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Hear Chris Cornell’s posthumous covers album

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Before his death in 2017, Soundgarden frontman Chris Cornell recorded an album of cover versions of songs by John Lennon, Prince, ELO, Terry Reid, Harry Nilsson and other artists who inspired him.

No One Sings Like You Anymore has been surprise-released on digital platforms today, with a physical release to follow on March 19. Listen to the album below:

All instruments on No One Sings Like You Anymore were played by Chris Cornell and Brendan O’Brien, who also produced and mixed the album.

“This album is so special because it is a complete work of art that Chris created from start to finish,” said his daughter Vicky Cornell. “His choice of covers provides a personal look into his favourite artists and the songs that touched him. He couldn’t wait to release it. This moment is bittersweet because he should be here doing it himself, but it is with both heartache and joy that we share this special album. All of us could use his voice to help heal and lift us this year, especially during the holiday season. I am so proud of him and this stunning record, which to me illustrates why he will always be beloved, honoured, and one the greatest voices of our time.”

Composer Harold Budd has died, aged 84

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American composer and pianist Harold Budd, often cited as one of the founding fathers of ambient, has died from complications of Covid-19. He was 84.

Budd started out writing minimalist works in the 1960s but didn’t release his first album until 1978, when Brian Eno helped produce The Pavilion Of Dreams. The pair then collaborated on 1980’s Ambient 2: The Plateaux Of Mirror and 1984’s The Pearl.

Budd went on to work with other leftfield rock musicians such as Jah Wobble and John Foxx, although he formed his most enduring creative bond with Cocteau Twins’ Robin Guthrie, starting with 1986’s The Moon And The Melodies. The pair’s most recent collaborative album, Another Flower (recorded in 2013), was released just last week.

“A lot to digest,” wrote Guthrie on Facebook. “Shared a lot with Harold since we were young, since he was sick, shared a lot with Harold for the last 35 years, period. Feeling empty, shattered lost and unprepared for this… His last words to me were ‘adios amigo’… They always were.. He left a very large ‘Harold Budd’ shaped hole whichever way we turn…”

Neil Young, 2021 Preview, Syd Barrett in the new Uncut

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Click here to buy a copy of the new issue online

Welcome to the final edition of Uncut for 2020. Before we go any further, I’d like to thank everyone on the team for their continued amazing work across all our titles – Marc, John, Tom, Sam, Mick, Michael, Mike, Phil, Kevin, Johnny, Mark and Lora. Looking back across the issues we’re put out in the last 12 months, the quality of every magazine has, I believe, been of such a high standard you wouldn’t necessarily think we’d all been working from front rooms, back rooms, spare bedrooms or sheds during the pandemic to unfailingly bring you regular issues of Uncut and our one-shots.

Thanks, also, to you – the readers – without whom we wouldn’t be here. Your unfailing loyalty during these challenging times has been amazing. Our subscribers around the world have been especially patient during the inevitable delays caused by disruption to freight services. As a thank you for bearing with us, next month all our print subscribers will receive a bonus second CD with their copy of Uncut. The is an exclusive 5-track sampler featuring the Weather Station – whose new album Ignorance has rarely been off the virtual Uncut office stereo. You can whet your appetite for this free gift via Laura Barton’s interview with the Weather Station’s Tamara Lindeman in the new issue.

Click here to buy a copy of the new issue online

What else? Well, for the first time in our 24 year history, we’ve finally got round to compiling a survey of Neil Young’s greatest songs. Well… 40 of them, at any rate. For this Herculean task, we’ve invited a panel of Neil’s oldest and closest collaborators – from Crosby and Nash to Crazy Horse, Stray Gators, International Harvesters, Bluenotes, Promise Of The Real among others. The results offer fresh insight into some familiar Young numbers but, critically, also shine a light on some deeper cuts. You may find yourselves, as I did, dusting down Re-Ac-Tor and This Note’s For You after reading the passionate cases put forward for songs from both those albums in our Top 40.

There’s also Syd Barrett‘s final band Stars, Stevie Wonder‘s imperial phase revisited, Cocteau Twins on their splendid run of albums, the genesis of Captain Beefheart, Nancy Sinatra, Tom Morello, unseen Dylan, the Kuti dynasty, Buzzcocks, Edie Brickell, Phil Ochs‘ diaries and a 15-track CD rounding up the month’s best new music.

You can also find our annual Preview of albums to look forward to over the coming months. About this time last year, we were putting the touches to our 2020 Preview. What a year it’s been. Here’s to a peaceful, happy and healthy 2021 for everyone.

Anyway, do let us know what you think of once you’ve had a chance to digest the issue – drop us a line at letters@www.uncut.co.uk. You can also join the Uncut discussion online at forum.www.uncut.co.uk.

Click here to buy a copy of the new issue online

Uncut – February 2021

CLICK HERE TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOUR DOOR

Neil Young, Uncut’s 2021 Preview, Captain Beefheart, Syd Barrett, The Weather Station, Cocteau Twins, Stevie Wonder, Nancy Sinatra, Buzzcocks and Tom Morello all feature in the new Uncut, dated February 2021 and in UK shops from December 10 or available to buy online now. As always, the issue comes with a free CD, comprising 15 tracks of the month’s best new music.

NEIL YOUNG: We count down his 40 greatest songs, with help from Young’s extended musical family – David Crosby, Graham Nash, Nils Lofgren, Ralph Molina, Billy Talbot, Poncho Sampedro, Spooner Oldham, Niko Bolas, Daniel Lanois and more. There’s a cameo from Marlon Brando and we learn all about Neil’s studio directions and way with a magic marker… “You never know what he’s going to do next…”

OUR FREE CD! FOR THE ROAD: 15 fantastic tracks from the cream of the month’s releases, including songs by The Besnard Lakes, Buck Meek, Goat Girl, Jim Ghedi, Langhorne Slim, Lucero, Aaron Frazer, Tamar Aphek, Farmer Dave & The Wizards Of The West and more.

