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Sturgill Simpson unveils Johnny Blue Skies

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Sturgill Simpson returns with a new album under new name, Johnny Blue Skies.

Sturgill Simpson returns with a new album under new name, Johnny Blue Skies.

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Passage Du Desir is released on July 12 on his own independent label, High Top Mountain Records – you can pre-order a copy here.

The album was produced by Johnny Blue Skies and David Ferguson and recorded at Clement House Recording Studio in Nashville, TN and Abbey Road Studios. Passage Du Desir is Simpson’s first new music since 2021’s The Ballad of Dood And Juanita.

The tracklisting for Passage Du Desir is:

Swamp of Sadness

If The Sun Never Rises Again

Scooter Blues

Jupiter’s Faerie (Morning Dawn)

Who I Am

Right Kind of Dream

Mint Tea

One for the Road

The new album follows the tenth anniversary reissue of Simpson’s Metamodern Sounds in Country Music.

Gastr Del Sol – We Have Dozens Of Titles

David Grubbs has been thinking about this release from the moment Gastr Del Sol ceased, but a few things had to happen in the ensuing 26 years. For one, Grubbs and Jim O’Rourke had to reconnect in person in Tokyo back in 2016. Then, an excellent live recording of the band’s final performance was unearthed from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation archives, captured in 1997 at the Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville in rural Quebec.

David Grubbs has been thinking about this release from the moment Gastr Del Sol ceased, but a few things had to happen in the ensuing 26 years. For one, Grubbs and Jim O’Rourke had to reconnect in person in Tokyo back in 2016. Then, an excellent live recording of the band’s final performance was unearthed from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation archives, captured in 1997 at the Festival International de Musique Actuelle de Victoriaville in rural Quebec.

JONI MITCHELL IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE!

But let’s travel back even further, to 1991, when Gastr Del Sol emerged out of Bastro, Grubbs’ previous post-hardcore band (hence the name: Bastro becomes Gastr del Sol when embedded into Gato del Sol, the name of the racehorse who won the 1982 Kentucky Derby.) Prior to that, Grubbs had cut his teeth playing guitar in Louisville’s Squirrel Bait, moody atonal ’80s punk that presaged math rock and contributed to the birth of post-hardcore (the other major band to come out of Squirrel Bait was of course Slint, a foundational force for anxious, introspective, quiet-loud-quiet post-rock). With each group Grubbs’ interests became more expansive yet more esoteric, and less overtly rock.

Grubbs had relocated to Chicago in 1990, and after Bastro ended drummer John McEntire and bassist Bundy K Brown went on to help shape the future of post-rock with Tortoise. But before that the trio created the first Gastr Del Sol album, 1993’s The Serpentine Similar. Bastro were fast and loud, but Gastr took those post-hardcore impulses into an avant-garde direction with the beginnings of their electroacoustic experimentation and Grubbs’ minimalistic, dissonant piano. The following year, McEntire and Brown both left to join Tortoise, ushering in the arrival of multi-instrumentalist, composer and producer Jim O’Rourke. The core lineup of Gastr Del Sol was thus solidified, existing just long enough to leave an indelible mark with a handful of incredible studio albums and assorted miscellaneous releases.

All of their work is studded with innovation, and an interest in the formal possibilities of music expressed in a patchwork of tradition and exploration. Electronic and acoustic live side by side, O’Rourke’s tape manipulation up against virtuosic guitar from both, the improvisation of jazz mixing with the composition of contemporary classical and the traditional language of folk. Grubbs’ voice and surreal, cryptic lyrics introduced yet another slanted element. It’s a cerebral mix but the guitar interplay is often sprightly and the atmosphere utterly cinematic – the best example of the latter is the mesmerising and impressionistic “Our Exquisite Replica of ‘Eternity’” from 1996’s Upgrade & Afterlife. Their excellent final studio album, Camoufleur, is less abstract but still avant-garde, a chamber pop album that would get classified as post-rock. It arrived in February 1998, but the band had already come to an end by then, O’Rourke having quit within a couple of days of finishing mixing the album. It was an abrupt ending to a fascinating band, and nothing has ever come out of the Gastr Del Sol vaults – until now, thanks to this new boxset from Drag City, home of Gastr Del Sol and related works from both members ever since.

We Have Dozens Of Titles gathers up previously uncollected live material (much of which comes from that final performance together) with music from obscure compilations, singles and EPs. O’Rourke mastered, and in some cases remastered, all the music and it sounds appropriately fantastic. The album opens with an early extended instrumental version of Camoufleur’s “The Seasons Reverse”, performed live at the Victoriaville fest. Sans drums and vocals, the song becomes more meditative but no less alluring, in large part due to the magnetic guitar part and haunting piano.

A version of “Ursus Arctos Wonderfilis” from the first album was recorded live in the studio in NYC and a guitar-duelling, drawn-out interpretation of “Dictionary Of Handwriting” from the “Mirror Repair” EP comes from the Yttrium Festival in Chicago in 1996, but the other two live tracks are from the Victoriaville set. This version of “Blues Subtitled No Sense of Wonder” (the source of the lyric which gives this boxset its title, per O’Rourke’s suggestion) is purely instrumental and relentless in a pensive yet grand way, but it’s “Onion Orange” that is the album’s most striking piece of all. An 18-minute odyssey from Grubbs’ first solo album that is just guitar in its original form, here it’s transformed into an otherworldly expanse with O’Rourke’s scintillating electronic additions, opening a window into an alternative but impossible future for Gastr.

Standouts from the previously released material include “Dead Cats In A Foghorn”, a mournful and melancholic collaboration with sound artist/percussionist Günter Müller, named after Ezra Pound‘s description of futurist music; a wholly abstracted version of “The Bells of St Mary’s” recorded for a Christmas compilation released by Sony Japan; and “The Harp Factory On Lake Street”, a 17-minute experimental orchestral piece that is part ambient, part jazz and entirely compelling.

Quietly Approaching” and “At Night And At Night” were both written for compilations; Grubbs recalls that the former is the first Gastr song that felt, to him, like it was really developed in the studio, in the sense that it had no relation to what they would do on stage. “The Japanese Room At La Pagode” comes from a split with the avant-garde violinist and composer Tony Conrad, while “20 Songs Less” is actually a 7” from 1993, offered as a single track.

The choice of pieces tells a story, though not in chronological order. “20 Songs Less” is the ninth track in the boxset, but it marks O’Rourke’s very first involvement with Gastr. Not only do several of the songs come from their final performance together, but the boxset opens and closes with the first and last songs, respectively, from that performance. There’s a real narrative sense that their story has come full circle, but naturally it’s presented in this abstracted way, intentionally sequenced to feel like a film presenting flashbacks, in Grubbs’ view. 

O’Rourke and Grubbs have both gone on to release scores of albums, both solo and in collaboration with a dizzying array of musicians and artists, in modes ranging from American primitive guitar and electronic abstraction to chamber pop and free jazz. They created lightning in a bottle with Gastr del Sol, however, progenitors of an electroacoustic flux and boundary-breaking acuity that would become a more acceptable mode of music in the years to come. Back then, though, they were the ultimate ‘What do we do with this?’ band. The answer has always been simple: just listen.

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Willie Nelson – The Border

It is already beyond serious argument that the string of tremendous albums issued by Willie Nelson during his eighties established a formidable benchmark in the admittedly little-contested field of octogenarian discographies. Having blown out 90 candles in April 2023, Nelson is now setting a daunting standard for future nonagenarians who fancy taking him on.

It is already beyond serious argument that the string of tremendous albums issued by Willie Nelson during his eighties established a formidable benchmark in the admittedly little-contested field of octogenarian discographies. Having blown out 90 candles in April 2023, Nelson is now setting a daunting standard for future nonagenarians who fancy taking him on.

JONI MITCHELL IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE!

Just as last year’s Bluegrass was a deft reworking of a dozen of his own classics to make them sound even more like traditional standards than they already did, The Border further demonstrates that Nelson feels he no longer has time to faff around overmuch with titles – this is an album located where Texas abuts Mexico, and where the music of each overlap. The cover shows the ochre mesas of the Big Bend National Park, along the frontier.

The title and opening track is further unsubtle if effective scene-setting. “The Border”, borrowed from Rodney Crowell’s 2019 album Texas, channels the quiet desperation of a US Border Patrol officer, neither song nor its protagonist fishing for sympathy, merely relating that this is how things are (“I work on the border, and it’s workin’ on me”). It is smart writing, understanding that the view of any given political conundrum tends to get less clear the closer one gets to it, and Nelson does it abundant justice: his gruff grumble suits the narrator’s weary stoicism, and not for the last time on this album, those gnarled fingers wring flamenco-flavoured miracles from the fretboard of that battered, antique Martin. “The Border” is not Crowell’s only contribution – his 1989 hit “Many A Long And Lonesome Highway”, also appears, possibly by way of averting the crime against nature that would have been Willie Nelson neglecting to record a given song called “Many A Long And Lonesome Highway”.

Of the remaining eight tracks, four are new songs by Nelson and long-time collaborator Buddy Cannon, four by other composers. Though Nelson at this point possesses gravitas sufficient to make any song he sings sound like his own, care has been taken to find songs he can wear especially comfortably. The lovely Larry Cordle/Erin Emberlin cut “I Wrote This Song For You” is sung straight through the fourth wall in the style of Nelson’s own “Sad Songs & Waltzes” (“I hope you hear it on/Some lonely late-night radio”), though is significantly less vindictive. The Shawn Camp/Monty Holmes shuffle “Made In Texas” is a plausible new anthem for Nelson’s home state, though only Nelson’s deadpan drawl could locate so much double-edged nuance in the bumper-sticker zinger “You can always tell a Texan/But you can’t tell him much”.

Hank’s Guitar”, by Cannon and Bobby Tomberlin, is a cousin to David Allan Coe’s “The Ride”, although the hallucination described in this lyric is not hitching a lift with the country patriarch, but being incarnated as his instrument (for all that Williams has loomed in country’s consciousness since his death in 1953, in a manner akin to an Old Testament prophet, it is extraordinary to contemplate that he and Nelson are near contemporaries: Williams was born only a decade earlier). The line “Next thing I knew/I was given to the Country Music Hall Of Fame” is an implicit acknowledgement of what awaits Trigger, Nelson’s famously dilapidated six-string.

