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Gospel According To Al Green

Besides being one of the most joyful and powerful film profiles of a major musical artist ever made, Gospel According To Al Green adheres awfully well to Willie Mitchell’s description of a great song. Al Green’s closest collaborator during the first secular phase of his career, Mitchell explains that a song shouldn’t stay in one place. Instead, it should be like “climbing a mountain”. When you “don’t have any more elevation”, it’s time to fade it out or cut it off. The real magic, Mitchell implies, is figuring out how high you can climb.

Evidently, director Robert Mugge was listening carefully to Mitchell’s advice, judging by the film’s ecstatic finale – a glorious 30-minute sequence featuring Green in full flight, singing and preaching to his congregation. It is rich reward for Mugge’s persistence; the US director chased Green for 13 months for permission to interview and film him in action.

The documentary – newly restored for this DVD and Blu-ray edition – was Mugge’s second project for Channel 4 after Black Wax, his 1982 film on Gil Scott-Heron. Though he was initially asked to profile gospel star Andraé Crouch, Mugge believed Green made for a more compelling subject, the singer having turned away from soul in the late ’70s to help spread the gospel as the minister of his own Baptist church in Memphis. After getting Green’s approval, Mugge hastily arranged to shoot the church’s seventh-anniversary celebration in 1983 with three 16mm cameras and a 24-track recording truck. It was the first (and apparently still the only) service by Green to be extensively filmed.

A few months later, Mugge shot Green and his band performing at an American Air Force base in Washington, DC. As presented here in the original film’s 4K restoration, the results of both shoots are stunning. Indeed, it’s another testament to Mugge’s talent and fortitude that he’s able to keep a camera steady on his exuberant subject as he bounces on his heels before his lectern in his tan-coloured suit, or bounds through the DC crowd to shake hands and share love.

Despite his initial reticence, Green made for a remarkably warm and candid subject during the film’s central interview, shot during rehearsals for the service. Though Green’s more jubilant when reflecting on his hard-won breakthrough with “Tired Of Being Alone” and the “charge of electricity” that prompted his conversion in 1973, he’s still plenty forthcoming on the topic of “the incident”. That was the night in 1974 when then-girlfriend Mary Woodson scalded him with hot grits before fatally shooting herself in his home. Speaking about it publicly for the first time, he relates the sad and grisly details like a man who can scarcely believe the story himself. “Did that actually happen?” he wonders. “I’m asking you – I’m not playing it for the movie.” He’s similarly frank about the complications caused by his newfound faith as he wrestled with his decision to change course: “I mean, I got a million-dollar career going here and I’m telling people they got to talk to Jesus?”

Perhaps what’s most surprising about Mugge’s film is how much it complicates any presumptions about the lines Green drew between the secular and the spiritual when he cast his thoughts heavenward. For instance, he has no apparent misgivings about leading his musicians and singers through a rendition of “Let’s Stay Together” in the rehearsal studio. What’s more, he freely and enthusiastically admits to applying the lessons he learned as a soul performer to his role as a man of God. “I took what I learned from the rock’n’roll,” he says. “The ingenuity, the class, the charisma, the steps, the movement, the hesitation, the wait, the way to be curious. You take all of this that you learn in pop and rhythm-and-blues and you use it to your best advantage.”

The additional ingredient, of course, is the “spiritual fire”. That’s what we witness in Gospel According To Al Green’s sublime finale, along with the astonishing prowess of a rare performer who’s able to surrender to the moment yet remain utterly in command.

EXTRAS: 8/10. Along with overseeing the original film’s 4K remaster, Mugge also created a new seven-minute Making Of doc. The set includes the complete audio of the interview and the whole anniversary church service, an extended sequence for one song, and a phone message by Green for Mugge.

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.

Hype!

“We were the guys in high school that people used to beat up, and we couldn’t talk to the pretty girls,” Van Conner explains partway through the 1996 music documentary Hype!. “We’re nerds, goddammit!” He’s talking about his band Screaming Trees, but the bass player is also talking about nearly everybody in the Seattle music scene, none of whom resembles the traditional rock star. There’s a chuckle in Conner’s voice, but also pride: rather than the angst-ridden young men long identified with grunge, most local musicians were just regular people driven indoors by the constant rain and a fanatical love of rock music. They weren’t bred to be celebrities. They were rock geeks.

That discrepancy between how Seattle saw itself and how the rest of the world saw Seattle is the main theme of Hype!, directed by Doug Pray (Scratch, Surfwise) and now out in a 21st- anniversary Blu-ray edition. Anyone hoping for a nostalgic tour of the city will be sorely disappointed. Released in 1996 but filmed just as the aftershocks of grunge were dying down, the film is highly sceptical of the attention given to the local scene, and most of the talking heads refuse to surrender any further autonomy to major labels and magazine photo spreads.