This issue of Uncut is available to buy by clicking here – with FREE delivery to the UK and reduced delivery charges for the rest of the world.

Inside the issue, you’ll find:

2021 PREVIEW: Join us for our essential guide to 21 of the year’s key albums, starring The Cure, Jackson Browne, Paul Weller, Marianne Faithfull, Kendrick Lamar, The Rolling Stones and more

CAPTAIN BEEFHEART: 55 years on from their debut single, the Magic Band tell us about Don Van Vliet’s remarkable transformation into the Captain, and their journey from the Antelope Valley to the cosmos

THE WEATHER STATION: Tamara Lindeman tells Uncut how loss and devastation – both global and emotional – have informed her brilliant new album Ignorance

COCTEAU TWINS: Album by album with the spangle makers

NANCY SINATRA: We review her stellar new compilation, and Sinatra herself discusses her work with Lee Hazlewood and the meaning behind “Some Velvet Morning”

STEVIE WONDER: Between 1972 and 1976, this teen idol became a visionary auteur with albums such as Talking Book, Innervisions and double-album masterpiece Songs In The Key Of Life. His collaborators explain how he did it

BUZZCOCKS: The making of “Harmony In My Head”

TOM MORELLO: The Rage Against The Machine guitarist answers your questions on Bruce Springsteen, naked protests, his new photo memoir and why the fight against fascism isn’t won yet

SYD BARRETT: We dig into the Melody Maker archives to bring you his last published interview, while his Stars bandmate Jack Monck relives Barrett’s final band – “Syd was haunted, you know?”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOUR DOOR

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new records from The Besnard Lakes, The Avalanches, Goat Girl, Jim Ghedi, Aaron Frazer, Barry Gibb, Farmer Dave & The Wizards Of The West and more, and archival releases from Nancy Sinatra, Cat Stevens, Evan Parker, Leila, Dave Alvin and others. We catch Emmylou Harris and the EFG London Jazz Festival – including Shabaka Hutchings performing with the Britten Symphonia – live online; among the films, DVDs and TV programmes reviewed are Delia Derbyshire: The Myths And The Legendary Tapes, Soul, Mank and Murder Me, Monster; while in books there’s Leonard Cohen and Black Diamond Queens: African-American Women And Rock And Roll.

Our front section, meanwhile, features Bob Dylan, Femi & Made Kuti, Vivien Goldman and Phil Ochs, and we introduce Lael Neale. At the back of the issue, Edie Brickell takes us through her life in beloved records.

You can pick up a copy of Uncut in the usual places, where open. But otherwise, readers all over the world can order a copy from here.

For more information on all the different ways to keep reading Uncut during lockdown, click here.

 

New Order announce huge outdoor show at Manchester’s Heaton Park

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New Order have announced a huge outdoor concert at Manchester’s Heaton Park on Friday September 10, 2021.

They’ll be supported at this homecoming show by Hot Chip and Working Men’s Club.

Tickets go on general sale from here at 9am on Thursday (December 10). You can also sign up for a pre-sale, starting now.

Last week, New Order released a video for recent standalone single “Be A Rebel” – watch that below. They’ll also be taking part in a Twitter listening party for Music Complete with Tim Burgess next Tuesday (December 15).

Joni Mitchell – The Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide

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Presenting the 148-page, Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide to Joni Mitchell. Includes archive features, in-depth reviews of every album, and her top 30 greatest songs. This updated version includes articles on the pre-fame Joni and her tentative return to public life in 2020.

Buy a copy by clicking here.

Introducing the Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide to Joni Mitchell

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BUY A COPY OF THE JONI MITCHELL: DELUXE UMG BY CLICKING HERE

Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story is a 2019 film by Martin Scorcese about Bob Dylan’s 1975-6 tour of small auditoriums which served to confound expectations, no doubt to the delight of its ostensible subject, Bob Dylan. Rather than the kind of faithful music documentary in which the director had previously specialised, the movie became a sporadically-amusing shaggy dog story in which Dylan insists he was directed throughout the tour by the mysterious “Van Dorp”.

When this wry and self-mythologising mood all gets a bit more interesting, though, it’s when Dylan is observed checking out other artists. There’s a great scene when Dylan watches Patti Smith and a stripped-down band punch through the curtain from poetry to electrifying rock ‘n’ roll. Most surprising though, is what occurs at a low-key post-show hoot session at the home of Canadian singer-songwriter Gordon Lightfoot. Roger McGuinn’s there. Dylan’s there, of course, in another surprising hat.

Centre stage, though, is Joni Mitchell. What she’s about to play, McGuinn tells us for the benefit of the tape, was written for the tour, although from our vantage point in history, we immediately recognise it as “Coyote”, the opening song on Mitchell’s sumptuous, drifting album Hejira, released in 1976.

There, the song is widescreen and graceful, and it’s tempting to think that its effortless forward momentum derives to some degree from its place in the album’s dramatic sound picture, piloted by Mitchell and the pulse of fretless bass. Here we are, though, self-evidently in Gordon Lightfoot’s dining room (with McGuinn and Dylan trying to keep up on acoustic guitars), and the song is doing much the same – moving with speed and precision through a calm and self-defined space.

It’s a scene which shows some of Mitchell’s key attributes, not least her ability to put herself at the centre of things and assume artistic control. Hers has been a career which has helped define what might be possible as a singer-songwriter: a development from folk music to the utterly original self-expression of her early records, through jazz, orchestrations and beyond.

