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Dave Grohl reveals ABBA influence on new Foo Fighters album

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Foo Fighters' new album 'Wasting Light' was inspired by ABBA and The Bee Gees, Dave Grohl has said. With former Nirvana producer Butch Vig at the helm, Grohl has described 'Wasting Light' as the band's heaviest album yet. But according to The Daily Star that didn't stop him from looking towards Swe...

Foo Fighters‘ new album ‘Wasting Light’ was inspired by ABBA and The Bee Gees, Dave Grohl has said.

With former Nirvana producer Butch Vig at the helm, Grohl has described ‘Wasting Light’ as the band’s heaviest album yet. But according to The Daily Star that didn’t stop him from looking towards Swedish pop for inspiration.

“I like loads of crazy-ass, dissonant, distorted rock ‘n’ roll,” he said. “But I also love The Bee Gees and Abba, bands whose pop choruses get bigger and bigger. I love anthemic choruses, that overwhelming feeling of release that you can connect with.”

He added: “So whenever I thought I had a big enough chorus for a song, I would use that as the pre-chorus and then I would try and write something even bigger, like they did.”

Foo Fighters recently made ‘Wasting Light’ available to hear in full online. The album – their seventh studio LP – will be officially released on April 11.

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My Morning Jacket announce June release of ‘Circuital’

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My Morning Jacket have revealed plans to release their sixth album, ‘Circuital’, on June 6. Recorded in the gymnasium of a church in Louisville, the ten track album is the band’s first full length release since 2008’s ‘Evil Urges’. “I hate the phrase ‘going back to our roots’, ...

My Morning Jacket have revealed plans to release their sixth album, ‘Circuital’, on June 6.

Recorded in the gymnasium of a church in Louisville, the ten track album is the band’s first full length release since 2008’s ‘Evil Urges’.

“I hate the phrase ‘going back to our roots’, but for this record we came home and made it in Kentucky,” explains frontman Jim James. “And it just felt a lot like it did when we were first starting out.”

James co-produced the record with Tucker Martine.

The pair first worked together when James appeared on Laura Veirs‘ album ‘July Flame’ last year, which MartineVeirs’ husband – also produced.

My Morning Jacket will play London’s Somerset House on July 16 and Latitude Festival in Southwold on July 17.

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INXS to headline brand new London festival

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INXS are set to headline the very first Southern Sounds festival, due to take place on London’s Clapham Common on June 11. The brand new festival will celebrate music by bands from the southern hemisphere. So far INXS are the only band on the bill to be revealed. INXS is currently fronted by Ca...

INXS are set to headline the very first Southern Sounds festival, due to take place on London’s Clapham Common on June 11.

The brand new festival will celebrate music by bands from the southern hemisphere.

So far INXS are the only band on the bill to be revealed.

INXS is currently fronted by Canadian born singer J.D. Fortune, who secured his place in the band after winning the 2005 reality TV show Rock Star: INXS.

The Australian band’s former frontman Michael Hutchence died in 1997.

For more information on the festival, visit southernsoundsfestival.com

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Dave Gilmour to join Roger Waters for new Pink Floyd performance

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Rogers Waters has revealed that he is planning to perform a Pink Floyd song with ex-bandmate David Gilmour live this year. The UK leg of his The Wall Live European tour starts on May 11. The elaborate show - based on Pink Floyd's 1980/81 tour of their 1979 album 'The Wall' - will play for six nigh...

Rogers Waters has revealed that he is planning to perform a Pink Floyd song with ex-bandmate David Gilmour live this year.

The UK leg of his The Wall Live European tour starts on May 11.

The elaborate show – based on Pink Floyd‘s 1980/81 tour of their 1979 album ‘The Wall’ – will play for six nights at London O2 Arena, on May 11, 12, 14, 15, 17, and 18. It will then hit the Manchester MEN Arena on May 20 and 21.

“I think it’s beginning to look now as if he’ll [Gilmour] do one gig,” Waters said. “He’ll do ‘Comfortably Numb’ at one gig. It’s a big secret when.”

In an interview with Sky News Waters added that the tour, which sees a 240ft-wide and 35ft-tall wall being dismantled throughout the show, will most likely be the last time he does anything of a similar scale.

“Constructing something like this indoors – I’ll probably never do anything this big again, the technology of projection we’ve used in this show is breathtaking,” he said.