Seattle had long sat in a remote corner of America, half-forgotten by the rest of the country and ignored by touring bands reluctant to trek so far out of their way. As the film explains, that isolation, coupled with the rainy climate, created a rabid music scene with a staunch DIY ethos and a surprisingly diverse range of sounds demonstrated here by kinetic live clips from the Monomen, Blood Circus, Dead Moon and, yes, Nirvana. The Posies and The Fastbacks couldn’t have been more different from Tad and Mudhoney, yet they all played the same clubs for the same fans and released records on the same small labels: Estrus, K, PopLlama, Sub Pop. In fact, one of the most entertaining passages in Hype! is a supercut of musicians listing short-lived, obscure but beloved local bands, some of which existed only for a handful of shows and a 7-inch, but not long enough to regret their choice of names: Bundle Of Hiss, Skin Yard, Cat Butt, Butt Sweat.

Just as that scene seemed to be waning, a second wave of bands sprang up in their wake, including a trio from nearby Aberdeen, Washington, whose drummer pounded hard, whose bass player thumped out melodic sludge, and whose singer had an esophagus lined with rusty barbed wire. They signed with a local label called Sub Pop for their first record, called Bleach, and graduated to a major label for their second record, Nevermind. When that album made them stars, every A&R guy and music journalist headed west to find more bands like Nirvana. When they didn’t find them, they essentially invented them.

At this point Hype! becomes something like a zombie film, with the last humans boarding themselves up in a farmhouse to battle the invading horde. In the rush to capitalise on the new youth culture that grunge represented, Seattle was exploited and then distorted, a vibrant scene pared down to a handful of flannel-clad bands writing introverted anthems about inner turmoil and emotional anguish. Almost everyone interviewed for the documentary expresses feelings of disenfranchisement and bitterness, as though their autonomy has been wrenched away from them. They brandish irony as a defence mechanism, whether it’s Sub Pop receptionist Megan Jasper trolling the New York Times with made-up slang (“Swingin’ on the flippity-flop”) or producer Jack Endino embracing 
the goofy job title “Godfather Of Grunge”.

These artists wielded irony as a weapon against pop-cultural gentrification, although it easily curdles into something equally destructive. Sub Pop founders Bruce Pavitt and Jonathan Poneman are portrayed as overly clever businessmen appropriating local DIY culture and marketing their label with LOSER T-shirts. All that distinguishes them from the invading forces is a smirk and a local zip code. As it explores this particular mindset, Hype! becomes more than just a documentary about a music scene. Especially viewed from the perspective of the late 2010s, the film is an artefact of a very different era and a very different attitude toward success. Pray might be criticised for not incorporating other viewpoints into his film, for not interviewing fashion designers, rock journalists and record execs to offset the suspicions of the locals. By excluding other points of view, however, he demonstrates how history might be written by the losers.

EXTRAS: 7/10. New audio commentary with Doug Pray, vintage interviews, live clips, outtakes, an animated short by Seattle cartoonist Peter Bagge.

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.

Borg vs McEnroe

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The on-court Sturm und Drang of Bjorn Borg and John McEnroe has already been the subject of one HBO documentary. Now, Danish director Janus Metz has assembled a staunch biopic about the two Wimbledon champions that owes a debt to Rush, a film that dramatised another real-life international sporting rivalry, between James Hunt and Niki Lauda. The focus is build up to the 1980 Wimbledon final – between “the baseline player and the net rusher” – when a television audience of 17.3 million viewers watched Borg chase his fifth straight title on Centre Court.

Newcomer Sverrir Gudnason plays the Swede as a stoic, dedicated athlete who is uncomfortable being recognised walking down the street. Shia LaBoeuf, meanwhile, is the temperamental McEnroe. The narrative leans heavily on their contrasting dispositions – scenes of McEnroe partying are cut against Borg in his hotel room, diligently measuring his pulse rate. The further McEnroe progresses through the tournament, the more enraged he becomes by the media focus on his behaviour, while Borg increasingly shuts himself down, wrestling to keep an unspoken anxiety in check. “Can’t you just talk about the tennis?” Says an exasperated MacEnroe; can’t Borg just talk at all?

Sports commentators act as a kind of Greek chorus, filling in exposition as required (“McEnroe is the bigger talent, but playing Borg is like being hit by a sledgehammer”), allowing Gudnason and LaBoeuf to get on with more actorly work. Gudnason is good as the enigmatic Bjorg, eventually making an introverted, enigmatic character likeable. LaBoeuf has been enjoyably unhinged in films lately – American Honey – and he chews his way greedily through McEnroe, savouring every unpredictable tic, cuss and hissy fit.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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.

