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Bob Dylan awarded Nobel Prize for Literature

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Bob Dylan has been awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.

The BBC reports that Dylan has received the prize “for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition”.

The award will be presented alongside this year’s other five Nobel Prizes on 10 December, the anniversary of prize founder Alfred Nobel’s 1896 death.

Dylan is the first American to win the award since Toni Morrison in 1993 and follows in the footsteps of Eugene O’Neill, TS Eliot, William Faulkner, Ernest Hemingway and John Steinbeck.

The Guardian reports that, earlier today, Ladbrokes has Ngugi wa Thiong’o as as favourite at 7/2, with Haruki Murakami tied with the Syrian poet Adonis at 6/1.

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Lego launches Beatles’ Yellow Submarine set

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The BeatlesYellow Submarine has been immortalized in Lego.

The 550-piece kit features Lego models of John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr.

The set was the suggestion of Kevin Szeto, who put forward the request to the toy company’s ideas section.

Szeto said, “As an amateur musician and songwriter, I have always been drawn to the music of The Beatles. The creation of the Yellow Submarine model was really my way of showing my affection for The Beatles, as well as trying to pay a small tribute to The Beatles phenomenon. The Yellow Submarine is bright, fun, and colourful, which also made it a good subject to translate into LEGO form.”

Lego designer Justin Ramsden said seeing The Beatles in Lego form “is a dream come true”.

He added: “I watched the film when I was younger and was really inspired by how it oozed so much imagination – comparable to how I view Lego elements.

“I’m also a massive fan of The Beatles, having grown up with their music all my life, so to see The Beatles in Lego form is a dream come true.”

The Lego set will be available worldwide in stores from November 1 at a cost of £49.99 (US$60).

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Hear Stevie Nicks previously unreleased demo for “Bella Donna”

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Stevie Nicks will release deluxe editions of her first two solo albums Bella Donna and The Wild Heart.

Alongside newly remastered audio, the sets contain live and unreleased tracks and rarities. Both will be available from November 4 on Rhino.

We’re delighted to preview one of those unreleased tracks: a demo for “Bella Donna“, from Nicks’ 1981 album of the same name.

Bella Donna: Deluxe Edition track listing:
Disc One: Original Album
“Bella Donna”
“Kind Of Woman”
“Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around” – with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
“Think About It”
“After The Glitter Fades”
“Edge Of Seventeen”
“How Still My Love”
“Leather And Lace”
“Outside The Rain”
“The Highwayman”

Disc Two: Bonus Tracks
“Edge Of Seventeen” – Early Take *
“Think About It” – Alternate Version *
“How Still My Love” – Alternate Version *
“Leather And Lace” – Alternate Version *
“Bella Donna” – Demo *
“Gold And Braid” – Unreleased Version *
“Sleeping Angel” – Alternate Version *
“If You Were My Love” – Unreleased Version *
“The Dealer” – Unreleased Version *
“Blue Lamp” – From Heavy Metal Soundtrack
“Sleeping Angel” – From Fast Times At Ridgemont High Soundtrack

Disc Three: Live 1981
“Gold Dust Woman”
“Gold And Braid”
“I Need To Know”
“Outside The Rain”
“Dreams”
“Angel” *
“After The Glitter Fades”
“Leather And Lace” *
“Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around”
“Bella Donna” *
“Sara”
“How Still My Love” *
“Edge Of Seventeen”
“Rhiannon”

The Wild Heart: Deluxe Edition tracklisting:
Disc One: Original Album
“Wild Heart”
“If Anyone Falls”
“Gate And Garden”
“Enchanted”
“Nightbird”
“Stand Back”
“I Will Run To You” – with Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
“Nothing Ever Changes”
“Sable On Blond”
“Beauty And The Beast”

Disc Two: Bonus Tracks
“Violet And Blue” – from Against All Odds Soundtrack
“I Sing For The Things” – Unreleased Version *
“Sable On Blond” – Alternate Version *
“All The Beautiful Worlds” – Unreleased Version *
“Sorcerer” – Unreleased Version *
“Dial The Number” – Unreleased Version *
“Garbo” – B-side
“Are You Mine” – Demo *
“Wild Heart” – Session *

* previously unreleased

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

The Who’s new My Generation box set comes with previously unreleased tracks

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The Who have announced details of a new box set celebrating their debut album, My Generation.

The Super Deluxe Edition features unreleased songs, demos, mixes, remasters, new notes from Pete Townshend, 80 page book, rare memorabilia and much more.

A 5CD box set is released on November 18 with 3LP and 2LP editions following on February 10, 2017.

Of the super deluxe box set Pete Townshend says, “Gathering these demos for this collection has been enjoyable; it’s wonderful for me to have these tapes made fifty-two years ago to listen to. I hope you enjoy them. They have a naiveté and innocence, a simplicity and directness, and an ingenuousness that reveals me as a young man struggling to keep up with the more mature and developed men around me. What an incredible group of strong, talented, young and engaging men they were!”

The album contains three previously unreleased songs – “The Girls I Could Have Had”, “As Children We Grew”, “My Own Love” alongside previously unheard demos and mixes.

