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Mercury Rev on ‘Opus 40’: “We were broken up on the inside”

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Mercury Rev recall the creation of one of their finest songs, a highlight of 1998's Deserter's Songs. Originally published in Uncut's October 2015 issue. ________________________________ “‘Opus 40’ could be the song of ours that’s most connected to the Catskill Mountains,” says frontman ...

DAVE FRIDMANN: At Tarbox, we finalised it and mixed it, and came up with all the final arrangement portions, but a tremendous amount of work had already been done when they came into the studio.

SNYDER: Much of “Opus 40” was re-recorded there. What remains for sure are Levon’s drums, Amy and Marie’s singing and whistling, and my part on the Hammond B3. The organ we kept from the first session, even though the solo I played on the B3 was a little clunky. I hit at least one wrong note but I insisted on keeping it ’cause that was the one I played while Levon was actually playing. Of the new additions, the harmonies during the choruses really made the song pop. I’m pretty sure it’s Grasshopper who’s hitting those high notes, which for me lives on as an unintended tribute to Rick Danko.

FRIDMANN: I don’t believe any actual string players were harmed in the making of that song, I believe that’s all samples and synthesisers. There was a confluence of our technical abilities, having a stable environment to work in, and having the ability to get to where we wanted to be in the first place. That combined with the fact I was simultaneously making The Soft Bulletin with The Flaming Lips and there was obviously a lot of cross-pollination going on. We were all learning what some of the capabilities of that technology was at that time, which was awesome.

DONAHUE: I remember thanking Dave Fridmann at the end of Deserter’s Songs, and saying “Thank you, this is probably our last hoorah together.” What took us by surprise was that people didn’t see the album coming. Maybe there weren’t oboes on See You On The Other Side, but there were other orchestrations, and more classical instrumentation, and on Deserter’s Songs we just fully dove in. But even when we handed it in [to the label], no-one said anything. It was just quiet. It didn’t occur to me that it would make waves like it did. All of a sudden we were being asked to do world tours. We didn’t even have guitar amps. I had sold all my guitars for heroin. We had no infrastructure, there was no management, there was nothing. It took a lot of soul-searching to even begin on how to piece this back together.

GRASSHOPPER: It really freaked us out. We were in London, in Sainbury’s, and all of a sudden we hear it on the loud speakers in the grocery store. We’d be in taxis and you’d hear it on the radio. We started to get stalkers that would follow us to the hotels and stuff, and Jonathan and I had to book under different names because you’d have people knocking at 3am on the hotel door. “Where’s Opus 40?” It got really crazy for a while… we played two nights at Shepherd’s Bush a few years later, and one night both Ryan Adams and Bryan Adams were on the guestlist. We thought, ‘Wow, that’s pretty cool.’

DONAHUE: I live on top of a mountain overlooking Woodstock now, and Grasshopper lives in a small town that’s nearby. We’re releasing a new album, our first one in seven years, and people say, “What took you so long?” We’re living in the mountains, people. Time goes differently here. It’s a lot like being an astronaut, you go up in space, you come back down and 30 years have passed on earth. It’s like that. Seven years to me is like seven months, it just goes by differently.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

REM announce 8xCD box set of BBC recordings

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On October 19, Craft Recordings will release REM At The BBC, a compendium of rare live and session recordings spanning 30 years. Performances featured in the 8xCD/1xDVD box set include a John Peel Session (1998), Drivetime and Mark & Lard appearances (2003) and a Radio 1 Live Lounge performance...

On October 19, Craft Recordings will release REM At The BBC, a compendium of rare live and session recordings spanning 30 years.

Performances featured in the 8xCD/1xDVD box set include a John Peel Session (1998), Drivetime and Mark & Lard appearances (2003) and a Radio 1 Live Lounge performance (2008). Live broadcasts include a show from Nottingham’s Rock City (1984), a 1995 Milton Keynes gig on the Monster tour, their 1999 Glastonbury headline set and an invitation-only 2004 show at London’s St James’s Church.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

Listen to “Losing My Religion (Live From Into The Night on BBC Radio 1 / 1991)” below:

REM At The BBC is also available in truncated 2xCD and 2xLP formats. For the full tracklistings, and to pre-order the album, go here.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

Memorial unveiled to rock pianist Nicky Hopkins

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A memorial to rock pianist Nicky Hopkins – who played with everyone from The Beatles to The Rolling Stones and David Bowie to Ella Fitzgerald – will be unveiled at midday tomorrow (September 8) in Ealing's Perivale Park. Nicky passed away in 1994 and fan John Wood has been running a crowdfundin...

A memorial to rock pianist Nicky Hopkins – who played with everyone from The Beatles to The Rolling Stones and David Bowie to Ella Fitzgerald – will be unveiled at midday tomorrow (September 8) in Ealing’s Perivale Park.

Nicky passed away in 1994 and fan John Wood has been running a crowdfunding campaign to erect a permanent memorial to this musician’s musician, in the form of a park bench designed like a piano.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

The campaign offered the opportunity for pledgers to have their name inscribed on the bench and contribute towards funding a music scholarship at London’s Royal Academy of Music, where Nicky himself won a scholarship in the 1950s. Names that have pledged in the campaign include Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts, Ronnie Wood, Bill Wyman, Yoko Ono Lennon, Roger Daltrey, Jimmy Page, Johnnie Walker, Bob Harris and Kenney Jones.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

Hear a new version of David Bowie’s “Beat Of Your Drum”

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The next in the series of career-spanning David Bowie box sets is released on October 13. Loving The Alien covers the period 1983-88 and includes a completely new production of Bowie's 1987 album Never Let Me Down. You can hear the new 2018 version of "Beat Of Your Drum" below. The track is release...

