again, that’s my own definition. I find a lot of music to be truly nihilistic, even and especially when it is covered in a shiny and positive veneer. I make this the 13th Six Organs album. Crude questions, but how do you look back on your work so far, and can you identify which records you’re proudest of? Whoah. I had no idea I was working with such an unlucky number on this one. I don't think any one record jumps out ahead of the others for me. Mostly they just seem like placemarkers in time. I don't really hear them as things outside of when they were recorded. I guess it helps that I was living in a different city for each one, except for a small handful that were recorded in Santa Cruz. How does it compare jamming with this band and with Rangda? And is there another Rangda album in the pipeline? Rangda is a different beast entirely. For one, it's so new that it is still growing pretty fast, maybe comparable to what a child learns from the time it's born until four years old or so; it gets an identity, learns what is important, figures out how not to shit its pants, stuff like that. Actually, Rangda recorded our second record in February at Black Dirt Studios. It's called “Formerly Extinct” and is coming out in September on Drag City. I feel we made huge leaps in how we play together over the last couple years. I mean, that first record was recorded after we had only jammed once, which is what gives it so much energy but the new songs have a much more nasty vibe going on. What’s next? Any chance of Six Organs/Comets dates? Six Organs and Rangda will be touring separately in the UK and Europe in October. The Six Organs show will be with a small band made up of some of the Comets guys. As for Comets itself, that is really up in the air as far as what might happen. I definitely wouldn't rule anything out. We certainly had a great time recording “Ascent”. And oh yeah, whatever happened to acid folk? I think it's probably doing pretty well in the underground. As long as it doesn't poke its head above ground, it will be fine.

Been talking for a while now about how I think Six Organs Of Admittance’s “Ascent” is one of the best albums of 2012, and I’ve finally written about it at length in the new issue of Uncut. Anyhow, Ben Chasny responded to a bunch of questions I sent over with a characteristic diligence, and I figured it was worth posting the whole exchange here.

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

Can you tell us how the reunion with Comets On Fire came about?

I should say that I’ve never really considered Comets to have broken up. We truly are just on a hiatus. We don’t live close to each other any more and there are families and jobs and other projects to consider. It’s more a matter of logistics. This record came about because we were supposed to have recorded an electric record under the Six Organs name ten years ago, but then I joined Comets instead, so the project fell by the wayside. It’s been a bit of a thorn in my side that we never finished it. Another factor is that I just missed playing with those guys so much and missed recording with Tim at Louder Studios. Also, logistics finally lined up with Noel not being on tour with Sic Alps and Ethan had finally finished his “Russian Wilds” record so he could have some clear head space.

I know three of these songs were on the lost Six Organs/Comets album from 2002. Why now?

Two of those songs are electric versions of acoustic songs that are on older Holy Mountain records. I’ve actually performed them live and electric quite a bit over the years with various configurations of Six Organs, such as with Alex Neilson and Elisa Ambrogio, or John Moloney and Keith Wood. Once we even played “A Thousand Birds” with Elisa’s dad on drums in Boston. That was pretty sick. “Even if You Knew” was a song that hadn’t been played in ten years but it was always a favourite to play live. I refigured some of the lyrics to go with the theme of the record and bring it up to date with what we were feeling now.

Did you have any great plans/influences/aims when you embarked on the sessions this time?

The record has a vague storyline inspired by a dream that I had of a spacecraft being constructed by a moon. I realized that I keep doing these records that are influenced by ideas rather than stories, so I wanted to try my hand at something new. It doesn’t have an explicit narrative that one could probably deduce from listening. My plan was to write the songs with the story as the backdrop. I won’t give away the narrative behind it all, but it does have some themes that are pretty well spelled out by the record cover and the lyrics.

I guess part of the adventure of being a musician is the possibilities presented by different groups of collaborators. But it must have been emotional and satisfying on some level to return to this gang?

It was a blast to get together and make music again. The last time we were all in the same room was during the Sub Pop 20th anniversary festival in Seattle about five years ago. As soon as we all got together again and plugged in and just started riffing in the practice space it all came back as if no time had passed at all. I think when you are in a band that tours and plays together as much as Comets did it’s natural that everyone respects each other’s space, both musically and personally. I also feel that everyone plays a bit different in Six Organs than they would in Comets. For one, I do all the solos rather than Ethan and I trading off. Another thing is Noel plays guitar rather than manning a tower of noise. And of course I am doing the singing and writing of lyrics instead of Ethan. But besides all of that, the approach is a bit different. In Comets there was a thrust toward excess in all parts. In Six Organs there is an attempt to make a solid foundation on top of which to build that excess.

What was it like to be leading the Comets, and how did Ethan adjust to playing your songs?

When we got together for this project there was never a sense that we were Comets On Fire. We all played as Six Organs so it never felt as if I was leading Comets. I don’t think Comets can be led. Comets is a 100 per cent democracy where any vote of negation from any one member can throw an entire idea out the window. Since this was Six Organs we just followed the lead of where the sound of Six Organs took us. Sometimes it feels as if Six Organs leads itself. I don’t need to tell anyone what to do. I think Ethan brought a great sound to the record. His guitar is the one in the right channel and very reverbed out in a train-tunnel-doom-surf way. Since the songs were recorded live with all of in one room, sometimes we weren’t even aware of how much we were playing off of each other at the time. When I listened back to the recording during mixing I definitely heard the subconscious connections that had been made over the years.

