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Neil Young announces Harvest 50th anniversary reissue, shares rare “Heart Of Gold” live performance

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Neil Young has announced the 50th anniversary reissue of his 1972 album Harvest. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Neil Young with Crazy Horse – Toast review The veteran folk star will celebrate half a century of his seminal fourth album with a...

Neil Young has announced the 50th anniversary reissue of his 1972 album Harvest.

The veteran folk star will celebrate half a century of his seminal fourth album with a deluxe reissue that’s released on December 2 via Reprise (pre-order). Included in the reissue is a documentary called Harvest Time, from which Young has shared a previously unreleased live recording of him performing “Heart Of Gold” for the BBC.

Available on 3xLP or 3xCD, the box set will come with the following: the original album; three studio outtakes; the BBC solo set recorded on February 23, 1971; and Harvest Time. Also included is a hardbound photo book, posters, and liner notes by photographer Joel Bernstein.

The outtakes included in the reissue are “Bad Fog Of Loneliness”, “Journey Through The Past” and “Dance Dance Dance”. Harvest Time also features footage from Young’s “Harvest Barn” sessions in Northern California along with recording sessions in Nashville and London.

You can watch the BBC recording of “Heart Of Gold” below.

Harvest (50th anniversary edition) tracklist:

01. “Out On The Weekend”
02. “Harvest”
03. “A Man Needs A Maid”
04. “Heart Of Gold”
05. “Are You Ready For The Country?”
06. “Old Man”
07. “There’s A World”
08. “Alabama”
09. “The Needle And The Damage Done”
10. “Words (Between The Lines Of Age)”

Neil Young Live in concert at the BBC:

01. “Out On The Weekend”
02. “Old Man”
03. “Journey Through The Past”
04. “Heart Of Gold”
05. “Don’t Let It Bring You Down”
06. “A Man Needs A Maid”
07. “Love In Mind”
08. “Dance Dance Dance”

Harvest outtakes:

01. “Bad Fog Of Loneliness”
02. “Journey Through The Past”
03. “Dance Dance Dance”

In other news, Young recently announced World Record, a new album he created with his band Crazy Horse.

The 10-song album will be released on November 18, and was produced by Rick Rubin at his Shangri-La studios in Malibu. The same studio was previously used by Young to record his 2016 album, Peace Trail.

On World Record, Young provides vocals across the album’s tracklist alongside instrumentation from Crazy Horse, all of which was recorded live and mixed to analogue tape by Rubin.

Friends and peers celebrate the musical genius of Davy Graham: “In some way, we all worshipped him”

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He was a revolutionary spirit at the vanguard of the ’60s folk movement, until drug addiction and mental health issues waylaid his mercurial talent. Here friends and collaborators and – among them Shirley Collins, Martin Carthy and Ray Davies – celebrate the nimble-fingered magic of DAVY GRAHA...

He was a revolutionary spirit at the vanguard of the ’60s folk movement, until drug addiction and mental health issues waylaid his mercurial talent. Here friends and collaborators and – among them Shirley Collins, Martin Carthy and Ray Davies – celebrate the nimble-fingered magic of DAVY GRAHAM. “He burned very brightly for a short time, and no-one forgot that,” hears Rob Hughes, in the latest issue of Uncut magazine – in UK shops from Thursday, October 13 and available to buy from our online store.

Shirley Collins has never cared much for jazz. So in 1964, when her husband suggested getting together with a hotshot guitarist he’d seen in a London jazz club, she hardly jumped at the idea. Undeterred, Austin John Marshall pressed on with introductions, inviting 23-year-old Davy Graham over to their home in Blackheath.

“I thought, ‘God, this is going to be awful,’” Collins recalls. “This tall young man, rather unsmiling at first, came in and starting playing “She Moved Through The Fair”, which I’d seen Margaret Barry sing at the Albert Hall. I couldn’t see how anybody could get away from her banjo sound, but the minute Davy started to play it, I realised that he absolutely understood the essential Irishness of the song. Yet he also somehow managed to bring it several stages forward, in the most beautiful way. When I started singing, the possibility of it was almost God-given. It was just mind-changing.”

The result, Folk Roots, New Routes, issued early the following year, proved a landmark. Collins’ pure voice found thrilling contrast in Graham’s sinuous fusion of styles drawn from North Africa, the Middle East and Indian raga forms. World music transposed onto a clutch of traditional folk songs. “At that time in folk music, nobody was making much effort to go through archives or collections to hear anything good, with the exception of Martin Carthy,” explains Collins. “But Davy had dug deeper and had a real understanding of the music. He could light up a song.”

Folk Roots, New Routes and the solo Folk, Blues & Beyond, also released in 1965, affirmed Graham’s reputation as the most prized guitarist of his generation. He’d spent the previous few years gigging around the capital’s folk dens and coffee houses, expanding the remit of traditional music in ways that hardly seemed feasible. Not only was he a dazzling technician, but he redefined folk guitar through a process of modal experiments, supple jazz phrasings and the absorption of his own tuning: DADGAD.

“Everybody saw his genius,” acknowledges Roy Harper, another contemporary who shared bills with Graham during the ’60s. “In some way, we all worshipped him. He was almost existing in a separate realm where jazz had been at least as important as acoustic folk.”

Graham’s calling card was “Angi”. A ravishing instrumental, first heard on a joint EP with Alexis Korner, it swiftly became a go-to for every aspiring folk guitarist in Britain. Key disciples of Graham’s like Bert Jansch, John Renbourn and Paul Simon were among those who covered it (the version on Sounds Of Silence kept Graham in royalties for some time). “Everybody in that particular folk guitar circle looked up to Davy, because he’d gone into it in such detail,” says Martin Carthy. “He was just incredibly adventurous for the time. He knocked everybody out.”

PICK UP THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT TO READ THE FULL STORY

Bob Dylan’s Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues! Show 15: Amsterdam 1

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Bob Dylan's Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues to make its way through Europe. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Last night [October 16], Dylan and his band performed at Amsterdam's AFAS Live, The Netherlands. Previously, the tour has stopped at: ...

Bob Dylan‘s Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues to make its way through Europe.

Bob Dylan

Last night [October 16], Dylan and his band performed at Amsterdam’s AFAS Live, The Netherlands.

Previously, the tour has stopped at:

Oslo Spektrum, Norway on September 25

Avicii Arena, Stockholm, Sweden on September 27

Scandinavium, Gothenburg, Sweden on September 29

Royal Arena, Copenhagen, Denmark on September 30

Flens-Arena, Flensburg, Germany on October 2

GETEC Arena, Magdeburg, Germany on October 3

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 5

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 6

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 7

Yayla Arena, Krefeld, Germany on October 9

Grand Rex, Paris, France on October 11

Grand Rex, Paris, France on October 12

Grand Rex, Paris, France on October 13

Forest National, Brussels, Belgium on October 15

According to Boblinks, the setlist for Dylan and his band in Brussels was:

Watching The River Flow (Bob on piano)
Most Likely You Go Your Way (and I’ll Go Mine) (Bob on piano)
I Contain Multitudes (Bob on piano)
False Prophet (Bob on piano)
When I Paint My Masterpiece (Bob on piano with full backing band)
Black Rider (Bob on piano)
My Own Version of You (Bob on piano)
I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight (Bob on piano)
Crossing The Rubicon (Bob on piano)
To Be Alone With You (Bob on piano)
Key West (Philosopher Pirate) (Bob on piano)
Gotta Serve Somebody (Bob on piano)
I’ve Made Up My Mind To Give Myself To You (Bob on piano)
That Old Black Magic (Bob on piano)
Mother of Muses (Bob on piano)
Goodbye Jimmy Reed (Bob on piano)
Band introductions (Bob on piano)
Every Grain of Sand (Bob on piano with harp)

According to capt.kid on Expecting Rain, “What a show! The band is so good. At the band introductions he laughed when he got to Tony. I thought it was mighty funny.