The next in the series of career-spanning David Bowie box sets is released on October 13. Loving The Alien covers the period 1983-88 and includes a completely new production of Bowie’s 1987 album Never Let Me Down.

You can hear the new 2018 version of “Beat Of Your Drum” below. The track is released digitally today, as well on a limited edition 7-inch picture disc backed with the 2018 version of “Zeroes”.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

Producer Mario McNulty worked on the new version of Never Let Me Down at Electric Lady Studios in New York with longtime Bowie musicians Sterling Campbell on drums, Reeves Gabrels and David Torn on guitars, and Tim Lefebvre on bass.

Of “Beat Of Your Drum”, McNulty says: “David Torn’s ambient guitars start the song that now lead into a much darker world than its shiny predecessor. David sang all the backing vocals on this which I have kept.”

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

Queen’s Bohemian Rhapsody soundtrack to feature Live Aid songs

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Queen have revealed full details of the soundtrack album that will be released on October 19 to accompany their upcoming biopic, Bohemian Rhapsody. It includes five songs from their historic 1985 Live Aid performance, never previously issued in audio form. The 22-track album features several other ...

Queen have revealed full details of the soundtrack album that will be released on October 19 to accompany their upcoming biopic, Bohemian Rhapsody.

It includes five songs from their historic 1985 Live Aid performance, never previously issued in audio form. The 22-track album features several other previously unreleased live tracks from throughout Queen’s career, as well as brand new versions of some old favourites.

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“We Will Rock You” starts out as the studio version, then seamlessly blends into a live performance with audience participation. “Don’t Stop Me Now” features Brian May’s newly recorded guitar parts and is much closer to how the band plays the track live today.

“Doing All Right” was originally recorded by Smile, the predecessor band to Queen that featured Brian and Roger with vocalist Tim Staffell. Freddie Mercury’s interpretation of the song featured on the first Queen album. To recreate the original Smile version, Brian and Roger re-united with Staffell at Abbey Road Studios.

Check out the full tracklisting for the Bohemian Rhapsody soundtrack below:

1. 20th Century Fox Fanfare 0:25
2. Somebody To Love 4:56
3. Doing All Right… revisited (Performed by Smile) 3:17
4. Keep Yourself Alive (Live At The Rainbow) 3:56
5. Killer Queen 2:59
6. Fat Bottomed Girls (Live In Paris) 4:38
7. Bohemian Rhapsody 5:55
8. Now I’m Here (Live At Hammersmith Odeon) 4:26
9. Crazy Little Thing Called Love 2:43
10. Love Of My Life (Rock In Rio) 4:29
11. We Will Rock You (Movie Mix) 2:09
12. Another One Bites The Dust 3:35
13. I Want To Break Free 3:43
14. Under Pressure (Performed by Queen & David Bowie) 4:04
15. Who Wants To Live Forever 5:15
16. Bohemian Rhapsody (Live Aid) 2:28
17. Radio Ga Ga (Live Aid) 4:06
18. Ay-Oh (Live Aid) 0:41
19. Hammer To Fall (Live Aid) 4:04
20. We Are The Champions (Live Aid) 3:57
21. Don’t Stop Me Now… revisited 3:38
22. The Show Must Go On 4:32

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

The 29th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

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A lot of more ambient, experimental sounds at the start of this week's playlist - I should really thank Richard Williams for recommending Arve Henriksen's The Height Of The Reeds the other day, which started me off down this route. What else? A new venture from Steve Jansen, the return of Thom Yorke...

A lot of more ambient, experimental sounds at the start of this week’s playlist – I should really thank Richard Williams for recommending Arve Henriksen’s The Height Of The Reeds the other day, which started me off down this route. What else? A new venture from Steve Jansen, the return of Thom Yorke, some vintage cuts from Zimbabwe’s mbira queen, Stella Chiweshe. Now dive in.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
ARVE HENRIKSEN

“Pink Cherry Trees”
(Rune Grammofon)

2.
EXIT NORTH

“Bested Bones”
(via Bandcamp)

Book of Romance and Dust by Exit North

3.
FEDERICO DURAND

“Los Juguetes De Minka Podhajska”
(Iikki)

4.
THOM YORKE

“Suspirium”
(XL Recordings)

5.
DISCLOSURE

“Moonlight” [Extended Mix]
(UMG)

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

6.
HAIKU SALUT

“The More And Moreness”
(PRAH Recordings)

7.
STELLA CHIWESHE

“Mayaya (Part 1 & 2)”
(Glitterbeat Records)

8.
CAMERA

“Emotional Detox” [Snippets]
(Bureau B)

9.
TUNNG

“ABOP”
(Full Time Hobby)

10.
BLUE ORCHIDS

“Get Bramah”
(Tiny Global Productions)

11.
MICAH P. HINSON

“Small Spaces”
(Full Time Hobby)

12.
DUR DUR BAND

“Jaceyl Mirahiis”
(Analog Africa)

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

Steely Dan announce UK arena tour

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Steely Dan have announced details of a UK arena tour. They will be joined by special guest Steve Winwood. Steely Dan last played the UK at London's O2 Arena in October 2017 - just eight weeks after the death of founder member Walter Becker. Their tour dates for next year are: 20 Feb 2019 Gl...

Steely Dan have announced details of a UK arena tour. They will be joined by special guest Steve Winwood.

Steely Dan last played the UK at London’s O2 Arena in October 2017 – just eight weeks after the death of founder member Walter Becker.

