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Uncut’s New Music Playlist for March 2024

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2024’s torrent of great new music just keeps on coming. This month, we bring you further evidence of Mick Head’s glorious renaissance, Brett Anderson covering Echo & The Bunnymen, Bonny Light Horseman finding inspiration in a remote Irish pub, new singles from Khruangbin and Isobel Campbell, and career-best stuff from Ben Chasny’s Six Organs Of Admittance.

THERE’S PLENTY MORE NEW MUSIC COVERAGE INSIDE THE NEW UNCUT! ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

Plus the return of US indie scufflers Les Savy Fav and Diiv, beautifully bleak new business from Keeley Forsyth and Stars Of The Lid’s Adam Wiltzie, and news of a sequel to 2022’s much-loved Ghosted, by Oren Ambarchi and friends. The pleasure’s all ours…

PARAORCHESTRA WITH BRETT ANDERSON & CHARLES HAZLEWOOD 
“The Killing Moon”
(World Circuit)

BONNY LIGHT HORSEMAN
“When I Was Younger”
(Jagjaguwar)

MICHAEL HEAD & THE RED ELASTIC BAND
“Connemara”
(Modern Sky)

KHRUANGBIN
“May Ninth”
(Dead Oceans / Night Time Stories)

LEYLA McCALLA
“Love We Had”
(Anti-)

ISOBEL CAMPBELL
“4316”
(Cooking Vinyl)

AMANDA BERGMAN
“Wild Geese, Wild Love”
(CowCow)

ROWENA WISE
“We Are Nothing”
(Dalliance)

CEDRIC BURNSIDE
“Closer”
(Provogue)

LES SAVY FAV
“Guzzle Blood”
(Frenchkiss)

HOUSE Of ALL 
“Murmuration”
(Tiny Global Productions)

DOG UNIT
“Consistent Effort”
(Brace Yourself)

DIIV
“Brown Paper Bag”
(Fantasy Records)

AWEN ENSEMBLE 
“Idris”
(New Soil)

SIX ORGANS OF ADMITTANCE
“Summer’s Last Rays”
(Drag City)

KEELEY FORSYTH
“Horse”
(FatCat)

OREN AMBARCHI / JOHAN BERTHLING / ANDREAS WERLIIN
“Tre”
(Drag City)

STILL HOUSE PLANTS
“No Sleep Deep Risk”
(Bison)

HATIS NOIT
“Jomon (Preservation Rework feat. Armand Hammer)”
(Erased Tapes)

ADAM WILTZIE
“Tissue Of Lies”
(Kranky)

GROUP LISTENING
“New Brighton”
(PRAH)

THERE’S PLENTY MORE NEW MUSIC COVERAGE INSIDE THE NEW UNCUT! ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

Take a look inside the new Uncut

As you’ll have gathered by now, there’s a new issue of Uncut currently in shops, featuring a cavalcade of excellent new interviews and features as well as our definitive reviews section and a free, 15-track CD.

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

Here’s a rundown of some highlights from the new issue…

PINK FLOYD

With his SAUCERFUL OF SECRETS band, NICK MASON is on a mission to save the potent, foundational music of PINK FLOYD. In doing so, he aims to reassert the Floyd’s historic creative path from three-minute pop fantasias and cosmic-progressive freakouts to the transitional epiphanies that led to The Dark Side Of The Moon. As he prepares to lead the Saucers back out on tour, Mason and his co-conspirators – aka “the jolly Floyd” – dig deep into the band’s years of questing. “In Pink Floyd, we didn’t have a clue what we were doing half the time,” Mason tells us. “What we did have was an abundance of ideas.”

THE BEACH BOYS

From three brothers wrestling on their front lawn to the miraculous creation of numerous pop masterpieces, a new photobook chronicles THE BEACH BOYS’ Californian dream, in their own words and pictures. There are disappointments and dark moments, but a sense of innocent joy prevails. As Brian Wilson recalls, “We were one of the biggest things going.”

ADRIANNE LENKER

Away from her day job with Big Thief, ADRIANNE LENKER has developed a parallel career as a solo artist, whose intricate and vulnerable folk songs mine deep, emotional truths. In New York, she talks to Uncut about creation, catharsis and connection. “In a way, it’s like one song that I’ve been writing since I was 10 years old…”

WAYNE KRAMER

The Motor City is in mourning. Brothers and sisters, the time has come for Uncut’s Jaan Uhelszki to pay a very personal tribute to the inspirational leader of the MC5

THE JESUS AND MARY CHAIN

Since reuniting in 2007, THE JESUS AND MARY CHAIN have proved that even the most tempestuous sibling relationships can enjoy successful second acts. As they prepare to mark their 40th anniversary with a new album and an autobiography, JIM and WILLIAM REID explain how the shared ideals they developed in their East Kilbride bedroom still apply in 2024. “Your fantasy of being in a band is in every way better than the reality…”

TOWNES VAN ZANDT

A dive bar in a rundown Texas neighbourhood, The Old Quarter was a regular haunt for TOWNES VAN ZANDT. In 1973, it also became the setting for a live recording that vividly captured the renegade singer-songwriter’s wild charisma and quicksilver poetry. As we mark what would have been Townes’ 80th birthday, friends, admirers and sundry ne’er-do-wells tell the story of this historic recording – and its critical place in Townes’ lore. “I’d seen him fucked up, I’d seen him really good,” says Steve Earle. “For some reason, he took those nights very seriously.”

