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We’re New Here: Florist

Every day I wake, wait for the tragedy.” The lyric with which Emily Sprague has chosen to open Florist’s latest album Jellywish could easily be read as melodramatic, were it not for her understated delivery: softly-spoken and matter-of-fact, an unfiltered early-morning thought over gently fingerpicked acoustic guitar. “The album starts that way because it’s important to call attention to the fact that we’re dysfunctional as humans on earth,” says Sprague, Florist’s vocalist, guitarist and principal songwriter. “We’re not really symbiotically living on this planet and with each other. We get stuck in these ways of believing what we think is true. But it doesn’t have to be so narrow.”

Every day I wake, wait for the tragedy.” The lyric with which Emily Sprague has chosen to open Florist’s latest album Jellywish could easily be read as melodramatic, were it not for her understated delivery: softly-spoken and matter-of-fact, an unfiltered early-morning thought over gently fingerpicked acoustic guitar. “The album starts that way because it’s important to call attention to the fact that we’re dysfunctional as humans on earth,” says Sprague, Florist’s vocalist, guitarist and principal songwriter. “We’re not really symbiotically living on this planet and with each other. We get stuck in these ways of believing what we think is true. But it doesn’t have to be so narrow.”

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The band formed 12 years ago in Albany, New York. Originally they were a trio, with Rick Spataro on bass and Jonnie Baker on additional guitar and keyboard, playing house shows with songs that Sprague had written to perform under her own name. “But it felt like the three of us were doing something more than just them playing as my band,” says Sprague. “It was really this friendship between us that was so much of what the music was about.” Drummer Felix Walworth joined shortly after Florist self-released their first EP We Have Been This Way Forever in the spring of 2013, and since then, that collaboration has been “growing, changing and going through all kinds of different life chapters together.”

Jellywish is more succinct and song-driven than its self-titled 19-track predecessor of 2022. It finds the band juxtaposing their exploration of modern anxieties – technology, ageing, loss, climate catastrophe – with quietly joyful melodies, like an otherworldly version of fellow East Coast indie-folkers Big Thief. While acoustic guitar, softly-brushed cymbals and resonant harmonies do much of the work, regular flashes of understated electronics add textures that call back to the band’s more experimental beginnings, as well as the modular ambient compositions Sprague has released under her own name; witness the ethereal squall from which “Our Hearts In A Room” emerges, or the undulating, music-box sound that peppers “Jellyfish”.

While Sprague has always written alone, it’s once she takes the material to the rest of the band that the “alchemy” that transforms them into Florist songs begins. “We’ve recorded every album ourselves, as Rick is a professional recording engineer with his own studio,” explains Sprague. “A huge part of what makes Florist recordings sound the way that they do is that it’s the four of us together in a house somewhere, hanging out and having ideas and committing them to tape.” Gradually, over the course of the band’s existence, Sprague has become “more comfortable writing in the same space that we’re recording. I don’t feel as nervous, or as much pressure, about it as I used to.”

Album opener “Levitate” – with that striking first line – was one of the songs that came together during those recording sessions, a month overlapping the April 2024 solar eclipse which the band spent together in a house in the Catskill Mountains. Time apart from the world allowed the band to “deep dive” into the music, developing their own shorthand. “We used the word ‘jellyfish’ a lot: like, ‘Let’s give this song a jellyfish vibe’, this sort of undulating, watery feel,” says Sprague.

The band has a heavy tour schedule over the coming months, and Sprague is excited to see how these songs land outside of that room. “In the early days, I used to be more worried about whether people would like the music,” she admits. “But now? I’m proud of this whole record. I’m proud of us.”

Jellywish is out on April 4 via Double Double Whammy

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Yusuf/Cat Stevens unveils his official autobiography

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Yusuf/Cat Stevens has announced that his long-awaited memoir, Cat On The Road To Findout, will be published in the UK on September 18, and in North America on October 7.

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The book is billed as “an extraordinary soul-baring journey through the triumphs, trials, and transcendental quest of one of music’s most enigmatic figures of our time” that will reveal “the intimate story of his deeply emotive transformation… from his folk-troubadour beginnings, to the glamorous chaos of 60s pop stardom, to his 70s reign as a generational voice [to] his unexpected departure from superstardom, embracing Islam.”

Says Stevens: “I’ve been on an amazing journey, which began in the narrow streets of London, and led me through the most iconic cities, to perform upon the great stage of Western culture, ascending the dizzying heights of wealth, recognition and artistic pinnacles; freely exploring vast ranges of religions and philosophies, wandering through churches, temples, all the way to the Holy abode in Jerusalem — ignoring myths and warnings — and crossing the foreboded, desert heartlands, to arrive at the House of One God in Abrahamic Arabia. What finally elevated my perspective was a luminous Book that perfectly alchemized my thoughts, beliefs, with human nature. It taught me Oneness, and my place and purpose within the universe.”

Cat On The Road To Findout will be published in hardback, ebook and audiobook format (narrated by the author). You can pre-order the book and join the presale for Stevens’ upcoming book tour here.

Queens Of The Stone Age announce Alive In The Catacombs

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Queens Of The Stone Age have revealed details of their new stripped-down concert film, recorded live in the Paris catacombs in July 2024.

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Alive In The Catacombs features songs from across the Queens Of The Stone Age back catalogue, performed largely acoustically – save for an electric piano connected to a car battery – and augmented by a small string section. Watch the trailer below:

Queens Of The Stone Age are the first band to receive official permission to play in the catacombs, a set of tunnels beneath the surface of Paris, where millions of bodies were buried in the 1700s – “the biggest audience we’ve ever played for,” notes Josh Homme.

“If you’re ever going to be haunted, surrounded by several million dead people is the place,” Homme continues. “It would be ridiculous to try to rock there…That space dictates everything, it’s in charge. You do what you’re told when you’re in there.”

Queens Of The Stone Age: Alive In The Catacombs was produced by La Blogothèque and directed by Thomas Rames. The film will be available to rent or purchase via qotsa.com from June 7 – pre-order now to receive exclusive access to behind-the-scenes footage. An audio-only version will be announced in the coming weeks. 

You can read more from Josh Homme talking exclusively to us about his “near-life experience” in the Paris catacombs in the next issue of Uncut, due out on May 23. Check back here next week for full details of the new issue.