It really is an awesome set of songs! He sings them so well!!!

Favorite tracks where: Most Likely, MOVOY, Key West (the bass line is very nice), and I Contain Multitudes that on got me tears… Old black magic was not a wreck like previous dates. The harp solo was spot on.”

Added Nellien, “What a great concert this was. I think it was a top performance, I was a little bit afraid he maybe should be tired after some many concerts, but he was not. After reading reviews and listening to recordings of this leg there were not much surprises for me.

A great harp at the and of EGOS [Every Grain Of Sand]

Maybe the drums and piano a little bit too loud for me. Bob was standing a lot and I was lucky to have a good view.”

Dylan’s next show is on Monday, October 17 at AFAS Live concert hall in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. He reaches the UK on October 19, for a 12-date tour that includes four nights at the London Palladium. This will be Bob’s first UK tour for five years.

Bob Dylan’s Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues! Show 14: Brussels

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Bob Dylan's Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues to make its way through Europe. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Last night [October 15], Dylan and his band performed at Brussels' Forest National, Belgium. Previously, the tour has stopped at: Oslo ...

Bob Dylan‘s Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues to make its way through Europe.

Bob Dylan

Last night [October 15], Dylan and his band performed at Brussels’ Forest National, Belgium.

Previously, the tour has stopped at:

Oslo Spektrum, Norway on September 25

Avicii Arena, Stockholm, Sweden on September 27

Scandinavium, Gothenburg, Sweden on September 29

Royal Arena, Copenhagen, Denmark on September 30

Flens-Arena, Flensburg, Germany on October 2

GETEC Arena, Magdeburg, Germany on October 3

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 5

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 6

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 7

Yayla Arena, Krefeld, Germany on October 9

Grand Rex, Paris, France on October 11

Grand Rex, Paris, France on October 12

Grand Rex, Paris, France on October 13

According to Boblinks, the setlist for Dylan and his band in Brussels was:

Watching The River Flow (Bob on piano)
Most Likely You Go Your Way (and I’ll Go Mine) (Bob on piano)
I Contain Multitudes (Bob on piano)
False Prophet (Bob on piano)
When I Paint My Masterpiece (Bob on piano with full backing band)
Black Rider (Bob on piano)
My Own Version of You (Bob on piano)
I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight (Bob on piano)
Crossing The Rubicon (Bob on piano)
To Be Alone With You (Bob on piano)
Key West (Philosopher Pirate) (Bob on piano)
Gotta Serve Somebody (Bob on piano)
I’ve Made Up My Mind To Give Myself To You (Bob on piano)
That Old Black Magic (Bob on piano)
Mother of Muses (Bob on piano)
Goodbye Jimmy Reed (Bob on piano)
Band introductions (Bob on piano)
Every Grain of Sand (Bob on piano with harp)

Says one reviewer, Marc Rosseel, on Boblinks, “Forest is packed and they show the love for His Bobness, shouting,
clapping and standing ovation, song after song”. According to Laurette Maillet, “On ‘I’ll be your baby tonight’ we’ll hear twice ‘I’ll be your baby CE SOIR’. Much applause :)”

For Bobcelona on Expecting Rain highlights in Brussels were, “‘Key West’, which entered new phases of depth in the moment Bob introduced a piano melody that intertwined with the phrasing and turned the song into a time-stopping dance with mortality, and ‘Goodbye Jimmy Reed’, with a rhythm control by Bob immaculately followed by the band in what has ended up being an statement of the experimental approach most shows now feature.”

According to lotterman on Expecting Rain, “he played a wonderful Every Grain of Sand. And wow, that harp solo at the end might be the best end of a Dylan show I ever witnessed.”

Dylan’s next show is on Sunday, October 16 at AFAS Live concert hall in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. He reaches the UK on October 19, for a 12-date tour that includes four nights at the London Palladium. This will be Bob’s first UK tour for five years.

Bill Callahan – YTI⅃AƎЯ

Increasingly bold in saying his cosmic quiet bits out loud, Bill Callahan drifts into reverie on the woozy “Planets” – one of the many spaced-out songs on his new LP – after having stared “at the sky so long I forgot how to talk”. As trumpeter Derek Phelps and regular guitarist Matt Kins...

Increasingly bold in saying his cosmic quiet bits out loud, Bill Callahan drifts into reverie on the woozy “Planets” – one of the many spaced-out songs on his new LP – after having stared “at the sky so long I forgot how to talk”. As trumpeter Derek Phelps and regular guitarist Matt Kinsey whip up a suitably galactic storm, the one-time Smog man hears the spheres singing something “vaguely Hawaiian”. “Kilakila Malu”, they chorus. “Kilakila Malu”.

The one-time deadpan king of dysfunction is continuing to follow a slightly yoga-pants-and-Birkenstocks path on his 20th studio LP. Having established himself as a career outsider with 1997’s prowler’s charter “Ex-Con”, the lo-fi Marylander has long-since stretched out from scratchy songs of desperation into more expansive terrain, 2003’s Supper and 2009’s Sometimes I Wish We Were An Eagle including some of the era’s most acute songs of love.

However, if their extensive leafings from his dream diary had some precedent in his earlier work, the themes of marriage and fatherhood that dominated 2019’s Shepherd In A Sheepskin Vest and 2020’s Gold Record felt like a betrayal for those who liked Callahan more when he could sing “why’s everybody looking at me like there’s something fundamentally wrong?” (as he did on “Palimpsest”, from 2005’s A River Ain’t Too Much To Love) and mean it.

If the new model Callahan continues to come out with slightly grandiose, Buddha-like statements (“we must bow our heads to get in and out of what we’re living in”, the 56-year-old nods sagely on “The Horse”), YTI⅃AƎЯ is a more troubled, and troubling work than its predecessors. Peppered with floaty jazz sections, and unexpected backing vocals (including contributions from Callahan’s son, Bass), its stated intention was to re-engage with a post-pandemic, post-Donald Trump world, though Callahan’s vision of life on the other side of the culture wars is an idiosyncratic one. His mantra amid the Crazy Horse-play of opener “First Bird” is “as we’re coming out of dreams, and we’re coming back to dreams”. His message: the inner world is more meaningful and engaging than the manufactured outrages of the outside one.

Seemingly channelling Carl Gustav Jung, Callahan warms to his task on Caravan-fandango “Natural Information”, singing about dipping into some well of universal truth during a pushchair ramble with his baby daughter. Accessing these extra levels of consciousness is easy, he suggests, if you know how. He then boasts absent-mindedly of his speed-dial relationship with his creative self (and his taste in leisure footwear) as he adds: “I wrote this song in five, in recovery slides”.