He added: “When we split up David and Nick [Mason, drummer] ended up with the name [of the band] and I ended up with ‘The Wall’ and everything to do with it and a few quid.”

The band briefly reformed in 2005 for Live 8.

Mason recently spoke out about his hopes that one day the whole band will reform for more live shows.

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Fleet Foxes join December ATP festival bill

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Fleet Foxes have been added to the line-up for December's All Tomorrow's Parties festival at Butlin's, Minehead. The event is being curated by Neutral Milk Hotel's Jeff Mangum and takes place on December 2-4. Fleet Foxes, who release new album 'Helplessness Blues' on May 2, are joined on the bill ...

Fleet Foxes have been added to the line-up for December’s All Tomorrow’s Parties festival at Butlin’s, Minehead.

The event is being curated by Neutral Milk Hotel‘s Jeff Mangum and takes place on December 2-4.

Fleet Foxes, who release new album ‘Helplessness Blues’ on May 2, are joined on the bill by Mike Watt and George Hurley, who will perform the songs of their former band Minutemen.

Also newly added to the line-up are Robyn Hitchcock, Group Inerane, Yann Tiersen, Elephant 6 Holiday Surprise and Half Japanese.

Scratch Acid, meanwhile, will play their first show since their 1987 split.

See Atpfestival.com for more information.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Arctic Monkeys announce first single from ‘Suck It And See’

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Arctic Monkeys have announced that 'Don't Sit Down 'Cause I've Moved Your Chair' will be the first single from their new album 'Suck It And See'. The band will release the track digitally on April 11. They will also release a limited-edition white-label seven-inch vinyl version on Record Store Day...

Arctic Monkeys have announced that ‘Don’t Sit Down ‘Cause I’ve Moved Your Chair’ will be the first single from their new album ‘Suck It And See’.

The band will release the track digitally on April 11. They will also release a limited-edition white-label seven-inch vinyl version on Record Store Day, April 16.

That vinyl version features ‘Brick By Brick’, a song they have posted online already, as its B-side.

The single will also then be released formally on May 30 on standard seven- and ten-inch vinyl single formats. These and the full digital release will feature new B-sides ‘The Blond-O-Sonic Shimmer Trap’ and ‘I.D.S.T.’, neither of which appear on the new album.

‘Suck It And See’ is released on June 6.

Queens Of The Stone Age’s Josh Homme has contributed backing vocals to one song on it.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Jane’s Addiction debut first song with Dave Sitek

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Jane's Addiction have debuted their first song featuring TV On The Radio man Dave Sitck on bass. Listen to the song, 'End To The Lies', by scrolling down and clicking below. It was played first in Chilean radio. Sitek helped write the band's new album, 'The Great Escape Artist' as well as playing ...

Jane’s Addiction have debuted their first song featuring TV On The Radio man Dave Sitck on bass.

Listen to the song, ‘End To The Lies’, by scrolling down and clicking below. It was played first in Chilean radio.

Sitek helped write the band’s new album, ‘The Great Escape Artist’ as well as playing bass on it. The album is expected to be released this summer.

Muse and Glasvegas producer Rich Costey has been done production work on the album.

Singer Perry Farrell has said that the band were “fully immersed in the process of making modern music. It has been a great experience thus far, and the results have so much potential.”

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Graham Coxon, Paloma Faith and Bill Ryder-Jones’ Converse song out next month

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Graham Coxon, Paloma Faith and ex-The Coral guitarist Bill Ryder-Jones' new collaboration song is coming out next month. The song, commissioned by the Converse shoe company, is called 'Desire' and will be available to download from Converse.co.uk on April 5. Blur guitarist Coxon told NME that he w...

Graham Coxon, Paloma Faith and ex-The Coral guitarist Bill Ryder-Jones‘ new collaboration song is coming out next month.

The song, commissioned by the Converse shoe company, is called ‘Desire’ and will be available to download from Converse.co.uk on April 5.

Blur guitarist Coxon told NME that he was excited about the opportunity to work with singer Faith.

“It’s like kinda tripped out voodoo sort of London town thing,” he said of the song.

He added: “I’ve always liked the idea of me actually writing songs and girls singing them, and I’d seen Paloma on TV and thought, ‘Wow man, she’s crackers!’. And I was always a fan of The Coral – I used to watch them live. Bill‘s a very good guitarist.”

