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Tributes paid to Glen Campbell

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Glen Campbell has died aged 81.

“It is with the heaviest of hearts that we announce the passing of our beloved husband, father, grandfather, and legendary singer and guitarist, Glen Travis Campbell, at the age of 81, following his long and courageous battle with Alzheimer’s disease,” the singer’s family said in a statement.

Campbell announced his Alzheimer’s diagnosis in 2011, which he followed with the Goodbye Tour and the documentary film I’ll Be Me. He released his last studio album, Adios, in June this year.

Glen Travis Campbell was born in Pike County, Arkansas, on April 22, 1936. His first guitar cost $7 from a Sears catalogue.

As a struggling musician, he moved to Los Angeles and by 1962 was a member of the Wrecking Crew, where he appeared on tracks including Elvis Presley‘s “Viva Las Vegas”, the Byrds’ “Mr. Tambourine Man” and the Righteous Brothers’ “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling”.

In 1964, when Brian Wilson stepped down from performing with The Beach Boys, Campbell replaced him on bass and high harmonies.

Campbell had his first major hit in 1967 with “By the Time I Get To Phoenix“, written by Jimmy Webb; the start of a hugely successful collaborative relationship that yielded “Galveston”, “Gentle On My Mind” and “Wichita Lineman“.

“We both came from almost identical backgrounds, raised in small towns in adjacent states, and both grew up with music as almost a daily application of family ritual, played in church and sang with our brothers and sisters,” Webb told Uncut in 2016.

“We found this area where we were very comfortable together musically. He understood what I was playing. He would stand behind me and watch my hands on the piano keys and divine the positions that he would need to take on the frets of the guitar. He would play the bass notes as well. I realised he was at least my equal and probably someone I could learn a great deal from if I would just shut up and pay attention.”

During a career that spanned six decades, Campbell sold over 45 million records. He also co-starred with John Wayne in 1969’s True Grit.

Since news broke of Campbell’s death, tributes have been paid by Brian Wilson, Ringo Starr, Dolly Parton and many more.

https://twitter.com/SteveMartinToGo/status/895070039363076096

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Introducing The Clash: The Ultimate Music Guide deluxe edition

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It is worth remembering that for some eyewitnesses during 1977, punk wasn’t all it was cracked up to be. Take, for instance, Reg Cliff, who went to see two of the scene’s prime movers in concert – and came away bitterly disappointed. “Last night I went to see the Sex Pistols and Clash (formerly 101’ers) for the first time,” he wrote to NME. “I was very, very disappointed. Both bands were crap and it’s enough to turn you on to Demis Roussos.”

It’s a shame Reg didn’t enjoy the show – The Clash, it transpired, were “a cacophonous barrage of noise” – but perhaps if he’s reading this blog then he might be encouraged to pick up a copy of our latest deluxe edition and experience a change of heart. Yes, we are proud to unveil a deluxe edition of the Uncut Ultimate Music Guide to The Clash, which goes on sale in the UK this Thursday (August 10) – when it also goes on sale in our online store.

1977 was, of course, a pivotal year for The Clash – they released their debut album in April and toured extensively becoming punk’s inspirational standard-bearers in the process. So it seems particularly apt that we celebrate the 40th anniversary of this landmark year in the band’s life with this deluxe guide to all things Clash. It includes a selection of articles originally published in the NME, Melody Maker and Uncut, and with extensive new reviews of every album, we trace the highs, lows and neglected margins of the band’s career and their solo endeavours. An all-star jury – headed by Mick Jones and Paul Simonon – vote on their best Clash tracks ever, and we trace the band’s pre-history back to the pub rock scene and Joe Strummer’s early band, the 101’ers.

By curious coincidence, during 1976 – as The Clash took shape – on the other side of the Atlantic, Neil Young was hard at work on Hitchhiker, an album that he quietly shelved and has remained in his vaults ever since. Until now, that is! Young is finally releasing Hitchhiker in September, and if a post on a new website last week is to be believed, his is also finally raising the curtains on the next volume of his exhaustive Archives project. It seems a timely opportunity, then, to remind you that the current issue of Uncut goes deep into the story behind Hitchhiker, along with Young’s other legendary lost albums.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

David Crosby announces release date for new album, Sky Trails

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David Crosby has announced details of a new solo album, Sky Trails.

The album follows on from Lighthouse, which he released in October 2016.

Sky Trails is released on September 29. It is a full band album, who include saxophonist Steve Tavaglione, bassist Mai Agan, drummer Steve DiStanislao and Crosby’s son, multi-instrumentalist James Raymond, who also produced the album.

Crosby and Raymond recorded some of the songs at Raymond’s home studio and then moved to Jackson Browne’s Groove Masters studio in Santa Monica for tunes that feature the full band.

The album includes a cover of Joni Mitchell‘s “Amelia” from her 1976 album, Hejira. “I’ve always loved how Joni wrote about her love life and Amelia Earhart’s life at the same time,” Crosby says. “It’s just exquisite writing.”

The tracklisting for Sky Trails is:

She’s Got To Be Somewhere
Sky Trails
Sell Me A Diamond
Before Tomorrow Falls On Love
Here It’s Almost Sunset
Capitol
Amelia
Somebody Home
Curved Air
Home Free

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

John Murry – A Short History Of Decay

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When he released his first solo album in 2012, John Murry probably thought all his glorious mornings – hallelujah, amen! – had come at once. The Graceless Age earned Murry the sort of reviews that make careers. You couldn’t imagine him filling stadiums on the back of it, but the album, adoringly received, at least seemed to offer a future largely free of the turmoil so far attached to Murry’s life and career. Things seemed finally to be looking up for him after years of notable strife, including periods of institutionalised treatment for mental health problems and heroin addiction, the calamity of his life to that point providing The Graceless Age with its raw and seething drama. Even as Murry’s brighter future was taking shape, however, things were already starting to unravel.

