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This month in Uncut

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Fleetwood Mac, John Lydon, Elastica and Mac DeMarco all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2017 and now on sale in UK shops and available to buy digitally.

Buckingham McVie are on the cover, and inside in our exclusive interview, Lindsey Buckingham and Christine McVie reveal all about their new album as a duo, and how it fits into the storied past, present and future of Fleetwood Mac. “It’s that umbilical cord that can’t be broken,” says Christine. “It just pulls you back.”

John Lydon and Leftfield tell the story of their ’90s collaboration, “Open Up”, involving Eastern samples, Hollywood fires, magic mushroom punch and taking the Public Image man out clubbing.

25 years on, Elastica reveal the truth about their brief and brilliant time in the spotlight. “One minute we were touring in a van, lying on top of the amps, and it was us against the world,” says Justine Frischmann. “The next, we had buses and trucks and catering and so many crew we didn’t even know who half of them were.”

Mac DeMarco invites Uncut to a poolside family gathering in Los Angeles, just as the singer, guitarist and songwriter moves from cult star to festival headliner. “I know the sweet, tender side of him,” explains his mother. “And I also know the maniac.”

Wire take us through their finest albums, from 1977 debut Pink Flag and equally influential follow-up Chairs Missing right up to 2017’s Silver/Lead. “We had no studio experience,” says Colin Newman, remembering their first sessions for Pink Flag. “We smoked a few joints and played, and Bruce [Gilbert, guitar] was convinced that we’d recorded the album. We were very disappointed to come into the control room and discover that they’d only been listening to the bass drum.”

Uncut also takes a look at the impact of Morocco on visiting artists such as The Beatles, the Stones, Nick Drake and The Incredible String Band – sexual freedom, powerful drugs and hypnotic music ensue…

We also celebrate the genius of the Bronx Brontë, Laura Nyro, as her closest collaborators uncover the true story of her thwarted career, while Mike Love answers your questions on The Beach Boys, Brian Wilson and Donald Trump.

Our opening Instant Karma section features BNQT, Jim Kweskin, The Magpie Salute and The Lemon Twigs, while Future IslandsSamuel T Herring chronicles his life in favourite records.

Our reviews section includes new releases from Father John Misty, Bob Dylan, Robyn Hitchcock, Mark Lanegan, Willie Nelson and The New Pornographers, and archival sets from T.Rex, Klaus Dinger, Ella Fitzgerald and more. We also catch Rod Stewart and Thundercat live.

Our free CD, Dreams, includes great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, The New Pornographers, Robyn Hitchcock, Feral Ohms, Wire, Jake Xerxes Fussell and more.

The new Uncut is out on March 16, 2017.

The Rolling Stones’ concert film debuts in China

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The Rolling Stones‘ concert film Havana Moon is to play in cinemas in China.

Global distribution company MusicScreen and European-Chinese distributor Pannonia Entertainment are to partner on the release. The film, directed by Paul Dugdale and produced by Eagle Rock Entertainment and JA Films, captured the band’s free outdoor concert in Havana, Cuba on March 25, 2016.

It received a one-night theatrical release in cinemas around the rest of the world last September and has since been released by Eagle Rock Entertainment on DVD, Blu-ray, DVD+2CD, DVD+3LP, Digital Video and Digital Audio plus a special Deluxe Edition.

Click here to read Uncut’s review of Havana Moon

“We are proud to be teaming up with MusicScreen to release this visually and orally stunning concert on film,” says Klaudia Elsässer, founder and managing director of Pannonia Entertainment. “It recreates one of the most exciting and timeless moments in music history for the Chinese market, and will be screened in the unique China Film Archive’s central cinema in Beijing.”

Mr. Li Tao, manager of Central CFI Cinemas, Beijing added: “It’s amazing that the Rolling Stones could make this revolutionary trip to Cuba and [give] a marvellous performance to Cuban people. I wish the Rolling Stones could come to China sometime in the near future. I was impressed by their energetic and professional performance. They are the superstar as always. It’s really nice to have them on the big screen. I appreciated very much to bring the film to Chinese audiences.”

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 Pink Floyd play “Atom Heart Mother” live from 1970

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Pink Floyd have shared film of the band performing “Atom Heart Mother” live at St. Tropez.

The extract was filmed by French TV channel Pop Deux at the Festival de St. Tropez, in the South of France, on August 8, 1970.

This clip and others are included on the CD/DVD/Blu-ray package Pink Floyd – The Early Years 1970 Devi/ation, which also includes a photo booklet and memorabilia from the period.

This is part of The Early Years, 1965 – 1972: The Individual Volumes, six separate CD/DVD/Blu-ray sets which are released on March 24.

Click here to read Pink Floyd: Their Secrets Unlocked! The band and collaborators explore the brilliance and burn-out of Syd Barrett

You can watch the first other clips below.

Interstellar Overdrive“, filmed for the Granada TV programme Scene – Underground at the UFO Club, London on 27 January 1967
Taken from Pink Floyd – The Early Years 1965-1967 Cambridge St/ation

Instrumental Improvisation” from The Sound Of Change, a BBC TV programme filmed in London on 26 March, 1968. Taken from Pink Floyd – The Early Years 1968 Germin/ation

The Beginning (Green Is The Colour)” filmed during rehearsals before their performance at the Royal Festival Hall, London on 14 April 1969. Taken from Pink Floyd – The Early Years 1969 Dramatis/ation

Meanwhile, the band have released a trailer for the forthcoming Their Mortal Remains exhibition, which runs from May 13 – October 1, 2017 at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum.

The Pink Floyd Exhibition: Their Mortal Remains retrospective marks the 50th anniversary of the band’s first album, The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn, and debut single, “Arnold Layne“.

