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Reviewed: I Am Not Your Negro

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In June 1979, the author James Baldwin wrote a letter to his literary agent outlining his next project. Called Remember This House, it attempted to tell the story of America through the lives of three of his murdered friends, Medgar Evers, Martin Luther King and Malcolm X. “I want these three lives to bang against and reveal each other,” he wrote, “and use their fateful journey as a means of instructing the people who they loved so much, who betrayed them, and for whom they gave their lives.”

The memoir went unfinished by the time of Baldwin’s death in 1987. In I Am Not Your Negro, filmmaker Raoul Peck has crafted a formidable documentary loosely structured around Baldwin’s notes – read by Samuel L Jackson – alongside archival footage stretching from the Civil Rights movement to the Ferguson riots and Black Lives Matter. The dismal truth, of course, is that in some respects nothing has changed. “History is not the past,” wrote Baldwin prophetically. “It is the present.”

A black, gay man in a country that tolerated neither, in 1948 Baldwin settled in Paris – where he wrote his first two novels, Go Tell It On The Mountain and Giovanni’s Room – only returning to America in 1957 after seeing footage of protestors outside desegregated schools in Charlotte, North Carolina. “I am terrified at the moral apathy, the death of the heart, that is happening in my country,” confessed Baldwin. In 1968, Balwdin is a guest on the Dick Cavett Show being asked by the host “Why aren’t negroes more optimistic – it’s getting so much better?”

“It’s not a question of what happens to the negro,” Baldwin says, prescient as ever. “The real question is what is going to happen to this country.”

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Introducing The History Of Rock 1986

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Welcome to 1986! Our latest edition of History Of Rock will manifest in UK stores around Thursday, but you can buy a copy now from our online store (as well as all the previous volumes of The History Of Rock). Prince is our cover star this time out, and here’s John Robinson, as usual, to do the introductory honours…

“Thanks to NME’s C86 cassette, a collection of young and promising guitar bands, this is an unusual year, in that it seems to come with its own soundtrack album already attached.

“In fact, though the music press of that year covers this emerging wave of groups like Primal Scream, some of the most dramatic events of 1986 take place in front of larger audiences, and far closer to the mainstream. From their yobbish first appearances in public, The Beastie Boys quickly prove that their records are serious – and particularly serious about a good time. Mancunians Simply Red and The Smiths both develop wider congregations of ecstatic supporters.

“Our cover star Prince, meanwhile, seems to dominate many people’s thinking. He’s made another excellent album, and another film. He’s working with Miles Davis, and has become a topic of conversation. When in August he plays a run of shows at London’s Wembley Arena, it leaves critics, if not exactly speechless, then at least convinced that these represent an apogee of what might be possible in a rock concert.

“It’s true, he’s not one for saying much. But in his stead, strong musical opinion flourishes from other sources. This year, The Go-Betweens, Nick Cave, The Fall, and the Smiths all make landmark work – and don’t just walk it, but talk it powerfully, too. Ten years on from punk, John Lydon has plenty to say about it, and his great new record. In the world of pop, meanwhile, George Michael and the Pet Shop Boys prove that thoughtful comment and a sense of mission aren’t the preserve of groups with guitars.

“This is the world of The History Of Rock, a monthly magazine which follows each turn of the rock revolution. Whether in sleazy dive or huge arena, passionate and stylish contemporary reporters were there to chronicle events. This publication reaps the benefits of their understanding for the reader decades later, one year at a time. Missed one? You can find out how to rectify that by clicking here.

“In the pages of this 21st edition, dedicated to 1986, you will find verbatim articles from frontline staffers, filed from the thick of the action, wherever that may be.

“At the Hacienda, jousting ego with New Order’s Peter Hook. Being told by Nick Cave that you, and every member of your profession, are scum. At the Brixton Academy, as Morrissey raises a sign to express all that the band’s wry and empathetic music have come to mean in the last three years.

“It says, ‘Two light ales, please…’”

 

 

 

Watch footage from The Who’s special performance of Tommy

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The Who performed their 1969 album Tommy in full during their gig at this year’s Teenage Cancer Trust.

The gig took place at London’s Royal Albert Hall on March 30, where as well as the likes of “Pinball Wizard”, “We’re Not Gonna Take It” and “I’m Free”, the band also played some rarely-performed tracks from the album like “Welcome”, “Miracle Cure” and “Underture”.