Murry was badly hit when former American Music Club drummer Tim Mooney – his friend, mentor and co-producer of The Graceless Age – died suddenly just before that album came out. At the same time, Murry’s marriage was falling apart, a bitter separation soon to follow. Despite the glowing reviews, the album sold modestly. Money problems meant he couldn’t afford to keep a touring band together. He was soon also without management and a record contract. His life was as much of a mess as it had ever been. “I felt a very simple, very real need to get the ever-living fuck away from the lunacy I felt I was suffocating within,” he says, explaining how he eventually fetched up in Kilkenny, from which Irish fastness he emerged a year ago to record A Short History Of Decay, which was produced in Toronto by Cowboy Junkies’ Michael Timmins.

For all its harrowing content, The Graceless Age was often a sonically rich confection, deeply textured and dense with layers of keyboards, synthesisers, strings, crackling electronics, “found” voices from radio broadcasts and police bulletins. Mooney’s deft production brought a ruined grandeur to tracks like “Southern Sky” and “Things We Lost In The Fire” that was almost symphonic. A Brief History Of Decay is built on rougher foundations, largely unadorned, not much more than Murry’s voice, guitars and occasional keyboards, bass, drums, here and there a violin and former Pogue Cait O’Riordan’s sweet harmonies. The Graceless Age was four years in the making. Timmins wrapped the sessions for its belated follow-up in five days, capturing in the hasty process something of the bereft and haphazard atmospheres of a record like Alex Chilton’s Like Flies On Sherbet. Songs were arranged on the hoof, spontaneously worked up even as the tapes were running. The whole thing sounds like it was recorded in a barely lit bus station at the end of the line, a lonely terminus there’s likely no coming 
back from.

In many ways, A Short History Of Decay comes from an even darker place than The Graceless Age and its confessional exorcisms. Some of it – let’s say blunt chugs like “Under A Darker Moon”, “Defacing Sunday Bulletins” and “Countess Lola’s Blues”, with their sundry necrotic guitar riffs – seems to reach the listener from the same murk as Lou Reed’s The Blue Mask and Legendary Hearts, albums that likewise were moored in the rude self-examination of recent sobriety, a troubled clarity and morose retrospection. There’s a similar gallows humour at play here, too. Like Lou Reed, Murry finds bleak amusements in desperate moments, seems tickled by dire predicament.

As far back as World Without End, the album of newly minted murder ballads he recorded with Bob Frank in 2006, Murry’s been expert in the specifics of misery – so there’s nothing funny about his glowering cover of Afghan Whigs’ “What Jail Is Like” that replaces the Whigs’ typical histrionics with a creepy low-key menace. A quartet of original songs – including “Silver And Lead”, “Wrong Man”, “Come Five & Twenty” and “Miss Magdalene” – meanwhile teem with guilt, regret, self-recrimination, a sense of personal rot and bitter fatalism. “The kids the cops killed?/Let me be one of them, too,” he sings on “Wrong Man”. Feelings of worthlessness prevail. “All I do is fix whatever I broke the day before,” he admits on “Under A Darker Moon”. Images abound of betrayal, compromise, opportunities selfishly squandered. But a kind of redemptive enlightenment emerges. “Life is a gift I don’t recall taking,” he sings sadly on the lovely, trembling, “Come Five & Twenty”. “But I’ll wear it ’til it fades,” he adds, the song, like the entire album, a survivor’s battered hymn.

Q&A
John Murry
A Short History Of Decay sounds even darker than The Graceless Age. How did that happen?

It wasn’t intentional. When I was writing it, I thought the songs were somehow gentler and I still think the album is often quite funny. Doesn’t the best horror often come from comedic places? The greatest comedies from the most tragic?

How did Michael Timmins end up as producer?
I met Mike when I played in Glasgow at Celtic Connections in 2013. I used to fall asleep to Cowboy Junkies’ The Trinity Sessions, so they were literally characters from a dream. Over the next few years, we stayed in touch. Somehow we both knew we needed to make a record together.

How much influence did he have on the sound of the album?
An immense influence. Mike has an amazing gift as a producer. He hears the essence of a song. Like Jim Dickinson, Mike is a producer in the truest sense. Like Jim, I admire the hell out of Mike. He showed me that with the right people playing in the room with me a record could come to life and it did. It’s exactly what I meant it to be: defiant, tangled, indignant and final. The songs speak much more clearly for themselves now, I believe, and I hope by letting them do their own talking, it will allow me to do mine.
INTERVIEW: ALLAN JONES

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Todd Haynes to direct Velvet Underground documentary

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Todd Haynes is to direct a documentary series about The Velvet Underground.

Speaking to Variety, the filmmaker – whose credits include the Bob Dylan film, I’m Not There – said the project will “rely certainly on [Andy] Warhol films but also a rich culture of experimental film, a vernacular we have lost and we don’t have, [and that] we increasingly get further removed from,” he said.

It will also be “challenging” given there is so little documentation on the group, the director added. So he is looking forward to “the thrill of the research and visual assemblage” and “getting in deep to the resources and material and stock and archival footage and the actual cinema and experimental work.”

Haynes also aims to include interviews of the surviving members of the band as well as figures from the contemporary 1960s arts scene.

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Broken Social Scene – Hug Of Thunder

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The initially striking thing about Broken Social Scene’s first release in seven years is that its title might have suited any of the four albums that preceded it, seeing as the Canadian collective may be one of the most warmly comforting bands of our time. Initially formed as a duo by Kevin Drew and Brendan Canning in Toronto at the end of the 1990s, Broken Social Scene soon grew into a unwieldy gaggle of pals, collaborators and ex- and current romantic partners, all of whom have come and gone depending on the demands of their other musical commitments – solo ones in the case of Leslie Feist and Jason Collett, bands for the various members of Metric, Stars, Do Make Say Think and many more. Live shows have rarely featured less than 10 members, sometimes more than 20, not including the guest stars. Playing Manchester’s Albert Hall the day after the bombing on May 22 this year, they were joined by Johnny Marr for a poignant performance of “Anthems For A 17-Year-Old Girl” from 2002’s You Forgot It In People.

