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Brian Eno to reissue his albums with John Cale and Jah Wobble

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All Saints Records have announced the reissue of Eno/Cale's 1990 album Wrong Way Up and Eno/Wobble's 1995 album Spinner, both due on August 21. The albums will be available on vinyl, limited edition deluxe casebound CD and standard digipak CD. All formats contain two bonus tracks for each album, ...

All Saints Records have announced the reissue of Eno/Cale’s 1990 album Wrong Way Up and Eno/Wobble’s 1995 album Spinner, both due on August 21.

The albums will be available on vinyl, limited edition deluxe casebound CD and standard digipak CD. All formats contain two bonus tracks for each album, while Spinner also includes a fresh essay and painting by Wobble.

Pre-order the reissues here and watch a teaser video below:

Some thoughts on Neil Young’s Homegrown

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After a Crazy Horse barn tour was cancelled owing to coronavirus touring restrictions, Neil Young devised other ways to perform live music for the masses. Choosing to keep on streaming in the free world, Young envisaged the Fireside Sessions: a “down-home production, a few songs, a little time tog...

After a Crazy Horse barn tour was cancelled owing to coronavirus touring restrictions, Neil Young devised other ways to perform live music for the masses. Choosing to keep on streaming in the free world, Young envisaged the Fireside Sessions: a “down-home production, a few songs, a little time together†beamed live from his Colorado home. For the inaugural six-song acoustic set broadcast on March 19, Young pulled a couple of mouth-watering cuts from his sprawling catalogue. There was “Love/Art Bluesâ€, debuted during CSNY’s 1974 tour, and the first solo outing for On The Beach’s “Vampire Blues†since 1974. Young closed the set with another deep cut: “Little Wingâ€, revived after an absence of over 40 years. A song about a benevolent bird that flies into town each summer, “Little Wingâ€â€™s inclusion felt especially timely. Although it appeared on 1980’s Hawks & Doves, its origins lie much further back, on Homegrown – one of Young’s legendary ‘lost’ albums, which finally arrives, 45 years late, in May.

Intended as a follow-up to On The Beach, Homegrown was pulled – apparently at the suggestion of The Band’s Rick Danko – in favour of a rehabilitated Tonight’s The Night. Young’s official reason for cancelling Homegrown was that its downbeat mood depressed him. Describing it now as “the sad side of a love affairâ€, at the time Young may have also felt uneasy about the number of songs about Carrie Snodgress, from whom he separated shortly before recording began. Five of Homegrown’s 12 songs later made it onto American Stars ’N Bars, Decade, Hawks & Doves and Ragged Glory. Among the other seven, several have only been played live a handful of times over the years, while three have never been heard until now.

Superficially, Homegrown resembles Hitchhiker – another ‘lost’ album from Young’s golden era that was finally released in 2017. But while Hitchhiker was a focused snapshot of Young’s creative process, recorded during one night in August 1976, Homegrown had more digressive beginnings. Sessions ran between June 1974 and January 1975 in Los Angeles, at Young’s Broken Arrow Ranch and even in England. The bulk of the work, though, took place at Nashville’s Quadrafonic Sound, where Young recorded Harvest along with producer Elliot Mazer. Reunited with Mazer and Harvest alumni Ben Keith on pedal steel and Tim Drummond on bass, Young also called on future International Harvester drummer Karl Himmel, Hawks/Band pianist Stan Szelest, Emmylou Harris, Levon Helm and Robbie Robertson.

More than just a trove of buried treasure from Young’s fecund ’70s – Homegrown is the missing chapter in his fabled Ditch Trilogy. Ben Keith’s exquisite pedal steel and Tim Drummond’s agile basslines provide a musical through-line; meanwhile, as Young picks through the debris of his relationship with Snodgress, Homegrown displays both the introspective qualities of On The Beach and the vérité nakedness of Tonight’s The Night.

