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The National announce Royal Festival Hall show

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The National have announced short run of intimate shows for April. Along with concerts in Paris, New York, Toronto and LA, there is a date at London's Royal Festival Hall on April 18. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Tickets go on sale at 10am on Monday (March...

The National have announced short run of intimate shows for April.

Along with concerts in Paris, New York, Toronto and LA, there is a date at London’s Royal Festival Hall on April 18.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Tickets go on sale at 10am on Monday (March 4) from here.

See the full list of dates below:

Monday April 16 @ Paris at Olympia
Thursday, April 18 @ London at Royal Festival Hall
Monday, April 22 @ NYC at Beacon Theatre
Wednesday, April 24 @ Toronto at Roy Thomson Hall
Friday, April 26 @ LA at Orpheum Theatre

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Listen to a new podcast about The Clash, narrated by Chuck D

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Spotify has a launched a new documentary podcast about The Clash, narrated by Chuck D of Public Enemy. Listen to Episode 1 of Stay Free: The Story Of The Clash below: https://open.spotify.com/episode/2JgBM7vWUEBu6eLDOoiu20 Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! “...

Spotify has a launched a new documentary podcast about The Clash, narrated by Chuck D of Public Enemy.

Listen to Episode 1 of Stay Free: The Story Of The Clash below:

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

“It’s an honour heading up this new podcast,” said Chuck D. “I was and am a big fan of their music. We were always tackling very similar social and political issues.”

You can watch a trailer for the full series below:

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Pink Floyd announce A Saucerful Of Secrets mono remaster

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Pink Floyd have announced the re-release of their 1968 album A Saucerful Of Secrets on 180g vinyl for Record Store Day 2019. The album has been remastered by James Guthrie, Joel Plante and Bernie Grundman from the original 1968 analogue mono mix. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it ...

Pink Floyd have announced the re-release of their 1968 album A Saucerful Of Secrets on 180g vinyl for Record Store Day 2019.

The album has been remastered by James Guthrie, Joel Plante and Bernie Grundman from the original 1968 analogue mono mix.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

The limited-edition release comes on 180-gram black vinyl, with a black poly-lined inner sleeve, and a faithful reproduction of the original sleeve, including the ‘Columbia’ logo, under which imprint (via EMI) the early Pink Floyd released in the UK.

It will be available from participating stores only on Record Store Day, Saturday April 13.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Hear Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever’s new single

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Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever have today released a single called "In The Capital", their first new material since last year's acclaimed album Hope Downs. Hear it below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ToteR-IzPqg Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! "In The C...

Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever have today released a single called “In The Capital”, their first new material since last year’s acclaimed album Hope Downs.

Hear it below:

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

“In The Capital” is available on streaming services now and will also be released as a limited edition 7″ on April 26, backed with another new song “Read My Mind”.

“I first had the idea for the melody and some of the lyrics when I was swimming,” says the band’s Fran Keaney. “It’s taken a while to finish the song, to make it feel like the initial feeling. I can’t neatly describe it, but something like connection despite distance. I was thinking about transience and water and death and big cities and fishing towns and moon river.”

Check out Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever’s upcoming European tour dates below:

Jul 3rd | Roskilde, DK – Roskilde Festival
Jul 5th | Ewijk, NL – Down the Rabbit Hole Festival
Jul 7th | Paris, FR – Le Point Ephemere
Jul 9th | Liverpool, UK – Invisible Wind Factory
Jul 11th | Dublin, IE – The Iveagh Gardens
Jul 12th | Madrid, ES – Mad Cool Festival
Jul 13th | Lisbon, PT – NOS Alive
Jul 15th | Glasgow, UK – St. Luke’s
Jul 16th | Sheffield, UK – The Leadmill
Jul 18th | Cardiff, UK – Clwb Ifor Bach
Jul 19th | Bedford, UK – Esquires
Jul 21st | Suffolk, UK – Latitude Festival
Jul 22nd | Birmingham, UK – Mama Roux’s
Jul 23rd | Reading, UK – Sub89
Jul 27th | Thirsk, UK – Deer Shed Festival

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

New Lou Reed doc to premiere 1965 demo of “I’m Waiting For The Man”

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A new Radio 4 documentary about Lou Reed will premiere a previously unheard 1965 demo of the singer performing future Velvet Underground staple "I'm Waiting For The Man". An extract from the demo will feature in Walking The Wild Mind, presented by Suzanne Vega, which is scheduled for broadcast on B...

A new Radio 4 documentary about Lou Reed will premiere a previously unheard 1965 demo of the singer performing future Velvet Underground staple “I’m Waiting For The Man”.

An extract from the demo will feature in Walking The Wild Mind, presented by Suzanne Vega, which is scheduled for broadcast on BBC Radio 4 and the BBC Sounds app at 8pm on Saturday (March 2).

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

The five-inch reel-to-reel tape was discovered in a sealed packaged, hidden behind some CDs in Reed’s study. It is believed that he mailed the package to himself in May 1965 in an attempt to establish copyright.

Lou Reed archivist Don Fleming opened the tape early last year to discover that it contained what is believed to be the first recorded version of “I’m Waiting For The Man”, among other previously unheard tracks.

“It was one of eleven songwriting demos that Lou seemed to have recorded on one day,” explains the documentary’s producer, Judith Kampfner. “As Don says it ‘is perfectly formed’ though to me Lou sounds very innocent. Don doesn’t know who harmonises with Lou on the song. The harmony to me is a bit Simon & Garfunkel though Don says there is very much a Bob Dylan influence there. The other voice is most probably a guy who worked with Lou at Pickwick Records. It is very different from the VU version that was released. I get goosebumps every time I hear it.