As you’d expect, there’s a lot of touchy-feely togetherness among the many players who somehow squeeze onto these stages. But listeners become part of it too, such that on a good night – when the performance climaxes with a joyful clamour of group vocal harmonies and a wall of guitars – it can all feel like one long, unfeasibly large group hug.

The spirit of warmth and inclusiveness the band exudes seems more valuable as the years have passed, especially as it becomes clearer how the things meant to connect people may isolate them instead. “All along we’re gonna feel some numbness,” sings Feist in Hug Of Thunder’s title track, a moving yet suitably thunderous effort to reconcile the hugeness of the world we perceive in childhood with the narrowness we may feel at later stages. “Certain times in our lives come to take up more space than others,” she offers as consolation. “And time’s gon’ take it’s time.” A similar sentiment surfaces in “Gonna Get Better”, which uses an epiphanic swirl of techno-pop textures and smeary guitars and horns to support the semi-hopeful 
notion that “things’ll get better ’cos they can’t get worse”.

The solace we receive from each other’s company serves as both the central theme and modus operandi for Hug Of Thunder, which follows yet another lengthy hiatus for the band. They only played four shows in six years, but somehow the gang reconvened last summer at a studio a few hours away from Toronto, with Drew and Canning accompanied by the Scene’s other three core members – Charles Spearin, Justin Peroff and Andrew Whiteman – and a dozen more friends, plus producers Joe Chiccarelli and Nyles Spencer.

The result contains some of the most exuberant and immediately engaging music they’ve ever recorded. Whereas its two predecessors – 2005’s Broken Social Scene and 2010’s Forgiveness Rock Record – suffered from a surplus of ideas and sometimes competing imperatives, Hug Of Thunder sees the band maintain a steadier focus and surer footing across 12 songs that may be the product of many hands but seem born of a shared vision. Arriving after the prelude of “Sol Luna” – a callback to the serene synth soundscapes of the project’s earliest recordings – “Halfway Home” is the first of the LP’s many instant anthems. It’s also another strong reassertion of Broken Social Scene’s equally fervent enthusiasms for indie-rock fuzz and major-key melodicism – “Protest Song” and “Stay Happy” are two 
more that fit neatly in the band’s sweet spot between Abbey Road and Dinosaur Jr’s Bug.

Other songs are fuelled by a greater sense of urgency, of making the most of a moment that always passes too swiftly. A cryptic but still pointed critique of the false selves and empty desires fostered by social-media addiction, “Vanity Pail Kids” is driven by its pounding rhythm and menacing blasts of brass. There are shades here of Arcade Fire, peers from Montreal who certainly benefited from the terrain that Broken Social Scene helped fertilise for Canadian indie hopefuls at the start of the century.

It culminates – as it so often does for Broken Social Scene – with a crescendo of almost overwhelming intensity and then a gentler dénouement. Hug Of Thunder’s closer “Mouth Guards Of The Apocalypse” swells and surges with its expressions of rage and discontent (“Our heroes are dicks, we don’t pay to protect them”). But beneath the squall and rancour lies the simpler, possibly naïve hope that we might treat each other a little better. As Drew sings through a haze of distortion, “If you can’t help me, 
then help someone like me.” If a hug would make a difference, he’d be quick to provide one. In any case, he and his friends have returned with music that feels just as comforting 
and necessary.

Q&A
Kevin Drew
Broken Social Scene have gone on and off hiatus for nearly 20 years now – what pulled the gang back together this time?

I just think we missed the people. Obviously as anxieties grow in the world, you pull toward what you know, which is your friends. So we just put it out there that the [core] five of us were gonna get into a studio and start jamming and writing and everyone else was welcome. By the time we were finished, we had everybody. We worked really hard at collecting a lot of music and then we spent a lot of time trying to organise and get on the same page with everyone’s opinions about what songs should go on the album. There’s this trustworthy, melodic group-heartbeat we all understand. It’s there not just inside the studio, but at the dinner table and on the tour bus and outside in the world hanging out.

Was there a collective idea or emotion that guided you this time?
We were all feeling and singing about the same things. And it’s just a general theme across our lives, as with so many people out there. We’re feeling everything that everyone’s feeling as I see us getting bamboozled on a daily basis and anxieties, disorders, depression and addictions are just sorta taking over. So we wanted to create that anthemic, you-are-not-alone album, an album for the struggle – thus the title Hug Of Thunder.

It might also be your most focused and impassioned album – did you feel a real seize-the-day attitude, too?
There’s definitely an urgency to it. There’s an urgency to last longer than two weeks as the value of art slowly slips away – sometimes you just have to scream a little louder.
INTERVIEW: JASON ANDERSON

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Bruce Springsteen to release two live shows from 1977

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Bruce Springsteen is to release two shows from 1977 on his live archive.

Rolling Stone reports that the shows from Albany (February 7) and Rochester (February 8) were made by Springsteen’s then sound engineer, Chas Gerber.

According to Backstreets, the recordings made by Gerber, who worked with Springsteen from 1975 to 1977, are of enormous historical significance.

The 1977 recordings will be released today [August 4], on the concert recording archive site nugs.net.

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Listen to Motörhead’s cover of David Bowie’s “Heroes”

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Motörhead have shared a previously unheard cover version of David Bowie’s “Heroes”.

The song was recorded during the sessions for Bad Magic, which was released a few months before Lemmy‘s death.

