Home Blog Page 226

The Beatles – The Beatles (‘The White Album’)

0
In 2012, Twitter was briefly united in mirth around the subject of Ecce Homo, a fresco of Jesus Christ found in the Sanctuary of Mercy church in Borja, Spain. An elderly parishioner, troubled by Christ’s faded and flaking visage, decided to restore the image herself – a fix that came out so poor...

In 2012, Twitter was briefly united in mirth around the subject of Ecce Homo, a fresco of Jesus Christ found in the Sanctuary of Mercy church in Borja, Spain. An elderly parishioner, troubled by Christ’s faded and flaking visage, decided to restore the image herself – a fix that came out so poorly that, at first, authorities suspected vandalism. That the story resonated was probably down to two lessons: good faith doesn’t necessarily make for good decisions; and that just because something’s old, doesn’t necessarily mean it requires a refresh.

These sorts of thoughts must have troubled Giles Martin – son of George – as he sat down to remix 
Sgt Pepper from the original master tapes on its 50th anniversary. But Martin’s new stereo mix, released last year, gave to the world a brighter, sharper 
Sgt Pepper – the instruments crisper, the mixes neater, bells and whistles polished and gleaming. Perhaps you needed it, perhaps you didn’t, but the important thing was that 
no-one yelled sacrilege.

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

Next stop, then, ‘The White Album’. But of course, The Beatles’ 1968 double LP is a very different beast, and in many ways, one perhaps resistant to the boxset treatment. For starters, there are obvious questions of scale. Sceptics have long maintained that ‘The White Album’ might have worked better pruned down to a single album; God only knows what they might make of the prospect of it expanded across seven CDs, encompassing 107 tracks, some five-and-a-half hours of music, and a 164-page hardback book. (If the Super Deluxe version sounds a bit ambitious, it’s also available in Deluxe form – over three CDs or four LPs – or as the classic 2LP vinyl in faithfully replicated gatefold sleeve.)

Perhaps more fundamentally, Martin had concerns about the prospect of remixing an album as cryptic and truculent as this. Sgt Pepper revels in its explosions of space and colour. ‘The White Album’, by contrast, is a labyrinth through which dark currents run, beauty and surrealism mingling with absurdity and recrimination. Clean it up, blow away the murk, and you risk spoiling whatever it is that makes it magic.

Luckily, Martin’s new stereo mix succeeds, principally through lightness of touch. As with Martin’s take on Pepper, this is a subtle revision rather than a bold remake. Come to it unawares and you might not notice any difference. But listen closely on headphones and the magic of the new mix becomes clear. Where once the opening guitar chimes of “Dear Prudence” felt fixed, now they gently amble across the stereo field. The layers of “Glass Onion” – Lennon’s mischievous vocal, Ringo’s thunking drums, those strings that sweep in like a chill down the spine – boast a new, crisp separation. In particular, an overhaul of “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” is a quiet revelation, showing off little details you had never heard previously.

Augmenting the new stereo mix on Deluxe and Super Deluxe versions is The Esher Demos. Long circulated as a bootleg but here collected in far better fidelity, these 27 tracks were captured on an Ampex reel-to-reel at George Harrison’s house in May 1968, shortly after The Beatles returned from their stint in India with the Maharishi. These are simple recordings, just acoustic guitars and group vocals. But the mood is jovial, and there is a palpable sense of collective endeavour. A raucous “The Continuing Story Of Bungalow Bill” features handclaps, drumming on tables and animal noises.

Lennon alludes to the group’s disillusion with the Maharishi on the ad-libbed outro of “Dear Prudence” (“All the people around were very worried about the girl, because she was going insane… So we sang to her”). And there’s also a glimpse of a new preoccupation: “Yoko Ono, oh no/Yoko Ono, oh yes,” he choruses on “Happiness Is A Warm Gun”. Much of ‘The White Album’ gets its first outing here, but there are also glimpses of songs that would emerge much later on. “Polythene Pam” and “Mean Mr Mustard” 
would see the light on Abbey Road. McCartney’s “Junk” emerged on his first solo album. Lennon’s “Child Of Nature” was eventually scrapped, but 
its melody and basic structure would one day 
re-emerge as “Jealous Guy”.

The Beatles would never again sound as together as they did on The Esher Demos. As they entered Abbey Road to begin recording in earnest, fault lines opened within the band. Sessions took place in irregular hours, band members would begin recording alone with tracks completed by overdub, and the creative friction even spread to the production team: engineer Geoff Emerick quit some six weeks into the sessions.

‘The White Album’’s Super Deluxe version lines up 50 chronologically assembled recordings from the original studio sessions, much previously unheard, and all freshly mixed from the four-track and eight-track tapes. You enter it expecting simmering tensions and recrimination. And while we can’t entirely rule out that some of the dirty laundry has been respectfully jettisoned, it’s perhaps a shock to find much evidence of a band not only gelling, but working hard to nail increasingly diverse and difficult material. Check out an 11-minute take on “Revolution 1”, recorded on the first day of sessions with Yoko Ono present. In band histories, this is often depicted as a tense scene. But the result is endearingly groovy, and ends with Ono reciting poetry and toying with tape loops. “That’s too much?” she asks at the end, nervously. But everyone’s laughing, and the mood is good.

‘The White Album’
is a smorgasbord of sounds and styles, and elsewhere we see just how far songs progressed from their starting point. An early take on “Helter Skelter” finds the group jamming out 13 minutes of lumbering caveman blues, hunting for moments of inspiration. Come “Second Version Take 17”, McCartney’s unlocked its deranged tenor, dispatching a version that, if anything, is wilder than the final version (“Keep that one… mark it fab,” he declares). “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da (Take 3)” sounds a little saccharine; it’s only when Lennon adds the vicious, almost parodic piano line that the song comes to life. Harrison’s second take on “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” is a frail but pretty acoustic number, some distance from the Eric Clapton-assisted rocker that’s unveiled a dozen tracks later. By way of contrast, McCartney has “Hey Jude” there right from its joyful first take, even if he hasn’t yet got the orchestra in place.

Along the way, we get Macca puzzling over “Blackbird”, some endearing random chat (Harrison is partial to a cheese, lettuce and Marmite sandwich), and casual takes on standards “Blue Moon” and “(You’re So Square) Baby I Don’t Care”. There are moments of play 
– bossa nova oddity “Los Paranoias” is proof 
that The Beatles were still close enough to entertain in-jokes, while a glimpse of the group cracking one another up as they record the backing vocals for “Lady Madonna” is warming.
Over 107 tracks, we learn that the making of 
‘The White Album’ was not quite the frigid 
stand-off that we might have been led to believe. But nor does this glimpse behind the curtain diminish ‘The White Album’’s mystique. Keep peeling the glass onion and you just discover more and more layers, its possibilities multiplying, its depths unfathomable.

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.

