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Neil Young reveals tracklisting for Archives Vol II: 1972-1976

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Neil Young has revealed the tracklisting for the long-awaited second volume of his archive anthology. Archives Vol II: 1972-1976 is a ten-disc boxset, due for release on November 20 exclusively through Neil Young archives. Pre-ordering begins on October 16. The set features 12 songs that h...

Neil Young has revealed the tracklisting for the long-awaited second volume of his archive anthology.

Archives Vol II: 1972-1976 is a ten-disc boxset, due for release on November 20 exclusively through Neil Young archives. Pre-ordering begins on October 16.

The set features 12 songs that have never been released before, as well as 50 previously unreleased alternate versions.

The unreleased songs include “Letter From ‘Nam”, “Come Along and Say You Will”, “Goodbye Christmas On The Shore” and “Sweet Joni” from 1972-3; “Greensleeves” from the On The Beach period; “Born To Run” with Crazy Horse; and a cover of Joni Mitchell’s “Raised On Robbery”.

See the full tracklisting below:

* previously unreleased song
# previously unreleased version

Disc 1 (1972-1973)
Everybody’s Alone

1. Letter From ‘Nam *
2. Monday Morning #
3. The Bridge #
4. Time Fades Away #
5. Come Along and Say You Will *
6. Goodbye Christmas on the Shore *
7. Last Trip to Tulsa
8. The Loner #
9. Sweet Joni *
10. Yonder Stands the Sinner
11. L.A. (Story)
12. LA. #
13. Human Highway

Disc 2 (1973)
Tuscaloosa

1. Here We Go in the Years
2. After the Gold Rush
3. Out on the Weekend
4. Harvest
5. Old Man
6. Heart of Gold
7. Time Fades Away
8. Lookout Joe
10. New Mama
11. Alabama
12. Don’t Be Denied

Disc 3 (1973)
Tonight’s The Night

1. Speakin’ Out Jam *
2. Everybody’s Alone #
3. Tired Eyes
4. Tonight’s the Night
5. Mellow My Mind
6. World on a String
7. Speakin’ Out
8. Raised on Robbery (Joni Mitchell song) *
9. Roll Another Number
10. New Mama
11. Albuquerque
12. Tonight’s the Night Part II

Disc 4 (1973)
Roxy: Tonight’s The Night Live

1. Tonight’s the Night
2. Mellow My Mind
3. World on a String
4. Speakin’ Out
5. Albuquerque
6. New Mama
7. Roll Another Number
8. Tired Eyes
9. Tonight’s the Night Part II
10. Walk On
11. The Losing End #

Disc 5 (1974)
Walk On

1. Winterlong
2. Walk On
3. Bad Fog of Loneliness #
4. Borrowed Tune
5. Traces #
6. For the Turnstiles
7. Ambulance Blues
8. Motion Pictures
9. On the Beach
10. Revolution Blues
11. Vampire Blues
12. Greensleeves *

Disc 6 (1974)
The Old Homestead

1. Love/Art Blues #
2. Through My Sails #
3. Homefires
4. Pardon My Heart #
5. Hawaiian Sunrise #
6. LA Girls and Ocean Boys *
7. Pushed It Over the End #
8. On the Beach #
9. Vacancy #
10. One More Sign #
11. Frozen Man *
12. Give Me Strength *
13. Bad News Comes to Town #
14. Changing Highways #
15. Love/Art Blues #
16. The Old Homestead
17. Daughters *
18. Deep Forbidden Lake
19. Love/Art Blues #

Disc 7 (1974)
Homegrown

1. Separate Ways
2. Try
3. Mexico
4. Love Is a Rose
5. Homegrown
6. Florida
7. Kansas
8. We Don’t Smoke It No More
9. White Line
10. Vacancy
11. Little Wing
12. Star of Bethlehem

Disc 8 (1975)
Dume

1. Ride My Llama #
2. Cortez the Killer
3. Don’t Cry No Tears
4. Born to Run *
5. Barstool Blues
6. Danger Bird
7. Stupid Girl
8. Kansas #
9. Powderfinger #
10. Hawaii #
11. Drive Back
12. Lookin’ for a Love
13. Pardon My Heart
14. Too Far Gone #
15. Pocahontas #
16. No One Seems to Know #

Disc 9 (1976)
Look Out For My Love

1. Like a Hurricane
2. Lotta Love
3. Lookin’ for a Love
4. Separate Ways #
5. Let It Shine #
6. Long May You Run
7. Fontainebleau
8. Traces #
9. Mellow My Mind #
10. Midnight on the Bay #
11. Stringman #
12. Mediterranean *
13. Ocean Girl #
14. Midnight on the Bay #
15. Human Highway #

Disc 10 (1976)
Odeon Budokan

1. The Old Laughing Lady #
2. After the Gold Rush #
3. Too For Gone #
4. Old Man #
5. Stringinan #
6. Don’t Cry No Tears #
7. Cowgirl in the Sand #
8. Lotto Love #
9. Drive Back #
10. Cortez the Killer #

PJ Harvey: “She’s an auteur… she knows what she wants”

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The new issue of Uncut – in shops now and also available to order online by clicking here – features a deep dive into the making of PJ Harvey's 1995 album To Bring You My Love, the first of many radical career inventions for its creator. Peter Watts talks to Harvey’s closest collaborators abou...

The new issue of Uncut – in shops now and also available to order online by clicking here – features a deep dive into the making of PJ Harvey’s 1995 album To Bring You My Love, the first of many radical career inventions for its creator. Peter Watts talks to Harvey’s closest collaborators about toy dinosaurs, skittle alleys in Dorset and Bob Dylan bootlegs – and how a creative rebirth became a definitive moment in Harvey’s remarkable career.

Towards the end of 1993, Harvey saw a student production of Hamlet, scored by John Parish, in Yeovil. An old friend, Parish first worked with Harvey in 1988, when she joined his band, Automatic Dlamini. The two stayed close and, after listening to her latest demos, Parish found himself working on Harvey’s first solo album.

“Polly had the arrangements very much in place already,” says Parish. “It was a case of trying to embellish what was already there, making it sound better and more engaging, enhance the strengths. The job on To Bring You My Love – as it often is with Polly – is identifying what you can take from a demo that, firstly, really works for the listener, who has no particular emotional attachment to the recording, and, secondly, what the artist loves about the song.”

To Bring You My Love was recorded during autumn 1994 at The Who’s old studio, Townhouse 3 in Battersea. Also present was co-producer Flood – real name Mark Ellis – who became another essential member of Harvey’s team. While the To Bring You My Love demos had been recorded at home by Harvey with keyboards, drum machine, guitar and vocals, they were typically strong and efficiently presented – she even had some of the string arrangements down pat. In the studio, however, such diligence caused problems for the musicians making the album, who struggled to add their own musical imprint.

Among them was American guitarist Joe Gore. “We met in a rehearsal place in London,” he recalls. “The first song was something like ‘Naked Cousin’. After we had finished, she and Flood looked a bit downcast. I had been playing very gung-ho and it soon became clear that what she wanted to hear was what she put on the demos. The process was, ‘Can you play it more like I played it?’ Everything I was playing was not leading to happiness. I had just discovered this fabulous fuzz pedal and brought three over for me, John and Polly. There was silence before Flood said drily, ‘Well, Norman Greenbaum has arrived.’ It was not a compliment.”