SHABAKA HUTCHINGS

The UK jazz magus has retired his celebrated bands Sons Of Kemet and The Comet Is Coming – and even put aside his trusty saxophone – in order to seek out fresh creative inspiration. His quest takes him from a bamboo forest in Japan via the birthplace of A Love Supreme to a kids’ swimming pool in Croydon, where SHABAKA HUTCHINGS explains to Sam Richards, “It’s gonna be good, so just enjoy the ride…”

AN AUDIENCE WITH… JAH WOBBLE

The former PiL bass invader talks Can, Sid, Sinéad and “going deep into the heart of space”

The Jesus And Mary Chain announce memoir, Never Understood

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The Jesus And Mary Chain have announced details of their memoir. Never Understood will be published by White Rabbit books on August 15.

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

Written by Jim and William Reid, with Ben Thompson, the memoir is available in hardback, trade paperback, ebook and audio digital download, alongside a White Rabbit special edition and a vinyl audiobook. You can pre-order a copy here.

The Jesus And Mary Chain also star in this month’s issue of Uncut, where they discuss their new album Glasgow Eyes, how the shared ideals they developed in their East Kilbride bedroom still apply in 2024 and how the bust-ups and breakdowns of yore are now firmly behind them. “Your fantasy of being in a band is in every way better than the reality,” they tell us.

Bruce Springsteen announces new Greatest Hits set

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As Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band head out onto the road this month, Sony Music are releasing Best Of Bruce Springsteen, a new compilation spanning 1973’s Greeting from Asbury Park, NJ to 2020’s Letter To You.

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

The album is released on April 19 and will come in physical formats as an 18-track set across 2 LPs or 1 CD – and digitally as an expanded 31-song package.

You can pre-order the album here.

The album and CD tracklisting is:

Growin’ Up
Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)
Born To Run
Thunder Road
Badlands
Hungry Heart 
Atlantic City 
Dancing in the Dark
Born in the U.S.A
Brilliant Disguise 
Human Touch 
Streets of Philadelphia
The Ghost of Tom Joad
Secret Garden
The Rising 
Girls In Their Summer Clothes
Hello Sunshine
Letter To You

The digital deluxe tracklisting is:

Growin’ Up
Spirit In The Night 
Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)
4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy) 
Born To Run
Tenth Avenue Freeze Out 
Thunder Road
Badlands
Prove It All Night
The River
Hungry Heart 
Atlantic City 
Glory Days
Dancing in the Dark
Born in the U.S.A
Brilliant Disguise 
Tougher Than The Rest 
Human Touch 
If I Should Fall Behind 
Living Proof
Streets of Philadelphia
The Ghost of Tom Joad
Secret Garden
The Rising 
Long Time Comin’
Girls In Their Summer Clothes
The Wrestler
We Take Care Of Our Own
Hello Sunshine
Ghosts 
Letter To You 

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN AND THE E STREET BAND – 2024 TOUR DATES:

March 19 – Phoenix, AZ @ Footprint Center 

March 22 – Las Vegas, NV @ T-Mobile Arena 

March 25 – San Diego, CA @ Pechanga Arena 

March 28 – San Francisco, CA @ Chase Center 

March 31 – San Francisco, CA @ Chase Center 

April 4 – Inglewood, CA @ Kia Forum 

April 7 – Inglewood, CA @ Kia Forum

April 12 – Uncasville, CT @ Mohegan Sun Arena 

April 15 – Albany, NY @ MVP Arena

April 18 – Syracuse, NY @ JMA Wireless Dome 

April 21 – Columbus, OH @ Nationwide Arena

May 5 – Cardiff, Wales @ Principality Stadium 

May 9 – Belfast, Northern Ireland @ Boucher Road 

May 12 – Kilkenny, Ireland @ Nowlan Park 

May 16 – Cork, Ireland @ Páirc Uí Chaoimh 

May 19 – Dublin, Ireland @ Croke Park 

May 22 – Sunderland, England @ Stadium of Light

May 25 – Marseille, France @ Orange Vélodrome

May 28 – Prague, Czech Republic @ Airport Letnany

June 1 – Milan, Italy @ San Siro Stadium

June 3 – Milan, Italy @ San Siro Stadium 

June 12 – Madrid, Spain @ Cívitas Metropolitano 

June 14 – Madrid, Spain @ Cívitas Metropolitano 

June 17 – Madrid, Spain @ Cívitas Metropolitano 

June 20 – Barcelona, Spain @ Estadi Olímpic 

June 22 – Barcelona, Spain @ Estadi Olímpic 

June 27 – Nijmegen, Netherlands @ Goffertpark 

June 29 – Nijmegen, Netherlands @ Goffertpark 

July 2 – Werchter, Belgium @ Werchter Park 

July 5 – Hannover, Germany @ Heinz von Heiden Arena 

July 9 – Odense, Denmark @ Dyrskuepladsen 

July 12 – Helsinki, Finland @ Olympic Stadium 

July 15 – Stockholm, Sweden @ Friends Arena 

July 18 – Stockholm, Sweden @ Friends Arena 

July 21 – Bergen, Norway @ Dokken 

July 25 – London, England @ Wembley Stadium connected by EE 

July 27 – London, England @ Wembley Stadium connected by EE 

Aug. 15 – Pittsburgh, PA @ PPG Paints Arena 

Aug. 18 – Pittsburgh, PA @ PPG Paints Arena 

Aug. 21 – Philadelphia, PA @ Citizens Bank Park 

Aug. 23 – Philadelphia, PA @ Citizens Bank Park 

Sept. 7 – Washington, DC @ Nationals Park 

Sept. 13 – Baltimore, MD @ Oriole Park at Camden Yards 

Oct. 31 – Montreal, Quebec @ Centre Bell 

Nov. 3 – Toronto, Ontario @ Scotiabank Arena 

Nov. 6 – Toronto, Ontario @ Scotiabank Arena 

Nov. 9 – Ottawa, Ontario @ Canadian Tire Centre 

Nov. 13 – Winnipeg, Manitoba @ Canada Life Centre 

Nov. 16 – Calgary, Alberta @ Scotiabank Saddledome 

Nov. 19 – Edmonton, Alberta @ Rogers Place 

Nov. 22 – Vancouver, British Columbia @ Rogers Arena

“It’s shamanic!”

