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Liam Hayes – Mirage Garage

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The last few years, it would appear, have been full of change for the elusive singer-songwriter Liam Hayes. Long identified with Chicago’s scene – his classic debut single from 1994, “Found A Little Baby”, and first album, More You Becomes You, both released under the name Plush, reached the...

The last few years, it would appear, have been full of change for the elusive singer-songwriter Liam Hayes. Long identified with Chicago’s scene – his classic debut single from 1994, “Found A Little Baby”, and first album, More You Becomes You, both released under the name Plush, reached the outside world via the city’s Drag City imprint – Hayes shook things up by moving to Milwaukee. Not a huge move by any means, as the road trip is barely 100 miles, but for Hayes it was significant: “I’d lived my whole life in Chicago,” he says, “so I guess in many ways it had come to define me, or had at least provided other people with a basis for defining me.”

Hayes approaches most things with care and curiosity, and he also doesn’t do things by halves. “A few years later,” he continues, “just to make sure that I wasn’t missing out on anything, I did a stint on the west coast. I kissed the ground as soon as I got back here.” But there seemed to be other things brewing: in the notes accompanying Mirage Garage, only his sixth album in 24 years, he mentions that his prior album, 2015’s Slurrup, “was supposed to be a new beginning, but it turned out to be an ending both personally and professionally.”

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It’s tempting to think of Hayes as unlucky – consider the story around 2002’s extravagant opus, Fed, which cost a six-figure sum to make and would eventually find initial release only in Japan, as no one-elsewhere would cough up Hayes’s asking price. Certainly, he’s an artist of high standards, and his vision of music, one where baroque ’60s pop meets lushly orchestrated soul, melancholy singer-songwriter tearjerkers a la Laura Nyro and Todd Rundgren, and Kinksian rockers, asks a lot of both Hayes’s songwriting, and his collaborators. But for all the mythology around Hayes as a “man out of time”, his music seems to be finding its own way; he’s stayed true to his vision and let the world assemble itself around him.

And if his time on the West Coast was troubled, it did, at least, give him the chance to record with producer Luther Russell, in the latter’s home studio in Pasadena. There was no grand plan: Hayes was simply getting his songs down, “without any expectations,” he clarifies. “We weren’t recording it with any idea of releasing it and I think that allowed me to be completely candid.” And indeed, Mirage Garage feels the most disarmed that Hayes has yet been. Its sound is relatively denuded, at least compared to the rococo flourishes of albums like Fed and Bright Penny: here there’s a real sense of two excitable friends in the back room, making music for sheer pleasure.

So, the second half of Mirage Garage, such as the Beatlesque stomp of “Eat In Sin”, shows that Hayes and Russell can simply let it roll, making music that’s full of light and play. The first side’s closer, “Herr Garage”, is Hayes at his most wicked, a drunken kazoo scrawling over a shuffle that’s like acoustic T. Rex at its silliest – which, of course, was also acoustic T. Rex at its most profound. All this comes, though, after Hayes has delivered a devastating one-two punch at the album’s start: the ghostly, drifting “In Me/Again”, performed through a shroud haze of nostalgia, where Hayes reflects, sometimes ruefully, on his history. It’s one of his most affecting, heart-wrenching songs, all the more powerful for its simple setting – sweeping acoustic guitars, gently brushed drums and Hayes’s pirouetting falsetto.

Following “In Me/Again” is “Here In Hell”, where Hayes turns his focus to the technological age. “I don’t need a screen or batteries or wires,” he ruminates, “’cos I’ve still got my brain.” From there, Hayes explores his feelings, watching those around him disappear into an info-tech nightmare. “Most everyone I knew had become bewitched by all this arid technology,” he recalls. “I rejected the programme and realised that in doing so, I had become part of an oppressed minority.” Strangely, Hayes has come out with something close to a Marxist hymn on labour relations, writing on the way our every act becomes a “cybernetic commodity” articulated through the online mediascape: “You are an unpaid electronic assembly line worker,” he argues. “Snout to tail, everyone and everything gets used.”

It’s a surprise to hear Hayes talking, and singing, so clearly about the socio-political malaise we find ourselves in these days. This is just one of the many surprises of Mirage Garage. Elsewhere, the acoustic reminiscence of “The More I Live” has the same gentle finesse of Colin Blunstone’s 1971 orch-pop classic, One Year; the crystalline guitar and clattering percussion of “Masters & Slaves” could be an early Gibb Brothers demo gone slightly bossa nova; “Amazing Astronauts”, punctuated by Russell’s pointillist percussion, is a slow reveal, sung from 
the bottom of a well.

Indeed, the sparseness and intimacy of the album feels like a new development for Hayes – unlike his previous, minimalist gem, 1998’s piano-and-vocals More You Becomes You, this feels less like a set piece, a through-composed performance, and more a great songwriter shading in an excellent set of songs with the gentlest of brushstrokes. Somehow, through some adverse conditions, Hayes has managed to pull off another idiosyncratic pop album, one that communicates more intimately and directly than ever before. Welcome back, Liam.

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.

Send us your questions for Robert Forster

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On March 1, Robert Forster will release his new solo album Inferno. It's only his third LP since The Go-Betweens' reunion was cut tragically short by the death of songwriting partner Grant McLennan from a heart attack in 2006. But as the press release states, "Forster only makes records when he feel...

On March 1, Robert Forster will release his new solo album Inferno. It’s only his third LP since The Go-Betweens’ reunion was cut tragically short by the death of songwriting partner Grant McLennan from a heart attack in 2006. But as the press release states, “Forster only makes records when he feels he has the songs – on Inferno, he has nine he totally believes in.”

That’s not to say it’s a lavish, slaved-over record – Forster’s songs are still concise, effortless and witty, offering wry reflections on ageing, climate change and his own cult status, as well as a window into his morning routine: “I swing my feet from the bed to the floor / ‘I’ve got another day’ I tell myself as I cross the floor“.

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And now’s your chance to find out more about the proclivities of the Brisbane indie legend, as he’s agreed to answer questions from Uncut readers for a forthcoming Audience With feature. So what would you like to ask the eminent singer/songwriter, guitarist, music critic, memoirist and godfather of Australian indie (or perhaps simply the father – his son Louis is in promising up-and-comers The Goon Sax)?

Email your questions to us at uncutaudiencewith@ti-media.com by Friday (January 11) – the best ones will be put to Forster, with his answers published in a future issue of Uncut.

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 the video for Sleaford Mods’ new single, “Kebab Spider”

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Sleaford Mods have released a new single from their upcoming album Eton Alive, due out on February 22 via their own label Extreme Eating. Watch the video for "Kebab Spider" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5uN3n-NjLHc Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Ja...

Sleaford Mods have released a new single from their upcoming album Eton Alive, due out on February 22 via their own label Extreme Eating.

Watch the video for “Kebab Spider” below:

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Jason Williamson explains his inspiration for the song as follows: “The accumulation of torment for those that refuse to capitalise solely through mediocre channels and as a result are ejected back onto the concrete. Obscure and under the horror as a giant spider crawls out the crown of their small portion of street meat.”

You can read more about Eton Alive in the current issue of Uncut, in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here.

Sleaford Mods have also just added an extra London date to the beginning of their UK tour. They will play the 100 Club on February 21, with tickets for that show going on sale on February 1. The rest of their UK tour dates are below:

MARCH
01 – NEWCASTLE, BOILER SHOP
02 – LIVERPOOL, O2 ACADEMY
06 – YORK, FIBBERS

07 – HULL, ASYLUM
08 – MIDDLEBROUGH, TOWN HALL
09 – LEEDS, STYLUS

13 – HOLMFIRTH, PICTUREDROME
14 – SHEFFIELD, PLUG
15 – MANCHESTER, ACADEMY
16 – KENDAL, BREWERY ARTS CENTRE
21 – LINCOLN, ENGINE SHED

22 – STOKE, SUGARMILL

23 – BIRMINGHAM, O2 INSTITUTE

APRIL
04 – WREXHAM, CENTRAL STATION
05 – CARDIFF, UNIVERSITY Y PLAS
06 – BRISTOL, O2 ACADEMY
11 – LEAMINGTON SPA, ASSEMBLY
12 – LEICESTER, O2 ACADEMY
13 – NORWICH, UEA WATERFRONT
17 – IPSWICH, CORN EXCHANGE
18 – NORTHAMPTON, ROADMENDER
19 – MARGATE, DREAMLAND
20 – BEXHILLDE LA WARR, PAVILION
25 – SOUTHEND, CHINNERYS
26 – READING, SUB 89

27 – OXFORD, O2 ACADEMY

MAY
02 – PORTSMOUTH, PYRAMIDS
03 – BOURNEMOUTH, OLD FIRE STATION
04 – SOUTHAMPTON, ENGINE ROOMS
09 – DERBY, THE VENUE
10 – CAMBRIDGE, JUNCTION
11 – HITCHIN, CLUB 85

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 1st Uncut new music playlist of 2019

... and we're off! Welcome back, folks. Already, in the three days since we've been back at work, we've got our hands on five (sorry, embargoed) brilliant new albums due in the coming months. Encouraging signs for the year ahead. Meanwhile, here's my first playlist for 2019 - mostly catching up with...

… and we’re off! Welcome back, folks. Already, in the three days since we’ve been back at work, we’ve got our hands on five (sorry, embargoed) brilliant new albums due in the coming months. Encouraging signs for the year ahead. Meanwhile, here’s my first playlist for 2019 – mostly catching up with a few stragglers from the very end of 2018, but hope you find something

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1.
THE RACONTEURS

“Sunday Driver”
(Third Man)

2.
WILLIAM TYLER

“Call Me When I’m Breathing Again”
(Merge)

3.
BASSEKOU KOUYATE & NGONI BA

“Deli”
(Outhere Records)

4.
BILL CALLAHAN/YO LA TENGO

“Touched By The Sun”

5.
FATHER JOHN MISTY

“Untitled New Song”

6.
KEL ASSOUF

“Franza”
(Glitterbeat)

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7.
FAYE WEBSTER

“Kingston”
(Secretly Canadian)

8.
MICHAEL CHAPMAN

“After All This Time”
(Paradise Of Bachelors)

9.
USTAD SAAMI

“God Is”
( Glitterbeat)

10.
SCOTT GILMORE

“Two Roomed Motel”
(Crammed Discs)

11.
CHROMATICS

“I’m On Fire”
(Italians Do It Better)

12.
YVES JARVIS

“Fruits Of Disillusion”
(-Anti)

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.

Introducing NME Gold: The Best Of NME 1975 – 1979

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Happy New Year, first. From everyone here at Uncut, we hope you all had a peaceful festive break. Ours was, I guess, tempered with some sadness as we learned of the sudden death of former Uncut contributor, David Cavanagh. I've written a more formal obituary in our next issue, but here's some links ...

Happy New Year, first. From everyone here at Uncut, we hope you all had a peaceful festive break. Ours was, I guess, tempered with some sadness as we learned of the sudden death of former Uncut contributor, David Cavanagh. I’ve written a more formal obituary in our next issue, but here’s some links to a couple of David’s pieces that we’ve previously published on the Uncut site – including his tremendous review of David Bowie‘s comeback album, The Next Day. As one writer said to me on an email over the Christmas period, Cav “was a big influence on so many of us.”

David Bowie – The Next Day

King Crimson – Sailors’ Tales

Tim Buckley – Venice Mating Call/Greetings From West Hollywood

Rest in peace, Cav.

Meanwhile, at the risk of moving onwards with unseemly haste, NME Gold: The Best Of NME 1975 – 1979 is out now. It’s in shops or you can buy it from our online store here. Here’s our one-shots editor John Robinson to tell you more about it.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Wondering how it had affected his business, I once chatted to Chris Squire, the late bass player in the progressive rock group Yes, about punk. It must have been, I naively suggested to him, a slightly alarming prospect to have gone to bed one night as a musician in a popular and ecologically-minded rock group, then wake up the next morning with barbarians at the gates, baying for his blood. Actually, Chris said, punk was all right. “When you’re playing a sold-out basketball arena in Toronto, to be honest, you didn’t really notice.”

Something of that co-existence is what you’ll find in this fifth archive magazine in the NME Gold series, compiling some of the best reporting, interviewing and reviewing from 1975-9. Punk, of course, has proved to be the dominant cultural movement in the period, leaving a legacy of empowerment, opportunity and initiative. This didn’t mean, however, that it would overnight wipe out the giants from the start of the decade. As much as it was about The Clash – you’ll hear new thoughts from Paul Simonon inside – and the Sex Pistols, it was also a time of big rock bands in their continuing pomp.