Gore now thinks that Harvey was using the record to step away from her old role as a guitar player in favour of becoming more of a frontperson. His job was to be what he describes as “her prosthetic guitar hand… At this point, she was focused on being a frontperson. She was taking dance lessons and wanted to be a commanding frontperson who didn’t have a guitar strapped to her.”

Having played with Tom Waits, Gore had acquired a knack for the weird and the scratchy. On “Working For The Man” he played guitar through a toy plastic amplifier miked up inside a shoe box. Meanwhile, on “Long Snake Moan”, he ‘played’ a toy dinosaur, recording its roar through his guitar pick-up.

“I went from contributing nothing to inserting myself on most of the tracks,” he says. “Almost everything I suggested got in. We had a similar process for Is This Desire?, when I came in with more prepared ideas and more of them were tossed out in the first round. She has the right to do that. Polly is like Tom [Waits]. An auteur in the classic sense. She conceived and executed everything. One time, Tom was talking about another artist and he said, ‘It sounds like she was taking her songs to the hairdresser and the make-up artist.’ He was saying that it was the producer who was giving the songs their style and the artist was relying on somebody else to find the gestalt of the project. It’s not like that with Polly. She knows what she wants.”

You can read much more about PJ Harvey and the making of To Bring You My Love in the November 2020 issue of Uncut, out now!

Doves – The Universal Want

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Rock history tells us that there is usually a pretty good reason why chart-topping bands take an extended break. From rehab to road weariness to the age-old ‘musical differences’ – code for mutual loathing brought on by too long in each other’s company – it rarely bodes well. Doves’ 1...

Rock history tells us that there is usually a pretty good reason why chart-topping bands take an extended break. From rehab to road weariness to the age-old ‘musical differences’ – code for mutual loathing brought on by too long in each other’s company – it rarely bodes well.

Doves’ 11-year absence, on the other hand, has, we’re told, simply been the result of midlife drift, the kind that sees old friends lose touch as real-world responsibilities take over. Having explored various musical avenues with their solo projects – Jez and Andy Williams with Black Rivers, Jimi Goodwin with solo debut Odludek – the trio began making music again in 2017, reigniting a 30-year partnership dating back to their days in dance outfit Sub Sub.

It’s a narrative in keeping with an everyman appeal that has seen their combination of romantic, widescreen rock and cryptic, small-screen lyrics – think Cold Feet, as filmed by David Lean – earn them two consecutive No 1 albums in the wake of 2000 debut Lost Souls, with 2002’s The Last Broadcast and 2005’s Some Cities. Kingdom Of Rust didn’t do badly either, reaching No 2 in 2009.

However, while The Universal Want’s lyrics are typically enigmatic, they suggest that Doves – who all turned 50 this year – have been through the emotional mill during their decade away. In the run-up to release, Jimi Goodwin has spoken of “a lot of casualties in my past… we shouldn’t be afraid to reference the damage that life can do”, and their fifth album comes with a cathartic feel. Densely layered – four of the 11 tracks are over five minutes – it’s also as complex as a Rubik’s Cube, the elaborate arrangements owing more to progressive rock than contemporary pop.

Opener “Carousels” sets the tone. While the lyric is archetypal Doves – a nostalgic reminiscence of childhood holidays in North Wales – it’s musically fearless, building from a sample of Afrobeat pioneer Tony Allen into an atmospheric, six-minute soundscape where soaring guitar glissandos and blistering techno bass merge in an “A Day In The Life”-inspired crescendo.

There’s a similarly bullish feel to “I Will Not Hide”. Ostensibly a country-pop cousin to “Catch The Sun”, it manages to shoehorn burbling synths, helium-balloon vocals and a liquid, John Squire-esque guitar solo into four breathless minutes. If these are scene-setters, “Broken Eyes” is where everything clicks into place. A La’s-esque leftover from the Kingdom Of Rust sessions, it’s an instant classic forged from the simplest of materials. The specifics remain obscure – is Goodwin singing: “I can’t help it if you don’t feel satisfied” to his bandmates, or a lover? – but it hits home like a slap in the face, hinting at inner turmoil.

There’s a different, darker kind of tumult in “Cathedrals Of The Mind”. Set against a dazzling musical backdrop where cascading synths give way to a sample from a ’60s Black Panthers rally decrying police brutality and then to a dub-meets-ambient end section, its haunting lyric (“Every day I see your face/Everywhere I see those eyes/ But you’re not there”) could apply to the aftermath of any human tragedy. The emotional Geiger-counter flips into the red on a storming “Cycle Of Hurt”. Almost hypnotic in its despondency, it finds Goodwin asking rhetorically: “Have I got the nerve, to end this cycle of hurt?”, the tension erupting in an explosive guitar solo before an electronic voice repeats: “It’s a trick/It’s a trap.”

This being Doves, the lyrical storm clouds always come shot through with musical sunlight. “Prisoners” is a Tame Impala-informed northern soul nugget reminiscent of “Black And White Town”, while a stunning “For Tomorrow” sees the Rubik’s Cube turn again. Similar in feel to Rotary Connection’s “I Am The Black Gold Of The Sun”, it’s a stone-cold classic, the cosmic desolation of the verses traded for renewed hope in a sky-scraping chorus of “From tomorrow, we will live again”.

The sense that, 20 years on from Lost Souls, Doves have come full circle is made explicit in the final two songs. Starting off as a prog-ish rumination on the pitfalls of consumerism, the title track is a slow burning epic, its “Sympathy For The Devil”-style groove mutating into a minimalist techno outro. If it acts as a flashback to sweaty nights at the Haçienda, a sublime “Forest House” soundtracks the comedown, a bucolic celebration of midlife tranquility.

The message is clear: Doves’ hedonistic past is largely behind them, but it informs everything they do. With their fifth album they’re taking strength from sadness, hope from despair, and wisdom from experience. In troubled times, The Universal Want is exactly what we need.

Ian Curtis’s “Love Will Tear Us Apart” guitar up for auction

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The Vox Phantom VI Special guitar that Ian Curtis played in the video to "Love Will Tear Us Apart" is up for auction at Bonhams, where it is expected to fetch £60-80,000. Curtis also played the guitar on "Heart And Soul" and on Joy Division's 1980 European Tour. After Curtis's death, it was used...

The Vox Phantom VI Special guitar that Ian Curtis played in the video to “Love Will Tear Us Apart” is up for auction at Bonhams, where it is expected to fetch £60-80,000.

Curtis also played the guitar on “Heart And Soul” and on Joy Division’s 1980 European Tour. After Curtis’s death, it was used by Bernard Sumner (on New Order’s “Everything’s Gone Green”) and by Johnny Marr in Electronic, before being passed back to Curtis’s daughter Natalie in 2002.

In an interview for Pat Graham’s book Instrument, Sumner says, “Ian really liked this guitar. The Phantom had tons of effects built into it, as an added bonus… The guitar has a battery in it, and if you press the buttons in the wrong combination it will go into self-oscillate mode and start to make this strange twittering sound that Ian liked very much. It is a pretty wacky guitar. It sounded like some of the thinner guitars on Velvet Underground tracks, clean and jangly.”

Read more about the guitar – and bid! – here.