The exhibition includes more than 350 objects and artefacts on display, many of them never before seen, including hand-written lyrics, musical instruments, letters, original artwork and stage props.

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

Various Artists – New Order Presents Be Music

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Back when New Order were still anonymous, “Be Music” was the alter ego behind which they hid when they took on producing jobs for other acts on Factory and its associated labels. Peter Hook was the first to activate the tag, late in 1981, when he manned controls for “Death Is Slowly Coming”, the bleak B-side of Stockholm Monsters’ debut single. But it was after New Order split from Joy Division producer Martin Hannett, and split their own atom by becoming self-producers with the eternal “Temptation” in 1982, that Be Music productions really bloomed.

Between 1983-’85 (ie between “Blue Monday” and Low-Life), all four members of New Order would employ the pseudonym for a wild variety of projects, taking unpaid production jobs partly to help other Factory signings – offering technical knowledge of synthesisers and programming, and often lending the equipment itself – and partly to try out their new gear and new ideas on other people’s records.

This 3CD, 36-track box (also available as a 12-track double LP) isn’t the first time Be Music productions have been gathered together: two collections, Cool As Ice and Twice As Nice, appeared in 2003 and 2004. But it’s the first time that, anonymity be damned, New Order’s name has been stamped up front. In a sweet but emphatic touch, the new compilation also spiritually extends the Be Music brand beyond the years it existed, expanding to include both recent work – Stephen Morris’ remixes for the likes of Factory Floor – and earlier family explorations, including “Knew Noise”, one of three tracks Ian Curtis and Joy Division/New Order manager Rob Gretton co-produced in 1979 for Section 25’s debut single.

During Be Music’s adventurous 1983-’85 prime, Bernard Sumner dived the deepest and came up with the most lasting results, and his work dominates the first disc. (Hook is represented by “Fate/Hate”, the second single by future music journalist Paul Trynka’s Nyam Nyam, to whose Hull post-punk he applies a roaring Moroder patch.)

Working often with A Certain Ratio’s Donald Johnson as Be Music-Dojo, Sumner shaped three classic singles almost everyone in the UK ignored at the time, but which stand as significant markers in the development of electronic music, even though each signposted an entirely different way forward: 52nd Street’s “Cool As Ice” (1983), the UK’s first electro-funk, quickly adopted by New York’s club underground; Marcel King’s “Reach For Love” (1984), sad, sweet, soul wrapped in a machine mesh; and the magnificent megamix of Section 25’s “Looking From A Hilltop” (1984), a glistening thing of backwards drums and synths, dazed vocals, soul sonic force and Kraftwerkian drive wrapped around psychedelic Blackpool melancholia. It still sounds like nothing else.

Between these milestones, Disc One shines light on honourable fellow travellers: in particular, Sumner’s augmented, extended finale to ex-Josef K man Paul Haig’s “The Only Truth” (1984) is revealed as a not-bad-looking distant cousin of “Temptation”.

Disc Two pays tribute to New Order’s Bogart & Bacall, Stephen Morris and Gillian Gilbert. They helmed Be Music’s furthest-out undertaking, Too Crazy Cowboys, the 1984 debut LP by Thick Pigeon (formed around actress-musician Stanton Miranda and future Coen Brothers composer Carter Burwell), represented by “Babcock + Wilcox”, a collision between New York art anti-pop and thin, spooky, handmade electronica. But with their more recent remix work, this disc casts The Other Two against type as New Order’s hardest edge, underlining how Morris has kept the flame burning for his earliest influences, traces of Can and other elektronische brethren. Best of all is Stephen and Gillian’s own “Inside”, rescued from a 2011 EP, a gleaming, jagged slab of propulsive Blade Runner motorik.

Disc Three is more ragbag, gathering odds, ends and remixes ranging from the great (Sumner lending an “Everything’s Gone Green” tinge to the sequencer swarms of Section 25’s “Sakura”) to the terminal (Factory supergroup Ad Infinitum’s excruciating “Telstar” cover). Important here is the inclusion of the full 22-minute “Video 586” from the days when New Order were trying to persuade machines to play endless encores, and the prototype for both the Power, Corruption & Lies track “586” and “Blue Monday”.

The majority of tracks point back to the fertile, swampy era when New Order were DIY-ing the future by cross-mixing guitars, Euro experimentalism, early hip-hop’s minimal electro and whatever else sounded good. It was in this period, in 1982, The Haçienda opened, and although the club is associated with its acieed-drenched Madchester heyday, this set suggests more interesting music was being played and made before then, when the dancefloor was half-empty. Not every track is killer, but even the filler fascinates. Confusion reigns.

Q&A
SECTION 25’s VIN CASSIDY
“Knew Noise” is this compilation’s earliest track. How were Ian Curtis and Rob Gretton as producers?

Well, it was Rob and Ian’s idea to get us into a studio. They didn’t have a great deal of studio experience – but they had more than us. Looking back, I suspect the Cargo studio owner, John Brierely, did most of the nuts and bolts. But Ian brought equipment, a syndrum Steve Morris hadn’t had long, and they were interested in going to town on various aspects. But it wasn’t until we did [debut album] Always Now with Martin Hannett that we discovered what it was like to work with “A Producer”.

Bernard Sumner produced 1984’s From The Hip. How did he compare to Hannett?
Obviously, lots of people have complained Martin was dictatorial. But our attitude was always: if you’re going to get a producer in, let them produce. But, yeah – it was much more democratic with Bernard.