The luminous “Coyotes” covers less well peer-reviewed terrain, Callahan drifting off into a meditation on reincarnation, and lovers reconnecting from lifetime to lifetime, after watching a sleeping family dog. “We tend to stick together down through the generations”, he sings in deadly earnest. “Holding hands through many lives”.

If this esoteric knowledge is reassuring, YTI⅃AƎЯ is not a new age pamphlet set to music. Anger and sadness course through it too. Listen closely, and line-dance-friendly closer “Last One At The Party” reveals itself as Callahan’s in memoriam to Silver Jews kingpin David Berman. “Drainface” glowers, “Partition” snarls, while “Naked Souls” taps into the cacophony of unhappy humanity – the incels, keyboard warriors and would-be cops and spree killers – and seemingly suggests a cull.

Callahan wrote, gently, touchingly, about his mother’s passing on Shepherd In A Sheepskin Vest, but returns to her deathbed on “Lily”. The wheel of her stretcher squeaks as her body is taken away. There are unresolved issues, then a séance. “The medium said you were sticking around halfway to make sure my boy was OK”, says Callahan. Going by the dark noise behind him, this message from behind the curtain is more unsettling than reassuring.

YTI⅃AƎЯ picks at the fabric of the universe and if it doesn’t always find the answers it wants, the expansive musical backdrop underlines its slightly ecstatic, questing spirit: here Mark E Smith, there Marquee Moon. As he continues to jot down his inner workings, Callahan may veer too close to psychobabble for some, but his writing remains subtly mined with pomposity-busting gags, even if his truth is increasingly out there.

Back on “Planets”, Callahan sees the sun clock off for the day and is overwhelmed by the fundamentally benign nature of the cosmos. For a moment the astral plainsman feels refreshed; “renewed”, as he puts it “for a second season”. Google Translate says “Kilakila Malu” means “shadow place” in Hawaiian. Go deeper if you dare.

Brian Eno – ForeverAndEverNoMore

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The first public taste of FOREVERANDEVERNOMORE could hardly have transpired in more extraordinary circumstances. As Brian Eno sang menacingly of “rock and fire” and “gas and dust” amid an ominously swelling storm of distorted synths, smoke lingered in the nighttime air and ash rained down fr...

The first public taste of FOREVERANDEVERNOMORE could hardly have transpired in more extraordinary circumstances. As Brian Eno sang menacingly of “rock and fire” and “gas and dust” amid an ominously swelling storm of distorted synths, smoke lingered in the nighttime air and ash rained down from the heavens. He was standing on the ancient stage of Athens’ Odeon of Herodes Atticus, in the shadow of the Acropolis, and these were not special effects. Wildfires were ravaging the Greek countryside, and when he cautioned that “these billion years will end”, his voice dropped in a potent mix of angry admonition and desperate resignation. The song felt like a warning from the gods.

The occasion was the inaugural live performance last summer by Brian and younger brother Roger, in celebration of their debut full-length collaboration, Mixing Colours. Its timely release in March 2020, as the UK’s initial Covid lockdown began, allowed its gentle solo piano instrumentals to recast our sudden, alien emptiness as a welcome opportunity for a breather. That premiere a year later of “Garden Of Stars” – and “There Were Bells”, which engages with similar themes – occurred in no less serendipitous circumstances, albeit, given their concerns, in an appropriately less soothing manner. “Here we are,” Brian commented from the stage, “at the birthplace of civilisation, watching the end of it.”

FOREVERANDEVERNOMORE’s recorded versions stay, like the album’s subject matter, loyal to the sound of that night. “Garden Of Stars” again finds Leo Abrahams on guitar, Pete Chilvers on keyboards, and Roger on accordion– plus the latter’s daughter, Cecily, adding her voice – and its furious midsection flaunts the kind of visceral sound design favoured by sombre, supernatural Netflix dramas. “There Were Bells”, meanwhile, begins with birdsong and cosmic gong-like synths, Brian plaintively describing a summer’s day on which “the sky revolved a pink to golden blue” before his somnolent mood slowly darkens. With a rumbling in the background, he conjures up “horns as loud as war that tore apart the sky”, turning to biblical imagery of Noah’s flood before gloomily concluding, “In the end they all went the same way”. The lack of an apocalyptic backdrop does nothing to lessen either song’s impact.

In just the span of a pandemic, Brian appears to have renounced Mixing Colours’ escapist tendencies, his agenda now not only more pressing but also grounded in reality. This isn’t without precedent: at points, 2005’s Another Day On Earth tackled terrorism and 2016’s The Ship addressed war, and with their emphasis on vocals, those albums also arguably represent this new work’s most obvious musical forerunners. But the man sometimes known as Brain One has now, if maybe grudgingly, accepted that a compassionate, intimate, less cerebral approach may be more effective at urgently conveying the dismal ramifications of the climate emergency to which many of us, some wilfully, seem oblivious.

FOREVERANDEVERNOMORE therefore makes little attempt to refashion the world in either a flattering or reassuring light, instead documenting a thoughtful, candid response to our environment’s increasingly rapid disintegration. He calls this “an exploration of his feelings”, and any influence he seeks is emotional. Avoiding sentimentality, this quality unexpectedly turns out to be vital to the album’s success.

At times, like Mixing Colours, FOREVERANDEVERNOMORE invites us to revel warmheartedly in the magic surrounding us, whether in broad brushstrokes, recalling the “last light from that old sun”, a possibly nostalgic allusion to Frankie Laine’s “Lucky Old Sun” on the sparse, subdued, jazz-inflected “Sherry”, or zooming in with wonder on nematodes early in “Who Gives A Thought”. As he puts it at the start of “We Let It In”, a brooding but beautiful lullaby whose synths breathe and growl like living creatures, “The soul of it is running gay / With open arms through golden fields”.

This awe at nature isn’t only lyrically conveyed. Perhaps the most powerful weapon Eno now possesses is his still-underrated voice, which he employs here admirably to communicate the feelings at FOREVERANDEVERNOMORE’s heart. These aren’t the playful, sometimes processed, chameleon-esque strains of Before And After Science, though voices are occasionally treated, including his daughter Darla’s on “I’m Hardly Me” and his own on “Garden Of Stars”, where its faintly robotic character advances an already unsettling tone. Mostly his register, deepened by age, is luxuriously lugubrious, as it was on The Ship. Sometimes he’s light and consoling (“Sherry”, “Icarus Or Blériot”), at others almost choral (“We Let It In”, the hymnal “These Small Noises” with Jon Hopkins). On the introductory “Who Gives A Thought” and the nebulous “I’m Hardly Me” he even makes a convincing Ratpack crooner.

His velvet pipes and gracious harmonies, however, can’t hide how, befitting its themes of imminent catastrophe, this is frequently uneasy listening. “We Let It In”‘s “golden fields” end “in gorgeous flame” and, for all its glorification of creation, “Who Gives A Thought” encapsulates the contrasting melancholy in which the album’s drenched. “There isn’t time these days for microscopic worms”, Brian continues forlornly of those nematodes, his melody descending like a sigh, “or for unstudied germs of no commercial worth”. If he begins by humming his notes as though lying in a hot bath, lavish swathes of synths and Abrahams’ hazy guitars are soon disturbed by a random, percussive knocking – like water slapping the side of a creaking, sinking boat – and snatches of unearthly radio signals. By the time a wistful solo trumpet punctures this mournful ocean of sound, the song’s undeniable elegance has been holed by regret beneath the water line.