Jane Birkin on the music that shaped her: “It was good for the morale, to have a bit of Chopin with your new boyfriend”

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Jane Birkin took us through her life in music in the June 2017 issue of Uncut, but here’s the full version, in which Jane recalls dealing with bomb threats with Serge Gainsbourg, learning about classical music with John Barry, and being mistaken for Françoise Hardy…

______________________________

Judy Campbell
A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square
1939
My mother was on the sheet music, and she was the muse, she was the one that Eric Maschwitz wrote for. He also wrote the lyrics for “These Foolish Things” for her too – “the phone that didn’t answer” was my mother. She was an inspiring force for those songs, yes. She sang it in England for the morale for the troops, of course, but also in the theatres during the bombs in London. She was good fun – and when the bombs used to drop to left or right of the theatre, she used to cup her ear in her hand, and then wait for the bomb to go off, and then go on singing, and people were standing up cheering. I didn’t know this until she died, someone told me, because she went off to sing “A Nightingale…” after 9/11 and they remembered having seen her in London during the bomb raids. I wish I’d known, just to have had her memories, really, it would have been nice. I heard her singing this, but when she was very very old. I think the very original song on those albums that you could break over someone’s head, which if I remember right, between my parents I think they were all broken. And then of course Vera Lynn took it over, and exasperatingly her version is the one that often gets played – but it was ma who started off with it. If anyone has a version of it, I’d be very very pleased! I think I’ve got one of the original records, but it’s very scratched.

______________________________

Elvis Presley
Are You Lonesome Tonight
1960

I was at boarding school, I was able to dance with the girl I adored, who was my superior in every way. It was for senior dancing, at an all-girls school, and I just remember dancing with Jane Welkley to “Are You Lonesome Tonight”. I’d bought what someone made me believe was the heart of a tree, and I’d put it in Bronco toilet paper, and I had it in my pocket to slip her at the end of the song. Because I think she was leaving the school or something. I just remember the passion I had for this beautiful, beautiful girl, and how she was No 1 in everything, and I was always letting her down. Everytime she saw me, it was, “Oh, Jane…” I could never get good enough reports for her, and I could never be the head of the house… I remember I painted a poster for Scott, our house, and that she asked me to do that, and that I felt that I’d done quite well, but nothing really in comparison to her beauty. I should think she was a couple of years older than me. It all seems very much older when you’re that age. I used to clean her plimsolls, and then by the time I got to be what her age was, another little girl was cleaning my plimsolls! Sort of tragic affairs of the boarding school… The cycle goes on. I think this was when I was 12, it was sort of Elvis’ second coming around, so I think perhaps he wasn’t shocking any more. I wasn’t brave enough to say Elvis Presley for being the person I thought about the most – Cliff Richard was the one I had pinned up above my bed, in a bathing suit, I think, unappropriately! I think my mother took us off to see Summer Holiday and she was very much disapproved of for having dared to take these schoolchildren of 14 off to see this shocking musical. It can’t have been very shocking, but it was for the other girl’s parents – my mother had a mauve sports car, which probably added to the thrill! So I’d like to say it was Elvis Presley right from the start and show how knowlegable I was about music, but it was in fact Cliff who was the one who was closest to my heart. He was good!

The 35th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

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Hey, big week for modern kosmische I guess, as we’ve taken delivery of the tremendous, free jazz-inclined new Bitchin Bajas album, plus a set from Gregg Kowalsky from Date Palms. And I guess James Holden’s fine record fits that description too: there’s also a new track from “The Animal Spirits” if you scroll down.

What else? I’ve found a link to Goran Kajfes’ latest adventurous collection of jazz covers; the lesser-spotted Neil Young (in 2017, at least), letting rip again with The Promise Of The Real; an epic new Alvarius B project from Alan Bishop; and an absolute killer single (Think Ryley’s “West Wind”) from Brigid Mae Power. I’ll stick that one on Twitter as soon as I get it.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

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

Bay Head by Gunn-Truscinski Duo

2 Goran Kajfes Subtropic Arkestra – The Reason Why Volume 3 (Headspin)

3 Nathan Bowles Trio – Live At Three Lobed/WXDU Hopscotch Afternoon Jamboree 2017 (Bandcamp)

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

4 Chris Gantry – At The House Of Cash (Drag City)

5 Neil Young & The Promise Of The Real – Like A Hurricane (Live At Farm Aid 2017)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1fZn4FCn-Y

6 Rostam – Half-Light (Nonesuch)

7 Margo Price – All American Made (Third Man)

8 Tim Buckley – The Dream Belongs To Me: Rare And Unreleased Recordings 1968-1973 (Edsel)

9 St Vincent – Masseduction (Loma Vista)

10 Courtney Barnett & Kurt Vile – Lotta Sea Lice (Marathon Artists/Matador)

11 Belly – Untogether (4AD)

12 Brooklyn Raga Massive – Terry Riley In C (Northern Spy)

13 Tim Buckley – Greetings From West Hollywood (Manifesto)

14 Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band – Adios Senor Pussycat (Violette)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGolQl1RJFU

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

16 Claire M Singer – Fairge (Touch)

17 Kamasi Washington – Harmony Of Difference (XL)

18 Steely Dan – Live In Memphis 1974 (Bootleg)

19 Tim Buckley – Venice Mating Call (Manifesto)

20 Alvarius B – With A Beaker On The Burner And An Otter In The Oven (Abduction)

21 Bitchin Bajas – Bajas Fresh (Drag City)

Bajas Fresh by Bitchin Bajas

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

23 Laura Baird – I Wish I Were A Sparrow (Ba Da Bing)

24 Four Tet – Scientists (Text)

25 Joshua Abrams – Music For Life Itself & The Interrupters (Eremite)

Music For Life Itself & The Interrupters by Joshua Abrams

26 Pearls Before Swine – One Nation Underground (Drag City)

27 Gregg Kowalsky – L’Orange L’Orange (Mexican Summer)

Nico! Shirley Collins! The Slits!