My Generation Super Deluxe track listing:
CD1: Original album (mono mixes)
Out In The Street
I Don’t Mind
The Good’s Gone
La-La-La Lies
Much Too Much
My Generation
The Kids Are Alright
Please, Please, Please
It’s Not True
I’m A Man
A Legal Matter
The Ox

CD2: Original album (new stereo mixes)
Out In The Street
I Don’t Mind
The Good’s Gone
La-La-La Lies
Much Too Much
My Generation
The Kids Are Alright
Please, Please, Please
It’s Not True
I’m A Man
A Legal Matter
The Ox

CD3: Mono mixes – bonus tracks
I Can’t Explain
Bald Headed Woman
Daddy Rolling Stone
Leaving Here
Lubie, Come Back Home
Shout And Shimmy
(Love Is Like A) Heatwave
Motoring
Anytime You Want Me
Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere
Instant Party Mixture
Circles
Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere (French EP Mix)
Out In the Street (Alt guitar break)
Out In the Street (Alt early vocal)
I Don’t Mind (Full Length)
The Good’s Gone (Full Length)
My Generation (Alt version)
I’m A Man (V2 – Early vocal)
Daddy Rolling Stone (alt. take)
Lubie (Alt Mix)
Shout And Shimmy (Alt mix)
Circles (Alt Mix)

CD4: Stereo mixes – bonus tracks
Out In The Street (Alt – Take 1)
I Don’t Mind (Full Length Version)
The Good’s Gone (Full Length Version)
My Generation (Instrumental Version)
The Kids Are Alright (Alt – Take 1)
I Can’t Explain
Bald Headed Woman
Daddy Rolling Stone
Daddy Rolling Stone (Alt version)
Leaving Here
Lubie, Come Back Home
Shout And Shimmy
(Love Is Like A) Heatwave
Motoring
Anytime You Want Me
Instant Party Mixture
Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere
Circles (New Mix)
Daddy Rolling Stone (Alt Take B – New Mix)
Out In The Street (Alt Take 2)
I’m A Man (Alt – New Mix)

CD5: The Demos
My Generation (V 3)
My Generation (V 2 – fragment)
The Girls I Could’ve Had
It’s Not True
As Children We Grew
Legal Matter
Sunrise (V 1)
Much Too Much
My Own Love
La-La-La- Lies
The Good’s Gone

My Generation 3 LP set track listing:
Disc One: Original LP – Mono mixes
Side 1
Out In The Street
I Don’t Mind
The Good’s Gone
La-La-La Lies
Much Too Much
My Generation

Side 2
The Kids Are Alright
Please, Please, Please
It’s Not True
I’m A Man
A Legal Matter
The Ox

Disc Two; Mono bonus tracks
Side 1
I Can’t Explain
Bald Headed Woman
Daddy Rolling Stone
Leaving Here
Lubie, Come Back Home
Shout And Shimmy

Side 2
(Love Is Like A) Heatwave
Motoring
Anytime You Want Me
Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere
Instant Party Mixture
Circles

Disc Three; Demos
Side 1
My Generation (V 3)
My Generation (V 2 – fragment)
The Girls I Could’ve Had
It’s Not True
As Children We Grew
Legal Matter

Side 2
Sunrise (V 1)
Much Too Much
My Own Love
La-La-La- Lies
The Good’s Gone

My Generation 2 LP SET E-commerce exclusive track listing:
Disc One – Original LP (Stereo Mixes)

Side 1
Out In The Street
I Don’t Mind
The Good’s Gone
La-La-La Lies
Much Too Much
My Generation

Side 2
The Kids Are Alright
Please, Please, Please
It’s Not True
I’m A Man
A Legal Matter
The Ox

Disc Two – Stereo bonus tracks

Side 1
In The Street (Alt Take 1)
I Don’t Mind (Full Length Version)
The Good’s Gone (Full Length Version)
My Generation (Instrumental Version)
The Kids Are Alright (Alt Take 1)
I Can’t Explain
Daddy Rolling Stone
Leaving Here

Side 2
Lubie, Come Back Home
Shout And Shimmy
Love Is Like A) Heatwave
Motoring
Anytime You Want Me
Instant Party Mixture
Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere
Circles (New Mix)

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

John Lennon: The Ultimate Music Guide

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A few days after John Lennon died, in December 1980, the NME’s editor at the time, Neil Spencer, sat down and tried to encapsulate the man’s genius, influence and complexity. By necessity, the resulting obituary turned out to be a lengthy and emotional meditation. “It was not merely that his songs provided the soundtrack for our lives that made Lennon the voice of his generation,” wrote Spencer, “but that they so often seemed to crystallise the mood of the times, and to do so with an honesty that was apparent in the way the man lived out his life.

“That is one reason why his loss has hit the world so hard. Like most of us he was often selfish and unpleasant, but he was never miserly with himself or his soul, at least not in the latter part of his life. He gave. He shared. And now he’s gone, we too seem diminished. The part of us that responded to the man’s essential goodness, his dignity, his openness, and his optimism will be that much more difficult to locate without him around.”

