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April 2018

Joni Mitchell, The Breeders, Josh T Pearson and a tribute to Mark E Smith all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2018 and in shops from February 15. Joni is on the cover, and inside, 50 years after the release of her debut album, Uncut tells the full story of the singer, songwriter and ...

Joni Mitchell, The Breeders, Josh T Pearson and a tribute to Mark E Smith all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2018 and in shops from February 15.

Joni is on the cover, and inside, 50 years after the release of her debut album, Uncut tells the full story of the singer, songwriter and guitarist’s remarkable rise to fame – from the Newport Folk Festival, via New York clubs to the hillside cottages of Laurel Canyon. “She was stunningly good, right off the bat,” says David Crosby.

After his death last month, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith, the utterly uncompromising, visionary leader of The Fall. Close collaborators and those who knew him also remember Smith – including Julian Cope, who explains: “He had very shamanistic qualities, a particular ability to draw the best from people.”

As The Breeders‘ ‘classic’ Last Splash lineup return with a new album, All Nerve, we talk to Kim Deal, Kelley Deal, Josephine Wiggs and Jim Macpherson about their music, long estrangements and the troubled times at the heart of the band. “I don’t know how other people do it,” says Kim, discussing her difficult process of making music.

Elsewhere, Uncut heads to Austin, Texas, to discover what Josh T Pearson has been up to in the run-up to his new album. There, we discover religious epiphanies, LSD love stories and warnings on the perils of AI. “I don’t want to seem like some crazy person,” he says. “God forbid.”

Uncut also visits FAME Studios to find a community in mourning, after the death of legendary producer Rick Hall. “He made you tough,” says David Hood. “He made you good…”

Meanwhile, Chris Robinson answers your questions, Spirit take us through the creation of “Fresh Garbage”, The Decemberists discuss their finest albums and Tracey Thorn reveals her life in music.

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new releases from Yo La Tengo, Jonathan Wilson, Joan Baez, David Byrne, Creep Show and more, and archival treats from Jimi Hendrix, Phil Everly and Miles Davis & John Coltrane. Our Films & DVD section features Lady Bird and The Doors live, while in Books we take on tomes about Astral Weeks and prog rock.

Brett Anderson, Derek Taylor, Shane MacGowan and Lucy Dacus all feature in our front section.

Our free CD this month, Turn Me On I’m A Radio, includes 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, The Men, Nap Eyes, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

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This month in Uncut

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Joni Mitchell, The Breeders, Josh T Pearson and a tribute to Mark E Smith all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2018 and in shops from February 15. Joni is on the cover, and inside, 50 years after the release of her debut album, Uncut tells the full story of the singer, songwriter and ...

Joni Mitchell, The Breeders, Josh T Pearson and a tribute to Mark E Smith all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2018 and in shops from February 15.

Joni is on the cover, and inside, 50 years after the release of her debut album, Uncut tells the full story of the singer, songwriter and guitarist’s remarkable rise to fame – from the Newport Folk Festival, via New York clubs to the hillside cottages of Laurel Canyon. “She was stunningly good, right off the bat,” says David Crosby.

After his death last month, we pay tribute to Mark E Smith, the utterly uncompromising, visionary leader of The Fall. Close collaborators and those who knew him also remember Smith – including Julian Cope, who explains: “He had very shamanistic qualities, a particular ability to draw the best from people.”

As The Breeders‘ ‘classic’ Last Splash lineup return with a new album, All Nerve, we talk to Kim Deal, Kelley Deal, Josephine Wiggs and Jim Macpherson about their music, long estrangements and the troubled times at the heart of the band. “I don’t know how other people do it,” says Kim, discussing her difficult process of making music.

Elsewhere, Uncut heads to Austin, Texas, to discover what Josh T Pearson has been up to in the run-up to his new album. There, we discover religious epiphanies, LSD love stories and warnings on the perils of AI. “I don’t want to seem like some crazy person,” he says. “God forbid.”

Uncut also visits FAME Studios to find a community in mourning, after the death of legendary producer Rick Hall. “He made you tough,” says David Hood. “He made you good…”

Meanwhile, Chris Robinson answers your questions, Spirit take us through the creation of “Fresh Garbage”, The Decemberists discuss their finest albums and Tracey Thorn reveals her life in music.

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new releases from Yo La Tengo, Jonathan Wilson, Joan Baez, David Byrne, Creep Show and more, and archival treats from Jimi Hendrix, Phil Everly and Miles Davis & John Coltrane. Our Films & DVD section features Lady Bird and The Doors live, while in Books we take on tomes about Astral Weeks and prog rock.

Brett Anderson, Derek Taylor, Shane MacGowan and Lucy Dacus all feature in our front section.

Our free CD this month, Turn Me On I’m A Radio, includes 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, featuring Graham Coxon, Gwenno, Guided By Voices, Jonathan Wilson, David Byrne, The Men, Nap Eyes, Tracey Thorn, The Low Anthem and Mélissa Laveaux.

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

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

Roxy Music – Roxy Music 45th Anniversary Edition

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Unsigned and – at that stage – unsignable, their original drummer Dexter Lloyd about to jump ship to join the pit band for Aladdin at the Oxford Playhouse, Roxy Music did not lack a certain chutzpah when they spoke to Melody Maker’s Richard Williams in July 1971. “The average age of this ban...

Unsigned and – at that stage – unsignable, their original drummer Dexter Lloyd about to jump ship to join the pit band for Aladdin at the Oxford Playhouse, Roxy Music did not lack a certain chutzpah when they spoke to Melody Maker’s Richard Williams in July 1971. “The average age of this band is about 27, and we’re not interested in scuffling,” said frontman Bryan Ferry, adamant that ‘Roxy’ felt no need to pay any musical dues. “If someone will invest some time and money in us, we’ll be very good indeed.”

Snooty and ambitious from the off, Ferry’s claim on their day-glo debut single “Virginia Plain” that Roxy had “been around a long time, just try try try tryin’ to make the big time” was something of a canard. The art-rock pioneers were barely road-tested by the time they signed to Island in spring 1972, a perceived disdain for their craft nettling detractors almost as much as Ferry’s ludicrously mannered vocals and the defiantly anti-prog credits for clothes, makeup and hair on the sleeve of their debut LP. Introducing them on The Old Grey Whistle Test a matter of days after Roxy Music’s release on June 16, ‘Whispering’ Bob Harris dismissed the band’s giddy racket as overhyped and amateurish. “Poor old Bob,” guitarist Phil Manzanera told Uncut, inclined to be generous with 
the benefit of hindsight. “Some people 
didn’t get it.”