In an excerpt from this month’s Pink Floyd cover story, Nick Mason’s Saucerful Of Secrets – aka Mason, Guy Pratt, Gary Kemp, Lee Harris and Dom Beken – reveal their 10 favourite vintage Floyd songs to play live…

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

“CANDY AND A CURRANT BUN”

“ARNOLD LAYNE” B SIDE; 1967

LEE HARRIS: I absolutely love this song. I think it might be Syd at his best – a three minute pop single that still manages a freakout section. When we first played it, it only took us a couple of rehearsals and it sounded amazing.

“SEE EMILY PLAY”

SINGLE; 1967

DOM BEKEN: There are so many wonderful, unusual sounds on this. Unlike some other tracks, where we were able to sample the original sound effects on the records, I had to recreate them all here. I made my own Rick Wright-style prepared piano by taking apart an old girlfriend’s piano and sampling every single note! I love the piano gliss going into the last chorus. It’s such a great pop song, isn’t it?

“ASTRONOMY DOMINE”

THE PIPER AT THE GATES OF DAWN; 196

NICK MASON: This is enormous fun to play, lots of tom-toms, lots of double-bass drum pounding. I love the vocal harmonies, like a Gregorian choir. People think of it as a freakout, but it’s deceptively complicated, with lots of very unusual chord changes.

“INTERSTELLAR OVERDRIVE”

THE PIPER AT THE GATES OF DAWN; 1967

MASON: There’s a lot of muddled labelling between ‘psych’ and ‘prog’, which I’ve always thought were very different things. This is Pink Floyd at our most psychedelic. It is always fun to play. It has that same structure you get in a classic jazz song – you play the melody, improvise around it, then restate it at the end.

“BIKE”

THE PIPER AT THE GATES OF DAWN; 1967

MASON: It’s a very funny lyric, isn’t it? “I’d give it to you if I could/But I borrowed it…” You have to follow Syd’s very odd metre to get the rhythm right. Apparently, we never played this live at the time, so it’s wonderful to give it another life.

“SET THE CONTROLS FOR THE HEART OF THE SUN”

A SAUCERFUL OF SECRETS; 1968

GARY KEMP: I first played this in 1971, jamming along to the record with my mates from the Anna Scher drama school, Phil Daniels, Peter Hugo Daly and Miles Landesman. It’s fabulous to play – it’s not busy, but a real energy boils up. It’s like a sonic voyage into the sun. It’s almost shamanic.

“THE NILE SONG”

MORE; 1969

GUY PRATT: This is another one Floyd never played live, to our knowledge. I got into this as a teenager, buying that cheap 99p Relics album and falling in love with it. This is Floyd at their punkiest and heaviest. I have to get into a zone where I’m able to howl the vocal part, screaming my guts out.

“ONE OF THESE DAYS”

MEDDLE; 1971

PRATT: This was one of only three songs from this era I’d played before – the others being “Astronomy Domine” and “Arnold Layne”. We often play this as a set opener, a way of setting out our stall. It’s a reminder of how experimental Roger was as a bass player – that wonderful, throbbing groove.

“ECHOES”

MEDDLE; 1971

KEMP: This is the most ambitious thing we’ve done. There are so many sections, so many moods. It took five days of rehearsals to nail it. There’s a gentle, very English, pastoral formality about the vocals that Guy and I have to cling to when we sing those harmonies.

“OBSCURED BY CLOUDS”

OBSCURED BY CLOUDS; 1972

PRATT: I think this is the most recent song in the Floyd canon that we do. Like a punky piece of krautrock. It’s so blissful. Nick said it would work in Ibiza and I think he’s right. It’s heavy and trancey. A lovely world to inhabit.

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

Watch Keith Richards cover The Velvet Underground’s “I’m Waiting For The Man”

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To celebrate what would have been Lou Reed’s 82nd birthday, Keith Richards has released a video showing him recording a cover of The Velvet Underground’s “I’m Waiting For The Man”.

It’s the first track on The Power Of The Heart: A Tribute To Lou Reed, to be released by Light In The Attic on Record Store Day (April 20).

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

“To me, Lou stood out,” says Richards. “The real deal! Something important to American music and to ALL MUSIC! I miss him and his dog.” Watch the video below:

See who else has contributed a Lou Reed cover to the album below:

The Power Of The Heart: A Tribute To Lou Reed (Vinyl)
Side A:
Keith Richards – I’m Waiting for the Man
Maxim Ludwig & Angel Olsen – I Can’t Stand It
Rufus Wainwright – Perfect Day
Joan Jett and the Blackhearts – I’m So Free
Bobby Rush – Sally Can’t Dance
Rickie Lee Jones – Walk on the Wild Side
Side B:
The Afghan Whigs – I Love You, Suzanne
Mary Gauthier – Coney Island Baby
Lucinda Williams – Legendary Hearts
Automatic – New Sensations
Rosanne Cash – Magician

The Power Of The Heart: A Tribute To Lou Reed (CD/Digital)

  1. Keith Richards – I’m Waiting for the Man
  2. Maxim Ludwig & Angel Olsen – I Can’t Stand It
  3. Rufus Wainwright – Perfect Day
  4. Joan Jett and the Blackhearts – I’m So Free
  5. Bobby Rush – Sally Can’t Dance
  6. Rickie Lee Jones – Walk on the Wild Side
  7. The Afghan Whigs – I Love You, Suzanne
  8. Mary Gauthier – Coney Island Baby
  9. Lucinda Williams – Legendary Hearts
  10. Automatic – New Sensations
  11. Rosanne Cash – Magician
  12. Brogan Bentley – The Power of the Heart

Stevie Nicks to headline BST Hyde Park

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Stevie Nicks has been announced as a headliner at this year’s American Express presents BST Hyde Park events in London.