Throughout his remarkably productive dotage, Nelson has sounded in no hurry for any such posthumous acclaim: the fatalistically entitled “Last Man Standing” is now six years and nine albums ago. The new songs on The Border are notably short on mordant acknowledgement that the Rio Grande is not the only liminal space inhabited by the record’s creator. “What If I’m Out Of My Mind” is a Buck Owens-esque swinger which wryly implies that old age need be no barrier to romantic misjudgement, and “Once Upon A Yesterday” a stately ballad fit to be ranked alongside any of Nelson’s formidable catalogue of stately ballads, iced with an exquisite steel solo by Bobby Terry.

The Border closes with a singularly spectacular defiance of any dying of the light. “How Much Does It Cost” is, more or less, Nelson’s companion to Leonard Cohen’s “Tower Of Song”, a rumination on his work and his reasons for doing it. But instead of asking Hank Williams how lonely it gets, Nelson cedes the key question to Woody Guthrie – “Ol’ Woody said how much does all of this cost/I’ll pay for it all, what the heck/And, by the way, take a cheque?” – before deciding that the answer now is the same as it was when his recording career began, back during the Eisenhower administration: “I’m a songwriter/And always will be”.

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Hear Mercury Rev’s new track, “Patterns”

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Mercury Rev have shared a new track, “Patterns”. You can hear it below.

Mercury Rev have shared a new track, “Patterns”. You can hear it below.

JONI MITCHELL IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE!

The track is taken from the band’s upcoming ninth album Born Horses, which is released on September 6 via Bella Union – you can pre-order a copy here.

Of “Patterns”, the band say, “When we gaze up at the stars in the sky at night, the flickering lights seem random. If we could zoom out and see all of the galaxies revolving around each other, we would see the order in it. There are only Patterns on top of Patterns…”

Tracklisting for Born Horses is:

Mood Swings

Ancient Love

Your Hammer, My Heart

Patterns

A Bird Of No Address

Born Horses

Everything I Thought I Had Lost

There’s Always Been A Bird In Me

The band are also touring:

October 27 – Belfast – Mandela Hall

October 28 – Limerick – Dolans Warehouse

October 29 – Galway – Roisin Dub

October 30 – Cork – Cyprus Avenue

October 31 – Dublin – Button Factory

November 2 – Norwich – Arts Centre

November 3 – Bristol – Trinity

November 4 – Newcastle – Boiler Shop

November 6 – Glasgow – The Garage

November 7 – Leeds – Brudenell Social Club

November 8 – Cambridge – Junction

November 9 – Brighton – Mutations Festival

November 11 – Amsterdam – Paradiso

November 12 – Leuven – Het Depot

1November 13 – Paris – La Maroquinerie

November 15 – Weissenhauser Strand – Rolling Stone Beach Festival

November 16 – Copenhagen – Bremen Theatre

November 17 – Johanneshov – Slaktkyrkan

November 18 – Oslo – Vulkan Arena

2025:

March 13 – Liverpool – Content

March 14 – Manchester – New Century Hall

March 18 – Portsmouth – Wedgewood Rooms

March 19 – London – EartH

Beth Gibbons – Uber Eats Music Hall, Berlin, June 2

A storm is brewing in the skies as Beth Gibbons prepares to take the stage of Berlin’s most unappetisingly named venue. There’s a wary anticipation inside the building too. Her debut solo album Lives Outgrown only emerged two days ago, and its still-unfamiliar intimacy is foreboding. When muted strings fill the auditorium before the lights have even dimmed, it’s a nervous hush that falls over the crowd rather than wild applause. As overtures go, it’s hardly emphatic, and yet the moment the seven-piece band enters, the atmosphere changes, the air suddenly electric.

A storm is brewing in the skies as Beth Gibbons prepares to take the stage of Berlin’s most unappetisingly named venue. There’s a wary anticipation inside the building too. Her debut solo album Lives Outgrown only emerged two days ago, and its still-unfamiliar intimacy is foreboding. When muted strings fill the auditorium before the lights have even dimmed, it’s a nervous hush that falls over the crowd rather than wild applause. As overtures go, it’s hardly emphatic, and yet the moment the seven-piece band enters, the atmosphere changes, the air suddenly electric.

JONI MITCHELL IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE!

Wearing a casual black sweater and cargo pants, nervously rubbing her hands until forced to step to the microphone, Gibbons remains out of the spotlight as long as possible. But when she finally delivers “Tell Me Who You Are Today”’s defining opening lines – “If I could change the way I feel/ If I could make my body heal” – there’s no doubt middle-age has done nothing to soften her powers. No-one sings like her. Bewitching is an understatement.

Nonetheless, it’s equally clear that tonight is about far more than just ‘that voice’. Howard Jacobs’ woodwind immediately lends the song’s spooky folk a resonant depth lacking in the recorded version, while Emma Smith and Richard Jones on violins provide hints of the sweeping drama characterising Radiohead’s A Moon Shaped Pool. “Burden Of Life” is underpinned by a bustling rhythm established by Jacobs and Lives Outgrown’s co-producer James Ford, while Smith and Jones’ strings switch between unsettling stabs and sweeping romance, underlining ominous tension.

Tom Herbert’s syncopated bassline introduces “Floating On A Moment” with a brittle, tentative caution, but its mood is soon magically transformed thanks to celestial backing vocals and Jason Hazely’s harpsichord. “Mysteries”, from 2002’s Rustin Man collaboration Out Of Season, is welcomed like a dear friend, while “Oceans” is as dreamy as it is spellbinding, although a musical saw singing like a lost soul illustrates the shadows lurking in the background.

Likewise, “Whispering Love” can’t help hide a sense of trouble ahead, despite immaculately fleshed-out arrangements full of wide-eyed wonder and sensitive introspection; and “Rewind”’s initial, subtle spaghetti western flourishes are overwhelmed by pummelled drums, ultimately collapsing into a percussive mess. As for “Beyond The Sun”, its opening drones and acoustic guitar are diabolically translated into a sinister sacrificial singalong, with choral backing vocals like Viking warriors and brass summoning us into battle.

This mix of beauty and brutality is captivating, whether on “Tom The Model” (another Out Of Season number) or “For Sale”, Gibbons’ voice perfectly suited to the haunting melancholy of its descending melody. By the end, her delighted words to the audience are lost amid their roars. Her smile, though, is charismatic and unmissable.

The band return for a sublime take on Portishead’s “Roads”, the room reduced to stillness (and one woman to weeping). Finally, there’s a primal “Reaching Out”, Gibbons chanting as though raising the dead to a John Barry soundtrack. It’s a climactic manifestation of the show’s greatest revelation, that Gibbons’ art is all-encompassing. If there was a storm tonight, it took place indoors.

SET LIST
Tell Me Who You Are Today
Burden Of Life
Floating On A Moment
Rewind
For Sale
Mysteries
Lost Changes
Oceans
Tom The Model
Beyond the Sun
Whispering Love
–––––
Roads
Reaching Out

Liam Gallagher – Utilita Arena, Sheffield, June 1

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The show begins with a huge digital clock literally rolling back the years from 2024, but Oasis gigs were never like this when their era-defining debut came out 30 years ago. A spectacular stage set recreates the album cover at arena size, complete with giant floating globe, flamingoes and the portrait of Burt Bacharach.

The show begins with a huge digital clock literally rolling back the years from 2024, but Oasis gigs were never like this when their era-defining debut came out 30 years ago. A spectacular stage set recreates the album cover at arena size, complete with giant floating globe, flamingoes and the portrait of Burt Bacharach.

JONI MITCHELL IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE!

Before showtime, 12,500 eager fans yell along as The Stone Roses’ “I Am The Resurrection” blares from the PA at tinnitus-inducing volume. When the clock finally reaches 1994 and Liam Gallagher launches into album opener “Rock ’n’ Roll Star”, the place erupts to such a degree that it’s a wonder the roof doesn’t levitate above the building.

That song has kicked off Gallagher’s solo shows for years, though several Definitely Maybe numbers are relatively under-heard; a nine-piece band (including Oasis co-founder and guitarist Bonehead) make them all sound as fresh as a daisy. “Columbia” is darker and more brooding than on record. “Shakermaker” – performed for the first time in years – epitomises the Beatles-meets-Sex Pistols blueprint that influenced generations of guitar bands.

Gallagher is now 51, but with his legs apart, head tilted back to suit a microphone purposely set four inches too high, he still looks every inch the rock ’n’ roll star – and a healthy pre-tour lifestyle has done wonders for his voice. It’s also a thrill to hear him so emotionally engaged. He puts everything into these songs, delivering “Bring It On Down”‘s brilliant line “you’re the outcast, you’re the underclass, but you don’t care ‘cos you’re living fast” with unadulterated venom.

The singer made it clear before the tour that he wouldn’t be performing the album in order because that would mean playing “Live Forever” three songs in, but the reshuffled set list also contains surprises. There are all manner of B-sides and deep cuts from 1994, when the songs were tumbling out of his now-estranged brother Noel. “Cloudburst” and “I Will Believe” haven’t been performed for 30 years. Most unexpectedly, Liam dedicates “Half A World Away” – a song Noel always sang – to “my little brother”. It was always among Oasis’s loveliest tunes, and this strings-drenched rendition – with the audience singing every word and holding up their phones – is a poignant highlight.

“Fade Away” has a gem of a chorus – “while we’re living, the dreams we have as children fade away” – and is one of a group of songs referencing family, childhood or nostalgia. Gallagher has clearly put a lot of thought into the selections and their presentation. Another curveball, “Lock All The Doors” – which dates from the early Oasis years but wasn’t completed until Noel recorded it for the 2015 High Flying Birds album Chasing Yesterday – is possibly another subtle olive branch, while the next two songs have themes of freedom and escape. “(It’s Good) To Be Free” sounds like a Mancunian Crazy Horse while the strings turn “Whatever” into an orchestrated celebration (“I’m free to be whatever I choose”).

