Home Blog Page 253

Exclusive! Hear a previously unreleased live version of the Eagles’ “Hotel California”

0

The Eagles album Hotel California turns 40 this year.

To celebrate this auspicious event, Rhino are releasing a 40th Anniversary Deluxe Edition on November 24.

Among the goodies is a full concert recorded at the Los Angles Forum in October 1976 – shortly before the album was released.

We’re delighted to premiere one of these tracks: a previously unreleased live version of “Hotel California” itself.

Presented in an 11 x 11 hardbound book, the 40th anniversary set also features rare and unseen photos from the era, a replica tour book and an 11 x 22 poster.

You can pre-order it by clicking here.

The track listing is:

Disc One: Original Album
“Hotel California”
“New Kid In Town”
“Life In The Fast Lane”
“Wasted Time”
“Wasted Time (Reprise)”
“Victim Of Love”
“Pretty Maids All In A Row”
“Try And Love Again”
“The Last Resort”

Disc Two: Live at The Los Angeles Forum (October 1976)
“Take It Easy”
“Take It To The Limit”
“New Kid In Town”
“James Dean”
“Good Day In Hell”
“Witchy Woman”
“Funk #49”
“One Of These Nights”
“Hotel California”
“Already Gone”

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 – All American Made

0

When Margo Price emerged in 2016 with Midwest Farmer’s Daughter, there was a certain symmetry to her story. Here was a country singer in the hardcore tradition of Loretta and Kitty, who had struggled to get arrested in Nashville until Jack White’s label – noting that the music was recorded at the Sun studio – stepped forward. Price’s debut was elegantly curated and mostly autobiographical, detailing the struggles of a smalltown girl in an unforgiving world. Suddenly, the singer from Aledo, Illinois, found herself being hailed as the future of country music.

Maybe she was. Perhaps she still is. But All American Made marks both a hardening and a deepening of Price’s sound. You could say it sounds more Memphis than Nashville. Certainly there are soul notes on it, and some Stax-like musical punctuation. Lester Snell, who arranged Shaft while in Isaac Hayes’ band, projects deep colours over the brisk, declamatory “A Little Pain”. And (sounding Memphis, but hailing from Nashville), the gospel quartet the McCrary Sisters add depth to the sultry “Do Right By Me”, a hardscrabble soul tune about a young woman with a cotton-picking farmer who has to leave her one-horse town to follow her dreams. “All I ever wanted was my own song to sing,” Price declaims.

There is, perhaps, a slight irony in this broadening of Price’s sound. Her previous band, Buffalo Clover, ploughed a folky furrow without ever breaking through, and when Price was shopping the tapes of Midwest… around, she was advised to add more rock elements. Her brand of country, meanwhile, didn’t fit with the commercial template which excites the 10-gallon accountants of Music Row.

Happily for Price, she is now operating from a position of strength, and free to take her music wherever she pleases. Geographically, that meant flitting a few blocks from Sun to Sam Phillips Recording, the studio opened by the Sun boss in 1960. The newer studio was state of the art at the time, and enjoyed a brief revival when the likes of The Cramps and Alex Chilton recorded there. It is now being restored under the tutelage of engineer (and Price co-producer) Matt Ross-Spang, whose production work for Jason Isbell earned him a Grammy. It’s a bigger space, a better playground, and it gives Price’s songs room to breathe.

The singer cites Willie Nelson as an example of a traditional country artist who has indulged his love of other genres. But there are times on All American Made when a comparison with Neil Young seems more appropriate. This is never clearer than on the extraordinary title track, which closes the album. The song is actually a few of years old – you don’t need to search for long on YouTube to uncover a clip of Price singing it with Buffalo Clover on a stage set decorated with the American flag. This early rendition is Spartan and powerful; the album version sounds like something taken from Young’s Living With War sessions. The bare bones of the tune are draped with a maelstrom of recorded speech, underscoring the tough politics of a lyric which links the heartache of farm failures in the Midwest with the serial hypocrisies of US foreign policy. You have to listen hard to realise that the detail in the song – of farms “turning into plastic homes” and of “mad cows being cloned” – is rooted in the Reagan administration of Price’s childhood. Yet the relevance of the song to the present day is obvious. (Price, when you ask her, notes how a song such as Young’s “Campaigner” – which explored the corrupt ambition of Richard Nixon – could be updated with minimal lyrical tweaks.)

That’s not the only bit of straight 
talking. “Pay Gap” is a Ry Cooder-ish Mexican waltz around a chorus of “Pay gap, why don’t you do the math?”; “Heart Of America” is a Dolly-ish tale of rural poverty with a skittish rhythm and an abundance of twang. There’s a hint of reggae (and the theme to Grange Hill) on the music business satire “Cocaine Cowboys”; and Price brings all her melodic toughness to bear on “Wild Women”, a road song that notes “it’s hard to be a mother, a singer and a wife”. “Loner”, a song by Price’s underrated writing partner (and husband) Jeremy Ivey, is an elegant country strum in praise of individuality.

The highlight of the record, though, is “Learning To Lose”, a freighted duet with Willie Nelson. Price sings beautifully, but is upstaged by Nelson’s weary croon. Like much of Price’s writing, the song relies on a twist of language, where love becomes life, and life becomes an anxious examination of the eternal. The eternal riddle is a pure country sentiment: “Is winning learning to lose?” Listening to Price and Nelson trading their lines, a lifetime of loss 
sounds like a worthwhile ambition.

Q&A
Margo Price
This record sounds a little more Memphis than Nashville.

I was wanting to explore more than just traditional country. That’s always been the goal, to have a melting pot of all the great kinds of music. Willie Nelson is a strong example of that – he loves jazz, and that comes out in his style. You have to make your own play – you can’t just sing a one-chord, crying honky-tonk song. Well, you can, and people do, but I like to incorporate more.

How did Willie Nelson come to be on the record?
We wrote this song, and we always had it in mind. I’ve hung out with him and shared a joint, and had 
a great conversation with him when we first met. He does a lot of his tracking at his studio in Texas, out in Spicewood. We went up there around New Year, and we got to go in the studio and listen to him sing and play all the guitar on it and cut the whole thing. It was amazing to see the way he works.