“To say he is destined to be judged as one of the great men of his age is not mere emotionalism or fan adulation,” continued Spencer and, 36 years down the line, that judgment is more secure than ever. Looking through the back copies of NME and Melody Maker, however, Lennon’s legacy seemed a little more unstable, volatile even, for much of the 1970s. For our newly upgraded John Lennon Ultimate Music Guide (on sale Thursday, available online here), alongside extensive reviews of all his solo recordings, we’ve delved into those archives and come up with some frankly amazing stuff. Lennon famously had the UK music weeklies flown out to him in New York, where he read them avidly and was prone to firing off letters to them, usually about the persistent rumours of a Beatles reunion – though he was inclined to pass comment on anything that caught his attention.

Lennon also frequently entertained writers from both Melody Maker and NME throughout the ’70s, allowed them unique access to recording sessions and his Dakota apartment, and talked to them at length about just about anything they wanted to know. These archive gems offer a priceless insight into Lennon, his life and music, and we’ve also reprinted a 2003 Uncut cover story, in which Yoko recalls in extraordinary detail her life with John, who she memorably describes as a “beautiful miracle”. The memory of it is something solid inside her, she makes clear, and the thought if it or John’s music ever fading is one thing that neither she – nor, indeed, anyone else – could ever imagine.

Otis Redding: Hear a never-before-released live version of “Any Ole Way” from 1966

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Otis Redding – Live At The Whisky A Go Go: The Complete Recordings is due on October 21 through STAX / UMC.

The comprehensive six-disc set collects in chronological order Redding’s seven sets recorded between Friday, April 8 – Sunday, April 10, 1966.

Redding’s sets included “Respect”, “I’ve Been Loving You Too Long” alongside his version of The Rolling Stones’ “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” and covers of The Beatles‘ “A Hard Day’s Night” and James Brown‘s “Papa’s Got A Brand New Bag”.

We’re delighted to be able to offer you a taster of the set, in the shape of this exclusive, never-before-released live version of “Any Ole Way“, taken from Redding’s second set on Saturday, April 9.

The box set features newly remixed and remastered recordings from all the April 1966 concerts. Although some of the performances had previously appeared on the 1968 album, In Person At The Whisky A Go Go, the new collection includes previously unreleased tracks and all of Redding’s between song banter.

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You can pre-order the set by clicking here.

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Paul Weller forms supergroup with Robert Wyatt, Danny Thompson to play concert for Jeremy Corbyn

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Paul Weller is to take part in a series of concerts in support of Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn.

Weller will front a one-off group also featuring Robert Wyatt, Pentangle’s Danny Thompson and Weller’s drummers Steve Pilgrim and Ben Gordelier.

The show, People Powered: Concert For Corbyn, will be held at Brighton Dome on December 16. It’s the first in a planned series of gigs celebrating Corbyn’s policies.

lso playing the show are Temples, Kathryn Williams, Stealing Sheep, The Farm, Jim Jones And The Righteous Mind, Edgar Summertyme and Ghetto Priest. Tickets are £25, on sale on Friday (October 14).

The show is the first time that former Wyatt has played live since he curated Meltdown Festival in 2001. In 2014, Wyatt had retired from making music.

“I’m doing the gig because I like what Corbyn says and stands for,” says Weller. “I think its time to take the power out of the hands of the elite and hand it back to the people of this country. I want to see a government that has some integrity and compassion.”

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Desert Trip: set lists and clips from Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones, Neil Young, Paul McCartney, The Who, Roger Waters

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The first Desert Trip weekend took place at Empire Polo Grounds, Indio, California from Friday, October 7 – Sunday, October 9.

The Los Angeles Times reports capacity of around 75,000 per day, who saw Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones, Neil Young, Paul McCartney, The Who and Roger Waters perform at the festival.

Dylan opened the weekend, performing “Rainy Day Women #12 & 35” at the piano, closing with “Masters Of War”.

He was followed by the Stones, whose set featured several surprises. The ban covered The Beatles’ “Come Together” and performing Eddie Taylor’s “Ride ‘Em On Down” for the first time since the early Sixties; the song appears on their forthcoming Blue & Lonesome album.

Other surprises included Neil Young joining Paul McCartney on the Saturday for three songs, “A Day in the Life”, “Give Peace a Chance” and “Why Don’t We Do It in the Road?”.

The same artists return for a second weekend on October 14, 15 and 16.

Friday, October 7
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LEuxQ9mEY84

Bob Dylan set-list:
Rainy Day Women #12 & 35
Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right
Highway 61 Revisited
It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue
High Water (For Charley Patton)
Simple Twist of Fate
Early Roman Kings
Love Sick
Tangled Up in Blue
Lonesome Day Blues
Make You Feel My Love
Pay in Blood
Desolation Row
Soon After Midnight
Ballad of a Thin Man

Encore
Masters of War

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lsv27YNj904

Rolling Stones set-list:
Start Me Up
You Got Me Rocking
Out of Control
Ride ‘Em on Down
Mixed Emotions
Wild Horses
It’s Only Rock ‘n’ Roll (But I Like It)
Come Together
Tumbling Dice
Honky Tonk Women
Slipping Away
Little T&A
Midnight Rambler
Miss You
Gimme Shelter
Sympathy for the Devil
Brown Sugar
Jumpin’ Jack Flash

