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Gong co-founder Gilli Smyth dies aged 83

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Gilli Smyth, co-founder of Gong, has died aged 83.

The news was broken by her son, Orlando Allen.

He said: “She passed amongst loved ones reading poetry and singing at exactly 12pm Australian time today. She is flying to the infinite through all the bardots as we speak so all your prayers of light, love gratitude and beaming energies are a shining light for her.

“Bless her psychedelic cotton socks, she will be in our and deeply in my heart forever. One of the strongest, most loving forgiving and powerful shakti being mums I have ever known.

“I give thanks for the blessing of her her being her example and shakti mumma presence and happy she is out of pain now and soon to be with, Daevid her dingo Virgin and all her favourite animals.”

Born Gillian “Gilli” Mary Smyth in June, 1933, she studied at King’s College, London, before a brief spell teaching at the Sorbonne. In 1968, she began doing performance poetry with the Soft Machine, founded by her partner and long-time collaborator, Daevid Allen.

She co-founded Gong with Allen and Smyth also worked on spin-off projects, Mother Gong and Planet Gong.

In 1978, Smyth released a solo album Mother. She emigrated to Australia in 1982 where she continued performance poetry often under the name Shakti Yoni.

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

October 2016

David Bowie, Lou Reed, David Crosby and Margo Price all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated October 2016 and in shops now or available to buy digitally by clicking here.

Bowie is on the cover, and inside, Tony Visconti takes us on a trip into the archives, as Bowie’s lost album, The Gouster, is unveiled 42 years late. Plus, what’s next in the great man’s afterlife?

“David is very quick in the studio,” explains Visconti. “He works out things the night before, he’ll scribble things on a piece of paper, then we get it very quickly. The reason for that is he hires the best people.”

Uncut discovers the harrowing story behind Lou Reed‘s “offensive” 1977 masterpiece, Street Hassle, a tale involving whisky, speed and replica human heads. “That studio was a sight to be seen,” says guitarist Ritchie Fliegler. “You had your amp, but instead of a microphone in front, there were… heads. Heads on sticks. It looked like Vlad The Impaler was making a record with his victims.”

Elsewhere, David Crosby – returning with a new album, Lighthouse, in October – discusses the evils of Desert Trip, endorsements from the Vatican, how Miles Davis discovered The Byrds, and how he’s ready to go into battle with CSNY against Donald Trump. “I’m a bozo, man!” he tells us.

Uncut heads out on a Nashville bar crawl with Margo Price, the runaway country success story of 2016, to discover how hard times and personal tragedy led to her album Midwest Farmer’s Daughter. “My first 27 years weren’t a walk in the park,” she says, “so I look at the positives.”

We also explore the strange story of Granny Takes A Trip, and how a gang of psychedelic tailors and shopkeepers changed the look and culture of 1960s London – Marianne Faithfull, Kenney Jones, Joe Boyd, Neil Innes, Granny’s founder Nigel Waymouth and more reveal all. “We were one of the first [boutiques],” says John Pearse, Waymouth’s partner in the store. “I guess it was a time when everything seemed possible – and it was possible, because we made it happen.”

The Turtles recall the creation of their US No 1 hit “Happy Together”, while Van Der Graaf Generator look back on the greatest albums of their career – “From the outside we must’ve looked mad!”

Devendra Banhart answers your questions, while we review new albums from the likes of Drive-By Truckers, Angel Olsen, Wilco, Billy Bragg and Jenny Hval, and archive releases from Led Zeppelin, Ray Charles, Jack White, NRBQ and more…

LCD Soundsystem and Frazey Ford are reviewed live, and we catch the new documentary on The Beatles‘ touring years, alongside a host of other DVDs, Blu-rays and films.

Our front section features Wizz Jones, remembering his late sparring partner John Renbourn, Pete Wylie, Noura Mint Seymali and unseen Kate Bush photos.

Sounds Of The New West: The Class Of 2016, free on the front of this issue, continues our run of Americana CDs, and features the finest modern talents – from Margo Price to Karl Blau, Jason Isbell to Hiss Golden Messenger, William Tyler to Shovels & Rope.

The new issue of Uncut, dated October 2016, is out now.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Introducing the new Uncut

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Welcome to the new Uncut! As you might have noticed, we’ve spruced things up a little bit. The idea is really to give the place a new lick of paint, as it were; behind our stylish David Bowie cover, the biggest change is that we’ve moved the reviews section to a much more prominent position. As John’s written in his Editor’s Diary blog, the shift emphasizes a critical part of our remit here at Uncut: to champion new music and to place it within the broader context of the rich, musical traditions that we love. For our free 15-track CD, we thought we’d compliment this relaunch issue with a new volume of Sounds Of The New West – our much-loved series of compilations stretching back to 1998. The Class Of 2016 edition features Margo Price, Jason Isbell, Hiss Golden Messenger, Sturgill Simpson, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Drive-By Truckers and many more. It’s out today (23 Aug) or you can download it.

We’d love to know what you think of the new look. The address, as ever, is: uncut_feedback@timeinc.com.

What can I tell you about the contents of the issue, then? In the past few weeks there has been plenty of speculation about David Bowie’s ‘lost’ album, The Gouster. Nothing, however, has been assembled that is quite as comprehensive as our 11-page cover story. Tony Visconti talks John Robinson through the making of this album in astonishing detail, illuminating Bowie’s remarkable working practices. There are 20-page telegrams, conceptual feedback and a love of early R&B records. “With David’s music,” Visconti tells us, “you have to be on your toes.” We also take a revelatory trip into Bowie’s archives and look ahead to what come next. “David was so in control in terms of the creative,” we learn.

Elsewhere in the issue, Stephen Deusner enjoys a long night out in Nashville in the company of Margo Price, David Crosby tells me that he’d happily go out with CSNY on an anti-Trump ticket (among other things), Damien Love talks to Lou Reed’s bandmates and confidants about the sordid madness behind the Street Hassle album while Tom Pinnock discovers how a gang of psychedelic tailors helped shape the culture of Swinging London.

