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Julia Holter – My Life In Music

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LA’s musical magic realist reveals her loud city songs: “There’s sorrow and ecstasy and all the feelings”

LA’s musical magic realist reveals her loud city songs: “There’s sorrow and ecstasy and all the feelings”

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LINDA PERHACS

Parallelograms

KAPP RECORDS, 1970

One of the first shows I ever played was a big Linda Perhacs event in 2009. I met her there, and I got really deep into her music. I loved how she was just her own person. Even though she was part of a scene in Topanga Canyon, she was on her own plane. Her sense of melody and harmony is kind of incredible, and she made this record out of nowhere. There are definitely elements of the harmonies of that period, but I think Linda’s always been a visionary. I worked with her for a long time and her music has inspired me in a lot of ways. It has a very unique sensitivity to tone, to sound, to timbre, and her lyrics are so evocative.

SIMONE FORTI

Al Di Là

SALTERN, 2018

I’ve become acquainted with Simone Forti through Tashi [Wada, Holter’s husband and collaborator]. She’s an important dancer and choreographer and writer and artist. She’s not known principally as a musician by any means, but these recordings have been very influential on me. She sings some Italian folk songs from her past, and she uses handmade instruments, like this thing she calls a molimo, which is a flute-like instrument made out of plumbing material. Then there’s other things like <Face Tunes>, where she’s responding sonically to a line that is drawn of someone’s face. I don’t even know how to explain it, it’s just really good, very moving. Check it out.

FAIROUZ

Maarifti Feek

RELAX-IN, 1987

Fairouz is a very famous Lebanese singer and I’ve been listening to lots of different tracks of hers over the past few years. But there’s some really great ones on this album, and it inspired my most recent record – not in a direct way, just that when you listen to something a lot, it gets in your head. This record took on a funky sound, which I think was a shift for Fairouz, as she started working with her son. The song “Li Beirut” is very moving to me right now, because of what’s going on in Lebanon. It’s like her love song to Beirut, written during the civil war, and it’s kind of devastating.

TASHI WADA

Duets

SALTERN, 2014

You probably think it’s funny that I put this record of my husband on here, but it was an important one for me. I actually heard this before we were dating, and it was very influential on me, both poetically and sonically. It’s very minimal compared to his current music – it’s just two two cellos playing in unison in various ways. It brings out the impossibility of the unison, which I find really moving, because obviously you don’t ever have perfect unisons. Do we talk about music conceptually together? Yeah, definitely. I mean, we talk about really stupid things in music too – it’s not always about the poetic aspects of the unison!

JEANNE LEE

Conspiracy

EARTHFORMS, 1975

I came across this record a few years ago, and it’s become very foundational to me, particularly her use of language. The track “Yeh Come T’ Be” is an example of how she works with words and the deconstruction of the words into sounds. The way she’s exploring the sounds and the layering of the vocals is really great to me, it feels very elemental. She was coming from a jazz background and she has a great record with Ran Blake where she sings jazz standards – they do an incredible version of “Laura” on that. But she also did a lot of undefinable, experimental sound-work. She has this very strong sense of giving things space, which is always important to me in music.

TIRZAH

Devotion

DOMINO, 2018

It’s something I come back to again and again. It’s very lulling and hypnotic, the way she uses repetition in her work. Her singing feels intimate and conversational, in a calming way. When I listen to Tirzah’s music, there’s this overwhelming feeling and emotion that feels kind of unique. It’s one of those things where it sounds effortless, but you know a lot of work was put into it. It’s very delicate and intricate in its own way, but the approach feels very genuine, whereas a lot of music in this crazy, Spotify-playlist-obsessed pop world sometimes feels a little calculated. So much music has been fussed over to the minute detail, whereas this just feels like someone’s poem.

JOANNA NEWSOM

Have One On Me

DRAG CITY, 2010

I’ve probably talked about this for the last 14 years, but it’s a really good record. Every time I listen to it, it just feels so good. And it’s also massive, so you don’t really get tired – you can revisit it, and it changes. I used to love talking about the arrangements, which are so great, but now what moves me a lot is the way she tells a story, and the trajectory of each song. It’s something that I admire because I’m not so good at it, being able to evoke characters and tell a story. But I love how Joanna Newsom does it in a surreal style where it twists and turns and meanders, so it’s not like a folk ballad in a traditional sense, it’s more literary.

JESSIKA KENNEY & EYVIND KANG

Azure

IDEOLOGIC ORGAN, 2023

For my last one, I thought I’d talk about a more recent record. I’m a big fan of these two humans, they’re just really great musicians. Sometimes they’re doing the most minimal things, but it’s so powerful because they’re so skilled and so sensitive and such interesting artists. There’s a track called “Ocean” where they’re exploring the ring modulations of two simultaneous frequencies, and Jessika is singing this crazy, very wide vibrato, over and over again. She’s studied Persian singing extensively, and has incredible control of her voice. Again, it’s hard for me to explain this record, but it has an incredible depth of emotion in it. There’s sorrow and ecstasy and all the feelings – it’s so good.

Inside the making of A Complete Unknown: “Bob Dylan’s recollections were critical”

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Next month, James Mangold’s film A Complete Unknown opens in cinemas, bringing to the big screen the early years of BOB DYLAN, from folk interloper to his electric apostasy at Newport in 1965. In this extract from from Uncut's January 2025 issue, we discover how much involvement Dylan himself had in this cinematic undertaking..

Next month, James Mangold’s film A Complete Unknown opens in cinemas, bringing to the big screen the early years of BOB DYLAN, from folk interloper to his electric apostasy at Newport in 1965. In this extract from from Uncut’s January 2025 issue, we discover how much involvement Dylan himself had in this cinematic undertaking..

CLICK HERE TO READ UNCUT’S REVIEW OF A COMPLETE UNKNOWN

LOS Angeles, 2020. Although the city is in lockdown, a coffee shop has been opened for the morning for the exclusive use of two illustrious customers. James Mangold, the director of Walk The Line, is there to meet Bob Dylan, who has been quarantining in town since his Never Ending Tour was mothballed due to the pandemic. Sitting opposite one another in a booth, they are there to discuss Mangold’s plans for a movie based on Dylan’s first years in New York. The implication is his decision to go electric will eventually be titled A Complete Unknown.

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“On that very first meeting, as we sat together drinking coffee, one of the first things Bob said to me was, ‘So what’s this movie about?’” Mangold tells Uncut. “The gracious way he was conducting himself made me feel very comfortable and I found myself saying, ‘I think it’s about a guy who was choking to death in his hometown. He ran away from his family and friends and everything he knew. He came to New York and created a new family and a new identity and new friends and flourished. Then he started to choke to death and ran away from there too.’ That’s the movie.”

Several more meetings followed, for hours at a stretch, in the coffee shop. Dylan, it transpired, had a lot he wanted to say about his youthful self. “When I sat down with Bob the first time, he had already read my script,” continues Mangold. “He said to me that he wasn’t gonna tell me what I could and couldn’t do. He was just gonna give his perspective on what went down. His recollections and observations about that period were critical to me – including his sense that he hadn’t even come completely to terms with, or understood, what happened.”

The source for Mangold’s film is Elijah Wald’s 2015 book Dylan Goes Electric!, which explores Dylan’s milieu from 1961 to 1965, up until he plugs in and plays “Maggie’s Farm” at the Newport Folk Festival on July 25, 1965.

“That moment in Newport really is cinematic,” Wald tells Uncut. Monica Barbaro, who plays Joan Baez in A Complete Unknown, agrees. “I think the audience will be rooting for him to go electric and try out whatever it is that’s making his hair stand on end. The film is in order, event-wise, but Ed Norton [who plays Pete Seeger] said that it had a kaleidoscopic effect with our large cast of [real-life] characters. This could be a limited series – we shot so much, and maybe there’s a four-hour version somewhere.”

Hollywood’s previous Dylan biopic, Todd HaynesI’m Not There (2007), cast six different actors to play ‘aspects’ of Bob, emphasising his mercurial, shifting mystery. Mangold only has one Dylan to contend with here – Timothée Chalamet, given the part way back in 2018 following his star-making turn in Call Me By Your Name. Accordingly, Mangold has tried to find the flesh-and-blood reality of a Minnesotan kid blowing into MacDougal Street, trailing tall tales as he makes his way to Newport ’65.

“I’m out to understand these people as thinking, feeling humans who were making choices about what they sang or who they dated in the same random way any 21-year-old might,” Mangold says. “I love the idea of looking at people who have had such a profound cultural effect when they weren’t iconic and no one knew what was gonna happen. The perception of Bob Dylan is the guy in the flare of spotlights with the curly hair and the Ray-Bans, but the transformation into that is the end of our picture. The movie is exceptionally sweet because there’s such innocence about these characters before all their moves are worth money and every song they sing outrages or pleases so many.”

Chalamet’s own perspective on the project is perhaps more akin to the enigma he plays. “This is interpretive,” he recently explained to Apple Music. “This is not definitive… this is not how it happened. This is a fable.”

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A Complete Unknown

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When the wild, rambling film of Rolling Thunder Revue was released back in 2019, it came with the subtitle “a Bob Dylan story by Martin Scorsese”, in what felt like a nod to the endless stream of franchise extensions that come tagged as “a Star Wars story” or “a Mad Max saga”. It cutely suggested that, with the MCU floundering, the 2020s might see a full flowering of the Bob Dylan Extended Universe, with movies, miniseries and, eventually, collectable figurines dedicated to the lost highways, side quests and minor characters of "My Back Pages".

When the wild, rambling film of Rolling Thunder Revue was released back in 2019, it came with the subtitle “a Bob Dylan story by Martin Scorsese”, in what felt like a nod to the endless stream of franchise extensions that come tagged as “a Star Wars story” or “a Mad Max saga”. It cutely suggested that, with the MCU floundering, the 2020s might see a full flowering of the Bob Dylan Extended Universe, with movies, miniseries and, eventually, collectable figurines dedicated to the lost highways, side quests and minor characters of “My Back Pages“.

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If so, then A Complete Unknown is the A New Hope of the Bobiverse, telling our hero’s journey in time honoured fashion. A young farmboy, raised in the wastelands of the midwest, heeds the call of a shambling, hermetic mentor (Woody Guthrie), and travels to the distant planet of Greenwich Village, 1961, where he absorbs the force of the folk revival. He falls in with an eccentric band of rogues (Dave Van Ronk, Albert Grossman, Johnny Cash), meets what seems to be his true love (“Sylvie Russo”, a version of Suze Rotolo), and begins his journey to the dark heart of the 1960s. He survives setbacks and romantic ordeals, takes up his mystical weapon (a 1964 Sunburst Fender Stratocaster) and travels to the belly of the beast (Newport Folk Festival 1965) where he vanquishes the dark father (Pete Seeger) before heading out on his Triumph Tiger motorcycle for the open road once more.

