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Uncut’s New Music Playlist for January 2024

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Judging by this lot, 2024 is already shaping up to be a great year for new music. I know we always say that – but that’s because it’s true, as conclusively proved here by the likes of Rosali, Nadine Shah, Julia Holter, Jane Weaver and Real Estate.

There are also welcome returns for Uncut legends The Jesus And Mary Chain, Pernice Brothers, High Llamas, A Certain Ratio and Bruce Hornsby (teaming up productively with chamber-funk outfit yMusic), while you can expect to read more about the likes of Oisin Leech, Faye Webster and Whitelands in our pages very soon.

Thanks to all the musicians who continue to excite and inspire, despite challenging conditions. Please continue to support them in all the usual ways, after digging in below…

ROSALI
“Rewind”
(Merge)

NADINE SHAH
“Greatest Dancer”
(EMI North)

THE JESUS AND MARY CHAIN
“Chemical Animal”
(Fuzz Club)

REAL ESTATE
“Haunted World”
(Domino)

JANE WEAVER
“Perfect Storm”
(Fire)

HIGH LLAMAS
“Toriafan” 
(Drag City)

BRHYM
“Deep Blue”
(Zappo Productions)

RIO 18
“Cachetón”
(Agati Recordings)

AZIZA BRAHIM
“Bubisher”
(Glitterbeat)

A CERTAIN RATIO
“It All Comes Down To This”
(Mute)

SAM EVIAN
“Wild Days”
(Flying Cloud/Thirty Tigers)

STRANGE BOY
“Follow The News”
(Groenland)

VILLAGERS
“That Golden Time”
(Domino)

PERNICE BROTHERS
“Who Will You Believe”
(New West)

DAVID NANCE & MOWED SOUND
“Tumbleweed”
(Third Man)

OISIN LEECH
“Colour Of The Rain”
(Outside Music/Tremone Records)

FAYE WEBSTER
“Lego Ring (ft. Lil Yachty)” 
(Secretly Canadian)

WHITELANDS
“Tell Me About It (ft. Dottie)”
(Sonic Cathedral)

JULIA HOLTER
“Spinning”
(Domino)

BIG|BRAVE 
“I Felt A Funeral”
(Thrill Jockey)

ADULT JAZZ
“Dusk Song”
(Spare Thought)

JIM WHITE
“Names Make The Name”
(Drag City)

A LILY
“Ħajti Kollha, Qalbi”
(Phantom Limb)

ARIEL KALMA, JEREMIAH CHIU & MARTA SOFIA HONER
“A Treasure Chest”
(International Anthem)

Send us your questions for Jah Wobble!

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When John Wardle AKA Jah Wobble got the call to join John Lydon and Keith Levene in Public Image Ltd in early 1978, he admits he was more into dub reggae and Tangerine Dream than punk. His heavy, exploratory bass-work helped take post-punk in a new direction – and when his PiL tenure turned sour, he transitioned naturally into working with Can’s Holger Czukay and Jaki Leibezeit.

After a period spent working for the London Underground, Wobble re-emerged in the late-’80s with his eclectic collective Invaders Of The Heart, whose guest vocalists have included Baaba Maal, Sinead O’Connor and Natacha Atlas.

These days he’s as busy as ever, touring his Metal Box: Rebuilt In Dub project, making ambient music inspired by walks or bus rides around south London, and playing in his sons’ band, Tian Qiyi. He’s also updated his autobiography, Dark Luminosity: Memoirs Of A Geezer, for reissue by Faber on March 7.

And now he’s agreed to face off against you, the Uncut readers. So what would you like to ask a legendary deep bass voyager? Send your questions to audiencewith@uncut.co.uk and Wobble will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

Sonic Youth’s Steve Shelley interviewed: “Every day was fascinating”

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In the February 2024 issue of Uncut, Sonic Youth’s Walls Have Ears is our Archive Album Of The Month. We spoke to Steve Shelley, drummer and band archivist, about the record, his early months with the band, Polish flexidiscs and what’s next from the vault… Here’s the extended Q&A. “Our minds have been changing for decades!”

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UNCUT: Why did you decide to officially release/reissue Walls Have Ears now?

STEVE SHELLEY: It had been on the back burner for years and years, and it felt like, ‘When we get to it, we’ll put this one out…’ Then I think about a year ago, someone had reissued yet another bootleg edition of it – this time they chopped it up into two different segments, each album having its own package. And I think we just thought that was too much, and that we should just put our own version of it out.

Did you have any involvement in it originally at all?

No, it was presented to us as a gift by our English record label at the time, Blast First, who we had an intense working relationship with… but we were pretty surprised by this record when it came out, pretty soon before EVOL was expected out.

And that coloured your appreciation of it?

Yeah, I think so. I think it’s always been a curiosity to the band. It caused problems when it came out, so yeah, I think band members weren’t too fond of it through the years. Our minds have been changing for decades, because we’ve been asking each other about these archival reissues, like, “Would you like to see this one come out?” That one was never a band favourite, though it’s been a fan favourite.

Who was the last member holding out with this one?

I’m not gonna give that up!

What do you recall about the trip to England that’s documented on Walls Have Ears?

I don’t really remember ULU, but of course I remember the first Brighton show on the beach. In the new promo video you hear “Expressway To Your Skull”, and it sounds fantastic, and then it cuts to some kids walking by the stage on the beach and we’re playing “Inhuman”, and you hear the sound of the stones on Brighton beach. That is exactly my memory of it – it wasn’t fancy or glamorous at all, it was like some kids walking by as you were trying to play a half-hour set. It was exactly what I wanted to be doing at that time, to be able to join this band and to go to the UK and Europe… every day was fascinating. To be on Brighton beach, being a Who fan! It was an incredible time.

The “Expressway…” outro is so quiet and restrained, it was a new direction for you then.

Thurston made a comment some time ago, when we were working on some live recording, about how the earlier “Expressway”s were quite gentle at the end. It wasn’t until later, when we had performed it hundreds of times, where it got a little more raucous at the end. This gentle early version really sounded cool to us.

Walls Have Ears is really quite warts and all, isn’t it – for instance, there are really long gaps between the tracks!

When I reassembled it to release it, I was surprised that these gaps were there, yeah.

At the start of the first “Death Valley 69” on there, there’s over a minute of getting ready. It’s really interesting, but it’s also crazy that that was left on there originally.

Well, it’s odd, because I’ve assembled a bunch of live recordings in the years since Walls Have Ears, and I didn’t have anything to do with Walls Have Ears. But some of the gaps are just like, who would leave it like that? It was very strange to me.

Where did these alternate track titles come from?

They came from the people who made the bootleg – it was a very standard thing at the time. Like, if you had a bootleg that had two songs with the same title you would rename the second song. So often there’d be fake names on bootleg records. People were always trying to run from the publishers and that sort of thing.

Do you remember first working on that EVOL material?

I think my first rehearsal with the group was with Kim and Thurston, Lee didn’t make it to the first one, and we worked on “Green Light”. Then “Expressway…” was brought in either that day or soon after – I remember it being a favourite and also being somewhat surprised at the style of the chording…  it was more of a ’60s tune than a punk thing, but yeah, the ’60s was one of my fortes. So I was really pleased to be working on the material and that it was already going this direction.

You look after all the archival stuff for the band – how does it work, liaising with Lee, Kim and Thurston?

I’m in Hoboken and Lee is in Manhattan, so we’re closer, distance-wise, so we see each other more often. And we’re more interested in this archival stuff – we’re both big Dylan and Neil Young fans, so we’re always discussing those reissues. We’ve got a list of a number of things that we could release, and we all sort of keep that going as a discussion among the four of us. People are more interested in certain things at certain times, and that’s when projects kind of float to the top. 

How do these projects get approved – do you get a text from, say, Kim saying ‘let’s do this?’

Well, she’ll get a text from me [first] – ‘would you like to do this?’ There’s a number of things that we’ve got a list of that we could release, and we sort of keep that going as a discussion amongst the four of us. People get more interested in certain things at certain times, and that’s when stuff kind of floats to the top, and a project will make it. Or else someone will have a good idea – like when Ethan [P Miller, from label Silver Current] came to us and said he wanted to do a fake bootleg record for the Brooklyn live record. We just really loved the concept and let him run with it.

You’ve mentioned that there’s a Washing Machine deluxe reissue in the works.

I’m working on some stuff for that, but it’s on hold right now. I’ve still got some ideas about it, but it took a backseat for the moment.

You’ve been trying to track down some rare SY releases, we hear…

There are some Russian lathe cuts which I would love to have. There were like a dozen of them or something – I’ve seen pictures but I don’t have one – and there were dozens of Polish flexidiscs. They were an inspiration for the deluxe edition of Walls Have Ears, we made a flexi for one of the extra tracks, “She’s In A Bad Mood”, from the night after Brighton beach, at Ladbroke Grove, Bay 63.