In our regulars, Devendra Banhart talks about hard times on the streets of Paris, military coups in Venezuela and the alien lifeforms within us in An Audience With…, The Turtles remember the Making Of “Happy Together”, Van Der Graaf Generator recall their deep, intense musical journey in Album By Album, and King Creosote’s Kenny Anderson shares his favourite songs in My Life In Music.

Our typically busy reviews pages includes new albums from Drive-By Truckers, Angel Olsen, Wilco, Shovels & Rope, Ultimate Painting, Billy Bragg & Joe Henry, Okkervil River and Jenny Hall. In our Archive section, we look at reissues from Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin’s Complete BBC Sessions, Jack White’s compilation of acoustic recordings, some welcome reissues from Jack Rose and a look at the East German underground that flourished behind the Iron Curtain during the late Seventies and Eighties.

In film, meanwhile, I review The Beatles tour documentary, David Mackenzie’s neo-Western Hell Or High Water, Viggo Mortensen indie-spirited Captain Fantastic, Ira Sachs’ Little Men and the new Chills doc. In DVD, we revisit Alex Cox’s Sid & Nancy and check out a new Killing Joke doc. In Live, we review LCD Soundsystem and Frazey Ford while in Books Allan catches up with Mike Love’s autobiography and a new (excellent) memoir about his time in Spacemen 3 and Spiritualized by Will Carruthers.

There’s more, of course. In the front section, we showcase some unseen Kate Bush images, Wizz Jones remembers his old friend John Renbourn, Pete Wylie returns and we introduce Noura Mint Seymali, the new African queen of desert blues. We also preview the highlights of this year’s End Of The Road festival.

Taking of which, if any of you are going to End Of The Road, you might want to keep checking back on Uncut’s Facebook and Twitter feeds as we count down to this year’s festival with a series of archive interviews from this year’s fantastic line-up.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Exclusive! Hear an unreleased Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell track “Waltz Across Texas Tonight” from Trio box set

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We’re delighted to host an exclusive, unreleased track from the forthcoming Trio box set.

Co-written by Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell, “Waltz Across Texas Tonight” dates from the recording sessions for the Trio II album.

Dolly Parton, Linda Ronstadt and Emmylou Harris released two albums together, Trio (1987) and Trio II (1999).

On September 9, Rhino will issue The Complete Trio Collection, a three-disc set compiling the two albums and will feature a 20-track bonus disc of previously unreleased material and alternate takes.

On the same date, a limited-edition deluxe set will also be available, featuring all of the music in a clamshell box that features an expanded booklet. Also available will be a single-disc edition titled My Dear Companion: Selections From The Trio Collection, featuring a mix of songs taken from the three-disc set, and Farther Along, a double-LP set of all the bonus material from the collection.

The deluxe set can be pre-ordered by clicking here.

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Neil Young unveils the line-up for this year’s Bridge School Benefit concerts

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Neil Young has revealed the line up for this year’s Bridge School Benefit concerts.

Young – who will perform alongside Promise Of The Real – will be joined on the bill by Roger Waters, Metallica and My Morning Jacket.

The benefit’s 30th anniversary also features Willie Nelson, case/lang/veirs, Norah Jones, Dave Matthews, Cage the Elephant and Nils Lofgren.

It takes place on October 22 and 23 at the Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, California. Find more details by clicking here.

Young and Waters will also perform on the same bill at the Desert Trip festival in Coachella earlier in October.

The October 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on David Bowie, plus Margo Price, Lou Reed, David Crosby, Devendra Banhart, Van Der Graaf Generator, The Turtles, The Beatles, Granny Takes A Trip, Kate Bush, Drive-By Truckers, Jack White, Ray Charles, Led Zeppelin, Wilco and more plus 32 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

This month in Uncut

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David Bowie, Lou Reed, David Crosby and Margo Price all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated October 2016 and out now.

Bowie is on the cover, and inside, Tony Visconti takes us on a trip into the archives, as Bowie’s lost album, The Gouster, is unveiled 42 years late. Plus, what’s next in the great man’s afterlife?

“David is very quick in the studio,” explains Visconti. “He works out things the night before, he’ll scribble things on a piece of paper, then we get it very quickly. The reason for that is he hires the best people.”

Uncut discovers the harrowing story behind Lou Reed‘s “offensive” 1977 masterpiece, Street Hassle, a tale involving whisky, speed and replica human heads. “That studio was a sight to be seen,” says guitarist Ritchie Fliegler. “You had your amp, but instead of a microphone in front, there were… heads. Heads on sticks. It looked like Vlad The Impaler was making a record with his victims.”

Elsewhere, David Crosby – returning with a new album, Lighthouse, in October – discusses the evils of Desert Trip, endorsements from the Vatican, how Miles Davis discovered The Byrds, and how he’s ready to go into battle with CSNY against Donald Trump. “I’m a bozo, man!” he tells us.

Uncut heads out on a Nashville bar crawl with Margo Price, the runaway country success story of 2016, to discover how hard times and personal tragedy led to her album Midwest Farmer’s Daughter. “My first 27 years weren’t a walk in the park,” she says, “so I look at the positives.”

We also explore the strange story of Granny Takes A Trip, and how a gang of psychedelic tailors and shopkeepers changed the look and culture of 1960s London – Marianne Faithfull, Kenney Jones, Joe Boyd, Neil Innes, Granny’s founder Nigel Waymouth and more reveal all. “We were one of the first [boutiques],” says John Pearse, Waymouth’s partner in the store. “I guess it was a time when everything seemed possible – and it was possible, because we made it happen.”

The Turtles recall the creation of their US No 1 hit “Happy Together”, while Van Der Graaf Generator look back on the greatest albums of their career – “From the outside we must’ve looked mad!”

