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Soul – The Ultimate Genre Guide

Following specials on GLAM and PUNK, the third edition of the ULTIMATE GENRE GUIDE will be focused on SOUL. A mixture of in-depth new writing and illuminating archive features, inside you will find revealing insights and engrossing encounters with soul legends like ARETHA FRANKLIN, MARVIN GAYE, OTIS...
Following specials on GLAM and PUNK, the third edition of the ULTIMATE GENRE GUIDE will be focused on SOUL. A mixture of in-depth new writing and illuminating archive features, inside you will find revealing insights and engrossing encounters with soul legends like ARETHA FRANKLIN, MARVIN GAYE, OTIS REDDING, CURTIS MAYFIELD, ISAAC HAYES and DUSTY SPRINGFIELD, among many others. A music of vibrant emotion, soul was also the music of societal change – here you can read about its struggles and triumphs. The sound. The look. The legacy. It’s THE ULTIMATE GENRE GUIDE.

Glen Campbell’s Elvis demos unearthed for new comp

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From 1964 to 1968 — in between recording sessions with the Wrecking Crew, touring with the Beach Boys, and recording his own albums — Glen Campbell was recruited to demo a number of songs for Elvis Presley, so he could decide if he wanted to record them. These recordings have recently been unea...

From 1964 to 1968 — in between recording sessions with the Wrecking Crew, touring with the Beach Boys, and recording his own albums — Glen Campbell was recruited to demo a number of songs for Elvis Presley, so he could decide if he wanted to record them.

These recordings have recently been unearthed and 18 of them will be released together for the first time as Glen Campbell Sings For The King on November 16 via Capitol/UMe.

Hear Campbell’s version of “Easy Come, Easy Go” below:

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Sings For The King includes songs written by Ben Weisman and Sid Wayne. Weisman is significant for having written the most songs recorded by Elvis than any other songwriter in history. Weisman and Wayne turned to Glen Campbell who had an uncanny ability to match Elvis’s key and even mimic his delivery, to record fully fleshed out studio versions that they could present to Elvis for his recording consideration. The songs were discovered by Executive Producer Stephen Auerbach who found the 50-year-old recordings on long-forgotten reel-to-reel tapes in a storage space belonging to his uncle-in-law, Ben Weisman.

Sings For The King will be released on vinyl, CD and digital formats, available to pre-order here. There will also be a limited edition 180-gram clear vinyl version available exclusively at the official Glen Campbell site. Check out the tracklisting below:

1. We Call On Him (A Duet With Elvis Presley) *
2. Easy Come, Easy Go *
3. Any Old Time
4. Anyone Can Play
5. I Got Love
6. I’ll Never Know *
7. All I Needed Was The Rain *
8. How Can You Lose What You Never Had *
9. Spinout *
10. Magic Fire
11. I’ll Be Back *
12. Love On The Rocks
13. Stay Away, Joe *
14. Cross My Heart And Hope To Die *
15. Clambake *
16. There Is So Much World To See *
17. Do The Clam *
18. Restless

* Recorded by Elvis Presley

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Hear Yoko Ono’s new version of “Imagine”

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Yoko Ono has released a new version of "Imagine" to mark what would have been John Lennon's 78th birthday (October 9). Hear it below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-xZnzxovFqw Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home! Ono's "Imagine" is taken from her album Warzone, ...

Yoko Ono has released a new version of “Imagine” to mark what would have been John Lennon’s 78th birthday (October 9). Hear it below:

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

Ono’s “Imagine” is taken from her album Warzone, out October 19, which features reworked versions of songs from her back catalogue.

Last year, the National Music Publishers Association announced that Ono would finally be credited as a co-writer on “Imagine” after Lennon admitted in 1980 that much of the lyric and concept for the song came from her.

You can read much more about the making of John Lennon’s Imagine album in the current issue of Uncut, in shops now or available to order online here. For a sneak preview of the article, go here.

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Introducing Queen: The Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide

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This year's London Film Festival begins tomorrow with, as usual, a strong selection of music films. Among the highlights is Blaze - the biopic of late country hellraiser Blaze Foley. A close friend of Townes Van Zant (played here by Charlie Sexton, moonlighting from Bob Dylan's band), Foley's was an...

This year’s London Film Festival begins tomorrow with, as usual, a strong selection of music films. Among the highlights is Blaze – the biopic of late country hellraiser Blaze Foley. A close friend of Townes Van Zant (played here by Charlie Sexton, moonlighting from Bob Dylan’s band), Foley’s was an enigmatic, confounding legend – significant details of his life are undocumented, his recorded musical output was sparse – and though his songs have been covered by Merle Haggard, John Prine and others it seems likely this new film, starring Benjamin Dickey and directed by Ethan Hawke, will further honour Foley and his music.

By contrast, Freddie Mercury is a man who needs little introduction. Later this month, Mercury and his band Queen have their story – or, at least, some of it – turned into a biopic. As ever with projects like this, there are two separate audiences to satisfy. The casual viewer and the devoted fanbase. What part of the stays in? What comes out? What do people already know? What do people need to know?

To an extent, it’s a conversation we might have here when assembling one of our Ultimate Music Guides. Which brings me neatly onto this latest updated UMG – a deluxe, remastered edition of The Ultimate Music Guide to Queen. This splendid volume goes on sale from Thursday – but you can buy a copy now from our online shop. Here’s John Robinson, our one-shots editor, to tell you more about it…

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Had the world changed in 1974, or had Queen changed? Never a critics’ band, Queen’s relationship with the press remained amusingly rebarbative in good times and in bad; those encounters are relayed for your enjoyment here in full, outrageous colour. If the rock press treated Queen with suspicion (occasionally with barely concealed homophobia), even in their early career Freddie Mercury had developed a persona to withstand it, and any of his own vulnerabilities. At one point an interviewer wonders if the singer is vain. “My dear, I’m the vainest creature going,” he replies with some élan, still some months from his commercial breakthrough. “But so are all pop stars…”

If it was designed to repel the press, this same persona, over the 17 years until Mercury’s death in 1991 (and beyond that event, via their million-selling compilations, live albums and the posthumous studio album Made In Heaven) helped Queen enjoy an enormously close relationship with its public. As the pieces here reveal, this was far from accidental. Into a rockist landscape, Queen injected a sense of fun, and willingness to please a crowd. Their operatic hit “Bo Rhap” (as “Bohemian Rhapsody” quickly became known) could not be played fully, authentically, live. Queen embraced the fact. They left the stage leaving backing tapes to deal with the song’s six-part harmonies, and returned in new costumes to rock out like a serious band at the close.