Encore
You Can’t Always Get What You Want
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction

Saturday, October 8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hOh5ETyyKuE

Neil Young and Promise Of The Real set-list:
After the Gold Rush
Heart of Gold
Comes a Time
Mother Earth (Natural Anthem)
Out on the Weekend
Human Highway
Neighborhood
Show Me
Harvest Moon
Words
Walk On
Texas Rangers
Powderfinger
Down by the River
Seed Justice
Peace Trail
Welfare Mothers

Encore
Rockin’ in the Free World

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DX1pQuzmbt0

Paul McCartney set-list:
A Hard Day’s Night
Jet
Can’t Buy Me Love
Letting Go
Day Tripper
Let Me Roll It
I’ve Got a Feeling
My Valentine
Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five
Maybe I’m Amazed
We Can Work It Out
In Spite of All the Danger
I’ve Just Seen a Face
Love Me Do
And I Love Her
Blackbird
Here Today
Queenie Eye
Lady Madonna
FourFiveSeconds
Eleanor Rigby
Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!
A Day in the Life
Give Peace a Chance
Why Don’t We Do It in the Road?
Something
Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da
Band on the Run
Back in the U.S.S.R.
Let It Be
Live and Let Die
Hey Jude

Encore
I Wanna Be Your Man
Helter Skelter
Golden Slumbers
Carry That Weight
The End

Sunday, October 9

The Who set-list:
I Can’t Explain
The Seeker
Who Are You
The Kids Are Alright
I Can See for Miles
My Generation
Behind Blue Eyes
Bargain
Join Together
You Better You Bet
5:15
I’m One
The Rock
Love, Reign O’er Me
Eminence Front
Amazing Journey
Sparks
The Acid Queen
Pinball Wizard
See Me, Feel Me
Baba O’Riley
Won’t Get Fooled Again

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2bfnxztWUVo

Roger Waters set-list:
Speak to Me
Breathe
Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun
One of These Days
Time
Breathe (Reprise)
The Great Gig in the Sky
Money
Us and Them
Fearless
You’ll Never Walk Alone
Shine On You Crazy Diamond (Parts I-V)
Welcome to the Machine
Have a Cigar
Wish You Were Here

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Radiohead’s scrapped Third Man sessions: “Not Worth Waiting For,” says Ed O’Brien

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Radiohead‘s Ed O’Brien has explained why the band’s 2012 recording session at Jack White‘s Third Man Records has never been released.

In 2012, White confirmed that the band had recorded at his Nashville studio but stated that he had not personally worked with them on the music.

Speaking on BBC Radio 6 Music‘s programme, The First Time With, O’Brien told presenter Matt Everitt about why the Third Man session hasn’t seen the light of day, saying: “I don’t know. It was alright. It was OK. I can’t really remember. It was really fun. Jack was so hospitable, him and his engineer—he records everything on 8-track. Listen, it’s not worth waiting for. If anything was amazing, you can be sure—we’d try and put it out.”

Listen to the full interview by clicking here.

Last month, a new, unheard Radiohead song “Ill Wind” appeared online from the special edition of A Moon Shaped Pool.

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Pink Floyd reissue Animals on vinyl for the first time in 20 years

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Pink Floyd continue the reintroduction of their catalogue on vinyl with Animals, which has remastered from the original analogue master tapes and reissued on vinyl for the first time in over 20 years.

Wish You Were Here and The Dark Side Of The Moon are also back in stock on vinyl from October 14th and November 4th respectively.

Also released on November 11 is The Early Years 1965-1972, a deluxe 27-disc boxset featuring 7 individual book-style packages, including never before released material. In addition to the deluxe set, a 2-CD highlights album called The Early Years – Cre/ation will also be available.

The band have also revealed a video for the 2016 Remix of “Childhood’s End” from The Early Years 1965-1972 box.

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Reviewed: War On Everyone

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“If you ain’t got a good script, you ain’t got shit,” says one character in John Michael McDonagh’s latest film; a bold assessment, as it turns out. In cahoots with actor Brendan Gleeson, McDonagh’s previous films, The Guard and Calvary, explored the rich landscape of Ireland and the idiosyncratic characters one might encounter there. War On Everyone finds a shifting of gears and a new geographical setting: America.

In 2012, McDonagh’s brother Martin made his American debut with the uneven Seven Psychopaths – would his sibling make a smoother transition Stateside?

War On Everyone follows the exploits of Terry (Alexander Skarsgård) and Bob (Michael Peña), two corrupt cops working a beat in New Mexico. After a series of suspensions, they are on their last chance when they get a whiff of a bank heist involving a dastardly British aristocrat and his dandyish sidekick; events then take a turn for the worst.

