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Denny Laine has died

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Denny Laine, the co-founder of Wings and The Moody Blues, has died aged 79. KEITH RICHARDS IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT - HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME On Instagram, his wife Elizabeth Hines said Laine died on Tuesday morning after a long battle with Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD...

Denny Laine, the co-founder of Wings and The Moody Blues, has died aged 79.

KEITH RICHARDS IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME

On Instagram, his wife Elizabeth Hines said Laine died on Tuesday morning after a long battle with Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD).

“My darling husband passed away peacefully early this morning. I was at his bedside, holding his hand as I played his favorite Christmas songs for him. He’s been singing Christmas songs the past few weeks and I continued to play Christmas songs while he’s been in ICU on a ventilator this past week.

“All he wanted was to be home with me and his pet kitty, Charley, playing his gypsy guitar.

He made my days colorful, fun and full of life-just like him.”

With The Moody Blues, Laine sang lead vocals and played guitar on “Go Now!”.

Born in Tyseley, Birmingham on October 29, 1944, Laine was a member of the Moody Blues from 1964 – 66, going on to co-found Wings with Paul and Linda McCartney and Denny Seiwell in 1971. A frequent contributor to Wings’ albums, he co-wrote “Mull Of Kintyre“. He stayed in the band until it folded in 1981.

Laine also recorded a number of solo albums, starting with Ahh…Laine in 1973. His final studio album was 2008’s The Blue Musician.

Laine’s death coincides with the 50th anniversary of the American release of Band On The Run: December 5, 1973.

Welcome to the new Uncut: Keith Richards at 80, The Doors, Essential 2024 Preview and more

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HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME IN ‘The Titanic Sails At Dawn’, his 1976 polemic for the NME, Mick Farren harangued the previous decade’s rock’n’roll trailblazers who by now, he believed, had become part of the very establishment they had once rebelled against. “Did we ever exp...

HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME

IN ‘The Titanic Sails At Dawn’, his 1976 polemic for the NME, Mick Farren harangued the previous decade’s rock’n’roll trailblazers who by now, he believed, had become part of the very establishment they had once rebelled against. “Did we ever expect to see The Rolling Stones on News At Ten,” railed Farren, “just like they were at the Badminton Horse Trials or the Chelsea Flower Show?”

The Stones, of course, have weathered such barbs with ease down the decades. Increasingly, it seems as they push ever onwards, they have become their own establishment – a kind of self-sufficient republic with its own rules, regulations and a unique set of operating systems. Releasing new music in their seventh decade, and with North American tour dates for 2024, they continue to break fresh ground with remarkable ease, redefining our ideas and expectations of what a band should be. Milestones continue to be reached: Mick Jagger turned 80 in July – and now, astonishingly, Keith Richards joins him later this month.

Our cover story, then, is a celebration of both Keith’s longevity and his irrepressible vitality as he reaches this landmark birthday. There are wonderful, warm and funny stories from old friends and collaborators as well as bandmates past and present. Stand by for plenty of piratical yarns; but also moments of surprising tenderness and warmth. Who knew Keith Richards – the old devil himself – could be so generous to the Boy Scouts during Bob-a-job week…?

The whole shabang opens with an exclusive introduction from Ron Wood while none other than Tom Waits has written us a brilliant new poem to honour this auspicious occasion.

What else is there to say? I’ll leave it up to Uncut’s newest contributor, then. As Waits’ writes in “Burnt Toast For Keith”…

“Happy Birthday KEITH the big 80 is here,

slap it in the face

and wake it up…”

Uncut – January 2024

HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME Keith Richards, The Doors, Bruce Springsteen, The Birthday Party, Kurt Vile, Pentangle, Sunny War, our essential 2024 Album Preview and more all feature in Uncut's January 2024 issue, in UK shops from December 8 or available to buy online now. All pri...

HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME

Keith Richards, The Doors, Bruce Springsteen, The Birthday Party, Kurt Vile, Pentangle, Sunny War, our essential 2024 Album Preview and more all feature in Uncut‘s January 2024 issue, in UK shops from December 8 or available to buy online now.

All print copies come with a free CD – Come On, 15 Tracks Of The Month’s Best Music including Ty Segall, Steve Gunn & Bridget St John, Gruff Rhys, Jerry David DeCicca, Office Dog, Brown Horse, ØXN, Future Islands, Nailah Hunter and Johnny Dowd!

INSIDE THIS MONTH’S UNCUT

KEITH RICHARDS: As rock’n’roll’s greatest survivor turns 80, a stellar cast – including MICK JAGGER, JIMMY PAGE, RON WOOD and JOHNNY MARR – share their favourite encounters with the Human Riff… plus! “Burnt Toast For Keith”: an all-new poem by TOM WAITS written exclusively for Uncut

2024 ALBUM PREVIEW: Everything you need to know about the key albums for the coming year, including PAUL McCARTNEY, THE BLACK KEYS, THE WEATHER STATION, MICK HEAD, KAMASI WASHINGTON, MERCURY REV, RICHARD THOMPSON, JEFF TWEEDY, PHOSPHORESCENT and more

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN: Lynn Goldsmith’s previously unseen pictures of the Boss capture a diligent idol-in-waiting

THE DOORS: The LA native whose expressive guitar-playing and songwriting chops helped define the sound of The Doors, ROBBIE KRIEGER on jamming with Zappa, bad vibes with the Grateful Dead and “weirdos” in the studio

THE BIRTHDAY PARTY: Crashing out of the Australian suburbs, NICK CAVE and THE BIRTHDAY PARTY took post-punk nihilism to its darkest, most demented extremes. With tales of violence, drugs and hostility, the survivors recall how hell broke loose

PENTANGLE: From London folk pubs to the stage of New York’s Fillmore East and beyond, PENTANGLE’s trajectory marked them out as one of the greatest and most adventurous groups of the late ‘60s. JACQUI McSHEE and DANNY THOMPSON look back on their magickal revolution

SUNNY WAR: The singer-songwriter has overcoming adversity and addiction, sustained by a deep devotion to music – be it Black Flag, AC/DC or Hank Williams. Bringing a punk edge to roots music, she emerges as Americana’s brightest star and biggest disruptor

AN AUDIENCE WITH… KURT VILE: The hard-working slacker talks sativa, forklifts, worshipping SUN RA and joining NEIL YOUNG in outer space

THE MAKING OF “BLISTERS IN THE SUN” BY THE VIOLENT FEMMES: Forty years of the acoustic punks’ ramshackle hit – heard in film soundtracks, a burger ad and even the White House

ALBUM BY ALBUM WITH SLEATER-KINNEY: Riot grrrls, interrupted… The on-off -on story of Olympia, WA’s finest

MY LIFE IN MUSIC WITH JJ BURNEL: The Stranglers bassman picks his peachiest tunes: “It’s the nearest thing to an orgasm in music”

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

REVIEWED Ty Segall, Brown Horse, Future Islands, Thandi Ntuli, Gruff Rhys, Jerry David DeCicca, Mott The Hoople, Cocteau Twins, The Long Ryders, Alan Sparkhawk, The Lost Weekend and more

PLUS Joni Mitchell tribute, The Replacements, Magnetic Fields… and introducing the hairy jams of Jeffrey Alexander

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

Paul McCartney & Wings announce 50th anniversary edition of Band On The Run

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50 years to the week of its original release, MPL and UMe will release an expanded 50th anniversary edition of Paul McCartney & Wings’ classic Band On The Run album on February 2, 2024. The single LP vinyl edition was cut at half speed using a high-resolution transfer of the original master...

