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The War On Drugs announce new album A Deeper Understanding; share track, “Holding On”

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The War On Drugs have announced details of their new album, A Deeper Understanding. You can listen to the first single from the album, "Holding On", below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LBWiMAu3uII&feature=youtu.be A Deeper Understanding is the band’s first album since 2014’s Lost In The Dr...

The War On Drugs have announced details of their new album, A Deeper Understanding.

You can listen to the first single from the album, “Holding On“, below.

A Deeper Understanding is the band’s first album since 2014’s Lost In The Dream, and their first album with Atlantic. It’s released on August 25.

Earlier this year, the band released “Thinking Of A Place” for Record Store Day.

A Deeper Understanding tracklisting:

Up All Night
Pain
Holding On
Strangest Thing
Knocked Down
Nothing To Find
Thinking Of A Place
In Chains
Clean Living
You Don’t Have To Go

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

The 21st Uncut Playlist Of 2017

I was thinking the other day what a good year 2017 was shaping up to be for archive releases, based mostly on my hammering of the Alice Coltrane ashram tapes and the Grateful Dead’s Cornell ’77 set. That idea got a big boost yesterday, though, with the arrival of a remastered, expanded edition o...

I was thinking the other day what a good year 2017 was shaping up to be for archive releases, based mostly on my hammering of the Alice Coltrane ashram tapes and the Grateful Dead’s Cornell ’77 set. That idea got a big boost yesterday, though, with the arrival of a remastered, expanded edition of Lal & Mike Waterson’s Bright Phoebus; a British folk-rock album, lost in copyright hell forever, that has very personal resonances for me.

A pleasure, then, to include the cleaned-up “Bright Phoebus” itself in this week’s playlist, along with a bunch of other and newer treats. Noteworthy: David Nance’s terrific no-wave freakout, “Negative Boogie”; the Elkhorn album (one for, crudely, your American Primitive collection); exceptional new tracks from the Floating Points and CRB albums; the Bedouine song, which is growing on me; and some new footage of the mighty Wet Tuna mid-jam the other night.

Swift caveat I haven’t added in a while: since this is a list of all the music I’ve played these past few days, inclusion doesn’t automatically mean approval (ie without making a fuss or focusing on the negative, there are one or two things here I don’t like at all). Let me know, anyhow, what you’re listening to: someone hassled me on Twitter this morning that it was time to put together a 2017 halftime report, and I’ll try and do that next week when this issue’s out the door.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 David Nance – Negative Boogie (Ba Da Bing)

2 Golden Retriever – Rotations (Thrill Jockey)

3 Elkhorn – The Black River (Debacle

4 A Tribe Called Quest – We Got It From Here… Thank You 4 Your Service (Epic)

5 The Grateful Dead – Boston 7/5/77 (www.archive.org)

6 Michael Mayer – DJ Kicks (!K7)

7 Floating Points – Reflections – Mojave Desert (Pluto)

8 Pep Llopis – Poiemusia La Nau Dels Argonautes (Freedom To Spend/RVNG INTL)

9 John Murry – A Short History Of Decay (TV)

10 Farmers Manual – Fmoto (Bandcamp)

11 Bedouine – Bedouine (Spacebomb)

12 Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Barefoot In The Head (Silver Arrow)

13 Compton & Batteau – In California (Earth)

14 Fleet Foxes – Crack-Up (Nonesuch)

15 The War On Drugs – Thinking Of A Place (Atlantic)

16 Cornelius – Mellow Waves (Rostrom)

17 Lal & Mike Waterson – Bright Phoebus (Domino)

18 The Allman Brothers Band – Eat A Peach (Capricorn)

19 Wet Tuna – Live In Albany 28/5/17 (Youtube)

20 Landing – Taeppe EP (Bandcamp)

21 Binker And Moses – Journey To The Mountain Of Forever (Gearbox)

Hear David Bowie play “Rebel Rebel” from Los Angeles 1974

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David Bowie's Cracked Actor - Live In Los Angeles album is released on June 16. This set captures Bowie's Philly Dogs Tour show at the Universal Amphitheatre on September 5, 1974, some of which was immortalized in the BBC documentary Cracked Actor. We're delighted to be able to host the version of...

David Bowie‘s Cracked Actor – Live In Los Angeles album is released on June 16.

This set captures Bowie’s Philly Dogs Tour show at the Universal Amphitheatre on September 5, 1974, some of which was immortalized in the BBC documentary Cracked Actor.

We’re delighted to be able to host the version of “Rebel Rebel” from the album – you can hear it below.

The album was mixed by Tony Visconti at Human Studios, NYC in October/November 2016. The eagle-eyed among you might spot that Cracked Actor – Live In Los Angeles was previously available as a limited vinyl edition for Record Store Day. This edition comes as both limited edition 2CD digipak and digital download.

The CD comes with a twelve page booklet featuring notes from the original LA Amphitheatre show programme and a October 1974 piece about the LA Philly Dogs shows from Rolling Stone. Neither of these was featured in the vinyl package.

The tracklisting for Cracked Actor – Live In Los Angeles is:

Introduction
1984
Rebel Rebel
Moonage Daydream
Sweet Thing/Candidate/Sweet Thing
Changes
Suffragette City
Aladdin Sane
All The Young Dudes
Cracked Actor
Rock ‘n’ Roll With Me
Knock On Wood
It’s Gonna Be Me
Space Oddity
Diamond Dogs
Big Brother
Time
The Jean Genie
Rock ‘n’ Roll Suicide
John, I’m Only Dancing (Again)

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

Welcome To 1988: The New History Of Rock Is Here!

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  This week brings another edition of our History Of Rock sister mag; to recap, our forensic project to republish the NME and Melody Maker’s best journalism, starting in 1965 and moving, at the rate of one year in each monthly issue, towards the present day. We’ve arrived at 1988, a year ...

 

This week brings another edition of our History Of Rock sister mag; to recap, our forensic project to republish the NME and Melody Maker’s best journalism, starting in 1965 and moving, at the rate of one year in each monthly issue, towards the present day.

We’ve arrived at 1988, a year which brings REM to the cover, and includes interviews with Nick Cave, Patti Smith, Robert Plant, Townes Van Zandt, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Sinead O’Connor, Morrissey, U2, Pixies and The Wedding Present, among many others. If you’ve missed any issues, you can find every edition of The History Of Rock on sale at our online shop: it makes, honestly, for a handsome collection. Here, as usual, is the History Of Rock’s John Robinson with his welcome to 1988…

“Among other happenings, this is a year when a new dance genre – acid house – helps create what is reported as a ‘new summer of love’. Still, the harmony, experimentation, and revolutionary spirit that accompanied that original summer of ‘67 is this year not only created by electronic artists – and is certainly not confined to the warmer months.

“Take our cover stars REM. In the space of a few years, they have grown from a lively and mysterious post-punk outfit into a concerned and influential rock band, backing presidential candidates and making a thoughtful pop record, Green. U2 continue to convince the fans in the stadia, hobnob with the greats, and exercise their power to effect change.

“Harmony exists between artists of different eras. New appearances by (and new interviews with) acts like Townes Van Zandt and Patti Smith illustrate how an enduring artist will always be able to find a place in music’s continuum. Robert Plant can even find the odd nice word to say about The Mission, produced by his former colleague John Paul Jones.

“Elsewhere, the parallels continue. Great new acts are mobilising grassroots support. A confluence is occurring between sonic and chemical experimentation. British tabloid newspapers, meanwhile, are conspiring to turn a music genre into a point of moral outrage.

“This is the world of The History Of Rock, a monthly magazine which follows each turn of the rock revolution. Whether in sweaty club 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 here.