Steve Albini’s archive collections are being sold

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Steve Albini's personal collection of records, books, fanzines, clothing and other memorabilia is being made available in weekly online sales.

Steve Albini‘s personal collection of records, books, fanzines, clothing and other memorabilia is being made available in weekly online sales.

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They will be sold on Steve Albini’s Closet, a website launched a year after the engineer’s death, which describes itself as an “entity created to distribute the treasures amassed by the late polymath.”

Between 100 and 200 new items will be uploaded to the site each Friday, with proceeds going to benefit Albini’s estate. “Somewhere in the stacks, about 4,000 pieces wait their turn, plus a corner for the smaller curiosities.”

The collection includes albums, CDs, books, cassettes, singles, alongside zines, shirts, posters, flyers and original art.

Robert Fripp is recovering after emergency heart surgery

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Robert Fripp has undergone two bouts of heart surgery after he unwittingly suffered a heart attack in early April while traveling to Italy.

Robert Fripp has undergone two bouts of heart surgery after he unwittingly suffered a heart attack in early April while traveling to Italy.

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Fripp initially believed his symptoms were related to acid reflux. “I’d been suffering what I considered to be acid reflux for a couple of weeks,” he explained in a YouTube video posted with his wife Toyah Willcox, on May 11. “On the Saturday morning I flew, it felt a little bit more.”

Fripp was due to perform at an Orchestra Of Crafty Guitarists event at Castione della Presolana in Bergamo. But after landing in Bergamo on April 6, Fripp was taken directly to a cardiac hospital, where doctors discovered dangerously elevated troponin levels, a protein that indicates damage to the heart.

“I was in A+E not quite knowing what was going on other than I knew they were going to do something, and an orderly came along and shaved my balls,” he continued. Fripp went on to say that he was diagnosed with a trifurcated artery and had a pair of stents inserted during two operations. He is on medication for the rest of his life.

Fripp also said that, less than a week after his surgery, he was able to direct the Guitar Circle show at Castione della Presolana.

“It was stunning. The audience were prepped with orchestral manoeuvres and it really was a magical event for me,” Fripp added.

Introducing…The History Of Rock: 1968!

With Pete Townshend announcing The Who’s farewell US tour, now seems a good time to remind ourselves of when the band made one of their earliest trips to the continent. You can read all about it in The History Of Rock: 1968, the latest in our series of premium magazines curated from the archives of NME and Melody Maker.

Pete in 1968 is a big fan of America. Amazing microphone systems. Great groups like Moby Grape. Their own bus, “equipped with all modern conveniences like scotch and beer”.  Even the fact that they’re staying in poky hotels hasn’t dampened his enthusiasm. As we follow the group deeper into the year we find them developing some challenging new work, the rock opera Tommy, at this stage provisionally entitled “Dead Dumb And Blind Boy”.

Our other favourite groups are changing too. After 1967’s colourful revelations and occasionally grandiose musical experimentation, 1968 has its feet more firmly planted on the ground. The gurus and the hallucinogens of the past twelve months have imparted their knowledge, and The Beatles are for the most part slightly more suspicious of whim and fancy.

No-one precisely says this is their plan (although Paul McCartney has been murmuring about “getting back” for a while), but there is a palpable swing away from the head trips of the studio and towards the heart: to early inspirations, live music. Later in the year, the double album released by the Beatles will contain strong flavours of blues and rock ‘n’ roll, the year’s two principal revivals. Does this now mean the Beatles are taking a step backwards? As Ringo Starr philosophically remarks: “It’s not forwards or backwards. It’s just a step.”

Bob Dylan also sets an anomalous tempo, established early in the year with the bucolic minimalism of John Wesley Harding. Dylan’s continued absence from the promotional scene allows him to move with a freedom not permitted his British contemporaries, and his absence creates a vacuum that myth, and under-the-counter recordings, step in to fill. Elsewhere in the mag you’ll find John Peel, Aretha Franklin, Cream…even George Best!

This is the world of The History Of Rock, a monthly magazine which reaps the benefits of their reporting for the reader decades later, one year at a time. Inside, you will find verbatim articles from frontline staffers, compiled into long and illuminating reads. You can catch up on any you’ve missed here. Enjoy!

The Who announce farewell North American tour

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The Who have revealed that their upcoming North American tour will be their last. At a press conference today (May 8) at London’s Iconic Gallery, Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend announced details of The Song Is Over: The North American Farewell Tour, which kicks off in Florida on August 16, ending in Las Vegas on September 28.

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“Well, all good things must come to an end,” said Pete Townshend. “It is a poignant time. For me, playing to American audiences and those in Canada has always been incredible… Roger and I are in a good place, despite our age, eager to throw our weight behind this fond farewell to all our faithful fans, and hopefully to new ones who might jump in to see what they have been missing for the last 57 years. This tour will be about fond memories, love and laughter.”

“To me, America has always been great,” added Roger Daltrey. “The cultural differences had a huge impact on me, this was the land of the possible. It’s not easy to end the big part of my life that touring with The Who has been. Thanks for being there for us and look forward to seeing you one last time.”

Asked about the possibility of a similar farewell tour in the UK, Daltrey simply said: “Let’s see if we survive this one…”

Peruse the North American tourdates below:

Aug 16 – Sunrise, FL – Amerant Bank Arena
Aug 19 – Newark, NJ – Prudential Center
Aug 21 – Philadelphia, PA – Wells Fargo Center
Aug 23 – Atlantic City, NJ – Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall
Aug 26 – Boston, MA – Fenway Park
Aug 28 – Wantagh, NY – Northwell at Jones Beach Theater
Aug 30 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden
Sep 2 – Toronto, ON – Budweiser Stage
Sep 4 – Toronto, ON – Budweiser Stage
Sep 7 – Chicago, IL – United Center
Sep 17 – Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Bowl
Sep 19 – Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Bowl
Sep 21 – Mountain View, CA – Shoreline Amphitheatre
Sep 23 – Vancouver, BC – Rogers Arena|
Sep 25 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena
Sep 28 – Las Vegas, NV – MGM Grand Garden Arena

Tickets go on general sale on Friday, May 16 at 10am local time from here. There is a pre-sale for Citi cardmembers and Whooligan Fan Club members.

Read more from The Who’s press conference in the next issue of Uncut.

