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Barbara Keith – Barbara Keith

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When Barbara Keith, acoustic in hand, headed from Massachusetts to Greenwich Village during the height of the folk era, she became one of countless aspiring troubadours tentatively following in Dylan’s footsteps, singing folk standards at Café Wha? and Gerde’s Folk City. She fell in with a bunc...

When Barbara Keith, acoustic in hand, headed from Massachusetts to Greenwich Village during the height of the folk era, she became one of countless aspiring troubadours tentatively following in Dylan’s footsteps, singing folk standards at Café Wha? and Gerde’s Folk City. She fell in with a bunch of Café Wha? regulars, and they formed the short-lived band Kangaroo. By the time they’d scored a record deal, Keith was starting to write songs, and soon after the group dissolved, she was signed by MGM/Verve, with Peter Asher assigned to produce her self-titled 1969 debut album. Although the LP caused barely a ripple, several labels saw enough promise in the youngster to keep tabs on her.

During a brief fling with A&M in 1970, Keith had her first taste of success when her song “Free The People†was covered by Delaney & Bonnie and Barbra Streisand, dramatically increasing her visibility. Before long she was auditioning for Columbia chief Clive Davis and Warner/Reprise Chairman Mo Ostin, who personally signed Keith to a three-album deal. Producer/A&R rep Larry Marks (Gene Clark, Phil Ochs, The Flying Burrito Brothers), who’d become her co-manager, got the job of helming her LP, and his first move was recruiting the very best musicians in LA to play on it.

Ostin had signed Keith at the perfect time – or so it seemed to the Warners brass on her arrival in 1972. Joni Mitchell had just jumped to Asylum and Bonnie Raitt was just getting started, so there was a void to be filled, and the 26-year-old Keith appeared to have the goods to become Mitchell’s heir apparent. She’d grown exponentially as a songwriter and had matured into a strikingly original singer, the urgency of her delivery further enlivened by her “hummingbird†vibrato, as one critic described it. But what most distinguished Keith from her contemporaries was her utter fearlessness, which was apparent from the opening notes of the second LP bearing her name.

Who in their right mind would dare cover Dylan’s “All Along The Watchtower†after Jimi Hendrix had made it monumentally, indelibly his own? Keith didn’t just cover it, she opened the album with it, her feral vocal powering through a gauntlet formed by John Brennan’s galloping acoustic, Lee Sklar’s rumbling bassline and David Cohen’s pecking wah-wah licks. By the time Jim Keltner joins the fray, the performance has attained a sinewy ferocity. “…Watchtowerâ€, like the bulk of the LP, was cut live off the floor, as Marks skilfully matched the players with Keith’s songs. The austere ballad “Burn The Midnight Oil No More†contains nothing more than Sklar’s bass and Keith’s regal piano amid a gossamer Nick DeCaro string arrangement. At the other extreme are “Shining All Alongâ€, which gets a full-bodied, Band-like treatment, as Lowell George, pianist Spooner Oldham, organist Mike Utley, drummer Jim Keltner, Sklar and percussionist Milt Holland wail away in sepia-toned bliss, and the vivid road anthem “Detroit Or Buffaloâ€, which climaxes with pedal-steel maestro Sneaky Pete Kleinow and George conjuring a gilded rhapsody out of steel cylinders sliding over strings.

A half century later, “Free The Peopleâ€, with its secular-gospel uplift, seems rooted in the era of Nixon and Vietnam, in contrast to the timeless country-folk ballad “The Bramble And The Rose†and the rousing rock anthem “A Stone’s Throw Awayâ€. Keith had co-written the latter song with Doug Tibbles, who’d recently abandoned a successful career as a sitcom scriptwriter to try his hand at drumming for a living. He was enlisted to keep the beat during rehearsals, and it wasn’t long before Tibbles and Keith fell madly in love, turning her priorities upside down. Soon after the album was completed, she returned her advance money and blithely walked away from a career filled with seemingly limitless potential. Reprise released Barbara Keith in 1973 with zero fanfare, and among the handful of people aware of the album’s existence were singers from Valerie Carter to Olivia Newton-John, who were delighted to cover its songs.

Keith and Tibbles spent a couple of decades in LA before eventually settling back in Massachusetts, where they raised two sons and, in 1998, when elder son John was 11, formed a family band, The Stone Coyotes. Early on, Elmore Leonard became a big fan, describing the band as “AC/DC meets Patsy Clineâ€. He used Keith’s lyrics in his 1999 novel Be Cool, which was released with a Stone Coyotes CD sampler, and took the band on a tour promoting the book. To date, they’ve filled 16 LPs and three EPs with songs penned by the prolific Keith, who’s as energised as ever at 76. If ever an artist’s story begged to be made into a biopic, it’s Barbara Keith’s topsy-turvy saga.

The Rolling Stones bring out Chanel Haynes to perform “Gimme Shelter” in Milan

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For their first show back after Mick Jagger's bout of COVID-19, The Rolling Stones performed "Gimme Shelter" with gospel singer Chanel Haynes. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Kurt Vile, Cat Power and more dig deep into the genius of The Rolling...

For their first show back after Mick Jagger’s bout of COVID-19, The Rolling Stones performed “Gimme Shelter” with gospel singer Chanel Haynes.

The legendary rockers performed in Milan, Italy on Tuesday (June 21), performing a 19-song set as part of their UK and European SIXTY tour. The show was confirmed to go ahead on Monday (June 20), following the postponements of shows in Amsterdam, Netherlands and Bern, Switzerland. The Amsterdam date has been rescheduled to next month, but the Swiss gig has since been cancelled altogether.

Haynes appeared with the Stones in place of their longstanding backup singer, Sasha Allen, who sat the Milan show out for an unspecified reason. A mentee of the iconic Quincy Jones, Haynes is best known as one third of the gospel trio Trinitee 5:7. More recently, she played the lead role in the UK’s production of Tina: The Tina Turner Musical.

Have a look at footage of Haynes performing “Gimme Shelter” with the Stones below:

As its name suggests, the Stones’ SIXTY tour comes in celebration of their six-decade tenure, having officially formed in June of 1962 (they’d perform their first show as The Rolling Stones a month later). At the first show of the tour, they delivered the first-ever live performance of their 1966 single “Out Of Time”. When they rolled through Liverpool, the paid tribute to The Beatles by covering their 1963 hit “I Wanna Be Your Man”.

On all dates of the tour thus far, the Stones have opened their set with a video tribute to drummer Charlie Watts, who died last December at the age of 80. Filling his spot on the tour is session drummer Steve Jordan, who the band confirmed in March would record parts for their upcoming 24th album.

Meanwhile, the Stones have several releases lined up to celebrate their 60th anniversary, including their Live At The El Mocambo album and a box set of all their single releases from 1963-1966. The BBC will also air a four-part docuseries, My Life As A Rolling Stone, throughout the summer. Each one-hour episode will dedicated to the band’s four members: Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Charlie Watts.