“In the pages of the 24th edition, dedicated to 1988, you will find verbatim articles from frontline staffers, filed from the thick of the action, wherever it may be.

“Taking a trip to Boots the chemist for an interviewee to sort out his methadone allowance. Buying more drinks for Peter Buck, even though he’s carrying a knife. Being uncomfortably stood upon as The Mission make their journey to the summit of American fame.

“’Sorry I stood on your bollocks earlier,’ Wayne Hussey tells the MM’s man.

“Still unchanged by fame, he indicates a nearby bowl of ice water. ‘You can dangle them in there if you want…’”

The Fall announce details of 32nd studio album, New Facts Emerge

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The Fall have announced details of their 32nd studio album. New Facts Emerge will be released on Cherry Red Records on July 28. The album was produced by Kieron Melling/Mark E. Smith and engineered by Ding. The line-up on New Facts Emerge is: Mark E. Smith (lead vocals); Peter Greenway (guitar, sy...

The Fall have announced details of their 32nd studio album.

New Facts Emerge will be released on Cherry Red Records on July 28. The album was produced by Kieron Melling/Mark E. Smith and engineered by Ding.

The line-up on New Facts Emerge is: Mark E. Smith (lead vocals); Peter Greenway (guitar, synth, backing vocals); Dave Spurr (bass, Mellotron, backing vocals); Kieron Melling (drums).

Tracklist:
Segue
Fol De Rol
Brillo De Facto
Victoria Train Station Massacre
New Facts Emerge
Couples Vs Jobless Mid 30s
Second House Now
O! ZZTRRK Man
Gibbus Gibson
Groundsboy
Nine Out Of Ten

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

Dr John, Jason Isbell, Brian Wilson, Ringo Starr, Cher and more pay tribute to Gregg Allman

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Gregg Allman has died aged 69. BBC reports that Allman died at home in Savannah, Georgia on Saturday [May 27, 2017]. A post on Allman's Facebook page said, "Gregg struggled with many health issues over the past several years. During that time, Gregg considered being on the road playing music with ...

Gregg Allman has died aged 69.

BBC reports that Allman died at home in Savannah, Georgia on Saturday [May 27, 2017].

A post on Allman’s Facebook page said, “Gregg struggled with many health issues over the past several years. During that time, Gregg considered being on the road playing music with his brothers and solo band for his beloved fans, essential medicine for his soul. Playing music lifted him up and kept him going during the toughest of times.”

Many tributes have been paid to Allman since news broke of his death. Including his former wife Cher, Jason Isbell, Brian Wilson, Dr John, Ringo Starr, Bootsy Collins and Ryley Walker.

“It’s too soon to properly process this,” Allman Brothers Band guitarist Dickey Betts said in a statement. “I’m so glad I was able to have a couple good talks with him before he passed. In fact I was about to call him to check and see how he was when I got the call. It’s a very sad day.”

Michael Lehman, Allman’s manager and close friend, also wrote: “I have lost a dear friend and the world has lost a brilliant pioneer in music. He was a kind and gentle soul with the best laugh I ever heard. His love for his family and bandmates was passionate as was the love he had for his extraordinary fans. Gregg was an incredible partner and an even better friend. We will all miss him.”

https://twitter.com/remhq/status/868568025125015552

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

Paul Rodgers: “I like to be in control of my own destiny”

Reflecting on 45 years in music, Paul Rodgers concludes, “It’s been a wonderful journey. I left Middlesbrough as a teenager with a cloud over my head, with a lot of tension and aggravation inside of me that I wanted to understand, and music has enabled me to get to a point where I’m peaceful n...

Reflecting on 45 years in music, Paul Rodgers concludes, “It’s been a wonderful journey. I left Middlesbrough as a teenager with a cloud over my head, with a lot of tension and aggravation inside of me that I wanted to understand, and music has enabled me to get to a point where I’m peaceful now. I feel on top of my career at the moment. I feel actually free. In the past, it got unwieldy, with too many cooks. I like to be in control of my own destiny.”

With The Royal Sessions – his first solo release in 14 years – out soon, Rodgers weighs up the key albums in his career, from his early work with rock’n’roll titans Free and Bad Company to his collaborations with Jimmy Page and Queen.

Of all of his many, marvellous musical adventures, Rodgers says, “I look back on the early days of Free with Paul Kossoff with the most fondness of any of my bands. Because I met him at a time when I was in London and very hungry, and we believed in each other.”

Words: Nick Hasted. Originally published in Uncut’s April 2014 issue (Take 203).

_______________________________

FREE
FREE
ISLAND, 1969
For this, their second album, Free dispensed with the heavy blues vibes of their debut, Tons Of Sobs. Singer Rodgers and bassist Andy Fraser came to the fore as songwriters, while the band developed a more personal, soulful sound.

PAUL RODGERS: It was felt, by the record label and everyone, that [Tons Of Sobs’ producer] Guy Stevens was a bit too out-there. So this next LP was cleaner, more thought about and produced. Chris Blackwell was in the studio quite a bit. I did a lot of my writing on acoustic guitar, as I lived in bed-sitters, and that was really all you could play in rooms like that. So I’d bring something like “Mouthful Of Grass” along and we’d electrify it with the band, then I started to visualise how it would be with the band as I wrote. Some of the songs remained acoustic, like “Mourning Sad Morning”. If it sounds hymnal, that might be my Catholic upbringing as a choirboy! I double-tracked my vocal for the first time on that song. I was learning about being in the studio. The idea is you negate all outside noise, booth everything off. But the danger is you lose the band feel. We wouldn’t go in another room, so we could still vibe with each other. I’d close my eyes and imagine I was onstage in front of a crowd, as that’s the real telling time. Paul and I would listen to the way Albert King would sing then answer with a guitar line, and we did that together a lot. We were learning to put something together that was totally original. That was the direction on this album. We were a rock band with soul.

_______________________________

FREE
FIRE AND WATER
ISLAND, 1970
“All Right Now”, a No 2 hit in spring 1970, prepared the ground for Free’s career-defining album, also a transatlantic smash. Fire And Water balanced the folky melancholy of “Oh I Wept” with wailing soul-blues, showcasing Rodgers’ voice and Kossoff’s guitar.

We produced it, with Roy Thomas Baker’s help. We were all in it together, we felt. We didn’t need someone with a producer’s chair. We’d balance ourselves every night onstage and find the right place to be and get in the groove. That’s what we wanted the record to do. Very often a producer might crank the vocal up so it’s drowning out everything else. That wasn’t where we wanted it to be, we wanted it to sit right, where we heard it onstage. So that was the production we did.

I think we’d learned more about songwriting by Fire And Water. Wilson Pickett had a hit with “Fire And Water”, and I can’t even tell you how cool that was. Because that was exactly my intention – “I wanna write something that one of those soul guys could sing.” I didn’t think they actually would! In those days, I held them as if they lived in Paradise and I would never get to be in touch with them. “Mr Big” is a very tough lyric, I’m amazed I got away with. I used to listen to BB King, and I think I was inspired by his approach to womanhood, if you like [laughs] – his manly stance! And that song’s a lesson in simplicity. Because the simpler the song, the bigger it sounds. The notes have room to echo.

“All Right Now” was the climax of all our efforts. We did it in the small studio downstairs in [Island studio] Basing Street that everybody used to call the Crypt. The guys put the track down first. I went out to put the vocal on, and I could see Chris Blackwell and his entourage come into the control room. It was a nice vibe, actually. I could tell by the way their jaws dropped that we had something. Success took us by surprise, though. The Blind Faith tour that followed knocked the wind out of us. ’Cos from being the headliners and packing out clubs all over Europe, literally on word of mouth – we were underground, you know – our gear was suddenly being flung on these huge stages, and it was just bedlam. We were exposed to the politics of the business, just thrown to the lions. It ripped the lid off our underground pretensions, and there we were, a big commercial band all of a sudden. I don’t think we were quite up for it. We were demoralised.