More of a collaboration?
Yeah. We’d jammed with Bernard a lot at our home studio in Blackpool, we could bounce ideas off each other. When we went into the studio to record, we didn’t have enough tracks, and we improvised the track “Inspiration” 50-50 between the band and Bernard. We were mates as much as anything. We recorded at Rockfield Studios in Monmouthshire. It was way out in the hills, and at the back there was a pond, and on the last day we all went skinny-dipping. You couldn’t have done that with Martin…
INTERVIEW: DAMIEN LOVE

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

Feist announces new album, Pleasure

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Feist has announces details of her first album since 2011’s Metals.

Pleasure will be released on April 28 by Polydor.

Recorded in Stinson Beach, Upstate New York and Paris, Pleasure was co-produced by Feist with longtime collaborators Renaud Letang and Mocky.

The tracklisting for Pleasure is:

Pleasure
I Wish I Didn’t Miss You
Get Not High, Get Not Low
Lost Dreams
Any Party
A Man Is Not His Song
The Wind
Century
Baby Be Simple
I‘m Not Running Away
Young Up

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

Pink Floyd: their secrets unlocked!

With the release on March 24 of Pink Floyd The Early Years, 1965 – 1972: The Individual Volumes and the opening of the The Pink Floyd Exhibition: Their Mortal Remains exhibition at the V&A on May 13, we dig deep into the group’s archives, as band members, collaborators and associates lead us from Spalding’s Tulip Bulb Auction Hall to the sound stages of American TV shows. Along the way, Tom Pinnock explores the mercurial brilliance of Syd Barrett and the band’s fitful attempts to take their experimental creative impulses into the mainstream. “We didn’t recognise what was going on,” says Nick Mason. “We were all so focused on wanting the band to be a success.” Originally published in Uncut’s December 2016 issue (Take 235). Words: Tom Pinnock

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“It makes me shudder,” says Nick Mason, remembering Pink Floyd’s first American tour, in November 1967. “Because Syd was by then a loose cannon.” The drummer is recalling the tinpot chat shows that Pink Floyd appeared on at the end of that year, from Pat Boone In Hollywood to American Bandstand, presented by Dick Clark. “No-one knew what Syd was gonna say, or whether he was going to freak out and try and throttle the host. It was so uncomfortable. Probably the only person who didn’t notice was Dick.”

On November 8, the day after American Bandstand, the group headed to the Hollywood studio of KHJ’s Boss City, where a clearly fed-up Syd Barrett walked out. “It came time for the take and Syd had disappeared,” says Andrew King, Floyd’s co-manager until Barrett’s departure. “So I went up to the director, who was classic Hollywood, and said, ‘Our lead singer isn’t here.’ And he said, ‘OK. He’ll be back in a few minutes, will he?’ It was so beyond this guy’s comprehension that something like this could happen that he practically passed out in shock. You don’t walk out of prime-time TV shows. It’s unheard of. But Syd did. I just think he thought it was boring and he couldn’t be bothered.”

The American tour was the end of a difficult six months for the Floyd, a period that had seen the group rise from the underground and then begin to fracture in the spotlight. Some stories from these latter days of the Barrett-era Floyd have been told many times: Syd onstage, lost in his own mind, detuning his guitars until the strings fell off, with Roger Waters, Rick Wright and Mason terrified about what he might do next; the singer appearing to melt under the hot stage lights as a whole tub of Brylcreem cascaded down his face.

Almost 50 years after these events, however, Pink Floyd’s long-awaited boxset, The Early Years 1965-1972, finally sheds new light on the band’s first year in the spotlight and the sublime talent and disturbing decline of Syd Barrett. Full footage of the band’s American Bandstand performance of “Apples And Oranges”, and their subsequent awkward interview with Clark, is just one restored jewel contained in The Early Years, alongside perhaps the three greatest lost Floyd songs, “Vegetable Man”, “Scream Thy Last Scream” and “In The Beechwoods”, never officially released before, or heard in this crystal-clear quality.

“This boxset is a complete sea change, really,” Nick Mason says, recalling the years he’s spent assembling the 27-disc collection, “from the days when we were very careful about what we would release – we’d only put out the very final version of everything – to actually digging about to find old things.”

Although Barrett’s time with the band only takes up two and a half discs, these are the jewels in the crown of this set, peeling back the liquid layers of this most mythical and mysterious period of the Floyd’s history; a crucial time when the group, teetering on the edge of creative and financial ruin, were split between high art and low commerce, between London’s UFO club and Spalding’s Tulip Bulb Auction Hall, between ambition and exploration, and between Top Of The Pops and spifritual enlightenment. Hits were searched for, and minds were damaged, though the truth about why is more complex than it has previously appeared.

“I’m absolutely happy with people who say, ‘For me, Pink Floyd was really Syd Barrett. After that, it went downhill,’” says Nick Mason, pinpointing “Vegetable Man” and “Scream Thy Last Scream” as his favourite bits of the boxset. “I get it. That’s not what I feel, but I don’t take umbrage with it. No-one else has written a song quite like ‘Chapter 24’, or ‘Bike’, or ‘Jugband Blues’.”

“Syd was a very sensitive soul, and a very dedicated artist in his own way,” says Aubrey Powell, friend of the group and Hipgnosis co-founder. “He was a monumental talent, but far more sensitive than people took him for. The toughness that is required to survive in that world of rock’n’roll, his sensitivity just couldn’t cope with it. It pushed him into a corner, mentally, that he couldn’t get out of.”

The Who announce Las Vegas residency

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The Who have announced a residency at Caesars Palace, Las Vegas.

The band have so far confirmed six shows – from July 29 up until August 11 – at The Colosseum, which they describe on their website as “the first run”.

The dates are: July 29 and August 1, 4, 7, 9, 11.

Ticket prices range from $75 to $500. $1 from each ticket sold will benefit Teen Cancer America.