Opener “Separate Ways†begins halfway through a chord, as if the band had started playing a split second before Mazer hit ‘record’. Sparsely arranged for a bare-bones ensemble, Young reflects on his split from Snodgress: “Though we go our separate ways/Lookin’ for better days/Sharin’ our little boy/Who grew from joy back then.†Keith’s pedal steel weeps sympathetically behind him as Levon Helm plays a slow, measured beat. The mood deepens with “Tryâ€, a tribute to Snodgress’s mother, who committed suicide shortly after the couple separated. Here, Young incorporates some of her favourite expressions, including “Shit, Mary, I can’t danceâ€. Emmylou Harris harmonises on the chorus while Helm’s discreet fills and a lovely, rolling piano from the great Stan Szelest lift the final third of the song. The rainy days continue with the sorrowful “Mexico†– the first of three travelogues – where Young sits alone at the piano, asking, “Why is it so hard to hang on to your love?â€

“Love Is A Rose†– familiar from Decade – opens with a supple bass run from Tim Drummond and a blast of Young’s harmonica before settling into the kind of palatable country-folk familiar from Harvest. Then it’s into “Homegrown†itself. Essentially a goofy jam about the pleasures of the herb, the version here is breezier and funkier than the Crazy Horse re-recording on American Stars ’N Bars. It’s welcome light relief before Young drifts back into his cursed fog. On the unreleased spoken-word piece “Floridaâ€, he relates a macabre yarn about a glider crashing into a 15-storey building in the city centre. On this, Young is accompanied by what could either be a saw, a detuned violin or perhaps someone running a wet finger around the rim of a glass – or, more likely, all three.

After the strangeness of “Floridaâ€, “Kansas†is a more conventional acoustic piece. The narrator wakes up to find a companion lying next to him in bed – “Although I’m not so sure if I even know your name.†With its world-weary delivery, “Kansas†resembles one of the more downcast moments from On The Beach, the harmonica motif seeming to reference “Ambulance Bluesâ€. Thematically, it is another meditation on the hollowness of stardom – this transient romantic assignation takes place “In my bungalow with stucco/That the glory and success bought.†With the album’s temperament growing unstable, Young withdraws into “We Don’t Smoke It Anymore†– a strung-out blues vamp that wouldn’t sound out of place on Tonight’s The Night.

Sometime in September 1974, shortly before CSNY played Wembley Stadium, Young and Robbie Robertson recorded a song called “White Lineâ€. You’ll know the electrified version from Ragged Glory, of course; but here, in a simple acoustic arrangement, it casts a note of wary optimism: “I’ve been down but I’m coming back up again.†The guitar interplay between Young and Robertson is warm, complementary – you might wish they’d collaborated musically more often. Meanwhile, whatever positive emotions Young had experienced on “White Line†have evaporated by the time the churning riffs of “Vacancy†start up. This is Young at his most fractious. “I look in your eyes and I don’t know what’s there,†he sings in a sarcastic jeer. “You poison me with that long vacant stare.†Is he addressing Snodgress directly? Or perhaps he’s expressing a broader disdain for the industry sharks and hangers-on around him?

The album winds down with two more acoustic songs: “Little Wing†and “Star Of Bethlehemâ€. If you squint hard enough, it’s possible to read the former as an allegory about Snodgress – “Little Wing, don’t fly away†– but “Star Of Bethlehem†rages with acrimony and betrayal. A crepuscular ballad, graced with elegant harmonies from Harris, it finds Young at his most merciless: “All your dreams and your lovers won’t protect you/They’re only passing through you in the end/They’ll leave you stripped of all that they can get to/And wait for you to come back again.†As with much of Homegrown, a heaviness crashes through the mellow musical vibes.