Devendra Banhart answers your questions, while we review new albums from the likes of Drive-By Truckers, Angel Olsen, Wilco, Billy Bragg and Jenny Hval, and archive releases from Led Zeppelin, Ray Charles, Jack White, NRBQ and more…

LCD Soundsystem and Frazey Ford are reviewed live, and we catch the new documentary on The Beatles‘ touring years, alongside a host of other DVDs, Blu-rays and films.

Our front section features Wizz Jones, remembering his late sparring partner John Renbourn, Pete Wylie, Noura Mint Seymali and unseen Kate Bush photos.

Sounds Of The New West: The Class Of 2016, free on the front of this issue, continues our run of Americana CDs, and features the finest modern talents – from Margo Price to Karl Blau, Jason Isbell to Hiss Golden Messenger, William Tyler to Shovels & Rope.

The new issue of Uncut, dated October 2016, is out now.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Hear new Teenage Fanclub track, “Thin Air”

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Teenage Fanclub have shared a new track from their forthcoming album, Here.

Thin Air” follows on from “I’m In Love“, which the band premiered in June.

The song is featured by the band’s bassist, Gerry Love.

 

Here is released on September 9 via PeMa, pre-order is available by clicking here.

The tracklisting for Here is:

I’m In Love
Thin Air
Hold On
The Darkest Part Of The Night
I Have Nothing More To Say
I Was Beautiful When I Was Alive
The First Sight
Live In The Moment
Steady State
Its A Sign
With You
Connected To Life

Teenage Fanclub live dates:

Saturday 3rd September – UK, BRISTOL – Fleece (SOLD OUT!)
Sunday 4th September – UK, DORSET – End Of The Road festival – get tickets
Monday 5th September – UK, LONDON – Islington Assembly Hall (SOLD OUT!)
Tuesday 6th September – UK, EDINBURGH – Liquid Rooms (SOLD OUT!)
Wednesday 7th September – UK, MANCHESTER – Gorilla (SOLD OUT!)
Friday 9th September – FRANCE, Saint-Amans-des-Côts – Heart of Glass, Heart of Gold Festival

Wednesday 12th October – CANADA, Toronto, ON — Opera House
Friday 14th October – USA, Washington, DC — 9:30 Club
Saturday 15th October – USA, New York, NY — Bowery Ballroom
Sunday 16th October – USA, Brooklyn, NY — Music Hall of Williamsburg
Monday 17th October – USA, Boston, MA — The Sinclair
Tuesday 18th October – USA, Philadelphia, PA — World Café Live
Thursday 20th October – USA, Cleveland, OH — Beachland Ballroom
Friday 21st October – USA, Chicago, IL — Bottom Lounge
Saturday 22nd October – USA, Minneapolis, MN — Fine Line
Sunday 23rd October – USA, Madison, WI — High Noon
Tuesday 25th October – USA, Detroit, MI — Loving Touch

Tuesday 15th November – UK, INVERNESS – Ironworks
Wednesday 16th November – UK, WHITLEY PLAY – Playhouse (SOLD OUT!)
Thursday 17th November – UK, SHEFFIELD – Leadmill
Friday 18th November – UK, MANCHESTER – Academy 2
Sunday 20th November – UK, LEEDS – University
Monday 21th November – UK, NORWICH – Waterfront
Tuesday 22nd November – UK, LONDON – Electric Ballroom (SOLD OUT!)
Wednesday 23rd November – UK, PORTSMOUTH – Wedgewood Rooms
Thursday 24th November – UK, BRIGHTON – Concorde 2 (SOLD OUT!)
Saturday 26th November – UK, BIRMINGHAM – Institute
Sunday 27th November – UK, CARDIFF – Glee Club (SOLD OUT!)
Monday 28th November – UK, NOTTINGHAM – Rock City
Tuesday 29th November – UK, BRISTOL – Anson Rooms
Wednesday 30th November – UK, CAMBRIDGE – Junction

Tuesday 2nd December – IRELAND, DUBLIN – Academy
Wednesday 3rd December – UK, GLASGOW – Barrowland (SOLD OUT!)
Thursday 4th December – UK, GLASGOW – ABC (SOLD OUT!)

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Ask Peter Hook

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Ahead of the release of his New Order memoir Substance on October 6, Peter Hook will be answering your questions as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’d like us to ask the legendary bassist?

Which one of his own basslines does he like the best?
What happened to the Freebass project with Andy Rourke and Mani?
What’s his favourite memory of Ian Curtis?

Send up your questions by noon, Wednesday, August 24 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

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

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Bat For Lashes – The Bride

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Despite the stage name and visual reinventions accompanying each new album, Bat For Lashes has never been a persona. Instead, it’s a vessel for the intimate songs of Natasha Khan, the British songwriter who grounds her musical flights of fancy in stark examinations of heartbreak, home and self-realisation. Yet critics have often overlooked her acuity as a songwriter; distracted by her spiritual adornments and uninhibited art school sensibility, there’s a dispiriting tendency to marginalise her as a kook, and to wish she would strip away the fuss so that we could hear her better. After all, confession is still considered the strongest currency of women’s art, and female musicians playing with image and identity are rarely afforded the credibility of, say, Father John Misty.

“Come out, show yourself,” comes the demand, “submit to verdict and discipline,” Slate music critic Carl Wilson wrote of this desire, in an astute piece comparing Joanna Newsom, country singer Iris DeMent, and Italian author Elena Ferrante, women who he wrote were “performing a vanishing act in order to be seen.” On The Bride, Khan joins their number. Her fourth full-length as Bat For Lashes is a complete concept album, where she plays a woman whose groom dies on the way to their wedding. Ravaged by grief, she hijacks the honeymoon car and drives off into what becomes a journey of self-discovery. By the end of the record, the bride wouldn’t trade the knowledge she’s acquired for a different outcome. In interviews, Khan has evaded being drawn on the story’s personal significance.