“Heroes” will feature on a new compilation from the band called Under Cöver – an 11-track release that finds Motörhead taking on songs by the likes of Metallica, Sex Pistols, Ramones and more.

In a press release the surviving members of the band discussed the cover. Guitarist Phil Campbell said: “It’s such a great Bowie song, one of his best, and I could only see great things coming out of it from us.”

Drummer Mikkey Dee added: “[Lemmy] was very, very proud of it, not only because it turned out so well, but because it was fun! Which is what projects like this should be – fun!”

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

The 30th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

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Loads of good things here in this week’s batch, compiled at a bit of a dash as we put the finishing touches to our next issue of Uncut. Quick checklist of the highlights you can find below: two long-awaited albums by laughing New Age master Laraaji; a new Margo Price EP; Shannon Lay, on Kevin Morby’s new Mare imprint, who should appeal to fans of Jessica Pratt, for a start; one of Britain’s most interesting solo guitarists, Dean McPhee, raising money for a fine album; Grandma’s Hands Band (involving some of Hiss Golden Messenger, Bon Iver, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Drive-By Truckers as well as Natalie Prass) paying tribute to Bill Withers at Newport; another track from Corin Tucker and Peter Buck’s Filthy Friends; Kamasi Washington’s beautiful “Harmony Of Difference”; Kelela; Circuit Des Yeux; and, I think possibly best of all, a magnificent new Four Tet track. That’ll do.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Hiss Golden Messenger – Hallelujah Anyhow (Merge)

2 Laraaji – Sun Gong (All Saints)

3 Margo Price – Weakness (Third Man)

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

5 Laraaji – Bring On The Sun (All Saints)

6 Shannon Lay – Living Water (Woodsist)

7 David Grubbs – Creep Mission (Blue Chopsticks)

8 Zara McFarlane – Arise (Brownswood)

9 LCD Soundsystem – American Dream (Columbia)

10 Dean McPhee – Four Stones (Hood Faire)

11 Grandma’s Hands Band – Ain’t No Sunshine/Lovely Day (Live at Newport Festival)

12 David Bowie – A New Career In A New Town (1977 – 1982) (Parlophone)

13 Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith – The Kid (Western Vinyl)

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

15 Voices Of East Harlem – Right On Be Free (Elektra)

16 Filthy Friends – Invitation (Kill Rock Stars)

17 Trio Da Kali & The Kronos Quartet – Ladilikan (World Circuit)

18 Kamasi Washington – Harmony Of Difference (Young Turks)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtW1S5EbHgU

19 Queens Of The Stone Age – Villains (Matador)

20 Kelela – LMK (Warp)

21 Four Tet – Planet (Text)

22 Circuit Des Yeux – Reaching For Indigo (Drag City)

23 Širom – I Can Be A Clay Snapper (Tak:til)

24 Cool Ghouls – Gord’s Horse (Melodic)

25 Wand – Plum (Drag City)

26 Colleen – A Flame My Love, A Frequency (Thrill Jockey)

27 Prince & The Revolution – Parade (Warner Bros)

28 Motörhead – Heroes (?)

 

Linda Perhacs to release new album, I’m A Harmony

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Linda Perhacs is releasing a new album, I’m A Harmony, on September 22, through Omnivore Recordings.

The album has been produced by Wilco’s Pat Sansone, with Perhacs and Fernando Perdomo.

Guests on the record include Devendra Banhart, Julia Holter, Wilco’s Nels Cline, Glenn Kotche and John Stirratt and producer/remixer Mark Pritchard.

“This is my third album,” says Perhacs. “It is truly my best so far because it is a collaboration with other amazing artists. In our world that is increasingly suffering from an ‘Eclipse Of All Love’, this album will renew your love and ‘Wash Your Soul In Sound’.”

According to co-producer Sansone: “Working with Linda on I’m A Harmony has been a joy and a true learning experience. She injects so much soul and quiet magic into every molecule of her writing and performances on this album. Working with her I was continuously inspired, and my fandom amplified.”

Co-producer Perdomo said: “Linda Perhacs is a musical treasure. It has been an honor to help Linda continue to bring so much joy to the world with her amazing vision and spirit. I’m A Harmony may be the most ambitious record I have ever been a part of. At 75, Linda is more creative than ever and I hope she inspires everyone as much as she has inspired me.”

The tracklisting is:
Winds of the Sky (featuring Nels Cline)
We Will Live (featuring Julia Holter and Devendra Banhart)
I’m a Harmony (featuring Julia Holter)
The Dancer
Crazy Love (featuring the Autumn Defense)
Take Your Love to a Higher Level (featuring Durga McBroom and Michelle Vidal)
Eclipse of All Love (featuring Pat Sansone)
One Full Circle Around the Sun
Beautiful Play (featuring Julia Holter)
Visions (featuring Julia Holter)
You Wash My Soul in Sound (featuring Mark Pritchard)

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Reviewed: Brian Eno reissues

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After leaving Roxy Music in July 1973, Brian Eno hatched a number of audacious schemes to launch his new career. There was – he revealed to NME’s Nick Kent – Luala And The Lizard Girls, who would perform live in launderettes and massage parlours, and the Plastic Eno Band, dedicated to creating music from an assortment of plastic musical instruments. Among other supposed works-in-progress were ‘The Magic Wurlitzer Synthesizer Of Brian Eno Plays “Winchester Cathedral” And 14 Other Evergreens’, a collaboration with Lynsey De Paul and even a rapprochement with estranged former bandmate Bryan Ferry as a duo called The Singing Brians.