Had Homegrown been released in June 1975, as intended, would Young’s career be any different? Does this previously missing instalment of the Ditch Trilogy (now Quartet?) alter our perceptions of the releases around it? If Time Fades Away, On The Beach and Tonight’s The Night address the tragedies of Young’s recent past and his disillusionment with the limousine lifestyle Harvest bought him, Homegrown telescopes in on troubles at home – making it the most human of this run of albums. Young’s writing is unashamedly autobiographical in ways it has seldom been since (other unreleased songs from this period like “Frozen Manâ€, “Homefires†and “Love/Art Blues†further illuminate Young’s inner character). He is bereft, injured, cold – but he also experiences a certain karmic resignation. As he sings on “Separate Waysâ€: “Me for me, you for you/Happiness is never through/It’s only a change of plan/And that is nothing new.†There will always be heartbreak and loss. It’s the way things are and the way they will always be. It’s Young’s Chinatown moment.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Idles announce their third album, Ultra Mono

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Idles have announced that their third album, Ultra Mono, will be released by Partisan Records on September 25. Watch a video for the latest single to be taken from it, "Grounds", below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mRkUt9VnaR0 Ultra Mono was recorded in Paris and produced by Nick Launay ...

Idles have announced that their third album, Ultra Mono, will be released by Partisan Records on September 25.

Watch a video for the latest single to be taken from it, “Grounds”, below:

Ultra Mono was recorded in Paris and produced by Nick Launay and Adam ‘Atom’ Greenspan, with additional programming by Kenny Beats. It features guest vocals from Jehnny Beth and contributions from Warren Ellis, David Yow and Jamie Cullum.

To accompany the album release, Idles have also announced that they’ll play a series of ticketed livestream gigs “from an iconic studio” in late August. Check out the poster below for full details:

Uncut – August 2020

The Beatles, Bob Dylan, Robert Fripp, Khruangbin, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Laura Marling, Siouxsie & The Banshees and Little Richard all feature in the new Uncut, dated August 2020 and in UK shops from June 18 or available to buy online now. As always, the issue comes with a free CD...

The Beatles, Bob Dylan, Robert Fripp, Khruangbin, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Laura Marling, Siouxsie & The Banshees and Little Richard all feature in the new Uncut, dated August 2020 and in UK shops from June 18 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 music.

THE BEATLES: As Peter Jackson’s new The Beatles: Get Back film is readied for release, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Michael Lindsay-Hogg, Jackson and more take us behind the scenes of the Fabs’ strangest chapter, the making of the Let It Be album and film. “It was a very difficult time,†remembers McCartney.

OUR FREE CD! Got A Feeling: 15 fantastic tracks of the month’s best music, including cuts from Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Dion, The Jayhawks, Jarv Is…, Khruangbin, Bananagun, Grand Veymont, Sam Prekop, Samantha Crain 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:

BOB DYLAN: The definitive, epic review of Rough And Rowdy Ways – Greek muses and World War II generals, murdered presidents and wistful lovers, from the Catskills to the Gulf Of Mexico… Bobcats assemble!

ROBERT FRIPP: With the guitarist gradually releasing a series of solo pieces, Music For Quiet Moments, he invites Uncut for a candid chat about “Crimson metalâ€, advice from David Bowie and why you should never, ever have a band meeting.

KHRUANGBIN: The trio’s new album, Mordechai, is our Album Of The Month, and bassist and singer Laura Lee discusses their journey, from Houston to the world, in an extended Q&A.

ROLLING BLACKOUTS COASTAL FEVER: The Melbourne group are back with their second album, Sideways To New Italy, and eager to talk about their “brutalising†working process, crocodiles, competitive table tennis and The Clash. “We tried disco,†explains Tom Russo. “It ended up this weird, sleazy country song…â€

LITTLE RICHARD: We honour one of the founding fathers of rock’n’roll, while collaborators and eyewitnesses recall his colourful, groundbreaking life and times. “We were lucky to have him as long as we did,†says Steve Van Zandt.

LAURA MARLING: Album by album with the London-based singer-songwriter.

JOHN MARTYN: The story of Inside Out, the crazed and experimental follow-up to Solid Air, as told by Graeme Thomson in an excerpt from his new biography of the artist.

THE GO-GO’S: The making of “Our Lips Are Sealedâ€.