Five years in the making, James Mangold’s film is a rich, handsome and largely faithful retelling of this beloved old standard. Even more than Joel and Ethan Coen’s Inside Llewyn Davis, it conjures the buzz, hum, slush and drone of a Greenwich Village full of cranks, seers and, yes, tambourine men. It assembles a sterling supporting cast including Scoot McNairy (Business Bob from Once Upon A Time In Hollywood) as the ailing Woody, hospitalised with Huntington’s but still raging against the dying of the light, Ed Norton giving a career peak performance as the idealistic, conflicted Pete Seeger (it’s hard to believe he was only a late addition after Benedict Cumberbatch dropped out – it’s impossible to imagine another actor in the role) and Dan Fogler, fresh off portraying Francis Ford Coppola in the misbegotten The Offer, threatening to steal yet another show with his Albert Grossman (possibly the most rock and roll performance in the film).

At the heart of it all, Timothée Chalamet is the quizzical eye of the gathering storm. Having prepared over the past decade by playing a series of messianic freaks, from the student revolutionary Zeffirelli in Wes Anderson’s The French Dispatch to Paul Atreides in Dune and the young Willie Wonka, he seems abundantly prepared for the role, nailing the hobo stroll, the mercurial moods and the inscrutable cool. Covid delays gave him time to master the songbook – and he’s a revelation as a singer, performing over 40 songs, from the early, flinty “Song To Woody” right up to the ferocious “Like A Rolling Stone” amidst the havoc of Newport. His musical performance is by far the best thing about the film – it’s hard to resist joining in with the applause of those early, confounded, enchanted audiences.

As an Uncut reader, you may have some qualms. Though based on Elijah Wald’s Dylan Goes Electric!, in familiar biopic fashion the story plays fast and loose with the historical record, cavalierly conflating people, places and events. And it doesn’t really know what to do with either Sylvie or Joan Baez, who spend much of the film simply gazing wistfully, resentfully or with plain exasperation at the wilful upstart.

But if Rolling Thunder had several wildcards up its sleeve, Mangold (whose 2005 Johnny Cash biopic Walk The Line offered an ultimately well behaved kind of outlaw) seems to take his liberties in the name of neatness. Though Bob himself apparently annotated and signed off the script himself, you might struggle to detect much of his mischief in the polished finished product. There is lightning in many of the performances, but as a film A Complete Unknown never quite goes fully electric. Maybe, as with Star Wars or The Godfather, the real crackling heart of darkness will come in the franchise’s second episode…

Inside our latest free Uncut CD – Nocturnes: the month’s best new music

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Mogwai, Eddie Chacon, The Innocence Mission, Bridget Hayden & The Apparitions and Songhoy Blues all appear on the latest free Uncut CD.

Mogwai, Eddie Chacon, The Innocence Mission, Bridget Hayden & The Apparitions and Songhoy Blues all appear on the latest free Uncut CD.

The compilation, entitled Nocturnes, comes with the January 2024 issue of Uncut, and showcases the month’s best new music.

See below for more on the full tracklisting…

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1 Brown Spirits
Mind Rocker (Part 1)

We kick off our exploration of this month’s best new music with a slice of grooving motorik garage from Melbourne’s Brown Spirits. The duo’s latest offering, Cosmic Seeds, continues their journey into kraut-centred deep space, but with an extra helping of analogue funk.

2 Rose City Band
Radio Song

Ripley Johnson doesn’t change the formula on Rose City Band’s new album, Sol Y Sombra, but there’s no need when he’s creating choogling, rolling delights like this, with lilting pedal steel and a psychedelic propulsion.

3 Bridget Hayden & The Apparitions
She Moved Through The Fayre

Todmorden-based Hayden is best known for her work with experimental and noise music, yet her spectacular new LP, Cold Blows The Rain, is a collection of spectral, dour traditional folk, with the singer and multi-instrumentalist playing Lankum at their own doomy, magisterial game.

4 Straw Man Army
Earthworks

Straight out of Brooklyn, this DIY two-piece twist the thorny post-punk of Wire and Mission Of Burma into stunning new shapes. Here’s the title track of their third album, a rallying cry against the modern American nightmare.

5 Euros Childs
Ursula’s Crow

On his 20th album, Beehive Beach, the former Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci frontman has swerved his experimental tendencies and written 12 sublimely melodic and melancholic songs. The piano-based arrangements only burnish these tales of childhood and the countryside.

6 The Innocence Mission
Your Saturday Picture

Midwinter Swimmers is the latest album by the Pennsylvanian veterans, led by songwriter and vocalist Karen Peris, and here’s one of the record’s many highlights; gauzy and introverted, it suggests both Yo La Tengo’s bossa nova excursions and Arthur Lee’s most pained transmissions. “Love is the sound,” Peris sings.

7 Eddie Chacon
End Of The World

After 20 years of silence following his time as half of Charles & Eddie in the ’90s, Chacon has carved out a slyly stunning solo career this decade. Working with collaborator Nick Hakim on new LP Lay Low, his songs nod to both classic R&B and more modern psychedelic soul.

8 Mogwai
Lion Rumpus

Producer John Congleton has been enlisted for The Bad Fire, the Glaswegians’ 11th album and the follow-up to their UK No 1 As The Love Continues. Here’s the first track to be taken from it, a classic, gnarly Mogwai mix of glistening synths and jet-engine guitars.

9 Songhoy Blues
Gara

Bamako-based Songhoy have often turbo-charged their desert blues with distorted guitars and rock rhythms, but on their fourth album, Héritage, they prove that they can do just as well embracing their roots with acoustic guitars and percussion.

10 AJ Woods
Hawk Is Listenin’

From deep in New Mexico comes a supergroup of sorts: on this psychedelic Americana record Woods is joined by members of A Hawk And A Hacksaw, Neutral Milk Hotel and more. The result is suitably sun-baked, like Neil Young stumbling and lost in the Albuquerque heat.

11 Joshua Burnside
Up And Down

Belfast musician Burnside matches his acoustic singer-songwriter influences with a more experimental bent, taking in electronica and field recordings: the results, as on his new album Teeth Of Time, provide the perfect forum for ruminations on fatherhood and the passing of time.

12 Anna B Savage
Lighthouse

A recent move from the UK to Ireland has inspired You & I Are Earth, the third album by this London-born artist. She’s also teamed up with Lankum producer John “Spud” Murphy, which provides the 10 tracks on the record with a certain overcast richness to match Savage’s eerie voice and the songs’ coastal themes.

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Jeff Parker & ETA IVtet – The Way Out Of Easy

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Jeff Parker is best known to rock fans as a key member of the Chicago post-rock ensemble Tortoise, someone who adds a rigour, virtuosity and high-gloss to their proggy instrumentals. But he’s also spent more than three decades exploring many different types of music. The Chicago scene from which Parker emerged in the 1990s was characterised by unusual collaborations between musicians from different genres, all playing together in odd combinations. As well as working with Tortoise, Parker would find himself playing regular sessions with the minimalist gumbri player Joshua Abrams, electronic explorers Isotope 217 and various free jazz musicians, including the likes of trumpeters Rob Mazurek and Jaimie Branch, saxophonist Matana Roberts and drummers Hamid Drake, Chad Taylor and Makaya McCraven.

Jeff Parker is best known to rock fans as a key member of the Chicago post-rock ensemble Tortoise, someone who adds a rigour, virtuosity and high-gloss to their proggy instrumentals. But he’s also spent more than three decades exploring many different types of music. The Chicago scene from which Parker emerged in the 1990s was characterised by unusual collaborations between musicians from different genres, all playing together in odd combinations. As well as working with Tortoise, Parker would find himself playing regular sessions with the minimalist gumbri player Joshua Abrams, electronic explorers Isotope 217 and various free jazz musicians, including the likes of trumpeters Rob Mazurek and Jaimie Branch, saxophonist Matana Roberts and drummers Hamid Drake, Chad Taylor and Makaya McCraven.

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Parker relocated to Los Angeles around a decade ago, where he has found himself at the nexus of a burgeoning scene which is, in its own way, as diverse as Chicago’s, where members of bands like Bright Eyes, Grizzly Bear and Shabazz Palaces might rub shoulders with genre-transcending musicians such as Carlos Nino, Miguel Atwood Ferguson, Nate Mercereau and Laaraji

In 2018 Parker started a weekly Monday-night residency at a small venue in LA’s Highland Park suburb called the Enfield Tennis Academy with three like-minded friends – Australian bassist Anna Butterss, drummer Jay Bellerose and alto saxophonist Josh Johnson. Until the venue closed in late 2023, the quartet would play each Monday night in front of around 50-100 people, first playing jazz standards and bebop tunes, and eventually playing lengthy improvisations that could last anything from 10 minutes to an hour in length. 

This entire album was recorded at one of those sessions in January 2023, in front of an audience. Only the first track here was pre-written: Parker’s 24-minute opener “Freakadelic” starts with him and alto saxophonist Josh Johnson playing an angular melody in unison, one that dimly resembles the Brecker Brothers’ “Some Skunk Funk”, over a rock-solid funk bassline by Butterss, before spinning out into a piece of psychedelic free improvisation. The other three tracks are collective improvisations.

Parker is not a flashy, freak-out guitarist. There are touches of Metheny-style virtuosity in everything he does, but he usually plays to a ruthless harmonic logic, one that comes from listening closely to what his bandmates are doing. A lot of his work has been about using repetition creatively, and this is very much how this ensemble engages as a unit. Parker, Butterss or Johnson will start each piece with a simple riff which is repeated, imitated and tweaked until it provides the spark for ruminative improvisations, the mood usually dictated by Bellerose, who often starts songs playing in a textural and delicate manner before slowly moving into more insistent beats, like the brushed post-rock drums on “Late Autumn” or the creepy bossa nova beat that pulses through “Easy Way Out”.

What’s sometimes difficult to believe is that this is an entirely live album, recorded by engineer Bryce Gonzales, who set up four microphones and fed them into a two-track mixer, mixing the band in real time. All four musicians use effects units, but none were applied in post-production or in the mix – all are being deployed in real time. Saxophonist Josh Johnson often plays through a digital harmoniser, which sometimes makes him play in fourths (on the first track), in thirds (on “Late Autumn”) and in octaves (on “Easy Way Out”). Often the harmoniser makes his instrument sound like some eerie cyborg, half human musician, half digital construct. Parker’s guitar is sometimes put through loop pedals, or digital delay: on the opening track his gentle arpeggios start to sound like a Javan gamelan; elsewhere he sounds like an organ drone.