Queen’s was a music that balanced gesture and authenticity, pop and rock, business and pleasure. If there is a struggle in their tale, it is a non-traditional one. Having initially resisted their commercial potential, Queen gave in to their ability to please crowds – and gave the people what they wanted, a policy which they developed to a fine art. Their unrivalled Greatest Hits album was unrivalled for a reason – the tracklisting even changing from region to region. It’s a policy which continues to this day. The new Freddie biopic Bohemian Rhapsody impressed Brian May and Roger Taylor – it will no doubt impress you too.

Let them go? No! We will not let them go!

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We also pay tribute to Aretha Franklin and elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop Records and includes tracks by J Mascis, the Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Loudon Wainwright III – Years In The Making

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Just a few months after the publication of Wainwright’s candid and entertaining autobiography, this 42-track collection of previously unreleased home demos and live recordings acts as an off-the-wall companion piece. Years In The Making is part career précis, part family snapshot album and part b...

Just a few months after the publication of Wainwright’s candid and entertaining autobiography, this 42-track collection of previously unreleased home demos and live recordings acts as an off-the-wall companion piece. Years In The Making is part career précis, part family snapshot album and part blooper reel.

Sequenced in seven distinct chapters (“Folk”, “Rocking Out”, “Kids”, “Love Hurts”, “The Big Picture”, etc), it contains versions of a handful of his most familiar songs, but the focus is firmly on offcuts that flesh out the colourful persona that has been a feature of his catalogue since the late ’60s. “Sonically it’s all over the place, at times noticeably low-fi,” he writes in the accompanying 60-page hardbound book, packed with memorabilia. “I decided that didn’t matter as much as offering up something that was spirited and representational, a diverting two hours of listening.”

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It’s diverting to the point of intrigue, especially when the default-setting witty, satirical mask slips to reveal the complicated man beneath. Loudon constantly aims for the funny bone, be it on the raging “Ulcer” (“There’s a knot inside my breadbox, the doc told me what to do/He said avoid alcohol and caffeine and cigarettes and you”), gag-packed pocket portraits of his extended family (“Meet The Wainwrights”), potshots at religion (“God’s Got A Shit List”) or paeans to his own perceived lack of success (“I Wanna Be On MTV”). But he’s also capable of breaking our hearts at the flip of a switch; a medley of frothy little ditties sung by offspring Rufus and Martha when they were small children is immediately followed by “Your Mother And I”, in which he explains to his kids why their parents are splitting up.

His roots show on the covers tracks (Woody Guthrie, Bob Dylan, a gorgeous reading of his old mate Richard Thompson’s “Down Where The Drunkards Roll”), although Wainwright has always been the most idiosyncratic of folk figureheads. It’s hard to think of another musician who has taken such glee in turning an ages-old musical form on its head, whose love of parody is so intricately laced with affection and reverence.

Even a mid-song broken guitar string becomes a comedic detour (“I Don’t Think That Your Wife Likes Me”) in Loudon’s world, typical of the intermittent beams of light he’s capable of shining on otherwise dark subject matter. Wainwright operates in an easily identifiable troubadour tradition, while casually flitting between social commentary, therapy session and stand-up routine.
The contents of his 23 studio albums have been cherry-picked for more rule-following compilations in the past (2011’s 40 Odd Years boxset is highly recommended), but it’s debatable as to whether any have provided such a broad overview of Wainwright’s musical wanderlust or fascinating character.

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Low – Double Negative

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The first sixteen minutes of Double Negative — essentially the first three songs — contain some of the most bracing music Low has ever made. “Quorum” opens the album with a blast of distortion, which coagulates into rhythmic, vertiginous waves. When Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker begin to sin...

The first sixteen minutes of Double Negative — essentially the first three songs — contain some of the most bracing music Low has ever made. “Quorum” opens the album with a blast of distortion, which coagulates into rhythmic, vertiginous waves. When Alan Sparhawk and Mimi Parker begin to sing, their voices are distorted and scrambled, yet their harmonies remain oddly intact, even catchy. Everything sounds distressed, and scarred, raw like an exposed nerve. As that song melts into “Dancing & Blood”, the commotion morphs into a strange, insistent beat, like a pounding heart or a timer counting down to some awful event. Parker’s voice rises above it all, barely escaping the mire, giving the album its first human-sounding moment before the song is overtaken with static. It’s hard to tell if “Fly”, the third panel in this triptych, is sinking or soaring. “Take my weary bones and fly,” Parker sings, as Steve Garrington’s bassline tethers her to her troubles.

By so thoroughly complicating their sound on these three opening tracks, Low manage the impressive feat of wresting beauty and grace from ugliness and abrasion. Especially for a band with twenty-five years behind them, such a change in sound and approach can be risky, but in this case it pays off and then some, as once again Low show how limitations can actually be freeing.

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Once standard bearers for the nebulously defined slowcore movement of the 1990s—which included Red House Painters, Ida, Codeine, Bedhead, and others—they have always specialized in glacially paced songs, midtempo even at their most rushed, that push Sparhawk and Parker’s wedded harmonies to the forefront. At least in the twenty-first century, Low have worked to explore all new territory, working with different producers (Jeff Tweedy, Dave Fridmann, Matt Beckley) to wring new sounds out of their set-up. But Double Negative is their biggest step forward to date, an album that scrambles their sound completely; it sounds nothing like Low and everything like Low. More than that, it captures what it means to be alive in 2018, when developments in technology create rather than alleviate suffering, when each day seems to present a fresh new hell, when it takes immense will power to maintain equilibrium and hope.

As they did on 2015’s Ones & Sixes, Low traveled down to Eau Claire, Wisconsin, to work at Justin Vernon’s April Base studio with producer B.J. Burton (Bon Iver, Francis & the Lights). Rather than bring finished songs, the trio took mostly sketches and fragments, which became the foundations for these intense experimentations and elaborations. Remarkably, the fragments remained fragments. The songs on Double Negative never move in expected ways: There’s nothing that you’d really call a chorus or a bridge, just melodic passages that sometimes repeat and often do not. Songs fade out before the track ends, or they bleed into each other, or they just dissipate into the air. Disarticulated and discombobulating, the album never lets you get comfortable, never offers anything like solid ground.

In that regard, Double Negative is comparable in sound and execution to Bon Iver’s 22, A Million, another album that distressed what had become a familiar aesthetic. But perhaps the album it most resembles—in execution and dread-laden mood if not necessarily in sound—is Radiohead’s Kid A. Shattering expectations about how they should sound and what they should do, Low gather up sounds on pop’s fringes and foist them just a little closer to the mainstream. And just as Kid A reflected a very particular millennial jitteriness, Double Negative captures something very specific to 2018, even if Sparhawk and Parker sound warmer and more human than Thom Yorke ever did.