Something comparable could be said of “Icarus Or Blériot”, whose title, nodding to the mythical Greek who flew too close to the sun and the French aviator who was first to cross the Channel, extends a philosophical question posed insistently, and more directly: “Who are we?” and, later, pointedly, “Who were we?” Though its pulsing synths sound like distant planes and Abrahams’ guitars might suit today’s ambient Americana, any prettiness is undermined by unresolved tension and a scattering of brief bursts of dissonance.

Admittedly it’s among the more peaceful tracks, and not the only one loosely indebted to his earlier ambient excursions. Most of these “songs” are amorphous, devoid of rhythm, held together by Eno’s melodies, and each side closes with an instrumental (of sorts). The celestial “Inclusion” ebbs and flows on a current of Roxy associate Marina Moore’s strings, and “Making Gardens Out Of Silence” is an eight-minute piece of generative music commissioned for the Serpentine Gallery’s ongoing Back To Earth project, its distorted, pitch-shifted voices echoing through one of his more traditional soundscapes. It’s less a finale than a swansong.

This, surely, is by design. That FOREVERANDEVERNOMORE’s Greek harbingers were chilling offered little comfort beneath the country’s sweltering skies, and a year later the album’s troubling sentiments have only become more indispensable. Brian could have chosen to hector us, but instead reminds us of all we stand to lose while offering
a flavour of our inevitably forthcoming grief. Certainly, the atmosphere’s unnerving, almost bleak, but it’s even more inspiring, and most of all poignant. If this turns out to be our planet’s bittersweet requiem, we’ll have only ourselves to blame. At least we’ll go down singing these strange, haunting elegies. Foreverandever? Amen.

Queen share rediscovered track featuring Freddie Mercury, “Face It Alone”

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Queen have shared a rediscovered track featuring Freddie Mercury – listen to "Face It Alone" below. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Deep dive into Queen’s 30 greatest songs Over the summer, Roger Taylor and Brian May revealed that they ha...

Queen have shared a rediscovered track featuring Freddie Mercury – listen to “Face It Alone” below.

Over the summer, Roger Taylor and Brian May revealed that they had unearthed a previously unreleased song by the band that had been sung by their late frontman.

“And it’s wonderful,” Taylor told Zoe Ball during an interview on BBC Radio 2. “Actually, it was a real discovery. It’s from the Miracle [1989] sessions.” May described the tune as “beautiful” and “touching”, adding: “It was kind of hiding in plain sight.”

On October 13, Queen released the stirring song along with an official lyric video – you can watch it below.

Fans can also pre-order a special 7″ vinyl edition of “Face It Alone”, which is due to arrive on November 18.

Additionally, the track will appear on a limited collector’s edition box set of Queen’s 13th studio album The Miracle. Per a press release, the eight-disc release boasts an hour-plus disc of previously unreleased recordings, including six unpublished songs.

A series of candid spoken exchanges in the studio will also offer “the most revealing window yet into the four members’ creative process and the joy, in-jokes and banter on their return to working together”.

You can pre-order the collection here (also released on November 18).

“Face It Alone” marks the first new song featuring Freddie Mercury to be released in over eight years.

Since Mercury’s death in 1991, Queen have released a number of previously unheard tracks featuring the frontman. In 2014, they shared the compilation album Queen Forever, which was comprised of songs recorded in the ‘80s that had been “forgotten about”.

Watch Animal Collective cover Silver Jews’ “Trains Across The Sea”

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Animal Collective have recorded a new session for SiriusXM, during which they covered Silver Jews' 1994 Starlite Walker cut "Trains Across The Sea". ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut For their rendition, the experimental band spliced it up with "Genie's Open",...

Animal Collective have recorded a new session for SiriusXM, during which they covered Silver Jews’ 1994 Starlite Walker cut “Trains Across The Sea”.

For their rendition, the experimental band spliced it up with “Genie’s Open”, a track which has never been officially released but has been performed live by the band on tour from as early as 2018.

In clips that have not been released online, the band also played recent songs “Prester John” and “Passer-by”, as well as Merriweather Post Pavilion track “Bluish”. For now, watch the band play their “Genie’s Open”/“Trains Across The Sea” mash-up below:

Animal Collective released their latest studio album, ‘Time Skiffs’, in February.

Earlier this week, Animal Collective cancelled a planned UK and European tour in support of Time Skiffs that was supposed to kick off in Ireland next month, saying in a statement that as they were planning for the tour, they faced “an economic reality that simply does not work and is not sustainable”.

“From inflation, to currency devaluation, to bloated shipping and transportation costs, and much much more, we simply could not make a budget for this tour that did not lose money even if everything went as well as it could,” they continued.

“We have always been the kind of people to persevere through the difficult times and get on stage unless our health prevented it. We are choosing not to take the risk to our mental and physical health with the economic reality of what that tour would have been.”

Bob Dylan’s Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues! Show 13: Paris, Night 3

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Bob Dylan's Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues to make its way through Europe. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Last night [October 13], Dylan and his band performed the third and final show at Paris' Grand Red, France. Previously, the tour has stopp...

Bob Dylan‘s Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues to make its way through Europe.

Bob Dylan

Last night [October 13], Dylan and his band performed the third and final show at Paris’ Grand Red, France.

Previously, the tour has stopped at:

Oslo Spektrum, Norway on September 25

Avicii Arena, Stockholm, Sweden on September 27

Scandinavium, Gothenburg, Sweden on September 29

Royal Arena, Copenhagen, Denmark on September 30

Flens-Arena, Flensburg, Germany on October 2

GETEC Arena, Magdeburg, Germany on October 3

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 5

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 6

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 7

Yayla Arena, Krefeld, Germany on October 9

Grand Rex, Paris, France on October 11

Grand Rex, Paris, France on October 12

According to Boblinks, the setlist for Dylan and his band in Paris was:

Watching The River Flow (Bob on piano)
Most Likely You Go Your Way (and I’ll Go Mine) (Bob on piano)
Contain Multitudes (Bob on piano)
False Prophet (Bob on piano)
When I Paint My Masterpiece (Bob on piano with full backing band)
Black Rider (Bob on piano)
My Own Version of You (Bob on piano)
I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight (Bob on piano)
Crossing The Rubicon (Bob on piano)
To Be Alone With You (Bob on piano)
Key West (Philosopher Pirate) (Bob on piano)
Gotta Serve Somebody (Bob on piano)
I’ve Made Up My Mind To Give Myself To You (Bob on piano)
That Old Black Magic (Bob on piano)
Mother of Muses (Bob on piano)
Goodbye Jimmy Reed (Bob on piano)
Band introductions (Bob on piano)
Every Grain of Sand (Bob on piano with harp)

Says Expecting Rain poster thinman2, “It’s fascinating to watch him walking on the edge musically every night, talking risks.”