The Rolling Stones will play the first of two London shows on Saturday (June 25) at BST Hyde Park. You can see the band’s full list of upcoming tour dates here.

Listen to Angel Olsen’s cover of Lucinda Williams’ “Greenville”

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Angel Olsen has shared a cover of Lucinda Williams' "Greenville" - check out the Amazon Original track below. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Angel Olsen – Big Time review The St. Louis singer-songwriter, who released her sixth studio LP, ...

Angel Olsen has shared a cover of Lucinda Williams’ “Greenville” – check out the Amazon Original track below.

The St. Louis singer-songwriter, who released her sixth studio LP, Big Time, earlier this month, said that before penning the album she found “a new obsession and love” for Williams’ music.

“There is no one like her out there,” Olsen said of the country folk singer. “It’s clear to me that her songs come from a very real place, and that’s the only kind of writing I like.”

“Greenville” was first released in 1998 as part of Williams’ fifth album Car Wheels On A Gravel Road.

Speaking about her cover of the track, Olsen said: “I recorded my version of “Greenville” in Los Angeles earlier this month with Kyle Thomas of King Tuff. We’ve known each other for a while, but never recorded music together. Kyle made this so fun to record and we had a great time goofing around.

Meg Duffy also sang with me on this track. Meg showed me this song for the first time years ago and was the first one to introduce me to Lucinda’s music. It was very meaningful to have them on the track with me.”

You can listen to Olsen’s rendition of “Greenville” below:

Last month, Olsen shared a cover of Bob Dylan’s 1964 classic “One Too Many Mornings”.

Her gentle reimagining of the track appears on the soundtrack to the Apple TV+ series Shining Girls, starring Elisabeth Moss.

The album features selections of the show’s original music composed by Claudia Sarne, with Olsen’s cover appearing as the third track on the record.

Olsen will head out on a UK and Ireland tour in support of Big Time in October. You can see her upcoming tour dates below.

OCTOBER 2022
18 – O2 Academy Brixton, London
19 – The Forum, Bath
20 – Usher Hall, Edinburgh
21 – Albert Hall, Manchester
24 – Vicar Street, Dublin

Listen to a previously-unreleased alternate version of Wilco’s “Kamera”

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Wilco have shared a previously unreleased, alternate version of their 2002 Yankee Hotel Foxtrot cut "Kamera", lifted from forthcoming deluxe editions of the album that are set to arrive in September. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Wilco – Cr...

Wilco have shared a previously unreleased, alternate version of their 2002 Yankee Hotel Foxtrot cut “Kamera”, lifted from forthcoming deluxe editions of the album that are set to arrive in September.

“Kamera (The Unified Theory of Everything Version)” is a significantly heavier take on the track, swapping out the primarily acoustic version that ended up on the album for electric guitars and propulsive drums.

The new version will feature on both the super deluxe LP and CD reissues, as well as the deluxe LP and digital sets. All will be available September 16 via Nonesuch Records. In the meantime, listen to the alternate version of “Kamera” below:

Wilco announced a series of 20th anniversary reissues for Yankee Hotel Foxtrot back in April. Seven special editions of the landmark album will be released via Nonesuch on September 16, including the super deluxe version, which is made up of eleven vinyl records and a CD.

That edition includes demos, drafts and instrumentals, charting the making of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, plus a live 2002 concert recording and a September 2001 radio performance and interview.

The super deluxe reissue also includes 82 previously unreleased tracks, as well as a new book featuring an interview with frontman Jeff Tweedy, drummer Glenn Kotche, and Jim O’Rourke, who mixed the acclaimed 2002 album. It also includes an in-depth essay by author Bob Mehr and previously unseen photos of the band making the album in their Chicago studio, The Loft.

Watch Roger Waters play a medley of Pink Floyd songs on Colbert

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Roger Waters was the musical guest on Monday night's (June 21) episode of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert – watch him perform a medley of songs below. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Introducing our latest online exclusive: The Ultimate ...

Roger Waters was the musical guest on Monday night’s (June 21) episode of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert – watch him perform a medley of songs below.

The former Pink Floyd frontman appeared on the show backed by a full band, a pianist and some backing singers. The medley included “The Happiest Days Of Our Lives”, “Another Brick In The Wall, Part 2” and “Another Brick In The Wall, Part 3” from Pink Floyd’s 1979 album The Wall.

The performance comes ahead of his This Is Not A Drill tour, which was originally set to begin in 2020 but was postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

“This Is Not A Drill is a groundbreaking new rock & roll/cinematic extravaganza, performed in the round,†Waters wrote in a statement (via Rolling Stone). “It is a stunning indictment of the corporate dystopia in which we all struggle to survive, and a call to action to love, protect, and share our precious and precarious planet home.

“The show includes a dozen great songs from Pink Floyd’s Golden Era alongside several new ones — words and music, same writer, same heart, same soul, same man. Could be his last hurrah. Wow! My first farewell tour! Don’t miss it. Love, R.”

The tour kicks off in Pittsburgh on July 6, before heading to cities like Toronto, Chicago, New York and Los Angeles. It finishes up in Mexico City on October 15.

Pink Floyd released their first new music in decades to aid the relief effort in Ukraine back in April.

The track, titled “Hey, Hey, Rise Up”, features a sample of Andriy Khlyvnyuk, the singer of Ukrainian band Boombox, and is the band’s first original music to be released since their 1994 album The Division Bell. All proceeds from the song go to Ukraine Humanitarian Relief.

Discussing the new song in a statement, David Gilmour said: “We want express our support for Ukraine and in that way, show that most of the world thinks that it is totally wrong for a superpower to invade the independent democratic country that Ukraine has become.â€

Kate Bush gives rare interview on “Running Up That Hill” resurgence: “I think it’s very specialâ€

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Kate Bush has spoken in a rare new interview about her 1985 track "Running Up That Hill" securing the top spot on the UK singles chart after appearing in the latest season of Stranger Things. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Kate Bush on her al...

Kate Bush has spoken in a rare new interview about her 1985 track “Running Up That Hill” securing the top spot on the UK singles chart after appearing in the latest season of Stranger Things.

Speaking to Emma Barnett on BBC Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour yesterday (June 22), Bush said the song’s recent rise to the top of the charts was “just extraordinaryâ€, adding that Stranger Things is “such a great seriesâ€.

She went on to add: “I thought that the track would get some attention. But I just never imagined that it would be anything like this. It’s so exciting. But it’s quite shocking really, isn’t it? I mean, the whole world’s gone mad.”

Bush carried on to say that the “wonderful†thing about the song’s resurgence 37 years after its initial release is that it has been able to reach “a whole new audience who, in a lot of cases, they’ve never heard of meâ€.

“The thought of all these really young people hearing the song for the first time and discovering it is, well, I think it’s very special.â€

Elsewhere in her conversation with Barnett, Bush revealed that the track was originally meant to be titled “A Deal With God”, but was changed as her record label felt “people would feel it was a sensitive titleâ€.