“According to Don it was a bit of a struggle to get the tape to work at first. They heard the songs start but then shortly over that another track started. They brought in a music preservation expert who determined that it wasn’t made on a commercial studio type of tape deck. It was made on some home deck that had weird tracking on the heads the way that it was set up. He had to reconfigure it.

“When I interviewed Don, he also played a few seconds of a couple of other songs but I don’t talk about them in the show because we don’t have any of the music. He says they most likely will release them at some time. I can say that he told me there were two songs that have never been released but that’s all I can really say.”

The latest issue of Uncut includes an in-depth feature about the making of Lou Reed’s 1989 album New York. The magazine is in shops now, or you can order a copy online by clicking here.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Introducing the Ultimate Genre Guide to Electronic Pop

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A quick one from me this week, as I'm running between meetings, an album playback and writing, but just to remind you that the current issue of Uncut is on sale - you can read more about it here. Also in the shops this week is our latest Ultimate Genre Guide. This is dedicated to Electronic Pop, a...

A quick one from me this week, as I’m running between meetings, an album playback and writing, but just to remind you that the current issue of Uncut is on sale – you can read more about it here.

Also in the shops this week is our latest Ultimate Genre Guide. This is dedicated to Electronic Pop, and very fine it is too. It’s in shops now – or you can order it from our online store by clicking here. Here’s John Robinson, our one shots editor, to tell you more about it…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

So why electronic pop, and not just “synth pop”? For this latest edition of the Ultimate Genre Guide, it’s mainly a question of not wanting to narrow unduly the broad and interconnected world of music made with electronic instruments.

Certainly, an important part of this magazine reflects the triumphs and the personalities of that vivid period in UK pop which Neil Tennant (himself one half of “the last of the 1980s synth duos”) remembered as being a time when “art students were in charge”.

He’s talking Human League, Soft Cell, Heaven 17, Art Of Noise and many of the bands that you can find written about in this magazine. No-one ever called New Order or Depeche Mode students, but in a time when a population was still getting its head around the concept of the video recorder, they too were in the vanguard of bands presenting startlingly modern pop.

But inside, you’ll also find coverage of events either side of this tuneful explosion. You’ll hear from Brian Eno and Tony Visconti, who have just spent a productive time with a rejuvenated David Bowie, fresh from making (i)Low(i) in Berlin and discernibly under the influence of the music made by Cluster at Forst and by Kraftwerk in Dusseldorf.

Kraftwerk’s influence, getting stuck into the wires of electronic music before it even had a circuit diagram, is a key feature of the magazine. At this early stage, experimentation feels a bit more a matter of actual electronics, hands-on and slightly untidy – more to do with cables and soldering irons than simply slickly selecting an attractive sound and writing a song. As Giorgio Moroder describes it, it can be a pretty basic business.

At one end of this, this means Bernard Sumner as he describes himself in his autobiography: late at night in his parents’ home, assembling the synthesizer kit which will help plot Joy Division’s journey into New Order. Emerging at the other end of the 1980s, it will come to mean the fragmenting of Kraftwerk’s initial electronic template into new and unexpected shapes. Following the trail will lead in one direction to electro and hip hop, in another to techno and all points north. As you will read, electronic pop’s beat moves between continents and can still be heard loudly today.

Inside this magazine you will be able to read deep and insightful new writing about the key players from within this movement, and entertaining archive features about them. As much as these groups might have effected a technological/artistic revolution within mainstream pop, it’s refreshing to see that some fundamental features of the engagement still apply: it’s all about the music, but “larks on tour” remains a trope of rock writing that remains intact from earlier times. As much as the players in this magazine embrace technology, these are still vibrant and driven personalities much as we ever knew them.

As you would maybe hope in a musical form, in its first decade or so electronic pop evolved and became more widely appreciated – a development you might see embodied perfectly by the Human League’s evolution from college project to chart success – but never quite became domesticated. Things certainly became tidier, less prone to blow a fuse, but the music could still unsettle the order of things. For some the polished productions of the Pet Shop Boys exemplified the flashiness of the mid 1980s. A rather more attentive listen, however, revealed that the band were coldly evaluating their times – and, as you might hope, keenly pushing on into the future. See you there!

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The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Hear Morrissey’s version of Roy Orbison’s “It’s Over”

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Morrissey will release a new album of cover versions called California Son via Etienne Records/BMG on May 24. Hear his take on Roy Orbison's "It's Over", featuring American singer-songwriter LP, below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3yNAg67u_c Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it ...

Morrissey will release a new album of cover versions called California Son via Etienne Records/BMG on May 24.

Hear his take on Roy Orbison’s “It’s Over”, featuring American singer-songwriter LP, below:

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Other guests on the album include Green Day’s Billie Joe Armstrong on Laura Nyro’s “Wedding Bell Blues”, Grizzly Bear’s Ed Droste on Jobriath’s “Morning Starship” and Petra Haden of That Dog on Bob Dylan’s “Only A Pawn In Their Game”.