Brian Eno readies anthology of film music

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This winter, Brian Eno will release Film Music 1976 – 2020 via UMC – a collection of his film and television soundtrack work. Spanning five decades, it includes music from Heat, Dune, Top Boy and Trainspotting, as well as seven previously unreleased tracks. Hear "Ship In A Bottle" from Th...

This winter, Brian Eno will release Film Music 1976 – 2020 via UMC – a collection of his film and television soundtrack work.

Spanning five decades, it includes music from Heat, Dune, Top Boy and Trainspotting, as well as seven previously unreleased tracks.

Hear “Ship In A Bottle” from The Lovely Bones below:

Film Music 1976 – 2020 will be released digitally, on double vinyl and on CD on November 13, although the physical versions won’t be released in the US until January 22. Pre-order the album here and peruse the tracklisting below:

‘Top Boy (Theme)’ from ‘Top Boy’ – Series 1, directed by Yann Demange, 2011
‘Ship In A Bottle’ from ‘The Lovely Bones’, directed by Peter Jackson, 2009
‘Blood Red’ from ‘Francis Bacon’s Arena’, directed by Adam Low, 2005
‘Under’ from ‘Cool World’, directed by Ralph Bakshi, 1992
‘Decline And Fall’ from ‘O Nome da Morte’, directed by Henrique Goldman, 2017
‘Prophecy Theme’ from ‘Dune’, directed by David Lynch, 1984
‘Reasonable Question’ from ‘We Are As Gods’, directed by David Alvarado / Jason Sussberg, 2020
‘Late Evening In Jersey’ from ‘Heat’, directed by Michael Mann, 1995
‘Beach Sequence’ from ‘Beyond The Clouds’, directed by Michelangelo Antonioni, 1995
‘You Don’t Miss Your Water’ from ‘Married to the Mob’, directed by Jonathan Demme, 1988
‘Deep Blue Day’ from ‘Trainspotting’, directed by Danny Boyle, 1996
‘The Sombre’ from ‘Top Boy’ – Series 2, directed by Jonathan van Tulleken, 2013
‘Dover Beach’ from ‘Jubilee’, directed by Derek Jarman, 1978
‘Design as Reduction’ from ‘Rams’, directed by Gary Hustwit, 2018
‘Undersea Steps’ from ‘Hammerhead’, directed by George Chan, 2004
‘Final Sunset’ from ‘Sebastiane’, directed by Derek Jarman, 1976
‘An Ending (Ascent)’, from ‘For All Mankind’, directed by Al Reinert, 1989

New Jimi Hendrix exhibition opens in London

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To mark the 50th anniversary of his death on September 18, 1970, a new Jimi Hendrix exhibition has opened at London's Masterpiece Art gallery. Bold As Love: Celebrating Hendrix includes rare and unseen photographers of the rock legend by the likes of Ed Caraeff, Baron Wolman, Gered Mankowitz, Dav...

To mark the 50th anniversary of his death on September 18, 1970, a new Jimi Hendrix exhibition has opened at London’s Masterpiece Art gallery.

Bold As Love: Celebrating Hendrix
includes rare and unseen photographers of the rock legend by the likes of Ed Caraeff, Baron Wolman, Gered Mankowitz, David Montgomery, Ulvis Alberts and Charles Everest.

Accompanying the photographs will be two sculptures by Guy Portelli entitled Hey Joe and Wight Spirit — a large-scale glass mosaic panel which features the handprints of more than 80 musicians who performed at the 1970 Isle Of Wight festival, including the handprint of Hendrix himself which Portelli mapped from a photograph taken by Baron Wolman.

The exhibition also features the original Isle Of Wight 1970 WEM speaker system used by Hendrix at the festival, including his personal Fender neck headstock pieces and Univibe effects pedal.

Bold As Love: Celebrating Hendrix is at Masterpiece Art in Holland Park, London, until September 30. Due to Covid-19 restrictions, the exhibition is by appointment only. For more details and to make an appointment, visit the Masterpiece Art website.

The Beatles unveil lavish new book full of unseen photos

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The Beatles: Get Back is a lavish 240-page hardcover book due to be published alongside Peter Jackson's film documentary of the same name on August 31, 2021. It tells the story of the creation of the 1970 album Let It Be via transcribed conversations drawn from over 120 recorded hours of The Beat...

The Beatles: Get Back is a lavish 240-page hardcover book due to be published alongside Peter Jackson’s film documentary of the same name on August 31, 2021.

It tells the story of the creation of the 1970 album Let It Be via transcribed conversations drawn from over 120 recorded hours of The Beatles’ studio sessions, culminating in the historic final rooftop concert.

The book also features hundreds of previously unpublished images – including photos by Ethan A. Russell and Linda McCartney – plus a foreword by Peter Jackson and an introduction by Hanif Kureishi.

Photo by Ethan A. Russell/©Apple Corps Ltd.
Photo by Ethan A. Russell/©Apple Corps Ltd.

The Beatles: Get Back costs £40 and can be pre-ordered here. Watch a trailer for it below:

You can read much more about the making of The Beatles’ Let It Be and the Get Back film in the August 2020 issue of Uncut, which is still on sale here.

Send us your questions for Todd Rundgren

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The great thing about pressing play on a new Todd Rundgren release is that you genuinely have no idea what it's going to sound like. Will it be a sumptuous slice of blue-eyed soul? Will it be an intergalactic prog opus, a la Utopia? Will it be a synthy studio exploration, or a note-perfect Beatles h...

The great thing about pressing play on a new Todd Rundgren release is that you genuinely have no idea what it’s going to sound like. Will it be a sumptuous slice of blue-eyed soul? Will it be an intergalactic prog opus, a la Utopia? Will it be a synthy studio exploration, or a note-perfect Beatles homage? Or perhaps all of those things together, as on his 1973 masterpiece A Wizard, A True Star?

But as you can hear below, “Espionage” is something new again for the ever-evolving Rundgren. Featuring Iraqi-Canadian rapper Narcy, it’s an impressively on-point cosmic hip-hop voyage that wouldn’t sound out of place on Brainfeeder or Stones Throw:

“Espionage” is the first taster from Rundgren’s upcoming album Space Force, due to be unveiled in instalments over the next few months, with other guests including Sparks and Rivers Cuomo of Weezer.

To celebrate, Rundgren has agreed to undergo a gentle grilling from you, the Uncut readers, for our regular Audience With feature. So what do you want to ask a multi-faceted musical legend? Send your questions to audiencewith@www.uncut.co.uk by Friday (September 18), and Todd will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

Jeff Tweedy announces new album, Love Is The King

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Jeff Tweedy's new solo album Love Is The King will be released digitally by dBpm on October 23. Hear two tracks from it below, "Guess Again" and "Love Is The King": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X46rveNq9GE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YHklzxUtLh4 “At the beginning of the lockdown...

Jeff Tweedy’s new solo album Love Is The King will be released digitally by dBpm on October 23.

Hear two tracks from it below, “Guess Again” and “Love Is The King”:

“At the beginning of the lockdown I started writing country songs to console myself,” says Tweedy. “Folk and country type forms being the shapes that come most easily to me in a comforting way. ‘Guess Again’ is a good example of the success I was having at pushing the world away, counting my blessings — taking stock in my good fortune to have love in my life. A few weeks later things began to sound like ‘Love Is The King’ — a little more frayed around the edges with a lot more fear creeping in. Still hopeful but definitely discovering the limits of my own ability to self soothe.”