Fan club members can access Pre-sale tickets starting on Tuesday, March 14 at 10am PT. Tickets will then go on sale to the public beginning Friday, March 17 at noon PT.

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

May 2017

Fleetwood Mac, John Lydon, Elastica and Mac DeMarco all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated May 2017 and now on sale in UK shops and available to buy digitally.

Buckingham McVie are on the cover, and inside in our exclusive interview, Lindsey Buckingham and Christine McVie reveal all about their new album as a duo, and how it fits into the storied past, present and future of Fleetwood Mac. “It’s that umbilical cord that can’t be broken,” says Christine. “It just pulls you back.”

John Lydon and Leftfield tell the story of their ’90s collaboration, “Open Up”, involving Eastern samples, Hollywood fires, magic mushroom punch and taking the Public Image man out clubbing.

25 years on, Elastica reveal the truth about their brief and brilliant time in the spotlight. “One minute we were touring in a van, lying on top of the amps, and it was us against the world,” says Justine Frischmann. “The next, we had buses and trucks and catering and so many crew we didn’t even know who half of them were.”

Mac DeMarco invites Uncut to a poolside family gathering in Los Angeles, just as the singer, guitarist and songwriter moves from cult star to festival headliner. “I know the sweet, tender side of him,” explains his mother. “And I also know the maniac.”

Wire take us through their finest albums, from 1977 debut Pink Flag and equally influential follow-up Chairs Missing right up to 2017’s Silver/Lead. “We had no studio experience,” says Colin Newman, remembering their first sessions for Pink Flag. “We smoked a few joints and played, and Bruce [Gilbert, guitar] was convinced that we’d recorded the album. We were very disappointed to come into the control room and discover that they’d only been listening to the bass drum.”

Uncut also takes a look at the impact of Morocco on visiting artists such as The Beatles, the Stones, Nick Drake and The Incredible String Band – sexual freedom, powerful drugs and hypnotic music ensue…

We also celebrate the genius of the Bronx Brontë, Laura Nyro, as her closest collaborators uncover the true story of her thwarted career, while Mike Love answers your questions on The Beach Boys, Brian Wilson and Donald Trump.

Our opening Instant Karma section features BNQT, Jim Kweskin, The Magpie Salute and The Lemon Twigs, while Future Islands‘ Samuel T Herring chronicles his life in favourite records.

Our reviews section includes new releases from Father John Misty, Bob Dylan, Robyn Hitchcock, Mark Lanegan, Willie Nelson and The New Pornographers, and archival sets from T.Rex, Klaus Dinger, Ella Fitzgerald and more. We also catch Rod Stewart and Thundercat live.

Our free CD, Dreams, includes great new tracks from Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan Band, Fairport Convention, The New Pornographers, Robyn Hitchcock, Feral Ohms, Wire, Jake Xerxes Fussell and more.

The new Uncut is out on March 16, 2017.

Watch Laurie Anderson and friends perform Lou Reed’s The Raven

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Laurie Anderson, Hal Willner, Julian Schnabel and others celebrated the release of Lou Reed’s archives during a special performance of Reed’s 2003 album, The Raven last night [March 13, 2017].

Earlier this month, on March 2 (which would have been Reed’s 75th birthday), it was announced that Reed’s personal archives – including his writing, recordings and photographs — were heading to the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.

To mark the archives’ release, Anderson, Willner, Schnabel and an ensemble of readers and musicians performed The Raven at the Library of Performing Arts at Lincoln Center.

On March 15, there will be a performance of Drones — an installation of feedback made with Reed’s amps and guitars.

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 new issue of Uncut, starring Buckingham McVie!

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That time again, folks, as we proudly unveil a new issue of Uncut. This one is out on Thursday in the UK (though subscribers should be receiving it any moment now) and, as you can see, our cover stars are Lindsey Buckingham and Christine McVie, giving us an exclusive look at the next phase of that epically complex Fleetwood Mac saga… “It’s that umbilical cord that can’t be broken,” says McVie. “It just pulls you back.”

Elsewhere in the mag, we’ve interviews with our Album Of The Month-winning charmer, Father John Misty, John Lydon and Leftfield, Mike Love, Wire, Future Islands and “jizz jazz” singer-songwriter Mac DeMarco, whose poolside interview with Jason Anderson in LA is augmented by some valuable insights from his mother: “I know the sweet, tender side of him,” she says. “And I also know the maniac.”

Then there’s Elastica, interviewed in depth for the first time in many years, as their debut album returns on vinyl. I’m not really a big fan of Britpop nostalgia; truth be told, I wasn’t keen on many of those bands and records when they first came out, 20 or 25 years ago. It’d be disingenuous to pretend I can’t be sentimental about some of the culture that surrounded me in my earlyish twenties, but as a general rule I cling closest to the music I love, whether it was made yesterday or before I was born. Not much Britpop makes the cut.

There are, of course, exceptions, and the appearance of Elastica in this month’s issue is a cause for some personal reflection and pleasure – validated by the fact that their records still sound pretty cool today. I was the first person to actually write about Elastica, I think – or more accurately, the first journalist to be allowed to write about them. Everyone on the London music scene had heard about their potential by summer 1993, but I was chosen to accompany them to a covert show in Aldershot, of all places. The night was a good one: they played a brisk and exciting set of upgraded singalong post-punk; Damon Albarn turned up and threw an empty pint glass (plastic, as I recall) at the headliners, Kinky Machine; I wrote an obnoxiously hyperbolic review for NME that I’m too embarrassed to quote from here.

