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The Replacements – For Sale: Live at Maxwell’s 1986

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“Do we know ‘Fox On The Run’?” Paul Westerberg asks the other Replacements, in response to a fan’s repeated shouts for the Sweet classic. On For Sale, a double live album documenting their 1986 tour, the band obligingly launch into an impromptu performance without knowing exactly where they’re going. The first verse is shaky but determined, with Paul Westerberg seemingly remembering the lyrics just seconds after they leave his mouth. The chorus, however, wobbles precariously until the entire song simply falls apart. Even after his bandmates have dropped out, bassist Tommy Stinson soldiers on, defiantly playing that bouncy riff even as Westerberg promises, “We’ll try again later.” There are shouts from the audience for “Walk Away Renee” and “September Gurls”, but the quartet barrel directly into “Hold My Life”.

Clocking in at a mere 70 seconds, “Fox on the Run” may be a trainwreck, but it’s a revealing moment on For Sale, which documents a tumultuous time in the Replacements’ career. In 1986 they were poised to break out of the underground and gatecrash the mainstream, having already graduated from the Minneapolis indie Twin/Tone to Sire. In October 1985 they had released their major label debut, Tim, produced by Tommy Erdelyi (better known as Tommy Ramone), still considered their best studio album. Their loud and drunken Saturday Night Live performance, which featured Westerberg dropping an f-bomb on live television, may have hindered their cause at the time, but it remains both a legendary television performance and a major component of the band’s continuing legacy.

For Sale was Sire Records’ attempt to showcase the band in its natural setting: the club stage rather than the television or music studio. They opted for the friendly confines of Maxwell’s in Hoboken, New Jersey, where the band had already played and developed a devoted following. According to new liner notes by Bob Mehr, author of Trouble Boys: The True Story of the Replacements, “Club owner Steve Fallon didn’t even advertise the date; by this time, The Replacements’ shows were such anticipated events that the club was teeming with fans based upon word of mouth alone.”

To record the show in such cramped confines, Sire hired a company called Effanel, which had overseen, among other live albums, U2’s Under A Blood Red Sky. In the hours before taking the stage the band partied in the club’s basement, and there was some suspense over whether the band would be focused and legible onstage or drunk and disorderly. From Westerberg’s first cries of “Murder!” on opener “Hayday,” it’s clear that the Replacements will be all of those things at once. Drummer Chris Mars performs the unglamorous feat of keeping these songs together, even as the band sprawls chaotically in front of him. Westerberg and Bob Stinson don’t strum their guitars as much as they bash and batter them. The result is a beautiful mess: lovingly crafted pop songs played with youthful punk abandon.

The Replacements are still regaled for their pimply insouciance, for the poetry of Westerberg’s lyrics, for the middle finger they flew in the face of music industry demands, and For Sale is perhaps the best document of these aspects of the band. The album’s title comes from the phrase gouged into Westerberg’s Les Paul Special, which signals the group’s semi-vandalistic aesthetic as well as their rejection of music-biz proficiency. The live setting only heightens the fidgety anticipation of “I Can’t Hardly Wait” and “I Will Dare”, the seediness of “If Only You Were Lonely”, the snottiness of “Gary’s Got A Boner” and the intense melancholy that underscores all of their songs. While they never get back around to “Fox On The Run”, the Replacements do manage to get all the way through leering covers of T. Rex’s “Baby Strange”, KISS’s “Black Diamond” and the Beatles’ “Nowhere Man”. You can hear them trying harder to keep these songs together, playing them with more affection than they played their own.

Just a few months after the last notes of “Fuck School” faded, For Sale was already obsolete, documenting a band that didn’t exists anymore. While the Replacements didn’t break up, they were forced to fire first their manager Paul Jesperson and later founding guitarist Bob Stinson, Tommy’s older brother. He was eventually replaced by Slim Dunlap, although the group’s paroxysms meant For Sale got lost in the shuffle, unreleased for thirty long years (although available as one of many bootlegs from this period). Who knows how or if it would have changed the band’s fortunes in the 1986, but in 2017 it sounds like a revelation, not just a reminder of their glorious volatility but also a raggedly beautiful effort that stands alongside the Replacements’ best records. They might not have gotten through “Fox On The Run” but few bands could make such undeniable triumphs out of such abject failures; on For Sale, the ‘Mats turn rock ‘n’ roll sloppiness into something cathartic, romantic, and even noble.

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

Steely Dan reviewed, London O2 Arena, October 29, 2017

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The deceased, one suspects, would not have appreciated sentimentality, and Donald Fagen is not about to dishonour an old friend. “We’re the Steely Dan organisation,” he says. “We’re a little different from what we were a few months ago, but I gotta live with that.” As if to emphasise the change, Fagen launches into “New Frontier”, a song that marked his original liberation from the company of Walter Becker in the early ‘80s. Becker himself, dead eight weeks, is never mentioned. Allusion, irony and a fragile air of emotional detachment remain Steely Dan’s key coping strategies, even as they enter the final phase of their suitably complex career.

“Their career” is something of a misnomer, of course. This is notionally Fagen’s career now, a place where the distinct legacies of Steely Dan and his solo work may begin to elide a little. Many of these exceptional musicians – notably guitarist Jon Herington, drummer Keith Carlock and the trumpeter/arranger Michael Leonhart – have been part of the organisation for over 15 years, belying the idea that a Steely Dan player is only as useful as their last solo. Nevertheless, with Becker gone, Fagen is the only visceral link to the 1970s. Swaying away from his keyboard, head thrown back with an ecstatic note of Ray Charles, he’s a surprisingly dishevelled figure; a slightly goofy cartoon hipster, mooching about the stage with shades and a melodica. The idea of Fagen as rock’s alpha droll technocrat might work in theory, but the reality is pleasingly more human.

As, to a degree, is the music. Like the parallel return of Brian Wilson to the road, the Steely Dan touring project these past 20 years has been dedicated in large part to playing songs on stage that were explicitly designed for the studio. But fixating on an idea of perfection tends to detract from the process of trial, error, error, error, error and chance that went into the creation of records like Aja, and makes these songs into such swinging live entities. At the heart of Steely Dan is a trust in malleable virtuosity, in a matrix of groove and possibilities. It doesn’t matter a huge deal who’s playing tenor saxophone, for instance, as long as they can improvise their way through the rhythmic peaks and troughs of “Aja” itself – as Walt Weiskopf does brilliantly tonight. He may not have quite the measure of Wayne Shorter, but he clearly has a similar understanding of how Steely Dan demand a fiendish balance of discipline and creativity.