As Patti Smith’s long time collaborator Lenny Kaye writes in our bespoke introduction to this magazine, this wasn’t remotely a problem for the younger generation. Seeing an arena rock show by Zep or Floyd was part of an ongoing celebration of music which was then mirrored in smaller local scenes. What was happening at CBGBs on the Bowery in New York, meanwhile, wasn’t so different to what had happening in our cover star Bruce Springsteen’s New Jersey. As punk becomes post-punk, you can hear the next decade preparing to burst into life.

Inside you’ll read archive features and insightful new reflections on the period from those who were there. You’ll visit the pub with Joe Strummer to put things straight. Be in the good seats for Led Zeppelin at Earls Court. On Canvey Island with Dr Feelgood, even in court with Keith Richards. Alongside them you’ll extensive eyewitness accounts of important steps by huge talents like Bob Marley, Television, Tom Waits and Kate Bush. You’ll also read the surviving members talk about what it was like in Joy Division. “A laugh”, as it turns out.

Rather than a period exclusively consisting of violent change, 1975-9 was one from which high quality music in every form has endured. Lenny Kaye writes about having once seen Bruce Springsteen perform as the frontman of Child, one of his early Asbury Park bands. “I thought that guy is great,” Lenny recalls. “I hope he gets a shot in the music business.”

Don’t worry. It will all work out all right for him.

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.

Uncut’s best music books of 2018

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10 ALL GATES OPEN: THE STORY OF CAN Rob Young & Irmin Schmidt Half forensic biography, 
half “cultural symposium”, 
All Gates Open is pretty close to the book Can deserve. Erudite and in-depth, as well as over-reaching and frustrating at times, its mix of aesthetic stringency and explo...

10
ALL GATES OPEN: THE STORY OF CAN
Rob Young & Irmin Schmidt

Half forensic biography, 
half “cultural symposium”, 
All Gates Open is pretty close to the book Can deserve. Erudite and in-depth, as well as over-reaching and frustrating at times, its mix of aesthetic stringency and exploratory zeal underscores why this music continues to resonate.

9
ASTRAL WEEKS: 
A SECRET HISTORY 
OF 1968
Ryan H Walsh

Using the largely undocumented genesis of Van Morrison’s classic album as a skeleton key, Walsh unlocks 
an eccentric, entertaining tale of Boston’s cosmic underbelly and burgeoning freak scene, including the eye-popping antics of Mel Lyman’s dubious Fort Hill cult.

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

8
LET’S GO (SO WE CAN GET BACK)
Jeff Tweedy

As you’d expect from a songwriter of Tweedy’s reach, Let’s Go offers rich rewards concerning his craft and the extremes of life 
in Uncle Tupelo and Wilco. It’s the longing light he shines on childhood, however, and the tender tributes to his family, that truly hit home.

7
TROUBLE SONGS: MUSIC AND CONFLICT IN NORTHERN IRELAND
Stuart Bailie

A humane, humorous and – the border being once again a live political issue – instructive exploration of 
the relationship between popular music and decades of turmoil 
in Northern Ireland, with key contributions from Bono, the Undertones, SLF, Christy Moore 
and David Holmes.

6
THE GIRL IN 
THE BACK
Laura Davis-Chanin

As drummer in CBGB hopefuls Student Teachers and teen lover of Blondie’s Jimmy Destri, Davis-Chanin rubbed shoulders with Bowie, Iggy and Talking Heads in late-’70s New York before illness halted her ambitions. Her account of missed opportunity and proximate fame hums with rueful insight.

5
THE STORY OF TROJAN RECORDS
Laurence Cane-Honeysett

Celebrating 
the 50th anniversary of the legendary reggae label, this big, beautiful artefact combines artist biographies and interviews with wonderful evocative images of Jimmy Cliff, Desmond Dekker, the Maytals, 
Bob Marley & The Wailers et al, plus record sleeves, labels, ads and other archive material. Tighten up!

4
MEMPHIS RENT PARTY
Robert Gordon

A sparkling greatest-hits compilation from a thoughtful writer diving deep into his specialist subject. Though Gordon’s essays include intimate encounters with Townes Van Zandt, Alex Chilton and Jerry Lee Lewis, it’s his brushes with Memphis’s lesser-known blues and soul survivors that give the book its poignant, piquant flavour.

3
WHEN WORDS FAIL
Ed Vulliamy

Rooted in his experiences as 
a war reporter, Observer journalist Vulliamy 
explores the nature and effect of “oppositional” music intent on challenging the “apathetic acceptance of power”. Assisted by Graham Nash, Joan Baez and Robert Plant, he movingly ponders music’s purpose in turbulent times.

2
HARLEM 69: THE FUTURE OF SOUL
Stuart Cosgrove

A novelistic account of soul’s late-’60s ascent, portraying a NYC ghetto throbbing with sound and fury. Connecting the hard-edged innovations of Harlem to R&B’s future moves, 
it’s a magnificent conclusion to Cosgrove’s soul-centric trilogy.

1
BEASTIE BOYS BOOK
Mike Diamond & Adam Horovitz

It’s hard to recollect another book that so successfully maps the entire world of a band. Seven years after their final album, and six from the untimely death of Adam Yauch, Beastie Boys Book is a valedictory last hurrah. The 600-page doorstop covers the trio’s roots in early-’80s hardcore, their Great Rap Scare notoriety, the hyperactive pan-genre sprawl of their greatest work, and scrapes with everyone from Madonna to Lee Perry. A narrative spine of sorts is provided by the conversational tug-of-war between Diamond and Horovitz, while cartoons, Korean recipes, photo essays, playlists and guest pieces from Amy Poehler, Spike Jonze and Colson Whitehead add limbs, heart and head. The result? A full-bodied triumph.

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.

Uncut’s best films of 2018

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20 American Animals Director: Bart Layton Director Bart Layton has an eye for unusual subjects. He directed 2012 doc The Imposter, about a notorious French conman Frédéric Bourdin, and follows that with this heist drama documenting the attempts of an art student and three accomplices to steal a nu...

20
American Animals
Director: Bart Layton

Director Bart Layton has an eye for unusual subjects. He directed 2012 doc The Imposter, about a notorious French conman Frédéric Bourdin, and follows that with this heist drama documenting the attempts of an art student and three accomplices to steal a number of rare books from Transylvania University in Lexington, Kentucky. This is a bizarrely gripping true-life crime thriller, with a memorable performance from Evan Peters as a reckless member of the gang.

19
The Square
Director: Ruben Östlund

To a degree, The Square channels the spirit of Lars Von Trier and Yorgos Lanthimos – filmmakers who have routinely upended middle-class entitlement by surreal and unsettling means. This comedy begins as a smart satire of the art world before morphing into excruciating Theatre Of Cruelty, all set around a bold new exhibition held by a Swedish contemporary art museum. Props to Claes Bang as the beleaguered museum director.

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18
Hereditary
Director: Ari Aster

Indebted to the likes of Roman Polanski in his 1970s horror pomp, Aster’s feature debut cast Toni Collette as Annie, whose mother has recently died. Mystery and trauma follow for her, her husband Steve (Gabriel Byrne) and two children, Peter (Alex Wolff) and Charlie (Milly Shapiro). A film about how sometimes rather than a safe and stable environment, the family unit can be a very troubling and overwhelming experience.

17
Black Panther
Director: Ryan Coogler

There are changes afoot: last May, DC released 
its first female-led superhero film, Wonder Woman, while this year, Marvel brought its first black superhero to the big screen – Black Panther. After the death of his dad, T’Challa (Chadwick Boseman) returns home to the African nation of Wakanda to take his rightful place as king. Trouble awaits. Black Panther follows relatively familiar narrative arcs, but Cooger brings 
a welcome lightness of touch.

16
120 BPM
Director: Robin Campillo

A fiery ensemble piece, set during the late 1980s and focusing on the Paris wing of ACT UP – the international direct-action organisation that demanded immediate, large-scale research into Aids. Campillo’s film concerns the blossoming romance between newcomer Nathan (Arnaud Valois) and Sean (Nahuel Pérez Biscayart), a firebrand whose HIV+ status is rapidly deteriorating. Campillo brilliantly juggled scenes of political action with the love story between Nathan and Sean as it works towards its inevitable final state.

15
The Ciambra
Director: Jonas Carpignano

Carpignano’s empathic study of the Roma community set on the fringes of Italian society where poverty and racial prejudice are rife. With his father and elder brother imprisoned, 14-year-old Pio Amato has by default become the man of the house. To put food on the table, he resorts to an array of inventive petty-criminal tricks (Scorsese is an exec producer – it shows). Trouble will follow, of course.

14
First Reformed
Director: Paul Schrader

Schrader has spent a career chasing down “God’s lonely man”, from Taxi Driver’s Travis Bickle onwards. His latest agonised supplicant is Reverend Ernst Toller, played by Ethan Hawke, a small-town pastor looking for deliverance. Matters moral, spiritual and ethical increasingly detain him until – radicalised, with his health ailing – he is forced to ask, “Will God forgive us?” Bad times lie ahead.

13
You Were Never Really Here
Director: Lynne Ramsay

A good year for Joaquin Phoenix, in Gus Van Sant’s freewheeling He Won’t Get Far On Foot and this darker piece from Lynne Ramsay. 
He plays Joe – an ex-soldier now freelancing in ‘private security’, where he is employed to rescue an abducted teenage girl. The story is really an opportunity for director and star to explore notions of masculinity and redemption. A fearsome score from Jonny Greenwood amplifies Joe’s state of mental distress.

12
Isle Of Dogs
Director: Wes Anderson

A stop-motion action film set in a dystopian future, Isle Of Dogs was Anderson in excelsis. The dogs of a fictional Japanese city have 
been exiled to a remote island 
where a band of mongrels must survive and attempt to reunite 
a boy with his lost pooch. Bryan Cranston, Bill Murray, Ed Norton, Jeff Goldblum, Scarlett Johansson and Yoko Ono provide voices, while the wonderful production design and exquisite animation drew from Japan’s rich visual arts, from Hokusai to Kurosawa.

11
Peterloo
Director: Mike Leigh

A very British massacre, this bitingly topical drama from Leigh centres on the murder of protesters at a mass pro-democracy rally 
in Manchester, 1819. A film of 
great scale and ambition, told on 
a crowded canvas, the director’s cool head and rigorous approach 
to the subject only underscore the significance of this project. Tim McInnery, as the bloated Prince Regent, adds a blackly comic element to this shamefully neglected chapter in British history.

10
The Shape 
Of Water
Director: Guillermo Del Toro

The latest fantastical creation from Del Toro 
– a multiple Oscar winner, no less – 
The Shape Of Water focused on the unconventional love story between an amphibian creature (Doug Jones) and human Eliza (Sally Hawkins). Set during the Cold War, Del Toro’s modern-day fable channelled 
1950s sci-fi monster movies – but also displayed an unexpected affinity for MGM musicals. Michael Shannon’s heartless facility director added some satisfyingly ripe scenery-chewing.

9
The Rider
Director: Chloe Zhao

Shot in the badlands of South Dakota, Zhao’s contemporary Western is a confident portrait 
of life among rodeo cowboys, and in particular Brady Blackburn – a daredevil 20-year-old recovering from a traumatic head injury. Partly an elegy for a disappearing way 
of life, partly an examination of 
the self-destructive nature of masculinity and partly a piece about the American frontier, Zhao’s film was alive with empathy.

8
A Fantastic Woman
Director: Sebastián Lelio

Chilean director 
Lelio’s Oscar-winning film features Marine (newcomer Daniela Vega), a transgender singer who as the film opens is in a relationship with an older man, Orlando. Alas, tragedy strikes and soon Marine finds herself marginalised and abused from all corners. In some respects, 
A Fantastic Woman recalls Almodóvar – another Spanish-language filmmaker who celebrates female leads and sexual taboos; 
but Lelio’s rich, warm film is very much his own.

7
Mandy
Director: Panos Cosmatis

The full range of Nicolas Cage’s ferocious acting ability is on display in this grindhouse revenge thriller that offers us LSD-crazed bikers, several deaths by burning and scenes of axe-smelting. He is 
a bereaved husband, turning to heavy metal violence to avenge 
his late wife. Cosmatis digs deep into a colour-saturated palette reminiscent of VHS box cover art, while the late Jóhan Jóhannsson’s synth-heavy score recalls the 
semi-John Carpenter drones of 
the era’s pulpier horrors.