Arms raise and voices swell for “Cigarettes And Alcohol” and a terrific home straight of “Supersonic”, “Slide Away” and the immortal “Live Forever”, during which the cameras catch a glorious close up of Gallagher clutching his tambourine between his teeth. Some of the crowd have left the building assuming the show’s over when the singer suddenly returns wearing a bucket hat for The Beatles’ “I Am The Walrus”, which always ended Oasis shows back in the day. “It’s been too fucking long!” yells Gallagher, as the song’s psychedelic odyssey and accompanying images of late icons and influences from Elvis Presley to Bob Marley put the cherry on the cake of a barnstorming show.

SET LIST
Rock ’n’ Roll Star
Columbia
Shakermaker
Up In The Sky
Digsy’s Dinner
Bring it On Down
Cloudburst
I Will Believe
Half The World Away
D’Yer Wanna Be A Spaceman
Fade Away
Lock All The Doors
(It’s Good) To Be Free
Whatever
Cigarettes & Alcohol
Married With Children
————–
Supersonic
Slide Away
Live Forever
————–
I Am The Walrus

Sex Pistols and Frank Carter to perform Never Mind The Bollocks

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Paul Cook, Glen Matlock and Steve Jones of the Sex Pistols – with Frank Carter (Gallows / The Rattlesnakes) subbing in for Johnny Rotten – will perform Never Mind The Bollocks in its entirety at a fundraiser for London's Bush Hall venue on August 13 and 14.

Paul Cook, Glen Matlock and Steve Jones of the Sex Pistols – with Frank Carter (Gallows / The Rattlesnakes) subbing in for Johnny Rotten – will perform Never Mind The Bollocks in its entirety at a fundraiser for London’s Bush Hall venue on August 13 and 14.

JONI MITCHELL IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE!

“We’re going to be playing Pistols numbers cause they need support and they need the money,” says Paul Cook. “We thought it would be a great way to stop it going under. This is my local venue. I grew up in Shepherd’s Bush and I still live round here. It would be a real shame to see it disappear and we want to keep it going. So everyone get down to the gig!”

“Smaller music venues are the lifeblood of new music,” says Glen Matlock. “It’s in these intimate spaces… where the spirit of live music truly comes alive so we need to keep them going.”

Says Frank Carter, “When the Sex Pistols call, you answer. I’m very excited to be a part of it.”

“If it all goes wrong,” adds Steve Jones, “it’s Paul’s fucking fault.”

Tickets go on sale at 9am BST on Wednesday (June 5) from here.

June 1, 1974

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The bugger in the short sleeves fucked my wife / Did it quick, then split…John Cale’s notorious opening to his 1975 song “Guts” described Kevin Ayers’ seduction of his wife Cindy, the former Miss Cinderella of the GTOs, the night before he and Ayers were due to share a stage in London. It became the incident for which the June 1, 1974 concert at the Rainbow Theatre would be best remembered by rock historians.

The bugger in the short sleeves fucked my wife / Did it quick, then split…John Cale’s notorious opening to his 1975 song “Guts” described Kevin Ayers’ seduction of his wife Cindy, the former Miss Cinderella of the GTOs, the night before he and Ayers were due to share a stage in London. It became the incident for which the June 1, 1974 concert at the Rainbow Theatre would be best remembered by rock historians.

JONI MITCHELL IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE!

The idea for the concert was cooked up over a lunch for five at an Italian restaurant called Gatamelata on Kensington High Street. At the table were Ayers, Cale, Nico, Brian Eno, and me. The date was May 13, which tells you how much spontaneity was involved in putting the event together.

A few months earlier, I’d joined Island as head of A&R. Cale and Nico had just been let go by Warner Bros, and both were among my early signings. It seemed obvious to invite Brian Eno (and Phil Manzanera, his erstwhile Roxy Music colleague) to work with them in the studio. The recording of Cale’s Fear was well underway and the sessions for Nico’s The End were about to begin, both albums being made at Sound Techniques in Chelsea, with the great studio engineer John Wood.

Ayers had already been signed by my predecessor, Muff Winwood, and his first album for the label, The Confessions Of Dr Dream And Other Stories, was about to be released. There were high hopes, after his two albums with Soft Machine and four as a solo artist, of relaunching him to a wider audience, capitalising on his louche good looks, seductive baritone voice and charmingly off-centre songs. Maybe there was a hedonistic, post-hippie Scott Walker in there somewhere.

photo by: Gems/Redferns

As we sat down to lunch, Kevin was three weeks away from launching his album with a concert at the Rainbow. Rather than just adding the usual nondescript support act, I thought it might be more interesting to turn the evening into something resembling the package shows of the early ’60s. It would create advance publicity for the first Island efforts of Cale and Nico while also helping Eno, who was in the early stages of constructing a new post-Roxy career for himself, having released Here Come The Warm Jets at the beginning of the year.

The announcement provoked a stir in the UK’s five weekly music papers, now largely staffed by writers who knew about the Velvets and the Soft Machine. Guests in the backing band would include Mike Oldfield and Robert Wyatt. The concert sold out quickly. It would be one of the events of the summer for London’s scenemakers, followed by similar, slightly more modest concerts in Birmingham and Manchester a few days later. It might also be a good idea, I thought, to record the Rainbow gig and put an album out quickly, as a kind of official bootleg.

Despite the pre-concert confrontation between Ayers and Cale, the evening went well. John Wood and I, sitting in the Island mobile recording truck parked in the alley behind the theatre, saw the proceedings only on a small, fuzzy black-and-white TV monitor, from a single fixed camera. We spent the next three nights mixing and editing the performances into an album that hit the shops on June 28, exactly four weeks later. There was no post-production: no overdubbing, no fixing of mistakes, no polishing. Any deficiencies in <June 1, 1974> were down to me, as the producer. And half a century later, I’ve almost forgiven whoever at the NME came up with a brilliantly ego-deflating acronym for the four stars: ACNE.

Richard Williams is on the panel for a 50th anniversary celebration of June 1, 1974 at London’s The Social on June 1, alongside Phil Manzanera, John Altman, Galen Ayers and Uncut’s Allan Jones, with live performances by Emma Tricca and Darren Hayman

The Police to release Synchronicity box set

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The Police's 1983 album Synchronicity is being reissued on July 26 by UMR / Polydor across multiple formats including 6CD, 4LP, 2CD, 2LP Coloured, 1LP Picture Disc and a digital album.

The Police‘s 1983 album Synchronicity is being reissued on July 26 by UMR / Polydor across multiple formats including 6CD, 4LP, 2CD, 2LP Coloured, 1LP Picture Disc and a digital album.

JONI MITCHELL IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE!

The band’s fifth and final studio album, it featured the singles “Every Breath You Take“, “King Of Pain“, “Wrapped Around Your Finger” and  “Synchronicity II“.

Synchronicity will be available in the following formats:

  • CD1 is the original album including “Murder By Numbers”, all remastered directly from the original source tapes
  • CD2 features 18 tracks containing all original 7” / 12” B-sides plus 11 exclusive non-album bonus tracks, available on CD for the first time
  • CD3 and CD4 contains previously unreleased alternate takes of all the Synchronicity songs
  • CD4 also features unreleased songs
  • CD5 and CD6 features 19 live recordings – all previously unreleased – captured on September 10, 1983 at the Oakland-Alameda Coliseum, USA

A 2CD Deluxe reissue will also be available, featuring the same track list as detailed on CD1 and CD2 of the boxset above.

The reissue will also be available as a Digital Box Set, available on all DSPs and will mirror the 6CD track list above.

The reissue will be available in three different vinyl presentations:

4LP Super Deluxe Edition (Limited Edition)

  • Original vinyl track list (LP1)
  • A selection of 7” / 12” B-sides and live recordings (LP2)
  • A selection of unreleased alternate takes and demos from the Synchronicity sessions (LP3)
  • A selection of unreleased alternate takes and demos from the Synchronicity sessions (LP4 side 1)
  • 6 unreleased songs as detailed in CD4 of the boxset description above, with the exception of ‘I’m Blind’ (LP4 side 2)

2LP Deluxe (Coloured Double Vinyl, D2C Exclusive) 

  • Original vinyl track list (LP1)
  • A selection of 7” / 12” B-sides and live recordings (LP2)

1LP Picture Disc (Alternate Sequence, Limited Edition)

  • Original vinyl track list but with a different running order of songs

You can pre-order here.

Here’s the tracklisting for all formats:

6-Disc Limited Edition Deluxe Boxset

CD1

  1. Synchronicity I
  2. Walking In Your Footsteps
  3. O My God
  4. Mother
  5. Miss Gradenko
  6. Synchronicity II
  7. Every Breath You Take
  8. King Of Pain
  9. Wrapped Around Your Finger
  10. Tea In The Sahara
  11. Murder By Numbers

CD 2 (Bonus)

  1. Truth Hits Everybody (Remix)
  2. Man In A Suitcase (Live At The Variety Arts Theatre, Los Angeles, USA / 16th January 1981)
  3. Someone To Talk To
  4. Message In A Bottle (Live At The Gusman Cultural Center, Miami, USA / 26th October 1979)
  5. I Burn For You
  6. Once Upon A Daydream
  7. Tea In The Sahara (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983)
  8. Every Breath You Take (Backing Track)
  9. Roxanne (Backing Track)
  10. Wrapped Around Your Finger (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983)
  11. Every Bomb You Make
  12. Walking On The Moon (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983)
  13. Hole In My Life (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983)
  14. One World (Not Three) (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983)
  15. Invisible Sun (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 2nd November 1983)
  16. Murder By Numbers (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 2nd November 1983)
  17. Walking In Your Footsteps (Derangement)
  18. Tea In The Sahara (Derangement)

CD 3 (Unreleased – Part 1)

  1. Synchronicity I (Demo)
  2. Synchronicity I (Alternate Mix)
  3. Synchronicity I (Instrumental)
  4. Walking In Your Footsteps (Alternate Version)
  5. Walking In Your Footsteps (Alternate Mix)
  6. O My God (Demo)
  7. O My God (Outtake)
  8. O My God (OBX Version)
  9. O My God (Alternate Mix)
  10. Mother (Alternate Version)
  11. Mother (Instrumental)
  12. Miss Gradenko (Alternate Mix)
  13. Synchronicity II (Demo)
  14. Synchronicity II (Outtake)
  15. Synchronicity II (Extended Version)
  16. Synchronicity II (Alternate Mix)
  17. Synchronicity II (Instrumental)

CD 4 (Unreleased – Part 2)