While Wilson and his band have worked assiduously at recreating the exact sound of Pet Sounds, Smile et al, Steely Dan effectively work back from the pristine finished songs to something more open-ended. There’s a jazz imperative being reclaimed at these gigs, so that Herington doesn’t try to reconstruct, note for note, the work of Denny Dias, or Skunk Baxter, or Larry Carlton, or Dean Parks, or Hugh McCracken, or Rick Derringer, or even Walter Becker himself (He does stick pretty close to Elliott Randall’s original path on “Reelin’ In The Years”, but the solo is more or less the riff in that instance). When Becker and Fagen auditioned one guitarist after another to play the solo on “Peg” in 1977, they didn’t tell them what to do, exactly. They just left each of them a space to be filled and a musical problem to be solved in the most harmonious way possible; a musical problem, it should be stressed, that Becker and Fagen had no idea how to solve themselves. Herington doesn’t copy Jay Graydon’s successful solution to the “Peg” dilemma, he resolves that dancing, elusive conundrum in his own, highly satisfactory, way.

A better comparison than Brian Wilson might be with The Grateful Dead, weirdly – another band whose sympathies were often closer to jazz than to rock, and who knew that a spirit of improvisation would allow their canon of songs to be endlessly reinvented. Steely Dan never go anywhere as free and chaotic as the Dead, but there are glimpses of how their songs can be stretched and reshaped right from the off, as “Bodhisattva” climaxes with a series of frenzied breakdowns, the four-man horn section stepping out of their discreet formation. It’s a hint of how this music will survive the loss of Becker and, perhaps eventually, Fagen himself – just as the Dead’s music lives on, in myriad valuable configurations, 22 years after the death of Jerry Garcia.

In the meantime, Fagen remains a heroically reluctant frontman, who still manages to avoid singing “Dirty Work” himself (In the predictable absence of David Palmer, that job goes to the Danettes, three female backing singers who smartly reclaim it as a country-soul slow-burner). His voice is a little strained and pinched on “Time Out Of Mind” and “My Old School”, but his apparent joy and engagement seems at odds with the touring curmudgeon he portrayed himself as in his memoir, Eminent Hipsters. There is even an apology for the relative shortness of the set – limited to 90 minutes, it seems, by the fact that Bluesfest have allowed support act The Doobie Brothers to play for nearly as long as Steely Dan themselves.

The relative brevity means that some opportunities are passed up on. “Babylon Sisters”, for a start, could have rolled on in its blithely funky way for another couple of minutes at least, while the intense consistency of Steely Dan’s back catalogue ensures everyone in the crowd will have left thinking of half a dozen or so personal favourites – “King Of The World”, “Through With Buzz”, “Sign In Stranger”, “Two Against Nature”, virtually all the hit singles – that didn’t make the setlist.

It also means that Fagen doesn’t pay explicit tribute to his old partner by singing Becker’s “Book Of Liars” (from his 1994 solo album, 11 Tracks Of Whack), as he has done at recent US shows and in Dublin the previous night. Instead, the poignancy comes from an absence: a neglected mic stand centre stage; the lack of a sardonic foil who always brought out the best, funniest and cruellest of Fagen, in both music and conversation.

You can find poignancy, too, in the details of all the Steely Dan songs about men of a certain age trying to deal, very awkwardly, with the past and with youth. Does Fagen really sing, “It’s hard times befallen the sole survivor,” tonight instead of “sole survivors”, in “Hey Nineteen”? “She thinks I’m crazy,” for sure, “But I’m just growing old…”

SETLIST

1. Bodhisattva
2. Black Cow
3. Hey Nineteen
4. New Frontier
5. Aja
6. Black Friday
7. Babylon Sisters
8. Dirty Work
9. Peg
10. Time Out of Mind
11. I Want To (Do Everything for You)
12. Josie
13. My Old School
14. Kid Charlemagne
Encore
15. Reelin’ In The Years
16. The Untouchables

David Crosby – Sky Trails

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David Crosby and Joni Mitchell go back a long way. It was Crosby, of course, who first enticed Mitchell to Los Angeles in 1967, producing her debut album and offering an entrée to the prime movers in the embryonic Laurel Canyon scene. Briefly lovers, they became life-long friends. Crosby has rarely missed an opportunity to rave over Mitchell’s singular gifts, particularly since her brain aneurysm in 2015.

Their connection is gently re-enforced on Sky Trails, Crosby’s third solo album in four years – and not simply because one of its ten tracks is a lovely cover of Mitchell’s “Amelia”. Transposed to piano, the opening lines echo the title of the album (“I spotted six jet planes / Leaving six white vapour trails across the bleak terrain”) – an indication, perhaps, that the association is intended to run deeper than a single, tender tribute.

“Amelia” originally appeared on Hejira, Mitchell’s first foray into jazz fusion. Sky Trails picks up some of the mood of that album, as well as its follow-up, Don Juan’s Reckless Daughter, and Crosby’s 2014 album, Croz. Where last year’s Lighthouse was pared down and reflective, built around voice and guitar, Sky Trails is more fully-fleshed out, characterized by burbling fretless bass; lush jazz-inflected grooves; fluting saxophones and elegantly fragmented melodies.

There are further nods to mid-70s Mitchell on “Curved Air”, a busy jazz-flamenco with Spanish guitar, Moorish handclaps and galloping fretless bass. On “Here It’s Almost Sunset”, bassist Mai Agan and saxophonist Steve Tavaglione summon up the spirit of Jaco Pastorius and Wayne Shorter on something like Joni’s “Jericho”; the choppy guitar figure and martial rhythm, meanwhile, isn’t a million miles from Bowie’s “Lazarus”.

The album is a thoroughly collaborative affair. The majority of the tracks were co-written with Crosby’s son and producer, James Raymond, who also produced Croz; Michael MacDonald earns a co-writing credit on “Before Tomorrow Falls On Love”, a classy, late night piano ballad. Yet the mood throughout is quintessential Crosby. You would expect him to have something pointed to say about the current state of America, and he saves it all up for the seven-minute “Capitol”, a tale of unilateral political disgust in which he contrasts the majesty of the government buildings and historic symbols of power with the “sharks” running the show, who “sneer at the people who voted” and will do “anything to stay part of the machine”.