When asked if she still listens to her older material, Bush responded: “I never listen to my old stuff. But then you know, when things like this come along, I’m normally involved in something like you know, maybe doing an edit or revisiting the track for some kind of other reason, I’m working on it. So yeah, I hadn’t heard it for a really long time.”

Talking about the placement and significance of “Running Up That Hill” in Stranger Things, Bush said she found its impact on Max “very touching,†describing it as “a kind of Talisman, almostâ€.

Bush wrapped up her chat with Barnett by comparing Stranger Things’ progression to the Harry Potter films: “In those early films they were just little kids, and then as the film has progressed, it becomes heaver and darker.

“You have a different connection with something that’s moved through years of really watching them grow,†Bush concluded.

Bush looks set to secure a second week at the top of the UK singles chart with “Running Up That Hill”.

End Of The Road Festival announce compilation album, Between The Music

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The End Of The Road festival have announced details of a new compilation album, Between The Music. ORDER NOW: THE BEATLES ARE ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST ISSUE OF UNCUT Described as a "passion project", the album has been put together by festival founder Simon Taffe “based on all the track...

The End Of The Road festival have announced details of a new compilation album, Between The Music.

Described as a “passion project”, the album has been put together by festival founder Simon Taffe “based on all the tracks that I play in between bands on all the different stages. It’s not really necessarily bands that play End Of The Road, it’s more like my whole record collection.â€

The album is released on September 16 on white vinyl for independent record stores and black vinyl everywhere else. It will also be available as a festival onsite exclusive available between September 1 – 4. You can pre-order a copy here.

The tracklist for Between the Music is:

The Lafayettes – Life’s Too Short
Dion – DripDrop
Captain Beefheart – Observatory Crest
Link Wray – Fallin’ Rain
The Monzas – Hey! I Know You
Abner Jay – I’m So Depressed
Johnnie Frierson – Have You Been Good To Yourself
Hailu Mergia & Dahlak Band – Anchin Kfu Ayinkash
Amanaz – Khala My Friend
Al Kooper – Lookin For A Home
Jim Ford – She Turns My Radio On
Jackie Shane – Any Other Way
Chuck Jackson – Any Day Now
Alexander Skip Spence – Cripple Creek
Lael Neale – Blue Vein
Washington Phillips – Mother’s Last Word To Her Son
Michael Hurley – I Stole The Right to Live
Ted Hawkins – Cold & Bitter Tears
Josephine Foster – Child of God
Jeff Cowell – Lucky Strikes and Liquid Gold
Blaze Foley – Clay Pigeons
Die Wellttaumforscher – Glücklich. Traurig. Seltsam.
The Soul Stirrers – Jesus Gave Me Water
Paul Robeson – Lazy Bones (1933)
The Cryin Shames – Please Stay

As previously reported on Uncut, Pixies, Bright Eyes, Fleet Foxes and Khruangbin headline this year’s festival.

They’ll be joined by an Uncut-friendly bill including Kurt Vile & The Violators, Tinariwen, The Weather Station, Hurray For The Riff Raff, The Magnetic Fields, Aldous Harding, Margo Cilker, Ryley Walker, Anaïs Mitchell, Yard Act, Cassandra Jenkins, Jake Xerxes Fussell, Lucy Dacus, Kevin Morby, Nala Sinephro and many more.

We’re delighted to once again be partnering with End Of The Road for what promises to be a brilliant festival.

Elvis Costello covers “Here, There And Everywhere” for Paul McCartney’s 80th birthday

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Elvis Costello has shared a cover of The Beatles' "Here, There And Everywhere" to mark Paul McCartney’s 80th birthday. ORDER NOW: THE BEATLES ARE ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST ISSUE OF UNCUT READ MORE: Paul McCartney turns 80: a look back at the Beatle’s numerous accomplishments Macca t...

Elvis Costello has shared a cover of The Beatles’ “Here, There And Everywhere” to mark Paul McCartney’s 80th birthday.

Macca turned 80 on Saturday (June 18), and stars from across the music world and beyond paid tribute to “the best songwriter ever” with tributes, covers and more.

To celebrate, Costello covered the Revolver classic, which was also covered by John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s son Sean Ono Lennon to mark the occasion.

“A little birdy told me this was one of your your fav Beatles tunes,†Ono Lennon wrote in the video’s caption. “So Happy Birthday! Thank you for all the beautiful music. You have mine and the whole world’s undying love and respect. (This version is a bit rough because it’s such a pretty song I kept getting choked up and staring again!)â€

Listen to Elvis Costello’s tender cover of “Here, There And Everywhere” below.

“They say it’s your birthday Saturday happy birthday Paul love you man have a great day peace and love Ringo and Barbara love love peace and love,†McCartney’s Beatles bandmate Ringo Starr wrote on Twitter to celebrate his birthday.

The official Twitter accounts for McCartney’s late bandmates John Lennon and George Harrison each posted a birthday message. Lennon’s birthday shoutout came alongside a playlist of the pair’s greatest songwriting collaborations; Harrison’s included some old footage of McCartney, shot by Harrison himself.

McCartney himself later replied to the messages. “Thanks for all the lovely greetings and warm wishes for my birthday,†he wrote on Twitter.

McCartney is set to become the oldest Glastonbury headliner when he takes to the Pyramid Stage on Saturday evening (June 25). He’ll top the bill alongside Kendrick Lamar and Billie Eilish, the latter of whom will become the festival’s youngest-ever solo headliner.

Mick Jagger ready to resume Rolling Stones tour following COVID-19 bout

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Mick Jagger has said that he's ready to resume The Rolling Stones’ UK and European tour after recently testing positive for COVID-19. ORDER NOW: THE BEATLES ARE ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST ISSUE OF UNCUT READ MORE: Kurt Vile, Cat Power and more dig deep into the genius of The Rolling Stone...

Mick Jagger has said that he’s ready to resume The Rolling Stones’ UK and European tour after recently testing positive for COVID-19.

The Stones postponed two gigs in Amsterdam, Netherlands and Bern, Switzerland last week due to their frontman’s ill health. The Amsterdam date has been rescheduled to next month, but the Swiss gig has since been cancelled.

After the Stones confirmed on June 20 that their SIXTY tour will resume as planned in Milan, Italy on June 21, Jagger has now shared a short video message in which he thanked the band’s fans for their support.

“Hi everyone, thanks so much for all your lovely messages – I really appreciate them,” he said.

“I’m sorry for the inconvenience about the shows. But we’ll be on stage in Milan on Tuesday – see you there.”

The band’s Twitter account said that the frontman was “doing great†following his bout of COVID-19. Jagger himself told his followers last Wednesday (June 15) that he was “feeling much better”.