Salif Keita – So Kono

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Mali might be one of Africa’s poorest nations, but it remains a musical superpower. The centre of the medieval Mande empire has been the breeding ground for dozens of global success stories, including the likes of Toumani Diabate, Ali Farka Toure, Rokia Traore, Oumou Sangare, Fatoumata Diawara, Boubacar Traore, Afel Bocoum, Bassekou Kouyate and Amadou & Mariam – not to mention Tuareg rockers like Tinariwen, Tamikrest and Songhoy Blues.

Mali might be one of Africa’s poorest nations, but it remains a musical superpower. The centre of the medieval Mande empire has been the breeding ground for dozens of global success stories, including the likes of Toumani Diabate, Ali Farka Toure, Rokia Traore, Oumou Sangare, Fatoumata Diawara, Boubacar Traore, Afel Bocoum, Bassekou Kouyate and Amadou & Mariam – not to mention Tuareg rockers like Tinariwen, Tamikrest and Songhoy Blues.

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Salif Keita might be the most famous of them all, but he was always the odd one out. Not only was he an albino in a society that regarded albinos as cursed, but he was an outcast from a minor royal family, competing with storytelling griots who tended to come from an ancestral lineage of musicians. It helped that he was blessed with an extraordinary voice. Keita can turn a jerky, conversational, arhythmic lyric into something that flows perfectly; making any amount of syllables fit into whatever space he has, improvising like a jazz singer, adding bluesy flourishes and grace notes, often leaping up an octave or more into a spine-tingling register.

It’s a voice that has worked across multiple genres. He started out in 1970, singing Afro-Cuban son and Congolese soukous with the Rail Band; a few years later he was performing rumbas, foxtrots, French ballads and Senegalese wolof songs with Les Ambassadeurs. In 1987 his breakthrough solo album Soro heralded the birth of the digital griot, setting Keita’s voice against a Peter Gabriel-ish backdrop of sampled koras and digi-drums. Since then he’s collaborated extensively – albums produced by Joe Zawinul, Vernon Reid and Wally Badarou; duets with the likes of Carlos Santana, Wayne Shorter, Grace Jones, Esperanza Spalding, Bobby McFerrin, Roots Manuva, Richard Bona and Cesaria Evora. In 2018 he released Un Autre Blanc – a heavily synthesized, elaborately orchestrated studio album featuring Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Angelique Kidjo and Alpha Blondy – and announced in interviews that, approaching his 70th birthday, it would be his last LP.

That was until 2023, when he was invited to play an unplugged set at a festival in Japan: just voice and acoustic guitar, with occasional accompaniment on the ngoni (a kind of harp-like banjo) and percussion. Keita loved the setting, realising that it brought out a side of him that had been hidden across his five-decade career, and he transformed his hotel suite into an impromptu studio to record this album. 

So Kono – which translates as “inside the chamber” in the Mande language – is Keita’s most spartan LP yet. He has always said that he feels self-conscious about his guitar playing, seeing it purely as a tool for songwriting, but here it takes centre stage – hypnotic, complex, repetitive patterns, played clawhammer style, plucked with the flesh at the tips of his fingers, like a medieval lute player, usually with a capo high on the fretboard.

Some of these songs rework older compositions. “Laban”, a piece of desert rock on his 2005 album M’Bemba, is turned into a wonderfully baroque miniature, featuring a Martin Carthy-like guitar pattern. The already quite spartan “Tu Vas Me Manquer” (‘I will miss you’) sounds even more beautifully heartbroken, while “Tassi”, a piece of bubblegum Latin pop from his 2012 LP Talé, is turned into a hypnotic meditation. Occasionally, Keita’s metrical, minimalist guitar patterns are set against the florid, tumbling ngoni flourishes of Badié Tounkara, like on the gentle minor-key waltz “Awa”, which translates as Eve, and serves as Keita’s tribute to womankind; the yearning declaration of love “Cherie”, which also features accompaniment on cello and talking drum; or “Soundiata”, a mesmeric tribute to his royal ancestors.

There are tributes to friends. “Kanté Manfila” is dedicated to a late bandmate of the same name who was in Les Ambassadeurs, while “Aboubakrin” is named after a successful politician. One is a eulogy, the other a joyful song of praise, but both have the same mood – trance-like guitar patterns and soaring vocals that sound a muezzin’s call to prayer.

Most startling of all is the final track “Proud”. Here, instead of playing acoustic guitar, Keita switches to a simbi, a Malian harp-lute, with a bulbous calabash body. He plays a metallic, jangling riff while howling the lyrics – partly in English – at the upper end of his vocal register, half ancient bluesman, half Pakistani qawaali singer. “I’m African, I’m proud,” he howls. “I’m albino, I’m proud/ I’m different, I’m proud.” It’s a fitting summation of a remarkable career.

One To One: John & Yoko

“I just like TV,” says John Lennon to an interviewer, somewhere at the heart of Kevin Macdonald’s scintillating, crackling, livewire documentary about John and Yoko Ono’s first year in New York. “It replaced the fireplace when I was a child. They took the fire away, they put a TV in and I got hooked.”

“I just like TV,” says John Lennon to an interviewer, somewhere at the heart of Kevin Macdonald’s scintillating, crackling, livewire documentary about John and Yoko Ono’s first year in New York. “It replaced the fireplace when I was a child. They took the fire away, they put a TV in and I got hooked.”

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Half a century after their demise we are certainly hooked on Beatles content. After all this time you might rightfully wonder if we need another John Lennon documentary. Particularly one that revisits a period already exhaustively covered in the 2006 The US vs John Lennon. But Macdonald and his team don’t just meticulously recreate the couple’s tiny West Village bedsit on Bank Street – a few guitars, a typewriter and a black and white TV set at foot of the small double bed. They also vividly recreate the electronic maelstrom that they plugged and plunged into, like Alice through the Looking Glass, via the TV and the telephone.

While the 2006 film was an overfamiliar, lionising grind of 21st century talking heads self-righteously proclaiming the wisdom of hindsight, Macdonald brings 1971 to vivid, lurid life. Adam Curtis is an obvious comparison, but Macdonald works some of his hallucinatory cathode alchemy, cutting together news reports from Attica and Vietnam, TV commercials for Clorox, the campaign trails of Nixon, George Wallace and Shirley Chisholm, gameshows, chat shows and the chaotic counterforce of Jerry Rubin, Allen Ginsberg and John Sinclair, watching the sparks fly.

