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March 2019

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Leonard Cohen, Bob Marley, Lambchop, Neu! and Jessica Pratt all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out on January 17. The issue is available to buy online by clicking here. Cohen is on the cover, and inside we celebrate the key albums in his remarkable career, with help from the Field Commander's ...

Leonard Cohen, Bob Marley, Lambchop, Neu! and Jessica Pratt all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out on January 17.

The issue is available to buy online by clicking here.

Cohen is on the cover, and inside we celebrate the key albums in his remarkable career, with help from the Field Commander’s closest confidants. As well as stunning songs, there’s the finest caviar, bottles of Château Lafite and glamorous romantic liaisons: “No matter what, he was still looking for something else,” says one collaborator. “Looking for better.”

The Wailers take us through their incredible work with Bob Marley, from Catch A Fire to Uprising. “I and I were in deep meditation of the works we were doing,” says Aston ‘Family Man’ Barrett. “We rehearsed, meditated, prepared ourselves every day to record, making sure we never missed a beat.”

Uncut heads to Nashville to see Lambchop‘s Kurt Wagner, returning with a new album and still exploring brave new worlds.

Meanwhile, Michael Rother, back with a boxset of his solo work, tells the story of Neu!, from his early days in Kraftwerk to the duo’s 21st-century revival.

Jessica Pratt welcomes us into her Los Angeles home to reveal how she created her new record, Quiet Signs – there are tales of loss, resilience and the redemptive power of John Cassavettes’ films. “I think I’d lost faith in myself,” she reveals.

Four decades on from their explosive debut, Crass recall Thatcher’s Britain, class war and terrifying run-ins with the KGB. “We didn’t tell people how to behave,” they say, “we told people to look at themselves and decide how they want to behave.”

Elsewhere, the Yardbirds explain how they made “For Your Love” and alienated Eric Clapton in the process, while Panda Bear reveals eight albums that shaped his life and music.

Sean Ono Lennon answers your questions, while we meet The Comet Is Coming, chat to The Long Ryders and Bodega, and check out Van Morrison and David Gilmour at the Pretty Things‘ grand farewell.

In our expansive reviews section, we look at new albums from Cass McCombs, Royal Trux, The Specials, Julia Jacklin, Sleaford Mods and more, archival releases from David Sylvian, Django Reinhardt, The Byrds, Phil Alvin and the beautiful losers of junkshop glam.

Live, we catch The War On Drugs, while Tracey Thorn and EMI feature on our books page; in our films, DVD and TV section, you can find reviews on Vice, Green Book, Suede: The Insatiable Ones, Boy Erased and more.

Last but not least, the issue comes with a free CD, Tower Of Songs, collecting 15 tracks of the month’s best new music – Cass McCombs, Sleaford Mods, Julia Jacklin, The Lemonheads, Royal Trux, Michael Chapman, The Claypool Lennon Delirium, Jessica Pratt, Rustin Man, The Long Ryders and more.

The new Uncut, dated March 2019, is out on January 17.

Hear a previously unreleased Townes Van Zandt song, “All I Need”

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TVZ Records and Fat Possum have announced an album of unreleased Townes Van Zandt recordings. Sky Blue will be released on March 17, on what would have been Van Zandt's 75th birthday. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Recorded in early 1973 at Bill Hedgepeth's...

TVZ Records and Fat Possum have announced an album of unreleased Townes Van Zandt recordings.

Sky Blue will be released on March 17, on what would have been Van Zandt’s 75th birthday.

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

Recorded in early 1973 at Bill Hedgepeth’s home studio in Atlanta, Sky Blue includes raw versions of well-known songs “Pancho & Lefty” and “Rex’s Blues” as well as two that have never been heard before. Hear one of those, “All I Need”, below:

Check out the full tracklisting for Sky Blue below and pre-order the album here.

1. All I Need
2. Rex’s Blues
3. Hills of Roane County
4. Sky Blue
5. Forever For Always For Certain
6. Blue Ridge Mountain Blues (Smoky Version)
7. Pancho and Lefty
8. Snake Song
9. Silver Ships of Andilar
10. Dream Spider
11. The Last Thing On My Mind

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

The Who to release a new album in 2019

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The Who have confirmed that they are putting the finishing touches to an as-yet-untitled new album, due for release later this year. Commenting on what can be expected from the band's first new album in 13 years, Pete Townshend says: “Dark ballads, heavy rock stuff, experimental electronica, samp...

The Who have confirmed that they are putting the finishing touches to an as-yet-untitled new album, due for release later this year.

Commenting on what can be expected from the band’s first new album in 13 years, Pete Townshend says: “Dark ballads, heavy rock stuff, experimental electronica, sampled stuff and Who-ish tunes that began with a guitar that goes yanga-dang”.

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

Talking in more detail about the genesis of the album to Rolling Stone, Townshend reveals: “I said I was not going to sign any contracts [to tour] unless we have new material. This has nothing to do with wanting a hit album. It has nothing to do with the fact that The Who need a new album. It’s purely personal. It’s about my pride, my sense of self-worth and self-dignity as a writer.”

Townshend goes on say that he’s received an amazing response to his new songs from everyone… except Roger Daltrey. “I had to bully him to respond and then it wasn’t the response I wanted. He just blathered for a while and in the end I really stamped my foot and said, ‘Roger, I don’t care if you really like this stuff. You have to sing it. You’ll like it in 10 years time.’”

The Who have announced that they will support the album with a tour of the USA, backed by a full orchestra. Dates are yet to be announced but venues are set to include Madison Square Garden and The Hollywood Bowl.

Says Daltrey: “Be aware Who fans! That just because it’s The Who with an Orchestra, in no way will it compromise the way Pete and I deliver our music. This will be full throttle Who with horns and bells on.”