Soon enough, Elastica’s story became a messy parable of Britpop excess, but Michael Bonner’s terrific new interview – including the rarely-spotted lynchpin, Justine Frischmann – recaptures the spirit and possibilities of a band at the start of an adventure. “I was disappointed with the women in bands that were popular at the time,” Frischmann tells him. “It felt like there was no one who represented me and my friends, the humour, the feel of the time and place we were living in. Quirky and English, smart and funny and angular. It really felt like a gang.”

What else? A CD that features Robert Plant & Fairport Convention, Father John Misty, Mark Lanegan, The New Pornographers, Robyn Hitchcock, a couple of big personal favourites (Feral Ohms and Jake Xerxes Fussell) and, amazingly, Kenny Loggins and Michael McDonald, who both guest on Thundercat’s smooth “Show You The Way”. Laura Snapes on Laura Nyro. Midlake’s new supergroup, BNQT. At least some of The Black Crowes reborn as The Magpie Salute. Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson, Cosey Fanny Tutti, Angaleena Presley, Rod Stewart, T.Rex and Klaus Dinger in reviews. And another one of Peter Watts’ vivid explorations of the counterculture, as he uncovers the hippy generation’s infatuation with Morocco. “It’s strong stuff,” he learns. “The sights are strong, the music is strong, the drugs are strong and the lifestyle is strong.”

A bit like Camden in 1993, allegedly…

Paul McCartney announces cassette release for Record Store Day

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Paul McCartney has announced a Record Store Day exclusive.

A limited edition three-song cassette of McCartney and Elvis Costello‘s Flowers In The Dirt demos will be made available at participating RSD stores on April 22.

The limited edition cassette-only release features “I Don’t Want To Confess“, “Shallow Grave” and “Mistress And Maid“.

The demos will be made available digitally only as part of the Deluxe Edition of Flowers In The Dirt.

Speaking about these tracks McCartney said: “The demos are red hot off the skillet and that’s why we wanted to include them on this boxed set. What’s great about these songs is that they’ve just been written. So there’s nothing more hot off the skillet as I say. So that was the kind of great instant thing about them. I hadn’t listened to them in ages but when I did I knew we had to put them out. We made a little tape of them and sent them to Elvis, who loved them too. We said we should put out an EP or something and now the moment’s finally arrived.”

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

Tinariwen – Elwan

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From The Clash to Public Enemy, from Thin Lizzy to the Manic Street Preachers, there has always been a strain of rock’n’roll mythology that has fostered the metaphor of the rock band as military comrades – brothers in arms, outlaws, renegades, hunkering down behind enemy lines as they deliver volley after volley of sonic terrorism. Tinariwen – the Tuareg heavy rock outfit from Mali – seemed to be the first band that actually brought this metaphor to life. They spent their formative years in the early 1980s training in Libya as military insurgents under the auspices of Colonel Gaddafi, who saw the Tuareg as useful allies in his quest for regional supremacy.

In the years since the Libyan dictator’s downfall, things have got extremely complicated for the traditionally nomadic Tuareg people. Spread out, like the Kurds, among several countries that are hostile to them – Mali, Niger, Libya, Algeria, Burkina Faso, even part of Nigeria – they have fallen victim to the power vacuums caused by the Arab Spring.

In Tinariwen’s home nation of Mali, it has resulted in an ugly three-way civil war. The separatist Tuareg political and military organisation that Tinariwen are identified with, the National Movement for the Liberation of Awazad (or the MNLA, to use its French acronym) are fighting regional battles with Al Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), while both organisations are also fighting against a government in Bamako who are supported by the French army. To complicate things further, some Tuareg have joined government forces; other factions in the (usually secular) MNLA have allied themselves with Islamists who want to violently impose Sharia law on the region, like Iyad Ag Ghali’s Ansar Dine.

Many Tuareg have fled Mali for refugee camps. Tinariwen themselves have been in a state of flux, living on the Mali/Algeria border and recording this album in France, Morocco and California. They have frequently been targeted by Islamists who are hostile to musicians: their guitarist Abdallah Ag Lamida, was captured by fundamentalists for several months before being released.

It’s a situation that Tinariwen cannot help but address on their latest album, Elwan, which translates – in the Tamashek language in which they sing – as “the elephants”. The lyrics of “Ténére Taqqal” (“What has become of the desert”) are the most poetic and the most politically charged on the album. “The desert has become an upland of thorns/Where elephants fight each other/Crushing tender grass underfoot,” it begins, over a spidery guitar drone, a wobbly, Jaco Pastorius-style bassline and a delightfully sluggish 12/8 rhythm. Here, the elephants of the album title are the rampaging enemy, with the gazelles and birds the vanquished commoners. “The strongest impose their will/And leave the weakest behind”.

To a great extent, all Tinariwen songs have the same roots. Most are harmonically simple compositions, in a minor key, where several guitarists create a pleasing mesh of arpeggios on electric guitars. Over a clatter of complex polyrhythms, a chorus of male vocalists growl, miserably and melancholically, with the occasional frenzied “whoop” coming in after the second chorus. But, just as there’s something wrong with Motörhead playing with a symphony orchestra, or Black Sabbath doing a disco single, there’s no need for Tinariwen to deviate from this template too much, although there is development of the subtle variety. Bassist Eyadou Ag Leche provides a grinding, propulsive underscore to tracks like “Sastanaqqam” (“I Question You”, a fearsomely funky track by Abdallah Ag Alhousseyni, outlining the love-hate relationship with the desert), or “Imidiwàn n-àkall-in” (“Friends From My Own Land”, Ibrahim Ag Alhabib’s one-chord groove that mourns how “My own people have abandoned their ancestral ways/All that’s left is a groaning land/Full of old people and children”).