It’s not subtle – no Joni-style obliqueness here – but Crosby builds up a fair head of steam amid a bluesy churn of rhythm and flickers of pedal steel, punctuated by a Herbie Hancock-like synth solo and squealing sax. Sleek jazz-fusion never felt so insurrectionary, although at other times it’s less confrontational. “She’s Got To Be Somewhere” rides a plush yacht rock groove, all syncopated horns and freeze-dried keyboards, to rather anodyne effect. “Sell Me A Diamond” begins promisingly, with a rippling piano figure and sparse rhythm, before building to an overwrought climax.

Though it’s an album of group performances, there are moments of exquisite, near solitary tenderness. “Somebody Home”, the only song solely written by Crosby, is a spare, atmospheric rumination, peppered with organ and horns, and sung with an intimacy and intensity remarkable for his 75 years. The song’s openness to a significant emotional connection is mirrored in “Curved Air” – “I might get found” – and again on “Sky Trails”, written and sung with Becca Stevens, which mixes a similar sense of cosmic disorientation (“Please tell me where I am”) with a deep yearning to belong. It’s a shadowy tour de force, the pair’s intertwined voices scattered among fragile shards of acoustic guitar and lonely trails of soprano saxophone.

Crosby finally finds his safe place on the closing track. “Home Free” is musically pensive, and though the lyrics flirt with the abstract and ethereal – candles, altars, Noah and the Ark, the wagon trains of America’s early pioneers – at heart it’s a thanksgiving for life’s simple graces, as many of Crosby’s songs are these days. All he craves is a bath, a coffee brewed on a “battered old stove”, and a place to be. The old rover has become “a tree always knowing where its leaves will fall”.

He has much to be thankful for. Yes, there’s the odd moment here that comes perilously close to Burning Man blather, and at times the production is overly slick, but Sky Trails is a strong, sinuous piece of work. Riding a creative wave, Crosby is not merely honing his craft, but expanding its parameters. Joni would no doubt approve.

Q&A
DAVID CROSBY
There are seven co-writes on the album. How does that process work?

James and I both write words and both write music. At times, it’s hard to tell who wrote which, in one line you’ll get words from both of us. Same with Michael MacDonald. He’s a joy to write with, a real craftsman who works hard and doesn’t take anything for granted. The great thing is, the other person always thinks of something you didn’t. You have more colours on the palette, and it makes for a different painting.

Why did you choose to cover “Amelia”?
I’ve always wanted to sing that song. I love that song! What a stunning piece of work she did, the two levels of it: talking about Amelia Earhart and talking about her own love life at the same time, so eloquently, with such a beautiful set of words. Her version is quite ornate. I tried to sing it very simply.

I can hear Joni’s influence elsewhere on the record…
We influenced each other very strongly for a while. She and I were both very taken with jazz. Some of it was my influence, but by no means all. She went whole hog in that direction the longer she went in, and became more intricate and complex. It’s all to the good.
INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

The Rolling Stones share a live version of “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” from 1965

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The Rolling Stones have released a version of “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction“, originally recorded for the BBC’s Saturday Club show in 1965.

The track is taken from the band’s forthcoming Rolling Stones – On Air album which collects some of their BBC radio sessions from 1963 – 1965.

The band have previously shared a track from the album, “Come On“, which was recorded for Saturday Club in 1963.

The album will be released via via Polydor Records on December 1, on CD, double CD deluxe edition, heavy-weight vinyl and special limited-edition coloured vinyl. This album follows the recent release of The Rolling Stones – On Air coffee table book, by Richard Havers and published by Virgin Books.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

The 40th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

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These playlists seem to get longer each week, but lots worthwhile here, as ever: Frazey Ford’s finally recorded her D’Angelo cover; Orpheo McCord (who you might remember drumming for Fool’s Gold and, briefly, The Fall) has made a sweet ambient record with Scott Hirsch from Hiss Golden Messenger; there’s a remix project based on Anderson Paak’s Nxworries album; No Age are back; Awanto 3 is Dutch techno that we discovered this week is Richard Dawson’s favourite album of 2017; the slightly goth Fever Ray album is out today, and worth a listen (vid embedded below is pretty NSFW by the way); the very fine Stick In The Wheel; Prins Thomas’ new album, which is terrific, though we’re currently struggling to spot the alleged Teenage Fanclub and Pat Metheny references; oh, and the Shields/Eno hook-up actually works brilliantly. See what you think…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Claire M Singer – Fairge (Touch)

Fairge by Claire M Singer

2 Kendrick Lamar – DAMN (Top Dawg)

3 Frazey Ford – When We Get By (Arts & Crafts)

4 Xylouris White – Mother (Bella Union)

5 The Breeders – Wait In The Car (4AD)

6 Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society – Simultonality (Tak:til)

7 Pharaoh Sanders – Tauhid/Jewels Of Thought/Deaf Dumb Blind (Summun Kukmun Umyun) (Anthology)

8 Wet Tuna – Livin’ The Die (Feeding Tube/Child Of Microtones)

9 Jon Hassell – Vernal Equinox (Lovely)

10 Orpheo McCord – Recovery Inhale (Bandcamp)

Recovery Inhale by Orpheo McCord

11 Zombie Zombie – Livity (Versatile)

12 Nabihah Iqbal – Weighing Of The Heart (Ninja Tune)

13 Ryan Driver – Careless Thoughts (Tin Angel)

14 Gunn-Truscinski Duo – Bay Head (Three Lobed Recordings)

Bay Head by Gunn-Truscinski Duo

15 Chuck Johnson = Balsams (VDSQ)

Balsams by Chuck Johnson

16 Ghostface Killah – Ironman (Razor Sharp)

17 Ghostface Killah – Fishscale (Def Jam)

18 The Weather Station – The Weather Station (Paradise Of Bachelors)

19 Hans Chew – Open Sea (At The Helm)

20 Henry Jamison – The Wilds (Akira)

21 Ezra Feinberg – Pentimento And Others (Related States)

22 NxWorries – Yes Lawd! Remixes (Stones Throw)

23 Digital Release – Positive Approach (Drawing Room Records)

24 Bibio – Phantom Brickworks (Warp)

25 No Age – Snares Like A Haircut (Drag City)

Snares Like A Haircut by No Age

26 Awanto 3 – Gargamel (Dekmantel)

Gargamel by Awanto 3

27 Brian Eno With Kevin Shields – Only Once Away My Son (Adult Swim)

28 Bitchin Bajas – Bajas Fresh (Drag City)

Bajas Fresh by Bitchin Bajas

29 Les Filles De Illighadad – Eghass Malan (Sahel Sounds)

30 Stick In The Wheel – Follow Them True (From Here)

31 Nadah El Shazly – Ahwar (Nawa Recordings)

32 Fever Ray – Plunge (Rabid)

33 Various Artists – Heed The Call (Vostok)

34 Prins Thomas – Prins Thomas 5 (Prins Thomas Musikk)

35 Jon Hassell – Earthquake Island (Tomato)

Tom Waits announces vinyl reissues

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Tom Waits is set to release newly remastered versions of each of his albums in the Anti- catalogue. In addition, the album Real Gone has been fully remixed.