Evidently, McDonagh is enjoying himself here – his dialogue is crisp and funny and Skarsgård and Peña enjoy the bants. “The world is full of injustices,” Terry counsels one aggrieved perp. “Call Amnesty International,” suggests Bob. McDonagh drops in amusingly incongruous references to Conrad, Diaghilev and Van Gogh, among others; a brief trip to Iceland proves comically rewarding. It is fun enough, but it lacks the richness and complexity of McDonagh’s earlier work. It also lacks a conspirator like Gleeson, whose spirit, heart and substance is missing here.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

The 34th Uncut Playlist Of 2016

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Lots to get through today, so here’s a quick summary of the new arrivals. Best Dungen in a while… A new one from Jim James (I think I currently prefer his solo work to his My Morning Jacket stuff)… The amazing Solange album (please, please give “Cranes In The Sky” a try)… Major Stars and Calvin Johnson?Dub Narcotic albums incoming… Yet another Oh Sees album… THE ROLLING STONES (allow me one day to make a case for what a decent album “A Bigger Bang” was, by the way)… And, just as I began to put this list together, the Gillian Welch official bootleg set turned up. I’m playing that one as I type, and will write more further down the line

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Dungen – Häxan (Smalltown Supersound)

2 Jim James – Eternally Even (ATO/Capitol)

3 Lambchop – FLOTUS (City Slang/Merge)

4 Solange – A Seat At The Table (RCA)

5 Major Stars – Motion Set (Drag City)

6 Calvin Johnson’s Selector Dub Narcotic – This Party Is Just Getting Started (K Records)

7 Iggy Pop – New Values (Arista)

8 NxWorries (Anderson Paak & Knxwledge) – Yes Lawd! (Stones Throw)

9 Psychic Temple – Psychic Temple II (Asthmatic Kitty)

10 Phish – Big Boat (Jemp)

11 Hiss Golden Messenger – Heart Like A Levee (Merge)

12 Thee Oh Sees – An Odd Entrances (Castle Face)

13 The Rolling Stones – Just Your Fool (Polydor)

14 Andy Shauf – The Party (Anti-)

15 The Lemon Twigs – Do Hollywood (4AD)

16 Feral Ohms – Live In San Francisco (Castle Face)

17 Leonard Cohen – You Want It Darker (Columbia)

18 Loscil – Monument Builders (Kranky)

19 Gillian Welch – Boots No 1: The Official Revival Bootleg (Acony)

Oasis on Be Here Now: “This record ain’t going to surprise many people”

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Liam Gallagher loves his wife, Tina Turner and Neighbours, hates sleep and Andy Bell’s band, and is anxious to show he’s not frightened of aliens. Noel Gallagher, meanwhile, has a lot to say about fame, drugs, the government, the bonding rituals of Paul Weller, the future of Oasis – and even their new album, Be Here Now. TED KESSLER switches on the tape recorder, opens the Hooch bottles and listens, amazed…

Originally published in the 12/7/97 issue of NME, and reprinted in Uncut’s Oasis Ultimate Music Guide – buy a copy now while stocks last…

_________________________

They need to be themselves, they can’t be no-one else. Well, maybe. Right now, bustling through the photo studio’s huge steel doors in a flurry of green and blue, Noel and Liam Gallagher are each other. Same hair, same scowl, same swagger, same security guards: brothers. In matching Kangol parkas.

“I swear I didn’t know he was going to wear his,” says Noel, fingering his designer logo. “Do you think I’d have turned up wearing the same clobber as that cunt on purpose?”

“Yeah, right,” smirks Liam, “you were on the phone to Pats going, ‘What’s he wearing, what’s he wearing? I’ve got to make sure it matches.’”

Noel rolls his eyes. “Er, right. We should make sure we get some money off Kangol for this.”

“Too right! Can’t wear anything these days.”

“Yeah,” agrees Noel. “Can’t wear anything these days without someone trying to give us money for it. Bloody terrible, that is. Do you want a sarnie?”

“No, but I’m mad for a beer.” Liam swivels around looking for his security guard. “Get
us a couple of beers, mate. I’m going to hit fucking Paris tonight! I’ve been in for three days and nights doing fuck all, just watching Neighbours twice a day. I’m getting a thing for Helen fucking Daniels and it’s not healthy! I am gasping for a proper night out. It’s going to be top!”

Noel momentarily brightens. It’s not been a great morning, but the future smells sweeter.

“Yeah,” he says, nudging his brother, “just you and me in Paris! We’re going to have a right party! Patsy and Meg will be panicking, ringing the hotel rooms, wondering where we are and we won’t be there. We’ll be out!”

“Yeah,” agrees Liam decisively, “we’ll be right out!”

But first, perhaps, a little more time in. We only have a few hours before the train pulls out of Waterloo, but these will be hours well spent, on the last day in June in a North London studio, staring out a photographer with glacial cool, before taking turns to impart wild nonsense and steely sense into a microphone. It will be time spent reflecting upon what it means and how it feels to be the two figureheads in the biggest and best rock’n’roll band of our generation as they prepare to unleash another epic record.

It will be time, too, for Oasis to step back into the ring and casually take a huge bite out of their opponents’ ears.

“I see Hurricane #1 went in at No 35,” notes Noel, chomping into his BLT and nodding at his press officer. This is not a congratulation, but an opening jab at labelmates who recently and foolishly lashed out at Liam in NME. “That’s 35 places too high in my book.”