Attempting to digest this four-disc post-mortem on what is still a mightily confusing record, it is easy to sympathise. Demos, outtakes, BBC sessions, a live recording and video footage document Roxy Music’s evolution from bedroom boffins to the crushed-Velvet Underground, but Roxy Music itself remains an assault on the senses to match its era-defining sleeve. Like the music within, cover star Kari-Ann Muller simultaneously seduces, snarls and sneers. Faced with relentless opening track “Re-Make/Re-Model”, as part of Melody Maker’s Blind Date feature in mid-1972, Slade guitarist Dave Hill summed up the vibe fairly well: “There are a lot of influences in it. This must be a very mixed-up band. I don’t know who it is, but it’s very interesting.”

The confidence of Roxy Music’s visual presentation disguised the postmodern jumble at their core. Formed in late 1970 by art-school fop Ferry and his bandmate from Newcastle clubland, bassist Graham Simpson, Roxy Music piled on layers of weird by enlisting oboist Andy Mackay and sound sculptor Brian Eno. Reconciling their reverence 
for the classic and the kitschy – Noël Coward and the skinny Elvis – with their taste for harsh pop-art brights and electronic noise was to be a long-term challenge.

Larval versions of “Ladytron”, Humphrey Bogart homage “2HB”, “Chance Meeting” and World War II mini-musical “The Bob (Medley)” culled from their mid-1971 home demo – featuring bluesy guitarist Roger Bunn and the tricksy Lloyd – are otherworldly but convoluted. The arrival of another of Ferry’s Geordie-land cohorts, drummer Paul Thompson, beat some of the prog out of them, but the appointment of ex-Nice guitarist Davy O’List brought more old-world clutter, Hendrix licks overloading songs reworked for a BBC session Roxy recorded as an unsigned act at the start of 1972. The lengthy take of the moody “Sea Breezes” is odd, dissonant and anguished, but it’s still King Crimson in brothel creepers.

It is only with the arrival of the 21-year-old Manzanera – mere weeks before the recording of the debut album – that Roxy Music stop sounding like three bands playing at once, though ex-Crimson man Peter Sinfield did not remember the March 1972 sessions that produced the record being particularly slick. “The lack of technical ability made life difficult,” he told one Roxy biographer. Eno and Ferry were non-musicians, Manzanera was “a fairly basic guitarist” and soon-to-be ex-bassist Simpson – suffering some kind of acid-inspired nervous collapse, seemingly brought on by the death of his mother – “kept bursting 
into tears”.

Such raw emotions were anathema to the 
Roxy Music that emerged on the finished record; Ferry notably pronounces the word “cry” on “Sea Breezes” like an alien tourist reading from a phrasebook, while ‘love’ Ferry-style is fleeting, illusory – a pursuit rather than a passion. “Re-Make Re-Model” sums it up, its Marcel Duchamp readymade chorus, “CPL 593H”, the number-
plate of a red Mini Ferry tracked to a street just 
off Knightsbridge after falling for its owner at 
the Reading Festival. Ferry’s breakneck stalking of his horsey dream girl morphs into a garish showcase for Roxy Music’s glossy brand of 
retro-futurism, with all the individual members taking an ironic mini-solo towards the end – Simpson’s, notably, a cheeky lift of The Beatles’ “Ticket To Ride”.

Women and machines get mixed up again on “Ladytron”, Ferry – perhaps not quite the ladies’ man he would like to be – fantasising about hacking his quarry’s source code (“I’ll use you and I’ll confuse you and then I’ll lose you”), before the song dissolves into an orgiastic extended threesome of distorted Manzanera guitar, Mackay oboe and Eno-tronics.

The rest of Roxy Music lacks that throbbing intensity, but is no less perverse in its pursuit of the impossibly picture-perfect. The devotion imagined on hellbound hoedown “If There Is Something” is so demented it can only be a mocking pastiche, Ferry pledging his ardour 
with a ludicrous promise to “sit in the garden, growing potatoes by the score”.

Bizarre doo-wop closer “Bitter’s End” is the crystallisation of all of Ferry’s Brill Building fantasies, with a killer self-referential pay-off line (“should make the cognoscenti think”), but the relatively restrained “2HB” may be Roxy Music’s spiritual core. Ferry’s homage to Bogart’s aloof portrayal of Rick in Casablanca celebrates not the film’s towering passions but the perfection of a look of manly composure. It’s the quintessence of the early Roxy Music’s cut-and-paste take on pop (“finding not keeping’s the lesson”), their veneration of style over content.

Rave reviews helped Roxy Music creep into the Top 30, but “Virginia Plain” – recorded in July 1972, and retro-fitted rather gauchely into the album’s running order here – swiftly rendered the whole record obsolete. Ferry’s pop-art slideshow lyrics took Roxy back to square one, plotting a course from their signing a deal with Island (the Robert E Lee referenced in the first verse was apparently Ferry’s lawyer) into a projected world of unending exotic scene-shifts. Boasting perhaps the greatest intro and outro in pop, it ditches the arch twists of the album to become something unequivocally future-facing: a promise to reinvent glamour rather than just recreate it.

A renewed sense of purpose and optimism course through the BBC session version of “Virginia Plain” recorded that summer, Manzanera helping himself to a rapturous screaming guitar solo, and the usually restrained Ferry letting out a gentle yelp in the background. The video and live performances following the single’s ascent to No 4 in the charts in August 1972 capture a band suddenly sure of foot and eager to move on.

Roxy Music – the way Eno saw it – represented 
a dozen future directions for rock, the best of which were pursued on 1973’s unmissable 
double feature, For Your Pleasure and Stranded. The lack of “scuffling” in Roxy’s early days may explain why their debut still sounds like work in progress, but the sense of crystallising promise shines through this set. Not brilliant just yet, but very good indeed.

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Watch Chris Hillman perform Tom Petty’s “Wildflowers”

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Chris Hillman's October 2017 concert at The Troubadour in Los Angeles became a tribute of sorts to his friend Tom Petty, who died a few weeks earlier. Watch Hillman and his band perform Petty's "Wildflowers" at the show: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVrh7RvB9gk&feature=youtu.be Hillman's ve...

Film composer Jóhann Jóhannsson has died aged 48

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Icelandic musician and composer Jóhann Jóhannsson has died at his home in Berlin, aged 48. He was famous for scoring several of Dennis Villeneuve's films including Prisoners, Sicario and Arrival, and he won a Golden Globe in 2014 for his work on James Marsh's The Theory Of Everything. Starting o...