Tom Waits and Kathleen Brennan personally oversaw the remastering process for both the vinyl and digital formats of the catalogue.

Waits explains, “This restoration project could arrogantly be compared to restoring a faded tapestry, a painstaking process that requires meticulous attention to each colour faded thread. Spending months on something completed once, many years ago was necessary though cursedly laborious for us.”

You can buy our the deluxe edition of our Ultimate Music Guide to Tom Waits by clicking here

The albums will roll out from November 2017 and continue into 2018. All albums will be available on 180 gram vinyl while each of the 3 discs of Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers & Bastards will be available separately.

November 10 – Bad As Me
November 24 – Real Gone
November 24 – Blood Money
November 24 – Alice
December 1 – Glitter and Doom Live
December 15 – Mule Variations
2018 – Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers and Bastards (released separately)

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Listen to Brian Eno and Kevin Shields’ collaboration, “Only Once Away My Son”

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Brian Eno and Kevin Shields have released a collaborative track, “Only Once Away My Son“.

It’s been released as part of Adult Swim‘s Singles Program, with the pair contributing music to the network’s ongoing ’52 weeks of free music’.

You can hear the track below.

Shields is gearing up to reissue the first two My Bloody Valentine albums on vinyl in January next year.

Shields is also set to make his live return at Sigur Ros’ upcoming Norður og Niður festival in Reykjavík, Iceland.

His listing on the Norður og Niður website suggested he was “working on material for a new My Bloody Valentine album to be released in 2018.”

Eno, meanwhile, has collaborated with pianist Tom Rogerson on a new album, Finding Shore, on December 18 via Dead Oceans.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Fats Domino dies aged 89

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Fats Domino has died aged 89.

According to reports from New Orleans, his death was confirmed by his daughter, who told TV station WWL-TV he died peacefully surrounded by family at his home.

Antoine ‘Fats’ Domino was born in New Orleans in February 1928.

In 1949, he teamed up with trumpet player and band leader Dave Bartholomew, who produced and co-wrote Domino’s first record “The Fat Man” that year.

Domino’s career went on to span five decades. Among his most famous works are “Blueberry Hill“, “Ain’t That A Shame” and “I’m Walking To New Orleans“.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Hear Morrissey’s new song, “I Wish You Lonely”

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Morrissey has released a new track from his forthcoming album, Low In High School.

I Wish You Lonely” follows on from “Spent The Day In Bed”, which he released last week.

Low In High School is released via Etienne Records/BMG on November 17.

The same day, two pop-up shops will open selling Morrissey merchandise and assorted limited editions.

They can be found at Camden Market, London and at 8250 Melrose Ave, Los Angeles.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

How much would you pay for David Bowie’s handwritten lyrics to “Starman”?

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The original lyrics to David Bowie‘s “Starman” have been revealed, after an early lyric sheet went up for sale in Los Angeles.

The piece of paper, which features the lyrics to an early draft of the song, is expected to sell for £4,500.

Despite being unsigned by the singer, the sheet reportedly comes with a certificate of authenticity.

The lyrics remain largely the same on the sheet, but there are some subtle changes within the verses.

On the sheet, one line reads ‘Some cat was layin down some rock ‘n’ roll, ‘lotta soul, he said’.

But when the song was released in 1972, the lyric became ‘Some cat was layin’ down some get it on rock ‘n’ roll, he said.’

Another change is noticeable in the same verse, with ‘Came back on a wave of phase’ eventually becoming ‘Came back like a slow voice on a wave of phase haze’.

The single page is now being put under the hammer by US based Julien’s Auctioneers and is expected to sell for between £3,000 and £4,500 when the auction takes place on November 4.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Chasing Trane: The John Coltrane Documentary

The use of the definite article in the title is revealing. This is not just ‘a’ John Coltrane documentary, it is positioned as the authorised story of one of American music’s most enduring cultural icons, a questing, spiritual tenor saxophonist who, in his 40 short years, helped shape the course of jazz. A big claim, then. But anyone who has seen John Scheinfeld’s previous work (The US Vs John Lennon or Who Is Harry Nilsson (And Why Is Everybody Talkin’ About Him)?) will know the screenwriter/director adopts a forensic approach to filmmaking, and is capable of bringing zinging insight to even the most documented subjects.

Chasing Trane is a heavyweight; the movie equivalent of a high-gloss, hardback coffee-table artbook. It is made with the full participation of the Coltrane family, including his stepdaughter (from first marriage to Naima Grubbs) and his children with Alice (née McLeod) Coltrane. Told entirely through new interviews, intercut with remarkable home cinefilm footage and animated photo-montages, it looks slick, plush, expensive. Coltrane’s own words are intoned by Denzel Washington, no less. The impeccably selected soundtrack is matched to beautiful, rhythmical artwork from Rudy Gutierrez, illustrator of a remarkable children’s book, Spirit Seeker: John Coltrane’s Musical Journey.

The interviewees, too, are excellent. In the I-was-there corner, jazz legends: Sonny Rollins, Wayne Shorter, Reggie Workman, Jimmy Heath and Benny Golson. In the ‘my hero’ camp: Carlos Santana, The Doors’ John Densmore, rapper Common, Wynton Marsalis – whose expert technical analysis of Coltrane’s musicality is superb – and the 42nd president of the United States, Bill Clinton. Assorted journalists, biographers and cultural commentators punctuate the anecdotes with unimprovised fact, and the whole product is 
rather gorgeous.