In this Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide to Joni Mitchell, alongside in-depth reviews of all her albums, you’ll read insightful interviews and meticulous reportage on her story. It’s in UK shops on Thursday (December 10) or you can buy a copy online now by clicking here. Enjoy!

Hear Tindersticks cover Television Personalities’ “You’ll Have To Scream Louder”

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Tindersticks are gearing up to release a new album, Distractions, via City Slang in February.

Today they’ve shared its first single, a cover of Television Personalities’ “You’ll Have To Scream Louder” from their 1984 album The Painted Word. Listen below:

“Late May and early June 2020 was a twitchy and angry time for many of us,” says Tindersticks frontman Stuart Staples. “There was a growing agitation inside of me. I woke on a Saturday morning with no plans but just this Television Personalities song going round in my head, it pushed me into the studio. 4 or 5 hours later I had made the basis of this recording, though I had to wait for windows of opportunity within our confinement to work with the band to bring it to a conclusion.

“I have loved the TVPs since buying the Bill Grundy e.p. with its photocopied sleeve on one of my regular after school bus trips to the Virgin record shop in a basement on King Street, Nottingham. Some years later, 1984, I was living around the corner on the 17th floor of Victoria Centre flats, they swayed in the wind. I was working a few days at a local record shop and The Painted Word was released. It became at the soundtrack to that semi-slum, those times. I was 19.

“To be young in the early 1980s there was much to be angry about, battles to be fought – Thatcher, racial and gender injustice – and (one of the motivations for this song) nuclear disarmament. Although we may not have thought those battles were ever won, we believed we had helped push things in a different direction, that changes were made.

“In the Spring of 2020 we were shown painfully that these battles are ongoing.”

The Royal Mint unveils new David Bowie coin

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The Royal Mint has unveiled a new David Bowie coin, as part of its Music Legends series. Bowie is the third musical act to be commemorated in such a way, after Queen and Elton John.

The coin features an image of Berlin-era Bowie, adorned with an Aladdin Sane lightning bolt.

The regular uncirculated £5 coin comes in four different editions. There are also limited silver and gold editions, with the 1oz gold coin retailing at £2,425.

Naturally, The Royal Mint launched the coin by sending one into space:

You can see plenty more dazzling David Bowie images in Uncut’s pair of special edition magazines, Ultimate Record Collection: David Bowie, available here.

Paul Weller reschedules March tourdates for later in 2021

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Due to ongoing uncertainty regarding the return of live music events, Paul Weller has rescheduled his March tourdates to November and December 2021.

Tickets for the original shows remain valid. Any customers who cannot attend the new dates should seek a refund from their point of purchase.

Three extra shows have been added to the tour in Bath, Sheffield and Lincoln. Tickets for these shows go on general sale at 10am on Friday (December 11). You can sign up for access to pre-sale tickets here.

Weller’s June and July tour dates remain unchanged. Peruse his full list of UK headline dates for 2021 below:

June 2021
Thursday 24th June PLYMOUTH PAVILIONS
Friday 25th June PORTSMOUTH GUILDHALL
Saturday 26th June BRIGHTON CENTRE
Monday 28th June HULL BONUS ARENA
Tuesday 29th June YORK BARBICAN

July 2021
Thursday 1st July LEICESTER DE MONTFORT HALL
Friday 2nd July LEICESTER DE MONTFORT HALL
Sunday 4th July BLACKBURN KING GEORGE’S HALL
Monday 5th July EDINBURGH USHER HALL
Tuesday 6th July DUNDEE CAIRD HALL
Thursday 8th July MANCHESTER O2 APOLLO
Friday 9th July NEWCASTLE O2 CITY HALL
Saturday 10th July NEWCASTLE O2 CITY HALL
Monday 12th July CARLISLE SANDS CENTRE
Tuesday 13th July BRADFORD ST GEORGE’S HALL
Thursday 15th July LONDON O2 ACADEMY BRIXTON
Friday 16th July LONDON O2 FORUM KENTISH TOWN
Saturday 17th July LONDON O2 FORUM KENTISH TOWN

November 2021
Tuesday 16th November OXFORD NEW THEATRE
Wednesday 17th November BATH FORUM
Friday 19th November LIVERPOOL EVENTIM OLYMPIA
Saturday 20th November LLANDUDNO VENUE CYMRU
Monday 22nd November SOUTHAMPTON 02 GUILDHALL
Tuesday 23rd November SOUTHEND CLIFFS
Wednesday 24th November MARGATE WINTER GARDENS
Friday 26th November STOKE VICTORIA HALL
Saturday 27th November SHEFFIELD OCTAGON
Monday 29th November GLASGOW BARROWLANDS
Tuesday 30th November ABERDEEN MUSIC HALL

December 2021
Wednesday 1st December MIDDLESBROUGH TOWN HALL
Friday 3rd December NORWICH UEA LCR
Saturday 4th December LINCOLN ENGINE SHED
Sunday 5th December CAMBRIDGE CORN EXCHANGE

Crock Of Gold: A Few Rounds With Shane MacGowan

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The boozing depicted in Thomas Vinterberg’s Another Round looks like mere middle-class dilettantism – which, of course, it is – compared to the hard living associated with Shane MacGowan. Excess is central to the myth of the Pogues’ founding bard, but it had a catastrophic effect on MacGowan’s creative abilities and his health.

Crock Of Gold is the latest film from Julien Temple, who has been documenting the hard cases of the British music scene for decades, with MacGowan the latest subject in a series of portraits that has also featured Ray Davies, Wilko Johnson and Joe Strummer. MacGowan fans will relish the sheer exuberance of a film that barrels along with the same hectic passion as a vintage Pogues number.