He also said he had a few fears about accepting the corporate cash to record the song for Converse.

“I did have to ask people when I first got involved in it,” he admitted. “Whether its kosher or it isn’t… I mean, where I come from – ‘indie land’ 20 years ago – you didn’t do stuff like that.”

He added: “But I’m quite happy now. Especially now the song’s coming out and working with Bill and Paloma.”

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Foo Fighters to screen documentary in UK and Ireland cinemas

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Foo Fighters will screen their new documentary Back And Forth in UK and Ireland cinemas for one night only next month. The documentary, the trailer for which you can watch by scrolling down and clicking below, chronicles the band's career from 1994 through to present day. It will be shown in over ...

Foo Fighters will screen their new documentary Back And Forth in UK and Ireland cinemas for one night only next month.

The documentary, the trailer for which you can watch by scrolling down and clicking below, chronicles the band’s career from 1994 through to present day.

It will be shown in over 100 towns and cities across the country on April 7, with all showings starting at 8pm (BST). See Intl.foofightersfilm.com for details and listings.

The film will also be screened at number of venues in mainland Europe.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6-tS8mlfEKM

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Radiohead newspaper writer reveals themes of ‘The Universal Sigh’

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Jay Griffiths, one of the contributers to Radiohead's recently-distributed free newspaper, has spoken to NME about the themes the band wanted for the publication. On Monday (March 28) free copies of the newspaper, The Universal Sigh, were distributed around the world. Frontman Thom Yorke personally...

Jay Griffiths, one of the contributers to Radiohead‘s recently-distributed free newspaper, has spoken to NME about the themes the band wanted for the publication.

On Monday (March 28) free copies of the newspaper, The Universal Sigh, were distributed around the world. Frontman Thom Yorke personally handed out copies in London.

Author Jay Griffiths wrote an article entitled ‘Forests Of The Mind’ for the newspaper. She told NME that the band gave her a simple brief for her work.

“All they said was that it was going to be a free newspaper given out internationally about woods, trees and forests,” she explained. “That really was about it, which was fantastic because that meant we could take it wherever we wanted to.”

She added: “I’ve written loads about the Amazon, the forests in West Papua and the importance of trees and woodlands in general and so it wasn’t an unfamiliar topic to me.”

Read the full interview with Griffiths at NME.COM/blogs now.

Griffiths is also the author of Wild: An Elemental Journey.

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Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

The 12th Uncut Playlist Of 2011

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All about Virender Sehwag as I type, but I’ve also just taken delivery of a bunch of new Mego releases that look great, including the Mark McGuire comp that’s playing now. In other news, the White Denim album doesn’t exactly get any worse, and there’s a new Purling Hiss split single out for Record Store Day. And a pile of post on my desk I should dig into now. And there we go, Sehwag’s gone… 1 Autechre – EPs 1991-2002 (Warp) 2 Psychedelic Horseshit – Laced (fatCat) 3 Wet Hair – In Vogue Spirit (De Stijl) 4 White Denim – D (Downtown) 5 Flaming Lips/Neon Indian – Is David Bowie Dying? (Warner Bros) 6 Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues (Bella Union) 7 White Hills – H – p1 (Thrill Jockey) 8 David Bowie – Toy (Bootleg) 9 Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band – Live At The Main Point, 1975 (Leftfield Media) 10 Purling Hiss/Puffy Areolas – Walking Down The Street/ My Hell (Permanent) 11 Thurston Moore – Demolished Thoughts (Matador) 12 Goran Kajfes – X/Y (Headspin) 13 Sohail Rana – Khyber Mail (Finders Keepers) 14 Loudon Wainwright III – 40 Odd Years (Shout Factory) 15 Mark McGuire – A Young Person’s Guide To Mark McGuire (Editions Mego)

All about Virender Sehwag as I type, but I’ve also just taken delivery of a bunch of new Mego releases that look great, including the Mark McGuire comp that’s playing now.

Muse to play ‘Origin Of Symmetry’ in full at Reading And Leeds Festivals

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Muse are planning to play their 'Origin Of Symmetry' album in full at the Reading And Leeds Festivals this summer, according to Matt Bellamy. The frontman had already stated that the band's headline sets would draw heavily from their 2001 album. He also said that the shows would be the last time s...