Low have never made a record quite so jarring and jagged, but Double Negative pushes beyond their own catalog. Despite 25 years together, despite being one of those bands (like Yo La Tengo or Lambchop or Cowboy Junkies) that has managed to write a long story for themselves with no breakups, no reunions, no major lineup changes, despite being a band often taken for granted, Low have made what might be their most relevant album, one that holds a mirror up to the world.

It’s not the first time they’ve tried; thirteen years ago, they recorded the heavy, strident Drums and Guns, inspired by the War in Iraq, but what makes Double Negative so powerful is the way these themes of alienation, isolation, and overwhelming anxiety inform the music as well as the lyrics. “Saw you at the grocery store, I know I should have walked over and said hello,” Sparhawk sings on “Always Trying to Work It Out,” and it’s one of the few times when they lyrics are immediately legible. And that mundane setting—that “grocery store”—jostles you a bit, reminds you these songs are set in an all too real world. Low conjure that particular anxiety in the lurching, coughing beat, the fragments of warped guitar, the woozy drone, but especially in Sparhawk’s manipulated vocals, which bend and balloon dysmorphically.

This is not a political album exactly; rather, it’s about living at the fraying edge of sanity. Politics is very much a part of that. “My body like a soldier,” Parker sings on “Fly.” “You gotta tell me when it’s over.” But the questions they seem to be asking here, the idea they’re exploring in both the lyrics and the sounds, are much more general: What is the psychological and emotional toll of living in such a tensed state? And how do we move beyond it? How do we heal? “Rome (Always in the Dark),” referring to another fallen empire, offers the most specific answer, a motivating mantra: “Before it falls into total disarray,” Sparhawk and Parker chant together, “you’ll have to learn to live a different way.”

Every song but especially that one sounds strained almost to its breaking point. “Tempest” could have been recorded in a burning studio. “The Sun, the Son” entertains nearly a full minute of silence before gradually mushrooming into a dank drone. “Dancing & Fire” manipulates Sparhawk’s guitar until it sounds more like the distant memory of a guitar than an actual instrument. Here Low’s signature slow pace suits the material, as though they’re forcing you to live in these ugly/beautiful moments, to inhabit these anxieties fully.

And yet, for all its wrenching worries, for all its paranoia and discomfort, for all its din and distortion, Double Negative is never merely cynical. What makes this experiment so poignant and so wildly compelling is the band’s steadfast belief that music can uniquely assess the times in which we live, that it can confront our greatest horrors and put something like a name to nameless fears. Perhaps the most powerful and optimistic moment on Double Negative comes on “Always Up,” when Parker’s voice quietly breaks through the chaos like the sun through storm clouds: “I believe I believe I believe… I can see I can see I can see.” It’s a brief respite from all the tension they have created, which suggests that for these indie rock veterans, making music is a means of illuminating the dark, a sustaining and radical act, and one that is absolutely necessary for survival.

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

BEAK> – >>>

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A consistently entertaining presence on the social networking site Twitter, over the years Geoff Barrow has expended no little energy on upbraiding critics who refer to his group BEAK> as a “side-project”. Of course, it’s understandable why the Bristol band might be regarded as in some way sec...

A consistently entertaining presence on the social networking site Twitter, over the years Geoff Barrow has expended no little energy on upbraiding critics who refer to his group BEAK> as a “side-project”. Of course, it’s understandable why the Bristol band might be regarded as in some way secondary. Barrow is best known as the musical force behind Bristol’s Portishead, whose 1994 album Dummy scooped the Mercury Music Prize and characterised the urbane, bluesy sound of trip-hop (another term that Barrow despised).

Still, let’s look at it for a minute from BEAK>’s perspective. In the decade that’s passed since Portishead’s last album, Third, the trio – Barrow on drums, Robert Plant collaborator Billy Fuller on bass and since 2016, Will Young on electronics – have released three albums, a brace of EPs, and played some 300 gigs, touring increasingly large rooms across Europe and America. While we shouldn’t entirely discount the possibility another fantastic Portishead album is quietly taking shape behind the scenes, we should at least consider that at this stage, the so-called side-project is the one using up the most of Barrow’s creative energies.

It’s worth pointing out, because with the cryptically named >>>, BEAK> may have finally come up with an album that feels like the main event. Their music to date – a murky, atmospheric sound drawing from dub, Krautrock and soundtrack music – has at times given the impression of a bit of a work-in-progress, its first-take, best-take spirit an antidote to Portishead’s stultifying perfectionism. Barrow once described the 11 years spent recording Third as “fucking tense… we could drift for months and months”. By contrast, BEAK>’s debut album came together in 12 days in a rehearsal room in Bristol, the band recording live with no overdubs.

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>>> doesn’t find BEAK> ripping up the rulebook, exactly. The eerie organs, the chunky motorik rhythms, the prevailing sense of oppositional spikiness – all remain present and correct. But it does feel like a progression, with a new clarity and compositional complexity running through its grooves. “Brean Down” comes on like an English take on the occult Krautrock gloom of Can’s Ege Bamyasi, Barrow tossing in skilful Jaki Liebezeit tom fills around the bristly guitars, and muttering obscure critiques (“We don’t like your music cos it ain’t upon the radio”). “RSI” harks back to the pulsating motorik disco of Stereolab, with whom Beak> share a few loves – for Silver Apples, Neu!, and the distinctive burble of the Farfisa organ. Elsewhere, moments defy clear categorisation: see “Harvester”, with its languid countrifed guitar and bold string sweeps; or “Alle Sauvage”, a pressurised instrumental making a virtue of BEAK>’s compositional closeness, drums, bass and synth locked together like clockwork.

So BEAK> are finally nailing it as a band. But it’s useful to view >>> through another lens, too. In 2016, Beak> soundtracked a gloomy Belgian thriller named Couple In A Hole, and Invada -– the Bristol indie label that Barrow co-runs – has emerged as a key player in the popular niche of TV and movie soundtracks pressed to vinyl, with recent editions of Netflix thriller Stranger Things and Johnny Greenwood’s score to Lynne Ramsay’s You Were Never Really Here currently gracing shelves. A filmic quality has leaked into >>>. “The Brazilian” floats in on sci-fi synths before turning into a strutting bass groove that sounds like the signature tune of a swaggering antihero in a gothic spaghetti western. Other times, either by impulse or design, they echo earlier landmarks in experimental composition. “Abbots Leigh” – its name a reference to a sleepy civil parish west of Bristol – explores a nightmarish free improvisation, its simmering tension and savage bursts of sound not unlike the music Ennio Morricone’s Gruppo di Improvvisazione Nuova Consonanza were making in the 1970s.

It’s always been tempting to sift Barrow’s music with an eye for expertly chosen reference points. <<< doesn’t necessarily transcend them, but it does something pretty much as good – it accurately communicates the thrill of three friends together in a rehearsal room, working in perfect lockstep, making music of shared mind. Will they ever make an album with the dark majesty of Dummy, or Third? Jury’s out. Still, maybe that’s fine. Those Portishead albums had the torture of their creation writ through their grooves. On >>>, you get carried along by BEAK>’s sheer enthusiasm – cut adrift from their past, sealed off from expectation, existing entirely in the moment.