Executed in a symphonic cacophony of styles, it takes in archive footage, interview material, ironically kitsch evocations of MacGowan’s childhood in an idealised golden-glowing Ireland, and animations in different styles, including a Ralph Steadman interpretation of a particularly nightmarish antipodean meltdown. Also featured are telling interviews with MacGowan’s father, while the man himself is seen in conversation with Johnny Depp (one of the producers), sardonically receiving homage from Sinn Fein politician Gerry Adams, and proving amusingly impervious to conversational prompting from Bobby Gillespie.

While the animations show MacGowan’s life as something of a picaresque romp, we also get a clear sense of the isolation and mental turmoil that underpinned his experience from early on. The damage done by the hellraising, and by the Pogues’ relentlessly punishing tours, becomes clear in the recent images of a debilitated and withdrawn MacGowan, now 62.

But Temple’s most original insight here is to focus on the seriousness with which MacGowan mined Irish myth and history, which underpin so many of his brilliantly crafted and ripely literate songs. From the breakneck to the poignantly lyrical, his repertoire comes alive again here in a torrent of inspiration and a blast of whiskey breath.  

Send us your questions for Bootsy Collins

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Has there been a more iconic bassist in the history of music than William ‘Bootsy’ Collins? The top hat and star-shaped shades make for an instantly recognisable silhouette, but more importantly Bootsy’s strident basslines helped formed the bedrock for what we understand as funk today.

After holding it down for James Brown – no mean feat – he hitched a ride on the Funkadelic mothership in 1972, becoming a prominent figure in the P-Funk family. Stretching out as a bandleader with Bootsy’s Rubber Band, songs like “I’d Rather Be With You” provided the blueprint for west coast hip-hop, before Collins brought a freaky, gritty glamour to dancefloor hits by Deee-Lite and Fatboy Slim. Always generous with his knowledge, he even founded his own Funk University.

While Bootsy was reluctantly forced to retire from live performance in 2019 on doctor’s advice, he’s remained as busy as ever in the ‘Boot-Cave’ – in October he released a new album entitled The Power Of The One, featuring George Benson, Bernard Purdie, Larry Graham and various other funk/soul all-stars. Ever the entrepreneur, he’s also launched a machine that allows you to cut your own vinyl records at home…

Now he’s kindly consented to field your questions for Uncut’s latest Audience With feature. So what do you want to ask the stereophonic, funk-producin’, rhinestone rock star known as Bootzilla? Send your questions to audiencewith@www.uncut.co.uk by Wednesday (December 9), and Bootsy will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

Hear Iggy Pop sing Elvis Costello’s “No Flag” – in French!

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Elvis Costello has released a new version of “No Flag” from his recent album Hey Clockface.

“No Flag (en Français)” features Iggy Pop on lead vocals, singing in French. Listen below:

Iggy Pop and Elvis Costello have been friends since 1977 but this is the first time they’ve released a song together. In a joint interview over at Rolling Stone, Costello admits that he was deliberately channelling The Stooges on “No Flag”: “That should have been a clue right away. It shared one word and one letter with a famous song of yours, but nobody spotted where it was drawing from, because nobody expects me to take a cue from you.”

Funkadelic – Funkadelic / Free Your Mind And Your Ass Will Follow

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In 1970, George Clinton and his merry pranksters of P-Funk released three albums that, collectively, worked to rewrite the possibilities of soul, funk and rock as integrated forces across the landscape of popular music. With Parliament’s debut set, Osmium, and these first two Funkadelic albums, Funkadelic and Free Your Mind And Your Ass Will Follow, Clinton and P-Funk set out the parameters of their thing – a plasmic, irruptive funk-rock hybrid where riffs were elastic, grooves were eternal, the world was rendered surreal, politics were both prurient and profound, and comedy came both at, and from, the core: equal parts skits and scatology.

With the turn of the decade and the end of the ’60s’ countercultural dream, the addled confusion of P-Funk seemed, just about, to capture the stank of the times and throw it back in the face of a puzzled, perplexed audience. Who the hell were these weirdos?

Truth be told, it took Clinton a little while to find his groove. Born in North Carolina and raised in New Jersey, he’d started out with doo-wop group The Parliaments. Taking his band to Detroit in the mid-’60s to audition for Motown, The Parliaments flunked the test but Clinton stuck around, landing a gig as an in-house writer for the venerable soul hit factory. The Parliaments tasted minor success in 1967 with “(I Wanna) Testify” – there’s a string of Parliaments 45s for small Detroit labels like Revilot, none of which signal the galaxy-gobbling hunger of Clinton’s freaked-out world vision.

All of that would come after Clinton connected with psychedelia and reconnected with his love of high-energy, amp-humping rock; as he once told Fred Mills, “We just said, well, we’ll do the music that was the nasty music I listened to in school. We’ll do that funky music, we’ll do that nasty music!”

There was a small, strange period of time in Detroit where Funkadelic would share stages with incendiary rock gangs like MC5 and The Stooges. Signed to nascent Detroit label Westbound by budding entrepreneur Armen Boladian, Funkadelic landed in the studio in late 1969 to record their first album, getting it down in two days straight at Tera Shirma Sound Studios. You can hear the impact of their encounters with Iggy Pop and his crew on the first, self-titled Funkadelic album, now being reissued on coloured vinyl along with its follow-up; it’s a spare, minimalist thing, reduced to its barest constituent parts – a dark ride into the eternity of the drug-addled groove. Indeed, as recently as 2016, Clinton has acknowledged, “They influenced us a lot. We was changing from Parliament to Funkadelic, and it would have been Iggy Pop [who] had a lot to do with that. That craziness.”