50 years to the week of its original release, MPL and UMe will release an expanded 50th anniversary edition of Paul McCartney & Wings’ classic Band On The Run album on February 2, 2024.

The single LP vinyl edition was cut at half speed using a high-resolution transfer of the original master tapes from 1973 by Miles Showell at Abbey Road Studios, London. It mirrors the US tracklist which features the song “Helen Wheels”, and also includes a Linda McCartney Polaroid poster.

The 2-LP vinyl edition – which includes two Linda McCartney Polaroid posters – features the original US album, remastered at half speed, and a second LP titled ‘Underdubbed’ Mixes Edition.

The ‘Underdubbed’ Mixes present Band On The Run’s songs for the first time without any orchestral overdubs. The previously unreleased rough mixes were created by Geoff Emerick, assisted by Pete Swettenham, at AIR Studios, on October 14, 1973.

“This is Band On The Run in a way you’ve never heard before,” explains Paul McCartney. “When you are making a song and putting on additional parts, like an extra guitar, that’s an overdub. Well, this version of the album is the opposite, underdubbed.”

The 2-CD edition will feature the original US album, ‘Underdubbed’ mixes, and a Linda McCartney Polaroid poster. The ‘Underdubbed’ mixes will also be released digitally.

Finally, Band On The Run will also be available in Dolby ATMOS for the first time, newly mixed by Giles Martin and Steve Orchard.

You can pre-order all editions here.

Peter Gabriel – i/o

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Nowadays, so much of culture is available on demand that it is like being delivered art from a firehose. So it was an unusual move of Peter Gabriel to drip feed us his latest album – his first original studio LP in two decades – online over the course of 2023; releasing just a single track every...

Nowadays, so much of culture is available on demand that it is like being delivered art from a firehose. So it was an unusual move of Peter Gabriel to drip feed us his latest album – his first original studio LP in two decades – online over the course of 2023; releasing just a single track every four weeks.

Each came complete with artwork commissioned from a designated artist – including Ai Weiwei, Cornelia Parker, Annette Messager and Olafur Eliasson. Each came in two (very slightly different) mixes: a “dark side” mix by Tchad Blake and a “bright side” mix by Mark “Spike” Stent. It has turned his album into a series of events: a throwback to how we once experienced a great TV series – a scrap of brilliance tossed at us from time to time, leaving us hungry for more.

Order the latest issue of UNCUT now, featuring Bob Dylan and our bumper Review Of 2023

But even the millions of Gabriel fans who will have picked up these songs over the last year will not have been able to put these 12 discrete tracks into a context. Looking at them as a single body of work (albeit still released in ‘dark’/‘bright’ versions), what’s immediately apparent is how the album shifts steadily from a mood of misery and doom towards positivity and light. The first few tracks are mainly in a minor key and deal – obliquely – with issues of global injustice and environmental catastrophe; the latter tracks largely switch from the political to the personal, from the dystopian to the utopian. We start with songs about global justice, data mining and mass surveillance; we end with love songs and appeals to wisdom.

Gabriel has spent so much of the last two decades since his last original studio album curating his legacy – best-of compilations, live retrospectives, re-recording his lesser-known songs, getting others to record his more famous songs, recording covers of his favourite songs by other artists, and so on. In some ways, you could also see i/o as something of a compilation – your favourite elements of Peter Gabriel’s career, but reworked into wholly original material.

The heavy drums on the slow-burning dystopian openers, “Panopticom” (a lyric suggesting an inversion of Jeremy Bentham’s sinister, all-seeing “panopticon”) and “The Court” (a doomy appeal for social justice), draw parallels with the heavier tracks on 1980’s Melt, like “Intruder” and “No Self Control”.

“Road To Joy” is a terrific piece of bombastic digi-funk in the vein of “Shock The Monkey”, “Big Time” or “Steam”; while anyone who loves Gabriel’s big, widescreen ballads, from “Here Comes The Flood” to “Don’t Give Up”, will love “So Much” and “Love Can Heal”.

And, for those who could rightly claim that Gabriel’s albums since So have failed to deliver much in the way of a strong melody, there are plenty of songs here that are the equal of “Solsbury Hill” or “Sledgehammer”: the Randy Newman-style ballad “Playing For Time’, the sunny, optimistic title track “i/o”, the shimmering, singalong funk of “Road To Joy”.

Gabriel famously takes years on his projects. Partly it’s because he’s an obsessive tinkerer; partly it’s because he’s as interested in the process as the end. Sometimes this seemingly fruitless tinkering can filter down into results: “Four Kinds Of Horses” – a celebration of spiritual wisdom, set to twinkly, horror-movie tubular bells and a gothic beat – is a collaboration with Richard Russell of XL, something that started as an idea for Russell’s Everything Is Recorded a few years ago.

Meanwhile, the loping funk of “This Is Home” was apparently inspired by a brief but unused collaboration with DJ/producer Skrillex – instead of dubstep, it has birthed a machine-led funk groove that underpins a warm meditation on hearth and home. “As we struggle through the buzz and the grind/ Of one thing I’m certain/ I know this is home”. It’s a song that assists us in the move from political to personal, a transition completed by the penultimate track “And Still”, a lovely ballad where Gabriel deals with the death of his mother. “And still your hands feel cold/Those hands that brushed my hair”, he sings, poetically. “I’ll carry you inside of me”.

There are points where his relentless utopianism can sound trite. The final track, “Live And Let Live”, is an appeal for global understanding, set to a rolling two-chord groove and a Beatles-y cello riff. Its appeal to follow the wisdom of William Blake, Martin Luther King and Nelson Mandela is sincere and well-meaning but it’s rather glib to hear as complex conflicts rage around the world. Who, be it in Ukraine or Israel or Nagorno-Karabakh, is going to “lay your weapons down”? What does “it takes courage to learn to forgive, to be brave enough to listen” mean in a global context?

But, let’s face it, these are nice flaws to have. In an era where so many of our musical heroes seem to be growing more cantankerous and ill-tempered with age, it comes as a welcome relief to see one heritage act pushing positively into the future – and making some of the warmest and most joyous music of his career.

Send us your questions for Squeeze!

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Half a century ago, Chris Difford stuck a 'guitarist wanted' ad in the window of his local shop in South-East London. There was no band, and only one person replied. But that person was Glenn Tilbrook, and thus began one of the great British songwriting partnerships, encompassing 15 studio album...

Half a century ago, Chris Difford stuck a ‘guitarist wanted’ ad in the window of his local shop in South-East London. There was no band, and only one person replied.

But that person was Glenn Tilbrook, and thus began one of the great British songwriting partnerships, encompassing 15 studio albums to date – more if you count the music they released together outside the Squeeze banner – and numerous classic singles, including three Top 10 hits.

Order the latest issue of UNCUT now, featuring Bob Dylan and our bumper Review Of 2023

Next autumn, Squeeze will celebrate their 50th anniversary with a comprehensive UK tour – see the full list of dates here.