SIOUXSIE & THE BANSHEES: 40 years on from Kaleidoscope, we take a trip into the archives with this Melody Maker piece from August 1980 – Siouxsie and Steven Severin talk insect welfare and their quest for perfection: “We’re really professional amateurs…â€

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new records from Margo Price, Dion, Khruangbin, Jarv Is…, The Jayhawks, Lianne La Havas, Kutiman and more, and archival releases from Be-Bop Deluxe, Bill Withers, McCarthy and others. We catch Damon Albarn and Sharon Van Etten live online; among the films, DVDs and TV programmes reviewed are Da 5 Bloods, A White, White Day, Carmine Street Guitars and Desolation Center; while in books there’s Chris Frantz’s Remain In Love and Steve Hackett’s A Genesis In My Bed.

In our front section, meanwhile, we pay tribute to Phil May, catch up with David Crosby to hear about his upcoming reissues, and meet Wilco-endorsed Chicago duo Ohmme and proto-punk visionary Richard Strange. At the end of the issue, Phoebe Bridgers reveals the music that has shaped her life.

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.

 

Welcome to the new issue of Uncut: The Beatles, Bob Dylan and more

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Fifty years on, where do you start with Let It Be? For The Beatles, the answer is a complicated one. Filmed in early 1969, director Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s documentary contains some of the very best audio-vérité footage of the band assembling songs, not to mention their last public concert ever, ...

Fifty years on, where do you start with Let It Be? For The Beatles, the answer is a complicated one. Filmed in early 1969, director Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s documentary contains some of the very best audio-vérité footage of the band assembling songs, not to mention their last public concert ever, on the rooftop of Apple Corps’ headquarters at 3 Savile Row; but it also foreshadows their breakup nearly 15 months later. Perhaps understandably, it’s not a project for which the band have historically shown much enthusiasm. “It went into the things that happen in any family: little fights, little niggles, little mistrust, little this, little that,†Ringo Starr tells Uncut.

Buy a copy of the new issue of Uncut – click here for more details

“The movie and the album didn’t come out until May 1970 and they were in the middle of their divorce,†filmmaker Peter Jackson explains. “The band was breaking up and they were suing each other and obviously it was a very stressful, unhappy time.â€

Jackson should know. The filmmaker has been entrusted with fashioning a new film, The Beatles: Get Back – an alternate documentary using Lindsay-Hogg’s extensive original footage. For our first Beatles cover in three years, Jackson, Lindsay-Hogg, Paul McCartney, Ringo and a cast of supporting players help John Robinson get back to the Fabs’ January rehearsals in Twickenham Film Studios – and look forward to Jackson’s new film.

Much of what we do at Uncut involves covering the evolving stories of our favourite artists. This month, it’s not just The Beatles who, all these decades later, continue to intrigue, excite and surprise us. Richard Williams has filed a 3,000-word deep dive into Bob Dylan’s 39th studio album, Rough And Rowdy Ways – a piece remarkable for its breadth, erudition and insight. “Perhaps only the omniscient have a licence to put together songs in the way Dylan does,†Richard writes. “Creating mosaics from fragments of the past and investing the result with fresh meaning through force of personality and poetic vision.â€

Elsewhere, there are new interviews with Robert Fripp, Rolling Blackouts, Laura Marling, Hank Marvin, Phoebe Bridgers, David Crosby and the Go-Go’s; Phil May is hymned by fellow Pretty Thing Dick Taylor, we bring you an exclusive preview of Graeme Thomson’s splendid new John Martyn biography and revisit a vintage chat with Siouxsie & The Banshees.

Incidentally, if you’re one of the many new subscribers who’ve joined the family recently – thank you and welcome on board. These are unprecedented times, but as Ringo reminds us, “The music is the important thing. It always is.â€

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Roy Ayers announces first studio album in 18 years

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Roy Ayers has revealed that his first studio album in 18 years will be a collaboration with hip-hop producers Adrian Younge and Ali Shaheed Muhammad (of A Tribe Called Quest) for their new label Jazz Is Dead. JID002 comprises eight original compositions, written collaboratively by Younge, Shaheed...

Roy Ayers has revealed that his first studio album in 18 years will be a collaboration with hip-hop producers Adrian Younge and Ali Shaheed Muhammad (of A Tribe Called Quest) for their new label Jazz Is Dead.