Muse are planning to play their ‘Origin Of Symmetry’ album in full at the Reading And Leeds Festivals this summer, according to Matt Bellamy.

The frontman had already stated that the band’s headline sets would draw heavily from their 2001 album. He also said that the shows would be the last time some of those songs were played live.

Now he has tweeted that the Devon trio will be playing the 2001 album, their second, from start to finish.

He wrote from Twitter.com/bellamy_matt: “So we’ll probably play ‘Origin…’ in its entirety (as well other songs) at Reading/Leeds as it will be 10 years since it came out.”

The Reading And Leeds Festivals take place on August 26–28. Muse headline the Friday night (26) at Leeds and the Sunday night (28) at Reading.

My Chemical Romance, The Strokes and Pulp will also play headline slots.

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Beady Eye confirmed for Somerset House gig

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Beady Eye, Hurts, Eels and Professor Green are among the acts confirmed to play this year's Summer Series at Somerset House gigs in London. The gigs take place in the courtyard of the central London outdoor venue from July 7-17. Blondie, Lamb and My Morning Jacket will also play shows as part of th...

Beady Eye, Hurts, Eels and Professor Green are among the acts confirmed to play this year’s Summer Series at Somerset House gigs in London.

The gigs take place in the courtyard of the central London outdoor venue from July 7-17. Blondie, Lamb and My Morning Jacket will also play shows as part of the series.

The Summer Series at Somerset House line-up is:

Eels (July 7)

Professor Green (8)

Stornoway (9)

Aloe Blacc (10)

Imelda May (11)

Beady Eye (12)

Blondie (13)

Hurts (14)

Ellie Goulding (15)

Lamb (16)

My Morning Jacket (17)

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Radiohead to release new single for Record Store Day

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Radiohead are to release a new single for Record Store Day. The band are releasing two new songs, 'Supercollider' and 'The Butcher', on April 16 to mark the international celebration of record stores. There are expected to be 2,000 copies of the seven-inch vinyl single available and it is rumoured ...

Radiohead are to release a new single for Record Store Day.

The band are releasing two new songs, ‘Supercollider’ and ‘The Butcher’, on April 16 to mark the international celebration of record stores. There are expected to be 2,000 copies of the seven-inch vinyl single available and it is rumoured to cost £10.

Yesterday (March 28), free copies of the band’s newspaper The Universal Sigh were handed out around the world. Frontman Thom Yorke personally dished out copies in London.

Beastie Boys, Gorillaz and Jack White are among the other acts putting out vinyl releases for Record Store Day.

Radiohead‘s latest album ‘The King Of Limbs’ has also been released physically this week (March 28).

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Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Terry Riley, Tim Hecker, Autechre

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A certain grouchy state of mind this morning almost compelled me to break my own if-you-can’t-say-anything-nice-don’t-say-anything-at-all rule for the blog and post a list of disappointing albums of 2011. Instead, though, I figured it’d be much more constructive to round up a few things worth investing in. First up, as I may have said before, I’ve probably played Terry Riley’s music more than that of any other artist over the past few years, so the appearance of a legal bootleg from him on www.wolfgangsvault.com is a big deal. “Great American Music Hall (San Francisco, CA) Apr 23, 1983” is a group performance that hooks up Riley with frequent collaborator George Brooks on sax, plus a bassist and sitar player, with Riley on synths and singing in his best approximation of Pandit Pran Nath’s just intonation. The closest reference point in Riley’s discography that I can think of is maybe the “Lifespan” soundtrack, with its explicit Indo-fusion vibes, but the long unravelling contemplation is also happily close to “Persian Surgery Dervishes” and “Descending Moonshine Dervishes”. Not the worst place to start, either, if you’re just embarking on an exploration of Riley’s music. I’ve alluded to Tim Hecker’s “Ravedeath 1972” a bunch of times over the past few weeks, so God knows why I haven’t written something proper about this excellent record. Perhaps because Hecker’s particularly billowing take on ambience is hard to write about and pin down, not least since his music seems relatively unanchored: there’s no easy list of kosmische antecedents to deploy here, for instance. Last time I blogged on Hecker, around “An Imagined Country”, I wrote some about Fennesz and claimed, “Hecker achieves a tremulous, devotional atmosphere, using some reverberant organ tones.” On “Ravedeath 1972”, that idea is even more pronounced, since many of the tones in these atmospheric pieces originated from him playing an old church pipe organ. The resulting music, as a consequence, has the signifiers of ritual and requiem, while at the same time being pretty abstract. Still struggling a bit here, as you may have deduced, but I really can’t recommend this one enough – possibilities, even, that it may end up as one of the albums of the year. Moving unsteadily on to more music that’s tough to write about, I received a fantastically austere-looking boxset last week of Autechre’s “EPs 1991-2002”. I must admit my interest in Autechre has waned a little over the past few years, but listening back to these consistently amazing tracks makes me want to dig out the whole album catalogue from home and revisit it all. The biggest revelation, I guess, has been rediscovering just how ravey and direct their early singles sound; these self-consciously ‘futuristic’ workouts that still - in the wake of IDM, braindance and apparently infinite meaningless sub-genres of electronic music – sound progressive the best part of 20 years down the line. Here, on the likes of “Cavity Job” and “Basscadet”, is the hip-hop influence they’ve always talked about writ large, or at least much larger than in the days of granular synthesis (a quick check on the ATP website has just reminded me that their massively stimulating All Tomorrow’s Parties lineup included Public Enemy as well as Bernard Parmegiani and most of the early 21st Century Mego roster). Great stuff, anyhow, and I’m currently stuck on the immense “Second Peng”. There we go: always better to accentuate the positive.