Is there an aura in the Sam Phillips studio?
Yeah. It’s a massive place, and you can cut directly to the acetate there. When I was done recording the album, they gave me vinyl 
as I walked out of there. That’s how I sent it to 
Third Man. It was cool 
to be able to send them something that was tangible.

Is Jack White on the record?
He didn’t play 
on this one, but he came in and listened to what we were working on. He refurbished the couch there in Sam Phillips’ office, which 
was amazing.

Do you worry about a backlash to having politics on the record?
I anticipate backlash, yes.
INTERVIEW: ALASTAIR McKAY

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.

Ramones announce Rocket To Russia deluxe anniversary edition

0

Ramones‘ third studio album, Rocket To Russia, is to celebrate its 40-year anniversary with two versions.

The 3 CD/1 LP Rocket To Russia: 40th Anniversary Deluxe Edition will contain two different mixes of the album: a remastered version of the original and a new 40th Anniversary Tracking Mix by original Rocket To Russia engineer/mixer Ed Stasium. The collection also includes a number of unreleased studio recordings, plus a previously unissued recording of the band’s 1977 concert in Glasgow.

The Deluxe Edition will be produced in a limited and numbered edition of 15,000 copies worldwide and comes packaged in a 12 x 12 hardcover book. Along with the music, the set also features stories about the band by Sire Records founder Seymour Stein, details about making the album by Stasium, and extensive liner notes by Uncut contributor, Jaan Uhelszki.

Two dozen rare and unreleased recordings are found on the second disc, including rough mixes from sessions at Mediasound and The Power Station. The third disc, meanwhile, features a complete unreleased recording of the band’s December 19, 1977 show at the Apollo Centre in Glasgow.

ROCKET TO RUSSIA: 40th ANNIVERSARY DELUXE EDITION
Track Listing

Disc One: Original Album
Remastered Original Mixes
1. “Cretin Hop”
2. “Rockaway Beach”
3. “Here Today, Gone Tomorrow”
4. “Locket Love”
5. “I Don’t Care”
6. “Sheena Is A Punk Rocker”
7. “We’re A Happy Family”
8. “Teenage Lobotomy”
9. “Do You Wanna Dance?”
10. “I Wanna Be Well”
11. “I Can’t Give You Anything”
12. “Ramona”
13. “Surfin’ Bird”
14. “Why Is It Always This Way?”

40th Anniversary Tracking Mix
15. “Cretin Hop”
16. “Rockaway Beach”
17. “Here Today, Gone Tomorrow”
18. “Locket Love”
19. “I Don’t Care” – Version 2
20. “It’s A Long Way Back To Germany” – Version 1
21. “We’re A Happy Family”
22. “Teenage Lobotomy”
23. “Do You Wanna Dance?”
24. “I Wanna Be Well”
25. “I Can’t Give You Anything”
26. “Ramona”
27. “Surfin’ Bird”
28. “Why Is It Always This Way?”

Disc Two: Bonus Material
Mediasound/Power Station Rough Mixes

1. “Why Is It Always This Way?” – Mediasound Rough, Alternate Lyrics *
2. “Rockaway Beach” – Power Station Rough *
3. “I Wanna Be Well” – Power Station Rough *
4. “Locket Love” – Power Station Rough *
5. “I Can’t Give You Anything” – Power Station Rough *
6. “Cretin Hop” – Power Station Rough *
7. “Happy Family” – Power Station Rough *
8. “Ramona” – Mediasound Rough, Alternate Lyrics *
9. “Do You Wanna Dance?” – Mediasound Rough *
10.“Teenage Lobotomy” – Mediasound Rough *
11.“Here Today, Gone Tomorrow” – Mediasound Rough *
12.“I Don’t Care” – Version 2, Mediasound Rough *

40th Anniversary Extras
13.“Here Today, Gone Tomorrow” – Acoustic Version *
14.“It’s A Long Way Back To Germany” – Version 1-Dee Dee Vocal *
15. “Ramona” – Sweet Little Ramona Pop Mix *
16.“Surfin’ Bird” – Alternate Vocal *
17.“Teenage Lobotomy” – Backing Track *
18.“We’re A Happy Family” – At Home With The Family *
19. “Cretin Hop” – Backing Track *
20.“Needles And Pins” – Demo Version *
21.“Babysitter” – B-Side Version
22.“It’s A Long Way Back To Germany” – B-Side Version
23.Joey RTR Radio Spot Promo *
24. “We’re A Happy Family” – Joey & Dee Dee Dialogue *

Disc Three: Live at Apollo Centre, Glasgow, Scotland (December 19, 1977)
1. “Rockaway Beach” *
2. “Teenage Lobotomy” *
3. “Blitzkrieg Bop” *
4. “I Wanna Be Well” *
5. “Glad To See You Go” *
6. “Gimme Gimme Shock Treatment” *
7. “You’re Gonna Kill That Girl” *
8. “I Don’t Care” *
9. “Sheena Is A Punk Rocker” *
10. “Carbona Not Glue” *
11. “Commando” *
12. “Here Today, Gone Tomorrow” *
13. “Surfin’ Bird” *
14. “Cretin Hop” *
15. “Listen To My Heart” *
16. “California Sun” *
17. “I Don’t Wanna Walk Around With You” *
18. “Pinhead” *
19. “Do You Wanna Dance?” *
20. “Chain Saw” *
21. “Today Your Love, Tomorrow The World” *
22. “Now I Wanna Be A Good Boy” *
23. “Judy Is A Punk” *
24. “Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue” *
25. “We’re A Happy Family” *

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.

Richard Hell and the Voidoids to release 40th anniversary edition of Blank Generation

0

Richard Hell and the Voidoids are to release a 40th anniversary deluxe edition of Blank Generation.

A limited edition double-CD and double-LP will be available on November 24, Record Store Day’s Black Friday.

The remastered album has also been restored to its original 1977 track listing and sleeve imagery. The set includes a second disc with previously unreleased, alternate studio versions, out-of-print singles and rare bootleg live tracks from the band’s first appearance in 1976 at CBGB. The booklet also contains many previously unpublished photos of the band, an essay by Hell, pages from his notebooks and private papers and a new interview with Ivan Julian by Hell.