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Creedence Clearwater Revival’s catalogue reissued as deluxe box set

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A new Creedence Clearwater Revival box set will be released by Craft Recordings on November 30, featuring half-speed vinyl remasters of all the band's seven studio albums, originally released from 1968-1972. The Studio Albums Collection comprises Creedence Clearwater Revival, Bayou Country, Green R...

A new Creedence Clearwater Revival box set will be released by Craft Recordings on November 30, featuring half-speed vinyl remasters of all the band’s seven studio albums, originally released from 1968-1972.

The Studio Albums Collection comprises Creedence Clearwater Revival, Bayou Country, Green River, Willy And The Poor Boys, Cosmo’s Factory, Pendulum and Mardi Gras, plus an 80-page book featuring new liner notes from music journalist Roy Trakin, archival photos and reproductions of band ephemera.

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

Pre-order The Studio Albums Collection here.

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Jack White’s Raconteurs to release a new album next year

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Jack White's band The Raconteurs – also featuring Brendan Benson, Jack Lawrence and Patrick Keeler – will release a new album in 2019. The band have already been in the studio recording new songs, two of which will be added to the upcoming deluxe anniversary reissue of their 2008 album Consoler...

Jack White’s band The Raconteurs – also featuring Brendan Benson, Jack Lawrence and Patrick Keeler – will release a new album in 2019.

The band have already been in the studio recording new songs, two of which will be added to the upcoming deluxe anniversary reissue of their 2008 album Consolers Of The Lonely, announced yesterday by Third Man Records.

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The new Raconteurs songs will feature on a bonus coloured vinyl 7″ packaged with a ‘metallic vinyl’ 2xLP reissue of Consolers Of The Lonely, available to subscribers to the Third Man Vault. As the website states, they are “the first NEW songs in ten years from recent sessions that will ultimately result in a new Raconteurs album in 2019”.

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

David Bowie early years documentary coming to BBC2 next year

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Completing Francis Whately's trilogy of David Bowie documentaries for the BBC, David Bowie: The First Five Years will air on BBC2 in 2019. According to a press release, the film starts in 1966, soon after David Jones changed his name to Bowie. It "traces his interest in everything from Holst to Pin...

Completing Francis Whately’s trilogy of David Bowie documentaries for the BBC, David Bowie: The First Five Years will air on BBC2 in 2019.

According to a press release, the film starts in 1966, soon after David Jones changed his name to Bowie. It “traces his interest in everything from Holst to Pinky and Perky, from Anthony Newley to Tibetan Buddhism, and how he used all these influences to create not only Ziggy Stardust, but the material for his entire career.”

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

The film has unearthed a report of a BBC audition from Tuesday 2 November 1965 of a band called David Bowie And The Lower Third. The report reveals that their audition material included “Chim-Chim-Cheree” as well as an original number called “Baby That’s A Promise”. In the report, the BBC’s ‘Talent Selection Group’ describe Bowie as having “quite a different sound”, but also “no personality”, “not particularly exciting” and “will not improve with practice”.

The BBC has also announced that it will broadcast David Bowie At Glastonbury 2000 on BBC4 later this month. It was recently announced that Bowie’s headline set would be released on CD and LP.

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

New exhibition selects the 70 best album sleeves of all-time

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An exhibition celebrating 70 years of the album has launched today (October 8) at Waterloo Station in London. It features the best album sleeve from every year since the advent of the long-playing record in 1949, as chosen by a panel of music industry judges. The exhibition coincides with the inau...

An exhibition celebrating 70 years of the album has launched today (October 8) at Waterloo Station in London.

It features the best album sleeve from every year since the advent of the long-playing record in 1949, as chosen by a panel of music industry judges. The exhibition coincides with the inaugural National Album Day this Saturday (October 13).

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

“It’s great to be part of it,” said Billy Bragg, whose album Life’s A Riot With Spy Vs Spy was chosen to represent 1983. “Some of of my favourite albums of all time are in here, Stevie Wonder, the Ramones, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Blondie… I’m really here to represent Barney Bubbles who designed the sleeve, he’s one of the great British album designers, and I was so fortunate he designed a record for me during his lifetime.”

Check out the full list of album covers included in the exhibition below. The sleeves will be on display at London Waterloo station until October 21, before moving to Manchester Piccadilly (October 22 – November 5) and Glasgow Central (November 6 – 19).

2017 Run The Jewels – Run The Jewels 3
2016 The Last Shadow Puppets – Everything You've Come To Expect
2015 David Gilmour – Rattle That Lock
2014 Royal Blood – Royal Blood
2013 White Lies – Big TV
2012 The Temper Trap – The Temper Trap
2011 Bright Eyes – The People's Key
2010 Klaxons – Surfing The Void
2009 Muse – The Resistance
2008 Fleet Foxes – Fleet Foxes
2007 The Cribs – Men's Needs, Women's Need, Whatever
2006 Thom Yorke – The Eraser
2005 Hard-Fi – Stars of CCTV
2004 Kanye West – The College Dropout
2003 Blur – Think Tank
2002 Lemon Jelly – Lost Horizons
2001 The Strokes – Is this it (UK Edition)
2000 Goldfrapp- Felt Mountain
1999 The White Stripes – The White Stripes
1998 Massive Attack – Mezzanine
1997 Spiritualized – Ladies and Gentlemen… We Are Floating in Space
1996 DJ Shadow – Endtroducing
1995 Aphex Twin – I Care Because You Do
1994 Oasis – Definitely Maybe
1993 Suede – Suede
1992 Tom Waits – Bone Machine
1991 Primal Scream – Screamadelica
1990 Sonic Youth – Goo
1989 The Stone Roses – The Stone Roses
1988 Pixies – Surfer Rosa
1987 The Cure – Kiss me kiss me kiss me
1986 Beastie Boys – Licensed To Ill
1985 Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds – The Firstborn is Dead
1984 This Mortal Coil – It'll End in Tears
1983 Billy Bragg – Life’s a Riot with Spy vs Spy
1982 Duran Duran – Rio
1981 Grace Jones – Nightclubbing
1980 The Pop Group – For How Much Longer Do We Tolerate Mass Murder?
1979 Joy Division – Unknown Pleasures
1978 Blondie – Parallel Lines
1977 Sex Pistols – Never Mind the Bollocks
1976 Ramones – Ramones
1975 Brian Eno – Another Green World
1974 Kraftwerk – Autobahn (UK Edition)
1973 Stevie Wonder – Innervisions
1972 Nick Drake – Pink Moon
1971 Funkadelic – Maggot Brain
1970 Miles Davis – Bitches Brew
1969 Scott Walker – Scott 3
1968 The Beatles – The White Album
1967 The Beatles – Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
1966 13th Floor Elevators – The Psychedelic Sounds of The 13th Floor Elevators
1965 Herb Alpert's Tijuana Brass – Whipped Cream & Other Delights
1964 Donald Byrd – A New Perspective
1963 Freddie Hubbard – Hub-tones
1962 The Beach Boys – Surfin' Safari
1961 Hi! We're The Miracles – The Miracles
1960 Conjunto Primavera – Bailemos Twist Con Texaco
1959 Billy Mure – Supersonic Guitars Volume I
1958 Chuck Willis – Chuck Willis, The King of the Stroll
1957 Little Richard – Here's Little Richard
1956 Elvis Presley – Elvis Presley
1955 Lightnin' Hopkins – Lightnin' and The Blues
1954 Thelonious Monk & Sonny Rollins
1953 Duke Ellington – Ellington Uptown
1952 Count Basie – Basie Rides Again!
1951 Bernard Herrmann – The Day The Earth Stood Still
1950 Arturo Toscanini and the NBC Orchestra – Grand Canyon Suite by Ferde Grofé
1949 Beethoven – Symphony No.3 in E Flat Major opus 55 (Eroica)