Pre-order the digital album here (physical formats to follow) and check out the artwork and tracklisting below:

1. Love Is The King
2. Opaline
3. A Robin or A Wren
4. Gwendolyn
5. Bad Day Lately
6. Even I Can See
7. Natural Disaster
8. Save It For Me
9. Guess Again
10. Troubled
11. Half-Asleep

This Friday (September 18), Tweedy and his band will be playing a drive-in show at the Outdoor Theater in McHenry, IL. You can buy tickets for the livestream here.

PJ Harvey, Tom Petty, Idles and more star in the new Uncut

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In this issue, John Fogerty talks about the influence that one of his favourite bands had on Creedence Clearwater Revival: “Booker T & The MG’s were our idols and our template for how you ought to be as a band. They were unselfish in their music.” While I suspect Fogerty’s observation was...

In this issue, John Fogerty talks about the influence that one of his favourite bands had on Creedence Clearwater Revival: “Booker T & The MG’s were our idols and our template for how you ought to be as a band. They were unselfish in their music.”

While I suspect Fogerty’s observation was more about the MG’s’ creative generosity of spirit, I’d like to think that the phrase “unselfish in their music” also applies to the joy they brought listeners. It’s a positive trait I’m sure is true of many of the musicians we write about in Uncut – whether it’s Polly Jean Harvey’s phantasmagorical career reinventions, Creedence’s ramble tamble adventures, Idles’ cathartic volume, Isaac Hayes’ extravagantly rich manifesto, Tom Petty’s understated musical ingenuity, Matt Berninger’s midlife melancholy or other artists you’ll find elsewhere in this month’s issue.

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

Beyond that estimable lineup, I’m thrilled we’ve got a Hüsker Dü piece in this issue – the last time we wrote about them in any depth was way back in Take 69!  I’d also like to thank reader Dave Nwokedi, who mentioned Steel Pulse in passing during a recent email conversation. We’ve not often written about the UK’s late-’70s/early-’80s reggae scene, so I’m delighted that our Making Of Steel Pulse’s “Ku Klux Klan” is one of this month’s highlights.

By the time I write next month’s Editor’s Letter, I’ll have started work on our Albums Of The Year lists. At the moment, I’m listening to the North Americans’ new album Roped In, due in October on Third Man; serene and immersive psychedelic folk. It’s heartening that there’s still so much good new music being made, despite everything, so far into the year. And there’s at least one more exceptionally good album (as yet unannounced) that’s been on heavy rotation here for a week or so…

Anyway, thanks again for your continued support and loyalty to Uncut in 2020. It means a lot – and I’m pleased to report that we’ve got some excellent issues lined up to take us into 2021. But, as ever, please write to us – letters@www.uncut.co.uk. It’s always good to hear from you.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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Uncut – November 2020

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CLICK HERE TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED DIRECT TO YOUR DOOR PJ Harvey, Tom Petty, Idles, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Matt Berninger, Steel Pulse, Hüsker Dü, Laura Veirs, Chris Hillman, Isaac Hayes and Hen Ogledd all feature in the new Uncut, dated November 2020 and in UK shops from Sep...

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PJ Harvey, Tom Petty, Idles, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Matt Berninger, Steel Pulse, Hüsker Dü, Laura Veirs, Chris Hillman, Isaac Hayes and Hen Ogledd all feature in the new Uncut, dated November 2020 and in UK shops from September 17 or available to buy online now. As always, the issue comes with a free CD, this time comprising 15 tracks of the month’s best new music.

PJ HARVEY: 25 years after To Bring You My Love, we talk to Harvey’s closest collaborators about toy dinosaurs, Dorset skittle alleys and Dylan bootlegs – and how a creative rebirth in 1995 sparked off her remarkable career. “It built an audience that was expecting to be challenged from record to record…”

OUR FREE CD! DOWN BY THE WATER: 15 fantastic tracks from the cream of the month’s releases, including songs by Songhoy Blues, Sufjan Stevens, Hen Ogledd, Garcia Peoples, Diana Jones, Fuzz, Adrianne Lenker, Andy Bell, Magik Markers 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:

TOM PETTY: We review the expanded Wildflowers & All The Rest set, and speak to Benmont Tench about Petty’s journey to making the record and his future plans for it

IDLES: As they release their third album, Ultra Mono, we catch up with the combustible Bristol five-piece offering an unflinching response to terrible times

CREEDENCE CLEARWATER REVIVAL: John Fogerty, Stu Cook and Doug Clifford look back at their turbulent 1970, a year when they became the biggest band in the world with Cosmo’s Factory

MATT BERNINGER: The National singer unveils his first solo LP, produced by Booker T. Has the “sad-sack, grungecore guy” lightened up?

LAURA VEIRS: Album by album with the Portland singer-songwriter

STEEL PULSE: The making of “Ku Klux Klan”

HÜSKER DÜ: Bob Mould takes us through a groundbreaking career, from Minneapolis dive bars and abandoned churches to concept albums – “We were single-minded, driven and prolific…”

CHRIS HILLMAN: The “good lieutenant” in The Byrds, The Flying Burrito Brothers and more finally tells his own story

ISAAC HAYES: In an archive interview from 1971, Melody Maker’s Richard Williams encounters Hayes in his Stax HQ – “Music is the universal language, it keeps society together when nothing else will work…”

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In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new records from Garcia Peoples, Hen Ogledd, Adrianne Lenker, Songhoy Blues, Diana Jones, Magik Markers and more, and archival releases from Tom Petty, Lou Reed, Thin Lizzy, New Order, Barbara Lewis and others. We catch Lankum and a tribute to Joe Strummer live online; among the films, DVDs and TV programmes reviewed are Tenet, I’m Thinking Of Ending Things, Roger Waters’ Us + Them and Creem: America’s Only Rock’n’Roll Magazine; while in books there’s Jimi Hendrix, William Burroughs and the New Romantics.

Our front section, meanwhile, features Perry Farrell, Jakko Jakszyk and The Mountain Goats, and we introduce Bab L’Bluz.

You can still 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.

Lambchop announce new covers album, Trip

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Lambchop have announced the release of a new covers album called Trip via City Slang on November 13. It features six songs, all chosen by a different member of the band. Hear their version of Wilco's "Reservations" (as selected by Matthew McCaughan) below https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=grKBBC...

Lambchop have announced the release of a new covers album called Trip via City Slang on November 13.

It features six songs, all chosen by a different member of the band. Hear their version of Wilco’s “Reservations” (as selected by Matthew McCaughan) below

“As with all the covers on Trip it was chosen not so much for it’s content or as a tribute to the original but for what our group could bring out in the recording of it,” says Kurt Wagner. “In this case I think it best demonstrates who we are as a group and what we are currently capable of expressing.”

Trip was recorded December 2–7, 2019, at Battletapes in Nashville, TN, and produced, engineered, and mixed by Jeremy Ferguson (with the exception of “Reservations” which was co‐mixed by Ferguson and Matthew McCaughan). Check out the full tracklisting below and pre-order here.