A certain grouchy state of mind this morning almost compelled me to break my own if-you-can’t-say-anything-nice-don’t-say-anything-at-all rule for the blog and post a list of disappointing albums of 2011. Instead, though, I figured it’d be much more constructive to round up a few things worth investing in.

Ask Iggy!

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As Iggy Pop prepares for a trip to the UK to play the Hop Farm festival in July with the Stooges, Iggy will appear in Uncut as part of our regular "Audience With" feature. So, is there anything you've always wanted to ask him? Can we expect more jazz albums? Apart from himself, who's his favourite Detroit musician? What news of the Iggy biopic? Send your questions to us by Wednesday, March 30 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com The best questions, and Iggy's answers will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question!

As Iggy Pop prepares for a trip to the UK to play the Hop Farm festival in July with the Stooges, Iggy will appear in Uncut as part of our regular “Audience With” feature.

So, is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask him?

Can we expect more jazz albums?

Apart from himself, who’s his favourite Detroit musician?

What news of the Iggy biopic?

Send your questions to us by Wednesday, March 30 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com

The best questions, and Iggy’s answers will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question!

Amy Winehouse’s Tony Bennett duet to come out in September

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Amy Winehouse's duet with Tony Bennett is set to see the light of day in September. The 'Back To Black' singer is among a list of artists including Mariah Carey, Sheryl Crow and Norah Jones who appear on Bennett's 'Duets II' album, out on September 19. Details of the song Winehouse and Bennett tac...

Amy Winehouse‘s duet with Tony Bennett is set to see the light of day in September.

The ‘Back To Black’ singer is among a list of artists including Mariah Carey, Sheryl Crow and Norah Jones who appear on Bennett‘s ‘Duets II’ album, out on September 19.

Details of the song Winehouse and Bennett tackle have not been released yet – nor any further details of the album’s tracklisting.

The song will be the first recorded output to feature Winehouse‘s voice since she provided vocals for Mark Ronson‘s cover of The Zutons‘Valerie’ in 2007.

She is currently thought to be recording a new album and has one live appearance scheduled for the summer, at July’s BBK Festival in Bilbao.

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Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Radiohead giving away free newspapers to tie in with ‘The King Of Limbs’

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Radiohead are set to dish out their own free newspaper, The Universal Sigh, later this month around the world. The band are giving out the newspapers to tie in with the physical release of their new album, 'The King Of Limbs'. It comes out in the UK on CD and vinyl on March 28. They've set up a we...

Radiohead are set to dish out their own free newspaper, The Universal Sigh, later this month around the world.

The band are giving out the newspapers to tie in with the physical release of their new album, ‘The King Of Limbs’. It comes out in the UK on CD and vinyl on March 28.

They’ve set up a website, Theuniversalsigh.com, featuring a list of some of the countries it will be available in and a guide to where fans can pick up a copy.

The band haven’t said what content the newspaper will boast, but a picture of it is up on Pitchfork.com.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Brett Anderson confirms that Suede are working on new material

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Suede have confirmed they are writing new material - but also that they may never release it. Speaking to Rolling Stone Indonesia, singer Brett Anderson said that though the band were working on new songs they won't release them unless they are "outstanding". "I wouldn't want to make another reco...