But first, they’ve kindly consented to go up the junction with you lot, the Uncut readers, for our next Audience With feature. So what do you want to ask these witty chroniclers of a bruised but not-quite-broken Britain? Send your questions to audiencewith@uncut.co.uk by Friday (December 8) and Chris and Glenn will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

Lou Reed’s final solo album to be reissued on January 12

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Lou Reed's final solo album Hudson River Wind Meditations is to be reissued by Light In The Attic in partnership with Laurie Anderson and The Lou Reed Archive on January 12. Order the latest issue of UNCUT now, featuring Bob Dylan and our bumper Review Of 2023 Originally released in 2007, the ...

Lou Reed’s final solo album Hudson River Wind Meditations is to be reissued by Light In The Attic in partnership with Laurie Anderson and The Lou Reed Archive on January 12.

Order the latest issue of UNCUT now, featuring Bob Dylan and our bumper Review Of 2023

Originally released in 2007, the ambient compositions were initially created for Reed’s personal use, to accompany spoken-word meditations that his acupuncturist recorded for him. Over time, they transformed into music for Reed’s Tai Chi and yoga practices. Eventually, he crafted them into an album with producer Hal Willner.

“I first composed this music… to play in the background of life,” wrote Reed in the liner notes of the original release. “To replace the everyday cacophony with new and ordered sounds of an unpredictable nature.”

The newly remastered Hudson River Wind Meditations will be available in double LP, CD and digital formats. Physical editions include liner notes by yoga instructor and author Eddie Stern, plus a recent conversation with Reed’s wife, Laurie Anderson.

Pre-order Hudson River Wind Meditations here and watch an unboxing video below.

Shane MacGowan has died

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Shane MacGowan has died aged 65. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT A statement confirmed he "died peacefully at 3.30am this morning (30 November) with his wife and and sister by his side". "Prayers and the last rites were read during his passing." htt...

Shane MacGowan has died aged 65.

ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT

A statement confirmed he “died peacefully at 3.30am this morning (30 November) with his wife and and sister by his side”.

“Prayers and the last rites were read during his passing.”

Posting on Instagram, McGowan’s wife Victoria Mary Clarke said MacGowan “meant the world to me”.

She wrote: “I don’t know how to say this so I am just going to say it. Shane… has gone to be with Jesus and Mary and his beautiful mother Therese.”

She said MacGowan “will always be the light that I hold before me and the measure of my dreams and the love of my life and the most beautiful soul and beautiful angel and the sun and the moon and the start and end of everything that I hold dear”.

MacGowan had been diagnosed with viral encephalitis in 2022, and as a result spent several months of 2023 in intensive care. Clarke had recently posted pictures of her husband, lying in his hospital bed, on social media. He seemed to have been improving and was discharged on November 22, 2023; the BBC reports that MacGowan and Clarke spent their wedding anniversary together at home.

Among many tributes paid to MacGowan, Nick Cave wrote, “A true friend and the greatest songwriter of his generation. A very sad day.”

Fellow Pogue Spider Stacy posted on Twitter:

And Lankum, whose False Lankum is Uncut’s Album Of The Year, wrote:

The Irish President Michael D Higgins said, “Like so many across the world, it was with the greatest sadness that I learned this morning of the death of Shane MacGowan.

“His words have connected Irish people all over the globe to their culture and history, encompassing so many human emotions in the most poetic of ways.”

Juliana Hatfield – My Life In Music

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ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT X Under The Big Black Sun ELEKTRA, 1982 ​​I was a teenager living in this small town in Massachusetts. My older brother decided to join the army and his girlfriend moved in with us. She became the cool, older sister th...

ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT

X

Under The Big Black Sun

ELEKTRA, 1982

​​I was a teenager living in this small town in Massachusetts. My older brother decided to join the army and his girlfriend moved in with us. She became the cool, older sister that I never had and her record collection was really a really important education. I remember one day she put on the X song “Motel Room In My Bed” and I thought it was the most exciting, glorious sound I’d ever heard. It made me realise that I was looking for something much more raw and weird and tough than the pop stuff on the radio, but without losing any of the melody. I didn’t really understand that they’re singing about sex and poverty and death, but somehow I still related to the angst underneath.

REM

Murmur

IRS, 1983

Again, it’s unpolished and kind of raw but there’s a lot of beauty to the songs. The band was not a stardom vehicle for the singer – everything was equally important and working together to create this totally new sound. I related to what seemed like the inarticulation of the words because I was very inarticulate myself, I didn’t really know how to communicate. So I liked that the singer wasn’t making all the words clear. All the feeling came through, regardless of what the words were saying. Music for me was always about transmitting honesty and emotion and it wasn’t so much about the words. Up until my twenties I never even really listened to lyrics, it was all about just hearing sound.

THE REPLACEMENTS

Let It Be

TWIN/TONE, 1984

Paul Westerberg’s voice was like a beacon to me. I recognised its defiant sadness, like we had been siblings in another life. I really related to the misfit attitude of always defying authority, even at personal risk: the idea of self-sabotage as heroism. Later, Paul and I made music together, and it was very exciting to get to know this hero of mine as an actual person. He hasn’t lost any of his musical power. But the fact that he doesn’t want to share his music with the public, I totally get it, because it’s very draining. Paul said to me once about music that I needed to save some for myself – don’t give everything to the audience because then you’ll have nothing of yourself left.

DINOSAUR JR

You’re Living All Over Me

SSE, 1987

A huge, huge inspiration to me. J Mascis is one of my top five guitar players of all time, the way he soloed was just totally mind-blowing. I love the combination of heaviness and beauty with this album, and just the ache running through it. I was listening to it this morning in preparation for this interview, and I started crying because of the ache. Blake Babies, my first band, we all lived together in this apartment in Boston and we were obsessed with this record. I remember sitting in front of the stereo, head between speakers, just absorbing the sound. It felt like it was from another planet, and I wanted to go there.

NIRVANA

Bleach

SUB POP, 1989

Another album that blew the minds of me and the Blake Babies when we were all living together in the late ’80s. When we went on tour, we had the cassette of Bleach and we put it in the van and we would all just bliss out on it. Just the relentlessness of the disillusionment, I found so pure. It was there from the very beginning; you could almost predict his suicide because it was like he was almost defeated before he started. He really was the voice of a generation, although I hate that expression. He spoke to us and he spoke for us. But at the root of it he was a great rock voice – and a genius, really.

OLIVIA NEWTON-JOHN & ELO

Xanadu OST

MCA, 1980

It was a marriage of two of my favourite childhood artists of the ’70s who came together on the soundtrack to this crazy, excellent movie. Olivia Newton-John was a really graceful and gracious artist with no pretension. I was very moved by the sound of her voice. She was really mainstream, but she also seemed kind of natural, like she wasn’t trying too hard to make the audience love her. She was never trying to pander to the crowd in my opinion, she was just lovable by nature. And then ELO, they’re a whole other category of genius. Obviously I love them – I just made an album of all ELO songs.