Reviewed! The Beatles – Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band Super Deluxe Edition

FIFTY years on, where do you start with Sgt Pepper? How about with the ending. On January 19, 1967, The Beatles began work on a song provisionally titled “In The Life Of…”. Even in an embryonic state, with just John Lennon on acoustic guitar and Paul McCartney on piano, the song is clearly on ...

FIFTY years on, where do you start with Sgt Pepper? How about with the ending. On January 19, 1967, The Beatles began work on a song provisionally titled “In The Life Of…”. Even in an embryonic state, with just John Lennon on acoustic guitar and Paul McCartney on piano, the song is clearly on a par with the innovative studio recordings for “Strawberry Fields Forever” and “Penny Lane” that have filled the previous weeks. This new song takes in newspaper headlines and suburban drudgery; its tone is sorrowful and poignant; its structure progressive. The only trouble is, The Beatles don’t have a satisfactory conclusion for it. “Take 1” finds assistant Mal Evans counting bars before McCartney’s piano chords simply halt. Another take, meanwhile, finds The Beatles hitting upon a more experimental approach, humming a final chord in unison with a little help from their friends. The sound is striking: part churchy hymnal, part meditative chant. The Beatles settle, finally, on a climactic major E piano chord, played simultaneously on three different pianos. “Have you got your loud pedal down, Mal?” asks McCartney. “Which one’s that?” replies Evans. “That right hand one, far right,” explains McCartney. “It keeps the echo going.”

That The Beatles had the opportunity to work through ideas such as these in depth and with focus was reflective of the group’s changed circumstances by early 1967. On August 29, 1966, the band played their final paid concert at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park. Without the impositions of a rigorous touring itinerary, The Beatles could now fully explore their creative impulses within the confines of Abbey Road’s Studio 2. Back in the olden days – 1964, say – the Fabs bashed out Beatles For Sale in seven non-consecutive days between touring commitments. They could now devote over 300 hours to Sgt Pepper between December 1966 and April 1967. As a consequence, this 50th anniversary edition luxuriates in alternative takes, overdubs and instrumental versions, as befitting the first deep archaeological survey of The Beatles’ archives since the Anthology series 22 years ago. Critically, this is only the first time an individual Beatles album has been given such treatment. After all, where do you start? How about with Sgt Pepper?

The sessions that Lennon, McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr played on were never intended to be heard publicly. This anniversary edition of Pepper, then, represents a breakthrough in Apple’s thinking. For once, we can map the creative path taken by The Beatles, from shared memories of childhood haunts, through Jim Mac’s Jazz Band and Pablo Fanque’s Circus Royal, to a 17-year-old runaway from Stamford Hill, a commercial for Kellogg’s Corn Flakes and a visit to India. But if the finished Pepper album is of historical significance, is the same true of the outtakes?

This edition (now with added “Strawberry Fields Forever” and “Penny Lane”) is available as a 2CD set, a double vinyl edition and a bells-and-whistles 4CD/Blu-ray/DVD boxset. All of these come with Giles Martin’s new stereo mix of the album. In the cheaper seats, the 2CD set includes 18 complete early takes that run in the same sequence as the finished album. For those willing to rattle their jewellery, the Super Deluxe Edition – reviewed here – offers a total of 33 early takes, sequenced in chronological order, alongside the original mono mix of the album and various mono rarities. It begins with “Strawberry Fields Forever [Take 1]” on November 24, 1966 and ends with “Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise) [Take 8]” from April 1, ’67 – the final piece of music cut for the album. What a glorious five months to be a Beatle.

“Take 1” and “Take 7” of “Strawberry Fields Forever” are among a handful of takes that appeared in part on Anthology, the song’s progress bolstered here by the addition of “Take 4” and “Take 26”. “Take 1” is gossamer-light and wistful. The Mellotron lines sound like a church organ, McCartney’s bass has a pleasingly loose thwock to it, while Harrison’s piercing slide guitar and Starr’s light brushes are discreet, unobtrusive. There are lovely harmony vocals from Lennon, McCartney and Harrison that, disappointingly, never survived beyond this take. By “Take 4”, the song slips into a familiar lysergic soup, ushered in by the flute sounds of McCartney’s Mellotron. Starr’s drums are busier, Harrison is more prominent in the mix as he picks out the rhythm melody on his guitar. “Take 26” lifts off with brass, strings, backwards cymbals, swaramandala. Already a seismic creative shift has occurred, with the warm intimacy of “Take 1” replaced by a groovy trip that would be full-blown psych spectacle by the time The Fabs completed the song. They followed it with “When I’m Sixty Four [Take 2]”.

In comparison to the heavyweight vibes of “Strawberry Fields Forever”, this is a buoyant knees-up from Macca. But taken together, the two songs demonstrate the increasing competitive tensions between Lennon and McCartney – the difference between the former’s art-school disposition and the latter’s harmonic sweetness. They complement each other perfectly, of course, on “A Day In The Life”, which enjoys five different iterations here: “Take 1”, “Take 2”, “Orchestral Overdub”, “Hummed Last Chord [Takes 8, 9, 10 and 11]” and “The Last Chord”. The first two takes show us the bones of the song’s brilliance but, arguably, it’s the subsequent addition of McCartney’s “Woke up, got out of bed…” that provides an earthy grounding for Lennon’s weary reveries. In total, the band spent 34 hours on “A Day In The Life”. By contrast, they whizzed through Please Please Me in just shy of 10 hours.

As it progresses, the Super Deluxe Edition traces the day-by-day creative momentum of the Pepper sessions. From February 1, “Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band [Take 1 – Instrumental]” is a lot grungier, moving in fits and starts, with bent notes in the mix. By the end of the day, they’ve reached a more familiar place with “Take 9” – though the ending is not yet in place. As the song rumbles to a close, McCartney ad libs, “I feel it, I feel it, I feel it, oh baby, now I feel it, I feel it, I feel it, baby I’m free now, gotta be free now,” before he concludes, “I don’t like that. It’ll probably be another day of singing it.” A conversation about breath control follows. A few days later, on Feb 8, we catch the Fabs at their heaviest with “Good Morning Good Morning [Take 1 – Instrumental]” before the song finally takes flight and shape with “Take 8” on February 16.

Aside from the heavy hitters, the songs averagely receive two takes each here. A couple, like “Fixing A Hole” and “Being For The Benefit Of Mr Kite!”, don’t differ substantially from their finished versions. The band worked out arrangements, tempo and phrasing in rehearsal. For “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds”, for instance, all the heavy lifting took place during one all-night rehearsal session. The band only spent two days on recording. The song is nailed in a few takes, but not before Paul offers some tips on delivery to John on “Take 5”: “Sing those quicker, ‘cellophane flowers of yellow and green’.” Elsewhere there are some Lennon LOLZ on “Being For The Benefit Of Mr Kite! [Take 7]” while “Lovely Rita [Speech and Take 9]” foregrounds some lovely gospel-y piano.

There are other unexpected surprises. The instrumental takes of “Getting Better” – 1 and 12 – are as warm and airy as a spring day. Conversely, the Met Office recorded “widespread gales” on March 9 and 10, when the song was recorded. The weather had improved considerably by March 15, when Harrison oversaw two instrumental versions of “Within You Without You”. “Take 1” is a haunting devotional drone lasting over five minutes, far superior to the final album version. Admittedly, it’s strange to visit these familiar places from new directions, without the reassuring grain of Lennon, McCartney or Harrison’s voices. The original mono mix of the album is as God and The Beatles intended. The band spent three weeks on the mono mix, while the stereo mix was done in three days without their direct involvement. The mono mixes are solid, powerful and focused. The physical impact, say, of “A Day In The Life” is equalled only by the vertiginous “Unreleased Mono Mix – No 11” of “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds”. The sprightly guitar riff that opens “Getting Better” is suddenly harsher, more metallic in mono. In stereo, “She’s Leaving Home” sounds rather wafty and sentimental, but the “Unreleased First Mono Mix” here is as stark as “Eleanor Rigby”.

