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A David Gilmour world exclusive, a Can CD, Beth Gibbons, T Bone Burnett, Slowdive and more in the new Uncut

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HERE’S Irmin Schmidt, explaining the mercurial brilliance of Can in full flight. “Even if we improvised onstage, we always went in the same direction,” he tells us on page 19 of our new issue. “In a way that it became a music that was not just bullshit. It was not some kind of jamming and everything falls apart. It was always something very connected.” You can witness the fruits of the group’s potent psychic bond on this month’s Uncut CD – a sampler showcasing Can’s indispensable live series, as they improvise freely and at length in cities as far-flung as Stuttgart and Birmingham. On these five tracks – don’t feel short-changed, the briefest is over eight minutes long – you’ll find rock’s most forward-thinking band at their most uninhibited. Dive in!

HERE’S Irmin Schmidt, explaining the mercurial brilliance of Can in full flight. “Even if we improvised onstage, we always went in the same direction,” he tells us on page 19 of our new issue. “In a way that it became a music that was not just bullshit. It was not some kind of jamming and everything falls apart. It was always something very connected.” You can witness the fruits of the group’s potent psychic bond on this month’s Uncut CD – a sampler showcasing Can’s indispensable live series, as they improvise freely and at length in cities as far-flung as Stuttgart and Birmingham. On these five tracks – don’t feel short-changed, the briefest is over eight minutes long – you’ll find rock’s most forward-thinking band at their most uninhibited. Dive in!

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Elsewhere, we’re delighted to present a world exclusive interview with another forward-thinking artist: David Gilmour, who invites us to his splendid boat-cum-studio, the Astoria, moored on the banks of the river Thames, to discuss his first studio album for nine years, Luck and Strange. Over tea and a handful of satsumas, Pete Paphides finds that the reinvigorated guitar genius has a lot to talk about – including collaborative relationships, therapy, parenthood, adolescent epiphanies, his woodwork skills, fallen bandmates, what he thought of Get Back and whether the digital simulation of ABBA Voyage might make a good treatment for his old band.

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Gilmour aside, there’s plenty more returning heroes in this issue, including Beth Gibbons, Slowdive, Mark Knopfler, Mdou Moctar and T Bone Burnett. At the other end of the spectrum, meanwhile, we shine a light on a new folk scene in Cornwall, where artists like Angeline Morrison and Daisy Rickman are quietly flourishing.

It’s a busy issue – as ever, let us know what you think.

Uncut – June 2024

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David Gilmour, Beth Gibbons, Jefferson Airplane, T Bone Burnett, Slowdive, Mark Knopfler, Royal Trux, Mdou Moctar, The Beatles, Isobel Campbell, Buffalo Tom, Eddy Grant, The Decemberists, Anita Pallenberg, Willie Nelson and more all feature in Uncut‘s June 2024 issue, in UK shops from April 26 or available to buy online now.

All print copies come with a free CD – Can Live 1973-1977 – a must-hear collection of revelatory and uninhibited performances taken direct from the archives of rock’s most forward-looking band!

INSIDE THIS MONTH’S UNCUT:

DAVID GILMOUR: In a world exclusive interview, the reinvigorated guitar genius reveals all to Uncut about his first new album for nine years

SLOWDIVE: The shoegaze survivors on their unlikely renaissance

T BONE BURNETT: The Americana emissary and super-producer prepares to revive a long-dormant solo career

ROYAL TRUX: We explore why, after the chaos and excess, these DC outlaws’ music endures

MARK KNOPFLER: The former Dire Straits man unveils one of his finest solo albums – a reckoning with his Geordie roots and his illustrious past

MDOU MOCTAR: How the desert blues prodigy is railing against injustice in his Saharan homeland

AN AUDIENCE WITH… IRMIN SCHMIDT: Can’s co-founder talks Damo, drug busts and drinking with Mark E Smith

THE MAKING OF “ELECTRIC AVENUE” BY EDDY GRANT: How the former Equals lead guitarist sneaked the politics of protest into the charts

ALBUM BY ALBUM WITH ISOBEL CAMPBELL: From Belle & Sebastian to Mark Lanegan and beyond: “They’ve all influenced each other…”

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PLUS: The Beatles get back to Let It Be, Ayers, Cale, Nico & Eno, new Cornish folk scene, Jefferson Airplane unseen, Willy Vlautin and introducing Landless

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New David Gilmour solo album and Uncut cover story revealed!

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David Gilmour has announced that his new solo album Luck And Strange will be released by Sony Music on September 6. Gilmour discusses the making of the album at length in the new issue of Uncut, which hits UK shops on Friday (April 26) and is also available to order now directly from us by clicking here.

David Gilmour has announced that his new solo album Luck And Strange will be released by Sony Music on September 6. Gilmour discusses the making of the album at length in the new issue of Uncut, which hits UK shops on Friday (April 26) and is also available to order now directly from us by clicking here.

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As explored in Uncut’s exclusive feature, Luck And Strange was recorded over five months in Brighton and London, with Charlie Andrew (Alt-J, Marika Hackman) co-producing.

The album features eight new tracks along with a reworking of The Montgolfier Brothers’ “Between Two Points”. Musicians contributing to the record include bassists Guy Pratt and Tom Herbert, drummers Adam Betts, Steve Gadd and Steve DiStanislao, keyboard players Rob Gentry and Roger Eno, and arranger Will Gardner. The title track also features the late Pink Floyd keyboard player Richard Wright, recorded in 2007 during a jam in a barn at Gilmour’s house.

Gimour’s children Romany (harp, vocals) and Gabriel (backing vocals) also contribute to the album. The majority of the album’s lyrics have been composed by Gilmour’s wife Polly Samson, his co-writer and collaborator for the past thirty years. “It’s written from the point of view of being older,” says Samson. “Mortality is the constant.” Adds Gilmour: “We spent a load of time during and after lockdown talking about and thinking about those kind of things.”