Their tour dates for next year are:

20 Feb 2019 Glasgow, U.K. The SSE Hydro
21 Feb 2019 Manchester, U.K. Manchester Arena
23 Feb 2019 Birmingham, U.K. Genting Arena
25 Feb 2019 London, U.K. The SSE Arena, Wembley
28 Feb 2019 Dublin, Ireland 3Arena

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

Tickets for Steely Dan go on-sale to the general public on Friday, September 7 2018 at 10am. Click here to find out more info.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds pay tribute to Conway Savage

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Conway Savage, pianist with The Bad Seeds, has died at the age of 58. The musician, who first joined the band in 1990, was initially diagnosed with a brain tumour in 2017. The band confirmed the news in a statement on Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds website. "Our beloved Conway passed away on Sunday ev...

Conway Savage, pianist with The Bad Seeds, has died at the age of 58.

The musician, who first joined the band in 1990, was initially diagnosed with a brain tumour in 2017.

The band confirmed the news in a statement on Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds website.

“Our beloved Conway passed away on Sunday evening. A member of Bad Seeds for nearly thirty years, Conway was the anarchic thread that ran through the band’s live performances. He was much loved by everyone, band members and fans alike. Irascible, funny, terrifying, sentimental, warm-hearted, gentle, acerbic, honest, genuine – he was all of these things and quite literally ‘had the gift of a golden voice,’ high and sweet and drenched in soul. On a drunken night, at four in the morning, in a hotel bar in Cologne, Conway sat at the piano and sang ‘Streets Of Laredo’ to us, in his sweet, melancholy style and stopped the world for a moment. There wasn’t a dry eye in the house. Goodbye Conway, there isn’t a dry eye in the house. Love, Nick and the Bad Seeds.”

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

He first played on the band’s sixth album The Good Son and he went on to play on Murder Ballads, The Boatman’s Call, Abattoir Blues/The Lyre Of Orpheus and Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!

Conway’s career also saw him Happy Organs, The Feral Dinosaurs and Dust On The Bible.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

Send us your questions for Jeff Goldblum

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Acting legend, jazz pianist... Jeff Goldblum is a man of many accomplishments. For his next challenge, he is set to ask your questions as part of our regular Audience With... feature. You may want to ask him about his many and varied film roles, his position as pianist with The Mildred Snitzer Orch...

Acting legend, jazz pianist… Jeff Goldblum is a man of many accomplishments. For his next challenge, he is set to ask your questions as part of our regular Audience With… feature.

You may want to ask him about his many and varied film roles, his position as pianist with The Mildred Snitzer Orchestra or what it’s like being… well, Jeff Goldblum.

What did he make of the 10-foot statue of him that appeared by Tower Bridge?
Can he still do magic rope tricks?
What does he remember about performing at Coachella?

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

Send your questions by Tuesday, September 4 to uncutaudiencewith@ti-media.com – the best ones, along with Jeff’s answers of course, will be published in a future issue of Uncut.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

Mott The Hoople announce Mental Train (The Best Of The Island Years 1969-1971)

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Mott The Hoople have announced details of a new 6-CD box set, Mental Train (The Best Of The Island Years 1969-1971). The set features everything the band ever recorded (previously unheard and unreleased tracks too) between 1969 and '71. It is released on November 2 via UMC. Here's the previously ...

Mott The Hoople have announced details of a new 6-CD box set, Mental Train (The Best Of The Island Years 1969-1971).

The set features everything the band ever recorded (previously unheard and unreleased tracks too) between 1969 and ’71.

It is released on November 2 via UMC. Here’s the previously unreleased “Rock And Roll Queen (Kitchen Sink Instrumental” from the album.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

You can pre-order the set by clicking here. Aside from all of their albums from the period, the set also includes bonus material plus BBC sessions and live concerts.

CD1 – MOTT THE HOOPLE
You Really Got Me
At the Crossroads
Laugh at Me
Backsliding Fearlessly
Rock and Roll Queen
Rabbit Foot and Toby Time
Half Moon Bay
Wrath and Wroll
Bonus Tracks
If Your Heart Lay with the Rebel (Would You Cheer the Underdog?) (Instrumental Take 2)
Rock and Roll Queen (Single A side)
Road to Birmingham (Single B side)
Road to Birmingham (Guy Steven’s Mix)
You Really Got Me (Complete take)
You Really Got Me (Vocal mix)
Rock and Roll Queen (Guy Steven’s Mono Mix)
Rock and Roll Queen (Kitchen Sink Instrumental)
Little Christine (2 Miles)

CD2 – MAD SHADOWS
Originally released September 1970 – Island Records ILPS 9119
Thunderbuck Ram
No Wheels to Ride
You Are One of Us
Walking with a Mountain
I Can Feel
Threads of Iron
When My Mind’s Gone
Bonus Tracks
Thunderbuck Ram (BBC Session)
Thunderbuck Ram (Original Take with Organ)
No Wheels to Ride (Demo)
Moonbus (Baby’s Got a Down on Me)
The Hunchback Fish (Vocal Rehearsal)
You Are One of Us (Take 9)
Going Home (2 Miles)
Keep A-Knockin’ (Studio version)

CD3 – WILDLIFE
Whiskey Women
Angel of Eighth Avenue
Wrong Side of the River
Waterlow
Lay Down
It Must Be Love
The Original Mixed Up Kid
Home Is Where I Want to Be
Keep A-Knockin’ (Live)
Bonus Tracks
Midnight Lady (Single A side)
The Debt (Single B side)
Downtown (Single A side)
Brain Haulage (Whiskey Woman)
Growing Man Blues (Take 10)
Long Red (Demo)
The Ballad of Billy Joe
Lay Down (Take 8)

CD4 – BRAIN CAPERS
Death May Be Your Santa Claus
Your Own Backyard
Darkness, Darkness
The Journey
Sweet Angeline
Second Love
The Moon Upstairs
The Wheel of the Quivering Meat Conception
Bonus Tracks
Mental Train (The Moon Upstairs)
How Long? (Death May Your Santa Claus)
Darkness, Darkness
Your Own Backyard (Complete Take)
Where Do You All Come From (Backing Track)
One of the Boys (Take 2)
Movin’ On (2 Miles)
Black Scorpio (Mommas Little Jewel)

