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Watch a video for Anna Calvi’s new single

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Anna Calvi has announced that her third album Hunter will be released on August 31. Watch a video for the first single from it, "Don’t Beat The Girl Out Of My Boy”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rJ-CtToFsWM Of the single, Calvi says: “It’s a song about the defiance of happiness. It’s ...

Anna Calvi has announced that her third album Hunter will be released on August 31.

Watch a video for the first single from it, “Don’t Beat The Girl Out Of My Boy”:

Of the single, Calvi says: “It’s a song about the defiance of happiness. It’s about being free to identify yourself in whichever way you please, without any restraints from society.”

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Calvi has also announced an extensive European tour starting in September and ending at London’s Roundhouse on February 7, 2019. See the full itinerary below:

Thu 27 Sep 2018 Belfast, Northern Ireland, The Belfast Empire
Fri 28 Sep 2018 Dublin, Ireland, The Tivoli Theatre
Sun 30 Sep 2018 Glasgow, Scotland, St Luke’s
Mon 01 Oct 2018 Manchester, England, O2 Ritz
Wed 03 Oct 2018 Newcastle, UK, The Boiler Shop
Thu 04 Oct 2018 Birmingham, UK, Town Hall
Fri 05 Oct 2018 Brighton, UK, All Saints Church
Sat 06 Oct 2018 Bristol, UK, SWX Bristol

Mon 08 Oct 2018 Lille, France, Le Splendid
Tue 09 Oct 2018 La Rochelle, France, La Sirene
Wed 10 Oct 2018 Nantes, France, Stereolux
Sat 13 Oct 2018 Valencia, Spain, La Rambleta
Sun 14 Oct 2018 Barcelona, Spain, Cruïlla de Tardor @ Razzmatazz 2
Tue 16 Oct 2018 Madrid, Spain, Chango
Wed 17 Oct 2018 Santiago, Spain, Sala Capitol
Fri 19 Oct 2018 Porto, Portugal, Hard Club
Sat 20 Oct 2018 Lisbon, Portugal, Capitolio
Mon 22 Oct 2018 Lyon, France, Le Radiant
Tue 23 Oct 2018 Strasbourg, France, La Laiterie
Wed 24 Oct 2018 Utrecht, Netherlands Tivoli Vredenburg, De Helling
Thu 25 Oct 2018 Brussels, Belgium, Botanique
Sat 27 Oct 2018 Odense, Denmark, Posten
Mon 29 Oct 2018 Oslo, Norway Parkteatret
Tue 30 Oct 2018 Stockholm, Sweden, Nalen
Thu 01 Nov 2018 Helsinki, Finland, Tavastia Club
Sat 03 Nov 2018 Lund, Sweden, Mejeriet
Sun 04 Nov 2018 Copenhagen, Denmark, Vega
Mon 05 Nov 2018 Aarhus, Denmark, Voxhall
Wed 07 Nov 2018 Warsaw, Poland, Niebo
Thu 08 Nov 2018 Prague, Czech Republic, Lucerna
Fri 09 Nov 2018 Leipzig, Germany, Conne Island
Sat 10 Nov 2018 Weissenhäuser Strand, Germany, Rolling Stone Weekender
Mon 12 Nov 2018 Bratislava, Slovakia, Nova Cvernovka
Tue 13 Nov 2018 Budapest, Hungary, A38 Ship
Thu 15 Nov 2018 Vienna, Austria, Simm City
Fri 16 Nov 2018 Rust, Germany, Rolling Stone Park
Sat 17 Nov 2018 Fribourg, Switzerland, Le Nouveau Monde
Sun 18 Nov 2018 Zurich, Switzerland, Plaza Club Zurich
Tue 20 Nov 2018 Ljubljana, Slovenia, Kino Siska
Wed 16 Jan 2019 Munich, Germany, Freiheiz
Fri 18 Jan 2019 Berlin, Germany, Astra Kulturhaus
Sat 19 Jan 2019 Hamburg, Germany, Kampnagel
Tue 22 Jan 2019 Cologne, Germany, Gloria Theatre
Wed 23 Jan 2019 Amsterdam, Netherlands, Melkweg
Fri 25 Jan 2019 Nancy, France, L’Autre Canal
Sat 26 Jan 2019 Nimes, France, Paloma
Sun 27 Jan 2019 Toulouse, France, Le Bikini
Tue 29 Jan 2019 Bordeaux, France, Le Rocher de Palmer
Thu 31 Jan 2019 Reims, France, La Cartonnerie
Thu 07 Feb 2019 London, UK, The Roundhouse

Tickets for the UK dates are available here from 10am on Friday (June 8).

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Hear a new song by Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever

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One of Uncut's favourite new bands, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever release their debut album Hope Downs next week (June 15). Hear another song from it below, entitled "The Hammer": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-blTnbIS2tM Get Uncut delivered to your door - find out by clicking here! The band...

One of Uncut’s favourite new bands, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever release their debut album Hope Downs next week (June 15).

Hear another song from it below, entitled “The Hammer”:

Get Uncut delivered to your door – find out by clicking here!