Details of European shows will be announced soon.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

The Third Ear Band remembered: “Glen thought it was very good PR for us to be heavily involved in the druids”

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In a recent Uncut, I wrote about a couple of excellent deluxe reissues from a group that, despite the endless reassessment of the past, still remain obscure - the Third Ear Band. In the late '60s and early '70s, however, they were quite the sensation, outselling many other artists on the Harvest lab...

They played some big gigs – with Al Stewart, with the Stones at Hyde Park…
[Blackhill] were quite ruthless – if someone had got a tour, we’d stick one of our other bands on it. And when we were doing the concerts in Hyde Park we’d stick all our bands on. I remember on the morning of the Stones concert, Paul Buckmaster phoned me up and said [poshly], “Andrew, what do you think I should wear? Should I wear a dark suit?”

Ursula Smith was an important part of the second album. What was she like?
She was a pretty good cellist. I think she’s still married to Steve Pank, who was the roadie. He famously once drove 40 miles the wrong way down the M1 with the band in the back. Steve was a legend for getting lost, always. It’s a miracle they ever got to any gigs at all with him driving.

If there was a lead instrument, it was surely Paul Minns’ oboe.
Paul Minns was a pretty extraordinary bloke – I say he’s the John Coltrane of the oboe, I think it’s quite amazing what he plays. There’s nothing to compare it with, his improvisations, I think they’re brilliant, utterly brilliant. Because of the way the reed’s constructed in oboes, you can make incredible noises with it.

What do you remember of their performance on Glastonbury Tor?
That was really funny – straight out of Monty Python. Glen thought it was very good PR for us to be heavily involved in the druids, so for some solstice or another, or an equinox, we went down there and the druids all showed up and we walked up to the top of Glastonbury Tor. Marching up the hill, Glen was probably complaining about his leg… yeah, it was a war wound. He made out it was anyway. The druids did whatever druids do, sort of moved around and shook their robes and what have you, and the Third Ear Band played, and then we went down again and had a roast lamb and two veg lunch with them. I always remember, we went through all that crazy druid stuff, then they all suddenly turned out to be quantity surveyors from Dorking.

Were they serious about alchemy and magick?
They were very good musicians; I don’t think they gave a shit about alchemy one way or another. I think they all thought they’d found a way to make some great music and they were going to have a go at it, and they did. Looking back at it now we can laugh at some of the hippie excesses, as they look to us now, but at the same it was very serious stuff. The music doesn’t sound dated at all, that’s the thing.

How did they come to be involved in Macbeth?
Through one of Polanski’s producers, Hercules Bellvile, he was a nice chap. It was a great experience for everyone, going down to Shepperton in Polanski’s huge Rolls-Royce. It was very exciting. Polanski was just so bright and so smart, he was always 10 paces ahead of anybody. He knew more about everything – he knew every technical thing backwards, he knew exactly what he was trying to do.

It really was the perfect film for them to soundtrack.
There’s something magic about the Third Ear Band. You don’t realise it at the time, then it’s hard to pin down years later, but there was something special there, there really was.

Richard Thompson: “I’m usually trying to think forwards”

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Originally published in Uncut's October 2018 issue To Hampstead, then, where RICHARD THOMPSON takes Tom Pinnock on a tour of his old haunts. Between stop-offs at former homes, favoured eateries and long-lost pubs, the visionary singer and guitarist reflects on his transcendent new album, 50 years o...

You worked with Joe Boyd again in the early ’80s after a long gap. Were things very different from those early Fairport albums?
Joe approached me for Shoot Out The Lights. I’d just recorded with Gerry Rafferty as producer, which was a bit of a disaster. Gerry loved to multi-track everything, which for his music works great, but we hated it for ours. Gerry was very difficult to work with – he’d come in the studio with a pint of what I thought was apple juice, but it was actually whisky. We wouldn’t allow him to release the record or shop it, but five or six of the songs ended up on Shoot Out The Lights. Joe suggested we go into Sound Techniques, make it quickly and cheaply and put it out on his label. That was also the end of mine and Linda’s relationship, so it was a bittersweet time. The album did OK in America, yeah, but unfortunately the publicity was all about us splitting up – yes, we got in Time magazine, but it was all “Oh, the record’s telling this story…”. Which it never was at all. I love Joe, he’s such a great musical human being, and he wrote the best book on the ’60s. He might have been the only person in Britain who had the ears and the musical background to allow Fairport to be ourselves.

Working with Mitchell Froom in the ’90s must have been very different.
Fairport were considered very unfashionable in the ’70s, and it didn’t really change too much in the ’80s. I suppose I escaped to America, where I was treated like a new alternative act, which was quite fun. I was there with REM and 10,000 Maniacs and Talking Heads, so that was OK. Joe had a naturalistic attitude to recording, but working with Mitchell involved tweaking something natural to make it sound a bit funkier, almost like it’s recorded badly. But ‘bad’ in this instance equals ‘attitude’. It was a lot of fun. The budgets were larger, and because of the ways corporations work you’re expected to spend the budget. I still owe EMI a fortune, I’ll never recoup!

13 Rivers might be closest to Mock Tudor, in many ways. That must have been a happy period for you?
I like Mock Tudor a lot, it’s a good sounding record. Again, that was a lucky record. A great studio, Capitol B. The Be-Bop-A-Lula Room, as they call it. I just did a chamber orchestra soundtrack there for a film called The Cold Blue. It’s made up of footage shot by William Wyler, the Hollywood director, about the Memphis Belle, the B-17F bomber.

You must have a lot of touring coming up.
I have three different tours of the States in November, December and January. They’re bus tours – I love them, it’s the best. The camaraderie of the road… It’s just the three of us, yeah, plus our crew of 72. Hair, makeup, costume, choreographer. One costume change per song. In October I’m back here.