CD5 – THE BALLADS OF MOTT THE HOOPLE
Unheard and unreleased music from the Island archive
Like a Rolling Stone (Fragment)
No Wheels to Ride (1st House)
Angel Of 8th Avenue (Tape 816)
The Journey
Blue Broken Tears (Tape 816)
Black Hills (Full Ralph’s Version)
Can You Sing the Song That I Sing (Full Take)
Till I’m Gone (2 Miles)
The Original Mixed Up Kid (BBC Session)
Ill Wind Blowing (2 Miles)
I’m A River (Vocal Rehearsal)
Ride on The Sun (Sea Diver) (2 Miles)

CD6 – IT’S LIVE AND LIVE ONLY
– Tracks 1 – 7: Fairfield Hall, Croydon, 13 September 1970
– Tracks 8 to 12: Paris Theatre, London, BBC Radio One, In Concert, 30 December 1971

Rock and Roll Queen
Ohio
No Wheels to Ride / Hey Jude
Thunderbuck Ram
Keep A-Knockin’
You Really Got Me
The Moon Upstairs
Whiskey Women
Your Own Backyard
Darkness, Darkness
The Journey
Death May Be Your Santa Claus

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

The 28th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

Busy week, so I'll be brief. Strong returning favourites - Low, J Mascis, Bill Ryder-Jones - plus some new-to-me current faves including Kikagaku Moyo (Japanese psych!), Eliza Blue (featuring a familiar face on acoustic duties...) and Sea Lion (Scandi folk!). Enjoy... Follow me on Twitter @MichaelB...

Busy week, so I’ll be brief. Strong returning favourites – Low, J Mascis, Bill Ryder-Jones – plus some new-to-me current faves including Kikagaku Moyo (Japanese psych!), Eliza Blue (featuring a familiar face on acoustic duties…) and Sea Lion (Scandi folk!). Enjoy…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
BOYGENIUS

“Me & My Dog”
(Matador)

2.
LOW

“Disarray”
(Sub Pop)

3.
LAURA GIBSON

“Tenderness”
(City Slang)

4.
CHRISTINE AND THE QUEENS

“La Marcheuse”
(Because Music)

5.
JOHN HULBERT

“After The Storm”
(Tompkins Square)

6.
EXPLODED VIEW

“Sleepers”
(Sacred Bones)

7.
SEA LION

“Suburban Skies”
(Adore Music)

8.
KIKAGAKU MOYO

“Dripping Sun”
(Guruguru Brain)

9.
IAN SVENONIUS

“Bodysnatcher”
(Merge)

10.
BILL RYDER-JONES

“Mither”
(Domino)

11.
J MASCIS

“See You At The Movies”
(Sub Pop)

12.
ELIZA BLUE

“Song Without Words”
(www.elizabluemusic.com)

Watch Led Zeppelin’s teaser trailer for 50th anniversary book

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Led Zeppelin have released a teaser trailer for their 50th anniversary book. Led Zeppelin by Led Zeppelin is published by Reel Art Press on October 9. The book is described as "a unique collaboration between Jimmy Page, Robert Plant and John Paul Jones, who have given Reel Art Press unrestricted ac...

Led Zeppelin have released a teaser trailer for their 50th anniversary book.

Led Zeppelin by Led Zeppelin is published by Reel Art Press on October 9. The book is described as “a unique collaboration between Jimmy Page, Robert Plant and John Paul Jones, who have given Reel Art Press unrestricted access to the Led Zeppelin archive.”

You can watch the trailer below.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

Meanwhile, the deluxe edition of Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to Led Zeppelin is in stores now. Click here to find out how to buy a copy.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

Mark Lanegan & 
Duke Garwood – With Animals

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There’s a moment on “My Shadow Life” that encapsulates the humid, prickly atmosphere of With Animals. As a drum machine snares out a steady beat and Mark Lanegan huskily whispers an elusive lyric about love and darkness, a clarinet roves into play. It drifts into earshot like an instrument bei...

There’s a moment on “My Shadow Life” that encapsulates the humid, prickly atmosphere of With Animals. As a drum machine snares out a steady beat and Mark Lanegan huskily whispers an elusive lyric about love and darkness, a clarinet roves into play. It drifts into earshot like an instrument being played in a neighbouring apartment on one of those clammy city evenings when windows are thrown open against thick summer heat. Then, just as mysteriously, it fades away again, like the memory of a dream. It’s uncomplicated but it achieves a lot, and that’s With Animals in a nutshell.

Lanegan and Duke Garwood first collaborated on 2013’s Black Pudding, with the multi-instrumentalist Garwood finding sinewy desert-rock rhythms for Lanegan’s unmistakable voice and lyrics about God, death and sex. That was a fine LP, but it was fairly conventional. With Animals is a different beast entirely, Garwood creating a sparse, electronic, heat-baked sound that is as absorbing as it is alienating.