But of all the many fabrications Eno proposed to Kent, one of them actually turned out to be true: a collaborative album with Robert Fripp. Released in November 1973, Fripp & Eno’s (No Pussyfooting) was the first record to carry Eno’s name post-Roxy. It established a pattern for the next 40-plus years – Eno as the inveterate collaborator. Between 1974 and 1977 alone – from Here Come The Warm Jets to Before And After Science – Eno’s assiduous creative networking led to assignations with, among others, John Cale, Cluster, Genesis, Nico, Robert Wyatt, Television, Hawkwind’s Robert Calvert, Gavin Bryars, Ultravox! and David Bowie.

Given this, it’s hard to believe Eno had time for his own career. Yet his first four ‘vocal’ albums are significant; not just in establishing Eno as a solo artist but also for the way they bridge musical worlds, bringing together the electronic and the organic, rock and drone, truffling out unexpected connections between incongruent styles. Eno’s catalogue was remastered for CD in 2004, but these are the first new vinyl cuts of these four LPs since the mid-1980s – with each album now spread over two discs – and have now been mastered at half-speed, a process designed to enhance the depth of field for vinyl reissues. The LP that benefits most obviously from this improved treatment is Another Green World, which enjoys a heightened immersive experience. The others sound fuller, richer; they’re louder, the volume has been raised, but there’s no compression or unnecessary EQing.

“I didn’t see Bowie and Lou as my peers”: Click here to read Uncut’s interview with Brian Eno

For January 1974’s Here Come The Warm Jets, Eno surrounded himself with old associates, including Andy Mackay and Phil Manzanera. The album covers plenty of ground – art pop, doo-wop pastiche, drones and surreal exotica – sometimes, like “Cindy Tells Me”, all within the space of one song. But Eno makes a virtue of these disparate qualities, stacking the absurd next to the sinister. Eno’s voice, previously glimpsed during harmonies on Roxy records, was now presented as another stylistic component, deployed in exaggerated fashion to suit each song: a sinister whine on “Baby’s On Fire”, a droll croon on “Dead Finks Don’t Talk”, multi-tracked into soothing symphony on “Some Of Them Are Old”. The wistful “On Some Faraway Beach”, meanwhile, offered 
an emotional counterpoint to his arch, 
self-aware creations.

Eno refined his working practices further for November 1974’s Taking Tiger Mountain (By Strategy), working with a smaller core band, including Manzanera and Wyatt. The emphasis was still on creative spontaneity; the newly devised Oblique Strategies instruction cards encouraged additional lateral thinking. Very loosely inspired by a series of postcards from a Chinese revolutionary opera, Taking Tiger Mountain… foregrounds unusual instruments in its pursuit of fresh perspectives. Manzanera’s guitar is still prominent – especially on the frenetic “Third Uncle” – but keen listeners might spot the typewriter solo on “China My China”, the Portsmouth Sinfonia’s string section on “Put A Straw Under Baby” or the noise like robot crickets stridulating at the end of “The Great Pretender”.

1975 proved to be an auspicious year for Eno. An accident in January led – fortuitously – to his inaugural ambient work, Discreet Music, whose textural drift seeped into the gentle rhythms of September’s Another Green World. Only five of the 14 songs have vocals and these tend to be delivered in soft, hymnal tones – like the multi-tracked choir of Enos (Eni?) on “Golden Hours”. There are few sharp edges on the album; for the most part, it glides along on Percy Jones’ supple basslines. What friction there is comes from John Cale’s agitated viola lines on “Sky Saw” or Fripp’s dazzling guitar solo on “St Elmo’s Fire”. Occasionally, conventional songs emerge from these sonic landscapes – “I’ll Come Running” is a sweet pop moment – but Eno’s interests lie elsewhere. The album closed with “Spirits Drifting”, whose foreboding minor chords sounded like a dry run for “Warszawa” from Bowie’s Low. Bowie occupied much of Eno’s 1977 – the year of Low and “Heroes” – though he still found time to tinker on December’s Before And After Science. In fact, …Science suffered from a lengthy gestation, with sessions swelling to two years and utilising a shifting retinue of returning players including Manzanera, Wyatt, Fripp, Jones and Phil Collins, Jaki Liebezeit and Dave Mattacks.

Considering Eno’s ongoing experiments with mood compositions, the first half of Before And After Science is a surprisingly lively record. The clipped funk rhythms of “No One Receiving” foreshadow his later work with Talking Heads while “King’s Lead Hat” (an anagram of Talking Heads), references the tight, angular sound of New Wave. After the burnished pop of “Here He Comes”, the album drifts into a deepening state of tranquil repose. The final sequence of “By The River”, “Through Hollow Lands (For Harold Budd)” and “Spider And I” – delicate piano motifs, understated guitar lines, warm choral harmonies – anticipate the next stage of Eno’s career: the ‘ambient’ series. From art rock to African polyrhythms and atmospheric sound textures, Eno travelled at tremendous speed during four short years. Rarely, if ever, did he look backwards. It was as if he had taken counsel from one of his own marvellous Oblique Strategies cards: ‘Trust in the you of now.’

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

The Who announce Maximum As & Bs box set

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The Who have announced details of a new box set consisting of the bands A sides, B sides and EPs.

The 5 CD set features 86 tracks from the Brunswick, Reaction, Track and Polydor labels accompanied by a 48-page booklet, with track-by-track annotation, period photos and memorabilia.

It will be released by UMC-Polydor on October 27.