The vinyl track listing for Blank Generation 40th Anniversary deluxe edition is:

Side One
“Love Comes In Spurts”
“Liars Beware”
“New Pleasure”
“Betrayal Takes Two”
“Down At The Rock And Roll Club”
“Who Says?”

Side Two
“Blank Generation”
“Walking On The Water”
“The Plan”
“Another World”

Side Three
“Love Comes In Spurts” – Electric Lady Studios Alternate Version
“Blank Generation” – Electric Lady Studios Alternate Version
“You Gotta Lose” – Electric Lady Studios Outtake Version
“Who Says?” – Plaza Sound Studios Alternate Version
“Love Comes In Spurts” – Live at CBGB, November 19, 1976
“Blank Generation” – Live at CBGB, November 19, 1976

Side Four
“Liars Beware” – Live at CBGB, April 14, 1977
“New Pleasure” – Live at CBGB, April 14, 1977
“Walking On The Water” – Live at CBGB, April 14, 1977
“Another World” – Ork Records Version
“Oh” – Original 2001 Release
1977 Sire Records Radio Commercial

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.

December 2017

Robert Plant, REM, Tom Petty and King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated December 2017 and out on October 19.

Plant is on the cover, and inside, the Golden God pops down to his local to discuss his new LP, Carry Fire, John Bonham and plans for the 50th birthday of Led Zeppelin. “[Let’s] hold hands and contact the living,” he says. “What else can you do, really?”

The issue also includes a free CD curated by Robert Plant & The Sensational Space Shifters, Golden Gods, featuring tracks by Buddy & Julie Miller, Thee Oh Sees, Bert Jansch, Patty Griffin, Konono No1 and more.

25 years after the release of REM‘s Automatic For The People, Uncut tracks down the major players to uncover the secrets of an unlikely rock masterpiece: “You don’t always have to make a high-energy pop record for it to be good,” says Mike Mills.

The great Tom Petty, and his life and work with the Heartbreakers, Mudcrutch and the Traveling Wilburys, is remembered in a tribute feature: “We were always glad to be one of the bands. That’s all you can do,” he told Bud Scoppa.

Uncut joins up with King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard in Nashville to discover just how these seven young Australians are becoming garage-rock’s biggest new cult. “I’ve never been super-interested in writing songs that I feel already exist,” explains “band director” Stu Mackenzie.

We also explore the rare strain of late-’70s suburban punks, talking to trailblazers in Peterborough, Carlisle and more, examining how a radical passion could be nurtured in the face of local bafflement and hostility… “Punks weren’t liked. We stuck together. That’s why some of us have never left punk.”

Ronnie Spector, Darlene Love and more recall the making of The Ronettes‘ classic “Be My Baby”, remembering how Phil Spector‘s ‘Wall Of Sound’ production created a pop landmark; elsewhere, Bootsy Collins takes us through the peaks of his career as a cosmic funk bassist – from James Brown & The JB’s and Funkadelic to Bootsy’s Rubber Band and his new solo album, World Wide Funk.

Perfume Genius reveals the records that have shaped his life, while singer and actor Charlotte Gainsbourg answers your questions about her new album Rest, her parents Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin, and working with Beck, Paul McCartney, Air and Jarvis Cocker.

Our Instant Karma front section features Bruce Springsteen, William Eggleston, Girl Ray and The Professionals, featuring Paul Cook and Steve Jones.

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new albums from Sharon Jones, Morrissey, James Holden, Mavis Staples and Gun Outfit, archival releases from Hüsker Dü, Davy Graham, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk, live sets from Bon Iver and Suzanne Vega, and DVDs and films on Mick Ronson, Grace Jones and Bert Berns.

The new Uncut is out on October 19.

This month in Uncut

0

Robert Plant, REM, Tom Petty and King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated December 2017 and out on October 19.

Plant is on the cover, and inside, the Golden God pops down to his local to discuss his new LP, Carry Fire, John Bonham and plans for the 50th birthday of Led Zeppelin. “[Let’s] hold hands and contact the living,” he says. “What else can you do, really?”

The issue also includes a free CD curated by Robert Plant & The Sensational Space Shifters, Golden Gods, featuring tracks by Buddy & Julie Miller, Thee Oh Sees, Bert Jansch, Patty Griffin, Konono No1 and more.

25 years after the release of REM‘s Automatic For The People, Uncut tracks down the major players to uncover the secrets of an unlikely rock masterpiece: “You don’t always have to make a high-energy pop record for it to be good,” says Mike Mills.

The great Tom Petty, and his life and work with the Heartbreakers, Mudcrutch and the Traveling Wilburys, is remembered in a tribute feature: “We were always glad to be one of the bands. That’s all you can do,” he told Bud Scoppa.

Uncut joins up with King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard in Nashville to discover just how these seven young Australians are becoming garage-rock’s biggest new cult. “I’ve never been super-interested in writing songs that I feel already exist,” explains “band director” Stu Mackenzie.

We also explore the rare strain of late-’70s suburban punks, talking to trailblazers in Peterborough, Carlisle and more, examining how a radical passion could be nurtured in the face of local bafflement and hostility… “Punks weren’t liked. We stuck together. That’s why some of us have never left punk.”

Ronnie Spector, Darlene Love and more recall the making of The Ronettes‘ classic “Be My Baby”, remembering how Phil Spector‘s ‘Wall Of Sound’ production created a pop landmark; elsewhere, Bootsy Collins takes us through the peaks of his career as a cosmic funk bassist – from James Brown & The JB’s and Funkadelic to Bootsy’s Rubber Band and his new solo album, World Wide Funk.

Perfume Genius reveals the records that have shaped his life, while singer and actor Charlotte Gainsbourg answers your questions about her new album Rest, her parents Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin, and working with Beck, Paul McCartney, Air and Jarvis Cocker.

Our Instant Karma front section features Bruce Springsteen, William Eggleston, Girl Ray and The Professionals, featuring Paul Cook and Steve Jones.

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new albums from Sharon Jones, Morrissey, James Holden, Mavis Staples and Gun Outfit, archival releases from Hüsker Dü, Davy Graham, Tim Buckley and Talk Talk, live sets from Bon Iver and Suzanne Vega, and DVDs and films on Mick Ronson, Grace Jones and Bert Berns.