1. Reservations (Jeff Tweedy) – chosen by Matthew McCaughan
2. Where Grass Won’t Grow (Earl “Peanut” Montgomery) – chosen by Paul Niehaus
3. Shirley (Jamie Klimek and Jim Crook) – chosen by Matt Swanson
4. Golden Lady (Stevie Wonder) – chosen by Andy Stack
5. Love is Here and Now You’re Gone (Brian Holland, Edward Holland and Lamont Dozier) – chosen by Tony Crow
6. Weather Blues (James McNew) – chosen by Kurt Wagner

New album “reimagines” Johnny Cash songs for symphony orchestra

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On November 13, Columbia/Legacy Recordings will release Johnny Cash And The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, an album that "reimagines" 12 Johnny Cash performances in new symphonic arrangements. Produced by Nick Patrick and Don Reedman and recorded at Abbey Road Studio 2, Johnny Cash And The Royal ...

On November 13, Columbia/Legacy Recordings will release Johnny Cash And The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, an album that “reimagines” 12 Johnny Cash performances in new symphonic arrangements.

Produced by Nick Patrick and Don Reedman and recorded at Abbey Road Studio 2, Johnny Cash And The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra is the latest in a series of RPO albums featuring similar treatments of songs the likes of Elvis Presley and Roy Orbison. Watch a trailer for the project below:

The recordings of “I Walk The Line” and “Flesh and Blood” used in making Johnny Cash And The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra are both previously unreleased alternate takes from Johnny Cash’s soundtrack sessions for the 1970 film I Walk The Line.

“I believe we have captured the emotion, sensitivity and genuine honesty of Johnny Cash through his story telling and his touching and captivating vocal performances,” says Don Reedman.

“My father, Johnny Cash, was in some ways an orchestra unto himself,” adds John Carter Cash, named as executive producer of the album. “I remember when my father introduced me to the RPO. I was around ten years old and he and I went to see three films from the James Bond saga at a festival in New York. When the theme for Goldfinger began, he leaned over to me. ‘That’s the finest orchestra in the world, son,’ he said. ‘That’s the Royal Philharmonic.’… He knew the music of the RPO. He respected them all throughout his life… I know my father would be enormously excited to see this new album become a reality.”

Hear Sinead O’Connor cover Van Morrison’s “Who Was That Masked Man”

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Van Morrison turned 75 on August 31, and for the last month or so, various Irish music luminaries have been paying tribute by covering his songs for Hot Press. The series came to a stirring climax yesterday with Sinead O'Connor's cover of "Who Was That Masked Man" from Veedon Fleece. Listen below...

Van Morrison turned 75 on August 31, and for the last month or so, various Irish music luminaries have been paying tribute by covering his songs for Hot Press.

The series came to a stirring climax yesterday with Sinead O’Connor’s cover of “Who Was That Masked Man” from Veedon Fleece. Listen below:

Other contributors to the Rave On, Van Morrison series have included Bob Geldof, Paul Brady and Irish president Michael D Higgins. View those highlights below and watch the whole series here.

Toots Hibbert: “Believe in what you believe in”

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The sad news came through this morning (September 12) that reggae pioneer Toots Hibbert of Toots And The Maytals has died, aged 77. Uncut were honoured to interview him just a couple of months ago, on the release of his new album Got To Be Tough. Here's Graeme Thomson's full feature, which originall...

The sad news came through this morning (September 12) that reggae pioneer Toots Hibbert of Toots And The Maytals has died, aged 77. Uncut were honoured to interview him just a couple of months ago, on the release of his new album Got To Be Tough. Here’s Graeme Thomson’s full feature, which originally appeared in the September 2020 issue of Uncut, Take 280.

“Is a good day,” pronounces Frederick “Toots” Hibbert breezily, calling Uncut from his studio in Kingston. “Is good here all the time.” It’s precisely the kind of blunt positivity we’ve come to expect from the man who has been fronting the mighty Maytals for the best part of 60 years, a man whose songs – vibrant, righteous, urgent, joyful – are synonymous with the golden age of Jamaican music.

Alongside Jimmy Cliff and Desmond Dekker, Hibbert was part of reggae’s first international wave. The youngest son of a Baptist minister, he grew up singing gospel in his father’s church choir. With its echoes of Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett and Ray Charles, his soulful voice is one of music’s most evocative sounds, encompassing all the sweetness and sweat of his homeland, from chapel to dancehall, lush countryside to febrile inner city.

Hibbert made the same journey in his teens as his great friend and contemporary Bob Marley, moving from the rural outlands – in his case, the town of May Pen – to the Kingston ghetto of Trench Town. There he formed The Maytals in 1962 with “Raleigh” Gordon and “Jerry” Matthias.

Working first with producer Coxsone Dodd at Studio One, and later Prince Buster, Byron Lee, Leslie Kong and Warrick Lyn, The Maytals blended ska, reggae, soul, blues and R&B with soulful three-part harmonies. In the late ’60s and early ’70s, they defined the era with the genre-minting “Do The Reggay”, jailbird’s lament “54-46, That’s My Number” and the karmic curse of “Pressure Drop” – alongside “Monkey Man”, “Time Tough”, “Pomp And Pride”, “Funky Kingston” and dozens more classics. In their prime, The Maytals were a bigger deal than The Wailers. Their record of 31 No 1 hits in Jamaica has never been equalled. “I was on top of the moon, man, in those days,” says Hibbert. “But we still didn’t get paid.”

Signing to Island in the early 1970s, they became Toots & The Maytals and appeared in the classic rude boy film The Harder They Come, featuring twice on the hugely successful soundtrack album. They toured with The Who and the Stones and proved a key source for the punky reggae ska revival: The Specials covered “Monkey Man”, The Clash “Pressure Drop”. Ever adventurous, Hibbert has since recorded with Willie Nelson and Jim Dickinson, and even had a swing at Radiohead’s “Let Down”. Every step, he says, has been guided by a powerful sense of destiny. “People over here say, ‘Hey Toots, you’re a star, man!’ I say, ‘No, I’m a son.’ You know what I mean? It was the call of the Almighty. He blows in me. I have different talents from other artists.”

At 77, the man Ziggy Marley calls Uncle Toots is still burning bright. He was last seen in these parts touring with The Specials in 2017. Now the latest iteration of The Maytals are back with a new album, Got To Be Tough, the first since Flip And Twist in 2010. It’s a lively, engaged affair, largely self-played and self-produced, with assistance from Zak Starkey on guitar, Sly Dunbar on drums and Cyril Neville on percussion. There are characteristic calls to keep your eyes open and your ear to the ground, as well as a punchy reading of Marley’s classic “Three Little Birds”.

The album title is a manifesto of sorts. Hibbert was struck on the head with a bottle thrown by an audience member at a concert in Virginia in 2013, an incident which left him shaken but unbowed. As we shall see, he has been through worse and survived: false imprisonment, “deep-down scams”, not to mention being saddled with a stage name he hates. “When The Maytals came in, we had to go through a lot of different vibes before we be what we are today,” he says. “I keep telling people that: ‘You have got to be tough. Don’t just give up in life. Be strong and believe in what you believe in.’”

From “Pressure Drop” to new tracks like “Just Brutal” and “Got To Be Tough”, I always think of your best songs as short, sharp sermons. Has the writing process changed over the years?
All my songs tell a story. A true story. Things just come to me and I write. An intelligent spirit came to me from the Lord, and we have to make sure that all of my words in my songs are permanent, intelligent and good to the ears of the people – children, big people, all people: my family, my friends, my musicians, the whole world. That’s how it is, and how it has always been. My vibes are coming from my spirit.