The LP was born in the sticky discomfort of an LA heatwave after a tour of North America. An exhausted Lanegan went on holiday leaving Garwood, who plays in Lanegan’s band, to look after his pets – two cats, six dogs. Sitting on Lanegan’s sofa in the desiccating South Californian heat, Garwood needed to create or melt into madness. He got an old eight-track from a friendly studio, picked up his guitar, programmed Lanegan’s Casio keyboard to provide the drumbeat and set to work. All but one song was created like this, audibly analogue but with an electronic backwash, a series of drones and loops that leak from track to track, and are overlayed by simple, repetitive guitar lines. Lanegan came home, listened good, wrote some cryptic but heartfelt lyrics and the LP was done.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

In his work with Greg Dulli, Isobel Campbell and QOTSA, Lanegan has shown he’s a generous collaborator. His partnership with Garwood is based on a total separation of duties – Garwood does music, Lanegan does words – and on With Animals Lanegan is, if anything, the more understated presence. On songs like “Feast To Famine” he barely sings at all, with vocals just another layer of atmosphere. On sparse opener “Save Me” he sounds like he’s intoning a call-to-prayer over a tick-tock drum track, while on the plodding “Scarlett” you picture him wandering through a one-horse desert town pleading for a lost soulmate. Almost every song references love of some kind, but none are love songs. Instead, words and music combine to produce a sense of pregnant desperation, a bleakness, a sense of loss, guilt and yearning. When Lanegan asks “Won’t you miss me, baby?” on “L.A. Blue”, he sounds like a desperate man expecting “no” for an answer. On the gorgeous “One Way Glass” he speculates about “something lonelier than death”.

The latter song asks Lanegan to do more than simply underscore Garwood’s parcels of alluring atmosphere and provide an alternative melody rather than an additional weave of texture. The brilliant “Upon Doing Something Wrong” is one of the few songs here that you could sing along to. It sees Garwood concoct a jubilant jangle of guitars, with Lanegan singing in a slightly higher key, naked with pain, regret and sorrow. Similarly, the disembodied lullaby “Ghost Stories” is given added mystery by Lanegan’s higher register, which sounds as if it was recorded in another room. In contrast, “With Animals” has the singer reaching for his deepest, most mesmeric growl, muttering ominous incantations, spells and chants as he describes his lover as a drug, a murderer, a sorcerer, a seraphim. It’s startlingly good. Like Cave and Cash, Lanegan has the capacity to embrace the gothic without rendering it ridiculous.

“Spaceman” is the most melodically upbeat song on the LP, Garwood creating a fuzzy tune of guitar and maracas. It’s bluesy and celebratory, even if Lanegan is singing from the perspective of a condemned man addressing a hangman. In terms of deceptive jauntiness, it’s rivalled by “Lonesome Infidel”, which borrows the tune of “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” then slows it down and adds haunting, echoey whistles and electronic ambience, taking it far from rock or country. The closer “Desert Song”, written by Garwood in Joshua Tree, is an acoustic strum that for once is stripped of electronic background. That allows Garwood’s guitar work to see things out on centre stage, with Lanegan contributing yet another matchless vocal of sad and piercing intent.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

John Cale on The Velvet Underground & Nico: “Everything was down-tuned and distorted”

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In this piece from the Uncut archives (August 2006, Take 111), ex-Velvets sonic provocateur John Cale talks exclusively about the making of one of the greatest debut albums of all time – from boxing feints and "scarred" violas to their "problem with Nico"... ________________________ SIDE 1 TRAC...

SIDE 2 TRACK 4 – “Black Angel’s Death Song”

Lou had this lying around from his Syracuse days; it was something his teacher suggested he write as a poem – free expression. It was almost like prose and we didn’t think we could pull it off. But those were the days when, if someone said it can’t be done, you did it anyway. When we mixed it in Hollywood we wanted to use maracas instead of that hissing I do, but it didn’t come off right. Sterling refused to play the bass. He resented playing bass on “Venus In Furs”. We played Tom Wilson this and “Heroin” screaming fucking loud with feedback; broke the speakers, all that shit. And Tom goes, “Yeah, hey, you’re, er, creating something exceptionally good there.”

________________________

SIDE 2 TRACK 5 – “European Son”
This was inspired by Lou’s teacher, Delmore Schwartz. It was a total improv with my bass part that we fixed up when we went to LA. It had the longer song format, which radio wasn’t cut out for, and it was a big rave noise, fantastic for ending a show with. For the LP, we dragged a chair across a floor over some aluminium studio plates. We didn’t know what we were doing but it sounded funny. It sounded like a plate glass window being smashed. We wanted to break the rules, so we broke every fucking rule we could.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

Lindsay Kemp on David Bowie: “I taught him how to make an entrance… and how to make an exit.”

Sad news this morning: the dancer, mime artist and choreographer Lindsay Kemp has died aged 80. Kemp, of course, worked with David Bowie and Kate Bush and played Alder MacGregor, pub landlord of the Green Man Inn in The Wicker Man. I spoke to Kemp in May, 2017 for a cover story on Bowie's formative...

Ziggy rehearsals. Was there a correlation back to Dance Centre?
Yes, it was all there. Everything that I taught him, he had absorbed. He was a great absorber. He absorbed everything that was around him, everything that he might find useful. Everything I taught him showed him was there, nothing was forgotten at all. Especially what was impressive was his stillness. I failed as a teacher with poor Kate Bush in many ways, because I didn’t manage ever to get her to keep still – which David demonstrated so marvelously in ‘My Death’, when he sat on stool and didn’t move at all, except for his fingers strumming his guitar, and that was the most moving and potent part of the show. That production of Ziggy Stardust changed the whole look of rock’n’roll. But it didn’t really need my baroque input. The songs stood up on their own. Tony Defries was right when he said, “Sorry David, we’re not going to take Lindsay and the troupe to the States because I don’t really think we need them.” When I went to David’s dressing room at the end of the Ziggy Stardust concert to congratulate him, he was in floods of tears. He said, “They don’t want to take you to the States with us.”