Perhaps even more revelatory are the audio of the phone calls John and Yoko carefully recorded, quite rightly anticipating some future bust and deportation. You hear the enthusiasm of John on the phone to Allen Klein, trying to convince him of his plans for some righteous Jesse James tour through America, freeing the prisoners. You hear Yoko and her assistants’ laborious attempts to secure a supply of 200 flies for her MoMA exhibition. Eventually, you hear John’s growing disillusionment with Rubin’s plan to call half a million a kids to face the cops at the 1972 Republican convention in Miami.

The film is centred around beautifully restored footage from the benefit show John and Yoko performed for the Willowbrook special needs school at Madison Square Gardens in August 1972 – what would turn out to be John’s only full-length post-Beatles concert. But though there’s a fab performance of “Come Together”, an almost unbearable rendition of “Mother” and a version of “Imagine” – cut to footage of Willowbrook kids playing in Central Park, that redeems the song – the real revelation of this film is hearing John’s voice, at the absolute dark heart of 20th century celebrity, madness and violence, sounding suddenly like the sanest man in New York, saying he’s not going to call children to a riot. “They’re all men,” he says, despairing of the would be heroes of the counterculture. “Where are the women? Where’s Mrs Hoffman?”

Terry Reid announces tour dates

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Terry Reid will play his first Irish, Scottish and Welsh shows in more than six years this autumn, alongside new UK dates that include a return to London's Jazz Café.

Terry Reid will play his first Irish, Scottish and Welsh shows in more than six years this autumn, alongside new UK dates that include a return to London’s Jazz Café.

THE JUNE 2025 ISSUE OF UNCUT IS AVAILABLE TO ORDER NOW: STARRING R.E.M., A DOORS RARITIES CD, BON IVER, PRINCE, SHACK, AMY WINEHOUSE, DIRE STRAITS, STEREOLAB AND MORE

Reid was recently featured in the Becoming Led Zeppelin documentary, with Robert Plant and Jimmy Page discussing him being considered as the first singer in the band before turning them down as he just signed a solo deal. It was Reid who suggested to Page that he try and check out another young singer who had just supported him named Robert Plant…

Tickets are available here.

September 11  WOLVERHAMPTON The Robin
September 13  DUBLIN (IE) Arthur’s Blues & Jazz
September 14  DUBLIN (IE) Arthur’s Blues & Jazz
September 16  HASTINGS White Rock Theatre
September 17  PORTSMOUTH Guildhall
September 18  ST IVES Theatre
September 19  CARDIFF The Gate
September 21  HEBDEN BRIDGE Trades Club
September 22  SHEFFIELD Greystones
September 24  NEWCASTLE The Cluny
September 25  GLASGOW Cottiers
September 26  POCKLINGTON Arts Centre
September 28  MALVERN Cube
September 30  LONDON Half Moon, Putney
September 1  LONDON The Jazz Cafe
September 3  CAMBRIDGE Portland Arms

Listen to Mark Pritchard and Thom Yorke’s new single, “The Spirit”

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Mark Pritchard and Thom Yorke have shared a new single, “The Spirit”, taken from their upcoming collaborative album, Tall Tales - which is released on May 9 from Warp Records.

Mark Pritchard and Thom Yorke have shared a new single, “The Spirit”, taken from their upcoming collaborative album, Tall Tales – which is released on May 9 from Warp Records.

THE JUNE 2025 ISSUE OF UNCUT IS AVAILABLE TO ORDER NOW: STARRING R.E.M., A DOORS RARITIES CD, BON IVER, PRINCE, SHACK, AMY WINEHOUSE, DIRE STRAITS, STEREOLAB AND MORE

The video for “The Spirit” has been directed by visual artist Jonathan Zawada.

“The Spirit” arrives the same day as a special global cinema event, in which fans will be able to hear Tall Tales alongside its accompanying feature film, directed by Zawada, a day ahead of release – although dates may vary for certain locations.

More info and tickets are available from here.

The album is released tomorrow. As well as digitally, the album will be available in a standard black vinyl 2LP gatefold edition and as a limited special black vinyl 2LP edition including a 36-page booklet featuring images from the project and lyrics to all the tracks, designed by Jonathan Zawada.

There will also be both a standard CD edition and a limited special CD accompanied by the 36-page booklet.

Natalie Merchant: “R.E.M. was atmospheric yet urgent, new yet mindful of tradition”

Uncut interviewed Natalie Merchant for this month's cover story on R.E.M. Merchant first struck up a friendship with Michael Stipe, that continues to this day, during her time with 10,000 Maniacs, which included supporting R.E.M. on tour in 1985 and again in 1987.

Uncut interviewed Natalie Merchant for this month’s cover story on R.E.M. Merchant first struck up a friendship with Michael Stipe, that continues to this day, during her time with 10,000 Maniacs, which included supporting R.E.M. on tour in 1985 and again in 1987.

We didn’t have enough space for Natalie’s answers in the cover story, so here’s the email interview with her in full below.

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UNCUT: You famously first met Michael at a house party in Athens; what were your first impressions of him?
NATALIE MERCHANT: I met Michael in early 1984 after a show that R.E.M. had played in a club in Atlanta, GA. Murmur had been out for a year and I can clearly remember the first time I heard it, and how it really floored me. I felt an instant kinship with the band and felt Michael and I were supposed to meet and become fast comrades. So, that first meeting carried a lot of weight in my mind. But as fate had it, we didn’t really get off to a great start. I had a vintage candy tin full of good luck charms that I carried in my shoulder bag and was showing Michael and explaining their meanings. He must have thought I was pretty tedious because he handed me a paper bag with his stuff in it and disappeared into another room — forever. The longer I waited, the more absurd I felt. Eventually, I put the bag on the floor outside the closed door and left the party. But a couple months later, I tried the mission again in Buffalo, NY. I took the bus to the city and showed up in the parking lot of the theater they were playing around soundcheck time. I knew where the vegetarian restaurant was and offered to show Michael. And instead of my box of trinkets, I impressed him with my juggling and penny whistle skills. I was only twenty and he was three years older. I can’t believe how long ago that was, that we’ve been friends for over 40 years. Jesus.