Thom Yorke – Suspiria (Music For The Luca Guadagnino Film)

0
Thom Yorke might have made his debut as a film composer a lot earlier than this, it seems. During the late ’90s, shortly after Radiohead had completed OK, Computer, Yorke was approached by Edward Norton and Brad Pitt to score Fight Club. If ever there was a film that dovetailed perfectly with Radi...

Thom Yorke might have made his debut as a film composer a lot earlier than this, it seems. During the late ’90s, shortly after Radiohead had completed OK, Computer, Yorke was approached by Edward Norton and Brad Pitt to score Fight Club. If ever there was a film that dovetailed perfectly with Radiohead’s own take on atomisation, alienation and crises, this was it.

In the end, Yorke rejected Norton and Pitt’s offer – and since then, of course, his bandmate Jonny Greenwood has gone on to become a highly successful soundtrack composer. Radiohead, too, have made their own foray into film music – their shelved Bond theme, “Spectre”, is now a highlight of Yorke’s live sets. Even Yorke’s external projects like the PolyFauna app and his Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes LP have featured the kind of subtly involving music you might expect to hear in a movie.

So at last – a mere 20 years on from Norton and Pitt’s offer – Yorke has finally got round to making his first film soundtrack. This, then, is Suspiria – Luca Guadagnino’s remake of Dario Argento’s horror classic about a coven of witches operating out of a ballet school. It is not, as you might imagine from PolyFauna or Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes, slow-moving, electronic and ambient – as it transpires, Suspiria finds Yorke stepping in a new direction.

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

The setting for Guadagnino’s film – Berlin, 1977 – is evidently a critical factor in all this. Yorke has made an album that draws partly from the krautrock armoury – modular synths, repetition, pulseless drones. Among the acts most associated with that era, Can, Popol Vuh and Klaus Schulze all worked on film scores – while Argento’s original Suspiria was soundtracked with swarthy, demonic intent by the Italian progressive rock band Goblin. All these elements, somehow, find their way into Thom Yorke’s Suspiria.

The critical point is this, though: what exactly is Suspiria? Is it a solo album? Is it a film soundtrack? To an extent, the answer is a fudge: it’s a bit of both. Pieces like “Suspirium”, “Unmade”, “Has Ended”, “Open Again” or “Suspirium (Finale)” are evidently full-length songs. But of the album’s 25 tracks, some of them – like the 44-second “A Soft Hand Across Your Face” or the 25-second “An Audition” – feel more like cues, designed to enhance the drama as it unfolds on screen. Even some of the longer pieces – “The Hooks”, “Olga’s Destruction”, “The Conjuring Of Aneke” – are titled after specific narrative events in Guadagnino’s film.

Having said that, though, Yorke’s aesthetic is sustained throughout; even the shorter pieces reflect something 
of their creator’s intent. Clocking in at 
59 seconds, “Synthesizer Speaks” might appear like a minor cue, for instance – but its weird, electronic shrieking feels part of a favoured Yorke obsession: technological fear and breakdown. I’m reminded of a line in “The Axe” where Yorke sings, “Goddam machinery, why won’t it speak to me? One day I’m going to take an axe to it.” Not so much a paranoid android, perhaps, as a seriously spooked synth.

In one final revelation, Yorke is not working here with his usual collaborator, Nigel Godrich. Instead, Suspiria has been co-produced by Sam Petts-Davies, recording engineer on A Moon Shaped Pool and Jonny Greenwood’s Junun project as well as the Godrich-produced Roger Waters album, Is This The Life We Really Want?.

One of the pieces that works best both on and off screen is “Volk”. Named after a legendary avant-garde ballet that is performed in the film as part of a demonic incantation (yes, yes), its simple five-note refrain becomes the starting point for a prolonged and substantial sonic exploration. In its eldritch route through discomforting Moog lines and deviant effects, it displays the kind of wry contempt for conventional rock’n’roll that has informed almost every artistic move Yorke and his band have made in the past 20-odd years.

The opportunity to do something entirely unconnected to songwriting in any form evidently appeals to Yorke – and for the most part, these experimental compositions for Suspiria work. But that’s not to ignore the moments were Yorke does consent to contribute songs – and they’re really very good. At first, “Suspirium” recalls “The Daily Mail” in its rawness and piano style. Then, as Pasha Mansurov’s flute pirouettes through the song’s second half, it is possible to detect the delicate orchestral filigree of A Moon Shaped Pool. These are made more explicit by a second, longer version, “Suspirium (Finale)”, which brings a wide-angled, cinematic quality to the song. Incidentally, the strings on Suspiria are provided by the London Contemporary Orchestra, who delivered such strong work on A Moon Shaped Moon. “Has Ended” is unsettling kosmische, built around slow, clattering drums (apparently played by Yorke’s son, Noah) and circular organ drones. At first, Yorke’s lyrics appear to refer directly to the film. There is a city, returning soldiers – presumably partitioned Berlin – “the witches were all singing”. Then, though, he makes an unexpected narrative leap. “We won’t make this mistake again,” he sings, suggesting the fascists and “their dancing puppet king” are, once again, on the rise. “We won’t make this mistake again…” he sings, somehow connecting a gruesome period horror to more genuinely disturbing contemporary events.

Unmade” is one of those beautiful, melancholy piano ballads at which Yorke excels, the repetition in melody and chordal changes recalling Eric Satie. 
It offers respite from the heavy drones 
and sinister atmospheres generated elsewhere. Meanwhile, “Open Again” weaves, spell-like, around a cycling 
guitar motif – one of the few times a 
guitar appears on the soundtrack.

As a creative exercise, it feels useful for Yorke to have made this record. Another electronic solo album along the lines of Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes would have felt like a step backwards. This project allows him to engage with the broader collaborative experience of filmmaking while also presenting a work that stands on its own terms. Rather like Guadagnino’s film, Thom Yorke’s Suspiria might not be to everyone’s tastes – but it feels enough, for now.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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.

The Rolling Stones announce new US tour dates

0
The Rolling Stones have announced another leg of their ongoing No Filter tour, visiting 13 stadiums across the USA between April and June 2019. See the full list of new dates below: Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! April 20, 2019 Miami Gardens, FL...

The Rolling Stones have announced another leg of their ongoing No Filter tour, visiting 13 stadiums across the USA between April and June 2019.

See the full list of new dates below:

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

April 20, 2019 Miami Gardens, FL Hard Rock Stadium
April 24, 2019 Jacksonville, FL TIAA Bank Field
April 28, 2019 Houston, TX NRG Stadium
May 7, 2019 Glendale, AZ State Farm Stadium
May 11, 2019 Pasadena, CA The Rose Bowl
May 18, 2019 Santa Clara, CA Levi’s®️ Stadium
May 22, 2019 Seattle, WA CenturyLink Field
May 26, 2019 Denver, CO Broncos Stadium at Mile High
May 31, 2019 Washington, D.C. FedExField
June 4, 2019 Philadelphia, PA Lincoln Financial Field
June 8, 2019 Foxborough, MA Gillette Stadium
June 13, 2019 East Rutherford, NJ MetLife Stadium
June 21, 2019 Chicago, IL Soldier Field

Or if you prefer, watch Mick Jagger set them to music:

Tickets for these dates will go on sale Friday, November 30 – more details here. There is a pre-sale for American Express® Card Members beginning Wednesday, November 28 at 10am local time.