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

The rest of the bill is still to be confirmed.

Nick last performed in the UK at another BST Hyde Park, supporting Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers in 2017.

Pre sale will go live at 10am on Monday, March 4 and will run until 9am on Wednesday, March 6. Sign up can be found here.

Elsewhere at this year’s BST Hyde Park, you’ll find Kings of Leon (June 30), Andrea Bocelli (July 5), Robbie Williams (July 6), Shania Twain (July 7), Kylie Minogue (July 13) and Stray Kids (July 14).

St Vincent announces new album, All Born Screaming

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Annie Clarke returns with a new St Vincent album All Born Screaming, which is released on April 26th by Virgin Music/Fiction Records.

You can hear “Broken Man” from the album below.

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

Clarke’s seventh album, All Born Screaming features guests including Dave Grohl, Cate Le Bon and Stella Mogzawa. You can pre-order a copy here.

The tracklisting All Born Screaming is:

Hell is Near
Reckless
Broken Man
Flea
Big Time Nothing
Violent Times
The Power’s Out
Sweetest Fruit
So Many Planets 
All Born Screaming
(featuring Cate Le Bon)

Hear Richard Thompson’s new track, “Singapore Sadie”

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Richard Thompson has announced details of his new album, Ship To Shore. You can hear a taster for the album, “Singapore Sadie“, below.

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

Released on May 31 via New West Records, Ship To Shore is Thompson’s follow-up to his 2018 studio album 13 Rivers and his 2021 memoir Beeswing.

Produced by Thompson and recorded in Woodstock, NY, the album will be available on standard black vinyl, CD and on digital platforms. A limited “Deep Blue” colour vinyl edition of 500 with a bonus orange flexi disc featuring a demo of the song “Trust” will be available via Rough Trade. An autographed compact disc edition and a limited orange and yellow marble coluor vinyl edition featuring a 5×7 archival print autographed by Richard Thompson will be available via independent retailers and is available for pre-order now via NEW WEST RECORDS

The tracklisting for Ship To Shore is:

Freeze 

The Fear Never Leaves You 

Singapore Sadie

Trust  

The Day That I Give In 

The Old Pack Mule  

Turnstile Casanova  

Lost In The Crowd  

Maybe 

Life’s A Bloody Show 

What’s Left To Lose  

We Roll 

Thompson is also heading out on tour:

March 1 – Mamaroneck, NY – The Emelin Theatre *

March 2 – Beacon, NY – The Towne Crier Cafe *

March 15 – Old Saybrook, CT – The Kate *

March 16 – Fall River, MA – Narrows Center for the Arts *

March 17 – Northampton, MA – Back Porch Festival *

March 21 – Fairfield,CT – Sacred Heart University Community Theater *

March 22 – Derry, NH – Tupelo Music Hall *

March 23 – Burlington, VT – First Unitarian Church *

March 24 – Shirley, MA – The Bull Run *

April 4 – Hartford, CT – Infinity Music Hall *

April 5 – Gloucester, MA – The Cut *

April 6 – Roslyn, NY – My Father’s Place *

April 7 – Roslyn, NY – My Father’s Place *

April 9 – Annapolis, MD – Rams Head Tavern *

April 10 – Richmond, VA – Tin Pan *

April 11 – Vienna, VA – The Barns at Wolf Trap *

April 12 – Collingswood, NJ – The Scottish Rite *

May 25 – Cambridge, England, UK – Corn Exchange #

May 26 – Bristol, UK – Beacon #

May 27 – York, UK – Barbican #

May 29 – Glasgow, UK – Royal Concert Hall #

May 30 – Gateshead, UK – Glasshouse #

May 31 – Manchester, UK – Aviva Studios at Manchester Factory International #

June 1 – Stoke-on-Trent, UK – Victoria Hall #

June 3 – Birmingham, UK – Symphony Hall #

June 4 – Cardiff, UK – New Theatre #

June 5 – Portsmouth, UK – Guildhall #

June 6 – Brighton and Hove, UK – Dome Concert Hall #

June 8 – London,UK – Royal Albert Hall #

July 28 – Cape May, NJ – Cape May Convention Hall #

October 18 – New York, NY – The Town Hall #

August 23 – August 30, 2025 – Venice, Italy – Harmony Voyages – Gems of the Adriatic Cruise

* Solo Show

# Full Band

Mdou Moctar unveils new album, Funeral For Justice

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Mdou Moctar has announced that his band’s new album Funeral For Justice – the follow-up to 2021’s Afrique Victime – will be released by Matador on May 3.

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

You can watch a video for the blistering title track below:

“This album is really different for me,” explains Moctar. “Now the problems of terrorist violence are more serious in Africa. When the US and Europe came here, they said they’re going to help us, but what we see is really different. They never help us to find a solution.”

Funeral For Justice was recorded by the band’s bassist Mikey Coltun over five days in a mostly unfurnished house in upstate New York. “I really wanted this to shine with the political message because of everything that’s going on,” he says. “As the band got tighter and heavier live, it made sense to capture this urgency and this aggression – it wasn’t a forced thing, it was very natural.”

Pre-order Funeral For Justice here.

Hear T Bone Burnett’s new track, “Waiting For You”

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T Bone Burnett will release a new solo album, The Other Side, on April 19 through Verve Forecast.