On “Chrome Dome”, what starts as an unaccompanied sax solo soon develops into a full-on piece of dub reggae, with Butterss’s double bass digging deep into sub-bass territory and Jay Bellerose’s drum kit slowly becoming shrouded in reverb, as if recreating Lee “Scratch” Perry’s Black Ark in real time, all flaring snare drums and echo-drenched hi-hats.

It’s possible that this quartet might not play together again for a long time, especially without a regular residency. Anna Butterss recently released an acclaimed solo album and tours with the likes of Jason Isbell and Phoebe Bridgers; Jay Bellerose’s many regular engagements includes being a member of Robert Plant and Alison Krauss’s touring band, while Jay Johnson works with the likes of Leon Bridges, Meshell Ndegeocello, Harry Styles and the Red Hot Chilli Peppers. It means that this LP could serve as a document of an improvising four-piece at its best.

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White Denim – 12

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White Denim have always been a difficult band to pin down. Since their 2008 debut album Workout Holiday, they’ve run the gamut from raucous garage rock to taut indie via touches of psychedelia, prog, soul and Southern boogie. However, on 12, they have arrived at something else altogether. Sucking up aesthetic influences from the UK new wave scene via groups like Scritti Politti, Orange Juice and Aztec Camera, while absorbing the masterful dub productions of Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry and Dennis Bovell, along with studying the songwriting chops of Nick Lowe and Jonathan Richman, they have come up with an album of shimmering pop, slick art-rock, sunshine funk and eccentric soul. “Some will see it as a dramatic shift,” says the band’s ostensible leader and creative director, James Petralli. “But I think it’s part of a natural evolution.” 

White Denim have always been a difficult band to pin down. Since their 2008 debut album Workout Holiday, they’ve run the gamut from raucous garage rock to taut indie via touches of psychedelia, prog, soul and Southern boogie. However, on 12, they have arrived at something else altogether. Sucking up aesthetic influences from the UK new wave scene via groups like Scritti Politti, Orange Juice and Aztec Camera, while absorbing the masterful dub productions of Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry and Dennis Bovell, along with studying the songwriting chops of Nick Lowe and Jonathan Richman, they have come up with an album of shimmering pop, slick art-rock, sunshine funk and eccentric soul. “Some will see it as a dramatic shift,” says the band’s ostensible leader and creative director, James Petralli. “But I think it’s part of a natural evolution.” 

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The album is the result of a period of change in Petralli’s life. He relocated his family to Los Angeles from Austin and, coupled with the restrictions of lockdown, he had to eschew his typical approach of getting a band together in a room to work it out. Instead, he threw himself deep into the process of assembling tracks digitally, pulling in contributions from players he’d sometimes never even met. And so drums, brass, woodwind, vocals and strings were all recorded and sent in from all over the country, sometimes including as many as four different drummers on one single track. “I definitely indulged in some extravagant personnel choices,” says Petralli.

However, rather than feeling messy, bitty or disjointed, he’s managed to weave together something wonderfully cohesive that in many ways, despite the vast number of contributors, is a seemingly singular vision he has carved out for the band. It’s the first ever record where Petralli has engineered it and been the main producer, stating he has “touched every sound that’s on there”, and the focus on detail, crisp production and immaculate delivery certainly suggests this is the kind of record made by a man who became deeply locked into the process. 

The result is very much a studio album; a proudly hi fidelity recording that boasts glistening production, elaborate compositions and eloquent arrangements. Although, ironically, despite being assembled digitally in a converted one-car garage in Petralli’s Pasadena residence – a process that was intended to utilise as many benefits as possible of modern recording methods – it’s something that sounds like it was recorded in a sprawling analogue studio in the 1970s, such is the engulfing warmth and sonic richness that permeates through, and radiates from, the album.

The opening “Light On” sets the tone for an album that is broad in scope, vision and ideas, as well as bursting with textures, sounds and instrumentation. Within seconds brass and woodwind are clashing against each other like rival animals yelping from deep in the woods, yet while also being strangely and harmoniously in sync, before beautifully soft jazz drums glide in, and vibrant guitar jumps to life, before it all coalesces to create a beautifully distinct piece of prog-jazz-soul-pop. The result is like an animated blend of Nick Drake and the Canterbury scene, with an added sprinkle of California new age. It’s a buoyant opener despite the sprightly and uplifting arrangements belying lyrics that depict the hard work required in keeping the faith during dark and turbulent times – “man, it’s hard to stay alive sometimes,” says Petralli at one point, yet sounding hopeful rather than dejected.  

Persistence in the face of opposition is the biggest lyrical theme throughout the album, and it’s one that’s emphasised by Petralli’s musical choices too. While he depicts struggles throughout – “tried standing up, started following down” he lets rip on the quietly rousing “Hand Giving Out” – the desire to want to overcome is very clearly reflected by the fact the song, and so much of the record, sounds so joyous, full of life, colour and momentum. It’s a mood-lifter, with the lyrical reflections and musical choices existing hand-in-hand to elevate the same point together: keep the faith, good things may be around the corner.

It helps that the band has written some of the hookiest music of their career. “Econolining” is deeply unique, littered with baroque production flourishes as it drives forward with giddy and unpredictable abandon, almost recalling The Lemon Twigs without the knowingly retro wink. “Second Dimension”, with music written by keyboardist Michael Hunter, is pure Stevie Wonder, an unashamed piece of stirring soul pop, while “I Still Exist” swings the other way on the soul pendulum to evoke and recall Marvin Gaye in its more stripped-back and slightly mournful groove. Petralli describes “Swinging Door” as the most ambitious arrangement he’s ever created: it features four drummers, as well as three bassists, all interwoven into a piece of gleaming psychedelic soul pop. It’s a beautifully layered song that feels multi-faceted yet not needlessly complex, and is a neat embodiment of a record that manages to make tiny moments feel wildly ambitious. It takes real skill to make something so dense sound as fluid as it does here.

Perhaps Petralli’s extracurricular activities have been key to some of his stylistic, and technological, choices on this record. Back in Austin, he was running his own commercial studio as a producer for hire and concluded that “in serving other people’s vision, maybe my own became a little clearer”, and then when he was in LA he worked as a guide vocalist on themini-series Daisy Jones And The Six, where he witnessed producers at Sound City fully pushing the capabilities of digital technology in the studio.

As a result, there is an unquestionable, inescapable feeling of an artist wanting to open things up. 12 is a record that feels incredibly individual, and loaded with personality, yet also enormously collaborative and generous. While Petralli has clearly taken on a complete and all-encompassing role in order to best serve this record, he’s also let many of the core band – Hunter, Cat Clemons and Matt Young – take a songwriting lead on certain tracks. Similarly, it’s not completely the end of previous members’ involvement. Founding member Steve Terebecki remains back in Texas and still contributes “as and when he pleases” and pops ups on the album, while original drummer Josh Block, who left the band back in 2015, plays on a couple of tracks and also mixed the album.

Ultimately, what has been achieved here is the very difficult task of Petralli freeing himself up to collaboration perhaps more than ever, as well as giving himself more working parts to assemble, while also meticulously shaping out a very distinct vision he has for this record. This is then something he has deftly managed to streamline into a remarkably cohesive and dynamic record that oozes flair, and feels like something of a hybrid between a solo offering and an ambitious group project. While it may escape easy categorisation, it’s unquestionably the most progressive and expansive record White Denim have made to date. 

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Father John Misty, Sharon Van Etten and Caribou to play End Of The Road 2025

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Headliners Father John Misty, Self Esteem and Caribou are among the first names revealed for the End Of The Road festival's 2025 edition, taking place at its usual home of Larmer Tree Gardens on the Dorset/Wiltshire border on August 28-31.

Headliners Father John Misty, Self Esteem and Caribou are among the first names revealed for the End Of The Road festival’s 2025 edition, taking place at its usual home of Larmer Tree Gardens on the Dorset/Wiltshire border on August 28-31.

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Sharon Van Etten will headline the festival on the opening night (Thursday 28) with her new band The Attachment Theory, while Throwing Muses, Goat, Rosali and Lisa O’Neill are also due to appear.

Affirming their commitment to music from across the globe, the first batch of names announced for the festival includes Syrian bouzouki player Mohammad Syfkhan, Colombian electronic singer-songwriter Ela Minus and South African “future ghetto funk” artist Moonchild Sanelly.

Also on the line-up are Mount Kimbie, Joy Orbison, Geordie Greep, These New Puritans, John Maus, Emma-Jean Thackray, Tropical Fuck Storm and Black Country, New Road, with many more names to come over the coming months.

Weekend tickets are available now from here.

Introducing the new Uncut: Kate Bush, 2025 Preview, The Damned, Quincy Jones and more

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Before I dig into this, a couple of bits of housekeeping. Firstly, apologies to Nick Hasted, who we inadvertently omitted to credit for last month’s Nick Cave cover story. Secondly, a quick heads up to all print subscribers that this issue comes with a second CD – the latest instalment in our ongoing Selected Works series, this one celebrating Cassandra Jenkins. You might have noticed Cassandra’s recent album My Light, My Destroyer in our Albums Of The Year and we’re delighted to have been able to further support her work on this rather special, 5-track CD. If you’ve come to Cassandra’s music belatedly, this is a great way to catch up with some of her earlier recordings.

Before I dig into this, a couple of bits of housekeeping. Firstly, apologies to Nick Hasted, who we inadvertently omitted to credit for last month’s Nick Cave cover story. Secondly, a quick heads up to all print subscribers that this issue comes with a second CD – the latest instalment in our ongoing Selected Works series, this one celebrating Cassandra Jenkins. You might have noticed Cassandra’s recent album My Light, My Destroyer in our Albums Of The Year and we’re delighted to have been able to further support her work on this rather special, 5-track CD. If you’ve come to Cassandra’s music belatedly, this is a great way to catch up with some of her earlier recordings.

ORDER A COPY DIRECT FROM US HERE

There’s a lot going on inside our January 2025 issue, of course – including our Kate Bush cover story, Alastair McKay’s hilarious double-header with The Damned’s chief mischief makers, Captain Sensible and Rat Scabies, Nick Hasted’s definitive dive into James Mangold’s Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown and Neil Spencer’s peerless adieu to Quincy Jones. But for us, the big piece of work this month is our annual review of the year to come. A masterful job by Sam Richards and Tom Pinnock here, it’s pretty much mapped out the key albums of 2025 – from Patterson Hood to Alabaster DePlume, Lucinda Williams to Modern Nature. Myself and both my predecessors have often been accused of blathering on about ‘vintage years’ for music, but looking ahead it genuinely feels like there’s plenty of new music to be excited by.