Watch fan-shot footage from the gig, and see the full setlist, below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lKNmPGs340E

The Who played:

I Can’t Explain
Substitute

Overture
It’s a Boy
1921
Amazing Journey
Sparks
Eyesight to the Blind (Sonny Boy Williamson cover)
Christmas
Cousin Kevin
The Acid Queen
Do You Think It’s Alright?
Fiddle About
Pinball Wizard
Go to the Mirror!
There’s a Doctor
Tommy Can You Hear Me?
Smash the Mirror
I’m Free
Miracle Cure
Sensation
Underture
Sally Simpson
Welcome
Tommy’s Holiday Camp
We’re Not Gonna Take It

Won’t Get Fooled Again
Join Together
Baba O’Riley
Who Are You

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Watch the moving new video for Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds’ “Steve McQueen”

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Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds have shared the new spoken-word video for “Steve McQueen“.

The visuals in the clip are taken from the recent film One More Time With Feeling, which documented Cave and his band recording their sixteenth album, Skeleton Tree.

Directed by Andrew Dominik, the footage sees Cave and his band rehearsing “Girl In Amber” in the studio as the frontman recites his moving “Steve McQueen” poem.

“I’m a housefly called ‘God,’ and I don’t give a fuck/ Here I come up the elevator, 60 floors, hoping I don’t get stuck/ And everyone out here does mean, and everyone out here does pain/ But someone’s got to sing new stars, and someone’s got to sing the rain.”

Watch the video for “Steve McQueen” below.

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

The Isley Brothers – “Inside the group, it was like a police state”

Originally published in Uncut’s September 2015 issue (Take 220)

“Harvest For The World’ refers to a peaceful gathering,” explains songwriter Ernie Isley, “where every human being is invited, and where no-one will be hindered in any way from participating.”

Originally a vocal trio comprising brothers O’Kelly, Rudolph and Ronald, by the early ’70s, the Isleys (expanded to include Ernie and Marvin Isley and Chris Jasper) were releasing an album a year and scoring a host of hits along the way. “Harvest For The World” stands out as one of their finest, an open-hearted call for equality across the planet. But beneath the luscious, sparkling veneer of the recording, engineered by Stevie Wonder collaborator and synthesiser pioneer Malcolm Cecil, there lies a stranger tale: of briefcases full of money; of Jimi Hendrix’s enduring influence; of older brothers packing powerful handguns and running the band “like a police state”; and of a group of wealthy superstars still rehearsing in their mother’s suburban basement.

“There was no fooling around or running in the studio to speak of,” says Robert Margouleff, who worked with the Isleys and Cecil from 1973’s 3+3 to The Heat Is On two years later. “These guys all dressed to the nines every day. There wasn’t a day that someone came in wearing a slouchy pair of jeans.” As all involved acknowledge today, the message of “Harvest For The World”, propelled into the charts with help from Cecil’s crisp sound, is still an important one. “It’s a very nice thought,” says Ernie Isley, “and hopefully one day that peaceful gathering will happen.”

___________________________

CHRIS JASPER (songwriting, keyboards): We did some covers on 3+3 – “Summer Breeze” and “Listen To The Music” – but, as time went on, Ernie and I started writing more. We worked together very well. The band would be on the road part of the year and the other part we’d be recording and writing, so it was a very busy time, to say the least.

MALCOLM CECIL (engineer)): The actual art and the performing in that period was very much between Chris Jasper and Ernie and Marvin Isley. The older brothers were mainly concerned with the vocals. They left the younger brothers to do the main tracking, and relied upon them for the funk and the beat.

JASPER: We all wrote at the Isleys’ mom’s house in Englewood, New Jersey. We had the equipment set up downstairs in the basement, and I left my piano and my keyboard set up and amplified. The bass amp was down there, Ernie’s guitar amps were down there. It was kind of a tight squeeze sometimes. But that’s where we did a lot of our rehearsing and writing.

ERNIE ISLEY (songwriting, guitars, drums): I wanted to get a 12-string guitar, so I went down to a music shop in Manhattan and picked up a Guild 12-string – which I still have – and it sounded really good. I brought it home and started trying it in the basement and happened to come up with the lines, “All babies together/Everyone a seed/Half of us are satisfied/Half of us in need…” Inspiration is everywhere and if anybody happens to have their antenna up and you are fortunate enough to be inspired, you can come up with all kinds of stuff.

Laura Marling – Semper Femina

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The title of Laura Marling’s new album – which loosely translates as ‘always a woman’ – is taken from Virgil’s The Aeniad: “Varium et mutabile semper femina”; “a woman is an ever fickle and changeable thing”. It’s a crude but apt summation of Marling’s determination as an artist to present a moving target. Semper Femina is her sixth album in nine years, the kind of old-school work ethic which complements an equally old-school creative sensibility. Having emerged in the slipstream of Mumford & Sons and Noah & The Whale, she long ago freed herself from the entanglements of any scene, other than perhaps an attachment to the golden age of Laurel Canyon’s music makers.