Opening with its legendary lines, “If you will suck my soul, I’ll lick your funky emotions”, Funkadelic slip straight into one of their venerable grooves, “Mommy, What’s A Funkadelic”, a nine-minute trip into a choral, funk-dazed fantasia. The spindly guitar riff of the following “I’ll Bet You” (soon to be covered by the Jackson 5) is counterbalanced by a fat, insistent six-string churn, with coruscating wisps of delay-drenched feedback filling in the stereo space, as Clinton and his crew spar over the song’s sticky strut. Session guitarist Ray Monette sprays a frenetic wah-gasm across “I Got A Thing, You Got A Thing, Everybody’s Got A Thing”, a heady speed rush of clipped, chipped funk. There’s also the murky blues vamping of “Qualify And Satisfy”, and the closing space-case Q&A of “What Is Soul” – “a joint wrapped in toilet paper” and “a hamhock in your cornflakes”, apparently.

If Funkadelic was psychedelic, then its follow-up, Free Your Mind And Your Ass Will Follow, was psychedelia as psycho-drama, pure and simple. Clinton has previously explained that the album was recorded in one long session while the entire band was dosed with LSD, and that makes a lot of sense, particularly when you’re riding its frazzled dynamics: it’s a slippery album, a spaced-out cornucopia of twisted hippie Christian gumbo (“the kingdom of heaven is within…”) and loose-limbed, heavily swinging funk. Yet it’s still surprisingly coherent too, particularly given its genesis story. The opening title track is far more structurally cohesive than often credited – the relentless fierceness of its choppy riff grounds the song’s spiral-cycle of wigged-out extemporisations around one simple, endless chord. That sets the tone for much of the album, though it also reaches out and captures something strangely anthemic, on songs like “Funky Dollar Bill” and the glissing glide of “I Wanna Know If It’s Good To You”.

Listening back, on the occasion of their 50th anniversary, it’s remarkable what Funkadelic achieved on these first two albums – they’re perfect examples of the tension between limitation and explosion that makes for the best funk, a rigid-yet-fluid grid of groove continually derailed and perverted by all kinds of unexpected turns. After all this time, they’re still exciting as all hell.

Fleet Foxes announce winter solstice livestream

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Fleet Foxes released their superb fourth album Shore – which figures highly in Uncut’s end-of-year charts – on the autumnal equinox. Now bandleader Robin Pecknold will follow that up with a solo acoustic livestream on the winter solstice.

He’ll play live from St. Ann & the Holy Trinity Church in Brooklyn, NY, on December 22 at 9pm ET (2am GMT) with the performance available on-demand until December 24. The show will feature a guest appearance from the Resistance Revival Chorus, a collective of more than 60 women and non-binary singers.

Tickets for the livestream are available here.

In addition, budding remixers will be interested to learn that all the stems for Shore will be made available via Bandcamp this Friday (December 4). “This is eleven hours of all of the album’s isolated tracks, solo’d drums, vocals, horns, bass, guitars – every individual piece of every song untangled and laid bare,” says Pecknold. “These aren’t royalty free, but any and all remixing / sampling / twisting / creative reuse and reimagining for your personal, non-commercial use is highly encouraged. And if you want to sample for commercial release, just get in touch. Enjoy!”

The Hold Steady announce new album, Open Door Policy

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The Hold Steady have announced that their new album Open Door Policy will be released on their own Positive Jams label via Thirty Tigers in February 2021.

Hear the first single “Family Farm” below:

Open Door Policy was recorded at The Clubhouse in Rhinebeck, NY, with producer Josh Kaufman and engineer D James Goodwin. Additional performers include Stuart Bogie and Jordan McLean on horns, Cassandra Jenkins and Annie Nero on backup vocals, and Matt Barrick on percussion.

Says Craig Finn: “Open Door Policy was very much approached as an album vs. a collection of individual songs, and it feels like our most musically expansive record. This album was written and almost entirely recorded before the pandemic started, but the songs and stories explore power, wealth, mental health, technology, capitalism, consumerism, and survival – issues which have compounded in 2020.”

The Hold Steady’s annual ‘Massive Nights’ shows at New York’s Brooklyn Bowl take place later this week (Dec 3-5). You can buy tickets for the livestreams here.

Laura Marling revisits her own records: “It was a magical happening”

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Taken from Uncut’s August 2020 issue

A follow-up to this spring’s Song For Our Daughter may be a little way off, explains Laura Marling. “If I’m on the road for an extended period of time, I tend to have written an album by the time I get back,” she says. “Obviously that’s been completely scuppered by coronavirus. When I’m at home I play the guitar but I don’t really feel the need to write – I mean, I’m at home, I’ve got nothing to miss.”

For now, though, there’s her extensive back catalogue to enjoy, and it’s this body of work that the songwriter is taking us through here; from her first studio experiences to orchestral arrangements for three bass guitars, via her own personal highpoint, 2013’s Once I Was An Eagle: “It’s just one of those things, maybe a once-in-a-lifetime thing.”

Along the way, Marling ponders her time in Los Angeles, being one half of Lump and her mission as a solo artist today. “I’m not trying to reinvent the wheel,” she says. “As much as I love Blake Mills’ production on Semper Femina – and I would take that any day – really it’s about whether I’m a good songwriter. That’s all I’m really interested in.”