So you’ll be spending a fair bit of time in Hampstead, then?
I want to spend more time in London, basically. I’m feeling the old pull. It’s a civilised place to live. I love the galleries, the LSO… I never get to spend enough time here, so I really want to change that. One tends to gravitate to what one knows. Now, are we going to pay or just do a runner?

The 2nd Uncut New Music Playlist Of 2019

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Aaaaand... here we go. Busy week for new music. Can't get enough of this latest batch of Lana Del Ray songs; also welcome returns for Ryan Adams, Pond and Deerhunter. My favourite discovery this week is Craven Faults - excellent deep synth stuff. Anyway, we're back next week with some big news: see ...

Aaaaand… here we go. Busy week for new music. Can’t get enough of this latest batch of Lana Del Ray songs; also welcome returns for Ryan Adams, Pond and Deerhunter. My favourite discovery this week is Craven Faults – excellent deep synth stuff. Anyway, we’re back next week with some big news: see you then.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
LANA DEL RAY

“hope is a dangerous thing for a woman like me to have – but i have it”
(UMG)

2.
ELENA SETIÉN

“She Was So Fair [feat. Steve Gunn]”
(Thrill Jockey)

3.
RYAN ADAMS

“Doylestown Girl”
(Blue Note/Capitol)

https://soundcloud.com/soundgardener18/r-adams-doylestown-girl-world-radio-premier-wxpn88-5

4.
CRAVEN FAULTS

“Intakes”
(Bandcamp)

5.
POND

“Daisy”
(Marathon Artists)

6.
HAND HABITS

“Pleaseholder”
(Saddle Creek)

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

7.
DEERHUNTER

“Plains”
(4AD)

8.
BILL MacKAY

“Pre-California”
(Drag City)

8.
SARAH LOUISE

“Rime”
(Thrill Jockey)

10.
RADIOHEAD

“Ill Wind”
(XL)

11.
TODD SYDER

“Just Like Overnight [feat. Jason Isbell]”
(Aimless Records/Thirty Tigers)

12.
FAT WHITE FAMILY

“Serf’s Up!”
(Domino)

The February 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley RIP, our massive 2019 Albums Preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

David Attenborough – My Field Recordings From 
Across The Planet

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In his 2001 book Songcatchers, Mickey Hart engagingly describes his extracurricular adventures away from the Grateful Dead, making field recordings of indigenous musicians from the jungles of Bali to the Arctic Circle. “You have to fight the rain, the insects, the sun,” he wrote of the field rec...

In his 2001 book Songcatchers, Mickey Hart engagingly describes his extracurricular adventures away from the Grateful Dead, making field recordings of indigenous musicians from the jungles of Bali to the Arctic Circle. “You have to fight the rain, the insects, the sun,” he wrote of the field recordist’s mission. “You have to eat the food of the musicians and observe their traditions. 
To earn the right to hear their music, 
you must respect and honour the culture that creates it.” In the book, Hart also pays tribute to the great song collectors of the past, chronicling the achievements of such pioneers in the field as Alan Lomax, Paul Bowles and Bela Bartok.

The name of David Attenborough does not feature, for at the time the field recordings the great naturalist made while shooting his early wildlife films were unknown and were mouldering 
in a BBC vault. There they sat unheard and forgotten for more than half a century, until 2014 when Attenborough casually mentioned to a BBC producer that while making his famous Zoo Quest series, he had also recorded music “wherever I came across it”.

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A search of the Corporation’s sound archives turned up a sonic treasury of dozens of field recordings, made by Attenborough between 1954 and 1963 on a portable EMI L2 tape machine the size and weight of a concrete block, powered by 10 large torch batteries, and which had to be rewound by hand. Taking as his inspiration the work of Alan Lomax – whom Attenborough had commissioned 
in 1953 to make a BBC TV series 
showcasing traditional folk musicians from Britain and Ireland – the strange but poignantly compelling results of his endeavours can finally be heard on this remarkable two-disc set.

Topped and tailed by Attenborough’s scene-setting narrative, the 50-plus fragments of music, recorded in West Africa, South America, Madagascar, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea and the Aboriginal territories of northern Australia, reveal a previously unknown side to the great man’s career and character and are a testament to his insatiable curiosity. As far as the BBC’s bean-counters were concerned, he was officially making the recordings for use as background music 
in the films, and one of the pieces – 
“Guira Campana” (The Bell Bird), recorded in Paraguay while looking for armadillos – became the Zoo Quest signature tune. Mostly, however, he recorded simply because he was enthralled by what he heard.

Recording musicians in their natural environment, Attenborough meticulously followed Hart’s code of respecting the culture. None of the music was performed in a concert setting or even specifically for Attenborough and his tape recorder. Apart from vainly trying to hush the voices of village children, there were no “production values” 
or any kind of mediation. It’s simply fly-on-
the-wall stuff in which he recorded people making music “for their own purposes, delight and comfort”.

This means most pieces don’t have a conventional beginning or end. Rather, we’re eavesdropping on a way of life which, as Attenborough notes, no longer exists. The first Zoo Quest trip was to Sierra Leone in search of the bald-headed rock crow. Arguably far more exotic than his avian quarry was the hauntingly rhythmic stringed music Attenborough recorded there on instruments such as the balange, za-za and quidina (which sounds rather like a kora). On the trail of the Komodo dragon, he headed for Indonesia and Borneo, where his recordings of gamelan and of the Dayak people singing to their ancestral spirits conjure an otherworldly thrill.

In Tonga, he recorded a lullaby written by the island’s queen for a royal princess, and in Fiji he found a string band that had heard Western music from the missionaries and played the most delightfully rustic version of “Colonel Bogey” you’ve ever heard. There are numerous other highlights but the best approach is simply to go with the flow – and if you want to know the historical provenance of what you’re hearing, Attenborough’s track notes in the splendid 52-page booklet make an entertaining and erudite guide.