At 27, Marling has assembled an impressive and unified body of work, making subtle adjustments with each step. Once I Was An Eagle (2013) opened with an audacious five-song suite of drone-poems, raw and richly allegorical; her last album, 2015’s self-produced Short Movie, was harder, jittery, more abrasive. Semper Femina is a further refinement of her art, rooted in a familiar cool classicism yet also distinct, the sound warm, intimate and inviting, punctuated with flashes of ragged guitar and adorned with sumptuous strings.

At a time when the Misogynist-in-Chief stalks the Oval Office, the album’s focus on female identity is both welcome and current, even if Semper Femina is nothing as straightforward as a concept album. As well as Virgil, Marling draws inspiration from psychoanalyst Lou Andreas-Salome and Rainer Maria Rilke, and namechecks Courbet’s explicit painting L’Origine du Monde, none of which dispels the notion of her having somewhat rarefied tastes. Though she’s a veiled writer, hinting at intimacy without revelation, the abstract nature of these nine unhurried, often very beautiful songs is partly the point. This is an exploration of femininity in all its variants; in its power, mystery and vulnerability; above all, in its mutability.

Opener “Soothing” is a career highlight. The atmosphere is steamy, malevolent, erotically charged, with echoes of Serge Gainsbourg’s “Melody” and Dylan’s “I Can’t Wait” in the off-kilter, up-ended groove. The serpentine bassline is tilted, while Marling is at her most imperious, decreeing that some prior means of intimate access – “your private door to my room” – is now denied. “I banish you with love,” she sings, her voice swooping from high to low.

This suspenseful, rhythmic magnetism is reprised on “Don’t Pass Me By”, which turns out not to be Marling’s take on the Ringo-penned Beatles clomper from the White Album, but closer to Karen Carpenter singing Portishead’s “Glory Box”. A litany of used-to-bes – old guitars and familiar tunes are taken away and stripped to their component parts, to be transformed “into something good” – it features another gorgeous string arrangement and a hypnotic descending chord sequence, plucked out on echoing electric guitar.

These two tracks are so good, slanted and enchanted, the rest of the record’s achievements feel low-key by comparison. “The Valley” is gentle, almost-ambient folk, a late-summer English pastoral sketched in flickering guitars, stacked vocals and a ravishingly lovely sweep of strings. It’s a fond lament, regretting a breach in female friendship, the realisation that confidences now go unshared. While “The Valley” is quietly heartbreaking, the lightly swinging “Next Time” is merely pleasant. “Nothing Not Nearly” is a sturdier affair, arriving with a crunch of distorted guitar and bearing a passing resemblance to Jeff Buckley’s “Lover, You Should Have Come Over”.

Marling splits her time these days between London and Los Angeles; her music can seem similarly polarised. The smouldering, soulful “Wildfire” has a West Coast swagger, despatched in a rich, deeply satisfying bluesy drawl, perfect for cussing out some poor soul’s mama (“kinda sad”) and papa (“kinda mean”). And “Nouel”, a spritely, fingerpicked pen portrait of a muse figure who “sings along to a sailor’s song in a dress that she made,” hardly shies away from those eternal Joni Mitchell comparisons. In contrast, “Wild Once” is an almost parodic display of clipped, actorly Englishness. Here is Marling at her most mannered, and arguably her least engaging. A loose-limbed tone-poem celebrating atavistic impulses, it’s the one track which doesn’t quite hit home.

“Always This Way”, on the other hand, is disarmingly simple and intimate. In gentle tones, Marling toys with rueful autobiography: “25 years, nothing to show from it…” Well, hardly. Semper Femina – while ultimately not quite the radical re-routing it occasional threatens to be – marks an impressive deepening of Marling’s explorations, and a timely testament to change as a positive force.

Q&A
LAURA MARLING
How fully-formed were the themes before you began recording?

It always becomes clear in retrospect. It was what I was interested in around the time I was writing it, so there was some forethought, but it’s not like a concept album. Without being provocative and political for the sake of it, it feels like that’s what’s happening in the world anyway. I was interested in what truly liberates women and what doesn’t.

How did it come together?
It was made in September 2015. I only really write when I’m touring. I like the energy of travel, and the constriction of having to find a space to write. We went straight from the American tour for Short Movie into the studio. It was mostly all of us performing together, and some overdubby guitar bits with Blake, little fancy things.

You produced Short Movie yourself but used Blake Mills this time. Why the change?
When I was producing Short Movie, I found the results weren’t very good, because I was constantly jumping between two roles. I didn’t enjoy it. I have mixed feelings about Short Movie; it was a difficult record to write, make and tour. I’d heard a couple of Blake’s self-produced records of his own music, and a couple of other things he’d produced, and I thought, ‘He’s my generation’s exciting thing!’ He’s got an extraordinary musical palette that he put into play on “Soothing”, and a few other places on the record. That’s his touch. He is brilliant.
INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Bob Dylan’s handwritten lyrics for unpublished 1961 song due for auction

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The handwritten lyrics to an unpublished Bob Dylan song are up for auction.