  1. Every Breath You Take (Demo)
  2. Every Breath You Take (Outtake)
  3. Every Breath You Take (Alternate Mix)
  4. King Of Pain (Demo)
  5. King Of Pain (Alternate Version)
  6. King Of Pain (Alternate Mix)
  7. Wrapped Around Your Finger (Demo)
  8. Wrapped Around Your Finger (Alternate Mix)
  9. Wrapped Around Your Finger (Instrumental)
  10. Tea In The Sahara (Demo)
  11. Tea In The Sahara (Alternate Mix)
  12. Murder By Numbers (Demo)
  13. I’m Blind (Demo)
  14. Loch
  15. Ragged Man
  16. Goodbye Tomorrow
  17. Truth Hits Everybody (Remix) (Outtake)
  18. Three Steps To Heaven
  19. Rock And Roll Music

CD 5 (Live Pt. 1 – Unreleased) Live At The Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum, California, USA / 10th September 1983

  1. Synchronicity I
  2. Synchronicity II
  3. Walking In Your Footsteps
  4. Message In A Bottle
  5. Walking On The Moon
  6. O My God
  7. De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da
  8. Wrapped Around Your Finger
  9. Tea In The Sahara
  10. Spirits In the Material World

CD 6 (Live Pt. 2 – Unreleased) Live At The Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum, California, USA / 10th September 1983

  1. Hole In My Life
  2. Invisible Sun
  3. One World (Not Three)
  4. King Of Pain
  5. Don’t Stand So Close To Me
  6. Murder By Numbers
  7. Every Breath You Take
  8. Roxanne
  9. Can’t Stand Losing You

4LP Super Deluxe Edition (Limited Edition)

Disc 1

  1. Synchronicity I (Side 1)
  2. Walking In Your Footsteps (Side 1)
  3. O My God (Side 1)
  4. Mother (Side 1)
  5. Miss Gradenko (Side 1)
  6. Synchronicity II (Side 1)
  7. Every Breath You Take (Side 2)
  8. King Of Pain (Side 2)
  9. Wrapped Around Your Finger (Side 2)
  10. Tea In The Sahara (Side 2)

Disc 2 (Bonus)

  1. Murder By Numbers (Side 1)
  2. Truth Hits Everybody (Remix) (Side 1)
  3. Man In A Suitcase (Live At The Variety Arts Theatre, Los Angeles, USA / 16th January 1981) (Side 1)
  4. Someone To Talk To (Side 1)
  5. Message In A Bottle (Live At The Gusman Cultural Center, Miami, USA / 26th October 1979) (Side 1)
  6. I Burn For You (Side 1)
  7. Once Upon A Daydream (Side 2)
  8. Tea In The Sahara (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983) (Side 2)
  9. Every Breath You Take (Backing Track) (Side 2)
  10. Roxanne (Backing Track) (Side 2)
  11. Wrapped Around Your Finger (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983) (Side 2)
  12. Every Bomb You Make (Side 2)

Disc 3 (Unreleased)

  1. Synchronicity I (Alternate Mix) (Side 1)
  2. Synchronicity I (Instrumental) (Side 1)
  3. Walking In Your Footsteps (Alternate Mix) (Side 1)
  4. O My God (Alternate Mix) (Side 1)
  5. Mother (Instrumental) (Side 1)
  6. Miss Gradenko (Alternate Mix) (Side 1)
  7. Synchronicity II (Outtake) (Side 2)
  8. Synchronicity II (Extended Version) (Side 2)
  9. Synchronicity II (Instrumental) (Side 2)
  10. Every Breath You Take (Alternate Mix) (Side 2)

Disc 4 (Unreleased)

  1. King Of Pain (Alternate Version) (Side 1)
  2. King Of Pain (Alternate Mix) (Side 1)
  3. Wrapped Around Your Finger (Alternate Mix) (Side 1)
  4. Wrapped Around Your Finger (Instrumental) (Side 1)
  5. Tea In The Sahara (Alternate Mix) (Side 1)
  6. Loch (Side 2)
  7. Ragged Man (Side 2)
  8. Goodbye Tomorrow (Side 2)
  9. Truth Hits Everybody (Remix) (Outtake) (Side 2)
  10. Three Steps To Heaven (Side 2)
  11. Rock And Roll Music (Side 2)

2CD

CD 1

  1. Synchronicity I
  2. Walking In Your Footsteps
  3. O My God
  4. Mother
  5. Miss Gradenko
  6. Synchronicity II
  7. Every Breath You Take
  8. King Of Pain
  9. Wrapped Around Your Finger
  10. Tea In The Sahara
  11. Murder By Numbers

CD 2

  1. Truth Hits Everybody (Remix)
  2. Man In A Suitcase (Live At The Variety Arts Theatre, Los Angeles, USA / 16th January 1981)
  3. Someone To Talk To
  4. Message In A Bottle (Live At The Gusman Cultural Center, Miami, USA / 26th October 1979)
  5. I Burn For You
  6. Once Upon A Daydream
  7. Tea In The Sahara (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983)
  8. Every Breath You Take (Backing Track)
  9. Roxanne (Backing Track)
  10. Wrapped Around Your Finger (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983)
  11. Every Bomb You Make
  12. Walking On The Moon (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983)
  13. Hole In My Life (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983)
  14. One World (Not Three) (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983)
  15. Invisible Sun (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 2nd November 1983)
  16. Murder By Numbers (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 2nd November 1983)
  17. Walking In Your Footsteps (Derangement)
  18. Tea In The Sahara (Derangement)

2LP Coloured Vinyl (D2C Exclusive)

Disc 1

  1. Synchronicity I (Side 1)
  2. Walking In Your Footsteps (Side 1)
  3. O My God (Side 1)
  4. Mother (Side 1)
  5. Miss Gradenko (Side 1)
  6. Synchronicity II (Side 1)
  7. Every Breath You Take (Side 2)
  8. King Of Pain (Side 2)
  9. Wrapped Around Your Finger (Side 2)
  10. Tea In The Sahara (Side 2)

Disc 2 (Bonus)

  1. Murder By Numbers (Side 1)
  2. Truth Hits Everybody (Remix) (Side 1)
  3. Man In A Suitcase (Live At The Variety Arts Theatre, Los Angeles, USA / 16th January 1981) (Side 1)
  4. Someone To Talk To (Side 1)
  5. Message In A Bottle (Live At The Gusman Cultural Center, Miami, USA / 26th October 1979) (Side 1)
  6. I Burn For You (Side 1)
  7. Once Upon A Daydream (Side 2)
  8. Tea In The Sahara (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983) (Side 2)
  9. Every Breath You Take (Backing Track) (Side 2)
  10. Roxanne (Backing Track) (Side 2)
  11. Wrapped Around Your Finger (Live At The Omni, Atlanta, USA / 3rd November 1983) (Side 2)
  12. Every Bomb You Make (Side 2)

1LP (Picture Disc)

Disc 1

  1. Synchronicity I (Side 1)
  2. Every Breath You Take (Side 1)
  3. Wrapped Around Your Finger (Side 1)
  4. Miss Gradenko (Side 1)
  5. Synchronicity II (Side 1)
  6. King Of Pain (Side 2)
  7. Walking In Your Footsteps (Side 2)
  8. Mother (Side 2)
  9. O My God (Side 2)
  10. Tea In The Sahara (Side 2)

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Robin Trower – Bridge Of Sighs

It’s 1974 and blues-rock is badly in need of a new guitar hero. Hendrix and Duane Allman are dead, Clapton and Peter Green are missing in action and Jimmy Page was last heard essaying reggae and doo-wop pastiches on Led Zep’s Houses Of The Holy. Cometh the hour, cometh Robin Trower.

It’s 1974 and blues-rock is badly in need of a new guitar hero. Hendrix and Duane Allman are dead, Clapton and Peter Green are missing in action and Jimmy Page was last heard essaying reggae and doo-wop pastiches on Led Zep’s Houses Of The Holy. Cometh the hour, cometh Robin Trower.

JONI MITCHELL IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE!

Frustrated by not being allowed to let rip in his years with Procul Harum, Trower had given notice of intent with his 1973 solo debut Twice Removed From Yesterday, which included an incendiary cover of BB King’s “Rock Me Baby” and rather suggested he’d been in the wrong group all along. Backed by Jimmy Dewar on bass and blue-eyed soul vocals and Reg Isidore on powerhouse drums, he followed with 1974’s epochal Bridge Of Sighs, which was to elevate him to the ranks of the most revered axemen of the age.

Touring America that summer, Trower found himself bottom of the bill opening for Ten Years After and King Crimson. By the time the tour was over he was outselling both headliners as Bridge Of Sighs reached No 7 in the US charts and went on to multi-platinum status.

Oddly, the album failed to chart in the UK, but Guitar Player magazine named Bridge Of Sighs its Album Of The Year and Robert Fripp, having just broken up King Crimson, asked Trower to give him lessons as “one of the few English guitarists that have mastered bends and wobbles, able to stand alongside American guitarists and play with an equal authority to someone grounded in a fundamentally American tradition.”

If Trower’s complaint had been that Procul Harum’s baroque arrangements left him little space to express himself, he set about making up for it on Bridge Of Sighs, every one of the eight tracks essentially a vehicle for his rampant soloing, from subtle and sultry to shrieking and shredding.

The album roars out of the blocks with a savage Hendrix-like riff on “Day Of The Eagle” which halfway through gives way to a slow bluesy solo reminiscent of Rainbow Bridge’s Pali Gap”. The title track – named not after the Venetian  landmark but a horse whose name Trower had spotted in the racing pages – is more Black Sabbath than Hendrix with a hypnotic riff over which Dewar intones, “Cold wind blows/The Gods look down in anger/On this poor child”, before Trower adds a suitably doomy solo.

Dewar hits the mark again with his Paul Rodgers impersonation on “In This Place”, a rock ballad with plenty of fat sustain from Trower’s Fender Stratocaster before the pace picks up again with “The Fool And Me”, a glorious blues-rock jam with a “Machine Gun”-style funk riff and which concludes with a frantic solo on which his whammy bar works overtime.