The album’s cover image, photographed and designed by Anton Corbijn, is inspired by a lyric written by Charlie Gilmour for the album’s final song “Scattered”.

You can read much more from Gilmour, Samson and their collaborators in the new issue of Uncut, in UK shops on Friday (April 26) but available to order now directly from us by clicking here.

Pre-order Luck And Strange here. Lead single “The Piper’s Call” will be available on all DSPs from 9am tomorrow (April 25), following its premiere on the BBC Radio 2 Breakfast Show.

Wings unveil first official release of 1974 live studio album, One Hand Clapping

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The official album of Paul McCartney & Wings' 1974 film One Hand Clapping, featuring songs recorded live in the studio at Abbey Road, is to be officially released for the first time on June 14.

The official album of Paul McCartney & Wings’ 1974 film One Hand Clapping, featuring songs recorded live in the studio at Abbey Road, is to be officially released for the first time on June 14.

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Some of the material has previously appeared on official McCartney releases, but this is the first time the audio for the film – plus several additional songs recorded off-camera – have been officially issued.

One Hand Clapping showcased Wings’ new 1974 line-up, with Paul & Linda McCartney and Denny Laine joined by guitarist Jimmy McCulloch and drummer Geoff Britton. Additionally joining the band in the studio were orchestral arranger Del Newman and saxophonist Howie Casey.

One Hand Clapping features live-in-studio renditions of “Live And Let Die”, “Band On The Run”, “Jet” and “Maybe I’m Amazed”, plus reworked extracts of Beatles’ classics “Let It Be”, “The Long And Winding Road” and “Lady Madonna”, and the Moody Blues’ “Go Now” with Denny Laine singing.

An online exclusive 2LP + 7” package features an exclusive vinyl single of previously unreleased solo performances recorded on the final day of the sessions in the backyard of Abbey Road studios. These include the unreleased track “Blackpool”, The Beatles’ “Blackbird”, Wings B-side “Country Dreamer”, and cover versions of Eddie Cochran’s “Twenty Flight Rock” (the first song Paul played to John Lennon when they met in 1957) and Buddy Holly’s “Peggy Sue” and “I’m Gonna Love You Too”.

You can view the full tracklistings for the various formats of One Hand Clapping and pre-order here.

Hear Johnny Cash’s posthumous new single, “Well Alright”

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A new Johnny Cash album, Songwriter – to be released by Mercury Nashville/UMe on June 28 – has been created from a stash of previously unreleased songwriting demos that Cash made in 1993.

A new Johnny Cash album, Songwriter – to be released by Mercury Nashville/UMe on June 28 – has been created from a stash of previously unreleased songwriting demos that Cash made in 1993.

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The demos were recorded at LSI Studios in Nashville in early 1993, but shelved shortly afterwards when Cash had a career-revitalising encounter with Rick Rubin. They were recently rediscovered by John Carter Cash, who stripped them back to just vocals and acoustic guitar, before inviting previous Cash collaborators (including guitarist Marty Stuart, bassist Dave Roe and drummer Pete Abbott) to re-embellish them.

Songwriter was co-produced by David ‘Fergie’ Ferguson at the famous Cash Cabin in Hendersonville, Tennessee. It also features guest appearances from Vince Gill and The Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach. Listen to the first single “Well Alright” below:

“I wanted it to be songs that mostly people hadn’t heard and that paid close attention to who he was as a songwriter and who he was as an American voice,” says John Carter Cash. “Bob Dylan says he’s one of the greatest writers of all of American written music and I agree. I want to put that in the forefront. His writing voice specifically is a certain voice, that I think if America wants to know their history, that’s a good place to look.”

You can pre-order Songwriter here. Check out the tracklisting and watch an album trailer below:

  1. Hello Out There
  2. Spotlight
  3. Drive On
  4. I Love You Tonite
  5. Have You Ever Been to Little Rock?
  6. Well Alright
  7. She Sang Sweet Baby James
  8. Poor Valley Girl
  9. Soldier Boy
  10. Sing It Pretty Sue
  11. Like A Soldier

Send us your questions for Warren Ellis!

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It's always a treat to have a new album from Dirty Three, the intrepid instrumental rock trio formed by Warren Ellis, Mick Turner and Jim White in Melbourne in 1992.

It’s always a treat to have a new album from Dirty Three, the intrepid instrumental rock trio formed by Warren Ellis, Mick Turner and Jim White in Melbourne in 1992.

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Love Changes Everything – their first for 12 years – might just be the band’s finest work to date, a sustained blast of redemptive wonder. It’s released by Bella Union on June 28, and you can hear a track from it in Uncut’s latest New Music Playlist.

It’s the perfect complement to Ellis’s role as chief berserker in The Bad Seeds and Grinderman, and as Nick Cave’s primary creative foil on a series of significant film scores and soundtracks – including the current Amy Winehouse biopic, Back To Black.

But even with (at least) three albums coming out this year, Ellis has kindly made time in his relentless creative schedule to undergo a gentle grilling from you, the Uncut readers. So what do you want to ask a rugged post-rock legend? Send your questions to audiencewith@uncut.co.uk by Friday (April 26) and Warren will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

Eno

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In the opening scene of this hugely enjoyable Brian Eno doc, we find the composer/polymath bopping around in his home studio, thinking about a composition like an ecosystem. As he works, we see him add weather, and even an animal population to his piece. Eventually he tweaks some controls on his screen to alter the prospect of change – how probable it is that a musical phrase will occur again. 

In the opening scene of this hugely enjoyable Brian Eno doc, we find the composer/polymath bopping around in his home studio, thinking about a composition like an ecosystem. As he works, we see him add weather, and even an animal population to his piece. Eventually he tweaks some controls on his screen to alter the prospect of change – how probable it is that a musical phrase will occur again. 

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Eno’s “generative” – evolving, infinitely changing – way of making music has been the guiding principle for Gary Hustwit’s film. Rather than a whistle stop rockdoc taking in glam rock and ambience via Fripp, “Heroes” and the Bush Of Ghosts, the idea is that the movie is itself pretty much infinitely variable, being composed of pictorial elements and whole scenes which can swap in and swap out each time it’s played. 