6
The Old Man 
And The Gun
Director: David Lowery

A late-career swansong for Robert Redford, who said this would be his last film. It is based on the true story of Forrest Tucker – an elderly thief who escapes from San Quentin before embarking on a string of heists across Texas. Sissy Spacek and Casey Affleck bring suitably dramatic support to a light but heartfelt film that fully honours Redford’s storied ’60s reputation.

5
Lucky
Director: John Carroll Lynch

A nonagenarian atheist who has outlived 
and out-smoked his contemporaries comes to terms with his own mortality. As an epitaph for its star Harry Dean Stanton, this spry meditation on death and ageing couldn’t have been better. Hard-won wisdom, stoic blankness and a David Lynch cameo. Sad and sweet, Lucky was the perfect ending to a commendable career.

4
Lady Bird
Director: Greta Gerwig

Lady Bird is a loosely autobiographical story of a confused teenage girl growing up during the early ’00s – much like writer/director Gerwig. Protagonist Christine McPherson is played by Saoirse Ronan as a mixed bag of emotions – hurtling between delight, sorrow, fear and anger. A warm, generous character study of a young woman in the process of working out who she is, and all the hazards that follow.

3
Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri
Director: Martin McDonagh

A gleeful piece of filmmaking, McDonagh’s latest concerned Mildred Hayes (Frances McDormand), a grieving mother whose frustration with the local police brings her into conflict with local police chief Sheriff Bill Willoughby (Woody Harrelson). As Mildred’s quest for justice veers towards desire for revenge, McDonagh’s film assumes a dark momentum. Sam Rockwell, Peter Dinklage and John Hawkes suffer their own torments.

2
Blackkklansman
Director: Spike Lee

After a period outside the mainstream exploring more experimental forms, 
Lee returns with a vengeance in this blackly comic, and supremely timely, period satire about Ron Stallworth (John David Washington), the first African-American detective to serve in the Colorado Springs Police Department. Determined to make a name for himself, Stallworth sets out to infiltrate the Ku Klux Klan. Riffing on blaxploitation motifs and concluding with an affecting documentary montage, this was evidence of a provocative filmmaker back at the height of his powers.

1
Phantom Thread
Director: Paul Thomas Anderson

Released back in February, Paul Thomas Anderson’s elegant, delicious pleasure remained the benchmark 
for the year in film. Considering, too, that it is apparently 
to be leading man Daniel Day-Lewis’s cinematic swansong, its position at the head of our year-end poll seems entirely fitting.

Reynolds Jeremiah Woodcock is certainly as memorable as any of Day-Lewis’s previous characters. A celebrated couturier to the post-war aristocracy, he is witty and nimble, elegant and epigrammatic. As with many creatives operating at the highest level, he is also fastidious and obsessive: one dress is described enigmatically as “worth everything we’ve been through”. In conjunction with his gimlet-eyed sister Cyril (Lesley Manville), Woodcock runs his operations from 
a splendid Georgian townhouse in London; but alas, as the film opens, this empire is faltering. First Woodcock finds himself under threat from the New Look, then he is unexpectedly beguiled by Alma (Vicky Krieps), a German waitress who becomes his muse.

Although there are a lot of clothes in Phantom Thread, it is not particularly a film about fashion. It is about control and obsession and the disruption of a status quo by a new arrival – in which case, it is possible to see this as thematically similar to Anderson’s 2012 film The Master.
But unlike The Master, Phantom Thread is often very funny. There are droll flashes of drawing-room farce – as well as a darker comic grain. In one scene, Woodcock complains testily that Alma butters her toast with “too much movement”. There is a late-arriving macabre gothic twist to the story that underscores Alma’s growing control over Woodcock.

During a year in which there were many strong leading performances 
– Frances McDormand, Joaquin Phoenix, Ethan Hawke, Toni Collette and Saoirse Ronan – it was hard to top Day-Lewis’s monstrous, dazzling and hammy Woodcock. “Chic?” He exclaims with disgust as he is brought news of Dior’s pioneering work across the Channel. “Fucking chic.”

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.

Sharon Van Etten: “I’m still writing heavy songs!”

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Sharon Van Etten's splendid new synth-driven album Remind Me Tomorrow is out on Jaunary 18 via Jagjaguwar. In the latest issue of Uncut – in shops now and available to buy online by clicking here – she reveals the reasons behind this radical, positive reinvention. They include falling in love a...

Sharon Van Etten’s splendid new synth-driven album Remind Me Tomorrow is out on Jaunary 18 via Jagjaguwar.

In the latest issue of Uncut – in shops now and available to buy online by clicking here – she reveals the reasons behind this radical, positive reinvention. They include falling in love and becoming a mother, as well as productive forays into acting, academia and – most impressively – standup comedy.

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

“My babysitter put on a variety show, and she asked me to perform,” she explains. “I had a solo show testing new material a week after, so I wasn’t really interested in picking up an acoustic guitar… I texted her and asked, ‘Can I try doing some standup?’ And she was like, ‘Are you kidding me?’” And so Sharon Van Etten made her nerve-racking standup debut, notes in hand. “It was anecdotal reports about being myself… a lot of rambling. It was really, really fun. It felt like the first day at school… not reinventing myself, but new.”

As for the mindset behind the new album, Van Etten says: “I’m in a really good place, I’m happy, I’m secure, I’m in love and I’m doing all the things that I’ve set out to do and more. And… I’m still writing heavy songs! But they’re not coming from a place of unhappiness. Maybe unease or insecurity – but not about my life, more about the world. Like, ‘How I’m gonna raise a child in a positive way with all the things that are going on?’”

Opening with driving synths and big rock drums, current single “Comeback Kid” sets the tone. It shows her voice in a new light, at once sultry, bullish and bruised. She describes it as “my New Jersey anthem… like if Pat Benatar and Bruce Springsteen wrote a song together… The story is about returning home and confronting people that you used to know. Like, ‘I was a fuckup, but I’ve got my shit together and I’m in a different place now…’ Moving forward but acknowledging your demons.”

You can read much more from Sharon Van Etten in the new issue of Uncut, in shops now with New Order on the cover.

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.

Paul Simonon: Why I vetoed The Clash reunion

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The latest issue of Uncut – in shops now and available to buy online by clicking here – features An Audience With Paul Simonon, bassist for The Clash and The Good, The Bad & The Queen. In the interview, Simonon reveals that while Joe Strummer was still alive, the idea of a Clash reunion was...

The latest issue of Uncut – in shops now and available to buy online by clicking here – features An Audience With Paul Simonon, bassist for The Clash and The Good, The Bad & The Queen.

In the interview, Simonon reveals that while Joe Strummer was still alive, the idea of a Clash reunion was seriously considered. However, Simonon’s personal reluctance to revisit the past meant that it never happened.

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

“Everybody seemed quite interested in the idea, but I wasn’t,” he says. “I’d rather me and Joe worked together again in another project, rather than go the easy route and reform something that was quite special and unique to that time. It never really works, I don’t think.”

Asked if he has any plans to commemorate the upcoming 40th anniversary of The Clash’s London Calling, Simonon says: “No. I’m not interested in any of that. We did do a boxset that me and Mick worked on [2013’s Sound System] and as far as I was concerned that was the be all and end all, that’s done. I don’t think you could get any better than that. But of course the record company has this thing, ‘Oh, it’s the anniversary of this…’ It’s like, so what? I’m not interested in celebrating yesterday. I’ve got other things to do. I’m more interested in what you’re doing tomorrow rather than what you did yesterday. That’s what keeps me going, anyway.”

In the wide-ranging interview, Simonon also talks about his encounter with David Bowie backstage at Shea Stadium in 1982, and reveals what it was like to record with Bob Dylan in the 80s.

“Bob Dylan used to come to a lot of Clash shows,” says Simonon. “He used to bring his family. Recording with him was… interesting. We turned up and Bob said, “I’ve got these ideas” and he played the guitar for this song, and we’re like, “OK – D, E, G, F,” going round it, and then he went, “Now there’s this other song,” and then there’s another song, and after about six or seven songs he says, “Right, let’s do the first one again.” At that point, I can hardly remember the one we’ve just done, let alone the first one. It’s a disaster. I don’t know what the point was. Maybe there was a certain energy or outlook he wanted. Nothing was explained.”

You can read much more from Paul Simonon in the latest issue of Uncut, in shops now with New Order on the cover.

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.

Uncut’s best archive releases of 2018

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30 ALICE COLTRANE Spiritual Eternal: The Complete Warner Bros Studio Recordings The three mid-’70s albums included here marked Coltrane’s transition from the cosmic jazz of her best-known work to the more devotional vibes of her ashram music as collected on last year’s World Spirituality Cla...

30
ALICE COLTRANE
Spiritual Eternal: The Complete Warner Bros Studio Recordings

The three mid-’70s albums included here marked Coltrane’s transition from the cosmic jazz of her best-known work to the more devotional vibes of her ashram music as collected on last year’s World Spirituality Classics. 1975’s Eternity found her experimenting with dramatic orchestral arrangements as on a tribute to Stravinsky’s The Rite Of Spring, while 1977’s Transcendence more than justifies its title.

29
ZUIDER ZEE
Zeenith 


Big Star may have been criminally underappreciated in the band’s lifetime, but they were household names compared to fellow Memphis power-poppers Zuider Zee, who only issued one album before fading into obscurity. This comp of surprisingly assured unreleased tracks from 1972-74 should help restore their reputation. A must for connoisseurs of Nilsson, Rundgren et al.

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

28
DAVID SYLVIAN & HOLGER CZUKAY
Plight & Premonition/Flux & Mutability

2018 was a good year for David Sylvian. 
His 1999 solo album, Dead Bees On A Cake, finally made its vinyl debut, while there were also half-speed vinyl remasters for Japan’s Gentlemen Take Polaroids and Tin Drum. Key, though, were these reissues of his two collaborative albums with Can’s Holger Czukay, from 1988 and ’89, that made use of found sounds to generate austere but beautiful ambient soundscapes.

27
JUDEE SILL
Songs Of Rapture And Redemption

This vinyl rarities 
set collected live recordings and demos, but in many ways displayed Sill’s rare talent in greater relief than her more polished studio albums. The 19 tracks here certainly supported JD Souther’s claim that Sill’s songwriting was “school for all 
of us”; “The Donor” appeared immaculately stripped down, while a demo of the melodically complex “The Kiss” was even more affecting for its slight imperfections.

26
HARUOMI HOSONO
Hosono House

Ryuichi Sakamoto may be the most famous graduate of Japan’s Yellow Magic Orchestra, but this year’s reissues of five albums recorded between 1973 and 1989 revealed, his former bandmate Hosono as an equally notable figure. From the arch country-bossa of 1973’s Hosono House to the warped synth-pop of 1982’s Philharmony, they combine fearless musical cross-pollination and experimentation with an endearingly screwy charm.

25
DAVE EVANS
The Words In Between

As a huge-faced fingerstyle guitarist on Whistle Test, his flares flapping in time, Bristolian Dave Evans is alleged to have impressed his fellow guest, Lou Reed. 
Far-fetched as that may be, his 
first album for Ian A Anderson’s 
The Village Thing records was
a heavily played, narrowly 
circulated work.  An album of understated carpet-level observation from Evans’s Clifton milieu, its mode and scenarios feel familiar; but all the while fresh, timeless and lacking in guile.

24
COCTEAU TWINS
Treasure Hiding: The Fontana Years

The notion that 
the Cocteau Twins were somehow diminished by leaving 4AD for 
a major label was proved to be bunkum by this four-disc survey of their post-1990 output. Liz Frazer’s largely comprehensible lyrics marked a new level of emotional candour and the serenity of the music feels particularly hard-won given the tensions between her 
and Robin Guthrie at the time. Utterly bewitching, still.

23
SUPER FURRY ANIMALS
Super Furry Animals 
At The BBC

From a boisterous version of “God! Show Me Magic” dedicated to Bunf’s dead pet hamster to 
a tenderly magnificent “Fragile Happiness” recorded live in John Peel’s living room, this was a life-affirming caper through the band’s early catalogue that made you yearn for new Super Furry action. Oh yes, and the vinyl came embedded with yeti hair.

22
PET SHOP BOYS
Behaviour

With Neil Tennant’s lyrics finally afforded the status of high art thanks to a new lyric book from Faber, 
the Pet Shop Boys’ deluxe reissue programme concluded with the re-release of Very, Bilingual, and probably their finest hour, 1990’s Behaviour. Its high standard was maintained across a disc of “Further Listening”, including classy B-side “Miserablism” and the ambient mix of “Music For Boys”.