Icelandic musician and composer Jóhann Jóhannsson has died at his home in Berlin, aged 48.

He was famous for scoring several of Dennis Villeneuve‘s films including Prisoners, Sicario and Arrival, and he won a Golden Globe in 2014 for his work on James Marsh’s The Theory Of Everything.

Starting out as a guitarist for Icelandic indie bands such as Daisy Hill Puppy Farm and Ham, Jóhannsson rose to prominence in the early 2000s as a composer of minimalist and neoclassical concept pieces. Released on 4AD, 2006’s IBM 1401, A User’s Manual combined sweeping orchestration with recordings made by his father of an old IBM mainframe computer. 2011’s The Miners Hymns was an audio-visual requiem for County Durham’s mining community, created in collaboration with filmmaker Bill Morrison.

Posting tributes to Twitter over the weekend, Mogwai‘s Stuart Braithwaite called Jóhannsson “an incredible talent” while Portishead‘s Geoff Barrow mourned the loss of a “great film composer” who “kick[ed] life into big films… influencing so many”.

Actor Elijah Wood wrote: “So distraught and saddened to hear of Jóhann’s passing. He was such an extraordinary composer and artist.”

Producer Flying Lotus tweeted: “Johann Johansson has been such an influence, especially lately. I’m in disbelief. The stuff he did for [Panos Cosmatos’s upcoming surrealist horror film] “Mandy” is incredible.”

https://twitter.com/jetfury/status/962390653878652929

https://twitter.com/flyinglotus/status/962383708622790656

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

James Taylor: “The success was a surprise…”

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Originally published in Uncut's July 2015 issue (Take 218) Reflecting on the process of making an album, James Taylor feels he has at last hit his stride. “It’s something I’ve done 16 times, so I feel like I know how to go about it now.” Uncut meets Taylor in the suite of a west London hote...

That’s Why I’m Here
Columbia, 1985
After intense rehab and failed sessions in Montserrat, Taylor is reborn with a synth-heavy hit record.

I had finally gotten sufficiently fed up with the life I had been leading, of substance abuse and addiction. I had gone through a detox, and I wasn’t going to feel capable of working for another six months. But after a month and a half I had to go to Montserrat to record in Air Studios, George Martin’s studio. It was a beautiful break, we went there with a great band and intended to cut basic tracks. But it was basically a washout for me. I wasn’t ready, I couldn’t sleep, I couldn’t focus, I was miserable, I wasn’t comfortable in my own skin. Six months later, I switched my addiction from heroin to rigorous physical exercise, every day, two or three sessions a day. That’s how I got through it, that’s how I got my body and my nervous system back. And it wasn’t until a year later that we got down to work on That’s Why I’m Here. The album is interesting, because it’s my first exposure to synthesisers. It sounds synthesiser-heavy to me if I hear it now, but it’s got some great tunes on it – “Something From Far Away” is really great. “Only A Dream In Rio” really describes what had happened to me over the making of the album. It was a misfire followed by a new direction.

___________________________

Hourglass
Columbia, 1997
Taylor’s 14th album, once again recorded at home, is a sombre and brooding examination of heartbreak and recovery.

This album was produced by Frank Filipetti, who is an engineer and producer, and that’s really what I like to do best these days, to work with someone who comes in from a knowledge of the actual recording process and how it sounds down on tape. Frank had the confidence and the sort of pioneering spirit, if you will, to basically make a major album for a major label, Sony, using this newly emerging home studio stuff – you could buy the whole setup that we used for about $20,000. Everything that we used in studios, like a Neve board and tape recorder, would cost a million dollars to own. It was really a breakthrough album in that way, and Filipetti got a Grammy Award for it, and he should have. We went up to Martha’s Vineyard to record, and installed ourselves in a summer house which belonged to a family that I knew and we tracked right there, in about two weeks. We were very focused, we were very relaxed, we were in our own context and Frank was making it happen. Some of my favourite songs are on here. I really like this album. “Yellow And Rose” is a recovery song, a song about people sent to Australia to be punished finding out that they are actually reborn.

___________________________

Covers
Hear Music, 2008
Celebrating his crack touring band, Taylor lays down versions of songs by Jimmy Webb, Leonard Cohen and Buddy Holly.

I had just built this studio at my home in Massachusetts. It’s really just a barn, a big, cheap structure, as much cubic footage as you can get for the buck. I built it in order to rehearse, but it turned out to be such a lovely sounding space, it’s got plywood and industrial wooden floors, but for some reason the sound and shape of it is perfect. I had this band that I had been touring with, Larry Goldings on piano, Steve Gadd on drums, who I had worked with in the ’70s way back when in Atlantic Studios in New York. So I had this wonderful band, with Lou Marini, Jr on saxophone and Walt Fowler on trumpet writing the arrangements. I had been touring this band and it sounded so great, I really wanted an excuse to basically to get it together and to just run this band around the course. There was this big batch of songs that I had always loved, and that I worked up on the guitar. Then we recorded them all live, 13 players at the same time. I came back in and worked on the vocals, but that’s the only overdubbing we did. It was just wonderful fun. There was no pressure because I really wasn’t under the gun to write and finish songs, we were just doing stuff we knew we loved. Anything from “Oh What A Beautiful Mornin’” to “Wichita Lineman” or “Suzanne”, I just tried songs that I’ve always loved.

___________________________

Before This World
Concord, 2015
Taylor’s latest, years in the making, is a sophisticated return, crafted during long stays in the wilderness.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvwheWonB74

I took 2013 off to write, but I really didn’t get serious about it. Things kept distracting me, until I finally decided to really hide away for a week at a time. And that’s when these songs started coming through. I wrote in Montana at a friend’s cabin, with 15 feet of snow outside. I wrote in Newport, Rhode Island – in the summertime it’s a sort of boating mecca, but in winter it’s abandoned, and I would walk the streets and roam my boat around the harbour and ride my bicycle, and just work on the lyrics over and over again. [Taylor’s wife] Kim would listen to me play this thing on piano over and over for years. It turned it into this really nice song called “You And I Again”. I have often said that I keep coming back to familiar themes, writing the same songs again from different angles. This is like that. “Far Afghanistan” is about a soldier preparing to fight, which is something I basically can’t stop thinking about, how these guys prepare themselves to do this impossible challenge of going to kill or be killed. Before This World is titled after the song on the album, but it’s also a double entendre in a sense. The period of time when I became who I am, say, between the ages of 15 and 22, was before this world, it was a prior world, and I am of a time before this world. The other sense in the title is that when you take a project and you release it, you are putting it before this world.