The album – T Bone’s first since 2008’s Tooth Of Crime – features contributions from Rosanne Cash, Lucius and Weyes Blood.

You can hear a taster for the album, “Waiting For You“, with Lucius on harmony vocals, below.

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

The album is available to pre-order here.

Tracklisting for The Other Side is:

He Came Down

Come Back (When You Go Away)

(I’m Gonna Get Over This) Some Day (w/Rosanne Cash)

Waiting For You (w/Lucius)

The Pain Of Love (w/Lucius)

The Race Is Won (w/Lucius)

Sometimes I Wonder (w/Weyes Blood)

Hawaiian Blue Song (w/Steven Soles)

The First Light Of Day

Everything And Nothing

The Town That Time Forgot

Little Darling

Burnett will also play three live shows in Nashville in May to support the album:

May 3— Franklin Theatre
May 9 — The Blue Room at Third Man Records
May 10— Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s CMA Theater

Watch a video for Shabaka Hutchings’ new track, “End Of Innocence”

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UK jazz figurehead Shabaka Hutchings – formerly of the bands Sons Of Kemet and The Comet Is Coming – has released his first new music since quitting the saxophone at the end of last year. “End Of Innocence” is the first single to be taken from his new solo album Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace, released by Impulse! on April 12.

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

While the album mostly features Hutchings playing a range of different flutes, “End Of Innocence” marks a return to his first instrument, the clarinet. Watch the Phoebe Boswell-directed video below:

The track also features Jason Moran (piano), Nasheet Waits (drums) and Carlos Niño (percussion). Other contributors to the album include André 3000, Lianne La Havas, Esperanza Spalding, Moses Sumney, Brandee Younger, Floating Points, Laraaji, Miguel Atwood-Ferguson, Saul Williams and Elucid.

“I invited a bunch of musicians I’ve met and admired over the past few years of touring throughout the United States to collaborate and everyone said yes, which I constantly find breathtaking,” says Hutchings. The album was recorded at the historic Van Gelder Studio in New Jersey, which he says “informed the sound of so many seminal jazz albums that have shaped my musical aptitude. We played with no headphones or separation in the room so we could capture the atmosphere of simply playing together in the space without a technological intermediary.”

You can pre-order Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace here and peruse the tracklisting below. Look out for an in-depth interview with Shabaka Hutchings in the new issue of Uncut, due out in UK shops tomorrow (March 29) or available to order online here.

  1. End Of Innocence
  2. As The Planets And the Stars Collapse
  3. Insecurities
  4. Managing My Breath, What Fear Had Become
  5. The Wounded Need To Be Replenished
  6. Body To Inhabit
  7. I’ll Do Whatever You Want
  8. Living
  9. Breathing
  10. Kiss Me Before I Forget
  11. Song Of The Motherland

Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson and Robert Plant & Alison Krauss for 2024 Outlaw Music Festival Tour

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Willie Nelson‘s Outlaw Music Music Festival Tour this year will feature Willie Nelson & Family, Bob Dylan, Robert Plant & Alison Krauss and John Mellencamp among its storied bill.

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“This year’s Outlaw Music Festival Tour promises to be the biggest and best yet with this lineup of legendary artists. I am thrilled to get back on the road again with my family and friends playing the music we love for the fans we love,” said Nelson.

The festival made its debut in 2016 in Scranton, Pennsylvania and has since gone on to include Neil Young, Van Morrison, ZZ Top, Sheryl Crow and Bonnie Raitt in various line-ups.

This year’s festival runs for 25 dates, beginning on June 21 at the Ameris Bank Amphitheatre in Alpharetta, Georgia and finishing on September 17 at the Darien Lake Amphitheater in Buffalo, New York.

Also on the bill are Brittney Spencer, Celisse and Southern Avenue while Billy Strings will also join the tour for one show at The Gorge in Washington.

You can find the full list of dates by clicking here. Tickets go on sale from Friday, March 1.

Scott Fagan – South Atlantic Blues (reissue, 1968)

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Tales of contenders who never fulfilled their early promise are plentiful in the music game, but Scott Fagan’s comes with intriguing details – including having sired Stephin Merritt – and an idiosyncratic soundtrack. Raised in the US Virgin Islands, he moved to New York in 1964 and there started co-writing songs with the heavyweight Doc Pomus/Mort Shuman team. Over the next three years, he also penned the songs that were to form his debut album. The “bigger than Presley” success predicted by Fagan’s high-profile manager, Herb Gart, never came to be, while a deal with Atlantic subsidiary ATCO saw him stuck in a contract with no label advocate. South Atlantic Blues disappeared, leaving only a trace.

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It’s clearly not through lack of ability or youthful appeal, as this vinyl reissue – which reinstates the original artwork (replacing the 1970 Jasper Johns lithograph, Scott Fagan’s Record, that appeared on 2015’s repressing) – attests. The singer-songwriter was a photogenic 22-year-old when he recorded it with producer Elmer Jared Gordon and the 10 tracks are as accomplished as they are immediately likeable. They’re also diverse, combining folk, country, psychedelic pop and orchestral soul, with calypso and show tuneage providing top notes. Three songs are co-writes with Fagan’s pal and fellow “hardscrabble kid” Joe Kookoolis; one, “Crystal Ball”, with Shuman. Melodrama is in play, due in part to fêted arranger Horace Ott’s work.