Peruse the full tracklisting for California Son below:

1. Morning Starship (Jobriath) with Ed Droste of Grizzly Bear
2. Don’t Interrupt The Sorrow (Joni Mitchell) with Ariel Engle of Broken Social Scene
3. Only a Pawn In Their Game (Bob Dylan) with Petra Haden
4. Suffer the Little Children (Buffy St Marie)
5. Days of Decision (Phil Ochs) with Sameer Gadhia of Young The Giant
6. It’s Over (Roy Orbison) with LP
7. Wedding Bell Blues (The Fifth Dimension) with Billie Joe Armstrong of Green Day & Lydia Night of The Regrettes
8. Loneliness Remembers What Happiness Forgets (Dionne Warwick)
9. Lady Willpower (Gary Puckett)
10. When You Close Your Eyes (Carly Simon) with Petra Haden
11. Lenny’s Tune (Tim Hardin)
12. Some Say I Got Devil (Melanie)

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Electronic Pop – Ultimate Genre Guide

The latest ULTIMATE GENRE GUIDE is a celebration of the futuristic sounds of ELECTRONIC POP. From the pivotal experiments of our cover stars Kraftwerk, to David Bowie’s work with Brian Eno and the disco revolutions of Giorgio Moroder, through their offspring in British pop: Soft Cell, Human Leagu...

The latest ULTIMATE GENRE GUIDE is a celebration of the futuristic sounds of ELECTRONIC POP.

From the pivotal experiments of our cover stars Kraftwerk, to David Bowie’s work with Brian Eno and the disco revolutions of Giorgio Moroder, through their offspring in British pop: Soft Cell, Human League, Depeche Mode and Pet Shop Boys.

It’s a tale of experimentation and tunes, told in insightful new writing and entertaining archive features.

It’s the story of how a brilliant new wave of musicians synthesised a new future for themselves.

It’s the Ultimate Genre Guide to Electronic Pop!

Buy online here

Talk Talk frontman Mark Hollis has died, aged 64

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Former Talk Talk frontman Mark Hollis has died, aged 64. Although no official announcement has been made, Hollis's cousin-in-law – the academic Anthony Costello – confirmed the news in a tweet yesterday (February 25) in which he called Hollis a "Wonderful husband and father. Fascinating and prin...

Former Talk Talk frontman Mark Hollis has died, aged 64. Although no official announcement has been made, Hollis’s cousin-in-law – the academic Anthony Costello – confirmed the news in a tweet yesterday (February 25) in which he called Hollis a “Wonderful husband and father. Fascinating and principled man.”

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Hollis effectively retired from music following the release of his debut solo album in 1998 in order to spend more time with his children. He has maintained a distance from the music industry ever since, although he did contribute a piece to the soundtrack of the 2012 TV series Boss.

As the frontman of Talk Talk, Hollis scored several global hits in the mid-80s with songs such as “It’s My Life” and “Life’s What You Make It”. However, fame didn’t sit well with Hollis, and he steered the band away from synth-pop and into a sparser, more contemplative realm influenced by Satie and Debussy on 1988’s Sprit Of Eden and 1991’s Laughing Stock.

While regarded as ‘difficult’ at the time, these albums have proved hugely influential. “I can’t overstate the influence on us three as musicians and us as a band” wrote Doves. “His music was rich and deep, and a huge influence on my development as a musician” tweeted Blur’s Dave Rowntree.

Former Talk Talk bandmate Paul Webb AKA Rustin Mann wrote on Facebook that “Musically he was a genius and it was a honour and a privilege to have been in a band with him. I have not seen Mark for many years, but like many musicians of our generation I have been profoundly influenced by his trailblazing musical ideas. He knew how to create a depth of feeling with sound and space like no other. He was one of the greats, if not the greatest.”

Field Music said that Hollis’s “1998 solo album… has been an endless source of musical and conceptual inspiration to us”. Chris Baio of Vampire Weekend wrote that, “Mark Hollis changed my life. Thank you for everything”.

Peers such as The The and Duran Duran also paid tribute to Hollis on social media.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Send us your questions for Damo Suzuki

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Damo Suzuki was famously discovered by Can's Holger Czukay while performing some kind of noisy happening outside Munich's Europa Cafe in April 1970. Hours later, he was in the band, adding his noisy happenings to Can's 'imperial phase' run of albums: Soundtracks, Tago Mago, Ege Bamyasi and Future Da...

Damo Suzuki was famously discovered by Can’s Holger Czukay while performing some kind of noisy happening outside Munich’s Europa Cafe in April 1970. Hours later, he was in the band, adding his noisy happenings to Can’s ‘imperial phase’ run of albums: Soundtracks, Tago Mago, Ege Bamyasi and Future Days.

For many, Suzuki’s ecstatic hollers and apocalyptic whispers were central to Can’s antic, otherworldly appeal; the perfect vocal interpretation of the strange rhythmic sorcery being summoned around him. Yet in his new autobiography, I Am Damo Suzuki – named after The Fall’s heartfelt homage – he makes clear that his tenure with “That German Band” was only one aspect of his lifelong mission: to spread peace by making “a kind of music that can communicate directly with the people”.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Before he joined Can, Suzuki was a hippie traveller who left Japan to see if he could make a connection with people on the other side of the world. For the last 25 years or so he’s continued on much the same path, as the only permanent member of Damo Suzuki’s Network. The others are local pick-up musicians or ‘Sound Carriers’ who typically only meet Suzuki at Soundcheck.

Despite battling colon cancer in recent years, Damo Suzuki’s Network is still going strong, with a run of UK dates forthcoming in March.