TOM PINNOCK

_________________

ALAS, I CANNOT SWIM
VIRGIN, 2008
Marling’s debut, produced by Noah & The Whale’s Charlie Fink

We had four weeks at Eastcote Studios, two weeks doing my record and then a further two weeks back-to-back doing the Noah & The Whale record. We laid down the bass, drums, guitar and vocal all at once, and then we did overdubs – this is the same for all albums I’ve done, pretty much. My dad ran a recording studio which shut down when I was quite small, but I remember growing up around all of that outboard gear at home. So I guess I was slightly more familiar with the studio than the average 17-year-old, but still it was my first proper session. These were all my first songs, written from the age of 16-17. There was a batch of songs before that that were on an EP, “London Town” – I didn’t like them very much by the time I got to making this. I haven’t listened to this for a long while, I very rarely play any of those songs live, so it’s a bit of a distant memory to me now. And the production was very much of the time I guess, that ‘new folk’ world – glockenspiels and banjos and whatever – which is good, that’s what it was supposed to be then. I don’t really think of this as part of my catalogue.

_________________

I SPEAK BECAUSE I CAN
VIRGIN, 2010
A leap forward, with Marling inspired by British folk and The Odyssey, and working with producer Ethan Johns

 

The difference between being 16 and being 19 is quite a shift, isn’t it? Ethan was very intimidating, but I quickly realised it was nothing but a type of shyness. He turned down the first record, but I tried again with the second one – he seemed to be more impressed with the songwriting. I went down to meet Ethan at Real World Studios, where he was working at the time. He came and picked me up from the station, and he was wearing triple denim and circular pink sunglasses, like John Lennon, and he had his crazy California hair. I thought he looked completely mental. I was very shy still, I didn’t really say much. As we were walking around Real World, he said, “It’s never really worked out for me, working with female artists, I seem to not do well with it.” So, being in my tomboy/late teenage years, I was like, “Well, I’m not like every girl, it’s going to be a totally different experience”, and it was. We started at Eastcote, but Ethan didn’t like the sound of the room, so we moved to Real World. I took my band with me, and we all stayed there at probably horrendous expense. We got driven in our splitter van from Glastonbury to Real World, we stayed there for two weeks and it was really magical. I’d read The Odyssey, and I obviously thought I was quite clever because of that, so a lot of it was based around Penelope and Odysseus, and Hera – there’s a lot of Greek mythology and Classics, I was really into it then. I had discovered tunings after the first album too, and a lot of I Speak Because I Can was in major and minor open-D tunings. I was also going through the unbelievable intensity of anybody’s late teenage years, I was so full of fucking hormones and excitement. I remember writing a lot, it was a good time.

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A CREATURE I DON’T KNOW
VIRGIN, 2011
The more expansive third record, again produced by Ethan Johns

 

I went from touring I Speak Because I Can straight into the studio to make this. That was the cycle that I was on then – I made the album, put it out, toured it for a year and then went straight back into the studio with a new crop of songs. It was a natural progression; the sound of this album was dictated by my touring band at the time, as we had been playing all these songs in soundchecks for the previous six months. We did all the pre-production away from Ethan because everybody was too scared to play in front of him. My drummer and my keyboard player, they’re proper musicians who’ve been playing with me almost since the beginning, they’re proper trained incredible musicians, but everyone else in the band didn’t really consider themselves a musician. So I had a slightly ragtag band. Of course Ethan’s got the little black book of every musician you might want, but I only wanted people that I loved on the records, that I knew were on my side. Maybe that was a bit paranoid of me, but I was a bit paranoid then of everybody, and I wanted to make sure that ultimately I had control of everything. It was also very important for me to keep my musicians employed, which I did manage to do for those four or five years, which felt like an achievement. So what I was doing was because of a mix of paranoia and economic anxiety!

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LIVE FROM YORK MINSTER
DIVERSE, 2012
Marling’s only live album, including a cover of Jackson C Frank’s “Blues Run The Game”

There are a lot of churches to play in Europe, but we decided to supersize that to cathedrals. We organised it through some quite intense logistical negotiation, literally talking to the bishops and persuading them it was a good idea, because I don’t think they do it very often, particularly somewhere like York Minster. It was such a spectacularly beautiful venue. We were bringing in our own sound system, and the acoustics in some of the cathedrals were much more tricky than others – Liverpool was completely wild and very hard to tame, but we were in a smaller room in York Minster, not in the main atrium, and luckily it was a good one to record. A completely stone room with wood on the ground has a particular quality to it. I think Charlie Fink had played “Blues Run The Game” to me, and I figured it was in the same tuning as “Goodbye England…”. I added it to the set because it was such an unusual tuning that there were not many songs I could play in it.

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ONCE I WAS AN EAGLE
VIRGIN, 2013
A stunning 16-track folk-rock epic, and Marling’s own favourite

I discovered smoking weed before this album, that’s the reason the first four songs are one. It’s like a nice lull, where you’re off on another planet. I’d had some intense emotional growth since the previous album, and I’d started to feel like I very much wanted to be on my own and not with a band. Though they’re still my band and I love them very much, it felt like I couldn’t get any time on my own, like I was always on tour or in the studio, and it started to feel like people recognised me a little bit, and it all overwhelmed me. So with this album I went back to Ethan on my own. It was a really amazing experience. I think he had wanted to get his hands on my music without all of those people around, so he could do with it what he really wanted. By that point we were friends, and I entrusted him with this really emotionally intense album. I went and recorded everything for him, in order, at his house – just me and a guitar with his engineer Dom Monks, who’s also brilliant – and then I went away for a week. When I came back he’d done most of the instrumentation on it, and he’d started to paint around the tracks.

I still think of it as a magical happening. People were trying to say it could have been shorter, and maybe a couple of songs could have been B-sides, but that was the story I wanted to tell. Ethan was into it too, he wanted to do a double record.

Ruth [de Turberville, cellist] came to play on the record towards the end. There’s a bit in “Pray For Me” where her cello line sounds like it’s rising above me, wrapping itself around my neck and pulling me down – there was some emotional quality to it, just as what Ethan did on it had an emotional quality. There was a sense that something was about to peak, it did feel like that. I felt like it was the best record I’d ever made, and I could sense that it would be harder to carry on from then.