The new Uncut is out on October 19.

Introducing the new Uncut

0

“I didn’t choose to be the King Of Cock Rock. I didn’t choose to be Chest Of The Year in 1971. These things are festooned upon one and you have to live ‘em down.”

Welcome, then, to the latest edition of Uncut: issues should have made their way into UK shops by Thursday; wise and fortunate subscribers will probably have received their issues before then. Chest Of The Year 1971 turns out, of course, to be Robert Plant. At home in his local pub, Plant is, as ever, the compelling raconteur and host, as happy to discuss mortality, and his old friend John Bonham, as he is his remarkable new album, Carry Fire. He and his band have compiled our mind-expanding free CD this month, and there is also talk about The Guardian Of The Whiteleafed Oak, blue Irish comedians, Malvern folklore, and an encounter with Sonny Boy Williamson in a Birmingham toilet. Plus, intriguingly, Plant touches on his plans for the impending 50th anniversary of Led Zeppelin. Let’s “hold hands and contact the living,” he tells Michael Bonner. “What else can you do, really?”

It is easy to feel assailed by tragedies, both vast and intimate, in 2017. In this issue of Uncut, we remember at length and with love Tom Petty, Holger Czukay, Harry Dean Stanton and Charles Bradley, while our album of the month is the final astonishing testament from Sharon Jones. But there’s still plenty of room for heroes, new and old, whose unquenchable lust for life and musical adventure remains an inspiration. So meet King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, circumnavigate their excruciating name, and revel in the psychedelic energy that drives them to try and make five albums in a single year. Learn about Perfume Genius’ formative influences, the latest manifestation of Bon Iver, and a wealth of new music from powerful, undersung artists like James Holden, Gun Outfit and Peter Oren. More newcomers range from teenage psychedelicists Girl Ray to the venerable photographer William Eggleston, who tells us how he’s branching out into a musical career as he nears his 80th year.

What else? REM revisit Automatic For The People. Bootsy Collins talks us through his greatest albums. Ronnie Spector and her accomplices reconstruct the making of “Be My Baby”. Charlotte Gainsbourg answers your questions. And Peter Watts learns what was it like, in 1977, to be the only punk in the village, as he discovers how a city-centred musical revolution caused reverberations in the towns and suburbs beyond the greenbelts. “Punks weren’t liked,” he hears. “We stuck together. That’s why some of us have never left punk.”

Forty years ago, they wanted a riot of their own. Now you can get yours, every month, via Uncut.

 

Watch Morrissey’s video for “Spent The Day In Bed”

0

Morrissey has revealed the video for “Spent The Day In Bed“, the first single to be taken from upcoming album Low in High School.

The video was filmed at the 142 year-old Peckham Liberal Club.

Morrissey has also today announced two unique pop-up shops to celebrate the release of Low in High School. The first shop will be open at the Provender Building, Camden Market, London on November 17, 18 and 19. There will also be a second shop on Melrose Ave, Los Angeles.

Low in High School will be Morrissey’s first studio album since 2014 and his debut for BMG.

The tracklisting for Low in High School is:

My Love I’d Do Anything For You
I Wish You Lonely
Jacky’s Only Happy When She’s Up On The Stage
Home Is A Question Mark
Spent The Day In Bed
I Bury The Living
In Your Lap
The Girl From Tel-Aviv Who Wouldn’t Kneel
All The Young People Must Fall In Love
When You Open Your Legs
Who Will Protect Us From The Police?
Israel

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Zara McFarlane – Arise

0

The British jazz saxophonist Courtney Pine once observed how young jazz musicians always seemed to be embarrassed about their non-jazz influences. “In private they’d be talking about funk and punk and dancehall and whatever,” he said. “But put them in front of a camera or a journalist and they’d only talk about Art Blakey or Duke Ellington. It’s as if they were ashamed of admitting that they had a life outside of jazz.”

A new generation of jazz musicians, however, particularly British ones, are less hung up about such things. For the likes of Shabaka Hutchings, GoGo Penguin, Laura Jurd, Femi Temowo, Seb Rochford and Matthew Halsall, “jazz” is less a genre, more a portal into another world, an interface that can be used to transform and translate any form of musical language.

Part of this new wave of British jazz musicians is Zara McFarlane, a singer from Dagenham in East London. A graduate of the Brit School and the Guildhall School of Music, McFarlane emerged through the ranks of Jazz Jamaica (Gary Crosby’s London-based ska-jazz big band) and Tomorrow’s Warriors (a collective of up-and-coming black British jazz musicians). Her first album, 2011’s Until Tomorrow, was an elegant, musicianly piece of modern jazz dominated by Peter Edwards’s piano trio; the 2014 follow-up, If You Only Knew Her, saw her start to integrate touches of dub and reggae into her modal jazz.

Her third album, however, delves deep into the connections between jazz and Jamaican music. The opening track, “Ode To Kumina”, and the closing track “Ode To Cyril”, both mix the African-derived hand drum patterns of one of Jamaica’s earliest musics – the kumina – with chanted vocals, tight horn harmonies and touches of calypso. Elsewhere we touch on the island’s descendants, like drum ‘n’ bass and dubstep. As such it’s almost like a voyage through the African diaspora, a jazz that simultaneously looks several centuries into the past and several years into the future.

The core of McFarlane’s band hasn’t changed – pianist Peter Edwards, saxophonist Binker Golding, bassist Max Luthert and drummer Moses Boyd – but the key difference here is that drummer Boyd has taken over production duties. He and saxophonist Golding are behind the rambunctious drums/sax duo Binker & Moses, and much of draws from that duo’s spartan energy. Boyd, in particular, serves as a one-man Art Blakey, Sly Dunbar, Carlton Barrett and Tony Allen, swinging in a distinctly Caribbean vernacular.

On her 2014 album, McFarlane transformed two reggae classics – Junior Murvin’s “Police And Thieves” and Nora Dean’s “Angie La La” – into modal jazz explorations. Here she ekes new truths out of two more Jamaican standards. Another Nora Dean number, “Peace Begins Within”, is transformed rhythmically, its lovers rock skank reworked as funky Afrobeat; while The Congos “Fisherman” (the opening track from their epic Lee “Scratch” Perry-produced 1977 album, Heart Of The Congos) is transformed harmonically, with layers of audacious, dissonant harmonies superimposed upon a simple piano and bass drum riff.