On the Ry Cooder-ish blues of “Ittus” (“Our goal”), written and sung by one of the new boys, Alhassane Ag Touhami, the politics are unusually bald. “I ask you, what is our goal/It is the unity of our nation/and to carry our standard high”. Here it’s an advantage to not understand the lyrics: what translates as a dry resolution from a party political conference takes on a musical power and resonance. Elsewhere, the militancy has been replaced by a slow-burning, brooding sadness. Even without reading the translations, songs like the haunted “Fog Edaghan” (‘On the mountain tops’) or the desolate, Fleetwood Mac-style blues of “Nizzagh Ijbal” (‘I live in the mountains’) that speak of loneliness; of the yawning desert of the heart, the empty land of the mind.

Tinariwen might have emerged from a heavily matriarchal Tuareg society and acknowledge inspiration from many female musicians – including the Tartit singer Fadimata “Disco” Walett Oumar – but their brand of combat rock doesn’t usually mention women at all. That’s changed a lot on Elwat. On “Talyat” (“Girl”), Abdallah Ag Alhousseyni sings a simple, lovelorn lyric for a “light-skinned girl/with blossoming face/coming out of her tent/dressed in a robe I know well”. “Assawt” translates as “The Voice Of Tamasheq Women” and again, it’s a light piece of folk-funk that reads like a piece of Soviet feminism. “That’s the voice of the Tamashek women/Searching for their freedom,” sings Abdallah. “Those are the thoughts of the old women/living in a Sahara devoid of water… my wish is for it to stop being subservient”.

Just as their last album, 2014’s Emmaar, featured guest slots from the likes of Josh Klinghoffer and Saul Williams, the tracks here recorded at the Joshua Tree in California feature several American fans. Matt Sweeney, Kurt Vile and Alain Johannes add to the tangle of guitars on tracks like “Tiwàyyen” and “Talyat”, while Mark Lanegan lends his distinctive baritone to “Nànnuflày”. But it’s the haunted croak of the band’s main singers, Ibrahim and Abdallah, that are the main draw: the sound of heartbroken gangleader, the world-weary soldier, bravado replaced by tenderness. It’s a sound that suits them perfectly.


Q&A
Eyadou Ag Leche (bass)
Why is the album called The Elephants?

The elephants symbolise the plagues of our people – big corporation, terrorists, radical Islamists, corrupted states etc. Our people, the Tuareg, are fighting since the 1960s and, in 2016, the issues are the same, or even worse. But we will still fight, look for peace and humanity. We will stay standing up again and again…

How political is this album?
I don’t know if you can call our songs “political songs”. These are just songs about what we are living everyday us and our people. Everything is political and nothing is political. This is our life.

Do you see Tinariwen continuing indefinitely, like a football team – constantly replenishing itself with new members?
Tinariwen have always been a big family of musicians since almost 30 years. Founder members like Japonais, Kedou, Intiyeden, Intidao have left: founder guitarists/composers like Ibrahim and Hassan are still in the band; Abdallah came later, and now myself 15 years ago and now Sadam (of Imarhan) join the band sometimes. The power of Tinariwen has always been to have multiple personalities of composers and it make the band identity unique, I hope it will continue again and again, but who knows?

What did Mark Lanegan, Kurt Vile, Matt Sweeney et al brought to the recordings?
We meet a lot of great artists on the road, and a lot of well-known musicians love our music. So we are always open to collaboration with others because we think our music needs to travel around the world. Kurt and Matt came for a recording session in Rancho de La Luna in Joshua Tree for few days, jamming with us. We kept a lot of stuff on the album. Alain Johannes was with us during this session, and Mark Lanegan said he loves the band and wanted to record with us. Unfortunately he was sick when we were in Joshua Tree so he recorded his vocals later on!

Your music seems to getting funkier, particularly your basslines…
Ha ha, thank you! Maybe it is because I love James Brown, Fela Kuti and Jimi Hendrix. I love to dance too! So I think that’s why.
INTERVIEW: JOHN LEWIS

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 Pink Floyd rehearsal footage from 1969

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Pink Floyd have shared rehearsal footage taken in 1969.

The clip finds the band performing “The Beginning (Green Is The Colour)” during rehearsals before their performance at the Royal Festival Hall, London on 14 April 1969.

This clip and others are included on the CD/DVD/Blu-ray package Pink Floyd – The Early Years 1969 Dramatis/ation, which also includes a photo booklet, memorabilia from the period, and a credits booklet. Available from March 24, 2017.

You can watch two other early Floyd clips below.

Interstellar Overdrive“, filmed for the Granada TV programme Scene – Underground at the UFO Club, London on 27 January 1967
Taken from Pink Floyd – The Early Years 1965-1967 Cambridge St/ation

Instrumental Improvisation” from The Sound Of Change, a BBC TV programme filmed in London on 26 March, 1968. Taken from Pink Floyd – The Early Years 1968 Germin/ation

The band have also released a trailer for the forthcoming Their Mortal Remains exhibition.

The exhibition runs from May 13 – October 1, 2017 at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum and includes more than 350 objects and artefacts on display, many of them never before seen, including hand-written lyrics, musical instruments, letters, original artwork and stage props.

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 Bob Dylan cover Hoagy Carmichael’s “Stardust”

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Bob Dylan has shared a new track form his forthcoming album, Triplicate.

As with Dylan’s two previous albums – 2015’s Shadows In The Night and 2016’s Fallen Angels – Triplicate finds Dylan tackling the great American Songbook.

The track is a version of Hoagy Carmichael’s “Stardust“.

Dylan has previously shared versions of “I Could Have Told You” and “My One And Only Love“, which were both popularised by Frank Sinatra.

Triplicate will see Dylan tackling songs made famous by the likes of Charles Strouse, Lee Adams, Harold Hupfield, and Cy Coleman and Carolyn Leigh.