On the Sonic Youth Bandcamp, you’ve released a lot of digital-only live albums and rarities. What do you have planned for that in the near future?

There are things, but I guess we’ve moved to the physical realm for this. Walls Have Ears will be on Bandcamp digitally, of course, but for the last year I’ve been working on this Live In Brooklyn record and Walls Have Ears, so the physical has taken over a little bit. I don’t have anything specific lined up just for the Bandcamp page, but there’s tonnes of digital recordings to listen to, and to review. I’m not sure what’s next there.

Is the SY studio, Echo Canyon West, still going in Hoboken? 

It is, although it’s not much these days. We just keep our gear stored there, but there is a room where Lee and I keep more of an archive. That’s in Hoboken too, and there are master tapes – we own everything up to Daydream Nation and Ciccone Youth – and then we have later tapes too, but we don’t ‘own’ them all as far as rights go. We’ve been pretty lucky as far as master tapes go, we haven’t had many of ours go missing like some other bands.

Allison Russell – My Life In Music

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The folk-roots queen on her formative musical encounters: “We did an interpretative dance performance to Sinead O’Connor!”

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JONI MITCHELL

Ladies Of The Canyon

REPRISE, 1970

There’s so many Joni records that have been deeply formative and influential for me as a musician and a writer and a human, but the reason I picked Ladies Of The Canyon is because that’s tied to my first musical memory. It was my mum’s favourite record when I was in foster care, and I would go for these brief visits with my mum at my grandma’s house because she wasn’t allowed to be unsupervised with me at that point. I would be hiding under the piano, listening to her play along to Ladies Of The Canyon. I was electrified by the clarinet coda of “For Free”. And then, of course, I ended up being a clarinettist – and getting to play clarinet onstage with Joni at the Gorge and at Newport!

TRACY CHAPMAN

Tracy Chapman

ELEKTRA, 1988

When I was nine years old, my uncle took me on a road trip to Banff, which is one of the most beautiful places on earth. He played me the tape version of Tracy Chapman, and I remember unfolding the insert and poring over those lyrics and looking at this photograph of this beautiful black woman. Meanwhile, I was being raised by a white supremacist, abusive adoptive father, and so to hear “Behind The Wall”, it was like she was singing about my family. It was revelatory. That was a huge part of my development as a songwriter, or even the idea that I could become a songwriter. For me, as this abused kid, it was like seeing myself and going, ‘Maybe I could do this too’.

THE STAPLE SINGERS

Freedom Highway

EPIC, 1991

After I’d run away from my abusive home, that’s when my musical world started to really open up. While it was scary to be on my own at 15, I was incredibly lucky because I was in Montreal, a city that has so much free public art and music. I first heard about The Staple Singers through a group at McGill [University] that were covering their songs, then I found Freedom Highway at Sam’s record store. There’s so many classic gospel songs that they’ve made their own, like “Wade In The Water”, “Glory, Glory, Hallelujah!”, “Jacob’s Ladder”… Mavis’s voice is the sound of freedom to me. I’ve been lucky enough to get to collaborate with her in recent years and she’s as wonderful as you would hope.

VARIOUS ARTISTS

Sweet Petunias: Independent Women’s Blues, Volume 4

ROSETTA RECORDS, 1986

It’s a compilation of rare ‘race’ recordings from the Library Of Congress that I was given as a tape in my teen-hood. It’s black women singing their stories that were recorded, some of them on wax cylinder in the ’20s and ’30s: people like Ella Johnson, June Richmond, Bertha Chippie Hill, O’Neil Spencer, Victoria Spivey. One of my early songs in Po’ Girl was an adaptation of a song on Sweet Petunias Volume 4 by a group called the Bandanna Girls – their song “Part Time Papa” was about a cheating, no-good man and I adapted the lyric to be about my abusive adoptive father. So my early forays into writing were using this template of these brilliant women that I heard myself in, and felt I could inhabit in some way.

SINÉAD O’CONNOR

Universal Mother

ENSIGN, 1994

I went to an alternative high school in Montreal, and we did an interpretative dance performance for our graduation ceremony to Sinead O’Connor’s “Thank You For Hearing Me”! And “Fire On Babylon”, I felt that song in my bones – it helped me work through some of my anger toward my own mother for not protecting me. I’ve long since forgiven her, because she was really a child as well in the situation. But at the time I had a lot of anger I was working through, and Sinead helped me channel that in a powerful way. She’s a prophet of our times, as far as I’m concerned. She paid a heavy price for it, but she’s directly a part of my survival. The fearlessness of her writing is foundational to everything I do.

THE BE GOOD TANYAS

Blue Horse

NETTWERK, 2000

Around 2001, I moved into this shared house in Vancouver. You could see daylight through the front door, there were toadstools growing in the bathroom, it probably should have been condemned. But rent was $100 a month and we would have these monthly jam sessions, and that’s where I met The Be Good Tanyas. I remember being in awe of what they were working on: reviving songs from the American Songbook like “Oh! Susanna” or “…Pontchartrain”, then writing their own songs inspired by that songbook, that were extraordinary. Every song on Blue Horse was a classic. I went back and listened to that record when y’all asked me to do this, and it’s as fresh and beautiful as the day it was recorded.

K’NAAN

The Dusty Foot Philosopher

BMG, 2005

He is an amazing Somali-born artist who became a refugee to Canada because of the horrific war in Somalia. I met K’Naan when I was in Po’ Girl and he had broken out with The Dusty Foot Philosopher, which remains to this day one of my favourite albums. It’s very much a memoir of a record. This is someone who lived trauma and tragedy of a kind that I’ve never been forced to endure – living in a war zone, seeing many of his friends and family killed, coming as a refugee and learning to speak English listening to recordings of Nas. And he’s documenting these things with such empathy and unflinching clarity. It’s a brilliant record, it really is. Undersung, in my opinion.

STEVIE WONDER

Songs In The Key Of Life

TAMLA, 1976

Some of my earliest favourite memories are dancing around to Stevie Wonder’s Songs in the Key of Life. My mum adored that record – she has a really adorable, quavery, slightly out-of-tune voice, and so I just hear her singing along with it. I thought they were songs written for us, you know? Stevie is an artist who can sing about really difficult things and you don’t even realise it, because you’re bopping along to this jam. You don’t even realise that you’re processing that he’s actually singing about really intense and hard human things. Songs like “Village Ghetto Land” or “Love’s In Need Of Love Today” I took very much to heart. It’s something I’m often playing with, those juxtapositions of a joyful-sounding song that’s dealing with heavy topics.

Allison Russell plays Lafayette on January 30 as part of a month of music in London in association with The UK Americana Awards powered by Sweet Home Alabama, which takes place at Hackney Church on January 25; more info and tickets at theamauk.org

Lou Reed – Hudson River Meditations

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Zen instrumentals from downtown

The Hudson River begins somewhere way up in the Appalachian highlands and flows 315 miles south through upstate New York, dividing Manhattan and New Jersey as it filters out into the Atlantic Ocean. Lou Reed had sung of the river on “Romeo Had Juliette”, a gritty love song from 1989’s New York that used the dystopian city as a stage: “Manhattan’s sinking like a rock/Into the filthy Hudson, what a shock”. But by the time he released Hudson River Wind Meditations in April 2007 the river had taken on a different character for him. Visible from the window of the downtown penthouse that he shared with his wife Laurie Anderson, the Hudson became the backdrop to his daily life, its slow-moving waters a constant and calming presence.

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Across five decades, Lou Reed’s creative muse had taken him to the highest highs, the lowest lows, and everywhere in between. But Hudson River Wind Meditations finds him in a place of perfect equilibrium.Reed’s final solo album, it appeared in 2007, four years after the Edgar Allan Poe-inspired concept suite The Raven, and another four years before Lulu, the Metallica collaboration that became his swansong. It is quite unlike either. Clocking in at an hour, it consists of four gently undulating instrumental pieces that have an extended, durational quality. Dip in for a few seconds and Hudson River Wind Meditations sounds unremarkable. But let it play out and something magic happens. Soft rhythmic drones begin to interact in subtle, shifting patterns, and before you know it you’re locked in, being carried along on its current.

Hudson River Wind Meditations sounds like nothing else in Reed’s catalogue. Butnor is it a complete outlier. It shares some DNA with the music of La Monte Young, the minimalist composer who inspired The Velvet Underground, and whose Dream House installation still drones away in New York’s Tribeca district to this day. You could also see it as a sort of sister release to Metal Machine Music – Reed’s squalling electric guitar feedback suite, which landed to a bewildered reception on its release in 1975, but makes rather more sense today. “Most of you won’t like this and I don’t blame you at all,” Reed wrote in that album’s sleevenotes. “It’s not meant for you. At the very least I made it so that I have something to listen to.”