Accompanying all this is Giles Martin’s newly mixed stereo version inspired by the original mono. It means everything is fuller and better balanced. The title track comes across as far more acidic and frantic, propelled by McCartney’s spitting lead guitar. “Within You Without You” appears a more urgent exploration of raga motifs; a rabbit hole into the mystic realms. Even “A Day In The Life” offers new perspectives, from the ingenuity of Ringo’s fills in the first 90 seconds to the harmonic complexity of Paul’s basslines. The clarity of Giles Martin’s work illustrates the continual, corrective changes of mood and pace on Pepper; the release “When I’m Sixty Four” gives after the dense thrum of “Within You Without You”, for instance.

Running to almost three and a half hours, this is The Beatles finally, belatedly, entering a marketplace already busy with archive-raiding anthologies and boxsets. But critically it offers valuable insight into the speed at which The Beatles travelled during this period. Here they are, blasting out acid-soaked rock stomps one day, Indian ragas the next. The Beatles never worked with such unified purpose again, but what this Pepper boxset captures is the fun, intense, playful creative ferment; the triumph, in other words.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

Kraftwerk – 3D The Catalogue

Kraftwerk continue to revisit their beloved canon of ’70s and ’80s classics, digitally tweaking and polishing and enhancing. This latest reboot features live versions of the band’s 8LP official catalogue, including the first visual record of their current 3D stage show on Blu-Ray and DVD. The...

Kraftwerk continue to revisit their beloved canon of ’70s and ’80s classics, digitally tweaking and polishing and enhancing. This latest reboot features live versions of the band’s 8LP official catalogue, including the first visual record of their current 3D stage show on Blu-Ray and DVD.

The full immersive home-viewing experience requires a 3D Blu-Ray player and 3D TV, a Betamax-style failed technology that even the big electronics firms have recently abandoned. Fortunately, the Blu-Ray also works in standard 2D players, which offer a fuzzy approximation of the stereoscopic visual effects. The standard edition features a 77-minute greatest hits set filmed at various locations around the globe. Typically for Kraftwerk, the audio mix is pristine, spacious and compatible with the latest Dolby Atmos 5.1 technology. In layman’s terms, this means these exactingly assembled electronic sound paintings sound pin-point precise even on my ancient laptop computer, and positively cinematic through a regular DVD and TV speakers. Sonically, this is the cutting-edge frontier.

And yet, visually, Kraftwerk remain oddly constricted by their mid to late 20th century aesthetic. The childlike animation for the 14-minute live version of “Autobahn”, for example, features sunny motorway vistas and chrome-gleaming antique cars clearly modelled on the 1974 album sleeve artwork. It looks like a lost episode of Mary, Mungo And Midge. Likewise, the metronomic whoosh and crunch of Trans-Europe Express unspools to striking monochrome graphics of streamlined trains, meticulously detailed iron bridges and sleek railtracks that appear to swoop high over the audience’s heads as they stretch away to infinity. Tron comes to mind. Of course, all this retro-futurism is largely a conscious stylistic choice, and it can produce sublime results, but some of these clunky throwbacks feel uninspired and overly literal. The boxy typography and techno-fetishist imagery that Kraftwerk deploy on tracks like “Techno Pop” are rooted in the low-res arcade-game era.

For dedicated fans, another annoyance is how many of the finest audio-visual performances are only accessible on the eight-album, 436-minute Blu-Ray disc in the expensive deluxe boxset. Tracks like the vocoder-driven synth voyage “Spacelab”, with its Kubrick-sized 3-D panoramas of distant planets, or the serene city symphony “Metropolis”, illustrated by rolling waves of Ballardian skyscrapers. Mesmerising, timeless beauty from the electronic Beatles. But too much of their genius is buried in the depths of this awkwardly conceived collection.

Extras: 5/10. Standard edition, no extras. Deluxe box set: 228-page hardback book and additional discs featuring standalone concert visuals.

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

The Other Side Of Hope

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For his latest film, the melancholy Finnish director Aki Kaurismäki appears to have broken with tradition. Previously, his films like The Leningrad Cowboys series, have largely taken place in a version of Finland that seems largely untroubled by contemporary events. This new film, however, finds an...

For his latest film, the melancholy Finnish director Aki Kaurismäki appears to have broken with tradition. Previously, his films like The Leningrad Cowboys series, have largely taken place in a version of Finland that seems largely untroubled by contemporary events. This new film, however, finds an urgent topically breaking through.

The Other Side Of Hope interweaves the stories of two men who have fled their homes. First, we meet Khaled Ali (Sherwan Haji), a refugee from Syria who has stowed away aboard a coal ship and arrived in Helsinki seeking asylum. Then there is Wikström (Sakari Kuosmanen), who has taken a less perilous, though no less dramatic, route to freedom. He has abandoned his boozy wife, won at poker and bought a dilapidated restaurant named The Golden Pint with the winnings.

In some ways, The Other Side Of Hope is a companion piece to La Havre, Kaurismäki’s 2012 film that also brought together an ageing local with a much younger refugee. Kaurismäki has often displayed compassion for the dispossessed – in The Man Without A Past, his nameless protagonist joined a community of homeless folk living inside empty container units. But here, he brings a torn-from-the-headlines immediacy to Khaled’s tale. A speech to the Finnish Immigration Service reveals the horrors he endured in Aleppo and during his hazardous journey to freedom.

The film’s tone shifts imperceptibly when Khaled and Wikström meet. Much droll humour – a Kaurismäki trademark – unfolds. Wikström offers Khaled a job at The Golden Pint, which is transformed into a sushi bar, much to the chagrin of the venue’s indolent resident staff. As the doorman, Ilkka Koivula is especially good, in that deadpan, Kaurismäki way.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

10cc announce comprehensive four-disc box set

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10cc have announced details of a new 4-disc box set. As the title suggests, Before During After – The Story Of 10cc covers the careers of Eric Stewart, Lol Crème, Kevin Godley and Graham Gouldman, together and apart. The collection starts with During // The Best of 10cc 1972 – 1978. After ...

10cc have announced details of a new 4-disc box set.

As the title suggests, Before During After – The Story Of 10cc covers the careers of Eric Stewart, Lol Crème, Kevin Godley and Graham Gouldman, together and apart.

The collection starts with During // The Best of 10cc 1972 – 1978.

After // The Post 10cc Years is a collection of tracks that came following the band’s split, hand-picked by members of the band. It includes music from Godley and Creme, Graham Gouldman’s Wax, Paul McCartney (with whom Eric Stewart co-wrote) and from Lol Creme’s period in The Art Of Noise.

Before // The Strawberry Hit Factory is a tribute to the band’s early studio productions while Before // The Early Years compiles more pre-recordings showcasing the early work of each individual band member.

The cover of Before During After – The Story Of 10cc includes a new design by Kevin Godley, and contains 40-page hardback book containing new interviews with all four 10cc members.

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

Ray Davies – Americana

For an artist so widely associated with a very English sensibility – godfather of Britpop, grandmaster of kitchen sink self-deprecation – Ray Davies has harboured a long and deep obsession with American culture. Always a significant presence in his life, at the age of 72 he has finally pushed it...