Jazz musicians often make great interpreters but poor songwriters; they’re sometimes so keen to display their chops that they get bogged down in unhummable melodies and labyrinthine chord changes. McFarlane – who made her TV debut aged 14, impersonating Lauryn Hill on Stars In Their Eyes – has a pop sensibility that’s unusual in the jazz world, and her songs (five penned alone, five cowrites) are based around strong melodies. “Fussin’ And Fightin’” shares its title with a Bob Marley song, but it’s actually a better tune, a politicised plea for solidarity set to a polyrhythmic beat that’s pitched somewhere between roots reggae and jungle. A similarly busy drum pattern powers “Freedom Chain”, a gorgeous piece of lovers’ rock that sees McFarlane providing more complex harmonies while guitarist Shirley Tetteh freaks out.

McFarlane is also not ashamed to work with professional songwriters outside the world of jazz. “Allies And Enemies”, cowritten with Shane Beales, is a highlight here, a drumless two-chord ballad in the unusual time signature of 7/4 about love and manipulation, based around a deliciously phrased vocal line (“they say time heals all wounds, whoever they are”). “Stoke The Fire”, co-penned with Paul Simm (who has written for Neneh Cherry, the Sugababes and Amy Winehouse) is a slow-burning roots reggae ballad that was written and recorded long before recent events in West London, but lyrics like: “They want us to burn/They just put fuel on the fire,” take on a shockingly prescient significance in the wake of the Grenfell Tower fire. “They stack us tall/and watch us burn/when will they learn/we all fall down.”

And that air of quiet militancy that’s a defining feature of this album. “Pride”, a pulsating waltz based around an ostinato bass clarinet line from star saxophonist Shabaka Hutchings, is an assertion of agency that mirrors the Black Lives Matter movement. Hutchings crops up again to provide a lengthy clarinet solo on “Silhouette”, a 6/8 ballad about how black women have been almost invisible throughout history. Both feature tremendous sax solos – strident without being didactic, accessible without being cloying – that seem to mirror the spirit of the entire album.

Q&A
Zara McFarlane
Was this a conscious effort to unite jazz with African-Caribbean music?

It’s something I’ve been interested in for a while. In fact, it’s only since writing and recording most of these songs that I started researching the history of Jamaican music in depth. I’ve been writing a musical with Theatre Royal Stratford East for their New Musical Theatre Development Collective about early Jamaican music. So, for instance, the “kumina” music we reference comes from indentured labourers from the Congo who came over after the abolition of slavery in 1834.

You’ve multitracked your voice so much that it appears that there’s like a choir of Zaras on each track!
Yes, I’m still trying to work out how I’ll perform this live! I think vocal harmonies are so crucial to so much Jamaican music, not just reggae and dub but in lovers rock and ska and rocksteady too – there’s a lot of harmony. I think that’s something that comes out of communal group vocal singing in Jamaica from the 1800s, which used a lot of percussion and vocals. It was always something you’d hear at ceremonial events, mainly deaths, but also weddings and births. That’s something I grew up with.

What edge did drummer Moses Boyd bring as a producer?
I’ve known Moses for years, through working with Tomorrow’s Warriors, while him and saxophonist Binker Golding have both been in my band for ages. As a producer I think he put the emphasis more on the rhythmical elements, which is what I wanted. So there’s a lot of reggae and dub, nyabinghi, kumina, all that stuff.

Who is the Cyril in the final track “Ode To Cyril”?
It’s this guy called Cyril Diaz, who had his own orchestra backing calypso singers in the 1950s. He was actually born in Cuba, based in Trinidad and big in Jamaica, which shows how mixed up a lot of those influences are around the Caribbean.
INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Fleet Foxes to release The Electric Lady Session EP

0

Fleet Foxes are releasing a new EP, The Electric Lady Session.

It will be released as a 10″ for this year’s Record Store Day Black Friday on November 24.

The EP features four songs selected from a WFUV session recorded at the Electric Lady Studio in New York on June 13, 2017 – a few days before the band’s new album, Crack-Up, was released.

Side A of the vinyl includes “Cassius, -” and “- Naiads, Cassadies” while Side B includes “Mearcstapa” and “On Another Ocean (January / June).”

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Marquee Club founder Harold Pendleton dies aged 93

0

Harold Pendleton, the founder of the Marquee Club and Reading Festival has died aged 93.

Born in Southport in 1924, Pendleton moved to London in the 1940s. Secretary of the National Jazz Federation, he took over the Marquee Ballroom on Oxford Street in 1958.

The Marquee – which relocated to nearby Wardour Street in 1964 – hosted performances from The Who, The Yardbirds, the Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, Cream, Jimi Hendrix Experience, Led Zeppelin and many others. Pendleton gave up ownership of the club in 1987.

In 1961, inspired by the Newport Jazz Festival, he launched the National Jazz Festival in Reading – and remained involved in what became the Reading Festival until 1992.

As obituary published by Entec Sound & Light, the company he founded in 1968, read, “Throughout his 60-year career, Harold created platforms to showcase emerging talent, as a promoter, manager, club owner, publisher, festival owner and innovator.

“He helped to shape popular music culture and uniquely bridged jazz, skiffle, blues, R&B, folk, rock, psychedelia, progressive rock, heavy metal, punk, new wave and world music movements, lit the fuse of one of the world’s most influential music business empires.”

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Hear Father John Misty’s country version of his song, “Pure Comedy”

0

Father John Misty has shared a country version of his song, “Pure Comedy” titled “Pure Country“.

“Pure Comedy” is the title track of his third studio album released earlier this year.

Josh Tillman recently performed a special show at Jack White‘s Third Man Records; the performance was recorded for an upcoming live album. Tillman has reportedly also finished his next studio album.