THE WHO MAXIMUM As &Bs TRACKLISTING:

DISC 1
Zoot Suit
I’m the Face
I Can’t Explain
Bald Headed Woman
Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere
Daddy Rolling Stone
My Generation
Shout and Shimmy
Circles (AKA ‘Instant Party’)
Instant Party Mixture
A Legal Matter
The Kids Are Alright
The Ox
La-La-La Lies
The Good’s Gone

DISC 2
Substitute
Circles
Waltz For A Pig
I’m A Boy
In The City
Disguises
Batman
Bucket T
Barbara Ann
Happy Jack
I’ve Been Away
Pictures Of Lily
Doctor, Doctor
The Last Time
Under My Thumb
I Can See For Miles
Someone’s Coming
Dogs
Call Me Lightning
Magic Bus
Dr Jekyll & Mr. Hyde

DISC 3
Pinball Wizard
Dogs Part Two
The Seeker
Here For More
Summertime Blues
Heaven And Hell
See Me Feel Me / Listening To You
Overture From Tommy
Christmas
I’m Free
Won’t Get Fooled Again
Don’t Know Myself
Let’s See Action
When I Was A Boy
Join Together
Baby Don’t You Do It
Relay
Wasp Man

DISC 4
5:15
Water
Listening To You / See Me Feel Me (Soundtrack Version)
Overture (Soundtrack Version)
Squeeze Box
Success Story
Who Are You
Had Enough
Long Live Rock
My Wife (Live)
5:15 (Soundtrack Version)
I’m One (Soundtrack Version)
You Better You Bet
The Quiet One
Don’t Let Go The Coat
You

DISC 5
Athena
A Man Is A Man
Eminence Front
It’s Your Turn
Twist And Shout (Live
I Can’t Explain (Live)
Bony Maronie (Live)
Join Together (Live)
I Can See For Miles (Live)
Behind Blue Eyes (Live)
Real Good Looking Boy
Old Red Wine
Wire & Glass EP – Side A (5 x tracks)
Wire & Glass EP – Side B – Mirror Door
Be Lucky
I Can’t Explain (2014 Stereo remix)

Meanwhile, Pete Townshend‘s demo and outtake collections Scoop, Another Scoop and Scoop 3 will be reissued as limited edition coloured vinyl editions on August 18. These have been newly remastered at Abbey Road with the LPs remastered at half speed and pressed on pink (Scoop), yellow (Another Scoop) and light blue (Scoop 3) vinyl. CD sets will also be available.

SCOOP 2LP (pink vinyl) tracklisting:
SIDE ONE

So Sad About Us / Brr
Squeeze Box
Zelda
Politician
Dirty Water
Circles (Instant Party)
Piano: Tipperary

SIDE TWO
Unused Piano: Quadrophenia
Melancholia
Bargain
Things Have Changed
Popular
Behind Blue Eyes

SIDE THREE
Magic Bus
Cache Cache
Cookin’
You’re So Clever
Body Language
Initial Machine Experiments

SIDE FOUR
Mary
Recorders

ANOTHER SCOOP (yellow vinyl) tracklisting:
SIDE ONE

You Better You Bet
Girl In A Suitcase
Brooklyn Kids
Pinball Wizard
Football Fugue
Happy Jack

SIDE TWO
Substitute
Long Live Rock
Call Me Lightning
Holly Like Ivy
Begin The Beguine
Vicious Interlude
La La La Lies
Cat Snatch

SIDE THREE
Prelude #556
Baraque Ippanese
Praying The Game
Driftin’ Blues
Christmas
Pictures Of Lily
Don’t Let Go The Coat

SIDE FOUR
The Kids Are Alright
Prelude, The Right to Write
Never Ask Me
Ask Yourself
The Ferryman
The Shout

SCOOP 3 (light blue vinyl) tracklisting:
SIDE ONE

Can You See The Real Me
Dirty Water
Commonwealth Boys
Theme 015
Marty Robbins
I Like It The Way It Is

SIDE TWO
Theme 016
No Way Out (However Much I Booze)
Collings
Parvardigar
Sea And Sand
971104 Arpeggio Piano

SIDE THREE
Theme 017
I Am Afraid
Maxims For Lunch
Wistful
Eminence Front
Lonely Words

SIDE FOUR
Prelude 970519
Iron Man Recitative
Tough Boys
Did You Steal My Money?
Can You Really Dance?

SIDE FIVE
Variations On Dirty Jobs
All Lovers Are Deranged
Elephants
Wired To The Moon – Pt. 2
How Can You Do It Alone
Poem Disturbed

SIDE SIX
Squirm Squirm
Outlive The Dinosaur
Teresa
Man And Machines
It’s In Ya

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Ask Andrew Weatherall

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Andrew Weatherall releases his new album Quaila on September 29 – but beforehand, he’ll be answering your questions as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the artist once known as Audrey Witherspoon?

What lessons did he learn from working with Primal Scream?
Has he ever turned down a remix, and why?
What does he remember about his first ever DJ set

Send up your questions by noon, Friday, August 11 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

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

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Reviewed: David Rawlings’ Poor David’s Almanack

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A couple of excellent new records for you this week. You can find my review of the new Psychic Temple album, IV, here. And here’s a deep preview of Poor David’s Almanack, the new album from David Rawlings; his third solo set, after a couple that came billed, a little confusingly, as the Dave Rawlings machine.

For all their charms, the arrival of each new Rawlings album inevitably poses an awkward question: why does it exist, when a new Gillian Welch album does not? Six years have now passed since the release of a new record fronted by Welch, 2011’s extraordinary The Harrow And The Harvest; six years in which Welch’s studio energies seem to have been concentrated on reversing the polarities of her partnership with Rawlings.

In democratic terms, it makes sense: given the collaborative nature of all their work, every Welch and Rawlings solo album could justifiably have come billed as a duo project. On this swift – by their standards – follow-up to Rawlings’ 2015 set, Nashville Obsolete, Welch co-writes five of the ten songs and contributes harmonies, at the very least, to every one of them. As Ryan Adams, Conor Oberst, The Decemberists and many more will testify, Welch makes for a brilliant backing singer. But it’s hard not to speculate what the terrifically plaintive “Airplane” might have sounded like if she’d taken the lead, especially given its affinities with The Harrow And The Harvest’s “The Way It Will Be”.

