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Sunny War announces new album, Armageddon In A Summer Dress

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Sunny War returns with a new album, Armageddon In A Summer Dress, which is due on February 21 from New West Records.

Sunny War returns with a new album, Armageddon In A Summer Dress, which is due on February 21 from New West Records.

You can hear the first track from the album below: “Walking Contradiction” featuring Steve Ignorant from Crass.

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!

Armageddon In A Summer Dress follows on from 2023’s Anarchist Gospel and was produced by Andrija Tokic (Alabama Shakes, Hurray for the Riff Raff) and features guest appearances by Valerie June, X‘s John Doe of X, Tré Burt, the RaconteursJack Lawrence, Kyshona Armstrong and John James Tourville of the Deslondes as well as Ignorant.

The tracklsting for Armageddon In A Summer Dress is:

One Way Train

Bad Times

Rise

Ghosts

Walking Contradiction (feat. Steve Ignorant)

Cry Baby (feat. Valerie June)

No One Calls Me Baby

Scornful Heart (feat. Tré Burt)

Gone Again (feat. John Doe)

Lay Your Body

Debbie Downer

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Throwing Muses share new single, “Drugstore Drastic”

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Throwing Muses return with new single "Drugstore Drastic", out today on Fire Records, with an extensive 2025 UK and EU Spring/Summer tour on sale now.

Throwing Muses return with new single “Drugstore Drastic“, out today on Fire Records, with an extensive 2025 UK and EU Spring/Summer tour on sale now.

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!

Drugstore Drastic” follows the Muses 2020 album Sun Racket and is the first salvo from a batch of new material due to come next year.

Meanwhile, Throwing Muses tour:

May 12: Blå, Oslo, Norway 
May 13: Vega Hall, Copenhagen, Denmark 
May 14: Lido, Berlin, Germany 
May 15: Gebaude 9, Cologne, Germany 
May 17: Waterfront, Norwich, UK 
May 18: Brudenell Social Club, Leeds, UK 
May 19: The Cluny, Newcastle, UK 
May 20: The Garage, Glasgow, UK 
May 21: Cyprus Avenue, Cork, Ireland 
May 22: Roisin Dubh, Galway, Ireland 
May 23: Whelan’s, Dublin, Ireland 
May 24: Academy 2, Manchester, UK 
May 25: Bearded Theory, Derbyshire, UK 
May 26: The Fleece, Bristol, UK 
May 27: Electric Ballroom, London 
May 28: White Rock Studio, Hastings, UK 
May 29: Chalk, Brighton, UK 
May 30: Cactus Club, Bruges, Belgium 
May 31: La Marberie, Paris, France 
June 2: The Chelsea, Vienna, Austria 
June 3: Strom, Munich, Germany 
June 4: Santeria Toscana 31, Milan, Italy 
June 5: Molotov, Marseille, France 

Bobby Gillespie: “I’m trying to work out what you do with a band that’s been going as long as we have”

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Primal Scream’s twelfth album Come Ahead marks a distinctive break with recent records. In this extended version of the interview in this month’s Uncut, Bobby Gillespie talks us through the radical changes in the Scream’s music-making from the ‘80s through Screamadelica to the present, social justice, his deep bonds with Andrew Innes and his late dad, and writing age-appropriate songs as a sixty-something rocker.

Primal Scream’s twelfth album Come Ahead marks a distinctive break with recent records. In this extended version of the interview in this month’s Uncut, Bobby Gillespie talks us through the radical changes in the Scream’s music-making from the ‘80s through Screamadelica to the present, social justice, his deep bonds with Andrew Innes and his late dad, and writing age-appropriate songs as a sixty-something rocker.

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!

UNCUT: It seems like the lyrics on Come Ahead follow on from some of the breakthroughs you made on Utopian Ashes, the album you made with Jehnny Beth.

BOBBY GILLESPIE: Definitely. I wrote the lyrics for Utopian Ashes just before I wrote my book Tenement Kid, and between those two releases something was unlocked and made free.

Had you become more confident that you could stand up and make art outside of Primal Scream?

With the book, definitely. We could actually have released Utopian Ashes as a Primal Scream album because I wrote 90% of the lyrics and about 90% of the melodies, and Andrew [Innes] and myself did all of the chords. But also with that record my writing process was different. Since Vanishing Point in ’96, it would be Andrew and myself in the studio, and Andrew would build up textures and atmospheres and rhythms, then I’d write lyrics that I felt would go with that particular soundscape. And we did away with chords. I’m not putting us up with these guys, but with let’s say James Brown or Fela Kuti or Miles Davis, everything’s just on the one chord, and there was influence from that stuff. We would go to the studio five days a week, Andrew would play synths and sequencers, and we’d build tracks from the bottom up, making albums as studio creations. We started Utopian Ashes like that, but thenI started adding chords with an acoustic guitar here at home and shaping the songs in a more traditional way. I was doing it on my own, and that gave me courage. And when it came to Come Ahead I found that I’d written all the lyrics before the record. They were poems. Whole sets of lyrics would come to me, and then I’d pick up the acoustic guitar.

It’s quite a psychological shift in your role in the band. Now it all starts with you.

That’s true, the collaboration comes later. We had this really good thing going for years. But I’d been writing lyrics to try and fit the music, and that was very constricting. I felt that I had more to say, and I found myself writing these long-forms songs. I thought, is this gonna be a folky kind of record? Is it gonna be singer-songwriter? You’ve gotta understand that we grew up in the ‘70s, and the blueprint for commercial rock and roll was two verses and two choruses. It takes a lot of skill to say a lot in two verses, and a lot of the times what I was saying was quite fractured, but I was writing to fit into a structure that would make an exciting pop or rock and roll record. With the original guitarist Jim [Beattie]’s beautiful elegiac 12-string then Robert Young and Andrew Innes, I was always thinking about hooks and guitar riffs. That busted open with Screamadelica when we started writing on keyboards and collaborating with Weatherall – I think the only guitar song on Screamadelica was originally “Shine Like Stars” and “Damaged”, and that changed everything as well. But being brought up on the pop song is kinda in your blood, we didn’t do the long-form song with loads of lyrics. And now I wanna write, I don’t wanna be hemmed in by having to make a three-minute song.“Settler’s Blues” on Come Ahead has 16 verses!

And along with your expansive lyrics, Andrew’s playing Floydian solos.

Before, me and him coproduced the records as well, we had so much work to do, and I think he concentrated less on guitar. This time he’s really had to think hard because there was limited space for guitar, and what he’s come up with is incredible.

You’ve both gone back to your essential talents.

I hope so. When I sing and he plays guitar, we’ve got a groove and an understanding and we know where each other’s going. And that’s Primal Scream. There’s a connection that goes all the way back to being 16.

With all that history, you’ve been quoted as saying you thought there might not be another Scream album.

That’s been overstated. In 2021, Utopian Ashes and Tenement Kid came out, I had so much work to do. David Holmes caught me up that year and said, ‘Let’s do a record.’ And I was like, ‘Oh, man, I’m not right, I don’t wanna do another record’ – at that point. At the beginning of 2020, I sat down and wrote a list of things that I wanted to do, and things I didn’t. And one of the things I didn’t wanna do was start a new Primal Scream record, and I knew that there had to be a different approach to making music. Because every year Andrew and I would make the album in the studio, it would be presented to whichever record company we were signed to, and a few months later they would release it. We would have to rehearse the band with the songs that we’d written, tour for a year ending in December, and then in the first week of January, Andrew and I would be back in the studio, feeling around in the dark to see if we could find something that sounded good.

So it became like clocking on, more than being creative?

We wanted to be creative, and also we’re workers. We didn’t wanna be lazy people. There was a period where that really did work, from ‘96 to maybe 2002, and after that, I’m not so sure. We both started having kids and families, and I guess it was just keeping ourselves busy. It would’ve been maybe better to take a couple of years off, but we wanted to keep working because it was the way we were brought up. You know, our parents worked.

Effectively, you did take a couple of years off from Primal Scream, and it seems you’ve refreshed the band and your place in it.

One-hundred percent. I’m trying to work out what you do with a band that’s been going as long as we have. I just wanna make records and write songs that reflect how I feel at the age I’m now and the world in which I find myself living, and I’m very curious about the world. It’s not like you’re trying to be better than anyone else. I just wanna make a contribution to music.

Thinking about Come Ahead’s themes, are the soldier from the closed-down mining town in “False Flags”, the cycles of colonial violence in “Settlers Blues” and the oppression and division of the working-class on other songs all sides of the same story?