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Wand – Plum

0

Cory Hanson didn’t hang about when he formed Wand with fellow art school chums Lee Landey and Evan Burrows in 2013. Their first three albums were released in a creative dash of just 14 months, a prolific flurry to rival that of friend and fellow West Coast adventurer Ty Segall, on whose God? label Wand made their start. In fact, Burrows and Hanson, the latter dressed in a natty safari suit, spent most of last year touring as part of Segall’s backing band, The Muggers.

Hanson has slightly eased up of late. Last November saw the arrival of his comely solo debut, The Unborn Capitalist From Limbo, whose sound marked a clear departure from Wand’s crunching psych-rock. Loud guitars were instead replaced by gauzy folk stylings and deft string arrangements. The album proved more than just a distraction from his main band. Crucially, it showed that, beneath the predilection for grinding noise, Hanson was an assured pop songwriter at heart. And it’s an experience that feeds directly into Wand’s fourth studio LP, Plum.

There’s a fresh physical dynamic at play here too. The end of 2016 found Hanson expanding the lineup to accommodate guitarist Robbie Cody and keyboardist/backing singer Sofia Arreguin. Not only have the new additions helped spread the songwriting load, they’ve allowed Wand a freedom to experiment that had otherwise been bound by the limitations of a trio. All of which means that Plum is the kind of record that goes wherever it pleases, an intuitive work that exists at the confluence of avant-pop, psychedelia and garage-rock.

Improvisation has been central to the sound of Plum. Hanson and the band spent months shaping these songs at their rehearsal space in LA before heading out on the road to test their durability. It’s a tribute to their instincts that there’s nothing here that feels studied or overly developed. Instead, Plum fizzes and surprises with the kind of regularity that makes even its fine predecessor, 2015’s 1,000 Days, sound a little prosaic by comparison.

The title track starts life as a raw piano riff, before being ambushed by spiny guitars that take their leave with the arrival of shakers and weirdo Moog effects. Hanson’s keening, slightly troubled vocal is then joined by Arreguin’s harmonies. Finally, as the song ebbs to a close, all that remains is a lone whistle. The playfully titled “Bee Karma” represents the twin poles of Hanson’s artistic output, sudden gusts of guitar subsiding into bucolic acoustic passages and back again. It’s not the only time Wand sound like a slightly more effusive version of Radiohead here; it’s possible, too, to detect the voyaging spirit of Television in “Blue Cloud”, from its terse, circling guitar intro to the allusive lyrical references to “Torn Curtain”. One of two songs that extend past the seven-minute mark, “Blue Cloud” is a perfect summation of what Wand do best, offering a variety of moods that manage to sound both instinctive and considered. This is psychedelia in the truest sense of the meaning – coltish, dark, invigorating and endlessly curious, as opposed to the weary generic tropes of echo effects, backwards guitars and freakouts.

Plum is also rooted in direct emotional experience. Despite its often elusive lyrics, a sense of anguish and loss pushes through its grooves. There’s a recurring reference to maps, as if the album’s protagonists are in search of new or lost co-ordinates, their future paths still unknown, waiting to be uncovered. And there’s also very real, still-raw heartbreak. The doleful “The Trap” is a song of fortitude and forbearance, its subject clinging to personal faith and the promise of a better day. “To survive in the end/You have got to pretend it is worth surviving now,” sings Hanson at his most delicate, before accepting that “We all fall apart/It’s just who we are.”

Yet the overriding feeling, mirrored in the exquisite vitality of the music, is one of transcendence. This reveals itself in any number of ways, from Hanson’s withering kiss-off to a departing lover in “White Cat” (a halfway house between Revolver and White Denim, a rush of busy chords and fluctuating melodies) and the more sober reflections on lovely closer “Driving”: “Burning sensation with passings of grief/Keep it together and respect my needs.”

Followers of California’s modern garage-rock scene tend to hoist John Dwyer and Ty Segall as its figureheads, in terms of creative daring and sheer productivity. But Cory Hanson is fast emerging as a significant force in his own right, whether solo or otherwise. Plum feels very much like a landmark in his still-fresh career.

Q&A
Corey Hanson
How did you break in Wand as a five-piece?

I was reading about how Television wrote Marquee Moon and they’d go into their rehearsal space five days a week for four hours a day. So I decided to go in six days a week for 10 hours a day. We pushed harder to see what would happen.

How much does your recent solo LP, The Unborn Capitalist From Limbo, feed into this LP?
That was a game-changer for me. I tried to eliminate all the things obscuring the songwriting and not have layers of distortion or fuzz. And we carried that attitude into Plum: ‘Let’s make a record where we all just perform it live in the studio and have that be the final product.’ I kept thinking, ‘Is this going to be the biggest mistake of my life?’

There’s also a theme of loss on Plum…
I was going through a severe break-up. And there were deaths in our families, so the lyrics are pooled from big losses we were experiencing together. But there’s also a sense of overcoming it all. A feeling of triumph, I guess. ROB HUGHES

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Courtney Barnett: “I want to be doing stuff forever, I don’t wanna crash and burn”

0

Originally published in Uncut’s December 2015 issue (Take 223)

From her base in Melbourne, in two years COURTNEY BARNETT has grown from cottage industry to indie-rock phenomenon, her deadpan observations and spiky guitar playing winning fans from Blur to Jack White. “I think you’ve just got to do what feels right, without compromising your morals,” she says. “Maybe something I’m saying is different somehow.” Words: Tom Pinnock

____________________________________________

Courtney Barnett and her band have spent most of the summer in identical portable boxes – the ubiquitous white cabins that are the universal unit of backstage festival accommodation. If her arrangements are much the same from day to day at present, however, they are a far cry from her customary environment in Melbourne, Australia, where for six years she has presided over a cottage industry of self-booked shows and self-released records.

However, since the release in 2013 of her sleepy and witty “A Sea Of Split Peas” double EP, and her follow-up album, the thrashier, but no less wry Sometimes I Sit And Think And Sometimes I Just Sit, word has spread about this deadpan songwriter and her explosive live band. She has been summoned to support Blur at massive shows in America, and while in Nashville recently made a single for Jack White’s Blue Series. For a laconic, supremely laidback individual, she maintains a busy schedule, and hasn’t seen home for months.