In Arnhem Land in 1963 – his last trip before he took a desk job as controller of BBC2 – he witnessed a sacred aboriginal coming-of-age ceremony and recorded some of the world’s oldest music, unchanged perhaps for thousands of years. Played on didgeridoo and clap sticks and accompanied by eerie and unearthly chanting, it provides some of the most mesmerising moments in the two-hour journey.

By the time Attenborough returned to making wildlife programmes a decade later, the pop revolution and the spell of The Beatles had seemingly permeated every last jungle clearing. He concluded that his days as a field recordist preserving endangered music were over. There was even more pressing business ahead, trying to save an endangered planet from man’s rapacious appetite for destruction.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

The Delines – The Imperial

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It’s been a long way back for Amy Boone. In March 2016, the singer was hit by a car as she walked through a parking lot in Austin, Texas, causing horrific breaks to her legs. It’s taken her the best part of three painful years, during which time she’s been through nine surgeries and various sk...

It’s been a long way back for Amy Boone. In March 2016, the singer was hit by a car as she walked through a parking lot in Austin, Texas, causing horrific breaks to her legs. It’s taken her the best part of three painful years, during which time she’s been through nine surgeries and various skin grafts, to be able to reclaim her place at the head of The Delines, the band she formed with Richmond Fontaine’s Willy Vlautin in 2012. What kept her going, apparently, was the knowledge that Vlautin had already written the bulk of what became The Imperial.

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

The lyrical preoccupations of this follow-up to 2014 debut Colfax are very much in keeping with Vlautin’s prior form, both as a songwriter and novelist. He’s drawn to those in society’s margins, damaged people trying to get by despite the odds, seeking warmth and comfort where, more often that not, there isn’t any. With the now defunct Richmond Fontaine, these tended to be forlorn, male-dominated environs. But Boone’s soulful presence in The Delines brings a different slant to Vlautin’s characters, her voice transmitting something more hopeful and tender. “Cheer Up Charley” offers up balm to a boozer who’s lost his wife and can’t seem to get over it, the band coating the tale with a fat beat and sweet horns.

The Imperial is mainly about connections both missed and met, however briefly. The title track sees two ex-lovers reunite up for one last drink, 10 years after he was sent to prison for a deal that went south and ruined their relationship. “Let’s Be Us Again” is a country-soul ballad that stands alongside the work of Lambchop, Boone on terrific form as she details a couple who are desperately trying to rekindle what they once had: “Let’s go downtown/And hide in some old lounge/And let it get loose and easy”. Even the most unbearably sad tales – “Holly The Hustle”; “He Don’t Burn For Me” – are given empathetic grace by The Delines’ stirring arrangements.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

Martin Scorsese’s new Bob Dylan doc to launch on Netflix this year

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Netflix has confirmed the existence of a new Martin Scorsese-directed Bob Dylan documentary, due to launch on the streaming service later in 2019. Scorsese previously directed 2005’s No Direction Home: Bob Dylan, concerning Dylan's rise to fame in the early to mid-60s. According to publicity mate...

Netflix has confirmed the existence of a new Martin Scorsese-directed Bob Dylan documentary, due to launch on the streaming service later in 2019. Scorsese previously directed 2005’s No Direction Home: Bob Dylan, concerning Dylan’s rise to fame in the early to mid-60s.

According to publicity material, “Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story by Martin Scorsese captures the troubled spirit of America in 1975 and the joyous music that Dylan performed during the fall of that year. Part documentary, part concert film, part fever dream, Rolling Thunder is a one of a kind experience, from master filmmaker Martin Scorsese.”

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

Details remain scarce but an article on US film site Variety confirms that Bob Dylan has been interviewed for the film along with “many of the alumni of that period”. Other participants in the Rolling Thunder Revue included Joan Baez, Roger McGuinn and T-Bone Burnett.

No specific release date for Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story has been set.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

Watch a video for Pond’s new single, “Daisy”

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Pond have announced that their new album Tasmania will be released by Marathon Artists on March 1. Watch a video for opening track "Daisy" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ap2gStsDZZo Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Tasmania was produced by Tame Impala...

Pond have announced that their new album Tasmania will be released by Marathon Artists on March 1.

Watch a video for opening track “Daisy” below:

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

Tasmania was produced by Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker and is described in a press release as “Pond’s dejected meditation on planetary discord, water, machismo, shame, blame and responsibility, love, blood and empire”.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

Steve Earle & The Dukes return with an album of Guy Clark songs

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Steve Earle & The Dukes have announced that their new album Guy will be released by New West on March 29. A sequel to his 2009 album Townes, on which he covered the songs of Townes Van Zandt, Earle's new effort comprises 16 songs by his other songwriting mentor Guy Clark. Order the latest issu...

Steve Earle & The Dukes have announced that their new album Guy will be released by New West on March 29.

A sequel to his 2009 album Townes, on which he covered the songs of Townes Van Zandt, Earle’s new effort comprises 16 songs by his other songwriting mentor Guy Clark.

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

“No way I could get out of doing this record,” says Earle. “When I get to the other side, I didn’t want to run into Guy having made the Townes record and not one about him.”

Townes Van Zandt and Guy Clark were like Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg to me. When it comes to mentors, I’m glad I had both. If you asked Townes what it’s all about, he’d hand you a copy of Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee. If you asked Guy the same question, he’d take out a piece of paper and teach you how to diagram a song, what goes where. Townes was one of the all-time great writers, but he only finished three songs during the last fifteen years of his life. Guy had cancer and wrote songs until the day he died… When he was sick – he was dying really for the last ten years of his life – he asked me if we could write a song together. We should do it ‘for the grandkids,’ he said. Well, I don’t know… at the time, I still didn’t co-write much, then I got busy. Then Guy died and it was too late. That, I regret.”