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SHORT MOVIE
VIRGIN, 2015
Self-produced in London, Marling’s fifth was the quickest she’s ever written and recorded

The funny thing was that the magic from <Eagle> didn’t last, because Ethan and I ended up making a record afterwards that we threw in the bin. It was a big financial mess, and that was quite a shock to me. I don’t have a lot of money to play with, I’m not a multi-million selling artist, so scrapping an album was a big deal. There were a couple of reasons for it, it wasn’t totally the songwriting. I was living in LA, so Ethan had come over to do it, we rented Sunset Sound which was also really expensive. The nice thing is that on that record we had Jim Keltner, so I got to hang out with him for two weeks – he was amazing. It took me a little while to get over the shock of that, and the disappointment that me and Ethan felt. I came back to London and said to my drummer [Matt Ingram], “I need to do an album for cheap.” He said, “Come and do it at my studio.” I ended up producing it with him, and that was an amazing experience. Short Movie was a very quickly written batch of songs, because I’d scrapped everything from the album that we threw away. So this was a very concise timespan, just a very short period in my life. I actually don’t really like the album, but I get why I wrote it and why I had to write it. I needed to keep moving or I was going to drown in the sorrow of having failed. It’s the first time I played electric guitar on a record – a friend had a bungalow in Joshua Tree that they weren’t going to be in for a couple of months, so I took all my guitars out there. I had guitar amplifiers all around the house, and there were no neighbours so I could play as loud as I wanted. That’s how that sound arrived.

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SEMPER FEMINA
MORE ALARMING, 2017
A return to form, produced by Los Angeles wunderkind Blake Mills

It was so interesting working with a different producer, he couldn’t be more different to Ethan. And I was such a huge fan of Blake’s already, so it was weird to go in and be so in awe of somebody. He’s my age too. The main thing he inspired in me was that if you worked hard enough you could be as good as him – there was no mystical quality as to why he was so good, other than that he worked really fucking hard. Ethan is from an older time where there was more money in the music business, so he works from midday until nine o’clock and he doesn’t work at weekends, which is fine; but Blake works from 10am until it’s done! I took three members of my band with me, because I was a bit worried that Blake would intimidate me to the point where I wouldn’t be able to get my point across. I’m glad I did that because it just about kept it from becoming a Blake Mills record, which it could have easily become. In those three weeks, I’d come back home at like 3am every night and play guitar in my backyard – I’d practise every night so that the next morning I’d come in and he wouldn’t be able to play my parts better than I could. I just couldn’t believe that someone could work so hard for someone else’s music, it was amazing. He’s quite a force to contend with, though, he doesn’t fuck around and he doesn’t banter, he just works. Blake literally seems bored when you’re playing him a song, when he feels it’s not sonically interesting. On “Soothing”, he started changing the chords so they were more interesting inversions, and then he orchestrally arranged this three-piece bass part for it.

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LUMP
LUMP
DEAD OCEANS, 2018
A collaboration with Tunng’s Mike Lindsay created Marling’s “greatest pleasure”

We were doing some Neil Young support shows and at the London one my guitarist Sam said, “Oh, my friend Mike’s coming down after the show, he’s quite weird and he wants to ask you a question.” He is a weird guy, in the best possible way, and he’s got an unusual manner. He said quite bluntly, “I need you to come into my studio in Shoreditch, I have something and only you can do it.” I was recently single at that time, feeling quite free about possibilities, so I said yes. I was renting a flat in Dalston, so I walked down on a very hot day to his basement studio in Shoreditch. It was absolutely boiling, no natural light. After a bit of awkward small talk, he played me 36 minutes of music without stopping. I had just started reading the Surrealist Manifesto and I’d underlined a bunch of words, and I started singing them over the top – Mike had demarcated where he thought songs were, and verses and choruses, and after the first day we’d done “The Curse Of The Contemporary” and “May I Be The Light”, and by the third day we’d almost finished the record. I knew when we were making it how special it was – there was no buddiness or communication, just like when Ethan worked on Eagle… and I left for a week. Lump had that quality too. Mike and I have now made two albums and toured, but we don’t really know each other too well, and are paranoid about maintaining that distance between the two of us, so we don’t lose that quality. Lump is the greatest pleasure in my life now, because it doesn’t feel like mine. There’s a second album done, it’s probably coming out this year but I don’t know when.

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SONG FOR OUR DAUGHTER
PARTISAN/CHRYSALIS, 2020
Marling’s classic-sounding latest, returning to her roots with Ethan Johns co-producing

I didn’t enjoy producing Short Movie myself, and I didn’t feel like I wanted to do that again – you can’t get a good enough perspective on your own, being both inside and outside the record at the same time. I thought Dom Monks and Ethan Johns as co-producers would just give me that security, but I think it was challenging for Ethan to change his role. I’d had to do a lot of random admin stuff earlier in 2019, which meant I’d sat on these songs for a while, which was hellish for me. But in that time I’d also moved back to London, set up my own studio, demoed everything extensively, contacted everyone I wanted to play on it… Ethan was the last part of the puzzle actually. He wanted to use this studio in Wales because he likes to record to tape, but I’m not a purist in that way. Dom Monks is the zen master between two nutbags, though, so he held the sessions together. I wrote the album while I was travelling around Europe for about four months, mainly the south of France and Italy, living in a campervan and staying on farms, very late twenties. It was really nice. I always feel like my albums are on/off – I Speak Because I Can was good, A Creature I Don’t Know was OK, Once I Was An Eagle was good, Short Movie was whatever, Semper Femina was good, and I sort of felt this one might be whatever… I don’t know, though! I never know what people are going to think, but people seem to really like it. I wasn’t expecting it to do so well. I thought I’d lean back into just being a songwriter which is all I really want from Laura Marling, from my solo stuff. And then Lump provides me with this whole other experience.