Who were the Astronettes?
Angela came up to Edinburgh, where I was living and where I was performing in my production of Flowers. It was a piece I did based on Jean Genet’s Our Lady Of The Flowers. She came up with the record of Ziggy Stardust and a note from David saying, “Listen to the music and if you like it, you might be interested in directing a theatrical production and maybe appearing.” It immediately caught my appetite. Angela came to see Flowers that night and took a fancy to quite a few boys in the company and she declared, “Well, we could take them all, or some of them down to London to participate in the show.” To my surprise, they were named the Astronettes. They were a group of six dancers from my company, including the Incredible Orlando, who was blind; an incredible performer who was a particular favourite of David and mine. I was the Starman and Queen Bitch, I performed.

Tell me about Natasha Korniloff?
Natasha designed quite a few of the costumes for that production. I designed quite a few costumes, Natasha did a few costumes and of course that incredible Japanese designer made some beautiful costumes. The show looked marvellous, and sounded marvellous, and baroque; it had a very big impact visually on the audience. They hadn’t seen that kind of theatricality in a rock show before, it was a marriage between my avant garde theatre and rock’n’roll. A very good marriage, I have to say.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

Hear unreleased Dave Davies track from 1973, “Cradle To The Grave”

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Dave Davies is to issue a new album of unreleased solo material recorded from 1971 to 1979. Decade will be released on October 12 via Red River Entertainment/Green Amp. You can hear the record’s lead single, “Cradle To The Grave”, below. “I am so pleased that after all this time these trac...

Dave Davies is to issue a new album of unreleased solo material recorded from 1971 to 1979.

Decade will be released on October 12 via Red River Entertainment/Green Amp. You can hear the record’s lead single, “Cradle To The Grave”, below.

“I am so pleased that after all this time these tracks are being released to see the light of day,” Davies said in a statement. “These songs have been silently nagging at me to be recognised all these years. At last I can proudly present this album Decade to the world.”

Davies’ last album was Open Road with Russ Davies in 2017.

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The tracklisting for Decade is:

“Cradle To The Grave”
“Midnight Sun”
“Islands”
“If You Are Leaving”
“Web of Time”
“Mystic Woman”
“Give You All My Love”
“The Journey”
“Within Each Day”
“Same Old Blues”
“Mr. Moon”
“Shadows”
“This Precious Time (Long Lonely Road)”

Meanwhile, The Kinks release a 50th anniversary edition of The Village Green Preservation Society through BMG on October 26.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

David Crosby: “I’m a bozo, man!”

As the Croz prepares to release a new solo album - his fourth in five years - and with two solo UK shows imminent, I thought I'd post my interview with him from our October, 2016 issue. It was a candid chat - as you'd hope - covering a lot of ground, from his career resurgence (he was about to relea...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZMTjFGmzGuA

The Live 74 album was amazing. Is there anything else in the CSNY archive you’d like to see released in the future?
Not really. To me, that’s all ancient history and I don’t really care about it. I wouldn’t spend five minutes looking around back there in those dusty old tapes. I’m completely busy making brand new music.

If you could give some advice to your 25-year-old self, what would it be?
Don’t. Get. Involved. With. Hard. Drugs. All it does is fuck you up and drag you away from your music.

Do you have a daily routine at home?
We do. What we try and do is get up, have a cup of coffee, and then we go for a walk – because I’m trying to stay alive. In my case, that’s an iffy proposition. Then we have breakfast and do the business of the day: the laundry, the cleaning, go to the market. If I’m lucky, I’ve got recording or rehearing. We try to accomplish as much each day as we humanly possibly can. But I spend time trying to write every day, every day.

How do you write?
I keep guitars on the wall right next to me. I’m looking at one, two three, four, five, five guitars in five different tunings right now here in my bedroom.

You’re 75 in August. Do you think much about your legacy?
No. I’m a bozo, man. I have a talent and I’m grateful for it, but I put my pants on one leg at a time, same as everybody, and I’ve made such egregious mistakes in my life that it’s given me a perspective where I do not look at myself the way other people do. I definitely think it’s not a healthy thing to do. You wind up standing there saying, “Gosh, I am significant.” All it does is aggrandise my own ego and it doesn’t advance me at all, doesn’t teach me anything and I don’t like it.

How’s Joni?
What I’m told is that she is doing well and that she’s working hard to get herself back together. She’s a very tough girl. I would bet on Joni rather than betting on anything else.

Have you seen her recently?
No. I got permission to come once, but when we tried to put it together it wasn’t a good day. So I’m going to keep trying until I can go and see her because when you’re sick or you’ve had a rough spot in your life, that’s when friends count. People showed up for me when I was in hospital, when I was on the bottom, so I think that’s a good thing to pay it forward.

Were you approached to play at the Desert Trip festival?
No. If somebody had approached The Byrds, I would have wanted to do it. But I think it’s a scam because all it is really is a parking lot, an empty field, a few acres of dust. So OK, you’re standing there for hours and hours and hours. They sell you a bottle of water for $5. You can’t tell who’s on stage because they’re a pinprick – that’s why Jagger waves a scarf round, man, he’s so far away you can’t tell it’s him. It’s not the way to see any of those bands, least of all Neil. The sound outdoors at that place is crap. The situation is crap. It’s a great story to be able to say, “I was there, I saw the Rolling Stones with Neil and everybody all at once.” But it’s a lousy concert. You could give me tickets to that and I wouldn’t go.

In the year when we lost Bowie, Prince and so many others there’s something slightly ghoulish about billing it “once in a lifetime”…
That’s merchandising. Truth is, the whole thing is about merchandising. It’s a gigantic money machine, and I’m not in it for money. That’s not why I came to the party in the first place. I’m a musician, my life is about music and I love making music. I don’t give a shit about the money. I don’t give a shit about being a star. I don’t give a shit about any of the rest of that stuff. It’s not my thing.