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.

Lucinda Williams and Richard Thompson for Cambridge Folk Fest 2019

0
The first batch of names have been announced for 2019's Cambridge Folk Festival, taking place at Cherry Hinton Hall on August 1-4 2019. Lucinda Williams will headline the festival on the Saturday night, while Richard Thompson will play a solo acoustic set. Other acts confirmed include Ralph McTell,...

The first batch of names have been announced for 2019’s Cambridge Folk Festival, taking place at Cherry Hinton Hall on August 1-4 2019.

Lucinda Williams will headline the festival on the Saturday night, while Richard Thompson will play a solo acoustic set. Other acts confirmed include Ralph McTell, José González, Tunng, Lisa O’Neill, Fisherman’s Friends, Karine Polwart and Lil’ Jimmy Reed. Friday and Sundays headliners are yet to be revealed.

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

As previously reported, Nick Mulvey is 2019’s guest curator and will play several sets throughout the weekend.

For more information and ticket sales, please visit Cambridge Folk Festival’s official site.

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.

The Chemical Brothers announce new album, No Geography

0
The Chemical Brothers have announced that their new album, No Geography, will be released in Spring 2019. It includes recent single "Free Yourself", the video for which you can watch below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7wzR_BVFsUU Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your...

The Chemical Brothers have announced that their new album, No Geography, will be released in Spring 2019.

It includes recent single “Free Yourself”, the video for which you can watch below:

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

As well as headlining the All Points East festival in London’s Victoria Park in May, The Chemical Brothers have also announced a UK arena tour for November, dates below:

21st November 2019 Leeds First Direct Arena
22nd November 2019 Manchester Arena
23rd November 2019 Glasgow The SSE Hydro
28th November 2019 Cardiff Motorpoint Arena
29th November 2019 Birmingham Arena

Tickets go on general sale at 9am on Friday November 30, although anyone who pre-orders No Geography from here will gain access to a pre-sale starting at 9am on Tuesday November 27.

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.

Killing Joke: “We went into the most savage jam… the universe opened”

0
Originally published in Uncut's September 2015 issue Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! The mind-bending saga of Killing Joke. Involves maggots, burned flats, gay brothels, police raids, black magic, electric shock therapy, pig’s heads, self-harm, decapitated w...

Originally published in Uncut’s September 2015 issue

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

The mind-bending saga of Killing Joke. Involves maggots, burned flats, gay brothels, police raids, black magic, electric shock therapy, pig’s heads, self-harm, decapitated wax figures, the Great Pyramid, Iceland, leylines, Wizards with tattooed faces, Paul McCartney, immensely powerful music… and the restoration of antique furniture.

_______________________________

Jaz Coleman is late. This isn’t unusual for a man who once absconded to Iceland without telling his band, forcing Killing Joke to appear on Top Of The Pops with a roadie in a beekeeper’s suit pretending to be the singer. In fact, as recently as 2012, he disappeared for a couple of weeks before resurfacing in the Western Sahara, having decided to go off-grid to write a symphony.

Admittedly, given his history, a 20-minute wait in the Columbia Hotel bar in Lancaster Gate might hardly seem quite so dramatic. The previous evening, Coleman gave a two-and-a-half hour talk in London on some of his favourite subjects – geometric energy, self-education, Rosicrucianism, islands – and when he eventually arrives at the hotel, he’s still full of energy and good cheer, carrying with him a heavy bag full of esoteric literature purchased from Atlantis, his favourite occult bookshop. Coleman – along with the other original members of Killing Joke – is meeting Uncut to look over the band’s extraordinary 36-year career ahead of the release of Pylon, their latest studio album. “Killing Joke is how we process our world,” explains Coleman, peering through his beetle-black fringe. “It’s exorcism, therapeutic. There are times in my career when I’ve wondered if it’s been a force for good, but I believe it’s had a beneficial effect on everybody that’s been involved in it.”

That hasn’t always been apparent, of course. Killing Joke were founded in the squats of Notting Hill, where they perfected a heady, nihilistic blend of punk and dub. Their commitment was intense, and some of the band barely escaped with their sanity. As Killing Joke’s bassist, Martin ‘Youth’ Glover, admits later, “There’s been overdoses, alcoholism, violence, nastiness and betrayal upon betrayal of Shakespearean proportions. But it’s a priceless legacy. Such pure energy uncompromised by commercial concerns. It’s challenging, it’s difficult, everything rational says don’t do it. Which is precisely why I do.”

Glover’s belief is shared by his colleagues – Coleman, guitarist Kevin ‘Geordie’ Walker and drummer ‘Big’ Paul Ferguson. Even though the original lineup have occasionally taken a break from one another – to write symphonies, record with
Paul McCartney or pursue a secondary career as an antique restorer – they have always returned to Killing Joke.

“You rarely see a band come back together and still be as powerful,” says producer Chris Kimsey. “A lot is about Geordie’s guitar, the chord shapes, the tone. And Jaz has tremendous musical knowledge of harmony and melody, but keeps it very primitive with Killing Joke. There’s immense power. They are also four of the most opinionated people ever. But they don’t argue about music, they argue about everything else.”

Indeed, it is unusual to find four equally strong figures in a single band. “They are unique,” agrees The Orb’s Alex Paterson, who worked as Killing Joke’s road manager during the ’80s. “They come from four different corners of the universe creating this massive sound and versed in the finer arts of darkness.”

Throughout our interview, Coleman doesn’t deny the darkness – the fights, the run-ins with police, the maggots – but insists the Killing Joke message is a positive one. “Every song is about freedom. We want to confront fear. The idea of laughter connects us all, because when you laugh, you have no fear.”

Paul Weller: “I’m more prolific than I’ve ever been”

0
The new issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – features our comprehensive look-back at the music (and films and books) that defined 2018. There's also a revealing new interview with Paul Weller in which he discusses the year in music – covering both his ow...

The new issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – features our comprehensive look-back at the music (and films and books) that defined 2018.

There’s also a revealing new interview with Paul Weller in which he discusses the year in music – covering both his own True Meanings album and the other artists who continue to inspire him – as well as his thoughts on turning 60 and what’s next for this restless songwriter. Read an extract from the Q&A below:

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

I suppose you’re already halfway through your next album…
I’ve got tunes! I’m at the demo stage. I’ve got eight pieces on the go – whether they’ll all make it or not, I don’t know. But I can’t stop writing. It’s been pretty consistent since 22 Dreams. In some ways, I think it’s fair to say I’m probably more prolific than I’ve ever been. I seem to have more ideas these days. I don’t know why that should be.

