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Exclusive! Hear the debut solo track by Oh Sees’ Brigid Dawson

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Former Oh Sees vocalist and keyboard player Brigid Dawson will release her debut solo album Ballet Of Apes via Castle Face on May 22. Hear the opening track, "Is The Season For New Incarnations", exclusively below: Credited to Brigid Dawson & The Mothers Network, Ballet Of Apes was recorde...

Former Oh Sees vocalist and keyboard player Brigid Dawson will release her debut solo album Ballet Of Apes via Castle Face on May 22.

Hear the opening track, “Is The Season For New Incarnations”, exclusively below:

Credited to Brigid Dawson & The Mothers Network, Ballet Of Apes was recorded in Australia with Mikey Young (Total Control/Eddy Current Suppression Ring), in San Francisco with Mike Donovan (ex Sic Alps), Shayde Sartin (ex Fresh & Onlys) and Mike Shoun (ex Oh Sees/Peacers), and in Brooklyn with psych-rockers Sunwatchers.

View the tracklisting below:

1. Is The Season for New Incarnations
2. The Fool
3. Carletta’s In Hats Again
4. When My Day of the Crone Comes
5. Ballet of Apes
6. Heartbreak Jazz
7. Trixxx

George Harrison: “He was on a spiritual journey”

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The new issue of Uncut – available to order online by clicking here, with free home delivery for the UK – celebrates the remarkable solo years of George Harrison with an extensive 11-page feature. In all-new interviews with his closest collaborators, Graeme Thomson digs deep into Harrison’s wo...

The new issue of Uncutavailable to order online by clicking here, with free home delivery for the UK – celebrates the remarkable solo years of George Harrison with an extensive 11-page feature. In all-new interviews with his closest collaborators, Graeme Thomson digs deep into Harrison’s working practices to cast new light on “the Quiet One” – from pioneering solo debut, Wonderwall Music, to the posthumous release, Brainwashed.

In this extract, collaborators recall the making of 1968’s Wonderwall Music – Harrison’s soundtrack to Joe Massot’s film about a mad professor and a Biba girl called Penny Lane, released three weeks before the ‘White Album’. With cameos from Eric Clapton and Peter Tork, it’s the first Fab solo record, the first album on Apple and a world music crossover before its time.

JOHN BARHAM [MUSICIAN/ARRANGER]:
Wonderwall… was primarily an extension of his love of Indian music. George became a pupil of Ravi Shankar and he impressed me as being a very respectful and disciplined student. He seemed at ease with the sitar. There were already obvious influences on Beatles songs like “Within You Without You” and “Blue Jay Way”.

DAVE MASON: George was an early adopter! He had done those wonderful Indian tracks on Revolver and Sgt Pepper, and was learning with Ravi Shankar. He gave me the sitar he’d first learned on. I used it on “Paper Sun”, Traffic’s first single.

BARHAM: Joe Massot offered him complete freedom in creating a music score for the film, and he took advantage. But it was obvious that George was still intensely involved in his creative work with The Beatles. When we were doing Wonderwall, The Beatles were using the same studio; they had it block-booked. There were times when George’s sessions finished and the other three Beatles would come in for an evening session. When this happened, George would become re-energised and go into a world apart with the other three that nobody else seemingly could enter. At one session I found a flugelhorn lying around the studio. It turned out to be Paul McCartney’s.

ROY DYKE [DRUMS, THE REMO FOUR]: We recorded backing tracks at Abbey Road to accompany certain points in the film. George had timed it all with a stopwatch: “We need one minute and 35 seconds with a country & western feel.” Or, “We need a rock thing for exactly two minutes.” Nothing was really written. We’d talk over ideas he wanted, play something, and he’d say, “That’s good, keep that. I like the piano there.” It was very experimental. There were different tracks with different atmospheres, and a few different sessions. The Indian musicians were recorded in Bombay. At another session he used Eric Clapton, who did a great riff on “Skiing”. I heard he borrowed a five-string banjo from Paul McCartney for Peter Tork to use!

BARHAM: Big Jim Sullivan, who was recording with Tom Jones at Abbey Road, happened to drop in and played bass on “On The Bed”. [It was] a free atmosphere, the sessions were very creative and very enjoyable. I was very impressed how well George had mastered [Indian classical] techniques. He had dropped in on one of Ravi Shankar’s recording sessions for the BBC/Jonathan Miller production of Alice In Wonderland at the Shepherd’s Bush BBC Centre, which I worked on. At the session we were recording a scene where Ravi soloed and I played an Indian jhala texture on piano. George was fascinated by the combination of sitar and piano, and subsequently at his house in Esher he asked me to play one of my own compositions based on jhala texture. He looked and listened very closely. Later at one of the Wonderwall sessions he very abruptly sat down at the piano and with great intensity started playing his own jhala over a chord sequence. We had many discussions about Indian philosophy and spirituality. I’m convinced that George was one of the very few people I’ve ever met who was on a spiritual journey.

You can read much more about George Harrison in the new issue of Uncut, on sale now.