Suede have confirmed they are writing new material – but also that they may never release it.

Speaking to Rolling Stone Indonesia, singer Brett Anderson said that though the band were working on new songs they won’t release them unless they are “outstanding”.

“I wouldn’t want to make another record that I look back on and regretted again,” he said. “Whether anyone else hears what we’ve been writing recently isn’t set in stone. Unless it turns out to be outstanding, then no-one will ever hear it.”

Anderson also said that the decision over whether to release new material would decide the band’s future.

Asked about playing with Suede beyond the summer, he said: “It depends on what happens with writing. I don’t know how long you can go tour with playing songs from the past.”

Suede are confirmed to headline this summer’s Latitude Festival and are also scheduled to play three shows at London‘s O2 Academy Brixton on May 19, 20 and 21.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

TRAFFIC – JOHN BARLEYCORN MUST DIE DELUXE EDITION

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Towards the end of 1969, Traffic had ground to a standstill. The ever-errant Dave Mason had left for the second time during the making of 1968’s Traffic. The remaining group gradually dispersed to the four winds, following the gusts of change that so unsettled rock and pop at the end of the decade: drummer and lyricist Jim Capaldi and all-purpose hornster/flautist Chris Wood blowing into a raft of session work, Steve Winwood joining Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker in Blind Faith, and later briefly volunteering for Baker’s Air Force. But Winwood had also conceived of a solo album, working title ‘Mad Shadows’, featuring him on everything. However, the loneliness of the studio didn’t agree with him, and in February he reconnected with Capaldi and Wood, booked time at Island and Olympic Studios, and began what would become Traffic’s most consistent album. With three tracks per side, and barely stretching to 35 minutes, John Barleycorn Must Die is short, almost an EP by today’s measures. It’s a trio record with an economical sound canvas, occasionally – as on “Stranger To Himself” and “Every Mother’s Son” – reduced to a duet of Winwood and Capaldi, and this new remaster reveals more detail in Winwood’s background shadings of silted-up organ and electric piano, engorged occasionally into fuzzy red levels. The title is misleading, calculated, no doubt, to chime in with the pastoral mood of the times. 1970, of course, falls bang into the great phase of British rural psychedelia and folk-rock: the foundational year of Steeleye Span, a time when the likes of Forest, Trees, Fairport Convention, Vashti Bunyan, Led Zeppelin and many others were all lacing their moonshine music with inspiration from real or imagined communion with Britain’s folkloric heartland. By making “John Barleycorn” the flagship song, Traffic – sometime residents of a suitably psychedelic rural retreat in Aston Tirrold, Berkshire – were making a last effort to harvest some fashionably rustic associations. That’s backed up by the engraving of a bushel of barley on the front cover, on background of ochre burlap, and lettering in a kitschy log-based font. But in truth, John Barleycorn is a much more sophisticated affair, pointing more towards jazz and improvisation than folkish simplicity. Their arrangement of the song is a beautiful and economical one, the slightly soured tuning on the acoustic guitar offset by Chris Wood’s gorgeous, flighty flute trills. And yet the opening instrumental “Glad” is far from folk-rock. Slamming in with a Motown-style backbeat ticked off on the rim, Winwood’s piano is spiced like a cocktail snack, a soul-jazz lick flavour alternating with horn-stings and Wood’s ‘electric saxophone’, doubled through wah-wah and distortion pedals, creating a psychedelic dialogue with the acoustic instruments. The maudlin “Freedom Rider” is the album’s weak link, while “Empty Pages” – “A song about boredom” as it’s introduced live – rolls amiably on some very tight drum work from Capaldi. On “Stranger To Himself” Winwood plays all instruments, from the expansive drum pattern to interjections on electric guitar and a sitar-like acoustic. “Every Mother’s Son” features some of his finest organ playing, wrapping the whole song in a pearly marmalade comfort blanket. Traffic showed flagging interest in digging where contemporary folk-rockers delved, and from here on their music became a cosmopolitan, auditorium-funk gumbo. The November 1970 Fillmore East live material included on the second disc doesn’t even include “John Barleycorn” in the setlist. After a minute and a half of dressing-room ambience, Bill Graham announces, “In association with Her Majesty the Queen… we bring you Traffic”. It’s an electrifying set – including new track “Medicated Goo” and a 14-minute, loose-limbed medley of “Glad” and “Freedom Rider”, that only sags on the lumbering “Who Knows What Tomorrow May Bring”. Even if they didn’t subsequently embrace the folk mythos, the pagan spirit of John Barleycorn worked its ancient magic upon the group, resurrecting these “three men came out of the west”, and granting them another four circuits of the sun. ROB YOUNG