And what about the rest of REM; why do you think those early records are so important?
After the chaotic nihilism of punk and robotic synth nonsense that followed it was soul-restoring to hear the unpolished organic sound of this band. They were a four-piece that made a very distinct music due to their individual characters, their strengths and limitations. R.E.M. was a balance and sum of Peter’s jangly guitar loops, Mike’s driving bass riffs and irrepressibly poppy harmonies, Bill’s no-nonsense drumming, and Michael’s inscrutable yet meaningful gravely musings and mumblings. R.E.M. was atmospheric yet urgent, new yet mindful of tradition, there was something rural, out of the way, idiomatic, sort of southern gothic in the music they made. Their songs had echoes of a strange lost America while still sounding so contemporary. Their aesthetic was original (credit Stipe for that). They used creeping kudzu and outsider art in their cover designs. On stage, Peter would wear a corduroy Future Farmers of America jacket, and Michael, a crumpled baggy old brown suit in which he danced like a possessed Baptist preacher. I suppose they were original without being radical.

How do you characterise Michael’s development as a songwriter from Murmur through to Fables Of The Reconstruction?
In my view, Michael made a bigger leap as a songwriter between Fables and Life’s Rich Pageant. In Murmur and Fables, he was blending his voice into the mix more as a textural instrument. He stepped out of the shadows with the vocals on Pageant, he suddenly seemed to want to clarify his message, to be heard. That seemed to be the trend going forward with Document and Green, Out Of Time, Automatic For The People.

Are you a fan of Fables; if so, what qualities do you most admire about it?
My associations with Fables are unique and impossible to separate from my experience of listening to it (or any of those early R.E.M. records, for that matter). By coincidence, we had contacted Joe Boyd at the same time as REM to ask if he would produce our first major label album. Joe had been primarily focused on his label Hannibal, and producing world music for a decade but he agreed to do both our albums and booked our projects back-to-back. We arrived in London March of ’85 just as R.E.M. was finishing Fables. They vacated the studio and we started The Wishing Chair the next day, same studio, producer and engineers. We were all so young, the music makes me nostalgic and brings memories to the surface. It was a different world then, in so many ways.

What was the nature of the relationship between REM and 10,000 Maniacs?
R.E.M. was always ahead of us in their experience and in their popularity but they were always so supportive and kind to our band. They, and their management always gave us the best advice. In my friendship with Michael, I found someone I could talk about songwriting and performing, and all the pros and cons of a life spent on the road. I’m nothing but grateful for the association.

What do you remember about touring with REM in 1985?
The tour started in the western states (Colorado, Wyoming, Nebraska) then went through the endless flatlands of the Midwest (Iowa, Indianapolis, Ohio) and ended in the deep south (Louisiana, Alabama). You don’t have to know much about the geography of the U.S.A. to imagine the distance we covered in less than a month. Some of the drives were 10-14 hours long; my band and crew were crammed into one Econoline van. Eventually, Michael took pity on me and let me ride in their tour bus. The tour stands out in my mind because my band was still playing small trashy rock clubs and suddenly we were in landmark theatres and big college gymnasiums with a powerful sound system and lights. The scale of production was so much larger than anything I had yet seen. It was a supremely Cinderella experience. R.E.M. was just beginning to explode, when we toured with them again in ’87 on the Document tour, there were more buses, trucks, speaker’s and lights. It was quite an exciting to witness their assent and we were all so grateful they were sharing their success with lesser-known bands like ours.

Read the full R.E.M. cover story in the latest issue of Uncut – in shops now!

Cover photo: George DuBose

Neil Young And The Chrome Hearts unveil new album, Talkin To The Trees

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The debut album from Neil Young And The Chrome Hearts is called Talkin To The Trees, and it will be released by Reprise on June 13.

The debut album from Neil Young And The Chrome Hearts is called Talkin To The Trees, and it will be released by Reprise on June 13.

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The album features 10 tracks including the previously released “Big Change”. Watch a video for new single “Let’s Roll Again” below:

The punky song appears to be a call to American car manufacturers to build safer, cleaner vehicles – although he can’t resist laying into Elon Musk along the way: “If you’re a fascist / Then get a Tesla”.

Check out the tracklisting for Talkin To The Trees below:

01 “Family Life”
02 “Dark Mirage”
03 “First Fire Of Winter”
04 “Silver Eagle”
05 “Lets Roll Again”
06 “Big Change”
07 “Talkin To The Trees”
08 “Movin Ahead”
09 “Bottle Of Love”
10 “Thankful”

R.E.M. release “Radio Free Europe 2025”

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R.E.M. are honouring 75 years of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty with a special remix of their debut single, "Radio Free Europe".

R.E.M. are honouring 75 years of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty with a special remix of their debut single, “Radio Free Europe“.

You can hear the remix below.

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The track has been remixed by Jacknife Lee, who also produced the R.E.M. albums, Accelerate (2008) and Collapse Into Now (2011)

The new remix is part of a five-track EP, with proceeds from the vinyl pressing to benefit RFE/RL on its 75th anniversary & World Press Freedom Day.

“Whether it’s music or a free press – censorship anywhere is a threat to the truth everywhere. On World Press Freedom Day, I’m sending a shout-out to the brave journalists at Radio Free Europe,” says Michael Stipe.

“Radio Free Europe’s journalists have been pissing off dictators for 75 years. You know you’re doing your job when you make the right enemies. Happy World Press Freedom Day to the ‘OG Radio Free Europe,” says Mike Mills.

You can stream or download the track here.

limited-edition 10-inch orange-vinyl pressing—available for pre-order now exclusively via the official R.E.M. store and independent record stores —lands September 12.

And don’t forget – R.E.M. are on the cover of the new Uncut, revisiting their early, imperial phase around the 40th anniversary of Fables Of The Reconstruction.

Cover photo: George DuBose

The Fourth Uncut New Music Playlist of 2025

A quick one today, to tie in with Bandcamp Friday. A smattering of familiar names - Lee Ranaldo, William Tyler, Garcia Peoples - but hopefully some new discoveries for you, too. I saw Margo Cilker play at the Voodoo Rooms in Edinburgh earlier this week, who covered "Invisible Stars" by Slow-Motion Cowboys, who I'm ashamed to say I'd not heard before, but are the project of a songwriter called Pete Fields, who dubs himself 'the Buzzard Prince of San Francisco in Exile'. Anyway, I can't now stop playing the track's parent album, Wolf Of St Elmo. I've also included an older track by Mally Smith - another new discovery - who opened for Cilker.