Album highlight “Too Rolling Stoned” opens Side Two, seven and a half minutes of Hendrix-inspired deep blues bombing. There’s a jazzy flare to “About To Begin” with a tastefully melodic solo of the kind the mature Jeff Beck might have envied. In contrast, “Lady Love” is the album’s most straightforwardly gnarly rocker and wouldn’t have sounded out of place on a Bad Company LP before the album concludes fittingly with more blistering, distorted blues-rock guitar mayhem on “Little Bit Of Sympathy”.

The song ideas are strong and Dewar’s vocals are impressively sturdy but ultimately it is Trower’s virtuosic touch, the nuanced tone of his Strat and the intrinsic skill of the “bends and wobbles” that Fripp so admired on which the success of Bridge Of Sighs rests.

That said, even the most impressive technique can only take you so far. Matthew Fisher, another Procul Harum escapee, was in the producer’s chair but Trower generously attributes much of the potency of the album’s sonic attack to Geoff Emerick, The Beatles’ legendary sound engineer, who “came up with a way of recording the guitar I don’t think had been done before with one mic in close, one mic in the middle distance and one mic set 15 feet away to get the sound of the room.”

Whatever the techy specifications, blues-rock guitar playing had seldom sounded so burnished and so incisive. Half a century on, Bridge Of Sighs remains Trower’s high point and a pinnacle in guitar pyrotechnics that still dazzles to this day.

Extras 8/10: An unedited and previously unheard stereo mix, outtakes/alternative versions of all eight original album tracks, a live set recorded for radio during the 1974 US tour plus a Blu-ray disc with Dolby ATMOS and 5.1 mixes.

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Ezra Feinberg – Soft Power

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Every so often, an ageing agit-rocker will crawl out of the woodwork to bemoan that the abject state of our governments is not being met with suitable ire from the current generation of songwriters. Where are our Bob Dylans, our Joe Strummers, our Rage Against The Machines? Obviously this is a load of old cobblers: pop is as diverse and engaged as it’s ever been, with young musicians at the vanguard of campaigns for racial equality, social justice and a ceasefire in Gaza. You don’t need to literally write a song about it.

Every so often, an ageing agit-rocker will crawl out of the woodwork to bemoan that the abject state of our governments is not being met with suitable ire from the current generation of songwriters. Where are our Bob Dylans, our Joe Strummers, our Rage Against The Machines? Obviously this is a load of old cobblers: pop is as diverse and engaged as it’s ever been, with young musicians at the vanguard of campaigns for racial equality, social justice and a ceasefire in Gaza. You don’t need to literally write a song about it.

JONI MITCHELL IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE!

This clamour for old-fashioned punk dissent overlooks the fact that it’s also the job of music to create utopias; that the quest for bliss is also an act of resistance. Hence the current yearning for ambient and New Age atmospheres that has united musicians from the fields of jazz, folk, electronica, neo-classical and, in this case, psychedelic rock. This mass retreat to calmer terrain is more than mere escapism – it’s an attempt to dream a better world based on principles of compassion, contemplation and consideration of beauty.

As with most of the musicians currently occupying this liminal space, Ezra Feinberg is no lightweight; his soothing prescriptions are effective precisely because they carry the wisdom of years of thoughtful musical study and exploration. Back in the 2000s, he led the psychedelic folk-rock band Citay, who were Bay Area contemporaries of Comets On Fire and Wooden Shjips. Beginning with 2018’s Pentimento And Others, his solo albums have ditched the band set-up for a series of more intimate and specific drone-folk surveys.

On Soft Power it feels like Feinberg’s finally broken through to the other side, jettisoning the last remnants of psych-rock fuzz and emerging with a fresh, shimmering palette of electric piano, woodwind, cosmic synths and a fingerpicked acoustic guitar that, in the absence of traditional rock beats, often provides the metronomic undertow. Opener “Future Sand” is mildly psychedelic in its own way, like stepping out into a bright spring morning after the first coffee of the day. “Soft Power” itself is a perfect beach sunset, twin flutes dipping and rising purposefully out of the rippling haze. “Flutter Intensity” (with a knowing glance in Stereolab’s direction) is a candy-floss confection of vibraphone jazz, modular synth-pop and the lightest of yé-yé grooves. And even while the motorik throb of album centrepiece “The Big Clock” hints at a sense of urgency, it never becomes hasty or insistent. This is a place where time is suspended, rather than something to be counted or chased.

Feinberg now lives in New York’s Hudson Valley, but his music retains a West Coast sensibility, placing it in the lineage of both The Beach Boys and The San Francisco Tape Music Center. You can imagine it playing in a minimalist Malibu apartment overlooking the ocean, sofa by Charles & Ray Eames, Richard Diebenkorn painting on the wall. There is an unashamedly functional quality to Soft Power that brings obvious comparisons with Brian Eno’s Ambient series and the Japanese genre of kankyō ongaku (‘environmental music’). But as with the best of those records, it’s so meticulously and lovingly crafted that it quickly transcends its background listening functionality to offer a glimpse of the sublime via rapt contemplation of the everyday.

You will certainly dig this album if you enjoyed Arp’s terrific 2018 album Zebra, on which Feinberg played guitar and marimba, alongside several other musicians who reprise their roles here. John Thayer acted as Feinberg’s primary creative foil on Soft Power, furnishing his basic tracks with simpatico synth and drum patterns. David Lackner then added the crucial flute and clarinet parts, with Jefre Cantu-Ledesma sprinkling his signature synth magic over a couple of tracks.

Other carefully chosen guests include Bing & Ruth’s David Moore on keys, tracing similar celestial arcs to those he drew on last year’s Steve Gunn collab Let The Moon Be A Planet; and harpist Mary Lattimore, whose presence is almost always an indicator of tasteful repose. On the wryly titled album closer “Get Some Rest”, she answers Lackner’s quizzical flute motifs with reassuring rolled chords, deferring any anxiety for another day. The sense of restraint is as palpable and powerful as it would have been had Feinberg spent these 40 minutes thrashing at a Stratocaster or raging wildly against the machine. Softness is his superpower.

Paul Weller interviewed: “I do think the world has lost its way”

Paul Weller talks to Uncut about his new album, 66. Read the full review of the Modfather's latest gem in the new issue of Uncut.

Paul Weller talks to Uncut about his new album, 66. Read the full review of the Modfather’s latest gem in the new issue of Uncut.

Paul Weller is a composer who has always tended to write alone. With The Jam he recorded around 140 songs, all of which – apart from a few covers and a handful of Bruce Foxton originals – were written solely by him. His years with the Style Council might have been full of interesting collaborations and guest vocalists, but nearly all of the 100-plus songs they recorded – some Mick Talbot instrumentals aside – are credited to P Weller, as were his first decade and a half of solo albums.

Since the career rebirth of 22 Dreams in 2008 (an album partly co-written with producer Simon Dine), Weller seems to have gleefully embraced the professional collaboration.

Noel, Bobby Gillespie, Suggs and others help out on the Modfather’s collab-happy birthday LP…

UNCUT: You told Uncut in 2007 that you used to be very self-conscious about co-writing.

PAUL WELLER: Yeah, that would have been after working with Graham Coxon. I think that experience showed me that it could be done without two blokes sitting in a rehearsal studio with acoustic guitars. With me and Graham, we’d send ideas to each other on tapes and CDs, and then rewrite each other’s ideas, slowly coming together. I really like working like that. It showed me that co-writing didn’t have to be that weird, self-conscious thing.

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Is that how you worked with all the co-writers on 66?

Pretty much. There are a lot of collaborators on this album, but we rarely got together in the same room, we mainly did it over the phone. With Bobby [Gillespie] and Noel [Gallagher], I had a chat with them, sent them a demo for a song, and in both cases, they sent back a finished lyric within a few hours. So those songs were quite instantaneous. One of the problems with collaboration is getting the time – everyone’s got their own things going on, they’re on tour, or doing their own records or whatever. But with the wonders of technology, you can do it really quickly and efficiently.

Dr Robert is probably your oldest collaborator here, isn’t he?

Yeah, we’ve been working together since the early ’90s, or possibly even since the late ’80s, with the Blow Monkeys. He played and sang on my first few solo albums. He has this collaborative project called Monks Road Social, where he’s the producer, working with lots of guest artists. He sent me a backing track and some lyrics, and I re-did the topline and changed some of the words around, which became “Rise Up Singing”. It crept out without anyone noticing. So we worked on it again for this album, replayed it and put an orchestra on it. I think we’ve really done it justice.

Is this long-distance collaboration different to how you co-wrote with your old producers Simon Dine and Jan “Stan” Kybert?

For those albums I co-wrote with both Simon and Stan, they would tend to come with backing tracks, and I’d improvise over them. That was a much more spontaneous, improvisatory way of writing, where I’d sing the first thing that came into my head, something I’ve never done before and not done since. Then we’d work on those improvisations, see what bits worked, take out the bits that didn’t. It really pushed me in different areas. I’m enjoying approaching songwriting in different ways, in my old age! I’ve already proved myself as a writer, but I’m looking to try other methods, looking to work in different ways, write with different people, keep things interesting.

Le SuperHomard will be a bit of a discovery for some of us. How did you get into contact with Christophe Vaillant?

I love the album he put out a few years ago, Meadow Lane Park. Christophe is a multi-instrumentalist and a really talented fella. He did a great remix of “On Sunset” a few years ago, and I suggested we do some stuff together. With him, he sent me some demos and I wrote lyrics and made a few changes, and then he came into my studio to finish them off. I can’t explain it in musical terms, but his songs have that French thing going on. There’s something in the harmonies and the melodies. “My Best Friend’s Coat” is such a French-sounding song. I suppose there are touches of the Style Council’s “A Paris” EP and Cafe Bleu: “Down In The Seine”, “The Paris Match”, all that stuff. My lyrics were trying to tap into that vibe, get into that mindset of strolling down the Champs Elysee, hanging out down by the Seine.

Hannah Peel has become a regular collaborator. What does she bring to your music?

She’s just great at what she does. She doesn’t get in the way, her string arrangements enhance the songs, she has great ideas. She’s rooted in lots of different types of music – as well as the kinda avant-garde orchestral stuff, she’s also really deep into this electronic thing. It’s a really good combination of influences. Everyone should go and see her live – she really puts these things together brilliantly.

Will Suggs be appearing live with you?