The band have also announced a European tour for the autumn, full dates here:

Oct 19th | Academy 2, Manchester, UK
Oct 21st | Stylus, Leeds, UK
Oct 23rd | Concorde 2, Brighton, UK
Oct 24th | Wedgewood Rooms, Portsmouth, UK
Oct 25th | O2 Academy, Oxford, UK

Oct 27th | BIME, Bilbao, ES
Oct 29th | Koko, London, UK
Oct 31st | Stereolux, Nantes, FR
Nov 2nd | Trix, Antwerp, NL
Nov 3rd | Paradiso, Amsterdam, NL
Nov 4th | Doornroosje, Nijmegen, NL
Nov 7th | John Dee, Oslo, NO
Nov 8th | Nalen, Stockholm, SW
Nov 9th | Mejeriet, Lund, SW
Nov 12th | Molotow, Hamburg, DE
Nov 13th | MTC, Cologne, DE

Tickets go on sale this Friday (June 8). You can read a lot more about Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever in the next issue of Uncut, on sale June 14.

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Watch Kamasi Washington and St Vincent on Later

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Last night (June 5), Later… With Jools Holland played host to Kamasi Washington and St Vincent. Watch them perform "Fists Of Fury" and "Slow Fast Disco" respectively: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrT8FddyqzM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pNbqvHMv4vI Get Uncut delivered to your door - find ...

Watch a trailer for Trojan Records documentary, Rudeboy

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As part of Trojan Records' 50th anniversary celebrations, Nicolas Jack Davies has made a documentary film about the pioneering reggae label and the impact of reggae music on British culture in general. Get Uncut delivered to your door - find out by clicking here! You can watch a trailer for Rudebo...

As part of Trojan Records’ 50th anniversary celebrations, Nicolas Jack Davies has made a documentary film about the pioneering reggae label and the impact of reggae music on British culture in general.

Get Uncut delivered to your door – find out by clicking here!

You can watch a trailer for Rudeboy: The Story Of Trojan Records below. The film includes interviews with stars such as Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, Ken Boothe, Marcia Griffiths and Pauline Black, alongside dramatised elements.

Rudeboy: The Story Of Trojan Records is due out in the autumn. For more information on Trojan Records’ 50th anniversary plans, including the release of a massive box set and coffee table book, go here.

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

L’Amant Double

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The latest from Francois Ozon is, broadly, 50 Shades Of Grey directed by David Cronenberg. That is to say, there is sexual ‘awakening’, a subplot about rival twin psychiatrists and a smidgeon of body horror. Based on Joyce Carol Oates’ Lives Of The Twins, Ozon’s film follows a 25 year-old ex...

The latest from Francois Ozon is, broadly, 50 Shades Of Grey directed by David Cronenberg. That is to say, there is sexual ‘awakening’, a subplot about rival twin psychiatrists and a smidgeon of body horror. Based on Joyce Carol Oates’ Lives Of The Twins, Ozon’s film follows a 25 year-old ex model, Chloe (Marine Vacth, star of Ozon’s 2013 Young & Beautiful), with anxiety issues which manifest themselves as stomach cramps. She is recommended a therapist which is how she meets Paul Meyer (Jérémie Renier) – tweedy but sympathetic – with whom she begins a relationship.

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But Paul has a twin, Louis (Renier again), who he refuses to talk about – a much darker soul, with whom Chloe begins an aggressive sexual relationship. Soon Chloe is digging deeper into the mysterious estrangement between the twins – who are they are what are their secrets? All of which brings her to the door of Jacqueline Bisset where revelations of some description are forthcoming.

Ozon’s film is really a stylish funhouse mirror, where we can no longer be entirely sure where reality ends and fantasy begins. There is one particularly weird sequence where Ozon shows Chloe and Paul making love – only for Louis to join them, at which point Chloe develops a second head so she can engage both her lovers.

The obvious comparison is Dead Ringers – David Cronenberg’s 1988 creepy thriller featuring Jeremy Irons as twin gynecologists in sexual competition with one another. But Ozon’s film is camper, if less twisted. The opening shot is a vagina spread open by a speculum; there are strap-on dildos; something awful possibly happens to a cat. By the time we get to Jacqueline Bisset, Ozon has gone full Brian De Palma:just who is the catatonic girl hidden away in the upstairs back bedroom?

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Wire – Pink Flag/Chairs Missing/154

Wire’s first three LPs chart an evolution that appears so accelerated, you typically only see its like displayed by rogue AI in sci-fi potboilers. In the space of three short years, the London quartet learned how to play their instruments, released one of the great major-label punk records, perfec...

Wire’s first three LPs chart an evolution that appears so accelerated, you typically only see its like displayed by rogue AI in sci-fi potboilers. In the space of three short years, the London quartet learned how to play their instruments, released one of the great major-label punk records, perfected the art of the obtuse pop song, and then left the orbit of rock’n’roll entirely. Wire’s tone could be lofty – arrogant, even. But their early music is also hugely generous, packed with unusual melodies, smart studio tricks, unusual concepts; a Wire song might be about swimming, or insects, or air travel, or something altogether more enigmatic and obscure.

This new raft of reissues collecting remastered versions of Wire’s first three LPs come in two flavours – as a run of single-disc editions that faithfully replicate the design scheme of the original release, and in expanded editions that add a host of extras. 1977’s Pink Flag is expanded to two CDs, while 1978’s Chairs Missing and 1979’s 154 grow to three discs apiece. Each is accompanied by an 80-page hardback book the size of a 7in single, which is filled with interviews and sleevenotes from Jon Savage and Graham Duff and excellent, mostly newly uncovered photos from official band photographer Annette Green.

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Freshly remastered, the albums themselves still thrill. Pink Flag, oikish punk rock with a pack of Brian Eno’s Oblique Strategies cards in its back pocket. Chairs Missing, a hallucinatory blend of post-punk melody and art-school surrealism. And finally, 154: sophisticated, enigmatic, extremely European. Arguably, the least essential of these expanded editions is Pink Flag, if only because its additional content diverges least from that which made it to the final LP. The lion’s share of the bonus tracks are yielded from six demos that the group recorded for EMI, and while it’s interesting to hear work-in-progress takes on “Reuters” and “Ex Lion Tamer”, the elements – Colin Newman’s insouciant hooligan drawl, grinding electric guitars, Robert Grey’s drums beating like an 
angry metronome – remain broadly the same.

Chairs Missing is where things get interesting. This was Wire’s flowering as a studio group, marking their first real experimentation with sequencers and synths. In Graham Duff’s informative sleevenotes, he quotes Newman talking about “the dream sequence”, band parlance for the moments where a song got suddenly, psychedelically, strange – a tactic he points to in “Sand In My Joints”, the vocal debut of bassist Graham Lewis. A very substantial 32 bonus tracks explore the album’s fastidious groundwork. It’s fascinating to see some of the finished LP’s more outré, synthesised pieces delivered as Pink Flag-style thrashes. There are also a handful of demos that remained tantalisingly undeveloped – angular new-wave charges like “Culture Vultures” and “It’s The Motive” prove Wire were discarding the sort of material other bands would hold close. Mind you, nothing was entirely forgotten. Another demo here, “Underwater Experiences”, finally found finished form on 2013’s Change Becomes Us.

Come 154, Wire had exchanged their punky pop-art concision for something more open-ended and conceptual, with multiple – and often competing – voices in play. The demo material proves just how profoundly they – aided by producer Mike Thorne – would reshape songs in the studio. “The Other Window” began life as a familiar punky thrash, Newman relating an existentially gloomy tale of a foreign train journey (“The seat was hard/The carriage fetid…”). By the time it made it to 154 itself, though, it had become a haunting soundscape with a sombre spoken-word vocal by Bruce Gilbert and drums looped in from another album track, “Single KO”. It wasn’t all about queering the pitch, though: the demos of “A Mutual Display” and “Map Ref. 41°N 93°W” – a dazzling airborne travelogue that became the album’s first single – show how Wire had become adept at using the studio to transform already finely wrought songs.

Additional here are a handful of tracks released around and just after 154, when they had been released from their EMI deal. “A Question Of Degree” and “Our Swimmer” are poppier than almost anything on 154, showing off the band’s interest in forward propulsion. The abrasive, noise-strafed “Former Airline” gives a glimpse of the difficult territory Wire would venture into in the ’80s, while “Go Ahead” turns an arch sarcasm to the music industry that had tried – and failed – to market a band as innovative and unusual as Wire. Even today, 40 years after these records were released, they still have the capacity to bewilder. But if listening to Wire can sometimes make you feel like you’re struggling to keep pace, it’s still a thrill to follow in their slipstream.

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Introducing Nick Cave: The Ultimate Music Guide

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It is a testament to how popular an uncompromising artist can become that Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds find themselves in the satisfying position of being able sell out the O2 Arena and reach the highest echelons of the album charts while also inspiring a unique kind of across-the-board devotion. The...

It is a testament to how popular an uncompromising artist can become that Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds find themselves in the satisfying position of being able sell out the O2 Arena and reach the highest echelons of the album charts while also inspiring a unique kind of across-the-board devotion. Their headline performance over the weekend at All Points East once again underscored the satisfying manner in which Cave and his cohorts conduct their business: dark Americana, good suits, interesting hair.

It’s particularly timely, then, that Cave’s remarkable career is the subject of our latest deluxe and expanded Ultimate Music Guide. It goes on sale Thursday – and you can buy copies here from our online store.

To find out what’s what, here’s John Robinson, Editor of the Ultimate Music Guides, to tell you all about it.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

“Nick is always looking for a new way in…”

If you didn’t manage to join Nick Cave on stage at his All Points East show the other day, you can still do so in spirit with the latest edition of the Ultimate Music Guide.

This issue is a deluxe, remastered edition of our in-depth look at the work of Nick Cave. Fully updated since our original edition in 2013, this 148 page special features outrageous archive interviews alongside in-depth reviews of every Cave work: the albums, the books and the films.

Get Uncut delivered direct to your door – find out how by clicking here!

This luxurious publication is now updated to include the past five years of activity by this compelling artist. UNCUT Editor Michael Bonner provides an extensive review of Cave’s most recent album Skeleton Tree, and updates a review of Cave’s already extensive filmography.

A few years ago, Nick introduced the mag (“A whole magazine about me? How exciting…”) with some thoughts on legwarmers, British journalists, and The Fall. He also had an amusing take on his own reputation. “I baulk when I hear I’m writing about lowlife people and Bayou priests…”

Now, we can also present an exclusive afterword from Cave’s chief musical foil, Warren Ellis. Warren sheds light on the band’s reconnection with an audience and process of writing Skeleton Tree, recorded in the aftermath of the tragic death of Cave’s son Arthur. “Nick had a plan to go into the studio,” Warren explains. “He wanted to honour that…”

This presents the complete Cave story so far: from the Boys Next Door through the Birthday Party and the Bad Seeds, 2018.

And what’s next?

“Hopefully,” says Warren, “we’ll keep moving forward.”

Thoughts? Suggestions? Reach out on Twitter at: @johnrobinson101

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Byrds duo announce Sweetheart Of The Rodeo tour

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The Byrds' Chris Hillman and Roger McGuinn have announced a US tour to celebrate the 50th anniversary of their landmark country-rock album Sweetheart Of The Rodeo. The two surviving members of the early 1968 line-up of The Byrds will be joined by Marty Stuart & His Fabulous Superlatives to play...

The Byrds’ Chris Hillman and Roger McGuinn have announced a US tour to celebrate the 50th anniversary of their landmark country-rock album Sweetheart Of The Rodeo.

The two surviving members of the early 1968 line-up of The Byrds will be joined by Marty Stuart & His Fabulous Superlatives to play songs from Sweetheart Of The Rodeo and tell stories of its making.

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“On March 9, 1968, Roger McGuinn and I along with many fantastic musicians began recording the Sweetheart Of The Rodeo album at Columbia Studios in Nashville,” said Chris Hillman in a statement. “It was truly a pivotal moment in our lives taking a turn toward the music we always felt a strong kinship with.”

Added McGuinn: “We’re all looking forward to taking the fans through the back pages of the recording. The concert will include songs that led up to that ground-breaking trip to Nashville and all the songs from the album.”

Currently only five Sweetheart Of The Rodeo dates have been announced – see below – but more are promised “when scheduling conflicts are resolved”.

July 24 – Los Angeles, CA @ Ace Hotel
July 29 – Saratoga, CA @ Mountain Winery
September 18 – Albany, NY @ Hart Theater
September 20 – Hopewell, VA @ Beacon Theatre
October 3 – Akron, OH @ Akron Civic

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Hear a new track by Kim Gordon’s Body/Head

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Body/Head - the duo comprising Kim Gordon (Sonic Youth, Free Kitten) and experimental guitarist Bill Nace – have announced that their second album The Switch will be released by Matador on July 13. Hear a track from it, "You Don't Need", below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SNm9IaWx6LE&fea...

Body/Head – the duo comprising Kim Gordon (Sonic Youth, Free Kitten) and experimental guitarist Bill Nace – have announced that their second album The Switch will be released by Matador on July 13.

Hear a track from it, “You Don’t Need”, below:

Get Uncut delivered to your door – find out by clicking here!

Body/Head tour America this summer, dates below:

21/6 – Cincinnati, OH – No Response Festival
13/7 – Los Angeles, CA – Masonic Lodge
14/7 – San Francisco, CA – The Lab
19/7 – Brooklyn, NY – Elsewhere *
20/7 – Kingston, NY – BSP *
21/7 – New Haven, CT – Statehouse *
22/7 – Greenfield, MA – Root Cellar *
24/7 – Boston, MA – Great Scott *
26/7 – Philadelphia, PA – PhilaMOCA *
15/9 – Austin, TX – Beerland

* denotes w/ Gunn-Truscinski Duo

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Watch Nick Cave duet with Kylie Minogue at All Points East

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds played a triumphant set to close the All Points East festival in London's Victoria Park last night (June 3). Highlights included a guest appearance from Kylie Minogue, singing her part on "Where The Wild Roses Grow". Watch footage of that below: https://www.youtube.co...

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds played a triumphant set to close the All Points East festival in London’s Victoria Park last night (June 3).

Highlights included a guest appearance from Kylie Minogue, singing her part on “Where The Wild Roses Grow”. Watch footage of that below:

The Bad Seeds’ career-spanning performance concluded with a massive stage invasion. Peruse the full set list below:

Jesus Alone
Magneto
Do You Love Me?
From Her to Eternity
Loverman
Red Right Hand
Come Into My Sleep
Into My Arms
Girl in Amber
Where the Wild Roses Grow
Jubilee Street
Deanna
Stagger Lee
Push the Sky Away

The deluxe edition of Uncut’s Ultimate Music Guide to Nick Cave, updated to include pieces on Skeleton Tree and all his latest activity, is in shops from Thursday (June 7).

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Listen to Beth Orton and The Chemical Brothers’ lost Tim Buckley cover

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Beth Orton and The Chemical Brothers have released a cover version of Tim Buckley's "I Never Asked To Be Your Mountain". The track was recorded some time in the late '90s but forgotten about until Orton stumbled across an old CD-R during a house move. Listen to it below: https://open.spotify.com/a...

Beth Orton and The Chemical Brothers have released a cover version of Tim Buckley’s “I Never Asked To Be Your Mountain”.

The track was recorded some time in the late ’90s but forgotten about until Orton stumbled across an old CD-R during a house move. Listen to it below:

“I rediscovered this track when it fell out of an unread copy of War and Peace after we’d moved house,” explains Orton. “The disc just said ‘Mountain’. I had no idea what I was listening to exactly… I called Tom to see if he remembered the track as it was clearly something I’d done with them and he was equally vague but at least remembered it happening back in Orinoco Studios in London in the late ’90s. It’s still all a bit hazy but when I put the track on I felt a beautiful rush of nostalgia hearing their beats building.

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“We must have recorded ‘I Never Asked to be Your Mountain’ around the same time as I recorded Central Reservation… I know when we recorded it, I really wanted us to do the original song justice and was afraid to take on such a momentous task with something that was already so extraordinary and complete; especially considering the pure alchemy of a voice like Tim Buckley’s. With hindsight, there’s room for us to view the track as a homage to his memory and brilliance and there is a value in that.”

“I Never Asked To Be Your Mountain” is released via Orton’s new label Lost Leaves, on which she plans to issue more of her unearthed recordings from the last 25 years.

Beth Orton plays a number of dates this summer, full itinerary below:

Thu 19th Jul Square Chapel Arts Centre, Halifax
Fri 20th Jul Pocklington Arts Centre, Pocklington
Sat 21st Jul Kaleidoscope Festival, Alexandra Palace, London
Fri 3rd Aug Belladrum Tartan Heart Festival, Inverness-shire
Sun 19th Aug Purbeck Valley Folk Festival, Corfe Castle, Dorset
Sun 26th Aug Towersey Festival, Thame, Oxfordshire

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

The truth behind Johnny Cash’s At Folsom Prison

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When WS 'Fluke' Holland caught wind that Johnny Cash was planning to record a live album at Folsom prison, the drummer couldn't contain his scepticism. "When we first started talking about doing it, I remember saying, many times, 'Look guys, it won't sell enough to pay for the tape!' It shows how mu...

When WS ‘Fluke’ Holland caught wind that Johnny Cash was planning to record a live album at Folsom prison, the drummer couldn’t contain his scepticism. “When we first started talking about doing it, I remember saying, many times, ‘Look guys, it won’t sell enough to pay for the tape!’ It shows how much I knew, but nobody had any idea that day that it would be the big deal it turned out to be.”

Cash’s long-standing producer and record company boss Don Law was always against the idea; it was only when he was replaced in both positions by Bob Johnston that the Folsom prison gig got the green light. Even before the album was released, Johnston was demoted, suggesting that it could not have happened six months before or after January 1968. “It was lightning in a bottle,” says Holland.

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Johnston played a key role in amping up the notoriety of At Folsom Prison, overdubbing whoops and hollers from a different source to make the inmates sound as if they were on the verge of a full-scale riot, with Cash as their ringleader.

“It was good theatre, but Cash didn’t appreciate it at all,” says the Cash family’s official historian, Mark Stielper. “It made him sound like a thug… He gets this huge reputation of being a badass, which the record company is perfectly happy to put forward in their advertising. There’s the beginning of the whole myth. Cash hated it, but he loved the notoriety. He had to make a bit of a deal with the devil.”

The record company were also happy to encourage the rumour that Cash was a convicted felon himself. In fact, he only ever spent one night in jail – for drunkenly picking flowers in a stranger’s yard.

Read the full story in the July 2018 of Uncut – on sale now – with Public Image Ltd on the cover (in the UK) and Johnny Cash on the cover (everywhere else).

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Watch the video for Gorillaz’ new single, “Humility”

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Damon Albarn's cartoon band Gorillaz have released a new single, "Humility", featuring George Benson. Watch the video, starring Jack Black, below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5yFcdPAGv0 Get Uncut delivered to your door - find out by clicking here! "Humility" is taken from Gorillaz' new albu...

Damon Albarn’s cartoon band Gorillaz have released a new single, “Humility”, featuring George Benson.

Watch the video, starring Jack Black, below:

Get Uncut delivered to your door – find out by clicking here!

“Humility” is taken from Gorillaz’ new album The Now Now, set for release on June 29. Unlike last year’s Humanz, the album largely eschews guest stars, with Benson, Snoop Dogg and Chicago house pioneer Jamie Principle the only featured names. Peruse the artwork and tracklist below:


Humility – feat George Benson
Tranz
Hollywood – feat Snoop Dogg + Jamie Principle
Kansas
Sorcererz
Idaho
Lake Zurich
Magic City
Fire Flies
One Percent
Souk Eye

Albarn also confirmed this week that a new album by his supergroup The Good, The Bad & The Queen – featuring The Clash’s Paul Simonon, The Verve’s Simon Tong and Afrobeat drummer Tony Allen – is coming soon.

Speaking to Zane Lowe on his Beats 1 show, Albarn said the record was “sort of finished… We’re playing it back at the moment downstairs. So yeah, I think it is.”

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Belle And Sebastian announce music festival at sea

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Belle And Sebastian have announced The Boaty Weekender – an indie cruise around the Mediterranean in August next year. The event will mark the 20th anniversary of the band's Bowlie Weekender at Camber Sands, which featured performances from The Flaming Lips, Mogwai and Mercury Rev and was the pr...

Belle And Sebastian have announced The Boaty Weekender – an indie cruise around the Mediterranean in August next year.

The event will mark the 20th anniversary of the band’s Bowlie Weekender at Camber Sands, which featured performances from The Flaming Lips, Mogwai and Mercury Rev and was the precursor to All Tomorrow’s Parties.

The line-ups for The Boaty Weekender’s five on-board stages are yet to be confirmed but the festival will include two unique performances from Belle And Sebastian, an intimate live conversation with the band, yoga, cocktails, club nights, themed balls and quizzes.

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Luxury liner The Norwegian Jade will set sail from Barcelona for Sardinia on August 8 2019, returning on August 12.

Watch an invite video below:

For all information, including how to join the ticket pre-sale, visit the official Boaty Weekender site.

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

On Chesil Beach

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Adapted from Ian McEwan’s Booker nominated novel, On Chesil Beach opens in 1962 on the wedding night of young university graduates Florence and Edward. As Larkin noted, they are a year out – and much of McEwan’s story pivots around that one excruciating night which takes place at a seaside hot...

Adapted from Ian McEwan’s Booker nominated novel, On Chesil Beach opens in 1962 on the wedding night of young university graduates Florence and Edward. As Larkin noted, they are a year out – and much of McEwan’s story pivots around that one excruciating night which takes place at a seaside hotel in Dorset’s Chesil Beach. The film (which the author also adapted) is evocative of that grey hinterland before the conservativism of the 1950s was swept away by the technicolour of the Sixties – “Between the end of the ‘Chatterley’ ban / And the Beatles’ first LP”. There are the sniggering waiters that attend Florence and Edward at their ghastly hotel, and in flashback we get the measure of Florence’s prim upbringing versus Edward’s more progressive family (another Larkin verse springs to mind here, about parents, from “This Be The Verse”).

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Being a McEwan joint, there are plenty of flashbacks, telescoping in and out of Florence and Edward’s lives before they met each other. What emerges is a portrait of two bright, likeable people coming together during a period that had yet to really get a handle on either sex or relationships. Although their situation is evidently not unique, McEwan’s gift for truffling out poetry in bleakness and art from cruelty is never far away. Saorise Ronan is a returning McEwan veteran (she made her film debut in Atonement) and she brings warmth and lightness of touch to Florence, despite her repressive background while the compassionate Edward (Billy Howle) has his own troubled backstory. Mercifully not as cruel as some of McEwan’s work, On Chesil Beach offers accessible, hardback quality.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Still On The Run: 
The Jeff Beck Story

Perhaps the key to this engaging but at times frustrating portrait of one of rock’n’roll’s most canonical guitarists comes when Aerosmith’s Joe Perry notes, “There’s 
a certain amount of 
fuck-you-ness to everything Jeff does.” Several others make a similar point without quite the...

Perhaps the key to this engaging but at times frustrating portrait of one of rock’n’roll’s most canonical guitarists comes when Aerosmith’s Joe Perry notes, “There’s 
a certain amount of 
fuck-you-ness to everything Jeff does.”

Several others make a similar point without quite the same succinctness. David Gilmour calls out Beck as one of our most “reluctant” rock stars, the late Sir George Martin describes him as “temperamental” and Beck himself reinforces the judgement by defiantly insisting that folding The Jeff Beck Group two weeks before they were due to play Woodstock was the smartest move he ever made.

The problem is that by the end of Matthew Longfellow’s 90-minute documentary, we’re not really much closer to understanding where the “fuck-you-ness” came from. Interviewed extensively at home and in his garage as he constructs another of his beloved hot rods, Beck comes across as an amiable and articulate man who thinks deeply about music. Although we’re amply reminded of all his achievements and are provided with plenty of evidence of his inventiveness as a guitarist, what makes 
Jeff Beck tick remains an enigma.

Even those who have known him best during his 50-year career seem unable to shed much light. Rod Stewart offers a blow-by-blow account of the Woodstock no-show, involving Beck doing a runner under cover of the night during an American tour and his bandmates getting phone calls the following day informing them that their leader had gone home to his mum. Yet there’s no explanation why, other than Beck’s own vague claim that it was something to do with “integrity”.

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However nebulous, it’s a notion that clearly means a lot to him. Only Neil Young has walked out on bands more times than Beck, and he recounts how he quit The Yardbirds in the middle of another American tour with palpable satisfaction. Playing on a bill with Gary Lewis & The Playboys to “teeny bop” audiences, after a couple of gigs he called fellow Yardbird Jimmy Page to his hotel room and told him he’d have to take over his lead-guitar duties because, “This is Middle America and we’re telling people we’re part of that and we’re not.” Once again he went home to Mum: “I had my Corvette parked in my mother’s driveway and I was free to dream again.”

Except that he wasn’t, as the reissued “Hi-Ho Silver Lining”, which he likens to “being asked to wear a pink frock”, put him back in the charts and created a distorted image, which to some extent persists to this day.

Longfellow made his name on the ‘classic albums’ TV series, a sharply focused format that is the opposite of the episodic nature of Beck’s stop-start career. However, he makes a decent fist of telling the disjointed story via a stellar cast of talking heads, judicious use of archive footage and some potent musical interludes, including Rod Stewart singing “Shapes Of Things” at the Fillmore East, Beck lazily but exquisitely picking Mingus’s “Goodbye Pork Pie Hat” while reclining on a sofa, playing with Clapton at Ronnie Scott’s and performing a medley of “Immigrant Song” and “Beck’s Bolero” with Jimmy Page at the Rock’n’Roll Hall Of Fame.

Coming fast on the heels of Eric Clapton: Life In 12 Bars, comparisons are inevitable, and Still On The Run is considerably 
lighter on personal revelation. If there’s 
a central theme, it’s that after realising he would never find another Rod Stewart, listening to John McLaughlin and Miles Davis persuaded him “to make his guitar his voice”, a decision that resulted in the change of direction heralded by 1975’s 
all-instrumental Blow By Blow.

The final section of the film is the least satisfactory, as a cast of famous collaborators pay tribute in such obsequious fashion that you might imagine Beck had already died and gone to guitar heaven. The gist, as Jennifer Batten gushingly puts it, is that “there’s a difference between playing music and being music – and Jeff is music”. It doesn’t entirely ring true as he tinkers happily with his hot rods and cheerfully admits that he keeps a guitar in every room “to remind me I should be doing that”.

Yet if Longfellow’s objective is to restate Beck’s claim as the equal of Clapton and Page in the trinity of British rock guitar pioneers, then Still On The Run does a decent job. “People need to up their awareness of him,” Ronnie Wood claims. 
“I mean, where have they been?”

Extras: 7/10. Five previously unreleased tracks from Beck’s Montreux Jazz Festival performance in 2007: “Eternity’s Breath”, “Freeway Jam”, “Nadia”, “Led Boots” and 
“Blue Wind”.

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Boom For Real: The Late Teenage Years Of Jean-Michel Basquiat reviewed

A few years ago, while writing a cover story on the early years of Blondie for Uncut, I touched briefly on the career of Jean-Michel Basquiat. The piece opened in the mid-Seventies, when America was in the middle of the worst prolonged economic period since the Great Depression. Many of the people I...

A few years ago, while writing a cover story on the early years of Blondie for Uncut, I touched briefly on the career of Jean-Michel Basquiat. The piece opened in the mid-Seventies, when America was in the middle of the worst prolonged economic period since the Great Depression. Many of the people I spoke to described New York at that time as if they were describing a war zone – full of burned out buildings and survivors eking an existence on the margins. Al Diaz, who as Bomb-One was part of New York’s first wave of graffiti writers, remembered, “There was a certain greyness to the city. Physically, the climate was run down. There was a lot of fun stuff going on, but the condition of the concrete – the physical city – was neglected. People gave less and less of a damn about the environment.”

Another eyewitness, Lenny Kaye, recalled “I remember when everything past Avenue A was taking your life into your hands. There’s scary areas… [a] no-go zone where drugs were rampant and buildings were on fire.”

“Everyone dressed like Road Warrior, like they were in battle – which you were,” added the filmmaker John Waters. “It was the perfect look for the time.”

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The period has been well-documented, of course – in sources as diverse as the memoirs of Patti Smith and Richard Hell, Amos Poe and Ivan Král’s documentary The Blank Generation and Jonathan Lethem’s novel The Fortress Of Solitude. The latest work to truffle into the Lower East Side of the late Seventies is Sara Driver’s doc, Boom For Real: The Late Teenage Years Of Jean-Michel Basquiat. A one-time NYU film school student, Driver was part of the downtown scene during the Seventies and Eighties when Basquiat rose to prominence. She has rounded up a strong selection of eye-witnesses, too – including her partner Jim Jarmusch, the author Luc Sante, Fred Brathwaite (aka Fab Five Freddy) and Al Daiz.

Jarmusch describes the young Basquiat as a charismatic, if elusive, figure who appears “out of nowhere… and then [he] just disappears.” He tells a story about Basquiat presenting Driver with a rose in the middle of the street – a move that is both bold and impish, very much in line with Basquiat’s wider MO as he tagged provocative SAMO© slogans around the art neighbhourhood, Soho.

Driver also draws on footage from her contemporaries to show the bombed-out Lower East Side – including cuts from rare films by James Nares and Jacob Burckhardt, while Basquiat himself appears often in scenes from Edo Bertolgio’s post-punk snapshot, Downtown 81, which found a semi-fictionalised version of the artist struggling to sell his work.

Brathwaite talks eloquently about “the whole cultural picture” happening in New York at the time, and certainly Driver works in a smart, unshowy way to weave Basquiat into a larger artistic narrative. There is, perhaps, a reason why she doesn’t address Basquiat’s childhood years in private school, or the collapse of his family – instead, we meet him first as a 16 year-old homeless youth, living by his wits, who manages to be everywhere from the Mudd Club to CBGBs, film shows and art exhibitions and all points in between. The artist Sur Rodney (Sur) notes that, without a home or studio, the streets of New York became Basquiat’s place of business; the walls of buildings essentially one giant easel.

One early advocate was Blondie’s Chris Stein, who told me, “No one knew what the fuck was going to happen with Jean. Nobody recognised him early on for being a breakthrough.”

Boom For Real is an excellent addition to Sara Driver’s short but exemplary filmography. Aside from her creative relationship with Jarmusch – she produced Permanent Vacation and Stranger That Paradise and has held credits on many more – she has only directed two feature films: Sleepwalk, a sort-of ghost story set on New York’s nocturnal periphery, and 1993’s When Pigs Fly – a comedy starring Marianne Faithfull as a ghost in pre-gentrified New York. There is also a short, You Are Not I, co-adapted by Jarmusch from a short story by Paul Bowles, the long-lost print of which was recently rediscovered and refurbished in 2012.

At the end of the film, as Suicide’s “Dream Baby Dream” plays over the soundtrack, Jarmusch describes Basquiat a “true investigator”. The same is true of Driver, whose clear-eyed insight assures us not only a rounded portrait of a mercurial artist but of a time and an entire creative scene.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Hear Underworld and Iggy Pop’s new collaboration

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Underworld have released a surprise new single featuring an entertaining monologue from Iggy Pop. Hear "Bells & Circles" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KmJWD9jQvhc The track was premiered during Underworld's set at BBC Music's Biggest Weekend in Belfast on Saturday. Watch that version ...

Underworld have released a surprise new single featuring an entertaining monologue from Iggy Pop. Hear “Bells & Circles” below:

The track was premiered during Underworld’s set at BBC Music’s Biggest Weekend in Belfast on Saturday. Watch that version below, or see the whole performance here.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eKAFCzvfC4I

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

Father John Misty: “The new album is my Tonight’s The Night”

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Father John Misty's new album God's Favorite Customer is out next week (June 1). Ahead of its release, Josh Tillman spoke to Uncut about the making of the album – and how it's something of reaction to his previous record, the epic Pure Comedy. "In hindsight, the ennui in Pure Comedy would probabl...

Father John Misty’s new album God’s Favorite Customer is out next week (June 1). Ahead of its release, Josh Tillman spoke to Uncut about the making of the album – and how it’s something of reaction to his previous record, the epic Pure Comedy.

“In hindsight, the ennui in Pure Comedy would probably have been more naturally suited itself to the mid- to lo-fi production style of this album,” he reflects. “Conversely, expensive-sounding heartbreak ballads always go over pretty well, so… just goes to show what I know about all this.”

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With regard to God’s Favorite Customer’s relatively quick gestation, he says: “This one needed to go down near the blast site, so to speak. If I had waited the industry standard amount of time between cycles I might not have been able to find a way back into the songs.”

Asked how the album fits into the Father John Misty canon so far, he says: “Based on tequila intake alone, I’d say it’s probably my Tonight’s The Night.”

Read the full interview, along with a comprehensive review of the album, in the July 2018 issue of Uncut, in shops now.

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.

The 19th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

Some strong new music from some old favourites - Weller, Kristin Hersh, Wooden Shjips - while the irresistible rise of John Dwyer's Thee Oh Sees continues apace. For fresher sounds, though, the Virginia Wing and Leon Vynehall tracks are terrific - as is Jonny Benavidez, whose Chicano Soul should put...

Some strong new music from some old favourites – Weller, Kristin Hersh, Wooden Shjips – while the irresistible rise of John Dwyer’s Thee Oh Sees continues apace. For fresher sounds, though, the Virginia Wing and Leon Vynehall tracks are terrific – as is Jonny Benavidez, whose Chicano Soul should put a spring in your step this Bank Holiday. Keen eyes will note I’ve included Luluc’s “Heist” again this week – I make no apologies as the track is a killer introduction to what I think is one of the best album’s I’ve heard so far this year.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
PAUL WELLER

“Aspects”
(Parlophone)

2.
LEON VYNEHALL

“English Oak (Chapter VII)”
(Ninja Tune)

3.
WOODEN SHJIPS

“Already Gone”
(Thrill Jockey)

4.
VIRGINIA WING

“The Second Shift”
(Fire Records)

5.
THEE OH SEES

“Overthrown”
(Castle Face Records)

6.
MOSES SUMNEY, SUFJAN STEVENS

“Make Out In My Car”
(Jagjaguar)

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7.
MARGO PRICE & JACK WHITE

“Honey We Can’t Afford To Look This Cheap”
(Live at the Ryman Auditorium, Nashville)

8.
MICHAEL NAU & THE MIGHTY THREAD

“Less Than Positive”
(Full Time Hobby)

9.
KAADA

“Farewell”
(Mirakel Recordings)

10.
ANDY JENKINS

“Genuine Heart”
(Spacebomb)

11.
ONE ELEVEN HEAVY

“Old Hope Chest”
(Kith & Kin)

12.
KRISTIN HERSH

“LAX”
(Fire)

13.
JONNY BENAVIDEZ

“Let’s Get Together”
(Timmion Records)

14.
LULUC

“Heist”
(Sub Pop)

The July 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Public Image Ltd on the cover in the UK and Johnny Cash overseas. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Ray Davies, Father John Misty, Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star, Sleaford Mods, Neko Case and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Father John Misty, Neko Case, Natalie Prass, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever and Jon Hassell.