Fagan’s voice is as much a defining element of South Atlantic Blues as his songs’ style: its slightly histrionic push and flutter, which recalls early Bowie, may be something of an acquired taste, but in his moodier moments he conjures Scott Walker and Gene Clark. The former is certainly present in set opener “In My Head”, whose lyrics are characteristically allusive (“Myself and I have always seen the sea as secret lover/But does she, does she, does she want the sky instead?/Oh, no, it’s something, something in my head”), the strident brass blasts and Fagan’s anguished, paranoid cry sending mixed emotional messages to great effect. “Crying” is another standout, a slice of bittersweet Southern soul thrown slightly off its axis by a plinking keyboard motif at the two-thirds mark. Very different are “The Carnival Is Ended”, a lilting, Bacharach-meets-Bowie number with steel pans and mariachi brass, and the socially conscious “Tenement Hall”, a Dr John/Van hybrid replete with improv strings and guitar savagery, which exits on Fagan’s near sob of “insane”, repeated to fadeout.

The reissue of his slightly mystical debut will no doubt stoke interest in director Marah Strauch’s forthcoming documentary on Fagan’s life and his new album in the pipeline – the unrecorded soundtrack to Soon, a rock musical co-written with Kookoolis which had a fleeting Broadway run in 1971. One more (deserved) shot at wider recognition, perhaps.

Uncut – April 2024

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Pink Floyd and Nick Mason’s Saucerful Of Secrets, The Beach Boys, Adrianne Lenker, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Shabaka Hutchings, Townes Van Zandt, Jah Wobble, Wayne Kramer, A Certain Ratio and more all feature in Uncut‘s April 2024 issue, in UK shops from February 2 or available to buy online now.

All print copies come with a free CD – One Of These Days, featuring 15 of the month’s best new music including The Black Keys, Jane Weaver, Ride, Cedric Burnside, Waxahatchee, Pernice Brothers, Jim White and more!

INSIDE THIS MONTH’S UNCUT

PINK FLOYD: With his SAUCERFUL OF SECRETS band, NICK MASON is on a mission to save the potent, foundational music of PINK FLOYD. In doing so, he aims to reassert the Floyd’s historic creative path from three-minute pop fantastias and cosmic-progressive freak-outs to the transitional epiphanies that led to The Dark Side Of The Moon. “In Pink Floyd, we didn’t have a clue what we were doing half the time,” Mason tells us. “What we did have was an abundance of ideas.”

THE BEACH BOYS: From three brothers wrestling on their front lawn to the miraculous creation of numerous pop masterpieces, a new photobook chronicles The Beach Boys’ Californian dream, in their own words and pictures. As Brian Wilson remembers, “We were one of the biggest things going”…

ADRIANNE LENKER: Away from her day job with BIG THIEF, ADRIANNE LENKER has developed a parallel career as a solo artist, whose intricate and vulnerable folk songs mine deep, emotional truths. In New York, she talks to Uncut about creation, catharsis and connection. “In a way, it’s like one song that I’ve been writing since I was 10 years old…”

SHABAKA HUTCHINGS: The UK jazz magus has retired his celebrated bands Sons Of Kemet and The Comet Is Coming – and even put aside his trusty saxophone – in order to seek out fresh creative inspiration. His quest takes him from a bamboo forest in Japan via the birthplace of A Love Supreme to a kids swimming pool in Croydon. “It’s gonna be good, so just enjoy the ride…”

THE JESUS AND MARY CHAIN: Since reuniting in 2007, THE JESUS AND MARY CHAIN have proved that even the most tempestuous sibling relationships can enjoy successful second acts. As they prepare to mark their 40th anniversary with a new album and an autobiography, JIM and WILLIAM REID explain how the shared ideals they developed in their East Kilbride bedroom still apply in 2024. “Your fantasy of being in a band is in every way better than the reality…”

TOWNES VAN ZANDT: A dive bar in a rundown Texas neighbourhood, The Old Quarter was a regular haunt for VAN ZANDT. In 1973, it also became the setting for a live recording that vividly captured the renegade singer-songwriter’s wild charisma and quicksilver poetry. “I’d seen him fucked up, I’d seen him really good,” recalls Steve Earle. “For some reason he took those nights very seriously.”

WAYNE KRAMER: Uncut’s Jaan Uhelszki first met the MC5 in 1965; here’s her personal tribute to their inspirational leader

REM: Stipe, Buck, Mills and Berry make a pilgrimage back to Athens’ 40 Watt club for Michael Shannon and Jason Narducy’s Murmur tribute. “It’s an honour to hear the songs so fresh, live in a room again,” Stipe tells us.

NICO: With reissues for Desertshore and The Marble Index due, in this archive interview John Cale remembers recording the Velvet revolutionary: “I didn’t know what I was getting myself into…”

AN AUDIENCE WITH… JAH WOBBLE: The ex-PiL bass invader talks Can, Sid, Sinead and “going deep into the heart of space”

THE MAKING OF “THERE’S A BREAK IN THE ROAD” BY BETTY HARRIS: How the Florida singer found her funk-soul heart with help from Allen Toussant, The Meters and “psychedelic music”

ALBUM BY ALBUM WITH A CERTAIN RATIO: The Greatest Manchester post-punk funkateers chart their sonic journey from 1980 to the present day

MY LIFE IN MUSIC WITH ALBERT HAMMOND: The songwriter’s songwriter on his most enduring listens: “Music will be there forever”

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REVIEWED: Cedric Burnside, Jane Weaver, Waxahatchee, Charles Lloyd, Ride, BrhyM, Love Child, Faust, Alice Cooper, Creation Rebel, Pixies, Werner Herzog, Jim Gordon, Kristin Hersh, Nirvana, Depeche Mode, Margo Price and more

PLUS: Farewell Damo Suzuki; Arthur Russell unseen; Lulu; our pick of the best speakers; introducing Oisin Leech…

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Introducing the new issue of Uncut

THERE have been many twists in the long-running saga of Pink Floyd, but few could have predicted the events of May 20, 2018. On stage in Camden’s Dingwalls, Nick Mason’s Saucerful Of Secrets opened a surprising new chapter in the band’s story, reviving the three-minute pop fantasias and cosmic-progressive freakouts of the Floyd’s foundational years before The Dark Side Of The Moon. In our cover story, Mason looks back on the creation of this magnificent, irregular music, while along with his co-conspirators in the Saucers, he explains how – and why – they’ve brought it back to life. “The best Pink Floyd gigs were voyages of discovery, accompanied by a sense of mystery and adventure,” Mason tells Uncut. “I was excited about playing music with a sense of freedom, music that involved improvisation. That’s what Saucerful Of Secrets is all about.”