“Hurricane #1?” queries Liam, sauntering over. “He copies my haircut and then slags me off! What’s that about? But I ain’t into this bickering between bands now. I’m a married man. I’ll just blank the cunt.”

“No you won’t, you’ll batter the cunt!”

“Who’ll I batter? Hurricane #1? Never heard of them. Isn’t that some indie band with the guy from Erasure in them?”

Pink Floyd “reunite” to support the Women’s Boat to Gaza

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The surviving members of Pink FloydDavid Gilmour, Nick Mason and Roger Waters – have issued a joint statement in support of campaigners who oppose Israel’s ‘siege of Gaza’ and were arrested this week.

The Women’s Boat to Gaza features a group of women from around the world who set sail from Barcelona to Gaza last month, sponsored by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition, a group opposed to Israel’s “siege of Gaza”.

The Women’s Boat was intercepted by the Israeli navy earlier this week, and the crew arrested. They are expected to be deported soon.

Reacting to the news, the statement from Pink Floyd reads: “David Gilmour, Nick Mason and Roger Waters stand united in support of the Women of the Gaza Freedom Flotilla, and deplore their illegal arrest and detention in international waters by the Israeli Defense Force.”

"Pink Floyd reunites to stand with the Women of the Gaza Freedom Flotilla"David Gilmour, Nick Mason and Roger Waters…

Posted by Pink Floyd on Thursday, October 6, 2016

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Various Artists – Ende Vom Lied: East German Underground Sound 1979-1990

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Recording at West Berlin’s Hansa Studios in the late ’70s and ’80s, in the shadow of the Wall, David Bowie and Depeche Mode infused their music with the monochrome gloom of the Iron Curtain. On the other side of the checkpoints, however, musicians were actually operating, and rebelling, in that Soviet dystopia.

For the subcultural East German groups chronicled on Ende Vom Lied, playing punk and avant-garde music was an act of genuine rebellion that could easily have got them banned, censored or worse if their songs were too critical of the ailing Deutsche Demokratische Republik. Without easy access to studios, groups like Herbst In Peking, Planlos and Ornament & Verbrechen were forced to primitively record themselves and release their music on cassettes, often with hand-drawn covers.

Western literature was difficult to come by, but music was a different story. “Radio waves don’t stop at iron curtains,” says Rex Joswig, leader of Herbst In Peking. “Radio was the medium – especially John Peel on Radio 1 – through which we’d hear things, as well as cassette tapes on which all the good stuff was copied.”

Christened Die Anderen Bands – “the other bands” – these musicians took inspiration from the likes of Sonic Youth, The Velvet Underground, Beefheart, The Stooges and punk, and West German groups such as Einstürzende Neubauten. With no state-approved channels for their music, there was no hope of success for these bands – they really were doing it for the music, in the spirit of rebellion and self-expression.

As a result, a sense of unbridled experimentation reigns on Ende Vom Lied: Magdalene Keibel Combo’s “Stahl Daab” is a dubbed-out, echoey instrumental, and 3tot’s “Hintere Gedanken” a twisted Weimar cabaret of piano and cracked vocals, while The Lonely Moon’s glowering cover of Tom Verlaine’s “Kingdom Come”, also covered by Bowie on 1980’s Scary Monsters, is transgressive darkwave. Perhaps best of all, Der Expander Des Fortschritts’ six-minute “Fremdgehen Durchs Land”, from 1990, moves from stentorian chanting to a grinding waltz that, wonderfully, sounds something like Can jamming with The Durutti Column.

The STASI, were unsurprisingly keen on keeping an eye on Die Anderen Bands, and Joswig tells of one band which featured two state informers in their lineup. “Two members of Firma gave information about other people to the STASI. Firma was actually a slang word for STASI… That’s the East German sense of humour.” Herbst In Peking, whose Fall-like “Parade” is another highlight, found themselves in trouble when, in 1989, they proposed a minute’s silence onstage for the victims in Tiananmen Square. “After that, the band’s permission to play was retracted because of anti-socialist propaganda.”

Most of the acts chronicled on this fascinating record, such as Grabnoct, The Lonely Moon and Andrea’s Auslauf, went quiet once the Wall came down in 1990, but others, such as Herbst In Peking and Ornament & Verbrechen, went on to success in the new, unified Germany. Either way, these pioneering groups had undoubtedly done more to smash the system than any Western punks could claim.

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

The Rolling Stones announce new studio album, Blue & Lonesome

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The Rolling Stones have announced details of their first studio album in over a decade.

Blue & Lonesome is released on December 2.

Produced by Don Was and The Glimmer Twins, the album was recorded over the course of just three days in December last year at British Grove Studios in West London.

The album consists of 12 tracks, all covers of Chicago blues songs.

The band – Mick Jagger (vocals & harp), Keith Richards (guitar), Charlie Watts (drums), and Ronnie Wood (guitar) were joined by their long time touring sidemen Darryl Jones (bass), Chuck Leavell (keyboards) and Matt Clifford (keyboards) and, for two of the twelve tracks, by Eric Clapton.