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Uncut – January 2025

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CLICK HERE TO GET THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

CLICK HERE TO GET THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

Every print copy of this issue comes with a free 12-track CD featuring brand new music from Mogwai, Rose City Band, Songhoy Blues, The Innocence Mission, Euros Childs, Eddie Chacon and more. Meanwhile, inside the magazine…

KATE BUSH: In this revelatory lost interview from 2011, Kate Bush holds forth on fame, the internet, pop music, fantastical creatures and the time she nearly burned her house down…

BOB DYLAN: With James Mangold’s early-years biopic A Complete Unknown soon to open in cinemas, we discover how Dylan is still actively rewriting his own history

THE WEATHER STATION: Tamara Lindeman talks exclusively to Uncut about the disassociation and despair that fuelled her ultimately revitalising new album, Humanhood

THE DAMNED: Punk miscreants Captain Sensible and Rat Scabies look back at their most diabolical misadventures with a fondness that’s led to their recent, triumphant reconciliation

QUINCY JONES: We explore the super-producer’s incredible legacy, spanning everything from big band jazz to era-defining pop

2025 PREVIEW: Looking forward to next year’s essential releases from the likes of Lana Del Rey, Brian Wilson, Pulp, Big Thief, LCD Soundsystem, The Waterboys, Patterson Hood and many more

THE GO-BETWEENS: Robert Forster et al dissect their much-loved catalogue of urbane Australian indie-pop

REVIEWED: New albums by Julian Cope, Sun Ra Arkestra, James Blackshaw, Lilly Hiatt and The Last Poets; archive releases by Dennis Bovell, Terry Riley, Television, Tom Waits, Mercury Rev and Laura Nyro; Big Star and The Saints live; part one of Cher’s memoirs

PLUS: An Audience With Mogwai, The Making Of Headhunters’ “God Make Me Funky”, My Life In Music with Frank Black, Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold makes his live solo debut, and Norman Blake and Bernard Butler unveil their new supergroup

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CMAT, Candi Staton and Lyle Lovett to be honoured at the UK Americana Awards

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The first winners of January's UK Americana Awards have been announced, with Candi Staton to receive the International Lifetime Achievement Award, Lyle Lovett the International Trailblazer Award, and CMAT the UK/Ireland Trailblazer Award.

The first winners of January’s UK Americana Awards have been announced, with Candi Staton to receive the International Lifetime Achievement Award, Lyle Lovett the International Trailblazer Award, and CMAT the UK/Ireland Trailblazer Award.

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A host of other award-winners will be revealed at the ceremony – taking place at London’s Hackney Church on January 23 – with Gillian Welch & David Rawlings, Waxahatchee, Bonny Light Horseman, Brown Horse, Katherine Priddy, Jason Isbell, Kacey Musgraves and Hurray For The Riff Raff all among the nominees (see the full list below).

The ceremony is the culmination of UK Americana Week powered by Sweet Home Alabama, with a number of showcase gigs taking place across Hackney from January 20-23 featuring the likes of Chloe Foy, Ferris & Sylvester, Willie Watson, Robert Vincent and many more. You can view the full line-up and buy tickets for all events here.

UK ARTIST OF THE YEAR
Elles Bailey 
Ferris & Sylvester
Hannah White
Katherine Priddy
Robert Vincent
The Heavy Heavy

UK ALBUM OF THE YEAR
Elles Bailey – Beneath The Neon Glow
Hannah White – Sweet Revolution
Kathryn Williams & Withered Hand – Willson Williams
Nina Nesbitt – Mountain Music 
The Hanging Stars – On A Golden Shore
The Heavy Heavy – One of a Kind

UK SONG OF THE YEAR
Blue Rose Code – “Sadie”
Brown Horse – “Stealing Horses”
Jack Francis – “Failure”
Nina Nesbitt – “Pages”
Our Man In The Field – “L’Etranger”
Robert Vincent – “Follow What You Love and Love Will Follow”

UK INSTRUMENTALIST OF THE YEAR
Ashley Campbell
Henry Senior Jr
Joe Coombs
Joe Harvey White
Joe Wilkins
Keiron Marshall

INTERNATIONAL ARTIST OF THE YEAR
Bonny Light Horseman
Charley Crockett
Jason Isbell
Larkin Poe
Sierra Ferrell
Waxahatchee

INTERNATIONAL ALBUM OF THE YEAR
American Aquarium – The Fear Of Standing Still
Bonny Light Horseman – Keep Me On Your Mind/See You Free
Gillian Welch & David Rawlings – Woodland
Kacey Musgraves – Deeper Well
Kyshona – Legacy 
Willie Watson – Willie Watson 

INTERNATIONAL SONG OF THE YEAR
Gillian Welch & David Rawlings – “Empty Trainload of Sky”
Hurray For The Riff Raff – “Buffalo” 
Julian Taylor & Allison Russell – “Pathways”
Kyshona – “The Echo”
Lizzie No – “The Heartbreak Store”
Sierra Ferrell – “American Dreaming”

LIVE ACT OF THE YEAR
Ben Ottewell & Ian Ball (of Gomez)
Campbell Jensen
Danny & The Champions of the World 
Kezia Gill 
Lola Kirke
Morganway
Savannah Gardner
Skinny Lister
The Heavy Heavy
Wunderhorse

Fontaines DC, Aviva Studios, Manchester, November 29, 2024 

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There’s a sea of people bouncing in green balaclavas, beers are flying, sweat is dripping, bodies are hoisted up on top of shoulders, and people are lovingly embracing one another. The mood is palpably jubilant this evening, as Fontaines DC kick off their three-night residency in Manchester. 

There’s a sea of people bouncing in green balaclavas, beers are flying, sweat is dripping, bodies are hoisted up on top of shoulders, and people are lovingly embracing one another. The mood is palpably jubilant this evening, as Fontaines DC kick off their three-night residency in Manchester. 

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This 4,500-capacity space is a comparatively intimate setting to the rest of their arena tour dates, so to have this relatively up-close environment – in which the screech of guitars and rumble of bass feel tangible, and singer Grian Chatten’s kilt flaps away just inches from fans’ faces – already feels like it might be the end of an era for the group. 

You can understand their successful trajectory. Over the course of four albums they have pulled off the impressive feat of balancing music that is smart, literary and experimental but also accessible, melodic and bursting with the kind of anthemic choruses that feel increasingly absent in contemporary guitar music. They are the rare kind of band that act as a bridge between young kids, ageing millennial Strokes fans, Britpop dads and classic rock aficionados – and the breadth of that audience is here tonight. 

They open with the dense, brooding “Romance”, which is all eerie atmospherics and surges of industrial-tinged electronics, before the curtain falls away to reveal the band against a huge backdrop of the wonky-shaped heart from the cover of their most recent album RomanceThe swift shift into “Jackie Down The Line”, from their previous 2022 album Skinty Fia, quickly displays the other side of the band – punchy, hooky, infectious – and it immediately whips the audience into a frenzy as they scream the words back in elated unison. 

“Big Shot” sounds like My Bloody Valentine meets Nine Inch Nails with immersive washes of hazy yet harsh guitars filling the room, while “Big” is delivered with a deadly stomp. “Boys In The Better Land” is frantic, agitated and hyper, with rapid-fire drums and Chatten’s half-spoken words tumbling out hurriedly. It sets the room alight, but so too does “Favourite”, which relishes in slowing things down and letting the words ring out with clarity over its irresistible hook. Despite only being out a few months, the song is received like a firmly embedded classic, as the room swells with joy and rows of arms wrap around one another. 

Palestine is a constant presence throughout the evening – from flags wrapped over amps to green, white and red tape being placed over Chatten’s mic stand – and “free Palestine” are the parting words as the band leave the stage.

The four-track encore of “In The Modern World”, “Desire”, “I Love You” and “Starburster” is a killer final run that really hits home just how many big songs this relatively young band already have. “Desire” thoughtfully allows its quiet moments to sound just as huge as the loud parts, while The Cure-like “I Love You” unfurls from its melancholic yet shimmering guitar-heavy opening to a powerful, almost speech-like delivery from Chatten as he spews words with an intense ferocity, landing each line like a punch.

“Starburster” is a song that mirrors a panic attack via sharp and rushed intakes of breath, and you suspect it has to be a set closer because it takes so much out of Chatten to deliver it. However, there is also something quite fitting about finishing on a song that leaves the band utterly breathless; it’s the same state they have kept the audience in for much of the evening. 

Setlist
Romance
Jackie Down The Line
Televised Mind
A Lucid Dream
Roman Holiday
Big Shot
Death Kink
Sundowner
Big
A Hero’s Death
Here’s The Thing
Bug
Horseness Is The Whatness
Nabokov
Boys In The Better Land
Favourite
Encore
In The Modern World
Desire
I Love You
Starburster

Jennifer Castle – Camelot

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Historically, pop music has often reached into Arthurian legend for a handy metaphor. It is, after all, a symbolist’s paradise – the enchanted vale of Van Morrison’s “Avalon Of The Heart”, for instance, or David Crosby’s Californian hippie dream reflected back as “Guinnevere”. The Moody Blues’ spellbound evocation of Camelot on “Are You Sitting Comfortably?”, perhaps. Or, more literally, Rick Wakeman’s preposterous chainmail folly on ice.

Historically, pop music has often reached into Arthurian legend for a handy metaphor. It is, after all, a symbolist’s paradise – the enchanted vale of Van Morrison’s “Avalon Of The Heart”, for instance, or David Crosby’s Californian hippie dream reflected back as “Guinnevere”. The Moody Blues’ spellbound evocation of Camelot on “Are You Sitting Comfortably?”, perhaps. Or, more literally, Rick Wakeman’s preposterous chainmail folly on ice.

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This ongoing thread of references in song – from Nat King Cole to Nas, Stevie Nicks to The Streets – tends to follow a pattern. Much like its depictions in literature, TV and film, Camelot is invariably viewed as shorthand for a certain kind of glorious perfection, a mythic crucible of courage and nobility, the embodiment of utopia. Monty Python notwithstanding, of course.

By contrast, Jennifer Castle’s Camelot, as mapped on her seventh album, is something altogether more nuanced. Hers is a battleground of opposing tensions, set against the divisive times of the present. There are ambiguities and contradictions, ecstatic visions and crises of faith. And a quest, not for some imagined grail, but for earthly and private resolutions. All fixed to music of the exquisite variety, from radiant acoustic studies to billowing symphonic pop.

Camelot feels like a landmark in Castle’s career. It’s certainly her most all-embracing record to date, the full fruition of an approach that began, tentatively, with a pair of mostly spare folk-countryish albums under her Castlemusic alias. The first of those was released some 18 years ago, since when she’s quietly emerged as a talent to rival contemporaries like Joan Shelley, Brigid Mae Power or fellow Canadian Tamara Lindeman in her guise as The Weather Station.

Much of Castle’s previous work has leaned towards the minimal, paring songs down to their bones and investing them with subtle and spacious atmospherics, guided by an effortlessly agile voice capable of conveying both the everyday and the existential. She isn’t averse to taking the expansive route either – consider the lush strings that cushion elements of 2014’s Pink City; the full-band arrangements of 2018’s Angels Of Death – but Camelot combines the best of these impulses in newly adventurous ways.

The first inkling arrived early this summer, when “Blowing Kisses” broke nearly four years of studio silence. Released to soundtrack an episode of hit TV comedy-drama The Bear (Castle used to work in a Toronto restaurant with the show’s co-producer and cast member Matty Matheson), it’s an eloquent tune that pushes the value of basking in the moment, driven by jazz-ballad piano and a sumptuous string arrangement from Owen Pallett for Estonia’s FAMES Skopje Studio Orchestra. There’s all the grace of a spiritual hymn, but it sounds like a fresh vow. “Don’t get it twisted,” sings Castle, gliding around the melody and rising into a soft rapture, “My heart’s still in it/My dedication’s a star.”

Blowing Kisses” was the first song tracked for Camelot. It’s a worthy showcase for her and the assembled band, some of whose members go way back with Castle, while others are relatively new. Listen closely and you can almost hear them – Carl Didur on piano, bassist Mike Smith, Evan Cartwright on drums, Castle’s acoustic guitar – probing for the right spaces to fall in together. This approach often lends the album a charged, extemporised feel.

Nothing captures this better than the magnificent “Full Moon In Leo”. Here, Castle stays true to the lunar definition of the title – an optimum moment to reveal the true inner self, an outpouring of passion and creativity – by leading a tune bouncing with vitality. Its gospel-funk heart is pumped by fat guitar distortion, sax, whirling electric piano and Castle’s swooping voice. There’s a timeless quality at work here too, reminiscent of, say, early ’70s Carole King or Laura Nyro at her most rhapsodic.

Lyrically, “Full Moon In Leo” is playful. “I push my broom/In my underwear and my attitude/And nothing more,” enthuses Castle two verses deep. But the song also embodies the ambiguity of Camelot as a whole. She’s tired of the capricious nature of the music industry, and also weary of waiting to be noticed on a broader scale: “I’ve got friends going grey/Just awaiting my face/To arrive on a billboard/On Fairfax Avenue/In sunny LA.” By the end of the song though, Castle is committed to the moment once again, pledging allegiance to the creative forces that shape her. This, she decides, is the way it should be. She even carves her own one-line epitaph on metaphorical stone: “The dream is alive and well.”

“Lucky #8” is built of similarly resistant stuff. Castle invokes angels and archangels, cosmic law and experiential notions of being (“What percentage am I spirit?/What percentage is machine?”) in order to make sense of everything around us, but ultimately finds herself transported by the physical rhythms of dance. The song moves at a decent lick too, all ringing guitars, psychedelic overtones and gorgeous harmonies. Longtime co-producer Jeff McMurrich steps up on lead guitar, while guest Cass McCombs – whose own music feels like an analogue to that of Castle, with their friendship stretching back over a decade – makes a telling contribution on slide.

This idea of navigating a way through uncertainty is a central feature of Camelot. Sited around one of Castle’s favourite local hiking spots in Ontario, “Fractal Canyon” takes nourishment from the things she holds dear – friends, loved ones, the great outdoors, the warmth of a random memory – while her unanswered questions eventually give way to a simple affirmation: “And I’m not alone here.” “Earthsong” carries much the same sentiment. A delicate acoustic piece that highlights both Castle’s silvery guitar-playing and beautifully supple voice, it was inspired by Indian anti-GMO activist Vandana Shiva. The idea of seeds as symbols of nurture and growth also ties into Castle’s experience as a farm labourer during the pandemic: “Mary, I know it’s thee/Folk mother pouring tea/Safe and sitting on the seed.”

These sure-footed earthly connections serve as Castle’s protection against the things that trouble her, whether it’s the two-faced cronies of “Some Friends” or the hypocrites and cynics that populate “Trust”, an emotional tug-of-war that ends with an ominously clanging piano chord. Or indeed the gory stigmata of “Mary Miracle”, informed by watching a TV news story on weeping religious statues as a kid, imagining the blood coursing “down the thighs of the porcelain angels/There by the riverbed thrashing in the mud.” The nightmarish intensity of Castle’s child vision is mirrored in the song’s relentless churn, styled like an ’80s arcade keyboard run that refuses to pipe down.

Whether or not she ends up plastered on an LA billboard is anyone’s guess. But that’s surely not the point. Much less the goal. Of greater import is the fact that, nearly two decades into her artistic life, Castle has moved into her imperial phase. The journey may not always be smooth, but Camelot is the outward manifestation of that surer focus and clarity of purpose. And, it appears, the kind of self-acceptance that only comes with experience. As she points out here: “I belong to the world.”

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Talking Heads – Talking Heads: 77 (Super Deluxe Edition)

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“The popular song is a very efficient and effective means of getting across ideas,” declares Talking Heads’ original typewritten ‘Statement Of Intent’, reproduced as part of this reissue package. “Without seeming pretentious, the band would like to think that music and the popular song (as a specific case) has the potential to inspire constructive feelings in the listener. The band hopes that their songs and presentation will inspire confidence in the audience. Words the band would hope can be associated with their ‘image’ are: sincerity, honesty, intensity, substance, integrity and fun.”

“The popular song is a very efficient and effective means of getting across ideas,” declares Talking Heads’ original typewritten ‘Statement Of Intent’, reproduced as part of this reissue package. “Without seeming pretentious, the band would like to think that music and the popular song (as a specific case) has the potential to inspire constructive feelings in the listener. The band hopes that their songs and presentation will inspire confidence in the audience. Words the band would hope can be associated with their ‘image’ are: sincerity, honesty, intensity, substance, integrity and fun.”

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These don’t sound like the ideals of a blank generation. Even amongst the supposedly iconoclastic denizens of CBGB, there was a widespread fixation with a well-established Stones/Stooges MO of leering, leather-clad hedonism and/or messianic self-destruction (which, as Tina Weymouth noted wearily, tended to come with a side-order of decidedly old-fashioned sexism). Fresh from the progressive Rhode Island School Of Design, Talking Heads surveyed this not-so-radical scene and quickly deduced that if punk really was going to provide some kind of new feeling, all those “traditional rock’n’roll stances” would have to go.

Taking their cue from Jonathan Richman (whose ex-bandmate Jerry Harrison had recently joined the band), Talking Heads’ debut rejected grandiose ideas of redemption or revolution and sought to find meaning in the everyday. Its celebration of small joys even included a shout-out to those undersung enablers of a healthy society, the “civil servants” who “work so hard and try to be strong”. Instead of leather jackets, Talking Heads wore polo shirts (provided, sweetly, by Chris Frantz’s mother). Instead of advertising their sexual deviancy, Frantz and Weymouth got married.

Except, of course, this clean-cut image – combined with David Byrne’s repertoire of tics and yelps and sudden bursts of crooning sincerity – often came across as intriguingly sinister. “Psycho Killer” was a song satirising America’s prurient interest in homicidal maniacs, or perhaps just a bit of schlock-rock fun. But most listeners were willing to believe that Byrne himself was the psychopath, an assumption not exactly contradicted by the chilling coldness of “No Compassion” (“So many people have their problems/I’m not interested in their problems”) or the way he seemed permanently bamboozled by the highly illogical workings of human relationships. By setting out to be as normal as possible, Talking Heads out-weirded the weirdos.

This new pin-sharp remaster of Talking Heads: 77 emphasises the freshness of the whole endeavour. The guitars are trebly and crisp, the rhythms brisk and utilitarian, perfectly designed to induce dancing in people who don’t usually dance. Byrne plays his role perfectly as the wide-eyed alien fascinated by daily life on earth: disconcertingly earnest, often agitated but never cynical.

Almost half a century on, it feels rather more like the start of something new than those other big New York punk touchstones of 1977: say, Rocket To Russia, Blank Generation or even Marquee Moon. Sure, the cod-calypso flourishes of “Uh-Oh, Love Comes To Town” still sound a little gauche, but it’s precisely these gleeful anti-rock touches that set this album apart, prising open new horizons and laying the groundwork for more convincing fusions to come.

Disc Two rounds up all of the B-sides and outtakes of the era, including brassy ‘Pop’ versions of “New Feeling” and “Pulled Up”, plus bouncy earworm “Sugar On My Tongue”, strangely overlooked for the original album. Most significantly, there are two alternative versions of “Psycho Killer”: a harder-rocking take that plays up Byrne’s original intentions to write a song in the style of Alice Cooper; and an acoustic version, first heard as the B-side to the 1977 single release, which features Arthur Russell on cello. It’s an intriguing meeting of downtown New York minds, even if Russell’s ominous scrapes and swoops are a slightly-too-obvious nod to Bernard Herrmann.

But the real find of this Super Deluxe Edition, and the main justification for its existence, is a previously unreleased live set, forged in the white heat of CBGB on October 10, 1977. Taped a month or so before the performance featured on Side One of The Name Of This Band Is Talking Heads, it underlines what an incredible live band Talking Heads were from the get-go. Every song is ridiculously tight and punchy, driven by Chris Frantz’s metronomic yet inventive drumbeats, while Byrne’s vocal performance is pure controlled mania, retaining the essential soulfulness of Al Green’s “Take Me To The River” while adding a whole new level of crazed intensity.

Thank You For Sending Me An Angel”, soon destined to become the opening song of the second album, is a two-minute frenzy of roiling excitement. Without pausing for breath, the band drop straight into the taut, stop-start funk of “Who Is It?”, Byrne scatting like a madman. The tension between these often fun, danceable songs and Byrne’s high-pitched, hair-trigger delivery is as riveting as any psycho thriller. Finally, it’s a chance to hear the band as Lenny Kaye and other CBGB scenesters first saw them: “a blaze soon to engulf the world.”

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The Beatles: Beatles ’64

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"It's not culture," says Paul. "It's having a laugh." A first look at the new Fabs film...

“It’s not culture,” says Paul. “It’s having a laugh.” A first look at the new Fabs film…

Following on from the Get Back series, The new Beatles collaboration with Disney+ is Beatles 64, which is available from today. A film produced by Martin Scorsese and directed by David Tedeschi, it focuses on the Fabs in February 1964, when they visited the USA for the first time. Most notably, to play on the Ed Sullivan show, which helped spread Beatlemania across the USA. 

Drawing heavily on the footage shot by David and Albert Maysles in New York and on tour, the film contains the Beatles you know, but have possibly never met in such high picture quality. Yes, you’re right, Peter Jackson’s MAL AI team have had a hand in it. Tedeschi’s film also gathers reactions and reflections from people who witnessed the phenomenon at first hand, whether they found it life-changing or (as one young jazz fan describes it) “disgusting”.

Here are our Top 10 Fab moments from the film.

Press conference

John is an interestingly recessive presence in the film. At the press conference on arrival in the US, though, he presents the best example of his caustic wit. Q: Why are the band so popular? “If we knew,” Lennon says, “we’d form another group and be managers.”

“Is that a camera?”

The Beatles are interested from the off in the Maysles’ fly-on-the-wall “direct cinema” approach, wondering how (“Are you filming now?”) they might be getting anything decent without any big production fuss. “He built it special…” “He’s not even looking through it!” 

The fans

The fans are the big winners here. The Maysles don’t have to ask them much to learn a lot. There they are in great numbers: with thoughtful gifts, petitions, plans to break into the hotel to seek an audience. They are on to something, and the world will need to catch up with it.

Paul

As in Get Back, the camera records Paul’s unique energy. He generally seems happier when “on” and in performance mode, whether in public or private. What does all this Beatle madness mean for Western culture he is asked at one point. “It’s not culture,” he shrugs. “It’s having a laugh.”

Ringo’s bit of wood

Martin Scorsese is on hand to chat with 21st century Ringo. Matters arising: the unreliability of revolving stages, his wanting to be as close to the other three as possible, and also how he was prevented from falling off a small rise by an improvised backstop nailed to the stage.

Brian

Strangely, given the recent repointing of the narrative to show Brian Epstein’s instrumental work in helping the Beatles’ career (brokering this US adventure, for one thing) that he’s barely in this. He gets a telegram from Elvis, mind. 

Talking Miami Hotel Blues #1

George has somehow acquired a crummy acoustic guitar. During Miami downtime, he defrays pre-show nerves by entertaining Ringo with an improvised Dylanesque talking blues. Paul hovers by rather anxiously.

Bernstein family

We meet Jamie Bernstein, who persuaded her father (renowned US composer Leonard) to watch the Ed Sullivan show while the family eat dinner. Leonard later breaks down for the US people how sophisticated Beatle tunes are.

The Gonzalez household

A smart Maysles move was to film a US family watching the Ed Sullivan show. Under the watchful eye of their parents, the two kids watch transfixed – knowing they are unable to lose it at home, but clearly on the verge. 

John meets Marshall McLuhan

It is some years later. John and Yoko are filmed in conversation with the Canadian philosopher about why the Beatles happened. John says it’s down to the fact that England stopped “conscription” (he means National Service), and rock ‘n’ roll was allowed to flourish. It’s a decent theory.

The 172 page Definitive Edition Ultimate Music Guide to The Beatles is available here

Arts council

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Art Garfunkel (83) is on the phone singing “Old Friends” to his son, Art Garfunkel Jr (33). “The old men,” he whispers, easing into a gentle croon, “lost in their overcoats, waiting for the sun. You know the little niceties, Junior? One of us sings ‘waiting for the sun’. The other sings ‘waiting for the sunset’…” Art Sr slides into the melody again: “The sounds of the city/ Sifting through trees…”

Art Garfunkel (83) is on the phone singing “Old Friends” to his son, Art Garfunkel Jr (33). “The old men,” he whispers, easing into a gentle croon, “lost in their overcoats, waiting for the sun. You know the little niceties, Junior? One of us sings ‘waiting for the sun’. The other sings ‘waiting for the sunset’…” Art Sr slides into the melody again: “The sounds of the city/ Sifting through trees…”

THE REVIEW OF 2024, NICK CAVE, ALICE COLTRANE, ELVIS COSTELLO, KRIS KRISTOFFERSON, CASSANDRA JENKINS AND MORE STAR IN THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER A COPY HERE!

The voice is more seasoned than on Simon & Garfunkel’s 1968 LP, Bookends. Art Sr is singing to illustrate how the words have acquired a new inference on Garfunkel & Garfunkel’s collaborative album, Father And Son. “It’s challenging in the middle-eight,” Art Sr admits. “I won’t go for it now”.

Sharing a park bench quietly,” sings Art Jr, a high tenor coming down the line from Germany, “how terribly strange”.

“Easy for you to sing,” says Art Sr.

It is a disorienting thing, listening to this father and son. The voice that sounds like Art Garfunkel is Junior’s; Art Sr’s singing has acquired what his son calls “a rounder, golden, warm tone”. Their album is an orchestrated exercise in reframed nostalgia, mixing Art Jr’s 1980s favourites with the songs that inspired his dad. Art Jr has enjoyed success in Germany as a schlager singer, rendering Simon & Garfunkel songs in German. Father And Son aims to expand his audience.

Representing Jr are Eurythmics’ “Here Comes The Rain Again” and Cyndi Lauper’s “Time After Time”. The melancholic tone of “Time After Time” is, says Art Jr, a result of thinking about “the meaning of life and the value of time together”.

“Don’t say ‘the meaning of life’,’ says Art Sr. “It’s too great.”

Art Jr’s musical education came via oldies tapes compiled by his father. “I made sure he knew Little Richard,” says Art Sr. “Jerry Lee Lewis, Fats Domino. He knew early R’n’B from my records, I never gave him classical. I never showed him Debussy.”

Art Sr’s request for the album was Nat King Cole’s “Nature Boy”. “I love this melody, it kills me,” Art Sr says, launching into the verse. “There was a boy/ A very strange enchanted boy…”

“Alright, so you like the song,” says Art Jr.

“I got a little carried away,” replies Art Sr. “I tell you what. I’ll be the pinball machine and you just jam it when it’s time for the flippers to play.”

There is, of course, an imbalance in the relationship between father and son, caused by Art Sr’s fame, and his uneasy relationship to it. “You used to say, ‘Daddy, does everybody in the world know who you are?’ And my answer to you was: ‘about half’.”

“I thought, ‘Wow! What an incredible amount’,” says Art Jr. “And I guess those figures are probably spot on.”

Fame, says Art Sr, “throws every day into improvisation. What will you do with the days? My profession, and being on the star trip, has made me feel like real life is the shows and the records, and everything else is backstage waiting to go on, smoking imaginary cigarettes.”

Would he welcome a Simon & Garfunkel reunion? “I’m at a stage with Paul Simon where I miss him. I haven’t spoken to him in quite a while, and I have no idea why not. But Paul Simon is a very funny man who plays beautiful rhythm guitar.”

“When you say funny, I think you’re saying he has a great sense of humour,” says Art Jr.

“That’s what I mean,” confirms Art Sr. “I would be interested.”

Father And Son is available on BMG

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I’m New Here – One True Pairing

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Tom Fleming looks visibly uncomfortable. Wincing slightly and itching his beard, he looks away from our video call before admitting with a rueful grin: “I’m still feeling a bit guilty about being a singer-songwriter. Do you know what I mean? It's not something I feel is necessarily a viable art form.” As a magazine that features no shortage of such performers, we’re bound to ask: why ever not? “Well, it’s just the cliche of it. I am, you know, one guy with an acoustic guitar a lot of the time… I don't want to be seen as another moaning white boy.”

Tom Fleming looks visibly uncomfortable. Wincing slightly and itching his beard, he looks away from our video call before admitting with a rueful grin: “I’m still feeling a bit guilty about being a singer-songwriter. Do you know what I mean? It’s not something I feel is necessarily a viable art form.” As a magazine that features no shortage of such performers, we’re bound to ask: why ever not? “Well, it’s just the cliche of it. I am, you know, one guy with an acoustic guitar a lot of the time… I don’t want to be seen as another moaning white boy.”

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Male and caucasian Tom Fleming may be, but moaning would be a criminally simplistic way of describing the compelling sounds he makes on his second solo album under the name One True Pairing. Having risen to prominence as bassist and sometime singer of Cumbrian art-rock mavericks Wild Beasts, Fleming was perhaps always going to feel the urge to resist convention. After the band went their separate ways in 2018, he made a self-titled debut that blended sparse electronica with noisier guitar textures and unflinching examinations of modern working-class masculinity. “I thought it was Born In The USA,” he confides. “I thought, ‘People are going to get this, it’s going to fly.’ But listening back, it’s a very challenging listen. It sounds like someone coming from a difficult place.”

New album Endless Rain does too, but it’s more like Tom Fleming’s Nebraska – a stripped-down set of self-reflective, acoustic-led vignettes. However, it also grabs the attention thanks to subtle sonic touches such as the tiptoeing violin and increasingly panicked percussion that punctuate opener “As Fast As I Can Go” and the faint sense of time ticking away that infuses the angst-wracked strumming of “Mid-Life Crisis”.

The input of Fleming’s long-time arranger Josh Taylor-Moon and the guest fiddle of Lankum’s Cormac MacDiarmada play their part in colouring that soundscape, as does the atmospheric production of John ‘Spud’ Murphy, whom Fleming hails as “incredible”, crediting him for enhancing certain traditional folk touches such as the delicate fronds of finger-picking that decorate self-examinations such as “Human Frailty”. Fleming’s vocals are continually arresting as they channel the quiet desperation of John Martyn as he sings, with a nod to the scary realities of Covid, of “gagging and choking for the smallest breath”.

Such lines reflect a loose theme running through Endless Rain: trying to keep one’s head metaphorically above water. Its title was initially inspired by a particularly soggy period back home in Cumbria that our down-at-heart hero spent grappling with a break-up and financial penury as well as “depression, neurodivergence, addiction and its aftermath”. Elsewhere, though, there are also moments of righteous anger – albeit shot through with a certain black humour – at the ongoing plight of the working poor. “We will come in deadly silence… we will drag you meekly from your beds”, he vows on “A Landlord’s Death”. “There’s a scene in For Whom The Bell Tolls, when they lead out the capitalists into the village and throw them one-by-one off the cliff,” he explains with a mischievous smile. “I grew up in rented accommodation, I still live in rented accommodation, and this country is not in a good spot. It’s fun, cathartic for me to sing like this, because I so often talk in metaphor and I’m like, ‘No, I’m not going to do that this time!’” Spoken like a true singer-songwriter.