How much does having a young family change your working methods?
Me now, I’d be quite happy if I was going in the studio next week to start working on a new album. But I can’t, for family reasons. So it’s about finding a balance. Trying to stay on the creative tip but at the same time, doing my family duties as well. It’s plate spinning.

I’d have thought you’d have had a routine by now. 

I play almost every day anyway, just to keep my 
chops in. So every night, when everyone’s gone to bed, I’ll keep chipping away at these songs, write a new thing, whatever it may be. I keep all these ideas stored on my phone until I’ve got time to go in and get them out.

The iPhone is a gift to musicians, isn’t it?
I wish I’d had it years ago! I didn’t have anything to record on back in the day. I used to keep playing the songs over and over until I had the sequence in my head. I always thought if they’re good enough, I’ll remember them next day.

How much did turning 60 overshadow the year?
I don’t think it overshadowed anything, but it was quite monumental. It made me extremely reflective. I’ve taken stock of a lot of things about myself, as a person.

What did you learn about yourself?
I behaved badly in the past, when I was pissed or out of it. It makes me cringe, thinking back to when I’ve been rude or aggressive towards people. I like to think I’m getting better as a person, but I’ll probably only know that for sure in 10 years’ time. It’s all about self-improvement for me, life. Not just as a writer, but as a person and a father. All those things, man. Be true to yourself. Find yourself, be at peace with yourself – which I think I finally am. You can’t make up for past mistakes, you can only hope to learn from them and move on. All of that fed into the making of True Meanings.

Did you have a good party?
I went out with the kids and my family to a little Ethiopian restaurant near us. That was good enough for me. I was going to do a joint party with my mate Steve Brookes. I’ve known him forever, we started The Jam together. His birthday is the day after mine. But we didn’t fancy it in the end.

So how autobiographical is True Meanings?
Some of it might start off being autobiographical, 
but I have to broaden it out to make it appeal to other people. I wouldn’t have an interesting enough life to write about myself all the time. Most of the time I’m just going up to Tesco’s or down the park. There’s always grains of me in it.

Do you have an example of anything on the LP?
Funnily enough, “White Horses”. Although Erland Cooper wrote the words, it struck a chord about the cycle of life: what you’ve inherited from your parents and pass on to your kids. That could have been me writing about myself. But it wasn’t. It was someone else doing it, which I thought was really interesting.

You can read much more from Paul Weller, in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

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.

Jack White: “I knew this record would be divisive”

0
The new issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – features our comprehensive look-back at the music (and films and books) that defined 2018. The issue is headed up by Uncut's Artist Of The Year Jack White, who takes stock of what, for him, has been a hectic and...

The new issue of Uncut – in shops now or available to buy online by clicking here – features our comprehensive look-back at the music (and films and books) that defined 2018.

The issue is headed up by Uncut’s Artist Of The Year Jack White, who takes stock of what, for him, has been a hectic and wildly successful – but also somewhat controversial – year.

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

March’s Boarding House Reach, White’s third solo album, gained him an American No 1, but it also left a few people scratching their heads. Even friends were conflicted. “They would come by when I was mixing,” White recalls. “They’d say ‘Holy shit, that’s amazing!’ Then five minutes later, ‘Oh my God… are you really putting that on the record?’”

“I knew this record would be divisive,” he continues. “There would be songs that people didn’t like. There were three spoken word songs. It was a way of making things harder for myself, putting hand grenades in front of myself… People think I’m some kind of control freak. But I’ve never stood and told a song what to do – you are going to be this kind of song, and then put stuff in, force it to emulate some kind of song from the past. People want to put you in the box, it’s easier for them, and so I became Mr Old-Timey Analogue Guy. Then you do something different, as I always have, and they are thrown.”

White’s drummer, Carla Azar, gives an indication of his recording style. “He loves throwing people together and making a situation,” she says. “He’ll never stop an idea before he’s heard it through. He can always press delete at the end – that’s where he has the control.” White works fast – sometimes completing a take before Azar has settled on the part she wants to play. So she’s learnt to make deliberate mistakes, forcing him to go back and do another take. “I trick him into playing what I really want to play,” she grins. “I’ve never told him that – put it in, he’ll love it.”

Although White seems to have extraordinary self-belief, he admits he has moments of self-doubt. When he’s recording new songs, he says, he likes to pretend he’s doing a cover. “I’m more comfortable covering other people’s music so I pretend my song has been written by somebody else a long time ago,” he says. “I started that in The White Stripes and have carried it in all my projects. I used to write my own songs and think they were OK, 
but then cover somebody else’s and find the 
chord changes amazing and felt so alive, more comfortable. So I began to pretend I was covering my own songs and it frees me up.”

In his constant battle against complacency, White loves to set himself challenges. This year, he has been playing with three guitars designed by musicians, including one by St Vincent intended for women. “It’s about putting myself in uncomfortable places and seeing what happens,” he says. “People think that as you gain more freedom, things become easier – somebody will tune your guitar, they’ll find you nicer mics – but that doesn’t make it easier. If you are a painter, you can’t have somebody else mix your paints, you can’t delegate the heavy work to somebody else. You need to find ways to make things harder. Paint on a jagged rock. Paint on dirt.

“I’m not a pop star, so I don’t have to come up with hits to stay alive,” he continues. “I’m very glad I don’t have that sort of pressure, because that wouldn’t be interesting. I get to serve the song rather than any image. That’s something people might not know about me, but it’s always about the song. Whatever it takes to keep the song alive. It’s not about, ‘This is who I am, or this is who people think I am, or this is what people expect so I’m going to give them what they expect or be contrary.’ That’s a lot of work that doesn’t interest me. With me that would turn into comedy.”

You can read much more from Jack White, his band and fellow Third Man insiders in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

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.

The KLF unveil plans to build a pyramid from dead people’s ashes

0
The KLF's latest wheeze is a plan to build a pyramid from 34,592 bricks, each containing the ashes of a dead person. Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty, now trading as K2 Plant Hire Ltd, are inviting people to sign up for a process call 'MuMufication', pledging that when they die – and following crem...

The KLF’s latest wheeze is a plan to build a pyramid from 34,592 bricks, each containing the ashes of a dead person.

Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty, now trading as K2 Plant Hire Ltd, are inviting people to sign up for a process call ‘MuMufication’, pledging that when they die – and following cremation – 23 grams of their ashes will be fired into a brick and added to the pyramid.

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

MuMufication costs £99, with discounts for those aged over 80 or under 23. You can sign up here.

The scheme will be launched at Liverpool’s Toxeth Town Hall on November 23, as part of The KLF’s ‘Toxteth Day Of The Dead’ celebrations. The K2 Plant Hire website states that: “Jimmy Cauty and Bill Drummond will mark the 2018 instalment by revealing an Unexpected Item in Toxteth Town Hall. This Unexpected Item will be available for inspection by the public between the hours of noon and 9pm on Friday 23 November, 2018. In order to gain entrance to Toxteth Town Hall during these hours, members of the public must present security staff with one full sized supermarket shopping trolley. The shopping trolley is non-returnable.