On his blog, Ethan tells a story about you burying the master tapes of a session to dig up and release at a much later date. Have you really done that?

I did that with one song a while ago. There was a song on “Luminous Night” that I recorded the basic tracks on a 4-track and then buried the cassette in the ground and dug it up a year later. Randall Dunn, who was recording the record at the time, had the idea to play it back on the 4-track running through a Sunn Model T at full volume and we recorded that, which became the song “Cover Your Wounds With The Sky”. I learned some things during the process that would make it much better the next time I do it, such as to not wind the tape up on the spools of the cassette so tight so next time I can get mould growing on the play-side of the tape.

And at the risk of using Ethan as the source of all my questions, he says of those 2002 sessions, “There is this incredible blend of spiritualism and nihilism. I guess to me that’s often been the complex, struggling and overwhelming element of Six Organs in any of its forms, but I feel like that battle is laid out in a very raw and explicit duel in these three songs.” Is that something you agree with, especially with these new sessions?

That’s very nice of him to say and a bit curious. Ethan has that writer’s way with descriptions that make things sound pretty glorious. That said, I wouldn’t say I agree that spiritualism and nihilism are necessarily exclusive in the first place, but I guess that depends on how you define each of those terms. I don’t equate dissonance, noise or non-melody to nihilism. Is Morton Feldman nihilistic? I’d say one of my goals in life is to fight nihilism and I see it in the hearts of more people than even know. But again, that’s my own definition. I find a lot of music to be truly nihilistic, even and especially when it is covered in a shiny and positive veneer.

I make this the 13th Six Organs album. Crude questions, but how do you look back on your work so far, and can you identify which records you’re proudest of?

Whoah. I had no idea I was working with such an unlucky number on this one. I don’t think any one record jumps out ahead of the others for me. Mostly they just seem like placemarkers in time. I don’t really hear them as things outside of when they were recorded. I guess it helps that I was living in a different city for each one, except for a small handful that were recorded in Santa Cruz.

How does it compare jamming with this band and with Rangda? And is there another Rangda album in the pipeline?

Rangda is a different beast entirely. For one, it’s so new that it is still growing pretty fast, maybe comparable to what a child learns from the time it’s born until four years old or so; it gets an identity, learns what is important, figures out how not to shit its pants, stuff like that. Actually, Rangda recorded our second record in February at Black Dirt Studios. It’s called “Formerly Extinct” and is coming out in September on Drag City. I feel we made huge leaps in how we play together over the last couple years. I mean, that first record was recorded after we had only jammed once, which is what gives it so much energy but the new songs have a much more nasty vibe going on.

What’s next? Any chance of Six Organs/Comets dates?

Six Organs and Rangda will be touring separately in the UK and Europe in October. The Six Organs show will be with a small band made up of some of the Comets guys. As for Comets itself, that is really up in the air as far as what might happen. I definitely wouldn’t rule anything out. We certainly had a great time recording “Ascent”.

And oh yeah, whatever happened to acid folk?

I think it’s probably doing pretty well in the underground. As long as it doesn’t poke its head above ground, it will be fine.

Ex-Guns N’ Roses guitarist Slash announces full October UK tour

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Former Guns N' Roses guitarist Slash has announced a full UK solo tour for later this year. The guitarist, who released his second solo album Apocalyptic Love in May, will play five shows across the UK in October. The gigs begin in Edinburgh at the city's Corn Exchange on October 7 and run until October 15 when the guitarist and his band headline Newcastle's O2 Academy. The run of gigs also includes shows in Manchester, Birmingham and London. 'Apocalyptic Love' features 13 songs, all of which feature Alter Bridge frontman Myles Kennedy on vocals. Kennedy is touring alongside Slash throughout the album's promotional world tour with his band Myles Kennedy And The Conspirators. Slash recently completed a full European tour, which included an appearance at this summer's Download Festival and a one-off show at London's HMV Hammersmith Apollo on June 6. Slash will play: Edinburgh Corn Exchange (October 7) O2 Apollo Manchester (8) Birmingham National Indoor Arena (9) O2 Academy Brixton (11) O2 Academy Newcastle (15) Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12-month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks! PIC CREDIT: MARC VILLALONGA

Former Guns N’ Roses guitarist Slash has announced a full UK solo tour for later this year.

The guitarist, who released his second solo album Apocalyptic Love in May, will play five shows across the UK in October.

The gigs begin in Edinburgh at the city’s Corn Exchange on October 7 and run until October 15 when the guitarist and his band headline Newcastle’s O2 Academy. The run of gigs also includes shows in Manchester, Birmingham and London.

‘Apocalyptic Love’ features 13 songs, all of which feature Alter Bridge frontman Myles Kennedy on vocals. Kennedy is touring alongside Slash throughout the album’s promotional world tour with his band Myles Kennedy And The Conspirators.

Slash recently completed a full European tour, which included an appearance at this summer’s Download Festival and a one-off show at London’s HMV Hammersmith Apollo on June 6.

Slash will play:

Edinburgh Corn Exchange (October 7)

O2 Apollo Manchester (8)

Birmingham National Indoor Arena (9)

O2 Academy Brixton (11)

O2 Academy Newcastle (15)

Please fill in our quick survey about Uncut – and you could win a 12-month subscription to the magazine. Click here to see the survey. Thanks!

PIC CREDIT: MARC VILLALONGA