Endless River is available now on Domino

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Phil Manzanera – My Life In Music

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For your pleasure, the Roxy Music guitarist reveals his most impactful albums: “It was too exciting for words”...

For your pleasure, the Roxy Music guitarist reveals his most impactful albums: “It was too exciting for words”

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BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB

Buena Vista Social Club

WORLD CIRCUIT, 1997

I started learning guitar in Havana, being taught by my mum. There was no Bert Weedon’s Play In A Day for me, it was bolero and son. I don’t think my parents had heard about babysitters – they’d often take me to the Tropicana Club and the Sans Souci, with people like Rubén González playing piano and Omara Portuondo singing… and the Buena Vista Social Club album has them on it. I was immensely jealous of Ry Cooder in some ways, because I had gone back to Cuba in 1991-92 and started playing with Cuban musicians. And then this came out and I said, ‘Aw, hang on!’ But obviously I was absolutely delighted that we had them for a brief moment before they all died off.

ELVIS PRESLEY

Elvis’ Golden Records

RCA VICTOR, 1958

This was like his greatest hits to date, so you get “Heartbreak Hotel”, “All Shook Up”, all the classic ones. I was in Cuba ’til after the revolution, then I was in Hawaii, and then I was in Venezuela. And because Elvis made films, he travelled internationally. Once Elvis appeared, I realised there was a thing called rock’n’roll. Girls in our class would be obsessed with these American college kids playing Elvis and Buddy Holly. And our world changed. Funnily enough, I did get to play with Scotty Moore in Air Studios in London. That was an amazing thing, ’cause when you hear those records and you hear how simple but nailed-on his playing is, you get it. And I got it!

THE WHO

My Generation

BRUNSWICK, 1965

When I listened to the World Service, I could hear The Shadows and Cliff and stuff like that. So I said to my parents, ‘Send me to boarding school in London!’ To be fair, my older brother was there already. Then The Beatles happened, The Kinks, the Stones and The Who, which was incredibly exciting. Little did I know at the time that Pete Townsend had gone to art school, but I seemed to be drawn to art students who formed bands, bringing this other dimension to pop and rock that allowed it to evolve. But obviously with all the smashing of guitars and the feedback and the anarchy and Keith Moon drumming like a feral beast, it was just too exciting for words.

THE BEATLES

Revolver

PARLOPHONE, 1966

This is the beginning of the fruition of art-rock, because it’s the start of albums that have different kinds of styles, that use the studio as an instrument. You’ve got these incredibly talented four guys, but you’ve also got George Martin and Geoff Emerick and Abbey Road, and ultimately you get a song like “Tomorrow Never Knows” which isn’t a song in the normal way. What they’re able to do is draw in all these different influences, from the Radiophonic Workshop to Indian music. They were overdubbing on top of the tapes, putting stuff backwards, phasing. They realised that they didn’t have to necessarily play [everything] live, so they were free. It’s difficult for people to imagine now how extraordinary it was to hear that stuff at the time.

THE JIMI HENDRIX EXPERIENCE

Are You Experienced

TRACK, 1967

When I saw Jimi Hendrix playing “Hey Joe” on Top Of The Pops, I wanted to run towards the screen and jump inside. I’d never heard the guitar played like that. As we know, everybody in London was scared out of their brains because he was the new gunslinger in town, and a showman as well. I was at the Saville Theatre when he played “Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” the week of release. The Beatles were up in a box watching it, and they couldn’t believe their eyes. His playing was incredibly exciting and incredibly innovative, and the production on Are You Experienced was out there breaking new ground. Having heard The Beatles, he wanted to do something special.

THE VELVET UNDERGROUND & NICO

The Velvet Underground & Nico

VERVE, 1967

I loved pop music but I also loved weirder stuff: Stravinsky and systems music and Terry Riley and Lamonte Young. So when it came to The Velvet Underground & Nico, you get lots of drone-type things from John Cale – and even Nico’s way of singing, I was very comfortable with that, and it influenced my sense of how I hear notes and being in tune. Obviously having Andy Warhol associated with it was a total box-tick in terms of art-rock. And it influenced so many people. Eno always had that quote: not many people bought the album, but everyone who did formed a band. Everybody in Roxy loved The Velvet Underground, so that was something that brought us together.

SOFT MACHINE

The Soft Machine

ABC PROBE, 1968

My best friend Bill MacCormick [future Quiet Sun bassist] knew Robert Wyatt’s family, so after school every day, Bill would pop into the little house where Soft Machine lived with Robert’s mum and hear all their stuff. We were superfans, we knew everything about them! We had the first album on import, and it sums up that whole coming together of improvised music, psychedelia and art. I always wanted my guitar to sound like the organ of Mike Ratledge, because he didn’t have a Hammond, he had a Lowrey which had a little pedal on it that you could bend notes with, and a fuzzbox. They looked very cool as well. Robert wore a banana-collared suit and Kevin Ayers always looked like a god.

DAVID BOWIE

The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars

RCA, 1972

Ziggy Stardust came out the same day as the first Roxy Music album. The following week, we supported Bowie at the Greyhound pub in Croydon. Up until the day he died, every time I saw David, we would laugh about that particular gig because he would say, ‘Phil, if I had a quid for everybody who said they were there, I’d be a millionaire.’ I’d say, ‘You are a millionaire!’ The only time I played on stage with him was at the Albert Hall when he was a guest on the David Gilmour tour that I played on, and that was the last time he ever performed in the UK. He came on to do “Arnold Layne” and knocked it out the park. Wow, incredible.

Phil Manzanera’s 50 Years Of Music boxset is released by UMR

Surviving Grateful Dead members planned to reunite with Phil Lesh for their 60th anniversary

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Bobby Weir, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann had planned to reunite with Phil Lesh to mark the Grateful Dead's 60th anniversary in 2025.

Bobby Weir, Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann had planned to reunite with Phil Lesh to mark the Grateful Dead‘s 60th anniversary in 2025.

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In a joint interview with CBS NewsAnthony Mason, the three surviving members of the Dead revealed they were considering a reunion to celebrate the band’s 60th anniversary next year with Lesh and had scheduled time to rehearse, before his death on October 25.

Weir, Kreutzmann and Hart last performed with Lesh at the Fare Thee Well concerts in 2015 celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Dead.

“I was hoping that we could play with him again one more time,” Kreutzmann said during the CBS interview, which Lesh was originally due to participate in. “So that, that was my sadness… because I know he wanted to play with us again too.”

“We were kicking it around,” Weir added. “In fact, we were going to get together and kick some songs around tomorrow.”

“I was hoping that we could do it,” Kreutzmann said, with Weir adding, “We were going to see where it goes. But we were just going to play the four of us.”

Jambase reports that CBS Mornings aired highlights of the inteview, below. The full interview will be broadcast on CBS Mornings on Wednesday, December 18.

Pentangle announce vinyl box set

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Pentangle's six studio albums released between 1968 and 1972 are being collected in a vinyl box set for the first time.

Pentangle‘s six studio albums released between 1968 and 1972 are being collected in a vinyl box set for the first time.

THE REVIEW OF 2024, NICK CAVE, ALICE COLTRANE, ELVIS COSTELLO, KRIS KRISTOFFERSON, CASSANDRA JENKINS AND MORE STAR IN THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER A COPY HERE!

Released by Svart Records on April 16, 2025, Pentangle: The Albums: 1968-1972 rounds up the five albums released on Transatlantic alongside Solomon’s Seal, released by Reprise and the final album with the original line-up: guitarists Bert Jansch and John Renbourn, alongside bassist Danny Thompson, drummer Terry Cox and singer Jacqui McShee.

This 14 LP boxset includes of bonus material featuring 22 recordings which are previously unreleased on vinyl.

Says McShee, “I am honoured to see our work as Pentangle celebrated with this special vinyl boxset release. The collection represents a journey through a significant chapter in music history – one in which we sought to experiment and explore each other’s talents and just enjoy making music together.

“Each song and album hold a special place in my heart, not only for the music itself but for the incredible memories and experiences that we shared as a band. I hope this release brings listeners, both old and new, the same joy and connection that we felt while creating this music together. 

“To all our fans who have supported our music over the years, thank you. You are keeping the Pentangle legacy alive, and I hope this boxset serves as a celebration of all that we accomplished together”.

The set was originally released on CD in 2017. For this vinyl edition, each album is presented in a gatefold sleeve replicating the original artwork, housed in an rigid slipcase box alongside an special gatefold holding a 64-page book of rare images and extensive sleeve-notes, including a Q&A culled from past interviews by Uncut contributor Mick Houghton with Jansch, Renbourn and McShee, essays about each album, a chronology and track-by-track details.

You can pre-order the box set here.