Your version of “Three Little Birds” has an energy that turns it into an almost completely different song. Why did you cover it?
It’s a good song! Me and Bob were very close friends, and bredren. There are quite a few of his songs that I’d like to sing one of these days. I just asked his son, Ziggy, “Let’s do this song for your daddy,” and Ziggy said, “Yes, Uncle Toots.” He call me Uncle Toots! I went home, I played all the instruments, as usual, and then Ziggy go to California and he came in on top. I put a different effort into it, between reggae and R&B.

Can you remember when you first met Bob?
I can remember it, but I don’t know the date! I met him in Trench Town, in the ’60s. When I first came to Kingston, after a while I live in Trench Town, and I get to meet Bob and Bunny [Livingstone] and Peter Tosh, and a lot of great people like that: Alton Ellis; Bongo Herman, the conga player; Byron Lee; “Chicken Scratch” Perry! Scratch is different, is all I can say. He has remained the same. He makes a lot of jokes, he makes you laugh, he makes you think. He’s a good friend. I go with these people, and it was quite nice. I didn’t plan it, but me and my friends, “Raleigh” Gordon and “Jerry” Mathias, three young boys, we started playing. We started with my compositions, we taught each other great things, and then I create the name The Maytals. I compose that name and I still have it. There was no Toots at the time. Toots is my nickname. I don’t like it when people call me Toots these days. My brother gave it to me, but he has died now.

So, what does Toots mean?
It mean nothing! It mean a laugh. You know: [high camp voice] “Hey, Toots!” I don’t like it, but I have to like it, because it’s part of my career. Friends call me by my spiritual name, Naya, but all my friends accept Toots as my career name all these years. My name is Toots & The Maytals on stage. Everyone who appear on stage with me, they share the name Maytals with me. I’m more than one person, I consider.

Are you still in touch with the original Maytals?
Raleigh died a few years ago now, but Jerry is still living in Brooklyn. I talk to about the old days when I see him. The only time I see him is when I go to Brooklyn and visit him. He’s still going strong.

You were making your way at the same time as The Wailers, The Skatalites, The Upsetters, The Pioneers, The Heptones. Was there rivalry?
That was just musical. It was exciting. But you know, the spirit that Bob has is very clean. I wrote a song [on 1972 album Slatyam Stoot] called “Redemption Song”, and Bob listened to it and said he wanted to write one like that. I said, “Yeah man, go ahead Bob.” We had a good thing going ever since we met.

Your voice is so distinctive and soulful. What were your influences growing up?
My voice was developed going to church with my family. I love singing; singing was what I thought I should do because it was born in me and I grew into it, straight from the church. We never talk about it, but my parents already know what I’m going to be.

The story goes that “54-46, That’s My Number” is titled after your prisoner ID, when you were wrongfully jailed in 1966 for possession of marijuana…
[Laughs] Well, I’ve never really been to prison, you know. It was just politics. I never smoked weed in those times. I never do nothing like that. I was just finished leaving school, but I won this festival [the inaugural Jamaican Independence Festival Popular Song Competition] with “Bam Bam” and people get jealous, and frame me for weed. I got the chance to meet some people, one of them was Chris Blackwell, and after the festival I was supposed to go away on my first Europe tour, but then some kind of musical politics came in. They couldn’t do nothing else than what they did because they didn’t have goodness in them heart for me. It was politics. I never go to prison. They bring me to a special place, where I have my own clothes, I got my own food from my home, I got my guitar, I got all the comforts that I have at home. When you go to prison you don’t have those comforts.

It was a kind of house arrest?
Yeah. Politics served me out, for 30 pieces of silver. They get to hold me back from my success. It’s a long story. So, what did I do? I wrote a song about it. I still have to feed on my enemies who did it. It was three persons. I can’t call no names, but I think they all die now. They were in the music industry, or something like that. But I have a good mind for them.

The Jamaican music industry seemed fairly rough and ready back then.
Well, we never used to get paid. All my good songs, all we get sometimes is three shillings for three of us, sometimes five shillings, sometimes 10 shillings – sometimes we got nothing. We just have to sing some more. There was a criminal element. Even now, it’s still there.

You popularised the term reggae with “Do The Reggay” in 1968. Some people say you invented it.
I never invented it. Something like reggae was playing in Jamaica long time, but nobody knew what to call the beat. Some people called it blue beat, or boogie beat, all different names, and then I came up with the word “reggae”. I realised I had to put the “rrrr” in the music! I had to let the people know the name of the music we play.

“Pressure Drop” is one of the lodestars of reggae. Do you remember writing it?
I remember everything I wrote! When we have all these problems with money, like I told you, somebody was supposed to pay us our first one or two thousand pounds – but we never get it. I wrote this song which, instead of trying to fight this person or do him any harm, it said, “Pressure going to drop on you.” But he knew I was talking to him. Again, I can’t call no names! I wrote that song about that moment because he didn’t pay me my money. It felt just like another song to me, I didn’t think it was going to be so great. All these songs were No 1 in Jamaica. I had, like, 31 No 1 records in those days, on the two stations – RJR and JBC – which no other artist ever get to do.

“Pressure Drop” has been covered by everyone from The Clash to Robert Palmer. You’ve recorded versions with Willie Nelson, Eric Clapton and Keith Richards. Do you have a favourite?
I just make it out to be a very nice thing to happen to reggae and Toots & The Maytals. It was a good thing, to meet other great artists and to make sure we are one family – black or white, we don’t care. Keith? He’s an amazing writer, musician, creator, producer. He’s everything that is great in music.

The Maytals performed “Sweet And Dandy” and “Pressure Drop” on The Harder They Come. Internationally, was that a game changer for you?
I think I was on top of the moon, man, in those days – but we still didn’t get paid. Up until now, I still don’t get paid for that performance in the [film]. But I love it, man, because of the fellow who stars in it: Jimmy Cliff. It was one of the best adverts for Jamaica, with Jimmy and all these people who put it together. Jimmy is still my friend and my brother, and we still come together.

Chris Blackwell eventually signed The Maytals to Dragon, an Island subsidiary, around the time he signed The Wailers. Did you and Bob discuss the merits of Blackwell and Island?
Chris kept listening to my songs. He’s a great guy, and he’s a great guy for listening to a record and telling you if it’s going to be a hit or not. He have good ears! Me and Bob didn’t get that close to talk about business. Neither Bob or myself, nor Bunny, we don’t know what this contract means to our career. People never can tell you what a contract means, unless you get a good corporate lawyer, which we never knew in those days. We didn’t converse about that.

At Island, you made a string of classic albums in the mid-’70s: Funky Kingston, In The Dark, Reggae Got Soul…
It build up a career in such a dynamic way that I can never forget. The albums are all special, because I have to work them everywhere I go, but Funky Kingston is really special, yes. I think that is one of my best songs, also. It was conversed by me and Chris Blackwell. He told me, “Hey man, I want you to sing a song like [The Beginning Of The End’s] ‘Funky Nassau’.” He keep on talking, talking, talking about this for about an hour. I said, “OK, Chris, I’m going to sit beside my two friends and take my guitar with me”, and I actually planned it. In five minutes’ time I go in the studio and we record it together. Jackie Johnson, Hux Brown, all the musicians, we went in and did the song – one time. We didn’t have to re-record anything, not even the voice. One time, that was it. Those are the times you just can’t forget.