JID002 comprises eight original compositions, written collaboratively by Younge, Shaheed Muhammad and Ayers, and recorded at Younge’s Linear Labs in Los Angeles. The album also features drummer Greg Paul, vocalists Loren Oden, Joy Gilliam, Saudia Yasmein, Elgin Clark and Anitra Castleberry, plus Phil Ranelin and Wendell Harrison of the spiritual jazz label Tribe Records.

Listen to a couple of tracks from JID 002 below:

JID002 is due for release digitally on June 19, with a physical release to follow in July. Jazz Is Dead is also working on similar projects from from the likes of Marcos Valle, Azymuth, Brian Jackson and Gary Bartz.

Paul McCartney unveils deluxe reissue packages for Flaming Pie

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The latest Paul McCartney album to get the Archive Collection treatment is 1997's Flaming Pie, which will be reissued in various formats via MPL/Capitol/UMe on July 31. The hefty 5CD/2DVD/4LP Collector’s Edition – priced at £520 – features the remastered album cut at half speed across two ...

The latest Paul McCartney album to get the Archive Collection treatment is 1997’s Flaming Pie, which will be reissued in various formats via MPL/Capitol/UMe on July 31.

The hefty 5CD/2DVD/4LP Collector’s Edition – priced at £520 – features the remastered album cut at half speed across two LPs; a hand-stamped white label vinyl featuring home recordings; “The Ballad Of The Skeletons†12†single with vinyl etching and poster; an exclusive marbled art print portfolio housing six Linda McCartney art prints; plus all manner of bonus audio, video and written content. Watch the unboxing video below:

There is also a £250 deluxe edition and less wallet-busting 3xLP and 2xCD formats, featuring numerous demos, out-takes and home recordings; plus a standard 2xLP edition featuring just the remastered original album.

Take a closer look at all the new Flaming Pie formats and pre-order here.

Hear Toots And The Maytals’ new single, “Got To Be Tough”

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Frederick “Toots†Hibbert has announced that the first Toots And The Maytals album in a decade will be released by Trojan Jamaica/BMG Records on August 28. Entitled Got To Be Tough, you can hear the first single and title track below: https://open.spotify.com/album/6TpWt5DjGFB6TyvvMjrBLh?s...

Frederick “Toots†Hibbert has announced that the first Toots And The Maytals album in a decade will be released by Trojan Jamaica/BMG Records on August 28.

Entitled Got To Be Tough, you can hear the first single and title track below:

The album features Zak Starkey on guitar, Sly Dunbar on drums and percussion from Cyril Neville, with a guest appearance from Ziggy Marley on a cover of his dad’s “Three Little Birds”. Pre-order Got To Be Tough here and check out the tracklisting below:

Drop Off Head
Just Brutal
Got To Be Tough
Freedom Train
Warning Warning
Good Thing That You Call
Stand Accuse
Three Little Birds Ft. Ziggy Marley
Having A Party
Struggle

Bob Dylan reveals tracklisting for Rough And Rowdy Ways

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Bob Dylan has taken to Instagram to reveal the tracklisting for the upcoming Rough And Rowdy Ways, his first album of new material since 2012's Tempest. https://www.instagram.com/p/CBT-07wl4ok/ As expected, the ten-track album features the three previously-released singles “Murder Most Foulâ...

Bob Dylan has taken to Instagram to reveal the tracklisting for the upcoming Rough And Rowdy Ways, his first album of new material since 2012’s Tempest.

As expected, the ten-track album features the three previously-released singles “Murder Most Foulâ€, “I Contain Multitudesâ€
and “False Prophetâ€. Peruse the full tracklisting below:

1. “I Contain Multitudesâ€
2. “False Prophetâ€
3. “My Own Version of Youâ€
4. “I’ve Made Up My Mind to Give Myself to Youâ€
5. “Black Riderâ€
6. “Goodbye Jimmy Reedâ€
7. “Mother of Musesâ€
8. “Crossing the Rubiconâ€
9. “Key West (Philosopher Pirate)â€
10. “Murder Most Foulâ€

Rough And Rowdy Ways is released next Friday, June 19 – the same day as the new issue of Uncut, your perfect companion for digesting the album. Check back here next week for details on how to order the magazine.