“Meanwhile, 399 living people will be enlisted on a journey to forge Toxteth Day Of The Dead traditions that will withstand the next thousand years. The 399 may be casual bystanders or they may have taken part in Welcome To The Dark Ages in August 2017. Either way, they will be expected to report to the entrance of Toxteth Town Hall at 15:00 precisely on Friday 23 November. There will be free tea and mince pies served at Toxteth Town Hall, which will last as long as we all shall live or until they run out. Whichever occurs first. There may be other occurrences throughout the day and night.”

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.

Hear a new song by Karen O and Danger Mouse

0
Yeah Yeah Yeahs' Karen O has made a joint album with Gnarls Barkley and Black Keys producer Danger Mouse, for release on BMG next year. Hear the first song from it, "Lux Prima", below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zy_rV49e7hI Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home...

Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ Karen O has made a joint album with Gnarls Barkley and Black Keys producer Danger Mouse, for release on BMG next year.

Hear the first song from it, “Lux Prima”, below:

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

“’Lux Prima’ is the first song we wrote for the record,” says Karen O. “After making music for the past twenty years and embarking on making this record with Danger Mouse I knew a couple things: one was that the spirit of collaboration between us was going to be a pure one, and two was that the more I live the less is clear to me. When you create from a blurry place you can go places further than you’ve ever been. I think we both were excited to go far out.”

“With ‘Lux Prima’, we were really looking for a place rather than a sound,” adds Danger Mouse. “It was our first shared destination so we thought we’d take our time getting there. The song itself is a bit of a journey, but all the parts felt like they needed each other. So it became our blueprint in a sense. We wrote the album in deliberate isolation. Along the way asking ourselves lots of questions. We didn’t find many answers, but found it was more about the questions themselves.”

“Lux Prima” will be released as a limited-edition white 12″ with etched b-side on December 14.

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.

Hear Mercury Rev cover Bobbie Gentry with Margo Price

0
Mercury Rev have announced the release of Bobbie Gentry’s The Delta Sweete Revisited, on February 8 via Bella Union. The record is a "reimagining" of Gentry’s 1968 album The Delta Sweete and features an impressive cast of guest vocalists including Norah Jones, Hope Sandoval, Beth Orton, Lucind...

Mercury Rev have announced the release of Bobbie Gentry’s The Delta Sweete Revisited, on February 8 via Bella Union.

The record is a “reimagining” of Gentry’s 1968 album The Delta Sweete and features an impressive cast of guest vocalists including Norah Jones, Hope Sandoval, Beth Orton, Lucinda Williams, Rachel Goswell, Vashti Bunyan, Marissa Nadler, Susanne Sundfør, Phoebe Bridgers, Margo Price, Kaela Sinclair, Carice Van Houten and Laetitia Sadier.

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

Listen to “Sermon” featuring Margo Price:

Peruse the tracklisting for Bobbie Gentry’s The Delta Sweete Revisited below, and pre-order the album here:

1. Okolona River Bottom Band ft. Norah Jones
2. Big Boss Man ft. Hope Sandoval
3. Reunion ft. Rachel Goswell
4. Parchman Farm ft. Carice van Houten
5. Mornin’ Glory ft. Laetitia Sadier
6. Sermon ft. Margo Price
7. Tobacco Road ft. Susanne Sundfør
8. Penduli Pendulum ft. Vashti Bunyan with Kaela Sinclair
9. Jessye Lisabeth ft. Phoebe Bridgers
10. Refractions ft. Marissa Nadler
11. Courtyard ft. Beth Orton
12. Ode To Billie Joe ft. Lucinda Williams**

**Not included on the original ‘The Delta Sweete’

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.

Send us your questions for Paul Simonon

0
Paul Simonon is a genuine punk icon. Not only did he play bass for The Clash, learning on the job in true DIY fashion, he designed their whole striking visual aesthetic, stencilled shirts and all. Forging a close bond with Joe Strummer, he stuck with The Clash through 10 years of white riots and c...

Paul Simonon is a genuine punk icon. Not only did he play bass for The Clash, learning on the job in true DIY fashion, he designed their whole striking visual aesthetic, stencilled shirts and all.

Forging a close bond with Joe Strummer, he stuck with The Clash through 10 years of white riots and combat rock, writing “Guns Of Brixton” and providing one of the defining images of the punk era with his bass-wrecking antics on the cover of London Calling.

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

But since The Clash disintegrated in 1986, Simonon has spent most of his time as an artist, exhibiting his figurative paintings of Thames landscapes and biker jackets at galleries such as London’s ICA. He made a return to music in 2006, when invited to join Damon Albarn’s supergroup The Good, The Bad & The Queen (alongside Tony Allen and Simon Tong). Now that group have reconvened for a second album, the Brexit-bemoaning Merrie Land – out on Friday – with Simonon again creating the artwork and the stage backdrops for their upcoming UK tour.

So what do you want to ask one of the coolest men in rock (and art)? Send your questions to us at uncutaudiencewith@ti-media.com by Friday (November 16) and the best ones will be published in a future issue of Uncut – along with Paul’s answers, of course.

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.

Introducing the new Uncut… and our Review Of The Year!

0
One of them is a debut by a bunch of thirtysomething Australian coffee-addicts. The title of another is denoted entirely by symbols. A third, meanwhile, imagines an entirely new version of the monarchy... Welcome, then, to Uncut’s Best New Albums Of 2018. Over the last month or so, our team of wri...

One of them is a debut by a bunch of thirtysomething Australian coffee-addicts. The title of another is denoted entirely by symbols. A third, meanwhile, imagines an entirely new version of the monarchy… Welcome, then, to Uncut’s Best New Albums Of 2018. Over the last month or so, our team of writers has been busy scrupulously compiling their end of year lists and, after an instructive week or so buried in a spreadsheet, I’m delighted to be able to share the results with you as part of our legendary Review Of The Year which dominates the new issue of Uncut. Incidentally, the issue goes on sale this Thursday – but you can order a copy from us right now.

In these pages, you’ll find a comprehensive look back at our favourite albums, archive releases, films and books from the last 12 months. And to help us, we’ve invited some celebrated friends to offer their own thoughts on 2018 – including Jack White, our Artist of The Year, as well as Paul Weller, Courtney Barnett, Stephen Malkmus, Low and Mélissa Laveaux.

Meanwhile, our free, 15-track CD showcases the artists who have helped soundtrack our year – from Father John Misty to Ry Cooder, Cat Power to Rolling Blackouts, Ty Segall to Julia Holter. Elsewhere, we unearth the latest treasures from Neil Young’s archives, salute the return of Fleetwood Mac, preview some exclusive unseen Prince images and learn the ghoulish tale behind Bauhaus‘ “Bela Lugosi’s Dead”.