He might have said the same about Hudson River Wind Meditations. When he began making this music, Reed never intended it for commercial release. Instead, these tracks – recorded, similarly to Metal Machine Music, at home, using a finely tuned set-up of keyboards, guitars and amplifiers – began life as Reed’s personal soundtrack to his yoga and Tai Chi practice. In the album’s sleevenotes, Reed’s yoga teacher Eddie Stern recalled how effective this music was at focusing the mind: “The sounds immediately drew you into an inner flow of awareness,” he explains. “Something was happening with the music, but at the same time something was happening inside of you.”

Each of these four tracks has a distinct character. The opening “Move Your Heart” is soft and billowy, with a gentle tidal feel. “Find Your Note” lines up clear shrill tones, like the drone of a Tibetan singing bowl, with the occasional electronic murmur or rumble of sub-bass. “Hudson River Wind (Blend The Ambiance)” mixes a field recording of wind coming off the Hudson with the drone of a Minimoog Voyager synth. And the closing “Wind Coda” is a reprise of the first track, concluding with the sound of a gong: a common Buddhist technique to mark the end of a meditation session.

Certainly, for those primarily familiar with Lou Reed as irascible punk, fearless documenter of the city’s filthy underbelly, this exposure to Zen Lou may inspire some cognitive dissonance. But it’s undeniable that Hudson River Wind Meditations comes from a very real and personal place. Artistically, its exploration of drone modes places it in a continuum of Lou’s work that stretches right back to the mid-’60s, when he penned novelty hit “The Ostrich” on a guitar with all strings turned to one note. More practically, for Reed it seems to have performed a functional role. Come his seventh decade, his health was failing him, as he struggled with the symptoms of Hepatitis B and diabetes. In this context you could understand Hudson River Wind Meditations as therapeutic: a balm for a damaged body; a way to still the churn of a restless mind.

Perhaps, though, it’s best to leave the last word to Lou himself. “I can use it for a lot of different things, including just ‘be there’ as the way a tree is there,” he told an interviewer. “In my place I have it going all day, which is better than listening to traffic.”

Adrianne Lenker announces new album, Bright Future

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And here’s the first track, “Sadness As A Gift”

Adrianne Lenker has revealed details of her new solo album, Bright Future, which is released by 4AD on March 22.

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Ahead of this, she has shared the new single “Sadness As A Gift“, which you can hear below:

Bright Future is Lenker’s first album since 2020’s songs & instrumentals, and features co-production from Philip Weinrobe, alongside contributions from Nick Hakim, Mat Davidson and Josefin Runsteen.

The tracklisting is:

Real House
Sadness As A Gift
Fool
No Machine
Free Treasure
Vampire Empire
Evol
Candleflame
9Already Lost
Cell Phone Says
Donut Seam
Ruined

You can pre-order a copy here.

The Smile – Wall Of Eyes

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Yorke, Greenwood and Skinner match Radiohead for challenges, surprises and beauty

Were Thom Yorke and Jonny Greenwood to insist that both The Smile’s debut album, 2022’s A Light For Attracting Attention, and this surprisingly expeditious follow-up were the direct successors to Radiohead’s last broadcast, 2016’s A Moon Shaped Pool, it’s doubtful many would query them. After all, despite Ed O’Brien, Colin Greenwood and Phil Selway’s vital contributions to the quintet’s long-term success, Yorke and the younger Greenwood have long been Radiohead’s dominant forces. Creatively, they’re so idiosyncratic – especially with drummer Tom Skinner’s role here so discreet, if unquestionably intricate – that common ground between The Smile and Radiohead is inevitable.

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As much as we anticipate reinvention when musicians adopt an alias, this isn’t why The Smile exists. Greenwood, simply put, was writing prolifically during the pandemic, and since not all of Radiohead were available while Skinner was – he’d already worked with Greenwood on his 2012 score to The Master – the trio teamed up to see where things might lead. Consequently, ‘Kid B’ exhibits little interest in distinguishing itself from ‘Kid A’: both bands trade in warped melodies, tricksy time signatures, unfamiliar structures, and unpredictable, inspired tangents, albeit rarely so much they appear intellectually aloof. They even dress in matching clothes, with Stanley Donwood and Yorke handling the artwork for each.

Sure, each band sounds a little different, with The Smile arguably more spontaneous, occasionally a smidge more post-punk, a tad sparser and sometimes a bit rawer, especially on this second album. That’s perhaps thanks to Nigel Godrich’s replacement as producer by Sam Petts-Davis, Yorke’s Suspiria co-producer, but development is what we’ve come to expect from Radiohead too: a group that’s always changing, always adapting, playing to their present strengths. No wonder it’s so hard to tell the two of them apart. The Smile’s cheerful choice of nom de plume was less a declaration of intent than a practical way of acknowledging a new constellation.

Of course, it makes commercial sense to blur the bands’ identities too, casting The Smile less as spinoff than regeneration, like a new Doctor Who, emerging from the same gene pool with equal gravitas. It makes artistic sense as well, allowing them to fill the space left by Radiohead’s absence while exploiting that global brand’s freedoms. Certainly, none of the grand fanfares or bittersweet symphonies usually preceding the return of megastars heralded Wall Of Eyes, which was largely written on tour. Instead, it was introduced by the breathtakingly arranged “Bending Hectic”, eight minutes of hushed vocals and tortured guitar strings, smoothed early on by featherlight violins which ultimately catapult filthy, doom metal chords into the mix.

Wall Of Eyes begins, too, not with a crowd-pleasing anthem but a finespun, chiefly acoustic title track whose initial impressionistic smudge only lifts, like a ghostly mist, upon repeated plays. Even when additional effects edge in and sky-scraping strings descend, their influence is more eerie than reassuring. A 5/4-time signature, despite its samba feel, is bookish too – in contrast to the brattish 5/4 of “You’ll Never Work In Television Again” (from A Light For Attracting Attention), or In Rainbow’s mesmeric, cantering “15 Step” – and, as the song begins disintegrating around him, Yorke counts each beat aloud. Still, both are in keeping with Wall Of Eyes character, which revels in that welcome but vanishing concept, the album as an entity of its own. This is, in essence, world-building music, with its stylistic breadth and dignified restraint remarkable.

Not that there aren’t moments of relative abandon. Somewhat gentler than “Bending Hectic”’s violent coda, “Read The Room” opens with intertwined, sinewy guitar lines, Yorke wailing like a peevish child over a hiccupping rhythm before a left turn into post-rock riffage and, later, early Verve-like shoegazing. “Under Our Pillows” begins with further spiky guitars and another 5/4 rhythm, though a brief stretch of meandering Pink Floyd psychedelia accelerates into a motorik dreamscape, while “Friend Of A Friend” – yet again in 5/4 – hastens to its conclusion, despite otherwise resembling “Pyramid Song”, with “A Day In The Life” orchestral squall.

Even that is hardly rampant, while the atmosphere elsewhere is pensively spellbinding. “I Quit” bleeds into a shimmering mirage with percussive tics, shards of synths and lush strings that couldn’t be less like Greenwood’s hero, Krzysztof Penderecki’s, and “You Know Me!” boasts Yorke’s fine falsetto over muffled piano chords quickly caught on a crepuscular breeze of hazy strings. Even “Teleharmonic”, the only true curveball, is a desolate, shivering electro-soul-barer, Yorke’s early murmur slurring “payback” into “baby”. Astonishingly, before long he’s hollering like Marvin Gaye in wordless ecstasy, with pastoral pipes, shimmering cymbals and rumbling synths bringing things to a blissful close.

Few artists are able to reach the stage where their fans trust them implicitly without soon becoming creatively complacent. Fewer still seem satisfied with that audience, instead scrabbling around desperately for greater relevance, with often the opposite result. But The Smile take Radiohead’s privileges seriously, rewarding our attention with music that demands and – crucially – holds it. No frills, no distractions. A little like Radiohead, then; but there’s nothing wrong with that.

Hear Khruangbin’s new single, “A Love International”

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It’s taken from their new studio album, A LA SALA

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Khruangbin have announced details of A LA SALA or “To the Room” in Spanish — the band’s fourth studio album and first LP in four years released on April 5 by Dead Oceans.

The album is available pre-order here.

Ahead of this, they’ve released a new single, “A Love International“, which you can hear below.


The tracklist for A LA SALA is:

Fifteen Fifty-Three
May Ninth
Ada Jean
4.Farolim de Felgueiras
Pon Pón
Todavía Viva
Juegos y Nubes
Hold Me Up (Thank You)
Caja de la Sala
Three From Two
A Love International
Les Petits Gris

Listen to Kim Gordon’s new track, “BYE BYE”

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It’s the lead track from her second solo album, The Collective

Kim Gordon returns with her second solo album, The Collective, which will be released on March 8 on Matador. You can pre-order the album here.