“False Flags” is about someone like my father, a typical young man who joined the Army at 17. He had next to no education, my dad. He grew up during the war, his father wasn’t around. His mother was working very hard in the uranium factory. She may have got cancer working there, and he was brought up by his sister who left a home at 16. He ended up on the streets. My dad had malnutrition, he was put in homes, he was shunted from relative to relative. And he was clearly not a stupid man. He was self-educated, but he joined the Army as a way to get outta Glasgow. And he said the Army made a man of him, right? There’s a little bit of that story in there, but also about deindustrialization, and how the Army’s recruited from the poorest, most ill-educated people in society, the lower ranks. And my dad was one of them. So it’s that soldier’s tale, and how I think they were used, abused and discarded. And “Settlers Blues” is about the religion of the flag, just like the army is, and it goes through a few different centuries, and shows how the victim historically becomes the victimizer, like what’s happening just now in Gaza.

If there’s a dominant sound to Come Ahead, it’s funk or even disco. How did that come about?

The initial rhythmic tracks were breakbeats that David Holmes sent over to me, and then I would do a very lo-fi acoustic guitar sketch on my phone. It began when I got a text from David, who goes, ‘Check your email.’ I checked and heard these breakbeat drums, and “Ready To Go Home” sounded really good with it, if I modified it to fit the new, funky rhythm, and the chords moved faster. He went, ‘Brilliant. You ready for another one?’, and it was a disco rhythm. I tried the lyrics to “Innocent Money” over that, edited, because it was a long-form poem. He emailed back and said, ‘Congratulations, you’ve just started the new Primal Scream album.’ Holmes is instrumental in this record. I wanted to be produced, that was the thing. I remember calling up Andrew and saying, ‘I’m gonna make a record with David Holmes. I’d love you to play guitar.’ And he goes, ‘I’m in.’ And so Holmes has gotta get equal credit, because his ideas have been fantastic. I went over to Belfast and recorded my vocals with him, and then Andrew went over separately and did his guitars.

Come Ahead’s cover photo is of your late dad. Is this record for him?

Well, I’ll tell you. When we were researching album titles, I had a few that were a bit serious – we might have called it Manichean Times. But I thought Come Ahead works on a variety of levels. If somebody challenges you they say, ‘Come ahead’. And also, I’m not Miles Davis – far from it – but Miles had Miles Ahead, and it’s quite a cheeky title. And when I was looking for photographs for Tenement Kid, my mum had these photographs of her and my dad the year before I was born, 1960. My dad looked half Teddy Boy, half Mod, and I thought, ‘Man, that’s a really powerful image.’ Also a lot of the things I sing about on the record and my attitudes and feelings about things come from my upbringing with my dad. He was all for social justice. Some of those themes were in the record, and it all came together. I just thought it was a great rock and roll picture for the cover – Morrissey would die for that! – and a good rock’n’roll title. We’re saying, we’re still here and we’re still rocking. The Scream are rolling on and we’ve made a record we’re very proud of. It’s the kind of songs and music we should be making at this point in our career. I think I’m getting better and Andrew’s getting better. We’re doing our best.

Come Ahead is out now on BMG

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, O2 Arena, London, November 9, 2024

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“Fucking London!” bellows Nick Cave with affectionate gusto, surveying the vast crowd who have come to pay homage in the city where he first made his name. “It seems like we’ve been on tour forever, but now we’re here.” Cave is a pretty good showman these days, so it’s possible he says this kind of thing wherever he plays. But there must be a part of him that thinks back to those famously confrontational Birthday Party shows at West Hampstead’s Moonlight Club almost 45 years ago and wonders exactly how he ended up headlining two nights at the O2.

“Fucking London!” bellows Nick Cave with affectionate gusto, surveying the vast crowd who have come to pay homage in the city where he first made his name. “It seems like we’ve been on tour forever, but now we’re here.” Cave is a pretty good showman these days, so it’s possible he says this kind of thing wherever he plays. But there must be a part of him that thinks back to those famously confrontational Birthday Party shows at West Hampstead’s Moonlight Club almost 45 years ago and wonders exactly how he ended up headlining two nights at the O2.

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!

It’s been a long and sometimes troubled journey, but Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds are defiantly an arena band now. 2024’s Wild God is the first album they’ve written specifically to fill venues of this magnitude, and an awesome opening one-two punch of “Frogs” and “Wild God” demonstrates how well they’ve judged the situation.

With a bank of four gospel singers offering an omnipotent wall of sound, Cave immediately assumes the mantle of a crazed TV evangelist, lyrics from the new songs flashing up on the big screen like subliminal messages imploring us to submit to the power of whatever religion this might be: “Bring your spirit down!”

It’s an undeniably stunning spectacle, though potentially for seasoned Bad Seeds watchers it lacks a little bite. For the first few numbers it could be anyone up there playing those songs, the band deliberately hanging back to allow Cave to seize the stage. But gradually their individual personalities begin to affect proceedings.

There’s the irrepressible Warren Ellis with a jaw-dropping violin solo on “O Children”, not to mention his haunting falsetto refrain on a devastating “Bright Horses”. Guitarist George Vjestica is a glowering presence stage-left, while Big Jim Sclavunos stands directly behind Cave, silhouetted by the gospel singers’ glittering robes, bashing away at his tubular bells like bones against a rock. And then there’s stand-in bassist Colin Greenwood, grinning nervously while Cave gleefully insults a fan in the front row for wearing a Radiohead T-shirt. 

“Jubilee Street”, from the transitional 2013 album Push The Sky Away, is a great showcase for this band of Bad Seeds old and new. It retains a pleasingly raw and combustible edge, exploding into life on the all-consuming coda (“I’m transforming! I’m vibrating!”), when the stage glows orange as if it’s on fire.

How to successfully incorporate elements of the old, belligerent Nick Cave has clearly been a conundrum. There’s understandably no sign of former live staple “Stagger Lee”, its morally ambivalent tale of a psychotic rampage proving hard to square with the hard-won euphoria of a new song like “Joy”.

However, “Red Right Hand” survives and thrives in this new context. It’s always been a little bit cabaret, and here Cave amplifies those elements, turning its organ motif into a terrace chant to be sung by the “balcony people” all the way up in the second tier. “The Mercy Seat” is a harder sell, though “Papa Won’t Leave You, Henry” proves to be an invigorating encore stomp. Most impressively, the band somehow turn the carnage of “White Elephant” – key lyric: “I’ll shoot you in the fucking face” – into a wildly celebratory set-closer, with the gospel singers leaving their perch to jive with Cave at the lip of the stage.

Even amid the old fire and brimstone, his piano ballads always offered solace, and here they slot seamlessly into Cave’s new era of emotional availability. “I Need You”, from the grief-wracked Skeleton Key, is a moment of heart-stopping vulnerability in the midst of a grand spectacle. And finally, after an unfeasibly rousing rendition of “The Weeping Song”, Cave heartily thanks each individual Bad Seed before returning alone to the piano for his evergreen love song “Into Your Arms”.

With the big screen camera now trained intently on his face, it looks like Cave’s eyes are moistening along with ours. After all, these are songs in which to weep. But we won’t be weeping long – catharsis has been triumphantly achieved.

SETLIST
Frogs
Wild God
Song Of The Lake
O Children
Jubilee Street
From Her To Eternity
Long Dark Night
Cinnamon Horses
Tupelo
Conversion
Bright Horses
Joy
I Need You
Carnage
Final Rescue Attempt
Red Right Hand
The Mercy Seat
White Elephant
ENCORE
O Wow O Wow (How Wonderful She Is)
Papa Won’t Leave You, Henry
The Weeping Song
Into My Arms

Read much more about Nick Cave in the new issue of Uncut, on sale now – order your copy by clicking here

Inside this month’s free Uncut CD – the Best Of 2024

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Jack White, Beth Gibbons, Gillian Welch & David Rawlings and more appear on our latest free CD compilation.

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Jack White, Beth Gibbons, Gillian Welch & David Rawlings and more appear on our latest free CD compilation.

All copies of the Review Of The Year 2024 issue of Uncut come with a free, 15-track CD – Best Of 2024 – that showcases many of the albums that appear in our Albums Of The Year.

See below for the full tracklisting…

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!