It’d be great if he could. We only did that “Ooh Do U Think U R” song once live, that was when he joined me at a little gig in the Chelsea FC bar section. That was great to do live. We’ve become great mates. With him, we tend to write over the phone, then he’d come into the studio to finish things off. He’s a very talented man, probably more talented than he realises. Have you seen his one-man show? He’s very funny. It’s a great bit of theatre!

Is there a unifying theme to the album?

I never think about that, until people suggest them. I tend to just write songs as I go along, and some of them work as part of a larger album, some don’t. I wrote 20 songs since completing Fat Pop in 2021, and my initial idea was to release this as a big, sprawling double album, but it didn’t seem like there was a way that I could get all 20 tracks to hang together in any cohesive way. So I took 12 songs from that 20 and these are the ones that seem to work together. Do you see any linking theme?

There seems to be a move towards communality, togetherness, perhaps even a sense of spirituality.

Yeah, maybe. I think that probably suggests where I am at the moment: that search for spirituality in a world that is increasingly hostile. I don’t mean spiritual in any organised religious way, as that’s often the problem, but I do think the world has lost its way. I’m talking more of a spiritual connection with the planet and what we’re doing with it. We seem rudderless. Suggs’s lyrics on “Ship Of Fools” refers to that, it’s having a bit of a dig at the sense of corruption and cronyism under Boris Johnson and the rest of the Conservative Party. And there is definitely a sense of reaction against lockdown, a desire for unity and connection: Erland Cooper’s lyric on “Burn Out” is filled with references to that, like that weird government directive under Covid that creative people should all retrain as bricklayers or whatever. Remember that? What a load of bollocks that was!

For more 66 goodness, check out The Paul Weller Fan Podcast

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Bob Dylan: Tell Tale Signs Special – The Complete Transcripts!

In Uncut Take 138 [dated November 2008], we celebrated the release of The Bootleg Series Vol. 8: Tell Tale SignsBob Dylan’s astonishing collection of unreleased material from 1989 - 2006.

In Uncut Take 138 [dated November 2008], we celebrated the release of The Bootleg Series Vol. 8: Tell Tale SignsBob Dylan’s astonishing collection of unreleased material from 1989 – 2006.

For this epic cover story, we spoke to the musicians, producers and crew who worked with Dylan during this period.

At the time, we ran the full, unedited transcripts of those interviews on Uncut.co.uk. Since then, though, they’ve fallen down the back of the internet, become hard to find or some of the links have since broken.

So we’ve decided to round them all up into one place.

Here, then, are the working links to all 13 transcripts in our Tell Tale Signs interviews – plus founding editor Allan Jones’ original review of the collection itself.

Interviews originally conducted by Damien Love and Alastair McKay

Part 1:

MICAJAH RYAN: engineer, Good As I’ve Been To You and World Gone Wrong

Part 2:

MALCOLM BURN: engineer, Oh Mercy

Part 3:

MARK HOWARD: engineer, Oh Mercy and Time Out Of Mind

Part 4:

DON WAS: producer Under The Red Sky

Part 5:

ROBBEN FORD: guitarist Under The Red Sky

Part 6:

DAVID LINDLEY: guitarist Under The Red Sky

Part 7:

AUGIE MYERS: organ, Time Out Of Mind and “Love and Theft

Part 8:

JIM DICKINSON: piano, Time Out Of Mind

Part 9:

JIM KELTNER: drums, Time Out Of Mind

Part 10:

DANIEL LANOIS: producer, Oh Mercy and Time Out Of Mind

Part 11:

MASON RUFFNER: guitarist, Oh Mercy

Part 12:

DAVID KEMPER: drummer, Never-Ending Tour 1996 – 2001

Part 13:

CHRIS SHAW: engineer “Love and Theft” and Modern Times

Part 14:

Uncut‘s original review of The Bootleg Series Vol. 8: Tell Tale Signs: Rare and Unreleased 1989–2006

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Inside Bob Dylan’s Masked And Anonymous

Originally published in Uncut Take 85 [June 2004]

Originally published in Uncut Take 85 [June 2004]

It’s 1964, and the singer is alone on the stage of New York’s Philharmonic Hall, talking to the darkness: “It’s just Halloween. I have my Bob Dylan mask on. I’m masquerading.”

It’s 1965, and the singer is in a black and white Britain, reading about himself in a newspaper: “God, I’m glad I’m not me.”

It’s 1972, and the singer stands in the dust in Durango, saying his name: “Alias anything you please.”

It’s 1975, and the stage lights go up to reveal the singer is hiding his face behind a transparent Richard Nixon mask.

Now it’s 2003, and the singer is wearing a blonde wig and a woolly hat at the Sundance Film Festival, watching a movie he wrote under the alias Sergei Petrov. In the film he plays a singer who looks like him but calls himself Jack Fate. He’s called the movie Masked And Anonymous.

The film is stuffed with more stars than any since Robert Altman‘s The Player. Despite – or maybe because – of this, the screening becomes one of the most infamous premieres in Sundance history, provoking walkouts and a firestorm of negative reviews. In the damning piece that sets the pace, veteran critic Roger Ebert decries the singer’s movie as “a vanity production beyond all reason”.

The critics’ objections ultimately boil down to one question: who the hell does Bob Dylan think he is?

It’s a good question. Here’s another: who the hell do we think Bob Dylan is? Hell, does anyone even think about Bob Dylan at all any more?

These are some though by no means all of the questions kicked up by Masked And Anonymous – the bewildering, beautiful, incisive, incoherent, intriguing and infuriating trashcan mystery which marks Dylan’s first serious sortie into cinema since 1987’s universally reviled Hearts Of Fire.

In fact, Masked And Anonymous reaches back further, almost 30 years, to Renaldo And Clara, the mixed-up confusion of hats, masks, mirrors and music Dylan shot on 1975’s Rolling Thunder Revue, and the way that film reached back to Dont Look Back, DA Pennebaker‘s seminal document of Dylan’s 1965 UK tour. Like those, Masked And Anonymous ends up being about a lot of things, but, like those, it starts off being about Bob Dylan.

“In a weird way, the movie is very autobiographical for Bob,” says Larry Charles, the Seinfeld writer/producer who co-wrote and directed Masked And Anonymous. “He’s a man of many masks. But looking at the mask is the way to understand him. If you’re willing to look deeply at the movie – at the mask, through the mask – you will learn all you need to know about who Bob Dylan is. It’s done with a code, but it’s all there.

“The movie’s like a puzzle. You’re the last piece. You have to put yourself into it.”

Here’s the puzzle, then. Masked And Anonymous describes an alternative universe in which the USA has degenerated into a filthy banana republic, ravaged by ceaseless civil war, dominated by a dying dictator whose image wallpapers the streets.

In a slum LA, a huckster music promoter, Uncle Sweetheart (John Goodman), up to his neck in debt, hooks up with TV producer Nina Veronica (Jessica Lange), herself under pressure from gangster-like bosses at the government-affiliated Network, to stage a televised benefit concert to aid – or distract – victims of the war.

Of course, they all plan skimming the profits. Thing is, they can’t attract anyone to play. So Sweetheart produces a tattered trump: his former client Jack Fate, a burned-out legend, currently rotting in the kind of overcrowded subterranean prison in which the Romans used to store the Christians until the lions were hungry.

Hearing Fate is involved, a seen-it-all journalist, Tom Friend (Jeff Bridges), rouses himself to get the story behind the concert – or rather, the story on Fate. Everyone vaguely remembers Fate, even if no one remembers why, or believes anyone would want to hear him sing. He has a reputation for making songs unrecognisable. Still, the show must go on.

That’s the plot. The texture is something else. Like Fate, Masked And Anonymous seems a relic of another era, a time when there was still the option of doing things differently. It plays like the Dennis Hopper of The Last Movie has ambushed Robert Altman’s Nashville. It might be the first sci-noir-bordertown-western-musical-art-movie.

In places, it looks like news footage, in others a post-apocalyptic sci-fi interzone, in others a carnival. The camera tracks around eavesdropping on characters as though the film were a documentary, but, while they act natural, they speak a stylised language, mingling hardboiled one-liners with streams of rhetorical, beat-generation blank verse.

Every now and then the film stops for a speech, a gag or a song (caught by a single, locked-off camera, a style modelled on Hank WilliamsGrand Ole Opry appearances and Johnny Cash‘s ’60s TV shows). It’s hard to tell if it’s replaying nouvelle vague distancing techniques or the rag-bag vaudeville of a Marx Brothers movie.

And in the middle of the mayhem, there’s Bob Dylan, walking his stiff, jiggling walk, extraordinary in grey Civil War duds and a pencil moustache reminiscent of a ’30s matinee idol. Squinting like Clint Eastwood, he doesn’t say much, as though he can’t decide whether he should be Bogart, Brando or Groucho. It’s Last Tango At The Circus In Casablanca.

Whatever it is, Masked And Anonymous began on the road in 2001. “At that time,” Charles reveals, “Bob had gotten very heavily into comedy. When he was touring, he’d watch a lot of comedy, got interested in that, and television. So, he decided maybe he’d do a comedy show on TV.

“Yeah, I know. Bob Dylan? A comedy show? On TV? But that’s what he wanted to do. So he started meeting writers.”

Charles, who with his dude’s shades and wizard’s mane has been described by Peter Farrelly as “a cross between Jerry Garcia and Charles Manson“, was introduced to Dylan by his friend, long-time Dylan associate Jeff Rosen. “Jeff said, ‘We’ve been setting up these meetings with writers, but nothing’s really coming – you wouldn’t consider sitting down with Bob would you?’ I was like, ‘Are you kidding?’

“I figured, I’ll have one meeting with Bob – he really insists on being called Bob, because Bob is the person; ‘Dylan’ is your problem – and I can tell all my friends, and that would be it. But we just immediately started riffing, and it developed into this very exhilarating verbal jam session. By the end of that meeting, we were working together. He walked me to my car, and I felt like I was on a *date*. Cars are driving by, I’m thinking, ‘Will someone please look and see – I’m with Bob Dylan!'”