The Rolling Stones will play the first of two London shows on Saturday (June 25) at BST Hyde Park. You can see the band’s upcoming UK and European tour dates below, and find any remaining UK tickets here.

JUNE 2022
21 – San Siro Stadium, Milan, Italy
25 – American Express presents BST Hyde Park, London

JULY 2022
3 – American Express presents BST Hyde Park, London
7 – Johan Cruijff ArenA, Amsterdam, Netherlands [rescheduled date]
11 – King Baudouin Stadium, Brussels, Belgium
15 – Ernst Happel Stadium, Vienna, Austria
19 – Groupama Stadium, Lyon, France
23 – Hippodrome Paris, Paris, France
27 – Veltins Arena, Gelsenkirchen, Germany
31 – Friends Arena, Stockholm, Sweden

Watch Elton John, Chuck D and more pay tribute to Brian Wilson on his 80th birthday

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Brian Wilson celebrated his 80th birthday, and a number of stars have flocked to wish the legendary musician many happy returns. ORDER NOW: THE BEATLES ARE ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST ISSUE OF UNCUT READ MORE: Brian Wilson – Long Promised Road To celebrate the Beach Boys icon's eight de...

Brian Wilson celebrated his 80th birthday, and a number of stars have flocked to wish the legendary musician many happy returns.

To celebrate the Beach Boys icon’s eight decades on the planet, his official social media channels have shared a seven-minute video featuring tributes from the likes of Elton John, Chuck D, Fleet Foxes, Bob Dylan, Carole King, Graham Nash, Smokey Robinson and many more.

“You’ve inspired me all my life. To me you’re the only real pop genius in the world, and I love you very much,” John says as the video begins, followed by an impromptu rendition of ‘Happy Birthday’ from Robinson.

After messages from Don Was and Lyle Lovett, one-time Beach Boys members Al Jardine and Blondie Chaplin chime in, followed by Wilson’s current touring band.

In addition to musicians, a number of film stars also jump in to celebrate the life of Wilson, including Jeff Bridges, Cameron Crowe and John Cusack (who played Wilson in the biopic Love & Mercy).

“Happy 80th Birthday Brian from your fellow performers!” the video’s caption reads. “Thanks to all these great artists for making this project possible.” Check out the celebratory video below.

She & Him’s Zooey Deschanel and M. Ward were also among those to send birthday love Wilson’s way. The pair recently announced a tribute album to Wilson, Melt Away and shared the first taster from the record, “Darlin'”, last month.

The duo will release their album of classic covers written by the Beach Boys founder on July 22 via Fantasy Records. You can pre-order it here.

She & Him are currently in the middle of a tour in support of the upcoming new album. See the full list of dates here.

Wilson isn’t the only superstar celebrating their 80th birthday this week: Paul McCartney celebrated the milestone on Sunday (June 19). Fans and stars alike flocked to social media to pay tribute to the legendary singer-songwriter.

The joyous legacy of George Clinton’s Parliament-Funkadelic: “It’s an institution of funk”

May 22, 2022. The Mothership has just moored in a North London car park. It’s five hours before showtime at the Kentish Town Forum. Inside the smaller of two purple tour buses, 81-year-old George Clinton – Uncle Jam himself – is resting up, not to be disturbed. Tonight’s show is part of a â€...

May 22, 2022. The Mothership has just moored in a North London car park. It’s five hours before showtime at the Kentish Town Forum. Inside the smaller of two purple tour buses, 81-year-old George Clinton – Uncle Jam himself – is resting up, not to be disturbed. Tonight’s show is part of a ‘farewell’ tour – this may be PFunk’s last ever spectacular in the capital – and Clinton is marshalling the strength to do it justice, one more time.

It’s a blustery day, gusts of rain hitting the concrete expanse, as members of the latter-day P-Funk tribe stroll in and out of the soundcheck – where the funk is being fine-tuned. These include storied ’70s lifers – guitarist Michael “Kidd Funkadelic†Hampton, for instance, no longer a kid now but a grizzled pensioner – as well as Clinton’s grandchildren, continuing the family funk business, all dressed in bright tie-dyed and polka-dotted tops.

Uncut is here too, contemplating the remarkable saga which has brought George Clinton to this point – from a ’50s barbershop group in Plainfield, New Jersey, through radical, funk revolutions to the pinnacle of ambition and invention in the late ’70s, where a spaceship would land on stage during the band’s stadium shows. “It was like a twisted Wakanda, with the same power and pride,†says former Bride Of Funkenstein Satori Shakoor. “P-Funk was bigger than black. It was a place where you thought, ‘Is this what it feels like to be truly free?’ And now generations of people globally are sustaining this. It’s a legacy, an institution of funk.â€

“This band is sometimes as sweet as The Beatles, sometimes as sloppy as the Stones, sometimes as radical as Bowie,†says Clip Payne, the keyboardist-vocalist who joined in 1978. “It has its metal thing – but it’s ghetto metal. It’s the people’s band. George makes sure that his audience is completely served. His audience isn’t usually the people you’d look at. They’re not at Ticketmaster, at all. They’re Funkateers, they’re Maggots. That’s where it’s at.â€

Indeed, a clutch of fans from Belgium are also hovering around the tour bus this afternoon. Hanna Affi recalls seeing his hero perform at Prince’s Paisley Park. “It was too funky,†he sighs. “There were around 30 people on stage, it was crazy. George was wearing a crown, like the King of Funk.†Meanwhile, Bart Hermans is happy to see Clinton at all. “He seems to be in the mood again for live shows. And he recently said that he’s stepping off the ‘farewell’ thing. He’s just going to see when it ends.’â€

Kate Bush reaches Number One with “Running Up That Hill”, 37 years after release

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Kate Bush's "Running Up That Hill" has reached Number One on the UK singles chart following its appearance in the latest season of Stranger Things. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Kate Bush on her album The Dreaming: “I wanted to take contro...

Kate Bush’s “Running Up That Hill” has reached Number One on the UK singles chart following its appearance in the latest season of Stranger Things.

Last week, the song was the most streamed track on the planet and reached Number One on both the Spotify charts in the UK and the US after earning 57million streams in just one week.

As well as being Number One now in the UK as of June 17, it’s also Number One in Australia, New Zealand and Switzerland. In the US, it’s currently Number Four in the main chart and Number One on the Billboard Global 200 chart, making it Bush’s biggest ever hit in America 37 years after its original release.

In a new statement today, Bush said of the news: “The Duffer Brothers have created four extraordinary series of Stranger Things in which the child actors have grown into young adults.

“In this latest series the characters are facing many of the same challenges that exist in reality right now. I believe the Duffer Brothers have touched people’s hearts in a special way at a time that’s incredibly difficult for everyone, especially younger people.

“By featuring ‘Running Up That Hill’ in such a positive light – as a talisman for Max (one of the main female characters) – the song has been brought into the emotional arena of her story. Fear, conflict and the power of love are all around her and her friends.