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Pleased to say, fans of music films are spoiled over the next few weeks, with a strong selection of docs and drams showing at two imminent London film festivals.

Raindance – which runs from September 20 – October 1 – kicks off a solid line-up with On The Sly: In Search Of The Family Stone, which I wrote about recently in Uncut, and Teenage Superstars, Grant McPhee’s look at Glasgow’s indie music scene in the mid-Eighties.

Things move swiftly on with Stooge – a film about Robert Pargiter, Iggy Pop’s No1 fan – and Melody Makers, about my alma mater though, mercifully, it focuses on a period long before I turned up to spoil the party. Interestingly, there’s also a doc on PiL called The Public Image Is Rotten – though, alas, I can’t find a trailer for it at the moment.

On The Sly: In Search Of The Family Stone

Teenage Superstars

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YOzNCacVFT0

Stooge

Melody Maker

The Public Image Is Rotten

Meanwhile, over at the BFI London Film Festival – which runs from October 4 – 15 – you can see the splendid documentary on England’s first lady of folk, The Ballad Of Shirley Collins, and a film about another of music’s grande dame – Marianne Faithfull, as captured by Sandrine Bonnaire.

One film I am very much looking forward to is Nico, 88, which appears to cover the same period as James Edward Young’s excellent book, Nico: Songs They Never Play On The Radio. There’s also a documentary on The Slits, G-Funk and – this looks pretty essential – Bamseom Seoul Pirates Inferno, about Korean punk band, Bamseom Pirates. Sample lyric: “Grandma our roof is leaking / Don’t worry son, Twitter will save us!” For more heartwarming fare, there’s The Drummer And The Keeper – the first feature from former musician, Nick Kelly.

I hope you agree, it looks like there’s plenty out there to enjoy.

The Ballad Of Shirley Collins

Faithfull

Nico, 88

Here to be Heard: The Story Of The Slits

Bamseom Seoul Pirates Inferno

G Funk

The Drummer and the Keeper

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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.

In Between reviewed

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When In Between was released in Israel at the start of the year, the Palestinian writer-director Maysaloun Hamoud received attention from some unexpected quarters. First, the authorities in Umm al-Fahm, one of the country’s largest Arab cities, tried to ban the film; shortly after, Hamoud received the first Palestinian Fatwa issued since 1948. In Between – Bar Bahar in Arabic – focuses on three women living in the centre of Tel Aviv, away from their families and the weight of tradition.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fPiVZj8Mm7o

There is Laila (Mouna Hawa), a lawyer, and Salma (Sana Jammelieh), a DJ, who are both immersed in the city’s underground scene – we meet them first at a club, taking cocaine in a backroom with a group of friends. A new flatmate arrives – Nour (Shaden Kanboura) – a hijabi from a small village. While her outlook seems initially opposed to Laila and Salma’s progressive lifestyle, Hamoud is more concerned with finding an equitable balance among this irregular sisterhood. They are all caught between their conservative Palestinian culture and a more liberal Israeli state that does not regard them as equals.

On a more personal level, they are all experiencing relationship problems. Despite his supposed independent credentials, Laila’s boyfriend turns out to be yet another conservative male. Salma, a lesbian, takes her latest girlfriend to meet her unwitting parents – at a meal designed to introduce Salma to a potential husband. Meanwhile, Nour’s ghastly fiancé, Wissam (Henry Andrawes) – an ostensibly pious traditionalist who disproves of her studies and views Laila and Salma as corrupting influences – finally reveals his true colours. The three leads are uniformly excellent. Although Hawa and Jammelieh have the more colourful roles, nevertheless Kanboura is given more opportunities to convey wider emotional range. Her quiet, studious Nour is the emotional centre of Hamoud’s brilliant film.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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.

Read the complete tracklisting for Bob Dylan’s Trouble No More – The Bootleg Series Vol. 13

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Bob Dylan‘s ‘gospel years’ are to provide the focus for the next instalment of his ongoing Bootleg Series.

Trouble No More – The Bootleg Series Vol. 13 / 1979-1981 is released by Columbia Records and Legacy Recordings on November 3.

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

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

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

The tracklisting for the deluxe edition is:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The 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.

New Order and Peter Hook reach “a full and final settlement”

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New Order have announced that they have reached “a full and final settlement” in the long running disputes with their former bassist Peter Hook.

The band released the following statement:

“The disputes were based upon Hook’s use of various New Order and Joy Division assets on merchandising and in the promotion of shows by his new band, and the amount of money he receives from the use of the name New Order by his former colleagues since 2011.

“The Joy Division and New Order names mean a great deal to so many of the fans, and the band felt it important to protect the legacy.

“With these issues now dealt with, Bernard, Stephen and Gillian can continue to do what they do best, make music and perform live.”

Hook has yet to release a statement of his own.

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.