Hear Paul Weller’s new song, “Earth Beat”

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Paul Weller's 15th studio album On Sunset is due for release by Polydor on June 12. Listen to a taster from the album, “Earth Beat” – featuring guest vocals from Col3trane – below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_DiWq4aVQk On Sunset was written and recorded at Weller's own Black B...

Paul Weller’s 15th studio album On Sunset is due for release by Polydor on June 12.

Listen to a taster from the album, “Earth Beat” – featuring guest vocals from Col3trane – below:

On Sunset was written and recorded at Weller’s own Black Barn Studios in Surrey. It was produced by Jan “Stan” Kybert and Weller himself with help from Charles Rees, and string arrangements by Hannah Peel.

Most of the album sees Weller multi-tasking on various instruments with accompaniment from his regular band – Ben Gordelier, Andy Crofts and Steve Cradock. Guests include Slade’s Jim Lea on violin, Mick Talbot on Hammond organ, Le Superhomard’s Julie Gros on vocals, The Strypes’ Josh McClorey on guitar and The Staves on backing vocals. Four tracks also feature The Paraorchestra.

On Sunset will be released digitally, on CD, deluxe CD (includes extra tracks), double gatefold vinyl, coloured vinyl and cassette.

Watch Bruce Springsteen’s entire 2009 Hyde Park concert

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Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band have released their entire 2009 London Calling: Live In Hyde Park concert film in an effort to encourage fans to "practice social distancing". https://twitter.com/springsteen/status/1240052960035471362 You can watch the whole thing below, or by following t...

Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band have released their entire 2009 London Calling: Live In Hyde Park concert film in an effort to encourage fans to “practice social distancing”.

You can watch the whole thing below, or by following the link in the tweet above.

The Who reschedule UK tour for spring 2021

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The Who have rescheduled their UK arena tour for spring 2021. It was originally due to start this month but was postponed last week due to coronavirus concerns. All tickets remain valid for the new dates below: Friday 5th - 3 Arena Dublin Monday 8th - M&S Bank Liverpool Wednesday 10th - SS...

The Who have rescheduled their UK arena tour for spring 2021.

It was originally due to start this month but was postponed last week due to coronavirus concerns. All tickets remain valid for the new dates below:

Friday 5th – 3 Arena Dublin
Monday 8th – M&S Bank Liverpool
Wednesday 10th – SSE Hydro, Glasgow
Friday 12th – Utilita Newcastle
Monday 15th – First Direct Arena Leeds
Wednesday 17th- RWA Birmingham
Monday 22nd – SSE Arena Wembley
Wednesday 24th – Motorpoint Arena Nottingham
Saturday 27th – Motorpoint Arena Cardiff
Monday 29th – Manchester Arena

Glastonbury 2020 cancelled due to coronavirus

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Glastonbury festival organisers have bowed to the inevitable and cancelled this year's event due to the increasing spread of coronavirus. “We are so sorry to announce this, but Glastonbury 2020 will have to be cancelled, and this will be an enforced fallow year for the festival," wrote Michael ...

Glastonbury festival organisers have bowed to the inevitable and cancelled this year’s event due to the increasing spread of coronavirus.

“We are so sorry to announce this, but Glastonbury 2020 will have to be cancelled, and this will be an enforced fallow year for the festival,” wrote Michael and Emily Eavis. “Clearly this was not a course of action we hoped to take for our 50th anniversary event, but following the new government measures announced this week – and in times of such unprecedented uncertainty – this is now our only viable option.”

135,000 people had already paid a £50 deposit for a Glastonbury 2020 ticket, but all of those people will have the chance to roll over that deposit to next year’s festival, guaranteeing them a ticket. “Those who would prefer a refund of that £50 will be able to contact See Tickets in the coming days in order to secure that. This option will remain available until September this year.”

The Eavises went on to apologise to their “incredible crew and volunteers” and admitted that the cancellation would have “severe financial implcations… not just for us, but also the Festival’s charity partners, suppliers, traders, local landowners and our community.”

In other festival news, Red Rooster – which was due to take place at Euston Hall, Suffolk on May 28-30 – has been postponed and will now take place on September 4-6 at the same venue. Main headliners Richard Hawley and Asleep At The Wheel have confirmed they are available for the new dates and the festival say that are “working with agents and management to move the rest of the bill”.

All tickets will of be valid for the change of dates.

Uncut – May 2020

George Harrison, Syd Barrett, Lucinda Williams, Michael Kiwanuka, Roberta Flack and more – plus our CD of the month’s best music – all feature in the new Uncut, dated May 2020 and available to buy online and in UK shops from March 19. GEORGE HARRISON: As the 50th anniversary of All Things ...

George Harrison, Syd Barrett, Lucinda Williams, Michael Kiwanuka, Roberta Flack and more – plus our CD of the month’s best music – all feature in the new Uncut, dated May 2020 and available to buy online and in UK shops from March 19.

GEORGE HARRISON: As the 50th anniversary of All Things Must Pass approaches, the Quiet One’s closest collaborators reveal all about his working practices from pioneering solo debut Wonderwall Music to the posthumous Brainwashed. We hear about recording sessions in a toilet, helicopter jaunts to the Grand Prix and the dark days after John Lennon’s assassination. “He was emerging from an incredible writing team,” one eyewitness explains, “but he suddenly came up with all this beautiful stuff!”