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There’s plenty about creativity, and what fuels it, in the rest of the magazine – whether it be the open-hearted songwriting of Big Thief’s Adrianne Lenker, the harmonic brilliance of The Beach Boys or the careworn poetry of Townes Van Zandt. In a typically wideranging issue, we head off in further sonic directions in the company of The Jesus And Mary Chain, Shabaka Hutchings, Jah Wobble, Betty Harris and A Certain Ratio, and also pay homage to two great instigators – Wayne Kramer and Damo Suzuki.

One of the best things about writing this column for you every month is getting to marvel at the incredible variety of music we stack inside every issue. This one is no exception; you’ll even find Lulu on the time she recorded with the Memphis Horns, Duane Allman and Dr John. Not a story you’re likely to read about every day…

Send us your questions for Vini Reilly

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Vini Reilly has fans in high places. When God appeared to Tony Wilson in the film 24 Hour Party People, it was to suggest that he release a Durutti Column greatest hits. As the Lord Almighty correctly observed, “It’s good music to chill out to.”

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

The Durutti Column were the first band signed to Factory Records in 1978, although they soon became a de facto Vini Reilly solo project (with staunch assistance down the years from drummer Bruce Mitchell and others). The group’s music – quiet, pensive, beautiful – was in stark contrast to the punk scene Reilly came up in as guitarist for Ed Banger & The Nosebleeds.

His delicate playing incorporated scales and techniques from classical and flamenco traditions rarely heard in rock. Occasionally The Durutti Column’s music has drifted towards the zeitgeist, as on 1989’s quasi-Balearic Vini Reilly album, soon to be reissued as a five-disc box set.

The year before, he played a key role on Morrissey’s debut Viva Hate. But mostly Reilly has preferred to do his own thing, maintaining a rare purity of vision.

So, what do you want to ask a singular British guitar genius? Send your questions to audiencewith@uncut.co.uk by Wednesday March 6 and Vini will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

Introducing the Ultimate Genre Guide: Singer-Songwriter

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My first meeting with a giant in the field of singer-songwriting wasn’t in an LA canyon, but somewhere on a hill outside San Francisco. Tasked 25 years ago with interviewing Neil Young for NME, myself and a photographer took a long taxi ride outside the city and up to what was then apparently one of Neil’s incognito hangs – a homey restaurant within a wooded area called the Mountain House. As we pulled up and stepped out of the taxi in our unCalifornian black clothing, we were greeted by a genial voice: “Great,” it announced, wryly. “The English are here!”

This, of course, was Elliott Roberts, then 30 years into a role which he occupied for over half a century, quietly influencing the careers of the most single-minded and ungovernable artists in music history: Neil Young of course, but also Crosby, Stills and Nash, and our cover star, Joni Mitchell. These artists, their contemporaries, kindred spirits and fellow travellers like James Taylor, Carole King, Judee Sill and Jackson Browne are at the heart of this publication.

They are also what we think of when we talk about the art of the singer-songwriter: the song as an investigation of the self, a discovery of emotional truths. Geographically and metaphorically it was an escape from the crowd: the old bands, and the old ways of doing things. As much as it was about the individual writer, it was also about a wider empathy: a tuneful and engrossing pursuit which won its musicians millions of fans all over the world.

In this magazine, you will of course read about the Canyon artists – the mismatch between turbulent life and melodious, easy-listening music of James Taylor is a particularly extraordinary treat – but you will also read in-depth reviews of artists who didn’t easily sit within the west coast songwriter circle. 

There’s impressive new and recent writing on the resolutely east coast Laura Nyro, whose work so enraptured the young David Geffen, and helped point his road ahead. Present also are new opinions on unclubbable visionaries like Van Morrison and Tim Buckley, and the quietly spectacular Paul Simon. Joni Mitchell connected Leonard Cohen to the Laurel Canyon scene, but his troubled relationship with his muse was destined to sit uneasily within it, despite the best efforts of David Crosby. You’ll find what amounts to last words on the scene from Croz at the back of the magazine.

“And then there was Joni,” he says. “Formidable talent doesn’t even begin to describe it, she was the best of us. She’s absolutely the best singer-songwriter of our time.”

You can find yourself a copy here.

Aziza Brahim – Mawja

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Aziza Brahim’s homeland of Western Sahara is listed by the UN as the last remaining colony in Africa. Under Spanish control until 1976, the territory was then annexed by Morocco and has been under occupation ever since. Denied self-determination, many of its people, the Sahrawi, were forced into exile in refugee camps in the Algerian desert. Those camps are where Brahim was born, her mother having fled the family’s ancestral home following Morocco’s military invasion.

PINK FLOYD ARE ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME

Growing up, Brahim recalls singing as the principal form of entertainment, and she was soon setting to music the verse of her grandmother, Lkhadra Mint Mabruk, a celebrated Sahrawi writer, revolutionary and feminist hero known as “the poet of the rifle”.