Tracklisting for Pentangle: The Albums: 1968 – 1972

* previously unreleased on vinyl

THE PENTANGLE

SIDE A

LET NO MAN STEAL YOUR THYME

BELLS

HEAR MY CALL

PENTANGLING

SIDE B

MIRAGE

WAY BEHIND THE SUN

BRUTON TOWN

WALTZ

SIDE C – Bonus Tracks

KOAN (Take 2)

THE WHEEL

THE CASBAH

BRUTON TOWN (Take 3)

HEAR MY CALL (Alternate Version)

6.WAY BEHIND THE SUN (Alternate Version)

WAY BEHIND THE SUN (Instrumental)

SIDE D – Bonus Tracks

BRUTON TOWN (Take 5) *

KOAN (Take 1)

TRAVELLIN’ SONG (Single Version with Strings)

POISON (August 1967 session)

I GOT A FEELING (August 1967 session) *

MARKET SONG (August 1967 session) *

SWEET CHILD – I (LIVE AT THE FESTIVAL HALL)

SIDE A

MARKET SONG

NO MORE MY LORD

TURN YOUR MONEY GREEN

HAITIAN FIGHT SONG

A WOMAN LIKE YOU

GOODBYE PORK-PIE HAT

SIDE B

THREE DANCES: BRENTZEL GAY/LA ROTTA/THE EARL OF SALISBURY

WATCH THE STARS

SO EARLY IN THE SPRING

NO EXIT

THE TIME HAS COME

BRUTON TOWN

SIDE C – Bonus Tracks

HEAR MY CALL

LET NO MAN STEAL YOUR THYME

BELLS

TRAVELLING SONG

SIDE D – Bonus Tracks

WALTZ

WAY BEHIND THE SUN

JOHN DONNE SONG

SWEET CHILD – II (STUDIO)

SIDE A

SWEET CHILD

I LOVED A LASS

THREE PART THING

SOVAY

IN TIME

SIDE B

IN YOUR MIND

I’VE GOT A FEELING

THE TREES THEY DO GROW HIGH

4MOON DOG

HOLE IN THE COAL

SIDE C – Bonus Tracks

HOLE IN THE COAL (Alternative Version)

THE TREES THEY DO GROW HIGH (Alternative Version)

HAITIAN FIGHT SONG (Studio Version)

IN TIME (Alternative Version)

A WOMAN LIKE YOU (Unabridged Trio Version) *

SIDE D – Bonus Tracks

I’VE GOT A WOMAN (Trio Mix) *

I AM LONELY (Jansch Solo Mix) *

POISON

BLUES

SALLY GO ROUND THE ROSES (Alternative Version 2)

MOON DOG (Full Band Version) *

BASKET OF LIGHT

SIDE A

LIGHT FLIGHT (Theme from “Take Three Girls”)

ONCE I HAD A SWEETHEART

SPRINGTIME PROMISES

LYKE-WAKE DIRGE

TRAIN SONG

SIDE B

HUNTING SONG

SALLY GO ROUND THE ROSES

THE CUCKOO

HOUSE CARPENTER

SIDE C – Bonus Tracks

SALLY GO ROUND THE ROSES (Alternate Version)

COLD MOUNTAIN (B-Side)

I SAW AN ANGEL (B-Side)

HOUSE CARPENTER (live in Aberdeen 26/3/70) *

LIGHT FLIGHT (live in Aberdeen 26/3/70) *

SIDE D – Bonus Track

PENTANGLING (live in Aberdeen 26/3/70)

CRUEL SISTER

SIDE A

A MAID THAT’S DEEP IN LOVE

WHEN I WAS IN MY PRIME

LORD FRANKLIN

CRUEL SISTER

SIDE B

JACK ORION

SIDE C – Bonus Tracks

WILL THE CIRCLE BE UNBROKEN? (Take 1, No Harmonica/El Guitar) *

RAIN AND SNOW (Take 2) *

OMIE WISE (Take 2, Live Vox) *

JOHN’S SONG (alias So Clear) (Take 7) *

SIDE D – Bonus Tracks

REFLECTION (Olympic Studios Take 1) *

WHEN I GET HOME (Alternative Vocal) *

REFLECTION

SIDE A

WEDDING DRESS

OMIE WISE

WILL THE CIRCLE BE UNBROKEN?

WHEN I GET HOME

RAIN AND SNOW

SIDE B

HELPING HAND

SO CLEAR

REFLECTION

SIDE C – Bonus Tracks

SHAKE SHAKE MAMMA

KOKOMO BLUES

FARO ANNIE

BACK ON THE ROAD AGAIN

WILL THE CIRCLE BE UNBROKEN (Take 3, Live Vox) *

SIDE D – Bonus Tracks

REFLECTION (Command Studios, Take 1, Wordless Vox) *

JOHN’S SONG (Take 5, Fuzz Guitar) *

WONDROUS LOVE *

SOLOMON’S SEAL

SIDE A

SALLY FREE AND EASY

THE CHERRY TREE CAROL

THE SNOWS

HIGH GERMANY

PEOPLE ON THE HIGHWAY

SIDE B

WILLY O’ WINSBURY

NO LOVE IS SORROW

JUMP BABY JUMP

LADY OF CARLISLE

SIDE C – Bonus Tracks

WHEN I GET HOME (live at Guildford Civic Hall 11/72) *

SHE MOVED THROUGH THE FAIR (live at Guildford Civic Hall 11/72) *

TRAIN SONG (live at Guildford Civic Hall 11/72) *

Act Unnaturally! The Beatles USA Catalogue 1964/1965/1966 explained!

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With The Beatles - 1964 US Albums in Mono box set released today, we explore the ways the Fab's American releases differed from the English originals...

With The Beatles – 1964 US Albums in Mono box set released today, we explore the ways the Fab’s American releases differed from the English originals…

THE REVIEW OF 2024, NICK CAVE, ALICE COLTRANE, ELVIS COSTELLO, KRIS KRISTOFFERSON, CASSANDRA JENKINS AND MORE STAR IN THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER A COPY HERE!

1964

INTRODUCING… THE BEATLES

Vee-Jay; January 10, 1964

What it is: The US version of Please Please Me, originally scheduled for July 1963 but delayed due to Vee-Jay owner Ewart Abner’s gambling debts. By most reckonings, the most counterfeited album of all time.

What’s in/out: The release initially omitted the title track and “Ask Me Why” as Vee-Jay had previously released them as a single. However, when Beechwood Music Inc. halted sales as they owned the publishing rights to “Love Me Do” and “P.S. I Love You”, Vee-Jay swiftly restored the two culled tracks in their place.

Highest US chart position: 2

MEET THE BEATLES!

Capitol; January 20, 1964

What it is: With Vee-Jay’s financial issues holding up The Beatles’ US release schedule, clamour for the band rising and their second album already released in the UK, Capitol stepped in to release a US version of With The Beatles just 10 days after their US debut album.

What’s in/out: The US album format expected just 12 tracks and the current hit, so the covers (bar “Till There Was You”) were stripped off and replaced with “I Want To Hold Your Hand”, “I Saw Her Standing There” and “This Boy”.

Highest US chart position: 1

THE EARLY BEATLES

Capitol; March 22, 1964

What it is: Capitol goes back to 1963 after Vee-Jay’s licence to release the early Beatles’ material expires.

What’s in/out: 11 of the 14 tracks from Introducing… The Beatles, leaving out “Misery”, “There’s A Place” and “I Saw Her Standing There” – the latter having already appeared on Meet The Beatles.

Highest US chart position: 43

THE BEATLES’ SECOND ALBUM

Capitol; April 10, 1964

What it is: Eager to capitalise on Beatlemania, Capitol compiled a third album from as-yet-unreleased tracks.

What’s in/out: Included are the five covers from With The Beatles which didn’t make Meet The Beatles!, b-sides “Thank You Girl” and “You Can’t Do That”, “She Loves You” and its b-side “I’ll Get You” and two new recordings – “Long Tall Sally” and “I Call Your Name”.

Highest US chart position: 1

A HARD DAY’S NIGHT

United Artists; June 26, 1964

What it is: More like an actual soundtrack to the band’s first film, rather than the studio album that was the UK version.

What’s in/out: United Artists version omitted all of the UK album’s second side bar “I’ll Cry Instead”, and instead dotted the songs from the film with easy-listening instrumental versions of “I Should Have Known Better”, “And I Love Her”, “Ringo’s Theme (This Boy)” and “A Hard Day’s Night”, arranged and conducted by George Martin.

Highest US chart position: 1

SOMETHING NEW

Capitol, July 20, 1964

What it is: A somewhat milking-it post-script to A Hard Day’s Night. Not entirely new, it turned out.

What’s in/out: Various mixes of “If I Fell”, “I’ll Cry Instead”, “Tell Me Why” and “I’m Happy Just To Dance With You” from A Hard Day’s Night, accompanied by most of the UK version’s side two (“And I Love Her”, “Any Time At All”, “When I Get Home”, “Things We Said Today”). Plus “Slow Down” and “Matchbox” from the “Long Tall Sally” EP and “Komm, Gib Mir Deine Hand”.

Highest US chart position: 2

BEATLES ‘65

Capitol; December 15, 1964

What it is: Capitol’s take on Beatles For Sale.

What’s in/out: Just eight of the songs from the parent album made the cut (sorry America, no “Eight Days A Week”, “Kansas City/Hey, Hey, Hey, Hey”, “Words Of Love”, “I Don’t Want To Spoil The Party”, “Every Little Thing” or “What You’re Doing”), plus “I’ll Be Back” from A Hard Day’s Night, “I Feel Fine” and its b-side “She’s A Woman”.

Highest US chart position: 1

1965

BEATLES VI

Capitol; June 14, 1965

What it is: Another of Capitol’s stop-gap albums.

What’s in/out: Beatles VI compiled the six Beatles For Sale tracks that were left off Beatles ’65 alongside “Ticket To Ride” b-side “Yes It Is”, and “You Like Me Too Much” and “Tell Me What You See” from the UK’s forthcoming Help! album. There were also the only two songs The Beatles recorded specifically for the American market: “Dizzy Miss Lizzy” and “Bad Boy”, both Larry Williams covers.

Highest US chart position: 1

HELP!

Capitol; August 13, 1965

What it is: Help! soundtrack, following the basic blueprint of America’s A Hard Day’s Night.

What’s in/out: Out go all of the UK’s side two songs in favour of sporadic instrumentals written or arranged by Ken Thorne: “From Me To You Fantasy”, “In The Tyrol”, “Another Hard Day’s Night”, “The Bitter End/You Can’t Do That” and “The Chase”.

Highest US chart position: 1

RUBBER SOUL

Capitol; December 6, 1965

What it is: Lacking obvious cover versions to save for stop-gap albums, here’s where Capitol resorted to pure butchery. The intention was to rework Rubber Soul as a folk-rock album. Go home, Capitol, you’re drunk.

What’s in/out: “Drive My Car”, “Nowhere Man”, “What Goes On” and “If I Needed Someone” were removed for later release and replaced by “I’ve Just Seen A Face” and “It’s Only Love” from Help!. 

Highest chart position: US 1

1966

YESTERDAY AND TODAY

Capitol; June 22, 1966

What it is: Notorious for its withdrawn butcher sleeve, Yesterday And Today acted as a mid-period mash-up. An illuminating, enjoyable mess.

What’s in/out: This was where the four tracks cut from the US Rubber Soul landed; “Act Naturally” and “Yesterday” left over from Help!; “I’m Only Sleeping”, “And Your Bird Can Sing” and “Dr Robert” from the forthcoming Revolver album; and both sides of the “Day Tripper/We Can Work It Out” single.

Highest chart position: US 1

REVOLVER

Capitol, August 8, 1966

What it is: Revolver, minus most of John. And thankfully the last time the label would alter The Beatles’ records. When the band resigned with Capitol in 1967 it was on the condition that no future track listings would be changed.

What’s in/out: With three Yesterday And Today tracks removed – all John’s – Capitol’s 11-track Revolver was a far less balanced affair.

Highest chart position: US 1

With thanks to Peter Watts

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