Rolling Stone reports that Dylan wrote the lyrics in November 1961, months after he moved to New York. Dylan gave the lyric sheet to musician and one-time roommate, Peter Crago.

The opening bid is set at $30,000.

The auction house, Nate D Sanders, have printed the lyrics:

Wisconson is the dairy state
I guess you all know well
I was in Wow Wow Toaster there
The truth to you I’ll tell
It’s milk & cheese & cream
I’ve known ’em all my days
I’m going back to my hometown I’m leaving right aways

I’m a heading out Wisconson ways
2000 miles to go
Madison, Milwakee set’s my heart aglow
I’m a coming to that dairy state
My heart’s a beating fast
I’ll pick my banjo gently there
And twiddle my mustache

There’s thoughts I left there long ago
One a coming now it seems
I’ll tune my banjo than the hills
And feast on milk and cream
And stamp my foot all thru the grass
And never know a care
My homes in Wow Wow Toaster
And I’m a going there”

The song continues on the verso:
”1. These people with you city ways
Are driving me insane to drink
My home’s in Wisconson it’s a better place I think
I’ve been in California
My home’s in Wisconson
And I”m gonna own the town”

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Paul Weller announces details of new album, A Kind Revolution

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Paul Weller has announced details his new studio album, A Kind Revolution.

The album is released on May 12 by Parlophone Records.

A Kind Revolution features members of Weller’s touring band Andy Crofts and Ben Gordelier with Steve Cradock and Steve Pilgrim on several tracks. Guests include PP Arnold and Madeleine Bell, Boy George, Robert Wyatt and The Strypes’ guitarist Josh McClorey.

The album was produced and arranged by Jan ‘Stan’ Kybert and Weller and will be released on CD, Special Edition 3 CD set, 12” Vinyl LP, limited Deluxe 10” Vinyl Box Set, Standard & Deluxe Downloads and is available to Stream.

The tracklisting is:

Woo Sé Mama
Nova
Long Long Road
She Moves With The Fayre
The Cranes Are Back
Hopper
New York
One Tear
Satellite Kid
The Impossible Idea

Weller has also announced tour dates for 2018:

February
Sat 17 – Brighton – Centre
Sun 18 – Bournemouth – Bournemouth International Centre
Tue 20 – Plymouth – Pavilions
Wed 21 – Cardiff – Motorpoint Arena
Fri 23 – Leeds – First Direct Arena
Sat 24 – Newcastle – Metro Radio Arena
Sun 25 – Glasgow – The SSE Hydro
Tue 27 – Nottingham – Motorpoint Arena

March
Thu 1 – Manchester – Arena
Fri 2 – Birmingham – Genting Arena
Sat 3 – London – The O2 Arena

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Hear an unreleased version of the Grateful Dead’s “Dancing In The Street” from 1977

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On May 8, 1977, the Grateful Dead performed at Cornell University’s Barton Hall.

The bootleg recording of this show was considered so significant that it was added to the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry in 2011.

To celebrate the 40th anniversary of the show, Rhino will release the Barton Hall concert separately in multiple formats on May 5. Cornell 5/8/77 will be available as a three-CD set, a limited edition five-LP set (limited to 7,700 copies), as well as digital download and streaming.

Below, you can hear a previously unreleased version of “Dancing In The Street” from the show: the track is available as an instant gratification from March 31 with pre-orders of the album.

You can pre-order by clicking here.

Track Listing for Cornell 5/8/77 is:

Disc One
“New Minglewood Blues”
“Loser”
“El Paso”
“They Love Each Other”
“Jack Straw”
“Deal”
“Lazy Lightning>”
“Supplication”
“Brown-Eyed Women”
“Mama Tried”
“Row Jimmy”

Disc Two
“Dancing In The Street”
“Scarlet Begonias>”
“Fire On The Mountain”
“Estimated Prophet”

Disc Three
“St. Stephen>”
“Not Fade Away>”
“St. Stephen>”
“Morning Dew”
“One More Saturday Night”

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

The 13th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

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Bunch of interesting new things here; I wish I had something to play you from the Man Forever album, especially the Laurie Anderson or Yo La Tengo collaborations, but I don’t think anything has made public yet.