Chasing Trane has a conventional narrative. This is a chronological walk through Coltrane’s life, from his ministerial upbringing in North Carolina, through the devastating loss of his father and grandfathers as a child, to initial awkward musical fumblings as a “country bumpkin” in Philadelphia. As part of the US Navy corps, Coltrane was stationed at Pearl Harbour in ’45 and ’46, and it was here that he made his first recordings. These are roundly derided by the talking heads as “not representative”, and that’s probably the closest you get to criticism in the whole one-and-half hours of Chasing Trane, which, it must be said, can border on the hagiographic.

Coltrane is repeatedly portrayed 
as kind, thoughtful, even sweet; 
a musician who took some years to find himself and his sound. The film races through his apprenticeship in (in his words) “the minor leagues”, before big breaks with Dizzy Gillespie, and his first stint with Miles Davis (’55-’56). These should have been giant steps, but he was fired from both outfits for drug abuse. This is dealt with in hushed sympathy; his stepdaughter offers a moving account of how he quit heroin with no support, the coldest of cold turkey.

1957 saw his spiritual awakening, first work with the inspirational Thelonious Monk, and his first solo album for Prestige, Coltrane. He got back on “the high-diving board”, and rejoined Miles Davis – but now more confident, and self-aware. There’s an excellent dissection of his second stint with the Miles. Coltrane was recording Giant Steps between the Kind Of Blue sessions in spring ’59, and some brilliant archive footage shows an unfettered Trane soloing lengthily, while Miles steps offstage, to have a cigarette. We fast-forward to Coltrane’s later solo work, his radio hit with “My Favourite Things”, and then – Classic Album style – explore the adulation afforded on 1965’s A Love Supreme. Much of the fascinating latter part of the film is framed around his life with Alice, his peaceful politics, and his embrace of the avant-garde. The metaphor here is that new saxophone tone: the celestial, cathartic “shrieking” that divided critics and fans.

It’s unilaterally agreed here that his death in July 1967 robbed music of one its breathless innovators. “John was about the big picture,” says Sonny Rollins. “He had a deep feeling for higher worlds.” Praise 
for the spirituality and universality of his music comes from all quarters. Santana describes Coltrane as “the sound of light and the sound of love… a vortex of possibility”. Clinton offers similar praise. As 
a musician, Trane was “a master 
of his soul”.

There’s no doubt Chasing Trane is a brilliant primer, an elegant, effortless watch, and a superbly assembled piece of documentary. Is this the real man, though? Perhaps its very officialness robs it of journalistic impartiality; and too many rosy tints are superimposed on an already colourful life.

The October 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Jack White on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Van Morrison, The National, The Dream Syndicate, Steve Winwood, Tony Visconti, The The, The Doors and Sparks. We review LCD Soundsystem, The Style Council, Chris Hillman, Hiss Golden Messenger and Frank Zappa. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Lee Renaldo, Mogwai, Wand, Chris Hillman, The Dream Syndicate, Hiss Golden Messenger and more.

The Ballad Of Shirley Collins reviewed

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This fine documentary about one of the great voices of British folk music opens at the bonfire night celebrations in Lewes, East Sussex, where she lives. The footage includes a menacing procession of burning effigies and martyrs crosses. Elsewhere, the nearby South Downs countryside appears as a fierce, lonely and strange place, wreathed in winter mist. Collins has lived in Sussex all her life and her work carries the rich folkloric history and song of the region. “When I was singing my best, I was the essence of English song,” she says. “I sang it better than anyone else and understood it better than anyone else.”

Directors Rob Curry and Tim Plester follow Collins as she prepares to release Lodestar, her first album in 38 years. She is a sprightly, game interview, whose own secret history is as enticing as the lost, esoteric music she has championed. Comedian Stewart Lee – an aficionado – presents her with PDF of elderly government’s files on the ethnomusicologist Alan Lomax, her former partner and a “convicted Communist”. Another long-standing admirer, Current 93’s David Tibet, presents her with three different coloured Russian bootleg flexis of Collins singing “Polly Vaughan”. In the remote, converted horse trailer belonging to folk singer Elle Osborne, Collins drinks homebrewed Elderflower vodka and muses on her new recording. “It might be a mistake, but in a way I don’t care if it’s a mistake. At least I’m going to do it.”

It’s been a life well-lived and accordingly Collins, seems phased by very little; though inevitably she still keenly feels the absence of her collaborator and sister, Dolly, who died in 1995. “It’s very funny being without your sister, even now I don’t think it’s true,” she says. The final shot is Collins, having said “Too-da-loo” to her latest musical collaborators, sitting back on her sofa in her front room, her eyes shining; reconnected with the earth and her music.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Stephen Stills and Judy Collins’ Everybody Knows to get a UK release

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Stephen Stills and Judy Collins collaborative album, Everybody Knows, has been given a UK release date.

The album has already been available in the States but is now due on March 2, 2018 through Sony Music in the UK.

Everybody Knows includes covers of Bob Dylan’s “Girl From The North Country”, Leonard Cohen‘s “Everybody Knows” and Traveling Wilburys’ “Handle With Care” alongside a new version of Buffalo Springfield’s “Questions”.

The tracklisting for the album is:

Handle With Care
So Begins The Task
River Of Gold
Judy
Everybody Knows
Houses
Reason To Believe
Girl From The North Country
Who Knows Where The Time Goes
Questions

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Reviewed: a new batch of 2017 hidden gems

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A bunch of good new albums to talk about today, but first I need to flag up a new mag we’ve been involved with, that goes on sale in the UK on Thursday. NME Gold is the first in a series where we invite a major figure – in this case Liam Gallagher – to curate their own magazine. There are big new interviews with Gallagher himself, plus he’s gone into the NME and Melody Maker archives to choose classic stories about his heroes. For more info on NME Gold: Liam Gallagher, please click here.

Moving swiftly on. Daft name notwithstanding, Cooper Crain and his Chicago crew Bitchin Bajas have established themselves these past few years as the foremost neue-kosmische outfit around. After various collaborations (including their profile-raising one involving fortune cookies with Will Oldham), the Bajas’ first full album in three years is a testament to expanding frontiers. Initially, “Bajas Fresh” remains focused on rapturous psychedelic electronica, albeit less dependent on the usual reference points – Terry Riley, Tangerine Dream et al – of old. Gradually, though, it embraces new textures: a vast drone piece (“Yonaguni”); a foregrounding of free jazz elements (“2303”, “Chokayo”, “Be Going”) that, as on their 2015 set with Natural Information Society, manage to be skittishly improvisational without undermining the overall serenity. A good time for your chakras guaranteed.