So what do you want to ask one of music’s genuine free spirits? Email your questions to us at uncutaudiencewith@ti-media.com by Tuesday (February 26) and Damo will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Sleaford Mods – Eton Alive

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“It’s getting shitter!” spits Jason Williamson on “Big Burt”, and a sense of bilious negativity is the sustaining force of Eton Alive, Sleaford Mods’ latest studio album, cathartic in its honesty but no less depressing for that. It’s like Mike Leigh’s Meantime in musical form: bitter...

“It’s getting shitter!” spits Jason Williamson on “Big Burt”, and a sense of bilious negativity is the sustaining force of Eton Alive, Sleaford Mods’ latest studio album, cathartic in its honesty but no less depressing for that. It’s like Mike Leigh’s Meantime in musical form: bitter, funny, confusing and bleak, as Williamson and Andrew Fearn navigate the seemingly bottomless national decline with a torrent of smart rhymes, cheap synths and itchy loops. Eton Alive – the pair’s first full-length since leaving Rough Trade and forming their own label – doesn’t fiddle too much with a working formula while still sounding like the work of a band that have no plans to vacate their unexpected platform any time soon.

Where Eton Alive differs from previous albums is with the presence of a trio of what Williamson happily describes as “pop songs”. These are pretty much unprecedented in the Mods’ canon, starting with “When You Come Up To Me”, which features an almost unrecognisable Williamson practically crooning, making a strange, stark beauty of Fearn’s beats. The band have always tangoed with grime, but here the influence is more that genre’s R&B/gospel inclinations or a scratchy version of the poppy garage of The Streets. Later comes “Firewall”, a little rawer but with a similar vocal sensibility, while the album closes with “Negative Script”, which has Williamson alternating between singing and his usual staccato John Cooper Clarke-style semi-spoken rap.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Also offering something a bit different is the aforementioned “Big Burt”, a freewheeling character piece that Fearn gave the working title “Oasisim”. The lyric sees Williamson having a go at everything from “Airfix dickheads” to “namedropping ’90s pricks”, namechecking a variety of children’s TV shows and rejecting “God’s plan”. As ever with the Sleaford Mods, there’s a lot of humour in tracks like “Big Burt” and coke-rant “Top It Up”, but it’s the sort of humour you’re never sure whether it’s safe to laugh at in case Williamson takes offence and pops you on the nose for not taking him seriously. Humour is often used to put the listener at ease, but with Williamson it’s another avenue for confrontation. “Graham Coxon looks like a left-wing Boris Johnson,” he snarls on the abrasive “Flipside”, a line he insists isn’t meant to be taken personally, and like many of the best insults is at once very funny and not entirely fair.

You suspect that Sleaford Mods are confrontational because they feel any other response to the human condition would be regarded as an abdication of responsibility. This can be exhausting, but Williamson has been scornful of the more energising, consensual approach of a band like Idles and on Eton Alive regularly lambasts those he considers “fakes”. Williamson’s targets are ignorance, isolation and mindless consumption, but he also points a finger at the political/media classes with the album title. On the defining “Policy Cream” he insists “Sit down, just shut up, I’ll talk,” before berating the vacuity of political policies that make no difference but are endlessly repeated in a negative spiral. “There’s no witchcraft here, it’s just fucking hell,” he despairs overt Fearn’s a suitably ominous backdrop.

“Policy Cream” ends with a bit of drunken chanting recorded off the street during the 2018 World Cup. The band love to pepper their arrangements with found sounds and unusual samples, everyday noises that give street life and texture to the music. The thuggish drawl of “Into The Payzone” features the sound of an electric drill – a reference to drill music – and touch card beeps, much like the corner shop ring used on “Drayton Manored” from 2017’s English Tapas. The brilliant “OBCT” even has a mournful kazoo solo, as Williamson wrestles with his own conscience, having recently moved into a bigger house in a posh suburb populated by “Oliver Bonas and Chelsea tractors”.

Williamson is angry but he’s no revolutionary, or at least he’s one who is honest about what is possible and what he is personally capable of achieving. The apocalyptic and punky stream of consciousness “Subtraction” sounds like a computer malfunctioning and includes the telling lines “it’s not enough anymore to want change, you have to do change”, before Williamson backs down… “but the only change I like sits in my pockets, I’m a consumer”. It’s this sense of powerlessness that makes the Mods such a difficult but necessary band. There’s no pretence at simple solutions, no fake idealism. It’s getting shitter, and Sleaford Mods aren’t pulling their punches.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Various Artists – Kankyō Ongaku

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Given the recent rediscovery of so much enthralling music that was formerly consigned to the uncool category of New Age, there’s no excuse for operators of holistic wellness spas and massage therapy clinics to torment their clients with tired playlists full of Enya and babbling brooks. Surely our ...

Given the recent rediscovery of so much enthralling music that was formerly consigned to the uncool category of New Age, there’s no excuse for operators of holistic wellness spas and massage therapy clinics to torment their clients with tired playlists full of Enya and babbling brooks. Surely our present-day quests for serenity would be better facilitated by the sounds on Kankyō Ongaku, whether the shimmering electronic tones in Yoshio Ojima’s “Glass Chattering” or the gentle clatter of chimes, drums and synthetic equivalents in Jun Fukamachi’s “Breathing New Life”.