The narrative arc makes The Bride feel even more like a close relative of Newsom’s Divers, using impersonal narrators to reckon with the prospect of true love, which “invites death into your life,” as Newsom told Uncut last year, while both attribute agency to women’s stories. Khan’s protagonist gets free, escaping the definition of marriage and widowhood by setting off on the road, a path rarely trodden by fictional women. “A man on the road is caught in the act of a becoming,” observed Vanessa Veselka in an essay on the lack of female narrative quests for The American Reader. “A woman on the road has something seriously wrong with her.” By setting her bride out of bounds, Khan rebukes both that idea, and perceptions of the female auteur-as-diary-writer, emphasising the distance between herself and her art, which has seldom sounded stronger.

Each of Bat For Lashes’ albums to date have contained half a dozen or so spectacular songs, usually the pop numbers. Although she received widespread critical acclaim from 2006 debut Fur & Gold through to 2012’s The Haunted Man, there was the sense that she hadn’t yet made her first truly great record. The Bride is it, despite playing against Khan’s pop strengths in favour of midnight torch songs that echo This Mortal Coil, later-period Radiohead, and ’70s AOR. There’s one uptempo song here, “Sunday Love”, where the bride is haunted by what could have been, her anxiety echoed by a corroded drum machine. It’s heart-racing, affecting stuff, especially as the distance opens up between its bassy depths and the transcendent heights of Khan’s vocals. But the rest of The Bride eschews such overt pop signifiers to foreground the subtlety of Khan’s melodies, and her voice’s expressive power, emphasised by the cinematic production: fathoms of nuanced bass and subtle synth beds that offer a forest’s eerie enveloping.

These qualities push The Bride beyond being a concept album and into an emotionally resonant record that works regardless of your investment in the story. There are a couple of exceptions: opener “I Do” finds Khan pledging her faith in wedded bliss, to bright autoharp trills that glint like sunbeams. It’s overly naïve, but justified to set up the story, and brief at any rate. That can’t be said for “Widow’s Peak”: a torrid spoken word interlude haunted by thunderous crashes and distant cries. It disrupts the album’s flow, and feels hammy compared to the easy grace on show elsewhere, which is quite majestic. Her story starts as dynamic balladry that eschews both melancholy and sentimentality for something ominous and grave: the swaggering, Morricone-indebted guitar of “Joe’s Dream” buoys a sweet Greek chorus, meanwhile “In God’s House” is the desolate terrain in which Khan confronts her loss in quasi-operatic tones.

Perhaps it’s a result of fronting Sexwitch last autumn, a collaboration with London psych band Toy where the newly minted group covered obscure pop and folk songs from Iran, Morocco and Thailand. At those shows, Khan howled and screamed; The Bride isn’t as visceral, but her range has opened up enormously. She’s flinty and suspicious on “Honeymooning Alone”, matching the pace of the stalking guitar, before opening up on the chorus, surrounded again by a sweet, girlish choir. On “Never Forgive The Angels”, the force of her voice pushes the song’s meditative drone heavenwards. The record’s standout is “Close Encounters”, a surreal folk song about a metaphysical interaction comprising just ghostly strings and Khan’s reaching vocals.

The rest of the album plays out like this: simple songs featuring Khan’s voice amidst a subtle landscape. With its gentle, lilting guitar and silvery violin, “Land’s End” is tentatively optimistic, while the romantic piano and comfortably AOR chorus of “If I Knew” plays like the pragmatic cousin to The Carpenters‘ “We’ve Only Just Begun”. The melodies at this end of the record are as accomplished and affecting as Bacharach and David songs, as Khan’s bride emerges into the light: “I will turn it back around/I’ll be homeward bound,” she declares on “I Will Love Again”, which balances her tentatively hopeful sentiment with a steady pulse and enveloping strings. And “In Your Bed” is cinematic and romantic; a realistic update of “I Do”, where deep connection is prized over salvation.

It’s a fitting ending: Khan’s fourth album is a mature piece of work, but doesn’t forsake her infectious, wide-eyed enthusiasm for the possibilities of her art. She’s hoping to turn this story into a book and a feature film. Whether those transpire or not hardly matters; The Bride is her most accomplished realisation of her wandering mind yet.

Q&A
You’ve said this album feels like coming home to yourself. What allowed that to happen now?

It’s mysterious really. I suppose there’s an aspect of developing confidence after doing this for a decade, or having tried so many other things out in the world. It’s like a relationship – you fall in love in so many different ways, and then sometimes 10 years later you find you’re having just as romantic a period as when you first met.

You performed almost the whole record in churches pre-release. How was that experience?
Amazing. Coming down the aisle with my bouquet and throwing it into the crowd, everyone sitting so quietly and listening because they were no-phone shows, huge stained glass windows, playing in sacred spaces that have this really heavy weight of history – it couldn’t have been better. It added to the melodrama and theatricality of the storytelling.

Walking down the aisle night after night and then singing “I Do” alone seems like a heavy experience.
Yeah, it’s really nerve-wracking and very emotional. Every time I’ve done it, I’ve felt like crying, and then when I get onto the stage, I have to really gulp and compose myself. It’s very exposing and very vulnerable, but I think that’s what makes it so beautiful because I feel like I’m really putting myself out there, trusting the audience. There’s this collective enjoyment of being in a really vulnerable place, and I think vulnerability is really underrated nowadays.

At the start of The Haunted Man, you were creatively blocked. But with this album – and the accompanying film, imagery, and a potential book – it seems you were in a very creative place.
I feel like it was the first time where I was really taking seriously my need to work on multidimensional levels, and that I can’t just narrow myself down to being a musician, putting out an album, doing a tour, coming home, starting again. I wasn’t able to express all of the avenues and facets of what I want to do in that cycle. There was a change in myself, and a change in my understanding of what’s expected of me and what I want to do, putting my process at the forefront and then just really enjoying swapping between all these different media.