“I salute the Duffer Brothers for their courage – taking this new series into a much more adult and darker place. I want to thank them so much for bringing the song into so many people’s lives.

“I’m overwhelmed by the scale of affection and support the song is receiving, and it’s all happening really fast, as if it’s being driven along by a kind of elemental force.

“I have to admit I feel really moved by it all. Thank you so very much for making the song a number one in such an unexpected wayâ€.

“Running Up That Hill” originally reached Number Three in the UK in 1985 and charted again in 2012, when it reached Number 12. The song was also recently used in It’s A Sin, the award-winning TV series by Russell T Davies.

The song was written and produced by Bush and featured on her fifth studio album Hounds Of Love, which was released in 1985, debuting at 30 on the Billboard chart, where it currently stands at No 12.

Bush now has boasts the longest-ever gap between Number One singles in Official Chart history, with 44 years between her 1978 chart topper “Wuthering Heights” and 2022’s “Running Up That Hill”.

Bush now also claims the record of longest time taken for a single to reach Number One on the Official Singles Chart, with it being 37 years since the single was first released.

Martin Talbot, Chief Executive of the Official Charts Company said: “It has been fantastic to see the iconic Kate Bush climbing up the Official Singles Chart with ‘Running Up That Hill’ – and to see her breaking a slew of records into the bargain.

“The way that a new generation of music fans have taken her classic track to their hearts really does cement Kate’s position as an all-time great, if that were at all necessary.â€

Sean Ono Lennon marks Paul McCartney’s birthday with cover of “Here, There and Everywhere”

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John Lennon and Yoko Ono's son Sean Ono Lennon has paid tribute to Paul McCartney on his 80th birthday with a cover of "Here, There and Everywhere". Check it out below. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Paul McCartney turns 80: a look back at the...

John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s son Sean Ono Lennon has paid tribute to Paul McCartney on his 80th birthday with a cover of “Here, There and Everywhere”. Check it out below.

Sharing the video, Sean Lennon wrote: “A little birdy told me this was one of [your] fav Beatles tunes.”

He continued: “So Happy Birthday! Thank you for all the beautiful music. You have mine and the whole world’s undying love and respect. (This version is a bit rough because it’s such a pretty song I kept getting choked up…!)”

Check out the cover here:

Fans and stars alike have flocked to social media to pay tribute to McCartney on the legendary singer-songwriter’s birthday.

“They say it’s your birthday Saturday happy birthday Paul love you man have a great day peace and love Ringo and Barbara love love peace and love,†McCartney’s Beatles bandmate Ringo Starr wrote on Twitter.

The official Twitter accounts for McCartney’s late bandmates John Lennon and George Harrison each posted a birthday message. Lennon’s birthday shoutout came alongside a playlist of the pair’s greatest songwriting collaborations; Harrison’s included some old footage of McCartney, shot by Harrison himself.

Paul McCartney is set to become the oldest Glastonbury headliner when he takes to the Pyramid Stage this Saturday evening (June 25). He’ll top the bill alongside Kendrick Lamar and Billie Eilish.

On Thursday night (June 16), McCartney joined forces with Bruce Springsteen as he wrapped his Got Back US tour in New York.

McCartney welcomed The Boss onstage at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey as a “birthday present to myself†to perform the latter’s 1984 classic “Glory Days” before the pair played The Beatles‘ “I Wanna Be Your Man”.

Later in the show, Jon Bon Jovi also joined McCartney onstage to sing “Happy Birthday” to him.

Watch Paul McCartney team up with Bruce Springsteen to perform “Glory Days” and “I Wanna Be Your Man”

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Paul McCartney joined forces with Bruce Springsteen as he wrapped his Got Back US tour in New Jersey last week (June 16). ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Paul McCartney turns 80: a look back at the Beatle’s numerous accomplishments McCart...

Paul McCartney joined forces with Bruce Springsteen as he wrapped his Got Back US tour in New Jersey last week (June 16).

McCartney welcomed The Boss onstage at the MetLife Stadium in New Jersey as a “birthday present to myself†to perform the latter’s 1984 classic “Glory Days” before the pair played The Beatles’ “I Wanna Be Your Man”. You can view footage below.

Springsteen previously performed “I Saw Her Standing There” with McCartney at London’s Hyde Park in 2012.

Following the performance last night, The Beatles icon took to Twitter to post a picture of the pair onstage with the caption: “Glory Days with Bruce Springsteen.”

Later in the show, Jon Bon Jovi also joined McCartney onstage to sing “Happy Birthday” ahead of the latter’s 80th birthday.

Throughout the show, McCartney performed a host of Beatles classics including “Can’t Buy Me Love”, “Getting Better” and “Love Me Do”.

As ever he also played his Wings classic “Live And Let Die” and Beatles anthem “Hey Jude”.

His Got Back tour in the US took place over six weeks with it initially kicking off in Washington on April 28.

McCartney will now return to the UK to headline Glastonbury 2022 this week alongside Billie Eilish and Kendrick Lamar. He last performed at the festival in Worthy Farm in 2004.

When asked what he’s got planned for this year’s event earlier this year, he said: “Yeah, to tell you the truth we don’t know exactly what we’re going to do yet, but we are definitely planning on having a few tricks up our sleeve…â€

Paul McCartney played:

“Can’t Buy Me Love”
“Junior’s Farm” 
“Letting Go”
“Got To Get You Into My Life”
“Come On To Me”
“Let Me Roll It”
“Getting Better”
“Let Em In”
“My Valentine”
“Nineteen Hundred And Eighty-Five”
“Maybe I’m Amazed”
“I’ve Just Seen A Face”
“In Spite Of All The Danger”
“Love Me Do”
“Dance Tonight”
“Blackbird”
“Here Today”
“Queenie Eye”
“Lady Madonna” 
“Fuh You”
“Jet”
“Being For The Benefit Of Mr. Kite!”
“Something”
“Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da” (The Beatles song)
“You Never Give Me Your Money”
“She Came In Through The Bathroom Window”
“Get Back”
“Band On The Run”
“Glory Day”
“I Wanna Be Your Man”
“Let It Be”
“Live And Let Die”
“Hey Jude”

Encore:
“I’ve Got A Feeling”
“Birthday”
“Helter Skelter”
“Golden Slumbers”
“Carry That Weight”
“The End”

Paul McCartney to release McCartney, McCartney II and McCartney III box set

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Paul McCartney is rounding up his trio of 'McCartney' albums into a limited edition box set. ORDER NOW: THE BEATLES ARE ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST ISSUE OF UNCUT The box set will be available on August 5 in three different formats – limited edition coloured vinyl, black vinyl edition and ...

Paul McCartney is rounding up his trio of ‘McCartney’ albums into a limited edition box set.

The box set will be available on August 5 in three different formats – limited edition coloured vinyl, black vinyl edition and CD – each including three photo prints with notes from McCartney about each album.

The newly created boxset cover art and typography for the slipcase are by Ed Ruscha. To pre-order McCartney I II III, please click here.

The box is available on these formats:

Limited Edition Colour Vinyl
Three-disc 180g audiophile vinyl set (McCartney – clear, McCartney II -white, and McCartney III – creamy white vinyl)
Three x 8 x 10†photo prints with introductions from Paul

Limited Edition Black Vinyl Edition
180g audiophile vinyl set
Three x 8 x 10†photo prints with introductions from Paul

CD
Limited Edition three-disc set
Three photo prints with introductions from Paul

Drive-by Truckers – Welcome 2 Club XIII

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As musicians mature, they tend to travel diverging paths. There are those who defy the sentimental haze of their pasts, who refuse to be the thing they were before; and then there are those who rest on their laurels and play the hits. Most alluring, however, are those who meditate on the journey: fr...

As musicians mature, they tend to travel diverging paths. There are those who defy the sentimental haze of their pasts, who refuse to be the thing they were before; and then there are those who rest on their laurels and play the hits. Most alluring, however, are those who meditate on the journey: from humble origins and regional memory, to defining relationships and unshakable loss, creating salient new work rooted in their past. From Loretta Lynn’s “Coal Miner’s Daughter†to Tom Petty’s “Southern Accentsâ€, memory as song, as a tribute to home, becomes a welcome milestone in an artist’s body of work.

With Welcome 2 Club XIII, Drive-By Truckers’ principle songwriters Patterson Hood and Mike Cooley have crafted a vivid acclamation of their 37 years together, with all of its highs and lows, sung over walloping Southern rock. Pondering their origins in nowhere dive bars in nowhere towns, on bygone drives through the South’s empty backroads, they stew in the rich absurdity of it all, and offer a collection that rings of the band’s tendency toward Southern-gothic neo-noir, but with frequent punctuations of light. It’s a pivot from the band’s last two records, which were steeped in politics and protest, though those themes still poke through.

With “The Driverâ€, the album opens on Hood’s narrator behind the wheel in his early twenties, cruising through The Shoals late at night, recording its hidden evils and open blight. It’s one of the most autobiographical songs he’s written, one that illuminates a crucial act for rural youth born in dry counties without hip clubs: the literal and metaphorical trek to find oneself. “Used to go out driving, sometimes late into the night/Trying to make sense of the pieces of my lifeâ€, he whispers in a crackling drawl, effectively providing a mission statement for the album writ large, where the majority of Hood’s songs mine past friendships and relationships, their reunions and despair, an extension of his work on 2012’s solo Heat Lightning Rumbles In The Distance but without all the misery.

Cooley’s pair of songs present the character studies the Truckers are known for, less personal on their face, but whose themes deftly fit the broader arc of Welcome 2 Club XIII. On “Maria’s Awful Disclosureâ€, he sings of the Canadian author Maria Monk and her infamous 1836 exposé “Awful Disclosures Of The Hotel Dieu Nunneryâ€, which was later debunked. As is his way, Cooley’s account reaches deeper and more broadly, doubling as an early example of the social and political echo chambers that pervade modern humanity. “Ghost-written pornography/Tailored to readers in need of a righteous excuse to indulge/Maria’s awful disclosureâ€, he sings.

“Every Single Storied Flameout†finds Cooley’s knife aimed at the myth of the rock star demigod. But instead of charging like a knight in battle, he carves at its fat with a steadily held scalpel, indicting his own complicity in the process. It’s a fitting transition to Hood’s “Billy Ringo In The Darkâ€, a character from Heat Lightning Rumbles In The Distance, who flames out under the weight of expectation and the grip of mental illness.

“Forged In Hell And Heaven Sent†finds Hood’s protagonist reconnecting with an old friend, over fiddle, harmonica and backing vocals by Nashville country-rock luminary Margo Price, fellow former rabble rousers turned dried-out parents with nothing to prove. The theme burbles up on album closer “Wilder Days†too, a meditation on bygone invincibility and simple everyday pleasures, amid the existential dread and political wasteland of contemporary life. “I find it best to laugh at the absurdity of life above the ground / There’s no comfort in survival but it’s still the best option that I’ve foundâ€, he tenderly intones from a spartan stage of minimalist fingerpicking, and bass and drum thuds.

Through its personal lens, and the rural expanse of its setting, Welcome 2 Club XIII presents itself as an album for anyone born outside of their country’s cultural capitals, for those who can look back on the hardships of their youth and be thankful for those humble beginnings, and the defiance and drive they instil. “Muscle Shoals just needs some punkâ€, Hood sings on the title track, contrasting his early rebellion with the homogeneity of his homeland: this is not The Shoals of FAME and Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, but of Foghat cover bands and tanning beds. It’s a sentiment that most of us can relate to, and one that seems to encapsulate the Truckers’ continuing, ever-thrilling journey.

Al Stewart – The Admiralty Lights: The Complete Studio, Live and Rare 1964-2009

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Riding high in the US charts at the start of punk rock’s annus mirabilis, Al Stewart was eager to make clear to an NME interviewer exactly how well he was doing. “Only two albums from the British folk scene have ever got into the American Top 30,†said the 31-year-old, who had moved to Califor...

Riding high in the US charts at the start of punk rock’s annus mirabilis, Al Stewart was eager to make clear to an NME interviewer exactly how well he was doing. “Only two albums from the British folk scene have ever got into the American Top 30,†said the 31-year-old, who had moved to California a few months earlier. “Out of Steeleye Span, Incredible String Band, Pentangle, Fairport Convention, Ralph McTell – you know the list – only two albums have ever made it. They’re Modern Times and Year Of The Cat – both by me.â€

Having spent much of his career being regarded as a minor talent (“When I looked for respect all I got was neglectâ€, he fumed quietly on 1976’s “If It Don’t Come Naturally, Leave Itâ€), commercial success proved to be intoxicating for Stewart. In the sleevenotes to this colossal summation of his life’s work – 21 commercially released albums, 18 live discs, eight sets of outtakes and home recordings and three more of BBC sessions, plus a 160-page book – Paul Simon’s one-time London flatmate remembers wallowing in his vindication as he took to the clubs of Los Angeles in 1977. “It is the only time that I have been truly happy in my life,†he recalls. “I was in the Rainbow Bar And Grill, I had a record in the Top 10 and every girl in the place wanted to come and sit on my lap.â€

Born in Scotland but raised in genteel Dorset, Stewart was the skiffle king of Wycliffe House boarding school before graduating to rock’n’roll: his group, the Trappers, were originally Tony Blackburn’s backing band. He briefly took electric guitar lessons from Wimborne Minster maestro Robert Fripp, but found what felt like his calling when he first heard Bob Dylan. Reconfigured as a singer-songwriter with a sideline in Lewis Carroll surrealism, Stewart gravitated towards Soho and served his musical apprenticeship at Greek Street mecca Les Cousins.