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Watch Nirvana reunite to play “Smells Like Teen Spirit” and more with Joan Jett

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The surviving members of Nirvana – Dave Grohl, Krist Novoselic and Pat Smear – were reunited at Foo Fighters' Cal Jam festival in San Bernardino, California, this weekend (October 6). As part of Foo Fighters' encore, the trio were joined by Joan Jett and Deer Tick's John McCauley to run through...

The surviving members of NirvanaDave Grohl, Krist Novoselic and Pat Smear – were reunited at Foo Fighters’ Cal Jam festival in San Bernardino, California, this weekend (October 6).

As part of Foo Fighters’ encore, the trio were joined by Joan Jett and Deer Tick’s John McCauley to run through six Nirvana songs. Jett fronted the ensemble on “Breed”, “Smells Like Teen Spirit” and “All Apologies” while McCauley sang “Serve The Servants”, “Scentless Apprentice” and “In Bloom”.

The Distillers’ Brody Dalle played bass on “All Apologies” while Novoselic switched to accordion.

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

Watch “Smells Like Teen Spirit” here:

And the whole six-song set here:

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

The Skids recall ‘Into The Valley’: “There was never a plan”

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Originally published in Uncut's July 2017 issue (Take 242) “Because of my health problems, I never expected to be here for long,” says Richard Jobson. “You start to think, ‘Well, I’d better have the best experience I can possibly have out of this.’ That’s what The Skids’ live perf...

GLOSSOP: It was common to double-track a lot of guitar parts. We did this with The Ruts as well. David was conscious that this was going to be the lead single from the LP and wanted to give it its best shot. I got the sense he was pushing them to a certain extent, but they went along with it.

SIMPSON: Stuart wanted to keep it more like how we’d play it live, and I think he thought things were going a wee bit too far into overdub-land. But we thought, “This sounds immense, bring it on!”

JOBSON: David and Stuart had fall-outs during sessions, but I wasn’t there all the time, because I got so bored. I’d go and walk around Soho.

SIMPSON: [Eventually] Stuart threw a wobbly about the direction things were going in – much to our surprise, because we thought things were sounding fantastic. Stuart was prone to throwing the toys out of the pram a wee bit. So he left – we weren’t sure if he was coming back. We were kind of stuck, as there were a few guitar overdubs to do – “Into The Valley” had already been finished.

JOBSON: Stuart was strange in the studio sometimes, he’d do his stuff and then he got really homesick sometimes, and he’d vanish. You’d go, “Where is he?” and he’d already be back in Scotland. He did that throughout all of our time together in The Skids – in fact, through to the last days of his life. He was a guy with a dark side to his personality. I always understood why he was like he was, I never really questioned it.

GLOSSOP: David and I were sitting there, thinking, ‘What are we gonna do? We haven’t got a guitarist!’ and I said, ‘Well, [Townhouse chief maintenance engineer] Chris Jenkins plays guitar, shall I ask him if he wants to come and do it?’ Chris came and played, but the thing is Chris is a rock guitarist, so we had to get him to simplify his playing so he could play Stuart’s parts. “No, don’t use vibrato, Stuart wouldn’t have done that…” It was quite funny. so someone else played a lot of the guitar parts on there – he’s credited on the record, so it’s common knowledge.

JOBSON: We didn’t want to do Top Of The Pops, but Virgin said, “You have to do it.” We had met the BBC producers and the DJs, and it was quite creepy, you know? It’s amazing that all these things have come out since, but you could really feel it in the air, it was pretty unpleasant. Most of the other acts were pretty atrocious. so when we released “Into The Valley”, we spoke about it beforehand and Stuart felt the same as I did – “Why the fuck are we here? This is not why we want to be in a band.” I’m epileptic, and I wasn’t feeling so good before we did the performance. Stuart was aware of that, and he said, “Let’s go for it, we’ll just do one take.” So we only did one take – normally you do five. I felt really ill. It was a mental performance, by these young guys who obviously couldn’t give a fuck. I was wearing some big leopard-skin jacket.

SIMPSON: Richard took it by storm with his Jobbo jive, as we’d call it. It put the track into people’s minds and it crept up the charts.

JOBSON: I was back in Scotland the day after the performance screened, and you could feel the difference. That weekend we were rehearsing and I noticed there were 20 or 30 local kids hanging about outside. I think we’d gone from being a cult band to something else, pretty much overnight. But I think it was difficult for Stuart for the rest of his time in The Skids, because he wanted to be home. He didn’t want to be on tour as much as we did. I guess the very thing that made us successful would be the very thing that finished it.

SIMPSON: Stuart was a huge talent, everyone knows the talent that he had, and it was a tragic waste [Adamson took his own life in 2001]. It’s still hard to take in.

JOBSON: I was recently asked to come on The One Show, so they could sit and have a laugh at the song’s expense, with various misinterpretations of the lyrics. I said, “You can have a laugh at my lyrics if you like, but that song was written about friends of mine who went to Northern Ireland, and it’s about something quite serious in the wider world. so why would I want to come and laugh at it?” They were shocked I wasn’t jumping up and down with excitement to come on some banal programme to take the piss out of my own work. But “Into The Valley” is quite a serious song, and if other people misinterpret the lyrics because of my odd use of phonetics or my accent, that’s not my problem. It’s a song and a lyric I’m very proud of.

SIMPSON: I don’t think we’d get off the stage if we didn’t do this one live! It’s sounding good. I don’t think anybody who ever came to any of our gigs ever went away saying, “That was crap.” They always had a fantastic time.