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To celebrate this auspicious event, she’s released “BYE BYE“, which comes with a video starring Coco Gordon Moore and directed by photographer and filmmaker Clara Balzary.

The Collective follows Gordon’s 2019 full-length debut No Home Record and continues her collaboration with producer Justin Raisen, with additional production from Anthony Paul Lopez.

The tracklisting for The Collective is:

BYE BYE

The Candy House

I Don’t Miss My Mind

I’m A Man

Trophies

It’s Dark Inside

Psychedelic Orgasm

Tree House

Shelf Warmer

The Believers

Dream Dollar

Billy Bragg and Margo Cilker to perform at the UK Americana Music Awards 2024

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Billy Bragg and Margo Cilker have been added to the line-up of live performers at this year’s UK Americana Awards, joining Jason Isbell, Drew Holcomb, Elles Bailey, St Catherine’s Child, Michele Stodart, Jonny Morgan, and Lauren Housley & The Northern Cowboys.

The ceremony takes place on Thursday January 25 at Hackney Church in London. It also features a multi-artist tribute to legendary American singer-songwriter, musician and producer Dan Penn, who will receive the International Lifetime Achievement award.

The awards show will be preceded by a week of showcase gigs around Hackney. You can see the full list of artists involved on the poster below, and you can buy tickets for the showcases and the awards here.

Introducing the new Ultimate Music Guide…Peter Gabriel!

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When Peter Gabriel announced in a letter to the British music press that he was leaving Genesis in order, among other things, to “grow cabbages” many who read it were amused (this being a time welcoming to such gentle humour), but many more were puzzled. Cabbages metaphorically, did he mean? Perhaps he planned to dress as one? Surely not plain old actual muddy cabbages?

As you’ll read in our latest Ultimate Music Guide, out as the man gets set to release a box set edition of his i/o album, the very Peter Gabriel answer to this is: a mixture of all the above. As he explains in one of the revealing early archive interviews we’ve reprinted here, when he quit Genesis, it was because he saw his future mapped out in front of him in world tours and promotional events and he didn’t like the look of it. The growing of cabbages, which we can take as a general stepping off the treadmill, exploring of a hidden path, indulging a whim, has been something Gabriel has done ever since. 

Although his So album helped make him synonymous with major label affluence in the CD era, at heart what you’ll read about in each of the in-depth reviews of his catalogue that we’ve collected here is the unfolding story of a truly independent artist. When Gabriel gets it in his mind to do something that he believes in – be that setting up a world music record label or the WOMAD festival – he will get it done, even though the bills will need to be paid by some other means. After the financially disastrous first WOMAD event, that meant the convening of “Six of the best” (the classic Genesis lineup, plus their new musicians, under a name referencing a public school caning), to settle the bills. Gabriel was carried on stage in a coffin, which he climbed out of, his career financially resurrected.  

Something like this dynamic flirtation with disaster has been a feature of Gabriel’s career. There wouldn’t always be a Genesis reunion to help, but Gabriel’s tightrope walk between commercial success and deep experimentation has given us massive sellers like So and Us but also challenging projects like OVO, (the multimedia madness of which Nigel Williamson breaks down for us here), collaborations which didn’t quite make it like Big Blue Ball and ones like Scratch My Back which seem to have simply run aground on sheer politics. “This is different,” as Gabriel said at the time “and it isn’t everyone’s cup of tea.” 

Cut to the present is, and Gabriel is unchanged, tending the curious garden plotted by his muse. His current album i/o has been offered to the public a song a month on YouTube, with each full moon, as if to confirm that his capacity for invention and appetite for digression is as strong as ever. Onstage in London a few months ago, he played the hits, to rapturous effect, but also a new song called “Olive Tree”. Yes, it was very good, and of yes of course, it pertains to a new project which reflects an interest in his Virtual Reality. It should go without saying, what with those cabbages and everything, there’s no immediate release date planned for it. You just don’t know what might come up in the meantime.

Enjoy the magazine. You can order a copy here.

“I don’t know who I am, I don’t know what I am… but I am” Anne Briggs interviewed

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A rare and remarkable interview with the elusive folk singer

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To coincide with the Topic CD given away free with the February 2024 issue of Uncut – which includes an exclusive, previously-unreleased Anne Briggs song – here’s our interview with the elusive folk singer that originally appeared in Uncut’s April 2019 issue; a deluxe edition of Briggs’ self-titled 1971 album will be reissued later this year by Topic

One of the wildest talents of her generation, ANNE BRIGGS retired from music in 1973, leaving only a handful of recordings behind her. Now, in a rare and remarkable interview, this most elusive of folk singers talks frankly with Jim Wirth about her extraordinary life, her brief but indelible career – and why it had to end so soon.

Anne Briggs is reading the labels attached to the trees in Kew Gardens. Slight but steely, she veers off the path at every turn, silently trampling across lawns and occasionally clambering up raised beds. If she could drown out the noise of the aeroplanes coming in to land at Heathrow, she might almost be in her element. The most mythologised singer of the 1960s folk revival has lived in rural Argyll for the past few decades, and her animal instincts have been frazzled by a rare visit to London to attend Topic Records’ 80th-birthday celebrations at Cecil Sharp House. Dressed today in jeans, a red zip-up jumper and hiking shoes, she reluctantly comes out of the greenery and folds herself into a seat in Kew’s café. “I find being in the city totally devastating,” she tells Uncut, hands in constant motion. “Bad. I lose my sense of direction. I get lost. All the time, I get lost.”

Briggs was no less disoriented when she first moved to the capital aged 17, drawn south from nottinghamshire by the prospect of independence more than recognition. An instinctively brilliant interpreter of traditional song, Briggs became a subtle, elliptical writer on a par with her on-off boyfriend Bert Jansch, with a dangerous reputation to match. In a 1971 edition of Sounds, folk critic Jerry Gilbert summed the footloose Briggs up as “a female Kerouac”. However, the 74-year-old is adamant that her rambling role model was never On The Road’s Dean Moriarty, but instead the feral child of Rudyard Kipling’s Jungle Book. “I learned to read when I was about five years old and all I wanted to be was Mowgli,” she says. “Mowgli could do all of the things I wasn’t allowed to do.”

Briggs effectively retired from music in 1973, after deciding that a lone foray into folk rock – released decades later as Sing A Song For You – was not good enough to be released. Pregnant with the second of her two children, she abandoned what was left of her singing career to work in some of Britain’s remotest places with her partner, forester Pat Delap.

“I’ve always been an outside kind of person,” she says, struggling to be heard above the sound of the air conditioning. “I’ve been a professional gardener in one form and another. I’ve spent the past 20 years outdoors; I had a contract with the Forestry Commission and then with the Crown Prosecution Service, helping the guys who are doing community service – keeping their clients occupied.”

In 11 years as a singer, Briggs released an EP and two full-length albums, as well as recording tracks for two Topic Records compilation albums – 1963’s The Iron Muse and 1966’s saucy The Bird In The Bush – and 1963 and 1964’s Edinburgh Folk Festival LPs. Even factoring in Sing A Song For You and “Four Songs” – a more recent EP of pieces scavenged from old radio sessions and a live tape – her entire recorded output amounts to barely three hours of music. However, the extraordinary power of her voice, supernaturally clear and eternally distant, has given Briggs an abiding appeal like few of her contemporaries. “I love the almost dispassionate delivery of Annie, and the starkness,” modern folk polymath Eliza Carthy tells Uncut. “The directness of the delivery and the purity of her voice – it’s like a dagger. It cuts right through you.”

“It’s all there on the albums,” adds Steve Ashley, Briggs’ long-term friend and one-time collaborator. “You can still hear that magic. She was also completely unpredictable.”

On bad nights, Briggs dissolved on stage, forgetting lyrics and abandoning songs as she battled with her profoundly ambivalent attitude to performing. She always sang with her eyes tight shut, making no attempt to reach out to the crowd; her transcendent nights might be the ones when she managed to blank the audience out entirely. “I was always singing to myself,” she says, momentarily cheery. “I hated being in front of an audience. I was nervous. I was just so fucking nervous. I’m so fucking nervous being here with you. I didn’t like being watched. I didn’t like having my photograph taken. Perhaps I felt that I was never empowered to be important.”

Anne Briggs was born in Toton, Nottinghamshire, on September 29, 1944. Now one of Nottingham’s western suburbs, Briggs says it was “a little rural pocket” during her childhood. Her upbringing was no bucolic idyll, though. World War II cost Briggs both her parents; her father – a sapper – contracted tuberculosis while on active duty, and her mother – a nurse – was diagnosed with the same condition at the time that her only daughter was born, dying when Briggs was five.