For an artist so widely associated with a very English sensibility – godfather of Britpop, grandmaster of kitchen sink self-deprecation – Ray Davies has harboured a long and deep obsession with American culture. Always a significant presence in his life, at the age of 72 he has finally pushed it to the centre of his music.

His first album of new material for eight years, Americana is an aural companion to Davies’ 2013 memoir of the same name. Through 15 songs (an expanded edition is already in the works), he traces an intimate relationship with the country which fired his imagination in the ’50s, turned his life upside down in the early ’60s, shunned him in the later ’60s, and became home in more recent decades. Americana may be unashamedly conceptual, but it wears its ambitions lightly. Davies tells Uncut his Americana is “an idea, an America of the mind rather than a style of music or the place itself”, a conceit which affords him the freedom to roam.

The scene-setting title track cribs from “Home On The Range”, recounting the explosive impact of US culture, particularly cowboy films, on the teenage Davies and his “baby brother” in their Muswell Hill terrace. Just one problem: “I can’t understand how I’m gonna get there from here.” Yet by the next song, “The Deal”, there he is, soaking up the Californian sun as a newly anointed pop star, his habitual British reticence simultaneously repelled and seduced by an unstoppable barrage of “awesome” Yankee optimism: “Feeling so fabulous, fraudulent, a counterfeit on the make.”

The mood throughout is of rueful, often humorous ambivalence. The tremendous “Poetry” – which has echoes of Cockney Rebel’s “Make Me Smile (Come Up And See Me)” – laments the brash vulgarity of the worst of Universal America, while “A Long Drive Home To Tarzana” uneasily embraces the American Dream via a haven in the San Fernando Valley. The airy chamber country of “The Invaders” relives the demonisation – not entirely without merit – of The Kinks as the thuggish footsoldiers of the British Invasion, ultimately resulting in them being banned from the States between 1965-’69: “They called us the invaders, as though we came from another world/The man from immigration shouted out, ‘Hey punk, are you a boy or a girl?’” This is a cultural earthquake with a very personal aftershock: “Things would never be the same,” not just for the world, but for Davies. A delicate duet, “Message From The Road” finds him battling time zones, desperate to connect with his wife and child back in Britain. He sings it with weary tenderness, while The Jawhawks’ keyboardist and vocalist Karen Grotberg plays the woman left at home, “out of sight and out of mind”.

One of the smartest moves Davies makes on Americana is using The Jawhawks as his core backing band. They bring a warm, uncomplicated cohesion. Given their input, and the themes, unsurprisingly the album has a prominent country flavour. “A Place In Your Heart” is a light-hearted hoedown, befitting a tale of travel, fleeting romantic assignations and wide-open possibilities; “Rock And Roll Cowboys” is an elegant country-rock waltz, piled up with Wild West metaphors; the title track is scored with swooning pedal steel. Yet the scope of Americana allows for a generous range of styles. Davies mines the blues on the swampy “Mystery Room” and the minimalist, somewhat malevolent “Change For Change”, while a brief spoken-word piece, the poignant “Silent Movie”, recalls a final meeting with his neighbour Alex Chilton, “the day before I left New Orleans”.

At times the influences are closer to home and enjoyably knowing. “The Deal”, with its familiar descending chord sequence, feels classically Kinksian; or perhaps – given that Davies wrote it during the age of Britpop – it’s closer to the sound of The Kinks filtered through Blur, a homage to a homage. “I’ve Heard That Beat Before” – a lovely, light, jazz-inflected shuffle musing on the dance between creative inspiration and domestic discord – features a snatch of “All Day And All Of The Night”, while Davies sings in his laziest Sunday afternoon voice.
He is entitled to flirt so openly with past glories. Entirely self-written and beautifully realised, Americana is a deeply satisfying reminder that Davies remains a songwriter with a huge reach, but few equals.

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

New Roy Orbison album to be released in November

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A Love So Beautiful: Roy Orbison With The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra will be released on November 3. The album is produced by Don Reedman and Neil Patrick, who also produced If I Can Dream: Elvis Presley With The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and The Wonder Of You: Elvis Presley with The Royal Phi...

A Love So Beautiful: Roy Orbison With The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra will be released on November 3.

The album is produced by Don Reedman and Neil Patrick, who also produced If I Can Dream: Elvis Presley With The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and The Wonder Of You: Elvis Presley with The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

Roy’s sons Wesley (guitar), Roy Jr. (guitar) and Alex (drums) provide instrumental backing on selected tracks, along with grandson Roy III (guitar, tambourine).

The album will be available to pre-order on CD, vinyl and digitally.

The full tracklisting is:

In Dreams
Crying
I’m Hurtin’
Oh, Pretty Woman
It’s Over
Dream Baby
Blue Angel
Love Hurts
Uptown
Mean Woman Blues
Running Scared
I Drove All Night
You Got It
A Love So Beautiful

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

Randy Newman announces new album, Dark Matter

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Randy Newman has announced details of his new studio album, Dark Matter. It is his first album of new material since Harps and Angels nine years ago, and will be released by Nonesuch on August 4. Below, you can watch the video for "Putin", which was released digitally in 2016. https://www.youtube...

Randy Newman has announced details of his new studio album, Dark Matter.

It is his first album of new material since Harps and Angels nine years ago, and will be released by Nonesuch on August 4.

Below, you can watch the video for “Putin“, which was released digitally in 2016.

The Great Debate
Brothers
Putin
Lost Without You
Sonny Boy
It’s a Jungle out There (V2)
She Chose Me
On the Beach
Wandering Boy

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

The 20th Uncut Playlist Of 2017

Swiftly this morning, as I’m meant to be writing about this expanded version of the Screaming Trees’ Dust. Slightly annoying list insofar as I can’t find any links to play you a bunch of the most interesting new things here: a reissue of a Portuguese minimalist record from the ‘80s by Pep Ll...

Swiftly this morning, as I’m meant to be writing about this expanded version of the Screaming Trees’ Dust. Slightly annoying list insofar as I can’t find any links to play you a bunch of the most interesting new things here: a reissue of a Portuguese minimalist record from the ‘80s by Pep Llopis; Bill Orcutt’s new electric solo album of Derek Bailey-ish skronk; Man Forever (especially the Yo La Tengo and Laurie Anderson collabs).

I have, though, found a taster of the beautiful valedictory album from Träd, Gräs Och Stenar, which hits a sweet spot roughly situated between latterday Crazy Horse (think “Drifting Back”) and late ‘60s Dead. And also this Jlin album, which has got a lot of critics more innovation-oriented than me very excited, is good and has this surprising hook-up with William Basinski on it.

Going into the attic now to try and find my Screaming Trees interview at Lollapalooza in 1996. Wish me luck…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Screaming Trees – Dust: Expanded Edition (Cherry Red)

2 Pep Llopis – Poiemusia La Nau Dels Argonautes (Freedom To Spend/RVNG INTL)

3 Nomade Orquestra – Entremundos (Far Out)

4 Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – Leonard/Carolyn (Domino)

5 Bill Orcutt – Bill Orcutt (Palilalia)

6 Al Green – I’m Still In Love With You (Hi)

7 Melvin Van Peebles – Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song (Stax)

8 The War On Drugs – Thinking Of A Place (Atlantic)

9 Floating Points – Reflections – Mojave Desert (Pluto)

10 Everything Is Recorded – Close But Not Quite (XL)

11 Michael Mayer – DJ Kicks (!K7)

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

13 Mark Fosson – Solo Guitar (Drag City)

14 Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Barefoot In The Head (Silver Arrow)

15 Jlin – Black Origami (Planet Mu)

https://soundcloud.com/jlinnarlei/holy-child-ft-william-basinski-available-on-jlins-album-black-origami

16  Träd, Gräs Och Stenar – Tack För Kaffet (So Long) (Subliminal Sounds)

17 Ben Lukas Boysen – Nocturne 4 (Tim Hecker Remix) (Erased Tapes)

18 Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires – Youth Detention (Don Giovanni)

19 James Elkington – Wintres Woma (Paradise Of Bachelors)

20 The Grateful Dead – Cornell 5/8/77(Rhino)

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

22 Broken Social Scene – Hug Of Thunder (City Slang)

23 Dauwd – Theory Of Colours (Technicolour/Ninja Tune)

24 Reggie Young – Forever Young (Ace)

25 Junie – The Complete Westbound Recordings 1973-1976 (Westbound)

 

 

Beach Boys announce Wild Honey and Smiley Smile rarities compilation

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The Beach Boys have announced details of 1967 - Sunshine Tomorrow, a new compilation of material from the Wild Honey and Smiley Smile sessions. The set will include a new stereo mix of Wild Honey as well as demos, outtakes and live recordings from around that period. 1967 - Sunshine Tomorrow will ...