Blue & Lonesome will be available on the following formats: CD, Digital Download, Double heavyweight vinyl in a gatefold sleeve with album download card and Deluxe edition including CD album, 75-page mini-book about the making of the album and band postcard prints. It is available to pre-order now by clicking here.

The tracklisting for Blue & Lonesome is:

1. Just Your Fool
(Original written and recorded in 1960 by Little Walter)

2. Commit A Crime
(Original written and recorded in 1966 by Howlin’ Wolf – Chester Burnett)

3. Blue And Lonesome
(Original written and recorded in 1959 by Little Walter)

4. All Of Your Love
(Original written and recorded in 1967 by Magic Sam – Samuel Maghett)

5. I Gotta Go
(Original written and recorded in 1955 by Little Walter)

6. *Everybody Knows About My Good Thing
(Original recorded in 1971 by Little Johnny Taylor, composed by Miles Grayson & Lermon Horton)

7. Ride ‘Em On Down
(Original written and recorded in 1955 by Eddie Taylor)

8. Hate To See You Go
(Original written and recorded in 1955 by Little Walter)

9. **Hoo Doo Blues
(Original recorded in 1958 by Lightnin’ Slim, composed by Otis Hicks & Jerry West)

10. Little Rain
(Original recorded in 1957 by Jimmy Reed, composed by Ewart.G.Abner Jr. and Jimmy Reed)

11. Just Like I Treat You
(Original written by Willie Dixon and recorded by Howlin’ Wolf in December 1961)

12. *I Can’t Quit You Baby
(Original written by Willie Dixon and recorded by Otis Rush in 1956)

*Eric Clapton: Guitar
**Jim Keltner: Percussion

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

The soundtrack to David Lynch’s Lost Highway is being reissued on vinyl

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The soundtrack for David Lynch’s 1997 film, Lost Highway, is to be reissued on vinyl for the first time in 20 years.

Produced by Trent Reznor, the soundtrack features music from regular Lynch collaborator Angelo Badalamenti as well as David Bowie, Lou Reed, Smashing Pumpkins, Barry Adamson and Nine Inch Nails.

The soundtrack will be available on limited yellow vinyl from November 4 via Music on Vinyl. You can pre-order it by clicking here.

Lost Highway OST tracklisting is:

David Bowie: I’m Deranged
Trent Reznor: Videodrones; Questions
Nine Inch Nails: The Perfect Drug
Angelo Badalamenti: Red Bats with Teeth
Angelo Badalamenti: Haunting & Heartbreaking
Smashing Pumpkins: Eye
Angelo Badalamenti: Dub Driving
Barry Adamson: Mr. Eddy’s Theme 1
Lou Reed: This Magic Moment
Barry Adamson: Mr. Eddy’s Theme 2
Angelo Badalamenti: Fred & Renee Make Love
Marilyn Manson: Apple of Sodom
Antonio Carlos Jobim: Insensatez
Barry Adamson: Something Wicked This Way Comes
Marilyn Manson: I Put a Spell On You
Angelo Badalamenti: Fats Revisited
Angelo Badalamenti: Fred’s World
Rammstein: Rammstein
Barry Adamson: Hollywood Sunset
Rammstein: Heirate Mich
Angelo Badalamenti: Police
Trent Reznor: Driver Down
David Bowie: I’m Deranged (Reprise)

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Special Edition of Bob Dylan’s No Direction Home to include unseen footage

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A special edition of Bob Dylan’s No Direction Home is being released to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the documentary.

The Deluxe 10th Anniversary Edition contains over two hours of never before seen footage and interviews; it is also the first time the film has been made available on Blu-ray and digitally.

The new set includes extended interviews with Dave van Ronk and Liam Clancy, plus an interview with Martin Scorsese about the making of the film.

Among the other bonus features are the unedited “Apothecary Scene” from Dylan’s 1966 UK tour, an unused promotional spot for “Positively 4th St.” and a clip of Dylan playing “I Can’t Leave Her Behind” as a work in progress in a hotel room in Glasgow in 1966.

The special edition box set will also include three Dylan litho prints and a special edition magazine featuring historical articles and photos.

No Direction Home is available to pre-order via the film’s website. The physical editions will be released October 28 and the digital download from October 25.

As previously reported on Uncut, this new edition of No Direction Home made its debut at the Dylan On Film season which ran in Tusla, Oklahoma, where The Bob Dylan Archive is housed in the University of Tulsa.

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Jenny Hval – Blood Bitch

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Throughout her career, Jenny Hval has seemed to take pleasure in picking the scabs off our futile inhibitions. On Blood Bitch, however, as its uncompromising title suggests, the Oslo-based musician has picked one of the last taboos: menstruation.

It’s not a topic that’s new to her, as her low-key debut, To Sing You Apple Trees (2006), will attest. Released under the pseudonym Rockettothesky in 2006, it offered a set of gorgeous melodies delivered in a sweet, girlish voice to an appealingly quirky backing that ranged from confessional to indie-pop. These rosy-cheeked songs suggested a fondness for structural playfulness, something she’s increasingly exploited since. But Hval’s greatest strength was, even back then, her lyrics. Some excelled simply for their poetry – “Leaned against the bar like a straw in a cocktail glass” (“Cigars”) – but others leapt out for their focus on ‘unmentionable’ subjects, not least the candid opening to the facetiously titled “A Cute Lovesong, Please”: “When you think of me do you masturbate?/I want to know that I can make a man ejaculate/You know it’s not pretty but you make me menstruate”.