Whatever becomes of that hope, the latest in Light In The Attic’s Japanese Archival Series is another invaluable example of the mindful crate-digging that has fostered a new vogue for private-issue, synth-slathered, ’80s-vintage mellowness, along with the overdue reappraisal of composers such as Joanna Brouk, Laraaji and Suzanne Ciani. If some of this music still bears the whiff of eucalyptus oil and yoga sweat, then it’s a small price to pay for the awe it elicits.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Compiled by Spencer Doran of Portland duo Visible Cloaks, this survey extends Light In The Attic’s mission to broaden awareness of Japanese sounds that had been little heard in the west. The Seattle label’s Japanese Archival Series has already produced treasure troves in the early-’70s folk-rock compilation Even A Tree Can Shed Tears and reissues of five solo albums by Haruomi Hosono of Yellow Magic Orchestra and Happy End. Of the artists collected on Kankyō Ongaku, YMO and Hosono are likely to be the two most familiar to listeners outside Japan, though devotees of anime director Hayao Miyazaki may recognise the name of his regular collaborator Joe Hisaishi. There was also a modicum of American exposure for Interior, a minimalist, avant-rock quartet who somehow ended up on Windham Hill, the label that was to new age what Sub Pop was to grunge. Sure enough, Interior’s selection “Park” bears less resemblance to George Winston than it does to This Heat at their eeriest.

Doran aims to create a wider context for a musical phenomenon that was quintessentially Japanese in many respects while also part of a longer exchange of artistic ideas between east and west. In his thoughtful liner notes, Doran roots the emergence of “kankyō ongaku” (a term used since the ’60s and which translates as “environmental music”) to the spike in popularity for the music of Erik Satie in late-’70s Japan. One reason was the affinity between the French composer’s concept of “furniture music” and Japanese traditions in which natural sounds were integrated into meditative and musical practices. It also aligned neatly with the enthusiasm for John Cage’s ideas and Eno’s ambient recordings among Japan’s musical vanguard. Doran sees that affection as somewhat ironic since these westerners’ eagerness to blur boundaries between music and non-music (as well as art and life in general) owed much to 
the teachings of Daisetsu Teitaro Suzuki, a Buddhist scholar who had a profound influence on Cage.

Nor are those the only ironies at hand. These simulations of natural tranquility became Walkman fodder for members of a rapidly urbanising society, more and more of the country’s natural spaces becoming forests of glass and steel. And as much as this music may encourage blissful states of Zen detachment, it was often created for purposes that were rather worldlier. One originally accompanied an ad for Seiko watches. Other pieces were made to be piped into the postmodernist architecture and gleaming buildings that exemplified Japan’s economic boom. A rapturous work of nigh-perfect stillness by Haruomi Hosono, “Original BGM” was commissioned by the Muji department store. Yet those origins may be more fitting than you think – after all, Eno has always been frank about ambient music’s potential applications as a balm for harried travellers and consumers.

Elsewhere, the music’s signifiers of the organic – like the volcanic stones used in “Ishiura”, a spacious and spellbinding piece by Toshi Tsuchitori – were surrounded by elements that were unabashedly synthetic. Many of the highlights of Doran’s compilation demonstrate the sumptuous capacities of the era’s most advanced musical tech, like the Oberheim OB-8 in Yoshio Suzuki’s Satie-like “Meet Me In The Sheep Meadow”.

An act that delighted in both innovation and provocation, YMO are represented by “Loom” from their more generally uptempo 1981 album BGM. (As in the title of Hosono’s composition, the name is derived from the tag for “background music”.) Largely the handiwork of YMO’s unofficial fourth member Hideki Matsutake – who’s equally mischievous with the sound of a passing train on his solo selection “Nemureru Yoru” – the piece combines a water drip with the vertigo-inducing audio illusion known as the Shepard-Risset glissando. Like so much of the music on Kankyō Ongaku, it makes for an utterly confounding yet lushly immersive listening experience. It also goes to show that no matter what kind of environments these artists were aiming to simulate or create – imaginary zen gardens for alienated salarymen and soundtracks to consumerist utopias being just two of many – their works feel like strange and captivating worlds unto themselves.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Hear a new song by surviving members of The Fall

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Three members of The Fall's final and longest-serving line-up – Keiron Melling, Dave Spurr and Pete Greenway – have formed a new band called Imperial Wax with vocalist/guitarist Sam Curran. Hear their debut single "No Man's Land" below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent t...

Three members of The Fall’s final and longest-serving line-up – Keiron Melling, Dave Spurr and Pete Greenway – have formed a new band called Imperial Wax with vocalist/guitarist Sam Curran.

Hear their debut single “No Man’s Land” below:

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

It’s from the album Gastwerk Saboteurs, which will be released by Saustex Records on May 17.

Imperial Wax head out on tour in May and June, see the full list of dates below:

Thursday 30th May Huddersfield, The Parish
Friday 31st May Manchester, Night People
Saturday 1st June Birmingham, Castle & Falcon
Sunday 2nd June Brighton, Prince Albert
Monday 3rd June – Bristol, Rough Trade
Thursday 6 June London, The Islington
Friday 7th June Cardiff, Clwb Ifor Bach
Thursday 13th June Glasgow, Broadcast
Friday 14th June Newcastle, Think Tank Underground

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Hear Jack White’s Led Zeppelin playlist

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Led Zeppelin have released a playlist generator, allowing you to create your own personalised playlist from their catalogue – finished off with your name in the famous Led Zeppelin font. One of the first people to take advantage of this neat little gimmick was Jack White. Hear his Led Zeppelin pl...