It’s a very different way of working than nowadays. You played most of the new album yourself.
I miss the old days. In the old days it would be my bass player, guitar player, keyboard player, we would go in the studio and we would do it live. Everybody would have the feel, but I would always say, “Do it my way.” I miss that. On this album, I created the music and I produced it myself, with Nigel [Burrell] alongside as a co-producer. I played everything. Bass, guitar, keyboards, the kick drum, the arrangements – everything [apart] from blowing horns. It is the first time I have done a whole album like that. The Maytals live in various countries, and that’s why I start to do things by myself, because it’s hard for them to come down so many times. I play what I think I would ask them to play for me on these songs. But I have a good memory of how it used to be, that’s why I can get the similar sound in the studio, and it’s all right. I play my bass like Jackie [Jackson] would be playing it. In other words, I prefer the old times, and I still respect the new times.

“Monkey Man” was covered by The Specials during the ska revival, and you toured with the band in 2017. How was that?
We did shows all over the place with The Specials, it was so nice. The audience are usually always with the rock’n’roll, [but] in those gigs, it was mostly ska fans, and the skinhead gave a good turnout! It was really, really crazy – but great.

Zak Starkey is head of your new label, Trojan Jamaica, and he also plays guitar on the new album. Do you know him well?
Not really at all. Just enough for him to know Toots & The Maytals. I met him once, and we had a good time. When Zak came, he said he wanted to be a part of it – but there were no parts for anyone to come in, because I had played all the parts already. He just put his guitar on and respect what I done. Beautiful. He was very nice to work with. Anyone who played anything, I told them what to play. Sly Dunbar, too. Like you read a script and follow it. It was all good.

It has been 10 years since your last studio album. What took you so long?
I was just trying to keep away from the audience for a while. It’s just my style. I don’t want to overdo nothing. Songs need to find the right time and the right company. You need the right people to do justice to a good song.

Was the hiatus related to the injury you received on stage in 2013?
That was some time ago, quite a few years now. I get hurt very badly. I think about it, but I try to put it aside – because I’m still alive. I never felt like stopping. I went there to sing a free show for all the students there. This guy, he was so happy singing the song with me, and then he went away and he just drink something that he shouldn’t have done. He had something in his pocket, and he drank it. He didn’t throw the bottle at me, it just happened that it catch me.

The perpetrator was sentenced to six months in jail, although you pleaded for leniency.
He was a young student. I forgive all those people, but I don’t forget.

What do you make of the state of reggae nowadays? Why is it less potent and popular than it was in the heyday of the ’70s and ’80s?
I think the younger generation has to pay more attention to what all the elders did before. From The Wailers, Jimmy Cliff, all the great singers in Jamaica that were born before them. They should pay more attention to their writing, their lyrics, to see that we were the ones who captured the world. Reggae is not overtaking the world the way it was with Bob, but there are still a lot of great people out there.

The tour for Got To Be Tough, which was postponed owing to the coronavirus, was billed in the press as a farewell tour. Is that still the case?
I never knew about that. I never tell nobody that. People have their own intentions, and they corrupt it in their minds, and corrupt other people. It was a scam, a deep-down scam, without me knowing anything about that. Unprofessional! I’m going to keep going all the time, man! You will see me again because I’m not going to resign for now. I keep on doing this thing. My audience don’t expect me to stop.

Got To Be Tough is out now on Trojan Jamaica/BMG

Southern Journey (Revisited)

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The original Southern Journey was a schlep undertaken by the American musicologist Alan Lomax in 1959. He and his then partner, English folksinger Shirley Collins, lugged an Ampex 601 reel-to-reel recorder though Virginia, Kentucky, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas, Georgia and North Caroli...

The original Southern Journey was a schlep undertaken by the American musicologist Alan Lomax in 1959. He and his then partner, English folksinger Shirley Collins, lugged an Ampex 601 reel-to-reel recorder though Virginia, Kentucky, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas, Georgia and North Carolina, collecting performances by church choirs, jug bands, chain gangs, barroom warblers, front-porch crooners and assorted other guitar-pluckers, harp-blowers and banjo-botherers. Lomax and Collins’ recordings were – and are – astonishing, a glorious trove of treasures hauled from the deepest recesses of the collective national memory. There was gold indeed in them thar hills.

Southern Journey (Revisited), a film by Rob Curry and Tim Plester, is first and foremost a retracing of Lomax and Collins’ steps. Curry and Plester have form here, having previously made the 2017 documentary The Ballad Of Shirley Collins, released around her comeback, aged 82 and after a 30-year silence, with the startlingly vigorous Lodestar. They head for the Deep South using America Over The Water, Collins’ account of the original Southern Journey, as a guidebook.

There is, inevitably, more going on with Southern Journey (Revisited) – or so the directors hope – than a mere re-beating of Lomax and Collins’ path. Southern Journey (Revisited) is a contribution to the already considerable canon of journalism and art hoping to understand and/or explain the rages, manias and follies of those portions of America – Virginia, Kentucky, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas, Georgia and North Carolina prominent among them – who decided, in November 2016, to take their country’s chances with a manifestly unqualified real estate grifter turned gameshow host.

This impulse has resulted in some great work – one thinks of Sarah Smarsh’s fine memoir Heartland, or Drive-By Truckers’ seething The Unraveling. It has also resulted in quite a lot of the kind of expedition which has become derisively known in journalism as the Cletus Safari, as big-city reporters venture briefly into the boondocks, scare up a few picturesque yokels, diligently stenograph an amount of paranoid whining, and serve it up to their readers as reassurance that none of this is their fault.

Southern Journey (Revisited) is very much fit to be bracketed with more thoughtful recent explorations of the heartland. Set against the backdrop of the 2018 midterm elections, in which Republicans across the United States were dealt quite the kicking, it takes a wilfully unobtrusive approach – the people Curry and Plester meet along the way are encouraged to tell their own stories, and sing their own songs. The picture that emerges will ring true to anybody who has visited these places – the locals are far smarter than often given credit for, unaffectedly proud of their traditions, and more or less bottomlessly hospitable.

The film also finds that the music means no less, and sounds every bit as fine, as Lomax and Collins discovered – and the film meets people who recall meeting those original explorers, back in 1959. If anything fundamental has changed since then, it’s a heightened awareness among people of the South of the low opinion of them often held elsewhere. One of Curry and Plester’s subject reflects on how the only media they usually see only want to ask them about Trump. Another smiles wryly – yet affectionately – at the “hipster doofuses” who descend from time to time to record the gospel singers. It says much about the filmmakers’ – merited – confidence in their work that they left that in.

Nubya Garcia – Source

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Plenty of ink has been spilt on the subject of London’s jazz scene over the last couple of years, but you’ve got to concede that the hype is broadly justified, backed up as it is by an impressive, ever-growing stack of wax. Moses Boyd, Kamaal Williams, Zara MacFarlane, Shabaka And The Ancestors,...

Plenty of ink has been spilt on the subject of London’s jazz scene over the last couple of years, but you’ve got to concede that the hype is broadly justified, backed up as it is by an impressive, ever-growing stack of wax. Moses Boyd, Kamaal Williams, Zara MacFarlane, Shabaka And The Ancestors, Emma-Jean Thackray, KOKOROKO – all have released music in 2020 that both feel situated in the jazz tradition, while smartly redefining the form with a modern, quintessentially London sensibility. With Source, saxophonist and bandleader Nubya Garcia positions herself right near the top of that list.

Born in Camden to parents from Trinidad and Guyana who came to the UK in the Windrush era, Garcia started playing piano aged five and played in youth groups before falling into the orbit of Gary Crosby’s Tomorrow’s Warriors in her late teens. A non-profit jam session and community hub that’s proved a vital breeding ground for the current generation of London jazz musicians, Tomorrow’s Warriors alumni generally share tip-top technique, used in concert with a creative freedom to explore sounds outside of familiar jazz boundaries.

Source works around this dichotomy. Centre-stage is Garcia’s saxophone, played with a languid and sumptuous soul that teeters at the boundary between grace and melancholy. Around it, her and her band – at its core, keys player Joe Armon-Jones, double bassist Daniel Casimir and drummer Sam Jones – prove an adaptable unit, their arrangements drawing from dub, cumbia and Latin modes, even as they switch between virtuoso workouts and segments of dreamy repose.

It’s credit to the nous of Garcia and co-producer Kwes that, for all its exploratory moments, Source feels like a coherent and complete work. In part this is thanks to Armon-Jones, whose fleet keyboard work – a mix of honeyed chords and luxuriant extended solos that nod to the influence of fusion pioneers like Herbie Hancock or Lonnie Liston Smith – spray stardust around Garcia’s gently searching sax, or occasionally romp out into their own space.

More broadly, though, it’s that all players are in sync enough to branch out into parallel genres without getting lost in the process. The 12-minute title track is a heavy dub stepper, Garcia’s saxophone coiling sinuously through skanking keys and echo-soaked drum and cymbal crashes, with trombone from Richie Seivwright and a vocal refrain from Sheila Maurice-Grey, Garcia’s bandmate in the London septet Nérija. Maurice-Grey also sings on another excursion into dub, “Stand With Each Other”, a pared-back number with a whiff of militancy that hangs on Jones’s sparse and skeletal percussion. And “La Cumbia Me Esta Llamando” takes a detour into cumbia rhythms, with vocal harmonies and hand percussion from the Columbian trio La Perla, who harmonise with spine-tingling effect.

At times the band can blaze, most notably on “Before Us In Demerara & Caura” – a gymnastic and exhilarating outing which often feels like every member of the band is soloing at once, Garcia’s sax carving agitated zig-zags through the air with barely any let-up. But in Source’s quieter moment, a more spiritual mien emerges.

“Together Is A Beautiful Place To Be” boasts the rich melodic sensibility and calm centredness of a young Coltrane; the closing “Boundless Beings”, meanwhile, is the album’s most complete song, the Chicago vocalist and sometime Chance The Rapper collaborator Akenya stepping up to the mic with a gorgeously sung tribute to the cosmic origins of the human spirit: “Let your inhibitions/Flow with the wind to the sea/We’re timeless creatures, you and me.” If Source occasionally codes as soul music, here’s where the connection becomes explicit.

There is the sense that, while widely recognised as one of the forefront talents of this generation of London jazz, Garcia has generally preferred to stay in the background. In the last couple of years, she’s appeared as part of broader ensembles such as Nérija, as a band member (on records like Moses Boyd’s Dark Matter, Theon Cross’s Fyah or Joe Armon-Jones’s Turn To Clear View), or contributing solo tracks to broader projects, such as Brownswood Recordings’ scene-defining 2018 primer We Out Here. But on Source she’s stepping into the spotlight, and it’s not before time: this is as good an encapsulation of the current wave of UK jazz as you’re likely to find – deeply melodic, brilliantly played, and blessed with a spirit that feels generous and boundless.

Hear previously unreleased Tom Petty song, “Confusion Wheel”

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Tom Petty's 1994 album Wildflowers is being reissued on October 16 with four discs of out-takes, demos, alternate versions and live tracks. Hear the previously unreleased "Confusion Wheel" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z8o9dUyZOVU The track is now available as an instant grat for a...

Tom Petty’s 1994 album Wildflowers is being reissued on October 16 with four discs of out-takes, demos, alternate versions and live tracks.

Hear the previously unreleased “Confusion Wheel” below:

The track is now available as an instant grat for anyone who pre-orders the album here, where you can also peruse the full tracklisting.

Hear Joni Mitchell play “House Of The Rising Sun” – her earliest known recording

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Joni Mitchell has launched an extensive archive series, beginning on October 30 with the release of Joni Mitchell Archives Vol. 1: The Early Years (1963-1967) – a 5xCD and digital collection featuring nearly six hours of unreleased audio. It includes her first known recording, a version of "Hou...

Joni Mitchell has launched an extensive archive series, beginning on October 30 with the release of Joni Mitchell Archives Vol. 1: The Early Years (1963-1967) – a 5xCD and digital collection featuring nearly six hours of unreleased audio.

It includes her first known recording, a version of “House Of The Rising Sun” recorded in 1963 for CFQC AM, a radio station in her hometown of Saskatoon, when Mitchell was 19. Listen below:

You can peruse the tracklisting for Archives Vol. 1: The Early Years (1963-1967) and pre-order here. Disc 1 will be released separately as a single LP entitled Early Joni, while the Live At Canterbury House – 1967 recordings will also be released as a standalone 3xLP set.

Watch Jimi Hendrix play “Voodoo Child (Slight Return)” on a Hawaiian volcano

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On July 30, 1970, Jimi Hendrix played two sets on a makeshift stage on the lower slope of the dormant Haleakala volcano on Maui, Hawaii. The sets were filmed with a view to being included in manager Michael Jeffery's ill-fated Rainbow Bridge film, though in the end only 17 minutes of Hendrix concert...

On July 30, 1970, Jimi Hendrix played two sets on a makeshift stage on the lower slope of the dormant Haleakala volcano on Maui, Hawaii. The sets were filmed with a view to being included in manager Michael Jeffery’s ill-fated Rainbow Bridge film, though in the end only 17 minutes of Hendrix concert footage was used.

Now the Haleakala volcano concerts have been fully restored by Eddie Kramer for a live album, Live In Maui, and accompanying feature-length documentary Music, Money, Madness… Jimi Hendrix In Maui.

Watch Jimi Hendrix playing “Voodoo Child (Slight Return)” from the Maui concert below:

Live In Maui will be released on November 20 on 2xCDs, followed by a 3xLP release on December 11. Both formats come with a Blu-Ray disc featuring the documentary, which is directed by John McDermott and incorporates never-before-released original footage and new interviews with first-hand participants and key players such as Billy Cox, Eddie Kramer and several Rainbow Bridge cast members, as well as its director Chuck Wein.

Pre-order Live In Maui here; watch a trailer for the documentary and check out the live album tracklisting below:

FIRST SHOW:
Chuck Wein Introduction
Hey Baby (New Rising Sun)
In From The Storm
Foxey Lady
Hear My Train A-Comin’
Voodoo Child (Slight Return)
Fire
Purple Haze
Spanish Castle Magic
Lover Man
Message to Love

SECOND SHOW:
Dolly Dagger
Villanova Junction
Ezy Ryder
Red House
Freedom
Jam Back at the House
Straight Ahead
Hey Baby (New Rising Sun)/Midnight Lightning
Stone Free