The Beach Boys have announced details of 1967 – Sunshine Tomorrow, a new compilation of material from the Wild Honey and Smiley Smile sessions.

The set will include a new stereo mix of Wild Honey as well as demos, outtakes and live recordings from around that period.

1967 – Sunshine Tomorrow will be released on a 2-CD set and digitally on June 30 via Capitol. The new stereo mix of Wild Honey will also be released on vinyl.

The tracklisting for 1967 – Sunshine Tomorrow is:

Disc 1:

Wild Honey (Stereo):

1. Wild Honey
2. Aren’t You Glad
3. I Was Made To Love Her
4. Country Air
5. A Thing Or Two
6. Darlin’
7. I’d Love Just Once To See You
8. Here Comes The Night
9. Let The Wind Blow
10. How She Boogalooed It
11. Mama Says * (Original Mono Mix)

Wild Honey Sessions: September – November 1967 (Previously Unreleased):

12. Lonely Days (Alternate Version)
13. Cool Cool Water (Alternate Early Version)
14. Time To Get Alone (Alternate Early Version)
15. Can’t Wait Too Long (Alternate Early Version)
16. I’d Love Just Once To See You (Alternate Version)
17. I Was Made To Love Her (Vocal Insert Session)
18. I Was Made To Love Her (Long Version)
19. Hide Go Seek
20. Honey Get Home
21. Wild Honey (Session Highlights)
22. Aren’t You Glad (Session Highlights)
23. A Thing Or Two (Track And Backing Vocals)
24. Darlin’ (Session Highlights)
25. Let The Wind Blow (Session Highlights)

Wild Honey Live: 1967 – 1970 (Previously Unreleased):

26. Wild Honey (Live) – recorded in Detroit, November 17, 1967
27. Country Air (Live) – recorded in Detroit, November 17, 1967
28. Darlin’ (Live) – recorded in Pittsburgh, November 22, 1967
29. How She Boogalooed It (Live) – recorded in Detroit, November 17, 1967
30. Aren’t You Glad (Live) – recorded in 1970, location unknown
31. Mama Says (Session Highlights)
(Previously unreleased vocal session highlights. Recorded at Wally Heider Recording, November 1967)

Disc 2:

Smiley Smile Sessions: June – July 1967 (Previously Unreleased):

1. Heroes And Villains (Single Version Backing Track)
2. Vegetables (Long Version)
3. Fall Breaks And Back To Winter (Alternate Mix)
4. Wind Chimes (Alternate Tag Section)
5. Wonderful (Backing Track)
6. With Me Tonight (Alternate Version With Session Intro)
7. Little Pad (Backing Track)
8. All Day All Night (Whistle In) (Alternate Version 1)
9. All Day All Night (Whistle In) (Alternate Version 2)
10. Untitled (Redwood) * (Previously unreleased instrumental fragment. Studio and exact recording date unknown. Discovered in tape box labeled “Redwood”)

Lei’d In Hawaii “Live” Album: September 1967 (Previously Unreleased):

11. Fred Vail Intro
12. The Letter
13. You’re So Good To Me
14. Help Me, Rhonda
15. California Girls
16. Surfer Girl
17. Sloop John B
18. With A Little Help From My Friends * (Recorded at Brian Wilson’s house, September 23, 1967)
19. Their Hearts Were Full Of Spring * (Recorded during rehearsal, August 26, 1967, Honolulu, Hawaii)
20. God Only Knows
21. Good Vibrations
22. Game Of Love
23. The Letter (Alternate Take)
24. With A Little Help From My Friends (Stereo Mix)

Live In Hawaii: August 1967 (Previously Unreleased):

25. Hawthorne Boulevard
26. Surfin’
27. Gettin’ Hungry
28. Hawaii (Rehearsal Take)
29. Heroes And Villains (Rehearsal)

Thanksgiving Tour 1967: Live In Washington, D.C. & Boston (Previously Unreleased):

30. California Girls (Live) – recorded in Washington, DC, November 19, 1967
31. Graduation Day (Live) – recorded in Washington, DC, November 19, 1967
32. I Get Around (Live) – recorded in Boston, November 23, 1967
Additional 1967 Studio Recordings (Previously Unreleased)
33. Surf’s Up (1967 Version) (Recorded during the Wild Honey sessions in November 1967)
34. Surfer Girl (1967 A Capella Mix) (Previously unreleased mix of Lei’d In Hawaii take from the Wally Heider Recording sessions in September 1967)

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

Two new Twin Peaks soundtracks are due soon

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The music from the new series of Twin Peaks is to be represented in two upcoming soundtracks. Twin Peaks (Music From The Limited Event Series) and Twin Peaks (Limited Event Series Original Soundtrack) will be issued on CD as well as on double LPs on September 8 by Rhino. Rhino also recently reissu...

The music from the new series of Twin Peaks is to be represented in two upcoming soundtracks.

Twin Peaks (Music From The Limited Event Series) and Twin Peaks (Limited Event Series Original Soundtrack) will be issued on CD as well as on double LPs on September 8 by Rhino.

Rhino also recently reissued the original soundtrack to both the original series and prequel film, Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me.

The tracklistings will be revealed as the new series progresses. The show’s third season recently began on Showtime in the US and Sky Atlantic in the UK. The latest 18-episode run is directed by David Lynch.

Meanwhile, two classic Lynch movie soundtracks are being reissued on vinyl.

Blue Velvet – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack by Angelo Badalamenti is released by Fire Soundtracks on September 8. It will be available as a blue/black split colour vinyl and standard black vinyl LP.

Sacred Bones Records have announced an expanded re-release of the soundtrack to Eraserhead. This limited deluxe edition includes a 16 page booklet, three 11″ x 11″ prints, digital download and a limited edition Peter Ivers 7″. The release is expected on June 16.

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

Reviewed: some more of 2017’s hidden gems

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Lots of big names and so on in the new issue of Uncut that I wrote about here (Roger Waters, Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt included). One of my favourite things in there, though, is Graeme Thomson’s interview with Paul Major, frontman of the great Endless Boogie and, now, the author of...

Lots of big names and so on in the new issue of Uncut that I wrote about here (Roger Waters, Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt included). One of my favourite things in there, though, is Graeme Thomson’s interview with Paul Major, frontman of the great Endless Boogie and, now, the author of a lavish memoir. Face The Music: The Psychedelic Worlds Of Paul Major is a vivid tale of extreme record-collecting, and one of the stranger collateral effects it may have is to bring Major’s band, if not exactly into the mainstream, then at least a little closer to the spotlight that they so richly deserve.