Led Zeppelin have released a playlist generator, allowing you to create your own personalised playlist from their catalogue – finished off with your name in the famous Led Zeppelin font.

One of the first people to take advantage of this neat little gimmick was Jack White. Hear his Led Zeppelin playlist below:

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Have a go at making your own here.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Kate Bush to release four-disc collection of rare tracks

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On March 8, Kate Bush will released a 4xCD collection of rare tracks called The Other Sides. This is the standalone release of non-album tracks that were originally compiled as part of last years's Remastered Part II box set. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! P...

On March 8, Kate Bush will released a 4xCD collection of rare tracks called The Other Sides.

This is the standalone release of non-album tracks that were originally compiled as part of last years’s Remastered Part II box set.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Peruse the full tracklisting for The Other Sides below:

Disc One. 12″ mixes

• Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)
• The Big Sky (Metereological Mix)
• Cloudbusting (The Organon Mix)
• Hounds Of Love (Alternative Mix)
• Experiment 1V (Extended Mix)

Disc Two. The Other Side 1

• Walk Straight Down The Middle
• You Want Alchemy
• Be Kind To My Mistakes
• Lyra
• Under The Ivy
• Experiment 1V
• Ne t’enfuis pas
• Un baiser d’enfant
• Burning Bridge
• Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God) 2012 Remix

Disc Three. The Other Side 2

• Home For Christmas
• One Last Look Around The House Before We Go…….
• I’m Still Waiting
• Warm And Soothing
• Show A Little Devotion
• Passing Through The Air
• Humming
• Ran Tan Waltz
• December Will Be Magic
• Wuthering Heights (Remix)

Disc Four. In Others’ Words

• Rocket Man
• Sexual Healing
• Mna Na Heireann
• My Lagan Love
• The Man I Love
• Brazil (Sam Lowry’s First Dream)
• The Handsome Cabin Boy
• Lord Of The Reedy River
• Candle In The Wind

Pre-order The Other Sides here.

Bush has also officially shared the video for “Rocket Man” for the first time since its original TV broadcast. Watch it below, and read a Kate Bush exclusive about the recording of the song over at NME.com.

Buy a copy of Uncut’s Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide to Kate Bush here.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Hear an EP of Thom Yorke’s Suspiria outtakes

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Thom Yorke has released an EP of outtakes from last year's Suspiria soundtrack. Hear Suspiria Unreleased Material in full below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! https://open.spotify.com/album/2AdumnuRRku7buXkoHdHEL The EP is available to buy now as a limite...

The Monkees: “We were essentially a garage band, but we had no control”

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Originally published in Uncut's August 2015 issue Even 50 years after their formation, Peter Tork marvels at the sheer thrill of being in The Monkees. “It was a lot of fun,” the singer, bassist and keyboardist says. “I mean, you’d wake up every day like, ‘Oh boy, oh boy, it’s another da...

Pool It
Rhino, 1987
After a long gap apart, Tork, Dolenz and Jones reunite for a smooth set of covers, with a song by Wreckless Eric!

Tork: This was in some ways made in the same way as the first two albums. When it was my songs, I made sure the production was along the lines of what I had in my head, but in truth it was the producer who made the background tracks and then the singers came in.

Dolenz: This was done with a great producer, Roger Bechirian, and it was a compilation. I’d brought in some songs that I’d always wanted to do, and Davy and Peter had done the same. Again, we were on the road and so came in and did the vocals. I thought there was some really good stuff on it. But I wasn’t able to be as involved as I’d have liked, it was just impossible – I was on the road. I remember flying in to town and going straight in the studio and doing vocals. I really liked the songs, especially the ones I submitted, of course, like “Heart And Soul”, Wreckless Eric’s “(I’d Go The) Whole Wide World” – that was a cool song!

Tork: I remember I had a couple of songs on that one too, one of them was written by a

friend of mine and I wrote the other one. Davy didn’t like Roger Bechirian, but I thought we could not have had a better producer for us for that album.

_________________

Justus
Rhino, 1996
The final album by the original four, and a satisfying sequel to Headquarters – every song is written and performed by The Monkees alone.

Dolenz: When Mike got back involved, of course, we now had a guitar player! And of course Mike’s sensibility as a singer-songwriter and producer… we were able to go back in like we had on Headquarters and do it all. It was wonderful. “Admiral Mike” is such a great tune that he wrote. It was tough for me to go back on the drums after so long, but I remember working very, very hard to get my chops up for that album. I had a lot of songs on this – I’d done a lot of writing over the years by that time. I’d gone through a divorce, and there’s nothing like a good divorce to make you write!

Tork: This didn’t do very well, as you might imagine. But I loved it. We did “Circle Sky” again, Michael wrote another set of lyrics for it. That was one of the strongest songs we ever played live. There’s some wonderful stuff. I like my song “Run Away From Life”. It’s eerie and spooky, and just clammy, which is what it’s supposed to be. It’s very atmospheric. Not a bad album for a bunch of garage-band actors being thrown together out of the blue.

Subscribe to Uncut and make huge savings on the cover price – find out by clicking here!

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

 

The Wave Pictures Q&A: “We’re really against chord changes…”

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Just before Christmas, I reviewed The Wave Pictures' excellent Look Inside Your Heart, a raw, vibrant record that moves from the bluesy garage of "House By The Beach" and the chooglin', stately "Hazey Moon", to the Dylan-esque storytelling of "Tell Me That You Weren't Alone". I spoke to the band's s...