1 NICK CAVE & THE BAD SEEDS

Wild God

[Taken from the Bad Seed Ltd album Wild God]

2 FONTAINES DC

Death Kink

[Taken from the XL album Romance]

3 GILLIAN WELCH & DAVID RAWLINGS

Empty Trainload Of Sky

[Taken from the Acony album Woodland]

4 JACK WHITE

That’s How I’m Feeling

[Taken from the Third Man album No Name]

5 MABE FRATTI

Kravitz

[Taken from the Unheard of Hope album Sentir Que No Sabes]

6 RICHARD THOMPSON

Freeze

[Taken from the New West album Ship To Shore]

7 BETH GIBBONS

Reaching Out

[Taken from the Domino album Lives Outgrown]

8 THE SMILE

Read The Room

[Taken from the XL album Wall Of Eyes]

9 CHRISTOPHER OWENS

Beautiful Horses

[Taken from the True Panther album I Wanna Run Barefoot Through Your Hair]

10 GRANDADDY

Nothin’ To Lose

[Taken from the Dangerbird album Blu Wav]

11 BASIC

New Auspicious

[Taken from the No Quarter album This Is BASIC]

12 BILL RYDER-JONES

If Tomorrow Starts Without Me

[Taken from the Domino album Iechyd Da]

13 STILL HOUSE PLANTS

M M M

[Taken from the Bison album If I Don’t Make It, I Love U]

14 BEAK>

Hungry Are We

[Taken from the Invada album >>>>]

15 SARAH DAVACHI

Night Horns (edit)

[Taken from the Late Music album The Head As Form’d In The Crier’s Choir]

“…a 1960s alternative reality where Dusty Springfield, Françoise Hardy and Brenda Lee worked in the same warehouse and smoked hash together on breaks…”

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Since we introduced My Life In Music back in 2006, in Take 108*, it’s become an essential component of Uncut, an opportunity for the artists we most admire to reveal all about the albums that have inspired them.

Since we introduced My Life In Music back in 2006, in Take 108*, it’s become an essential component of Uncut, an opportunity for the artists we most admire to reveal all about the albums that have inspired them.

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!

As this is our Review Of The Year issue, we thought it might be fun to tweak the My Life In Music format accordingly. So we asked the stars of 2024 to tell us about the musical discoveries that have blown them away this year, from new albums and reissues to music books, documentaries and gigs. The result is a 32-page A5 book given away free with our Review Of The Year issue.

As with the very best examples of My Life In Music, the 23 entries in this My Year In Music book are full of revelations and surprises. As a consequence, we hope you’ll find some exciting treasures of your own – much as you would, really, in a regular issue of Uncut.

Notebooks at the ready, then, for some precious recommendations direct form rock’s top table – including deep steers from Thurston Moore, Richard Thompson, Bill Callahan, Yasmin Williams, Bill Ryder-Jones, Nubya Garcia.

Find out about…

“…a beautiful record of drone electronics…”

“…moving, grown-ass music…”

“…a modern wonky disco classic… ”

“…very cool, riffy chamber jazz…”

“…a 1960s alternative reality where Dusty Springfield, Françoise Hardy and Brenda Lee worked in the same warehouse and smoked hash together on breaks…”

* In case you were wondering, the first artist in the MLIM hotseat was Siouxsie Sioux

LCD Soundsystem share new track, “X-Ray Eyes”

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LCD Soundsystem have released a new track, “X-Ray Eyes”. You can hear it below.

LCD Soundsystem have released a new track, “X-Ray Eyes”. You can hear it below.

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 band debuted the track on NTS Radio in October.

The band’s James Murphy has also shared a statement that acted. as an update on the band’s mooted fifth album. Their last was American Dream in 2017.

so there’s a new lcd song now called x ray eyes.

it’s the first single of what’s shaping up to be a new album. don’t ask me when that is, because we’re still working on it. but it feels very good to be putting out new music. we made a small run of silkscreened 12❞s that will sell at the upcoming LA and NYC shows, and DFA will have a limited grip of them, but don’t freak out if you don’t get one because there will be a more readily available commercial release of the same record when we can get it together. we just made a pile of white labels and are screening 100 at a time for each gig. it’s a short lead time thing. and it’s fun.

but, no, there’s no finished LP yet. but when we’re not playing shows, it’s getting closer and closer to completion. so that’s the news. anything else you hear is bullshit speculation.

go vote.

j

Echo & The Bunnymen album gets debut vinyl release

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Echo & The Bunnymen's 1999 album What Are You Going to Do with Your Life? is getting its debut release on vinyl in time to mark its 25th anniversary.

Echo & The Bunnymen‘s 1999 album What Are You Going to Do with Your Life? is getting its debut release on vinyl in time to mark its 25th anniversary.

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 album – the last to feature Les Pattison on bass – is released on November 29, both on crystal clear vinyl and on limited edition rust orange vinyl.

Fully remastered, the 1999 album will also be reissued on an expansive 34-track double CD edition featuring B-sides, alternative takes and live versions of Bunnymen classics and tracks from the album. The video for the album’s lead single “Rust” has been newly restored in HD.

The tracklisting for the expanded CD is:


Disc 1
What Are You Going To Do With Your Life?
Rust
Get In The Car
Baby Rain
History Chimes
Lost On You
Morning Sun
When It All Blows Over
Fools Like Us
The Fish Hook Girl
*
See The Horizon *
Sense Of A Life **
Beyond The Green **
The Wood +
Rust (Video Edit)
Fools Like Us (Alternate Extended Mix) +
Baby Rain (Alternative Mix 1) +
History Chimes (Piano and Guitar Version) +
 
Disc 2
What Are You Going To Do With Your Life? (Radio Edit) +
Get In The Car (Radio Edit) ++
Top Of The World (Band Version) +
Rust (Live At The Improv Theatre, 1999) +
Fools Like Us (Live At The Improv Theatre, 1999) +
Baby Rain (Live At The Improv Theatre, 1999) +
What Are You Going To Do With Your Life? (Live At The Improv Theatre, 1999)+
All That Jazz (Live At Cream, Liverpool, 1997) +
Back Of Love (Live At Cream, Liverpool, 1997) +
People Are Strange (Live At Cream, Liverpool, 1997) +
The Cutter (Live At Cream, Liverpool, 1997) +
Lips Like Sugar (Live At Cream, Liverpool, 1997) +
Over The Wall (Live At Cream, Liverpool, 1997) +
Do It Clean Medley (Live At Cream, 1997) +
The Killing Moon (Live At Cream, 1997) +
Rust (BBC Radio 1 – Live Lounge, 1999)

 * From Rust CD Single 1
 ** From Rust CD SIngle 2
+ previously unreleased
++ from Get in The Car CD Single

AAA

Aphrodite’s Child – 666 – The Apocalypse Of St John: 50th Anniversary Boxset

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If The Rolling Stones’ notorious free concert at Altamont in December 1969 signalled the end of the ’60s’ hippie ideal, then Aphrodite’s Child’s 666 is the sacrificial ceremony where the hopes and dreams of that decade are finally turned to dust in a beautiful, cacophonous, ridiculous melange of progressive rock, psychedelic folk, Greek myth, Christian scripture, Monty Python surrealism and countercultural conspiracy. The victims at this ceremony? Aphrodite’s Child themselves, whose four members went their separate ways long before this controversial 83-minute double-album based on the Book of Revelations was released in June 1972, two years after the band had delivered it to their label, Mercury.

If The Rolling Stones’ notorious free concert at Altamont in December 1969 signalled the end of the ’60s’ hippie ideal, then Aphrodite’s Child’s 666 is the sacrificial ceremony where the hopes and dreams of that decade are finally turned to dust in a beautiful, cacophonous, ridiculous melange of progressive rock, psychedelic folk, Greek myth, Christian scripture, Monty Python surrealism and countercultural conspiracy. The victims at this ceremony? Aphrodite’s Child themselves, whose four members went their separate ways long before this controversial 83-minute double-album based on the Book of Revelations was released in June 1972, two years after the band had delivered it to their label, Mercury.

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!

Stewarded by the Greek maestro Vangelis Papathanassiou – the visionary behind the Blade Runner and Chariots Of Fire scores – and fronted by the singer and bassist Demis Roussos – later, the kaftan king of ’70s kitsch – alongside guitarist Silver Koulouris and drummer Lucas Sideras, Aphrodite’s Child began life as Athens’ answer to The Byrds or The Beatles. Drawing on psych-rock, flower power and the lush balladry of Mikis Theodorakis, they achieved notable success in Europe with their first two albums, End Of The World (1968) and It’s Five O’Clock (1969), and singles “I Want To Live” and “Rain And Tears”.

But Vangelis, the driving musical force, soon tired of that charade and sought new challenges to match his colossal ambition. Based in Paris to escape the right-wing dictatorship in Greece – like the rest of the band – he’d experienced the riots of May ’68 and, though not political, sensed something in the air. An encounter the following year with the writer and filmmaker Costas Ferris, who’d touted a script for a film called Aquarius to an unimpressed Pink Floyd, led to Ferris proposing a theme for an Aphrodite’s Child concept album based on either a modern-day Passion Play or the Revelation of St John (known as Apocalypse in Greece), set in the here and now. The idea of Apocalypse – renamed 666 – appealed to Vangelis, who felt the need to compose music not as a celebration of the Swinging ’60s but rather as an almost violent reaction to it. On jazz freak-out “Altamont”, for example, the gods view the unfolding chaos from a mountain: “We saw a lamb with seven eyes/We saw a beast with seven horns,” intones the album’s English narrator John Forst. He also mentions “the rolling people”, which The Verve would use for Urban Hymns.