It’s clearly this which has piqued Eno’s interest enough to participate (“There’s never just one story,” he says in the Q&A afterwards), and he is a playful and radiant presence throughout the film. Notoriously shy of the retrospective, “our” version of the film finds him variously discoursing in a fuschia shirt, grooving with Bowie in 1993, creating ziggurats with televisions in New York, and delivering a lecture on why art is politically important. We also get Oblique Strategies, Apollo, a witty moment of David Byrne, some Fripp (but not enough) and Roxy (definitely not enough) and just the right amount of Devo and U2 (none). It was, Eno says in afterwards, not at all like the other version he saw, and more “poppy and wordy”. 

Wordy works perfectly. Eno’s music is an infinitely lovely and thoughtful expanse, and so clearly is this film – but its real strength may be presenting its subject simply talking. At the Q&A, the other panel members lean into him entranced, and so will anyone who sees Eno, drawn in by his twinkling thoughtfulness and talent for clarity. 

Early in the movie we hear Eno speak about how as a young art student he wanted to resolve some of the tension between fine art and rock music, and making some remarks about The Who. In the film Eno almost presents himself the anti-Who. Floating on a river, devising a way to use Duchamp’s urinal, playing an Omnichord, and quietly open to the idea that, if you stop and think about it, the complicated things are actually rather simple.

The official soundtrack to the documentary film Eno is released by UMR on April 26

Cedric Burnside – Hill Country Love

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Almost halfway through Hill Country Love, Cedric Burnside untangles a skein of blues from his guitar and starts singing, “Here I go, bout to walk through the door/I see people, all over the floor/I can’t blame them, the music is hot you know.” The opening of “Juke Joint”, one of the many high points of Burnside’s new album, does much to position his songwriting, and his music, within the rich tradition of hill country blues, placing it firmly in the juke joint: old rural weekend venues where black communities would gather to drink, eat, hang out and play music. It’s no surprise, then, that photographer and scholar Bill Steber once called juke joints the “kiln where the musical fires burned brightest” in the Mississippi Delta.

Almost halfway through Hill Country Love, Cedric Burnside untangles a skein of blues from his guitar and starts singing, “Here I go, bout to walk through the door/I see people, all over the floor/I can’t blame them, the music is hot you know.” The opening of “Juke Joint”, one of the many high points of Burnside’s new album, does much to position his songwriting, and his music, within the rich tradition of hill country blues, placing it firmly in the juke joint: old rural weekend venues where black communities would gather to drink, eat, hang out and play music. It’s no surprise, then, that photographer and scholar Bill Steber once called juke joints the “kiln where the musical fires burned brightest” in the Mississippi Delta.

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For Burnside, the juke joint is emblematic of both the development of hill country blues, and the community spirit that informs his music. He’s particularly well placed to carry that history: his grandfather was legendary hill country blues musician, RL Burnside; his father, Calvin Jackson, was a drummer who played with the likes of Jessie Mae Hemphill and Junior Kimbrough. All were key players who brought hill country blues into the late 20th and early 21st century. Burnside started playing with his grandfather, who he calls Big Daddy, in his mid-teens; negotiating the road as a youngster opened his eyes, and when he’d return to school after touring, his fellow students would say he “talked like a fifty-year old”, Burnside laughs.

Being around such musicians also helped Burnside understand, at an almost molecular level, the histories of hill country blues, and the way those histories inform how this seemingly sui generis music comes together. Fundamentally, it builds out of fife and drum blues, a form of music where a cane fife (a small flute) player leads a troop of drummers. This music was first documented for a wider listenership by Alan Lomax, who ‘discovered’ Sid Hemphill, one of the key sources of hill country blues, in the early ’40s. From that music, and subsequent fife and drum corps like Othar ‘Otha’ Turner and his Rising Star Fife and Drum Band, you get the single-minded stream of melody and polyrhythmic complexity that makes Hill country blues so unique.

If anyone can be singled out as being responsible for bringing hill country blues to wider attention, though, it’s Mississippi Fred McDowell, whose Lomax recordings are among the foundational texts of modern blues. Burnside tips his hat to McDowell several times on Hill Country Love, giving remarkably faithful, spirited performances of McDowell classics “You Got To Move” and “Shake Em On Down”. On both, Burnside goes acoustic, the slide burring beautifully against the strings as Burnside sings these songs with deft confidence and a sensitivity to the curious corners of the melodies; he’s obviously drunk deeply from McDowell’s archive of recordings, and he knows how to mobilise that knowledge and understanding to stay faithful to the music’s past, while carving his own initials into the music too.

But the connection with McDowell, for Burnside, is even more intimate and immediate. “Him and my Big Daddy was really good friends,” he says. “They played house parties together; they drank moonshine together. He was one of the ones that I really wish I could have got to meet and shake his hand. That’s one of the reasons why I put ‘Shake Em On Down’ and ‘You Got To Move’ on the album. My Big Daddy used to play those songs.” One thing that keeps doubling back, throughout Hill Country Love, is the remarkably interwoven community that is hill country blues, the way the Burnside and Hemphill dynasties are so core to the music and its development, and the way this history feeds itself and creates parameters for the music that are, however, never limitations.

You can hear those connections and parameters most clearly, perhaps, in the closing “Po Black Maddie”, where Burnside takes on a song from his grandfather’s catalogue and makes it his own. It’s one of the album’s most bravura performances, the guitar playing limber and lithe as Burnside and his band ride the song’s mantric riff and structure to the skies. It’s also an excellent example of what makes this music so special and unique – it’s fixed to a point; the music is hypnotic, droney, repetitive, but not reductively so, and it creates its own energy, its own head of steam, through such stark repetition. “I think that’s one of the good things of hill country blues,” Burnside reflects, “that drone, that hypnotic beat. It’s always going. No matter where the music goes, that beat is still there.”