THE POLICE

Outlandos d’Amour

A&M, 1978

Sting had a unique singing voice, he didn’t sound like anyone. I was in a cover band in high school and we did a lot of Police songs, so I had a real affinity for the way that Sting sang those songs. The chemistry between those three guys was unreal. All the lore says that they fought, even came to blows at times. I don’t know if that’s true, but some of the best bands have volatile personal relationships and maybe that’s necessary when you have such strong personalities blending together musically. And I’m wearing a Sting concert T-shirt! I went to see him a couple of weeks ago play in Boston with my oldest friend in the world. It was kind of a nostalgia trip, but Sting still sang and played bass amazingly.

PRETENDERS

Pretenders

REAL RECORDS, 1979

Chrissie Hynde is one of the great rock voices of all time. Such a boss, such a badass, such a great songwriter. I’m still waiting for someone else to live up to the example that she made. And I love that some of the songwriting’s kind of experimental – the second song on that album is in 7/8 time, it’s in a non-traditional time signature, which is so cool. It’s such a rock thing to do and it’s a little bit progressive. What else can you say about her? She’s just one of the great singers: so tough, so smart. A great example and inspiration. The real deals, they don’t stop – they just keep doing it, because it’s in their blood.

Juliana Hatfield Sings ELO is out now via American Laundromat

Hear Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band’s new single, “Ciao Ciao Bambino”

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Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band return with a new single, "Ciao Ciao Bambino". ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT Head's first new music since 2022's Dear Scott, "Ciao Ciao Bambino" is released on Modern Sky UK. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1IUlVh...

Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band return with a new single, “Ciao Ciao Bambino“.

ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT

Head’s first new music since 2022’s Dear Scott, “Ciao Ciao Bambino” is released on Modern Sky UK.

“’Ciao Ciao Bambino’ came to me one night when I was thinking about the first words I ever heard,” says Head. “It was a song called ‘Ciao Ciao Bambino’ that my mum used to sing to me when I was a baby. The song then kinda evolved from there and became a journey through time.”

Head and the Red Elastic Band – featuring Phil Murphy (drums), Tom Powell (bass), Danny Murphy (guitars) and Nathaniel Cummings (guitars/backing vocals) – were once again produced by Bill Ryder-Jones.

Hear The Jesus And Mary Chain’s new single, “jamcod”

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The Jesus And Mary Chain are back to mark their 40th anniversary with a new album, Glasgow Eyes. The album's released on March 8 via Fuzz Club. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT You can hear "jamcod", the first single from the album, here. https://www.youtub...

The Jesus And Mary Chain are back to mark their 40th anniversary with a new album, Glasgow Eyes. The album’s released on March 8 via Fuzz Club.

ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT

You can hear “jamcod“, the first single from the album, here.

The tracklisting for Glasgow Eyes is:

‘Venal Joy’

‘American Born’

‘Mediterranean X Film’

‘jamcod’

‘Discotheque’

‘Pure Poor’

‘The Eagles and The Beatles’

‘Silver Strings’

‘Chemical Animal

‘Second of June’

‘Girl 71’

‘Hey Lou Reid’

The album was recorded at Mogwai’s Castle of Doom studio in Glasgow. You can pre-order by clicking here.

The band have also announced a run of tour dates:

MARCH

22nd – UK, Manchester, Albert Hall

25th – Ireland, Dublin, Olympia

26th – UK, Belfast, Limelight 1

27th – UK, Edinburgh, Usher Hall

30th – UK, London, Roundhouse

APRIL

2nd – Denmark, Copenhagen, Amager Bio

3rd – Sweden, Gothenburg, Pustervik

5th – Norway, Oslo, Rockefeller

6th – Sweden, Stockholm, Munich Brewery

7th – Sweden, Malmo, Plan B

9th – Germany, Hamburg, Markthalle

11th – Germany, Berlin, Huxleys

12th – Germany, Cologne, Live Music Hall

13th – France, Paris, Elysée Montmartre

15th – Switzerland, Geneva, L’Usine

16th – Switzerland, Winterthur, Salzhaus

17th – Italy, Milan, Alcatraz

19th – Austria, Krems, Donaufestival

20th – Germany, Heidelberg, Halle O2

21st – Netherlands, Tilburg, Roadburn Festival

23rd – Belgium, Brussels, AB

24th – Netherlands, The Hague, Paard

Jason Isbell to perform at UK Americana Music Awards 2024

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The Americana Music Association UK has announced that UK Americana Music Week 2024 will take place in Hackney, London, from January 22-25. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT Four days of talks and showcase gigs will culminate in the UK Americana Music Awards show...

The Americana Music Association UK has announced that UK Americana Music Week 2024 will take place in Hackney, London, from January 22-25.

ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT

Four days of talks and showcase gigs will culminate in the UK Americana Music Awards show on January 25 at St John’s Hackney, where Jason Isbell is set to receive the International Trailblazer Award, before performing live at the ceremony.

Johnny Morgan will receive the Bob Harris Emerging Artist Award, while other award-winners will be announced on the night. See the full list of nominations below.

You can buy passes to attend the UK Americana Music Awards and the full week of events here – including a kick-off party where The Northern Cowboys and a special line-up of previous AMA-UK award winners and nominees will celebrate 10 years of Jason Isbell’s Southeastern.

UK Album of the Year nominees
Far From Saints – Far From Saints
Michele Stodart – Invitation
Roseanne Reid – Lawside
Ward Thomas – Music In The Madness

International Album of the Year
Allison Russell – The Returner
Drew Holcomb & The Neighbors – Strangers No More
Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit – Weathervanes
Margo Cilker – Valley of Heart’s Delight

UK Song of the Year
Hannah White – “Chains of Ours”
Kirsten Adamson – “My Father’s Songs”
Lauren Housley & The Northern Cowboys – “High Time”
St Catherine’s Child – “Every Generation”

International Song of the Year
Chris Stapleton – “White Horse”
Maren Morris – “The Tree”
Margo Price – “Radio”
Noah Kahan – “Stick Season”

UK Artist of the Year
Cardinal Black
Elles Bailey
Hannah White
Michele Stodart

International Artist of the Year
Allison Russell
Jason Isbell
Lucinda Williams
War & Treaty

UK Instrumentalist of the Year
Holly Carter
Joe Coombs
Joe Harvey White
Keiron Marshall

UK Live Act of the Year
Elles Bailey
Far From Saints
Ferris & Sylvester
Frank Turner
Lauren Housley & The Northern Cowboys
The Hanging Stars

Acetone – I’m Still Waiting

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The story of Acetone is one filled with dichotomies. One of promise and disappointment, calmness and noise, darkness and light, reverence and indifference, and of tender souls and hard drugs. Formed in 1992, comprising Richie Lee (bass, vocals), Mark Lightcap (guitar, vocals) and Steve Hadley (drums...

The story of Acetone is one filled with dichotomies. One of promise and disappointment, calmness and noise, darkness and light, reverence and indifference, and of tender souls and hard drugs. Formed in 1992, comprising Richie Lee (bass, vocals), Mark Lightcap (guitar, vocals) and Steve Hadley (drums), the LA band were one of many swept up in the post-Nirvana gold rush and signed for a huge advance, only for them to later fade into a distant memory, a spectre of unfulfilled potential.