David Gilmour to release new music via Polly Samson’s audiobook

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Polly Samson will release the self-narrated audiobook of her Hydra-set novel A Theatre For Dreamers on June 25. It features original music throughout from her husband David Gilmour, including the premiere of his new single "Yes I Have Ghosts". Inspired by a character from the novel and co-written...

Polly Samson will release the self-narrated audiobook of her Hydra-set novel A Theatre For Dreamers on June 25. It features original music throughout from her husband David Gilmour, including the premiere of his new single “Yes I Have Ghosts”.

Inspired by a character from the novel and co-written by Samson, “Yes I Have Ghosts” will be released separately a week later.

Polly Samson says: “We didn’t set out to work together on the audiobook, but lockdown meant I had to narrate and I’m grateful to David Gilmour for stepping in to the producer’s chair. We wanted to explore the creative possibilities of the format and produce something new, refreshing and innovative.â€

David Gilmour comments: “The audiobook format has so much untapped potential, and I am surprised more musicians have not creatively collaborated with authors, narrators, and audiobook producers in this way before. The two worlds seem to seamlessly link, and music can really help to bring audiobooks to life in unexpected new ways. We were also lucky to have our daughter Romany in lockdown with us to contribute harp and additional vocals.â€

Watch the video for Michael Stipe’s “No Time For Love Like Now”

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After teasing the song in March, Michael Stipe has released the finished version of his Big Red Machine collaboration "No Time For Love Like Now". The song was written by Stipe and The National's Aaron Dessner, with orchestration by Bryce Dessner. The song also features Justin Vernon on guitar, B...

After teasing the song in March, Michael Stipe has released the finished version of his Big Red Machine collaboration “No Time For Love Like Now”.

The song was written by Stipe and The National’s Aaron Dessner, with orchestration by Bryce Dessner. The song also features Justin Vernon on guitar, Brad Cook on synth, JT Bates on drums, Thomas Bartlett aka Doveman on keys, and Clarice Jensen and Yuki Numata Resnick on strings.

Watch the video below:

Stipe has also designed a “No Time For Love Like Now†t-shirt and tote bag, available for purchase from here, with all proceeds to The Equal Justice Initiative and Covid-19 Protest Relief Fund.

Watch all of Uncut’s exclusive Paradise Of Bachelors sessions

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Over the past month or so, we've been hosting a series of lockdown sessions in association with one of our favourite labels, Paradise Of Bachelors. In case you missed any of them, you can now watch all four of these unique at-home performances below: James Elkington https://youtu.be/6Cmt-m9qX...

Over the past month or so, we’ve been hosting a series of lockdown sessions in association with one of our favourite labels, Paradise Of Bachelors.

In case you missed any of them, you can now watch all four of these unique at-home performances below:

James Elkington

Itasca

Jake Xerxes Fussell

Michael Chapman

As always, please support the artists and label by buying the albums – visit the official Paradise Of Bachelors site to order directly or find links for local retailers.

Send us your questions for Archie Shepp

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Since emerging as part of Cecil Taylor's band in the early '60s, saxophonist Archie Shepp has been a key figure in the development of jazz – both musically and as a force for social change. He's played alongside Don Cherry in trailblazing avant-jazz ensemble the New York Contemporary Five and ...

Since emerging as part of Cecil Taylor’s band in the early ’60s, saxophonist Archie Shepp has been a key figure in the development of jazz – both musically and as a force for social change.

He’s played alongside Don Cherry in trailblazing avant-jazz ensemble the New York Contemporary Five and with John Coltrane on Ascension, also appearing live with everyone from Sun Ra to Frank Zappa.

Meanwhile his landmark solo albums include the scorching free jazz of 1965’s Fire Music, the Afrocentric explorations of 1968’s The Magic Of Juju and the lush sweep of 1972’s Attica Blues, an intensely lyrical and soul-stirring response to the Attica Prison uprising and institutional racism in general that constitutes essential listening right now.