Oh, and I’d also like to introduce a new contributor – Elvis Costello, no less, who graciously offered to write his own Album By Album feature for us. Astonishingly, this piece also marks Elvis’ first major appearance in Uncut – a mere 260 issues down the line.

But I guess if I wanted to flam together some kind of positive concluding message about the year in music, I’d probably leave it instead to our cover star and Uncut’s Artist Of The Year – the estimable Jack White. In an unusually frank and open interview with Peter Watts, White takes stock on his busy year. Along the way, he pauses to explain exactly what it is that keeps him going. “I’m not a pop star so I don’t have to come up with hits to stay alive,” he says. “I’m very glad I don’t have that sort of pressure, because that wouldn’t be interesting. I get to serve the song rather than any image. That’s something people might not know about me, but it’s always about the song. Whatever it takes to keep the song alive.”

Incidentally, do please do send us your own end of year charts. I’d like to publish a readers’ Albums Of The Year list to run in a future issue of Uncut. Email your entries to me at Michael.Bonner@ti-media.com.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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.

January 2019

0
Jack White, Neil Young, Paul Weller, Elvis Costello, Courtney Barnett and our Review Of 2018 all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out on November 15. Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! White is on the cover, and inside we follow him through Europe to le...

Jack WhiteNeil YoungPaul WellerElvis CostelloCourtney Barnett and our Review Of 2018 all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out on November 15.

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

White is on the cover, and inside we follow him through Europe to learn all about his experimental, thrilling and divisive year, from his Boarding House Reach LP to his growing Third Man empire.

“It’s about putting myself in uncomfortable places and seeing what happens,” Jack tells us.

This issue also features our Review Of 2018, including Uncut‘s top 75 albums of the year and top 30 archival releases, plus books and films. Included in our best new albums of 2018 is a debut by a bunch of Australian coffee addicts, a record whose title is denoted entirely by symbols and another that imagines an entirely new version of the monarchy.

We delve into the latest from Neil Young‘s Archives, Songs For Judy, and hear from photographer Joel Bernstein, who recorded the original tape, just what Young was like in the mid-’70s. “It was a very heady month!” he explains, recalling the tour captured on Songs For Judy.

Paul Weller takes us to his local cafe for a look back at another brilliant year, taking in his celebrated collaborators, his favourite new music and the enduring power of the Fabs: “I want to hear the greatness in things.”

Elvis Costello takes us through his finest work, from My Aim Is True to Look Now, in a self-penned Album By Album piece – “With stupefying arrogance, we set about showing our contemporaries what could be done with their winning formulas,” he says.

Elsewhere, Courtney Barnett answers your questions on gardening, Yorkshire puddings, walk-on music and hanging out with Kim and Kelley Deal. “They’re the coolest people!” she exclaims.

“Where can I get some kombucha on tap?” asks Stephen Malkmus, as Uncut takes a trip through Middle America with the guitarist and his band, the Jicks, discussing “scorching guitars and shit”, socks and the state of US indie-rock in 2018.

In our Instant Karma section, we hear from Ronnie WoodGazelle TwinHen Ogledd and The Attack, and hear the real story behind Prince‘s Graffiti Bridge, while Mélissa Laveaux reveals the records that have shaped her life. In our Live area, we catch Ry Cooder and Fleetwood Mac.

Our expansive reviews section includes new albums from Jeff TweedyRosaliWillard Grant ConspiracyThe Good, The Bad & The QueenPistol Annies and more, and archival releases from Neil YoungBrian EnoKate Bush and the Art Ensemble Of Chicago.

Plus, the issue comes with a free Best Of 2018 CD, including stunning tracks from Ty SegallElvis CostelloCat PowerLowRolling Blackouts Coastal FeverRy CooderJulia HolterKurt VileGazelle Twin and more.

The new issue of Uncut, dated January 2019, is out on November 15.

John Mayall announces new album, featuring Todd Rundgren and Steven Van Zandt

0
84-year-old blues guitar legend John Mayall has announced that his new album, Nobody Told Me, will be released by Forty Below Records on February 22. Special guests in the album include Todd Rundgren, Little Steven Van Zandt of The E Street Band, Alex Lifeson from Rush, Joe Bonamassa, Larry McCray ...

84-year-old blues guitar legend John Mayall has announced that his new album, Nobody Told Me, will be released by Forty Below Records on February 22.

Special guests in the album include Todd Rundgren, Little Steven Van Zandt of The E Street Band, Alex Lifeson from Rush, Joe Bonamassa, Larry McCray and Carolyn Wonderland.

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

Nobody Told Me was recorded at Foo Fighters’ Studio 606 on the same Sound City Neve console Fleetwood Mac used to record Rumours. It was co-produced by Mayall and Forty Below founder Eric Corne.

You can peruse all of Mayall’s 2019 European dates at his official site. UK dates will be added soon.

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s latest boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

Bon Iver to headline final day of All Points East 2019

0
Bon Iver is the second headliner to be confirmed for May/June's All Points East festival in London's Victoria Park. He'll close out the festival on Sunday June 2, supported by Mac DeMarco, First Aid Kit, John Grant, Tallest Man On Earth, Julien Baker, Snail Mail and KOKOKO! Order the latest issue ...

Bon Iver is the second headliner to be confirmed for May/June’s All Points East festival in London’s Victoria Park.

He’ll close out the festival on Sunday June 2, supported by Mac DeMarco, First Aid Kit, John Grant, Tallest Man On Earth, Julien Baker, Snail Mail and KOKOKO!

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

As previously reported, The Chemical Brothers will headline the festival’s opening night on May 24, supported by Primal Scream, Spiritualized and Hot Chip. Tickets for both days are available here.

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s latest boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

Johnny Marr announces intimate show at London’s EartH

0
Johnny Marr has added an intimate London date to the end of his current European tour. He'll play new Hackney venue EartH on December 9. 100 tickets are available now in-store at Rough Trade East, with each purchaser also receiving a 7" vinyl copy of Marr's new single, "Spiral Cities". Order the l...

Johnny Marr has added an intimate London date to the end of his current European tour. He’ll play new Hackney venue EartH on December 9.

100 tickets are available now in-store at Rough Trade East, with each purchaser also receiving a 7″ vinyl copy of Marr’s new single, “Spiral Cities”.