In an unusual display of multi-platform co-ordination, Endless Boogie have a new album out around the same time as Face The Music and, as ever, it’s a masterclass in progressive choogling. Endless Boogie’s mission statement, inherent in their name, still holds good on what is either their fourth or sixth album (depending on which head’s counting). Vibe Killer, though, pursues the deep mantric possibilities that came to the fore on 2013’s classic Long Island, so that the title track very roughly resembles a meditation tape concocted by Malcolm Young and Klaus Dinger. There’s a new layer of keyboard funk running through the likes of “Bishops At Large”, while “High Drag, Hard Doin’” revisits the belt-buckle stomp of early albums like Focus Level (2008). But those gnarled slow jams proliferate, as Paul Major privileges gruff narratives over Beefheartian holler. “Back In ‘74”, involving Kiss, a kite-flying contest, and a herd of art students with shaved eyebrows, is a particular keeper.

A few more recent albums I like a lot, starting once again in Chicago. Ryley Walker’s productivity and networking skills have meant that most every Uncut reviews section now comes with a range of albums featuring what we might usefully call the Ryley Diaspora. This month, it was the turn of Bill Mackay, a folk/jazz/experimental vet of the Chicago scene, who duetted with Walker on 2015’s Land Of Plenty and intermittently figures in his live band. Mackay’s first Drag City set, Esker, works as a neat sampler of his unshowy virtuosity, at once brisk and mellow. Atmospheric minimalism (“Persona”) can be endearingly jaunty, while “Candy” locates a sweet spot somewhere between Fahey and Django. The Michael Rother twang of “Wail”, meanwhile, makes for a graceful companion piece to William Tyler’s Modern Country.

From a similar, orbit, Emmett Kelly’s career roughly falls into two streams: adding filigree guitar backup to the likes of Will Oldham, Joshua Abrams and Ty Segall; and auditioning as Jim McGuinn’s stunt double. That’s Jim rather than Roger McGuinn, because Kelly’s solo records as The Cairo Gang often sound like immaculate homages to the early Byrds, not least the new Untouchable; “Real Enough To Believe”, with its beautifully arching Rickenbacker break, could easily be smuggled onto Side Two of Turn! Turn! Turn! Six albums into the Cairo Gang’s catalogue, such flagrant imitation should be played out, but Kelly’s craftsmanship ensures Untouchable is a deeply satisfying 32 minutes. Segall co-produces, and encourages a little more glam/garage abandon. And credit for another groovy departure: “That’s When It’s Over”, which brilliantly fuses “Sweet Jane” and “Hey Joe” in all but name.

Regarding My Pharaoh, My King by Anthony Pasquarosa & John Moloney, the Pharaoh in question is Pharaoh Sanders, portrayed on the front cover in a suitably cosmic painting. But the homage of Moloney (veteran of Sunburned Hand Of The Man and various Thurston Moore projects, as well as drummer on that killer Wet Tuna jam I’ve mentioned ad nauseam this year) and Pasquarosa (a new name to me, I must confess) is more impressionistic than explicit. In the absence of any saxophone, they try and make sense of the possibilities suggested by spiritual jazz with an acoustic guitar and a drumkit. As a consequence, My Pharaoh… sounds more like Sandy Bull and Billy Higgins’ collaborations, aligning the duo with similar recent jazz/folk face-offs by Steve Gunn & John Truscinski and Ryley Walker & Charles Rumback. And while Pasquarosa might not be as feted as Gunn and Walker, he’s every bit their equal on swinging ragas like “For John, After Ali”.

Lastly, a very low-key vinyl-only album from British psych outlier Rick Tomlinson. Around a decade ago, guitarist Tomlinson made a cult name for himself as a kind of Lancastrian analogue to Six Organs Of Admittance, making fine psych-folk records as Voice Of The Seven Woods and Voice Of The Seven Thunders. Mostly AWOL since 2010, Tomlinson’s return, Phases Of Daylight, is a strange and lovely thing. Over eight tracks, he only picks up a guitar (acoustic) twice, preferring to create spare, devotional soundscapes using various bits of hand percussion, bamboo flutes, analogue synths, ouds and, most strikingly, a cornet. The results are at once serene and unsettling, a kind of naïve temple jazz that reaches its apotheosis on “Visual Spirit”, akin to a Tibetan Buddhist ritual enacted by Miles Davis. Miles in the Bardo, maybe?

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds – Lovely Creatures: The Best of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds 1984 – 2014

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Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds have led a career filled with stories. In addition to the coming and going of band members—whose own personalities and sounds have embellished their legacy with filmic significance—the Bad Seeds’ albums are often received more like literary works than rock’n’rol...

Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds have led a career filled with stories. In addition to the coming and going of band members—whose own personalities and sounds have embellished their legacy with filmic significance—the Bad Seeds’ albums are often received more like literary works than rock’n’roll records: studied and revered for their symbolism, characters, and plot twists. The same thing that makes it difficult for the band to represent themselves with a standard “Best Of” collection also makes it difficult for newcomers to approach their work. Their biggest hit—the beatific Kylie Minogue duet “Where the Wild Roses Grow”— was an outlier on its album, 1994’s brooding Murder Ballads. Similarly, their mostly widely acclaimed releases — 1986’s Your Funeral… My Trial or 1997’s The Boatman’s Call — are hardly representative works: albums made more canonical by understanding the context surrounding them.

Lovely Creatures, a new multimedia set that spans three decades of the Bad Seeds’ career, is the closest the band has come to offering a definitive work, collecting key tracks from the group’s first fifteen albums (it stops just before last year’s masterwork Skeleton Tree). This is music that evolves in sudden thrashes of mood and vision; placing it in chronological order only further highlights the group’s refusal to be pinned down into a narrative. From their chaotic, nightmarish early recordings to the ghostly hymns that close the set, these songs present the Bad Seeds’ unparalleled gifts for disorienting listeners and deconstructing their own sound. It’s called Lovely Creatures—a reference to a song from Murder Ballads — but drummer Jim Sclavunos finds an even more fitting term in the box’s extraordinary liner notes: these are “exquisite corpses.”

Lovely Creatures exists in a wide variety of editions. The most extensive is a 3xCD box that comes with a DVD and a 200-page book of critical essays, interviews, photographs, and memorabilia. It’s a gorgeous collection that illustrates the care and time this band puts into telling their story. Originally planned for release in autumn 2015, Lovely Creatures was shelved after Cave’s family tragedy and the resulting Skeleton Tree album took precedent. “Time became ancient history in a heartbeat as circumstances beyond my control took hold,” he explains in a brief afterword, “Now it seems the time is right to recognise the Bad Seeds and their many achievements.” Lovely Creatures excels in representing those successes. As with all of Cave’s albums, it’s attributed to the band as a whole, eschewing any extracurricular work the members have been involved in (meaning, no material from the pre-Bad Seeds group the Birthday Party, or their mid-2000’s side project Grinderman, or recent Nick Cave/Warren Ellis film scores). Even without those parts of the story, the group’s range is handedly apparent in the breadth of material presented.

Throughout the Bad Seeds’ career, Nick Cave carefully constructed their mythology, writing (and selectively covering) songs within a lineage of poetically-inclined journeymen, from John Lee Hooker and Johnny Cash to Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan. While he’s reluctantly earned the nickname “the grandfather of goth,” Cave has always aspired to more universal shades of darkness. “To be underground, you need to be extreme and you need to be doing something new,” he says stoically in a 1991 interview clip on the accompanying DVD,  “I never thought I was doing anything new.” As such, Cave’s inspiration came from the oldest concepts imaginable: Old Testament themes of love and death and grief and madness. These are subjects that reappear through these songs with the frequency of Mick Harvey’s percussive thrashes and Warren Ellis’ ambient loops. Cave’s obsessions adapted and evolved along with his music.