“She never left hospital,” Briggs says. “I only have one memory of her, which is looking up at this lady who’d been painted. It was a big day for her and the nurses: her daughter’s coming to visit her, and they made her up, bright red. It frightened me. She was like a puppet.”

Briggs’ paternal Aunt Hilda and her husband raised her as their own, but never really explained who the woman in the sanatorium was. “I had no idea at all,” she says, pushing the voice recorder further away. “I think that did influence the way I developed as a human being. I don’t know who I am, I don’t know what I am, but I am.”

If the human world brought fear and confusion, nature was Briggs’ salvation; another uncle, a conservationist, helping to spark her lifelong interest in flora and fauna. However, the would-be Mowgli found manmade forces conspiring against her again once she started to explore on her own.

“I resented hugely, from the age of about 11, the way that girls were treated,” she says. “I wasn’t allowed to wear trousers! I was a real outdoor girl, out in the woods all the time, and if you haven’t got trousers you just end up with scratched legs.”

She questioned the world around her more as she got older, insistently pushing the boundaries. “In the village I came from I was known as ‘the Bohemian’,” she says, rolling her eyes. “I was quite hard work for my uncle and aunt, because we were in this little village community and I wasn’t behaving in the right way. I didn’t see it that way. I just saw there was an inevitability that I had to pursue all possibilities, and I was particularly pissed off with the role in life for working-class girls. So pissed off. It was awful.” She twists her fingers. “That I would be a hairdresser. I was a clever girl! A hairdresser! That was the aspiration: your own little salon.”

Defying those limited expectations, Briggs made it to sixth form, where she studied Art, French and English. Her aunt and uncle felt she might be the first person in her family to make it to university, but the arrival of the Centre 42 festival in Nottingham in the summer of 1962 was to change everyone’s plans.

A trade union-sponsored travelling event aimed at decentralising art from London, it hinged on the discovery of local talent. Having learned folk songs off the radio, and the records of Isla Cameron and Mary O’Hara, the 17-year-old Briggs auditioned to appear, and was invited to sing on stage the following night, a one-off engagement gradually morphing into a longer tour, and then a decision to quit school and run away with the circus.

“My family were so angry with me,” Briggs remembers with a tinge of sadness. “They were prepared to subsidise my way through university. But after a year of doing A-levels, I realised what a drain I was on my substitute parents; I was a terrible drain on a working-class income and would continue to be so, and I thought, ‘I can’t go there; I can’t do this.’”

Briggs moved down to London, initially taking refuge at the Bloomsbury flat owned by Gill Cook – who worked at folk record shop Collet’s, and was the benign house mother to the folk revival’s waifs and strays. The singer’s family tried to get a court injunction to haul her back to Toton, but – since she was only weeks away from her 18th birthday – gave up. All of a sudden, Briggs felt she might have the freedom she wanted.

“I’d always sung, but it had never occurred to me that I could make an income from it,” she explains. “Gill Cook’s flat was next door to Sidney Carter, who wrote ‘Lord Of The Dance’, and I’d occasionally babysit for him and his wife. Centre 42 said they’d give me five quid a week as a go-fer. And I thought, ‘Yes – I’ve got a living.’ I was independent!”

She was also a unique talent; untutored but certain of herself, she bewitched the young vanguard of the folk revival with her natural style of singing traditional songs. Frankie Armstrong – later Briggs’ co-star on The Bird And The Bush – witnessed one of her first London engagements. “This quite small figure just stood up and sang like a bird, with that sense of freedom and purity,” she tells Uncut. “I was just absolutely mind-boggled. In terms of singing the kinds of songs she was singing at the time, I didn’t think there was anyone to match her.”

However, while she bonded with Jansch and the Watersons – all children, as Briggs points out, with family backgrounds as complicated as her own – she never found a comfortable niche in the factional London folk world. Topic doyen AL Lloyd kept her supplied with superb songs (not least “The Recruited Collier”; her version on The Iron Muse remains the definitive one) but she was more comfortable doing ad-hoc spots in north London’s Irish pubs.

“There was a bunch of Irish labourers who’d tell me where they were going to be drinking, and I’d go along,” she says, smiling. “They’d play the fiddle and the flute, and I’d sing unaccompanied – and they’d say, ‘All right, you’re one of us.’ That was so important to me. I had no awareness of the class thing; I just knew we were all at the bottom of it, but the Irish guys just seemed to adopt me and look after me.”

Topic released Briggs’ solo EP “The Hazards Of Love” in 1964, the captivating sleeve shot – taken by Brian Shuel during the recording of The Iron Muse – trapping the camera-shy singer looking like a French Nouvelle Vague heroine, grainy and unknowable. It largely featured pieces Lloyd had picked out for her – not least her rewiring of sea shanty “Lowlands” as a mournful love song. Warwick siren June Tabor, for one, felt it was a magical record, telling Uncut: “It’s completely unselfconscious. It had the decoration of an Irish style of singing, but there was a lot of her and her Midlands self as well. It was a music that gave me memories of things I never could have known.”

However, Briggs’ interests moved beyond unaccompanied folk as the decade wore on. Having worked together with Jansch during their off-days from touring, Briggs began to amass a small kernel of songs of her own, the mournful “The Time Has Come” being recorded somewhat perversely by The Alan Price Set in 1967, long before she committed her own version to tape in the early 1970s. She also began to quietly absent herself from Britain, spending more time in Ireland with Johnny Moynihan, from Dublin imps Sweeney’s Men, the couple busking and adventuring together for several years. Future Wings guitarist Henry McCullough saw them at close quarters and reckoned they were “the first hippies” – in Ireland at least – with Briggs subsidising their lifestyle with occasional trips back across the sea. “I’d come over to England, do a few gigs to get money then leg it back to Ireland and just live,” she says.

Such was her unworldliness that she spent part of the summer of 1967 living alone on a beach in the west of Ireland, an experience she recounted on her stark signature tune “Living By The Water” – key line: “Because I need no company, I make no enemies.”

“I did live on a beach,” she says. “Alone. For several weeks. I was totally happy with that. I didn’t want to be tied down; anybody putting pressure on me, I didn’t want it.”

Freedom had its pitfalls, though, especially for women, as she was reminded once she moved back to England. “I actually got a lift from Fred West,” Briggs says. “He had his daughter Charmaine in the car and his brother as well. I was hitchhiking with my lurcher, Clea. They stopped and picked me up not far out of London, because I was going back to Nottingham to spend time with my family, who had eventually decided that they would speak to me again.” It’s not a story she cares to elaborate on. “let’s not go there.”

Lloyd eventually persuaded Briggs to record a debut LP for Topic in 1970, by which time she and Moynihan were living in a caravan in little Bealings, Suffolk, scuffing by on seasonal work. In a letter to Topic label manager Gerry Sharp, she begs for a £5 advance explaining, slightly over dramatically, “I broke my back strawberry picking last week.”

Released in early 1971, with Briggs and Clea depicted in silhouette on the cover, Anne Briggs opens with her stunning take of “Blackwater Side”, the traditional favourite slowed to crawling pace like some Pre-Raphaelite version of The Velvet Underground’s “Pale Blue Eyes”. More revelations follow, unaccompanied performances interleaved with a couple of Briggs’ songs and a spellbinding “Willie o’Winsbury”, with Moynihan on bouzouki. The Scottish ballad catches the king preparing to have hanged the man who had made his daughter Janet pregnant, only to be bewitched by his beauty: “If I was a woman as I am a man,” sings Briggs. “My bedfellow you would be.”

Briggs’ rapturous rendition acknowledges its power for a more sexually liberated age. “It was phenomenal and I knew it,” she says. “The whole thing of ‘Willie o’Winsbury’ is that it’s potentially homosexual, and I thought that was absolutely perfect and right.”

That Anne Briggs contained self-penned songs was something of a departure from Topic’s staunchly traditional MO. Briggs herself had doubts that self-expression fitted the Topic brand.

“I’ve never told anybody this, but I felt guilty for having written things,” she says, nudging the voice recorder a little further toward the edge of the table. “like, am I betraying something? I really felt I was sort of impure.”

Anne Briggs is a beautiful record, but – as with her entire output – not a piece that inspires fond memories. “I had a bad cold at the time,” she says. “I really found it difficult to sing at all.”