Shepp’s latest project Ocean Bridges is a vibrant collaboration with his nephew Jason Moore AKA underground rapper Raw Poetic. On it, Shepp leads an eager young band through a series of tasty improvised grooves while passing on some of his considerable knowledge to the next generation.

So what do you want to ask a true jazz master? Send your questions to audiencewith@www.uncut.co.uk by Tuesday June 16, and Archie will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

Watch Sparks’ live isolation performance of “All That”

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Despite protesting in the current issue of Uncut that "we're not all acoustic groups!", the ever-resourceful Sparks have found a way to perform new album opener "All That" in isolation. The video features Russell and Ron Mael in their respective LA homes, playing along with the other members of t...

Despite protesting in the current issue of Uncut that “we’re not all acoustic groups!”, the ever-resourceful Sparks have found a way to perform new album opener “All That” in isolation.

The video features Russell and Ron Mael in their respective LA homes, playing along with the other members of their band. Watch below:

A Steady Drip, Drip, Drip is out now digitially with a CD, vinyl and cassette release to follow on July 3. You can read Uncut’s review of the album here, and order our latest issue – featuring An Audience With Sparks – by clicking here.

Columbia are giving away a signed Bob Dylan art print

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Anyone ordering Bob Dylan's new album Rough And Rowdy Ways before June 24 will be in with a chance of winning a lobby card art print signed by the man himself. An (unsigned) lobby card comes packaged with all physical versions of Rough And Rowdy Ways, which is released next Friday (June 19). ...

Anyone ordering Bob Dylan’s new album Rough And Rowdy Ways before June 24 will be in with a chance of winning a lobby card art print signed by the man himself.

An (unsigned) lobby card comes packaged with all physical versions of Rough And Rowdy Ways, which is released next Friday (June 19).

Go here to pre-order and enter the competition, check out the previously released singles from the album here, and look out for much more on Rough And Rowdy Ways in the new issue of Uncut – which is also out on June 19.

Björk’s label One Little Indian changes name to One Little Independent

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One Little Indian records – home to Björk, Crass, Marry Waterson, Kathryn Williams among others – has announced that it is changing its name to One Little Independent, as well as updating its logo. Founded by Derek Birkett in 1985, the label took its name from his band Flux Of Pink Indians. ...

One Little Indian records – home to Björk, Crass, Marry Waterson, Kathryn Williams among others – has announced that it is changing its name to One Little Independent, as well as updating its logo.

Founded by Derek Birkett in 1985, the label took its name from his band Flux Of Pink Indians. “As a teenager living in London in the late 1970s, my friends and I were deeply inspired when we learned about some of the philosophies of the Indigenous People of the Americas, of peace and love for each other and for nature and the planet, and in turn they were of huge influence in our anarchist punk movement,” writes Birkett in a social media post. “I was naive enough at the time of founding my label to think that the name and logo was reflective of my respect and appreciation of the culture.

“I’m aware that my white privilege has sheltered me and fostered my ignorance on these issues. I realise now that the label name and logo instead perpetuated a harmful stereotyping and exploitation of Indigenous Peoples’ culture. This is the exact opposite of what was intended. However, I know that it is not the intentions but the impact that is important.

“I want to apologise unreservedly to anyone that has been offended by the name and the logo. I recognise now that both contribute to racism and should have been addressed a long, long time ago.”

As well as changing the name and logo, Birkett has committed to donating to organisations including the Honouring Indigenous Peoples Charitable Corporation and The Association On American Indian Affairs.

Third Man to release last ever show by The Stooges’ original line-up

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Third Man Records have announced the upcoming release of The Stooges' Live At Goose Lake: August 8, 1970 – the last ever performance of the original line-up of the band and indeed the only known soundboard recording of said line-up. The festival slot found The Stooges promoting their just-relea...

Third Man Records have announced the upcoming release of The Stooges’ Live At Goose Lake: August 8, 1970 – the last ever performance of the original line-up of the band and indeed the only known soundboard recording of said line-up.

The festival slot found The Stooges promoting their just-released Fun House album, although legend has it that bassist Dave Alexander turned up too wasted to play, hastening the collapse of the band. This recently unearthed recording – found buried in the basement of a Michigan farmhouse, restored by Vance Powell and mastered by Bill Skibbe – suggests that story may not be entirely correct.

Listen to “TV Eye” below:

The album will be released almost 50 years to the day of the original performance, on August 7, 2020. It comes on CD, digital and vinyl formats – including two limited edition coloured vinyl variants – with liner notes by Uncut’s Jaan Uhelzski. Read more and pre-order here.

Fun House itself will be reissued as a 15xLP boxset in July.

Watch a video for Margo Price’s new single, “Letting Me Down”

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Margo Price has announced a new release date for her forthcoming album That’s How Rumors Get Started. It will now be released on July 10 in numerous formats, including limited edition gold vinyl. Watch a video for the latest single to be taken from the album, "Letting Me Down": https://www.y...

Margo Price has announced a new release date for her forthcoming album That’s How Rumors Get Started. It will now be released on July 10 in numerous formats, including limited edition gold vinyl.

Watch a video for the latest single to be taken from the album, “Letting Me Down”:

You can read a review of That’s How Rumors Get Started in the new issue of Uncut, out next week. In the meantime, check out her recently released live album, Perfectly Imperfect At The Ryman, below.

Paul Weller – The Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide

Introducing the fully-updated, deluxe edition of our Ultimate Music Guide to the music of Paul Weller. Featuring a wealth of spiky archive interviews and in-depth reviews of every album, from The Jam to The Style Council, all the way to this month’s On Sunset. “It’s philosophical,†Paul tell...

Introducing the fully-updated, deluxe edition of our Ultimate Music Guide to the music of Paul Weller. Featuring a wealth of spiky archive interviews and in-depth reviews of every album, from The Jam to The Style Council, all the way to this month’s On Sunset. “It’s philosophical,†Paul tells us in an exclusive new interview, “but also tongue in cheek.â€

Click here to buy!

Introducing the Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide to Paul Weller

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Even with a new album out this week, and with the pandemic striking at the heart of how musicians operate, there’s no stopping Paul Weller. As he tells us in a new interview for this fully-updated deluxe Ultimate Music Guide, he’s been busy completing rough ideas, writing at home, and collaborat...

Even with a new album out this week, and with the pandemic striking at the heart of how musicians operate, there’s no stopping Paul Weller. As he tells us in a new interview for this fully-updated deluxe Ultimate Music Guide, he’s been busy completing rough ideas, writing at home, and collaborating remotely with his band. “I’ve already got enough for a new record,†he says.

We shouldn’t be surprised. If there’s a constant feature of Weller’s story, it’s that he’s a musician whose career has been characterised by tremendous industry. From the fire of The Jam, the experimentation of The Style Council to the flowering of his solo career, Weller’s musical changes have been based on a bedrock of social responsibility and growing wisdom.

Even in our changed times he sees something to work with. “The air is noticeably cleaner,†he says. “I’ve started seeing and hearing birds again, the birdsong can be so loud. I’ve found it encouraging to think that the planet only needs a few weeks to start to repair itself. The planet will be here long after we’ve gone. Hopefully people can see that we are part of something bigger and we are lucky to be here.â€

Perhaps we’ll hear the fruit of Paul’s insights on subsequent records. For the moment, though, we can reflect on his story so far in the Ultimate Music Guide’s blend of spiky archive interviews and deep critical evaluation of the work. It’s a journey which has taken us from the fire and skill of In The City to the innovative and soulful explorations of his latest album On Sunset. And much as we feel fortunate to be on the trip with him, it’s worth noting that Paul feels pretty grateful to be on it himself.

“My escape was music because nothing else made any sense,†he tells us. “I don’t know what I’d have done if I didn’t have music.â€

The Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide to Paul Weller is in shops tomorrow (June 11). Alternatively you can order it online by clicking here.

Enjoy!

John Robinson