In the interim, please find below a new Kendrick Lamar track; Tunisia’s ultra-intense Ifriqiyya Electrique; new things from Sufjan Stevens and his gang, and from Sam Amidon; Amber Coffman (this one slipped out a few months ago but I missed it at the time); Lilie Mae Rische (from Jack White’s band); and two tracks from the deluxe expansion of Evan Dando’s wonderful “Baby I’m Bored”. Also don’t sleep on the Kevin Morby track and the Gas teaser. And just remembered, maybe best of all, there’s another new Joan Shelley track…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Gas – Narkopop (Kompakt)

2 Jan Jelinek – Loop-Finding-Jazz-Records (Faitiche)

3 Kendrick Lamar – The Heart Part 4 (Top Dawg Entertainment)

4 Ifriqiyya Electrique – Rûwâhîne’ (Glitterbeat)

5 Man Forever – Play What They Want (Thrill Jockey)

6 Helado Negro – Private Energy (Expanded) (RVNG INTL)

7 Various Artists – Jon Savage’s 1967: The Year Pop Divided (Ace)

8 Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda – World Spirituality Classics, Volume 1: The Ecstatic Music of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda (Luaka Bop)

9 Sufjan Stevens, Bryce Dessner, Nico Muhly, James McAlister – Planetarium (4AD)

10 Evan Dando – Baby I’m Bored (Fire)

11 Kevin Morby – City Music (Dead Oceans)

12 Wet Tuna – Live At The Root Cellar 1​/​19​/​17 Electric Set (Bandcamp)

13 Lilie Mae – Wash Me Clean (Third Man)

14 Joan Shelley – Joan Shelley (No Quarter)

15 Joshua Abrams & Natural Information Society – Simultonality (Tak:Til/Eremite)

16 Amber Coffman – All To Myself (Columbia)

17 Forest Swords – The Highest Flood (Ninjatune)

18 Joni Mitchell – Don Juan’s Reckless Daughter (Asylum)

19 75 Dollar Bill – Wood/Metal/Plastic/Pattern/Rhythm/Rock (Tak: Til)

20 Jeff Parker – Slight Freedom (Eremite)

21 Sam Amidon – The Following Mountain (Nonesuch)

 

Ask Jason Isbell

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Ahead of the release of his new album, The Nashville Sound, Jason Isbell will be answering your questions as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’d like us to ask the singer song-writer?

What’s his favourite memory of his time in Drive-By Truckers?
What was life like growing up in Alabama?
Just what is The Nashville Sound?

Send up your questions by noon, Tuesday, April 4 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

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

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Sparks announce new album, Hippopotamus

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Sparks have announced details of a new studio album.

The Mael brothers will release Hippopotamus on September 8, 2017 on BMG.

Watch the “Hippopotamus” single video below:

The tracklisting for Hippopotamus is:

Probably Nothing
Missionary Position
Edith Piaf (Said It Better Than Me)
Scandinavian Design
Giddy Giddy
What The Hell Is It This Time?
Unaware
Hippopotamus
Bummer
I Wish You Were Fun
So Tell Me Mrs. Lincoln Aside From That How Was The Play?
When You’re A French Director (featuring Leos Carax)
The Amazing Mr. Repeat
A Little Bit Like Fun
Life With The Macbeths

The band have also announced a run of dates in support of the band. Sparks will play:

Monday 07 August — Vega Theater, Copenhagen
Tuesday 08 August — Rockefeller, Oslo, Norway
Thursday 10 August — Cirkus, Stockholm, Sweden
Saturday 12 August — Flow Festival, Helsinki, Finland
Monday 11 September — Lucerna Music Bar, Prague
Tuesday 12 September — Columbia Theatre, Berlin
Thursday 14 September — Paard van Troje, Den Haag
Friday 15 September — Den Atelier, Luxembourg
Saturday 16 September — Ancienne Belgique, Brussels
Wednesday 20 September — Queens Hall, Edinburgh
Friday 22 September — O2 Ritz, Manchester
Saturday 23 September — Rock City, Nottingham
Sunday 24 September — O2 Institute 1, Birmingham
Tuesday 26 September — 02 Academy, Bristol
Wednesday 27 September — O2 Shepherds Bush Empire, London

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Jeff Buckley’s handwritten journals to be published in new book

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Jeff Buckley‘s handwritten journals are to appear in print in a new book.

Jeff Buckley: His Own Voice is due in spring 2019, to coincide with the 25th anniversary of Grace.

The book will feature letters, lyrics and photographs from Buckley, reports Rolling Stone.

The book will be compiled and edited by Buckley’s mother Mary Guibert and biographer David Browne, who wrote Dream Brother: The Lives And Music Of Jeff And Tim Buckley.

“In choosing these pages to share with the world, I’m giving him the chance to speak with his own voice, for the record… and for his fans to see what a sweet, funny, amazing human being he was,” Guibert said in a statement.

An audiobook edition will feature unreleased recordings, including Buckley’s outgoing voicemail message and his list of “100 things to do.”