Guy was produced by Earle and recorded by his long-time production partner Ray Kennedy. The Dukes on this record include Kelley Looney on bass, Chris Masterson on guitar, Eleanor Whitmore on fiddle & mandolin, Ricky Ray Jackson on pedal steel guitar, and Brad Pemberton on drums & percussion. Guy also features guest appearances by Emmylou Harris, Rodney Crowell, Terry Allen, Jerry Jeff Walker, Mickey Raphael, Shawn Camp, Verlon Thompson, Gary Nicholson, and the photographer Jim McGuire.

You can peruse the tracklisting below, and pre-order the album (including a limited edition red vinyl version) here.

1. Dublin Blues
2. L.A. Freeway
3. Texas 1947
4. Desperados Waiting For A Train
5. Rita Ballou
6. The Ballad Of Laverne And Captain Flint
7. The Randall Knife
8. Anyhow I Love You
9. That Old Time Feeling
10. Heartbroke
11. The Last Gunfighter Ballad
12. Out In The Parking Lot
13. She Ain’t Going Nowhere
14. Sis Draper
15. New Cut Road
16. Old Friends

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

Ryan Adams to release three new albums in 2019

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Ryan Adams has revealed that he's planning to release three new in albums 2019, beginning with Big Colors. In a tweet, he wrote: "Remember that year when I released 3 records. Let's do it again" https://twitter.com/TheRyanAdams/status/1082432394358009857 https://twitter.com/TheRyanAdams/status/10...

Ryan Adams has revealed that he’s planning to release three new in albums 2019, beginning with Big Colors.

In a tweet, he wrote: “Remember that year when I released 3 records. Let’s do it again”

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

Judging by subsequent posts on Adams’ Twitter feed, Big Colors features guest musicians including Bob Mould and Benmont Tench. It was recorded at New York’s Electric Lady studios and Capitol Studios and PaxAm Studios in LA. No release date has been confirmed as yet.

Adams also retweeted a message suggesting that the second of the three albums is called Wednesdays.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

Hear Lana Del Rey’s new single

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Lana Del Rey has today released a new single called "Hope Is A Dangerous Thing For A Woman Like Me To Have – But I Have It". Hear it below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rY2LUmLw_DQ Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! "Hope Is A Dangerous Thing For A Woman L...

Lana Del Rey has today released a new single called “Hope Is A Dangerous Thing For A Woman Like Me To Have – But I Have It”.

Hear it below:

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

“Hope Is A Dangerous Thing For A Woman Like Me To Have – But I Have It” may or may not feature on Lana Del Rey‘s forthcoming album, currently titled Norman Fucking Rockwell, which is due in mid-2019.

Del Rey is also planning to publish a book of poetry and short stories called Violet Bent Backwards Over the Grass.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

Watch a video for Steve Gunn’s new track, “Vagabond”

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Steve Gunn will release his new album The Unseen In Between via Matador in January 18. Watch a video for the track "Vagabond" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6-dwxvTQd0 Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! You can read more about The Unseen In Between in ...

Steve Gunn will release his new album The Unseen In Between via Matador in January 18.

Watch a video for the track “Vagabond” below:

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

You can read more about The Unseen In Between in the latest issue of Uncut – in shops now or available online by clicking here – as part of a big Album By Album feature with Steve Gunn.

Gunn’s world tour kicks off at the end of this month, reaching the UK in April. See the full list of dates below:

30/1 – New Haven, CT – State House $
31/1 – Boston, MA – Great Scott ^
1/2 – New York, NY – Bowery Ballroom ^
2/2 – Philadelphia, PA – Union Transfer ^
7/2 – Long Beach, CA – The Hangout (solo show)
8/2 – San Diego, CA – Casbah ^
9/2 – Los Angeles, CA – Teragram Ballroom ^
10/2 – Santa Cruz, CA – Moe’s Alley $
12/2 – Portland, OR – Aladdin Theater $
13/2 – Seattle, WA – Tractor Tavern $
15/2 – Novato, CA – Honk Tavern #
16/2 – San Francisco, CA – The Chapel #
12/3 – Amsterdam, NL – Bitterzoet *
13/3 – Den Haag, NL – Paard *
14/3 – Groningen, NL – Vera *
15/3 – Hamburg, DE – Nochtspeicher *
16/3 – Aarhus, DK – Radar *
18/3 – Stavanger, NO – Folken *
20/3 – Oslo, NO – Revolver *
21/3 – Gothenburg, SE – Pustervik *
22/3 – Copenhagen, DK – Loppen *
23/3 – Berlin, DE – Frannz Club *
24/3 – Prague, CZ – Archa Theatre *
25/3 – Leipzig, DE – UT Connewitz *
26/3 – Schorndorf, DE – Manufaktur *
27/3 – Vienna, AU – Arena *
30/3 – Luzern, CH – Südpol *
31/3 – Zurich, CH – Rotefabrik *
1/4 – Lyon, FR – Sonic *
2/4 – Paris, FR – Le Petit Bain *
3/4 – Kortrijk, BE – De Kreun *
4/4 – Brussels, BE – BRDCST Festival
5/4 – London, UK – Oslo *
6/4 – Birmingham, UK – Hare & Hounds *
7/4 – Leeds, UK – The Brudenell Social Club *
8/4 – Manchester, UK – Deaf Institute *