Says Bobsmurf, “Top show of all 3 nights. Really solid all the way through to that old black magic. Extended instrumental on Watching the river. As he went through i contain multitudes, false prophet I realised how great those songs really are, only taken me 2 years to realise.

“Gotta serve somebody rocked, and the crowd was rough and rowdy all through.

“Black magic, mother and Jimmy Reed were disappointing. To me he lost it for 3 tracks, even turning away at one point after a song, playing with his hair.

“But wow. Every Grain of Sand, incredible incredible incredible. The first piano solo was amazing enough, but when the harp came out, I lost it as did the crowd. A staggering solo to end an amazing first three shows I’ve ever been to.”

Dylan’s next show is on Saturday, October 15 at the Forest National, Brussels, Belgium. He reaches the UK on October 19, for a 12-date tour that includes four nights at the London Palladium. This will be Bob’s first UK tour for five years.

Bob Dylan’s Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues! Show 12: Paris, Night 2

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Bob Dylan's Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues to make its way through Europe. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Last night [October 12], Dylan and his band performed the second of three shows at Paris' Grand Red, France. Previously, the tour has stopped ...

Bob Dylan‘s Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues to make its way through Europe.

Last night [October 12], Dylan and his band performed the second of three shows at Paris’ Grand Red, France.

Previously, the tour has stopped at:

Oslo Spektrum, Norway on September 25

Avicii Arena, Stockholm, Sweden on September 27

Scandinavium, Gothenburg, Sweden on September 29

Royal Arena, Copenhagen, Denmark on September 30

Flens-Arena, Flensburg, Germany on October 2

GETEC Arena, Magdeburg, Germany on October 3

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 5

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 6

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 7

Yayla Arena, Krefeld, Germany on October 9

Grand Rex, Paris, France on October 11

According to Boblinks, the setlist for Dylan and his band in Paris was:

Watching The River Flow (Bob on piano)
Most Likely You Go Your Way (and I’ll Go Mine) (Bob on piano)
I Contain Multitudes (Bob on piano)
False Prophet (Bob on piano)
When I Paint My Masterpiece (Bob on piano with full backing band)
Black Rider (Bob on piano)
My Own Version of You (Bob on piano)
I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight (Bob on piano)
Crossing The Rubicon (Bob on piano)
To Be Alone With You (Bob on piano)
Key West (Philosopher Pirate) (Bob on piano)
Gotta Serve Somebody (Bob on piano)
I’ve Made Up My Mind To Give Myself To You (Bob on piano)
That Old Black Magic (Bob on piano)
Mother of Muses (Bob on piano)
Goodbye Jimmy Reed (Bob on piano)
Band introductions (Bob on piano)
Every Grain of Sand (Bob on piano)

Bob Dylan

You can read a long review of the show here, in which Dylan fan Johnny Borgan compares the October 12 show with the previous night’s performance. “In my opinion ‘Watching The River Flow’ was always the weakest spot in this set, excused by the warm-up effect, but when Dylan attacks the song tonight, after playing some chords of ‘Oh Susannah’ before it evolves into the song, something happens and I have to look up and listen, he is on fire, breathes new life in the song and sings kind of harmony to his unsung melody line, and it’s just great. What a start & the first change from last night.”

Borgan also notes that, “No harmonica tonight – maybe the powerful singer after all has to save some energy, voice and breath through the night, or some nights? The piano works well, the almost percussive effect Dylan love is used to the fullest, and that’s the driving force behind the dynamics of a band always attentive and focused on the pianist’s small nods and signs. A really great and long piano solo on ‘To Be Alone With You’.”

Dylan’s next show is on Thursday, October 13 at the Grand Rex, Paris, France. He reaches the UK on October 19, for a 12-date tour that includes four nights at the London Palladium. This will be Bob’s first UK tour for five years.

Send us your questions for Michael Head

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It's 40 years since beloved Liverpool romantics The Pale Fountains enjoyed their sole brush with the charts. "Thank You" reached No. 48 in November 1982, establishing a pattern of agonising near-misses and poignant almost-fame that frontman Michael Head would repeat with his subsequent bands Shack a...

It’s 40 years since beloved Liverpool romantics The Pale Fountains enjoyed their sole brush with the charts. “Thank You” reached No. 48 in November 1982, establishing a pattern of agonising near-misses and poignant almost-fame that frontman Michael Head would repeat with his subsequent bands Shack and The Strands.

But then this year, something strange happened: Head’s terrific new album with The Red Elastic Band, Dear Scott, broke into the UK Top 10 – deserved reward for decades of heart-tugging baroque pop that brought the streets of Kenny (AKA Kensington, Liverpool) to life as vividly as those of LA or San Francisco.

So this would seem a pretty good time to collar Mr Head and ask him anything you want about his circuitous route to the top and the many great songs he’s given us along the way. Send your questions to audiencewith@www.uncut.co.uk by Monday (October 17) and he’ll answer the best ones in the next issue of Uncut.

Listen to Weyes Blood’s new epic road song, “Grapevine”

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Weyes Blood has released a brand new single "Grapevine". Check it out below. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Taken from her forthcoming album And In The Darkness, Hearts Aglow, set for release November 18 via Sub Pop, Weyes Blood’s latest single is an epic...

Weyes Blood has released a brand new single “Grapevine”. Check it out below.

Taken from her forthcoming album And In The Darkness, Hearts Aglow, set for release November 18 via Sub Pop, Weyes Blood’s latest single is an epic road song set along the famed stretch of Southern California’s Interstate 5.

Speaking about the meaning behind “Grapevine”, Weyes Blood’s Natalie Mering said: “Technology is harvesting our attention away from each other. We all have a ‘Grapevine’ entwined around our past with unresolved wounds and pain.

“Being in love doesn’t necessarily mean being together. Why else do so many love songs yearn for a connection?”

“Grapevine” follows on from previous single “It’s Not Just Me, It’s Everybody” –  a song about interconnectivity and “the fraying of society around us”.

In addition, Weyes Blood will be heading out on her In Holy Flux Tour between late winter and spring of 2023 in support. Check out dates below.

Weyes Blood’s tour dates are:

JANUARY
28 – Festsaal Kreuzberg, Berlin
30 – Berns, Stockholm
31 – Rockefeller, Oslo

FEBRUARY
01 – VEGA, Copenhagen
03 – Kulturkirche, Cologne
04 – Le Trianon, Paris
05 – Botanique – Orangerie, Brussels
06 – Paradiso, Amsterdam
08 – Roundhouse, London
09 – SWX, Bristol
10 – QMU, Glasgow
12 – Vicar Street, Dublin
13 – O2 Ritz, Manchester
14 – CHALK, Brighton

Dan Auerbach’s band The Arcs announce first album in eight years, Electrophonic Chronic

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Dan Auerbach's band The Arcs have announced their first album in eight years, Electrophonic Chronic. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut The Black Keys frontman's side project released their debut studio record, Yours, Dreamily, back in 2015. Its 12-track follow...

Dan Auerbach’s band The Arcs have announced their first album in eight years, Electrophonic Chronic.

The Black Keys frontman’s side project released their debut studio record, Yours, Dreamily, back in 2015. Its 12-track follow-up is due to arrive on January 27, 2023 via Auerbach’s own label Easy Eye Sound (pre-order here).