There’s quite a few Americana artists on the record – Simone Felice, Dawn Landes. Any significance to that connection?
It wasn’t the genre so much but the people. I knew I wanted to play more guitar, and then I wanted more guitar textures. I’ve known Lou [Rogai, Lewis & Clark] for eight years, we’re really old friends – he and Eve Miller played with Rachel’s, who I used to absolutely love when I was at uni. I thought of him as someone that’s really textural. Dawn I’d seen playing with Sufjan Stevens, so I guess she is folky, but I asked her because I loved her voice and playing when I saw Sufjan doing Carrie And Lowell, so maybe there was a bit of that.

You had a six-week recording session in Woodstock. How did the atmosphere fuel the record?
The rainy pine forest, Twin Peaks vibe was really magical and really infused the music, I think. I felt it was the closest landscape that linked to the landscape I could imagine in parts of The Bride.

How much of a political comment is there in there about societal expectations of women?
I’ve softened on that the more I’ve talked about it. What’s so beautiful about the album is towards the end there’s this thankfulness and this great gratitude to the bride’s dead fiancé for standing by her side through this journey of self-discovery and learning to really love yourself. I think that it was through him making her stand on her own two feet that she was able to get to the end – songs like “If I Knew” and “I Will Love Again”, where she realises how unconditional love from another person can really heal you and help you to find a space in yourself where you’re not looking to an external source to rescue you. By the end it’s the greatest love of all, which is this really poignant kind of companionship that she’s developed with him even though he’s not there in his physical form. He’s loved her to the point where she’s ready to really love someone in a real way, and so the album is about setting yourself up to really love someone. It is pro-relationships and pro-companionships and love, but it’s anti-overly romanticised, idealistic, and quite scary codependent ideas about love, which I think we’re sold quite shamelessly in films and media.
INTERVIEW: LAURA SNAPES

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

In praise of Pedro Almodovar’s Julieta

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After a detour into high camp comedy with I’m So Excited!, Pedro Almodovar elegantly returns to his natural habitat: moody melodrama centred around notions of yearning, memory and loss and populated by strong female characters. The film is an adaptation of three inter-related short stories by Alice Munro, but Almodovar’s other influences are also evident. “I feel like a character in a Patricia Highsmith novel,” remarks one, while the plot’s gradual unravelling – involving a mysterious death, a meeting on a train and a blonde-haired heroine – inevitably recall Hitchcock’s favourite filmmaker tropes.

When Almodovar first introduces us to Julieta (Emma Suárez), she is living in preparing to leave Spain for a new life in Portugal with her partner Lorenzo (Dario Grandinetti). But there is a sorrow in Julieta that cannot be lifted, as she drifts enigmatically through generously proportioned and stylishly designed apartments, staring listlessly at some nice painting and drinking expensive wine from thin-stemmed glasses. A chance encounter (is there any other kind?) reveals that she has an estranged daughter, Antía; news of her current life sends Almodovar into full-on flashback mode, to Julieta when she was 25 (played by Adriana Ugarte) and she first met Xoan (Daniel Groa), who later became Antía’s father.

Keen followers of Almodovar will find much to comment Julieta: it may not entirely be in the amazing run that stretched through All About My Mother, Talk To Her, Bad Education and Volver, though it shares their poise and confidence. It has, though, an unusually rich seam of melancholia running through it – a rarity for Almodovar, who is rarely liable to such sentiment. It seems that, aged 66, the great Spanish filmmaker might be coming to terms with his own maturity, at long last.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

David Bowie stars in the new-look Uncut

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“Don’t fuck with the formula!” In his new autobiography, Mike Love denies having said those notorious words to Brian Wilson, as his cousin struggled to make sense of Smile. Ever since a 1971 article in Rolling Stone made the accusation, Love has been lambasted as the most conservative of rock stars, and the phrase has been used as shorthand for a certain creative cowardice.

In the world of magazines, however, there’s something to be said for not fucking with the formula. For most of Uncut‘s 19-year lifespan, we’ve mostly abided by that rule, never changing direction in some vainglorious attempt to capture new readers and alienate old ones.

Be assured, we’re not going to start messing about now. We are, though, proud to announce that the forthcoming issue of Uncut (out in the UK on Tuesday August 23) will look and feel significantly different to those that have gone before it. Uncut, it seemed clear to us, could do with a bit of sprucing up – hence the nuanced new look that our Art Editor, Marc Jones, has conceived for the mag. The big change is that we’ve moved the whole reviews section to a much more prominent position. I don’t want to lapse into marketing blather, but you’ve constantly told us that our reviews are the most important part of Uncut, so we wanted to make a bigger deal of them. The shift is also designed to assert a critical part of what we do: tirelessly championing new records, and placing them in the context of the musical traditions that we love, stretching back over 50 years.

For this special issue, we’ve also resurrected Sounds Of The New West, a series of compilations that cemented the link between Uncut and the freshest Americana talents, but has lain dormant for a surprisingly long time – since the early years of the millennium, in fact. Those early CDs helped crystallise a key part of Uncut’s aesthetic: here was new music, the compilations implied, that existed in a proud cultural tradition; which respected the old ways but simultaneously made fresh currency out of them.

With the rise of Margo Price – featured in this issue, and starring at the Uncut-endorsed End Of The Road festival this month – it seemed a perfect time to assemble a Class Of 2016 CD. Not many of them originate from the west, new or otherwise, but we’ve dug deep for many rarities and neglected gems to make this one a real keeper. Please let us know, as ever, what you think.

Margo Price also features prominently in the magazine, alongside Tony Visconti telling the full story of David Bowie‘s Gouster – and what comes next. There’s a spectacularly candid chat with David Crosby, and a spectacularly squalid investigation of Lou Reed‘s Street Hassle; plus Van Der Graaf Generator and The Turtles, Kate Bush and Alan Vega, Pete Wylie and Devendra Banhart; and a wonderful piece by Tom Pinnock on the psychedelic tailors of 1960s Chelsea.