If there’s a key to Hill Country Love’s 14 songs, it’s perseverance, when it comes both to the music, and to the life that sustains it. On “I Know”, Burnside’s cat’s-claw guitar figure is shadowed, beautifully, by Patrick Williams’ harmonica, keening away in the back of the mix, before stepping forward for a solo that draws as much as it can out of a child’s clutch of notes. A run of songs midway through the album weave together tightly to create parallels between dedication to one’s faith, and dedication to one’s music: “Closer”’s clipped guitars are tracked by Burnside’s rich voice, while “Love You Music” is carried by a riff that’s strangely filigree, while drummer Artemas LeSueur, the understated heartbeat of Hill Country Love, shifts from deep, sly toms, to martial clamour on the snare.

Toll On They Life” feels like the album’s centrepiece, though, the simple poetry of Burnside’s lyrics cracked open by a surprising, unexpected chord change that leads the song into new terrain, briefly: the flourish feels like light chiming through carriage doors. Throughout, Burnside is quietly observational, taking in the way “People get mad when things don’t quite go the way they want/They do crazy things out of spite”; soon he’s warning, “People will lie in your face/To get things to go they way.” What’s remarkable about Burnside’s delivery here is the way it see-saws between a kind of dispassionate observation and an understated, yet stern judgement – something he can flick between in the simple curve of a syllable.

Lest this all sounds too heavy, Burnside’s also able to cut loose, to follow a groove to its natural conclusion. “Funky” does just what it says, with a railway rhythm from LeSueur matched by a grinding guitar riff and Burnside’s itchy, tetchy repetition, like a dancefloor mantra, of the title’s imperative. “Smile” is slower, but the chipped guitar riff with its decisive cut-offs, traced in outline by sleepy harmonica and the deep prowl of the bass, has a sensuous, smoky sway. Luther Dickinson’s bass playing on the album can slip by at times, but it’s a keen, grounding weight to the songs, giving them real heft.

Dickinson’s also co-producer of the album, along with Burnside himself. Recorded in a rather prosaically described “old building in Ripley, Mississippi”, you get the sense here of two friends at play; this is music created with ease, songs that are uncluttered, with no fuss or flash, but plenty of commitment. It’s another compelling achievement for a blues artist whose institutional recognition – a Grammy for best traditional blues album for 2021’s I Be Trying; the Mississippi Governor’s Arts Award for Excellence – actually makes perfect sense. As the keeper of the flame of hill country blues, Burnside’s earned it, and then some.

BrhyM – Deep Sea Vents

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It’s unlikely anyone will hear anything much stranger this year than BrhyM’s “Platypus Wow”. “Got webbed feet, rubber bill, fat-ass tail, furry chill,” a multi-tracked Bruce Hornsby mumbles to a peculiar accompaniment of squawking, cawing woodwind, adding “dark purple-green coloured fur/I’ll stick that ass with my poison spur.” Soon he’s quasi-rapping, joined by mournful strings, unpredictable piano runs and doo-wop harmonies, before concluding, “I light up the world, only for you.” The sentiment might sound Disneyesque, but Disney this is not.

It’s unlikely anyone will hear anything much stranger this year than BrhyM’s “Platypus Wow”. “Got webbed feet, rubber bill, fat-ass tail, furry chill,” a multi-tracked Bruce Hornsby mumbles to a peculiar accompaniment of squawking, cawing woodwind, adding “dark purple-green coloured fur/I’ll stick that ass with my poison spur.” Soon he’s quasi-rapping, joined by mournful strings, unpredictable piano runs and doo-wop harmonies, before concluding, “I light up the world, only for you.” The sentiment might sound Disneyesque, but Disney this is not.

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The third track on Hornsby’s first full-length with yMusic – the chamber ensemble favoured by, among others, Bon Iver, The National and Paul Simon – is generally indicative of the enigmatically titled Deep Sea Vents’ experimental nature. It may, however, come as a surprise. No-one, after all, introduces Bruce Hornsby without mentioning ‘that’ song. Almost four decades since The Range’s second single, “The Way It Is”, topped the charts in America, spending eight ubiquitous weeks in the UK Top 40, it remains his greatest legacy. Earlier this year, kicking off Radio 2’s Piano Room Month with the BBC Concert Orchestra, he began with an extended version.

To be fair, the classic track’s a poignant, near-universal reflection upon poverty, sampled by Tupac for “Changes” and for many years a treasured feature of Grandstand’s football league tables rundown. Nonetheless, today’s Hornsby is a very different model. Since his invitation to record with Justin Vernon’s former band, DeYarmond Edison, for a 2016 Grateful Dead covers album, overseen by The National’s Aaron and Bryce Dessner, he’s engaged in a series of unlikely collaborations. A 2016 appearance at Wisconsin’s Eaux Claires festival, curated by Vernon and the Dessners, was followed by another at Coachella the next year with Bon Iver, whose “U (Man Like)” Hornsby co-wrote for 2019’s i,i. Vernon in turn offered backing vocals on Hornsby’s startling Absolute Zero, its wonky character pointing towards his latest offering.

The roots of Deep Sea Vents are submerged in Eaux Claires, where yMusic co-founder CJ Camerieri glanced side of stage to see an unlikely gentleman in his sixties rejoicing at the sextet’s alliance with The Staves. An ensuing conversation led to their own contributions to 2019’s Absolute Zero, while a tour together, curtailed by the pandemic, provoked this new album’s title track. Written after an invitation from Camierei’s musical partner, Rob Moose, the joyous, swing-time number, like Randy Newman kicking up his heels in a speakeasy, was performed as their encore, Hornsby singing – like you do – of “Cephalopod dreams/Lounging in beds marine”. No wonder, when it was clear Covid was sticking around, Moose reached out again.