The Arcs have shared the first preview of the forthcoming project in the form of Keep On Dreamin’, which arrives with an animated official video by Robert “Roboshobo” Schober.

Electrophonic Chronic will also include the cuts “Heaven Is A Place”, “A Man Will Do Wrong”, “Backstage Mess” and “Love Doesn’t Live Here Anymore”.

The Arcs’ original line-up – completed by Leon Michels, Nick Movshon, Homer Steinweiss, and the late Richard Swift (who died in 2018, aged 41) – contributed to the new album, per a press release.

It was recorded between Auerbach’s Easy Eye Sound studio in Nashville, Electric Lady in Manhattan, and Michels’ Diamond Mine in Queens, New York. Auerbach and Michels served as co-producers.

“This new record is all about honouring Swift,” Auerbach said in a statement. “It’s a way for us to say goodbye to him, by revisiting him playing and laughing, singing. It was heavy at times, but I think it was really helpful to do it.”

He continued: “Whether it was New York City or Nashville or LA or Swift’s hometown of Cottage Grove, Oregon, wherever we were, we would always get in the studio together.

“It was our favourite thing to do. It’s rare that you meet a group of people that you click with like that, who you instantly bond with. We were just having fun, making sounds, making music. It was an amazing time for me.”

Michels, meanwhile, said that The Arcs had laid down “between 80 and 100 tracks” as the group “just constantly recorded” following the release of Yours, Dreamily.

“It was so much fun to be in the studio once again, so we were just making music all the time,” he added. “I think there was always a plan to make a follow-up record.”

The full tracklist for The Arcs’ Electrophonic Chronic is as follows:

01 “Keep On Dreamin'”
02 “Eyez”
03 “Heaven Is A Place”
04 “Califone Interlude”
05 “River”
06 “Sunshine”
07 “A Man Will Do Wrong”
08 “Behind The Eyes”
09 “Backstage Mess”
10 “Sporting Girls Interlude”
11 “Love Doesn’t Live Here Anymore”
12 “Only One For Me”

Bob Dylan’s Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues! Show 11: Paris, Night 1

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Bob Dylan's Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues to make its way through Europe. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Last night [October 11], Dylan and his band performed the first of three shows at Paris' Grand Red, France. Previously, the tour has stopped a...

Bob Dylan‘s Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour continues to make its way through Europe.

Last night [October 11], Dylan and his band performed the first of three shows at Paris’ Grand Red, France.

Previously, the tour has stopped at:

Oslo Spektrum, Norway on September 25

Avicii Arena, Stockholm, Sweden on September 27

Scandinavium, Gothenburg, Sweden on September 29

Royal Arena, Copenhagen, Denmark on September 30

Flens-Arena, Flensburg, Germany on October 2

GETEC Arena, Magdeburg, Germany on October 3

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 5

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 6

Verti Music Hall, Berlin, Germany on October 7

Yayla Arena, Krefeld, Germany on October 9

According to Boblinks, the setlist for Dylan and his band in Paris was:

Watching The River Flow (Bob on piano)
Most Likely You Go Your Way (and I’ll Go Mine) (Bob on piano)
I Contain Multitudes (Bob on piano)
False Prophet (Bob on piano)
When I Paint My Masterpiece (Bob on piano with full backing band)
Black Rider (Bob on piano)
My Own Version of You (Bob on piano)
I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight (Bob on piano with harp)
Crossing The Rubicon (Bob on piano)
To Be Alone With You (Bob on piano)
Key West (Philosopher Pirate) (Bob on piano)
Gotta Serve Somebody (Bob on piano)
I’ve Made Up My Mind To Give Myself To You (Bob on piano)
That Old Black Magic (Bob on piano)
Mother of Muses (Bob on piano)
Goodbye Jimmy Reed (Bob on piano)
Band introductions (Bob on piano)
Every Grain of Sand (Bob on piano)

Bob Dylan

You can read a long review of the show here, in which Dylan fan Johnny Borgan writes, “The sound is perfect & crispy clear after some adjustments through ‘Watching The River Flow’, we can hear Dylan whisper ‘I Contain Multitudes’ in our ears, and his barking as sharp gunshots in ‘False Prophet’, the new arrangement fits like a glove!

Meanwhile, on Expecting Rain, GuillemTM wrote, “Bob seemed in great mood. It took him a couole of songs to get into it but My Own Version Of You was terrific. So it was Black Rider, I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight and Gotta Serve Somebody. All Rough And Rowdy Ways songs sounded great, and different from the album.” Also on Expecting Rain, Bobsmurf described the show as “an incredible overwhelming experience… Highlights for me, Gotta Serve Somebody, I’ll be your baby tonight, that harp solo really got me, I contain multitudes ending with one of many incredible centre stage ‘bows’.”

Dylan’s next show is on Wednesday, October 12 at the Grand Rex, Paris, France. He reaches the UK on October 19, for a 12-date tour that includes four nights at the London Palladium. This will be Bob’s first UK tour for five years.

On the road with Bob Dylan

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As BOB DYLAN live fever reaches its peak, Uncut travels to Stockholm to experience the Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour up close. First, though, Uncut’s writers – and some close associates – relive their own legendary encounters with Bob from his past seven decades of challenging, constantly evolving...

As BOB DYLAN live fever reaches its peak, Uncut travels to Stockholm to experience the Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour up close. First, though, Uncut’s writers – and some close associates – relive their own legendary encounters with Bob from his past seven decades of challenging, constantly evolving live music. Take your seat alongside us at Sheffield City Hall in 1965, Madison Square Garden in 1974, the Spokane Opera House in 1980 and beyond, down 50 transformative years, in our definitive, eye-witness report on Dylan in concert, in the latest issue of Uncut magazine – in UK shops from Thursday, October 13 and available to buy from our online store.

To give you a flavour of our latest cover story, Richard Williams’ recalls an early sighting of Dylan in the UK, still in his first incarnation as boho troubadour, at Sheffield City Hall on April 30, 1965…

A handful of folk-club appearances during a stay in London in December 1962 to record the BBC TV play Madhouse On Castle Street and a sold-out concert at the Royal Festival Hall in May 1964 were Bob Dylan’s only British appearances before he stepped on stage at Sheffield’s City Hall on the evening of April 30, 1965, opening a seven-date UK concert tour. None of us present that night knew was that this was our last chance to see a full-length exposition of Dylan in his first incarnation: the solo troubadour on stage with nothing more than an acoustic guitar and a bunch of harmonicas.

There was no support act. With no preliminaries, he launched straight into “The Times They Are A-Changin’”, probably his most famous song just then, since it had been released as a single in the UK in advance of the tour, making the Top 10. He sang it straight, neither leaning in to the song nor drawing back, playing it just a touch too fast, as if to get it out of the way. It was a first tiny indication that Dylan might be capable of ambivalent feelings towards his own work, or at least towards the way it was absorbed and used by his audience. A lot had changed since he chose to open another concert with the song in November 1963, two or three nights after JFK was killed and just a week after he’d recorded it in New York. Now you could tell he felt that the song had left his ownership; he was no longer responsible for it, nor would he allow himself to be defined by the simple slogan that had spoken to and for so many.