18/4 – Milwaukee, WI – Cactus Club +
19/4 – Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall +
20/4 – Galien, MI – The Storehouse
21/4 – St. Louis, MO – Off Broadway +
22/4 – Oklahoma City, OK – 89th Street +
23/4 – Dallas, TX – Double Wide +
24/4 – Austin, TX – Barracuda +
26/4 – Birmingham, AL – Saturn +
27/4 – Athens, GA – 40 Watt Club +
28/4 – Atlanta, GA – The Earl +
29/4 – Nashville, TN – The Basement +
30/4 – Asheville, NC – The Mothlight +
1/5 – Carrboro, NC – Cat’s Cradle +
2/5 – Charlotte, NC – Neighborhood Theatre +
3/5 – Richmond, VA – Richmond Music Hall +
4/5 – Washington, DC – Songbyrd

^ w/ Meg Baird & Mary Lattimore
$ w/ Meg Baird
# w/ Sachiko Kanenobu
* w/ Papercuts
+ w/ Gun Outfit

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

Introducing Roxy Music: The Ultimate Music Guide

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In 2012, I interview Bryan Ferry for our regular An Audience With... feature. Sitting in the library above his studio in West London, he fielded questions covering writers' block, the whereabouts of his Antony Price suits and the '60s music scene in Newcastle before we came to this one from Ferry's ...

In 2012, I interview Bryan Ferry for our regular An Audience With… feature. Sitting in the library above his studio in West London, he fielded questions covering writers’ block, the whereabouts of his Antony Price suits and the ’60s music scene in Newcastle before we came to this one from Ferry’s Roxy Music bandmate, Andy Mackay: “Would you like to finish the album we started in 2006?” The question, I remember, hung in the air while Ferry gathered his thoughts.

“Not sure,” he said. “Was there quite a lot of work done on it? Not really, no. I didn’t get excited about it at the time particularly. I tried to, then I ran out of enthusiasm for it. We did a lot of shows, but taking it into the studio is a different thing. A lot of the onus is on me. I think, over the years, I got so used to making what we call solo albums – but they’re not really solo albums, they’re where I choose who plays on what. Basically, I wanted to do that again. My heart wasn’t in it, and it was pointless doing it. Maybe some other day it could come back. If one of the guys in Roxy came to me with a fabulous tune, then I might change my mind…”

For those of us who’d been eagerly following the on-off story of a new Roxy album – their first since 1982, and their first involving Brian Eno since 1973 – Ferry’s comments seemed like a rather disappointing full-stop to the band’s glorious career. It is a career, incidentally, that you can relive again in all its glory in our handsome Roxy Music Ultimate Music Guide – which goes on sale January 10 but you can now buy direct from our online store here.

As edited by John Robinson, this 124 page magazine is, we modestly believe, the definitive guide to the band’s music. You’ll find insightful new writing on every album, a slew of archive features from the Melody Maker, NME and Uncut vaults as well as a decade by decade look at the solo work of messers Ferry and Eno.

Back to Ferry, then, in his library and one final, warm memory of Roxy as the start of their career, rattling around the UK on their early, provincial tours. “It was exciting, travelling around in a van,” said Ferry. “We didn’t do it for very long, we were very fortunate. We were just beginning to be known. It was the first this, the first that. It was a laugh, playing places like Scarborough. Sleeping in the van overnight. Eno was a laugh, we got on very well. And Andy Mackay was really very amusing, very dry. So we spent a lot of time laughing, really. Paul was a character… they were all characters.

“I was proud of that band.”

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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

The February 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley RIP, our massive 2019 Albums Preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

Hear Ibibio Sound Machine’s new song “Tell Me (Doko Mien)”

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London-based sextet Ibibio Sound Machine have announced that their new album Doko Mien will be released by Merge on March 22. Hear the title track "Tell Me (Doko Mien)" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RbK2dERL_BA&utm= Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home...

London-based sextet Ibibio Sound Machine have announced that their new album Doko Mien will be released by Merge on March 22.

Hear the title track “Tell Me (Doko Mien)” below:

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

You can pre-order Doko Mien, including the white vinyl version, here.

Ibibio Sound Machine tour the UK and North America in May – peruse their itinerary below:

Mar 5th | Brighton, UK – Concorde 2
Mar 9th | Bristol, UK – Colston Hall
Mar 13th | London, UK – 100 Club [SOLD OUT]
Mar 14th | London, UK – 100 Club
Mar 15th | Manchester, UK – YES
Mar 16th | Manchester, UK – YES
Mar 18th | Washington, DC – U Street Music Hall
Mar 20th | New York, NY – Brooklyn Bowl
Mar 22nd | Montreal, QC – L’Astral
Mar 23rd | Toronto, ON – Mod Club
Mar 25th | Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall
Mar 27th | Oakland, CA – New Parish
Mar 28th | Los Angeles, CA – Teragram Ballroom
May 4th | Leeds, UK – Live at Leeds
May 5th | Leicester, UK – Handmade Festival
May 24th | London, UK – All Points East Festival

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

Hear the title track from Royal Trux’s new album, White Stuff

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After reforming in 2015, Royal Trux have announced their first album of new material since 2000. White Stuff will be released by Fat Possum on March 1, and you can hear the title track below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tu8S-alMAkk Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to yo...

After reforming in 2015, Royal Trux have announced their first album of new material since 2000.

White Stuff will be released by Fat Possum on March 1, and you can hear the title track below:

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

“Nothing has changed within the Truxian universe we created for ourselves as teenagers because Trux is and will always be our way of life whether living it together or separate,” says the band’s Jennifer Herrema. “This is no hobby rock kick. We are long game lifers with no fear, no regrets and plenty of gratitude for the way the universe has rewarded our singular dynamic.”

Check out the White Stuff tracklisting below – and look out for a review in the next issue of Uncut, in shops on January 17.