Hornsby responded quickly to their ‘progressive’ ideas with finished songs, and though what emerged is, musically and lyrically, often cerebral, his relish for spontaneity remains intact. Embracing jazz, the avant-garde, contemporary classical, electronics, chamber music, even funk, but rarely losing sight of pop’s melodic demands, it succeeds in playing to yMusic’s strengths while bringing out, with gusto, a rarely showcased side to Hornsby. He’s no stranger to partnership, though, touring as part of the Grateful Dead from 1988 until Jerry Garcia’s death and collaborating with the likes of Ricky Skaggs, Charlie Haden and Spike Lee. 2004’s Halcyon Days, his second album with touring band The Noisemakers, even featured Sting and Elton John, while his Radio 2 presentation concluded with “The End Of The Innocence“, co-written with Don Henley.

None of this hints at the extremes of Deep Sea Vents, which, aside from Hornsby’s broadminded maritime themes, remains admirably capricious. “Wild Whaling Life”, inspired by Moby Dick, combines dulcimer, jagged strings and flitting piccolo lines with a far nimbler beast’s energy, while “(My) Theory Of Everything” follows Ed from the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, who’s busy “taking water samples, checking in for phosphates” as ticklish woodwind tosses gentle waves. On “The Wake Of St Brendan”, Hornsby’s voice shimmers as if underwater, any early tension resolved like a Van Morrison redemption, while “Foreign Sounds”’ piano and strings suggest a frugal Peter Gabriel – also evident on the rippling “The Baited Line” – before “Deep Blue” pairs existential meditations with minimalist, Prince-like swagger.

Inevitably, Hornsby’s older fans, resistant to refrains like “I am the platypus”, may baulk at Deep Sea Vents challenges, while others might carp at more esoteric moments, not least “Barber Booty”’s flailing strings. That, however, is just the way it is, and don’t you believe them. Those willing to immerse themselves in this vibrantly imaginative, inventive world may recognise that, though some things never change, it’s inspiring when they do.

Introducing the Ultimate Music Guide to Nirvana

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Nirvana‘s ambition, Dave Grohl tells Uncut’s Graeme Thomson in this new magazine, was to sell as many records as Sonic Youth and maybe be able to make enough money for the members of Nirvana to get their own apartments. 

Of course, what happened with Nevermind surpassed that ambition, to put it mildly. When the album was released in autumn 1991, it sold enough copies for the band to be able to buy apartments for themselves, and in principle, one for everyone they’d ever met besides.

Anyone acquainted with the Nirvana story will be aware of the complex and ultimately fatal relationship that Kurt Cobain had with that kind of fame. But as you’ll read in the in-depth reviews and classic interviews in this new magazine, this was never – confusingly perhaps in a time when words like “loser” and “slacker” were in everyday parlance, when many US bands dressed as if they arrived on stage direct from farm or sawmill – a band content with underachievement. 

As Sub Pop’s Jonathan Poneman tells me in a new piece you can read here, Nirvana were driven by a desire not for material success, (“as in ‘now I’m going to buy a bunch of Rolls Royces’”) but for something more imprecise and unknowable: to evolve fast and do the best they possibly could. Kurt Cobain’s very first recordings were made in the spirit of simply leaving some kind of record. The band’s first album offered tantalising hints of untapped potential, precious resources on the point of being uncovered, if not yet polished to the gleam of their second. By their third, they wanted to reassert that their gritty ethos remained intact.

The success and ideological problems which came with their success became part of Nirvana’s music and day to day life, to the point where this magazine is published around the 30th anniversary of Kurt Cobain taking his own life. Kurt’s story which we’ve told in contemporary features and news reports, and even at this remove, it still seems desperately sad, but one through which the life force of the music continues to burn brightly.

Get your copy here.

Arooj Aftab announces new album, Night Reign

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Arooj Aftab has announced that her new album Night Reign, the follow-up to 2021's Grammy-winning Vulture Prince, will be released by Verve on May 31.

Arooj Aftab has announced that her new album Night Reign, the follow-up to 2021’s Grammy-winning Vulture Prince, will be released by Verve on May 31.

Watch a video for the lead single “Raat Ki Rani” below:

Night Reign features appearances from Cautious Clay, James Francies, Vijay Iyer, Kaki King, Moor Mother and Chocolate Genius, alongside regular collaborators Petros Klampanis and Maeve Gilchrist.

The album will be available on standard black LP, D2C exclusive purple LP and in a limited signed edition available exclusively on Aftab’s webstore, plus an exclusive silver LP available at indie retailers. Pre-order / pre-save here and peruse the tracklisting below:

  1. Aey Nehin
  2. Na Gul
  3. Autumn Leaves (ft. James Francies)
  4. Bolo Na (ft. Moor Mother, Joel Ross)
  5. Saaqi (ft. Vijay Iyer)
  6. Last Night (Reprise) (ft. Cautious Clay, Kaki King, Maeve Gilchrist)
  7. Raat Ki Rani
  8. Whiskey
  9. Zameen (ft. Chocolate Genius, Inc.)

Arooj Aftab plays a number of summer festivals before touring the UK and Europe in October. See the full list of dates below:

June 28, 2024 Antwerp, BE Live is Live Festival
June 26-30, 2024 Glastonbury, UK Glastonbury Festival
July 13, 2024 Rotterdam, NL North Sea Jazz Festival
Aug 9, 2024 Helsinki, FI Flow Festival
Aug 13, 2024 Uppsala, SE Uppsala Konsert & Kongress
Aug 15, 2024 Oslo, NO Oslo Jazz Festival
Aug 17, 2024 Biddinghuizen, NL Lowlands Festival
Aug 19, 2024 Zurich, CH Zürcher Theater Spektakel 2024
Oct 12, 2024 Manchester, UK Aviva Studios
Oct 19, 2024 Berlin, DE Heimathafen
Oct 20, 2024 Hamburg, DE Mojo Club
Oct 21, 2024 Heidelberg, DE Enjoy Jazz Festival
Oct 22, 2024 Cologne, DE Kulturkirche
Oct 23, 2024 Lille, FR Aeronef
Oct 25, 2024 Paris, FR Trianon
Oct 26, 2024 Nantes, FR Le Lieu Unique
Oct 28, 2024 Lisbon, PT Teatro Tivoli BBVA
Oct 29, 2024 Barcelona, ES Sala Apolo
Oct 30, 2024 Madrid, ES Festival de Jazz de Madrid
Nov 1, 2024 Bristol, UK Beacon Theatre
Nov 2, 2024 Glasgow, UK QMU
Nov 3, 2024 Leeds, UK Project House
Nov 7, 2024 London, UK Pitchfork Festival @ Roundhouse
Nov 8, 2024 Den Bosch, NL November Music Festival
Nov 12, 2024 Copenhagen, DK Vega

Allman Brothers’ Dickey Betts has died aged 80

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Dickey Betts, the singer, songwriter, and guitarist of the Allman Brothers Band, has died aged 80.