To that end, Vangelis composed a Tommy-style rock oratorio based on Ferris’s script in which an audience at a circus watches the animals and performers act out a diabolical ritual while the real Armageddon whips up chaos outside the big top. While the audience thinks this is part of the show, the all-seeing narrator becomes more and more exasperated. When the two scenes collide, all hell breaks loose – realised by Vangelis in the penultimate 20-minute jam “All The Seats Were Occupied”, which weaves excerpts from the whole album into a frenetic finale. Much like Alejandro Jodorowsky’s contemporaneous film The Holy Mountain, which also blends religion and magical realism, the more you think you understand 666, the less sense it makes.

Vangelis and his bandmates spent 10 months in Europa Sonor studios in Paris, burning through $90,000 in the process and forbidding their paymasters to hear the works in progress. If Mercury had come to terms with the fact that Aphrodite’s Child no longer produced chart-topping romantic pop, they struggled with the potentially blasphemous nature of 666 – not helped by the four weatherbeaten musicians who, with their flowing locks and furrowed brows, resembled fallen apostles. Yet there are some sublime songs, such as “The Four Horsemen” and “Loud Loud Loud”. In the end, the one track that most vexed the label was “” (Infinity), in which the Greek actress Irene Papas chants, “I was, I am, I am to come” as an improvised, orgasmic a cappella, becoming increasingly hysterical as Vangelis rattles percussion approvingly. Intended to convey the Second Coming of Christ through the pain of birth and the joy of sex, its X-rated content vexed Mercury who, fearing a “Je T’aime”-style backlash, asked Vangelis to cut it from the album. He refused, and so the label sat on the record for two years, only then releasing it via their new leftfield Vertigo imprint. On the one-year anniversary of the album’s completion, a miffed Vangelis threw a party in the studio where it was recorded and played it in full to his guests. One admirer in attendance, Salvador Dali, proposed a lavish stunt in Barcelona to promote it, which didn’t happen.

The original recording of Papas apparently lasts 39 minutes, which Vangelis cut to five, and some fans might feel short-changed that this fabled onanistic odyssey has been omitted from this 50th-anniversary boxset. In addition to the video of a rare 1972 Discorama documentary and a Dolby Atmos revamp, what’s of interest here are the new remasters – overseen by Vangelis before he died in May 2022 – of both the Greek pressing of 666 and the one released in the rest of the world. On the more desirable Greek version, several songs are longer and mixed differently; “Battle Of The Locusts” features extra Hendrix riffing from Koulouris, while the bluesy groove of “Hic Et Nunc” plays on for two further minutes.

Heavier than Led Zeppelin, saucier than Serge and wilder than The White Album – in these secular times, every home should have a copy of 666.

Bob Dylan, Usher Hall, Edinburgh, November 5, 2024

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If, at this late date, you still need proof Bob Dylan is not a man to be trusted, then this unexpected return to the UK for the latest leg of the Rough And Rowdy Ways tour is a good place to start. Certainly, after the triumphant fourth and final show at the London Palladium – with its two extra curtain calls – you could have been forgiven for thinking that Dylan was bidding farewell to the capital, before making a last, dignified excursion round the country. So it came as a surprise when this latest run of 10 UK shows were announced in July – not just simply Dylan’s decision to return to the UK, but the question this inevitably raised. When you’ve played shows as good as the ones Uncut witnessed in London, Glasgow and Oxford in 2022 what, then, do you do for an encore?

If, at this late date, you still need proof Bob Dylan is not a man to be trusted, then this unexpected return to the UK for the latest leg of the Rough And Rowdy Ways tour is a good place to start. Certainly, after the triumphant fourth and final show at the London Palladium – with its two extra curtain calls – you could have been forgiven for thinking that Dylan was bidding farewell to the capital, before making a last, dignified excursion round the country. So it came as a surprise when this latest run of 10 UK shows were announced in July – not just simply Dylan’s decision to return to the UK, but the question this inevitably raised. When you’ve played shows as good as the ones Uncut witnessed in London, Glasgow and Oxford in 2022 what, then, do you do for an encore?

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 answer lies somewhere in the 25 dates Dylan played on this year’s Outlaw Music Festival Tour between June and September. Appearing in outdoor venues as part of a larger line-up, Dylan replaced drummer Jerry Pentacost with Jim Keltner, swapping out the Rough And Rowdy Ways-heavy sets for more festival-friendly material including “Highway 61 Revisited”, “Simple Twist Of Fate” and “Rainy Day Women #12 & 35”. Reconvening the Rough And Rowdy Ways tour in Prague in October, Dylan retained Keltner and also a couple of the big hitters from the Outlaw shows. As a consequence, this leg of the tour has shifted focus and tone; Dylan, once again, is moving on.

Superficially, he’s changed three songs in the setlist since 2022 – “Most Likely You Go Your Way (and I’ll Go Mine)”, “Gotta Serve Somebody” and “That Old Black Magic” are out, replaced by three older songs. But the key to this 2024 version is Keltner. I last saw Keltner play with Dylan at Docklands Arena in 2002 – and much as then it’s impossible to take your eyes off him this evening. The 2022 shows had a very aquatic, slow-moving quality, partly down to the feline brushwork of Dylan’s then-drummer, Charlie Drayton. Keltner – wearing aviator shades for the entire show, silver hair swept back – is a much more emphatic player than Drayton. His explosive playing on tonight’s opener “All Along The Watchtower”, for instance, sets the agenda for what follows. His drumming on “Desolation Row”, meanwhile, recalls the machine gun intro to “Peggy Sue”, but sustained over nine minutes. He brings similar potency to the bluesier songs on Rough And Rowdy Ways, where his solidity and swing carries “False Prophet” and “To Be Alone With You” as much as, say, Doug Lancio’s jarring bursts of guitar. But despite the intensity of Keltner’s delivery in these lounder moments, his discreet brushwork brings warmth and intimacy to more lambent numbers like “Key West (Philosopher Pirate)” and “I’ve Made Up My Mind To Give Myself To You”. Elsewhere, “Watching The River Flow” carries an additional poignancy: the original 1971 recording was Keltner’s first session with Dylan. As if to underscore their shared history, the two men routinely exchange looks and comments with one another between songs.

If the focus has shifted in Keltner’s favour, nevertheless the rest of the band are still on point. Dylan’s baby grand is centre stage, with the other musicians placed around it, in the same positions they took in 2022. Tony Garnier and Doug Lancio are still stage right, closely following Dylan’s piano playing, with Bob Britt on stage left. Dylan is far more active than I’ve seen him in a long time. He started “All Along The Watchtower” sitting down, playing guitar with his back to the audience. By “I Contain Multitudes”, the third song, he’s upright – which is how he spends most of the show. We even get a little jig during “Goodbye Jimmy Reed” which raises a cheer from the stalls. But for the most part, Dylan leans across his baby grand, as if conspiratorially addressing the audience, occasionally reaching down to play piano or playing harp. The piano playing is every bit as strong and resourceful as in 2022 – on a particularly radical overhaul of “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue”, Dylan channels Thelonious Monk, finding angular, spacious shapes between the melodies while on “To Be Alone With You” he’s playing wild honky tonk riffs.

And then, just after 9pm, he’s gone. There are still seven shows left to play, including three at the Albert Hall. But after that, nothing has been announced. Is this, then, the end of the Rough And Rowdy Ways tour? And if so, what comes next? I like to think we’ll find out soon enough…

Bob Dylan and his band setlist Usher Hall, Edinburgh, November 6, 2024:

All Along The Watchtower

It Ain’t Me, Babe

I Contain Multitudes

False Prophet

When I Paint My Masterpiece

Black Rider

My Own Version Of You

To Be Alone With You

Crossing The Rubicon

Desolation Row

Key West (Philosopher Pirate)

Watching The River Flow

It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue

I’ve Made Up My Mind To Give Myself To You

Mother Of Muses

Goodbye Jimmy Reed

Every Grain Of Sand

Uncut Review Of The Year 2024

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All print copies come with two gifts: a 32-page, A5 book, My Year In Music, where the stars of 2024 share their albums, books, gigs and other musical highlights from the last 12 months; and also a 15-track Best Of 2024 CD starring Jack White, Gillian Welch & David Rawlings, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Beth Gibbons, The Smile, Richard Thompson, Bill Ryder-Jones and more!