That’s this month’s gently upgraded Uncut. We’ve always been about “The past, present and future of great music” – now we’ve just written it on the cover.

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

Kraftwerk, Autobahn and a new era of electronic music: “It’s like an artificial joke”

Four decades ago, Ralf Hütter and Florian Schneider shifted their band, Kraftwerk, into a significantly higher gear. A sleek anthem to the open road, Autobahn also heralded a new idea of Germany, and a new era of electronic music. With help from Kraftwerkers and associates, Uncut tells the story of a musical revolution, from Tomorrow’s World to Disneyworld, and of the “German Beach Boys”. “People said: are you doing surfing on the Rhine? Yes, maybe, but we don’t have waves.” Words: Stephen Dalton. Originally published in Uncut’s March 2015 issue (Take 214).

______________________

On September 25, 1975, Kraftwerk made their first appearance on British TV. They were featured in an edition of Tomorrow’s World, sandwiched between reports on the acoustic properties of glass fibre material and pedicures for pigs. This piece of TV history still looks utterly bizarre and vaguely sinister. Neatly dressed in sober suits and ties, the group’s Ralf Hütter and Florian Schneider faced each other across a compact stage, playing cumbersome analog synths and singing monotonous German lyrics about the joys of road travel. Between them, their band mates Wolfgang Flür and Karl Bartos tapped electronic knitting needles on homemade foil-wrapped percussion pads seemingly salvaged from an early Apollo mission. “This is ‘Autobahn’,” proclaimed presenter Derek Cooper in gloriously patrician BBC tones. “Based, say the group, on the rhythm of trucks, cars and passing bridges heard while driving through Germany.”

Zooming in on a madly grinning Schneider, the clip signed off with a promise of further technological innovations to come from the band’s “laboratory” in Düsseldorf. “Next year, Kraftwerk hope to eliminate the keyboards altogether,” Cooper concluded, “and build jackets with electronic lapels that can be played by touch.”

Forty years later, we are still waiting for those musical lapels to materialise. But minor technical hitches aside, “Autobahn” still sounds like a road map for the musical future. Kraftwerk’s debut chart hit was not the first pop song to use electronic instruments, but it was the first to put synthesisers front and central in a tune composed almost entirely of artificial sounds. Critically, the song – and its parent album – almost single-handedly transformed post-war Germany from kitsch musical backwater to high-tech launch pad for pop’s electronic new wave.

“Autobahn was about finding our artistic situation,” recalls Ralf Hütter, Kraftwerk’s sole remaining founder member. “Where are we? What is the sound of the German Bundesrepublik? Because at this time bands were having English names, and not using the German language.”

Born from Düsseldorf’s art scene, Autobahn also had a strong visual impact, with a sleeve that became an influential design classic. On Tomorrow’s World, the band’s short post-hippy hair and self-consciously formal dress made them look like funky accountants. But just a few years later, this aggressively normal look was adopted as the default uniform by post-punk bands with arty aspirations.

“We offered self-confidence,” explains former Kraftwerk percussionist Wolfgang Flür. “We wanted to show our German appearance with short-cropped hair, ironed suits and ties, not to imitate English pop or American rock. We knew our appearance was ironic, flirtatious, provocative.”

A sly subversion of Anglo-American rock tradition, “Autobahn” was a romantic hymn to the functional elegance of Germany’s motorway system. The banal, sublime beauty of modern transport infrastructure.

Metallica share “Hardwired” from their first new album in eight years

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Metallica have announced their first album in eight years.

Hardwired… To Self-Destruct is a double album featuring nearly 80 minutes of new music. It is due for release on November 18.

The band have also shared the video for lead single “Hardwired“, which everyone who pre-orders the album now will receive as an instant download. You can hear the track below.

The tracklisting for the album is:

Disc One:
‘Hardwired’
‘Atlas, Rise!’
‘Now That We’re Dead’
‘Moth Into Flame’
”Am I Savage?’
‘Halo On Fire’

Disc Two:
‘Confusion’
‘Dream No More’
‘ManUNkind’
‘Here Comes Revenge’
‘Murder One’
‘Spit Out The Bone’

Disc Three (Deluxe Edition Only):
‘Lords Of Summer’
‘Riff Charge’ (Riff Origins)
‘N.W.O.B.H.M. A.T.M.’ (Riff Origins)
‘Tin Shot’ (Riff Origins)
‘Plow’ (Riff Origins)
‘Sawblade’ (Riff Origins)
‘RIP’ (Riff Origins)
‘Lima’ (Riff Origins)
’91’ (Riff Origins)
‘MTO’ (Riff Origins)
‘RL72’ (Riff Origins)
‘Frankenstein’ (Riff Origins)
‘CHI’ (Riff Origins)
‘X Dust’ (Riff Origins)

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds announce tracklisting for Skeleton Tree album

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Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds have announced details of their forthcoming album, Skeleton Tree.

The album is released on September 9. It was recorded near Cave’s home in Brighton with further sessions at French studio La Frette.

The tracklisting for Skeleton Tree is:
Jesus Alone
Rings Of Saturn
Girl In Amber
Magneto
Anthrocene
I Need You
Distant Sky
Skeleton Tree

The first opportunity to hear the album will take place on September 8 during screenings of a companion film, One More Time With Feeling.

The film has been directed by Andrew Dominik, who has previously worked with Cave on The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford. Dominik explained,

“When Nick approached me about making a film around the recording and performing of the new Bad Seeds album, I’d been seeing quite a lot of him as we rallied around him and his family at the time of his son’s death. My immediate response was ‘Why do you want to do this?’ Nick told me that he had some things he needed to say, but he didn’t know who to say them to. The idea of a traditional interview, he said, was simply unfeasible but that he felt a need to let the people who cared about his music understand the basic state of things. It seemed to me that he was trapped somewhere and just needed to do something – anything – to at least give the impression of forward movement.”