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

John Lydon comes out in support of Trump, Brexit and Nigel Farage

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John Lydon has defended Brexit, Nigel Farage and Donald Trump in a new interview.

Lydon appeared on ITV’s Good Morning Britain on Monday (March 27) when he described Farage as “fantastic”.

Lydon continued: “After that up the River Thames argument he had with Bob Geldof I wanted to shake his hand because it was silly beyond belief.”

“Where do I stand on Brexit? Well, here it goes, the working class have spoke and I’m one of them and I’m with them. And there it is.”

Lydon went on to describe American President Donald Trump as a “complicated fellow”, adding: “One journalist once said to me, ‘Is he the political Sex Pistol?’ In a way.”

You can read an interview with John Lydon in the next Uncut — now in UK shops and available to buy digitally

“What I dislike is the left-wing media in America are trying to smear the bloke as a racist and that’s completely not true, There are many, many problems with him as a human being but he’s not that and there just might be a chance something good will come out of that situation because he terrifies politicians.”

“This is a joy to behold for me. Dare I say, [he could be] a possible friend,” Lydon said. Watch the full interview beneath.

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Running The Voodoo Down!

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The next issue of The History Of Rock isn’t due ‘til next week, and while briefly giving another plug to our current issue of Uncut, I thought I’d indulge myself this week by posting a review of one of the best comps I’ve come across this year: Running The Voodoo Down! Explorations In Psychrockfunksouljazz 1967-80.

According to George Clinton, the roots of his psychedelicised funk can be traced back to a Vanilla Fudge concert, of all places. In 1967, Clinton’s formative band The Parliaments were playing a show at a college in upstate New York, on a bill with Vanilla Fudge and The Box Tops. “We had to use the Vanilla Fudge’s equipment, because we didn’t have any,” Clinton told Rolling Stone in 1990. “Goddamn! That shit was so bad. It was extremely loud. So I went out and bought Jimi Hendrix’s Are You Experienced?, Cream’s album, a Richie Havens record and Sly’s Whole New Thing. I gave them to Eddie [Hazel, guitarist] and Billy [Nelson, bassist] in the band. They were just 15, 16 at the time. And the second night we used the Vanilla Fudge’s equipment, we knew what to do with that motherfucker.”

Clinton had identified a way of taking back control. White bands had been making capital out of African-American song for decades; Vanilla Fudge themselves had just released a debut album that featured amped-up covers of “People Get Ready” and “You Keep Me Hangin’ On”. Following the example of Hendrix, though, Clinton realised that inspiration could flow in more than one direction – that the volume and possibilities of psychedelic rock could add new dimensions to the music of black America. “[Hendrix] took noise to church,” he continued to Rolling Stone. “With that feedback, you could almost write the notes of that feeling down. His music, like the Beatles’, was way past intellectual. That shit was in touch with somethin’ else.”

“Shit in touch with somethin’ else” might make a neater subtitle for Running The Voodoo Down, lumbered as it is with “Explorations In Psychrockfunksouljazz 1967-80”. But then neatness isn’t something that this music actively encourages, so disdainful is it of genre confines, racial profiling and the orthodox parameters of song. The Chambers Brothers, for instance, began as a Mississippi gospel quartet, evolved through LA folk clubs, and by 1967 had recruited a white drummer and turned into a kind of elevated garage rock group, with a fuzzy take on the soul canon; “People Get Ready” recurs, again, on their debut album. Running The Voodoo Down, though, goes with the full 11-minute version of their signature “Time Has Come Today”, a Love-like ramalam that loses its temporal bearings after about two and a half minutes, and at times resembles a Jefferson Airplane stab at “Whole Lotta Love”. “My soul,” observes Joe Chambers, “has been psychedelicized.”

“Time Has Come Today” has figured on plenty of similar compilations in the past, of course, and Dean Rudland and Tony Harlow’s selections here mix up the canonical (Funkadelic’s “Maggot Brain” and “Red Hot Mama”, The Undisputed Truth’s “Like A Rolling Stone”, Sly & The Family Stone’s “Thank You For Talkin’ To Me, Africa”), with a good few cratedigging rarities. If anything, in their enthusiasm they may have set themselves a little too wide a brief: any compilation that features Don Cherry’s “Brown Rice”, proto-punks Pure Hell, and an early solo track from the jazz pianist Keith Jarrett, in which he pitches himself as a mediocre Richie Havens impersonator, is certainly an eclectic listen.

Slowly, though, two imperatives start to become clear: black musicians reconfiguring white rock songs; and the involvement or proximity of either Clinton, Sly, Hendrix or Miles Davis (the album title is adapted from Bitches Brew’s “Miles Runs The Voodoo Down”). Sometimes the two meet serendipitously, as on Eddie Hazel’s limber extrapolation of “California Dreamin’”, or the inspired way that the Isley Brothers segue CSNY’s “Ohio” into Hendrix’s “Machine Gun”, a highlight of their 1971 rock covers set, Givin’ It Back.