Perhaps the answer lies in something Rawlings told Uncut in 2015. “Gillian’s voice has such a great quality that the more you strip away around it the better it sounds, which is why we’ve always made very sparse records,” he said. “But when I’m singing, it’s very much back to ‘OK, how do we present this strange instrument?’ It’s frustrating at times, but it’s rewarding when you get it right.” Consequently  Poor David’s Almanack, like Nashville Obsolete, betrays a keenness to flesh out their aesthetic: Bowie vet Ken Scott engineers, and a more elaborate sound design incorporates strings on the aforementioned “Airplane”.

In that context, Rawlings is a fine frontman, an amiable convenor of sessions where Brittany Haas’ fiddle takes the spotlight as often as his own discreet virtuosity on the guitar, where Dawes and the Old Crow Medicine Show drop in, and where Welch can add “hands and feet” percussion as well as drums. That old-time, good-time vibe can occasionally dip into hokeyness, as the album title signals, but slower numbers like “Lindsey Button” and “Put ‘Em Up Solid” are where the group excels. As Rawlings and Welch’s vocal intertwine with those of Willie Watson, there’s a hymnal quality to the sound, and a communitarian warmth that reveals a good reason why Rawlings has come to the fore of this ensemble; a desire, explicit or otherwise, to pay homage to The Band, another act who understood the enduring possibilities of a collective approach to roots music.

 

 

 

Jack White is recording a new solo album

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Jack White is recording a new solo album.

White’s label, Third Man Records, posted two photographs to Twitter on Monday [July 31]. One was taken in New York City on July 27 and the other in Los Angeles on July 30. “Jack White recording songs for his third solo album,” the photos were captioned.

The album will mark White’s third solo release following 2014’s Lazaretto and 2012’s Blunderbuss.

In April, White released a new song, “Battle Cry”.

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Tributes paid to Sam Shepard

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Sam Shepard, the Pulitzer Prize winning writer and Oscar-nominated actor, has died aged 73.

News of Shepard’s death broke yesterday [July 31]. He died of complications from ALS (motor neurone disease) at his home in Kentucky on July 30 surrounded by family.

Although best known as a man of words and letters, Shepard also moved in music circles. As a drummer, he played with the Holy Modal Rounders during the 1960s. He also travelled with Bob Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue during 1975; he documented his experiences in The Rolling Thunder Logbook. His creative partnership with Dylan led to the pair co-writing “Brownsville Girl” from Dylan’s 1986 album, Knocked Out Loaded.

On the Rolling Thunder tour, Shepard met T Bone Burnett, who later wrote music for a revival of Shepard’s 1972 play The Tooth Of Crime. Shepard and Burnett also formed a band, called Void, during the late 1990s.

Shepard is also thought to be the inspiration for Joni Mitchell‘s 1976 song, “Coyote”, from her album, Hejira.

During his career, Shepard wrote 44 plays; one his his earliest, 1971’s Cowboy Mouth, was written and performed by Shepard and his then lover, Patti Smith. Shepard also wrote the screenplay for Wim Wenders film, Paris, Texas.

Speaking to Uncut in July 2014, the film’s star, Harry Dean Stanton, recalled, “I was in Albuquerque, I think, with Sam Shepard. We were drinking and listening to a Mexican band. I said I’d like to get a part with some sensitivity and intelligence to it. I wasn’t asking for a part or anything, I was just free-associating, talking, right? I got back to LA, and Sam called me and said, ‘Do you want to do a lead in my next film, Paris, Texas?’ I said, ‘Only if everybody involved is totally enthusiastic about me doing it.’ Wim Wenders thought I was too old. He came to see me and finally he agreed to it after a couple of meetings. I just played myself.”

In a parallel career in front of the camera, Shepard is perhaps best known for his portrayal of Chuck Yeager in 1983’s The Right Stuff, which gained him an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. His other on-screen credits included Terrence Malick’s 1978 film, Days Of Heaven.

Shepard continued to act – as Frank James in The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford, and genre films like Killing Them Softly and Mud and he a rare leading role in the 2011 western, Blackthorn.

His most recent book, The One Inside, was published earlier this year and contained a Foreword by Patti Smith.

Tributes have been paid to Shepard since news of his death.

https://twitter.com/DonCheadle/status/892054138363629568

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

50th anniversary edition of The Rolling Stones’ Their Satanic Majesties Request revealed

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To commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Rolling Stones album Their Satanic Majesties Request, ABKCO Music is releasing a limited edition deluxe double vinyl/double hybrid Super Audio CD (compatible with all CD players) package on September 22.

The set contains both the stereo and mono versions of every song, all newly remastered by Bob Ludwig. Their Satanic Majesties Request 50th Anniversary will include Michael Cooper’s original 3-D lenticular cover photograph, featuring the band in peak psychedelic regalia.

Their Satanic Majesties Request 50th Anniversary track list:

Vinyl
Side A (stereo)

Sing This All Together
Citadel
In Another Land
2000 Man
Sing This All Together (See What Happens)

Side B (stereo)
She’s A Rainbow
The Lantern
Gomper
2000 Light Years From Home
On With The Show

Side C (mono)
Sing This All Together
Citadel
In Another Land
2000 Man
Sing This All Together (See What Happens)

Side D (mono)
She’s A Rainbow
The Lantern
Gomper
2000 Light Years From Home
On With The Show

Hybrid SACD
Disc 1 (stereo)
Sing This All Together
Citadel
In Another Land
2000 Man
Sing This All Together (See What Happens)
She’s A Rainbow
The Lantern
Gomper
2000 Light Years From Home
On with the Show

Disc 2 (mono)
Sing This All Together
Citadel
In Another Land
2000 Man
Sing This All Together (See What Happens)
She’s A Rainbow
The Lantern
Gomper
2000 Light Years From Home
On with the Show

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.