Bajas Fresh by Bitchin Bajas

In a similarly improving vein is Brooklyn Raga Massive’s “Terry Riley In C” on Northern Spy. Few musical pieces in the modern classical canon provide the opportunity for a communal freak-out like “In C”@ recent versions have seen its 53 short musical phrases configured by a Guitar Orchestra lead by Portishead’s Adrian Utley, and by an Africa Express conclave in a Bamako youth club. Given the key influence of Indian music on Riley, it’s weird that no-one’s previously improvised on “In C” using sitars, tablas and so on. Brooklyn Raga Massive’s take, as a consequence, is a wholly logical and satisfying one. Part of “In C”’s genius is how no instrumentation sounds anachronistic to it, but the gracefully evolving systems lend themselves extremely well to the rich textures – listen out for the dragon mouth trumpet. A masterpiece of social music may have finally found its spiritual home.

Terry Riley In C by Brooklyn Raga Massive

Those who place value in folk bona fides should be impressed by Laura Baird’s family tree: her sister is Meg, the spectral singer who also currently jams in Heron Oblivion; her great-great uncle, IG Greer, was a notable song collector and singer in North Carolina. The pleasures of Laura’s new solo album, “I Wish I Were A Sparrow” (Ba Da Bing) are not, though, dependent on ancestry. As keen listeners will have spotted on three duo albums with her sister (notably 2012’s Until You Find Your Green), Baird is a nimble banjoist, and has one of those ethereal folk voices that can sound at once warm and uncanny. It’s a tribute to her songwriting, too, that new songs like the fine opener, “Wind Wind”, are such comfortable bedmates with trad picks like “Pretty Saro” and “The Cuckoo”. One to file alongside recent sets by House & Land and Nathan Bowles in your Contemporary Appalachian section. Also: contains actual sparrows.

One suspects that, in 1967, there must have been rather a lot of bands like Pearls Before Swine spattered across America. Formed in Florida by an antic high-schooler called Tom Rapp, the young PBS vacillated between Renaissance Faire whimsy and wheezing electric protest-folk on their debut, “One Nation Underground”, that’s been given a much-needed remastering and reissue by Drag City. At times, both can seem a little gauche: the solemn invocations of “the amber lady seated at her harpsichord in velvet”; some Dylan impersonations (cf “Playmate”) in which, if nothing else, Rapp’s nasal congestion sounds authentic. So far, so generic.

But the way the two strains combine, in haphazard ways, is what makes Rapp’s first moves so appealing, and why Pearls Before Swine’s music has been so venerated in outsider psych circles. A generally ramshackle air, all Farfisas on the edge of breakdown, finger cymbals and stray banjos, give a weird edge to garage workouts that’s closer to The Fugs than The Band – a pranksterish dimension compounded by the Morse Code signal “F-U-C-K” being beeped out in “Miss Morse”. Meanwhile, unsteady and lovely reveries like “Another Time” and “Morning Song” set a template for later, more fully-realised Rapp albums like Use Of Ashes – and for numerous waves of acid-folk over the ensuing decades. Devendra Banhart fans take note; he certainly did.

Bob Seger covers Lou Reed and Leonard Cohen on new album, I Knew You When

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Bob Seger has announced details of his new studio album, I Knew You When.

The album – released by Capitol Records on November 17 – features tributes to Lou Reed, Leonard Cohen and Glenn Frey.

A cover of Reed’s “Busload Of Faith” can be downloaded now with a digital preorder. Seger’s album also includes “Glenn Song”, for Glenn Frey, and a cover of Leonard Cohen’s “Democracy”.

The tracklisting for I Knew You When is:
Gracile
Busload Of Faith
The Highway
I Knew You When
I’ll Remember You
The Sea Inside
Marie
Runaway Train
Something More
Democracy
Forward Into The Past
(Deluxe Album only)
Blue Ridge (Deluxe Album only)
Glenn Song (Deluxe Album only)

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Introducing NME Gold: Liam Gallagher

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Introducing NME Gold, a new joint project from NME and Uncut.

The first issue goes on sale this Thursday [October 26] and is dedicated to and edited by Liam Gallagher.

Here’s John Robinson, who’s overseen NME Gold, to explain what it’s all about.

“An innovative meeting of old and new, each issue of NME Gold is a curated trip through the extensive archives of NME. Your guide on this first immersive journey is Liam Gallagher, who introduces each feature article with his favourite artists – The Beatles, The Stone Roses, The Verve, Sex Pistols and many more – and reveals his own relationship with his heroes.

“In collaboration with Liam, NME Gold is nothing less than a printed mixtape of the historic music and legendary artists that have inspired him to become the musician and style icon he is today. A substantial new interview with Liam brings his life in music right up to date, while extensive picture content finds him commenting on his most victorious moments and classic looks.”

While NME Gold is in shops from Thursday, you can also buy a copy from our online store.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Bob Dylan world exclusive! Hear a previously unreleased version of “Solid Rock”

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The next instalment of Bob Dylan‘s ongoing Bootleg Series hits the shelves on November 3.

Trouble No More – The Bootleg Series Vol. 13 / 1979-1981 focusses on Dylan’s so-called ‘Gospel years’.

Uncut has covered this period before – in a mammoth, two-part exploration of Dylan’s Eighties. You can read part one by clicking here and part two by clicking here.

As a taster for this latest, tantalising dip into Dylan’s archives, we’re delighted to bring you a world exclusive – scroll down to hear a previously unreleased version of “Solid Rock” from Dylan’s 1980 album, Saved.

This version was recorded live at London’s Earl’s Court on June 27, 1981.

This track is available on the 9 disc (8CD/1DVD) box set that contains 100 previously unreleased live and studio recordings including 14 unreleased songs. The set also includes Trouble No More: A Musical Film, a new feature-length film incorporating never-before-seen footage from Dylan’s 1980 tours.

The set will also be available in 2CD and four-LP configurations featuring the first two discs from the deluxe box.