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However, while their trajectory fitted into a familiar formula during an era when bands were signed impulsively and thrust into the limelight seemingly overnight, their music slotted less neatly into a prescriptive pattern. They weren’t some watered-down grunge band, post-hardcore noise outfit or a group trading on that predictable loud-quiet-loud vibe; instead they existed between the cracks. They floated between the stirring songcraft of Big Star, the guitar squeal of The Stooges and the woozy melodies of later-era Velvets, topped off with heavy lashings of country and touches of psychedelia, all wrapped up with a touch of sunshine-kissed dream pop and hypnotic, druggy grooves. Success never truly came, and the band ended in tragedy with the 2001 suicide of Lee, aged just 34. For decades they seemed forgotten, but in recent years a Light In The Attic Compilation, 1992-2001, along with a biography by Sam Sweet, Hadley Lee Lightcap, has seen the legacy and output of the band spotlit and reassessed. Now this boxset presents the entire released catalogue of the band, plus an unreleased bonus LP of outtakes and demos, alongside a 60-page booklet in which the likes of Spiritualized’s Jason Pierce and Matmos’s Drew Davies write with real warmth about their love for the trio. Pierce offers: “In their short time Acetone made the music they needed to hear. Music that filled the gaps, cleared the fog, and made sense of the rattle of life. Music that touched the edges. Full of frailty, love, pain, satisfaction, disquiet, and boredom.”

For a band capable of making such tender, delicate and endearingly beautiful music as Acetone, it’s a jarring image to think that they were once deemed “too messy and too much trouble” for Pierce, hardly a straight-edge poster boy, to get in touch with. However, it’s a story that aptly sums up a group who were certainly multi-layered, and for whom darkness often co-existed alongside moments of staggering beauty.

The circulation of their self-recorded demo tape in 1992 created a buzz, and they were soon subject to a label bidding war. Despite never having released a record and being somewhat of an unknown entity, they were signed as the first act to Vernon Yard Recordings (a subsidiary of Virgin) for $400,000. There was real expectation for the band, both externally and internally, and tours with label mates (The) Verve were scheduled – with Oasis on the same bill – as plans were locked into place for Acetone to be pushed and promoted as a breakthrough act. 

Their debut EP, “Acetone”, and album, Cindy, both came in 1993. The former merged screeching guitars on “I’m Gone” with the more restrained, unwinding and post-rock tonalities of “Cindy”, and suggests a band still in the stages of locating its key sense of personality, sound and style. The swiftly arriving Cindy LP, however,already feels much more fully realised, combining the edge, volume and bite of some of the EP with a gentleness and melodic flair that would in many ways come to define the band.

The opening “Come On” is an unashamed homage to The Velvet Underground’s “Ocean”, with a lyrical refrain of “I’m still waiting” that pulls on the Bob Marley & The Wailers track of the same name so hard that Chris Blackwell requested royalties. There are nods, winks and thefts throughout – one track is even called “Pinch”, perhaps knowingly – from the Grease-referencing “Chills” to Isaac Hayes’s version of “Walk On By” reflected in “Sundown”, via more flavours of the VU elsewhere.

Yet even when operating within someone else’s sonic template, the band manage to carve out a unique space of their own to operate in – forging their own personality while standing in the shadows of others. Perhaps this is most beautifully realised on “Louise”, a song plucked straight from the world of the self-titled VU album, all languid, woozy, melody-drenched guitar lines that slowly unfurl with almost doo-wop vocals and the gorgeous, lullaby-esque refrain of “just close your eyes”.

Despite drugs increasingly becoming an issue – overdoses, trips to hospitals, stints in rehab – Acetone managed a fairly prolific run between 1995-97, releasing an EP of country covers,“I Guess I Would”, and two full-length albums. “I Guess I Would” applies the band’s drowsy, almost Hawaiian tone to tracks by the Flying Burrito Brothers and John Pine, but the deeply slowed-down nature of the record is perhaps representative of a band who were struggling to hold on to a sense of momentum and dynamism as hard drugs took hold.

Similarly, 1996’s If You Only Knew is stripped-back and slowed-down with a darker tone permeating much of it. However, against a backdrop of turmoil, there’s a wealth of beauty to be extracted. While some of Lee’s vocals sometimes feel a little lost and distant on the album, the band are capable of creating swirling atmospherics and hypnotic grooves: “Hound Dog” and the bleakly titled “I’ve Enjoyed As Much Of This As I Can Stand” recall nothing so much as Zuma-era Neil Young & Crazy Horse.

It’s fitting, then, that after being dropped by Vernon Yard, the band’s final two albums would be on Young’s own Vapor Records. 1997’s Acetone and 2000’s York Blvd. may not have brought the success they once hoped for, but they did see the band bow out with grace, flair and some stirring music that still feels incredibly free of a date-stamp.

While there’s a sense that the time spent around Pierce and his music may have worked its way into some of the band’s final record – the opening “Things Are Gonna Be Alright” could be an outtake from Spiritualized’s Ladies And Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space – there’s an assuredness about the album. It merges the band’s by now distinct melodic haze with punch and bite, as wailing guitars wrestle with bursts of freshly added organ and Lee and Lightcap’s interlocking harmonies.

Despite the turbulent journey, the final York Blvd. feels less like an implosion, more a document of a band re-energised and having fun, which makes the suicide of Lee the year after its release all the more tragic. While he no doubt falls into the category of several talented, and perhaps a little fragile and troubled, singers and songwriters who died this way in the 2000s – from Elliott Smith and Mark Linkous to Vic Chestnutt – Lee has never had the same posthumous attention or adulation. This boxset successfully remedies that, not only highlighting his devastating and clearly underappreciated talent, but also showcasing the combined forces of a band that at their best can match Big Star, Yo La Tengo, Low and other outfits whose legacies feel enshrined in the history of alternative music. Perhaps now Acetone can finally join them.  

Connie Lovatt – Coconut Mirror

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Parenthood is a teacher, people say, and one of the key things American singer-songwriter Connie Lovatt learned from becoming a mother was patience. “The amount of patience you need when caring for a newborn or a baby or a toddler will toss out any previous claim to being well versed in the concep...

Parenthood is a teacher, people say, and one of the key things American singer-songwriter Connie Lovatt learned from becoming a mother was patience. “The amount of patience you need when caring for a newborn or a baby or a toddler will toss out any previous claim to being well versed in the concept,” she reflects when asked about the ways the mother-daughter dynamic affected her relationship to music. “I was, thankfully, forced to apply that to the songwriting,” she continues. “Getting frustrated with how little I could work, or with how frequently I could return to the work, was pointless. I worked when I could, and I finished when I could, and it took what it took.”

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Not to overwork a connecting thought, but patience is something a fan of Lovatt’s music has had to learn, too. She first appeared on folks’ radars in the early to mid 1990s, as a member of Containe, a duo with Fontaine Toups of New York indie rockers Versus. She was part of that group’s wider circle of peers and colleagues, including Peer Hansen and Jason Asnes, with whom she released a single as Alkaline; Asnes was also a member of the pre-Versus outfit Saturnine. Later, she formed The Pacific Ocean with Ed Baluyut of Versus. She also fell in with Bill Callahan, touring with Smog and appearing on his career-defining album, 2002’s A River Ain’t Too Much to Love.