As it ended, the applause was ardent. In his documentary Don’t Look Back, DA Pennebaker captured how it faded to silence as Dylan stepped back, slid a capo on to the second fret and took his time choosing a harmonica from the selection on a bar stool next to his microphone stand. Although there were plenty of school-age fans present to see a performer who was now a pop star, albeit a new variant of the genre, the audience’s behaviour was that of the concert hall or the folk club, attentive and respectful.

“To Ramona” was warmer. Now he was inhabiting the song rather than just singing it. But with his third song came the first revelation. Bringing It All Back Home would not be released in the UK until the following month, so the deep, dark, extended complexity of “Gates Of Eden” came as a shock, redoubled a few minutes later by “It’s Alright Ma…”, its rapid-fire lyric precisely enunciated, its harmonica stabs shooting through the hall. Then “Love Minus Zero”, “Mr Tambourine Man” and “It’s Over Now, Baby Blue”, all new-minted. To hear these epic songs for the first time, sung with such commitment and control, was to be given a vision of new feelings, new possibilities. They were like starbursts against the backdrop of the already familiar songs: “Don’t Think Twice…”, “…Hattie Carroll”, “With God On Our Side” and others.

If our minds were reeling as we left the hall, his was already elsewhere. A month after returning home he was in a New York studio, recording 20 takes of “Like A Rolling Stone”. In July he was scandalising the Newport Folk Festival with a raucous band including Mike Bloomfield and Al Kooper. And in May 1966 he would return to Britain with The Hawks, shredding the last of the old restraints.

PICK UP THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT TO READ THE FULL STORY

The Libertines announce podcast to celebrate 20 years of ‘Up The Bracket’

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The Libertines have announced the launch of a special podcast to celebrate 20 years of their debut album Up The Bracket. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut The podcast Up The Bracket: 20 Years of The Libertines will be made up of seven episodes featuring excl...

The Libertines have announced the launch of a special podcast to celebrate 20 years of their debut album Up The Bracket.

The podcast Up The Bracket: 20 Years of The Libertines will be made up of seven episodes featuring exclusive interviews with band members Carl Barât, Pete Doherty, John Hassall and Gary Powell, as well as the A&R who discovered them, James Endeacott, and their biographer and former NME journalist Anthony Thornton.

The series will be hosted by Radio X’s Sunta Templeton and will provide listeners with insight into The Libertines’ journey, exploring the highs and lows and the moment they felt like they ‘made it’ told by the band themselves.

The release of the podcast this Friday (October 14) will be accompanied by a special documentary, with both being available exclusively on Global Player.

Speaking on the podcast, Templeton said: “20 years on, we’re jumping aboard the good ship Albion with Peter, Carl, John and Gary and journeying back to where it all began. The story of The Libertines is fascinating, chaotic and totally captivating, and this is an essential listen for fans of their trail-blazing brilliance.”

Listen to the trailer for the podcast here.

News of the special podcast from The Libertines arrives weeks after it was revealed the band have just returned from working on their fourth album in Jamaica.

“We’ve got a new album on the way,” Doherty told media at the AIM Independent Music Awards 2022. “It’s been quite productive. Just trying to write some new songs.”

While a new album from the band is currently in the works, they are also gearing up for the release of a Super Deluxe Edition of Up The Bracket which is due for release on October 21. The collectible will include 65 unreleased recordings with original demos, radio sessions and live recordings. A 60-page book with a foreword by Beats 1 presenter and former NMEjournalist Matt Wilkinson, unseen photos and memorabilia is also set to be released.

The 20th anniversary of Up The Bracket was also celebrated by the band back in July where they performed the album in full at a one-night show at Wembley Arena.

Rolling Stones bassist Darryl Jones gets his own documentary, In The Blood

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The Rolling Stones bassist Darryl Jones has gotten his own documentary – you can watch the trailer for it below. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Titled Darryl Jones: In The Blood, the new film will explore the life and career of the musician, as well exam...

The Rolling Stones bassist Darryl Jones has gotten his own documentary – you can watch the trailer for it below.

Titled Darryl Jones: In The Blood, the new film will explore the life and career of the musician, as well examining matters such as race, politics and growing up on the south side of Chicago.

Mick Jagger, Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood all feature in the documentary, as does the late Charlie Watts in one of his last filmed interviews.

“In a band you have to get on with everyone, really,” Watts says in the film. “And Darryl is one of those people who – he’s very easy to work with and very pleasant to be around.”

“He’s one of the best bass players in the world,” adds Keith Richards. “He played with Miles Davis for five years, and that’s no mean resume, you know?”

At the age of 21, Jones performed alongside iconic jazz musician Miles Davis. He later went on to play with Herbie Hancock, Sting, Peter Gabriel and Madonna, before eventually becoming the bassist for The Rolling Stones following the retirement of Bill Wyman in 1993.

At a Q&A for the film in Santa Monica, director Eric Hamburg said: “It’s not an easy thing to replace someone who is a founding member of a band like the Stones. And yet Darryl was able to do it. I don’t know if they could have gone on for the last 30 years if they hadn’t had Darryl Jones playing with them.”

“Hopefully not to sound too arrogant, but I’ve never really felt like a rookie with these guys,” said Jones. “When I played with them for the first time, I thought to myself, ‘that really felt good to me, and if it felt as good to them as it felt to me, I will hear from them again,’ and I did.”

Hamburg went on to add: “I hope the film will inspire young people to pick up an instrument and play and write music.

Darryl does not fit the clichés of rock stars. He’s not arrogant. He’s not on a big ego trip. He’s very humble. This is a movie about a very inspiring person.”

Watch The Cure debut new song “And Nothing Is Forever”

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The Cure debuted a new track called "And Nothing Is Forever" during their show in Stockholm on October 10 – check out the footage below. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Robert Smith and co. were performing at the Avicii Arena in the Swedish capital as par...

The Cure debuted a new track called “And Nothing Is Forever” during their show in Stockholm on October 10 – check out the footage below.

Robert Smith and co. were performing at the Avicii Arena in the Swedish capital as part of their current European tour, which has already seen the band preview two new songs: “Alone” and “Endsong”.

Those cuts returned to the setlist yesterday, with “And Nothing Is Forever” making its first appearance six songs into the gig (via Setlist.FM).

The dreamy, six-minute number – featuring typically-lush synth and piano – includes the opening lyrics: “Promise you’ll be with me in the end/ Say we’ll be together, and with no regret/ However far away/ You will remember me in time.

Later, Smith reflects on how his “world has grown old, and nothing is forever”. Watch a selection of fan-shot videos here:

Elsewhere in the concert, The Cure gave “A Strange Day”, “One Hundred Years” and “Primary” their tour debuts. Check out the clips of those performances above.

The group are currently playing as a six-piece, having welcomed guitarist/keyboardist Perry Bamonte back to the fold. Bamonte previously appeared in the line-up between 1990 and 2005.

Robert Smith Simon Gallup The Cure
The Cure’s Robert Smith and Simon Gallup Image: David Wolff – Patrick / Redferns

The Cure’s UK and Ireland tour is set to kick off in Dublin on December 1 – you can see the full list of dates below.