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

Last night at London’s Roundhouse, Marr was joined onstage by The The’s Matt Johnson:

Check out Johnny Marr’s updated European tour itinerary below:

November
13th – Sheffield, O2 Academy
14th – Newcastle, O2 Academy
15th – Glasgow, Barrowlands (SOLD OUT)
17th – Liverpool, O2 Academy (SOLD OUT)
18th – Manchester, O2 Apollo (SOLD OUT)
21st – Spain, Madrid, Sala But
23rd – Portugal, Lisbon, Super Bock Em Stock
26th – Spain, Barcelona, Bikini
27th – France, Lyon, L’Epicerie Moderne
29th – Italy, Milan, Fabrique

December
1st – Austria, Vienna, Flex
2nd – Germany, Munich, Technikum
3rd – Germany, Cologne, Gloria Theater
5th – Germany, Hamburg, Gruenspan
6th – Netherlands, Amsterdam, Melkweg Max
7th – Belgium, Antwerp, Trix Club (SOLD OUT)
9th – London, EartH

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s latest boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

Stereolab – Switched On Volumes 1-3

0
Ever since announcing their hiatus in 2009, English-French avant-pop group Stereolab have gone through a slow but significant re-evaluation. If, during their existence, people could be sniffy about the group – record-collection pop! Krautrock by numbers! Process over outcome! – a broader audienc...

Ever since announcing their hiatus in 2009, English-French avant-pop group Stereolab have gone through a slow but significant re-evaluation. If, during their existence, people could be sniffy about the group – record-collection pop! Krautrock by numbers! Process over outcome! – a broader audience has since caught up with Stereolab: see how they’re fêted, now, by figures as distinct as Pharrell Williams, Bradford Cox of Deerhunter and Tyler The Creator. Their albums, though, have been hard to come by for some time, making these reissues of their Switched On series – which pulled together hard-to-find 7in, 10in and split singles, compilation appearances and other experiments – most welcome.

Stereolab’s roots appeared to be in indie-pop and C86 – guitarist and songwriter Tim Gane was in agit-pop gang McCarthy; he met singer and lyricist Laetitia Sadier after a gig in France. They soon became a couple, with Sadier relocating to London and the pair forming Stereolab in 1990, with Martin Kean, who had played bass in New Zealand pop group The Chills, and drummer Joe Dilworth, who was also working as a photographer: those are his bleached, white-out photos on the cover of My Bloody Valentine’s Isn’t Anything. (Stereolab’s lineups would be in a relatively constant state of flux, with members coming and going over the years, though for a period of time Gane and Sadier counted drummer Andy Ramsay and the late, much-missed singer, guitarist and keyboard player Mary Hansen as solid co-conspirators.)

But there were deeper roots to Stereolab. Before McCarthy, Gane had made noise cassettes as Unkommuniti, hooking up with Broken Flag, the label run by Gary Mundy of Ramleh. Earlier still, Gane had his head rearranged by some chance encounters with avant-garde and experimental music: talking about his discovery of future collaborator Nurse With Wound via the music press, he recalls that “Sounds [magazine] got me into many things, actually: Throbbing Gristle, Nurse With Wound, and the Recommended reissue of the first Faust album in 1979… The photo and description of the music so intrigued me that I went out and bought it. How could there be music like that made before punk!”

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

That final discovery might well be the most important, as early Stereolab picked up on the manifold experiments of krautrock, while foregrounding its pop possibilities: for every head-wrecking blast of drone, there was a beautiful pop melody, Sadier and Gina Morris (and later, Hansen) harmonising gorgeously over drums that ticked, metronome-like, alongside white-light, streamlined guitars, and sputtering arcs of rough-as-guts analogue keyboards. It was a simple, effective strategy, and one that dominates the first two of these three Switched On compilations: see the hypnotic throb of “Super Electric”, the gentle menace of “Contact”, and the driving psychedelia of “The Light That Will Cease To Fail”.

It’s important, though, not to over-emphasise the importance of groups like Faust and Neu! to the spider’s web of influences that Stereolab gathered around them. There was so much more going on – a fondness for the ‘sincere kitsch’ of easy listening; a love of the unexpected twists and turns of ’60s pop-psych, and its oft-surrealist production values; deep explorations of hard-edged electronic abstraction and musique concrète; and a general embrace of the detritus of popular culture. All this, plus song titles drawn from all kinds of artistic and scientific endeavour: Stereolab are probably the only group who’ve lifted a song title from 
a book on Californian performance art.

Those multiple influences begin to show on Refried Ectoplasm, which is, by general consensus, the pick of the Switched On series. The breadth it covers is perfect – it makes enough space for all kinds of diversions, from the genteel, playful jangle of “Tone Burst (Country)” to the heads-down, psycho-dirge of “Tempter”, while also featuring some of Stereolab’s finest pop songs, such as the gilded glide of “French Disko” and the pulsing, thudding blocks of abraded noise that constitute “John Cage Bubblegum”, perhaps the emblematic single from this period. You could also hear, on some songs, the influence of Sean O’Hagan of The High Llamas, who was a member from 1993 to 1994, and who brought a particular lyricism to the group’s way with melody.

The centrepiece of Refried Ectoplasm, however, is Stereolab’s first collaboration with Nurse With Wound, the “Crumb Duck” 10in, from which comes both “Animal Or Vegetable (…A Wonderful Wooden Reason)” and “Exploding Head Movie”. Steven Stapleton of Nurse With Wound was already legendary, in certain circles, for his deep love of German experimental music from the 1970s; it was a perfectly imperfect fit, with Stapleton either pushing the group’s mantric rock through waves of effects (“Exploding Head Movie”) or completely dissecting their music, building a 16-minute anti-epic that’s like Faust’s career in miniature (“Animal Or Vegetable”).

Indeed, Gane seems to have given Stapleton material custom-designed for his interests: “I orientated the tracks to be rather krautrock bubblegum in a fast-driving Neu! and pounding Faust manner,” Gane recalls. Always a conscious, intelligent artist, Gane knew exactly how to give Stapleton material he could work with, while pushing him into unfamiliar, more pop territory.

The first two Switched On compilations collect material from 1991 to 1994. In the latter year, their processes changed, and they started to pull apart the idea of ‘the band’, entering the studio with nothing planned beyond the simplest four-track recordings. “This turned out to be the most radical change for us,” Gane explains, “as it totally freed us up to interpret the music in a very open way, and enabled albums like Emperor Tomato Ketchup and Dots & Loops to come out of the process.”

On Aluminum Tunes, you can hear how Stereolab’s music has been blown wide open by this change. The songs from 1995’s Music From The Amorphous Body Study Center set the tone – breezy, luscious pop songs meet shuddering drone-rock miniatures and space-age children’s tunes – and the rest of the material takes in some of their most risk-taking recordings, like the crushed, colliding edits of “Iron Man”, the sugar-rush blast of “Speedy Car”, and a playful cover of several bossa nova standards, “One Note Samba/Surfboard”, with guest flute from Herbie Mann.

They were also writing some of their loveliest songs – see Study Center’s “Pop Quiz” and “The Extension Trip”, and melancholy swoons “You Used To Call Me Sadness” and “Seeperbold”. If Aluminum Tunes doesn’t sit together quite as convincingly as its predecessors, that’s largely due to the sheer sweep of the material it takes in. But listening back, it’s astonishing to hear how Stereolab managed to fit so much of the shadow history of music together in an almost faultless run of singles and albums, and yet to constantly transcend their influences, to make music that could be genuinely affecting, in its love for music, and in its thoughtful address of its audience. It’s pop that loves pop – and loves the bravery of the experimentation at the heart of pop at its best.