When you first got together with Roger McGuinn and Gene Clark, did you have a plan?
We were just guys who were folkies, who got together and we had seen The Beatles. So we knew what we wanted to be and we weren’t! But Roger and Gene were singing these songs that Gene had written after he’s listened to The Beatles. Roger could figure out how to play them in a Beatle-ish fashion and then I sat down with them and started singing harmonies. It was completely organic thing.

McGuinn, Hillman, Stills, Nash, Young…. what do you think links all your previous collaborators?
We’re all human beings and we’re all gifted with talent. We’re doing whatever our spirits tell us to do with that.

Has it all been worth it, so far?
Totally. Love it. I just wish I’d done more music and less drugs. I regret the time I wasted being wasted, that I could have spent making more music.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

Cowboy Junkies – All That Reckoning

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It’s been six years since The Wilderness, the last of the four Cowboy Junkies albums comprising The Nomad Series, and 30 since the groundbreaking slowcore gut-punch of The Trinity Session announced them as a uniquely intense proposition. Marking the passing of time feels important: All That Reckon...

It’s been six years since The Wilderness, the last of the four Cowboy Junkies albums comprising The Nomad Series, and 30 since the groundbreaking slowcore gut-punch of The Trinity Session announced them as a uniquely intense proposition. Marking the passing of time feels important: All That Reckoning sounds like the record the Cowboy Junkies have been building up to their entire career.

As the title implies, and as they explained to Uncut last month, it covers the hard yards of romantic commitment and political and social disillusionment. Or, as songwriter Michael Timmins explains, it’s a bunch of fiftysomething Canadians “sniffing our way through life, step by step”.

The theme is encapsulated in “The Things We Do To Each Other”, one of several songs that resonate on both an intimate and universal level, recognising that – whether at the kitchen table or in the corridors of power – when “you get the folks to fear”, all bets are off. Elsewhere within these songs are “mugging politicians”, vanished children, nationless citizens, mattresses of poison, ruined kingdoms, lost love only partially regained, and the vast, ordinary sorrows of ageing.

If the lyrical terrain is tough going, the accompanying music is more reassuringly familiar. It’s a stately North American noise, close to blues, touching country, shading rock. The quieter parts are beautiful but never gratuitously pretty. The more animated moments reach back to the panoramic psych-blues of Sing In My Meadow, pitched somewhere between Bob Dylan’s “Can’t Wait” from Time Out Of Mind and Neil Young’s more muscular work-outs.

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Throughout, there’s a churning below the waterline that constantly threatens disruption, a mutinous whirlpool of backwards guitars, distorted vocals, shimmering cymbals. On “Wooden Stairs”, where the scars of loss are carved into a single recurring memory, the music pushes and pulls like the sea. “Mountain Stream” – a mournful parable about a “king of empty things” – is troubled by screeds of treated guitars.

It coheres with an easy unity, the band welded together as though one immutable instrument, and though the effect is less radical than 30 years ago, their soft attack can still stun. The cool murmur of Margo Timmins’ voice remains a potent weapon, sometimes sweetly languid, sometimes murderously quiet. On “The Possessed”, a simple ukulele strum, gentle as a lullaby, she harbours a medieval devil, lurking chimerically in the light, the air, the water, and finally in the arms of a lover.

All That Reckoning lays out its over-arching concerns in the opening minutes. The title track is a lowering document of personal disarray and fraught surrender. “When We Arrive” casts its net wider, encompassing the “world of self-delusion… days of death and anger”, where people are cast seawards, exiled from home, the most they can hope for to “at least be holding hands when we arrive”. The baritone guitar riff recalls Bowie’s “Lazarus”; Timmins’ voice is alternately wreathed in reverb and hissing treble. The reckoning is both close to home and far, far away, and equally terrible either way.

Further dispatches follow from tumultuous times. The extraordinary “Missing Children” uses William Blake’s The Tyger as the inspiration to honour the lives of disappeared youths, seeking out the horror and humanity that lies behind the “frozen” photographs flashing by on local news channels. Timmins’ voice is all bluesy drag and drawl, while the music crackles. The crunching stoner-boogie of “Sing Me A Song”, similarly, rears like a gathering storm. While the verses are a consciously trite hymn to hashtag idealism – “Sing me a song about life in America, sing me a song of love” – the verses zero in on individual acts of casual cruelty.

The skeletal “Nose Before Ear” is a claustrophobic, densely allegorical prowl, penetrated by a brilliantly taut vocal, Timmins summoning up all kinds of dread and a “grief more dense than hearts can bear”. Just off-centre, a howl of atmospheric guitar and fiddle recalls the Bad Seeds at their most spectral. “Broken,” sings Timmins. “That’s why 
the blues were born.”

Burnished with piano and organ, and deftly resisting the urge to balloon into an anthem, the haunting “Shining Teeth” embarks on that most potent and symbolic of North American journeys, going down to the river in a bid to wash the pain away. It’s a road taken more in hope than expectation. There are no easy answers here, nor many signs of redemption. Vigilance is key. If you lost touch with Cowboy Junkies some time ago, perhaps taking their unhurried grandeur for granted, All That Reckoning presents a brave, beautiful and timely opportunity to pick up the thread.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

David Axelrod – Song Of Innocence

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Los Angeles in 1968 was a place of opportunity, a time when the freaks suddenly found themselves in control. Elektra had made a hit of The Doors, Warner Brothers had signed the Grateful Dead, and the Laurel Canyon scene was thriving. Suddenly a new breed of A&R man – hip, often hippyish, with soli...