Dickey Betts, the singer, songwriter, and guitarist of the Allman Brothers Band, has died aged 80.

DAVID BOWIE IS ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

The news was broken on a post of Betts’ Instagram:

“It is with profound sadness and heavy hearts that the Betts family announce the peaceful passing of Forrest Richard ‘Dickey’ Betts (December 12, 1943 – April 18, 2024) at the age of 80 years old. The legendary performer, songwriter, bandleader and family patriarch passed away earlier today at his home in Osprey, FL., surrounded by his family. Dickey was larger than life, and his loss will be felt world-wide. At this difficult time, the family asks for prayers and respect for their privacy in the coming days. More information will be forthcoming at the appropriate time.”

Betts, who wrote and sang “Ramblin’ Man” and “Blue Sky” for the Allmans, was also part-inspiration for Billy Crudup’s character in Almost Famous.

Outside the Allman Brothers Band – which he co-founded with Gregg and Duane Allman, Berry Oakley (bass), Butch Trucks (drums) and Jai Johanny “Jaimoe” Johanson (drums) in 1969 – Betts also enjoyed a solo career, beginning with 1974’s Highway Call and also including Dickey Betts & Great Southern, the Dickey Betts Band and Betts, Hall, Leavell and Trucks alongside Jimmy Hall, Stones’ keyboardist Chuck Leavell and fellow Allman Brother, Butch Trucks.

Jaimoe is now the sole surviving member of the original Allmans line-up.

Uncut’s New Music Playlist for April 2024

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We’ve just dispatched another top-quality issue of Uncut to the printers – if we do say so ourselves – and while we can’t reveal too much about its contents until next week, this playlist of our current raves should give you a few clues. 

We’ve just dispatched another top-quality issue of Uncut to the printers – if we do say so ourselves – and while we can’t reveal too much about its contents until next week, this playlist of our current raves should give you a few clues. 

There’s more from the superb Beth Gibbons solo album; the auspicious return of Fontaines DC; a scorching live performance from Mdou Moctar; a new single from Cassandra Jenkins, one of the smartest new singer-songwriters of recent years; the first sighting of Eiko Ishibashi‘s latest soundtrack; Altın Gün’s last ever tune with singer Merve Daşdemir; and lashings of ambient bliss courtesy of Carlos Niño, Chihei Hatakeyama and SUSS.

DAVID BOWIE IS ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

Plus! Guided By Voices and Belle And Sebastian doing what they do best, and two appearances by the inspirational Warren Ellis – the first leading Dirty Three’s ecstatic comeback; and the second with Nick Cave, sharing their heart-rending tribute to Amy Winehouse from the Back To Black biopic. Dig in…

BETH GIBBONS
“Reaching Out”
(Domino)

CASSANDRA JENKINS
“Only One”
(Dead Oceans)

MYRIAM GENDRON
“Terres Brûlées”
(Thrill Jockey / Feeding Tube)

RICHARD THOMPSON
“Freeze”
(New West)

ALTIN GÜN
“Vallahi Yok”
(Glitterbeat)

FONTAINES DC
“Starburster”
(XL)

HOLLOW SHIP
“Music In Motion”
(PNKSLM)

MDOU MOCTAR
“Imouhar – Live Outside The School (Agadez, Niger)”
(Matador)

GUIDED BY VOICES
“Serene King”
(Guided By Voices Inc)

STRAND OF OAKS
“Party At Monster Lake”
(Western Vinyl)

BELLE AND SEBASTIAN
“What Happened To You, Son?”
(Matador)

GIRL AND GIRL
“Mother”
(Sub Pop)

KING HANNAH
“Davey Says”
(City Slang)

AARON FRAZER
“Payback”
(Dead Oceans)

O.
“176”
(PIAS)

SHABAKA
“Insecurities (feat. Moses Sumney)”
(Impulse!)

DIRTY THREE
“Love Changes Everything Part 1″
(Bella Union)

BLACK DECELERANT
“Two”
(RVNG Intl)

EIKO ISHIBASHI 
“Smoke”
(Drag City)

EZRA FEINBERG
“Future Sand”
(Tonal Union)

KAMASI WASHINGTON
“Dream State (feat. André 3000)”
(Young)

LANDLESS
“The Fisherman’s Wife”
(Glitterbeat)

JAKE XERXES FUSSELL
“Going To Georgia”
(Fat Possum)

GROUP LISTENING
“Shopping Building”
(PRAH)

JOHN GRANT
“The Child Catcher”
(Bella Union)

LOMA
“How It Starts”
(Sub Pop)

CARLOS NIÑO & FRIENDS
“Love To All Doulas!”
(International Anthem)

CHIHEI HATAKEYAMA & SHUN ISHIWAKA
“M4 (feat. Hatis Noit)”
(Gearbox)

SUSS
“Flight”
(Northern Spy)

NICK CAVE & WARREN ELLIS
“Song For Amy”
(UMR/Island)

Send us your questions for Mike Campbell!

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For almost fifty years as Tom Petty's trusted guitarist, co-writer and co-producer, Mike Campbell helped shaped the course of American rock.

For almost fifty years as Tom Petty’s trusted guitarist, co-writer and co-producer, Mike Campbell helped shaped the course of American rock.