“I miss Melbourne, but I don’t pine for it,” Barnett says. “I’ll be home soon. I try to just kind of live in the moment and do what’s happening now, so that I don’t stress out about stuff too much. It’s human nature, everyone goes mental [on tour]. Everything feels multiplied by five, all the emotions and all the adrenaline, so tiny little things send people crazy. After a month, you go to weird head-spaces.”

Uncut follows Barnett and her band – “the CB3” – for a few days at European festivals, and promotional commitments, playing for Belgian and Dutch TV. While band members Bones Sloane (bass) and Dan Mudie (drums) relax, Barnett handles the business duties. Just as impressively, she still calls all the shots. Even her Jack White-produced single is a collaboration between Third Man, Aussie indie Remote Control and her own label, Milk!.

“Milk!’s kind of like an art project,” she explains in her cabin later on. “We just decide what wacky thing we wanna do and work towards it with the hope of making enough money to make another thing happen. It’s nice to be able to work that way without thinking of how much cash you can make.

“I met [Dischord founder, Fugazi guitarist] Ian MacKaye recently in DC. I just totally admire his whole fucking approach to life and music and everything. It’s kind of cool to be discovering someone like him and all of his bands and his label now. That general vicinity of the music industry is the corner that I would prefer to be in, which I think is what I was aiming for when I started Milk!, just to be able to do things on my own terms. Not to be like some rogue cowboy, just ’cos I just want to make music without all the shit that people tag along with it.”

Another big inspiration for Barnett is Patti Smith – although, again, perhaps as much for her approach to her art and her career than her music. Barnett has just covered Smith’s debut, Horses, live in Sydney with her partner, musician Jen Cloher, and some friends, tackling two songs each. “It’s a really challenging album. But you’ve got to challenge yourself in life or you don’t get anywhere. I try to constantly push myself a little outside my comfort zone, or I’d just stay in my room and be depressed. So I have to keep trying to grow as a person.”

The 38th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

0

Been playing a lot of Jon Hassell this week; not just the reissue of “Dream Theory In Malaya”, which I think is just out, but his debut solo album, “Vernal Equinox”, a new one on me and sadly unavailable on any platform it seems. Also here: a mighty essential Pharaoh Sanders boxset; the best, and sadly last, Sharon Jones album; a killer live set from Chris Forsyth And The Solar Motel Band, including their take on “Don’t Be Denied” (second nice cover of that song I’ve heard this past year or so, after Norah Jones’ unexpected effort); a mind-expanding mix from Spin’s Andy Cush; the Wu!; and last but definitely not least, the brilliant new Hans Chew salbum. Dig in…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Jon Hassell – Dream Theory In Malaya: Fourth World Volume Two (Tak:Til)

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

3 Bitchin Bajas – Bajas Fresh (Drag City)

Bajas Fresh by Bitchin Bajas

4 Four Tet – New Energy (Text)

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

6 Ahmad Jamal Trio – The Awakening (Be With)

7 The Necessaries – Event Horizon (Be With)

8 OCS – Memory Of A Cut Off Head (Castle Face)

9 Kendrick Lamar – DAMN (Top Dawg Entertainment)

10 Jon Hassell – Vernal Equinox (Lovely)

11 Julie Byrne – Not Even Happiness (Basin Rock)

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

13 Chris Thile – Thanks For Listening (Nonesuch)

14 Brigid Mae Power – Don’t Shut Me Up (Politely) (Tompkins Square)

15 Chuck Johnson = Balsams (VDSQ)

Balsams by Chuck Johnson

16 Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings – Soul Of A Woman (Daptone)

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

18 Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band – Live At Union Pool 21 Sept 2017 (Bandcamp)

Live at Union Pool 21 Sept 2017 by Chris Forsyth & the Solar Motel Band

19 Kamasi Washington – Harmony Of Difference (Young Turks)

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

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

Bay Head by Gunn-Truscinski Duo

22 Superorganism – Something For Your M.I.N.D. (Domino)

23 Ryan Driver Featuring The Weather Station – It Must Be Dark Tonight (Tin Angel)

24 Various Artists – Sound Advice 233: Andy Cush (http://www.theworldsbestever.com)

https://www.mixcloud.com/TheWorldsBestEver/sound-advice-233-andy-cush/

25 Calexico – End Of The World With You (City Slang)

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

27 Hans Chew – Open Sea (At The Helm)

28 Steely Dan – The Royal Scam (ABC)

29 Wu-Tang Clan Wu-Tang Clan: The Saga Continues (36 Chambers/Entertainment One)

The Style Council vinyl remasters

0

When Uncut published its Top 30 Paul Weller songs 10 years ago, it was no surprise that only five tracks from The Style Council made the cut. The post-Britpop narrative still had it that the ’80s were a regrettable detour for Weller – a decade of pretensions, anodyne funk, questionable politics, dodgy haircuts and toe-curling sleevenotes. There was one distinguished dissenting voice. “I really empathised with The Style Council,” said Robert Wyatt. “I know some people think of it as Paul’s period in the wilderness, but the wilderness is a very underestimated place. Sometimes the most important part of what you do comes out of the moments when you sidestep the main road.”

It’s to Weller’s credit that he’s still evading the main road even as he approaches 60. You could sense fresh bearings last December, when he persuaded Wyatt out of retirement to join him and Danny Thompson in a people-power trio for the first Concert For Corbyn in Brighton. Ignoring calls for “Eton Rifles”, Weller revisited “A Stones Throw Away”, from the Council’s 1985 state-of-the-nation address, Our Favourite Shop. On record the scathing lyric was strung up in needless orchestration; here it was stripped back, delivered with rueful urgency.

Since that night, all manner of supposedly outdated ’80s ideas have gained a surprising new currency. So, with the back catalogue newly remastered and reissued on beautifully hued vinyl, is it time to give The Style Council their due? It’s hard to imagine a debut more likely to infuriate the green-parka army of betrayed Jam fans than Introducing… (1983). While The Style Council had been manifestly born out of “a hatred for the rock myth and the rock culture” and conceived by Weller and new partner Mick Talbot as an attempt to marry the Small Faces and the Modern Jazz Quartet, debut 45 “Speak Like A Child” wasn’t the radical departure many expected. But collected on Introducing…, available as a European import in autumn ’83, the extent of Weller’s transformation became clear.

That’s most evident on “Long Hot Summer”, a track smitten with the lush, synthetic filigree producers Jolley & Swain had tailored for Imagination, and the first undeniable stroke of Style Council genius. While vintage R&B and Motown might have been acceptable to the discerning mod revivalist, “Long Hot Summer” was brazenly contemporary, staking Weller’s claim to be blue-eyed Soulboy No 1 ahead of metropolitan club kids like Spandau Ballet, or even home counties upstarts like George Michael.

Introducing… might have been wished away by diehards as a grab-bag of singles – the sound of a man musically taking off a pair of too-tight winklepickers. But when Café Bleu, the debut LP proper, followed in March 1984, it was no less bemusing. It featured 13 tracks (which Weller sang on less than half of), a handful of Talbot’s blithe jazz pastiches (‘Café Blue Note’, more like), some daft rive gaucherie in the sleevenotes, and none of the previous year’s hit singles. It had originally been conceived as a double but, not for the last time, Polydor refused to indulge Weller’s whims. As a consequence the album that finally appeared felt weirdly lopsided, like a meal consisting of amuse-bouches and desserts, but no main course. A relief from the meat and potatoes of much of The Jam for sure, but a lost opportunity that in some ways scuppered the band’s nascent career. You can’t help but feel that had they released a single album in the autumn of 1983, including “Speak Like A Child”, “Long Hot Summer”, “Ever Changing Moods”, “Headstart To Happiness”, “You’re The Best Thing”, “Here’s One That Got Away” and “Spring, Summer, Autumn”, it would be rightly acclaimed as one of the great British pop debuts of the decade.

By 1985, Weller had cemented a working band including Steve White on drums and Camelle Hinds on bass, plus new love DC Lee, around the core of him and Talbot. While none of the pretensions had been lost, Our Favourite Shop was a far more cohesive work, with lyrical sights aimed squarely at Downing Street in the second term of Thatcherism. The slow-burning opener, “Homebreakers”, depicted a family torn apart by the on-your-bike imperatives of the time, while “A Man Of Great Promise” and “With Everything To Lose” were eloquent testaments to doomed youth. And on “Walls Come Tumbling Down”, Weller wrote a supreme piece of protest pop, finally making good on his Curtis Mayfield ambitions.

Entering the charts at No 1, Our Favourite Shop was the culmination of a stunning two years’ work. A man as driven as the younger Weller might have been tempted to quit at the top of his game, disbanding The Style Council as he had once cast aside The Jam. But maybe that drive now refused to stop at mere pop success. Weller threw himself into Red Wedge, rallying the left pop community behind the Kinnock campaign. Meanwhile, Julien Temple’s film of Absolute Beginners, to which the band contributed “Have You Ever Had It Blue?” promised to be the apotheosis of The Style Council vision of hip, modernist youth, grooving to Blue Note while sipping cocktails and cappuccinos.

The catastrophe of political campaign and artistic vision seemed to stall Weller’s irresistible rise. Meanwhile, he and DC Lee were expecting their first child and, for possibly the first time, something might have seemed more important than his righteous pop vision. However you might explain it, The Cost Of Loving, released in 1987, was the band’s first great failure – and not even a noble one. On the face of it, turning to the modern R&B sounds of America wasn’t a terrible idea (even if The Human League had already signed up with Jam & Lewis with mixed results in 1986). But while the delirious reference points of early Style Council – nouvelle vague, bossa nova, Curtis Mayfield, Jean-Paul Marat, the MJQ, the GLC – had fused into something inspired, The Cost Of Loving was too sedulous. The most daring thing about lead single “It Didn’t Matter” was that it was a brazen rip-off of David Sea’s “Night After Night”. But the theft was carried out with little style. Elsewhere you got the feeling the band aspired to a third way between Anita Baker’s grace and Alexander O’Neil’s gusto, but floundered limp and lifeless in the middle of the road.

No caprice of critical hindsight can resurrect The Cost Of Loving, but you can make a case for Confessions Of A Pop Group. Though promoted as a return to the template of Our Favourite Shop and trailed with “Life At A Top Peoples Health Farm”, which distinctively mashed up Joe Brown’s “What A Crazy World” with “Subterranean Homesick Blues”, Confessions…, in its way, was as bold and quixotic as Café Bleu. The first side was styled “Piano Paintings” and featured, in “The Gardener Of Eden”, a “three-piece suite”, paying homage to, among others, Debussy, Francis Lai and the Swingle Singers. The second side, though less left- field, featured the last great Style Council single, “How She Threw It All Away”. Once again, it was a commercial flop, and by now bridges with Polydor had been truly burned. As with The Cost Of Loving, picking up on the deep house scene wasn’t the worst idea in the world. But in 1989 even Dr Robert from The Blow Monkeys pulled off pop house with more panache, while the Pet Shop Boys’ cover of Sterling Void’s “It’s Alright” pulled the sound into an English artpop orbit with more poise.

The album remained unreleased for another 10 years, and the much-vaunted new decade in modernism never came to pass. Almost the opposite: Weller’s pastoral rebirth and reclamation as an elder statesman of Britpop could be seen as a regression from the once dedicated progressive. It took until 22 Dreams for that old radical spirit to fully rekindle. As he approaches 60, is it too much to hope that, like Wyatt before him, he continues 
to grow ever more adventurous, and embarks on 
a seventh decade of modernism?

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.

Listen to St Vincent’s new album, Masseduction

0

Annie Clark is streaming the new St Vincent album, Masseduction.

You can hear the album below, via Spotify.

Masseduction is her first full-length since her 2014 self-titled LP.

The tracklisting for Masseduction is:
“Hang on Me”
“Pills”
“Masseduction”
“Sugarboy”
“Happy Birthday, Johnny”
“Savior”
“New York”
“Fear the Future”
“Young Lover”
“Dancing with a Ghost”
“Slow Disco”
“Smoking Section”

The November 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring The Beatles on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Beck, Michael Head, The Jacksons, Neil Finn and we celebrate the legacy of Woody Guthrie and remember Walter Becker. We review David Bowie, The Smiths, Margo Price, Robert Plant and Kurt Vile and Courtney Barnett. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile, Gregg Allman, Margo Price, The Weather Station and more.