That was, more or less, the last many of us heard from Lovatt until now. A quiet presence in independent music, Lovatt seemed to work well collaboratively, and the music she made with Containe and The Pacific Ocean shared an understated poetics; twisting smartly through unexpected chord changes and high-flying melodies, the surface emotional ambivalence of Lovatt’s early writing, particularly on the two Containe albums, I Want It All and Only Cowards Walk Like Cowards, belies hidden depths. It seemed to pick up a few distinct threads from its preceding decade – the considered folksiness of groups like Salem 66; the chiming lilt of Galaxie 500 or Beat Happening – and weave them into new, unexpected shapes.

Coconut Mirror is Lovatt’s first solo album and the cast on this diminutive but emotionally rich collection of songs is impressive – Callahan appears on “Kid”; Jim White of Dirty Three, and James McNew of Yo La Tengo, make for an impressive rhythm section; Che Chen of 75 Dollar Bill turns up on lead guitar on a few tracks; Rebecca Cole, of Wild Flag and touring member of Pavement, is here too. The album came together during the pandemic, so these various musicians sent through their parts, via the post or file exchange. For Lovatt, this was an experience rich with possibility: “Recording the demo was setting a pleasing table for one. Re-singing the songs after everyone’s parts had been woven in was like arriving at an excellent party, well underway, where every detail was taken care of.”

Perhaps the most significant guest on the album, though, is one Hartley Nandan, screaming on the penultimate “Sleep”. Significant as this is Lovatt’s daughter, who the album was written for; it’s a form of storytelling, from Lovatt to Nandan, that fundamentally affected the album’s songs: as Lovatt says, “Once I realised that I was writing this record for [my daughter] it became a lot easier to shape the purpose of each song and creative narratives.” This explains, in some ways, both the openness of the songs – Lovatt’s singing has never been this tender before, her melodies breathing more naturally, the songs brief yet decisive in their expression. “Kid” seems to capture the many emotional resonances of the early years of raising a child, with Callahan joining towards the end, singing into silence, one beautiful line, “shed a tear for God”.

Lovatt is particularly adept at clipping the unexpectedly profound from the papers of everyday living and framing these moments as abstract keepsakes, hinting at the complexity of memory, but expressed in smartly compact songs that work allegory and experience into miniature stories. “Heart” has a Mekons-esque clip to it; “Basin” pirouettes through unpredictable chords, small shifts in moods, whistling as Lovatt sings of domesticity; “Lines” has a gorgeous melodic arc across the entire song, which is shadowed by excellent, smartly fluent guitar from Chen. Indeed, the musicianship throughout is exquisite, but ultimately, everything’s in service to the jewel-like qualities of Lovatt’s 11 songs, each one a rare gemstone, refracting through prisms, conducting light in birefringence.

The Making Of… “Wardance” by Killing Joke

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This article originally appeared in Uncut Take 310 (March 2023) While Killing Joke’s “Wardance” – an ominous groove warning of nuclear destruction – makes its point in a couple of unforgettable minutes, a conversation with singer Jaz Coleman takes many twists. Coleman, who is calling fr...

This article originally appeared in Uncut Take 310 (March 2023)

While Killing Joke’s “Wardance” – an ominous groove warning of nuclear destruction – makes its point in a couple of unforgettable minutes, a conversation with singer Jaz Coleman takes many twists. Coleman, who is calling from Prague where he’s writing a symphony, peers intensely at the screen while delivering an erudite monologue that takes in topics as diverse as archaeologist Sir Mortimer Wheeler’s excavation of Mohenjo Daro, the World Economic Forum, Roger Waters, Indian epic Mahabharata, digital enslavement, the Taurid meteor system, Plato, Mussolini and nuclear annihilation. “And that brings us to the significance of ‘Wardance’,” he concludes with a demonic grin.

Coleman formed Killing Joke with guitarist Kevin “Geordie” Walker, bassist Martin “Youth” Glover and drummer Big Paul Ferguson in the squats of West London at the end of the 1970s. “Wardance” emerged early on as an example of the band’s ability to match propulsive energy, heavy vibes and a fierce groove with a singalong chorus. Selected as a single and recorded at Gooseberry Studios with Mark Lusardi, it was released in February 1980, but the band weren’t entirely satisfied so had another go when they recorded their debut album at the Marquee Studio with engineer Phil Harding, who later worked with Stock, Aitken & Waterman. This time Jaz Coleman’s vocals were heavily distorted, and the song was given a more portentous tone in keeping with the album’s mood and the tune’s apocalyptic lyrics. It became a mainstay of the set and remains so today.


Killing Joke have come a long way from those Ladbroke Grove days, but they’ve never been ones to compromise: “Wardance” is now heavier and more intense than ever. “‘Wardance’ became a big anthem quite quickly,” says Youth. “It wasn’t an end-of-set song like ‘Pssyche’, but it’s what gave us this reputation of having this bludgeoning assault. We were teenagers when we did this. We didn’t know what we were doing, it was intuitive. I am very proud of how those songs have become part of the vocabulary of resistance to autonomous 1984 governments that feel all-powerful and justified at keeping the public in chains. When we started, people were shocked. They didn’t know how to react. But now they get it, and they know what it means and what we represent.”

JAZ COLEMAN: I have this lasting memory of Youth at 8 Templeton Place, his palatial apartment in Earls Court. He was 18 and was playing the bassline of “Wardance”. I love that bassline and every time I hear it, it takes me back to that time.


YOUTH: I am still staggered at the bassline on “Wardance”. I shouldn’t be blowing my own trumpet, but it’s incredible, the sound of it, the dirtiness. There’s nothing like it, even today.


COLEMAN: When we formed the band, everybody believed we wouldn’t last long. Nuclear war would occur sooner rather than later.


PAUL FERGUSON: We were squatting in a depressed area of London in Maggie Thatcher’s Britain. The Cold War was in full effect and the future looked very bleak indeed.


YOUTH: We spent the first few months rehearsing in Cheltenham. At the end, we had a 20-minute set and I am pretty sure “Wardance” was in there. Once we started gigging, we rehearsed at the People’s Hall on Latimer Road where we shared a rehearsal room with Motörhead.


FERGUSON: We rehearsed in a couple of studios. One in a basement off Portobello Road owned by Ace, who had a hit with the song “How Long (Has This Been Going On)”. The other was Ear Studio, in a rundown neighbourhood that the locals took to calling The People’s Republic of Frestonia. They made an attempt to separate themselves from the UK by filing a charter with the UN.


COLEMAN: The Clash were upstairs and we were downstairs. Paul and I would get our lyrics out, Geordie would have some riffs and we’d rehearse three or four times a week, more sometimes.


GEORDIE: It’s a collaboration, but it begins with the riffs. It has to. We don’t do it the other way. Everybody contributes, and that pushed us. We had a rule: don’t criticise an idea if you can’t put a better one on the table.


YOUTH: Every time we came to rehearse, we’d hear Motörhead finishing up and this enormous filthy bass. I wanted to get my bass as loud as Lemmy. The first time I took mushrooms we came out rehearsal and walked down to the Nashville to see The Cramps, which was an amazing introduction to psychedelia. They didn’t have a bass player, of course – just a dirty fuzzy guitar, but it was so loud you didn’t notice. There was an element of that Cramps/Motörhead in “Wardance” basically. I was trying to do what they were doing in a different way.


COLEMAN: I don’t really remember about the moments those lyrics appeared. What Big Paul and I normally do is agree on a theme and then go and write independently and synthesise. I like doing that because that’s what being in a band is about. It’s total collaboration. You have to sacrifice your ego if you are going to make it work properly.


YOUTH: We recorded it at Gooseberry with Mark Lusardi, who had been trained by Dennis Bovell. First we did the EP “Turn To Red” and we went back for “Wardance”. On things like “Nervous System” we were experimenting with funk and disco, and that morphed into a harder edge for “Wardance”, which was more of a pagan thunder tribal stomp.


COLEMAN: We weren’t happy with the first recording, to be honest.


YOUTH: We couldn’t get the vocal sound right. We distorted it but it kept sounding wrong.


FERGUSON: We recorded “Wardance” three times. Once as a single, once at the Marquee studios and then for John Peel. They are each radically different-sounding recordings, although the structure itself didn’t change. We always had difficulty placing the bass riff in the mix of the choruses with the floor toms I was playing.


YOUTH: The single is now my favourite version.


FERGUSON: The “Wardance” single, more up-tempo, is perhaps a more exciting take on the song. The drums are more compressed, Youth’s bass guitar more present, Geordie’s buzzsaw guitar cutting away, Jaz sings with more snark and my vocal is forward in the crowd choruses.


YOUTH: When we came to the album, we recorded the song again at the Marquee with Phil Harding.


HARDING: The band were producing themselves, so I kept my suggestions to the technical side. If there was any instruction, it was to capture the rawness. Once we got a balance and everybody was comfortable it really did flow. But it was chaotic because there was no producer, so nobody would take the lead.


COLEMAN: Phil suffered terribly. He was a fresh-faced engineer right at the start of his career and a very good referee for that first record.


YOUTH: Phil was great. We had distinct respect because he was
the engineer. We wouldn’t give Phil any crap, we treated him as a professional.


HARDING: I’d have one or other of them screaming at me from the other side of the mixing desk. They’d stand opposite me, glaring and shouting about the mix during a full-volume playback. That happened on pretty much every track.


COLEMAN: We were all smoking vast amounts of hashish and in a state of complete paranoia and violence would break out frequently.


HARDING: I’d come across bongs before but never one like this Caribbean one, a massive jug that sat on the floor. I knew it was dangerous for me to get anywhere near it and that became a running joke until we were having the playback and Youth talked me into finally having a blast.


YOUTH: I remember Paul punching the window in the studio toilet. He was struggling to get the drums and was so frustrated, he punched a window. I also remember him punching one of the managers one day because he was late bringing the weed. There was an aura of violence, but we stopped short of punching each other – that came later.


HARDING: Paul was a real softy underneath it all and I have total respect for the way he played. “Wardance” is a great example of his talent, because I love a drum rhythm based around tom-toms rather than snare. Geordie was the same. He must have spent hours getting his sound together, impeccable matching of guitar and amp settings.


YOUTH: Again with “Wardance” we weren’t happy with the vocal sound. We kept going round in circles. We wanted a really fucked-up vocal sound and there was nothing on record that we could refer to. It seems churlish to say we weren’t happy as that vocal has influenced so many singers, but I still think we didn’t quite get it.


HARDING: Jaz was the most difficult to please. I’d had seven years’ training in not to distort things and now I had Jaz screaming at me to distort his vocal. What we did to get somewhere near what Jaz was describing is that it’s not so much distorted as going through an outboard effect called an Eventide Harmoniser. I am pretty sure the vocal was processed through the Eventide with this modulator effect and distorted through the box. It was all about the intensity that Jaz wanted to get across.


FERGUSON: The first album was ground-breaking for us because we’d never heard a record like it. It had a weird dissonance. It sounded heavy but actually it wasn’t, when you listened more carefully.


YOUTH: Geordie and I get off on ’60s pop songwriting and production style. That came out on things like “Wardance”. The chorus is pure pop. I still try and push for that as I love that element and the counterpoint with the dirty energy of the verses.


HARDING: They were always more commercial than people imagine. “Wardance” is a stand-out track as it’s a little more experimental. It has those effects at the front, and the echo and backing vocals on the chorus. That doesn’t happen elsewhere on the first album except on “Change”, where we doubled Geordie’s guitar.


GEORDIE: My favourite gig was the CND rally at Trafalgar Square in 1980. Jaz told them, “Margaret Thatcher has bought all these Cruise missiles and all you can do is stand there with a fucking placard. You deserve what you are going to get. This one’s called ‘Wardance’.” Then it kicked off. I’ve got my suspicion that’s why we never did Glastonbury.


YOUTH: I’m sure Jaz and Paul were writing about nuclear war and the prevailing paranoia of existential destruction – we all thought about that all the time and it’s what give us a big creative surge. But for me it’s a reference to the wardance of the Native American Indians as a way of banding together and resisting the encroachment of their land by colonial forces.


COLEMAN: Resist. “Wardance” is saying resist, resist, resist.


YOUTH: I’ve been told it was used in the first Iraq war by soldiers going into battle. That was weird for us because it’s an anti-war song.


COLEMAN: There are two things that separate Killing Joke and our generation from other musicians. The first is that we are probably the last generation that believe you can change things through music. That counterculture aspect has always been there. The second is that our entire existence has been lived under the stress of total extinction. When we perform “Wardance”, it seems to have more meaning, more intensity, more relevance and [be] more menacing than ever before.


FERGUSON: “Wardance” is still very much part of our live repertoire and I still love playing the song.


YOUTH: It’s great playing at the Royal Albert Hall. We’ve outgrown our detractors and are able to appropriate the Albert Hall to make our noise. And why not?


COLEMAN: We’re doing both LPs at the Albert Hall and I’m looking forward to it as both albums seem to suit the period we’re living through. They are the ultimate Cold War-turning-hot records. We are right here, 30 seconds to midnight on the Doomsday Clock and “Wardance” is more relevant than ever because it’s about how we psychologically deal with living in this perpetual tyranny and fear of extinction.

Squeeze to mark 50th anniversary with UK tour

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Squeeze have announced details of a 50th anniversary tour for October 2024. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT The band - Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook joined by bassist Owen Biddle, guitarist Melvin Duffy, percussionist Steve Smith, keyboardist Stephen Larg...

Squeeze have announced details of a 50th anniversary tour for October 2024.

The band – Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook joined by bassist Owen Biddle, guitarist Melvin Duffy, percussionist Steve Smith, keyboardist Stephen Large and drummer Simon Hanson – will be supported by Badly Drawn Boy. The tour concludes with a show at London’s Royal Albert Hall.

Squeeze have confirmed that they will once again be supporting charity The Trussell Trust, which provides emergency food and support to people who cannot afford the essentials, while campaigning for change to end the need for food banks in the UK. Fans are invited on the tour to bring along food donations to the shows, where there will be collection points across the venue each night. There will also be collection buckets for any cash donations.  All donations will be distributed to people in crisis across the 1,300 food bank centres in the Trussell Trust network. Visit trusselltrust.org/donate-food to find out how to make a donation to your local food bank and the items they most need this winter. 