JOBSON: It’s a song that I don’t get bored singing. Presumably on the live dates, I’ll be getting a lot of help singing it. We’ve got to get close again to that feeling of every night being a one-off. singing “Into The Valley” on a Tuesday night in Cleethorpes, then singing it again the following night in Newcastle-under-Lyme, you did it as if it was the last time you’d ever sing it.

Deep Purple to reissue two more classic albums on purple vinyl

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Rhino will release special purple vinyl editions of Deep Purple’s early 70s albums Deep Purple In Rock and Fireball on November 23. Both albums have been newly remastered by Andy Pearce and Matt Wortham from the original analogue tapes, and have been cut at half-speed by Barry Grint at Alchemy M...

Rhino will release special purple vinyl editions of Deep Purple’s early 70s albums Deep Purple In Rock and Fireball on November 23.

Both albums have been newly remastered by Andy Pearce and Matt Wortham from the original analogue tapes, and have been cut at half-speed by Barry Grint at Alchemy Mastering.

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

Both albums are extensively reviewed in Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to Deep Purple, as are all their albums, alongside a slew of archive interviews. The bookazine is in shops now – read more and order a copy online here.

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Brian Eno announces deluxe vinyl reissue of four ambient landmarks

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Brian Eno has announced the deluxe vinyl issue of four of his 1970s albums – Discreet Music, Music For Films, Music For Airports and On Land – via UMC/Virgin EMO on November 16. The albums have been remastered at half-speed for 45RPM so that they now come as 2xLP sets in a gatefold sleeve with ...

Paul McCartney pays tribute to Beatles engineer Geoff Emerick

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Geoff Emerick, the recording engineer who helped oversee some of The Beatles' most sonically groundbreaking works, has died aged 72. Emerick joined EMI as an assistant engineer in June 1962, at almost exactly the same time as The Beatles' first recording session at Abbey Road. In 1966 he was promot...

Geoff Emerick, the recording engineer who helped oversee some of The Beatles’ most sonically groundbreaking works, has died aged 72.

Emerick joined EMI as an assistant engineer in June 1962, at almost exactly the same time as The Beatles’ first recording session at Abbey Road. In 1966 he was promoted to first engineer at the prompting of George Martin, helping the band realise their cutting-edge ideas on tracks such as “Tomorrow Never Knows”, “A Day In The Life”, “All You Need Is Love” and “The Ballad Of John And Yoko”.

He later worked on several of Paul McCartney’s solo and Wings albums, including Band On The Run. He produced two albums for Elvis Costello and also worked with Kate Bush, Badfinger, Cheap Trick, Art Garfunkel, Ultravox and Jeff Beck among many others.

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“I first met Geoff when he was a young engineer working at Abbey Road Studios,” wrote Paul McCartney on his website. “He would grow to be the main engineer that we worked with on many of our Beatles tracks. He had a sense of humour that fitted well with our attitude to work in the studio and was always open to the many new ideas that we threw at him. He grew to understand what we liked to hear and developed all sorts of techniques to achieve this. He would use a special microphone for the bass drum and played it strategically to achieve the sound that we asked him for. We spent many exciting hours in the studio and he never failed to come up with the goods.”

In a tribute on her website, Kate Bush wrote: “Geoff Emerick was the first engineer I ever worked with. He recorded ‘The Man With The Child in His Eyes’ along with a couple of other tracks at Air Studios in Oxford St in 1974. He was incredibly sweet and supportive – I’d never been in a recording studio before, let alone played live with an orchestra. He joked around with me and put me at ease. He had a brilliant sense of humour and was really quite mischievous. I’ll always remember him with a smile on his face. What a really lovely man he was, an incredibly gifted engineer and one of the truly great heroes of the music business. It was such an honour to work with him.”

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

The Police announce career-spanning vinyl box set

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The Police have announced the release of a career-spanning 6xLP box set for November 16. Every Move You Make: The Studio Recordings contains the band's five studio albums plus a sixth disc entitled ‘Flexible Strategies’ which features non-album recordings and B-sides. Order the latest issue of...

The Police have announced the release of a career-spanning 6xLP box set for November 16.

Every Move You Make: The Studio Recordings
contains the band’s five studio albums plus a sixth disc entitled ‘Flexible Strategies’ which features non-album recordings and B-sides.

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

The albums have been remastered at half-speed and cut onto 180-gram heavyweight vinyl at Abbey Road Studios. Every Move You Make: The Studio Recordings also contains a special 24-page, 12”x12” photobook featuring rare and unseen images from the band’s personal archives, housed in deluxe packaging of a hardcover box with lift-off lid.

Check out the tracklisting below:

Outlandos d’Amour (1978)
Side One:
Next to You
So Lonely
Roxanne
Hole in My Life
Peanuts
Side Two:
Can’t Stand Losing You
Truth Hits Everybody
Born in the ’50s
Be My Girl – Sally
Masoko Tanga

Reggatta de Blanc (1979)
Side One:
Message in a Bottle
Reggatta de Blanc
It’s Alright for You
Bring on the Night
Deathwish
Side Two:
Walking on the Moon
On Any Other Day
The Bed’s Too Big Without You
Contact
Does Everyone Stare
No Time This Time

Zenyatta Mondatta (1980)

Side One:
Don’t Stand So Close to Me
Driven to Tears
When the World Is Running Down, You Make the Best of What’s Still Around
Canary in a Coalmine
Voices Inside My Head
Bombs Away
Side Two:
De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da
Behind My Camel
Man in a Suitcase
Shadows in the Rain
The Other Way of Stopping

Ghost in the Machine (1981)

Side One:
Spirits in the Material World
Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic
Invisible Sun
Hungry for You (J’aurais toujours faim de toi)
Demolition Man
Side Two:
Too Much Information
Rehumanize Yourself
One World (Not Three)
Ωmegaman

Synchronicity (1983)
Side One:
Synchronicity I
Walking in Your Footsteps
O My God
Mother
Miss Gradenko
Synchronicity II
Side Two:
Every Breath You Take
King of Pain
Wrapped Around Your Finger
Tea in the Sahara

Bonus Disc: Flexible Strategies
Side One:
Dead End Job (1978)
Landlord (1979)
Visions Of The Night (1979)
Friends (1980)
A Sermon (1980)
Shambelle (1981)
Side Two:
Flexible Strategies (1981)
Low Life (1981)
Murder By Numbers (1983)
Truth Hits Everybody (Remix) (1983)
Someone To Talk To (1983)
Once Upon A Daydream (1983)

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Suspiria: Thom Yorke, Tilda Swinton and invocations for a demon mother

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This Sunday, Thom Yorke celebrates his 50th birthday. As a teenager coming of age in the mid-Eighties, then, he would have been well-placed to watch a film like Dario Argento’s Suspiria – perhaps in its heavily edited VHS version on Thorn EMI. Colourful and hypnotic, Suspiria is one of those fil...