Bark Psychosis – Hex

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First things first: forget ‘post-rock’. It might be hard to, given this most fluid of genres is having its moment again, thanks to one-hundred on-line “best of post-rock” lists, and the recent publication of Jeanette Leech’s fearless: The Making of Post-Rock, but Bark Psychosis both predate and transcend the often simplistic faux-experiments under its untidy umbrella. On Hex, the only album Bark Psychosis made across their initial, fated run, the group are looking much further afield – here, there are trace elements of holy minimalism, ECM jazz, the fractal jazz-funk of Miles Davis, the sea-spray of Can.

In some ways, it’s a surprise that Bark Psychosis even found their way here. In the late ‘80s, the group, led by teenage friends Graham Sutton and John Ling, were enamoured of the heavy/noisy aesthetic of groups like Swans, Napalm Death and Sonic Youth. They learned, and listened, quickly, though – by their debut single, 1990’s “All Different Things”, they were somewhere else entirely, using soft-loud dynamics to jolt the listener out of their senses, or quietly burbling away in frigid, unsettled ambience. Over three more singles, Bark Psychosis very slowly explored the possibilities in their music: by the time they reached their fourth single, 1992’s startling “Scum”, they simply let everything flow.

“Scum”’s twenty-two minutes lead us, in a roundabout way, into Hex. Tellingly, “Scum” was the first time Bark Psychosis had recorded at St. John’s Church on Stratford Broadway, London, though they’d been rehearsing there for a while. Allowing the song structure to hang loose, its ebbs and flows, its swells and recesses, are chillingly effective, the song often lost in stillness, or folding into silence, the room humming to itself. At the church, they learned the power of acoustics, and Hex would develop, at least in part, in response to “Scum” – instead of “Scum”’s singular mood, Hex would be also recorded in many other spaces, the better to capture their particular aura.

It would also prove to be a protracted and trying recording process that would lead to the group’s disintegration. They may have had the support of a major label in Virgin subsidiary Circa, but every penny would go into recording; by the time they got to RAK Studios to mix the album, they were living out of drummer Mark Simnett’s camper van and scrounging off other groups’ leftovers for food. Was it all worth it? Hex’s delicacy, its confidence, its moments of sheer, unalloyed beauty, balanced by its extended passages of knife-slit tension and fraught anxiety, answer the question with a decisive ‘yes’, even as the album sessions stretched everyone to breaking point.

Hex opens with “The Loom”, a modular piece where a sweet, melancholy piano refrain, curled by purring strings, eases into an elusively gorgeous melody, Sutton singing, ‘I just came to watch you smile’ before a dub-wise bass leads the song into darker terrain: the slow weave of bass, percussion and ghosted drones is the closest Bark Psychosis get to their most obvious precursors, the Talk Talk of Spirit Of Eden and Laughing Stock. Lead single “A Street Scene” follows, another uncertain construction that orbits a tremolo-ing guitar with all the fragility of a spun sugar nest, sudden bursts of noise jolting the mise en scène before everything winds down to a gentle conclusion, guitar drizzling like Vini Reilly playing at 16RPM. “Absent Friend” and “Big Shot”, the other two songs of the album’s first half, play at similar games – periods of stability spiral into uncertainty; dampened snares tap out unhurried rhythms; sighs score the skyline.

In its second half, Hex turns monumental. “Finger Spit” is rife with lacunae, with great arcs of blasted guitar carving parabolas in the humidity of a late Summer night, Simnett’s drums skittering around the kit as slamming voids of piano crash out of the instrument’s frame. “Eyes & Smiles” is the moment of hope amidst the album’s uncertain tenor, Sutton crying ‘you’ve gotta go on’ as the group builds one of its richest songs, weaving uncommon beauty from more Reilly-esque guitars, while muted brass sings out across plains of ghostly synth.

The comedown is “Pendulum Man”, an instrumental with all the gorgeous calm of Eno’s Music For Airports, its slow clockwork tempo pulsing out a great architectonic space while Bark Psychosis themselves seem slowly to recede, ethering out of earshot. It’s a beautiful, pellucid ending to a monumentally brave album that all but called time on this line-up of Bark Psychosis. Really, where else could they have gone from here?

Q&A
Graham Sutton
What was the goal when you started Hex?

Just to feel fulfilled as a musician. It’s really hard to put yourself back in the mindset of a twenty, twenty-one-year-old. It was really fucking intense, it was so driven.

And Hex is such a self-contained world.
There was a thing of trying to stretch ourselves, or do something new. That time around, we had access to more. Apart from ten days in a proper studio, it was all rented gear that was bolted together, moved to different locations, set up, recorded, patched together. It’s very much a case of DIY.

Can you tell me about those spaces?
We started at Bath Moles, this little studio above a club. Then we moved to the church for six weeks, to try different stuff there. We also moved to different people’s flats and houses, [for example] if they had a piano somewhere, in their front room.

What has the reissue allowed you to do?
The biggest thing is to be able to do it properly, actually going back and managing to source the original tapes and to get those mastered properly.