Los Angeles in 1968 was a place of opportunity, a time when the freaks suddenly found themselves in control. Elektra had made a hit of The Doors, Warner Brothers had signed the Grateful Dead, and the Laurel Canyon scene was thriving. Suddenly a new breed of A&R man – hip, often hippyish, with solid underground credentials and the chemicals to back them up – were rubbing shoulders with the suits at labels across town. David Axelrod was no newcomer. He’d joined Capitol as a producer and A&R guy in 1963, making hits with R&B star Lou Rawls and the hard-bop saxophonist Cannonball Adderley. But as the ’60s bit, Axelrod – “Axe” to his friends – was increasingly developing his own vision: a sound patching baroque classical music to the engine of rhythm and blues, powered by a sense of spirituality that aspired to nothing less than the holy.

Axelrod had taken a maverick route into the industry. A white kid raised in the largely African-American LA district of Crenshaw, he grew up dirt-poor, and distinguished himself early on through his fists. A promising early career as a boxer was cut short owing to an eye injury that left him sheltering behind a pair of shades. He found his calling in the jazz clubs on New York’s 52nd Street, and on returning to LA, learned to read music under the tutelage of pianist Gerald Wiggins, finding his feet as a producer and arranger. Even as he refined a sumptuous orchestral sound fusing soul and jazz, Wagner and Stravinsky, something of Axelrod the brawler remained. “No matter how pretty his music is,” said Cannonball Adderley, “there’s always a layer of violence in it.”

Nowhere in Axelrod’s discography is this duality captured plainer than on Song Of Innocence. Seven instrumental tracks packaged behind a blazing mandala, Axelrod’s debut as a solo artist – like its sister album, 1969’s Songs Of Experience – was inspired by the 18th-century poet William Blake, whose beatific, quietly revolutionary verse extolled the virtues of a humble life, close to nature and free from the “mind-forg’d manacles” of the society in which he lived. Recorded at Capitol Studios in LA, with a 33-strong band reading from Axelrod’s fastidious musical charts, Song Of Innocence combines bold strings and orchestral flourishes with a powerhouse rhythm section comprised of guitarist Al Casey, bassist Carol Kaye and drummer Earl Palmer – members of LA’s hotshot session players The Wrecking Crew.

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In a 1968 interview with Billboard, Axelrod identified his audience as “a new breed of record buyer… more sophisticated in his thinking”. The composer’s first attempt to reach out to this constituency had come with Mass In F Minor, a psychedelic religious opera sung in Latin, which Axelrod composed and arranged. The album was credited to the LA group The Electric Prunes, but the hapless garage rockers hadn’t the chops to complete it, so the band trickled off and Axelrod replaced them with Wrecking Crew personnel. Mass… was ambitious, flawed. But by Song Of Innocence, Axelrod had his sound bang on. Check “Holy Thursday” for a glimpse of Axe’s songwriting at its most refined and graceful. Kaye’s bass sits right in the pocket as divine strings sweep in and recede, the rest of the space coloured in with dancing vibraphone, bold chisel strokes of guitar, and climactic swells of horns.

Fifty years from its release, Song Of Innocence has undergone a refresh. The running time remains a lean 27 minutes, but a sensitive remastering job, overseen by the late composer’s producing partner HB Barnum, keyboardist/conductor Don Randi and his widow Terri leaves it sounding deeper and brighter than ever. “Urizen” sounds like a church mass overcome by Dionysian ecstasy, a punchy backbeat driving through rousing brass and fingers jamming over the keys of a church organ. “The Mental Traveler” combines spaghetti western guitar, the drone of a sitar and the dull ring of a gong to magical effect. Gentler moments like “A Dream” sit next to atonal string swells that set the teeth on edge. Melodic themes persist throughout, making Song Of Innocence feel greater and deeper than the sum of its parts.

Axelrod’s genius did not go unrecognised. George Harrison wanted to sign him to Apple. Now-Again CEO Eothen Alapatt, in this set’s extensive sleevenotes, revealed Axe told him Miles Davis jammed Song Of Innocence before embarking on his own fusion of jazz and rock, Bitches Brew. But the world turned, and by the late ’80s Axelrod and his wife were near penniless, living in a shack in the San Fernando valley, with ambitious works like Requiem: The Holocaust gathering dust on the shelf. Recognition came from a new generation of hip-hop crate-diggers, who started using his grooves as base material for their own productions. Everyone from Dr Dre to Lauryn Hill to Wu-Tang Clan made use of an Axe sample, and in 2004 two superfans – DJ Shadow and his co-conspirator in UNKLE, Mo’Wax’s James Lavelle – tempted the 73-year-old back to the stage. Axe appreciated this reappraisal in his own inimitable way. As he told one journalist: “I wasn’t into sampling ’til I started getting cheques.”

Following Axelrod’s death last year, many obituaries gestured to the composer’s influence on hip-hop. But it would be remiss to reduce his legacy to mere sample fodder. Song Of Innocence demands recognition too: in its swirling orchestration and broiling grooves, we get a glimpse of something unique – a daring, refined, deeply funky vision of the divine.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.

Watch new Suspiria trailer, featuring Thom Yorke’s score

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Thom Yorke has made his debut as a film composer with the upcoming horror film remake Suspiria. You can watch the full-length trailer - featuring some music from Yorke - below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BY6QKRl56Ok&t=5s A rework of Dario Argento’s 1977 Italian horror classic, this version...

Thom Yorke has made his debut as a film composer with the upcoming horror film remake Suspiria.

You can watch the full-length trailer – featuring some music from Yorke – below.

A rework of Dario Argento’s 1977 Italian horror classic, this version stars Dakota Johnson, Tilda Swinton and Chloe Grace Moretz and has been directed by Luca Guadagnino.

Order the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!

Yorke’s bandmate Jonny Greenwood, of course, has a long history in this field, notably his long and profitable relationship with director Paul Thomas Anderson.

Suspiria is released in cinemas on November 2, with a digital release to follow through Amazon Prime.

The October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.