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

 

Hear John Prine’s new song, “Summer’s End”

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John Prine has shared a new song, "Summer's End". The track is taken from The Tree Of Forgiveness, Prine's first album featuring new material in over 13 years. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9XLaIFTmJF8 Recorded at Nashville’s RCA Studio A, the album includes ten new songs written by Prine alo...

John Prine has shared a new song, “Summer’s End“.

The track is taken from The Tree Of Forgiveness, Prine’s first album featuring new material in over 13 years.

Recorded at Nashville’s RCA Studio A, the album includes ten new songs written by Prine along with co-writers Pat McLaughlin, Roger Cook, Dan Auerbach, Keith Sykes and Phil Spector. Brandi Carlile, Jason Isbell and Amanda Shires are among the guests on the album.

The album can be pre-ordered by clicking here.

The tracklisting for The Tree Of Forgiveness is:

Knockin’ On Your Screen Door” (by John Prine and Pat McLaughlin)
I Have Met My Love Today” ft. Brandi Carlile (by John Prine and Roger Cook)
Egg & Daughter Nite, Lincoln Nebraska, 1967 (Crazy Bone)” (by John Prine and Pat McLaughlin)
Summer’s End” (written by John Prine and Pat McLaughlin)
Caravan Of Fools” (by John Prine, Dan Auerbach, and Pat McLaughlin)
The Lonesome Friends Of Science” (by John Prine)
No Ordinary Blue” (by John Prine and Keith Sykes)
Boundless Love” (by John Prine, Dan Auerbach, and Pat McLaughlin)
God Only Knows” (by John Prine and Phil Spector)
When I Get to Heaven” (by John Prine)

John Prine plays the following UK dates:
August 2: GLASGOW, Kelvingrove Bandstand (with John Moreland)
August 3: BIRMINGHAM, Town Hall (with John Moreland)
August 4: CAMBRIDGE, Cambridge Folk Festival

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

The 6th Uncut new music playlist of 2018

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Slightly conscious that this week's playlist is top heavy with returning US indie stalwarts - Stephen Malkmus, the Breeders, St Vincent, MGMT - but it's hard to complain when the music is evidently this strong. There's a lovely track, too, from an old friend, PJ Harvey. At the less storied end of th...

Slightly conscious that this week’s playlist is top heavy with returning US indie stalwarts – Stephen Malkmus, the Breeders, St Vincent, MGMT – but it’s hard to complain when the music is evidently this strong. There’s a lovely track, too, from an old friend, PJ Harvey. At the less storied end of the scale, please take the time to check out current Uncut office favourites Khruangbin – psych jams from Texas! – as well as the melancholic folk of Jim Ghedi and some classy electronic business from Richard Fearless, finding a happy place between William Basinski and Detroit techno.

Did I mention the Breeders? Expect some more exciting news from Kim and co next week…

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

1.
PJ Harvey & Harry Escott

“An Acre Of Land”
(Cognitive Shift Recordings)

2.
Richard Fearless

“Night Blind”
(Drone)

3.
The Sea & The Cake

“Any Day”
(Thrill Jockey)

4.
Jim Ghedi

“Home For Moss Valley”
(Basin Rock)

5.
Ought

“Desire”
(Merge)

6.
Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks

“Middle America”
(Domino)

7.
Mark Pritchard

“Come Let Us” (feat. Gregory Whitehead)
(Warp)

8.
Oumou Sangré

“Djoukourou” (Auntie Flo remix)
(No Format)

9.
Khruangbin

“Maria También”
(Night Time Stories)


10.
The Breeders

“Joanne”
(4AD)

11.
In Tall Buildings

“Beginning To Fade”
(Western Vinyl)

12.
St Vincent

“Consideration”
(Spotify Sessions: Singles)

13.
MGMT

“Me And Michael”
(Columbia Records)

14.
Shovels & Rope

“Great, America (2017)”
(New West)

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Johnny Cash’s writing set to music by Elvis Costello, Willie Nelson and more

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A trove of Johnny Cash’s handwritten letters, poems and documents has been set to music by artists including Kris Kristofferson and Willie Nelson, Rosanne Cash, Kacey Musgraves, Elvis Costello and more. Recorded primarily at The Cash Cabin Studio in Hendersonville, Tennessee, Johnny Cash: Forever...

A trove of Johnny Cash’s handwritten letters, poems and documents has been set to music by artists including Kris Kristofferson and Willie Nelson, Rosanne Cash, Kacey Musgraves, Elvis Costello and more.

Recorded primarily at The Cash Cabin Studio in Hendersonville, Tennessee, Johnny Cash: Forever Words is also the musical companion to the best-selling Forever Words: The Unknown Poems, a volume of Cash’s unpublished writing edited by Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Paul Muldoon and curated by John Carter Cash and producer Steve Berkowitz.

The album is available to pre-order by clicking here.

The Johnny Cash: Forever Words tracklisting is:
Forever/I Still Miss Someone – Kris Kristofferson and Willie Nelson
To June This Morning – Ruston Kelly and Kacey Musgraves
Gold All Over the Ground – Brad Paisley
You Never Knew My Mind – Chris Cornell
The Captain’s Daughter – Alison Krauss and Union Station
Jellico Coal Man – T. Bone Burnett
The Walking Wounded – Rosanne Cash
Them Double Blues – John Mellencamp
Body on Body – Jewel
I’ll Still Love You – Elvis Costello
June’s Sundown – Carlene Carter
He Bore It All – Daily and Vincent
Chinky Pin Hill – I’m With Her
Goin’, Goin’, Gone – Robert Glasper featuring Ro James, and Anu Sun
What Would I Dreamer Do? – The Jayhawks
Spirit Rider – Jamey Johnson

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Unknown Mortal Orchestra announce new album, Sex & Food

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Unknown Mortal Orchestra have announced details of a new album, Sex & Food. The album was recorded in Seoul, Hanoi, Reykjavik, Mexico City and Auckland and Portland. You can hear the first single, "American Guilt", below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-JlcmCxIXU "'American Guilt' is an attemp...

Unknown Mortal Orchestra have announced details of a new album, Sex & Food.

The album was recorded in Seoul, Hanoi, Reykjavik, Mexico City and Auckland and Portland.

You can hear the first single, “American Guilt”, below.