NICK CAVE: After a period of carnage and contemplation, Wild God found the legendary band in rip-roaring form, powered by their leader’s emotional candour and renewed lust for life. Back in Berlin, a location that looms large in the group’s lore, Cave and cohorts consider their ongoing transformation: “It’s really about the present moment…”

UNCUT’S REVIEW OF THE YEAR: Standby for the definitive look back at 2024. The 80 Best New Albums Of 2024, 30 Best Archive Releases, 20 Best Films, 10 Best Books and 10 Best Music Documentaries… plus Bruce Springsteen, Waxahatchee, Beak> and English Teacher speak!

ALICE COLTRANE: Since her death in 2007, the reputation of this spiritual jazz pioneer has continued to grow to the point where it now matches that of her esteemed husband John. In what has been designated The Year Of Alice, we hear from those who worked, lived and prayed alongside the musician and teacher to discover what drove her to create such transcendent music: “There was an energy around her, a sacredness”…

ELVIS COSTELLO: With an enhanced reissue of his much-loved King Of America album, EC explores the new shoots in the old routes that have taken him around America’s greatest music cities for the last 40 years. “I’m grateful for the trip I’ve been on,” he tells us.

KRIS KRISTOFFERSON: Singer, film star, soldier, academic and activist, KRIS KRISTOFFERSON, who died last month, could seemingly turn his hand to anything – not least songwriting, where he helped take country music in bold new directions. But as we discover, success sat awkwardly with his rebel spirit. “Mark Twain was special, Bob Dylan’s special, all The Beatles are special. Kris fits in with that lot, you know?”

CASSANDRA JENKINS: The singer-soungwriter’s latest record My Light, My Destroyer is one of the breakthrough albums of this year: a rich, emotional blend of warmth and melancholy set against cosmic awe. In Portland, Oregon, she explains how she overcame self-doubt and grief to discover truths about herself and her songwriting. “I’m just a delicate flower,” she explains. “So it’s pretty funny tothrow a delicate flower into a tornado.”

AN AUDIENCE WITH… JOE BOYD: The folk-rock super-producer talks Syd, Sandy, 6am calls from Kubrick and ping-pong with John Cale.

THE MAKING OF “WILD THING” BY THE TROGGS: A “weird demo with cuckoo noises” touted by a country songsmith flops for The Wild Ones but catches the ear of Hampshire’s beat hopefuls. “It had something about it…”

ALBUM BY ALBUM WITH MICK HEAD: The rocky road from The Pale Fountains to Shack to Strands to the New Elastic Band and back.

MY LIFE IN MUSIC WITH JULIA HOLTER: LA’s musical magical realist on her loud city songs: “There’s sorrow and ecstasy and all the feelings…”

REVIEWED: White Denim, Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, Father John Misty, Joni Mitchell, Michael Kiwanuka, Randy Newman, Dusty Springfield, Jeff Parker, Paul Simon, The Shovel Dance Collective, George Harrison, David Gilmour, Haley Heynderickx, Silk Road Ensemble with Rhiannon Giddens, Ray Charles, Trees Speak and more.

PLUS: Phil Lesh and Barbara Dane RIP, Blur, John Peel’s record collection, Jesse Malin, an REM/Black Crowes/Screaming Trees supergroup and introducing… Fievel Is Glauque.

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Introducing Uncut’s Review Of 2024

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

AMONG the many surprises 2024 had to offer, arguably the most unexpected took place on the night of September 25. “Happy Birthday Mary Jo!” Bob Dylan wrote on X. “See you in Frankfort.”

https://twitter.com/bobdylan/status/1839062887408476449

Whoa – who was Mary Jo? And did he mean Frankfort, the state capital of Kentucky, or Frankfurt, where Dylan was due to play a few weeks later? And hang on, was that really Bob Dylan anyway? A further post on September 30 said, “I just found out the other day that Bob Newhart was gone. Rest in peace Bob. You brought us a lot of joy.”

More followed – including a restaurant recommendation when in New Orleans and a thwarted experience at a publishing convention in – yes – Frankfurt.

While Dylan’s presence on social media may well have sent scholars into a lather (are the posts canon?), his missives, however random or cryptic they may appear, are nevertheless an intriguing development. They read more like short stories, full of chance meetings and melancholy outcomes: “I ran into one of the Buffalo Sabres in the elevator at the Prague hotel,” Dylan wrote on October 9. “They were in town to play the New Jersey Devils. He invited me to the game but I was performing that night.”

It’s unlikely Dylan will be posting much about our Review Of The Year, although – no spoilers, really – he’s in it. For this year’s poll, 44 contributors voted for a total of 426 new albums and 180 archival releases. For anyone who is interested, there were 86 votes between our Album Of The Year and the album in second place, but only six votes separating the next three albums.

Alongside our Albums Of The Year, Archival Releases Of The Year, Best Books, Films and Music Documentaries, you can find Nick Cave, Alice Coltrane, Bruce Springsteen, Mick Head, Cassandra Jenkins, Julia Holter, Waxahatchee, Beak> and English Teacher.

There’s plenty to dig into besides the Review Of The Year polls, including Elvis Costello, Joe Boyd, The Troggs and a 32-page supplement: My Year In Music, where the stars of 2024 share their favourite albums, reissues, books and gigs of the year with us.

I’d especially recommend Alastair McKay’s powerful tribute to one of Uncut’s formative influences, Kris Kristofferson. As Margo Price tells Alastair, “His plain-spoken yet eloquent way of writing was a gift. He wrote from the heart and could paint a story or an entire landscape in just a few verses. His writing and acting both encapsulate the woes and the wins of humanity. His words and songs, they have living, breathing souls. They are sacred.”

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!

Quincy Jones: “I learned the difference between music and the music business”

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This article originally appeared in Uncut Take 163 from December 2010

This article originally appeared in Uncut Take 163 from December 2010

Quincy Jones keeps Uncut waiting for an hour before we’re finally ushered into his presence. Thankfully, this proves to be the only evidence of prima donna behaviour from the legendary producer and arranger – when we finally meet, he’s charming and affable, brandishing photos of his kids and relating tales of his extensive travels (China is a current obsession). As we talk through a handful of his many career highs, “Q” heads off on entertaining tangents: numerology, the banning of slave drums in 1692 America, the similarity between Chinese and African languages, the emotional pull of a major seventh chord and why Pro-Tools will never replicate his sound. In passing, he name-drops the Stones, Brando, Picasso and David Beckham. At 77, with a credit on over 100 albums, we have to ask what the secret is to his success. “The sequence is very important,” he says. “That’s the architecture of an album…”

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QUINCY JONES
THE BIRTH OF A BAND

(MERCURY, 1959)

Jones’ third album was recorded half in New York, half in Paris – a reflection of how important the latter city had become to him in the late 1950s

JONES: I first came to Europe with the Lionel Hampton band when I was in my early 20s. In 1957 Eddy Barclay offered me the job of musical director at Barclay Records in Paris, which was great firstly because I also got to study under Nadia Boulanger, who had been mentor to Stravinsky, Aaron Copland and many other classical musicians. She was the lady. I learned so much from her – in New York they wouldn’t let you arrange strings if you were black – only horns or rhythm section.

Paris at that time was hot. Bardot was 24, Jeanne Moreau 23, I got to meet people like Pablo Picasso and James Baldwin. Lots of American jazz musicians went and lived in Paris because they loved the freedom and respect they got compared to back home. France nurtured jazz.

I went back to Paris in 1959 with an all-star band for the European tour of a Broadway show, Free And Easy. The band was terrific – guys like (trumpeters) Clark Terry and Harry Edison and (alto sax) Phil Woods, all the guys on Birth Of A Band!, but after the show bombed I lost a lot of money trying to hold the band together. That’s when I learned the difference between music and the music business.

RAY CHARLES
THE GENIUS OF RAY CHARLES

(ATLANTIC, 1959)

In previous years Charles had scored a string of R&B hits but after signing with Atlantic the scene was set for crossover success. Who better to help arrange than Ray’s old sidekick…

That was the first time I worked with Ray in the studio, though we had been friends since we were teenagers. He had wanted to get as far away from Florida as he could and that was Seattle, which in 1946 was on fire.  It was a port for the Pacific Theatre in WW2.  You could hear R&B, be-bop, any kind of music. The Chicago pimps moved there ‘cos that’s where the business was. We used to wear sailor suits because the sailors got the girls. That was an amazing time to come up.

After our paying gigs playing pop hits, Ray and I would go down to the Elks Club and play bebop all night for free. Ray sang like Nat Cole and Charles Brown and played alto sax like Charlie Parker. By 1959 he was a big star but controversial in the black community because he had taken gospel music and made it into pop records like “I Got A Woman”. Then he broadened out into big band jazz like Genius, with people from the Basie and Ellington bands playing. We did it again a few years later on Genius Plus Soul = Jazz, which has a great arrangement of “One Mint Julep”.