I wonder whether realising it as close as possible to how you would want, allows you to close the book on it, somehow.
Certainly. It’s been done properly now. That makes me happy.
INTERVIEW: JON DALE

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.

Watch a new video for Leonard Cohen’s “Leaving The Table”

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A new animated video has been released for Leonard Cohen‘s song, “Leaving The Table“.

The song appeared on Cohen’s final album, You Want it Darker.

The video premiered during the ceremony for the 2017 Polaris Prize, Canada’s top music award, for which Cohen’s You Want It Darker was nominated.

On November 6, artists including Elvis Costello, Philip Glass, Feist and Adam Cohen and more will participate in Tower Of Song: A Memorial Tribute To Leonard Cohen at Montreal’s Bell Center to mark the anniversary of Cohen’s death.

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.

David Lynch on David Bowie’s return to Twin Peaks

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David Lynch has discussed David Bowie‘s posthumous cameo in the recent Twin Peaks season.

In a new interview with Pitchfork, Lynch explained that he had approached Bowie’s representatives about reprising his role of FBI agent Phillip Jeffries in the show’s recent third series.

“I never even talked to him, but I talked to his lawyer, and they weren’t telling me why he said he couldn’t do it,” Lynch revealed. “But then, of course, later on we knew.”

“We got permission to use the old footage, but he didn’t want his voice used in it,” Lynch added. “I think someone must have made him feel bad about his Louisiana accent in Fire Walk With Me, but I think it’s so beautiful. He wanted to have it done by a legitimate actor from Louisiana, so that’s what we had to do. The guy [voice actor Nathan Frizzell] did a great job.”

“He was unique, like Elvis was unique,” Lynch added. “There’s something about him that’s so different from everybody else. I only met him during the time I worked with him and just a couple of other times, but he was such a good guy, so easy to talk to and regular. I just wish he was still around and that I could work with him again.”

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me

Twin Peaks: The Return

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.

The Fall announce career-spanning singles box set

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The Fall have announced details a new career-spanning singles box set.

The Fall – Singles 1978-2016 is due on November 24 via Cherry Red Records.

It’s available as both a 3CD set and a 7CD book set.

The 3xCD features the A-sides, beginning with 1978’s “Bingo-Master” and running through the title track from their 2016 EP Wise Ol’ Man.

The 7xCD edition comes with a new book, all the A-sides as well as the corresponding B-sides.

All the tracks have been remastered by longtime Fall engineer Andy Pearce.

You can pre-order the set by clicking here.

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.

Roger Waters confirms European tour dates

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Roger Waters will bring his Us + Them tour to Europe next summer.

Five shows in Germany and one show Austria for summer 2018 have been announced, with more to come in Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Holland, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the UK.

The show features classic Pink Floyd, new songs and solo work, including tracks from his new album Is This The Life We Really Want?.

Click here for more details about Uncut’s Roger Waters cover story from our July 2017 issue

Monday, May 14 – Hamburg Barclay Centre
Wednesday, May 16 Vienna Stadthalle

Saturday, June 2 – Berlin Mercedes Benz Arena
Monday, June 4 – Mannheim SAP Arena
Monday, June 11 – Cologne Lanxess Arena
Wednesday, June 13 – Munich Olympiahalle

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.

November 2017

The Beatles, Beck, The Smiths and Woody Guthrie all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated November 2017 and in shops from September 21.

The Fab Four are on the cover, and inside Uncut tells the full story of Magical Mystery Tour – from psychedelic and spiritual adventures, wild parties, tragedies and a surreal trip into the unknown – with help from the survivors who were there on the ground.

“I’m rocking the tape trying to find the right spot and [The Beatles] are all chattering away in the control room,” says engineer Ken Scott, recalling mixing and editing “I Am The Walrus”. “I had to just turn round and tell them to ‘Shut the fuck up!’ I was petrified. It must have taken me five minutes to build up the confidence to turn round and tell them to shut up. They immediately went quiet… too quiet!”

As he prepares to release his new album, Colors, Beck reflects on 25 years of “opening up the vocabulary”, and lets us into the creation of his new record – his Sgt Pepper and Thriller rolled into one. “People told me to stop,” he tells us, “but there is a power in momentum.”

In our reviews section, we delve into The Smiths‘ first ever deluxe reissue of The Queen Is Dead, unreleased demos, live tracks and all, over a forensic four pages.

50 years on from his death, we also examine the life and work of great American hero, Woody Guthrie, from an abandoned plot in Okemah, Oklahoma, to a new generation of protest singers channelling his indefatigable spirit.

Elsewhere, Uncut heads to Liverpool to meet Michael Head, formerly of Shack and The Strands, and discover how he’s finally kicking his run of bad luck and bad habits and made his first album in 11 years. “I feel like I’ve been in the freezer for 30 years,” he tells us.

Andrew Weatherall answers your questions on Primal Scream, clothes, the enduring appeal of dance music, and the power of drugs: “We took acid and sat on top of Silbury Hill. I don’t know how, but I ended up wearing a monk’s robe and I had a shepherd’s crook. Every time I raised the crook in triumphant psychedelic wonderment, thunder or lightning would occur…”

Meanwhile, Neil Finn takes us through his best albums, Billy Childish lets us in on his favourite music, and The Jacksons recall the creation of “I Want You Back”.