At others, though, a track feels like it’s been included more out of conceptual expediency than real quality, Buddy Miles’ post-Band Of Gypsys slouch through another Neil Young song, “Down By The River”, being alright insofar as Miles at least resists the temptation to scat. Hendrix himself only actually figures on a useful bit of marginalia alongside Miles, playing choppy funk (and overdubbing himself on bass) while Lightnin’ Rod (Jalaluddin of The Last Poets) lays the jive-talking groundwork for rap over the groove.

Miles Davis’ rapprochement with rock, meanwhile, is shown to be a little more deconstructed than most, illustrated by a miraculous excerpt from the Jack Johnson sessions, “Willie Nelson (Take 3)”. Over ten minutes, the impression is of zen masters manoeuvring around one another in a vacuum, with John McLaughlin and Sonny Sharrock articulating a rock imperative through flecks and gestures more than concrete riffs. Hendrix is a clear antecedent, but “Willie Nelson” sounds closer to the contemporary explorations of Can than it does to ‘60s psych.

In the summer of 1970, soon after the Jack Johnson recordings, Davis went back on the road. He played on the same bill as Hendrix and Sly at The Isle Of Wight Festival, with Keith Jarrett on keyboards, and further confronted a rock audience by opening a bunch of shows for Santana in the States. A year later, Santana marked the closure of the Fillmore West in San Francisco with a surprisingly effective, and funky, version of Davis’ “In A Silent Way”.

Included here, it’s one more example of how Running The Voodoo Down initially looks like a document of creative chaos, and ends up mapping a wide world of music that is harmoniously folding in on itself. It describes a disparate scene, where ideas and personnel exist in a permanently dynamic state of flux. Where Jimi Hendrix and Miles Davis never quite managed to work together, but their matrix of connections remained, in true psychedelic fashion, mind-expanding.

Michael Stipe announces autobiographical photo book

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Michael Stipe has announced that he will be releasing an autobiographical photo book later this year.

He is working with frequent collaborator Jonathan Berger on the book, which is said to be about Stipe’s life and his time with R.E.M.

Announcing the news in an interview with The Creative Independent, Stipe said; “This [book] focuses on my timeline, on the work I’ve done all along, all through the band and back to my early 20s,” he said.

“It’s all photo based, but some of it’s just documentation of things I’m obsessed with and that I focus on to make new pieces from. There are also certain things I’ll take, recontextualize, and present as something completely different.”

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

George Harrison – The Vinyl Collection

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As a solo artist, George Harrison’s big mistake was his first; putting out an album that he was never able to better. All Things Must Pass, released in November 1970, looms over the rest of his output like a beautifully chiselled monolith that he could never emulate, and against which all subsequent albums were measured and found wanting.

It’s arguably an unfair judgment. All Things Must Pass arrived as an unexpected cornucopia from a man customarily allotted just the one ‘George song’ per Beatle album (a source of chagrin for Harrison, whose attitude to his former band was rarely warm), and who had been storing up songs. Though two sides of its three LPs were indulgent jam sessions, its other four boasted a potent mix of romantic and spiritual numbers, including a brace of tunes from Bob Dylan, a massive hit in “My Sweet Lord” (subsequently judged as a sub-conscious lift of The Chiffons’ He’s So Fine) plus a hefty sonic punch courtesy of co-producer Phil Spector. According to George, Phil needed a few cherry brandies to get him up and alive in the morning, but without Phil, no Wah-Wah.

Compared to the lo-fi acoustic sketchbook of McCartney, released in spring 1970, and the pungent minimalism of Lennon’s Plastic Ono Band, which arrived in December of that year, ATMP maintained the florid sound and socio-spiritual idealism the Beatles’ global public expected. Little wonder it sold so well.

The need for a follow-up was displaced by 1971’s The Concert for Bangladesh, arranged by George at the request of Ravi Shankar, an event that marked the birth of rock charity. The resultant live album isn’t featured here, but helps explain why 1973’s Living In The Material World arrived on a wave of goodwill that made it a chart-topper, though the good faith wasn’t repaid by the stodgy rock and pious, self-righteous songs that lay beyond its joyous hit single “Give Me Love (Give Me Peace On Earth)”. Stung by criticism, Harrison never again made an album so overtly drenched in Hinduism, thus sparing us advice like “Remember, A mind that wanders round a corner is an unwise mind”.

Having all of Harrison’s albums gathered in one place may promise a narrative arc through his solo career and life, but played back to back what comes across is their consistency, predictability even. “Guitars, basic drums and analogue tapes – that’s the way I like it. It doesn’t go with trends. My music just stays what it is,” George summarised bluntly towards the end of his life.