21
LOVE
Forever Changes 50th Anniversary Edition

An album concerned with impending death, Love’s third LP has proved surprisingly enduring. This deluxe reissue admittedly offered little new – a backing track and an outtake of another were the only previously unheard cuts – but it handily collected everything, alternate mixes and the like, into one package. The original album, crisply remastered by Bruce Botnick and included on vinyl and CD, is still a spooked masterpiece, of course: “We meet again… you look so lovely,” as Arthur Lee sings 
on “You Set The Scene”.

20
DAVID BOWIE
Loving The Alien (1983 – 1988)

Bowie’s 2018 captured highlights from across three decades. April gave us Welcome To The Blackout from 1978’s storied Isolar II tour; in November, his legendary set from Glastonbury in 2000 was finally released after years in limbo. But this ‘80s box set – covering Bowie’s “difficult” superstar years – offered many joys. Not least, a “new” version 
of Never Let Me Down that repositioned the album as, if 
not exactly a lost classic, then certainly worthy of reassessment.

19
THE BETA BAND
The Three EPs

Astonishingly, it’s been 20 years since The Beta Band shuffled diffidently into our lives, maracas in hand. While the band’s three subsequent albums – which were also reissued this year – had their highlights, a penchant for 
self-sabotage meant the Betas never quite topped the renegade folk-hop of their first three EPs, collected 
here on vinyl for the first time.

18
VARIOUS ARTISTS
Bob Stanley & Pete Wiggs Present: Paris In The Spring

Following last year’s terrific English Weather, the Saint Etienne chaps crossed the channel for this typically edifying survey 
of French pop of the post-’68 era. Gainsbourg’s presence looms 
large over these sultry orchestral bagatelles, but there’s also room for the excellent jazzy prog of Triangle and Cortex.

17
BRIAN ENO
Discreet Music

For an artist who prides himself on looking forward, Eno spent a lot of time revisiting his catalogue in 2018. In May, he assembled many of his splendid exhibition pieces in the Music For Installations set while, in October, he celebrated the 10th anniversary of his generative music app Bloom. But the biggest noise, so to speak, circled round the latest half-speed vinyl remasters of Music For Films, On Land and Music For Airports, topped off by the ne plus ultra of ambient music – 1975’s hushed masterpiece, Discreet Music.

16
BERT JANSCH
A Man I’d Rather Be Part 1

Most of Jansch’s excellent work has been reissued over the last few years, but the neophyte would be hard-pressed to go wrong with this boxset compiling his first four albums. Here was the timeless debut, including “Needle Of Death” and “Anji”, the more expansive 
It Don’t Bother Me, and the stellar Jack Orion and Bert and John – which, respectively, practically invented folk-rock and the courtly guitar duo – all packaged with new liner notes and unseen photos.

15
STEREOLAB
Switched On

With the band still on “indefinite hiatus”, Stereolab’s unique combination of French-accented indie-pop, Farfisa drones and verbose Marxism feels more precious than ever. It is a view reinforced by the first batch of reissues this year – Switched On, Refried Ectoplasm (Switched On Volume 2) and Aluminum Tunes (Switched On Volume 3) – odds-and-sods comps that fans have long regarded as worthy rivals to regular albums. Conveniently, these are 
also now being reissued, with Peng! and The Groop Played ‘Space Age Batchelor Pad Music’ the first to drop.

14
THE KINKS
The Kinks Are The Village Green Preservation Society

50 years on, the last album by the original Kinks remains their best. Now in a deluxe set with double LP and “Continental” vinyl editions, CDs of demos and three 7” singles, Ray Davies’s hymn to more innocent times retains its enormous charm and power. An unpsychedelic companion piece to Sgt Pepper, Village Green doesn’t transform Edwardiania so much as embrace it for what it is, wittily, and rockingly extracting timeless life lessons from a world not so much unlike our own.

13
BOBBIE GENTRY
The Girl From Chickasaw County: 
The Complete Capitol Masters

Gentry only ever recorded from 1967 to 1971, but the best of her music – “Ode To Billie Joe”, especially – still casts a powerful spell. This box contained everything, from the sublime Southern Gothic of her debut and the easy-listening lows 
of Local Gentry to the majestic swansong, Patchwork, plus some fascinating intimate demos, live tracks and previously unheard originals. A criminally underrated songwriter, now given her dues.

12
WIRE
Pink Flag/Chairs Missing/154

While the current incarnation of 
Wire continue to administer regular short, sharp jolts of angular art-rock, the three peerless albums they recorded at the tail-end of the ’70s will take some beating. These fulsome reissues collected 
all available demos and alternate versions, with sleevenotes that dug forensically into every track’s origins.

11
LIZ PHAIR
Girly-Sound To Guyville: The 25th Anniversary Box Set

Phair’s 1993 debut Exile In Guyville introduced her as one of the most important voices in alt.rock, offering witty, worldly commentary on life, sex and indie-scene hypocrisy. This anniversary reissue came accompanied by three discs of “Girly-Sound” tapes – early demos made largely for friends – that served to highlight the poignancy 
of tracks like “Fuck And Run”.

10
BOB DYLAN
More Blood, More Tracks – The Bootleg Series Vol 14

Running to 87 tracks, this latest instalment in Dylan’s ongoing archival sweep brought us the motherlode of Blood On The Tracks recordings. Hearing the astonishing leaps covered during, say, nine different versions of “Idiot Wind” – or the brilliance of “Up To Me”, inexplicably dropped from the original album – captures Dylan’s restlessly creative mind at full tilt. Revelations? Of course! Here’s Mick Jagger, stopping by with some advice on slide guitar…

9
THE FALL
I Am Kurious Oranj

Curious back in 1988 – a ballet score? Tell that to The Wedding Present – this strange record, originally conceived as a collaboration for the Edinburgh Festival with Scottish choreographer Michael Clark, possibly plays more coherently now. While dominated by big hitters (“New Big Prinz” “Jerusalem”), 
the album’s uneven mixture of humorous non-sequitur, sound art and stout indie-rock has come to feel like a microcosm of the band’s entire career.  Mark E Smith, throughout, supplies cut-up vituperation.

8
TOM PETTY
An American Treasure

Released a year 
after Tom Petty’s unexpected death in October, 2017, An American Treasure proved to be the perfect epitaph for this beloved musician. Stretching 
to 63 tracks, this set dug into Petty’s capacious archive, truffling out rarities, outtakes, live and alternate versions showcasing the depth 
and enduring quality of Petty’s songwriting from 1976’s unreleased “Surrender” to an unheard cut of the poignant “Sins Of My Youth” from the Heartbreakers’ final studio album, Hypnotic Eye.

7
TEENAGE FANCLUB
Bandwagonesque

A host of remastered vinyl reissues from the early years – Bandwagonesque, Thirteen, Grand Prix, Songs From Northern Britain and Howdy! – this set reminded us of the remarkable writing skills of Blake, McGinley and Love (plus sundry drummers). Bandwagonesque, inevitably, stood out as the band’s early masterpiece while the departure of bassist Love in November underscored the gentle greatness of the album’s tracks, including his compositions “December”,“Star Sign” and “Guiding Star”.

6
THE BEATLES
The Beatles

In 1968 “heavy” was the word, and for The Beatles, heavy was the atmosphere. Fifty years on, the band’s return to something like rock’n’roll basics after the symphonic conceptions of 
Pepper – yes, we know you can’t call “Happiness Is A Warm Gun” 
or “Revolution 9” completely 
basic – still plays as a glacial, vernacular masterpiece. Now supplemented by additional working demos, we hear how far each Beatle could get on their own – Paul’s exuberant “USSR”; George’s “Not Guilty”; John’s “Julia”, bashfully delivered to George Martin – and how much further when they worked together.

5
ROXY MUSIC
Roxy Music

It goes without saying that Roxy Music’s debut still sounds as thrillingly impudent as it did in 1972. Here, for the first time, we got to see how the trick was done: behold fascinating, strung-out early versions of the likes of “2HB” and “Chance Meeting” that reveal Roxy’s prog roots, along with a batch of BBC performances that crackle with mischievous energy.

4
FELT
Reissues

Driven by acute perfectionism, Lawrence’s reissues essentially rewrote Felt’s history. For Ignite The Seven Cannons, he pared back Robin Guthrie’s production. For what was Let The Snakes Crinkle Their Heads To Death, he had a whole new title: The Seventeenth Century. Retained throughout, however, were Lawrence’s tuneful and engrossing mysteries.

3
NEIL YOUNG
Roxy: Tonight’s The Night Live 1973

A typically busy year for Neil, with his Paradox soundtrack, Promise Of The Real and solo shows and a brief run with Crazy Horse. After last year’s Hitchhiker, Young dug back into the Archive for this gem. Culled from recordings made by Young and the Santa Monica Flyers at LA’s Roxy Theatre during September, 1973, this is strong account of a dark time in Young’s career – witness the dishevelled “Roll Another Number”, or the scarily spaced out “Tired Eyes”.

2
PRINCE
Piano & A Microphone 1983

One night in March 1983, Prince entered his home studio and sat down at his Yamaha piano. As 
the tape rolled, he laid down an uninterrupted 35-minute medley of formative ideas and future classics. Plucked intact from the Prince vault, it made for one of the most startling archive releases of recent times – and this is just the beginning…

1
JOHN COLTRANE
Both Directions At Once: The Lost Album

This year marked the 50th anniversary of a slew of foundational rock texts, each honoured by the obligatory deluxe reissue, buffed up using the latest modish techniques. Among the stacks of bonus material, there were moments of revelation – 
a pivotal early take here, a telling snatch of studio banter there – 
but sometimes also the sound 
of a barrel being scraped.

All of which made the appearance of a complete lost album by John Coltrane, recorded just 18 months before A Love Supreme, that much more staggering. In the sleevenotes, Sonny Rollins likened it to “finding a new room in the Great Pyramid”. Recorded in a single day in March 1963 at Rudy Van Gelder’s New Jersey studio with Coltrane’s Classic Quartet lineup of McCoy Tyner, Elvin Jones and Jimmy Garrison, Both Directions At Once includes unusual renderings of familiar tunes – airy, piano-free takes of “Nature Boy” and “Impressions” – and previously unheard, untitled numbers that find Coltrane favouring the soprano sax rather than his signature tenor.

The story of its discovery adds an element of romance. With the master tapes of the sessions long destroyed, a mono audition reel was discovered by the family of Coltrane’s then-wife Naima. Yet surely there was a catch? If Coltrane deemed this material insufficiently exciting to release at the time, are we overstating its importance now? Both Directions At Once is clearly not a revolutionary work, but 55 years hence, that feels less important than the fact it contains some beautiful music, played with an effortless accord that verges on the mystical.

The work of Coltrane’s son Ravi (and others) in editing and sequencing the album also shouldn’t be underestimated. Disc Two of the deluxe edition provided intriguing alternate takes but Disc One instantly felt definitive. For a long time, it has seemed that the possibility of jazz as a musical expression of social and spiritual concerns was a notion that belonged to the past. Yet a new generation of musicians led by Kamasi Washington and Shabaka Hutchings have breathed new life into the genre. It’s only fitting that a “new” John Coltrane album should be part of this renaissance.

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.

Uncut’s best new albums of 2018

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50 THE NECKS Body The latest from keyboardist Chris Abrahams, bassist Lloyd Swanton and drummer/guitarist Tony Buck was their most thrilling yet, the Australian trio hitting an extended motorik gallop at the halfway point. At times reminiscent of Mogwai jamming with Michael Rother, at others dabbl...

50
THE NECKS
Body

The latest from keyboardist Chris Abrahams, bassist Lloyd Swanton and drummer/guitarist Tony Buck was their most thrilling yet, the Australian trio hitting an extended motorik gallop at the halfway point. At times reminiscent of Mogwai jamming with Michael Rother, at others dabbling in their customary jazzy ambience, Body shows that The Necks can still surprise, even on their 20th LP.

49
MARY LATTIMORE
Hundreds Of Days

2018 saw this LA harpist not only team up with Meg Baird for the experimental folk of Ghost Forests, but also bend her instrument’s 47 strings to Hundreds Of Days, a blissfully ambient solo work. With Lattimore looping her harp, and seasoning it with synth, piano, guitar and voice, she evoked the sublime textures of New Age tapes, and the timeless drones of Eno and Oliveros.