DECEMBER
01 – 3ARENA, Dublin, Ireland
02 – SSE, Belfast, Northern Ireland
04 – OVO HYDRO, Glasgow, Scotland
06 – FIRST DIRECT ARENA, Leeds, England
07 – UTILITA ARENA, Birmingham, England
08 – MOTORPOINT ARENA, Cardiff, Wales
11 – THE SSE ARENA, Wembley, London, England
12 – THE SSE ARENA, Wembley, London, England
13 – THE SSE ARENA, Wembley, London, England

Introducing the new Uncut: Bob Dylan, Flaming Lips, Weyes Blood, Pharoah Sanders

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Part of the mission statement here at Uncut is to bring you new and seldom-told stories from the past 60 years of music. This month, I’m especially proud to run Dave Simpson’s brilliant interview with Misty In Roots. It’s a powerful tale – rest assured, I won’t spoil the details for you he...

Part of the mission statement here at Uncut is to bring you new and seldom-told stories from the past 60 years of music. This month, I’m especially proud to run Dave Simpson’s brilliant interview with Misty In Roots. It’s a powerful tale – rest assured, I won’t spoil the details for you here – and not one that I recall being told in the mainstream UK music press before. In many respects it’s a story that still feels vital today, and despite the tragedies and travails that unfold, there is something ultimately deeply nourishing about the band’s celebration of community and, critically, the unifying power of music. As one fan, Pete Townshend, tells Dave, “The music… this rose above the troubles, the violence and the sadness.” I’d also recommend Rob Hughes’ piece on Davy Graham – I’m ashamed to admit, I think this is our first deep dive into the gifted guitarist’s life and music. Rob is helped in his task by a bevy of admirers and friends, from Shirley Collins and Roy Harper to Ray Davies. It’s another great read, I hope you’ll agree, in a packed issue.

I’m also very pleased that we’re able to follow-up Weyes Blood’s Album Of The Year win back in 2019, for the sublime Titanic Rising, with a grand reveal of her excellent new album, And In The Darkness, Hearts Aglow. Jaan Uhelszki joins Natalie Mering at home in the tiny town of Altadena, California, to go deep into this new record. Elsewhere, Sam Richards checks in with Wayne Coyne and Steven Drozd to recall the high times and sonic breakthroughs of The Flaming Lips’ Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots as it turns 20.

The main event, of course, is Bob Dylan’s return to the UK this month for his first tour here in five years. As Nick Hasted confirms, in his hot-off-the-press report from Dylan’s Stockholm show he witnessed on September 27, the Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour has proved full of surprises. In addition to Nick’s piece on Dylan live in 2022, a number of our writers and a few friends relive some of their favourite Dylan shows for us from the past seven decades: Richard Williams kicks us off with an elegant report of Dylan at Sheffield City Hall in 1965. You’ll also find a host of musicians sharing their memories with us of touring with Dylan down the ages. If there’s one constant throughout, it’s Dylan’s endless capacity for reinvention.

Bob Dylan and his band, in show and concert. Don’t you dare miss it!

Uncut – December 2022

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HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME Bob Dylan, Robyn Hitchcock, Flaming Lips, Davy Graham, L7, Weyes Blood, Alan Parsons, Misty In Roots, Alabaster DePlume, Peter Frampton and Willy DeVille all feature in the new Uncut, dated December 2022 and in UK shops from October 13 or available to buy o...

HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME

Bob Dylan, Robyn Hitchcock, Flaming Lips, Davy Graham, L7, Weyes Blood, Alan Parsons, Misty In Roots, Alabaster DePlume, Peter Frampton and Willy DeVille all feature in the new Uncut, dated December 2022 and in UK shops from October 13 or available to buy online now. This issue comes with an exclusive free 15-track CD of the month’s best new music.

BOB DYLAN: As Bob Dylan live fever reaches its peak, Uncut travels to Stockholm to experience the Rough And Rowdy Ways Tour up close. First, though, Uncut’s writers – and some close associates – relive their own legendary encounters with Bob from his past seven decades of challenging, constantly evolving live music. Take your seat alongside us at Sheffield City Hall in 1965, Madison Square Garden in 1974, the Spokane Opera House in 1980 and beyond, down 50 transformative years, in our definitive, eye-witness report on Dylan in concert.

OUR FREE CD! CONTAINS MULTITUDES: 15 tracks of the month’s best new music

This issue of Uncut is available to buy by clicking here – with FREE delivery to the UK and reduced delivery charges for the rest of the world.

Inside the issue, you’ll find:

THE FLAMING LIPS: Axl Rose! Cat Stevens! Songs to sing at funerals! As a 20th-anniversary boxset expands the technicolour universe of The Flaming LipsYoshimi Battles The Pink Robots, Wayne Coyne reveals the real story of how his band of freaks inherited the Earth. “We just embraced it all, and did it our way,” learns Sam Richards.

WEYES BLOOD: With Titanic RisingUncut’s Album Of The Year in 2019 – Weyes Blood’s Natalie Mering conjured up a beguiling mix of bold cinematic dreams and ecological fears. For her follow-up, And In The Darkness, Hearts Aglow, she has further refined her singular vision. She tells Jaan Uhelszki about Buddhist anthems, Greek myths and – of course! – the end of the world: “My idea of impending doom is a lot closer than people think.”

DAVY GRAHAM: He was a revolutionary spirit at the vanguard of the ’60s folk movement, until drug addiction and mental health issues waylaid his mercurial talent. Here friends and collaborators and – among them Shirley Collins, Martin Carthy and Ray Davies – celebrate the nimble-fingered magic of Davy Graham. “He burned very brightly for a short time, and no-one forgot that,” hears Rob Hughes.

MISTY IN ROOTS: Emerging from their west London squat during the racially charged late ’70s, they battled inequality and injustice through their powerful “progressive protest music”. They went on to record one of the greatest live albums of all time, enjoy the patronage of John Peel and Pete Townshend, and become the first British reggae group to play in Russia – before relocating to a farm in Zimbabwe. All while they endured trauma and tragedy whose scars can still be felt to this day. This, then, is the remarkable story of Misty In Roots. “The music is our legacy,” they tell Dave Simpson. “It will outlast all of us.”

ROBYN HITCHCOCK: As the singular psych-folk troubadour releases his 22nd album with help from famous friends, he answers your pressing enquiries.

L7: The making of “Pretend We’re Dead”.

ALAN PARSONS: The ultimate backroom boy on his massively successful “prog pop” career.

THE BEATLES: Their pivot-point LP gets a fresh spin.

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new records from King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Richard Dawson, Arctic Monkeys, Big Joanie and more, and archival releases from PJ Harvey, Iris Dement, Bright Eyes, and others. We catch the End Of The Road live; among the films, DVDs and TV programmes reviewed are The Banshees Of Inisherin, Triangle Of Sadness, Vesper, Neptune Frost and A Bunch Of Amateurs; while in books there’s Tom Doyle and Brian Johnson.

Our front section, meanwhile, features Pharoah Sanders, Peter Frampton, Willy DeVille, International Anthem & Skullcrusher, while, at the end of the magazine, Alabaster DePlume shares his life in music.

You can pick up a copy of Uncut in the usual places, where open. But otherwise, readers all over the world can order a copy from here.

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR