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Blondie postpone UK tour until 2022, add Johnny Marr as special guest

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Blondie have postponed their Against All Odds UK tour until next spring – see the revised schedule below.

Debbie Harry and co. were due to hit the road with Garbage next month for a run of headline dates in Liverpool, Manchester, Hull, London, Glasgow, Nottingham and other cities.

Today (October 6) it has been confirmed that the gigs will now take place between April and May 2022. Johnny Marr will appear as a special guest in place of Garbage, who have been forced to pull out due to scheduling conflicts. The former Smiths guitarist contributed to Blondie‘s latest record, Pollinator (2017).

“Having collaborated with Johnny on Blondie’s last album, and with plans for a new collaboration on our next album, we are looking forward to a long-overdue return to the UK, and even better, to sharing the stage with the inspirational musical influence that is Johnny Marr,” explained Harry in a statement.

Johnny Marr
Johnny Marr. Credit: David M. Benett / Getty Images

Drummer Clem Burke added: “It is a disappointment to have to postpone our UK tour until April 2022. We will now be joined by our special guest & friend Johnny Marr. We’re happy to continue our relationship with Johnny that began with his contribution to our last album Pollinator. Looking forward to seeing all our UK fans in the spring.”

Marr, meanwhile, said he was “delighted” to be heading out on the road with Blondie, who he hailed as “21st century heroes”.

You can see Blondie‘s Against All Odds UK tour dates below, with remaining tickets available from here.

April 2022
22 – The SSE Hydro, Glasgow
24 – Motorpoint Arena, Cardiff
26 – The O2 Arena, London
28 – The Brighton Centre, Brighton
29 – Bonus Arena, Hull
 
May 2022
1 – AO Arena, Manchester
2 – M&S Bank Arena, Liverpool
4 – First Direct Arena, Leeds
5 – Motorpoint Arena, Nottingham
7 – Utilitia Arena, Birmingham

Over the summer, Debbie Harry gave an update on Blondie‘s next album. “We’re in the process of setting up a period of time to lay down some tracks and rehearse,” the frontwoman told NME. “We’re already looking at 10-12 songs, but it feels too early to talk about it.”

Big Thief share dreamy new single “Change” and North American tour dates

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Big Thief have shared a new song called “Change” alongside details of a North American tour for 2022.

Arriving yesterday (October 6), the latest release follows a string of standalone singles from the New York band this year, including “Little Things”, “Sparrow” and “Certainty”.

Change, like the wind, like the water, like skin/ Change, like the sky, like the leaves, like a butterfly“, Adrianne Lenker delicately sings over a stripped-back acoustic instrumental. Later, she ponders: “Would you stare forever at the sun/ Never watch the moon rising?/ Would you walk forever in the light/ To never learn the secrets of the quiet night?

You can listen to “Change” here:

Big Thief will embark on a North American tour between April and May next year, before taking on festival slots at Barcelona’s Primavera Sound and Berlin’s Tempelhof Sounds in June.

The four piece’s newly announced stint is set to kick off in New York on April 12. Performances will then follow in Montreal, Washington D.C., Chicago, Portland, Los Angeles and other cities.

Tickets go on general sale this Friday (October 8) at 10am local time. The full schedule is as follows:

April 2022
12 – Ithaca, NY, State Theatre
16 – Brooklyn, NY, Kings Theatre
18 – Montreal, QUE, L’Olympia
19 – Toronto, ON, Massey Hall
21 – Washington, DC, The Anthem
22 – Cleveland, OH, Agora Ballroom
23 – Royal Oak, MI, Royal Oak Music Theatre
25 – Chicago, IL, Riviera Theatre
26 – Milwaukee, IL, The Pabst Theater
27 – St. Paul, MN, Palace Theatre
29 – Denver, CO, Ogden Theatre
30 – Salt Lake City, UT, Metro Music Hall

May 2022
2 – Seattle, WA, Paramount Theatre
3 – Portland, OR, Roseland Theater
4 – Portland, OR, Roseland Theater
7 – Oakland, CA, Fox Theatre
10 – Los Angeles, CA, Wiltern Theatre
11 – Los Angeles, CA, Wiltern Theatre
12 – San Diego, CA, Observatory North Park

Big Thief‘s previously-announced UK and European tour will commence in January. They’re due to play three nights at the O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire in London between March 2 and March 4.

Listen to an extract from Can Live In Brighton 1975

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The mnagnificent Can have announced details of the second instalment of their ongoing series of archival concert recordings.

Can Live In Brighton 1975 will be released on December 3 on limited edition triple gold vinyl and double CD, both packaged in a gatefold sleeve with accompanying booklet containing sleevenotes by Can biographer and Uncut contributor, Rob Young.

You can watch an extract from “Sieben” below.

Following Can Live in Stuttgart 1975, this latest instalment has been overseen by founding member Irmin Schmidt and producer / engineer Rene Tinner.

Tracklisting for Can Live in Brighton 1975 is:

Brighton 75 Eins
Brighton 75 Zwei
Brighton 75 Drei
Brighton 75 Vier
Brighton 75 Fünf
Brighton 75 Sechs
Brighton 75 Sieben

You can pre-order a copy by clicking here.

Shannon Lay on new album Geist: “The beliefs I had about myself were crumbling. Everything was shattering”

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Standing in Shannon Lay’s backyard in Pasadena – an upmarket community northeast
of Los Angeles known for grand homes, lush gardens and the annual Rose Parade famously name-checked by Elliott Smith – there is a sense of spiritual ease. “There’s a certain kind of warmth coming off of it,” Lay says, pointing to a giant oak tree, which she estimates to be over 200 years old, whose branches envelop the space like a hug. Before she lived here, the area was a refuge from city life. “I lived in Echo Park and Frogtown for a long time,” she says. “And in that situation, you either go to the Guitar Center in Hollywood or the Guitar Center in Pasadena, and I always went to Pasadena because Hollywood can be really hectic.”

Her small Spanish-style backhouse is decorated with string lights, vintage furniture and other on-trend bohemia, like many homes in Southern California. But for a young, hard-touring, full-time musician like Lay such anchored domesticity can be novel. Living by herself in a standalone rental she secured on her own is a first. “All the other places were from friends saying, ‘Take this random room,’” she says. “This has everything I need. And I feel this trust developing with life that we’re taken care of, that if things are supposed to be a certain way it’s gonna work out. I’m slowly learning that worry is optional a lot of the time.”

Lay is just 30 years old, but she’s been gigging in the Los Angeles indie music scene for more than a decade. A veteran of boisterous art-punk and garage-rock bands, by 2016 she was exploring a softer side of music, playing tender and introspective folks songs on acoustic and electric guitar. She’s a skilled player, but it was her gorgeous, gossamer voice that drew the attention of Kevin Morby, Ty Segall, Steve Gunn and many others who she’d go on to record and tour with.

She produced her latest album, Geist, with Jarvis Taveniere (Waxahatchee, Whitney, Purple Mountains). Its quiet assurance reads like a master statement, the work of a woman who’s finally found her footing in the world. “A lot of the identities and beliefs I had about myself were crumbling; everything was shattering,” she says of its making. “It was a tower moment, in tarot. But the best thing about those moments is that you can rebuild in a way that’s more sustainable and maybe more beneficial.” Its creation marked a turning point in a long period of self-reflection, self work and healing from childhood trauma.

“I began this process of therapy and trying to drop into my body a bit more,” she explains. “Be a little more present, be very honest with myself and not be afraid to explore the things that were hard to look at.” The result is a velveteen folk-rock album where the earthen and the celestial meet in a seamless embrace, much like her beloved houseplants and astrological ponderings. “It’s very lush and arranged while also being very intimate,” says Ty Segall. “She’s got such a great and unique voice.”

Henry Rollins announces Good To See You UK tour for 2022

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Henry Rollins has announced a new set of UK live dates on his Good To See You tour next year.

The frontman, presenter and spoken-word artist is preparing a one-man show for 2022 which will “faithfully recount the events of his life in the brief pre-COVID period since the last tour and when things got even stranger over the last several months”.

“It’s been an interesting time to say the least and he’s got some great stories to tell,” an accompanying statement announcing the tour promises.

Rollins will kick off the UK leg of his Good To See You tour on February 18 in Bexhill-on-Sea and will then visit venues in Cardiff, Bath, Birmingham and more before concluding the jaunt in Manchester on February 28.

Henry Rollins
Henry Rollins. Credit Getty

Tickets for Rollins‘ Good To See You tour go on sale on Thursday (October 7) at 10am from here. You can see his upcoming tour schedule below.

February
18 – De La Warr Pavilion, Bexhill-on-Sea
19 – Buxton Opera House, Buxton
20 – Palladium, London
21 – Tramshed, Cardiff
22 – Komedia, Bath
23 – Playhouse, Whitley Bay
24 – Albert Hall, Nottingham
25 – Corn Exchange, Cambridge
26 – Town Hall, Birmingham
27 – Grand Central Hall, Liverpool
28 – Bridgewater Hall, Manchester

The 8th Uncut New Music Playlist of 2021

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With another fun-filled issue of Uncut at the printers – more news on that very soon – it’s high time for a new playlist, shining a light on some of the excellent music that helped us make it.

Keep scrolling for tasters from the fine new albums by Dean Wareham and Bedouine, reliably uplifting sentiments from Courtney Barnett and Field Music, noisy interjections from a couple of grizzled indie supergroups, and Mogwai remixed by (half of) New Order. Plus plenty more goodness besides…

DEAN WAREHAM
“Cashing In”
(Double Feature)

BEDOUINE
“It Wasn’t Me”
(The Orchard)

COURTNEY BARNETT
“Write A List Of Things To Look Forward To”
(Marathon Artists)

WARMDUSCHER
“Wild Flowers”
(Bella Union)

CONNAN MOCKASIN
“Flipping Poles”
(Mexican Summer)

PHOEBE BRIDGERS
“That Funny Feeling”
(Dead Oceans)

LA LUZ
“Oh, Blue”
(Hardly Art)

FIELD MUSIC
“Endlessly”
(Memphis Industries)

BUFFALO NICHOLS
“How To Love”
(Fat Possum)

HENRY PARKER
“Nine Herbs Charm”
(Cup And Ring)

MYRIAM GENDRON
“Go Away From My Window”
(Feeding Tube)

C JOYNES
“Waverley Cross”
(Cardinal Fuzz)

SPRINGTIME
“Will To Power”
(Joyful Noise)

IRREVERSIBLE ENTANGLEMENTS
“Lágrimas Del Mar”
(International Anthem)

KOKOKO!
“Donne Moi”
(Transgressive)

MOGWAI
“Ritchie Sacramento (Other Two Remix)”
(Rock Action)

LIGHT CONDUCTOR
“Splitting Light (Radio Edit)”
(Constellation)

NONEXISTENT
“Untitled 9 (Cold Walls)”
(Downwards Records)

SARAH DAVACHI & SEAN McCANN
“Keep Outside The Night”
(Recital)

NICK JONAH DAVIS
“Dérive Néolithique”
(Eiderdown Records)

Courtney Barnett shares online stem mixer for fans to “play around” with songs from new album

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Courtney Barnett has launched an interactive stem mixer on her website that allows fans to adjust songs from her forthcoming album Things Take Time, Take Time.

The player, which operates similarly to Kanye West‘s previously announced DONDA stem player, enables users to “listen & play around” with tracks from Barnett‘s third album.

So far the player, which was built and designed by Raphael Ong and Sean Lim, allows for people to alter “Rae Street”, “Before You Gotta Go” and “Write A List Of Things To Look Forward To”, which are the only songs released from the album to date. It’s assumed that the remainder of the LP will be available to rework when it’s released on November 12.

The player gives users the option to adjust the volume of the various percussion, guitars, and vocals in the mix of the songs.

Courtney Barnett
Courtney Barnett. Credit: Mia Mala McDonald

It follows the Australian singer-songwriter acknowledging last month the similarities between the music video for her single “Before You Gotta Go” and fellow Melbourne act Quivers’ clip for “You’re Not Always On My Mind”.

Both music videos feature the respective musicians heading out into the field and recording audio samples from the natural world. Additionally, the lyric from Barnett’s song, “You’re always on my mind”, is similar to the title of the Quivers song.

On social media, Barnett promoted the Quivers video, saying: “I thought I had come up with a beautiful, original idea for a video, but it seems like I was wrong.

“I’d like to introduce you to Melbourne band [Quivers] and director [Nina Renee] who had the same idea way before me,” she wrote. “Any similarities are completely coincidental and if I had seen this clip when I was making mine I would have completely changed my concept or the way we explored it.”

Bruce Springsteen harmonicas and handwritten lyrics go up for auction

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Handwritten lyrics to Bruce Springsteen songs “Thunder Road”, “For You”, and “Night” are set to go under the hammer at auction later this month.

The sale – due to take place via Bonhams on October 28 – will also include two harmonicas which were used on the original recordings of “Thunder Road” and “Johnny 99”.

The four-page “Thunder Road” manuscript is written by Springsteen in pen on ruled notebook paper. It contains the entire song as recorded by The Boss for his 1975 album, Born To Run, but the final page features two different drafts of the opening verse. It is estimated to sell for somewhere between $50,000 and $70,000.

The “For You” lyrics are also written in pen on ruled notebook paper. It matches up almost perfectly with the final version on the album, but it does not contain the line “but you did not need my urgency” and has the word “your” instead of “my” in the line “don’t give me my money, honey”. It is estimated that it will go for $25,000 to $30,000.

The “Night” manuscript is three pages and features the words just as they appear on the album. It is estimated to sell for $25,0000 to $30,000.

As for the harmonicas, the one used on “Thunder Road” is a Hohner Marine Band “F” Harmonica with box, and it comes with a signed, dated and notarised letter from Mike Batlan, who worked for Springsteen as a musical instrument technician from 1973 to 1985. It is expected to draw $5,000 to $7,000.

The second harmonica is a Hohner Marine Band “E” Harmonica that was used on the song “Johnny 99”, taken from Springsteen’s 1982 album Nebraska. Once again coming with a box, it too is accompanied by a signed and dated letter from Batlan regarding the provenance. It is expected to draw $2,000 to $2,500.

All of the items have been in the hands of a private collector who acquired them from Batlan.

To find out more about the auction and how to bid, visit Bonhams website here.

Elsewhere in the auction, a host of Beatles memorabilia will be up for grabs including two handwritten setlists from the early days of the band.

Bonhams’ Senior Specialist of Music for their Popular Culture department, Howard Kramer, explained the significance of both setlists in a statement to Rolling Stone.

“At this point, the Beatles were about to become a band in the truest sense,” he said of the 1960 setlist. “Pete Best had yet to join the band and the first Hamburg engagement was about two months out. Pretty soon, there was no looking back.”

Sons Of Kemet announce 2022 UK tour set to kick off in February

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Sons Of Kemet have announced that they’ll be heading out on the road for a UK tour next year.

The experimental jazz quartet, led by Shabaka Hutchings, will kick off the run of dates on February 19 at Gorilla in Manchester, followed by shows in Glasgow, Leeds, Bristol, and ending the tour with their biggest headline show to date at London’s Roundhouse on February 26.

“UK/EU tickets on sale now!!!! We cannot wait to be back playing live for you after such a long pause,” the group wrote on Twitter.

You can see the full list of Sons Of Kemet dates below – tickets are on sale now here.

February 2022
19 – Manchester, Gorilla
20 – Glasgow, Oran Mor
22 – Leeds, Belgrave Music Hall
24 – Bristol, Marble Factory
26 – London, Roundhouse

Sons Of Kemet released their third album, Black To The Future, back in May. It follows 2018’s Your Queen Is A Reptile, which earned the group a Mercury Prize nomination.

Sons Of Kemet, Claud, TV Priest and more are set to play Pitchfork Paris 2021 next month.

Pitchfork Paris will run from November 15-21 across multiple venues across the city, and also feature a show on Bobby Gillespie & Jehnny Beth’s joint European tour.

The announcement came alongside news of a first ever London-based Pitchfork Festival, set to take place the previous week in November.

Depeche Mode’s Dave Gahan announces new album Imposter with Soulsavers

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Dave Gahan and Soulsavers have announced a new album Imposter, which reimagines songs from acts including Neil Young, PJ Harvey, Cat Power, Bob Dylan and more.

The latest joint album between the Depeche Mode frontman and Soulsavers (Rich Machin) is described in press material as reinterpretations of 12 songs “from across genres and time periods” rather than a covers album. It will be released on November 12 via Columbia.

Included on the album are reinterpretations of Power‘s “Metal Heart”, Young‘s “A Man Needs A Maid”, Harvey‘s “The Desperate Kingdom Of Love”, Gene Clark‘s “Where My Love Lies Asleep”, Dylan‘s “Not Dark Yet” and Mark Lanegan‘s “Dark Religion”.

Gahan said of the project: “When I listen to other people’s voices and songs – more importantly the way they sing them and interpret the words – I feel at home. I identify with it. It comforts me more than anything else.

“There’s not one performer on the record who I haven’t been moved by,” he said of the featured works.

Gahan added: “I know we made something special, and I hope other people feel that and it takes them on a little kind of trip – especially people who love music and have for years.”

Imposter tracklist:

1. “The Dark End Of The Street”
2. “Strange Religion”
3. “Lilac Wine”
4. “I Held My Baby Last Night”
5. “A Man Needs A Maid”
6. “Metal Heart”
7. “Shut Me Down”
8. “Where My Love Lies Asleep”
9. “Smile”
10. “The Desperate Kingdom Of Love”
11. “Not Dark Yet”
12. “Always On My Mind”

Imposter album artwork.

The first song from the album, “Metal Heart”, will be released this Friday (October 8).

Imposter was recorded live as a ten-member band at the famous Shangri-La Recording Studio in Malibu, California in November 2019.

It follows Gahan‘s previous collaboration with Soulsavers, 2015’s Angels & Ghosts, from which the project then became known as Dave Gahan and Soulsavers. Prior to that, The Light The Dead Sea was released in 2012 under Soulsavers (featuring Dave Gahan).

Soulsavers, comprising Machin and Ian Glover, have worked with other musicians on joint projects including Lanegan and Josh Heinden. According to press material, only Machin – not Glover – has worked with Gahan on Imposter.

Meanwhile in Depeche Mode news, the band recently announced the release of a digitally restored version of their landmark Depeche Mode 101 concert film and documentary.

The Rolling Stones’ producer Chris Kimsey on Charlie Watts: “It’s all in the style”

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Charlie [Watts] never changed over the years. When I first worked with the Stones, on Sticky Fingers, I wasn’t really noticing the individual personalities in the band. They just struck me as strong, innovative characters, searching for something in their sound and their groove. But as I got to know them, I realised that Charlie was just a wonderful, wonderful person.

“After many years I could never figure out why he was in the band, because he was not like the others. The rest of them were all frontmen, as it were – though I’m sure Mick wouldn’t agree. Even Bill had this persona. Charlie was just this quiet man at the back, but he was the one holding it all together.

“His energy was intense. I’ve worked with drummers who go through their drum heads after one session, because they hit them so hard. But while Charlie was not a heavy hitter – his touch was lighter because his background was in jazz – he had this ability to hit them the way they should be and get a very loud tone.

“Most drummers hit the hi-hat at the same time as the snare, which is a very normal thing to do. But Charlie would always lift his hand off the hi-hat, so there would just be the snare beat alone. Nothing around it, which was a dream to record. That, in itself, made his drums sound louder and more powerful. I didn’t figure that out until I was working on Some Girls with them, but it was terrific to discover.

“Excuse the pun, but he was so in tune with his drums. There was one session when I got there before anyone arrived. I was sitting down at his drumkit and decided to tune the snare up a little, so I literally did a half turn on two of the lugs. When Charlie came in that night, he sat down and hit his snare drum. And after the first hit he just stopped and looked up in shock. I said, ‘What’s wrong?’ He said, ‘Someone’s touched my drums!’ It was such a minimal thing, but he knew the response so well. It was amazing that he could immediately pick up on such a small change.

Charlie was No 1 when it comes to drummers. What he did for the Stones’ music, no-one else could do that. That’s why Steve Jordan is in the band now, because he just emulated Charlie. He learned how to play by watching and listening to him. A lot of drummers I’ve worked with have said, ‘I want to sound like Charlie Watts.’ And I’d say, ‘Well, good luck there, mate. You don’t sound anything like him.’ It’s all in the style. They think they have it, but Charlie had so many subtleties that made such a difference when it came to the big picture. Coming from a jazz background, his playing had dynamics in it. It wasn’t just thump-thump-thump. He was extraordinary.”

As told to Rob Hughes

Kacey Musgraves channels Forrest Gump in SNL performance of “Justified”

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Over the weekend, Kacey Musgraves was the musical guest on the new season opener of Saturday Night Live, where she channeled Forrest Gump in her performance of “Justified”.

For her performance, the singer referenced an iconic scene from the 1994 film, which sees Forrest’s love interest Jenny performing live completely naked, only covered by her acoustic guitar.

After fans assumed the homage to the film, Musgraves then seemingly confirmed the link in a tweet posted after the performance, sharing a screengrab from the Forrest Gump scene in question.

See the “Justified” performance and subsequent tweet below:

“Justified” appears on Kacey Musgraves‘ new album Star-Crossed, which came out last month.

Following the release of the album, Musgraves will hit the road in the US and Canada, kicking off the tour in St Paul, Minnesota on January 19 and continuing on to a final show in LA on February 20. She will be supported by King Princess and MUNA across all dates.

Elsewhere on the 47th season of SNL, other musical guests will include Halsey, who will appear next Saturday (October 9) while Kim Kardashian West takes on presenting duties.

For the following instalment on October 16, Rami Malek – who appears in No Time To Die as the new Bond villain, Safin – will host as Young Thug takes to the stage. SNL‘s final episode on October 23 will feature Jason Sudeikis (Ted Lasso) and Brandi Carlile.

Watch Toyah Willcox cover The Velvet Underground’s “Venus In Furs”

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Toyah Willcox and husband Robert Fripp have shared a cover of the The Velvet Underground‘s “Venus In Furs” – listen to it below.

It’s part of their regular, ongoing series of ‘Sunday Lunch’ online performances which see them perform a cover together at home in their kitchen – something they started during lockdown.

In the latest edition, Willcox delivers a flamboyant rendition of  “Venus In Furs” whilst stood on a kitchen table top.

Fripp is seen gazing up at Wilcox and chimes in with comments like: “Toyah will do almost anything to get out of cooking,” and “I wonder if we’re having dessert.”

You can watch the performance here:

The pair launched their Sunday Lunch video series last year, sharing renditions of songs by Nirvana, David Bowie, Metallica, Billy Idol, The Rolling StonesJudas Priest, The ProdigyGuns N’ RosesAlice Cooper and more through Willcox’s YouTube channel.
Their last cover was of Shirley Bassey‘s “Goldfinger” and before that, Willcox performed a version of The Cult’s “She Sells Sanctuary” to welcome home Fripp, who had been away for a while.

During this time, the pair started Sunday Lunch off-shoot, Sunday Lunch Love Letters, where they would perform songs on a split-screen from different locations.

Willcox revealed in February that her Sunday Lockdown Lunch video series started because her husband, King Crimson‘s Robert Fripp, was having withdrawals from performing.

Last month, Willcox released her 16th studio album Posh Pop, which she previewed with the single “Levitate” featuring Simon Darlow and Bobby Willcox.

Brian May started working on new Queen song but then “suddenly lost interest”

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Roger Taylor has revealed that Queen bandmate Brian May started working on a new song for the band but then “suddenly lost interest”.

The pair started work on a new track with Adam Lambert – who has fronted Queen since 2011, following the death of original frontman Freddie Mercury in 1991 – but guitarist May doesn’t seem to be a fan of what they laid down.

“Well, Brian suddenly lost interest and I don’t really know why,” Taylor told MOJO (via Contact Music. “We started it in Nashville when we were all quite tired.

He continued: “We couldn’t decide on a title and the lyric felt a little too negative for Queen, maybe. But it was pretty damn good, and I hope it comes to light.”

The longstanding Queen drummer also talked about the possibility of him and May reconnecting with former Queen bassist John Deacon, who stopped playing with the band in the mid-’90s.

Queen's original line-up
Queen’s original line-up. Credit: Snowdon Copyright Queen Productions Ltd

“It’s a lovely fairy tale, but to be honest I don’t think so. John’s like a hermit, really,” Taylor said. “I don’t think he’s quite equipped for that – he’s really fragile. He can’t deal with company or the outside world, so far as I know.”

He added: “I guess he just sits there counting his money.”

Also recently, Taylor has lashed out at those who refuse to vaccinate themselves against COVID-19, saying that they “must be ignorant and stupid”.

He made his comments in a recent episode of the Consequence podcast, Kyle Meredith With. He appeared on the show to speak about his new solo album Outsider, noting that it was largely influenced by last year’s lockdowns in Europe and the UK.

Citing the single “Isolation” as one primarily inspired by the lockdowns, he said: “I think in Europe it was very serious, and I really felt for people in Milan. You know, locked up in a one room apartment, that was a scary time.”

Meanwhile, an “immersive” pop-up shop dedicated to Queen has opened in London, running until early next year.

The White Stripes to release Live At The Detroit Institute Of Arts album

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Third Man Records has announced the release of a live White Stripes album recorded at Detroit’s Institute of Arts.

The Jack White-owned label’s 50th vault package documents the band’s performance in the museum’s Diego Rivera Court on November 2, 2001.

“That was the best thing we’ve ever done. It was also the worst thing we’ve ever done,” the band – comprising Jack and Meg White – said in a statement.

Besides being a defining moment in the band’s global ascendancy, the famed concert is noteworthy for breaking the Detroit Institute’s all-time single-day attendance record, as per the Third Man Records website.

The White Stripes played 33 tracks over two sets, including 14 covers of songs by Blind Willie McTell, Bob Dylan, Iggy Pop, MC5, Robert Johnson, Loretta Lynn, Dolly Parton and others. You can see official footage from the gig below.

The vault packages include a red and white 2-LP set featuring soundboard audio, a pro-shot DVD of the complete show, previously unseen images, and a custom gatefold jacket. You can see the full tracklisting below.

The White Stripes – Live At The Detroit Institute Of Arts

1. “Little Room”
2. “The Big Three Killed My Baby”
3. “Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground”
4. “Hotel Yorba”
5. “Lord, Send Me An Angel” (Blind Willie McTell cover)
6. “Astro”
7. “Jack The Ripper” (Screaming Lord Sutch cover)
8. “Death Letter” (Son House cover)
9. “One More Cup Of Coffee” (Bob Dylan cover)
10. “I’m Bored” (Iggy Pop cover)
11. “Omologato” (The Gories cover)
12. “Looking At You” (MC5 cover)
13. “We’re Going To Be Friends”
14. “Baby Blue” (Gene Vincent cover)
15. “Cannon / Grinnin’ In Your Face” (Son House cover)
16. “Boll Weevil” (traditional)
17. “Let’s Shake Hands”
18. “When I Hear My Name”
19. “Jolene” (Dolly Parton cover)
20. “You’re Pretty Good Looking (For A Girl)”
21. “Hello Operator”
22. “Stop Breaking Down” (Robert Johnson cover)
23. “Apple Blossom”
24. “Fell In Love With A Girl”
25. “I Fought Pirhanas”
26. “Let’s Build A Home”
27. “Goin’ Back To Memphis” (Henry and June cover)
28. “Do”
29. “Rated X” (Loretta Lynn cover)
30. “Expecting”
31. “I’m Finding It Harder To Be A Gentleman”
32. “Your Southern Can Is Mine” (Blind Willie McTell cover)
33. “Screwdriver”

Fans can get the album by signing up to subscribe to the Third Man Records vault package, available until midnight on October 31.

Meanwhile, Jack White recently played a surprise set on a London rooftop last weekend (September 25) to celebrate the grand opening of his new Third Man Records store.

Tame Impala reportedly working on new track with Diana Ross

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Tame Impala are reportedly working on a new track with Diana Ross for her upcoming album, Thank You.

The “I’m Coming Out” singer is gearing up to release her first full project of original material in over two decades. Set for release later this year, the album was written during lockdown with the likes of Jack Antonoff, Jimmy Napes, Tayla Parx and Spike Stent.

According to The Sun, one of the songs on Ross‘ forthcoming album will see Ross collaborate with Tame Impala as she loves “reinvention” and being able to “melt” musical genres together.

“Diana might be 77 but she is determined to push musical boundaries and challenge herself,” a source told the newspaper. “She loves reinvention and melting genres together. She’s really excited to work with Tame Impala and is ecstatic with the track – she can’t wait for fans to hear it.”

Speaking on Thank You earlier this year, Ross said: “This collection of songs is my gift to you with appreciation and love. I am eternally grateful that I had the opportunity to record this glorious music at this time.

“I dedicate this songbook of love to all of you, the listeners. As you hear my voice you hear my heart.” You can hear the LP’s title track above.

Ross had been due to perform as part of this year’s Eden Sessions, though her live date at the outdoor concert series has yet to be rescheduled. She is set to embark on a UK tour next summer.

The singer had also been booked to perform in Glastonbury’s hallowed ‘legends slot’ at the 2020 edition of the festival, which was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Earlier this month, Tame Impala returned to full-band live shows for the first time in 2021, kicking off their rescheduled Rushium tour at the United Center in Chicago on September 7.

The performance was the first to feature all five members of the Tame Impala touring band since March 2020, when the band’s North American tour was ultimately cut short on account of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Johnny Cash’s live cover of Bob Dylan’s “Don’t Think Twice It’s All Right” has been released to streaming

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Johnny Cash’s live cover of Bob Dylan’s “Don’t Think Twice It’s All Right” has been made available on streaming services for the very first time.

Taken from the Man in Black’s forthcoming live album, Bear’s Sonic Journals: Johnny Cash, At The Carousel Ballroom April 24, 1968, the 28-song set saw Cash performing with his then-new wife June Carter Cash and his backing band The Tennessee Three.

Recorded by the late Owsley Stanley at the Carousel Ballroom in San Francisco, the performance included a cover of Bob Dylan‘s “Don’t Think Twice It’s All Right”. The song was taken from Dylan‘s 1963 album The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, and Cash had previously shared a studio version of the cover on his 1965 album Orange Blossom Special.

You can listen to Cash‘s live cover below:

Set to arrive on October 29, Bear’s Sonic Journals: Johnny Cash At The Carousel Ballroom, April 24 1968 will be released on streaming and double-CD and double-LP formats.

The physical editions come with new essays by Cash’s son, John, as well as Stanley’s son Starfinder, The Grateful Dead’s Bob Weir, and Widespread Panic’s Dave Schools. It will also include new art by Susan Archie, and a reproduction of Steve Catron’s original Carousel Ballroom concert poster.

You can pre-order the Johnny Cash live album here – see the tracklist for Bear’s Sonic Journals: Johnny Cash At The Carousel Ballroom, April 24 1968 below.

1. “Cocaine Blues”
2. “Long Black Veil”
3. “Orange Blossom Special” (CD and Digital only)
4. “Going To Memphis”
5. “The Ballad Of Ira Hayes”
6. “Rock Island Line”
7. “Guess Things Happen That Way”
8. “One Too Many Mornings”
9. “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right”
10. “Give My Love To Rose”
11. “Green, Green Grass Of Home”
12. “Old Apache Squaw”
13. “Lorena”
14. “Forty Shades Of Green”
15. “Bad News”
16. “Jackson”
17. “Tall Lover Man”
18. “June’s Song Introduction”
19. “Wildwood Flower”
20. “Foggy Mountain Top”
21. “This Land Is Your Land”
22. “Wabash Cannonball”
23. “Worried Man Blues”
24. “Long Legged Guitar Pickin’ Man”
25. “Ring Of Fire”
26. “Big River”
27. “Don’t Take Your Guns to Town”
28. “I Walk The Line”

Dave Grohl hints that the cover of Nirvana’s Nevermind could change in the future

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Dave Grohl has hinted that the cover of Nirvana‘s Nevermind could change for any subsequent reissues.

He was speaking to The Sunday Times about the album after Spencer Elden, the child who appears in the artwork, sued Kurt Cobain‘s estate alleging the image was an example of child pornography and sexual exploitation.

Speaking about the cover, Grohl said: “I have many ideas of how we should alter that cover but we’ll see what happens. We’ll let you know. I’m sure we’ll come up with something good.”

Speaking about his attitude to litigation, Grohl added: “I think that there’s much more to look forward to and much more to life than getting bogged down in those kinds of things. And, fortunately, I don’t have to do the paperwork.”

Cover of Nirvana's Nevermind
Cover of Nirvana’s Nevermind. Credit: Nirvana/Universal Music

Nirvana are also about to release a 30th anniversary edition of the classic album, however Elden wants his image censored on the reissue.

Elden also wants the album art altered for any future re-releases, according to his lawyer Maggie Mabie. “If there is a 30th anniversary re-release, he wants for the entire world not to see his genitals,” lawyer Maggie Mabie told The Associated Press.

Since the lawsuit was filed, a deluxe 30th anniversary reissue of Nevermind has been officially announced and is set to be released on November 12. Pre-orders for the various deluxe edition are currently available on Nirvana’s website with Elden’s image uncensored.

According to TMZ, Elden’s lawyer, Mabie, is demanding Universal Music censor the image of Elden from the cover of the 30th anniversary reissue, requesting that the label “end this child exploitation and violation of privacy.”

Various Artists – I’ll Be Your Mirror: A Tribute To The Velvet Underground & Nico

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For many years, Hal Willner co-ordinated the music sketches on revered US TV sketch show Saturday Night Live. At other times he could be found curating multi-cast tributes to the work of songwriters such as Leonard Cohen, Charles Mingus, Kurt Weill and Thelonious Monk. Or convincing The Replacements to sing Disney tunes. Or soundtracking Robert Altman films. Or producing albums for Marianne Faithfull, Laurie Anderson and Allen Ginsberg. His skill was in the art of combination – matching artists to other artists, or to specific songs, certain sounds to other sounds, or to situations.

One of the enduring musical partnerships of Willner’s life was with Lou Reed. The pair first collaborated in 1985, for Reed’s take on Weill’s September Song, and continued to his final four albums, and his RCA & Arista boxset in 2013; a relationship of understanding and focus, and great, attentive listening. Willner liked to describe himself as Reed’s Tonto.

It is fitting, then, that a tribute to The Velvet Underground & Nico should be Willner’s grand farewell as executive producer. I’ll Be Your Mirror is a reimagining of the Velvets’ self-titled 1967 debut in its entirety, the perfect showcase for the ludicrous extent of their influence, from Thomas Bartlett to Fontaines DC, King Princess to Kurt Vile. It is hard not to see Willner’s fingerprints across its 11 tracks: there in the pairings of Sharon Van Etten with Angel Olson, Iggy Pop with Matt Sweeney, Andrew Bird and Lucius, and in the terrific attention to sound and detail.

It begins with Michael Stipe’s stunning interpretation of Sunday Morning. Opening with clarinet rather than celesta, and lifted by flickering synths, the track ranges from lugubrious to regretful and back, Stipe’s voice seemingly cast in pale, early light. Beneath it runs a bassline that intriguingly owes more to Walk On The Wild Side than the song Stipe is covering.

It was the Village Voice critic Richard Goldstein who famously likened Nico’s voice to “a cello getting up in the morning”, and something similar could be said here of the beautifully crestfallen tone of Sharon Van Etten. On Femme Fatale it’s swaddled in strings and buffered by both Olson’s vibrato and distinctively Van Etten-ian piano chords. There’s a certain glee to some of these covers – Matt Berninger delivers a gloriously freewheeling I’m Waiting For The Man, sounding half-giddy to be allowed to touch the hem of this song’s garment. Similarly, it’s hard not to be swept up by Kurt Vile and the Violators scurrying exuberantly through Run Run Run. Meanwhile, Andrew Bird and Lucius suck the marrow of Venus In Furs: by turns gloweringly sinister then deeply rousing.

The tracks that fly highest here are in fact the least faithful, more subversive – St Vincent and Thomas Bartlett’s extravagant reimagining of All Tomorrow’s Parties calls to mind Laurie Anderson or Robert Ashley, a condensed avant-garde opera that moves from paranoia to celestial beauty.

Although Courtney Barnett’s version of I’ll Be Your Mirror lacks the twinkling wonder of the original, her more prosaic take allows us to find at the heart of the song a romantic simplicity that, for all the nihilistic trappings, the drugs, the deviancy and the whiplash, often powered Reed’s writing.

Later, Fontaines DC’s extraordinary version of The Black Angel’s Death Song is delivered as if sweaty-toothed and spoiling for violence, all gathering clouds and gathering rage, hisses and handclaps and scissors (yes, scissors) from Grian Chatten, the predatory curl of Conor Curley’s harmonium, Dan Carey’s impeccable production. It is a song reborn.

Whenever Willner talked about Reed, he spoke of the songwriter’s passion for life and for living. What is particularly affirming about this tribute album is that it is so astoundingly, writhingly, sometimes viciously alive; the songs of Reed, Cale, Tucker, Morrison and Nico not preserved in aspic but, thanks in no small part to Willner, given fresh breath, new blood.

Some years ago, Willner recalled how Reed’s highest musical compliment praised the sheer effort of a musician. Listening to records, he would turn to his Tonto and say, “Hal, you’ve got to listen to this! They’re really trying!” Perhaps, then, this is the greatest way to recommend I’ll Be Your Mirror: you’ve got to listen to this, because they are all really, really trying.

Whipping Boy – Heartworm

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On the face of it, Whipping Boy could have been huge stars. Formed in Dublin during the late ’80s as Spacemen 3/Loop/Mary Chain devotees, by the time of their second album, they had become accomplished songwriters and musicians, with a major label deal behind them. Heartworm presented a strong package – melodies, edge and verve – but what it didn’t have was timing. Released in November 1995, it got lost somewhere between (What’s The Story) Morning Glory? and Different Class. Heartworm maps an inward trajectory, where narrators have “lost my faith in all things good”, childhood reveries are framed by “what might have been” and relationships have run aground, leaving them “a bitter love, a broken love”. Evidently, this was not the stuff of Britpop triumphalism.

Fast forward 26 years and the spirit of Whipping Boy now partly resides in Fontaines DC – another Dublin band who have a similarly urgent, sardonic energy and another darkly charismatic frontman. Although, to some extent, the success of Fontaines helps give this Whipping Boy reissue a leg up, Heartworm is all its own thing. Opening track Twinkle sets out the band’s stall: tight, propulsive melodies, sheets of feedback shivering through the chorus and a characteristically elliptic portrait of characters on the brink. The narrator is “waiting to be bled” and similar examples of toxic co-dependency and emotional vampirism recur throughout the album. During the chorus of Tripped, for instance, Fearghal McKee intones “she tripped, she tripped” over and over again before he admits, “You know you were the only one”. The complexities of such morbidly unhealthy relationships peak on We Don’t Need Nobody Else where McKee monologues, “I hit you for the first time today… Christ, we weren’t even fighting”. In the background, the song explodes with its own kind of violence.

Elsewhere, there is much brooding on what was. When We Were Young presents itself as a rousing moshpit anthem buoyed along by a litany of teenage pursuits – “Babies, sex and flagons, shifting women, getting stoned/Robbing cars, bars and pubs, rubber johnnies, poems”. But the nub of the song lies in its opening lines, “When we were young no-one died/And nobody got older”, a brilliant piece of foreshadowing that McKee circles back to at the end of the song where he sings of “What might have been/When we were young”. On Personality, “people grow old, they get bored/They forget to take a risk” and end up “in the dark we’ll all be waiting/With nothing left to hold”.

For anyone looking for a chink in all this – spoilers – sorry, but it doesn’t come. Album closer Morning Rise is swathed in strings, but it finds McKee repeating “And it goes on”: the circle will not be broken.

Heartworm is a bleak record, but a powerful one – expertly played by the band, especially guitarist Paul Page who turns on a dime from delicate cascading guitar lines to feedback squalls, and McKee, of course, an astute chronicler of dark interiors. Had Heartworm come out earlier, perhaps this album of ragged songs and heartworn melodies might have been bigger. We can only imagine.