Radiohead – OKNOTOK

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In 2001, four years after OK Computer came out, Thom Yorke said he couldn’t bear to listen to the band’s third album, claiming it made him feel ill. Thankfully, time is a healer, and Yorke and the band have now delved into dark cupboards and cold storage for this 20th-anniversary reissue, complete with a second disc containing B-sides and previously unheard songs. ‘Unreleased tracks’ often mean flotsam and jetsam repackaged for a quick buck and an impending anniversary but, in this case, “I Promise”, “Man Of War” and “Lift” are the most exciting, crucial elements of this deluxe edition.

“I Promise” is a beautiful, simple hymn. Until now, fans have had to make do with scratchy bootlegs of this song from 1996, the last time it was played live. The version on OKNOTOK is similar in arrangement to what you might have heard: an acoustic guitar ballad with a marching-band drumbeat. The repetition of “I promise” gives it an almost psalmic quality with Yorke’s emotionally expressive voice climbing to its euphonious higher planes. Two minutes in, luscious strings enter the fray, swirling around Colin Greenwood’s bassline. Interestingly, it’s the chosen single released by the band, perhaps because it has the least emotional baggage out of the three.

The story of “Man Of War” is a little more thorny. You can glimpse how intense life was for Radiohead in the late ’90s in Grant Gee’s documentary Meeting People Is Easy, filmed during the promotional tour of OK Computer. In one scene the band is trying to record “Man Of War”, which had been knocking around since The Bends, and had been played live loads of times in 1995. They try out various sounds, instruments; things work, others don’t. “There’s summink here,” says producer Nigel Godrich. “Fuck this,” Yorke seems to say. Later, exasperated and glum, he says, “We’ve actually been working all day and the only thing we’ve got that’s any good is the bass and guitar.”

Apart from one play in 2002, the song was retired and looked extinct, despite shouts for “Big Boots”, its alternative title, at live shows. So what a delirious pleasure to have it on record. It’s a maximalist riot of voluptuous bass, luxurious strings and anguished vocals, suggestive of the James Bond themes it started life in homage to (it was originally slated for an Avengers film soundtrack). The lyrics shiver with menace: “I’ll bake you a cake, made of all their eyes” and “the worms will come for you”. And the bridge is startlingly good. Suddenly, Yorke’s voice hushes before the bottom falls out of the song with Jonny’s almighty electric trill.

“’Man of War’ is very melodramatic. Too melodramatic,” Yorke told NME. “I like it. It’s pretty much the opposite to everything we’re writing.” So why leave it out? It could have worked on either The Bends or OK Computer, and it sounds strong 20 years later. Perhaps it tells us something about the band’s perfectionism, and the standards they set themselves for recording, in particular, which Nigel Godrich gives Uncut some insight into. “The reason they didn’t get released at the time was more because they were such important songs we felt we hadn’t managed to get them down right – to do them justice,” he said.


Lastly, we have “Lift”, a notorious song in Radiohead lore, the colossus that never was. It was played 30 times in 1996 while on tour with Alanis Morissette – and a few times in 2002 – before being filed away, seemingly prematurely, considering it connected so well with crowds. But its long dormancy tells us what the band didn’t want at the time: another “Creep”.


Already struggling to cope with fame and its demands, “Lift” could have taken the band to a different place if it had been released as a single. “I think we kind of subconsciously killed it, because if OK Computer had been like a Jagged Little Pill, like Alanis Morissette, it would have killed us,” Ed O’Brien recently told 6 Music. They didn’t do a good version, because when they got to the studio to record, pressure was “like having a gun to your head,” he added.


But it turns out one version was ruled good enough, decades later. The version on the OKNOTOK reissue, Godrich tells Uncut, was a “very early” one: “It is the most honest of the three, really.” Yorke’s vocal is somewhat subdued; reluctant, even – there is no “Creep”-style belting here. It sounds as if he’s singing it to himself, which, it turns out, he is. “Lift” is the only Radiohead song in which Yorke refers to himself by name: “We’ve been trying to reach you, Thom,” he sings, before, “Lighten up, squirt.” It’s a rare, sweet moment of comparatively un-cryptic internal dialogue. Admittedly, the song does sound of-its-time, especially Jonny Greenwood’s Rockford Files-esque Korg synth riff, which may be why the famous neophiles ignored it for so long.

The B-sides come next on CD2, newly remastered. They’re a perfect counterpart to the three new tracks, and point towards Radiohead’s convention-defying next chapter of Kid A and Amnesiac, particularly the dubby trip-hop of “Meeting In The Aisle” and the hazy waltz of “A Reminder”. In terms of the original album, OK Computer was so richly-produced in the first place that remastering seems unnecessary; but listen on really good headphones or speakers, and it sounds magnificent, even if there are no revelations. And one mystery is cleared up: after being split up on streaming services, the peripatetic “Paranoid Android” beeps are now back at the end of “Airbag”, suggesting it’s the band’s definitive view. Well, for now.

Ultimately, though, it’s the three previously unreleased tracks that reveal something new, suggesting that the album and the band could have become something quite different. Swap them for, say, the less accessible “Electioneering”, “Climbing Up The Walls” and “Fitter Happier” and you’ve got a much more radio-friendly album that would likely have sold even more copies. But perhaps a different direction reined in the pressure and allowed the band to then create on their own terms. The long-overdue release of these recordings – sure-fire hits in some parallel universe – sees the band fully relax in their middle age, and finally make peace with a past that once made them feel sick.

The September 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Neil Young on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Mark E Smith, Nick Lowe, Iron & Wine and Sigur Rós, we remember Dennis Wilson and explore the legacy of Elvis Presley. We review Grizzly Bear, Queens Of The Stone Age, Arcade Fire, Brian Eno and The War On Drugs. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Randy Newman, Richard Thompson, Oh Sees, Lal & Mike Waterson, Psychic Temple, FJ McMahon and Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band and more.