Watch Margo Price cover Joni Mitchell’s “River”

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Margo Price has released a video of her covering Joni Mitchell’s seasonal classic, “River”.

This solo version was recorded at Pulse Studios in Price’s adopted hometown of Nashville. Watch below:

In the current issue of Uncut you can read an entertaining interview with Margo Price, in which she castigates the country music establishment and discusses her love of Dolly Parton and Dr Dre. The magazine’s in shops now, or you can order a copy online here.

Scritti Politti announce first ever live performances of Cupid & Psyche 85

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To celebrate the album’s 35th anniversary, Scritti Politti have announced their first ever live performances of Cupid & Psyche 85.

Green Gartside and band will tour the UK in September and October 2021, playing the album in its entirety for the very first time.

See the full list of tourdates below. Tickets will go on sale on Friday December 4 from here.

TUE 21 SEPT 2021 – NORWICH, THE WATERFRONT
WED 22 SEPT 2021 – BIRMINGHAM, TOWN HALL
FRI 24 SEPT 2021 – CARDIFF, THE GATE
SAT 25 SEPT 2021 – MANCHESTER, RNCM CONCERT HALL
MON 27 SEPT 2021 – GLASGOW, ST LUKES
TUE 28 SEPT 2021 – LEEDS, CITY VARIETIES
WED 29 SEPT 2021 – GATESHEAD, SAGE
FRI 1 OCT 2021 – BRIGHTON, CONCORDE 2
SAT 2 OCT 2021 – LONDON, O2 SHEPHERDS BUSH EMPIRE

Cupid & Psyche 85 was an immaculate studio creation that proved impossible to recreate live at the time. “The Scritti of Fred (Maher), David (Gamson) and I never did play live,” recalls Gartside. “We had a tour lined up and we kinda reluctantly went into a rehearsal place somewhere in Manhattan to figure out how the fuck this album could be played. If I recall correctly, it became apparent immediately that we couldn’t reproduce the sound. The project was abandoned.”

However, the current Scritti Politti line-up of Green Gartside, Rob Smoughton (of Hot Chip/Black Peaches), Rhodri Marsden and Dicky Moore have finally bottled the magic and will perform Cupid & Psyche 85 in its entirety at the shows, “alongside other material from Scritti’s history.”

Music, Money, Madness… Jimi Hendrix Live In Maui

The trippy story of how Jimi Hendrix ended up playing a concert in front of a few hundred spectators at a windy cow farm next to a Hawaiian volcano features a cast of characters that could come from a Thomas Pynchon novel. There’s Chuck Wein, aka The Wizard, a Leary-lite Harvard graduate who dated Edie Sedgwick and made films with Warhol before dropping into the hippie world. There’s Michael Jeffery, Hendrix’s manager, a shady operator with a line in tall stories about his career in the British Army. And there’s Hendrix, who found himself committed to making a soundtrack for Wein and Jeffery’s Hawaii-set psychedelic sci-fi movie, Rainbow Bridge, and somehow ended up playing one of the last shows – performing with the Cox-Mitchell axis – on the tiny island of Maui.

Directed by John McDermott, Music, Money, Madness – Jimi Hendrix Experience Live In Maui attempts to unpick this wild tale with the help of a tremendous batch of interviewees. Billy Cox and Eddie Kramer are on hand from camp Hendrix, there’s cast and crew from Rainbow Bridge, a few still bewildered Warner Bros execs plus archive interviews with Mitch Mitchell and Chuck Wein.

Rainbow Bridge started as a celebration of Hawaii’s surfing subculture, but soon mutated into an experimental, unscripted Warhol-esque film inspired by hippie life, Wein’s impenetrable personal philosophy and Jack Nicholson’s stoned campfire monologue from Easy Rider. It’s the success of the latter that seemed to appeal to Jeffery, who thought a Hendrix score would turn a counterculture flick into a serious commercial offering. The promise of that soundtrack persuaded Warners to fund the film, and Hendrix was on board as he needed the money to complete Electric Lady Studio.

Filming was chaotic. “No script, a very loose idea and it shows,” says Colette Harron, who ran an East Village boutique and knew most of the principals. Wein shot 72 hours of footage and delivered a four-hour cut, which was turned into a 90-minute film that bewildered audiences and critics when, after Hendrix’s death, it was eventually released at a pot-fuelled premiere at the Aquarius in Hollywood in 1971.

Hendrix made a cameo in the film as an assassin but his biggest contribution was to perform an outdoor concert that was filmed. The gig was as unconventional as the film. “It was a colour/vibratory sound experience,” says Rainbow Bridge art director Melinda Merryweather. “The electricity went off, people swear they saw a spaceship go by, somebody fell of a tower.” The audience were asked to sit in astrological order and delivered a mass Buddhist chant as Hendrix took the stage. A gale was blowing and the small audience sat on the floor as if they were at a village fête. It must have been one of the most unusual set-ups Hendrix had ever faced but he seemed to thrive in the atmosphere – Cox describesit as one of the best the trio did.

The set included new songs like “Dolly Dagger”, “Hey Baby (New Rising Sun)”, “Ezy Rider” and “Freedom” alongside established classics. Seventeen minutes of scratchy footage – with drums overdubbed by Mitchell – appeared on the posthumous Rainbow Bridge film, eventually released along with a Hendrix LP of the same name that had nothing recorded in Maui. Much more restored footage features in this fun documentary, while the forthcoming Live In Maui triple contains all that was salvageable from the two 50-minute sets.