1. White Stuff
2. Year Of The Dog
3. Purple Audacity #2
4. Suburban Junky Lady
5. Shows And Tags
6. Get Used To This
7. Sic Em Slow
8. Every Day Swan
9. Whopper Dave
10. Purple Audacity #1
11. Under Ice

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

New David Bowie 7″ box set collates unreleased late-’60s material

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To celebrate the upcoming 50th anniversary of "Space Oddity", Parlophone have announced a 7" vinyl box set featuring nine rare David Bowie recordings from the era. Spying Through A Keyhole comprises nine demo tracks including the previously unknown "Love All Around" and the two earliest known versi...

To celebrate the upcoming 50th anniversary of “Space Oddity”, Parlophone have announced a 7″ vinyl box set featuring nine rare David Bowie recordings from the era.

Spying Through A Keyhole comprises nine demo tracks including the previously unknown “Love All Around” and the two earliest known versions of “Space Oddity”. The tracks were initially available on streaming services for a limited period in December, but are previously unreleased on physical formats.

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

Most of the recordings are solo vocal and acoustic home demo performances. Parlophone have provided some more details on the Spying Through A Keyhole tracks below:

Mother Grey (demo)
This mid-tempo tale of a fledgling son fleeing the nest features multi-tracked vocals, guitars and harmonica from David.

In The Heat Of The Morning (demo)
A well-known early Bowie song but presented here in demo form with final lyrics.

Goodbye 3d (Threepenny) Joe (demo)
A charming demo from 1968.

Love All Around (demo)
A delightful love song from whence the title of this collection came: “I see a pop tune spying through a keyhole from the other room”.

London Bye, Ta-Ta (demo)
An early demo version of the song with completely different lyrics in a couple of the verses compared to those of the later full band versions.

Angel, Angel, Grubby Face (demo version 1)
The first and only previously known demo of this song.

Angel, Angel, Grubby Face (demo version 2)
A later version of the same song with alternative lyrics.

Space Oddity (demo excerpt)
The lyric and arrangement variations lend weight to the theory that this is possibly the first ever recorded demo of one of Bowie’s most famous songs.

Space Oddity (demo – alternative lyrics) (with Hutch)
Originally conceived as a song for a duo to perform, this is the first known version to feature John ‘Hutch’ Hutchinson again with lyric and arrangement variations.

Spying Through A Keyhole will be issued as a 7″ vinyl box set later in the spring, exact release date TBC.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

Springsteen manager Jon Landau: “Bruce has an ability to dial into the moment”

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The latest issue of Uncut, in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here, features an in-depth review of Springsteen On Broadway – both the film and its soundtrack. The magazine comes with a free 15-track CD featuring the Springsteen On Broadway version of "The Ghost Of Tom Joad". Or...

The latest issue of Uncut, in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here, features an in-depth review of Springsteen On Broadway – both the film and its soundtrack.

The magazine comes with a free 15-track CD featuring the Springsteen On Broadway version of “The Ghost Of Tom Joad”.

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

There is also a Q&A about the project with Bruce Springsteen’s manager Jon Landau and the film’s director Thom Zimny. You can read that in full below:

Has any artist done something like these shows before?
LANDAU: None of us have been able to think of a direct comparison. It’s a performance piece, written from beginning to end; there have been a few changes of a line here and there, but it’s unique. What makes it unique is the underlying spiritual thread that runs through it. It’s a psychological and spiritual journey, which sounds pretty fancy but plays very directly.

How did the show originate?
LANDAU: It began with the book, which was the basis of the play. He loved doing the book and got the idea of using the spine of the book to tell his story in a live setting. He worked it up on his own. He was invited to the White House by Obama. I thought he’d do maybe seven or eight songs in an informal setting, but when we got there Bruce pulled out all these pieces of paper. He told me to sit in the audience and we’d talk about it afters. He’d obviously been working on it for a while – it was 80 per cent of the show we took to Broadway. Right from the beginning, this was composed and written, and wasn’t going to change. The only change was “Long Walk Home” was swapped for the slightly more tragic “The Ghost Of Tom Joad”. The stories are the stories and there’s a little room for embellishing, but they remain largely the same, the variation is the delivery. 


Did he not get bored?

LANDAU: Bruce has an ability to dial into the moment, into what he is feeling right then. He experienced the content of the show in a very direct way, he’s immersed in it. There’s nothing routine about it for him, even though the format is very established. This particular ability gives every show an immediacy and urgency that the audience thrive on. We started with 40 shows. I thought we might end up doing around 100 but by the end, we’ll have done 236. Bruce was very determined to keep going. He loves doing the show. He has no other reason to do 236 of anything. It feels good to him. It’s emotionally draining but it’s very satisfying. I often see him after the show and he is without fail in a fantastic mood. Very cheerful and satisfied. It’s a big effort, a big experience, a big relief and when it’s over he feels he did something worthwhile that day.

Some of the songs are quite radically different.
Yes, and the variations are caused by the context of the play, the setting. Because he’s not planning those changes, they just seem natural. There’s all sorts of variations. In “Dancing In The Dark”, there’s improvisation on the vocal towards the end, in “Land Of Home And Glory” he’s improvising lines that touch on his love of soul. That’s shaped by the songs being where they are in the show. It’s all connected.

How did the show develop?
ZIMNY: The editor in me really admires the way he honed and perfected the show over time. I was watching how every detail in the show had grown, and we were waiting for his timing, his delivery, his rhythm, to be in the perfect place to be filmed. The exciting moment was when he sang “Long Time Coming” and it was very emotional. That was something you couldn’t see in the theatre unless you were standing next to him on the stage. When you see the eye tear up and the intensity of that performance, we captured something that wasn’t planned, it was the pure performance of the night. We knew 
we could build the whole show 
around that moment.