The album will be released on March 31 in a 3-CD 8-Panel Digipak, a 3-LP vinyl set and a 3-LP Deluxe Vinyl Limited Edition packaged in a numbered case.

The complete vinyl track listing for Triplicate is as follows. The CD sequence and track listing is identical to the vinyl version, but each disc has only one side:

Disc 1 – ‘Til The Sun Goes Down
Side 1:
I Guess I’ll Have to Change My Plans
September Of My Years
I Could Have Told You
Once Upon A Time
Stormy Weather

Side 2:
This Nearly Was Mine
That Old Feeling
It Gets Lonely Early
My One and Only Love
Trade Winds

Disc 2 – Devil Dolls
Side 1:
Braggin’
As Time Goes By
Imagination
How Deep Is The Ocean
P.S. I Love You

Side 2:
The Best Is Yet To Come
But Beautiful
Here’s That Rainy Day
Where Is The One
There’s A Flaw In My Flue

Disc 3 – Comin’ Home Late
Side 1:
Day In, Day Out
I Couldn’t Sleep A Wink Last Night
Sentimental Journey
Somewhere Along The Way
When The World Was Young

Side 2:
These Foolish Things
You Go To My Head
Stardust
It’s Funny To Everyone But Me
Why Was I Born

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 trailer for Pink Floyd’s Their Mortal Remains exhibition

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Pink Floyd have released a trailer for the forthcoming Their Mortal Remains exhibition.

The exhibition runs from May 13 – October 1, 2017 at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum.

The Pink Floyd Exhibition: Their Mortal Remains retrospective marks the 50th anniversary of the band’s first album, The Piper At The Gates Of Dawn, and debut single, “Arnold Layne“.

The exhibition includes more than 350 objects and artefacts on display, many of them never before seen, including hand-written lyrics, musical instruments, letters, original artwork and stage props.

Meanwhile, to coincide with the forthcoming release of The Early Years, 1965 – 1972: The Individual Volumes, the band have also released video clips from each of the separate sets.

You can watch the first two below.

1965-1967 CAMBRIDGE ST/ATION
‘Interstellar Overdrive’ from The Scene – Live 1/3

1968 GERMIN/ATION
‘Instrumental Improvisation’ – Live 6/3

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

Will Oldham: “I think about sex a lot, so why not sing about it?”

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Will Oldham may have a reputation as a reticent chap – an actor and singer who has cultivated the image of an austere, mordant, alt.country hillbilly, aka Bonnie “Prince” Billy. But, in well over an hour of conversation, he proves to be as garrulous and entertaining as anyone Uncut has ever spoken to. Sitting in his backyard in Louisville, Kentucky – you can actually hear the bright red cardinals chirruping in nearby trees – he expounds at length about ’80s punk (“it was a small step from Buddy Holly to the Misfits”); about Brazilian music (Os Mutantes, Gal Costa, Milton Nascimento, Antonio Carlos Jobim); Roy Harper (“I heard Valentine playing in a bar and then had to discover everything he’d ever recorded”) and about his unlikely collaborations with R Kelly (“a remarkable songwriter”) and Kanye West (“so crazy and so functional at the same time”). “It’s exciting to get questions from these musical luminaries,” he says, as he begins to rummage through out postbag. “And even more exciting to get questions from everybody else!” Originally published in Uncut’s Take 181 (June 2012). Words: John Lewis

_______________________________________

What are your songwriting rituals?
Lee Ranaldo
They’re always different. You can never replicate the elements that form a song. The majority of songs come as a surprise to me and tend to be about complicated things I find interesting. There are glimmers of revelations about sexuality, spirituality, physicality, musicality. Actually, I think about sex a lot – I’m sure lots of people do – so why not sing about it? These things are inescapable, so let’s sing about them. And a song is integrated with any experience.

You are best known to most as a musician and actor, but do you engage in any other form of artistic practice? Do you paint, draw or sculpt, for instance?
Alasdair Roberts
I never have, and I’ve been thinking about this a lot. The traditional idea is that the visual arts and the performing arts are the exclusive domain of a small group of people deemed “artistic” and “creative”. I’ve never subscribed to that. I feel that if one is artistically or creatively minded, then anything one does in one’s life is an expression of that. All things have the potential to be approached expressively or artistically, and I found a way of turning something that was relatively impractical into a practical pursuit. If I’d had the skills, I’d have pursued something a little more practical, and pursued it more impractically!

You played at an All Tomorrow’s Parties festival (one of the Shellac weekends). Have you ever been asked to curate a festival, like ATP or Meltdown?
Eamon, Dublin
I have been asked a couple of times. I thought it would be cool to get Madonna to play with a band of great musicians, with Mike Watt on bass and Steve Albini on guitar, for example. Ha ha. I had vague ideas to invite an Indonesian ensemble SuraSama, an Eastern European musician called Félix Lajkó, and getting Glenn Danzig to do an experimental set. But generally, I don’t like festivals. When people say: “I’m going to a festival because this band’s playing and this band’s playing and this band’s playing”, does that mean they’re interchangeable? I can’t digest more than two great performances in one weekend, so the concept is indulgent and decadent and kinda disgusting to me. And it seems oxymoronic to invite musicians that I admire to perform in such a competitive environment, where the only winners are the guys with the loudest soundsystems, like Andrew WK or the Foo Fighters. Festivals are good pay cheques for musicians, but they’re not ideal environments.