The Admiralty Lights features some unheard Phil Ochs-alike songs from this period, “Child Of The Bomb†and “Do I Love My Neighbour?â€, plus the 1966 Tolkien knock-off, “The Elfâ€, that Stewart recorded as his debut single before being signed to CBS, apparently because the label wanted to get hold of The Piccadilly Line, who shared the same management. The company nonetheless invested considerable effort in making his debut album, Bedsitter Images, heavy-handed Judy Collins-style orchestration swamping Stewart’s self-conscious lyrics on the “Norwegian Woodâ€-ish “Swiss Cottage Manoeuvres†and his takedown of unhip suburbanites, “The Carmichaelsâ€.

Follow-up Love Chronicles – featuring half of Led Zeppelin, most of Fairport Convention, and the first documented use of the word “fucking†on an overground record release – was Melody Maker’s folk album of the year for 1969. However, while Stewart’s Colin Blunstone-winsome voice and ear for a melody served him well on “Life And Life Only†and “You Should Have Listened To Alâ€, the ingrained sexual politics have not aged well, the romantic encounters depicted on “In Brooklyn†and the side-long title track uncomfortably close to the self-aggrandisement of the Playboy letters page.

A host of recordings from the early part of his career show why the genial Stewart was a popular club turn, the crowd at a 1971 Warwick University show being won over by his tale of meeting Leonard Cohen in the gents at Montreal Airport. However, if his early work aspired to the voice-of-a-generation cachet of Dylan and the confessional finesse of Joni Mitchell, he came across on record as a gauche wannabe, clean-shaven in a hairy age. Admirably self-aware, he told an interviewer in 1972: “I’m forced to admit, looking at the songs on the four albums that I’ve made, that all of them have been different but not different enough.â€

He may not have realised it at the time, but with “Manuscriptâ€, from his third outing 1970’s Zero She Flies, Stewart had found his USP. A taut meditation on the days leading up to World War I, shot through with family history and a report of a day at the beach at Worthing, it’s a magnificently dense piece, held in place by a meandering, teasing melody. Songs rooted in history (mostly military or naval) ultimately provided Stewart with an escape route from his own head and an endless supply of yarns to spin. Olde worlde material provided swashbuckling backdrops for all of his LPs from 1973’s Past, Present And Future – which features the ode to British sea power “Old Admirals†– though his subsequent ascent to million-sellerdom owed as much to a crowd-pleasing electric backing band and a determination to be born again in the USA.

While Stewart could still concoct distinctly British songs when the mood took him – hear the vengeful, Sandy Denny-worthy “The Dark And The Rolling Sea†from 1975’s Modern Times – it was a determinedly mid-Atlantic colour-palette, developed as he did the hard yards in American venues, that allowed him to thrive. The live recordings here show him ruthlessly stripping the oldies from his set by the middle of the decade, with the albums of his 1975–78 imperial phase a purposeful rejection of his folk-club days. They have a Fleetwood Mac-ish reach for the back of big venues, exotic Moody Blues touches and a Randy Newman smartness with a tasteful trace of Pink Floyd pomp courtesy of producer Alan Parsons.

Crucially, Stewart’s baroque melodies matched the grand drama of his subject matter; “Not The One†(“Queen Bitchâ€, approximately) from 1975’s Modern Times; “Sand In Your Shoes†and Amy Johnson tribute “Flying Sorcery†from 1976’s Year Of The Cat; Mock Tudor monstrosity “A Man For All Seasons†and “Almost Lucy†from 1978’s Hipgnosis-sleeved Time Passages. Mass-market oriented, but superbly engineered.

Sales slowly declined thereafter, though The Admiralty Lights shows that Stewart did not give up easily. His 1980s records stand up well, the cheeseville production of Indian Summer and 24 Carrots gaining a pleasing patina with the passage of time, while other follies – such as his unreleased “(World According To) Garp†single and vintage wine-themed 2000 LP Down In The Cellar – show an artist with endless faith in their vision, however ridiculous. True to eccentric form, his most recent studio album, 2008’s Sparks Of Ancient Light, features riffs on the lives of classical adventurer Hanno
The Navigator and the final Shah of Persia, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, among others.

Given the giant sweep of Stewart’s historical works, The Admiralty Lights is appropriately oversized. His songs can be wordy and portentous, and incur into David Brent territory at times (“negressâ€, as heard on “Zero She Fliesâ€, is certainly not a word anyone else will be singing any time soon). However, that kind of linguistic overreach is the hallmark of a stylist with a burning need to impress – see also: Donovan, Steve Harley, Marc Bolan, Morrissey.

Judged on his early albums, Stewart was a two-bob Dylan with moderately heavy friends, but The Admiralty Lights shows that he raised his game magnificently from the mid-1970s. Those US chart figures he quoted in 1977 were a pointed reminder to the folkies back home that none of his Liege & Lief-literate contemporaries harnessed arcane drama as successfully as Stewart. And as Lord Nelson, Napoleon, Robespierre, Joseph Stalin and Winston Churchill would doubtless tell him if they had the chance, history loves a winner.

Frank Sinatra – Watertown

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Should you ever feel like being shredded, head to YouTube and seek out Nina Simone’s performance of “For A While†at Ronnie Scott’s club in 1984. Co-written by The Four Seasons’ Bob Gaudio and singer-songwriter Jake Holmes, the song is a simple and bottomless one that fits a loose lineage ...

Should you ever feel like being shredded, head to YouTube and seek out Nina Simone’s performance of “For A While†at Ronnie Scott’s club in 1984. Co-written by The Four Seasons’ Bob Gaudio and singer-songwriter Jake Holmes, the song is a simple and bottomless one that fits a loose lineage running from Hoagy Carmichael’s “I Get Along Without You Very Well†through to Bob Dylan’s “Most of The Time†– songs about how, when you suffer devastating loss, the world still just keeps turning around you, life goes on, and you gradually get pulled back into going along with it; until, suddenly, the memory of your loss comes rising up out of the everyday, raw as ever, to stun you all over again. Simone’s entire Ronnie Scott’s show is extraordinary, but “For A While†is its bleeding heart. She sings like she’s creating it from her own pain and, if you let it, it will tear you apart.

Simone was always ahead of the curve. By the time of that performance, “For A While†was a lost song from a forgotten record: Watertown, a suite of 10 tracks all exploring this same sense of overwhelming, mundane, private grief, which Frank Sinatra recorded in 1969, released in 1970, and almost never recovered from. The worst-selling album of his career, its disastrous commercial failure played a part in his (short-lived) decision to retire the following year. When he went back to work, Watertown was barely mentioned again. Since his death in 1998, however, it has been repeatedly rediscovered, garnering a cult who will tell you that this, the Sinatra record least like a Sinatra record, ranks among his masterpieces.

Sinatra turned 54 the year Watertown appeared, and it seemed to cement the idea he had grown fatally out of touch, precisely because it seemed he was trying so hard to prove he was still with it: hooking up with younger hitmakers to make that grooviest of ’60s-’70s rock things, a concept album.