Since then, Hval has been quietly carving a niche that’s almost exclusively hers, gliding fearlessly from mournful torch songs to musique concrète as she refines her explorations of physicality and desire. 2015’s metamorphic Apocalypse Girl stirred greater interest, not only for her resolute reclamation of the word ‘cunt’, but her latest is not only her most sophisticated, but also her most distilled. Inevitably, much of its allure arises from its lyrical complexity: few artists could sing with such tenderness and conviction of being caught in “a sexual holding pattern/Stuck in erotic self-oscillation”. But its restless, reckless shifts in musical style are just as astonishing. Much of “In The Red”’s 145 seconds are taken up by the sound of Hval panting, and a field recording of a seemingly flippant conversation opens “The Great Undressing” with the disclosure that the album is about vampires. On the exquisitely tense “Female Vampire”, however, her voice is at its most delicate, bounced between blunted synth jags and subtly driving percussion, and “Conceptual Romance”’s mood shifts from the heartbroken to the angelic, Hval swathed in pillowy keyboards that can’t help but recall 10cc’s “I’m Not In Love”.

Secret Touch”, meanwhile, finds her returning to the lo-fi simplicity of her debut, testing the limits of her voice over a beatbox rhythm as she declares that “flesh is the loneliest creature”, before going on to offer a startling confession about how kisses help her “to avoid thinking of death”. Elsewhere, her material is even more challenging, but no less captivating: on “Untamed Region”, amid ghostly wails, documentary maker Adam Curtis can be heard discussing “the strange mood of our times”, before Hval recites details of dipping her finger in blood she’s left on hotel sheets. “The Plague”, too, stitches together tabla drums, radio samples, distorted shrieks, early ’90s Norwegian black metal drones and an amorphous lullaby.

Some of it is occasionally – suitably – impenetrable. But it indicates, too, how Hval blurs what is and isn’t traditionally appropriate for musical composition, just as Holly Herndon and, in her more recent work, Björk have done. It also underlines her intent to create a narrative without Blood Bitch ever disappearing into the realms of the ‘concept album’. Speaking to Uncut, she talks of her desire for the record to “stumble into new, noisy rooms with their own life”, and this indeed encapsulates the unique and, crucially, feminine voyage it undertakes.

Nonetheless, though Hval steers us from a revelatory fascination with her body to critiques of capitalism and romantic deprivation, from lush synth-pop to knowing, mutilated soundscapes, Blood Bitch is not without its sanguine displays of humour: the knowing puns in its song titles, for instance, or the description of a doctor’s appointment in which “the speculum pulls me open/Spacing the space/ Accidental sci-fi”. Hval’s approach has always been equal parts instinctive, intellectual and whimsical, but Blood Bitch confirms her singular methodology is now at its most surgically precise and bold. In realising her uncontainable, bewildering ambitions, one might even suggest it represents Hval’s coming of age.

Q&A
Jenny Hval
What provoked your fascination with the body?

Uncontainable desire and a broken heart. And the need to create a more interesting body than the one I was given and the way it was addressed. What I had just wasn’t enough.

Why do you think so few people are prepared to delve into these topics in such depth?
Fear and good manners. But art doesn’t have good manners, so I don’t understand why pop lyrics should.

Do you think male critics spend too much time dwelling on these themes?
Yes. When you become so focussed on society’s interpretations of isolated elements in an artist’s work, it’s easy to forget that the core of mine is not themes or issues or provocation. I might seem to talk about these aspects of my work a lot in interviews, but it’s because I answer questions. And when I return to making or performing music, I’m reminded that the core of my work is desire and expressing desire. But that is harder to talk about and acknowledge.

The new album boasts a certain theatricality that’s become increasingly important to your work. Have you encountered resistance to your willingness to step outside ‘accepted’ boundaries?
I think working with Lasse Marhaug has been very liberating for me in that he is equally disinterested in the difference between a song and a sound. This also means that we’ve worked incredibly detailed with the album as a sonic narrative and a sonically moving experience, and the accessibility of the sound of boiling water as much as the accessibility of a chorus.
INTERVIEW: WYNDHAM WALLACE

The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD

Watch Real Estate perform a new song, “Harpsichord”

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Real Estate have debuted a new song live.

The band played “Harpsichord” during their set on September 31 at Project Pabst in Atlanta.

The song is potentially from the band’s forthcoming fourth album. As Pitchfork notes, the band teased new music with some in-studio footage.

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The November 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on The Specials, plus Bon Iver, Bob Weir, Shirley Collins, Conor Oberst, Peter Hook, Bad Company, Leonard Cohen, Muscle Shoals, Will Oldham, Oasis, Lou Reed, Otis Redding, Nina Simone, Frank Ocean, Michael Kiwanuka and more plus 140 reviews and our free 15-track CD