A quick one today, to tie in with Bandcamp Friday. A smattering of familiar names – Lee Ranaldo, William Tyler, Garcia Peoples – but hopefully some new discoveries for you, too. I saw Margo Cilker play at the Voodoo Rooms in Edinburgh earlier this week, who covered “Invisible Stars” by Slow-Motion Cowboys, who I’m ashamed to say I’d not heard before, but are the project of a songwriter called Pete Fields, who dubs himself ‘the Buzzard Prince of San Francisco in Exile’. Anyway, I can’t now stop playing the track’s parent album, Wolf Of St Elmo. I’ve also included an older track by Mally Smith – another new discovery – who opened for Cilker.

Plus some jams, ambient gubbins etc.

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JOE HARVEY-WHYTE & BOBBY LEE
“Smoke Signals”

SLOW-MOTION COWBOYS
“Invisible Stars”

JERRY DAVID DeCICCA
“Long Distance Runner”

JEFFREY ALEXANDER + HEAVY LIDDERS
“Synchronous Orbit”

PYE CORNER AUDIO
“Galaxies”

ELORI SAXL
“It Will Be Gone”

GOLDEN BROWN
“Beelzebufo”

GOLDMUND
“Darnley”

MALLY SMITH
“Dive In”

GARCIA PEOPLES
“Journey Through The Valley Of O”

WILLIAM TYLER
“Howling At The Second Moon”

LEE RANALDO
“Take Me Up”

MARC RIBOT
“When The World’s On Fire”

ganavya
“Sinathavar Mudikkum”

Bridget St John: “They all had kind hearts”

A new mini-album celebrates her lost 'brothers': Nick Drake, John Martyn, Kevin Ayers and Michael Chapman. Bridget St John explains all to Uncut...

A new mini-album celebrates her lost ‘brothers’: Nick Drake, John Martyn, Kevin Ayers and Michael Chapman. Bridget St John explains all to Uncut…

UNCUT: On Covering My Brothers, you pay tribute to four artists who were important to you. Did you feel like a sister to them?
BRIDGET ST JOHN: They were my brothers – never lovers! They were people that stayed in my life, other than Nick, who died so young. I saw John Martyn three months before he died, he came to New York [where St John has lived since 1976]. Even though I didn’t see them all the time, the connection was there, like it is with good friends.

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You’ve really put your own stamp on these songs, including an experimental take on Michael Chapman’s 10-minute “Aviator”.
I only cover a song if it has got inside me. I can sing these songs because I relate to them as if I’d written them. “Aviator” was about a personal thing for Michael, a problem with the Inland Revenue, but for me it’s about the world and what’s going on now. So I changed a few words, with his wife Andru’s blessing. Michael’s version is much more aggressive than mine – I think he was really angry when he wrote it!

You cover Nick Drake’s “Fly”, and you knew him back then too – as much as anyone could…
I related to him very strongly because we were both so shy – it’s hard to be so shy and be onstage. I don’t think I was as introverted as him, but I felt he was a kindred spirit.

Yours and Kevin Ayers’ voices worked very well together – almost like male and female versions of each other.
I always loved playing with Kevin. I’m not a perfect singer, I often don’t sing exactly on the beat, and I think we just could feel where the other one was. Here, I play “Jolie Madame”, which we recorded together originally. I can speak French, but Kevin was properly bilingual, so it was completely finished when he played it to me.

The oddity on this EP is your version of John Martyn’s “Head And Heart” – a demo you made for 1974’s Jumblequeen, lost and recently discovered.
John was originally going to produce the album, so I recorded some demos for him. There were six songs, and “Head And Heart” was one of them. I’d totally forgotten doing it until last summer when Mhairi, John’s daughter, got in touch and said, “I have this reel-to-reel.” I really like this version.

John was the first of these four you met, wasn’t he?
I met him in 1967, when I was at Sheffield University, through Robin Frederick who also knew Nick Drake. He was the one who took me to Al Stewart‘s house to record my first demo, which got to John Peel, which led to everything opening up for me. John Martyn helped me buy my first steel-string guitar, because I only had a nylon string. I did several gigs with him, until it became clear that he was so far ahead of his time, with the Echoplex and his way of playing… his audience didn’t relate to me so much, as a quiet singer-songwriter, so we did fewer gigs together, but still some, and sometimes with him and Danny Thompson.

Did you try and keep up with their hell-raising?
No, after two glasses of wine I’d need to go to bed! But all my ‘brothers in music’ had kind hearts. They might have had rough edges, or deeper than rough edges… but I think I’m drawn to the good and the depth of people.

What have you got coming up after this release?
I’ve got a couple of songs I definitely want to put down, so I’ll probably go to the studio upstate, where I recorded “Aviator”, in May or June.

Covering My Brothers is available on 10” vinyl by Shagrat Records

Hear the title track of Bruce Springsteen’s lost film soundtrack, Faithless

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On June 27, Sony Music will release Tracks II: The Lost Albums – a 9-LP or 7-CD collection comprising seven previously unreleased full-length albums by Bruce Springsteen.

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One of those albums is Faithless, a soundtrack recorded in 2005-6 for a movie that was never made. Hear the title track below:

“This was a really unusual collection of songs,” Springsteen remembers. “You could recognise details and maybe a character or two. But for the most part, I just wrote atmospheric music that I thought would fit.” The album was recorded primarily as a solo pursuit, with appearances throughout by producer Ron Aniello, touring members of The E Street Band — Soozie Tyrell, Lisa Lowell, Curtis King Jr, Michelle Moore and Ada Dyer — as well as contributions from Patti Scialfa, Evan Springsteen and Sam Springsteen.

See the full tracklisting and pre-order Tracks II: The Lost Albums here. Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band return to the UK later this month for five more shows, details below:

14th May Manchester Co-op Live
17th May Manchester Co-op Live
20th May Manchester Co-op Live
4th June Liverpool Anfield Stadium
7th June Liverpool Anfield Stadium

Hear an exclusive track from a new live EP by The Saints ’73-’78

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Last autumn, Ed Kuepper toured Australia with a reconfigured line-up of punk pioneers The Saints, fronted by Mudhoney’s Mark Arm.