First teaming up with Petty in Mudcrutch in the early 1970s, he was a constant in Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers as well as contributing to all of Petty’s solo albums.

DAVID BOWIE IS ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

On top of that, his list of playing and co-writing credits is staggering: Campbell has collaborated with (deep breath) Bob Dylan, Stevie Nicks, Don Henley, Aretha Franklin, Warren Zevon, Randy Newman, Tracy Chapman, Joe Cocker, Mary J Blige, Johnny Cash, John Prine and many more. He’s even played on a couple of songs by punk stalwarts Bad Religion.

After Petty passed away, Campbell joined Fleetwood Mac for their 2018-19 world tour. More recently he’s been concentrating on his own “rougher-edged” band, The Dirty Knobs, who’ve released two albums to date.

So, what do you want to ask a linchpin of American rock? Send your questions to audiencewith@uncut.co.uk by Monday (April 22) and Mike will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

“I’m still kicking!”

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As she celebrates the 60th anniversary of “Shout” with a new book and tour - and Glastonbury slot - Lulu talks Bowie, The Beatles and R&B

As she celebrates the 60th anniversary of “Shout” with a new book and tour – and Glastonbury slot – Lulu talks Bowie, The Beatles and R&B

DAVID BOWIE IS ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

Hi Lulu. How are you doing today?

I’m good. So what are we talking about this time? You know me, I could talk forever!

How about we start with current plans?

I’m putting out a book that’s going to be, how can I say it, different. The same goes for my Champagne For Lulu tour in April. You’ll have never seen or heard me like this before. I don’t want to say too much, because I want everything to be a surprise.

The tour coincides with the 60th anniversary of “Shout”. You recorded the song after seeing Alex Harvey, right?

It was totally inspired by him. I’d never heard The Isley Brothers version before I saw Alex sing it in a dingy little club in Glasgow. I was only 13 and went along with the other boys in my band, who were quite a bit older. It was so exciting. The place went wild when Alex started singing it. I think he’d been in Germany around the same time as The Beatles.

Talking of which, The Beatles were big fans of your version…

John and Paul said that Lulu’s “Shout” was their favourite record of the week when they were on Ready Steady Go!. That blew my goddamn mind. But they liked the same music as me. We were into black American music: Motown, R&B, the blues, gospel.

Is that what drew you to the States to record 1970’s New Routes and Melody Fair with Jerry Wexler and Tom Dowd?

Yeah. I was working with people like the Dixie Flyers, the Memphis Horns, Duane Allman, Dr John, Cornell Dupree.But I struggled with a lot of it, maybe because we didn’t have enough great songs. My biggest hit was “Oh Me Oh My”, which actually came from Scotland. I don’t think the producers really understood me. When I met David Bowie a few years later, he said, “The record companies don’t get you, Lu. And they don’t get your voice either.” I aspired to be like Big Mama Thornton rather than being called the pop princess of Saturday night TV.

Bowie co-produced, sang and played on your 1974 cover of “The Man Who Sold The World”. Then you recorded more together. Can you explain the connection you had?

I was blown away by his talent. He was challenging, exhilarating, new. And I was astonished that Bowie saw me and heard me. We went to New York and recorded two or three songs. But then I left. He was into so many different things and substances, his life was going into a whole kind of wild trajectory and it made me feel anxious. I don’t believe in regret, but it’s maybe the one thing where I think, ‘Who knows what would’ve happened had I stayed?’

One of those songs was “Can You Hear Me”, which Bowie redid for Young Americans

He said, “I’ve written this for you.” I’d love to hear [my version] again, but I can’t get hold of any of those tracks now. I think they’ve all disappeared.

Is it true you’re currently working on a collaborative album, similar to 2002’s Together?

I’ve put out feelers and I’ve got a few really great people who’ve said yes. But I’m keeping that a surprise for now, like the contents of the book and tour. I’m working on several things. I’ve been studying acting for seven years and did a film last summer, Arthur’s Whisky, with Diane Keaton. And there’s a documentary that’s in talks. So there’s lots of stuff. I’ve lived longer than I thought I would. And I’m still kicking, I still have ambition. Let’s just say I have big plans!

The Champagne For Lulu tour runs throughout April, see luluofficial.com for dates and ticket info

Can announce Live In Aston 1977

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Can have announced details of the latest in their ongoing series of focusing on the band’s live performances.

Can have announced details of the latest in their ongoing series of focusing on the band’s live performances.

Live In Aston 1977 is set for release on vinyl, CD and digitally on May 31 via Mute and Future Days.

DAVID BOWIE IS ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

You can hear “Vier” from the album below.

You can pre-order the album by clicking here.

The release follows Can Live in Paris 1973, the first of the series to feature the late Damo Suzuki, Can Live in Brighton 1975Can Live in Stuttgart 1975, (Uncut’s Reissue of the Year in 2021) and Can Live in Cuxhaven 1976.

Can fans should check out the next issue of Uncut for some very special news.

Broadcast release an unheard vocal take of “The Games You Play”

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Broadcast have released a previously unheard vocal take of "The Games You Play", which you can hear below.

Broadcast have released a previously unheard vocal take of “The Games You Play“, which you can hear below.

DAVID BOWIE IS ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

The track is taken from Spell Blanket – Collected Demos 2006-2009, which is released May 3 on Warp Records.

“The Games You Play” is an unheard vocal version of an instrumental track called “DDL” which first appeared on the All Tomorrow’s Parties 1.0 compilation in 2001 and was subsequently compiled on The Future Crayon rarities album in 2015.

You can read more about Spell Blanket – Collected Demos 2006-2009 in the current issue of Uncut.

On September 28, Broadcast will release Distant Call, a collection of early demos that were worked into finished productions appearing on Haha Sound, Tender Buttons and The Future Crayon.

Distant Call will be the final Broadcast release.

The Beatles’ Let It Be is coming back to screens

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Let It Be - director Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s 1970 film about The Beatles - is finally getting re-released.