The Squeeze 50th Anniversary UK Tour dates are:

Fri 4 Oct 2024                 Sheffield City Hall

Sat 5 Oct 2024                Birmingham Symphony Hall

Tue 8 Oct 2024               Aberdeen Music Hall

Wed 9 Oct 2024             Edinburgh Usher Hall

Fri 11 Oct 2024                 Glasgow Royal Concert Hall

Sat 12 Oct 2024                Manchester O2 Apollo

Sun 13 Oct 2024               Newcastle O2 City Hall

Tue 15 Oct 2024               Stoke-On-Trent Regent Theatre

Thu 17 Oct 2024               Nottingham Royal Concert Hall

Fri 18 Oct 2024                 York Barbican

Sat 19 Oct 2024                Liverpool M&S Bank Arena 

Mon 21 Oct 2024             Llandudno Venue Cymru Theatre

Tue 22 Oct 2024               Leicester De Montfort Hall

Wed 23 Oct 2024             Cambridge Corn Exchange

Fri 25 Oct 2024                 Ipswich Regent

Sat 26 Oct 2024                Southend Cliffs Pavilion

Sun 27 Oct 2024               Southampton Mayflower Theatre

Tue 29 Oct 2024               Guildford G Live

Wed 30 Oct 2024             Bristol Beacon

Fri 1 Nov 2024                Cardiff Utilita Arena 

Sat 2 Nov 2024               Brighton Centre

Sun 3 Nov 2024              Plymouth Pavilions

Tue 5 Nov 2024              Aylesbury Waterside Theatre

Thu 7 Nov 2024             Reading Hexagon

Fri 8 Nov 2024                Swansea Arena

Sat 9 Nov 2024               Eastbourne Congress Theatre

Mon 11 Nov 2024            London Royal Albert Hall

Tickets on sale Friday, December 1 from 10AM HERE.

Watch Neil Young play “The Star-Spangled Banner”

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Neil Young has released a version of "The Star-Spangled Banner" to coincide with Thanksgiving. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAH-MxpgjpI The video, directed by Daryl Hannah, finds Young playing the American national ant...

Neil Young has released a version of “The Star-Spangled Banner” to coincide with Thanksgiving.

The video, directed by Daryl Hannah, finds Young playing the American national anthem on Old Black, in the style reminiscent of his Weld-era take on “Blowin’ In The Wind“.

The video ends with the messages “Be Brave” and “Stand With Peace” appearing on the screen while Young runs his guitar through his effects pedals.

 

Paul Weller announces tour dates for 2024

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Paul Weller has announced a run of UK dates for spring 2024. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT Weller, whose last album Fat Pop (Volume 1) was released in 2021, heads out on April 4 at Poole's Lighthouse and finished by at the Cambridge Corn Exchange on April ...

Paul Weller has announced a run of UK dates for spring 2024.

Weller, whose last album Fat Pop (Volume 1) was released in 2021, heads out on April 4 at Poole’s Lighthouse and finished by at the Cambridge Corn Exchange on April 21. These new dates compliment a previously announced run of shows that take place in July.

April 4 – POOLE Lighthouse 

April 5 – BRISTOL Beacon 

April 6 – NEWPORT ICC Wales 

April 8 – SOUTHEND Cliffs Pavilion 

April 9 – LEICESTER De Montfort Hall 

April 11 – SHEFFIELD City Hall 

April 12 – STOKE Victoria Hall 

April 13 – STOCKTON Globe Theatre 

April 15 – DUNFERMLINE Alhambra 

April 16 – BLACKBURN King George’s Hall 

April 17 – YORK Barbican 

April 19 – LINCOLN Engine Shed 

April 20 – AYLESBURY Waterside 

April 21 – CAMBRIDGE Corn Exchange 

Previously announced shows for next year are: 

July 3 – LIMERICK IRELAND – King John’s Castle SOLD OUT 

July 4 – DUBLIN IRELAND – Trinity College SOLD OUT 

July 7 – SCARBOROUGH Open Air Theatre 

July 13 – EDINBURGH – Edinburgh Castle Esplanade SOLD OUT 

 Tickets for the April tour go on sale Friday, December a at 10am from www.Seetickets.comwww.Ticketmaster.co.uk and www.gigantic.com.

The Rolling Stones announce tour dates for 2024

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The Rolling Stones have announced a brand-new tour for 2024. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT The Hackney Diamonds tour will play at 16 cities across North America and Canada, beginning on April 28 in Houston, Texas. The Stones last toured America in 2021,...

The Rolling Stones have announced a brand-new tour for 2024.

The Hackney Diamonds tour will play at 16 cities across North America and Canada, beginning on April 28 in Houston, Texas.

The Stones last toured America in 2021, during the No Filter tour. After opening the tour at Houston’s NRG Stadium, they will  visit Las Vegas, Glendale, East Rutherford, Seattle, Foxboro, Orlando, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Denver, Chicago, Vancouver, Los Angeles and Santa Clara. The Stones will also perform at this year’s New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. Full tour intinerary is below.

Sunday, April 28, 2024 – ​​NRG Stadium, ​​​Houston, TX
Thursday, May 2, 2024​​ – Jazz Fest, ​​​New Orleans, LA
Tuesday, May 7, 2024 – ​​​State Farm Stadium​​, Glendale, AZ
Saturday, May 11, 2024​​ – Allegiant Stadium, ​​Las Vegas, NV
Wednesday, May 15, 2024​​ – Lumen Field​​​, Seattle, WA
Thursday, May 23, 2024​​ – MetLife Stadium, ​​East Rutherford, NJ
Thursday, May 30, 2024​​ – Gillette Stadium, ​​Foxboro, MA
Monday, June 3, 2024 – ​​​Camping World Stadium​, Orlando, FL
Friday, June 7, 2024​​​ – Mercedes-Benz Stadium, ​Atlanta, GA
Tuesday, June 11, 2024 – ​​Lincoln Financial Field, ​​Philadelphia, PA
Saturday, June 15, 2024​​ – Cleveland Browns Stadium, ​Cleveland, OH
Thursday, June 20, 2024​​ – Empower Field at Mile High​, Denver, CO
Thursday, June 27, 2024 – ​​Soldier Field, ​​​Chicago, IL
Friday, July 5, 2024​​​ – BC Place, ​​​Vancouver, BC
Wednesday, July 10, 2024 – ​​SoFi Stadium​​​, Los Angeles, CA
Wednesday, July 17, 2024 – ​​Levi’s® Stadium, ​​Santa Clara, CA

Tom Waits and Iggy Pop to co-host BBC radio show

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Tom Waits is to co-host Iggy Pop's BBC Radio 6 Music show on Sunday, December 3. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan and the Review Of 2023 star the latest UNCUT The show will air on Pop's regular slot, so gather round the wireless at 4pm UK time on Sunday, December 3. We learn from the announcement tha...

Tom Waits is to co-host Iggy Pop‘s BBC Radio 6 Music show on Sunday, December 3.

The show will air on Pop’s regular slot, so gather round the wireless at 4pm UK time on Sunday, December 3.

We learn from the announcement that “in between records, the pair share stories, including how Tom once hitched a ride with Eden Ahbez, the songwriter who composed ‘Nature Boy’, and how Iggy once came across Captain Beefheart eating breakfast in L.A. but was wise enough not to disturb him.”

Swordfishtrombones, Rain Dogs and Franks Wild Years – Waits’ spectacular run of albums, released on Island Records between 1983 and 1993 – have been newly remastered from the original tapes and are available now on vinyl and CD via Island/UMe.