The film is just Bruce – no theatre, no audience, no reactions – can you explain the thinking behind that?
ZIMNY: The film starts with a close-up of Bruce and his opening line of dialogue. We didn’t want to go outside the theatre and do the traditional build-up. We knew we had a show that was over two hours long and we wanted to capture the intimacy of the theatre experience and the best way to do that was to focus on his eyes. The film relies on the drama and intensity of his eyes, the story and the connection he has with the audience. We wanted to step into the rhythm Bruce was delivering and not interrupt it.
LANDAU: We asked Bruce what the goal was. Bruce said it was to show the show as fully, deeply and completely as we can, for the audience that has seen it and for the audience that hadn’t. We didn’t want to reinterpret it, we wanted a straight focus on the man. His face tells the story and by getting as close as we do as often as we do, the audience starts to read the look in his eyes. That becomes the action. The face is so expressive and very satisfying to see him in close-up.

How many shows were recorded?
LANDAU: Two nights. These were friends-and-family shows, because the cameras were blocking certain positions, but he did exactly the same show. We’d allotted some time for retakes but didn’t use them. There’s not one change in the vocal, that is 100 per cent live. The performance was so strong, we could walk out of there with everything we had.


What can we expect for 2019?
LANDAU: If I make a prediction I get in trouble with the fans. So it’s a clean slate; we stop at Broadway on December 15, and while we have a few ideas, we have no firm plans for next year.

INTERVIEW: PETER WATTS

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.

The Ballad Of Buster Scruggs

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The Ballad Of Buster Scruggs is by turns many things, including whimsical, brutal, hilarious, violent, absurd, tragic and cheerfully nihilistic. It was originally intended by writer-directors Joel and Ethan Coen to be streamed as a Netflix series, six tales from the Old West about different ways of ...

The Ballad Of Buster Scruggs is by turns many things, including whimsical, brutal, hilarious, violent, absurd, tragic and cheerfully nihilistic. It was originally intended by writer-directors Joel and Ethan Coen to be streamed as a Netflix series, six tales from the Old West about different ways of dying, all of them brutal. After shooting the individual episodes, however, the Coens decided they’d work even better as a full-length feature. So they turned them into a film, one of their best.

There are six chapters, each introduced by the turning of a page from a book of Western tales, that gleefully embrace classic genre tropes – the singing cowboy, charismatic bank robber, freak show huckster, the grizzled prospector, the wagon train, cantina shootout and perilous stagecoach journey – the Coens both honour and dismember. Their only previous period Western was a remake of True Grit stifled by reverence. Where they had earlier taken unfettered liberties with film noir, screwball comedy, the gangster movie, whatever, their take on the Western in that unhappy reboot was stylistically pedantic, as if they were unusually intimidated by cinematic tradition, where once they had redefined it. Buster Scruggs is a much wider film, less diminished by deference. In parts, it’s like Blazing Saddles directed by Sam Peckinpah.

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

It starts with the title chapter. Coens veteran Tim Blake Nelson is Buster, a singing cowboy in Gene Autrey drag. We first see him riding through a Monument Valley that’s rarely looked so ethereal. He’s atop a white stallion, strumming a guitar, crooning “Cool Water”. From his aw-shucks straight-to-camera chat, he seems an affable sort of cowpoke. Then the killing starts, and stops only when Buster draws against a faster gun. At which point, he departs the scene to the strains of “When A Cowboy Trades His Boots For Spurs”, written by Gillian Welch and Dave Rawlings, in a sequence of transcendent absurdity.

“Near Algodones” stars James Franco as a bank robber whose lynching is comically – and violently – interrupted before brute fate unhappily intervenes. The punchline to the piece, perfectly delivered by Franco, back in a noose after extraordinary events, is one of the funniest the Coens have written. The following episode, “Meal Ticket”, is dark, mean, unsettling. Swathed in furs like Warren Beatty in McCabe & Mrs Miller, Liam Neeson is a struggling geek show impresario on a harsh winter circuit of godforsaken mining towns. His only attraction is Harrison The Wingless Thrush, a quadruple amputee who entertains dwindling crowds by reciting Shelley and the Declaration Of Independence until he’s replaced by a performing chicken, another flightless bird, in another bitter Coens joke.

Everything about the film is hand-tooled, in many ways perfect. The star of the gig, however, may be Bruno Delbonnel’s cinematography. Landscapes familiar from hundreds of Western movies are rendered newly astonishing by his eye for scale and detail. Especially spectacular are the panoramic views he provides throughout “All Good Canyon” of an unsullied valley – an unsullied America – soon to be desecrated by the whiskery appearance of Tom Waits’ grizzled prospector. Channelling Walter Huston in 
The Treasure Of The Sierra Madre, Waits spends nearly the whole episode in the solitary digging of holes, panning for gold in a stream and occasionally grunting. Violence soon finds him, though, and the body count goes up again.

The film’s most heartbreaking chapter is “The Gal Who Got Rattled”, the wagon train story. Zoe Kazan is achingly brilliant as the woman travelling west alone after the death of her devious tinhorn brother into an uncertain future, possibly an arranged marriage. Wagonmaster Billy Knapp, played by Bill Hick with heroic tenderness, duly falls in love with her. They even dare think of a future together, somewhere at the end of the trail, that’s cruelly compromised by the impetuous pursuit of a yapping dog and the arrival of a Commanche war party.

Finally, “The Mortal Remains” features three squabbling passengers on a stagecoach ride to the end of their lives, although they may each have other, preferred destinations. Their guides are two bounty hunters, Brendan Gleeson and a satanically dapper Jonjo O’Neill, whose mesmerising storytelling barely eases their increasingly nervous passage to the eternal darkness at 
the far end of a film that on all fronts is blow-your-head-off brilliant.

The March 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with New Order on the cover. Inside, you’ll find Pete Shelley (RIP), our massive 2019 albums preview, Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Paul Simonon, John Martyn, Steve Gunn and much more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the month’s new music, including Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler and the Dream Syndicate.