QUINCY JONES
BIG BAND BOSSA NOVA

(MERCURY, 1961)

A trip to Brazil in 1961 furnished Quincy with a new source of inspiration and another signature tune, “Soul Bossa Nova”, a swaggering big band blast still familiar two generations on through the Austin Powers soundtrack

We had previously made a State Department trip to the Middle East with Dizzy Gillespie, and it got back to Washington that we had done a good job. They said “We’re gonna send you to Latin America.” We went to Ecuador, Montevideo, Buenos Aires and finally to Brazil. Lalo Schiffrin (pianist and composer) had told me, ‘Wait until you get there!’ It was during the time that Antonio Carlos Jobim and Joaos and Astrid Gilberto and the rest of the bossa nova – ‘new wave’ – were happening. When you listen to it (hums Jobim’s “She’s A Carioca”) – all those flattened fifths in bossa, you can see how influenced it was by jazz. Everyone caught the bug – Stan Getz obviously, and Sinatra did an album with Jobim.

I still go every year to Carnival in Rio and then to see my friends up in Bahia for the carnival in Salvador de Bahia. Next year we’re planning a float in the Rio carnival parade for New Orleans musicians, have them meet up with Brazilians, and we’re gonna have William Friedkin [director of The Exorcist] shoot a film there for an IMAX movie, because a lot of Americ`ns don’t know about carnival, which is a spectacular and spiritual event. Imagine – all those girls dancing on a giant screen!

FRANK SINATRA
SINATRA AT THE SANDS

(REPRISE, 1966)

In 1964 Quincy had arranged a Sinatra hit, “Fly Me To The Moon”, which appeared on It Might As Well Be Swing, with backing from the Count Basie orchestra. When Sinatra decided to cut his first live album, Basie and Quincy were his go-to guys

I first met Frank when I was playing a gig for one of Princess Grace Kelly’s events in Monaco in the late ‘50s. He had me playing “Man With The Golden Arm” as he came on stage and worked the crowd, which included people like Cary Grant and David Niven, then he just took off into “Fly Me To The Moon”. Sensational. Then I worked with him and the Count Basie orchestra in 1964. Those were the days when singers were expected to deliver words like musicians played notes. Frank was actually the one who started calling me “Q”. When we were flying out to Vegas, he asked if we could play “Shadow Of Your Smile”. I said, Sure, as long as you know the lyrics. Then he wrote out the words over and over again and the next night he hit it perfectly – just check the record. And I worked with him again on ”LA Is My Lady”, one of his last records, in 1984.

Sinatra had certain catchphrases. He would say; “Q, live every day like it’s your last and one day you’ll be right.”

THE ITALIAN JOB
MUSIC FROM THE ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE SOUNDTRACK

(PARAMOUNT, 1969)

Quincy had scored a dozen films by the time the call came to soundtrack The Italian Job – among them The Pawnbroker, In Cold Blood and In the Heat Of The Night. From The Italian Job an English national anthem would emerge …

I recall it well, as that was the time my son (Quincy Jones III) was born – he was born in London. We had a lot of fun doing the score – we were recording in the daytime at Olympic Studios where the Stones were cutting Sympathy For The Devil at night. Michael Caine would come by every day, then we’d go eat spaghetti con vongele in the King’s Road. Michael and I became great friends – I was with him and Shakira [Caine’s wife] just last month – and I discovered we were born the same year, day and hour – we’re celestial twins. Michael taught me cockney rhyming slang – “Watch the boat on the ice cream and check out the bristols on the richard.” No-one knows what you’re talking about.

I got an Ivor Novello award a couple of years ago and Elton John told me that only a Brit could write “Self Preservation Society”, which became the anthem of the movie, and I said wrong! Don Black did the words but I did the melody. I heard that they play it at every English soccer game – David Beckham told me that!

MICHAEL JACKSON
OFF THE WALL

(EPIC, 1979)

Prior to producing Off The Wall, Quincy was known as a jazz man and soundrack composer – the nearest he had come to making a crossover black pop record was working with guitarist George Benson on Give Me The Night. That was about to change

My connection with Michael came through love, like everything else y’know! I met him when he was twelve at Sammy Davis’s house. Then Michael played the part of the scarecrow in The Wiz (1978 Motown adaptation of Wizard Of Oz) where I was the musical director. On a musical the most important thing is the pre-recording because the movie is shot to that, at least the songs are, the score comes later.

Michael asked me for suggestions on who might produce his first solo album. I didn’t know how intuitive he was; he knew everyone’s lines, dance steps, he didn’t miss a thing. They were rehearsing one day and Michael’s thing was to read a famous quote – he pronounced Socrates as ‘so-crates’ and when I corrected him he looked like a deer in the headlights he said ‘Really?’. At that point I said I’d like to take a shot at his solo album and he said ‘Really?’ in the same way.

The record company said “No, Quincy’s too jazzy,” but that record saved half the A&R jobs there because it sold 12 million copies. I got Michael to sing “She’s Out Of My Life”, a song I was saving for Sinatra, and he cried during every take. The tears are there on the record, man.

MICHAEL JACKSON
THRILLER

(EPIC, 1982)

Where Off The Wall had been been recorded quickly, making Thriller sprawled over months, with obsessive attention to detail. Matters were complicated by the decision to make another album concurrently – E.T. , a ‘storybook’ of Spielberg’s feature film that Quincy scored and Michael narrated (it was soon wthdrawn as at Epic’s insistence). Deadlines loomed

In the summer of 1982 I had too many projects on the go. I was working on Thriller with Michael, working with the McCartneys, and working on E.T. To record Thriller I had three studios on the go – there would be Michael in one, Eddie Van Halen in another (Guitarist on “Thriller”), Bruce (Swedien, Q’s engineer and mixer) in another. We recorded a huge amount of material for the album. Then when we’d assembled nine tracks I took out the weakest cuts and put in “Beat It” and “Human Nature”, that really turned the album upside down cos we had “Billie Jean”, “Starting Something” and “Thriller”. It was incredibly strong. The sequence is very important – that’s the architecture of an album. When you have multi-producers you end up in trouble ‘cos they don’t have any sense of overal architecture and the dramatic sequencing.

Eventually we finished at nine in the morning after putting the overdubs on “Beat It”. I took Michael to my house and said Bruce is going to take the tape to get it mastered, so I got three hours sleep. When it came to the playback the album wasn’t working, so Michael starts to cry.

I’d been telling ‘em all along that if you want big grooves, you have to have 18 or 19 minutes a side, not 24 or 27 cos it won’t hold it, you get a tinny sound. I’d been asking Michael to cut down the introduction to ”Billie Jean” ‘cos it’s 11 minutes long and he’s saying “But it makes me want to dance,” and who are we to argue with him, us fat belly guys? Anyway we had to cut it down, take out a verse.

I’ve always tried to make records that have six exits and six entries so you can’t hear all of it at once; you have the bass line here, the backing singers there and so forth and you can’t hear it all, so you play it until the vinyl wears out and have to buy another copy.

Nobody knew Thriller would become the biggest album in the history of music, nobody, because that’s what God sends.

It never ceases to shock me that wherever in the world I go – and I travel constantly, man, I love it – that at twelve o’clock you are going to hear “Billie Jean” or “Wanna be Starting Something”. Else it will be “Ai No Corrida” from my album The Dude, or George Benson’s “Give Me the Night”. Absolutely everywhere!

MILES DAVID & QUINCY JONES
MILES & QUINCY IN MONTREAUX

(WARNER BROS, 1991)

Jazz’s dark prince finally acceded to Quincy’s request to revisit the tunes he’d recorded with producer Gil Evans in the 1950s on classic albums like Miles Ahead and Sketches of Spain. It proved to be Miles’ final album

Miles never wanted to do that concert. It took me 15 years to talk him into that. He was never one to look back, always wanted to keep moving forwards. His early stuff, though, has to be some of my all time favourite music. People always ask me how to get kids into jazz and I say “Give em Kind Of Blue’ and make them take it every day, like orange juice.” But I also liked Bitches Brew. People were telling us not to mix jazz with rock, that myopic mentality. That’s bullshit. Miles, Cannonball Adderley Herbie Hancock and myself used to talk about this, how you should try everything. We’d talk about rock bands. I used to say, “How come we’re drinking on a Saturday night and they’re the ones with the gigs?” One by one we expanded – Herbie wrote “Watermelon Man,” Cannonball did “Mercy Mercy Mercy”, I did “Walkin Into Space” in 1969 and Miles did Bitch’s Brew in 1970. See, the electric bass changed everything. That instrument was the one changed the genre – there would be no rock and roll, no Motown, no nothing without an electric rhythm section.