We review End Of The Road festival and The Necks live, alongside albums from Courtney Barnett & Kurt Vile, Robert Plant, Margo Price, David Bowie and The Replacements, and films including The Death Of Stalin and Wind River.

In our front section, we investigate the KLF‘s comeback, speak to PP Arnold, Trevor Key and Ian McNabb, and introduce Bedouine.

This month’s free CD, Roll Up! Roll Up!, includes 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including cuts from Courtney Barnett & Kurt Vile, Margo Price, Gregg Allman, PP Arnold, Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band and The Weather Station.

The new Uncut is out on September 21.

This month in Uncut

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The Beatles, Beck, The Smiths and Woody Guthrie all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated November 2017 and in shops from September 21.

The Fab Four are on the cover, and inside Uncut tells the full story of Magical Mystery Tour – from psychedelic and spiritual adventures, wild parties, tragedies and a surreal trip into the unknown – with help from the survivors who were there on the ground.

“I’m rocking the tape trying to find the right spot and [The Beatles] are all chattering away in the control room,” says engineer Ken Scott, recalling mixing and editing “I Am The Walrus”. “I had to just turn round and tell them to ‘Shut the fuck up!’ I was petrified. It must have taken me five minutes to build up the confidence to turn round and tell them to shut up. They immediately went quiet… too quiet!”

As he prepares to release his new album, Colors, Beck reflects on 25 years of “opening up the vocabulary”, and lets us into the creation of his new record – his Sgt Pepper and Thriller rolled into one. “People told me to stop,” he tells us, “but there is a power in momentum.”

In our reviews section, we delve into The Smiths‘ first ever deluxe reissue of The Queen Is Dead, unreleased demos, live tracks and all, over a forensic four pages.

50 years on from his death, we also examine the life and work of great American hero, Woody Guthrie, from an abandoned plot in Okemah, Oklahoma, to a new generation of protest singers channelling his indefatigable spirit.

Elsewhere, Uncut heads to Liverpool to meet Michael Head, formerly of Shack and The Strands, and discover how he’s finally kicking his run of bad luck and bad habits and made his first album in 11 years. “I feel like I’ve been in the freezer for 30 years,” he tells us.

Andrew Weatherall answers your questions on Primal Scream, clothes, the enduring appeal of dance music, and the power of drugs: “We took acid and sat on top of Silbury Hill. I don’t know how, but I ended up wearing a monk’s robe and I had a shepherd’s crook. Every time I raised the crook in triumphant psychedelic wonderment, thunder or lightning would occur…”

Meanwhile, Neil Finn takes us through his best albums, Billy Childish lets us in on his favourite music, and The Jacksons recall the creation of “I Want You Back”.

We review End Of The Road festival and The Necks live, alongside albums from Courtney Barnett & Kurt Vile, Robert Plant, Margo Price, David Bowie and The Replacements, and films including The Death Of Stalin and Wind River.

In our front section, we investigate the KLF‘s comeback, speak to PP Arnold, Trevor Key and Ian McNabb, and introduce Bedouine.

This month’s free CD, Roll Up! Roll Up!, includes 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including cuts from Courtney Barnett & Kurt Vile, Margo Price, Gregg Allman, PP Arnold, Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band and The Weather Station.

The new Uncut is out on October 21.

My Bloody Valentine may release a new album in 2018

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My Bloody Valentine are rumoured to be on the verge of releasing a new album according to a new biography written for Kevin Shields’ upcoming performance at Sigur Ros’s upcoming Norður og Niður festival.

The biography, published on the festival’s website, says Shields is “currently finishing an all analog vinyl version of Loveless and Isn’t Anything and is also working on material for a new My Bloody Valentine album to be released in 2018.”

The album would be the follow-up to their 2013 comeback album m b v.

Speaking to Uncut in 2014, Shields revealed he’d already started writing new material. “There are a few tunes I made in the past year,” he told us. “One of them is very weird. It’s a bit Springsteenish. I know, I’ve written my Bruce Springsteen song! It’s hard to believe, isn’t it?”

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

Hear Morrissey’s new single, “Spent The Day In Bed”

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Morrissey has released a new single, “Spent The Day In Bed“.

The track is taken from his new album, Low In High School; his first new studio album in three years.

The album is released on November 17 on Etienne Records/BMG.

The album will be released digitally and in physical formats: CD, coloured vinyl and limited edition cassette.

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

Introducing the new issue of Uncut

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What do you do when you’ve just released the most significant album in rock history? For The Beatles in late 1967, the answer was simple: go back to work, but in the most playful way possible. In our new issue of Uncut, out on Thursday in the UK (though hopefully subscribers should have their copies sooner), we mark the 50th anniversary of recording sessions which turned into parties, psychedelic and spiritual adventures (“George swore to me he could levitate”), destabilising tragedies and, eventually, a redemptive and surreal trip into the unknown – the Magical Mystery Tour. “The songs had changed, our attitudes had changed,” says Ringo Starr. “Our well-being had changed.”