There are a few exceptions, most obviously the Indian experimentalism of 1968’s Wonderwall and 1969’s Moog-driven Electronic Sound. 1975’s Extra Texture might also be considered something of a one-off, being made largely in Los Angeles with a bunch of session players and in a vaguely soul-funk style.

Otherwise, the records bleed pretty much seamlessly into each other, helped by Harrison’s habit of using old songs on new albums and getting the usual suspects to play on them; Clapton, Keltner, Preston and Starr among them. Every album has its high points and its champions, even those rubbished at the time have been latterly reassessed as ‘minor masterpiece’, ‘overlooked gem’, ‘return to form’ and the like. It is a matter of personal choice and, one suspects, personal history. For example, the introvert Extra Texture, dismissed by George himself as “grubby”,turns out to be a favourite of his wife Olivia.

What’s clear is that George’s musical career became way less important to him after the pivotal year of 1974, which saw him build his own studio, establish his own label, Dark Horse, produce other people’s albums, undertake a badly received North American tour alongside Ravi Shankar, and split with his wife Pattie Boyd. He reached the sanctuary of his beloved Friar Park badly mauled; “the nearest I came to a nervous breakdown”.

Thereafter Harrison worked to his own schedule. His touring days – which had turned stale for all the Fabs in the Mid Sixties – were firmly behind him. Music took second place to his role as film producer (where his output was prodigious), to the restoration of his garden, and to his interest in fast cars. Krishna, cocaine, Formula One – Harrison, allegedly ‘The Quiet Beatle’, was in reality a complex, contradictory personality.

It’s likely no coincidence that Cloud Nine, by far the most polished and successful of the later albums, had, like All Things Must Pass, an outside producer involved, with Jeff Lynne giving it a sheen of Electric Light Orchestra, and taking George back to the top of the singles charts with |Got My Mind Set On You”. By then, Harrison’s cob with the Beatles had softened as When We Was Fab, a minor hit, proved. “All Those Years Ago”, his 1981 tribute to Lennon, had also given him a rare hit.

The mood on George’s post-74 output is softer and less judgmental than on his early output – he had nothing to prove – and their delights are often unexpected. On 1982’s much dismissed Gone Troppo you’ll find the dreamy “That’s The Way it Goes”, the laughalong title track and some gorgeous Hawaiian ukulele. 1981’s Somewhere In England has Save The World, considered soft protest at the time but beautifully played and never more relevant than today. Perfect cameo guitar solos are sprinkled liberally around – Harrison was, even in the Beatles, always an underrated axeman. It’s a mild shock to hear him rattle so confidently through his back catalogue on 1991’s Live In Japan, an undervalued album.

Brainwashed, completed after George’s passing in 2001 by his son Danu and Jeff Lynne, is a touching epitaph. Harrison’s vocal cords are shot, but contemplative songs like Pisces Fish offer a glimpse into a gentle soul.

Extras: 12” single Picture Discs of When Was Fab/Zig Zag/ That’s The Way it Goes remix/When Was Fab Reverse End and Got My Mind Set On You extended/Lay His Head.

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews

Don Hunstein, Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan photographer, dies aged 88

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Photographer Don Hunstein has died, aged 88.

Hunstein worked as an in-house photographer for Columbia Records in the 1950s and 60s. Among his subjects, he photographed Duke Ellington, Billie Holiday, Aretha Franklin and Janis Joplin.

He also shot Bob Dylan and his then-girlfriend, Suze Rotolo, walking down a West Village street that appeared on the sleeve of the Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan album,

According to the New York Times Hunstein had already photographed Dylan and Rotolo inside, but was not yet satisfied. “I said I wanted to get some outside stuff, and I looked out the window and saw it was getting darker and darker,” he told Rockarchive, a collective of rock music photographers, in 2007. Once downstairs, he told them to walk up and down the street.

“There wasn’t very much thought to it,” he said in 1997 about his instructions to Dylan and Rotolo. He ended the session after shooting only one roll of color film and a few black-and-white pictures.

Hunstei also produced covers for Miles Davis’ Nefertiti, Thelonious Monk’s Monk’s Dream, and Dylan’s 1962 self-titled solo LP.

The May 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Buckingham Nicks. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Elastica, Mac DeMarco, John Lydon and Mike Love. We take a trip to Morocco – North African destination of The Beatles, Stones, Hendrix and more – and look back at the life of Laura Nyro. Our free CD collects great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, Thundercat and more. The issue also features Wire on their best recorded work. Plus Future Islands, Lemon Twigs, Sleaford Mods, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, T.Rex, Cosey Fanni Tutti and more, plus 131 reviews