When you look back over all the Wave Pictures stuff, are there things you’re particularly pleased with?
The thing is you never listen to them again, so it tends to be from singing the songs live a lot. I love to sing a song like “Tropic” and a song called “Like Smoke”. Most of the time it’s the process, you just enjoy making stuff. I liked doing all of it – some of it’s really embarrassing now and some of it seems surprisingly good, but it doesn’t really matter all that much. It bothers me much more if I’ve gone too long without having written something new. There are some things on City Forgiveness that have held up really well. We were in a bar and they put on A Season In Hull on the last German tour and I was surprised that that sounded as good as it did! I usually think our music’s really good if it’s put on in bars! I like all of it really, because it’s always a happy memory. I don’t understand why people get so embarrassed by their early stuff, it doesn’t make any sense – of course you were a different person then. Some of the things you did that were embarrassing have a certain strength to them and you think, ‘I wish I could embarrass myself like that now’! Because they have a naivete about them that’s nice. I don’t know if that makes sense, but you have a funny feeling towards it all really.

We’ve got a really big number of active live songs now, maybe 300, something like that. And we don’t use setlists, so you go on and start playing and you try to follow the arc of some kind in the air, and sing what you want to sing and what you can remember in the moment. Don’t play something too many times if it’s going really well – because it’s got to be active in some way. There are always those things that you can play if it’s going really badly…

Like what?
If it’s going really badly I might play “Pea Green Coat” or “Spaghetti”, say. Something that everybody knows.

It must be good to be a band like Yo La Tengo, where there are no songs that you absolutely have to play at a gig.
We got stuck with one song, where people were always upset when we didn’t play it, so Franic said, ‘Let’s just never play it again.’ That was “Love You Like A Madman”, which is a pretty song but there’s a limit to how many times you can sing a song – I start getting the words wrong, and you lose all feeling for it. So we just decided to do a whole tour of never playing it once, and it was great, it was so liberating. Then after we got through that, now there’s nothing that we would have to play, it’s great. We’ve done three nights where we’ve not repeated one song! You get crazy people come up to you after shows sometimes, people who are not well, delirious – I got thrown up against a wall once in Spain because I wouldn’t play “Just Like A Drummer”. I told him I’d played it the night before, but that was just no good for him. It’s not that often that something like that happens, but you have to keep on keeping it fresh and exciting for yourself. Audiences feed off that, and they feed off hearing the song they want to hear in the moment they want to hear it as well, but you can’t only do that, otherwise it’s completely dead. I know the feeling of being in audiences when it’s like that – it gives me the creeps, all that performing classic albums. It’s totally against the purpose of live music, and it’s totally against those feelings of creativity that made them make the classic albums, so in every way it’s weird. The point of a live show is that you don’t know what you’re gonna get. But that’s not to say I go out there and try and piss off the audience!

Well, I look forward to your 2028 Look Inside Your Heart anniversary gigs. Or what would be your Don’t Look Back album?
Oh, maybe City Forgiveness? It’s too early to tell. And we’d never do it anyway. Well, I say that now…

The Wave Pictures play London’s KOKO on February 21

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

John Lennon: “He wanted to break out of the box of being a Beatle”

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The new issue of Uncut – in shops now and available to buy online by clicking here – follows John Lennon throughout a turbulent 1969 as he embarks on a series of wild avant-garde experiments with Yoko Ono on the way to extricating himself from The Beatles and establishing himself as a solo artis...

The new issue of Uncut – in shops now and available to buy online by clicking here – follows John Lennon throughout a turbulent 1969 as he embarks on a series of wild avant-garde experiments with Yoko Ono on the way to extricating himself from The Beatles and establishing himself as a solo artist.

As well as the famous bed-ins, the naked experimental films, the avant-garde albums and the political campaigns, there is the formation of a new musical outfit, The Plastic Ono Band, hastily assembled to play the Toronto Rock’N’Roll Revival festival at the invitation of Kim Fowley on September 13, 1969.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

The Plastic Ono Band bassist Klaus Voorman remembers rehearsing their set of rock’n’roll classics on the plane from London. “We went once through each song,” Voormann tells Peter Watts. “Then we got to ‘Cold Turkey’. I thought it was a great song and we should spend time to 
get the right feeling, but we didn’t.”

Inside the venue, the band got another chance to rehearse in the dressing room, although the bass and two guitars were plugged into a single amp and they didn’t have a drum kit. A nervous Lennon threw up backstage. Voormann was worried his friend was going to stain his fine white suit. “One thing hardly anybody realised is that John wasn’t a frontman, that wasn’t his thing,” he explains. “Paul was the frontman of The Beatles. John didn’t know how to handle the crowd. It was wrong to play ‘Cold Turkey’, it was a lousy version and the crowd didn’t like it. John got angry. That wasn’t cool.”

After playing a few rock standards, “Yer Blues”, “Cold Turkey” and “Give Peace A Chance”, the set 
took an unexpected turn. “I heard this feedback and thought somebody needed to turn the mic down,” says drummer Alan White. “But it was Yoko, in a bag, on the floor, howling through a microphone. That was a bit of a shock and the audience were as stunned as I was. It was weird – but it was exciting too and that’s what she was into, that’s what she wanted to get over.”