Masked And Anonymous is officially credited to phantom screenwriters Rene Fontaine and Sergei Petrov. When the movie first opened in the US last July, Charles made a gallant effort to maintain the pretence that these ciphers really existed, but that’s one mask which has since slipped. The seeds of the script were found in a box of scrap paper Dylan produced: a pile of scribbled notes, names and lines, apparently the byproduct of his writing for “Love and Theft”. In fact, the film shares that album’s mysterious sense of weird, lost and hidden American history, of Tin Pan Alley echoes merging with plantation moans. The very title seems to call out to Charley Patton, the bluesman who recorded as “The Masked Marvel”, to whom Dylan dedicated “Love and Theft”‘s stunned apocalyptic bluegrass knees-up, “High Water“.

“Bob dumped all this paper on the table,” Charles remembers, “and said, ‘I dunno what to do with these.’ I looked through and said, ‘Well you could take this, and put it together with this, and that could be a character who says this‘ – almost like a William Burroughs, cut-up technique. We would just throw ideas out, attach them to other ideas. There was no plan. The film began to emerge naturally.”

That technique is reflected in the shape of the movie: a series of moments bumping into and bouncing off one another rather than connecting in any linear way. Charles says, “It’s a fascinating way of working.”

But it’s also anathema to Hollywood. When it came to raising the “shockingly small amount of money” needed to make the movie – around $7 million for a 20-day digital-video shoot, shoehorned into Dylan’s touring schedule – Charles says, “We got a lot of incredibly rude comments. People would be very cold, ruthless. They’d say: ‘Well, Bob Dylan’s never sold a movie ticket.’ I mean, we’re talking about possibly the only American artist who will survive the collapse of civilisation.”

This, too, fed into the shape of the film. “The reason we wound up with the cast we did,” Charles reveals, “is we thought we have to surround Bob with enough stars to make the people who are going to give us money comfortable they’re going to get it back.”

The extraordinary cast has been dismissed by many reviewers as simply the result of actors scrambling to associate themselves with Dylan. But as Charles points out, “These are all risk-taking actors. Jeff Bridges has always sought rigorously and vigorously independent movies. Mickey Rourke is an amazing, intense, unique American actor. It was a fight to get him in the movie. People were like, ‘Oh, he’s trouble.’ Bob and I actually fought to make sure Mickey was in, because he says something about the movie.

“Then there’s John Goodman and Jessica Lange, who often do Shakespeare or Brecht in theatre. These are great connoisseurs of language. They were attracted to the script’s language, which is very different from what you find in American cinema today, and the ideas. These actors are looking for that kind of experience, some kind of challenge. Some kind of spiritual quality to their work. We couldn’t give them money. But we could give them that.”

The film’s eventual producer, Nigel Sinclair of Spitfire Films, responded for similar reasons. “I got involved,” he says, “because this film addressed some human and political issues that are really important, and are becoming more important, at the beginning of the 21st century in terms of social groups, friction and bloodshed, and what happens to us as a human tribe.

“That’s what this film is about: the link between our existential, individual experience, and, if you will, the political, group experience – the kind of battle that has gone on since Marxism was first introduced, as to whether the individual or society in the end is most important.”

In all the potshots fired at Dylan for daring to make a movie, there seemed a reluctance to acknowledge that, wrapped in the film’s woolly ball of confusion, there are indeed hard questions. About America; about political mayhem; about race; about business, government and the media; about the co-opting of the counterculture; about corruption and greed; about image and reality and how they get mistaken for each other; about the artist’s responsibility; about individuals with their own problems, caught up in all this, finding themselves unable to understand, let alone help each other.

Still, more than anything, the film is about Dylan. He’s the filter through which everything else is viewed. How else to explain why, when we first glimpse Jeff Bridges as the journalist who would be Fate’s nemesis, he’s hiding inside a hooded sweatshirt exactly like the one Dylan wore while recording Under The Red Sky? Why, before going after Fate in the film’s most extraordinary scene, turning on him with a creepy, hectoring rap about Jimi Hendrix, Fate/Dylan’s absence at Woodstock, and the meaning of Hendrix’s epochal reordering of “The Star Spangled Banner“, Bridges changes costume, re-emerging as a black-leather-jacketed xerox of the Dylan of Dont Look Back?

“Yes. He’s dressed exactly like Bob Dylan 1965,” Charles confirms. “Down to the *shoes*. Most people don’t pick up on that. The film is littered with those kinds of details. In some sense, everybody is a reflection of Bob. But it occurred to me very vividly that Jeff was also playing the young journalist Bob gets into the argument with in Dont Look Back, 40 years later.

“Bob is constantly competing with the younger versions of himself. That, I think, is one of his big issues with the media, not accepting him for what he is, whatever that might be. He’s constantly fighting his own past. He can’t really enjoy his own music, in a sense. He has to keep moving forward.

“‘Don’t look back’ becomes a theme. Of this film, and his life.” 

Accompanied by a soundtrack of Dylan covers – familiar songs rendered as Japanese punk or Italian rap until they blur into a babbling muzak Esperanto, pierced occasionally by Dylan’s own lacerating performances – Masked And Anonymous is, finally, Dylan talking to himself, about himself, where he’s been, where he is and what he sees. If that’s a vanity project, then that’s what his work has always been.

“I was always a singer, maybe no more than that…” Jack Fate concludes. “I stopped trying to figure everything out a long time ago.” Maybe this is just another song. Maybe it’s just Halloween.

Kim Gordon, Arooj Aftab and Prince Jammy for Le Guess Who? festival

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The first names have been revealed for this year's Le Guess Who? festival, taking place in Utrecht, The Netherlands, on November 7-10.

The first names have been revealed for this year’s Le Guess Who? festival, taking place in Utrecht, The Netherlands, on November 7-10.

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Guest curators include Arooj Aftab, Bo Ningen, Darkside and Mabe Fratti. They will all perform at the festival, alongside Kim Gordon, Theo Parrish, Meshell Ndegeocello, King Jammy, Wadada Leo Smith, Tropical Fuckstorm, Los Gaiteros de San Jacinto and many other names from across the globe.

Peruse the full line-up announcement here. A limited amount of four-day passes and individual day tickets will go on sale on Tuesday May 28, at 10AM BST here.

You can read a candid, in-depth interview with Arooj Aftab in the brand new issue of Uncut, out today with Joni Mitchell on the cover – order your copy here!

Catching Fire: The Story Of Anita Pallenberg

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In an interview with The Observer in 2008, Anita Pallenberg explained why, despite many offers, she would never write an autobiography: “The publishers want to hear only about the Stones and more dirt on Mick Jagger and I’m just not interested.”

In an interview with The Observer in 2008, Anita Pallenberg explained why, despite many offers, she would never write an autobiography: “The publishers want to hear only about the Stones and more dirt on Mick Jagger and I’m just not interested.”

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Pallenberg, however, learned early the value of never giving away her whole truth – her exact date and place of birth long lay unresolved, with both 1942 and 1944, Rome and Hamburg, being suggested; perhaps a deliberate blur from a child born into a haughty German-Italian family when those nations were on the wrong side of history – and, as it happens, by the time she revealed why she’d never contemplate writing a memoir, she had already started doing just that.

After her death in 2017, the unpublished, unfinished manuscript was discovered by Marlon, her son with Keith Richards. Among the other things he found was a cache of home movies shot during her years with Keith in the 1960s and 70s, at home and on the run from Peru to Switzerland, London to Villefranche-sur-Mer; fragile, poignant, mundane, stunning Super-8 moments from a life lived at the eye of a hurricane.

Entrusted to co-directors Alexis Bloom and Svetlana Zill, that phantom book and precious footage form the heart of Catching Fire, a vital, definitive portrait of Pallenberg. Tender, tragic, tawdry and triumphant, the documentary is a bruised family affair: Marlon and his sister Angela are the most moving and bemused on-screen interviewees, while their brother Tara, who died at 10 weeks old, becomes a crucial presence. Keith himself gives a fascinating off-camera interview, heartfelt and shrugging, sometimes cutting, always entranced. Anita’s soul-sister Marianne Faithfull is heard, too, and perhaps has the clearest memory of all.

“I’ve been called a witch, a slut, a murderer,” Pallenberg says as the film begins, setting the pace. Except, Pallenberg doesn’t say it: her words are read by Scarlett Johansson. For anyone familiar with Pallenberg’s distinctive Euro tones, this may seem jarring, but Johansson does a superb job, inhabiting not imitating Pallenberg’s voice. As clips from Barbarella remind us, a tradition is being continued: back then, Pallenberg’s Black Queen was voiced by Joan Greenwood. Still it’s Anita – eyes, smile, attitude – you remember.

The film takes us close, yet secrets remain. Early years whip by ­– childhood, Rome, nuns in Germany, and then she’s in New York with Warhol’s crowd – and you’re so struck by the smile beaming from photographs you forget to wonder: how exactly did this happen?

Modelling took her to Munich in 1965, where she saw the Stones and life pivoted. Heading backstage armed with hashish, friends dared her to kidnap a Stone. Brian Jones, her “doppleganger” went willingly. The story is familiar: Brian, beatings, then Keith, then Mick and Performance, the movie of blurring personae and claustrophobic coincidence and drugs and sex and violence and hiding and escape, the metaphorical, prophetic biography of them all.

But it has never been told like this. The famous photographs of the Stones and entourage creating Exile On Main Street at Villa Nellcote will always look like music’s most elegantly wasted decadent idyll. Here you see how dingy it was. As the heroin takes grip, it gets darker and dingier.

Shifting the perspective to the women and children living the sometimes seedy realities of the Rolling Stones, this is the rock’n’roll equivalent to Carolyn Cassady’s memoir Off The Road, about life with husband Neal and Jack Kerouac and the painful, dull, sexist yet beautiful reality behind the Beat boys’ myth. Both underline how reactionary our revolutionaries are: Keith offered to pay Pallenberg to stop acting and stay home.

The Stones always overshadowed her life. But it’s in keeping with Pallenberg’s contradictions that this film, which sets her apart and shines a light on the woman like never before, is one of the great Stones documentaries. Catching Fire both embraces yet erases the much-despised concept of “the muse,” to posit Pallenberg as a crucial part of the group’s DNA. Laying out how she affected their look, outlook, and sound, the film makes clear that the Stones would not have been the same without her, and raises a question: what could she have been if it hadn’t been for the Stones?

