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Paul McCartney Expands ‘Memory’

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Paul McCartney is to release an expanded version of his latest studio album 'Memory Almost Full' which was originally released in June this year. The new deluxe CD package also comes with a second DVD disc containing the music videos for the singles 'Ever Present Past', which was directed by Phil Griffin, and 'Dance Tonight', directed by Michel Gondry [Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind] and starring actress Natalie Portman. The added DVD also features exclusive live performance footage from the time of the album's release, including the Beatles' 'secret show' at London's Electric Ballroom in June. Extra tracks that were part of the original deluxe package in June, 'In Private', 'Why So Blue', '222' have now been incorporated on to the main album. Meanwhile, in other Macca news - he spoke out in an interview earlier this week, explaining how the Beatles turned down an offer to reform in 1976 - to see the story - click here. The full track listing for the new deluxe 'Memory Almost Full' is: Disc: 1 1. Dance Tonight 2. Ever Present Past 3. See Your Sunshine 4. Only Mama Knows 5. You Tell Me 6. Mr Bellamy 7. Gratitude 8. Vintage Clothes 9. That Was Me 10. Feet In The Clouds 11. House Of Wax 12. End Of The End 13. Nod Your Head 14. In Private 15. Why So Blue 16. 222 Disc: 2 / DVD 1. Drive My Car 2. Only Mama Knows 3. Dance Tonight 4. House Of Wax 5. Nod Your Head 6. Dance Tonight 7. Ever Present Past Pic credit: Rex Features

Paul McCartney is to release an expanded version of his latest studio album ‘Memory Almost Full’ which was originally released in June this year.

The new deluxe CD package also comes with a second DVD disc containing the music videos for the singles ‘Ever Present Past’, which was directed by Phil Griffin, and ‘Dance Tonight’, directed by Michel Gondry [Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind] and starring actress Natalie Portman.

The added DVD also features exclusive live performance footage from the time of the album’s release, including the Beatles‘ ‘secret show‘ at London’s Electric Ballroom in June.

Extra tracks that were part of the original deluxe package in June, ‘In Private’, ‘Why So Blue’, ‘222’ have now been incorporated on to the main album.

Meanwhile, in other Macca news – he spoke out in an interview earlier this week, explaining how the Beatles turned down an offer to reform in 1976 – to see the story – click here.

The full track listing for the new deluxe ‘Memory Almost Full’ is:

Disc: 1

1. Dance Tonight

2. Ever Present Past

3. See Your Sunshine

4. Only Mama Knows

5. You Tell Me

6. Mr Bellamy

7. Gratitude

8. Vintage Clothes

9. That Was Me

10. Feet In The Clouds

11. House Of Wax

12. End Of The End

13. Nod Your Head

14. In Private

15. Why So Blue

16. 222

Disc: 2 / DVD

1. Drive My Car

2. Only Mama Knows

3. Dance Tonight

4. House Of Wax

5. Nod Your Head

6. Dance Tonight

7. Ever Present Past

Pic credit: Rex Features

Eric Clapton Subject Of TV Special

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Eric Clapton is to appear on The South Bank Show, for the first time in twenty years, this December. Interviewed once again by South Bank Show host Melvyn Bragg, Clapton chats at length about conquering his addiction with alcohol which was at it's peak at the time of their first meeting. The filmed interview also sees Clapton talk frankly about his family, the death of his son, the intensity of his relationships with other great guitarists and with women, his influences and his most moving songs - and how he has now finally found peace. The show which airs on ITV1 on December 2, will also include rare and exclusive performance footage. Other highlights on The South Bank Show this Christmas include an interview with Annie Lennox behind the scenes as she prepares for a peace concert. The show airs on December 16. Don't forget - there's still time to enter Uncut.co.uk's Eric Clapton competition - For your chance to win a Fender Strat - click here!.

Eric Clapton is to appear on The South Bank Show, for the first time in twenty years, this December.

Interviewed once again by South Bank Show host Melvyn Bragg, Clapton chats at length about conquering his addiction with alcohol which was at it’s peak at the time of their first meeting.

The filmed interview also sees Clapton talk frankly about his family, the death of his son, the intensity of his relationships with other great guitarists and with women, his influences and his most moving songs – and how he has now finally found peace.

The show which airs on ITV1 on December 2, will also include rare and exclusive performance footage.

Other highlights on The South Bank Show this Christmas include an interview with Annie Lennox behind the scenes as she prepares for a peace concert. The show airs on December 16.

Don’t forget – there’s still time to enter Uncut.co.uk’s Eric Clapton competition – For your chance to win a Fender Strat – click here!.

Cut Of The Day: Dexys Perform Passion Revue

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Today's choice cut from the world of YouTube is this clip of Dexys Midnight Runners in 1981. Performing 'Your Own' which was renamed 'Liars A - E' on the Projected Passion Revue album - the band are on top form for this live clip. Check out Uncut deputy editor John Mulvey's 4* review of The Projected Passion Revue here. Check out the great Dexys live performance here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TNRqbT41ViQ If you have any trouble viewing the embedded video, click here.

Today’s choice cut from the world of YouTube is this clip of Dexys Midnight Runners in 1981.

Performing ‘Your Own’ which was renamed ‘Liars A – E’ on the Projected Passion Revue album – the band are on top form for this live clip.

Check out Uncut deputy editor John Mulvey’s 4* review of The Projected Passion Revue here.

Check out the great Dexys live performance here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TNRqbT41ViQ

If you have any trouble viewing the embedded video, click here.

Uncut’s Worst Gigs – Ever!

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In last month's UNCUT, our writers, friends and favourite musicians reminisced about their favourite gigs. Well, in this month’s issue we’re looking back on the worst gigs we’ve ever seen - including The Stone Roses, Bob Dylan, Kevin Rowland and David Bowie - with rare photos from the shows too. We're also going to publish one of the worst gigs every day, with online exclusives, so feast your eyes on this, and be glad you weren’t there! ***** 11 | THE FALL The Junction, Cambridge Tuesday, October 24, 1995 PAT LONG: The Junction was a nondescript building situated in the middle of an industrial estate behind Cambridge railway station. The Fall played there in 1993 and a bootleg of the show proves that it was incredible – the album that they were touring, The Infotainment Scan, was a return to form, Mark E Smith was just the right side of drunk and they closed with a thrillingly malicious version of The Sonics’ “Strychnine”. I wasn’t at that gig. The one I went to was two years later and remains one of the most hostile I’ve ever seen – and that includes the Jesus Lizard show when David Yow rammed his forearm, James Herriot-style, into his anal cavity and then smeared his hand on the front row’s faces. The first thing Smith did was kick NME photographer Andy Wilsher in the face, lens first. He then slurred through a few songs, booted guitarist Craig Scanlon in the rump and stormed off to sing most of the rest of the set from the dressing room. Scanlon apparently left the band the next day after what were presumably 16 very long and tiresome years. ***** plus WERE YOU THERE? Not even UNCUTs war-weary gig-hounds have been to every show in history – but you lot probably have. Email Allan_Jones@ipcmedia.com to share your memories, of the ones we've published or any which we have missed, and we’ll publish the best in a future issue

In last month’s UNCUT, our writers, friends and favourite musicians reminisced about their favourite gigs.

Well, in this month’s issue we’re looking back on the worst gigs we’ve ever seen – including The Stone Roses, Bob Dylan, Kevin Rowland and David Bowie – with rare photos from the shows too.

We’re also going to publish one of the worst gigs every day, with online exclusives, so feast your eyes on this, and be glad you weren’t there!

*****

11 | THE FALL

The Junction, Cambridge

Tuesday, October 24, 1995

PAT LONG: The Junction was a nondescript building situated in the middle of an industrial estate behind Cambridge railway station. The Fall played there in 1993 and a bootleg of the show proves that it was incredible – the album that they were touring, The Infotainment Scan, was a return to form, Mark E Smith was just the right side of drunk and they closed with a thrillingly malicious version of The Sonics’ “Strychnine”.

I wasn’t at that gig. The one I went to was two years later and remains one of the most hostile I’ve ever seen – and that includes the Jesus Lizard show when David Yow rammed his forearm, James Herriot-style, into his anal cavity and then smeared his hand on the front row’s faces. The first thing Smith did was kick NME photographer Andy Wilsher in the face, lens first. He then slurred through a few songs, booted guitarist Craig Scanlon in the rump and stormed off to sing most of the rest of the set from the dressing room. Scanlon apparently left the band the next day after what were presumably 16 very long and tiresome years.

*****

plus WERE YOU THERE?

Not even UNCUTs war-weary gig-hounds have been to every show in history – but you lot probably have.

Email Allan_Jones@ipcmedia.com to share your memories, of the ones we’ve published or any which we have missed, and we’ll publish the best in a future issue

Brian May Launches New Queen Live DVD

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Queen guitarist Brian May launched the forthcoming Queen Rock Montreal live DVD at London's Hard Rock Cafe last night (October 16). Making a jovial, anecdotal speech before an edit of the concert film was shown, Brian May apologised on behalf of Roger Taylor who couldn't make it to the launch, saying: "he sends his love. He told me to tell you that he would actually MUCH rather be here with us for the launch of the DVD, rather than sunbathing on his luxurious boat off the coast of Africa, if he were someone who gave a shit!" May also told the story of how Queen came to play the Montreal Forum for two nights on November 24 and 25 in '81 - after touring South America - as director Saul Williams had decided it would be great to make a cinema quality live film. May explained the back story that as the band were no longer on tour at the time of the filming, everything had to especially constructed for those two nights. The stress of that combined with the band's (especially Mercury's) dislike of the Williams working practices meant that tempers flared. May advised us retrospectively saying: "What you see in this film is a very edgy, angry band, carving out a performance in a rather uncomfortable situation. But it does mean it’s very high energy, real, and raw." One of the highlights of the film is the first ever live performance of 'Under Pressure' their soon to be global hit, in collaboration with David Bowie. The DVD will also come with extended Live Aid footage. Check out the queenrockmontreal.com microsite here - for some video and audio clips from the show. Plus check out Brian May's regularly updated blog here and to see all of his speech notes from last night.. Queen Rock Montreal is released on DVD and double CD on October 29. Disc one: Intro We Will Rock You (fast) (May) Let Me Entertain You (Mercury) Play the Game (Mercury) Somebody to Love (Mercury) Killer Queen (Mercury) I'm in Love With My Car (Taylor) Get Down, Make Love (Mercury) Save Me (May) Now I'm Here (May) Dragon Attack (May) Now I'm Here (reprise) (May) Love of My Life (Mercury) Disc two: Under Pressure (Queen/Bowie) Keep Yourself Alive (with impromptu jam before the song) (May) Drum Solo/Tympani Solo (Taylor) Guitar Solo/Guitar and Drum Duel (May/Taylor) Flash (May) The Hero (May) Crazy Little Thing Called Love (Mercury) Jailhouse Rock (Leiber/Stoller) Bohemian Rhapsody (Mercury) Tie Your Mother Down (May) Another One Bites the Dust (Deacon) Sheer Heart Attack (Taylor) We Will Rock You (May) We Are the Champions (Mercury) God Save the Queen (tape) (arr. May)

Queen guitarist Brian May launched the forthcoming Queen Rock Montreal live DVD at London’s Hard Rock Cafe last night (October 16).

Making a jovial, anecdotal speech before an edit of the concert film was shown, Brian May apologised on behalf of Roger Taylor who couldn’t make it to the launch, saying: “he sends his love. He told me to tell you that he would actually MUCH rather be here with us for the launch of the DVD, rather than sunbathing on his luxurious boat off the coast of Africa, if he were someone who gave a shit!”

May also told the story of how Queen came to play the Montreal Forum for two nights on November 24 and 25 in ’81 – after touring South America – as director Saul Williams had decided it would be great to make a cinema quality live film.

May explained the back story that as the band were no longer on tour at the time of the filming, everything had to especially constructed for those two nights. The stress of that combined with the band’s (especially Mercury’s) dislike of the Williams working practices meant that tempers flared. May advised us retrospectively saying: “What you see in this film is a very edgy, angry band, carving out a performance in a rather uncomfortable situation. But it does mean it’s very high energy, real, and raw.”

One of the highlights of the film is the first ever live performance of ‘Under Pressure’ their soon to be global hit, in collaboration with David Bowie.

The DVD will also come with extended Live Aid footage.

Check out the queenrockmontreal.com microsite here – for some video and audio clips from the show.

Plus check out Brian May’s regularly updated blog here and to see all of his speech notes from last night..

Queen Rock Montreal is released on DVD and double CD on October 29.

Disc one:

Intro

We Will Rock You (fast) (May)

Let Me Entertain You (Mercury)

Play the Game (Mercury)

Somebody to Love (Mercury)

Killer Queen (Mercury)

I’m in Love With My Car (Taylor)

Get Down, Make Love (Mercury)

Save Me (May)

Now I’m Here (May)

Dragon Attack (May)

Now I’m Here (reprise) (May)

Love of My Life (Mercury)

Disc two:

Under Pressure (Queen/Bowie)

Keep Yourself Alive (with impromptu jam before the song) (May)

Drum Solo/Tympani Solo (Taylor)

Guitar Solo/Guitar and Drum Duel (May/Taylor)

Flash (May)

The Hero (May)

Crazy Little Thing Called Love (Mercury)

Jailhouse Rock (Leiber/Stoller)

Bohemian Rhapsody (Mercury)

Tie Your Mother Down (May)

Another One Bites the Dust (Deacon)

Sheer Heart Attack (Taylor)

We Will Rock You (May)

We Are the Champions (Mercury)

God Save the Queen (tape) (arr. May)

Neil Young Previews New Album Online

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Neil Young has set up his own youTube channel to showcase tracks from his new album 'Chrome Dreams II'. Four tracks from the forthcoming album are available to watch with specially made photo montage's from Neil Young's photo collection. The veteran rocker has posted the tracks 'Dirty Old Man', 'The Believer', 'The Way' and 'Spirit Road' with a collection of close-up images of rusty cars taken by Young. The new studio album, the follow-up to last year's 'Living With War' is due for release next week (October 23) and Neil Young also kicks off his North American tour this week in Idaho (October 18). Check out Neil Young's 'Chrome Dreams II' showcase here:http://youtube.com/neilyoungchannel For more details about Neil Young's 20-date US tour, click here.

Neil Young has set up his own youTube channel to showcase tracks from his new album ‘Chrome Dreams II’.

Four tracks from the forthcoming album are available to watch with specially made photo montage’s from Neil Young’s photo collection.

The veteran rocker has posted the tracks ‘Dirty Old Man‘, ‘The Believer‘, ‘The Way‘ and ‘Spirit Road‘ with a collection of close-up images of rusty cars taken by Young.

The new studio album, the follow-up to last year’s ‘Living With War’ is due for release next week (October 23) and Neil Young also kicks off his North American tour this week in Idaho (October 18).

Check out Neil Young’s ‘Chrome Dreams II’ showcase here:http://youtube.com/neilyoungchannel

For more details about Neil Young’s 20-date US tour, click here.

Cat Power Hearts Bob Dylan On New Jukebox Album

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Cat Power has revealed the track listing for her second covers' album due out early next year. The album, titled 'Jukebox' is to include covers of songs made famous by artists such as Bob Dylan, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Hank Williams and Janis Joplin. The album due out on January 21, will also include two new Cat Power tracks; 'Metal Heart' and 'Song To Bobby', her own tribute to Bob Dylan. The 'Jukebox' track listing is: 'Theme From 'New York, New York' (originally sung by Frank Sinatra) 'Metal Heart' (Cat Power) 'Ramblin' (Wo)man' (Hank Williams) 'Song To Bobby' (Cat Power) 'Aretha, Sing One For Me' (Originally sung by George Jackson) 'Lost Someone' (James Brown) 'I Believe In You' (Bob Dylan) 'Fortunate Son' (Creedence Clearwater Revival) 'Silver Stallion' (Lee Clayton) 'Dark End Of The Street' (Originally sung by James Carr) 'Don't Explain' (Billie Holiday) 'Woman Left Lonely' (popularized by Janis Joplin)

Cat Power has revealed the track listing for her second covers’ album due out early next year.

The album, titled ‘Jukebox’ is to include covers of songs made famous by artists such as Bob Dylan, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Hank Williams and Janis Joplin.

The album due out on January 21, will also include two new Cat Power tracks; ‘Metal Heart’ and ‘Song To Bobby’, her own tribute to Bob Dylan.

The ‘Jukebox’ track listing is:

‘Theme From ‘New York, New York’ (originally sung by Frank Sinatra)

‘Metal Heart’ (Cat Power)

‘Ramblin’ (Wo)man’ (Hank Williams)

‘Song To Bobby’ (Cat Power)

‘Aretha, Sing One For Me’ (Originally sung by George Jackson)

‘Lost Someone’ (James Brown)

‘I Believe In You’ (Bob Dylan)

‘Fortunate Son’ (Creedence Clearwater Revival)

‘Silver Stallion’ (Lee Clayton)

‘Dark End Of The Street’ (Originally sung by James Carr)

‘Don’t Explain’ (Billie Holiday)

‘Woman Left Lonely’ (popularized by Janis Joplin)

29 Artists Join Forces For Love Music Hate Racism

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Uncut's sister title NME has joined up with Love Music Hate Racism to release a free anti-racism double album - the first disc of which comes free with this week's issue of the paper. The Love Music Hate Racism project was created following reports that the British National Party were attempting to recruit school students to their notorious campaign by handing out racist music CDs. The LMHR album aims to reverse the trend with it's positive anti-racist message from the artists involved. Pete Doherty’s Babyshambles and Carl Barat's Dirty Pretty Things both appear on the album, putting aside artistic differences. Doherty exclaimed, “Count me in – I’ll fight!” Other artists that feature on the double album include Hard-Fi, Carbon/Silicon, Manu Chao, Billy Bragg, Biffy Clyro and The Charlatans. There are a further 14 tracks available to download free at NME.com The full track list for LMHR disc one is as follows: 1. The Enemy – Fear Killed The Youth Of Our Nation (rare B-side) 2. Lethal Bizzle - Babylon' s Burning The Ghetto (new single) 3. Roll Deep Racist People (specially recorded) 4. Helsinki (Drew - Babyshambles) Ampersand (specially recorded) 5. The View - Fireworks & Flowers (unreleased song) 6. Hard Fi - We Need Love (exclusive remix) 7. MIA - Hussel (from the album 'Kala ') 8. Bloc Party vs. Diplo - Where Is Home? (Exclusive remix) 9. Carbon / Silicon - The Network's Going Down (exclusive recording) 10. Natty - If I... (exclusive recording) 11. Babyshambles - Stone Me-What A Life! (B-side of 'Delivery’) 12. Get Cape. Wear Cap. Fly - If I Could Build You A Tower (specially recorded) 13. The Charlatans - Blank Heart, Blank Mind (specially written and recorded) 14. Dirty Pretty Things - 9 Lives (specially written and recorded) 15. Albert Hammond Jr. - Cartoon Music For Superheroes (From the album Yours To Keep)

Uncut’s sister title NME has joined up with Love Music Hate Racism to release a free anti-racism double album – the first disc of which comes free with this week’s issue of the paper.

The Love Music Hate Racism project was created following reports that the British National Party were attempting to recruit school students to their notorious campaign by handing out racist music CDs. The LMHR album aims to reverse the trend with it’s positive anti-racist message from the artists involved.

Pete Doherty’s Babyshambles and Carl Barat’s Dirty Pretty Things both appear on the album, putting aside artistic differences. Doherty exclaimed, “Count me in – I’ll fight!”

Other artists that feature on the double album include Hard-Fi, Carbon/Silicon, Manu Chao, Billy Bragg, Biffy Clyro and The Charlatans.

There are a further 14 tracks available to download free at NME.com

The full track list for LMHR disc one is as follows:

1. The Enemy – Fear Killed The Youth Of Our Nation (rare B-side)

2. Lethal Bizzle – Babylon’ s Burning The Ghetto (new single)

3. Roll Deep Racist People (specially recorded)

4. Helsinki (Drew – Babyshambles) Ampersand (specially recorded)

5. The View – Fireworks & Flowers (unreleased song)

6. Hard Fi – We Need Love (exclusive remix)

7. MIA – Hussel (from the album ‘Kala ‘)

8. Bloc Party vs. Diplo – Where Is Home? (Exclusive remix)

9. Carbon / Silicon – The Network’s Going Down (exclusive recording)

10. Natty – If I… (exclusive recording)

11. Babyshambles – Stone Me-What A Life! (B-side of ‘Delivery’)

12. Get Cape. Wear Cap. Fly – If I Could Build You A Tower (specially recorded)

13. The Charlatans – Blank Heart, Blank Mind (specially written and recorded)

14. Dirty Pretty Things – 9 Lives (specially written and recorded)

15. Albert Hammond Jr. – Cartoon Music For Superheroes (From the album

Yours To Keep)

Cut of the Day: Lou Reed With David Bowie

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Cut of the day today is Lou Reed joining David Bowie on stage in New York back in 1999. Bowie joins his hero for a double-whammy of Reed tracks - Dirty BLVD and White Light/White Heat. Check out the glorious eight minute video clip here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YdRXRJSCm_U If you have trouble viewing the embedded video click here.

Cut of the day today is Lou Reed joining David Bowie on stage in New York back in 1999.

Bowie joins his hero for a double-whammy of Reed tracks – Dirty BLVD and White Light/White Heat.

Check out the glorious eight minute video clip here:

If you have trouble viewing the embedded video click here.

McCartney: ‘The Beatles Turned Down Reunion In ’76’

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Paul McCartney has spoken for the first time about how the Beatles turned down a offer to reform the band in 1976. Speaking to listings magazine Radio Times to publicise his show at the BBC Electric Proms later this month, McCartney said that the money they were offered to stage a comeback back then was 'phenomenal'. He said:"There were phenomenal amounts of money being offered. Millions by Sid Bernstein, this New York promoter. But it just went round and round. There might be three of us thinking 'You know, it might not be a bad idea' - but the other one would go, 'Nah, I don't think so' and sort of veto it. Let's put it this way, there was never a time when all four of us wanted to do it. And I'm actually glad of that now because the Beatles' work is a body of work. There's nothing to be ashamed of there. He concluded: "The potential disappointment of coming on and not being as good as The Beatles had been, that was a risk we shouldn't take." In the wake of the unprecedent buzz around Led Zeppelin's reunion - Macca was asked in the interview 'What If' the Beatles could have reformed now? McCartney replied: "Since you're leading me down that flowery path, we could imagine that John would be this fantastic elder statesman, very much in command of his lifestyle. I'd be alongside him singing magnificently. George would be playing like an angel on his guitar. We'd be gelling, sounding like nothing anyone's ever heard before with all the power of modern amplification." With a flourish he added: "And, behind us, would be the world's greatest drummer. And it'd be fandabidozi! We could be introduced by the Krankies. Unfortunately, this is just pure imagination. But then what's wrong with that?" McCartney also revealed that he has artists old and new on his iPod, saying: "My iPod moves from Kaiser Chiefs to Neil Young to Guillemots to Bob Dylan to Radiohead to Bob Marley. And if you want to get a dancefloor moving, it's I Will Survive. Mix that with Foo Fighters, throw in a bit of Fred Astaire, KC and the Sunshine Band, maybe Fatboy Slim and we've got it!" Pic credit: Rex Features

Paul McCartney has spoken for the first time about how the Beatles turned down a offer to reform the band in 1976.

Speaking to listings magazine Radio Times to publicise his show at the BBC Electric Proms later this month, McCartney said that the money they were offered to stage a comeback back then was ‘phenomenal’.

He said:”There were phenomenal amounts of money being offered. Millions by Sid Bernstein, this New York promoter. But it just went round and round. There might be three of us thinking ‘You know, it might not be a bad idea’ – but the other one would go, ‘Nah, I don’t think so’ and sort of veto it. Let’s put it this way, there was never a time when all four of us wanted to do it. And I’m actually glad of that now because the Beatles’ work is a body of work. There’s nothing to be ashamed of there.

He concluded: “The potential disappointment of coming on and not being as good as The Beatles had been, that was a risk we shouldn’t take.”

In the wake of the unprecedent buzz around Led Zeppelin‘s reunion – Macca was asked in the interview ‘What If‘ the Beatles could have reformed now?

McCartney replied: “Since you’re leading me down that flowery path, we could imagine that John would be this fantastic elder statesman, very much in command of his lifestyle. I’d be alongside him singing magnificently.

George would be playing like an angel on his guitar. We’d be gelling, sounding like nothing anyone’s ever heard before with all the power of modern amplification.”

With a flourish he added: “And, behind us, would be the world’s greatest drummer. And it’d be fandabidozi! We could be introduced by the Krankies. Unfortunately, this is just pure imagination. But then what’s wrong with that?”

McCartney also revealed that he has artists old and new on his iPod, saying: “My iPod moves from Kaiser Chiefs to Neil Young to Guillemots to Bob Dylan to Radiohead to Bob Marley. And if you want to get a dancefloor moving, it’s I Will Survive. Mix that with Foo Fighters, throw in a bit of Fred Astaire, KC and the Sunshine Band, maybe Fatboy Slim and we’ve got it!”

Pic credit: Rex Features

Amy Winehouse Trips Up At Comeback Gig

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Amy Winehouse performed her first live gig since taking a drug overdose in August, last night (Oct 15) at Berlin’s Tempodrom venue. Winehouse's comeback show did not start well, with the singer tripping up on stage, followed by mumbling the opening lines of ‘Valerie’, her now customary rendition of The Zutons song. Despite the underwhelming start, the singer won over the crowd by performing her smash hits ‘Rehab’ and ‘You Know I’m Know Good’. The show last night, comes after two months of numerous gig cancellations, due to her publicised drug problems and stints in rehab. The show in Berlin last night was the first of twelve dates scheduled across mainland Europe in the coming two weeks. Following these European dates, Winehouse will return for her UK tour, which starts in Birmingham on November 14.

Amy Winehouse performed her first live gig since taking a drug overdose in August, last night (Oct 15) at Berlin’s Tempodrom venue.

Winehouse’s comeback show did not start well, with the singer tripping up on stage, followed by mumbling the opening lines of ‘Valerie’, her now customary rendition of The Zutons song.

Despite the underwhelming start, the singer won over the crowd by performing her smash hits ‘Rehab’ and ‘You Know I’m Know Good’.

The show last night, comes after two months of numerous gig cancellations, due to her publicised drug problems and stints in rehab.

The show in Berlin last night was the first of twelve dates scheduled across mainland Europe in the coming two weeks.

Following these European dates, Winehouse will return for her UK tour, which starts in Birmingham on November 14.

New Reviews Online Now

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Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of music reviews; including new, reissued and compilation albums. Find out about the best here. All of our reviews feature a 'submit your own review' function - we would love to hear about what you've heard lately. This week's new reviews published online, each with Q&As are: 4*Robert Wyatt - Comicopera 4*Beirut - The Flying Club Cup 4*Josh Ritter - The Historical Conquests Of Josh Ritter 3*Vashti Bunyan - Some Things Just Stick In Your Mind Other recomended new releases you might have missed in the past couple of weeks are: 5*Joy Division - Reissues 4*Les Savy Fav - Let's Stay Friends 4*Moby Grape - Reissues 3*Bob Dylan - Dylan. 5*Babyshambles - Shotter's Nation 4*Carbon/Silicon - The Last Post 4*Steve Earle - Washington Square Serenade

Uncut.co.uk publishes a weekly selection of music reviews; including new, reissued and compilation albums. Find out about the best here.

All of our reviews feature a ‘submit your own review’ function – we would love to hear about what you’ve heard lately.

This week’s new reviews published online, each with Q&As are:

4*Robert Wyatt – Comicopera

4*Beirut – The Flying Club Cup

4*Josh Ritter – The Historical Conquests Of Josh Ritter

3*Vashti Bunyan – Some Things Just Stick In Your Mind

Other recomended new releases you might have missed in the past couple of weeks are:

5*Joy Division – Reissues

4*Les Savy Fav – Let’s Stay Friends

4*Moby Grape – Reissues

3*Bob Dylan – Dylan.

5*Babyshambles – Shotter’s Nation

4*Carbon/Silicon – The Last Post

4*Steve Earle – Washington Square Serenade

Six Organs Of Admittance: “Shelter From The Ash”

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Something of a Robbie Basho binge in the office this morning reminded me that I’ve been sleeping on this Six Organs Of Admittance album for a few weeks now. Ben Chasny has been one of the most interesting players on the New Weird American psych/folk scene (or whatever you want to call it; chances are Chasny will try and wriggle free of any glib categories anyhow) for a few years now. Now Comets On Fire have split/are on hiatus, I guess that’s one less project to distract Chasny from his solo work as Six Organs, though given this is about his ninth full-length in less than a decade, extra-curricular activities are hardly ruining his productivity. In fact, the wise, clubbable and endlessly enthusiastic Chasny is one of those musicians who clearly thrives on mixing with a revolving cast of collaborators; there’s always someone new with a fresh perspective, or an arcane musical text to obsess over. One of the key players on “Shelter From The Ash” is the mighty Elisa Ambrogio from Magik Markers, whose last album, “Boss”, I raved about at length here. The last time Six Organs played London, they came as a duo of Chasny and Ambrogio, and their erotically-charged guitar face-offs suggested “Shelter” would be a more fractious affair than some of its predecessors, privileging Chasny’s interest in fierce avant-skronk as much as his nuanced, Takoma-ish fingerpicking. You get a glimpse of that on the lovely “Strangled Road”, when a hushed duet between the couple and some lovely acoustic support from Matt Sweeney is riven apart by a harrowing, if relatively restrained, electric solo by Ambrogio. In general, though, the basic vibe is consistent with many of Chasny’s previous records: pensive, crepuscular, intricate, so that the rippling instrumental “Goddess Atonement” (maybe the track that stimulated the leap from Basho to here) is one of the best he’s ever recorded. I’d be hard-pushed to call much of it folk, mind. Stuff like last year’s “The Sun Awakens” brought the heaviness by mixing up the brackish jams with some vast drones. But “Shelter From The Ash” has a fractionally heavier rock sound. On “Coming To Get You”, another ripping Ambrogio solo arrives amidst Chasny’s meticulously constructed crank, twang and molten hum, and some menacing patter from fellow Comets alumnus Noel Harmonson. It rocks, crudely. Chasny’s vocals are getting more incantatory too, maybe betraying the intonations of David Tibet in another band that Chasny guests in, Current 93. You can hear it on “Final Wing”, an awesome, mantric piece built around a repeating guitar figure which generates a kind of cumulative dread comparable to something like those Om pieces I wrote about the other week (Om have been recent playmates of Tibet, too, unsurprisingly). Current 93 are occasionally described as “Apocalyptic folk”, which often seems like a fancy name for intellectualised acoustic goth to me. This, though, makes the concept seem appealing: downhome doom, more or less.

Something of a Robbie Basho binge in the office this morning reminded me that I’ve been sleeping on this Six Organs Of Admittance album for a few weeks now. Ben Chasny has been one of the most interesting players on the New Weird American psych/folk scene (or whatever you want to call it; chances are Chasny will try and wriggle free of any glib categories anyhow) for a few years now.

Robert Wyatt – Comicopera

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The first clue to 'Comicopera' – Wyatt’s ambitious, 16-track concept album in three acts – is that the press release was written by Alexis Taylor of Casio popsters Hot Chip. Taylor describes his love of Wyatt’s music of the early 1980s, recordings that were “unfinished-sounding, barely accompanied odds and ends”. And, if much of Wyatt’s work of the last decade has invoked the woozy, pastoral jazz rock of his 1974 masterpiece 'Rock Bottom, 'Comicopera' instead revisits Wyatt’s early 1980s albums like 'Nothing Can Stop Us' and 'Old Rottenhat'. Here those lo-fi tropes – cheap synth drones, vocoders, minimal drum machines – are refracted through a jazz prism. The drones are provided by Wyatt’s crack horn section (including trombonist Annie Whitehead and tenorist Gilad Atzmon), the vocoder effects come from the digitally treated voices of guest vocalists (Brian Eno, Karen Mantler and Monica Vasconcelos), and the minimal percussion multi-tracked by Wyatt himself. And it’s telling that Wyatt plays as much trumpet as he sings – like Chet Baker, his trumpet tone shares the same beautifully bleak, child-like timbre as his singing voice. Act One, largely co-written with his wife Alfreda Benge, starts happily (the perfectly crafted love song “Just As You Are”, the romantic post-rock of “You You”, the melancholic hymn to old age “AWOL”). Act Two dabbles with spirituality (the whimsical “A Beautiful Peace”) before being jolted into reality by events in Iraq (“(i)You planted all your everlasting hatred in my heart(i)” he screams on “Out Of The Blue”). From there, Act Three moves as far from Anglo-American pop as possible, with two tracks in Spanish, another in Italian, and a highly textured solo improvisation from jazz vibraphonist Orphy Robinson. If there’s a criticism here, it’s that the structure doesn’t really work – the songs just tumble out relentlessly, with no real flow, and Act Three sounds more like a Euro-Communist EP that’s been tagged onto the rest of the album. Yet each song works brilliantly in isolation, making this a treasure trove of Wyatt’s finest work ever. JOHN LEWIS Q AND A: ROBERT WYATT UNCUT:How do you characterise these last three records? RW:They’re band records. It’s an Ellington thing, everyone gets their moment. It’s not a philanthropic thing. The rest of it is variations on bloke on his own with keyboards. I think they have something in common; I’m a middle-aged bloke, a lot of blood’s flowed under the bridge now. The other thing they have in common, is that Alfie really put the pots on when it came to helping me with words and stuff. The whole first third of the new record has none of my words on it. When the second section starts with my words you think, ‘oh it’s him again.’ What about “Beautiful Peace”? I can’t recall a guitar song of yours quite like that. I think it’s simply because the tune is based on a Brian Eno tune. I always like doing stuff with Brian. We’re so different and what we do together is so different to what we do apart. it’s the Singalongabrianeno song INTERVIEW: JOHN MULVEY

The first clue to ‘Comicopera’ – Wyatt’s ambitious, 16-track concept album in three acts – is that the press release was written by Alexis Taylor of Casio popsters Hot Chip. Taylor describes his love of Wyatt’s music of the early 1980s, recordings that were “unfinished-sounding, barely accompanied odds and ends”.

And, if much of Wyatt’s work of the last decade has invoked the woozy, pastoral jazz rock of his 1974 masterpiece ‘Rock Bottom, ‘Comicopera’ instead revisits Wyatt’s early 1980s albums like ‘Nothing Can Stop Us’ and ‘Old Rottenhat’.

Here those lo-fi tropes – cheap synth drones, vocoders, minimal drum machines – are refracted through a jazz prism. The drones are provided by Wyatt’s crack horn section (including trombonist Annie Whitehead and tenorist Gilad Atzmon), the vocoder effects come from the digitally treated voices of guest vocalists (Brian Eno, Karen Mantler and Monica Vasconcelos), and the minimal percussion multi-tracked by Wyatt himself. And it’s telling that Wyatt plays as much trumpet as he sings – like Chet Baker, his trumpet tone shares the same beautifully bleak, child-like timbre as his singing voice.

Act One, largely co-written with his wife Alfreda Benge, starts happily (the perfectly crafted love song “Just As You Are”, the romantic post-rock of “You You”, the melancholic hymn to old age “AWOL”). Act Two dabbles with spirituality (the whimsical “A Beautiful Peace”) before being jolted into reality by events in Iraq (“(i)You planted all your everlasting hatred in my heart(i)” he screams on “Out Of The Blue”). From there, Act Three moves as far from Anglo-American pop as possible, with two tracks in Spanish, another in Italian, and a highly textured solo improvisation from jazz vibraphonist Orphy Robinson.

If there’s a criticism here, it’s that the structure doesn’t really work – the songs just tumble out relentlessly, with no real flow, and Act Three sounds more like a Euro-Communist EP that’s been tagged onto the rest of the album. Yet each song works brilliantly in isolation, making this a treasure trove of Wyatt’s finest work ever.

JOHN LEWIS

Q AND A: ROBERT WYATT

UNCUT:How do you characterise these last three records?

RW:They’re band records. It’s an Ellington thing, everyone gets their moment. It’s not a philanthropic thing. The rest of it is variations on bloke on his own with keyboards. I think they have something in common; I’m a middle-aged bloke, a lot of blood’s flowed under the bridge now. The other thing they have in common, is that Alfie really put the pots on when it came to helping me with words and stuff. The whole first third of the new record has none of my words on it. When the second section starts with my words you think, ‘oh it’s him again.’

What about “Beautiful Peace”? I can’t recall a guitar song of yours quite like that.

I think it’s simply because the tune is based on a Brian Eno tune. I always like doing stuff with Brian. We’re so different and what we do together is so different to what we do apart. it’s the Singalongabrianeno song

INTERVIEW: JOHN MULVEY

Beirut – The Flying Club Cup

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Released last year, Beirut’s debut album 'Gulag Orkester' was a shamelessly postmodern yet clearly heartfelt exercise in East European gypsy music pastiche. Remarkably, for all its sepia-tinted melancholy and antique beauty, it was composed and largely recorded by teenage prodigy Zach Condon in his New Mexico bedroom. It earned huge acclaim and its creator toured the world, suffering a minor breakdown along the way. Now 21, Condon shifts his retro-homage focus westward to France on this richly rendered sequel. Partly inspired by a century-old photograph, The Flying Club Cup is a concept album of sorts. The original intention was to pay homage to a series of French towns, one in each track. Titles like “Nantes” and “Cherbourg” survive, but thankfully Condon ditched this plan in favour of more general themes and emotions. Although Condon spent long periods in Paris before making 'The Flying Club Cup', much of it was actually recorded in New Mexico. Rather like the work of “freak folk” duo CocoRosie, this album inhabits an exile’s exotic opium dream of Paris, a quasi-mythic city where ennui-laced chansons glide down late-night boulevards accompanied by Mexican mariachi trumpets and florid flamenco flourishes. There are also nods to the rousing cod-Balkan folk of its predecessor. Condon coos these heartbroken serenades and intoxicated ballads in a liquid vibrato moan somewhere between Thom Yorke and Antony Hegarty. “La Banlieu” is a tormented plea to a lost lover, fiery and impassioned. “In the Mausoleum”, conversely, could well be the most cheerful funeral song ever written. It is also a thing of simple, mesmerising beauty. 'The Flying Club Cup' may feel a little gimmicky on first contact, but the songs are ultimately strong enough to shake off any conceptual baggage. If you can forgive Condon’s mannered delivery and overabundance of drunken waltz rhythms, this is an audacious experiment in cultural appropriation, an enchanting musical holiday in someone else’s misery. STEPHEN DALTON Q&A: ZACH CONDON UNCUT: Is the French influence on The Flying Club Cup more theoretical than musical? “It’s definitely not a direct, straightforward reference, just a vague launching pad for the album. Besides, it’s really hard to put your finger on what exactly is French music. All you can think about are the clichés, the accordion player on the riverside or something. None of it is really true.” Did you have any direct contact with Paris before making the album? “I’ve lived in Paris twice, actually. I just moved back to New York. Paris has always been my home away from home in Europe. I actually prefer it to America.” Is it true you collapsed of nervous exhaustion last year? “We got to Europe after two months touring in the US and things started to go awry. My brain was just playing tricks on me. I was in Paris: walking into traffic, I didn’t even see the cars around me.” INTERVIEW: STEPHEN DALTON

Released last year, Beirut’s debut album ‘Gulag Orkester’ was a shamelessly postmodern yet clearly heartfelt exercise in East European gypsy music pastiche. Remarkably, for all its sepia-tinted melancholy and antique beauty, it was composed and largely recorded by teenage prodigy Zach Condon in his New Mexico bedroom. It earned huge acclaim and its creator toured the world, suffering a minor breakdown along the way.

Now 21, Condon shifts his retro-homage focus westward to France on this richly rendered sequel. Partly inspired by a century-old photograph, The Flying Club Cup is a concept album of sorts. The original intention was to pay homage to a series of French towns, one in each track. Titles like “Nantes” and “Cherbourg” survive, but thankfully Condon ditched this plan in favour of more general themes and emotions.

Although Condon spent long periods in Paris before making ‘The Flying Club Cup’, much of it was actually recorded in New Mexico. Rather like the work of “freak folk” duo CocoRosie, this album inhabits an exile’s exotic opium dream of Paris, a quasi-mythic city where ennui-laced chansons glide down late-night boulevards accompanied by Mexican mariachi trumpets and florid flamenco flourishes. There are also nods to the rousing cod-Balkan folk of its predecessor.

Condon coos these heartbroken serenades and intoxicated ballads in a liquid vibrato moan somewhere between Thom Yorke and Antony Hegarty. “La Banlieu” is a tormented plea to a lost lover, fiery and impassioned. “In the Mausoleum”, conversely, could well be the most cheerful funeral song ever written. It is also a thing of simple, mesmerising beauty.

‘The Flying Club Cup’ may feel a little gimmicky on first contact, but the songs are ultimately strong enough to shake off any conceptual baggage. If you can forgive Condon’s mannered delivery and overabundance of drunken waltz rhythms, this is an audacious experiment in cultural appropriation, an enchanting musical holiday in someone else’s misery.

STEPHEN DALTON

Q&A: ZACH CONDON

UNCUT: Is the French influence on The Flying Club Cup more theoretical than musical?

“It’s definitely not a direct, straightforward reference, just a vague launching pad for the album. Besides, it’s really hard to put your finger on what exactly is French music. All you can think about are the clichés, the accordion player on the riverside or something. None of it is really true.”

Did you have any direct contact with Paris before making the album?

“I’ve lived in Paris twice, actually. I just moved back to New York. Paris has always been my home away from home in Europe. I actually prefer it to America.”

Is it true you collapsed of nervous exhaustion last year?

“We got to Europe after two months touring in the US and things started to go awry. My brain was just playing tricks on me. I was in Paris: walking into traffic, I didn’t even see the cars around me.”

INTERVIEW: STEPHEN DALTON

Josh Ritter – The Historical Conquests Of Josh Ritter

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Evidently wary of the heavy-handed earnestness that blights many an acoustic singer-songwriter, Josh Ritter has lately been looking for ways to extend his range. Last year’s 'The Animal Years' was a move away from the steady James Taylorisms of his first two records, and contained two post-Dylan protest epics in "Girl In The War" and "Thin Blue Flame". This album, his fourth, moves things on even further – and finds Ritter cutting loose and having some old-fashioned fun. 'The Historical Conquests…', recorded in a Maine farmhouse with a bunch of able musician friends and the grandly-titled Great North Sound Society Orchestra, is the sound of Ritter cutting loose: with fourteen short, sharp, richly melodic songs about love, gunslingers and Joan of Arc. It’s clear from the crashing cymbals, clanging guitar and distorted vocals of "To The Dogs Or Whoever" that he’s having a ball. Now invoking the Dylan of 'Highway 61 rather than the pale social commentator of ’63, here there’s a spirit of adventure that continues throughout. There’s a real gallop to the piano-driven "Real Long Distance", whilst the Beatlesy, vaguely funky "Rumours" finds Ritter revelling in his new-found freedom: "My orchestra is gigantic / This sound could sink the Titanic / And the string section’s screaming / Like horses in a barn burnin’ up". In his more restive moments, there’s a raw, edge-of-the-moment feel to "Open Doors" and "Wait For Love" that suggests he’s less precious about the packaging of his art these days. Some songs, like the 50-second "Moons", are content to appear as mere impressions of ideas. However Ritter’s ideas manifest themselves though, the overall effect of this loosening up is to show him in a new light. More than just as a troubadour, the Josh Ritter who appears here is primarily a writer of quality pop songs. ROB HUGHES

Evidently wary of the heavy-handed earnestness that blights many an acoustic singer-songwriter, Josh Ritter has lately been looking for ways to extend his range. Last year’s ‘The Animal Years’ was a move away from the steady James Taylorisms of his first two records, and contained two post-Dylan protest epics in “Girl In The War” and “Thin Blue Flame”.

This album, his fourth, moves things on even further – and finds Ritter cutting loose and having some old-fashioned fun. ‘The Historical Conquests…’, recorded in a Maine farmhouse with a bunch of able musician friends and the grandly-titled Great North Sound Society Orchestra, is the sound of Ritter cutting loose: with fourteen short, sharp, richly melodic songs about love, gunslingers and Joan of Arc.

It’s clear from the crashing cymbals, clanging guitar and distorted vocals of “To The Dogs Or Whoever” that he’s having a ball. Now invoking the Dylan of ‘Highway 61 rather than the pale social commentator of ’63, here there’s a spirit of adventure that continues throughout. There’s a real gallop to the piano-driven “Real Long Distance”, whilst the Beatlesy, vaguely funky “Rumours” finds Ritter revelling in his new-found freedom: “My orchestra is gigantic / This sound could sink the Titanic / And the string section’s screaming / Like horses in a barn burnin’ up”.

In his more restive moments, there’s a raw, edge-of-the-moment feel to “Open Doors” and “Wait For Love” that suggests he’s less precious about the packaging of his art these days. Some songs, like the 50-second “Moons”, are content to appear as mere impressions of ideas. However Ritter’s ideas manifest themselves though, the overall effect of this loosening up is to show him in a new light. More than just as a troubadour, the Josh Ritter who appears here is primarily a writer of quality pop songs.

ROB HUGHES

Vashti Bunyan – Some Things Just Stick In Your Mind: Singles And Demos 1964-1967

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Back before she recorded with Devandra and Joanna, before the remarkable resurrection of Diamond Day, even before her legendary late 60s horse-and-cart trek from London to the Isle of Skye, Vashti Bunyan was a figure from an older, weirder England: she was a would-be star at the very birth of British Pop. This charming new compilation of lost singles and early demos makes plain what Bunyan has always insisted on: she wasn’t a pre-Raphaelite folk princess, or roving contemporary of Anne Briggs, but rather an aspiring singer-songwriter, an early, ambitious recruit to Andrew Loog Oldham’s “Industry of Human Happiness”, and, as photos from the time show, a dead ringer for Kate Nash. Maybe that’s not such an unlikely comparison: but while Nash in 2007 can take her sweet, strange, slightly gauche songs to the top of the charts, in 1965 Bunyan could only be a kind of singing doll, and ALO evidently saw her as the next Marianne Faithfull, setting her up with the title track, a winsome Jagger and Richards number. The single failed, Oldham’s attention turned elsewhere, and Bunyan’s career faltered in the face of industry indifference. But this anthology, compiled from mouldering old acetates and tapes, rescues several songs that hint at the kind of pop writer she might have been, and show the beginnings of the singer who recorded 'Diamond Day'. “Winter Is Blue”, an unreleased single from 1966, is an eerie, baroque number that might not be out of place on early Joni Mitchell album, while “Coldest Night Of The Year”, recorded with Immediate label mates Twice As Much, is a deliciously frosty British take on the Beach Boys. And the second disc, a whole set of 1964 demos, recorded straight through in an hour, reveal an oddly determined, genuinely peculiar talent. Now that Diamond Day inescapably rings out during every ad-break, perhaps, after a long detour, Vashti Bunyan has finally become the pop star she always meant to be. STEPHEN TROUSSÉ Q&A With Vashti Bunyan: UNCUT: How do you feel about these songs now? The demos on the second disc I hadn’t heard until a few months ago. It was very odd. It was like finding teenage poetry in the back of a drawer! It’s so earnest and so heartfelt! Some of them I would like to bury forever. But “Find My Heart Again” and “Someday” – it might have been nice if they’d had an Andrew Oldham arrangement. What motivated you to release them? I don’t think people who have heard Diamond Day are aware that I was initially trying to make be a pop singer. I didn’t want to be a folk singer! I wanted to show another part of that time, when young people really grabbed a hold of the music business. It never occurred to me that it was glamorous. But of course it was wonderful and deeply fascinating. Just to be around this world of Andrew Oldham and the Stones. Everyone was so young. The glamorous world was the other one – the one that the old guard who had been in show business since the 20s and 30s ran. Andrew broke through all that. INTERVIEW: STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Back before she recorded with Devandra and Joanna, before the remarkable resurrection of Diamond Day, even before her legendary late 60s horse-and-cart trek from London to the Isle of Skye, Vashti Bunyan was a figure from an older, weirder England: she was a would-be star at the very birth of British Pop.

This charming new compilation of lost singles and early demos makes plain what Bunyan has always insisted on: she wasn’t a pre-Raphaelite folk princess, or roving contemporary of Anne Briggs, but rather an aspiring singer-songwriter, an early, ambitious recruit to Andrew Loog Oldham’s “Industry of Human Happiness”, and, as photos from the time show, a dead ringer for Kate Nash. Maybe that’s not such an unlikely comparison: but while Nash in 2007 can take her sweet, strange, slightly gauche songs to the top of the charts, in 1965 Bunyan could only be a kind of singing doll, and ALO evidently saw her as the next Marianne Faithfull, setting her up with the title track, a winsome Jagger and Richards number.

The single failed, Oldham’s attention turned elsewhere, and Bunyan’s career faltered in the face of industry indifference. But this anthology, compiled from mouldering old acetates and tapes, rescues several songs that hint at the kind of pop writer she might have been, and show the beginnings of the singer who recorded ‘Diamond Day’.

“Winter Is Blue”, an unreleased single from 1966, is an eerie, baroque number that might not be out of place on early Joni Mitchell album, while “Coldest Night Of The Year”, recorded with Immediate label mates Twice As Much, is a deliciously frosty British take on the Beach Boys. And the second disc, a whole set of 1964 demos, recorded straight through in an hour, reveal an oddly determined, genuinely peculiar talent. Now that Diamond Day inescapably rings out during every ad-break, perhaps, after a long detour, Vashti Bunyan has finally become the pop star she always meant to be.

STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Q&A With Vashti Bunyan:

UNCUT: How do you feel about these songs now?

The demos on the second disc I hadn’t heard until a few months ago. It was very odd. It was like finding teenage poetry in the back of a drawer! It’s so earnest and so heartfelt! Some of them I would like to bury forever. But “Find My Heart Again” and “Someday” – it might have been nice if they’d had an Andrew Oldham arrangement.

What motivated you to release them?

I don’t think people who have heard Diamond Day are aware that I was initially trying to make be a pop singer. I didn’t want to be a folk singer! I wanted to show another part of that time, when young people really grabbed a hold of the music business. It never occurred to me that it was glamorous. But of course it was wonderful and deeply fascinating. Just to be around this world of Andrew Oldham and the Stones. Everyone was so young. The glamorous world was the other one – the one that the old guard who had been in show business since the 20s and 30s ran. Andrew broke through all that.

INTERVIEW: STEPHEN TROUSSÉ

Dinosaur Jr’s Mascis Appears On New BSS ‘Solo’ Project

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Core member of the ever expanding and contracting Broken Social Sceneplayers, Kevin Drew is to play a handful of UK shows this week, playing material from new 'solo' project 'Spirit If'. The solo album - attributed to Broken Social Scene Presents Kevin Drew - features most current and former BSS musicians from the group playing songs that Drew has written. Other BSS core member Brendan Channing is currently holed up in Toronto recording the second of the 'BSS Presents' series. 'Spirit If…' was recorded over the last two years at Ohad Benchetrit’s house and was produced by Drew, Benchetrit and Charles Spearin. The album also features a guest appearance from Dinosaur Jr’s J. Mascis. The full track listing for the album is as follows: 01. Farewell To The Pressure Kids 02. TBTF 03. F--ked up kid 04. Safety Bricks 05. Lucky Ones 06. Broke Me Up 07. Gang Bang Suicide 08. Frightening Lives 09. Underneath The Skin 10. Big Love 11. Backed Out On The... 12. Aging Faces / Losing Places 13. Bodhi Sappy Weekend 14. When It Begins The track TBTF is currently available as a free download here: www.arts-crafts.ca/kevindrew Kevin Drew is currently on a short UK tour, he plays: Manchester – Academy (October 16) Birmingham – Academy (17) London – Koko (19)

Core member of the ever expanding and contracting Broken Social Sceneplayers, Kevin Drew is to play a handful of UK shows this week, playing material from new ‘solo’ project ‘Spirit If’.

The solo album – attributed to Broken Social Scene Presents Kevin Drew – features most current and former BSS musicians from the group playing songs that Drew has written.

Other BSS core member Brendan Channing is currently holed up in Toronto recording the second of the ‘BSS Presents’ series.

‘Spirit If…’ was recorded over the last two years at Ohad Benchetrit’s house and was produced by Drew, Benchetrit and Charles Spearin.

The album also features a guest appearance from Dinosaur Jr’s J. Mascis.

The full track listing for the album is as follows:

01. Farewell To The Pressure Kids

02. TBTF

03. F–ked up kid

04. Safety Bricks

05. Lucky Ones

06. Broke Me Up

07. Gang Bang Suicide

08. Frightening Lives

09. Underneath The Skin

10. Big Love

11. Backed Out On The…

12. Aging Faces / Losing Places

13. Bodhi Sappy Weekend

14. When It Begins

The track TBTF is currently available as a free download here:

www.arts-crafts.ca/kevindrew

Kevin Drew is currently on a short UK tour, he plays:

Manchester – Academy (October 16)

Birmingham – Academy (17)

London – Koko (19)

Uncut’s Worst Gigs – Ever!

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In last month's UNCUT, our writers, friends and favourite musicians reminisced about their favourite gigs. Well, in this month’s issue we’re looking back on the worst gigs we’ve ever seen - including The Stone Roses, Bob Dylan, Kevin Rowland and David Bowie - with rare photos from the shows too. We're also going to publish one of the worst gigs every day, with online exclusives, so feast your eyes on this, and be glad you weren’t there! ***** 9 | ELTON JOHN Hammersmith Odeon, London December 24, 1982 GAVIN MARTIN: Elton’s career was in the doldrums – his Jump Up! LP had underperformed badly and, fuelled by cocaine and brandy, the era of tantrums and tiaras was in full swing. Matters came to a head at his annual Yuletide homecoming gig. Shortly before the show, news broke that drummer Nigel Olsson had flu. Elton decided to play the gig regardless, though it quickly became obvious that, without the drummer, the band was conspicuously weakened. Compensating with an ill-advised show of Jerry Lee Lewis-style theatrics, Elton deepened the crisis. His piano stool flew into the stalls, striking front-row ticket-holder Serena Connolly. “Is this how you treat your fans?” she cried. Elton’s ill-advised response – “If you’re hurt, call the RSPCA” – brought further protests from the injured fan until, unable to go on, Elton left the stage in tears. For a while confusion and uncertainty reigned, and a queue formed at the box office for refunds. Elton reappeared, presenting Serena with a large bunch of flowers, and the show limped on to an unimpressive conclusion. The nightmare came back to haunt Elt at the following evening’s end of tour party. Guest of honour Serena chose a smart off-the-shoulder dress – revealing the bruises sustained during the previous evening’s antics. ***** plus WERE YOU THERE? Not even UNCUTs war-weary gig-hounds have been to every show in history – but you lot probably have. Email Allan_Jones@ipcmedia.com to share your memories, of the ones we've published or any which we have missed, and we’ll publish the best in a future issue

In last month’s UNCUT, our writers, friends and favourite musicians reminisced about their favourite gigs.

Well, in this month’s issue we’re looking back on the worst gigs we’ve ever seen – including The Stone Roses, Bob Dylan, Kevin Rowland and David Bowie – with rare photos from the shows too.

We’re also going to publish one of the worst gigs every day, with online exclusives, so feast your eyes on this, and be glad you weren’t there!

*****

9 | ELTON JOHN

Hammersmith Odeon, London

December 24, 1982

GAVIN MARTIN:

Elton’s career was in the doldrums – his Jump Up! LP had underperformed badly and, fuelled by cocaine and brandy, the era of tantrums and tiaras was in full swing. Matters came to a head at his annual Yuletide homecoming gig.

Shortly before the show, news broke that drummer Nigel Olsson had flu. Elton decided to play the gig regardless, though it quickly became obvious that, without the drummer, the band was conspicuously weakened.

Compensating with an ill-advised show of Jerry Lee Lewis-style theatrics, Elton deepened the crisis. His piano stool flew into the stalls, striking front-row ticket-holder Serena Connolly.

“Is this how you treat your fans?” she cried. Elton’s ill-advised response – “If you’re hurt, call the RSPCA” – brought further protests from the injured fan until, unable to go on, Elton left the stage in tears. For a while confusion and uncertainty reigned, and a queue formed at the box office for refunds. Elton reappeared, presenting Serena with a large bunch of flowers, and the show limped on to an unimpressive conclusion.

The nightmare came back to haunt Elt at the following evening’s end of tour party. Guest of honour Serena chose a smart off-the-shoulder dress – revealing the bruises sustained during the previous evening’s antics.

*****

plus WERE YOU THERE?

Not even UNCUTs war-weary gig-hounds have been to every show in history – but you lot probably have.

Email Allan_Jones@ipcmedia.com to share your memories, of the ones we’ve published or any which we have missed, and we’ll publish the best in a future issue

Oasis’ Liam Officially In UK Wit Set

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Oasis front man Liam Gallagher has been voted tenth wittiest Brit in history, in a new TV poll. The survey of 3,000 comedy fans for Dave TV put the Gallagher in tenth place, behind some marginally more predictable choices of historical figures. The list was topped by iconic playwright Oscar Wilde, with Spike Milligan and Stephen Fry in second and third place. Some of Gallagher's more memorable quotes have included:"Americans want grungy people, stabbing themselves in the head on stage. They get a bright bunch like us, with deodorant on. They don't get it. And his remark when he heard that WAG and Spice Girl Victoria Beckham was writing a book: "She can't even chew gum and walk in a straight line, let alone write a book". The full Top 10: 1. Oscar Wilde 2. Spike Milligan 3. Stephen Fry 4. Jeremy Clarkson 5. Sir Winston Churchill 6. Paul Merton 7. Noel Coward 8. William Shakespeare 9. Brian Clough 10. Liam Gallagher

Oasis front man Liam Gallagher has been voted tenth wittiest Brit in history, in a new TV poll.

The survey of 3,000 comedy fans for Dave TV put the Gallagher in tenth place, behind some marginally more predictable choices of historical figures.

The list was topped by iconic playwright Oscar Wilde, with Spike Milligan and Stephen Fry in second and third place.

Some of Gallagher’s more memorable quotes have included:”Americans want grungy people, stabbing themselves in the head on stage. They get a bright bunch like us, with deodorant on. They don’t get it.

And his remark when he heard that WAG and Spice Girl Victoria Beckham was writing a book: “She can’t even chew gum and walk in a straight line, let alone write a book”.

The full Top 10:

1. Oscar Wilde

2. Spike Milligan

3. Stephen Fry

4. Jeremy Clarkson

5. Sir Winston Churchill

6. Paul Merton

7. Noel Coward

8. William Shakespeare

9. Brian Clough

10. Liam Gallagher