“‘American Guilt’ is an attempt to capture some of the feelings floating around these days,” says UMO’s Ruban Nielson. “In a perverse way I wanted to embrace this abandoned genre of rock music that I keep reading is ‘dead’ and invite people to hear what this living dead genre sounds like in the UMO universe. It was recorded in Hanoi, Vietnam during monsoon season in a studio built for traditional Vietnamese music. Additional recording was done in Mexico City but our sessions were interrupted by one of the devastating earthquakes that occurred there last year. As we slept in the Parque de Mexico, unable to get back to our Air BnB, we heard a man yell ‘Viva la Mexico!’ and I put this in the song out of respect for them.”

UMO play the Roundhouse in London on May 24 2018. You can buy tickets by clicking here.

The tracklisting for the album is:

A God Called Hubris
Major League Chemicals
Ministry of Alienation
Hunnybee
Chronos Feasts on His Children
American Guilt
The Internet Of Love (That Way)
Everyone Acts Crazy Nowadays
This Doomsday
How Many Zeros
Not In Love We’re Just High
If You’re Going To Break Yourself

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The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Brigid Mae Power – The Two Worlds

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In her dreamy, chorus-less songs, Brigid Mae Power embraces contradictions. She is both tough and vulnerable, assertive and hesitant, wounded and resilient. She writes songs that are structured like poems and delivered like prayers, with the words blurring hazily into the melodies. Sometimes the lyr...

In her dreamy, chorus-less songs, Brigid Mae Power embraces contradictions. She is both tough and vulnerable, assertive and hesitant, wounded and resilient. She writes songs that are structured like poems and delivered like prayers, with the words blurring hazily into the melodies. Sometimes the lyrics numb as they sting, but more often they capture a moment of emotional clarity.

First 45 “Don’t Shut Me Up (Politely)”, then, can’t help but align itself with recent shifts in sexual politics – the post-Weinstein purging of sexual harassment, mansplaining, the undermining of abortion rights. The song pre-dates the Weinstein business, but the sentiment is timeless, militant in its understatement. “You’d try to convince me, that I was somebody that I’m definitely not,” Power sings. “Don’t you find the spirit threatening?/What you did with mine/You squashed it/But guess what I can hear?/It’s my spirit still breathing/Breathing loud and clear.”

The contradictory two worlds that Power refers to, in the title of her second album proper, are the personal and the political. On a personal level, she’s found herself struggling to balance the requirements of everyday life with an artistic desire to wander. Earlier in her career, she had felt the need to escape the limitations of Galway and explore NYC – she has recounted how that went wrong in a harrowing Tumblr post written in solidarity with women sharing experiences in the aftermath of the Weinstein revelations. More recently, Power found herself, like many of us, struggling to understand the global outbreak of right-wing populism.

But there is no manifesto here; instead, the duality is boiled to its essence. “Oh, how are we going to work the two worlds?” she sings on the haunting title track. It’s the prettiest tune on the record, but there’s something visceral about the way Power gnaws at the word “how”. Musically, she has evolved. Though there were a handful of self-released home recordings, she considers the 2014 Bandcamp release, I Told You The Truth, to be the record on which she started to find her feet. It’s a sparse affair, recorded on the fly in a Galway church, and it is the record on which Power learned to trust the acoustic qualities of her voice. She began to fly with the addition of Peter Broderick as a musical foil on her self-titled 2016 album. With Broderick producing, Power tiptoed away from her folk roots to something more quizzical.

On The Two Worlds, the process is deepened. Broderick collaborates again, and his gnarly production turns the tunes inside out. The opening song, “I’m Grateful”, is a delicate slow dance, a wistful hymn of gratitude which threatens to fold in on itself, but it is held together by a rhythm which sounds like a grandfather clock winding down. Power’s music never seems aggressively experimental, but it is the product of diverse influences. She grew up playing Irish traditional music on the button accordion, but was drawn to Joni Mitchell, Tim Buckley and Neil Young. In recent years, she has revisited the traditional sounds of Planxty and Andy Irvine, but over the past year, Stevie Wonder’s back catalogue has been a source of inspiration. Still, the echoes of that Galway church reverberate throughout these introverted psychedelic hymns.

And then there is the voice. The songs were recorded live in a few takes, with a minimum of overdubs added later. The briskness of the process highlights the nakedness of Power’s words, but the therapeutic gnawing of “Peace Backing 
Us Up” has an edge all of its own.

Occasionally, when the tunes are allowed a hint of jazziness – see the painfully honest “So You’ve Seen My Limit” – Power is like Julie London with the playfulness swapped for the scarred honesty of Karen Dalton. Musically the fit is not precise, but Power’s single-mindedness also suggests a kinship with the work of the Glaswegian singer, Kathryn Joseph, who mined similar territory in her emetic 2015 album, Bones You Have Thrown Me And Blood I’ve Spilled. It’s a small thing, maybe, but when she started out, Power recorded under her full name Brigid Power Ryce. She dropped the Ryce, and added her middle name, Mae.
“I know it might sound ridiculous,” she says, “but I always thought Brigid Power Ryce had too many Rs in it when said out loud and it didn’t suit me.” She has, it seems, reached an accommodation with herself, with her doubts and her strengths. The two worlds co-exist beautifully here, the soft Power and the raw.

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The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Harold Budd announces first London show in 17 years

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Harold Budd has announced that he will play a rare London show at Islington's Union Chapel on April 28. It will be his first live appearance in the capital for 17 years. Budd will perform a selection of old and new material, including his distinctive ‘soft-pedal’ piano and electronic pieces. ...

Harold Budd has announced that he will play a rare London show at Islington’s Union Chapel on April 28. It will be his first live appearance in the capital for 17 years.

Budd will perform a selection of old and new material, including his distinctive ‘soft-pedal’ piano and electronic pieces.

He’ll be joined by Ireland’s Vespertine Quintet and his statement teases the possibility of further special guests: “I hope to see some of my old friends again – whomever might drift by”. Budd‘s regular collaborators include Brian Eno, John Foxx and Robin Guthrie of Cocteau Twins.

Tickets for the evening are priced £25 and available here.

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Hear the new single from Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks

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Erstwhile Pavement frontman Stephen Malkmus has released a new single with his band The Jicks. Hear "Middle America" below: https://open.spotify.com/track/2ITLhkANwCtGoZKizs0FZC No parent album has been confirmed but a press statement reveals that "fans can likely expect a further taste of new mus...

Erstwhile Pavement frontman Stephen Malkmus has released a new single with his band The Jicks. Hear “Middle America” below:

No parent album has been confirmed but a press statement reveals that “fans can likely expect a further taste of new music, on top of the band’s beloved catalogue”.

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks will tour North America US this summer, full dates below:

1st June – St. Paul, MN – Turf Club
2nd June – Milwaukee, WI – The Back Room at Colectivo
3rd June – Chicago, IL – Thalia Hall
5th June – Columbus, OH – Ace of Cups
6th June – Pittsburgh, PA – Rex Theater
7th June – Cleveland, OH – Grog Shop
8th June – Detroit, MI – Magic Stick
9th June – Toronto, ON – Lee’s Palace
11th June – Montreal, QC – Theatre Fairmount
12th June – Cambridge, MA – The Sinclair
14th June – Brooklyn, NY – Music Hall of Williamsburg
16th June – Philadelphia, PA – Theatre of Living Arts
17th June – Washington, DC – Black Cat
19th June – Carrboro, NC – Cat’s Cradle
20th June – Athens, GA – The Georgia Theatre
21st June – Nashville, TN – Mercy Lounge
22nd June – Louisville, KY – Zanzabar
23rd June – Cincinnati, OH – The Woodward Theater
17th July – Petaluma, CA – Mystic Theatre
18th July – San Francisco, CA – Slim’s
22nd July – Phoenix, AZ – The Crescent Ballroom
25th July – Austin, TX – The Mohawk
26th July – Houston, TX – White Oak Music Hall
27th July – Dallas, TX – Granada Theater
28th July – Tulsa, OK – The Vanguard
29th July – Kansas City, MO – Record Bar
31st July – Englewood, CO – Gothic Theatre
1st August – Salt Lake City, UT – Urban Lounge
3rd August – Vancouver, BC – Rickshaw Theatre
4th August – Seattle, WA – Neptune Theatre
5th August – Portland, OR – Star Theater

A further announcement regarding UK and European dates is likely to follow in due course.

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Send us your questions for Spinal Tap’s Derek Smalls

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Spinal Tap bassist Derek Smalls - very much the lukewarm water to David St Hubbins' fire and Nigel Tufnell's ice – is gearing up to release a new solo album in April, entitled Smalls Change (Meditations Upon Ageing). Partly subsidised with a grant from the 'British Fund for Ageing Rockers', Small...

Spinal Tap bassist Derek Smalls – very much the lukewarm water to David St Hubbins’ fire and Nigel Tufnell’s ice – is gearing up to release a new solo album in April, entitled Smalls Change (Meditations Upon Ageing).

Partly subsidised with a grant from the ‘British Fund for Ageing Rockers’, Smalls Change features a litany of star guests, including David Crosby, Donald Fagen, Rick Wakeman and Richard Thompson.

Smalls will also be answering your questions for Uncut‘s regular An Audience With… feature. So what do you want to ask a musician who’s seen it, done it, taken it and lived to tell the tale?

Send your questions to us by Tuesday February 13 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com

The best questions, along with Derek’s answers of course, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine.

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

The The announce more UK shows for September

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The The have announced details of a short UK tour in September, in addition to their three sold-out shows in London. The concerts mark the band's return to the live arena after 16 years away. The The's full 2018 touring itinerary is now as follows: JUNE 1st Denmark, Heartland Festival 2nd Stockhol...

The The have announced details of a short UK tour in September, in addition to their three sold-out shows in London. The concerts mark the band’s return to the live arena after 16 years away.

The The‘s full 2018 touring itinerary is now as follows:

JUNE
1st Denmark, Heartland Festival
2nd Stockholm, Münchenbryggeriet
5th London, Royal Albert Hall (SOLD OUT)
6th London, Brixton Academy (SOLD OUT)
7th London, Troxy (SOLD OUT)

JULY
7th Dublin, Iveagh Gardens

SEPTEMBER
4th Glasgow, Barrowlands
5th Glasgow, Glasgow Royal Concert Hall
7th Birmingham, Digbeth Arena
8th Portmeirion, Festival No.6
9th Bristol, St. Philip’s Gate Arena

Tickets for the dates in Glasgow, Birmingham and Bristol go on sale at 10am on Friday (February 9). They are available here for Glasgow and here for Birmingham and Bristol.

In 2015, Matt Johnson told Uncut that he was working on a new The The album that he hoped would be “a new start for my career”.

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Love’s Forever Changes repackaged for 50th anniversary

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50 years ago this week, Love's epochal Forever Changes LP was released in the UK. To mark the occasion, Rhino have announced that a special 50th Anniversary Edition of the album will be issued on April 6. The box set contains four CDs, two DVDs and a vinyl disc, all housed in an illustrated 12” ...

50 years ago this week, Love‘s epochal Forever Changes LP was released in the UK.

To mark the occasion, Rhino have announced that a special 50th Anniversary Edition of the album will be issued on April 6.

The box set contains four CDs, two DVDs and a vinyl disc, all housed in an illustrated 12” x 12” hardbound book. It includes the CD debut of a remastered version of Forever Changes made by original co-producer and engineer Bruce Botnick, as well as the first-ever release of the mono version on CD. Also included are alternate mixes of the album, as well as a selection of rare and unreleased singles and studio outtakes.

The vinyl disc contains Botnick’s stereo remaster of the original album, while the DVD includes a 24/96 stereo mix. Also featured is “Your Mind And We Belong Together”, a rare Love promotional video directed by Elektra producer Mark Abramson that was originally released in 1968.

The full tracklisting is as follows:

Disc One: Original Album
1. “Alone Again Or”
2. “A House Is Not A Motel”
3. “Andmoreagain”
4. “The Daily Planet”
5. “Old Man”
6. “The Red Telephone”
7. “Maybe The People Would Be The Times Or Between Clark And Hilldale”
8. “Live And Let Live”
9. “The Good Humor Man He Sees Everything Like This”
10. “Bummer In The Summer”
11. “You Set The Scene”

Disc Two: Mono Mix

Disc Three: Alternate Mix
1. “Alone Again Or”
2. “A House Is Not A Motel”
3. “Andmoreagain”
4. “The Daily Planet”
5. “Old Man”
6. “The Red Telephone”
7. “Maybe The People Would Be The Times Or Between Clark And Hilldale”
8. “Live And Let Live”
9. “The Good Humor Man He Sees Everything Like This”
10. “Bummer In The Summer”
11. “You Set The Scene”
12. “Wonder People (I Do Wonder)” – Outtake – Alternate Mix

Disc Four: Singles and Outtakes
1. “Wonder People (I Do Wonder)”
2. “Alone Again Or” – Single Version
3. “A House Is Not A Motel” – Single Version
4. “Hummingbirds” – Demo
5. “A House Is Not A Motel” – Backing Track
6. “Andmoreagain” – Alternate Electric Backing Track
7. “The Red Telephone” – Tracking Sessions Highlights
8. “Wooly Bully” – Outtake
9. “Live and Let Live” – Backing Track *
10. “Wonder People (I Do Wonder)” – Outtake, Backing Track *
11. “Your Mind And We Belong Together” – Tracking Sessions Highlights
12. “Your Mind And We Belong Together”
13. “Laughing Stock”
14. “Alone Again Or” – Mono Single Remix

DVD: 24/96 Stereo Mix
1. “Alone Again Or”
2. “A House Is Not A Motel”
3. “Andmoreagain”
4. “The Daily Planet”
5. “Old Man”
6. “The Red Telephone”
7. “Maybe The People Would Be The Times Or Between Clark And Hilldale”
8. “Live And Let Live”
9. “The Good Humor Man He Sees Everything Like This”
10. “Bummer In The Summer”
11. “You Set The Scene”
12. “Your Mind And We Belong Together” – Video

LP: Original Album
Side One
1. “Alone Again Or”
2. “A House Is Not A Motel”
3. “Andmoreagain”
4. “The Daily Planet”
5. “Old Man”
6. “The Red Telephone”

Side Two
1. “Maybe The People Would Be The Times Or Between Clark And Hilldale”
2. “Live And Let Live”
3. “The Good Humor Man He Sees Everything Like This”
4. “Bummer In The Summer”
5. “You Set The Scene”

* Previously unreleased

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Richard Hell & The Voidoids – Blank Generation: 40th Anniversary Deluxe Edition

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Richard Hell was everywhere, back then. Versions of him, anyway. This was 1977, punk well under way, and the look that was common among bands and fans from the King’s Road to East Kilbride was his. It was a tattered look that, worn by Hell, hinted at a kind of soiled dandyism. It included hair tha...

Richard Hell was everywhere, back then. Versions of him, anyway. This was 1977, punk well under way, and the look that was common among bands and fans from the King’s Road to East Kilbride was his. It was a tattered look that, worn by Hell, hinted at a kind of soiled dandyism. It included hair that appeared to have been cut using a lawnmower with most of its blades missing, T-shirts that seemed to have been shredded by shrapnel, sometimes held together by safety pins, or smeared with slogans. Any old jacket would do, as long as it looked like it had recently been taken from a bloated corpse, washed up on an estuary sandbank. In 1977, this was a new way of dressing, much gawked at. Hell had looked like this for years, the music he’d been making for almost as long just as frayed, provocative and influential.

Like Dylan before him, he blew into New York from the American heartland, Kentucky via Delaware, high on poetry, music and himself. He was 17 and people who knew him still called him Richard Meyers. It was just after Christmas, 1966. Patti Smith made a similar journey, Philadelphia via New Jersey, six months later. They found low-paid work, lived in the same kinds of dingy, cold-water digs, wrote poems, Meyers publishing his own magazine. In their shared sense of destiny, they were where they were meant to be, at the centre of things that hadn’t quite happened yet, that would be indelibly marked by their respective interventions, Meyers and Smith emerging as key players in the New York punk and art scene that grew out of and around the Bowery music club CBGB and the Lower East Side.

In February 1971, Smith appeared at St Mark’s Church, performing for the first time with Lenny Kaye on guitar. According to Meyers, who was in the audience, he’d also been thinking about mixing poetry and music, and with Tom Miller, a fellow misfit he’d met at boarding school in Delaware, he formed The Neon Boys, the pair charismatically renaming themselves Richard Hell and Tom Verlaine. The increasingly accomplished Verlaine played lead guitar, with Hell on rudimentary bass. With the addition of second guitarist Richard Lloyd, they became Television and their music more complex under Verlaine’s dictatorial leadership. Sidelined, Hell left Television in March 1975. A week later, he joined former New York Dolls Johnny Thunders and Jerry Nolan in The Heartbreakers. They played the aggressive, sneering rock he loved, but their songs lacked Television’s lyrical finesse.

Early in 1976, he quit and formed The Voidoids, recruiting drummer Marc Bell from Wayne County’s band, guitarists Ivan Julian, bizarrely a veteran at 21 of UK pop act The Foundations, and Robert Quine, a brilliant guitarist but a difficult man who committed suicide in 2004. He was 34, prematurely bald, obsessed with The Velvet Underground, free jazz and ’50s rock’n’roll. He dressed in conservative slacks, button-down shirts and sports coats and hadn’t played in a band since 1968. However, his coruscating lead lines and explosive solos quickly became one of the band’s defining sounds. The Voidoids formed in June 1976, played their first gig in November and by the start of 1977 were in the studio, recording their first album, Blank Generation.

Of the great debut albums by bands from the CBGB scene, you might listen to Television’s Marquee Moon and think of bat caves made of ice, lit by neon. On their debut album, the Ramones sounded like they’d been strapped to the nose cone of a ballistic missile and blasted into space. Talking Heads: 77 was replete with jittery impulses, uptight and tense. Patti Smith’s Horses, meanwhile, sounded like something beset by bad weather, hoarse incantations made on a windswept beach under a sky best described as glowering. Blank Generation, finally released in November 1977, sounded by comparison grubby, dishevelled, like it had been recorded in an alley strewn with broken glass, beer cans and dead cats.

It was actually recorded at Electric Lady in Greenwich Village, and produced by industry veteran Richard Gottehrer, co-founder of Sire and notably part of the production team who’d made garage-band classic “I Want Candy”, which they released as The Strangeloves, good enough credentials at the time for Hell. Blank Generation was finished by the end of March. But by then Hell had serious reservations about the record. When Sire announced its release would be delayed, he insisted on re-recording it, replacing seven of the 10 tracks with new versions recorded at Plaza Sound. Listening to the Electric Lady versions of tracks from the album on the bonus disc of this anniversary reissue (which also includes five tracks recorded live at their debut performance, the original Ork Records version of “Another World” and the band’s last, one-off, recording, 2000’s “Oh”), you can hear that Hell’s instincts were right. The Plaza Sound versions are sharper, more dynamic, harder-edged, more abandoned, the band capable of making quite a racket, Julian and Quine’s guitars combining in ways that make them sound occasionally like Antennae Jimmy Semens and Zoot Horn Rollo on Trout Mask Replica, Hell yelping over them like something with a tail, caught in a trap. On the brief, savage solos he takes, Quine sounds like he’s handcuffed to lightning.