OUR CD! On Cloud Nine: 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lucinda Williams, Sufjan Stevens & Lowell Brams, James Elkington, Roedelius, BC Camplight, Waxahatchee, The Lovely Eggs and more.

UK readers! This issue of Uncut is available to buy by clicking here.

Overseas readers! This issue of Uncut is available to buy by clicking here.

Plus! Inside the issue, you’ll find:

SYD BARRETT by PINK FLOYD: 50 years on from his debut solo album, The Madcap Laughs, Barrett’s myth is as powerful as ever. Nick Mason remembers his mercurial brilliance, while Roger Waters recalls the creation of The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn

LUCINDA WILLIAMS: Uncut heads to Williams’ new home in Nashville to hear all about her history in the city, protest songs, empathy and her unflinching new album Good Souls Better Angels: “You have to be able to dig way down inside yourself,” she tells us

MICHAEL KIWANUKA: We catch up with the soulful, socially conscious singer on the road in Washington DC. Up for discussion are his journey from acoustic revivalist to electrified futurist, and his liberated third album, Kiwanuka. “In the beginning, I didn’t really know my potential…”

DAVID ROBACK RIP: From The Rain Parade to Mazzy Star, we chart the guitarist and songwriter’s influential, remarkable career, with help from some of his closest longstanding collaborators

SUZANNE VEGA: The making of “Luka”, an urban folk song about child abuse that became a worldwide hit

ROBERTA FLACK: The great singer and performer discusses her stunning debut First Take, now receiving a deluxe reissue and reviewed as our Archive Album Of The Month

THUNDERCAT: Album by album with the jazz-funk-soul maverick

BRIAN ENO: Together with his brother Roger Eno, the pair sit down to talk about their relationship, their music and new collaborative album Mixing Colours

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new records from James Elkington, Ed O’Brien, The Strokes, Jackie Lynn, Tony Allen & Hugh Masekela, Waxahatchee and more, and archival releases from The Handsome Family, Joni Mitchell, Kelis, Neil Innes, Rory Gallagher, Gentle Giant and others. We catch Elvis Costello & The Imposters live, along with the Rowland S Howard tribute concert, and also review films including Depeche Mode‘s Spirits In The Forest, Calm With Horses and The Painted Bird, and books on the Heartbreakers and John Entwistle.

In our front section, meanwhile, we report from the live tribute to Ginger Baker, catch up with Shirley Collins and Mark Lanegan, introduce our Wilcovered album on vinyl and meet Carson McHone. Meanwhile, Baxter Dury answers your questions and Jehnny Beth reveals the music that has shaped her life.

International readers can pick up a copy at the following stores:

And also online at:

Introducing the new Uncut: George Harrison, Lucinda Williams, Syd Barrett and more

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There’s a moment in Martin Scorsese’s documentary George Harrison: Living In The Material World where Harrison reflects, in archive footage, on the distance travelled during his remarkable career. “People say I’m the Beatle who changed the most,” he says. “But really that’s what I see ...

There’s a moment in Martin Scorsese’s documentary George Harrison: Living In The Material World where Harrison reflects, in archive footage, on the distance travelled during his remarkable career. “People say I’m the Beatle who changed the most,” he says. “But really that’s what I see life as being about. You have to change.”

Change, we learn, was always at the forefront of Harrison’s mind. Not so much ‘the quiet one’ as ‘the restless one’, he always appeared to be looking for the next thing. There’s George the early advocate of World Music, George the seeker of spiritual enlightenment, George the movie entrepreneur. For this month’s cover, his biographer Graeme Thomson offers a unique, intimate insight into George’s creative processes across his finest solo albums, aided by the recollections of many of his closest collaborators. But despite his many leaps, from All Things Must Pass to Traveling Wilburys and beyond, one eyewitness recalls George revealing, in a private moment, the ways in which his former outfit still affected him: “All I really wanted to do was to be in a band.”

The new Uncut: order a copy direct from us today

You’ll find plenty of other restless, innovative spirits in this issue. Syd Barrett’s mercurial brilliance is hymned by Nick Mason and Roger Waters, Brian and Roger Eno talk ambient music, colour-coded crossword clues and ELP, Lucinda Williams takes on Nashville, Michael Kiwanuka takes us on tour, David Roback’s singular musical vision in the Rain Parade, Opal and Mazzy Star is celebrated by friends and former bandmates, plus there’s Shirley Collins, Mark Lanegan, Suzanne Vega, Thundercat and more. Elsewhere, our writers are out in force in the reviews section, which features essential reports on excellent new albums from the likes of James Elkington, Tony Allen and Hugh Masekela and The Strokes as well as key reissues from Roberta Flack, the Handsome Family and Joni Mitchell.

There’s also another especially strong free CD with this month’s issue, with new music from Damaged Bug, the solo project from chief Oh See John Dwyer, Roedelius, Waxahatchee, BC Camplight, Monophonics, Sufjan Stevens (accompanied by his father-in-law, Lowell Brams) and Jackie Lynn – a hook up between Circuit Des Yeux’s Haley Fohr and Bitchin Bajas.