Towards the end of 1969, Traffic had ground to a standstill. The ever-errant Dave Mason had left for the second time during the making of 1968’s Traffic. The remaining group gradually dispersed to the four winds, following the gusts of change that so unsettled rock and pop at the end of the decade: drummer and lyricist Jim Capaldi and all-purpose hornster/flautist Chris Wood blowing into a raft of session work, Steve Winwood joining Eric Clapton and Ginger Baker in Blind Faith, and later briefly volunteering for Baker’s Air Force.

But Winwood had also conceived of a solo album, working title ‘Mad Shadows’, featuring him on everything. However, the loneliness of the studio didn’t agree with him, and in February he reconnected with Capaldi and Wood, booked time at Island and Olympic Studios, and began what would become Traffic’s most consistent album.

With three tracks per side, and barely stretching to 35 minutes, John Barleycorn Must Die is short, almost an EP by today’s measures. It’s a trio record with an economical sound canvas, occasionally – as on “Stranger To Himself” and “Every Mother’s Son” – reduced to a duet of Winwood and Capaldi, and this new remaster reveals more detail in Winwood’s background shadings of silted-up organ and electric piano, engorged occasionally into fuzzy red levels.

The title is misleading, calculated, no doubt, to chime in with the pastoral mood of the times. 1970, of course, falls bang into the great phase of British rural psychedelia and folk-rock: the foundational year of Steeleye Span, a time when the likes of Forest, Trees, Fairport Convention, Vashti Bunyan, Led Zeppelin and many others were all lacing their moonshine music with inspiration from real or imagined communion with Britain’s folkloric heartland. By making “John Barleycorn” the flagship song, Traffic – sometime residents of a suitably psychedelic rural retreat in Aston Tirrold, Berkshire – were making a last effort to harvest some fashionably rustic associations. That’s backed up by the engraving of a bushel of barley on the front cover, on background of ochre burlap, and lettering in a kitschy log-based font.

But in truth, John Barleycorn is a much more sophisticated affair, pointing more towards jazz and improvisation than folkish simplicity. Their arrangement of the song is a beautiful and economical one, the slightly soured tuning on the acoustic guitar offset by Chris Wood’s gorgeous, flighty flute trills.

And yet the opening instrumental “Glad” is far from folk-rock. Slamming in with a Motown-style backbeat ticked off on the rim, Winwood’s piano is spiced like a cocktail snack, a soul-jazz lick flavour alternating with horn-stings and Wood’s ‘electric saxophone’, doubled through wah-wah and distortion pedals, creating a psychedelic dialogue with the acoustic instruments.

The maudlin “Freedom Rider” is the album’s weak link, while “Empty Pages” – “A song about boredom” as it’s introduced live – rolls amiably on some very tight drum work from Capaldi. On “Stranger To Himself” Winwood plays all instruments, from the expansive drum pattern to interjections on electric guitar and a sitar-like acoustic. “Every Mother’s Son” features some of his finest organ playing, wrapping the whole song in a pearly marmalade comfort blanket.

Traffic showed flagging interest in digging where contemporary folk-rockers delved, and from here on their music became a cosmopolitan, auditorium-funk gumbo. The November 1970 Fillmore East live material included on the second disc doesn’t even include “John Barleycorn” in the setlist. After a minute and a half of dressing-room ambience, Bill Graham announces, “In association with Her Majesty the Queen… we bring you Traffic”. It’s an electrifying set – including new track “Medicated Goo” and a 14-minute, loose-limbed medley of “Glad” and “Freedom Rider”, that only sags on the lumbering “Who Knows What Tomorrow May Bring”.

Even if they didn’t subsequently embrace the folk mythos, the pagan spirit of John Barleycorn worked its ancient magic upon the group, resurrecting these “three men came out of the west”, and granting them another four circuits of the sun.

ROB YOUNG