It began when Sinatra became friends with Four Seasons singer Frankie Valli in the late ’60s. Sinatra was in a restless, uncertain place, casting around for material he could connect with. 1969 produced one of his biggest hits, “My Wayâ€, yet it was a song he quickly grew to loathe, and otherwise sales were sliding. Sinatra was searching for something. Valli, a devoted fan, persuaded him that writer-producer Gaudio could write it.

At that point, Gaudio had moved far from “Big Girls Don’t Cryâ€. Inspired by hearing Jake Holmes (who wrote “Dazed And Confusedâ€), Gaudio collaborated with him in 1969 on The Four Seasons’ own post-Sgt Pepper psych-pop concept opus, The Genuine Imitation Life Gazette. When the chance of writing for Sinatra presented itself, they set out to craft something similarly ambitious, but in his image.

Sinatra is credited with creating the concept album, the first to exploit the format’s possibilities to present not merely a ragbag of tunes, but a unified whole, assembling songs as an extended exploration of mood, tone. He raised it to an art with 1955’s In The Wee Small Hours, where everything, from the city-night cover to the final note hangs in perfect, blue-bruised balance. Some of Sinatra’s greatest collections danced through life’s sparkling good times – 1956’s peerless Songs For Swingin’ Lovers! – but the deepest were bittersweet meditations on loneliness, abandoned love. The titles say it all: Only The Lonely; Where Are You?; No One Cares.

With Watertown, Gaudio and Holmes built him a concept album in the contemporary sense – a song cycle forming a specific narrative – which drew on Sinatra’s legacy while tailoring it to the era. The record’s narrator is a lonely man in the vulnerable tradition of Sinatra’s 1950s classics, but far removed from their sophisticated urban milieu. He’s a smalltown working guy, and his story is as simple as he is: his wife left. She had ambitions that outgrew him and their backwater town. She had an affair. Now she’s gone, moved to the big city, chasing some modern something he can’t comprehend. Meanwhile, he’s
left there, frozen in grief, trying to raise their children.

Gaudio said he and Holmes named the town by sticking a pin in a map of Upstate New York, but rain practically becomes a character in Watertown. Several songs are fragments of letters the narrator writes his wife – but, it transpires, never sends – filled with mundane domestic details, and always the rain. Balancing that banality, however, is the depth and complexity of emotion Sinatra brings to his masterfully understated vocals, the ageing voice cracking beautifully along the edges.

For the first time, rather than record live with the orchestra, Sinatra chose to overdub afterwards, but it was no case of phoning it in. He attended the band’s recording sessions, and sang scratch vocals in the room, but decided to hold back final takes until he had lived with these new songs longer alone, got to know them.

Gaudio and arranger Charles Callelo frame him in a lush pop palette that leaves Watertown both lyrically and sonically distant from the popular notion of “a Frank Sinatra recordâ€. It met with bafflement from Sinatra’s traditional audience, but fans have since cited similarities with certain Beach Boys sounds, shades of Scott Walker and, particularly, the work of Jimmy Webb.

But what makes it is entirely, purely, Frank Sinatra. Inhabiting the songs, he produces one of his great acting jobs. Live with the record a while, and you feel the tidal forces of pain that Simone later exposed trembling everywhere just beneath the very simple surface. Simone sings “For A While†like it’s destroying her. Sinatra holds it all back with the most delicate restraint. Still, in Watertown, he’s drowning.

Listen to a previously unreleased version of David Bowie’s “Starman”

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A new version of David Bowie's classic single "Starman" has been shared to mark the 50th anniversary of the late icon's fifth studio album, The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars. ORDER NOW: THE BEATLES ARE ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST ISSUE OF UNCUT READ MORE: Bowie on...

A new version of David Bowie’s classic single “Starman” has been shared to mark the 50th anniversary of the late icon’s fifth studio album, The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars.

The seminal record, which also features the tracks “Five Years”, “Suffragette City” and “Ziggy Stardust”, arrived on June 16 in 1972.

In celebration of its half century birthday, Parlophone Records has released “Starman (Top Of The Pops Version, 2022 Mix)” ahead of a limited-edition, half-speed vinyl reissue of the aforementioned album that comes out today (June 17).

In 1972, the Musicians Union rules stated that to appear on Top Of The Pops the artist must re-record their track and – in this case – sing live over the top.

This previously unreleased version of “Starman” takes the backing track (recorded at London’s Trident Studios) and backing vocals, featuring a one-off Bowie ad-lib ‘Hey Brown Cow‘, recorded for the show.

“Starman (Top Of The Pops Version, 2022 Mix)” was created by “Ziggy Stardust” co-producer Ken Scott earlier this year from the BBC’s original multi-tracks.

The imminent 50th anniversary reissue of The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars will also be available as a picture disc, featuring the same master and a replica promotional poster for the album.

Press materials hailed the original full-length project as “the breakthrough album that catapulted David Bowie into the international spotlight”, adding that it’s “remained a touchstone record, growing in stature with each passing year”.

The full tracklist for the re-release is as follows:

SIDE ONE
“Five Years”
“Soul Love”
“Moonage Daydream”
“Starman”
“It Ain’t Easy”

SIDE TWO
“Lady Stardust” 
“Star”
“Hang On To Yourself”
“Ziggy Stardust”
“Suffragette City”
“Rock ’N’ Roll Suicide”

Hear Lana Del Rey’s cover of Father John Misty’s “Buddy’s Rendezvous”

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Lana Del Rey's rendition of Father John Misty's "Buddy’s Rendezvous" has arrived on streaming services – listen to it below. ORDER NOW: THE BEATLES ARE ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST ISSUE OF UNCUT READ MORE: Father John Misty – Chloë and the Next 20th Century review The Blue Banister...

Lana Del Rey‘s rendition of Father John Misty’s “Buddy’s Rendezvous” has arrived on streaming services – listen to it below.

The Blue Banisters singer-songwriter’s cover of Joshua Tillman’s Chloë And The Next 20th Century track was first previewed back in January. It was later exclusively released on a seven-inch vinyl as part of a limited edition box set of the aforementioned record.

Featuring piano, strings and saxophone, the alternate version of “Buddy’s Rendezvous” sees Del Rey and Tillman join forces towards the end.

Whatever happened to the girl I knew?/ In the wasteland, come up short and end up on the news/ Hey, hey, hey, hey/ Whatever happened to the girl I knew?” the pair sing together.

Tune in here:

 

Father John Misty has also shared the official video for the original version of “Buddy’s Rendezvous”. The clip was directed by Tillman’s wife, the filmmaker and photographer Emma Elizabeth Tillman. Watch above.

Father John Misty will showcase his latest album on a run of UK and European headline concerts in 2023, which includes a stop-off at the O2 Academy Brixton in London.