The tracklisting for the deluxe edition is:

Disc 1: Live
Slow Train
(Nov. 16, 1979)
Gotta Serve Somebody (Nov. 15, 1979)
I Believe in You (May 16, 1980)
When You Gonna Wake Up? (July 9, 1981)
When He Returns (Dec. 5, 1979)
Man Gave Names to All the Animals (Jan. 16, 1980)
Precious Angel (Nov. 16, 1979)
Covenant Woman (Nov. 20, 1979)
Gonna Change My Way of Thinking (Jan. 31, 1980)
Do Right to Me Baby (Do Unto Others) (Jan. 28, 1980)
Solid Rock (Nov. 27, 1979)
What Can I Do for You? (Nov. 27, 1979)
Saved (Jan. 12, 1980)
In the Garden (Jan. 27, 1980)

Disc 2: Live
Slow Train
(June 29, 1981)
Ain’t Gonna Go to Hell for Anybody (Unreleased song – Apr. 24, 1980)
Gotta Serve Somebody (July 15, 1981)
Ain’t No Man Righteous, No Not One (Unreleased song – Nov. 16, 1979)
Saving Grace (Nov. 6, 1979)
Blessed Is the Name (Unreleased song – Nov. 20, 1979)
Solid Rock (Oct. 23, 1981)
Are You Ready? (Apr. 30, 1980)
Pressing On (Nov. 6, 1979)
Shot of Love (July 25, 1981)
Dead Man, Dead Man (June 21, 1981)
Watered-Down Love (June 12, 1981)
In the Summertime (Oct. 21, 1981)
The Groom’s Still Waiting at the Altar (Nov. 13, 1980)
Caribbean Wind (Nov. 12, 1980)
Every Grain of Sand (Nov. 21, 1981)

Disc 3: Rare and Unreleased
Slow Train
(Soundcheck – Oct. 5, 1978)
Do Right to Me Baby (Do Unto Others) (Soundcheck – Dec. 7, 1978)
Help Me Understand (Unreleased song – Oct. 5, 1978)
Gonna Change My Way of Thinking (Rehearsal – Oct. 2, 1979)
Gotta Serve Somebody (Outtake – May 4, 1979)
When He Returns (Outtake – May 4, 1979)
Ain’t No Man Righteous, No Not One (Unreleased song – May 1, 1979)
Trouble in Mind (Outtake – April 30, 1979)
Ye Shall Be Changed (Outtake – May 2, 1979)
Covenant Woman (Outtake –February 11, 1980)
Stand by Faith (Unreleased song – Sept. 26, 1979)
I Will Love Him (Unreleased song – Apr. 19, 1980)
Jesus Is the One (Unreleased song – Jul. 17, 1981)
City of Gold (Unreleased song – Nov. 22, 1980)
Thief on the Cross (Unreleased song – Nov. 10, 1981)
Pressing On (Outtake – Feb. 13, 1980)

Disc 4: Rare and Unreleased
Slow Train
(Rehearsal – Oct. 2, 1979)
Gotta Serve Somebody (Rehearsal – Oct. 9, 1979)
Making a Liar Out of Me (Unreleased song – Sept. 26, 1980)
Yonder Comes Sin (Unreleased song – Oct. 1, 1980)
Radio Spot January 1980, Portland, OR show
Cover Down, Pray Through (Unreleased song – May 1, 1980)
Rise Again (Unreleased song – Oct. 16, 1980)
Ain’t Gonna Go to Hell for Anybody (Unreleased song – Dec. 2, 1980)
The Groom’s Still Waiting at the Altar (Outtake – May 1, 1981)
Caribbean Wind (Rehearsal – Sept. 23, 1980)
You Changed My Life (Outtake – April 23, 1981)
Shot of Love (Outtake – March 25, 1981)
Watered-Down Love (Outtake – May 15, 1981)
Dead Man, Dead Man (Outtake – April 24, 1981)
Every Grain of Sand (Rehearsal – Sept. 26, 1980)

Disc 5 – Live in Toronto 1980
Gotta Serve Somebody
(April 18, 1980)
I Believe In You (April 18, 1980)
Covenant Woman (April 19, 1980)
When You Gonna Wake Up? (April 18, 1980)
When He Returns (April 20, 1980)
Ain’t Gonna Go To Hell For Anybody (Unreleased song – April 18, 1980)
Cover Down, Pray Through (Unreleased song – April 19, 1980)
Man Gave Names To All The Animals (April 19, 1980)
Precious Angel (April 19, 1980)

Disc 6 – Live in Toronto 1980
Slow Train
(April 18, 1980)
Do Right To Me Baby (Do Unto Others) (April 20, 1980)
Solid Rock (April 20, 1980)
Saving Grace (April 18, 1980)
What Can I Do For You? (April 19, 1980)
In The Garden (April 20, 1980)
Band Introductions (April 19, 1980)
Are You Ready? (April 19, 1980)
Pressing On (April 18, 1980)

Disc 7 – Live in Earl’s Court, London – June 27, 1981
Gotta Serve Somebody
I Believe In You
Like A Rolling Stone
Man Gave Names To All The Animals
Maggie’s Farm
I Don’t Believe You
Dead Man, Dead Man
Girl From The North Country
Ballad Of A Thin Man

Disc 8 – Live in Earl’s Court – London – June 27, 1981
Slow Train
Let’s Begin
Lenny Bruce
Mr. Tambourine Man
Solid Rock
Just Like A Woman
Watered-Down Love
Forever Young
When You Gonna Wake Up
In The Garden
Band Introductions
Blowin’ In The Wind
It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue
Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door

Disc 9: Bonus DVD
Trouble No More – A Musical Film

DVD EXTRAS:
Shot of Love
Cover Down, Pray Through
Jesus Met the Woman at the Well
(Alternate version)
Ain’t Gonna Go to Hell for Anybody (Complete version)
Precious Angel (Complete version)
Slow Train (Complete version)

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

Margo Price: “I knew that this was my true calling”

Originally published in Uncut’s October 2016 issue (Take 233)

A long night out in Nashville with the town’s insurgent new star, Margo Price. Uncut’s Stephen Deusner goes on a bar crawl with the Price family to discover how hard times and personal tragedy led to Midwest Farmer’s Daughter, and the runaway country success story of 2016.

_______________________________

“I like spicy food and I like cheese,” Margo Price says as she scoots into a booth at Duke’s, a new dive in East Nashville. She points proudly to a small, handwritten sign across the room that advertises a sandwich that bears her name. The Margo Price is grilled cheese with Muenster, white cheddar, red onion and spinach, spiked with a bit of giardiniera and accompanied by a herb mayo dipping sauce. It’s not for the faint of heart or the weak of stomach, but Price grabs one regularly – or as regularly as she can when she’s not touring behind her solo debut, Midwest Farmer’s Daughter, one of the best country albums of the year.