In her teens Brahim was educated in Cuba before returning to the desert in 1995, where she joined the National Sahrawi Music Group. She then chose Spain as a suitable base from which to raise the plight of her oppressed people via her music.

After releasing her debut album in 2012 – which included settings of her grandmother’s poems – she was signed by Glitterbeat, for whom she has recorded a series of proudly defiant albums full of moving songs yearning for her homeland and espousing the cause of freedom.

A fearless moderniser who at the same time sounds somehow ancient, her work to date has found acclaim in world music circles without making the transition from a WOMAD audience to the mainstream in the way that, say, Tinariwen have done.  Deeply rooted and yet sonically adventurous, Mawja should, if there is any justice, change that.

‘Mawja’ means ‘wave’ in the Hassaniya dialect of Arabic, a reference to the radio signal which growing up in the refugee camp kept her in touch with the outside world and the electronic “waves” that now carry her music and the story of her people to a wider audience.

Since her last album, 2019’s Sahari, much has happened to turn Brahim’s universe upside down and the travails have fed into Mawja to create her most accomplished and rounded work to date. With her mother, brothers and sisters and one of her daughters still living in the barren region of the Algerian desert known as The Devil’s Garden, she suffered a crisis of anxiety, characteristic of many exiles separated from their loved ones, which was exacerbated by the Covid pandemic. Then in November 2020 the uneasy 30-year ceasefire between Morocco and the Polisario Front, the armed wing of the Sahrawi liberation movement, broke down and fighting resumed.

In 2022 came the death of the grandmother whose revolutionary poetry Brahim had sung so stirringly and who had taught her to be “proud and tenacious” in the face of adversity. Out of anguish, though, came inspiration, and the spirit of the great matriarch permeates the album from “Duaa”, a blues-drenched prayer in her honour, to the tender tribute “Ljaima Likbira”.

Brahim’s default musical currency is a resonant African desert blues freighted with a mournful yet defiant passion, but with a distinctly feminist perspective that is as different from Ali Farka Toure or Tinariwen as, say, Bessie Smith was from John Lee Hooker or Robert Johnson.

It’s a potent and compelling sound, inextricably linked to the resistance struggle but with an inherent dignity and elegance – not merely a cry of protest at oppression but a celebration of a proud culture, too. Her country may have no official status but it “exists without restrictions in our words, in our memory and in our voices.”

Playing the traditional Sahrawi hand drum known as the tabal and accompanied by Western rock instrumentation, her soulful voice has a delectably creamy tone capable of subtly different emotional shading. With its flute and chiming guitar there’s a folkish vibe to “Marhabna 2.1” (‘Welcome’), a syncopated reimagining of the opening track on her 2012 album. There’s more of a defiant edge to “Haiyu Ya Zawar” (‘Cheer, Oh Revolutionaries’), a song of resistance and struggle with some thrilling flamenco-style guitar played on a Cuban tres, while the raw, fiery blues-rock of “Metal Madera” was inspired by Brahim’s admiration for The Clash.

Amid the militant rallying cries there’s a healthy dose of myth and magic, too, particularly on the gently swaying “Bubisher” about a legendary bird, the appearance of which in Sahrawi folklore is meant to be a portent that better times are on the way. The Sahrawi, it seems, desperately need another sighting. Meanwhile, Mawja is an eloquent homage to the indomitable spirit and rich culture of Brahim’s troubled but proud people.

How To Buy Jerry Garcia And Friends

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With the reissue of Jerry Garcia and David Grisman’s So What, a meandering and lovely acoustic jazz set from 1998, Jon Dale singles out other collaborative highlights from the Grateful Dead frontman’s extra-curricular career…

JERRY GARCIA & DAVID GRISMAN

So What (reissue, 1998)

ORG MUSIC

7/10

A curious album, this one. Garcia and Grisman were long-time collaborators, having met in the late ’60s, which led to Grisman appearing on the Grateful Dead’s 1970 album American Beauty; they’d soon play together in bluegrass band Old & In The Way, and later, in the ’90s, they released a string of collaborative albums, including an album of children’s music (Not For Kids Only). There were many strings to their collective bow, then, and while their focus did tend to be on bluegrass and folk – Grisman combined these genres with jazz into a form he called Dawg Music – So What feels like a bit of an outlier, given its focus on acoustic jazz. They take on a few Miles Davis tunes here, flexing from a spirited “So What” to a tender “Milestones”; the real gems here, though, are the lovely runs through Milt Jackson’s “Bag’s Groove”.

The best of Jerry’s collaborations

HOWARD WALES & JERRY GARCIA

Hooteroll?

DOUGLAS, 1971

8/10

A surprisingly sturdy, impressive jazz-rock album, Hooteroll? has Wales and Garcia going at it particularly feverishly. It’s on Wales’s terms, largely – his overdriven organ tends to dominate proceedings – but when Garcia steps in, he’s more than capable of taking up the baton. One of the better albums in this genre.

MERL SAUNDERS

Fire Up

FANTASY, 1973

8/10

Saunders started playing with Garcia at The Matrix, the beginning of a long, fruitful collaboration. On Fire Up, Saunders is joined by Garcia, fellow Grateful Dead member Bill Kreutzmann, and Creedence’s Tom Fogerty. It’s a joy, Saunders’s piano and Garcia’s guitar and singing in perfect tandem, a deep blues-funk groove.

OLD & IN THE WAY

Old & In The Way

ROUND, 1975

8/10

A joyous, celebratory live performance from this bluegrass gang, where Garcia returns to the banjo, and joins David Grisman (mandolin), Vassar Clements (fiddle), Peter Rowan (guitar) and John Kahn (string bass). Playful and full of spirit, it’s a lovely documentation of the group, recorded late ’73 in San Francisco.