I’m New Here – Mabe Fratti

Mabe Fratti is ready for her close-up. “My music is like when you see yourself in a really good mirror and you see all the pores in your skin – I love that,” says the in-demand Guatemalan cellist and singer, from her home in Mexico City. “Not sure I would want a picture of me like that, but I like that in my sound.”

Mabe Fratti is ready for her close-up. “My music is like when you see yourself in a really good mirror and you see all the pores in your skin – I love that,” says the in-demand Guatemalan cellist and singer, from her home in Mexico City. “Not sure I would want a picture of me like that, but I like that in my sound.”

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Fratti’s most recent solo album fits that description. Released a year ago, Se Ve Desde Aqui (It Is Seen From Here) uses cello, voice and synthesiser to give a gracefully gnarly account of Fratti pushing herself In a new direction after two earlier albums of more ethereal work. “I’m not a royal academy cellist or whatever, so given my technical limitations, I try to be very raw with the sound. I like the dirtiness… it’s who I am.”

As an artist, Fratti is hard to pigeonhole. Avant-garde but accessible, the 31-year-old straddles the worlds of classical, jazz and experimental music. As such, she’s spent much of this year on tour, travelling to Australia and across Europe, including a two-day residency at London’s Café Oto in August that left audiences speechless.

By chance, three records she’s closely involved with are being released in quick succession. The first is Vidrio by Titanic – a delightful album of baroque pop and exploratory jazz that foregrounds Fratti’s voice as she sings her partner Hector Tosta’s poetic lyrics. They recorded some of the record in their apartment, known as Tinho Studios, and chose the name Titanic because it sounds “decadent and elegant – and maybe we sound like this because we are not elegant at all,” she laughs.

Next up is the sprawling art-rock of Amor Muere’s Love, A Time To Die, which Fratti recorded two years ago in Mexico City with bandmates Gibrana Cervantes, Concepcion Huerta and Camile Mandoki. “We’re all expressing ourselves in a very free way,” says Fratti, “trusting in the ideas of others.” Finally, on Phét Phét Phét’s Shimmer, she improvised cello and vocals for Jarett Gilmore’s jazz-pop fusion group, which again gelled around sessions in Mexico City.

“There’s something very special about the chaotic and DIY culture here in Mexico City,” she says. “It’s such a big place that there’s a DIY scene for everything. It’s a big mix.” She was drawn there in 2015 after growing up in Guatemala City, where she took up the cello as a child after seeing her sister play the violin. “I wanted to play the saxophone but I had breathing problems and there was always a lot of snot,” she recalls. Raised Protestant by her engineer parents, Fratti learned to express herself with her cello in church – “I really enjoyed playing the scores, and I would improvise with chords and play what I wanted” – while also playing in bands inspired by Radiohead and Nirvana.

The idea for her next solo record Sentir Que No Sabes, she says, is to “make something very groovy” and so she’s been digging into Arthur Russell and, er, Lenny Kravitz. “The first time I heard Arthur Russell I went crazy, I love him. Some of my new parts are very Russelliano. And I had a couple of weeks where I was obsessed with Lenny Kravitz and listened to him on repeat, so there’ll be some Kravitz on there – but very far from what he would do, of course.”

Sentir Que No Sabes is released on June 28 by Unheard Of Hope

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Oasis to release 30th anniversary edition of Definitely Maybe

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Oasis are to release a 30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition of their debut album, Definitely Maybe.

Oasis are to release a 30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition of their debut album, Definitely Maybe.

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Featuring unheard Monnow Valley versions and Sawmills Studios outtakes, including an unreleased demo of “Sad Song” featuring Liam Gallagher’s vocal.

it’s available on deluxe 4LP, 2CD, coloured vinyl, cassette and digitally with new artwork and sleeve notes on August 30 via Big Brother. Pre-order here.

The tracklisting for Definitely Maybe (30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition) is

Volume 1

Rock ‘n’ Roll Star (Remastered)

Shakermaker (Remastered)

Live Forever (Remastered)

Up In The Sky (Remastered)

Columbia (Remastered)

Supersonic (Remastered)

Bring It On Down (Remastered)

Cigarettes & Alcohol (Remastered)

Digsy’s Dinner (Remastered)

Slide Away (Remastered)

Married With Children (Remastered)

Volume 2

Rock ‘n’ Roll Star (Monnow Valley Version)

Shakermaker (Monnow Valley Version)

Live Forever (Monnow Valley Version)

Up In The Sky (Monnow Valley Version)

Columbia (Monnow Valley Version)

Bring It On Down (Monnow Valley Version)

Cigarettes & Alcohol (Monnow Valley Version)

Digsy’s Dinner (Monnow Valley Version)

Rock ‘n’ Roll Star (Sawmills Outtake)

Up In The Sky (Sawmills Outtake)

Columbia (Sawmills Outtake)

Bring It On Down (Sawmills Outtake)

Cigarettes & Alcohol (Sawmills Outtake)

Digsy’s Dinner (Sawmills Outtake)

Slide Away (Sawmills Outtake)

Sad Song (Mauldeth Road West Demo, Nov’ 92)

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Introducing the new Uncut: Joni Mitchell, Paul Weller, Kraftwerk, Stevie Nicks and more

AT the time of writing, Bruce Springsteen, Neil Young and The Rolling Stones are all on tour, either in Europe or America. As you can read from various reports on these outings in this issue, the artists continue to go about their business with commendable vigour, delivering performances that spectacularly reaffirm music’s unifying power. After seeing the Stones’ opening show in Houston, Stephen Conn – one of our subscribers – emailed to me to say: “In a world where Paul McCartney is still revising a Beatles saga that wrapped up decades ago and we now spend most of our lives trapped in a 16-year-old’s diary on Planet Taylor, that old totems like the Stones are still capable of ecstatic musical transcendence like this is a remarkable thing.”

AT the time of writing, Bruce Springsteen, Neil Young and The Rolling Stones are all on tour, either in Europe or America. As you can read from various reports on these outings in this issue, the artists continue to go about their business with commendable vigour, delivering performances that spectacularly reaffirm music’s unifying power. After seeing the Stones’ opening show in Houston, Stephen Conn – one of our subscribers – emailed to me to say: “In a world where Paul McCartney is still revising a Beatles saga that wrapped up decades ago and we now spend most of our lives trapped in a 16-year-old’s diary on Planet Taylor, that old totems like the Stones are still capable of ecstatic musical transcendence like this is a remarkable thing.”

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The road figures a lot in this new issue of Uncut, in one form or another. To the Grateful Dead, it was a place where songs reinvented themselves, every night for 30 years. To Kraftwerk, it signified functional elegance. And to our cover star Joni Mitchell, it was a place to escape. In all three instances, the road is also a place of transformation. “The refuge of the road is a real thing,” Natalie Mering aka Weyes Blood tells us, as part of our cover story dedicated to Joni’s Hejira album. “She is singing about having a weary, wandering soul and realising that when you are wandering you have your greatest sense of belonging.”

There’s an abundance of goodness elsewhere. John Cale, Arooj Aftab, Warren Ellis, Stevie Nicks, Bonny Light Horseman, Inspiral Carpets with Mark E Smith and plenty more.

As ever, let us know what you think.

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Uncut – July 2024

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Joni Mitchell, Paul Weller, Kraftwerk, Stevie Nicks, Steve Albini, Grateful Dead, Arooj Aftab, John Cale, Warren Ellis, Bonny Light Horseman, Mark E Smith and Inspiral Carpets, Josef K, Beach Boys, The Stones, Bruce Springsteen, Neil Young with Crazy Horse and more all feature in Uncut‘s July 2024 issue, in UK shops from May 24 or available to buy online now.

All print copies come with a free CD – Coast To Coast, featuring 15 tracks of the month’s best new music by John Cale, The Dirty Three, Linda Thompson, The Folk Implosion, John Grant, Cassandra Jenkins, Eiko Ishibashi, Bill MacKay and more

INSIDE THIS MONTH’S UNCUT:

JONI MITCHELL: Hymning Hejira. A new box set brings Joni’s masterpiece back into focus. Friends and collaborators are on-hand to reveal its secrets while admirers – including The Weather Station, Weyes Blood, Allison Russell and Courtney Marie Andrews – celebrate its enduring magic

KRAFTWERK: As Autubahn turns 50, we explore the genesis of the Robots: free jazz, LSD and electronic flutes!

STEVIE NICKS: With UK shows upcoming, this recently unearthed interview offers rare insights: her fear of computers, Mick Fleetwood’s jewellery and getting a talking-to from Tom Petty!

STEVE ALBINI: The iconoclastic music maker remembered by Jon Spencer, David Gedge and David Grubbs. Requiescat!

GRATEFUL DEAD: As Dead & Company prepare to take over the Sphere in Las Vegas, we chart the history of the Dead via 20 classic live shows – from the Acid Tests onwards

JOHN CALE: At 82, there’s no stopping Cale’s late-career hot streak. What motivates him? “Things are getting worse faster, but I’m going to fight by way through it.”

AROOJ AFTAB: The New York-based Pakistani artist continues to redefine the parameters of 21st century music with her unique and intoxicating blend of styles and traditions

AN AUDIENCE WITH… WARREN ELLIS: On Nick Cave, The Dirty Three, punching violins and the benefits of air fryers

THE MAKING OF “I WANT YOU” BY INSPIRAL CARPETS featuring MARK E SMITH: How the Madchester mainstays hooked up with a local legend… and all hell broke loose!

ALBUM BY ALBUM WITH BONNY LIGHT HORSEMAN: Anais Mitchell, Josh Kaufman and Eric D Johnson talk us through the best of their recorded highlights

MY LIFE IN MUSIC WITH SAMANTHA MORTON: The actor, director and now singer on her essential aural companions: “When you’re lonely, music becomes your friend”

REVIEWED: Paul Weller, Cassandra Jenkins, The Folk Implosion, Eiko Ishibashi, Dave Alvin and Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Cindy Lee, Madeleine Peyroux, Tom Verlaine, Animal Collective, Margo Guryan, Master Wilburn Burchette, Neil Young with Crazy Horse, Bruce Springsteen, The Beach Boys and more

PLUS: The Rolling Stones with Irma Thomas, back to school with Robyn Hitchcock, Josef K continue to fascinate, Dhani Harrison meets Tuvan throat singers Huun-Huur-Tu, introducing Ryan Davis & The Roadhouse Blues Band

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