Singing, though, remained a less back-breaking way of making a living than fruit picking, and it was perhaps in the hope of a less hand-to-mouth existence that Briggs signed up with manager Jo Lustig, the New Yorker hustler who made mainstream acts of Pentangle and Steeleye Span. Her legend enhanced after Sandy Denny included her tribute to Briggs, “The Pond And The Stream”, on 1970’s Fotheringay LP, Briggs had a second album in the racks by the end of 1971, Lustig having persuaded CBS to chance their arm on the beeswing-fragile The Time Has Come. A collection that draws together more of Briggs’ songs and works by her peers – Steve Ashley’s “Fire And Wine”, Lal Waterson’s “Fine Horseman” and “Step Right Up” by Henry McCullough – the badly out-of focus sleeve reflects the hazy music within, Briggs demonstrating her inimitable ability to sing a song like she’s not in the room on “Ride, Ride” and the Nick Drake-y “Tangled Man”. However, if it’s deceptively strong, Briggs feels her intentions in recording it were not entirely honourable. “I got pregnant and I had no idea of how I was going to survive, how I was going to provide for my child,” she says. “And CBS offered me 500 quid to produce an lP a year for five years.” She smiles ruefully. “And I fucking blew it.” Her aversion to paying her musical dues was underlined when Lustig booked her to support Jansch at the Royal Festival Hall on June 30, 1971. Wearing a borrowed pink maternity outfit, Briggs felt utterly out of place, and was further unnerved when her manager had a bunch of flowers delivered to her on stage. “Jo Lustig was trying to make me into something I didn’t want to be,” Briggs says, extending her arms out wide. “He wanted me to be an arm-flinger.”

Like the Shirley Bassey of folk?

“Yeah.” She pauses. “No way.”

Briggs was weary of the fight long before her final musical act, when she invited Ashley’s newformed folk-rock ensemble Ragged Robin to back her on a putative second CBS record. The group were given barely a day to rehearse with Briggs – who had never performed with a backing band – before being whisked off to the studio.

“Anne hadn’t heard the band and I also knew she disliked recording,” Ashley tells Uncut.

“However, when she arrived and met everyone she was in good form and the rehearsals went well. Unfortunately, the wild spirit of the rehearsal became more subdued in the studio. But still, with so little time available to us – we only had a couple of days – I think it turned out pretty well.”

The traditional “Hills of Greenmore” and Briggs’ own “Summer’s In” and “Travelling’s Easy” are wistful and luminous, while there is a little more Liege & Lief thunder in “Sing A Song For You” and “Sullivan’s John”, but Briggs remains profoundly ambivalent about the recordings: “I was pregnant again. I did it purely for money. I thought: ‘I’ve got to provide for the babies.’ I’d got two of them, one in there,” she says pointing at her waist “and one being carted around.” Briggs disliked her singing on the record so much that she forewent the £500 to block its release, and abandoned any plans to sing again.

“I had no options,” she says, hackles rising as she bats away questions about why she stopped. “I had no options.”

Because of money? Because of the responsibility of having children?

“Don’t push it. No. I was saying to you: I had no options.” And that’s all she is prepared to say.

The light is fading at Kew Gardens; in a few minutes the staff will be ushering us out. Briggs needs a rest. “I find talking for any length of time really difficult,” she explains. She has managed to cut her tongue while lighting a cigarette; the filter is stained with blood as she tells Uncut about her children’s taste for endurance sport. For her part, Briggs reckons that she could still comfortably survive a night or two in the wilderness. “I’ve had a hard life,” she says, seeking no sympathy. “I’ve had a really hard life.”

A return to performing may be more than she can handle, though. She has been lured back on stage a handful of times in the past 46 years, but hideous stage fright ruined every performance. She has never stopped writing and still owns her bouzouki, but any talk of more music is off the table as she packs up her grey rucksack. “That’s not a good place to go,” says Mowgli, slinging her bag over her shoulder. If the manner of her departure from music was not of her choosing, she is taking a dark satisfaction in controlling the narrative now. “We’ve had a good chat,” she says with an air of finality as she heads for the exit. She is leaving on her own terms; going her own way.

Hear The Black Keys’ new song with Beck, “Beautiful People (Stay High)”

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The Black Keys’ new album Ohio Players will be released by Nonesuch on April 5. As previously revealed in Uncut, it features collaborations with Beck, Noel Gallagher and Alice Cooper, among others.

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Hear the first single “Beautiful People (Stay High)”, written with Beck and Dan The Automator, below:

An “extensive international tour” will be announced at a later date. Pre-order Ohio Players here and read more about its creation from Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney below:

Annie Nightingale has died aged 83

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“She changed the face and sound of British TV and radio”

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Annie Nightingale, the pioneering DJ and broadcaster, has died aged 83. She passed away at her home in London after a short illness, according to a statement from her family.

Born in Middlesex in 1940, Nightingale began her career as a journalist and television presenter. She started at BBC Radio 1 in 1970, where she remained the only woman broadcaster for 12 years.

Although Miranda Ward was the first female voice on Radio 1 – as host of Miranda’s Meanders on Scene And Heard – Nightingale joined the station with her own Sunday evening show in February 1970, moving on to Sounds Of The ’70s and then a Sunday-afternoon request show from 1975 – 1979.

She also co-hosted The Old Grey Whistle Test from 1978 to 1982. During the first half of her career, she enjoyed good relations with many artists, including The Beatles and Marc Bolan.

In the second half of her career, she embraced club culture and in 1994 she began presenting The Chill Out Zone. She continued to broadcast a dance music show, Annie Nightingale Presents, until December 2023.

On Instagram, fellow DJ and broadcaster Annie Mac wrote, “What a devastating loss. Annie Nightingale was a trailblazer, spirited, adventurous, fearless, hilarious, smart, and so good at her job. This is the woman who changed the face and sound of British TV and Radio broadcasting forever. You can’t underestimate it.”

Uncut’s Richard Williams – who was The Old Grey Whistle Test’s first host – wrote on Twitter, “I knew Annie Nightingale a little bit in the 1970s and not at all thereafter, but that passing acquaintanceship was enough to leave memories of a warm, funny, clever, wholehearted and generous-spirited person — exactly the one to whom people have been paying tribute all day. RIP.”

Aled Haydn Jones, Head of BBC Radio 1 said, “She was the first female DJ on Radio 1 and over her 50 years on the station was a pioneer for women in the industry and in dance music. We have lost a broadcasting legend and, thanks to Annie, things will never be the same.”

Cocteau Twins – Four-Calendar Café/Milk & Kisses

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Remastered vinyl reissues of the trio’s final two albums

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It was received at the time with bewilderment and foreboding akin to that which might be prompted by the ravens fleeing the Tower of London: Cocteau Twins leaving 4AD. It wasn’t just that the Cocteaus had, more than any other act, epitomised 4AD’s singular and influential aesthetic, it was that they appeared on the verge of an unlikely accession to genuine superstardom. 1990’s Heaven Or Las Vegas had been widely, and correctly, hailed as a classic. The accompanying US tour had filled ballrooms, theatres and – in a booking which seemed both hilariously incongruous yet weirdly apposite, given the album’s dazzle and shimmer and indeed title – the Aladdin Hotel in Vegas itself (wedding venue of Elvis and Priscilla Presley, among much else).

Behind the scenes, however, things were unravelling. The Cocteaus’ relationship with 4AD had become strained, as had the relationship between guitarist Robin Guthrie and singer Elizabeth Fraser. Unhelpful quantities of drugs were being consumed. The Cocteaus were dumped by 4AD in 1991, and Guthrie and Fraser split not long after. But the group somehow held together and signed to Fontana, for whom the Cocteaus made these two albums, now reissued – and/or welcomed home – in 140g vinyl by 4AD (in the US, at least; everywhere else we get them courtesy of Proper and UMR).

There was clearly every reason why 1993’s Four-Calendar Café could/should have been a disappointment at best, a disaster at worst: first major-label album, follow-up to a masterpiece, band barely on speaking terms, add cocaine, await calamity. But against these considerable odds, Four-Calendar Café is a marvel. For all the upheaval attending its creation, it sounds a pretty natural successor to Heaven Or Las Vegas, the Cocteaus apparently continuing to realise that they could stay just as pretty while becoming less opaque. It’s riddled with tunes that nobody’s milkman would have difficulty whistling, conveying Fraser’s most audible and least mistakable lyrics to date (on the gorgeous trundle of “Bluebeard”, which sounds about as close as the Cocteaus were ever likely to get to a country song, Fraser is perceptibly casting an eye sideways towards Guthrie as she trills “Are you the right man for me?/Are you safe, are you my friend?”).

Guthrie later claimed that half of Four-Calendar Café was made while he was still taking drugs, half after he’d emerged from rehab, and that the darker, gloomier tracks were actually a product of his newly acquired sobriety. It is to the album’s credit that it’s hard to tell which ones Guthrie thought were which. “Squeeze-Wax” is one of the more obviously ecstatic lullabies in the Cocteaus’ canon, and seems straightforwardly addressed by name to Guthrie and Fraser’s young daughter, Lucy – but the eternal tremulous frailty of Fraser’s voice freights something of love’s terrors as well as its delights. Similarly, “My Truth”, which presents as quite the fluffy meringue of a thing, is laden with Fraser’s dogged memos to self about how “You can work through the pain/And come to peace”.