Montreux was the first time I ever saw Miles smile at the audience! He waved a towel at the audience and smiled. Once Miles had done the show he loved it. He said “We should take this shit all over the world.” I don’t know why he was so resistant, man, that was Miles. He was mad on technology, like Brando – they were complex guys.

QUINCY JONES
BACK ON THE BLOCK

(QWEST, 1989)

After three Jackson albums and We Are the World, had Quincy run out of road? Uh-uh. Back On The Block mixed old school talents like Ella Fitzgerald and Ray Charles with cutting edge rappers and mixed genres into a seamless whole. It won seven Grammys, including best album

We’d won Grammys on other albums like The Dude and Smackwater Jack, but nothing like Back On The Block. It had the widest range – be-bop, zulu music, soul…that’s my speciality, I love that conglomerate. It kind of ushered in hip-hop too, ‘cos we had Ice T, Daddy Kane, Melle Mel, Kool Moe Dee.

I’m all for the rappers, because the spoken word is the third genre after music and singing, right? It’s like praise songs in Africa. The lyrical skills are astounding but the lyrical content is often a problem and sampling is also a bad habit. I understand the fascination with gangsterism because I grew up in Chicago, the home of that stuff.

So a lot of hip-hop’s problems have a social source and that’s why I’m working hard now to build a consortium to get to the kids in school to know their roots. It’s crazy that kids don’t know about Duke Ellington and The Cotton Club. It’s starting to turn round – a lot of young guys come to me and say “I want you to teach me how to be a musician.” That’s the attitude we want.

The Cure, The Troxy, London, November 1 2024

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It’s probably a couple of decades too late, but Robert Smith is finding that his deepest fears are coming true. Now aged 65, he recently fretted about whether he’d make it to 70 – and still be around to celebrate the 50th anniversary of The Cure. Certainly, the coal-black angst and existential melancholia that has become the band’s stock-in-trade has taken on an additional potency in the last few years: health scares proliferated, loved ones have died. We have become used to venerable artists like Dylan, Neil Young and Springsteen ruminating on ageing and mortality, now it seems that it’s Smith’s turn to manage the problematic business of growing old.

It’s probably a couple of decades too late, but Robert Smith is finding that his deepest fears are coming true. Now aged 65, he recently fretted about whether he’d make it to 70 – and still be around to celebrate the 50th anniversary of The Cure. Certainly, the coal-black angst and existential melancholia that has become the band’s stock-in-trade has taken on an additional potency in the last few years: health scares proliferated, loved ones have died. We have become used to venerable artists like Dylan, Neil Young and Springsteen ruminating on ageing and mortality, now it seems that it’s Smith’s turn to manage the problematic business of growing old.

THE CURE, BRYAN FERRY, THE MC5, RADIOHEAD, KIM DEAL, PAUL WELLER AND MORE STAR IN THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER A COPY HERE

When Seventeen Seconds came out in 1980, it gave The Cure their unique voice, setting them on a path that took them from tortured post-punk doomsayers to alt-goth superstars with 1989’s Disintegration – an album which included some of the band’s sweetest songs (“Pictures Of You”, “Lovesong”) and their most fraught (“Disintegration”, “Fascination Street”). On the title track, Smith was already predicting “how the end always is”; he was just 30.

Songs from both Seventeen Seconds and Disintegration feature significantly in tonight’s show – as if Smith is deliberately showing us his workings, tracing a specific throughline that leads to their new album, Songs Of A Lost World. The ‘lost world’ is the promise and optimism the Apollo 11 Moon landing represented to the 10-year-old Smith. In “Endsong”, one of Smith’s most straightforwardly autobiographical songs, he is “outside in the dark staring at the blood red moon / Remembering the hopes and dreams I had and all I had to do / And wondering what became of that boy and the world he called his own / I’m outside in the dark wondering how I got so old”.

Powered by Jason Cooper’s hypnotic drum tattoo, “Endsong” is a highlight of the band’s first set – Songs Of A Lost World played in full. This allows us to take stock of The Cure in 2024, a band partly changed by the events of the last few years, but coming back together to usher in their latest milestone, their first album of new music for 16 years. There are other reasons to celebrate, too. Smith takes a moment to reveal that he and Simon Gallup are celebrating 45 years of performing live together. Essentially Smith’s consigliere, Gallup, dressed tonight in a leopard-skin overcoat, offers a more dynamic and dramatic stage presence than his capo, prowling the stage, delivering low-slung basslines that run from teeth-rattling heaviosity to alienated funk. Elsewhere, Roger O’Donnell returns to keyboards following his battle with lymphoma while another old face, multi-instrumentalist Perry Bamonte, has been back in the band since 2022. As much as it is a celebration of music, tonight also feels like a testament to enduring friendships. Of the ‘junior’ members, Reeves Gabrels (now a mere decade into his tenure with the band) is more naturally inclined to stretch out in the songs – no doubt his expansive solos on “A Night Like This” and “From The Edge Of The Deep Green Sea” dovetail with Smith’s unabated love for Hendrixian flourish.

When the band reach the Seventeen Seconds section – “At Night”, “M”, “Secrets”, “Play For Today” and “A Forest” – they build on the wintry minimalism of the original album, underscoring the keen melodies that power Smith’s songwriting. A triumphant, hit-laden home stretch – “Lullaby”, “The Walk”, “Friday I’m In Love”, “Close To Me”, “Why Can’t I Be You?”, “Boys Don’t Cry” – reinforces both the celebratory nature of tonight’s show and the unspoken camaraderie that exists between Smith and his bandmates. The resilience of these songs and the resilience of The Cure are there for us to marvel at.

The Cure setlist:

Alone

And Nothing Is Forever

A Fragile Thing

Warsong

Drone:Nodrone

I Can Never Say Goodbye

All I Ever Am

Endsong


Plainsong

Pictures Of You

High

Lovesong

Burn

Fascination Street

A Night Like This

Push

Inbetween Days

Just Like Heaven

From The Edge Of The Deep Green Sea

Disintegration

At Night

M

Secrets

Play For Today

A Forest

Lullaby

The Walk

Friday I’m In Love

Close To Me  

Why Can’t I Be You? Boys Don’t Cry

The Verve announce This Is Music: The Singles 20th Anniversary 2 LP set

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The Verve are releasing a 2 LP edition of their 2004 compilation, This Is Music: The Singles on January 24, 2025 through UMR.

The Verve are releasing a 2 LP edition of their 2004 compilation, This Is Music: The Singles on January 24, 2025 through UMR.

THE CURE, BRYAN FERRY, THE MC5, RADIOHEAD, KIM DEAL, PAUL WELLER AND MORE STAR IN THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER A COPY HERE

This is the first time This Is Music: The Singles has been released on vinyl. It comes in black and light blue/red vinyl editions. You can pre-order here.

This vinyl edition has been updated with the two tracks pulled from the sessions for Urban Hymns – “This Could Be My Moment” and “Monte Carlo” – replaced by the singles from the band’s 2008 reunion album, Forth – “Love is Noise” and “Rather Be“.

In addition, “She’s A Superstar” is included in its original, full- length, eight-and-a-half-minute form (rather than the five-minute edit that featured on the first edition of this compilation).

The tracklisting for This Is Music: The Singles is:

LP 1

Side A

This Is Music

Slide Away

Lucky Man

History

Side B

She’s A Superstar

On Your Own

Blue Sonnet

LP 2

Side C

All In The Mind

The Drugs Don’t Work

Gravity Grave

Side D

Bittersweet Symphony

Love Is Noise

Rather Be

Uncut’s New Music Playlist for October 2024

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As you furiously carve those pumpkins and meticulously apply the zombie make-up, why not dig into our latest playlist?

As you furiously carve those pumpkins and meticulously apply the zombie make-up, why not dig into our latest playlist?