Voormann thinks that Ono’s performance was amazing. “She was doing everything she could possibly do to let the people know that war was terrible,” he says. “By the end she was croaking like a dying bird. It was heartbreaking. I really heard tanks and soldiers and people dying. At the end, John came and embraced her. You could see exactly what he saw in her. He was proud of her and loved her, and in a way he couldn’t care less about the public, but in another way they were trying to spread this message.”

On the plane back to London, Lennon decided The Plastic Ono Band were his future now. On September 
20, during a meeting at Apple’s headquarters, he told Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr that he was leaving The Beatles. Ten days later, he invited Voormann and Eric Clapton to join him and Starr at Abbey Road. Lennon’s post-Beatles career was to begin in earnest.

“John said we would do ‘Cold Turkey’ and I was happy about that,” says Voormann. “We went in the studio and John and Eric were playing lots of different riffs until we created this haunted thing.” When the single was released on October 20, the credit on the green Apple label read simply “John Lennon”: Lennon-McCartney was no more.

Sean Ono Lennon feels that some of his father’s more radical interventions in 1969 were partly inspired by a deliberate attempt to break with his own weighty history: “It was a reaction to being a Beatle and being told what to wear and say. He wanted to break out the box of being a Beatle. He always had an instinct that wasn’t rebellious as much as a need to escape the confines of conventional society. He was intellectually driven and wanted to figure out what the world was and who he was and what love was.”

You can read much more about John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s 1969 in the new issue of Uncut, on sale now.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.

Stereolab announce 2019 world tour

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Stereolab have confirmed their reunion by announcing a lengthy world tour kicking off in late May. On May 3, they will also reissue 1993's Transient Random Noise-Bursts With Announcements and 1994's Mars Audiac Quintet as expanded and re-mastered editions via Warp Records and Duophonic UHF Disks. ...

Stereolab have confirmed their reunion by announcing a lengthy world tour kicking off in late May.

On May 3, they will also reissue 1993’s Transient Random Noise-Bursts With Announcements and 1994’s Mars Audiac Quintet as expanded and re-mastered editions via Warp Records and Duophonic UHF Disks.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home!

Each album has been remastered from the original 1/2″ tapes by Bo Kondren at Calyx Mastering and overseen by Tim Gane. Bonus material will include alternate takes, 4-track demos and unreleased mixes. The initial vinyl editions will be pressed onto triple clear vinyl with a poster/insert containing sleevenotes by Gane. They will also include a lottery-style scratch card – all winners will receive a limited edition 12″ EP.

Listen to an early version of “French Disco” from the Transient Random Noise-Bursts With Announcements reissue below:

Peruse the full list of Stereolab 2019 tourdates below:

May 30th | Brussels, BE – Botanique/Orangerie
May 31st | Hilvarenbeek, NL – Best Kept Secret
June 1st | Barcelona, ES – Primavera Sound
June 6th | Porto, PT – Primavera Sound
June 6th | Bordeaux, FR – Rock School Barbey
June 9th | Paris, FR – Vilette Sonique
June 11th | Brighton, UK – Concorde 2
June 12th | London, UK – O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire
June 15th | Bristol, UK – SWX
June 16th | Birmingham, UK – O2 Institute 1
June 18th | Sheffield, UK – Leadmill
June 19th | Manchester, UK – Albert Hall
June 20th | Newcastle, UK – Boiler Shop
June 21st | Leeds, UK – Leeds Uni Stylus
June 22nd | Glasgow, UK – SWG3 Galvinisers
June 24th | Belfast, UK – Empire

June 25th | Dublin, IE – Vicar Street
Aug 6th-10th | Oslo, NO – Oya Festival
Aug 15th-18th | Brecon Beacons, UK – Green Man Festival
Sept 16th | El Paso, TX – Lowbrow Palace
Sept 17th | Santa Fe, NM – Meow Wolf
Sept 19th | San Antonio, TX – Paper Tiger
Sept 20th | Austin, TX – Mohawk
Sept 21st | Dallas, TX – Granada Theatre
Sept 23rd | Atlanta, GA – Variety Playhouse
Sept 25th | Washington, DC – 9:30 Club
Sept 26th | Philadelphia, PA – Union Transfer
Sept 27th | Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Steel
Sept 28th | Brooklyn, NY – Brooklyn Steel
Sept 29th | Boston, MA – Royale
Oct 1st | Montreal, QC – Corona Theatre
Oct 2nd | Toronto, ON – Danforth Music Hall
Oct 3rd | Detroit, MI – Majestic Theatre
Oct 4th | Milwaukee, WI – Turner Hall
Oct 5th | Minneapolis, MN – First Avenue
Oct 7th | Denver, CO – Gothic Theatre
Oct 8th | Salt Lake City, UT – Metro Music Hall
Oct 10th | Phoenix, AZ – Crescent Ballroom
Oct 11th | Joshua Tree, CA – Desert Daze
Oct 13th | Portland, OR – Wonder Ballroom
Oct 14th | Vancouver, BC – Commodore Ballroom
Oct 15th | Seattle, WA – The Showbox
Oct 18th | San Francisco, CA – The Fillmore
Oct 19th | San Francisco, CA – The Fillmore

Tickets go on general sale on Friday (Feb 22) although you can sign up to a pre-sale here.

The April 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with John Lennon on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Keith Richards, Anne Briggs, Edwyn Collins, Lou Reed, Humble Pie, Robert Forster, Jenny Lewis, James Brown and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Pond, Ex Hex, Hand Habits, Lambchop, Stephen Malkmus, Kel Assouf and Patty Griffin.