You can read more from Andrew Dominik on the film by clicking here.

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Pink Floyd to continue release of back catalogue on vinyl

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This coming September 2016, Pink Floyd are set to continue reintroduction of their back catalogue on vinyl with ‘Atom Heart Mother, Meddle and ‘Obscured By Clouds all remastered from the original analogue master tapes. Previous reintroductions The Wall and The Division Bell are also back in stock on vinyl from 26th August.

Pink Floyd followed their 60s albums with their fifth studio album, 1970’s Atom Heart Mother. Featuring the classic lineup of Roger Waters, David Gilmour, Richard Wright and Nick Mason, the LP went on to become the band’s first UK No.1 record.

In a short break from touring ‘Atom Heart Mother’, in 1971 Pink Floyd released the experimental album, ‘Meddle. The LP saw the band move musical direction away from their original psychedelic sound, especially highlighted by the 23-minute track Echoes which occupied the entirety of the b-side of the record.

Pink Floyd’s seventh album ‘Obscured By Clouds was originally recorded as the soundtrack to the French film ‘La Vallée’ but released as a stand alone album in 1972.

The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, A Saucerful Of Secrets, More, Ummagumma, are also available through Pink Floyd Records.

More information is available on the Pink Floyd website.

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Sarah Jarosz – Undercurrent

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Having only just turned 25, it’s remarkable to consider how much Sarah Jarosz has already packed into her professional life. A prodigious ability on banjo and mandolin led to her playing bluegrass festivals in Texas at the age of 11. By the time she was in her final year at high school she’d been signed by Sugar Hill, for whom she’s now released four studio albums. Factor in her recent graduation from the New England Conservatory Of Music, an extended period on the road co-hosting A Prairie Home Companion with Garrison Keillor, plus dates with Aoife O’Donovan and Sara Watkins as part of super-trio I’m With Her, and you can only applaud her sheer plurality.

Notwithstanding all that, Undercurrent feels like a significant moment in her career. It’s a record that finds Jarosz largely dispensing with the leftfield bluegrass of her previous solo work, its palette instead defined by acoustic guitars and a more singer-songwriterly approach to folk and country. These are songs about the choices we make, the paths we take and the things we leave behind, a deep meditation on the invisible currents that guide us.

Her silvery voice is a perfect navigator, as supple as it is dauntless, particularly on the gorgeous “Green Lights”, which sounds as beguiling as anything by Laura Veirs. The dark “House Of Mercy”, co-written with long-term collaborator Jedd Hughes, is a rootsy duet freighted with the spirit of Steve Earle; “Take Another Turn” asks what it means to be lost; the determined strum and vaporous organ of “Comin’ Undone”, with Parker Millsap, is an exhortation to hold tight to the world no matter what fate chucks at you. There are discreet additions, too. Pedal steel adds to the ruminative quality of “Back Of My Mind”, while the steady churn of a banjo takes “Lost Dog” into mountain folk territory, as does its cheeky appropriation of the lyric from the old traditional, “In The Pines”. Undercurrent is an enthralling journey from source to mouth.

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Suede to release 20th anniversary edition of Coming Up

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Suede are releasing a 20th anniversary edition of Coming Up.

The band’s third album, it was the first to feature new guitarist Richard Oakes.

The 20th anniversary edition includes a DVD of nine contemporary TV performances plus an hour-long film of the band with producer Ed Buller discussing the writing and recording of the album.

Also included is a new note by Brett Anderson about the creation of the cover image, along with the lyrics, hand-written lyric drafts, tape boxes and photos from the band’s collections.

A special limited edition version is available exclusively from the Suede website. Limited to 750 copies it includes a three-track 10” single, featuring “Asda Town”, “Together” and “Bentswood Boys” – Richard Oakes’ first recordings with the band, originally issued as b-sides to singles on Dog Man Star.

The full track listing:

CD 1: COMING UP
Trash 

Filmstar 

Lazy 

By The Sea 

She 

Beautiful Ones 

Starcrazy 

Picnic By The Motorway 

The Chemistry Between Us 

Saturday Night 

Bonus tracks 

Europe Is Our Playground [‘Sci-Fi Lullabies’ version]
Trash [‘Singles’ version]

CD 2: B-SIDES
Europe Is Our Playground [original version] 

Have You Ever Been This Low? 

Another No One 

Every Monday Morning Comes 

The Sound Of The Streets 

Young Men 

Sam 

Money 

This Time 

Jumble Sale Mums

These Are The Sad Songs
Feel

Sadie

Digging A Hole

Graffiti Women
1
Duchess
Every Monday Morning Comes [demo]
Soundgarden 
[Have You Ever Been This Low] [different version]
She [strings]

The Chemistry Between Us [strings]

CD 3: DEMOS, MONITOR MIXES, REHEARSALS
Trash [early take]

Filmstar [monitor mix]
Lazy [first demo]

By The Sea [studio demo]

She [early monitor mix]

Beautiful Ones [early monitor mix]
Starcrazy [first demo]

Picnic By The Motorway [demo]
The Chemistry Between Us [different version]

Saturday Night [monitor mix 2]
Electric Cakes [Together]
[demo take 4]

Wedgie [This Time] [demo take 2]
Waltz

Sombre Bongos
[Europe Is Our Playground] [demo]
Owly [The Sound Of the Streets] [rehearsal]
Every Monday Morning Comes [demo]
Soundgarden
 [Have You Ever Been This Low] [different version]
She [strings]

The Chemistry Between Us [strings]

CD 4: LIVE AT THE PARADISO, AMSTERDAM [20.10.96]
Intro: ‘She’ strings
Filmstar

Trash

Heroine
She
Lazy

By The Sea

Starcrazy

Animal Nitrate
The Wild Ones

Saturday Night

So Young

New Generation

Beautiful Ones

Europe Is Our Playground

DVD: BBC TV APPEARANCES
TOP OF THE POPS
Trash [26.7.96] 

Trash [9.8.96] 

Beautiful Ones [25.10.96] 

Saturday Night [24.1.97] 

Filmstar [22.8.97] 

LATER

Trash [14.12.96]
Saturday Night [14.12.96]
Lazy [14.12.96]
MERCURY MUSIC PRIZE
By The Sea [28.8.97]

BONUS DVD FEATURE
The making of Coming Up

10” SINGLE
Asda Town 

Together 

Bentswood Boys 


The album will also be reissued on 180g yellow coloured vinyl, along with a bonus LP of b-side tracks. All housed in gatefold packaging.