If Four-Calendar Café seemed, then, a considerable advance in difficult conditions – it hit Top 20 in the UK, and made the lower reaches of the Billboard 100 in the US – then 1996’s Milk & Kisses suggested a sounding of the retreat into the Cocteaus’ comfort zone. The arrangements conjured by Guthrie and bassist/keyboardist Simon Raymonde are monumental (with due recognition that the influence always went both ways, opening track “Violaine” recalls The Cure at peak stadium pomp). Fraser’s vocals, though certainly more discernible than they were during the Cocteaus’ earliest giddy glossolalia, shrunk somewhat back into the palatial confections enveloping them. (“This time,” Fraser drily told one interviewer, “I wasn’t trying to make a point or use it as therapy.”)

Nevertheless, if Milk & Kisses isn’t quite the post-punk Shoot Out The Lights or Rumours that Four-Calendar Café was, it was nevertheless unabashed in places. “Rilkean Heart” is Fraser’s grateful yet regretful paean to her recent relationship with Jeff Buckley. The album’s peak, “Half-Gifts”, in which Guthrie’s guitars duel gently with Raymonde’s queasy fairground organ, seems a meditation on broadly similar themes (“It’s an old game, my love/When you can’t have me, you want me”).

It seems regrettably likely that these albums will remain the last we hear of this bizarre and wonderful group. A 55-date reunion tour was booked in 2005, then unbooked when Fraser decided that she did not, on reflection, fancy it. But complaints about quantity should always be overruled by demonstrations of quality, and Four-Calendar Café and Milk & Kisses are a graceful, if inadvertent, farewell from an entity who still seem less like a rock group than they do some surreal natural phenomenon, existing just beyond the explicable.

Gruff Rhys – Sadness Sets Me Free

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A rich harvest of succour awaits on Super Furry veteran’s euphonious almanac of sorrows

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The process of writing from the title down is a proven way of conjuring art from a blank page. In 1994, Manic Street Preachers wrote the entirety of their final album as a four-piece after Richey Edwards and Nicky Wire decided that calling it The Holy Bible was a suitable scene-setter for the gravity of the sentiments expressed therein. In 2017, Saint Etienne’s cache of love letters to Metroland assembled itself only once the trio decided their next project would be called Home Counties. It’s interesting then, that this was also the process by which Gruff Rhys started work on the successor to 2021’s universally acclaimed concept album (about a sacred mountain on the North Korean border), Seeking New Gods.

The neon light depicted on the sleeve art reads ‘Sadness Sets Me Free’, but if it mirrored the grammatical emphasis of his 1996 hit with Super Furry Animals, “God! Show Me Magic”, and became Sadness! Set Me Free, it would shine a keener light on what Rhys has allowed himself to do here. On an album of songs that “feel melancholic or… deal with shit things,” it’s important to state that, at no point, does the listener feel like they’re taking a holiday in someone else’s misery. That’s even true of “Bad Friend”, which details a miserable caravan holiday in West Wales. It’s actually the sweetest song on the record; a string of reassurances to friends and loved ones that, although our protagonist might sometimes fall short of his own standards, “bad friends are still friends/And better than an enemy/And I will be there at the end.”

Also abundant here are qualities that ensure you’ll want to keep Sadness Sets Me Free near to your turntable in the weeks after it enters your world. Keeping the core of the group with which he’d just completed a European tour, Rhys headed straight from Dunkirk to the careworn 19th-century splendour of Paris’s La Frette Studios, where the basic songs were laid down in three days. Since 2014’s American Interior, Osian Gwynedd has established himself as the Garson to Rhys’s Bowie, the Barson to his Madness, to the extent that the songwriter appears to be leaving spaces in his songs into which he knows his keyboard player will decant something special.

Gwynedd’s mellifluous tones are the first thing you hear on the title track that opens the song, a Nashville-style rumination about the temptation to pick at the stitches of the first-world contentment which is too easily taken for granted. The fatalistic soothsaying of “Silver Lining (Lead Balloons)” and “They Sold My Home To Build A Skyscraper” are powered along by Gwynedd’s jazzy flourishes and (in the case of the former) an arrangement that suggests that Kevin Ayers’ “Song For Insane Times” might have been a tourbus staple in the preceding weeks.

Indeed, it’s by no means the only song for insane times on here. Right at the centre of Sadness Sets Me Free sit a bunch of songs that mark Rhys’s furthest incursion into dystopian territory more commonly associated with, say, Thom Yorke. Billowing out like smoke rings over the merest candle flicker of piano and a low synth hum, “Cover Up The Cover Up” invites us to depict our everyman protagonist gazing up from the rubble as helicopters carrying their cargo of discredited politicians and their oligarch enablers disappear into the clouds never to return – “aides still flapping excuses into the crowds.”  On the pensive, diaphanous “The Far Side Of The Dollar”, Rhys sounds like a child reluctantly tuned into the frequency at which empty seas and infertile soil transmit their sorrow.

Here and elsewhere, heavy sentiments are leavened by a succession of hair-raising arrangements by Gruff ab Arwel. In its stately grandeur, “I Tendered My Resignation” doesn’t fall far short of Bill Shepherd’s arrangements for The Bee Gees in their early years, and it’s an analogy that carries into the song itself, which for its blending of the sublime with the ridiculous (“Sometimes doing the right thing is the opposite of doing the right thing/Sometimes it’s the wrong thing…”) evokes the heady peaks of Robin Gibb’s “I Started A Joke”.

Rhys describes another standout track, “Celestial Candyfloss”, as “an attempted pocket symphony about the cosmic lengths that people will travel in the pursuit of love and acceptance”, but there’s no “attempted” about this, and that’s also down to ab Arwel, whose presence here makes the song so much more than an affable four-to-the-floor radio rattler. None of which, by the way, is meant to diminish any credit due to Rhys for the magnitude of this achievement. If anyone’s counting, this is the 21st studio album which has featured Rhys as a songwriter and performer. But it’s hard to recall a set of songs on which Rhys’s low-key radicalism and unquenchable sense of wonder have coexisted with such ease.

On the declamatory closer “I’ll Keep Singing”, he reiterates the sentiments which birthed the preceding nine songs: “Sadness sets me free.” And as the strings echo into silence, he sounds all but cured of whatever blues he brought into the room. He won’t be the only one.

JJ Burnel – My Life In Music

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The Stranglers bassman picks his peachiest tunes: “It’s the nearest thing to an orgasm in music”

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THE WHO

“My Generation”

BRUNSWICK, 1965

This was radical when it came out – everything from the bass solo, to using the volume knob on the guitar for creating that vibrato or tremolo effect, to the fact that it doesn’t really have a traditional chorus. It sums up the sudden self-awareness of teenagers at that time, and it hasn’t dated in my opinion. I would have been about 13, [watching it on] Top Of The Pops or Ready, Steady, Go. Unlike other bands at the time, The Who seemed to be quite aggressive, and I picked up on that. It was the first time I’d heard the bass played like that, and it was very exciting. I mean, rock’n’roll has to be exciting, otherwise it’s just background music.

DUSTER BENNETT

“Jumping At Shadows”

BLUE HORIZON, 1968

Duster Bennett I remember seeing as a 15 or 16-year-old in a pub in Godalming. Every Sunday there was a blues club in the back of the Angel pub in Godalming High Street. Duster Bennett actually recorded an album there called <Bright Lights…> and I was there! He was a one-man band, so he had a guitar, he had a kazoo, a harmonica, a bass drum which was activated by his foot, and a hi-hat – all four limbs were playing. And he had an incredible voice. He looked more like a skinhead, but “Jumping At Shadows” is a beautiful blues song, it’s got slightly different chord progressions. Fleetwood Mac’s version is great as well, with Peter Green.

TOMITA

“The Girl With The Flaxen Hair”

RCA RED SEAL, 1974

It’s a piece by Debussy. However, I discovered it getting very stoned in my early twenties, by way of listening to a guy called Tomita, who was a Japanese synthesiser pioneer. He did an album of Debussy’s music on synthesiser, which fucking blew my mind – it’s so modern. “The Girl With The Flaxen Hair” is a short piece, only about four minutes, and it peaks at just the right time. Every time you hear it, you’re holding your breath until it reaches that crescendo, and then the release… It’s the nearest thing to an orgasm in music. You blow out a breath of air when it’s peaked. And then you probably want to have a cigarette or something!

THE YARDBIRDS

“Over Under Sideways Down”

COLUMBIA, 1966

I’ve got the privilege at the moment of playing with one of The Yardbirds. Jim McCarty lives a few villages away from me [in Provence], and he’s still an incredible drummer. So every week we play together, trying to reinvent some old blues things. “Over Under Sideways Down” is just a cool R&B track, talking about the zeitgeist: “<Cars and girls are easy come by in this day and age>”. I’ve been reliably informed that the bass on the outro, which I really love, was actually not played by Paul Samwell-Smith but by Jeff Beck. It’s always the one I want to play with Jim McCarty but he won’t let me! But hey, I’m playing with one of my heroes.

KRAFTWERK

“The Model”

EMI, 1981

Kraftwerk actually prevented us from getting to No 1. The Stranglers were at No 2 for several weeks with “Golden Brown” but then they re-released this fucking record called “The Model” – which actually is great! They were so influential with the lack of emotion in the delivery and the attempt to de-romanticise music. They were at the forefront of the synthesiser revolution, which I really liked, especially since we got so much flak at the beginning of The Stranglers for having a synthesiser, which was considered heresy by the other bands of our peer group. Synthesisers had been around since the ’60s in various forms, but when they became part of the mainstream it brought a whole new dimension to music.

BILLY COBHAM

“Quadrant 4”

ATLANTIC, 1973

I’ve never really liked jazz fusion. But I was listening to John McLaughlin’s Mahavishnu Orchestra recently because it was foisted on me, and I was quite impressed. If you write a list of the top five British guitarists, John McLaughlin is one of them. Anyway, Billy Cobham played with him in Mahavishnu Orchestra, and then he did some solo stuff with a guitarist called Tommy Bolin, who was in Deep Purple at some point and died when he was just 25. This track is acrobatics, which sometimes puts me to sleep. I think, ‘Get over yourself’ – you’ve got to have the emotion in there too. But this one excites me so much. It’s electric musicianship [pushed] as far as it goes.

HENRY THOMAS

“Bull Doze Blues”

VOCALION, 1929

This one was introduced to me recently by Jim McCarty. I’ve always liked the three main singles from Canned Heat: “On The Road Again”, “Let’s Work Together” and “Going Up The Country”. I was jamming on “Going Up The Country” with Jim and he said, “Ooh no, you’ve got to hear the original,” which is “Bull Doze Blues” – I think it was about the building of the Hoover Dam. And it introduced me to a lot of older stuff from the ’30s. It’s great to discover that the origin of something you think is quite classic anyway, is something even older. A lot of those ’60s bands lifted generously from the blues and “Going Up Country” was lifted generously from “Bull Doze Blues”.

BOB DYLAN

“I Threw It All Away”

CBS, 1969

It’s one of my all-time favourite songs. I know to look at me, you wouldn’t think I was a Bob Dylan fan, and I find most of his output leaves me cold. But that particular song hits the nail on the head for me. It’s quite humble, and I’m sure we could all identify with the lyrics and the sentiment of the song. Also, the playing’s loose – it’s completely the antithesis of what The Stranglers do, for instance. Not that I know much about his previous music, but certainly there are a couple of tracks on Nashville Skyline that are listenable, as far as I’m concerned. You can like a song by someone and not necessarily pursue it further and become a fan.

JJ Burnel’s book Strangler In The Light: Conversations With Anthony Boile is out now, published by Coursegood

Hear The Black Crowes’ first new song in 15 years

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The Black Crowes have announced that their new album Happiness Bastards will be released on March 15 via their own Silver Arrow Records.

NEIL YOUNG IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME

Produced by Jay Joyce, it’s their first album in 15 years following the reconciliation of brothers Chris and Rich Robinson. Hear the first single “Wanting And Waiting” below:

“Happiness Bastards is our love letter to rock’n’roll,” says Chris Robinson. “Rich and I are always writing and creating music; that has never stopped for us, and it is always where we find harmony together. This record represents that.”

UK and European tourdates will be announced soon. In the meantime, you can pre-order Happiness Bastards here and check out the tracklisting below:

  1. Bedside Manners
  2. Rats And Clowns
  3. Cross Your Fingers
  4. Wanting And Waiting
  5. Wilted Rose ft. Lainey Wilson
  6. Dirty Cold Sun
  7. Bleed It Dry
  8. Flesh Wound
  9. Follow The Moon
  10. Kindred Friend

Ride’s new album Interplay is coming on March 29

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Ride have announced that their new album will be released by Wichita Recordings / PIAS on March 29.

Produced by the band with Richie Kennedy, Interplay is their seventh album overall and third since reforming in 2014.

NEIL YOUNG IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME

Hear the first single “Peace Sign” below:

Pre-order Interplay here and peruse the tracklisting below:

Peace Sign
Last Frontier
Light in a Quiet Room
Monaco
I Came to See the Wreck
Stay Free
Last Night I Came Somewhere to Dream
Sunrise Chaser
Midnight Rider
Portland Rocks
Essaouira
Yesterday is Just a Song

The Long Ryders – Native Sons: Expanded 3CD Edition

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NEIL YOUNG IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME

There’s nothing quite like pulling off a coup with your group’s first album, and with a guest appearance from The ByrdsGene Clark on Native Sons, The Long Ryders not only did just that, but they also made a pretty clear statement of intent: this is the music we love, these are the songwriters we love, let’s place ourselves in that lineage. The relationship between Clark and The Long Ryders was mutually supportive and beneficial, sharing bills, hanging out together, and thanks to producer Henry Lewy, a backing vocal on the Ryders’ “Ivory Tower”. “Gene Clark was kind to us, always,” Long Ryder Sid Griffin recalls, explaining what led to him calling Clark to ask him to share some of his wayward spirit on Native Sons. “The Long Ryders were told we sounded like The Byrds, so why not have a real Byrd sing on a track?”

Why not indeed. The Long Ryders were smelted in the same furnace as other groups doing the rounds in Los Angeles in the early ’80s – Green On Red, The Rain Parade, The Dream Syndicate, The Bangs (later The Bangles). Between them all, they’d be branded the Paisley Underground, a closely affiliated gang of musicians who embraced all that was good about the psychedelic ’60s – Love, The Doors, The Byrds, 13th Floor Elevators, etc – honing those sounds to a finely crafted setting of jewels and re-introducing the psychedelic aesthetic to underground rock. The Long Ryders were part of the scene, thanks both to the sound they chased, and simply by being based in Los Angeles, but out of all the Paisley Underground groups, they were the ones that crossed over most readily into other territory: roots rock, the not-yet-nascent ‘Americana’ movement, country rock.

It’s no surprise, then, to discover an artist as singular as Tom Petty was a supporter and huge fan of the group, for example. More curious are tales of U2 (who they almost toured with) and Noel Gallagher being big fans. But that’s the story with The Long Ryders – their influence is completely outsize to their level of success. This is not an uncommon story, but it’s curious to think of exactly music The Long Ryders are at the roots of, somehow: you can clearly hear their influence in groups like The Jayhawks and Uncle Tupelo, for example, and the Byrdsian glimmer of the C86 gangs, not to mention much of the music that now passes for Americana. And the foundational tablets for this influence are 1983’s “10-5-60 EP and the following year’s Native Sons, compiled, with a disc of demos and a storming live set from London’s Dingwalls in 1985, in this deluxe edition reissue.

Listening back to “10-5-60 and Native Sons, two things become clear: firstly, the Long Ryders are a group that benefit from lighter, more natural application of production mores; secondly, Stephen McCarthy is a sublime guitarist, someone who unerringly played exactly what the song needed, no more, no less. He was an articulate guitarist, but his proficiency never leaned towards showboating; the playing has no flash, but plenty of taste. It’s an assessment Griffin agrees with: “Stephen McCarthy was the Clarence White of his generation… Stephen shoulda been as famous as Johnny Marr!” One of the cumulative effects of listening to these three hours of early Long Ryders recordings is an ever-increasing awe at McCarthy’s fluency: it’s a perfect showcase for the ragged-yet-right spirit of his playing.

Of course, the songs are uniformly remarkable, too, particularly on the “10-5-60” EP, which might just outshine Native Sons for its flighty gruffness, the way it grabs hold of the moment – ‘this is our shot!’ – and essays six songs that are effortlessly cool in their updating and emboldening of Byrdsian folk-rock jangle. Native Sons introduces more country and roots elements to their songs, and Lewy’s production helps to highlight the melodicism at the core of the Long Ryders’ sound. (He was a wise choice, having produced Flying Burrito Brothers.) It’s the outliers that really shine here – the slow, mordant acoustic lament of “Fair Game”; the sky-bound, chiming mantra of “Too Close To The Light”. The demos shed light on the album’s development and offer a glimpse at some of the covers the group played: a convincing “Masters Of War”, and a gorgeous take on Tim Hardin’s “If I Were A Carpenter”. Forty years on, it still makes for thrilling rock music that moves the music forward by highlighting the art of its past.