“My husband used to work here when the place first opened,” says the Buffalo Prairie, Illinois, native. “He worked behind the counter making sandwiches, and I would come in and always order the same thing – a spicy grilled cheese. So they made me a sandwich.” It’s become a popular menu item, even more so now that Price has become one of the hottest acts in town, and that little sign on the wall hangs like a trophy: a certificate of the perseverance ingrained in her personality. Her professional philosophy is the same as her strategy for getting herself on the menu: just keep doing what you’re doing until someone takes notice.

Tonight, however, Price isn’t eating. Dinner is long over and the sandwich counter has been closed for hours. Instead, she’s sipping a mescal margarita, her favourite at Duke’s because the bartender mixes in chili powder to give it a kick. Sporting
a retro mini-dress, bright red with a ’60s mod ingénue look, Loretta Lynn by way of Jeannie C Riley, Price holds court effortlessly at Duke’s. Bargoers pass by and say hi, ask how she’s doing. Some, like the two young women at the bar, are fans of her music; others are old friends who haven’t seen her around for a while. Price treats everyone with the same casual intimacy.

As she settles in at a small table near the entrance, Price has to half-shout to be heard. “Most of the time I find it easy to talk to people. I waitressed forever, and that was like being interviewed all the time. With waitressing, you can come to the table and talk to the people, and then you can say you gotta check  on this other table. With bartending, you’re stuck behind the bar. You’re trapped.”

The attention doesn’t bother her tonight. In fact, she seems to relish the chatty atmosphere at Duke’s, where she’s still treated more like a barroom regular than a local celebrity who has, in the past six months, played The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, Saturday Night Live and The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. “I can still wander pretty freely in my day-to-day life without being bothered. I’m kind of a chameleon in the way I look and dress, so I can walk through the airport and nobody bothers me. Every now and then you’ll have somebody stop you in the grocery store. That’s a nice thing. I still haven’t found it too much of a drag yet.”

After more than a decade of gigging and touring, things are starting to happen very quickly for Price. There are television appearances, long tours in America and abroad, summer festival gigs, and a schedule so hectic that she can barely keep up with it. But many things remain the same. “I still live in the same house. My husband and I have only one car. I’m still living a modest life, hanging out with my same friends. I’m trying to keep things as normal as possible, whatever that might be. Good or bad, I take it all one day at a time.”

Ask James Murphy!

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With LCD Soundsystem‘s album American Dream continuing to cement the band’s comeback, James Murphy will be answering your questions as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the electronic bigwig?

What’s the best piece of advice David Bowie ever gave him?
East London or East Village?
What’s his favourite comeback album?

Send up your questions by noon, Sunday, October 22 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

The best questions, and James’ answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine.

The December 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Robert Plant on the cover. Plant and his band have also compiled our free CD, which includes tracks by Bert Jansch, Daniel Lanois, Patty Griffin, Thee Oh Sees and more. Elsewhere in the issue, we remember Tom Petty and there are new interviews with REM, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bootsy Collins, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard and Ronnie Spector. We review Morrissey, Sharon Jones, Mavis Staples, Hüsker Dü, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk and much more.

The 39th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

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Here we go: Gwenifer Raymond is a wild American primitive player from Brighton via Cardiff and her video is very funny; all-female desert jams, from Niger, courtesy of Les Filles De Illighadad; an Arabic funk comp; lost and frail Ed Askew songs; something new from British folk radicals Stick In The Wheel; a new Floating Points track; another Ty Segall single; and maybe best new arrival of all, the first extract from the forthcoming third Xylouris White album… Hardcore!

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Bitchin Bajas – Bajas Fresh (Drag City)

Bajas Fresh by Bitchin Bajas

2 Gwenifer Raymond – Sometimes There’s Blood (Tompkins Square)

3 Hans Chew – Open Sea (At The Helm)

4 Les Filles De Illighadad – Eghass Malan (Sahel Sounds)

5 Claire M Singer – Fairge (Touch)

6 Chuck Johnson = Balsams (VDSQ)

Balsams by Chuck Johnson

7 Zimpel/Ziołek – Zimpel/Ziołek (Instant Classic)

8 Thundercat – Drunk (Brainfeeder)

9 The Breeders – Wait In The Car (4AD)

10 Various Artists – Habibi Funk: An Eclectic Selection Of Music From The Arab World (Habibi Funk)

Habibi Funk 007: An eclectic selection of music from the Arab world by Various Artists

11 Jon Hassell – Vernal Equinox (Lovely)

12 Four Tet – New Energy (Text)

13 Pharaoh Sanders – Tauhid/Jewels Of Thought/Deaf Dumb Blind (Summun Kukmun Umyun) (Anthology)

14 Anna St Louis – First Songs (Mare/Woodsist)

15 Ed Askew – A Child in the Sun: Radio Sessions 1969–1970 (Drag City)

A Child In The Sun by Ed Askew

16 Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds – Holy Mountain (Sour Mash)

17 Marisa Anderson – Traditional And Public Domain Songs (Mississippi Records)

18 James Holden & The Animal Spirits – The Animal Spirits (Border Community)

19 Wet Tuna – Live At The Root Cellar 19/1/17 (Bandcamp)

live at the root cellar 1/19/17 “electric set” by WET TUNA

20 Nathan Bowles Trio – Live At Hopscotch 2017 (Bandcamp)

Live at Three Lobed/WXDU Hopscotch Afternoon Jamboree 2017 by Nathan Bowles Trio

21 Saz’Iso – At Least Wave Your Handkerchief At Me: The Joys And Sorrows of
Southern Albanian Song (Glitterbeat)

22 Dub Syndicate – Ambience In Dub 1982-1995 (On U Sound)

23 Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith – The Kid (Western Vinyl)

24 The Breeders – Title TK (4AD)

25 Stick In The Wheel – Over Again (?)

26 Fifty Foot Hose – Cauldron (Aguirre)

27 Calexico – The Thread That Keeps Us (City Slang)

28 Ty Segall – Ty Segall (Drag City)

29 Ty Segall – Meaning (Drag City)

Meaning by Ty Segall

30 Steely Dan – The Royal Scam (ABC)

31 Rosie Vela – Magic Smile (A&M)

32 Floating Points – Ratio (Pluto)

33 Xylouris White – Only Love (Bella Union)