I’m also proud to report that on page 8, you’ll find the latest news about our Wilcovered compilation – which gets a vinyl release as part of Record Store Day in June. I’m hugely grateful to everyone who’s helped make this happen and even though I’m looking at an early pressing as I write this, I still can’t quite believe this has happened. Just once, please permit me to say this: I love my job.

Pretenders announce new album, Hate For Sale

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Chrissie Hynde has announced that the new Pretenders album Hate For Sale will be released by BMG on May 1. Listen to lead track "The Buzz" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbq8mcCYke0 Speaking about "The Buzz", Chrissie Hynde says: “I think we all know that love affairs can take on ...

Chrissie Hynde has announced that the new Pretenders album Hate For Sale will be released by BMG on May 1.

Listen to lead track “The Buzz” below:

Speaking about “The Buzz”, Chrissie Hynde says: “I think we all know that love affairs can take on the characteristics of drug addiction. It’s about that. Not mine of course – I’m never obsessive never obsessive never obsessive.”

Hate For Sale was produced by Stephen Street and written collaboratively by Chrissie Hynde and guitarist James Walbourne. Peruse the tracklisting below:

‘Hate For Sale’
‘The Buzz’
‘Lightning Man’
‘Turf Accountant Daddy’
‘You Can’t Hurt a Fool’
‘I Didn’t Know When To Stop’
‘Maybe Love Is In NYC’
‘Junkie Walk’
‘Didn’t Want To Be This Lonely’
‘Crying in Public’

Watch Neil Young play “Heart Of Gold” live from his fireside

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Yesterday, Neil Young took part in a 'digital rally' in support of Bernie Sanders, playing "Heart Of Gold" live from his home. You can watch Young's segment at 38:15 on the video below. The livestream also featured Jim James of My Morning Jacket (5:12) and The Free Nationals (1:02:19). https:...

Yesterday, Neil Young took part in a ‘digital rally’ in support of Bernie Sanders, playing “Heart Of Gold” live from his home. You can watch Young’s segment at 38:15 on the video below.

The livestream also featured Jim James of My Morning Jacket (5:12) and The Free Nationals (1:02:19).

Neil Young has revealed that there will be more where this came from. Posting on Neil Young Archives, he wrote: “Because we are all at home and not venturing out, we will try to do a stream from my fireplace with my lovely wife filming. It will be a down-home production, a few songs, a little time together.” He is expected to announce the first livestream in the coming days.

Watch a video for Modern Nature’s new song, “Flourish”

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Modern Nature have announced a new seven-track mini-album called Annual, due for release by Bella Union on June 5. Watch a video for lead track "Flourish" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1suxE1o6jI Annual was recorded in December 2019 at Gizzard Studio in London, with Jack Cooper jo...

Modern Nature have announced a new seven-track mini-album called Annual, due for release by Bella Union on June 5.

Watch a video for lead track “Flourish” below:

Annual was recorded in December 2019 at Gizzard Studio in London, with Jack Cooper joined by saxophonist Jeff Tobias and percussionist Jim Wallis (keyboardist Will Young didn’t appear this time, concentrating on his work with Beak). The album features guest vocals from Kayla Cohen of Itasca on “Harvest”.

Cooper explains how Annual came about: “Towards the end of 2018, I began filling a new diary with words, observations from walks, descriptions of events, thoughts…free associative streams of just… stuff. Reading back, as the year progressed from winter to spring, the tone of the diary seemed to change as well… optimism crept in, brightness and then things began to dip as autumn approached… warmth, isolation again and into winter.

“I split the diary into four seasons and used them as the template for the four main songs. The shorter instrumental songs on the record are meant to signify specific events and transitions from one season to the next. I figured it wouldn’t be a very long record, but to me it stands up next to [2019’s] How To Live in every way.”

Pre-order Annual here.

The 4th Uncut New Music Playlist Of 2020

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Apologies for what feels like a massive delay since the last Playlist; crazy deadlines plus, you know, real world events have pushed everything back a little. Anyway, there's a ton of good stuff here -- Modern Nature AND Modern Studies, together in the same Playlist! Plus the return of Sonic Boom, B...

Apologies for what feels like a massive delay since the last Playlist; crazy deadlines plus, you know, real world events have pushed everything back a little. Anyway, there’s a ton of good stuff here — Modern Nature AND Modern Studies, together in the same Playlist! Plus the return of Sonic Boom, Brigid Mae Power, Phoebe Bridgers, Angel Deradoorian and plenty more.