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Concentrating on the band’s early material – hence the moniker Saints ’73-’78 – the five-piece added a horn section for their shows at Brisbane’s Princess Theatre, the highlights of which are now being released on a new digital-only EP entitled Nights In Venice Live… Vol. 1, due out tomorrow (May 2). Pre-save here and listen to the title track exclusively below:

The Saints ’73-’78 have also announced an international tour for later this year. Check out the full list of dates below:

Oct 31: Auckland NZ, Powerstation
Nov 1: Wellington NZ, Meow Nui
Nov 5: Los Angeles USA, Teragram Ballroom
Nov 6: San Francisco USA, Great American Music Hall + Hot Lunch
Nov 7: San Francisco USA, Great American Music Hall
Nov 8: Portland USA, Revolution Hall
Nov 9: Seattle USA, The Neptune
Nov 11: Chicago USA, Metro
Nov 13: Toronto Canada, Phoenix Concert Theatre
Nov 15: New York USA, Music Hall of Williamsburg
Nov 16: Philadelphia USA, Union Transfer + Pissed Jeans + Chimers
Nov 17: Washington USA, Union Stage + Des Demonas + Chimers
Nov 20: London UK, BBC 6 radio session with Riley & Coe
Nov 21: Bristol UK, Trinity Centre
Nov 22: Leeds UK, Project House
Nov 23: Glasgow Scotland, Garage
Nov 24: Manchester UK, Academy 2
Nov 26: London UK, Electric Ballroom
Nov 28: Stockholm Sweden, Debaser + The Schizophrenics
Nov 29: Malmo Sweden, Plan B
Nov 30: Berlin Germany, Astra + The Courettes

Special guests all shows Chimers (Australia) except where noted.

Kassi Valazza – From Newman Street

Kassi Valazza opens “Roll On”, a meditative country-tinged ballad from her third album, with a stark realisation: “I’ve made up my mind, I feel like I do”, she asserts over a slow-motion two-step rhythm and thick brushstrokes of pedal steel and fiddle. “And if I feel like I do, I’ll try moving on”.

Kassi Valazza opens “Roll On”, a meditative country-tinged ballad from her third album, with a stark realisation: “I’ve made up my mind, I feel like I do”, she asserts over a slow-motion two-step rhythm and thick brushstrokes of pedal steel and fiddle. “And if I feel like I do, I’ll try moving on”.

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Her voice is a high, sharp lilt that brings to mind Joan Baez or Carolyn Hester or other folk singers from the ’60s and ’70s, with a gentle vibrato and a gift for windswept phrasing. She sings like the breeze is scattering her syllables like leaves. “Roll On” is a break-up song – with a lover perhaps, but more likely with a city – but she instills the song not with resentment or sadness, but a precarious excitement for a new beginning.

From Newman Street is an album full of chapters closing and new ones opening, created by a singer-songwriter who embellishes her folky observations with psychedelic flourishes and knowing nods to the past. It is also, she says, a tale of two cities. Valazza wrote a little more than half of these new songs in a small basement apartment in Portland, Oregon, working in seclusion before joining her trusted touring band to record at a local studio.

She’s been a fixture in that city’s folk scene for a decade, gradually finding her voice and refining her sound. Her 2019 debut, Dear Dead Days, sounds like Patsy Cline sitting in with The International Submarine Band: a vivid combination of twangy torch vocals and feral psych guitars. That album heralded a wave of young Pacific Northwest country artists, including Margo Cilker and Riddy Arman, but cosmic country was a starting point rather than a destination, and she drifted towards a stately strain of folk rock on her 2022 EP “Highway Sounds” and her 2023 sophomore album Kassi Valazza Knows Nothing.

The latter paired her with the Portland rabble-rousers TK & The Holy Know-Nothings, who certainly roused some rabble on her songs and exposed a live wire in her vocals. Its finest moment, however, was her mostly solo reimagining of Michael Hurley’s “Wildegeeses”, which she sang like she was missing some remote piece of land very dearly. As confident as she sounded on record, Valazza suffered from stage fright, depression and social anxiety that was very isolating even in a city full of friends and fans.

Hoping a change of scenery might alleviate those concerns, in early 2024 she returned from a long tour and immediately packed up her guitars and records and headed east. Her plan was to settle in Nashville, but she overshot and ended up in New Orleans. She quickly learned she couldn’t outrun her demons, but new surroundings inspired new songs as well as new perspectives on old songs.

Valazza took this second batch to Portland and finished the album, although there’s no Side One/Two split between her Oregon songs and her Louisiana songs. Instead, she wisely mixes them together to reflect a certain kind of wanderlust that has always motivated her music but feels more acute and certainly more conflicted on From Newman Street.

These songs are perched somewhere between home and away: the warmth of her bed and the lure of the larger world. That is, of course, the clash faced by any musician who makes her living playing songs in different cities every night. With its gently percolating percussion and nimble bassline, “Your Heart’s A Tin Box” is a touring lament that’s disarmingly matter-of-fact in its misgivings: “Two months of selling out most of the shows/ I’d sure like to see where all that money goes”, she sings, before building to a moment of stark self-reckoning, where she hopes “they like the way you sing”. She ends the songwith a chorus of “you think too much”, which sounds like the punchline to a grim joke.

She addresses most of these songs to “you”, which sounds more like “I”, as though each song is a pep talk or a warning addressed to Valazza’s future self. Her Portland bandmates, many of whom have been playing long before Valazza even arrived in the city, provide breezy accompaniment to her breezy melodies, instilling songs like “Your Heart’s A Tin Box” and “Market Street Savior” with the motion of travel.

Erik Clampitt’s pedal steel traces the line of the horizon in the distance, while the rhythm section of drummer Ned Folkerth and bassist Sydney Nash count off the highway lines one by one. Favouring arrangements that highlight one instrument – the muted Byrdsy guitar theme on “Market Street Savior”, the billowy organ blowing through “Small Things”, but most of all Valazza’s deft guitar picking – they never crowd her songs, but leave lots of open, empty space. That lends the album a gentle melancholy, nothing too dark, but these songs all sound like they’re meant to be heard while staring out the car window during a long road trip.

In its sense of motion and its travelogue sensibility, the album sounds like a millennial update to Hejira, Joni Mitchell’s mid-’70s document of her local travels along American highways. Both albums are sharp, complex, slightly elusive and offhandedly funny. “Some say you look like your father”, Valazza sings on “Small Things”, “but me, I’ve never met your father”. It’s a line overflowing with implications.

Hejira is full of dalliances and encounters, but Valazza’s album is lonelier, directed inward rather than outward, stuck inside her own head. It’s a fascinating place to be, not least because she’s so strenuous in her self-interrogation. These songs never let her off the hook. She also peppers her lyrics with references to geographical landmarks: not just Newman Street but St John’s Park on “Shadow Of Lately” and Market Street on “Market Street Savior”. They’re like breadcrumbs to mark her path, or perhaps just a means of getting out of her own head, if only for a line or two.

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If there’s one landmark she names most often, it’s her own bed, which is even featured on the album cover. This is the place where she can retreat into solitude. “All things look the same from the pillow on my bed”, she sings on “Weight Of The Wheel”, which has a bit of the folk-rock elegance of The Band. “I’m stressed out, I’m far away/ There’s a dizzy dancing in my head”.

Or, as she sings on opener “Birds Fly”, “It’s so nice to have a bed and watch the trees grow”. That song begins with a hallucinogenic intro before fading into a quiet arrangement that foregrounds Valazza’s voice and guitar, her thumb picking out a pendulum on the low strings. The album concludes not far from where it starts, with the spare title track set, ironically, back in Portland. It’s a kitchen-sink reverie, an idle reminiscence while she washes the dishes.

“Wishing you well from Newman Street”, she muses. “How is the weather on the open sea?/ Now I sit here all alone, keeping control”. Both musically and lyrically, From Newman Street is Valazza’s strongest, boldest and most vivid expression of emotional restlessness, but it’s also a search for stable ground and a nice view – some place or person or mood that feels like home.

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Pink Floyd At Pompeii MCMLXXII

Pink Floyd and experimental filmmakers were made for each other. Sketchy plot? Unknowable characters? Third act still in development? In the era immediately after the departure of Syd Barrett, Pink Floyd could certainly empathise with all of that – and for the right fee would be able improvise you some searching and intermittently explosive music to soundtrack it.

Pink Floyd and experimental filmmakers were made for each other. Sketchy plot? Unknowable characters? Third act still in development? In the era immediately after the departure of Syd Barrett, Pink Floyd could certainly empathise with all of that – and for the right fee would be able improvise you some searching and intermittently explosive music to soundtrack it.

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It had recently worked for the BBC (the moon landings, 1969) and Barbet Schroeder, for his films More (1968) and La Vallée (1972), but when he approached Pink Floyd, the French director Adrian Maben had arguably left it a little too late to get their full attention for a vaguely outlined project juxtaposing their music with works of surrealist art. By now, after all, Pink Floyd were getting somewhere. The “ping” sound in “Echoes” had lately been a penny audibly dropping on how the band might pilot their way beyond the next horizon with structured, conceptual pieces.

However, when Maben, undeterred, came back with a revised project – to film the band playing a set to the empty amphitheatre in Pompeii in October 1971 – he’d alighted on something sufficiently odd to pique their interest. If he was too late to catch the shifting and ectoplasmic Floyd he thought he wanted, Maben, much in the spirit of the times, captured an era in a way a more dogged documentarian might have missed. He filmed an important band in the way that no such band is generally ever filmed: extensively, in superbly high quality, and – most importantly – just as they were moving into what, for once, it isn’t vulgar to call their imperial phase.

Maben’s direction – now rendered in the gleaming definition of this new release – is all about grandeur. The Pink Floyd: Live At Pompeii footage has some sweet things in it, like the band roaming around the volcanic landscape, communing with the bubbling mud (a visual history of Pink Floyd promo images between 1971 and ’74 would feature a lot of sand) but the main characterand scale of the concert sequences is monumental.

The camera moves in a stately fashion, drinking in the historic setting and charting the build of the set. There are graceful tracking shots of the backs of the amplifiers (“Pink Floyd. London”), which strongly suggest that in the mathematics of the era, gear quantity equalled serious music. This was clearly serious – a fact confirmed by the presence of a grand piano.

Slowly, the band’s set unfolds. The first part of “Echoes”, “Careful With That Axe, Eugene”, “Saucerful Of Secrets”… it’s an engrossing and sumptuous thing to watch, as the band languidly perform this very good music on a sunny afternoon. On one level, it’s a scene of fin-de-siècle pranksterism: they’re here to do something for its own sake; the same benign testing of frontiers that will make you found a school or an underground newspaper. On another, freighted as the scene is with the benefit of hindsight, the film now plays as more thoughtful and bespoke. Pink Floyd. The amphitheatre at Pompeii. Which is the more enduring edifice?

Pink Floyd’s personalities lighten the gravitas. During interviews conducted while making The Dark Side Of The Moon in 1972, we don’t get much of an insight into Rick Wright or the mildly preoccupied David Gilmour. Roger Waters? He’s full of strong opinions on everything, from philosophical questions of instrumental technology (are the Floyd’s machines running themselves?) to the non-sibilant second pressings of Obscured By Clouds. The real gift to the filmmakers, though, is undoubtedly Nick Mason. Looning at the drums, his presence is an asset in live sequences otherwise filled with tranquil guitar noodling and Roger Waters’ occasional flailing at the gong.

Back in the canteen at EMI Studios on Abbey Road, he delivers a historic rebuke to the wheatgrass smoothie (“I’ll have egg, sausage, chips and beans – and a tea”) and is as insightful on the times and Pink Floyd’s place in them as he is dogmatic about the correct slice of fruit crumble (“NOT a corner piece”).

For some people, Mason thinks, Floyd are “part of their childhood”; part of the “underground London” era that included the free concert in Hyde Park. That was all very well, he suggests, but it’s not a place where the band would want to stay forever. In the studio, we observe Rick Wright adding another well-chosen keyboard trill to “Us And Them” and can immediately understand that there’s no danger of that. As the world will shortly come to know, Pink Floyd’s music has already woken up to the concerns of the adult world. What they play from now on will, for good and bad, be filled by the responsibilities of their own maturity.

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