This Sunday, Thom Yorke celebrates his 50th birthday. As a teenager coming of age in the mid-Eighties, then, he would have been well-placed to watch a film like Dario Argento’s Suspiria – perhaps in its heavily edited VHS version on Thorn EMI. Colourful and hypnotic, Suspiria is one of those films guaranteed to stick with you – much as, say, impalement by meat hook might. The setting is a prestigious dance academy in Munich, run by an all-female staff overseen by a gaunt, charismatic director. But all is not quite as it seems. Students meet with a grisly fate – stabbed through the neck, hanged with telephone cables, impaled, throat slit – and the truth about the academy is finally revealed in a climax of baroque, supernatural horror.

Yorke is on hand to score the 2018 remake of Suspiria, directed by Italian filmmaker Luca Guadagnino. There are subtle shifts between the two films. Guadagnino relocates the film to Berlin, 1977 – the year Argento’s film was released – bolstering his depiction of the wintry city with real events taken from the ‘German Autumn’. When not dabbling in the dark arts, the academy’s staff find time to catch up with the hijacking of Lufthansa Flight 181 by terrorists sympathetic to the Red Army Faction. We see demonstrations in the streets while, early on, a bomb blast rocks the academy. These contribute to the growing sense of dread and disorientation Guadagnino creates. Nowhere is safe, it seems. Not out there and certainly not… in here.

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‘Here’ is the Tanz Academy, founded by the mysterious Helena Markos and run by the formidable and demanding Madam Blanc (Tilda Swinton). As the film opens, a new student has arrived – Susie Bannion (Dakota Johnson), who has swapped her oppressive Amish upbringing in Ohio for something she discovers is just as oppressive and cult-like in Berlin. Ballet, we learn, is really just a means to exact terrible punishment against transgressors – or perhaps to nourish ancient and terrible entities.

The film works best in the first hour or so, where Guadagnino satisfyingly sets up his mood and eerie atmosphere. Unlike the screaming, lurid colours in Argento’s original film, Guadagnino favours a dull palette of browns, greys and greens. The academy seems perpetually underlit and slightly rundown; much like the rest of Berlin, it seems. There are a number of gruesome shocks early on – a dance routine, not for squeamish viewers – but largely Guadagnino is establishing mood. There’s no great reveal about the identity of the academy staff: they’re a coven of witches while the school itself is, as one outgoing member of staff describes it, “a box of rabies”. Factionalism is rife. Are you with Swinton’s gothy madam – or are you with the ageless creature with long fingernails that dwells in what appears to be Jimmy Page’s sub-basement?

Guadagnino returns to this theme of division and dysfunction. One character repeatedly travels between East and West Berlin. Susie tells Blanc about the religious schism between that Amish and the Mennonites in her childhood. Operational feuds occur between rival factions within the real life terrorist organizations. There is even a less specific separation at work, where a heavily disguised Swinton also plays a male psychoanalyst Dr Jozef Klemperer (she is mysteriously credited, though, as ‘Lutz Ebersdorf’). It is also a film about mothers. Susie and her own overbearing mother, bed-ridden back on the farm in Ohio; Susie and Blanc, her surrogate mother; and finally the ghastly Three Mothers whose arcane theology underpins both Argento and Guadagnino’s films. As you can tell, here is a lot going on here.

Yorke’s score, meanwhile, drones and glowers maniacally away in the background. In its way, it casts just as powerful a spell as the dance sequences. These are extraordinary invocations of their demon mother, upholstered by superb audio design: early on, Susie is led through a routine that acts as a spell, with every move the dancer makes exerting a ghastly physical impact on a disloyal student in another room.

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THOM YORKE’S SUSPIRIA SOUNDTRACK IS RELEASED OCTOBER 26 BY XL RECORDINGS
SUSPIRIA IS IN CINEMAS FROM NOVEMBER 16

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We also pay tribute to Aretha Franklin and elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop Records and includes tracks by J Mascis, the Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

The Rolling Stones unveil Beggars Banquet 50th Anniversary Edition

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The Rolling Stones have revealed details of the Beggars Banquet (50th Anniversary Edition) to be released all formats this November 16th by ABKCO. The limited edition vinyl package will come in a gatefold jacket, with a bonus 12” of “Sympathy For the Devil” in mono cut at 45rpm, backed with a...

The Rolling Stones have revealed details of the Beggars Banquet (50th Anniversary Edition) to be released all formats this November 16th by ABKCO.

The limited edition vinyl package will come in a gatefold jacket, with a bonus 12” of “Sympathy For the Devil” in mono cut at 45rpm, backed with an etching of the original ‘toilet’ cover. Also included is a replica of the rare Japanese bonus flexidisc containing a phone interview with Mick Jagger from 1968. The album has been newly mastered by Bob Ludwig, with lacquers cut at Abbey Road and pressed on 180g vinyl.

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

The artwork of Beggars Banquet (50th Anniversary Edition) pays tribute to both historical sleeve images: the package will be housed with the Michael Vosse ‘toilet’ image, with an overwrap of the ‘inoffensive’ wedding invitation art.

Pre-order the vinyl edition here and check out the tracklisting below:

Disc 1

Side A
Sympathy For the Devil
No Expectations
Dear Doctor
Parachute Woman
Jigsaw Puzzle

Side B
Street Fighting Man
Prodigal Son
Stray Cat Blues
Factory Girl
Salt of the Earth

Disc 2

Sympathy For the Devil (mono)

Flexidisc
‘Hello, This Is Mick Jagger!’ London to Tokyo April 17, 1968

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.

Joe Strummer – Joe Strummer 001

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This is the thing about the charisma of premature death. Absolution usually follows. After Joe Strummer died in December 2002, the Strummer Legend was quickly burnished into a holy glow, a posthumous radiance. Joe was no longer The Man Who Broke Up The Clash and it was like he hadn’t spent the bes...

This is the thing about the charisma of premature death. Absolution usually follows. After Joe Strummer died in December 2002, the Strummer Legend was quickly burnished into a holy glow, a posthumous radiance. Joe was no longer The Man Who Broke Up The Clash and it was like he hadn’t spent the best part of a decade drunk or on holiday. 
In the way people always have, they saw him more clearly when he was no longer there. They regarded him now as they might the Burning Bush of Biblical 
repute or a tablet of stone inscribed with wisdom’s words, God’s hip voice. “Raise a toast to Saint Joe Strummer,” Craig Finn sang on The Hold Steady’s 
2008 track “Constructive Summer”, giving voice 
to the feelings of many.