1.
BRIGID MAE POWER

“On A City Night”
(Fire)

2.
MODERN NATURE

“Flourish”
(Bella Union)

3.
PHOEBE BRIDGERS

“Garden Song”
(Dead Oceans)

4.
MODERN STUDIES

“Heavy Water”
(Fire)

5.
SONIC BOOM

“Just Imagine”
(Carpark)

6.
ROSE CITY BAND

“Only Lonely”
(Thrill Jockey)

7.
MARKER STARLING

“Waiting For Grace” [feat. Laetitia Sadier]
(Tin Angel Records)

8.
DERADOORIAN

“Saturnine Night”
(ANTI –)

9.
ARBOURETUM

“Let It All In”
(Thrill Jockey)

10.
MAGNETIC FIELDS

“The Day the Politicians Died”
(Nonesuch)

11.
YĪN YĪN

“Thom Kï Kï”
(Bongo Joe)

12.
JASON SIMON

“The Same Dream”
(BYM)

Hear two new tracks by The Bad Seeds’ Warren Ellis

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Warren Ellis of Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds has penned the soundtrack to a new documentary by Arno Bitschy, called This Train I Ride. The film tells the story of women hopping freight trains around America. The soundtrack will be released on vinyl and digitally by Invada on April 24. Hear two track...

Warren Ellis of Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds has penned the soundtrack to a new documentary by Arno Bitschy, called This Train I Ride. The film tells the story of women hopping freight trains around America.

The soundtrack will be released on vinyl and digitally by Invada on April 24. Hear two tracks from it below:

Warren Ellis says: “This project took flight when I met Arno Bitschy in Paris, February 2019. He showed me several sequences with music I had sent to him and I committed without hesitation. The beautiful images and closeness to the women he had achieved over three years, hopping trains with them across the USA, floored me. How he managed to tell their story is a film in itself. Their defiance, quest to be self-reliant and desire to not be victims of the past is so empowering.

“A week later I was walking out of the Metro from a therapy session and received a text from Brian Eno, inviting me to see an orchestra rehearse in Théâtre du Châtelet under the baton of Teodor Currentzis. Serendipity. My idea was to record, collate and produce the music on trains, in the spirit of the women in this documentary. Brian was so encouraging with this approach and told me about a train journey he had taken in the ’80s with no fixed destination.

“Over the next month I sat with my computer, loops, iPhone, Reface DX synthesiser and forgotten ideas and composed the music on the Metro and Eurostar and in various hotels while working on Ghosteen. I would send the pieces to Arno from the train, or wherever I was located, and he edited them into the film. The narrative of these women is the heart of this meditation.”

Throbbing Gristle’s Genesis P-Orridge has died, aged 70

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Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, co-founder of seminal industrial groups Throbbing Gristle and Psychic TV, has died aged 70. P-Orridge, who identified as pandrogynous and used the pronouns s/he and h/er, was diagnosed with chronic myelomonocytic leukemia in 2017. H/er death on Saturday (March 14) was co...

Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, co-founder of seminal industrial groups Throbbing Gristle and Psychic TV, has died aged 70.

P-Orridge, who identified as pandrogynous and used the pronouns s/he and h/er, was diagnosed with chronic myelomonocytic leukemia in 2017. H/er death on Saturday (March 14) was confirmed in a statement by h/er two daughters Genesse and Caresse.

Born Neil Andrew Megson in Manchester, P-Orridge first made waves with h/er confrontational performance art collective COUM Transmissions, founded in Hull at the turn of the 1970s. P-Orridge formed Throbbing Gristle in 1975 alongside COUM’s Christine Newby AKA Cosey Fanni Tutti, Chris Carter and Peter ‘Sleazy’ Christopherson as a way of pushing COUM’s transgressive ideas out of the art world and into popular culture.

They made an instant impact, with an early Throbbing Gristle performance at London’s ICA in 1976 leading to the group being branded “wreckers of civilisation” by a conservative MP in Parliament. The group’s combination of pioneering electronics and provocative subject matter spawned an entire genre, named industrial after Throbbing Gristle’s record label of the same name.

In the 1980s, P-Orridge went on to found Psychic TV, applying occultist philosophy to murky psychedelic rock and, later, acid house. Along the way, he alienated most of his former bandmates, who accused him of tyrannical behaviour and running Psychic TV like a cult. In her memoir, Cosey Fanni Tutti went further, claiming that P-Orridge’s abusive behaviour included attacking her with a knife and throwing a breezeblock at her head.

In the ’90s, Genesis and h/er second wife Lady Jaye (Jacqueline Breyer) embarked on the “Pandrogeny Project”, undergoing plastic surgery to to resemble each another, and identifying themselves as a single pandrogynous being. P-Orridge continued to refer to h/erself in this way even after Lady Jaye’s death in 2007.

“It is shocking and uncanny to read that Genesis Breyer P-Orridge is gone, even as I knew it was coming,” wrote Matmos’s Drew Daniel on Twitter. “I have complicated and mixed feelings about their actions and legacy but absolute and deep gratitude for their musical work and artistic example. R.I.P”

Robin Rimbaud, AKA Scanner, tweeted: “Farewell to Genesis P-Orridge, a controversial and troubling figure for some, an inspiration and icon for others. For me, s/he was part of my musical and cultural upbringing and will certainly miss his/her presence”

Record Store Day postponed until June 20

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This year's Record Store Day, originally due to take place on April 18, has now been postponed until June 20. In a statement on their website, the organisation wrote: "We think this gives stores around the world the best chance to have a profitable, successful Record Store Day, while taking into ...