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

48
LAURA VEIRS
The Lookout

Five years after her last record, Veirs’ 10th album provided a welcome reminder of the heights the Portland-based songwriter can reach. Her husband Tucker Martine was again producing, while Sufjan Stevens, Jim James and Karl Blau helped out with vocals, but the real stars here were Veirs’ lyrical, romantic songs, whether hushed and elegiac (piano-led “The Meadow”) or supremely crafted (“Everybody Needs You”, with its dub echoes and drum machine).

47
JULIA HOLTER
Aviary

Have You In My Wilderness, Uncut’s Album Of The Year 
in 2015, tempered Holter’s more experimental roots with the influence of classic Canyon songwriting. Its follow-up Aviary, though, makes no such concessions as, across 90 minutes, Holter sketches out free-jazz freakouts, droning electronic tones and heady lyrics inspired by Sappho and medieval texts. Difficult and awkward, but full of delights.


46
KATHRYN JOSEPH
From When I Wake The Want Is 


Arriving fully 
formed with her 2015 debut, Glasgow-based pianist and songwriter Kathryn Joseph returned with an even stronger effort this year, inspired by a temporary break with her long-term partner. As expected, it was 
a bleak but intoxicating listen, with the singer’s broken, skeletal piano lines and anguished vocals on “And You Survived” recalling Thom Yorke, and “Mouths Full Of Blood” trying out the fractured jazz of Mark Hollis or Robert Wyatt.

45
ANNA CALVI
Hunter

Calvi’s long-awaited third album was her most intense and hard-hitting yet, exploring the restrictions of gender roles over her most ambitious music to date – “Swimming Pool” recalls Scott Walker, and “Chain” channels the Banshees at their most psychedelic and anguished, while the opening “As A Man” reconfigures Nick 
Cave’s “Red Right Hand” for Roxy Music. The stripped-down “Away” shows that Calvi can do quiet too: “There is a rage in the sky/Is this the 
moment sublime?”

44
RYLEY WALKER
Deafman Glance

“I didn’t want to be jammy acoustic guy any more,” wrote Walker, introducing this album. “I just wanted to make something weird and far-out that came from the heart.” So while Deafman Glance wasn’t as instantly seductive as Primrose Green or Golden Sings…, 
its vexed, meandering narratives felt like a more accurate reflection 
of its mercurial creator, casually blending jazzy Chicago post-rock with country desolation.

43
TRACY THORN
Record

Having been releasing stellar music for almost 40 years, Thorn would have been forgiven for relaxing a little on her latest; instead, though, she produced a set of shiny, graceful electro-pop with help from Warpaint, Shura and Corinne Bailey Rae, her lyrics discussing the joys of drunk dancing, the various obstacles that women face in our society (“Sister”), and her children (“Babies”): “Lay your pretty hair down/Get the fuck to bed now,” she sings wryly.

42
MELODY’S ECHO CHAMBER
Bon Voyage

Burnt out creatively and personally, Melody Prochet headed to Sweden to record her second album with members of Dungen. The result was perhaps 2018’s most freewheeling and eclectic set, taking in Gainsbourg grooves, lounge jazz and sample-heavy hip-hop – and that was just the first track, “Cross My Heart”. Elsewhere there were hints of The Breeders and Tinariwen, and riffs inspired by Black Sabbath, the whole coalescing to reflect Prochet’s fearless, questing vision.

41
CAT POWER
Wanderer

After 2012’s Sun, 
an ambitious, if awkward, pop record, the old Chan Marshall re-emerged for Wanderer, happier and more relaxed on new label Domino. The textures were familiar, sure – the sparse piano on Rihanna’s “Stay”, the country desolation of “Robbin Hood”, and the widescreen gospel of “Wanderer/Exit” – but the overall result, a slim but addictive 38 minutes, was one of Marshall’s best.
 ON THis month’s CD

40
ARCTIC MONKEYS
Tranquility Base Hotel + Casino

Following 2013’s huge-selling AM, Alex Turner and co could have conquered the world, but instead they headed for the moon, crafting this audacious concept album seemingly about a lounge crooner on some futuristic lunar colony. Turner’s long tried 
to ape Nick Cave and Dion, but 
on the likes of “American Sports” and “Golden Trunks” he hit upon 
a style of noirish, plastic-soul balladry all his own.

39
ELEANOR FRIEDBERGER
Rebound

After perfecting 
a stately folk-rock sound on 2016’s New View, the former Fiery Furnace took 
a different tack on her fourth solo album; inspired by an extended 
stay in Athens, and specifically 
a goth club she was taken to in the Greek capital, Rebound was all drum machines and woozy, 
vintage synthesisers. At its warped heart, though, lay Friedberger’s most characterful songs yet, from the galloping “Everything” 
to the fidgety, Furnaces-like “Are 
We Good?”

38
CALEXICO
The Thread 
That Keeps Us

Swapping the Arizona desert for 
the lusher environs 
of North Carolina, Joey Burns and 
John Convertino made their most straight-ahead rock record since 2006’s Garden Ruin. Of course, 
this being Calexico, it’s still a heady mix, containing some venerable songwriting on the Wilco-esque rush of “Bridge To Nowhere” and the Neil Finn-like “Girl In The Forest”, not to mention some of their usual genre-bending on the horn-assisted disco-psych of “Under The Wheels”.

37
STEPHEN MALKMUS & THE JICKS
Sparkle Hard

Four years after Wig Out At Jagbags, and with a whole host of young artists now in thrall to his loose, literate sound, the former Pavement frontman and his band returned with this effervescent LP. “Rattler” found Malkmus dabbling with auto-tune, but the rest was reassuringly familiar, from the lysergic assault of “Bike Lane” and the bittersweet chamber-pop of “Solid Silk”, to “Refute”, a country-rock cousin of “Range Life” featuring Kim Gordon.


36
THE LEMON TWIGS
Go To School

The Lemon Twigs’ second LP was, yes, an epic rock musical about a school-attending chimp 
called Shane, as much Rodgers & Hammerstein as Rundgren. Yet 
the story was just funny enough to work, and the songs, performances and arrangements superb, whether the D’Addario bros were trying out picture-perfect Big Star power pop (“Queen Of My School”) or Van Dyke Parks balladry (“Wonderin’ Ways”).

35
GO KART MOZART
Mozart’s Mini Mart

Lawrence’s latest might have come out at the same time as the first set of Felt reissues, but it was as impressive. Glam-synth stompers such as “When You’re Depressed” bounced along musically, but touched on very dark topics – see Clavi-funk cut “A Black Hood On His Head”, seemingly about Isis killings. And who could resist songs titled “Crokadile Rokstarz” or “Knickers On The Line By 3 Chord Fraud”?

34
HOOKWORMS
Microshift

As we went to press, this West Yorkshire quintet had just split after allegations of abuse involving frontman MJ; nevertheless, their third record was their bravest 
effort, with songs about the 2015 Leeds Boxing Day floods that destroyed their studio, and about Alzheimer’s, cancer, death and broken relationships. Lightening the load was a new, more electronic sound, with synths and loops replacing shoegazey psych-rock on “Negative Space” or the hypnotic kosmische of “Static Resistance”.

33
CONNAN MOCKASIN
Jassbusters

The Kiwi auteur’s third solo album was the soundtrack to his own short film series, Bostyn ’n’ Dobsyn, which Mockasin co-wrote and starred in. Divorced from this Lynchian, slightly creepy series, though, Jassbusters still delighted; recorded live and stripped down in 
a Paris studio, these eight tracks of hushed soul, led by Mockasin’s koto-inspired guitar leads and ad-libbed vocals, were otherworldly.
 ON THis month’s CD

32
GWENNO
Le Kov

Gwenno Saunders’ second LP was sung purely in Cornish, inspired by both her upbringing and the government’s decision to cut school funding for the minority language. To show the language is living and breathing, she harnessed it to a gauzy set of psych pop, with crisp drums, bass and piano woven between all manner of synths and organs. Broadcast, Jane Weaver and Gruff Rhys (the latter featuring) were touchstones, but Le Kov showed that Gwenno could match those artists.

31
GAZELLE TWIN
Pastoral

Elizabeth Bernholz’s third LP as Gazelle Twin found the Brighton-based musician examining Englishness through a nightmarish melange of folk and electro, cut up and pitch-shifted to ghoulish extent. The 14 short tracks flowed tightly, functioning more as a soundscape or radio play than an LP – perfect for Bernholz’s freewheeling message, then, which drew from William Blake and the perpetual call of the elderly (“Better In My Day”).


30
MÉLISSA LAVEAUX
Radyo Siwel

This Canadian singer-songwriter returned to her family’s roots on her fourth LP, inspired by the music of Haiti. The result was an intoxicating mix, with Laveaux singing in Creole and accompanying herself with some striking guitar. 
Of the highlights, “Kouzen” has a minor-key lilt that sounds distinctly French – perhaps no surprise seeing as Laveaux lives in Paris – while “Twa Fey” is beautifully strange, its sound as thin and high as Laveaux’s reverbed vocals.

29
LET’S EAT GRANDMA
I’m All Ears

Rosa Walton and Jenny Hollingworth’s quixotic 2016 debut was hard to ignore, but their follow-up was the real deal; mixing together synth pop, weird folk and pumping dance, the pair, along with producers David Wrench, Sophie and Faris Badwan, created a thrilling and strange cosmic soup. Best of all was “Donnie Darko”, which moved from a plaintive ballad to Balearic slow-disco and back in 11 joyful minutes.

28
DIRTY PROJECTORS
Lamp Lit Prose

Following the auto-tune experiments and ugly recriminations of 2017’s self-titled effort, this was a swift return to form for the indie-rock brainiacs. Buoyed by new love and a (mostly) new band, Dave Longstreth drew on ’70s folk rock and neo-soul for this giddily upbeat affair; he remains the only songwriter around likely to compare his lover to the Archimedes palimpsest.

27
IDLES
Joy As An Act Of Resistance

The biggest thing 
in British punk 
rock for years, this 
Bristol quintet put everything into their second album; thrashing guitars and ragged drums heightened Joe Talbot’s messages, whether he was calling out toxic masculinity on the Sonic Youth-esque “Samaritans” or writing about the death of his daughter on “June”. As the LP’s title suggested, these 12 piledriving songs documented a search for contentment and happiness in the face of a painful existence.

26
JOHN PRINE
The Tree Of Forgiveness

Not for nothing is John Prine one of Bob Dylan’s favourite songwriters; and the long-awaited The Tree Of Forgiveness didn’t disappoint. Dave Cobb was in the producer’s chair, with Jason Isbell and Amanda Shires contributing vocals and assorted instruments, but Prine’s lyrics, delivered in a moving, desolate croak, are the treat here: “Yeah, when I get to heaven, I’m gonna take that wristwatch off my arm,” he sings on the closing “When I Get To Heaven”.

25
COURTNEY MARIE ANDREWS
May Your Kindness Remain

Andrews’ sixth album was a strong follow-up to her breakthrough record, 2016’s Honest Life, and found the West Coast songwriter exploring a new intensity in the atmospheric production, and a new depth and tenderness in her songs. “There is always a reason/A story to tell,” she sang on “Border”, while on the title track she paints a picture of a friend “wearing loneliness like a costume for the whole world to see”.

24
PAUL WELLER
True Meanings

Hitting 60 after a savagely creative decade, Weller took some time to reflect, conjuring up these 
14 tranquil and folky songs. The textures were homely, sure – hints of Nick Drake, Traffic’s more rustic material and his own Heliocentric (2000) – but True Meanings was all about the songs; from the waltzing live favourite “Gravity” and the soulful “Mayfly” to the majestic “Come Along”, featuring Martin Carthy and Danny Thompson.
 ON THis month’s CD

23
KURT VILE
Bottle It In
MATADOR

The Philadelphia songwriter’s longest and most expansive album, Bottle It In seemed to stop time, inviting the listener to enter the guitarist’s gloriously woozy headspace for 80 minutes of ethereal indie rock. “Loading Zones” and country cover “Rollin’ With The Flow” were joyously immediate, but the real picks were the meditative 10-minute “Bassackwards” and the transcendent, circular “Skinny Mini”. Effortlessly unique.
 ON THis month’s CD

22
FATHER JOHN MISTY
God’s Favorite Customer

After the grand scope of Pure Comedy, Josh Tillman’s fourth seemed modest by comparison; yet nestled within its 10 tracks were some of the songwriter’s finest songs, from the acidic, Beatles-y “Hangout At The Gallows” to the blown-out, twinkling title track. And forget wry songs exploring the whole of human history, God’s Favorite Customer instead found Tillman writing movingly about 
his own personal struggles. 
 ON THis month’s CD

21
KAMASI WASHINGTON
Heaven And Hell

After 2015’s game-changing The Epic, the saxophonist refined his sound on this double album (triple if you count the hidden EP) 
of interstellar jazz-funk. Along the way it took in kung-fu themes, a classic bebop cover and 10-minute symphonies incorporating lush choirs, heart-rending arrangements and some stunning performances from Washington and his crew – especially keyboardist Brandon Coleman and vocalist Patrice Quinn. Divine.