Whether in the theatrical voyeurism of “From Her to Eternity” or the twisted devotion of “God Is In The House”, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds always play against each other to better illustrate the visceral tension within their material. Their live shows, collected on the visual component to the box, are often where these songs came alive: a Los Angeles performance of the epic “Jubilee Street” finds the band vibrating and transforming, while the studio version merely alludes to it. Many of the recordings on Lovely Creatures explore their greatest moments of dissonance. In “Babe, You Turn Me On”, the Bad Seeds proceed with the tender whimsy of a wedding band on a beach, while Cave gets as graphic as is allowed on record. “You turn me on,” he sings, “Like an idea, like an atom bomb.” Just after, he emits a thunderous explosion into the mic: it’s unclear whether this is meant to illustrate the bomb or the idea—both equally destructive entities in Cave’s hands.

Other songs, like the vulgar “Stagger Lee” or a gnarly rendition of “I’m Gonna Kill That Woman”, illustrate the darkest reaches of the mind, exorcising demons both literal and figurative. “My songs may be using characters and the narratives may appear fictitious but they are all very much reflections of myself,” Cave has claimed, “I recognize them, with a shudder, in the same ways one sees their reflection in the mirror.” It’s the opposite answer most songwriters would give about work that portrays serial murderers and sexual deviants. But Cave has always been fascinated by the moment where fiction and real life converge. Tracks like 2004’s “There She Goes, My Beautiful World” and 2008’s “We Call Upon the Author” find him reflecting upon (and laughing at) the creative process, as the Bad Seeds explode with raucous energy. Cave’s bandmates always seem to drum up the most excitement through songs that require reflection and solitude: spoiling the mood is how they get their kicks.

But just like Cave’s writing, which evolved from narrative-based horror stories into more shapeless dreamscapes over the course of thirty years, the Bad Seeds’ performances shifted into something more elusive as well. You can hear their various stabs at maturity throughout the set. In the Rolling Stones-indebted country of “He Wants You”, led by Blixa Bargeld’s pedal steel, or the barroom balladry of “People Ain’t No Good”, they worked toward a sound that reflected their growing interest in ambience and atmosphere—not just accompanying Cave but swirling around him like mist rolling off the sea. By the time you get to “Push The Sky Away”, the final songs on the set, the group have made themselves as scarce as possible: providing only haunting background vocals and ghostly bursts of synth.

Push The Sky Away”, with a melody at once eerie and uplifting, reflects Cave’s growing interest in penning simpler, statelier records (Although, were they included, his Grinderman records, featuring fellow Bad Seeds Warren Ellis, Martyn Casey and Jim Sclavunos, would dismiss that notion entirely—with their jarring bursts of lust and violence). Backed by a band with equal capabilities to sooth and to terrorize, Cave’s songbook is reflected on Lovely Creatures as deep and rich as the mysteries that inspired it. Whether this is your first initiation to the band or a souvenir after many miles traveled with them, it makes clear that there are still many more stories to tell—more beauty and evil left to uncover.

Q&A
WARREN ELLIS, THOMAS WYDLER, JIM SCLAVUNOS

The trajectory of the Bad Seeds is a complicated story. What was the hardest part of telling it over the course of just two (or three, on the deluxe version) discs?

Warren Ellis (1997 – present): What to leave out is always difficult the bigger the catalogue becomes. That was part of the idea behind making the compilations different for the 2 and 3 set editions. The band has changed sound so often and hopefully that’s reflected on Lovely Creatures. As is the variety of songs Nick has written over the years. It’s by no means definitive.

The DVD collects some incredible live footage—some looks to be transferred from VHS and others from YouTube. How does the Bad Seeds’ live show interact with your studio output? How has it evolved over your career and why is it crucial to the band’s legacy?
Thomas Wydler (1986 – Present): To play live is completely different to the creative studio process. In the studio we create a new sound with every new record. It is not our style to play the same all the time.
Jim Sclavunos (1996 – present): The songs all take on a new life when we perform them live. First and foremost they inevitably change from the album versions when we adapt them to play them live; but then over the course of a tour and moreover the course of many successive tours, the songs continue to evolve and shift, sometimes dramatically. Even when we decide to revert to the ”original version” of a song — an earlier arrangement such as how it might have sounded on a record – it’s still somehow informed by all the other different versions we’ve come up with over time.
WE: The live band seems a very different beast to the band in the studio. On stage is where the songs are honed. Not all the songs make it. In the studio I guess the energy is more internalised and intense in a different way. The stage always brings a certain drama to the proceedings.

The deluxe set closes with the title track of 2013’s Push the Sky Away, stopping just before last year’s Skeleton Tree. Does that record feel like the start of a new era?
JS: There’s some kind of evolutionary flow that runs through the entire body of Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds output over the span of the band’s existence; but for me personally every album I’ve been involved in since joining the band has felt like a bit of a re-start, and Skeleton Tree is no exception. Whenever one goes in to make a new album I think it’s only natural to move on from where one’s last musical efforts left off but also that you will look to bring in something new and different, while keeping an ear out for ideas that somehow strike an inner chord. When you set up creative challenges for yourself, it can prompt unexpected results that keep things fresh.
WE: Hopefully each record signals some kind of new era. Skeleton Tree feels like a launch pad for the next album, what not to do and hopefully where to go will reveal itself. Skeleton Tree will find it’s place in the catalogue, live it seems to have already. It was always going to be a different kind of album.

For fans who are beginning their journey into the Bad Seeds’ catalogue with Lovely Creatures, where do you recommend going next?
TW: Get the record Push The Sky Away.
WE: Lovely Creatures feels like a good place to start. I’d suggest Your Funeral My Trial and the B sides and Rarities as a place to go.
JS: I recommend Skeleton Tree as it’s our most recent release. It captures a lot of where we’re at as a band right now and it will be key in setting the course for where we might end up next. But I can wholeheartedly recommend any of our albums as a worthy starting point for delving deeper into the band’s oeuvre; each one embodies in its own way a unique moment on Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds’ timeline.

What does the rest of this year look like for the Bad Seeds?
JS: Touring North America and Europe are the obvious focus this year; but who knows what else might come up? We’ve already done some very satisfying dates in Australia and New Zealand earlier this year, so we’re psyched for all the upcoming dates and very keen to explore what the current incarnation of the touring band is capable of.
WE: Lots of touring on the back of Skeleton Tree, The States and Europe, Australia was completed in January, and hopefully start on a new album.

INTERVIEW: SAM SODOMSKY

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.

Jack White to release children’s book

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Jack White will release a children’s book later this year. The picture book, We’re Going To Be Friends, is inspired by the song of the same name by The White Stripes. Elinor Blake, an animator who has worked on the likes of The Ren & Stimpy Show and Pee Wee’s Playhouse, has illustrated the b...

Jack White will release a children’s book later this year.

The picture book, We’re Going To Be Friends, is inspired by the song of the same name by The White Stripes.

Elinor Blake, an animator who has worked on the likes of The Ren & Stimpy Show and Pee Wee’s Playhouse, has illustrated the book.

We’re Going To Be Friends charts the adventures of Suzy Lee and her friend – characters that also appear in the song. It will be available from November 7 via Third Man Books and will come with a download of ‘We’re Going To Be Friends’ as well as cover versions by Woodstation Elementary School Singers and April March, aka Blake.

https://twitter.com/nerdsattack/status/865583319307694080/photo/1

The July 2017 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our exclusive interview with Roger Waters on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, there are new interviews with Evan Dando, Jason Isbell, Steve Van Zandt and Kevin Morby and we look at shoegazing and the Scottish folk revival. We review The Beatles, Fleet Foxes, U2, Van Morrison and Dan Auerbach. Our free CD features 15 tracks of the month’s best music, including Can, Richard Dawson, Saint Etienne, Ride, The Unthanks, Songhoy Blues and more.