This year’s Record Store Day, originally due to take place on April 18, has now been postponed until June 20.

In a statement on their website, the organisation wrote: “We think this gives stores around the world the best chance to have a profitable, successful Record Store Day, while taking into consideration the recommendations of doctors, scientists, the World Health Organization, Centers for Disease Control, and the need to be good citizens of both local and worldwide communities.

“We’re working with all of our partners and our stores to make this change as smooth as possible for everyone who participates in Record Store Day: customers, record stores, artists, labels and more. Record Store Day is everywhere and we want to hold our party when everyone can gather around safely to celebrate life, art, music and the culture of the indie record store.”

Highlights of this year’s RSD include an unheard David Bowie 1974 live album and Uncut’s Wilcovered CD coming to vinyl.

Record shops around the country have been keen to stress that they remain open for business as usual.

The Allman Brothers Band – Trouble No More: 50th Anniversary Collection

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It began with a jam. Fresh off a tour with pop star Tommy Roe, Chicago-born bass player Berry Oakley settled down in Sarasota and embedded himself in the local music scene. In the late 1960s he began hosting unrehearsed concerts every Sunday at Willow Branch Park. Free to the public and open to anyb...

It began with a jam. Fresh off a tour with pop star Tommy Roe, Chicago-born bass player Berry Oakley settled down in Sarasota and embedded himself in the local music scene. In the late 1960s he began hosting unrehearsed concerts every Sunday at Willow Branch Park. Free to the public and open to anybody with an instrument, these events gave young musicians from Central Florida an opportunity to play together, share notes, possibly form bands, and of course jam for as long as they liked in whichever directions the music took them.

Most weekends Duane Allman, a burnout on the LA rock scene and a lauded session guitarist looking to launch a solo career, would make the four-hour drive from Jacksonville to sit in on these open-air sessions. The two players developed a close friendship and an even closer musical relationship, and Duane eventually invited Oakley to join his as-yet-unnamed band, pairing him with a guy named Johnny Lee Johnson (known far and wide as Jaimoe) to create a flexible and formidable rhythm section.

As The Allman Brothers Band coalesced into a tight, resourceful sextet – rounded out by Duane’s kid brother Gregg Allman on vocals, Dickey Betts on guitar, and Butch Trucks as a second drummer – they wrote songs out of necessity but jammed with determination. Their first two studio albums flopped primarily because they focused more on the former and less on the latter. What made them legends was 1971’s double live At Fillmore East, which fit a mere seven tracks on four sides and remains one of the most electrifying concert albums ever released. And on “In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed” or even the instrumental portions of the Willie Cobbs cover “You Don’t Love Me”, The Allman Brothers Band managed to shed most of the narcotic associations of rock improvisations: they weren’t setting controls for the heart of the sun like Pink Floyd, nor were they soundtracking your trip like the Grateful Dead.

Instead, their jams sound like expeditions into the dark woods of Southern music and heritage, like opportunities for them to explore old-school rock’n’roll, gritty R&B, Georgia funk, rural blues, ecstatic gospel, even double-jointed jazz. For a demonstration of The Allman Brothers Band’s improvisational powers, spin the live version of “Mountain Jam” they recorded at Watkins Glen, New York, during a show they co-headlined with the Grateful Dead. It’s one of a handful of previously unreleased tracks that sweeten this anniversary boxset. Using the version on their 1972 album Eat A Peach as only a loose blueprint, they settle quickly into the gently rushing rhythm, letting the melody ebb and flow gracefully. No-one really solos; instead, they trade out leads almost telepathically, more like a jazz ensemble than a rock band, which lends the music an organic and unpredictable quality.

Sprawling across 10 LPs or five CDs, Trouble No More showcases a band torn between tight songcraft and wide-open jams, and that conflict would persist even as the lineup changed. The Allman Brothers Band seemingly were always in the process of adding and shedding members, the former usually by incredibly tragic means. Duane Allman was killed in a motorcycle crash in 1971. A year later, Oaklay died the same way.

Their departures destabilised the band for most of that decade, as Gregg Allman and Dickey Betts struggled for control of the group. Betts was responsible for their biggest chart smash and arguably their signature tune, a chugging and catchy number called “Ramblin’ Man” that remains a staple of classic rock playlists. Like Skynyrd’s “Sweet Home Alabama”, it’s become a bit too familiar, overshadowing better and more representative recordings in their catalogue. However, sequenced between the swampy, sarcastic blues “Wasted Words” and the funk-rock workout “Southbound”, its casually racing tempo and jittery sentiments about transience and impermanence sound fresh and lively on Trouble No More, effectively translating blues tropes to the travails of a touring musicians.

Gregg Allman addressed similar themes in his lyrics, but drew more heavily from blues imagery to lend weight to his thoughts on masculinity, heartache, life on the road. While they’re not bogged down by the South’s disreputable iconography – no rebel flags as stage backdrops, for example – The Allman Brothers Band rarely question or upend the received history of their home region, at least not as determinedly as Lynyrd Skynyrd or, decades later, the Drive-By Truckers. As a result, some of their songs sound moored to the past and an older attitude toward race and music. Written and sung by Gregg, “Whipping Post” equates the emotional pain inflicted by a straying women to the physical violence inflicted upon slaves. Despite Duane’s ferocious guitar riffs and the rhythm section’s relentless pace, the song sounds uncomfortably glib 50 years later.

Trouble No More takes its title from the first song the original lineup played together back in 1969, a Muddy Waters cover that set the tone for most nearly everything that followed. It’s also the final song The Allman Brothers Band played at what at the time was their final show on October 28, 2014. That encore, along with their farewell remarks to an audience rowdy in their affection, closes this boxset on a poignant note: “I know you’re leaving,” Gregg Allman rasps, “if you call that gone.” It’s a fitting way to end this 50th-anniversary set, which depicts their entire career as one long, inspired ramble: nobody knew exactly what the next note was going to be, and they all played better for it.

Extras: 8/10. The 10-LP packaging consists of a wood veneer wrapped slipcase with gold graphics, five gatefold jackets and a 56-page book. It includes an 8,900+ word essay on the 50-year history of the band by John Lynskey, unreleased band photos along with newly shot photos of memorabilia from the Big House Museum, Macon, GA and a recap of the 13 incarnations of the lineup.

Cornershop – England Is A Garden

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When Tjinder Singh’s father told him, “There will come a day when they want to chuck you out,” these words had a profound bearing on the person he would become. “I’ve always lived with that in my background. This has made the group political,” he said in a recent interview with Snack, be...

When Tjinder Singh’s father told him, “There will come a day when they want to chuck you out,” these words had a profound bearing on the person he would become. “I’ve always lived with that in my background. This has made the group political,” he said in a recent interview with Snack, before adding: “It’s always nice to have something other than love to write about.”

While England Is A Garden is by no means Cornershop’s Brexit album – the band have addressed issues of race, immigration and multiculturalism since they first appeared at the start of the 1990s – it was written and recorded while the mad fog of Brexit descended, and now that a divided UK has formally left the EU, the band’s rather glorious seventh album does carry a certain weight, a poignancy perhaps not immediately apparent in the freewheeling rock’n’roll being liberally doled out here. Is the day that Singh’s father warned him about inching ever closer or is it already here, fast-tracked by Brexit into reality? Depending how you voted, you’ll know the answer.

You don’t need to look far to note Singh’s views on the issue – “Brexit was always about racism,” he wrote in a recent tweet, while the band’s “Demon Is A Monster” instrumental is the opening theme of the popular Remainiacs podcast – and although we’re a long way from the band who set fire to a poster of Morrissey in 1992 at the beginning of their career, calling out the singer’s views in a prescient stunt, Brexit appears to have sanctioned the kind of nationalism that Cornershop warned us about. “Baby, I can see it in Enoch’s eyes,” Singh sang on “Roof Rack” back in 1995. “Because breaking these borders will bring new orders.” England might still be a garden, but it’s choked by weeds.

Rather than dwell on differences, this latest set sees Cornershop focusing on the things that bring people together. Much like the work of Jeremy Deller, whose playful art explores ideas of cultural difference and community by drawing on seemingly disparate elements to find common unifying threads, this record uses Singh’s familiar tropes – the Black Country, heavy metal, Marc Bolan, empire, songs that scan like ’70s sitcoms – to paint an eccentric picture of modern-day Englishness. Of course, this is what Cornershop have always done, but the last time we heard from them in any meaningful way was more than a decade ago, in 2009, with Judy Sucks A Lemon For Breakfast, a mixed bag that arrived seven years after the excellent Handcream For A Generation (a record that featured both Noel Gallagher and Oasis bassist Guigsy, to illustrate how long ago that was).

There have been other LPs – a collaboration with the Indian singer Bubbley Kaur in 2011 and, in 2015, Hold On It’s Easy, a lounge version of their shambolic debut, Hold On It Hurts – but Cornershop’s return resonates this time not just because of the pitiful state of the nation but because they’ve made such a joyous album, one that doesn’t wander off along unnecessary tangents and keeps their indulgence in check. Singh today is something of the elder statesman, which suits the classy Kinksian soul of “St Marie Under Canon” – “the story of charge and attack” he sings – and the hard Memphis blues of “No Rock: Save In Roll” where he riffs on his Wolverhampton roots, repping the Black Country as the place that forged heavy metal.

It’s tempting to accuse Singh and guitarist Ben Ayres of ripping off Marc Bolan, but you soon realise (or remember) that this glam grind and righteous groove is the Cornershop house style. It’s there in the endless boogie of “I’m A Wooden Soldier”, a number violated by a ripe Moog squiggle in the manner of Denim’s Back In Denim, and frames “The Cash Money” and “Highly Amplified”, the latter laced with sitar and flute.

Throughout the record Singh sings of combat and confrontation, of cultures clashing and historical battles. On the sugar-coated Velvets romp “Everywhere That Wog Army Roam” we learn that “policeman follow them” wherever they go. Singh has long used “wog” in his material but in this current climate the word feels especially charged. The album closes with a nine-minute devotional jam called “The Holy Name”, where Singh and a school choir sing of “nothing to lose but all to gain” as an agreeable cacophony bubbles up. It’s a tremendous note to end on. Cornershop are back, then, better than ever, and now there’s every reason to pay attention.

The Who postpone UK tour

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The Who have been forced to postpone their upcoming UK tour due to coronavirus concerns. The tour was due to start on Monday (March 16) at the Manchester Arena and finish at Wembley SSE Arena on April 8. The dates will be rescheduled for later in the year and all tickets will be honoured. The...

The Who have been forced to postpone their upcoming UK tour due to coronavirus concerns.

The tour was due to start on Monday (March 16) at the Manchester Arena and finish at Wembley SSE Arena on April 8. The dates will be rescheduled for later in the year and all tickets will be honoured.

The Who will also be unable to appear at the Royal Albert Hall on March 28 as part of the annual Teenage Cancer Trust shows but intend to reschedule that show as well, with more news to follow.

“Haven’t reached this decision easily,” says Pete Townshend, “but given the concerns about public gatherings, we couldn’t go ahead.”

Greg Dulli has also had to cancel his imminent European tour. While his team are working on rescheduling the dates, refunds are available from the point of purchase.

As more tours and concerts face cancellation in the coming days, check NME’s liveblog for updates.

Glastonbury adds Kendrick Lamar, Thom Yorke, Lana Del Rey and many more

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Kendrick Lamar has been unveiled as Glastonbury 2020's third pyramid stage headliner, alongside the previously announced Paul McCartney and Taylor Swift. Diana Ross will occupy the Sunday afternoon legends slot. Among the slew of other acts to be confirmed for the festival are Thom Yorke, Lana De...

Kendrick Lamar has been unveiled as Glastonbury 2020’s third pyramid stage headliner, alongside the previously announced Paul McCartney and Taylor Swift. Diana Ross will occupy the Sunday afternoon legends slot.

Among the slew of other acts to be confirmed for the festival are Thom Yorke, Lana Del Rey, Pet Shop Boys, Gilberto Gil, Brittany Howard, Candi Staton, Angel Olsen, Anna Calvi, Big Thief, Caribou, Cate Le Bon, Crowded House, EOB (Radiohead’s Ed O’Brien), Elbow, Fontaines DC, Goldfrapp, Happy Mondays, Herbie Hancock, Jarv Is…, The Isley Brothers, The Jesus & Mary Chain, Kacey Musgraves, Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds, Primal Scream, The Specials and Suzanne Vega. See the full line-up poster below:

In a statement, Glastonbury organiser Emily Eavis addressed fears that the festival might be postponed or cancelled due to coronavirus. “As things stand we are still working hard to deliver our 50th anniversary Festival in June and we are very proud of the bill that we have put together over the last year or so,” she wrote. “No one has a crystal ball to see exactly where we will all be 15 weeks from now, but we are keeping our fingers firmly crossed that it will be here at Worthy Farm for the greatest show on Earth!⁣”

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So, after much consideration given the current circumstances, and with the best of intentions, here is the first list of musical acts for Glastonbury 2020. ⁣⁣ ⁣⁣ As things stand we are still working hard to deliver our 50th anniversary Festival in June and we are very proud of the bill that we have put together over the last year or so. No one has a crystal ball to see exactly where we will all be 15 weeks from now, but we are keeping our fingers firmly crossed that it will be here at Worthy Farm for the greatest show on Earth!⁣⁣ ⁣⁣ As always this is just a taste of what is to come, we plan to announce many more artists and attractions, area by area, over the coming weeks leading up to the full line-up in May. ⁣⁣ In the meantime we post this with much love to all. ⁣⁣ ⁣⁣ (There’s also a non-circular version of the line-up – and full text list – on our website now) Artwork by Stanley Donwood

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Watch a video for Margo Price’s new single, “Twinkle Twinkle”

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Margo Price has announced that her new album That’s How Rumors Get Started will be released by Loma Vista on May 8. Watch a video for lead single "Twinkle Twinkle" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r0YbQS0GvR8 That’s How Rumors Get Started was produced by Sturgill Simpson at Los An...

Margo Price has announced that her new album That’s How Rumors Get Started will be released by Loma Vista on May 8.

Watch a video for lead single “Twinkle Twinkle” below:

That’s How Rumors Get Started was produced by Sturgill Simpson at Los Angeles’ EastWest Studios. Tracking occurred over several days while she was pregnant with daughter Ramona. “They’re both a creation process,” says Price. “And I was being really good to my body and my mind during that time. I had a lot of clarity from sobriety.”

Most of the songs were co-written with Price’s husband Jeremy Ivey, and recorded with a band including guitarist Matt Sweeney, bassist Pino Palladino, drummer James Gadson and keyboardist Benmont Tench. Background vocals were added by Sturgill Simpson and the Nashville Friends Gospel Choir.

Check out the tracklisting and cover art for That’s How Rumors Get Started below:

That’s How Rumors Get Started
Letting Me Down
Twinkle Twinkle
Stone Me
Hey Child
Heartless Mind
What Happened To Our Love?
Gone To Stay
Prisoner Of The Highway
I’d Die For You