Whatever the post-mortem hum that surrounded Strummer, the fact remained that after The Clash’s dismal end – for which he ever blamed himself, repeatedly, at length, especially over drinks – the adoring roar that he had once enjoyed was now silenced. If it was true, as he often said, that The Clash alone gave him purpose, it seemed as plausible that without The Clash he meant surprisingly little to anyone. His fear that his audience was gone was realised when his solo album, Earthquake Weather, was released in September 1989 to poor reviews and disastrous sales. Worldwide, Earthquake Weather sold no more than 7,000 copies. I spoke to him that Christmas. He sounded humiliated, more depressed than ever. What was he going to do now? “Disappear, probably,” he said.

That’s what Joe then did, like he’d evaporated. He later described the following decade as “The Wilderness Years”, a time of creative drought, depression and drugs. “The Wilderness Years”, such as they were, properly began in 1983, when Joe evicted Mick Jones from The Clash. From then, Strummer was apt to drift, project to project, often taking bit parts in films no-one saw for which he wrote a lot of music no-one heard. Anyway, it’s to those years that this expansive collection rather bravely returns us. Up to a point, the anthology makes plausible the view that, however flawed, there was more to the music Strummer made outside The Clash than its commercial reputation allows. CD1 opens with two tracks from Strummer’s pub-rock crew The 101’ers, the band Bernie Rhodes wanted eradicated from Joe’s past. But this is where it started for Joe, right leg pumping at the Charlie Pigdog Club and The Elgin in Ladbroke Grove, unforgettable nights. The following “Love Kills”, a lumpy punk-blues, recorded in 1986 for Alex Cox’s Sid And Nancy, is presumably here because it was the first time Joe had recorded with Mick Jones since The Clash split. Its fierce B-side, “Dum Dum Club”, might have been a better selection.

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In 1987, Strummer was in Nicaragua with 
a beard and a small role in Walker, Alex Cox’s unhinged satire on American imperialism. 
He also composed a fabulous score for the 
film, represented here by “Tennessee Rain”, 
a campfire sing-along, not entirely typical of the soundtrack. “Trash City”, meanwhile, is a great slutty rocker from the 1988 Keanu Reeves film Permanent Record that introduced Joe to the band he called Latino Rockabilly War, who backed 
him on Earthquake Weather. There are two songs from Finnish director Aki Kaurismäki’s 1990 
I Hired A Contract Killer, in which Joe again had a minor part. “Burning Lights” is stark, a song about travelling without getting anywhere, a familiar destination for Joe at the time. “Afro-Cuban Be-Bop” is Joe at his dreamiest, with a lovely fluttering vocal and sweet melody. Both tracks were credited to The Astro-Physicians, actually just Joe and a bongo player. Elsewhere, the straining earnestness of “Generations” is in sharp contrast to the uproarious Rick Rubin-produced “It’s A Rockin’ World”, composed for 
a South Park episode.

Still-born Earthquake Weather is represented by an affable version of The Tennors’ rocksteady tune “Ride Your Donkey” – mystifyingly when “Leopardskin Limousines”, one of Joe’s greatest songs, was available. After 10 years gulping for air, Joe fully found his voice again on the three terrific records he made between 1999 and 2002 with The Mescaleros (the third, Streetcore, completed after his death). There are no quibbles, minor or otherwise, about tracks included from them, especially valedictory dub epic “Yalla Yalla”. Further highlights of CD1 are two duets – the first, suitably grainy, with Johnny Cash on Bob Marley’s “Redemption Song”, the other with Jimmy Cliff on the rousing “Over The Border” and the sentimental version of “Minstrel Boy”, recorded for Ridley Scott’s gung-ho war film 
Black Hawk Down.

CD2 features 12 unreleased tracks, some sourced from newly discovered tapes stashed in Strummer’s ‘archive’ – actually his garden shed, full to the brim with all manner of artefacts. Not all of it’s great. Joe at times was inappropriately convinced he should form a blues trio. On the evidence of lamentable 12-bar slog “32nd Street”, this would have been an even worse idea than sacking Mick from The Clash, notwithstanding the fact Mick plays guitar on the track, an outtake from the Sid And Nancy soundtrack. Country pastiche “2 Bullets”, sung by Pearl Harbour, is from the same undistinguished source. More valuable is the version of a newly written 101’ers barnstormer, “Letsagettabittarockin’”, recorded in 1974 by Joe on a cassette in his room at his old Elgin Avenue squat, and “Czechoslovak Song/Where Is England”, a striking demo of “This Is England”, the only redeemable track from Clash swansong Cut The Crap.

Two tracks come from clearly tentative July 1984 sessions – “Pouring Rain” and “Blues On The River”, both plaintive, the latter with an insinuatingly atmospheric groove. “Pouring Rain” was reworked in 1993, dressed up with flute, accordion, fiddle, saxophone, for the soundtrack of the film When Pigs Fly at sessions featuring jazz-folk bassist Danny Thompson and Rockpile drummer Terry Williams. “When Pigs Fly” itself is lovely, busking pop, Joe sounding attractively weary, like a lot of late nights gathered together. “Rose Of Erin” has a similar Celtic swirl, but Joe’s constrained, a little uptight, like he’s singing conscientiously but without much feeling from a lyric sheet. “The Cool Impossible”, recorded separately with the same musicians, is quietly fantastic, Strummer confident enough to veer off on digressive vocal tangents, his eccentric phrasing dashingly spontaneous. “London Is Burning”, meanwhile, is an early version of Streetcore’s “Burning Streets”, brash in the manner of vintage Clash. But what to make of “US North”, produced by Mick Jones in 1986, a torrent of words delivered with a sort of wan passion over a shunting beat that goes on for 10 life-sapping minutes? You keep waiting for it to find a new gear, take off, any direction a relief from this corseted repetition of droning strings and watery guitar.

Three more tracks come with the vinyl boxset, with much extra paraphernalia. A seven-inch single couples another early demo of “This Is England” with the clanging call-to-arms of 1984 demo “Before We Go Forward”. There’s also, finally, a cassette, a facsimile of one found in Joe’s archive featuring a song called “Full Moon”, a 1975 demo recorded in the basement of 101 Walterton Road, his old Maida Vale squat. It’s enormously touching – Joe at 22, late at night with his guitar, his future unwritten, so much unknown yet to come in the cool impossible.

The November 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with David Bowie on the cover. The issue also comes with two exclusive Bowie art prints, including one previously unseen image. We pay tribute to Aretha Franklin, while elsewhere in the issue you’ll find exclusive features on John Lennon, Tom Petty, Led Zeppelin, Cat Power, John Grant, Blondie, Connan Mockasin, Billy Gibbons, Family, Stereolab and many more. Our free 15-track CD has been exclusively curated by Sub Pop and includes tracks by J Mascis, The Afghan Whigs, Mudhoney, Luluc, Low and Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever.