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July 2018

Public Image Ltd, Father John Misty, Neko Case and Johnny Cash all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated July 2018 and out on May 17. PiL are on the cover, and inside John Lydon, Jah Wobble and Keith Levene recall the last days of the Sex Pistols and explain how the pioneering, cantankerous Publ...

Public Image Ltd, Father John Misty, Neko Case and Johnny Cash all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated July 2018 and out on May 17.

PiL are on the cover, and inside John Lydon, Jah Wobble and Keith Levene recall the last days of the Sex Pistols and explain how the pioneering, cantankerous Public Image were born. “We wanted it to be scratchy, irritating,” Lydon tells us. Plus, The Cure, The Fall, Joy Division and other graduates from The Class Of ’78 discuss repetition, groove and “weird, vivid juxtapositionsâ€.

Father John Misty‘s God’s Favorite Customer is our album of the month, and Josh Tillman gives us an exclusive interview about the making of the record and the inspirations behind it: “Me referencing ‘The White Album’ in the studio has become a bit of a running joke,” he reveals.

Uncut meets Neko Case in Vermont as she prepares to release her new album, Hell-On – topics up for discussion include poultry, barn fires and folk tales. “Nobody deserves extinction more than human beings,” she says.

50 years ago, Johnny Cash entered Folsom prison to play two concerts for the inmates – he left a legend. We tell the story of how that gig paved the way for Cash’s rejuvenation and, 25 years later, his second career renaissance. “He was the rebel, the outsider, the philosopher, the believer, the badass,” says Rick Rubin.

We also find former Kink Ray Davies in reflective mood at his Konk Studios, as he talks UK politics, relations with his brother Dave, and the latest album in his Americana trilogy.

On the 50th anniversary of hippie musical Hair, we revisit the origins of the groundbreaking production, acid trips, nudity, backstage astrologers and more.

Ray LaMontagne takes us through his work to date in our Album By Album piece – “I wanted to be a timber framer – while Alice Cooper and his group recall the making of “(I’m) Eighteen” and Tanya Donelly takes us through her favourite records.

We review new albums by Father John Misty, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Johnny Marr, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Natalie Prass and Kamasi Washington, and archive releases from The Cure, Otis Redding, Bruce Springsteen and The 4th Movement. Films and DVDs covered include Studio 54, The Defiant Ones, My Friend Dahmer and more, while we catch Van Morrison & Joey DeFrancesco live.

Our free CD, Rise, features 15 tracks of the month’s best new music, including Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Father John Misty, Neko Case, Bombino, Jon Hassell and more.

Like us on Facebook to keep up to date with the latest news from Uncut

Musicians pay tribute to avant-garde hero Glenn Branca

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Musicians have been paying tribute to influential no wave guitarist and avant-garde composer Glenn Branca, who died this week of throat cancer aged 69. After founding key no wave group Theoretical Girls in 1976, Branca forged a singular career writing and performing cacophonous, minimalist guitar s...

Musicians have been paying tribute to influential no wave guitarist and avant-garde composer Glenn Branca, who died this week of throat cancer aged 69.

After founding key no wave group Theoretical Girls in 1976, Branca forged a singular career writing and performing cacophonous, minimalist guitar symphonies and other rigorous, uncompromising works.

He played a crucial role in the formation of Sonic Youth, introducing Thurston Moore to Lee Ranaldo and putting out their first two albums on his own label. David Bowie named Branca’s 1981 album The Ascension as one of his favourite records of all-time.

Writing on Instagram, Ranaldo said: “The beginning of my time in New York, 1979-1980, would have been nothing without the genius work that Glenn Branca was doing at that time. The most radical, intelligent response to punk and the avant garde I’d ever seen.”

Actor and Lounge Lizards leader John Lurie added that seeing Theoretical Girls in 1979 “changed my life”.

Thurston Moore tweeted simply: “The Ascension”

https://twitter.com/lurie_john/status/996134195721273345

https://twitter.com/cedricbixler_/status/996143343875776512

The June 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with the Rolling Stones on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, Françoise Hardy, Eric Burdon, James Taylor, Public Enemy, Eleanor Friedberger and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Courtney Barnett, Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, Ryley Walker, Beach House, Wand, Simone Felice, Dylan Carson and The Sea And Cake.

Introducing the new Uncut

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If there is one thing Neil Young has taught us over the years, it is that we should always expect the unexpected. Just as we were finishing this latest issue of Uncut, Young reunited with Crazy Horse to play their first shows since 2014. Fortunately, we were able to report on this momentous event â€...

If there is one thing Neil Young has taught us over the years, it is that we should always expect the unexpected. Just as we were finishing this latest issue of Uncut, Young reunited with Crazy Horse to play their first shows since 2014. Fortunately, we were able to report on this momentous event – needless to say, the sight of the Horse in full jam mode stirs the blood. Now, of course, Young has already moved on – announcing the next steps for his fabled Archive project as well as a fresh run of solo dates.

Young has a history of uncompromising career moves and you can encounter similar dissenting spirits elsewhere in this month’s Uncut. Our cover story finds John Lydon – along with Keith Levene, Jah Wobble and a variety of drummers – recounting the early days of PiL, from north London squats to 5 star hotels in the Caribbean. Peter Watts has done a predictably splendid job capturing the remarkable, complex stories of the various individual players and the grimy spirit of late Seventies Britain.

There is another rebel here, too – perhaps the greatest of them all? – Johnny Cash, whose legendary performance at Fulsom Prison took place 50 years ago. With a new book of rare and unseen photos of this historic event due for publication, Graeme Thomson speaks to surviving eye-witnesses to uncover the untold story of how Cash was reborn at Folsom – and then experienced another career resurrection precisely 25 years later with the first American Recordings album. Our eagle-eyed overseas readers will have already spotted that they have the Man in Black on their cover.

Andy Gill travels to Konk for a meeting with Ray Davies, who has plenty to say about the state of modern Britain, his vital back catalogue and current relations with his brother, Dave. And the latest on a Kinks reunion? Well, you’ll have to read the issue to find out…

There’s more besides, of course. Nick Mason explains why he’s chosen to celebrate the music of Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd, Mazzy Star tell us about their return to active service, Neko Case invites Stephen Deusner to her studio in deepest Virginia and we examine the ongoing missions of The Beatles’ Yellow Submarine.

We also celebrate 50 years of Hair – a weird but compelling story involving full frontal nudity, Paul Nicholas and an early Can affiliate. There’s Tanya Donelly, Sleaford Mods, Studio 54, Otis Redding – and then there is the latest from Father John Misty, who has a view on his brilliant new album. Asked by Tom Pinnock, how he feels this album fits into the Father John Misty canon so far, Josh Tillman answers: “Based on tequila intake alone, I’d say it’s probably my Tonight’s The Night.â€

It all comes back to Neil, I guess.

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.

This month in Uncut

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Public Image Ltd, Father John Misty, Neko Case and Johnny Cash all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated July 2018 and out on May 17. PiL are on the cover, and inside John Lydon, Jah Wobble and Keith Levene recall the last days of the Sex Pistols and explain how the pioneering, cantankerous Publ...

Public Image Ltd, Father John Misty, Neko Case and Johnny Cash all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated July 2018 and out on May 17.

PiL are on the cover, and inside John Lydon, Jah Wobble and Keith Levene recall the last days of the Sex Pistols and explain how the pioneering, cantankerous Public Image were born. “We wanted it to be scratchy, irritating,” Lydon tells us. Plus, The Cure, The Fall, Joy Division and other graduates from The Class Of ’78 discuss repetition, groove and “weird, vivid juxtapositionsâ€.

Father John Misty‘s God’s Favorite Customer is our album of the month, and Josh Tillman gives us an exclusive interview about the making of the record and the inspirations behind it: “Me referencing ‘The White Album’ in the studio has become a bit of a running joke,” he reveals.

Uncut meets Neko Case in Vermont as she prepares to release her new album, Hell-On – topics up for discussion include poultry, barn fires and folk tales. “Nobody deserves extinction more than human beings,” she says.

50 years ago, Johnny Cash entered Folsom prison to play two concerts for the inmates – he left a legend. We tell the story of how that gig paved the way for Cash’s rejuvenation and, 25 years later, his second career renaissance. “He was the rebel, the outsider, the philosopher, the believer, the badass,” says Rick Rubin.

We also find former Kink Ray Davies in reflective mood at his Konk Studios, as he talks UK politics, relations with his brother Dave, and the latest album in his Americana trilogy.

On the 50th anniversary of hippie musical Hair, we revisit the origins of the groundbreaking production, acid trips, nudity, backstage astrologers and more.

Ray LaMontagne takes us through his work to date in our Album By Album piece – “I wanted to be a timber framer – while Alice Cooper and his group recall the making of “(I’m) Eighteen” and Tanya Donelly takes us through her favourite records.

We review new albums by Father John Misty, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Johnny Marr, Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Natalie Prass and Kamasi Washington, and archive releases from The Cure, Otis Redding, Bruce Springsteen and The 4th Movement. Films and DVDs covered include Studio 54, The Defiant Ones, My Friend Dahmer and more, while we catch Van Morrison & Joey DeFrancesco live.

Our free CD, Rise, features 15 tracks of the month’s best new music, including Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever, Melody’s Echo Chamber, Father John Misty, Neko Case, Bombino, Jon Hassell and more.

Like us on Facebook to keep up to date with the latest news from Uncut

 

Julian Cope – Peggy Suicide/Jehovakill

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If Robert Graves had wielded a Fender XII instead of a steel nib when he eulogised the pre-Christian gods that still stalk our culture, poetry and landscapes, he might have come up with something a little like Cope’s epic double albums Peggy Suicide and Jehovahkill. This was heavy rock music – t...

If Robert Graves had wielded a Fender XII instead of a steel nib when he eulogised the pre-Christian gods that still stalk our culture, poetry and landscapes, he might have come up with something a little like Cope’s epic double albums Peggy Suicide and Jehovahkill. This was heavy rock music – the rock in question being sarsen, Lewisian Gneiss and bluestone, quarried and erected to form henges, dolmens and menhirs by the megalithic people of the British Isles.

“Man is naturally a serpentine traveller, and all those straight Roman roads are just Empire Paranoia,†wrote Cope in the sleevenotes to Jehovahkill; and the self-styled Arch-Drude certainly reached this point by a suitably un-Roman route. When The Teardrop Explodes ended in 1982, he embarked on a solo career, “building back catalogue†with the excellent lysergic indie of World Shut Your Mouth and Fried. Then came his first two albums for Island, that giant mic stand and an attempt at chart stardom; the results, 1987’s Saint Julian and 1988’s My Nation Underground (now also being reissued on vinyl, all sourced from the original tapes), were glossy and uneven, trying out Detroit rock and stadium funk. There were strong moments – “Trampoleneâ€, “World Shut Your Mouthâ€, “Charlotte Anne†– but by the time of My Nation Underground, Cope’s work was suffering from a lack of inspiration, unsympathetic production and label interference.

In one weekend at the end of recording sessions, however, Cope, guitarist Donald Ross Skinner and drummer Rooster Cosby tracked a whole other album, Skellington, and released it on a tiny label, with the similar Droolian following later in 1990. Both consisted of rough acoustic takes channelling quicksilver bursts of inspiration such as “Out Of My Mind On Dope And Speed†and “Robert Mitchumâ€; they were slapdash, sure, but also coursing with the wild creativity that his previous two albums had lacked.

This experience – melded with a reading list featuring MC5 manager John Sinclair, occult philosopher Colin Wilson and wayward archaeologist TC Lethbridge – would set Cope on course for a more unfiltered, socially conscious music. 1991’s Peggy Suicide was the first result of this revitalised approach, an 80-minute splurge of Cope’s concerns about the planet, represented by the dying deity of the title, who appeared to the singer in a vision. “I saw Mother Earth,†Cope wrote in the sleevenotes, “an enormous goddess standing upright and proud, but throwing her head back in pain and confusion at the treatment that Mankind chosen to mete out to her.â€

His method of songwriting at the time generally involved cycling through south London, then calling back home from a payphone near Westminster Bridge to record the ideas on his answer-phone. The result of all that pedalling was a very modern form of protest music, one that railed against the Poll Tax on “Leperskinâ€, Thatcher’s legacy on “Promised Landâ€, climate change on “Hanging Out & Hung Up On The Line†and the motor vehicle on “East Easy Riderâ€, all with a focus that his stoned heroes Jim Morrison, Sky Saxon and Syd Barrett wouldn’t have been capable of mustering. “Not Raving But Drowningâ€, meanwhile, recounted the tale of a tripping football fan who fell from the back of a Sealink ferry and drowned in the English Channel, while “Safesurfer†(which appeared on Droolian in an early form) is a seduction song with a pro-condom plea. Musically, Peggy… was deliciously diverse, ranging from Funkadelic epics such as “East Easy Rider†and the psychedelic folk of “Pristeenâ€, to the Technicolor pop of “The American Lite†and “Beautiful Love†and the Motörhead riffage of “Hanging Out & Hung Up On The Lineâ€. Wah-wah was everywhere, often fed with Ovation 12-string.

If this was the first fruit of Cope’s new approach, there were enough seeds inside to grow a whole new branch of philosophy, a whole orchard of music. The cover of Peggy’s swift follow-up, Jehovahkill, featured the Outer Hebrides’ Callanish Stones, again here replicated on the tasty etching on Side D, and the 16 tracks inside mixed the socially conscious, Goddess-worshipping approach of Peggy with a new exploration of this island’s ancient religions, long subsumed into the might of Christianity.

There was also a major new musical element at play, krautrock. Never shy of telegraphing his enthusiasms to listeners, Cope shamelessly tapped into the motorik rhythms and cosmic guitar of Neu! on “Necropolis†and “The Subtle Energies Commissionâ€, the trance-like grooves of Can on “Poet Is Priest†and Faust-like sonic collage on “Up-Wards At 45°†and “Soul Desertâ€. In between were dark folk lullabies like “Know (Cut My Friend Down)†and “Julian H Copeâ€; sometimes the approaches were mixed, as on “Akhenatenâ€, a descending glam stomp that attempts to reclaim the symbol of the cross for pagans, or “Fear Loves This Placeâ€, a minor-key ballad that finds Cope railing against this “hell of a heavenâ€.

Island had already rejected an earlier version of the album, so they were hardly delighted by the expanded finished product, its eccentric subject matter and erratic mix (vocals uncomfortably high, drums low; Cope’s A&R described the brutalist “Slow Rider†as the worst song he’d ever heard in his life); they deigned to put out Jehovahkill, but soon after its release Cope was dropped. The greedheads, as Cope would have it, might not have recognised a masterpiece when they heard one, but the furore brought him even greater fame, spurring him on to create his own label and get deeper into his prehistoric and environmental interests. Today, his final two albums for Island remain as holistic as rock music gets, joining the dots between the Druids and dolmens of 3,000 BCE, and the environmental and political destruction of the early 1990s CE; and they can clearly be seen as the start of everything Cope-related that came after. Spiking rock’n’roll with transcendent and countercultural ideas, these albums, at once poetic and journalistic, remain Cope’s boldest, most ambitious artefacts – true megaliths of the form.

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 a new video for Flaming Lips rarity, “The Captain”

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The Flaming Lips will release their Greatest Hits Vol. 1 on June 1. The standard vinyl album compiles 11 singles from their Warner Bros era (1993-now), while a 3xCD deluxe edition adds a number of album tracks, B-sides, studio outtakes and previously unreleased tracks. You can watch a new video f...

The Flaming Lips will release their Greatest Hits Vol. 1 on June 1.

The standard vinyl album compiles 11 singles from their Warner Bros era (1993-now), while a 3xCD deluxe edition adds a number of album tracks, B-sides, studio outtakes and previously unreleased tracks.

You can watch a new video for one of those deluxe edition tracks, “The Captain”, below. The song was originally recorded for The Flaming Lips’ classic 1999 album The Soft Bulletin.

Peruse the full tracklisting and cover art for Greatest Hits Vol. 1 below:

Greatest Hits Vol. 1 (vinyl)
Side One:
1. Do You Realize??
2. Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots Pt. 1
3. Race For The Prize
4. Waitin’ For A Superman
5. When You Smile
6. She Don’t Use Jelly

Side Two:
1. Bad Days (Aurally Excited Version)
2. The W.A.N.D.
3. Silver Trembling Hands
4. The Castle
5. The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song

Greatest Hits Vol. 1 Deluxe Edition (3xCD & digital)
Disc 1:
1. Talkin’ ‘Bout The Smiling Deathporn Immortality Blues (Everyone Wants
To Live Forever)
2. Hit Me Like You Did The First Time
3. Frogs
4. Felt Good To Burn
5. Turn It On
6. She Don’t Use Jelly
7. Chewin The Apple Of Your Eye
8. Slow Nerve Action
9. Psychiatric Explorations of The Fetus With Needles
10. Brainville
11. Lightning Strikes The Postman
12. When You Smile
13. Bad Days (Aurally Excited Version)
14. Riding To Work In The Year 2025
15. Race For The Prize (Sacrifice Of The New Scientists)
16. Waitin’ For A Superman (Is It Getting Heavy?)
17. The Spark That Bled
18. What Is the Light?

Disc 2:
1. Yoshimi Battles The Pink Robots Pt. 1
2. In The Morning Of The Magicians
3. All We Have Is Now
4. Do You Realize??
5. The W.A.N.D.
6. Pompeii Am Gotterdammerung
7. Vein Of Stars
8. The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song
9. Convinced Of The Hex
10. See The Leaves
11. Silver Trembling Hands
12. Is David Bowie Dying?
13. Try To Explain
14. Always There In Our Hearts
15. How??
16. There Should Be Unicorns
17. The Castle

Disc 3:
1. Zero to A Million (Demo)
2. Jets (Cupid’s Kiss Vs The Psyche Of Death) (2-Track Demo)
3. Thirty-Five Thousand Feet Of Despair
4. The Captain
5. 1000 Ft. Hands
6. Noodling Theme (Epic Sunset Mix #5)
7. Up Above The Daily Hum
8. The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song (In Anatropous Reflex)
9. We Can’t Predict The Future
10. Your Face Can Tell The Future
11. You Gotta Hold On
12. What Does It Mean?
13. Spider-man Vs Muhammad Ali
14. I Was Zapped By The Lucky Super Rainbow
15. Enthusiasm For Life Defeats Existential Fear Part 2
16. If I Only Had A Brain
17. Silent Night / Lord, Can You Hear Me

You can pre-order the album 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.

Send us your questions for Hawkwind’s Dave Brock

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Since co-founding Hawkwind in 1969, Dave Brock has been the band's only constant member throughout almost half a century of wild times and wilder music. A steady hand on the tiller as gleeful chaos reigned all around, Brock's 40-plus bandmates over the years have included everyone from Lemmy to Ging...

Since co-founding Hawkwind in 1969, Dave Brock has been the band’s only constant member throughout almost half a century of wild times and wilder music. A steady hand on the tiller as gleeful chaos reigned all around, Brock’s 40-plus bandmates over the years have included everyone from Lemmy to Ginger Baker, reggae toasters to naked dancers – even, briefly, Samantha Fox.

As one of the first bands to include synthesizers and sci-fi themes, Hawkwind were pioneers of space-rock. But they were also a seriously heavy proposition, a key influence on punk and numerous other musical subcultures, a mainstay of festivals and free-spirited musical gatherings to this day.

Having released their 30th album, Into The Woods, last year, Hawkwind are currently preparing for an upcoming UK tour on which they will be accompanied by a live orchestra.

So what would you like to ask their indefatigable frontman? You’ve certainly got a rich and varied history to dive into, so don’t be shy.

Send your questions by Wednesday May 16 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com – the best ones, along with Dave’s answers of course, will be published in a future issue of Uncut.

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 Gruff Rhys’ new song, “Limited Edition Heart”

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Gruff Rhys has released another track from his upcoming album Babelsberg, due out on June 8. Hear "Limited Edition Heart" below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L09PSR7uQtU&feature=youtu.be Of the song, Rhys says: "I wrote 'Limited Edition Heart' whilst walking along a polluted yet beautiful r...

Gruff Rhys has released another track from his upcoming album Babelsberg, due out on June 8. Hear “Limited Edition Heart” below:

Of the song, Rhys says: “I wrote ‘Limited Edition Heart’ whilst walking along a polluted yet beautiful river. It has beautiful orchestral arrangements thanks to Stephen McNeff and the BBC NOW orchestra.â€

The Super Furry Animals frontman has also announced a European band tour for November and December. This is in addition to his previously announced orchestral and in-store shows. The full list of tourdates is as follows:

Jun 8th – Bristol, Rough Trade (in store gig, entry with purchase of LP)
Jun 10th – Cardiff, Millennium Centre (w/BBC National Orchestra Of Wales)
Jun 13th – London, Rough Trade East (in store gig, entry with purchase of LP)
Aug 30th – Salisbury, End Of The Road Festival
Sept 12th – London, Barbican (with the London Contemporary Orchestra)
Sept 15th – Manchester, RNCM Concert Hall (with the RNCM Orchestra)
Sept 16th – Manchester, RNCM Concert Hall (with the RNCM Orchestra)
Nov 8th – Portsmouth, Wedgewood Rooms
Nov 9th – Brighton, The Old Market
Nov 10th – Folkestone, The Quarterhouse
Nov 11th – Oxford, O2 Academy
Nov 12th – Bristol, SWX
Nov 13th – Birmingham, Glee Club
Nov 15th – Glasgow, SWG3
Nov 16th – Leeds, Church Leeds
Nov 17th – Liverpool, Arts Club
Nov 19th – Paris, France, Le Badaboum
Nov 20th – Schaffhausen, Switzerland, Tap Tab
Nov 21st – Munich, Germany, Ampere
Nov 22nd – Berlin, Germany, Privatclub
Nov 23rd – Hamburg, Germany, Turmzimmer
Nov 24th – Copenhagen, Denmark, Alice
Nov 26th – Brussels, Belgium, Botanique/Rotonde
Nov 27th – Cologne, Germany, Studio 672
Nov 28th – Amsterdam, NL, Paradiso Noord
Dec 1st – Cork, Ireland, Live At St.Lukes
Dec 2nd – Galway, Ireland, Roisin Dublin
Dec 3rd – Dublin, Ireland, Button Factory

Tickets for the new UK shows are available 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.

Prince’s band The Revolution announce European tour

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Prince's band The Revolution have announced their first European shows in 33 years. Bobby Z, Wendy Melvoin, Lisa Coleman, Matt Fink and Brownmark initially reunited in September 2016 to play three shows at Minneapolis's First Avenue club in honour of Prince's passing. Now their reunion has extende...

Prince’s band The Revolution have announced their first European shows in 33 years.

Bobby Z, Wendy Melvoin, Lisa Coleman, Matt Fink and Brownmark initially reunited in September 2016 to play three shows at Minneapolis’s First Avenue club in honour of Prince’s passing. Now their reunion has extended to include a European tour in Feburary 2019, including a date at London’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire on February 13.

The Revolution backed Prince throughout his imperial phase of the early to mid-80s, featuring on all his albums from 1999 to Sign O’ The Times.

“We never have been apart as a band,†says Brownmark. “We’ve all been in touch, including contact with Prince, and he even talked about us all playing again.â€

Fink elaborates: “Back in 2014, Bobby and I met with Prince and he opened the meeting with his desire to reunite with The Revolution for some future shows. Sadly for us, this did not come to fruition, which makes our reunion all the more poignant.”

“I think everybody in The Revolution is singular, not like anybody else,†adds Melvoin. “So while we still have a shot at getting that same feeling, let’s do it with as much grace and integrity as we can. We’re still a band, still vital human beings, so let’s play this stuff before we can’t anymore.â€

The full European tourdates are as follows:

COPENHAGEN VEGA – FEBRUARY 8
AMSTERDAM PARADISO – FEBRUARY 10
PARIS CIGALE – FEBRUARY 11
LONDON SHEPHERDS BUSH EMPIRE – FEBRUARY 13

The June 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with the Rolling Stones on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, Françoise Hardy, Eric Burdon, James Taylor, Public Enemy, Eleanor Friedberger and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Courtney Barnett, Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, Ryley Walker, Beach House, Wand, Simone Felice, Dylan Carson and The Sea And Cake.

Lindsey Buckingham speaks out on Fleetwood Mac firing

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Lindsey Buckingham has opened up publicly for the first time about his recent ousting from Fleetwood Mac. Speaking between songs at a campaign fundraiser for democratic politician Mike Levin in Los Feliz, California, Buckingham expressed sadness at his enforced departure amid fears that it has tain...

Lindsey Buckingham has opened up publicly for the first time about his recent ousting from Fleetwood Mac.

Speaking between songs at a campaign fundraiser for democratic politician Mike Levin in Los Feliz, California, Buckingham expressed sadness at his enforced departure amid fears that it has tainted Fleetwood Mac’s legacy.

“Probably some of you know that for the last three months I have sadly taken leave of my band of 43 years, Fleetwood Mac,” Buckingham said. “This was not something that was really my doing or my choice. I think what you would say is that there were factions within the band that had lost their perspective.”

When someone in the crowd shouted “Fuck Stevie Nicks!”, Buckingham continued: “Well, it doesn’t really matter. The point is that they’d lost their perspective. What that did was to harm – and this is the only thing I’m really sad about, the rest of it becomes an opportunity – but it harmed the 43-year legacy that we had worked so hard to build. That legacy was really about rising above difficulties in order to fulfill one’s higher truth and one’s higher destiny.â€

Watch the whole video below, c/o Brian Larsen.

Uncut’s Fleetwood Mac – Ultimate Music Guide (Remastered Edition) is available to buy online now by clicking here.

Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide: Fleetwood Mac

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.

Alex Turner: “Making an Arctic Monkeys album is not an easy alchemy”

Like us on Facebook to keep up to date with the latest news from Uncut Originally published in Uncut's June 2014 issue (Take 205) Five excellent albums. An inflammatory speech on the future of rock’n’roll. America for the taking. And now, this month in London, their biggest ever gigs… Has th...

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Originally published in Uncut’s June 2014 issue (Take 205)

Five excellent albums. An inflammatory speech on the future of rock’n’roll. America for the taking. And now, this month in London, their biggest ever gigs… Has the time come for the ARCTIC MONKEYS to take their place in the rock pantheon? “It feels like a quest, it doesn’t feel like there’s a beginning or end to this thing,†says Alex Turner, as Uncut interviews the band, their collaborators and their heroes to discover the secrets of their success. “I’d put them in the same line as Ray Davies,†says John Cooper Clarke. “It’s their world, but they make it magical.†Story: John Robinson.

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Rather than the many songs he had written, for a few days earlier this year Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner was more notorious for 127 words he improvised on the winners’ rostrum at an awards ceremony. His tone – swaggering, cocky – wasn’t to everyone’s taste. But having stormed the citadel, it would be churlish not to have permitted the Arctic Monkeys the moment to raise their flag.

The fine details of his words (“Rock’n’roll… is always waiting round the corner… ready to smash the glass ceilingâ€) became a news item, were deconstructed, frowned on, seized upon as a call to arms, but largely ignored for what they were: a personal statement of belief. The guitar music favoured by Arctic Monkeys isn’t a genre decision, but a challenging, empowering force, a form whose rules they’ve mastered out of respect: the better to break them and advance the medium’s ineffable spirit. It can change, and mutate, but as Alex Turner put it that night, rock’n’roll “will never die…â€

“It’s the feeling that anyone can do it,†says Nick O’Malley, the group’s bassist. “It’s not controlled and polished. It excites me that four friends can grow up in the same village, making some noise in a mate’s garage, and go on to win two Brit Awards.â€

That, in essence, has been the Arctic Monkeys’ journey: from the Sheffield suburb of High Green to the centre of the music business establishment. If that journey has been an unexpected one, it has also been one the band have mirrored in their music. Rather than following a predictable route, Arctic Monkeys have for over a decade instead pursued the eccentric and passionate lines of enquiry that have been the lifeblood of rock’n’roll from the very beginning.

The poet John Cooper Clarke has long been an inspiration to Alex Turner, and a version of his composition “I Wanna Be Yours†is the final track on the band’s current album, AM. Like most of us, he watched the Brits ceremony at home.

“I thought his acceptance speech was terrific. I think it was the most lucid thing I’ve ever heard a drunken person say,†says Clarke a few days afterward. “He paraphrased Danny And The Juniors there, didn’t he? ‘Rock’n’roll is here to stay…’

“It was right in 1957,†Clarke adds, “and it’s right now.â€

Hear Orbital’s new single, “Tiny Foldable Cities”

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Dance music trailblazers Orbital will release a new album called Monsters Exist on September 14. After not speaking for five years, the Hartnoll brothers reunited for a series of live shows last year before returning to the studio to record their first album since 2012. Hear the first single from M...

Dance music trailblazers Orbital will release a new album called Monsters Exist on September 14.

After not speaking for five years, the Hartnoll brothers reunited for a series of live shows last year before returning to the studio to record their first album since 2012. Hear the first single from Monsters Exist, “Tiny Foldable Cities”, below:

“When you haven’t made an album in five years it just comes tumbling out,†says the band’s Paul Hartnoll. “Because of the global situation I was torn between writing a really aggressive Crass-type album that says ‘Fuck The Man!’ or going back to rave sensibilities. You know, let’s really rebel by stepping away and actually living that alternative lifestyle. You don’t need to spell out who the monsters are. We’re not pointing our fingers at Donald Trump or Kim Jong-un. It’s clear who the monsters are. I’ve never liked preaching to people. It’s much better to provoke a bit of thought.â€

“It’s a reflection on modern day monsters,†adds Phil Hartnoll. “That can mean anything from bankers and The Man or your own demons and fears. The monsters inside you.”

Peruse the full tracklisting and artwork for Monsters Exist below:

Standard CD / Deluxe Edition Disc 1
1. Monsters Exist
2. Hoo Hoo Ha Ha
3. The Raid
4. P.H.U.K.
5. Tiny Foldable Cities
6. Buried Deep Within
7. Vision OnE
8. The End Is Nigh
9. There Will Come A Time (Featuring Prof. Brian Cox)

Deluxe Edition Disc 2
1. Kaiju
2. A Long Way From Home
3. Analogue Test Oct 16
4. Fun With The System
5. Dressing Up In Other People’s Clothes
6. To Dream Again
7. There Will Come A Time – Instrumental
8. Tiny Foldable Cities – Kareful Remix

Orbital play a number of gigs and festival shows throughout 2018, details below:

MAY
25 , Belfast, BBC Music Biggest Weekend, Titanic Slipways

JUNE
11 Moscow, Bosco Fresh Festival
29 Brighton Racecourse
30 Hull, Zebedee’s Yard

JULY
13 Beat-Herder Festival
14 Barcelona, Cruilla Festival
28 Margate, Dreamland
29 Camp Bestival, Big Top

AUGUST
3 Dekmantel, Amsterdam Holland
5 Dublin, Beat Yard Festival
11 Gateshead, Sage

SEPTEMBER
01 Bristol, Downs Festival
08 Birmingham, Shiiine On Genting Arena – 1 day festival

NOVEMBER
18 Minehead, Shiiine On Butlins Weekender

DECEMBER
15 London, Hammersmith Apollo
18 Sheffield, Academy
19 Cambridge, Corn Exchange
20 Manchester, Apollo

The June 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with the Rolling Stones on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, Françoise Hardy, Eric Burdon, James Taylor, Public Enemy, Eleanor Friedberger and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Courtney Barnett, Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, Ryley Walker, Beach House, Wand, Simone Felice, Dylan Carson and The Sea And Cake.

Ultimate Music Guide: Black Sabbath

When Black Sabbath closed the final performance from their The End Tour, in Birmingham on February 4 last year, you could be forgiven for wondering whether that was really the last we'd hear of Ozzy Osbourne and his musical cohorts. After all, here was a band who had come back from the brink several...

When Black Sabbath closed the final performance from their The End Tour, in Birmingham on February 4 last year, you could be forgiven for wondering whether that was really the last we’d hear of Ozzy Osbourne and his musical cohorts. After all, here was a band who had come back from the brink several times in the past – Ozzy himself had embarked on a solo farewell jaunt in 1992.

But if the peal of a familiar church bell has definitely tolled the end of Black Sabbath – and those monolithic riffs are no more – then at least it is possible to celebrate the masters of metal in all their infinite glory in our latest Ultimate Music Guide – which goes on sale this Thursday, May 10.

As you can imagine, it features classic interviews from the archives of Melody Maker and NME complemented by extensive new reviews of every Sabbath album, every Ozzy solo album, miscellanies and more. You can buy a copy from our online store by clicking here.

Here’s John Robinson, who edited this issue, to tell you all about it.

“’We’re all four together, like brothers’

“Not everyone’s first thought, of course, but the origin story of Black Sabbath is essentially a romantic one. Whereas the beginnings of heavy contemporaries like Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple speak of professionalism, of scouting the scene for strong players and likely collaborators, those of Black Sabbath feel endearingly haphazard.

As you will discover as you read through the extraordinary archive interviews and affectionate new critical writing which makes up this new Ultimate Music Guide, the story of Black Sabbath and Ozzy Osbourne is a rags to riches yarn. Namely how four pot smokers from an unpromising part of Birmingham turned their obsessions – heavy music; not working; smoking pot – into one of the most influential, charismatic and commercially successful bands of the late 20th century.

“’Usually in bands you get two blokes who stick together and two others, but it’s not like that with us,’ Ozzy Osbourne told NME’s Nick Logan in 1971. ‘We’re all four together, like brothers. And that’s right because you have four people creating the sound.’

“That sound was collaborative, loose and darkly groovy. But as with brothers, there were serious fights along the way as it got made. And yet, as Ozzy’s path diverged from Sabbath’s, the singer trading on his dangerous reputation to become a huge star in the US, guitarist Tony Iommi fought to keep something like his original band intact – a tangled story, with many singers, which sailed close to rock parody. When the original band – or three-quarters of them – reformed in 2013, it brought to this doomy and aggressive band a blessed kind of symmetry.

“What made it all worth it was the extraordinary music made along the way – which we celebrate with in-depth new reviews here. From the dark and frightening intimations of their debut album to the underground vibrations of the follow-up, Paranoid, Sabbath’s sound was a heavy, powerful swing with riffs for every occasion. When Tony Iommi downtuned his guitar for third album Master Of Reality, he set in motion a sound which spawned an entire musical genre.

“This magazine follows the band on every step of their journey, from the debut to 13, and the ongoing career of Ozzy Osbourne, who provides an exclusive introduction to the mag. We hope you enjoy it.

“In fact, as Ozzy himself has said: ‘We love you all! Go crazy!’â€

Order a copy

Ultimate Music Guide: Yes

If the guiding principle of minimalism is 'less is more', then I guess in prog terms more is more. Allow me to unveil our special edition focussing on one of the world’s most successful rock bands: Yes. Here's John Robinson, who's edited this UMG, to tell you more about it: “As the band prepar...

If the guiding principle of minimalism is ‘less is more’, then I guess in prog terms more is more. Allow me to unveil our special edition focussing on one of the world’s most successful rock bands: Yes.

Here’s John Robinson, who’s edited this UMG, to tell you more about it:

“As the band prepare to celebrate their 50th anniversary with a March UK tour (and another version of the band playing in the summer), this special 124 page prestige magazine will tell the full story of Yes. Featuring in-depth reviews of all of their albums, alongside a trove of archival features, this is the definitive chronicle of this multi-million selling, Hall Of Fame-honoured band.

“It will also feature a new bespoke introduction from Yes guitarist Steve Howe. Here’s a word from Steve:

“’We’ve been lucky to have had so many big buzzes. When we were coming up initially… when The Yes Album was fantastically well received in the UK… when Fragile was racing up the American charts… when Close To The Edge came out…selling out Madison Square Garden more often than Led Zeppelin.

“’We’ve had a lot of difficulties, a lot of sadness, a lot of arguments and a lot of lost money, but we’ve been blessed with a lot of great things in the heritage we’ve helped create. But none of them are any more important than the fact that the band carried on, that there was a determination, a love of the music and a commitment to that standard we created.

“’The group wasn’t just five blokes that go up in their Wellington boots and play. This was a group that had to have high standards, it had to be ground-breaking, it had to be different, it had to have great lights, staging, sound. We saw this as a project that wasn’t just about music.’â€

Order a copy

Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide: Fleetwood Mac

The last time Fleetwood Mac toured the UK, in 2015, the message they chose to share with us was togetherness. For a band whose history has been characterized by departures, infidelity and addiction, the return of Christine McVie to the band’s line up after a 16 year-absence felt like a rare harmon...

The last time Fleetwood Mac toured the UK, in 2015, the message they chose to share with us was togetherness. For a band whose history has been characterized by departures, infidelity and addiction, the return of Christine McVie to the band’s line up after a 16 year-absence felt like a rare harmonizing moment: a lull in the turbulence. As Lindsey Buckingham rather grandly described it on stage during the band’s residency at London’s O2 Arena that summer, “With the return of the beautiful Christine, there is no doubt that we begin a brand new, prolific and profound and beautiful chapter in the story of this band, Fleetwood Mac.â€

Uncut’s Fleetwood Mac – Ultimate Music Guide (Remastered Edition) is in shops from Thursday, April 12 and available to buy online now by clicking here

In fact, McVie’s return to active service was the latest remarkable twist in Fleetwood Mac’s story. The intervening three years have seen the band release expanded editions of albums from their beloved Buckingham/Nicks configuration – Rumours, Fleetwood Mac, Mirage, Tango In The Night – as well a surprising and robust collaborative album from Buckingham McVie. As ever, the 21st century Fleetwood Mac continue to benefit from their most successful and notorious period.

But in many respects, Fleetwood Mac are actually a more interesting proposition away from the Rumours material. The 2013 reissue of the band’s 1969 album, Then Play On was a useful reminder of the magical guitar interplay between Peter Green and Danny Kirwan. While the deluxe treatment of the Buckingham/Nicks era has been splendid, there are some fans – myself among them – who would cherish similarly well-curated archival trawls through the band’s majestic run of ‘transitional’ albums: Kiln House, Future Games, Bare Trees…

Meantime, Mac fans can hopefully be content with a special edition of our own – Fleetwood Mac: The Ultimate Music Guide. This 124-page deluxe edition – on sale from Thursday – features a wealth of archival interviews from Melody Maker and NME, a recent catch up with Buckingham and McVie alongside in-depth reviews of every album.

At the very least, we hope you agree, it’s something to read while we wait for the “brand new, prolific and profound and beautiful chapter” in the story of Fleetwood Mac to unfold.

Order a copy

 

 

Sharon Van Etten to play Late Night Prom

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Sharon Van Etten will play London's Royal Albert Hall on August 8 as part of the BBC Proms season. She'll appear alongside Hercules & Love Affair and Serpentwithfeet in Prom 35, a special 'Late Night Prom' celebrating the music of New York. Helmed by conductor Jules Buckley and the Heritage Or...

Sharon Van Etten will play London’s Royal Albert Hall on August 8 as part of the BBC Proms season.

She’ll appear alongside Hercules & Love Affair and Serpentwithfeet in Prom 35, a special ‘Late Night Prom’ celebrating the music of New York.

Helmed by conductor Jules Buckley and the Heritage Orchestra, Prom 35: New York: Sound Of A City will feature “new music from some of the city’s rising stars, plus classic tracks by established acts that have changed the city’s soundscape. Expect anything from pagan-gospel and disco-punk to feminist rap or DIY indie.”

Tickets for the Prom go on sale tomorrow morning (May 12), available from the Royal Albert Hall site.

Sharon Van Etten is currently at work on her new album, the follow up to 2015’s I Don’t Want To Let You Down EP.

The June 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with the Rolling Stones on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, Françoise Hardy, Eric Burdon, James Taylor, Public Enemy, Eleanor Friedberger and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Courtney Barnett, Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, Ryley Walker, Beach House, Wand, Simone Felice, Dylan Carson and The Sea And Cake.

Britpop – The Ultimate Genre Guide

Welcome, then, to the latest edition to the Uncut family. Following on from our survey of Glam – which is still available to buy here – the second instalment of our Ultimate Genre Guide will focus on Britpop. As you’d expect, it mines the capacious archives of Melody Maker and NME – who didn...

Welcome, then, to the latest edition to the Uncut family. Following on from our survey of Glam – which is still available to buy here – the second instalment of our Ultimate Genre Guide will focus on Britpop. As you’d expect, it mines the capacious archives of Melody Maker and NME – who didn’t stint in their coverage of the subject – for classic interviews alongside brand new essays by Uncut’s crack team of writers. There’s David Cavanagh on the roots of Britpop, Stephen Troussé on Suede, Tom Pinnock on Blur, John Robinson on Oasis and – sorry – me on Elastica and plenty more.

Over to John Robinson, who edited it…

“Britpop isn’t short on triumphant scenes. Oasis at Knebworth. Blur at the top of the charts. Pulp, taking over from the indisposed Stone Roses and making Glastonbury their own in 1995. The best British music of the time explored some unsavoury places, had some unintentionally comic moments, even some darker interludes. But it seemed there were a lot of occasions which felt like a kind of victory.

“Not everyone felt quite the same (‘Britpop,’ Thom Yorke told Melody Maker in 1997, ‘was a party to which we weren’t invited.’) but it would be crazy to think that guitar bands in the period failed to benefit from the mainstream breakthrough made by previously alternative guitar music. It was certainly the site of Radiohead’s major impact.

“In this new Ultimate Genre Guide you can read deep new appraisals of this excellent music. There’s new thought here on our cover stars Blur and Oasis, of course, but also Elastica, The Verve, Suede, Pulp, the Manics, Radiohead, Supergrass and the Auteurs. Some 25 years on from the genre’s arguable creation moment in Suede’s “The Drownersâ€, you can also enjoy the thrill of the moment with our selection of rarely-seen archive features.

“For some it was about guitar groups in skinny ties, or Chris Evans on the television. For Jarvis Cocker, it ultimately became about the untucked shirt – and you can read about all of those elements here. At its best, though, Britpop was about a vital transformation, a rediscovery of an eloquent type of narrative song – a kind of music that originated in the everyday, but contained the power to transcend it completely.

“In the 1960s that might mean Ray Davies casting a brief glance to Terry and Julie on Waterloo Bridge. Today, it’s the inspired transatlantic social reportage of Alex Turner, and rediscovering this art of song was key to Britpop. It was probably the one point of common ground that Blur had with Oasis, and it chimed with a public ready to celebrate something.

“It was a golden age for classic songs stirring a huge number of people. Oasis played to a quarter of a million people at Knebworth – but over 22 million people bought (What’s The Story) Morning Glory. Paul Weller found himself not only cited as an influence, but enjoying huge demand for his new work. The Verve evolved from psychedelic adventurers to visionary balladeers. The Manic Street Preachers turned their sloganeering into some of the most anthemic songs of the decade. Pulp, once an impossible orchid, flowered magnificently in the spotlight.

“A quarter of a century on, it feels like something worth celebrating again. This time, it’s a party to which everyone is invited.â€

Order a copy

Police confirm the death of Frightened Rabbit’s Scott Hutchison

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Frightened Rabbit frontman Scott Hutchison has died aged 36. Police confirmed today (May 11) that a body found yesterday evening at Port Edgar Marina near Edinburgh is that of the singer and guitarist. Hutchison was reported missing on Wednesday morning. "We are utterly devastated with the tragic...

Frightened Rabbit frontman Scott Hutchison has died aged 36.

Police confirmed today (May 11) that a body found yesterday evening at Port Edgar Marina near Edinburgh is that of the singer and guitarist. Hutchison was reported missing on Wednesday morning.

“We are utterly devastated with the tragic loss of our beloved Scott,” said his family in a statement. “Despite his disappearance, and the recent concerns over his mental health, we had all remained positive and hopeful that he would walk back through the door, having taken some time away to compose himself.

“Scott, like many artists, wore his heart on his sleeve and that was evident in the lyrics of his music and the content of many of his social media posts.
He was passionate, articulate and charismatic, as well as being one of the funniest and kindest people we knew. Friends and family would all agree that he had a brilliant sense of humour and was a great person to be around.”

They added: “Depression is a horrendous illness that does not give you any alert or indication as to when it will take hold of you. Scott battled bravely with his own issues for many years and we are immensely proud of him for being so open with his struggles. His willingness to discuss these matters in the public domain undoubtedly raised awareness of mental health issues and gave others confidence and belief to discuss their own issues.â€

Following the news of Hutchison’s death, fellow musicians – including Belle & Sebastian’s Stuart Murdoch and Mogwai’s Stuart Braithwaite – paid tribute to the singer on social media.

For help and advice on mental health issues, go here. In the UK, The Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123 or through their website here.

The June 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with the Rolling Stones on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, Françoise Hardy, Eric Burdon, James Taylor, Public Enemy, Eleanor Friedberger and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Courtney Barnett, Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, Ryley Walker, Beach House, Wand, Simone Felice, Dylan Carson and The Sea And Cake.

Watch Arctic Monkeys play “Four Out Of Five†on US TV

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Arctic Monkeys' sixth album, Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino, is out today (May 11). Last night, they played its most immediate track "Four Out Of Five" – there are no singles – on US TV programme The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. Watch that here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DHM...

Arctic Monkeys’ sixth album, Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino, is out today (May 11).

Last night, they played its most immediate track “Four Out Of Five” – there are no singles – on US TV programme The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. Watch that here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DHMBJ2do1XU

Listen to Tranquility Base Hotel & Casino below. You can read Uncut’s comprehensive take on the album in the current issue, on sale now.

The June 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with the Rolling Stones on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, Françoise Hardy, Eric Burdon, James Taylor, Public Enemy, Eleanor Friedberger and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Courtney Barnett, Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, Ryley Walker, Beach House, Wand, Simone Felice, Dylan Carson and The Sea And Cake.

The Beach Boys and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra share “Fun, Fun, Fun”

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The Beach Boys and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra have shared "Fun, Fun, Fun" from their new collaborative album. You can watch it below. The Beach Boys With The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra is to be released on June 8 by Universal/UMC. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rQUevuu0FYE&feature=youtu.b...

The Beach Boys and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra have shared “Fun, Fun, Fun” from their new collaborative album. You can watch it below.

The Beach Boys With The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra is to be released on June 8 by Universal/UMC.

The album pairs The Beach Boys’ original vocal performances with new symphonic arrangements, newly recorded by The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra at Abbey Road Studios. The album is produced by Don Reedman and Nick Patrick, who produced A Love So Beautiful: Roy Orbison with The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and The Wonder Of You: Elvis Presley with The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

Brian Wilson said: “I always knew the vocal arrangements I did back in the 1960s would lend themselves perfectly for a symphony and there is no better one in the world than the Royal Philharmonic. I am both proud and humbled by what they have created using our songs and I hope everyone falls in love with it like I have.â€

You can pre-order a copy by by clicking here.

The June 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with the Rolling Stones on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive new interviews with Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, Françoise Hardy, Eric Burdon, James Taylor, Public Enemy, Eleanor Friedberger and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Courtney Barnett, Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, Ryley Walker, Beach House, Wand, Simone Felice, Dylan Carson and The Sea And Cake.