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s latest boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.

Mavis Staples on her best albums: “I should be thinking about retiring, but I’m thinking, ‘Hey, I’m just getting started!’”

0
Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Originally published in Uncut's March 2016 issue At the age of 76, and after 65 years of performing, Mavis Staples can hardly believe that she may only just be reaching her peak. “Things have been happening for me lately,” ...

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

Originally published in Uncut’s March 2016 issue

At the age of 76, and after 65 years of performing, Mavis Staples can hardly believe that she may only just be reaching her peak.

“Things have been happening for me lately,” she says, “that make me feel like being born all over again. I mean, at this time I should be thinking about retiring, but I’m thinking, ‘Hey, I’m just getting started.’”

After success with her family gospel and soul group, The Staple Singers, led by her father Roebuck ‘Pops’ Staples, and decades of strong solo work, Mavis Staples now feels revitalised by her new record, the M Ward-produced Livin’ On A High Note – including new songs by Nick Cave and Justin Vernon – and a forthcoming documentary about her life, Mavis!.

“I tell you, it’s a beautiful feeling. So my father is very proud right now. And I know he’s probably telling all the angels, ‘Yep, my daughter Mavis, she’s still at it.’”

_______________________________

The Staple Singers
Uncloudy Day
Vee-Jay, 1959
Following their early church performances, The Staple Singers were picked up by Vee-Jay to record a set of singles, soon compiled on this, their debut LP.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i7V7OMw7tg8

MAVIS STAPLES: When we first started singing on our living room floor back in 1949, 1950, we weren’t doing it for a career, we were singing to amuse ourselves. We had done all of our homework and had nothing to do, so my father picked up his guitar and said, “We’re gonna sing.” And he started giving us things to sing that he and his sisters and brothers would sing when they were in Mississippi. And that was The Staple Singers. One night my aunt Katie came through and said, “Shucks, you guys sound pretty good. I believe I want y’all to sing at our church.” We were so happy to be singing someplace other than on the living room floor. And when we sang in her church, that was it – people liked us so much that they kept clapping us back. And Pops said, “Shucks, these people like us, we’ll have to go and learn some more songs.” And the rest is history. When we moved from the church to the studio, it was fine – we knew we weren’t in church then, and that we couldn’t have an audience in the studio. That’s when it became more serious. In church you were singing to a congregation, and you could get this spiritual feel from just being there. But what you do in the studio is you take your heart in there with you. You have to be very sincere in what you’re doing – you’re singing from your heart. When we first started, man, we would always be on the same microphone in the studio. We wouldn’t do a whole album, we would sing four songs, then The Spaniels would sing four songs, then Maceo Woods would do four songs. And those 12 songs would make the album. Then when we did our first whole albums, Uncloudy Day and Will The Circle Be Unbroken, we sang all the songs!

_______________________________

The Staple Singers
Freedom Highway
Epic, 1965
The Staples engage thrillingly with the Civil Rights movement on this live album, recorded at Chicago’s New Nazareth Church.

This was a live album, recorded in church. The title song refers to the [Civil Rights] march from Selma, Alabama to Montgomery, Alabama. And that was when they wouldn’t let us cross the bridge into Montgomery. That is all shown now in that movie, [2014’s] Selma. Pops wrote the lines “march of freedom’s highway… I’ve made up my mind and I won’t turn around”, and he started putting those verses in there. I still sing “Freedom Highway” today, because it’s still relevant. Sometimes I think I’m back in the 1960s, with what is going on today. So I keep freedom songs in my show, because they are still relevant – “Freedom Highway”, “Why Am I Treated So Bad”… People used to tell us, “You’re very political”, and we’d say, “That’s our way of getting it across, through a song.” Pops would say, “If you write for the Staples, then you gotta read the headlines, ’cause we wanna sing about what’s going on in the world. And maybe we can sing a song to try and fix it.” That was just our way of letting the world know that we, as black people, we got somebody on our side too, and you could hear it in a song. “Why Am I Treated So Bad” – Pops wrote that for the Little Rock Nine. There were nine black children trying to go to a school in Little Rock, Arkansas, and they would not let these children board the bus. Everyday they would walk with their books and their heads held high into a mob of white people throwing rocks at them, spitting at them and calling them names. It went on for so long that the governor of Little Rock, the mayor of Little Rock and the President of the United States said, “Let those children board that bus. Let them go to school.” And we were waiting around the television to see the kids board the bus. When they got ready to go to the bus, a policeman was standing there and he put his club across the door, wouldn’t let them board. And Pops said, “Why are they treating them so bad?”, and he wrote that song that night. It turned out to be Dr King’s favourite. We would sing before Dr King would speak, and he would always wanna hear that song.

The 33rd Uncut New Music Playlist Of 2018

0
Another measly apology for not having posted a Playlist for a few weeks. In my defence, I've been bogged down with spreadsheets working out our end of year polls. We'll unveil the results soon enough - but in the meantime I hope you enjoy this latest round-up of new music we've been playing lately i...

Another measly apology for not having posted a Playlist for a few weeks. In my defence, I’ve been bogged down with spreadsheets working out our end of year polls. We’ll unveil the results soon enough – but in the meantime I hope you enjoy this latest round-up of new music we’ve been playing lately in the Uncut office. And this weekend is pretty much your last chance to lay your hands on a copy of our current Bob Dylan issue – if you can find a copy left, that is. More here about that, should you need it.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
LEMONHEADS

“Can’t Forget”
(Fire)

2.
BOB MOULD

“Sunshine Rock”
(Merge)

3.
WILLIAM TYLER

“Fail Safe”
(Merge)

4.
CASS McCOMBS

“Sleeping Volcanoes”
(Anti-)

5.
PANDA BEAR

“Dolphin”
(Domino)

6.
SARAH LOUISE

“Chitin Flight”
(Thrill Jockey)

7.
ROYAL TRUX

“Every Day Swan”
(Fat Possum)

8.
JESSICA PRATT

“This Time Around”
(City Slang)

9.
THE CIA

“Pleasure Seeker”
(In The Red)

10.
SZUN WAVES

“Constellation (Live From Space)”
(Bandcamp)

11.
DEAN WAREHAM vs CHEVAL SOMBRE

“Grand Canyon”
(Double Feature Records)

12.
PARQUET COURTS

“We R In Control”
(Amazon Music)

The December 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Bob Dylan on the cover. The issue also comes with a unique 12-track Bob Dylan CD, The Best Of The Bootleg Series, featuring an exclusive track from Dylan’s new boxset. Elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on the Small Faces, Jeff Tweedy, the Psychedelic Furs, Moses Sumney, Sister Sledge, Jeff Goldblum, Marianne Fathfull, Ty Segall, Roger Daltrey, Klaus Voormann and many more.