There are hiccupping punk broadsides like “Liars Beware”, “New Pleasure” and “Who Says?”, and “Down At The Rock And Roll Club” has a ramshackle air that anticipates The Replacements, but as Hell says proudly, the album’s not all crude heckle, frenzied accusation and pop-eyed bile. “Betrayal Takes Two” is a woozy country-doo-wop mash-up, “The Plan” a pretty anticipation of lovely Babyshambles songs like “In Love With A Feeling” and “Loyalty Song”. There’s also an eerie take on John Fogerty’s “Walking On The Water”, originally recorded by Fogerty’s pre-Creedence band, The Golliwogs, an obscurity suggested by Quine. Even nominal punk anthems “Love Comes In Spurts” and “Blank Generation” don’t fully conform to punk’s typical roar. “Love Comes In Spurts” is usually described as an anti-love song, but beneath its surface grubbiness it’s a teenage lament as touching in its way as a Brill Building ballad. Similarly, “Blank Generation” is barely as savage as the song it famously inspired, the Sex Pistols’ “Pretty Vacant”. Written as a parody of a ’50s novelty song called “I Belong To The Beat Generation”, it lampoons self-regarding hippie communality as wryly as Neil Young’s “Roll Another Number For The Road”, from Tonight’s The Night, an album whose raw intensity is also recalled on album closer “Another World”, eight minutes of personal exorcism. Hell describes it as “hysterical to the point of mysticism”. It ends with him hoarse, hacking, coughing, spent.

“By then I was wiped out,” Hell says, thinking about it 40 years later. “All I had left to hang on to was my feelings. I gave it everything I had. We all did.”

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Introducing David Bowie: The Ultimate Music Guide

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Last summer, Tony Visconti shared his earliest memories of David Bowie with Uncut. They met in 1967, when Bowie, as an ambitious 19 year old, had already experienced a number of false starts in his career. “He had some experience in the studio and he was definitely a budding songwriter,” recalle...

Last summer, Tony Visconti shared his earliest memories of David Bowie with Uncut. They met in 1967, when Bowie, as an ambitious 19 year old, had already experienced a number of false starts in his career. “He had some experience in the studio and he was definitely a budding songwriter,” recalled Visconti. “I was introduced to him via his very first album on Deram, the one where he was all over the shop – no two songs are in the same genre. But he was on the fence then. Later on I asked him, ‘What would you do if you weren’t a rock star?’ He said, ‘I would have worked in musical theatre.’”

Bowie would have to wait 50 years until he finally got his wish to mount a musical. As it transpires, it was also the final work he completed before his death on January 10, 2016: Lazarus. Watching Lazarus in London less than a year after Bowie’s passing was a strange experience. As with the album, it was hard to come to it without looking round for clues about Bowie’s own condition. “I’m a dying man who can’t die,” claimed Bowie’s protagonist/alter ego, Thomas Jerome Newton, and lines like that now seem freighted with Bowie’s own views on both his physical state and his artistic legacy.

We celebrate the full-span of Bowie’s career – from his self-titled debut to ★ and Lazarus – in The Ultimate Music Guide: David Bowie. The latest in our long line of upgraded and expanded deluxe titles, its 148 pages include in-depth reviews of every album and revealing archive interviews making it the most up-to-date work on Bowie’s career. Among the additional features in this edition, you’ll find our survey of Bowie’s 30 greatest songs, as chosen by colleagues and contemporaries including Visconti, Jimmy Page, Woody Woodmansey, Siouxsie Sioux, Morrissey, Dave Gahan and James Murphy.

It’s in shops on Thursday – but available now in our online shop – and it showcases an artist whose incomparable vision, and a determination to pursue it at any cost, has been in place from the very beginning. Another of the Guide’s new features is a comprehensive look back at Bowie’s 1960s, where his old friend George Underwood observes: “David was planning his career in his head before it happened… He said to me once, ‘I’m in this up to my neck.’” As if to underscore this point more publicly, Bowie told Melody Maker in 1972, “I’m going to be huge, and it’s quite frightening.” He was right, of course. This, then, is the story of how it happened.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

The Cure’s Robert Smith to curate Meltdown

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The Cure's Robert Smith has been named as the curator of this year's Meltdown Festival at London's Southbank Centre in June. Smith follows in the footsteps of previous Meltdown curators such as David Bowie, Nick Cave, Patti Smith, David Byrne and MIA. He will personally select the festival line-up,...

The Cure’s Robert Smith has been named as the curator of this year’s Meltdown Festival at London’s Southbank Centre in June.

Smith follows in the footsteps of previous Meltdown curators such as David Bowie, Nick Cave, Patti Smith, David Byrne and MIA. He will personally select the festival line-up, details of which will be revealed in the coming weeks.

“I am honoured and excited to be curating the 25th Meltdown festival,” said Smith, who promises that the 30-plus performers across the ten days of the event will include “some of the most exciting, inspirational, intense and influential performers of the last 40 years”.

The festival takes place from June 15-24. Tickets will go on sale to Southbank Centre members on March 13 and to everyone else on March 15.

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The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.

Elvis Costello, The Waterboys and Nick Lowe to play Blenheim Palace

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Elvis Costello, The Waterboys and Nick Lowe have been unveiled as the acts playing the Saturday night of Blenheim Palace's Nocturne Live series on June 16. It will be the first time that regular collaborators Lowe and Costello have shared a stage for five years. Nocturne Live is a four-day concert...

Elvis Costello, The Waterboys and Nick Lowe have been unveiled as the acts playing the Saturday night of Blenheim Palace’s Nocturne Live series on June 16.

It will be the first time that regular collaborators Lowe and Costello have shared a stage for five years.

Nocturne Live is a four-day concert series that takes place against the backdrop of The Great Court at Oxfordshire’s Blenheim Palace. The other headliners are Chic and Gary Barlow, with a fourth yet to be announced.

Tickets for the Elvis Costello date start at £40 and will be available here from Friday (February 9).

The March 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with My Bloody Valentine and Rock’s 50 Most Extreme Albums on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Joan Baez, Stick In The Wheel, Gary Numan, Jethro Tull and many more and we also look back on the rise of progressive country in 70s’ Austin, Texas. Our free 15 track-CD features 15 classic tracks from the edge of sound, including My Bloody Valentine, Cabaret Voltaire, Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band, Flying Saucer Attack and Mogwai.