For our first Beatles cover in five years (a quarter of Uncut’s lifespan, interestingly) Michael Bonner has procured a handful of return tickets for the Magical Mystery Tour’s most doughty survivors. Good tales proliferate, as you’d hope. “I went to John’s house one night,” remembers Barry Finch, then a partner in Mayfair Publicity whose clients included Epstein’s Saville Theatre. “He had a big sweet jar. He screwed the top off and gave me a Black Bomber, a speed pill. We went into the garden and sat together on a stone seat. There was a plaque on the ground reading, ‘Sitting in an English garden waiting for the sun’. He turned to me and said, ‘Barry, I paid twenty grand for this house and it’s always fucking raining!’

“We went back inside where we took some acid. Then we went up into his recording studio. John began playing the guitar. I could play the piano a little. ‘This is good, Barry,’ he said. ‘Now go to B!’ But I didn’t know what B was. ‘Never mind.’ So we went back downstairs and that was the end of that.”

Elsewhere in the new issue, Stephen Deusner has an exclusive chat with Beck, in which he reflects on 25 years of “opening up the vocabulary”, and reveals all about his new album, Colors – Sgt Pepper and Thriller rolled into one, he claims, plausibly. Tom Pinnock meets up with one of my favourite British songwriters, Michael Head: a fiftysomething from Liverpool who alleges he’s never heard either The White Album or Dark Side Of The Moon. There are more interviews with The Jacksons, Billy Childish, PP Arnold, The Icicle Works, Bedouine, Neil Finn and – a strong highlight – Andrew Weatherall. The story about starting an early DJ gig with the theme from 633 Squadron is worth the price of admission alone, though obviously I would say that.

What else? On the spot reports from The KLF shenanigans, End Of The Road festivals, and, from me, the latest Necks residency in London. Album of the month is the wonderful Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile hook-up, playing as I type, and other significant players in the reviews section include Robert Plant, Margo Price, Gregg Allman, David Crosby, and two big personal favourites from The Weather Station and Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith.

You can find a lot of this crowd on our free CD, along with Ryley Walker and Bill Mackay, Tricky, Circuit Des Yeux and more. I’m sure there’s more I’ve forgotten in there – Stephen’s pilgrimage to Okemah, Oklahoma on the 50th anniversary of Woody Guthrie’s death, for one – but don’t miss David Cavanagh’s magisterial farewell to Walter Becker; “The sardonic observer of humanity who’s secretly pleased that, with so many venal dollar-eyed incompetents around, he’ll never run short of material.”

 

 

Acetone – 1992 – 2001

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Acetone didn’t go completely unnoticed in their time. Formed at the back end of grunge in 1992, they were packed off on support tours for The Verve, Spiritualized and Oasis over the following years, though none of those audiences were likely to embrace the bucolic subtlety of their foraging guitar music. They were a three-piece without a natural frontman, a band who sang in hushed tones or else none at all. And their songs tended to be impressionistic pieces that nosed around for a groove rather than concerning themselves with hooks and snappy choruses.

Bassist Richie Lee and guitar player Mark Lightcap had met at the California Institute of the Arts in Los Angeles during the ‘Eighties. Hooking up with local student Steve Hadley, a proficient drummer, they formed art-noise outfit Spinout and adopted a series of pseudonyms: Scooter, Geezer and Izzy Cane. Their solo legacy was a self-titled album in 1991, after which they split from lead singer Tom Henry and decided to form Acetone.

1992 – 2001 does a fine job of collating their best moments from a career that spawned four albums and two EPs, as well as offering nine unreleased tracks from the hours of music they recorded in an empty bedroom that served as a regular rehearsal space. The songs glow with a low-key radiance and move with a warm, spectral propulsion that recalls both VU and the dreamier end of Mazzy Star (indeed, the latter’s Hope Sandoval declared Acetone “one of my all-time favourite bands”). “Shaker” is a deceptively tranquil instrumental that undergoes various tiny calibrations. A discreet organ drone adds to the shifting textures of “Return From The Ice”, while their interpretation of William Blake’s “How Sweet I Roamed”, via The Fugs, feels like a blissful lullaby.

Clues to their noisier past do emerge occasionally, like Lightcap’s twanging solo on “Things Are Gonna Be Alright”. Though the only time they really get heavy is during the distorted squeal of “Vibrato”, a mini-jam that otherwise carries a balmy Southern groove. And 1997’s “Chew”, taken from their first album for Vapor Records, owned by Neil Young and manager Elliot Roberts, is nothing short of spectacular. Hadley’s drums tick like jazz, Lee produces a springy bass riff that’s irresistible.

Who knows what Acetone might have become. Their story ultimately ended in tragedy, when Lee took his own life in the summer of 2001, in the garage next to the house they rehearsed in. He was just 34. Hopefully, the band’s beguiling back catalogue might finally get the recognition it deserves, not only through this primer but also Hadley, Lee, Lightcap, a new book by author Sam Sweet that charts the back stories of each member.

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