Elle

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“You always wanted a sanitized version of life,” says Irene Leblanc (Judith Magre), chiding her daughter Michele (Isabelle Huppert). Michele has just walked in on her mother in a state of semi-undress with a toy boy lover. In Paul Verhoeven’s film, Michele is constantly surrounded by desire, control and sexuality. As a top video games executive, she encourages her artistic team to more graphically depict the barbarous acts of an orc rapist. She is in the throes on an imprudent affair with a colleague’s husband. Her father is a notorious Seventies mass murderer. Meanwhile, she is raped at home by a masked intruder. “Thursday. At 3pm,” she tells a group of stunned friends with clinical detachment.

Verhoeven has long liked to provoke his audiences – in Basic Instinct, Starship Troopers, Black Book – and Elle is no exception. Michele remains determined not to give in to her anxieties about the incident, she pursues a business as usual line, maintaining a rigorous sense of purpose. Occasionally, though, her self-control cracks. Verhoeven pitches Elle as several films at once. It is partly a comedy of bourgeois manners involving the various vexing members of Michele’s family, partly a lurid thriller about the ramifications of assault and also a sophisticated portrait of a multifaceted central character.

Huppert – rightly nominate for a Best Actress Oscar – successfully navigates these tonal and narrative shifts, fusing Verhoeven’s contradictory trails into a consistent, complex performance. For Verhoeven’s part, working from a novel by Betty Blue author Philippe Djian, he is clearly in debt to Hitchcock, Polanski and DePalma – masters of black comedy and prurient melodrama.

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

Rare and unreleased David Bowie albums planned for Record Store Day

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Two limited edition David Bowie albums are being released for this year’s Record Store Day.

Cracked Actor (Live In Los Angeles 1974) and the Hunky Dory era promo album, BOWPROMO1 are due on April 22.

The former is the first official release of this ‘Philly Dogs Tour’ show from September 1974, some of which was featured in the BBC documentary Cracked Actor. The full live show is documented on the triple vinyl five-sided album, with a sixth side featuring an etching of the Diamond Dog era Bowie logo.

All of the 16 track multi track tapes were finally reunited in one place in November of last year and mixed officially for the first time by long time Bowie collaborator Tony Visconti. The live set features newly commissioned artwork with rare and unseen photographs from the 1974 Universal Amphitheatre show by Terry O’Neill and Jamie Andrews in a gatefold sleeve.

BOWPROMO1 was originally pressed in very small quantities in 1971 and featured seven Hunky Dory-era songs by David on side A and five by Dana Gillespie on the flip.

This Record Store Day one-sided release faithfully replicates the original promo featuring Bowie’s seven tracks plus five exclusive Bowie prints and new sleeve notes about this highly collectable rarity in a special presentation box.

DAVID BOWIE – CRACKED ACTOR (LIVE LOS ANGELES ’74) (3 LP SET)

Side 1:
Introduction
1984
Rebel Rebel
Moonage Daydream
Sweet Thing/Candidate/Sweet Thing

Side 2:
Changes
Suffragette City
Aladdin Sane
All The Young Dudes
Cracked Actor

Side 3:
Rock ‘n’ Roll With Me
Knock On Wood
It’s Gonna Be Me
Space Oddity

Side 4:
Diamond Dogs
Big Brother
Time

Side 5:
The Jean Genie
Rock ‘n’ Roll Suicide
John, I’m Only Dancing (Again)

Side 6:
David Bowie logo etching

BOWPROMO1 SIDED BOXSET LP
Oh! You Pretty Things
Eight Line Poem
Kooks
It Aint Easy
Queen Bitch
Quicksand
Bombers / Andy Warhol Intro

The April 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Björk. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Deep Purple, Chrissie Hynde, The Magnetic Fields and we look inside legendary LA venue The Troubadour, while our free CD collects great new tracks from Grandaddy, Laura Marling, Real Estate, Hurray For The Riff Raff and more. The issue also features Alison Krauss on her best recorded work. Plus John Mayall, Jaki Liebezeit RP, Procul Harum, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Creation, Buena Vista Social Club, Elliott Smith, George Harrison, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Sleaford Mods and more, plus 131 reviews

Hear Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy cover Merle Haggard’s “Mama Tried”

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Will Oldham has announced a new Bonnie “Prince” Billy album.

Best Troubadour consists entirely of Merle Haggard covers. The album is released on May 5 through Domino.

“Merle Haggard is a channeler who has paid ample tribute to those that came before him,” says Oldham. “He has demonstrated explicitly and implicitly his standing on the shoulders of Tommy Duncan/Bob Wills, Jimmie Rodgers, Floyd Tillman, Lefty Frizzell and many others. There are songs in his catalogue that seep solidly into the headspace of Kentuckians who grew up when I did, and beyond through his vast influence on the George Straits, Dwight Yoakams, Alan Jacksons, John Andersons, Toby Keiths, and too many others. He is not the original, but he may be the most significant junction.”

You can watch a 360-degree video for “Mama Tried” below.

The tracklisting for Best Troubador is:

The Fugitive
I’m Always On a Mountain When I Fall
The Day the Rains Came
Haggard (Like I’ve Never Been Before)
I Always Get Lucky With You
Leonard
My Old Pal
Roses In the Winter
Some Of Us Fly
Wouldn’t That Be Something
Pray
That’s The Way Love Goes
Nobody’s Darling
What I Hate (excerpt)
I Am What I Am
If I Could Only Fly

The April 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Björk. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s interviews with Deep Purple, Chrissie Hynde, The Magnetic Fields and we look inside legendary LA venue The Troubadour, while our free CD collects great new tracks from Grandaddy, Laura Marling, Real Estate, Hurray For The Riff Raff and more. The issue also features Alison Krauss on her best recorded work. Plus John Mayall, Jaki Liebezeit RP, Procul Harum, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Creation, Buena Vista Social Club, Elliott Smith, George Harrison, The Jesus And Mary Chain, Sleaford Mods and more, plus 131 reviews