20
JACK WHITE
Boarding House Reach

If some thought they had Jack White pegged as a traditionalist, his third solo album set them straight – here, White and a carnival of diverse musicians explored hip-hop, garage gospel, spoken word, digital funk and musique concrète, often in a single song. While the eclectic, ragged results proved controversial with some, there was no doubt that this was a game-changer for White, and perhaps the start of an exciting and experimental new era.

19
COWBOY JUNKIES
All That Reckoning

Returning after 
six years away, the Junkies’ latest was arguably their best since The Trinity Session 30 years before. A stately, quietly experimental record, All That Reckoning found the Timmins siblings and Alan Anton weaving tales of “mugging politicians” and 
a “king of empty things”, with 
stately arrangements and Margo Timmins’ peerless voice to the 
fore. “And you can control hate,” 
she sang on “The Things We Do 
To Each Other”, “but only for so 
long/And when you lose control, 
oh man…”

18
THE BREEDERS
All Nerve

That All Nerve happened at all was 
a surprise, being 
the classic lineup’s first album together since 1994’s Last Splash; more of a shock, though, was just how strong these 11 songs were. Warped punk jolts such as “Wait In The Car” jostled with bleached miniatures like the title track, while Kim 
Deal’s enigmatic lyrics (“ox bow, strange glow…”) and Kelley Deal’s primal guitar daubings made All Nerve wonderfully more than the sum of its parts.

17
COURTNEY BARNETT
Tell Me How You Really Feel

If her debut LP 
cast Barnett as a genuinely funny voice, this follow-up showed a darker, more serious side to the Melbourne songwriter. The dejected trudge of the opening “Hopefulessness” set the tone, and the most immediate cut, “Nameless, Faceless”, took on male oppression and violence against women. Musically, there were allusions to Neil Young (“Walkin’ On Eggshells”) and Pavement (the second half of “City Looks Pretty”), while the sour, melancholic “Need A Little Time” showed just how Barnett’s writing has matured. Seriously good, then.

16
EZRA FURMAN
Transangelic Exodus

A “queer outlaw saga” set in a world where angels exist and are deemed illegal, Ezra Furman’s latest didn’t lack ambition. The Chicago-born songwriter had the talent to pull it off, though, whether he was writing about passion (“Love You So Bad”) or faith (“God Lifts Up The Lowly”), or corralling synths and cellos into 
a new, restless sound.


15
ELVIS COSTELLO 
& THE IMPOSTERS
Look Now

A surprise return 
to the studio for Costello, who after 2013’s Roots collaboration seemed happy to stick to the stage, Look Now was one of his finest in years. A classicist record packed with sparkling melodies and chamber-pop arrangements from the Imposters, highlights included the soul inflections of “Under Lime”, the bossa nova ballad “Photographs Can Lie” and or the Carole King co-write “Burnt Sugar Is So Bitter”.


14
RY COODER
The Prodigal Son

Reacting to the gloomy global events of recent years, Cooder left behind his more nakedly political songwriting and went in search of a higher power. Like Brian Eno, this was a non-religious man venerating religious music, and on The Prodigal Son he covered a host of gospel songs and hymns, seasoned with his worn voice and gorgeous slide playing. Three originals showed that Cooder hadn’t lost his terrific songwriting skills either.


13
YOUNG FATHERS
Cocoa Sugar

Edinburgh trio Young Fathers continued to forge their own singular path, lacing their electronic post-punk with urgent chants and bursts of (troubled) soul. While not as overtly provocative as predecessor White Men Are Black Men Too, Cocoa Sugar still asked plenty of awkward questions, not least in its use of stirring gospel 
cues to advance a distinctly sceptical agenda. “Learn your lessons,” they warned on “Turn”, “No such thing as blessings.”


12
NEKO CASE
Hell-On

For her first completely self-produced record, Case enlisted KD Lang, Beth Ditto, Robert Forster, Mark Lanegan and Eric Bachmann on additional vocals – but it was Case’s songwriting that wielded the force on these 12 playful, provocative songs: at one point, Case recalled crying so hard she “pissed” herself, in another she discussed the loss of her Vermont home to a fire. A cavalcade of hilarious and moving vignettes.

11
RICHARD THOMPSON
13 Rivers

Thompson’s best since at least 1999’s Mock Tudor was a hard-hitting tour de force. Any of his usual whimsy was absent, the guitarist and his rhythm section ploughing through 13 gnarled, wiry songs that drew on Thompson’s personal experience and the gathering clouds of American politics. “Don’t need a ticket for the future,” he muses on the juddering “Her Love Was Meant For Me”. “The apocalypse is free…”

10
SONS OF KEMET
Your Queen Is A Reptile

Saxophonist Shabaka Hutchings led the charge for new British jazz in 2018, flanked here by the revelatory tuba of Theon Cross and the twin drum attack of Tom Skinner and Eddie Hick. In a year 
of two royal weddings, Your Queen Is A Reptile suggested replacing the British monarchy with a posse of inspirational black women; a concept reflected by music of punkish ferocity and electrifying invention.

9
CHRISTINE AND THE QUEENS
Chris

Though her hair might have been shorn, along with half her pseudonym, Héloïse Letissier 
here continued on the path set by her hit debut. The primary mode 
on Chris is intelligent R&B, 
typified by the glassy DX7s of the sublime “Girlfriend” and the new jack swing of “Feel So Good”, all melded with Letissier’s provocative musings on gender fluidity, sex 
and existentialism. That it struck 
a chord with so many diverse 
listeners around the world is testament to its quality.

8
BEAK>
>>>

With no new Portishead album 
on the horizon, 
this felt like Geoff Barrow consciously upgrading his side project to the main stage. The murky motorik jams that have powered Beak> 
since the beginning were still present and correct, but rendered 
on >>> with a new subtlety 
designed to intrigue and disquiet. New to the table was a sense of 
real emotional investment, exemplified by the eerie, battle-scarred anthem “Harvester”.

7
GRUFF RHYS
Babelsberg

Spinal Tap’s David 
St Hubbins may 
have considered performing some of his acoustic numbers with a huge orchestra, but Super Furry Animals’ Rhys actually did 
it this year, releasing this lush set 
of heartfelt, deceptively deep chamber pop. Gone are his usual high-concept themes; instead we 
get Lee Hazlewood-style country-rock (“Frontier Man”), Gainsbourg-esque grandeur (“The Club”) and charming piano pop (“Selfies In 
The Sunset”), the latter making reference to Mel Gibson and nuclear destruction, of course.
 ON THis month’s CD

6
JANELLE MONÁE
Dirty Computer

The third album by this most mysterious and creative of US pop stars moved away from the complex concepts of her previous work for a harder-hitting, more immediate result. Its kaleidoscopic, digital-funk sound was reflected in its castlist, though, including Prince, Stevie Wonder, Brian Wilson and Pharrell, while Monáe herself sang of sex and sci-fi but kept her android enigma intact.

5
YO LA TENGO
There’s A Riot Going On

Ira Kaplan, Georgia Hubley and James McNew can turn on a dime from a tender ballad to a feedback-drenched noise jam – but their 15th album conjured a mood and stuck with it, resulting in their most consistent LP since 2000’s And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out. While the riot continued outside, this was the otherworldly antidote, where the trio whipped up acoustic motorik (“She May, She Might”), droney ambience (“Shortwave”) and reverby ballads that resembled a comatose Beach Boys (“Forever”).

4
SPIRITUALIZED
And Nothing Hurt

Roughly 21 years after Ladies And Gentlemen…, Jason Pierce returned with something of a sibling to that record, even down to the similarities between the blown-out, prettily wasted opening tracks. The group’s eighth album was no retread of past glories, though, rather a stately, mature masterpiece in its own right, as devastating as it was gorgeous. What’s more, the likes of “Let’s Dance” are the most personal and tender songs Pierce has ever written.

3
TY SEGALL
Freedom’s Goblin

Laguna Beach’s garage auteur has released a lot of LPs in his time (five this year alone, including a White Fence collaboration and an ace covers LP), but none have been quite like the sprawling Freedom’s Goblin. Recorded partly solo, and partly with his Freedom Band, its 17 tracks cover Southern punk (“Fanny Dog”), goth disco (“Despoiler Of Cadaver”), country rock (“Cry Cry Cry”) and more; yet, like the ‘White Album’, it works perfectly as a whole.


2
ROLLING BLACKOUTS COASTAL FEVER
Hope Downs

The Melbourne 
five-piece managed to perform an impressive balancing act on this, their stunning debut, blending the most exciting guitar music of the past 
into a dizzingly vital new sound. 
In Hope Downs’ genes, then, were the wistful pop melodies of The Smiths, the guitar interplay of Television, the propulsion of The Strokes and the ragged noise of Sonic Youth, blended into 10 magnificent, fresh songs headed by three equally strong vocalists.


1
LOW
Double Negative

After 25 years of sublime harmony, this year it seemed as if Low’s façade of restraint might finally have cracked. A band of minimalism, melody and control, the Duluth trio has traditionally operated on a policy of strong words, softly spoken, the harmonies of drummer Mimi Parker and guitarist Alan Sparhawk resonating within an uncluttered, almost sacred space.

But an experimental band never stops searching. After flirtations with electronics alongside producer BJ Burton on 2015’s Ones And Sixes, the band now went full immersion and allowed Burton to smash their compositions with gales of electronic sound. The result was a record by turns consoling and disquieting; containing the shock of the new while retaining the delightfully familiar.

Reference points for the new record range from Eno’s Discreet Music and Radiohead’s In Rainbows to the fog-bank electronica of Tim Hecker’s Ravedeath, 1972. In a strong year for enduring ’90s independent artists, this was surely the very strongest work. In the absence of significant new studio albums by rock’s elder statesmen, Double Negative also punched extra weight: you could almost read this as having that restated singularity of purpose that characterises the best late-career albums.

Rather than a superficial electronic makeover, the album performed fundamental work on the band’s fabric, like watching an entrancing film, only to have something suddenly smash through the screen. The opening track “Quorum” introduced the new Low landscape: Mimi Parker’s harmony vocals discernible and delightful, as Burton creates barometric conditions that occlude their usual clarity. At times Low are present more by implication than anything else – the magnificent endpoint, perhaps, of their characteristic restraint.

Coming and going, the band drift in and out of their electronic camouflage, the opening trio of “Quorum”, “Dancing And Blood” and the moving “Fly” an unfolding ambient suite. By “Tempest” their serene sound descended into a scarifying growl and buzz, a happy peace finally brokered towards the end of the album with the transcendent “Disarray”.

Musical abstractions often encourage us to deduce what we want from them. Here, Low’s engagement with noise only served to extend their range – and illuminate their ongoing investigation of beauty, spirituality and decay.

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 Order: “It’s always been about the future”

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New Order have announced the reissue of their debut album in deluxe boxset form. Movement - The Definitive Edition includes a bonus CD of previously unreleased tracks plus a DVD of live shows, and will be released on April 5, 2019. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your h...

New Order have announced the reissue of their debut album in deluxe boxset form.

Movement – The Definitive Edition
includes a bonus CD of previously unreleased tracks plus a DVD of live shows, and will be released on April 5, 2019.

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

The new issue of Uncut – in shops tomorrow (December 20) but available to order online now by clicking this link – features an in-depth interview with all four members of the band about the difficult transition from Joy Division to New Order and the creation of Movement.

“Personally, I didn’t want it to sound like sub-Joy Division, I didn’t want to sound like sub-Ian,” says Bernard Sumner. “It did feel a little bit like that. But I didn’t really know any better because… well, we were Joy Division, but without the singer.”

“One of the things I think people liked about New Order in the early days was the shambolic, couldn’t-give-a-fuckness about it,” adds drummer Stephen Morris. “We didn’t know what the fuck we were doing. So we just got pissed and hoped nobody would notice.”

“I like a challenge,” continues Sumner. “Give me something difficult to do, if you give me enough time, I’ll be able to do it. Most people would learn to sing, get a bit of experience and then make a record. But I made a record first, as a singer. It wasn’t really the right way to do it. We had to go through that painful experience to come out on the other side. In the end, there was no right way to do it.”

Peter Hook left New Order in 2007, but continues to honour their historic works with his new band, The Light. He remains hugely fond of Movement: “To me, the beauty of Movement is the synchronicity between the three instruments: the six-string bass, the guitar, the drums. When it worked, it was magic. It was all about the three of us clicking in together.”

Perhaps inevitably, Sumner takes a different view as he recalls that strange, liminal period when Joy Division became New Order and three friends found some deep, unarticulated solace in the music they made together. “Our attitude was, ‘Whatever happens, we have to make it work,’” he says. “Because it’s the only thing we’ve got.’”

“It’s always been about the future,” he reflects “Without that attitude I wouldn’t be here today, and we wouldn’t have come up with 
tunes like ‘Blue Monday’ or ‘Bizarre Love Triangle’ or ‘Temptation’ or ‘Everything’s Gone Green’. Right from the early days of Joy Division, 
I always had a nagging thought in the back of my head: wouldn’t it be fabulous if you could move music forward?”

You can read much more about the making of Movement in the new issue of Uncut, in shops tomorrow.

Peruse the tracklisting for Movement – The Definitive Edition below:

LP / CD1 (original album)
Dreams Never End
Truth
Senses
Chosen Time
ICB
The Him
Doubts Even Here
Denial

CD2 (previously unreleased tracks)
Dreams Never End (Western Works Demo)
Homage (Western Works Demo)
Ceremony (Western Works Demo)
Truth (Western Works Demo)
Are You Ready For This? (Western Works Demo)
The Him (Cargo Demo)
Senses (Cargo Demo)
Truth (Cargo Demo)
Dreams Never End (Cargo Demo)
Mesh (Cargo Demo)
ICB (Cargo Demo)
Procession (Cargo Demo)
Cries And Whispers (Cargo Demo)
Doubts Even Here (Instrumental) (Cargo Demo)
Ceremony (1st Mix – Ceremony Sessions)
Temptation (Alternative 7”)
Procession (Rehearsal Recording)
Chosen Time (Rehearsal Recording)

New Order – Movement DVD
Live Shows
Hurrah’s, NY 1980

In A Lonely Place
Procession
Dreams Never End
Mesh
Truth
Cries & Whispers
Denial
Ceremony
Recorded on 27th September, 1980.
Produced, directed and filmed by Merrill Aldighieri

Peppermint Lounge, NY 1981

In A Lonely Place
Dreams Never End
Chosen Time
ICB
Senses
Denial
Everything’s Gone Green
Hurt – instrumental
Temptation

TV Sessions
Granada Studios 1981
Doubts Even Here
The Him
Procession
Senses
Denial

BBC Riverside 1982
Temptation
Chosen Time
Procession
Hurt – instrumental
Senses
Denial
In A Lonely Place

Extras
Ceremony CoManCHE Student Union 1981
In A Lonely Place Toronto 1981
Temptation Soul Kitchen, Newcastle 1982
Hurt Le Palace, Paris 1982
Procession Le Palace, Paris 1982
Chosen Time Pennies 1982
Truth The Haçienda 1983
ICB Minneapolis 1983

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 two new Raconteurs songs, “Sunday Driver” and “Now That You’re Gone”

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The Raconteurs have released a new double A-side single, "Sunday Driver" / "Now That You're Gone". Hear both songs below: https://open.spotify.com/album/0vOrIwTMeu6vTRRkBkdkoG Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! In the new issue of Uncut – in shops tomorrow (D...

The Raconteurs have released a new double A-side single, “Sunday Driver” / “Now That You’re Gone”.

Hear both songs below:

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

In the new issue of Uncut – in shops tomorrow (December 20) but available to buy now by clicking hereJack White sheds a little more light on The Raconteurs’ upcoming album.

“We are recording everything live,” he reveals. “We really want to to capture how great that bands sound live… We have around 15 ideas and it’s sounding really good. We’ll go back and finish it before Christmas.”

Read more about The Raconteurs album – as well as big-hitting returns from The Specials, Drive-By Truckers, Nick Cave, Jarvis Cocker and many more – in Uncut’s 2019 albums preview, in the new issue out tomorrow.

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 Good, The Bad & The Queen announce UK tour

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The Good, The Bad & The Queen have announced a UK tour for April. Damon Albarn, Paul Simonon, Tony Allen and Simon Tong will play six British dates starting at Norwich UEA on April 12. See the full list of GBQ tourdates below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your hom...

The Good, The Bad & The Queen have announced a UK tour for April.

Damon Albarn, Paul Simonon, Tony Allen and Simon Tong will play six British dates starting at Norwich UEA on April 12. See the full list of GBQ tourdates below:

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

12th April NORWICH, The LCR – UEA
13th April CARDIFF University, Great Hall
15th April SHEFFIELD, Octagon Centre
16th April MANCHESTER, Albert Hall
18th April LIVERPOOL, Eventim Olympia
19th April LONDON, The London Palladium

Tickets go on sale at 9am on Thursday (December 20). For ticket information, visit The Good, The Bad & The Queen’s official site.

You can read an interview with Paul Simonon in the latest issue of Uncut, in shops on Thursday.

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 the new Uncut

0
The news of Pete Shelley’s death broke just as we started sending this issue to the printers. Although we were unable to make any changes to the front cover – that had already printed – we were able to do some last minute juggling around with our features to accommodate Jim Wirth’s substanti...

The news of Pete Shelley’s death broke just as we started sending this issue to the printers. Although we were unable to make any changes to the front cover – that had already printed – we were able to do some last minute juggling around with our features to accommodate Jim Wirth’s substantial tribute to Shelley, which you’ll find inside.

By coincidence, Shelley isn’t the only Manchester icon celebrated in the new issue of Uncut. Our cover story finds Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook, Gillian Gilbert and Stephen Morris recalling the early days of New Order. The four principals take us from messy beginnings in insalubrious Manchester rehearsal rooms to the brink of international stardom via New York nightclubs, wintry European cities and a 1932 exhibition poster by the Italian Futurist artist Fortunato Depero. Along the way, we meet the mysterious Witchdoctors Of Zimbabwe, a Hell’s Angel with a taste for LSD and learn about a particularly wild run-in with Britt Ekland’s brother. There are revelations, humour and – nearly 40 years on – great wisdom from New Order’s original members.

“It’s always been about the future,” Sumner says. “Right from the early days of Joy Division, I always had a nagging thought in the back of my head: wouldn’t it be fabulous if you could move music forward?”

Elsewhere, our massive 2019 Preview features The Specials, the Raconteurs, Drive-By Truckers, Lucinda Williams, Edwyn Collins, Rhiannon Giddens, Nick Cave, Lambchop, PJ Harvey, Sleaford Mods, Robert Forster and more.

We also turn our attentions – probably not the last time – to an engagement this summer in Hyde Park featuring Bob Dylan and Neil Young. There are new interviews with Sharon Van Etten, Mark Knopfler, Steve Gunn, Paul Simonon, Dennis Quaid, the Bangles, Rustin Man, Olivia Chaney and – he’ll go far, this one – David Attenborough. We revisit a John Martyn classic and discover Cosey Fanni Tutti’s favourite records.

Our free CD features the best of the month’s new music – including a track by Bruce Springsteen – while our reviews section is crammed with brilliant new albums by William Tyler, Kaia Kater, Julian Lynch, Deerhunter and Liam Hayes and reissues from the Third Ear Band, Eric Dolphy, the Glands and Green River.

Welcome to the new Uncut, then.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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.

February 2019 issue

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New Order, Pete Shelley, our 2019 Preview and Sharon Van Etten all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out on December 20 – along with a free CD featuring a Bruce Springsteen track. The issue is available buy online by clicking here. Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris and Gillian Gilbert ...

New Order, Pete Shelley, our 2019 Preview and Sharon Van Etten all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out on December 20 – along with a free CD featuring a Bruce Springsteen track.

The issue is available buy online by clicking here.

Bernard Sumner, Peter Hook, Stephen Morris and Gillian Gilbert are on our cover – inside they tell the full story of the band’s beginnings, from the aftermath of Ian Curtis’s suicide to Movement and beyond: “We had to reinvent everything!”

We remember the late Pete Shelley in a substantial feature, and Steve Diggle, John Maher and Mike Joyce pay tribute to the Buzzcocks lynchpin. “He was determined. But in a quiet, understated way…”

In our 2019 Preview we get the inside story on a host of exciting albums due for release in the next 12 months, from Drive-By Truckers and The Raconteurs to PJ Harvey and Lucinda Williams.

“If I don’t challenge myself and grow,” Sharon Van Etten tells us, “what’s the point?” We meet the returning singer-songwriter to discuss her new album Remind Me Tomorrow, motherhood and her new gig as a stand-up comedian.

Paul Simonon answers your questions, and Steve Gunn takes us through his finest albums so far, while we look back at the making of John Martyn’s classic track, “Solid Air”.

Meanwhile, Uncut has lunch with Mark Knopfler – on the menu are the Sex Pistols, the demise of the greasy spoon and the chances of a Dire Straits reunion – while Cosey Fanni Tutti reveals the records that changed her life.

In our Reviews section, we cover new albums from Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler, Julian Lynch, Liam Hayes, Deerhunter, Kaia Kater and more, and reissues from the Third Ear Band, David Attenborough, The Glands and Eric Dolphy; in our Live section, we review Le Guess Who? festival and David Byrne.

As for DVDs, films and TV, we take a close look at The Ballad Of Buster Scruggs, Stan & Ollie, Roma, The Favourite and more, and review books on Sub Pop Records and Townes Van Zandt.

Our free CD, Boss Sounds, features Bruce Springsteen, William Tyler, The Dream Syndicate, Kaia Kater, Sarah Louise, Juliana Hatfield and more.

The new Uncut, dated February 2019, is out on December 20.

Thom Yorke, Kendrick Lamar, Sade nominated for Oscar

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The shortlist for the Best Original Song category of 2019's Academy Awards has been announced. It includes Thom Yorke's Suspiria theme song, Sade's "The Big Unknown" from Widows and "All The Stars" from Black Panther by Kendrick Lamar and SZA. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it se...

The shortlist for the Best Original Song category of 2019’s Academy Awards has been announced.

It includes Thom Yorke’s Suspiria theme song, Sade’s “The Big Unknown” from Widows and “All The Stars” from Black Panther by Kendrick Lamar and SZA.

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See the full list of nominees below:

Willie Watson, Tim Blake Nelson, Willie Watson, Tim Blake Nelson – ‘When A Cowboy Trades His Spurs For Wings (The Ballad of Buster Scruggs)
Sampha – ‘Treasure’ Beautiful Boy
Kendrick Lamar and SZA – ‘All The Stars’ Black Panther
Jónsi and Troye Sivan – ‘Revelation’ Boy Erased
Dolly Parton – ‘Girl in the Movies’ Dumplin
Arlissa – ‘We Won’t Move’ The Hate U Give
Emily Blunt – ‘The Place Where Lost Things Go’ Mary Poppins Returns
Emily Blunt and Lin-Manuel Miranda – ‘Trip A Little Light Fantastic’ Mary Poppins Returns
Quincy Jones, Chaka Khan, and Mark Ronson – ‘Keep Reachin’ Quincy
Jennifer Hudson and Diane Warren – ‘I’ll Fight’ RBG
Gal Gadot
and Sarah Silverman – ‘A Place Called Slaughter Race’ Ralph Breaks the Internet
The Coup and Lakeith Stanfield – ‘OYAHYTT’ Sorry to Bother You
Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper – ‘Shallow’ A Star is Born
Thom Yorke – ‘Suspirium’ Suspiria
Sade – ‘The Big Unknown’ Widows

2019’s Academy Awards ceremony takes place on February 24.

The January 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jack White on the cover. Inside, White heads up our Review Of The Year – which also features the best new albums, archive releases, films and books of the last 12 months. Aside from White, there are exclusive interviews with Paul Weller, Elvis Costello, Stephen Malkmus, Courtney Barnett, Low and Mélissa Laveaux. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best music of 2018.

Art Ensemble Of Chicago – The Art Ensemble Of Chicago 
And Associated Ensembles

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For half a century now, The Art Ensemble Of Chicago have been a cartoonish presence in the usually austere world of avant-garde music. In concert, they turned free improvisation into a compelling pantomime – saxophonist Roscoe Mitchell might have vegetation growing from his hat; trumpeter Lester B...

For half a century now, The Art Ensemble Of Chicago have been a cartoonish presence in the usually austere world of avant-garde music. In concert, they turned free improvisation into a compelling pantomime – saxophonist Roscoe Mitchell might have vegetation growing from his hat; trumpeter Lester Bowie would wear a white lab coat; bassist Malachi Favors and drummer Don Moye would wear tribal body paint, while Joseph Jarman once came on stage wearing naught but 
a saxophone sling.

Between them, they’d play hundreds of instruments – from conch shells to gongs, from duck calls to bicycle bells, from squeaky toys to the giant bass saxophone – their playful improvisations punctuated by total silence and by ecstatic, thrashing dissonance. They rejected the category of ‘jazz’ and instead declared their output “Great Black Music: From Ancient To Future” – fittingly, the Art Ensemble dipped back in time to music that pre-dated jazz (jug bands, chain-gang hollers, antique blues, African religious rituals, baroque dances) and projected forward to an avant-garde music that defied category.

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The wildness that the band displayed in concert was, however, rather difficult to capture on LP. 1969’s punky, ritualistic Message To Our Folks is a good starting point for curious rock fans, but many of their early albums were rather scrappy recordings for French and American indie labels that never really captured their appeal. That was until this most Afrocentric of outfits were signed – to many people’s surprise – by the ‘whitest’ and most European of jazz labels, ECM.

It was actually a good fit for a band that, despite their roots in Chicago’s experimental scene, had developed strong links with the European avant-garde (they actually came into being while exiled in Paris in 1968). And Manfred Eicher’s German label reinvigorated the band, allowing them the time, space and budget to record in sonic detail. This mammoth, 21-disc boxset compiles everything that AEOC members have recorded for ECM over the last 40 years, from the four albums released between 1978 and 1984, to myriad projects that Bowie and Mitchell recorded with other heavyweight musicians, including Kenny Wheeler, Charlie Haden, Jack DeJohnette, Wadada Leo Smith, Evan Parker and Muhal Richard Abrams.

The AEOC’s ECM debut, Nice Guys (1978), is a fine starting point. From the drunken swing of the title track, to the reggae-tinged “Ja”, to the Miles Davis tribute “Dreaming Of The Master”, this is a thoroughly accessible and confident selection, while the gloriously spooky “Folkus” shows how serene and atmospheric free improvisation can be. The 1980 album Full Force (featuring the Indian-tinged improvisations of “Magg Zelma” and the freewheeling Mingus tribute “Charlie M”) was followed by a contemporaneous double-album Urban Bushmen (the best document of their insane live shows); while The Third Decade, their final band album for ECM in 1984, lurches from ancient to modern, from trad jazz (“Walking In The Moonlight”) to brassy hip-hop (“Funky AECO”) via John Cage-style minimalism (“The Bell Piece”).

Just as interesting are the myriad spin-offs that Art Ensemble members have recorded for ECM. Lester Bowie’s first two ECM albums are a whimsical mix of funk, gospel, doo-wop, salsa and bebop, all the time using his impressive repertoire of smears, growls and whinnying squeals, while the two albums with his Brass Fantasy – 1985’s I Only Have Eyes For You and 1986’s Avant Pop – see him covering a series of unlikely pop songs, from Whitney Houston to Willie Nelson, from Fats Domino to the Dells, with a New Orleans-style marching band featuring Bob Stewart on tuba.

Bowie’s death in 1999 did rob the AEOC of its most gloriously unhinged member: 2001’s Tribute To Lester is poignant but rather more ascetic than previous Art Ensemble releases. And subsequent iterations of the band are dominated by the rather more astringent Roscoe Mitchell, whose more orchestral instincts are given full vent on his two albums with the Transatlantic Art Ensemble. 2007’s Composition/Improvisation Nos 1, 2 & 3 and 2008’s Boustrophedon see Mitchell and Minneapolis pianist Craig Taborn joined by a European outfit, led by circular-breathing saxophonist Evan Parker. There are lengthy improvisations, written-through chamber orchestral works for strings and woodwind, with some startling solos from the likes of Parker and flautist Neil Metcalfe.

Part of the Art Ensemble’s USP was to avoid pianos or guitars on their albums, so it’s surprising to hear their members in more orthodox jazz settings. New Directions, a 1978 Jack DeJohnette album featuring Bowie on trumpet and a fiery John Abercrombie on guitar, is a charged session where Bowie deploys his full battery of unusual effects over Abercrombie’s woozy chords, while 2015’s Made In Chicago is a compelling piece of improv. But still, those distinctive Art Ensemble qualities – fidgety, funny, funky and febrile – are present throughout.

The January 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jack White on the cover. Inside, White heads up our Review Of The Year – which also features the best new albums, archive releases, films and books of the last 12 months. Aside from White, there are exclusive interviews with Paul Weller, Elvis Costello, Stephen Malkmus, Courtney Barnett, Low and Mélissa Laveaux. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best music of 2018.

Rosali – Trouble Anyway

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When Rosali Middleman was writing songs for her second solo album, she lived in an apartment next to noisy railroad tracks. At first the sound of passing freights was deafening, especially when she was trying to work out melodies and lyrics. “I write very improvisationally and intuitively, and I r...

When Rosali Middleman was writing songs for her second solo album, she lived in an apartment next to noisy railroad tracks. At first the sound of passing freights was deafening, especially when she was trying to work out melodies and lyrics. “I write very improvisationally and intuitively, and I record everything,” says the Philadelphia-based singer-songwriter. “I love the sound of trains and everything they represent, but it was right outside my bedroom window, this loud sound of screeching brakes.” While it disrupted her songwriting, eventually she grew to appreciate that unpredictable racket, which inspired, in a roundabout way, the chugging 
guitars and persistent rolling tempo of the psychedelic number “Rise To Fall”.

The song is a showcase for her nimble backing band, which includes members of The War On Drugs, Purling Hiss and other Philadelphia acts, but mostly it’s a showcase for Middleman herself, for her subtly inventive guitar playing, for her understated vocals, and for her elusive songwriting, which zeroes in on a lover so obsessively that it takes on the unstoppable power of a locomotive. “There’s no-one above you, no-one below,” she sings. “Feeling alarmed, feeling alarmed.” “Rise To Fall” reveals a singer-songwriter who gives ample time over to lengthy guitar jams, letting her songs sprawl beyond the words she’s written. Or perhaps it’s the other way around: perhaps Middleman is an instrumentalist first, an adventurous player who ratchets her jams to carefully constructed, yet still impressionistic songs.

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Trouble Anyway is only Middleman’s second album. Originally from Michigan, she went to college in Minnesota and worked as a dairy farmer in Vermont before moving to Philadelphia 12 years ago. Since then she has spent time in a number of local bands, first as one half of the duo Blood Like Mine and later as one-third of the power-punk trio the Long Hots and the improvisational supergroup Wandering Shade. Those various acts have allowed her to hone her chops in a range of roles: as a solo artist, as a supporting player, as a collaborator, as an improviser. All of that came to play on her solo debut, Out Of Love, which made Uncut’s list of top albums for 2016. Devised with Gerhardt Koerner of the Lilys, it featured a lo-fi, predominantly acoustic palette in which Middleman’s guitar playing could stretch out and take on different sounds and forms. The music was cerebral, but the songs were anything but. She wrung maximum emotion out of her lyrics, thanks to a voice that was both deadpan and soulful, vulnerable and determined. She came across as an artist permanently steeling herself against bad news.

Trouble Anyway amplifies all of those qualities. The arrangements are lusher and less lonely, more detailed and more open to improvisation. They sound spontaneous, as though these recordings capture only one iteration out of infinite possibilities. Nothing is settled on songs like the languid epic “Silver Eyes” or the starry-sky shuffle “Who’s To Say”. The music slips easily from urban indie-rock to country-tinged folk, from edges-blurred psychedelia to low-key torch balladry. Trouble Anyway ultimately sounds like a communal record, not the product of a lone artist but that of a musician surrounding herself with friends and deploying them like she would an effects pedal or a keyboard patch. Middleman duels with guitarists Paul Sukeena (Spacin’) and Mike Polizze (Purling Hiss) on “Lie To Me” and “Rise To Fall”, while Mary Lattimore adds dramatic flutters of harp to “If I Was Your Heart” and keyboards to “Dead And Gone”. Stitching everything together is a makeshift rhythm section featuring bassist Dan Provenzano of local noisemakers the Writhing Squares and drummer Nathan Bowles, best known as an American Primitive banjo player but also formerly a drummer in Steve Gunn’s touring band.

Of all the sounds and styles these players indulge, perhaps the dominant mode here is blues. Middleman is not a blues artist per se, and any influence from Howlin Wolf or Robert Johnson or Junior Kimbrough is indirect. Rather, her songs have the feel of blues, if not exactly the sound. She’s got trouble in mind, to quote Lightnin’ Hopkins. Indeed, Middleman writes probingly about sexual politics and the inability of men and women to truly connect – a popular subject of blues songs. “I’ll be half a woman to your half a man,” she sings over a parallax cluster of guitars on “Lie To Me”, “and I’ll keep the other half ’til you learn how to stand.” 
You could imagine Ma Rainey or Bessie Smith delivering those lines with a leer and a wink.

Trouble Anyway
is not exactly a breakup record, but something a bit more elusive, a bit more unsettled. At times it sounds like a record of staying together when you know breaking up would be so much better, so much healthier. “The trouble I’ve found lying in your arms is the trouble I’d be troubled with anyway,” Middleman sings on the title track, as the guitars do the worrying and hand-wringing for her. By the time she gets to the final track, “Maybe I’m Right”, her perspective sounds hard won, the song quiet but the sentiments very loud: “Felt like self-destruction in the middle of the night,” she ponders. “Starting to question the path of a line. Maybe I’m right… Maybe I’m right.”

Rather than belting out these songs, Middleman deploys a deadpan that prizes subtle and microcosmic shifts in tone and intention. Like Aimee Mann, another singer-songwriter to whom she bears more than a passing resemblance, she understates her lyrics so that that they hit you harder; she makes you lean into these songs, listen a bit more carefully, carefully parse her phrasing and her words. And perhaps that’s another aspect of the blues in these songs, this sense of evoking a feeling just out of reach, either too intense or too enormous or too nebulous or simply too horrific to put into words with much accuracy. These are songs about emotions, but they are not necessarily emotional songs. “Tears they rolled away, cried a lake,” she confesses on opener “I Wanna Know”. “What am I today?/Cry a little longer.” “Cried a lake” is so succinct and evocative, pointing to a grief as large and as dangerous as any body of water in which you could drown. Another songwriter might have made that image the whole point of the song, but Middleman has the confidence to tuck it away into a corner of a verse, where it lies in wait for the listener.

Middleman sings “I Wanna Know” in a hush, as though she’s a safe distance from whatever made her cry a little longer in the first place. To her credit, however, she is never at a safe distance from her listeners. She makes these songs sound edgy in their immediacy, prickly in their intimacy, as disruptive as a passing train. Trouble Anyway announces the arrival of an artist who fits neatly into no category, but thrives in the inbetween.

The January 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jack White on the cover. Inside, White heads up our Review Of The Year – which also features the best new albums, archive releases, films and books of the last 12 months. Aside from White, there are exclusive interviews with Paul Weller, Elvis Costello, Stephen Malkmus, Courtney Barnett, Low and Mélissa Laveaux. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best music of 2018.

Watch Paul McCartney play “Get Back” with Ringo Starr and Ronnie Wood

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Paul McCartney concluded the current leg of his Freshen Up tour with a sold-out show at London's O2 Arena last night (December 16). For the encore to his career-spanning set, he invited Ringo Starr and Ronnie Wood on-stage to play "Get Back". Watch footage of it below: https://www.youtube.com/watc...

Paul McCartney concluded the current leg of his Freshen Up tour with a sold-out show at London’s O2 Arena last night (December 16).

For the encore to his career-spanning set, he invited Ringo Starr and Ronnie Wood on-stage to play “Get Back”. Watch footage of it below:

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McCartney later posted a video to Instagram with the message “Fuh-ing great! Thank you London x”.

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Fuh-ing great! Thank you London x

A post shared by Paul McCartney (@paulmccartney) on

The January 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jack White on the cover. Inside, White heads up our Review Of The Year – which also features the best new albums, archive releases, films and books of the last 12 months. Aside from White, there are exclusive interviews with Paul Weller, Elvis Costello, Stephen Malkmus, Courtney Barnett, Low and Mélissa Laveaux. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best music of 2018.