Let It Be – director Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s 1970 film about The Beatles – is finally getting re-released.

The film, which has been out of circulation for decades, will launch exclusively on Disney+ on May 8, 2024.

DAVID BOWIE IS ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

The documentary has been restored by Peter Jackson’s Park Road Post Production using the original 16mm negative and remastering the sound using the same MAL de-mix technology that was applied to Jackson’s Get Back series.

Michael Lindsay-Hogg says, “’Let It Be’ was ready to go in October/November 1969, but it didn’t come out until April 1970. One month before its release, The Beatles officially broke up. And so the people went to see ‘Let It Be’ with sadness in their hearts, thinking, ‘I’ll never see The Beatles together again. I will never have that joy again,’ and it very much darkened the perception of the film. But, in fact, how often do you get to see artists of this stature working together to make what they hear in their heads into songs. And then you get to the roof and you see their excitement, camaraderie and sheer joy in playing together again as a group and know, as we do now, that it was the final time, and we view it with full understanding of who they were and still are and a little poignancy. I was knocked out by what Peter was able to do with ‘Get Back,’ using all the footage I’d shot 50 years previously.” 

“I’m absolutely thrilled that Michael’s movie, ‘Let It Be,’ has been restored and is finally being re-released after being unavailable for decades,” says Peter Jackson. “I was so lucky to have access to Michael’s outtakes for ‘Get Back,’ and I’ve always thought that ‘Let It Be’ is needed to complete the ‘Get Back’ story. Over three parts, we showed Michael and The Beatles filming a groundbreaking new documentary, and ‘Let It Be’ is that documentary – the movie they released in 1970. I now think of it all as one epic story, finally completed after five decades. The two projects support and enhance each other: ‘Let It Be’ is the climax of ‘Get Back,’ while ‘Get Back’ provides a vital missing context for ‘Let It Be.’ Michael Lindsay-Hogg was unfailingly helpful and gracious while I made ‘Get Back,’ and it’s only right that his original movie has the last word…looking and sounding far better than it did in 1970.”

Worlds of echo

“There are a great many interesting things about Arthur Russell, one of which is that he was rediscovered through his music being made available for the first time, in many cases. So he was similarly simultaneously discovered and rediscovered. There's very little biographical information in terms of him speaking about himself to the press. Consequently, there's an element that Arthur can be whoever you want him to be, enhanced by the fact that he was adept at so many different forms of music.

“There are a great many interesting things about Arthur Russell, one of which is that he was rediscovered through his music being made available for the first time, in many cases. So he was similarly simultaneously discovered and rediscovered. There’s very little biographical information in terms of him speaking about himself to the press. Consequently, there’s an element that Arthur can be whoever you want him to be, enhanced by the fact that he was adept at so many different forms of music.

DAVID BOWIE IS ON THE COVER OF THE LATEST UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

“He was a complicated person, of the type who have different versions of themselves. He practised Buddhism, but he was also wildly ambitious. He made avant-garde music, but he also made very warm and accessible music that he hoped would be commercial. I found that going through his archive in great detail just further enhanced the idea that he was an enigma.

“I’ve seen much of his record collection, and he did have things like Tommy James & The Shondells records. And he did like ABBA! But I don’t know how many Beatles or Beach Boys records he had. In the archive, there’s a letter from him aged 16 and he’s writing about John Cage and Ferlinghetti and Allen Ginsberg, so he had quite developed tastes for the counterculture. His approach – of not being limited by being a composer or a cellist or a disco producer – obviously hindered him in his lifetime, but it’s actually the approach a lot of people now take. I think one of the reasons for his popularity is that he’s so confident in his ability and he’s unrestricted by the idea of staying in your lane.

“In everything he did, there’s a degree of integrity. In the later period, when he’s making music like ‘Make 1, 2’ or ‘Wild Combination’, they are very catchy, potentially commercial songs. But there’s the same attention to detail that there is in some of his more abstruse compositions. There is a relationship to quality and rigour no matter what sort of musical dialogue he’s engaged in. That is very rare, and is probably one of his defining features.

“Arthur was encouraged by figures like Ginsberg and Philip Glass, but they weren’t facilitators, because I don’t think he’d let people facilitate for him. He was hyper-creative, obviously, but I don’t know how good he was at networking. I don’t think he had the kind of character that could quite get to that point. He only played outside of New York two or three times under his own name, and he could have probably walked to the majority of shows he ever played. So I think it’s very much a nest he built for himself in East 12th Street – a nest bordering on a cocoon. 

“At the point he was diagnosed with HIV in 1986, he’d just released World Of Echo and he had a contract with Rough Trade. Whatever frustrations he’d had, he was probably the best place he’d been in terms of the opportunities ahead. So there is a tragedy that he got sick just as he reached a point where he could have gone on to do whatever he wanted.

“The reason Arthur’s music still sounds so fresh today is partly down to his skill in recording. In most cases, you can’t tell the era in which it was made – <World Of Echo> could have been made yesterday, it just doesn’t sound like anything else. There’s a sense of escape in a lot of his music: the escape of dancing in a club, but also the escape of hearing a very soft voice and a cello, drawing you back to the womb. Not many people sing like him or sound like him. So I do think there is some sort of genius at work.”

Travels Over Feeling: Arthur Russell, A Life is published by Faber on April 18

The Cult announce 40th anniversary tour

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The Cult will mark their 40th anniversary with a UK tour in the autumn, concluding at London's Royal Albert Hall on November 4.

The Cult will mark their 40th anniversary with a UK tour in the autumn, concluding at London’s Royal Albert Hall on November 4.

Says the band’s Billy Duffy: “Following up from the great energy of Death Cult 8323 shows, I’m looking forward to bringing that sense of celebration of the band’s music, and the communion with our fans, to Cult 8424. CFFC. Let the ceremony commence!”

See the poster below for the full list of dates:

Tickets go on sale on Friday (April 19) at 10am BST from here.