THE CURE, BRYAN FERRY, THE MC5, RADIOHEAD, KIM DEAL, PAUL WELLER AND MORE STAR IN THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER A COPY HERE

Below, you’ll find terrifyingly good new tunes from the likes of King Gizzard, Kim Gordon, Panda Bear (feat Cindy Lee), Rose City Band, Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy, Dot Allison & Anton Newcombe (stepping out together as All Seeing Dolls), Sharon Van Etten, TV On The Radio’s Tunde Adebimpe and plenty more besides. Plus a few Hallowe’en frights…

KING GIZZARD & THE LIZARD WIZARD
“Phantom Island”
(p(doom))

PANDA BEAR
“Defense (feat Cindy Lee)”
(Domino)

SHARON VAN ETTEN & THE ATTACHMENT THEORY
“Afterlife”
(Jagjaguwar)

KIM GORDON
“Bangin’ on the Freeway”
(Matador)

EDDIE CHACON
“Empire” (ft. John Carroll Kirby)
(Stones Throw)

TUNDE ADEBIMPE
“Magnetic”
(Sub Pop)

MOGWAI
“Lion Rumpus”
(Rock Action)

MANIC STREET PREACHERS
“Hiding In Plain Sight”
(Sony)

ROSE CITY BAND
“Lights On The Way”
(Thrill Jockey)

BONNIE ‘PRINCE’ BILLY
“Our Home (feat. Tim O’Brien)”
(Domino)

RICHARD DAWSON
“Polytunnel”
(Weird World)

BLUE LAKE
“Oceans”
(Tonal Union)

BABA ZULA
“Pisi Pisi Halayı” 
(Glitterbeat)

BONNIE TRASH
“Red Right Hand”
(Hand Drawn Dracula)

JESSE MALIN
“Argentina”
(Wicked Cool)

TUNNG
“Didn’t Know Why”
(Full Time Hobby)

OUIJA
“The Man Who Would Not Die”
(Agent Anonyme)

ALL SEEING DOLLS
“That’s Amazing Grace”
(A Recordings)

PENELOPE TRAPPES
“Sleep”
(One Little Independent)

CLAIRE ROUSAY
“VIII” (from The Bloody Lady)
(Viernulvier)


Send us your questions for Mogwai!

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Today, Mogwai have announced that their 11th album The Bad Fire will be released through their own Rock Action label on January 24. The follow-up to 2021 chart-topper As The Love Continues, it was produced by John Congleton at Chem19 studios in Blantyre, Scotland.

Today, Mogwai have announced that their 11th album The Bad Fire will be released through their own Rock Action label on January 24. The follow-up to 2021 chart-topper As The Love Continues, it was produced by John Congleton at Chem19 studios in Blantyre, Scotland.

THE CURE, BRYAN FERRY, THE MC5, RADIOHEAD, KIM DEAL, PAUL WELLER AND MORE STAR IN THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER A COPY HERE

Watch a video for the track “Lion Rumpus” below:

You can pre-order The Bad Fire in various formats here. Mogwai will be also be touring the world in early 2025 – dates and ticket info here.

But before all that, they’ve kindly submitted to a friendly interrogation from you, the Uncut readers. So what do you want to ask the legendary Glasgow noisemakers? Send your questions to audiencewith@uncut.co.uk by Tuesday (November 5) and Mogwai will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

Iggy Pop announces new live album from Montreux Jazz Festival 2023

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Iggy Pop has today announced that his Live At Montreux Jazz Festival 2023 album will be released on January 24 via earMUSIC. The set was recorded at Stravinski Auditorium on July 6 this year, with Iggy performing songs from throughout his career (Stooges and solo) with a seven-piece band.

Iggy Pop has today announced that his Live At Montreux Jazz Festival 2023 album will be released on January 24 via earMUSIC. The set was recorded at Stravinski Auditorium on July 6 this year, with Iggy performing songs from throughout his career (Stooges and solo) with a seven-piece band.

THE CURE, BRYAN FERRY, THE MC5, RADIOHEAD, KIM DEAL, PAUL WELLER AND MORE STAR IN THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER A COPY HERE

Watch a video for “Five Foot One” below:

“I give something extra every time I do Montreux Jazz,” says Iggy Pop. “In ’23 it was deep cuts like ‘Mass Production’, ‘Endless Sea’, ‘Five Foot One’ and a hell of a lot of sweat.” 

The CD version of Live At Montreux Jazz Festival 2023 will come with a Blu-ray disc of the filmed performance. The album will also be released in 2xLP and digital formats. Check out the tracklisting below:

1.) Rune*
2.) Five Foot One
3.) T.V. Eye
4.) Modern Day Rip Off
5.) Raw Power
6.) Gimme Danger
7.) The Passenger
8.) Lust for Life
9.) Endless Sea
10.) Death Trip
11.) Sick of You
12.) I Wanna Be Your Dog
13.) Search and Destroy
14.) Mass Production
15.) Nightclubbing
16.) Down On The Street
17.) Loose
18.) Frenzy

*Blu-ray/download video only

Paul Morrissey – filmmaker, Warhol collaborator and Velvet Underground manager – has died aged 86

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Paul Morrissey, the cult filmmaker, Andy Warhol collaborator and Velvet Underground manager, has died aged 86, reports The New York Times.

Paul Morrissey, the cult filmmaker, Andy Warhol collaborator and Velvet Underground manager, has died aged 86, reports The New York Times.

THE CURE, BRYAN FERRY, THE MC5, RADIOHEAD, KIM DEAL, PAUL WELLER AND MORE STAR IN THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER A COPY HERE

Born in 1938 in Manhattan, Morrissey met Warhol in 1965, via the poet and filmmaker, Gerard Malanga. Morrissey began working at the Factory, collaborating first with Warhol on My Hustler in 1965.

Morrissey’s low-budget explorations of New York subculture – including Chelsea Girls (1966), Lonesome Cowboys, Flesh (both 1968), Trash (1970) and Women In Revolt (1972) – proved influential on the next generation of independent filmmakers like Henry Jaglom, Jim Jarmusch and Hal Hartley. Morrissey was also an early champion of Brian De Palma.

Between 1966 and ’67, Morrissey also managed The Velvet Underground and Nico. Morrisey also helped conceive and titled the Exploding Plastic Inevitable happenings, which included appearances by the band.

After parting ways with Warhol in 1974, Morrissey continued to make films – most notably his 1978 adaptation of The Hound Of The Baskervilles starring Peter Cook and Dudley Moore.

Morrissey’s final film News From Nowhere was released in 2010.

The Cure – Songs Of A Lost World

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Dignity and despair go hand-in-hand on Songs Of A Lost World, as Robert Smith stands on the precipice of life and wonders what lies beyond. We have always known that this album would be imbued with sadness following the deaths of his parents and brother within a few years. Throughout Songs Of A Lost World, the writing is very much on the wall. Smith takes account of his life and career, asking what’s been the point of it all. “Where did it go?” he asks on stately opener “Alone” as he ponders his youthful hopes and dreams. Seven songs later, he answers that question on closing number “Endsong”. “It’s all gone”, he sings, “left alone with nothing, the end of every song”. The last word of the last song? “Nothing”.

Dignity and despair go hand-in-hand on Songs Of A Lost World, as Robert Smith stands on the precipice of life and wonders what lies beyond. We have always known that this album would be imbued with sadness following the deaths of his parents and brother within a few years. Throughout Songs Of A Lost World, the writing is very much on the wall. Smith takes account of his life and career, asking what’s been the point of it all. “Where did it go?” he asks on stately opener “Alone” as he ponders his youthful hopes and dreams. Seven songs later, he answers that question on closing number “Endsong”. “It’s all gone”, he sings, “left alone with nothing, the end of every song”. The last word of the last song? “Nothing”.

THE CURE, BRYAN FERRY, THE MC5, RADIOHEAD, KIM DEAL, PAUL WELLER AND MORE STAR IN THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER A COPY HERE

Alone” and “Endsong” are bound together in theme and sound – huge, dark clouds of synth and piano, a razor blade guitar and thunderous drums that are placed high in the mix like a heartbeat through a stethoscope. Few bands do atmosphere as well as The Cure, and while Songs Of A Lost World is not as angry as Pornography or as claustrophobic as Disintegration, it instead possesses an immersive, graceful beauty and more energy than you might expect. Five of these songs have been in The Cure’s setlists since 2022 and the studio versions are every bit as intense as their live counterparts but also sound a little crisper. The melodic and lyrical allusions to The Cure’s history now pop out of “And Nothing Is Forever”, while “A Fragile Thing” has a sparkle that was absent from its live incarnation. The bleak, beautiful “I Can Never So Goodbye”, with its heart-stopping line about “something wicked this way comes, to steal away my brother’s life”, remains as desolate and personal a song as Smith has ever written, but one whose incessant melody lines draws you in.

There are whispers of love and glimmers of hope, but resignation is the prevailing emotion. The gnarly grind of “Warsong” is about a friendship that turns sour, while the zesty industrial rock of “Dronenodrone” has Smith shrugging, “down down down, I’m pretty much done”. The penultimate song “All I Ever Am” is propelled by kick drum and guitar as Smith surveys everything he has achieved with a critical eye before threatening to give up “his weary dance with age” and move “toward a dark and empty stage”. We have been here before, of course – “I’ve run right out of thoughts and I’ve run right out of words”, he sang on “39” from 2000’s Bloodflowers, an album awash with imitations of the end: “One more time before it’s over…”, “when it all stops…”, “nothing left to say”. But back then, Smith had just turned 40; now in his mid-60s, Smith’s stocktake of his position is at the other end of middle age and all that entails.

The end is inevitable, but let’s hope the lights aren’t going down just yet.

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