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Read the foreword to Bruce Springsteen’s autobiography

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Bruce Springsteen has released the forward to his forthcoming autobiography, Born To Run.

The memoir is published on September 27 and accompanied by Chapter And Verse – a new 18-track compilation album containing five unreleased tracks that’s due on September 23 through Columbia Records.

FOREWORD
I come from a boardwalk town where almost everything is tinged with a bit of fraud. So am I. By twenty, no race-car-driving rebel, I was a guitar player on the streets of Asbury Park and already a member in good standing amongst those who “lie” in service of the truth . . . artists, with a small “a.” But I held four clean aces. I had youth, almost a decade of hard-core bar band experience, a good group of homegrown musicians who were attuned to my performance style and a story to tell.

This book is both a continuation of that story and a search into its origins. I’ve taken as my parameters the events in my life I believe shaped that story and my performance work. One of the questions I’m asked over and over again by fans on the street is “How do you do it?” In the following pages I will try to shed a little light on how and, more important, why.

Rock ’n’ Roll Survival Kit
DNA, natural ability, study of craft, development of and devotion to an aesthetic philosophy, naked desire for . . . fame? . . . love? . . . admiration? . . . attention? . . . women? . . . sex? . . . and oh, yeah . . . a buck. Then . . . if you want to take it all the way out to the end of the night, a furious fire in the hole that just . . . don’t . . . quit . . . burning.

These are some of the elements that will come in handy should you come face-to-face with eighty thousand (or eighty) screaming rock ’n’ roll fans who are waiting for you to do your magic trick. Waiting for you to pull something out of your hat, out of thin air, out of this world, something that before the faithful were gathered here today was just a song-fueled rumor.

I am here to provide proof of life to that ever elusive, never completely believable “us.” That is my magic trick. And like all good magic tricks, it begins with a setup. So…

You can pre-order Born To Run by clicking here

You can pre-order Chapter And Verse by clicking here

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Leonard Cohen’s You Want It Darker: what we know so far

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June was an unexpectedly busy month for seasoned Leonard Cohen watchers. First, he shared a snippet of new song “You Want It Darker” during a scene in the BBC drama Peaky Blinders. Admittedly, it’s barely a minute long but it suggests the album will continue the bleak, ravaged tone of his last studio album, Popular Problems: “If you are the dealer / Let me out of the game / If you are the healer / I’m broken and lame”. A few weeks later, The New Yorker published a new poem by Cohen called “Steer Your Way”, which found the singer musing on the slow, unwavering process of mental and spiritual evolution in the face of confounding moral uncertainties – “Year by year / Month by month / Day by day / Thought by thought”.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y8ad_pmpkqY

Both “You Want It Darker” and “Steer Your Way” are scheduled to appear on Cohen’s latest album, which was announced last week. Among other things, You Want It Darker continues Cohen’s run of brilliant album titles (this one feels particularly pertinent in the year of Trump, I think) but critically it underscores a remarkable burst of activity – three studio albums in six years – similar to Cohen’s creative streak during the Seventies.

You Want It Darker has been produced by his son, Adam, who has since written on Facebook page about the album’s “haunting vocal performances, stirring lyrics, classic melodies”. Speaking to Uncut in 2014, Adam Cohen described his father as “on the very upper floors of the tower of song” – a high standard Cohen snr has rarely, if ever, failed to maintain.

What else do we know? Two songs from You Want It Darker feature the cantor and choir from Congregation Shaar Hashomayim, the Quebec synagogue where, aged 13, Cohen celebrated his bar mitzvah. It transpires that the album was played in full during The 10th Leonard Cohen Event in Amsterdam earlier this month; posts on the Leonard Cohen forum have specifically highlighted one song, “Treaty”, as a standout, describing it as Cohen “making peace, not only with his Maker, but with everyone and all things”. Enticingly, it seems that Cohen’s long-serving collaborator Patrick Leonard revealed that the songwriter is already at work on his next album: an orchestral work, no less.

Cohen’s current profile might have its roots in expediency and the financial crisis that forced him back on the road in 2008. But the fastidious poetic vision, high seriousness and self-deprecating wit remain as pronounced as ever. The songs about love and sex and faith and death continue to come; and, as ever, Cohen responds with grim vigor and great writing. At the end of July, Marianne Ihlen, Cohen’s muse, died from leukaemia. Cohen wrote to Ihlen a few days before he died. Typically, his letter offers wisdom and warmth. “Well, Marianne it’s come to this time when we are really so old and our bodies are falling apart and I think I will follow you very soon. Know that I am so close behind you that if you stretch out your hand, I think you can reach mine.”

The tracklisting for You Want It Darker is:

You Want It Darker
Treaty
On the Level
Leaving the Table
If I Didn’t Have Your Love
Travelling Light
Seemed the Better Way
Steer Your Way
String Reprise/Treaty

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Man Who Fell To Earth original soundtrack due for release

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The soundtrack to Nicolas Roeg‘s film, The Man Who Fell To Earth, is to be released for the first time.

The release coincides with the 40th anniversary reissue of Roeg’s film.

UMC will release the soundtrack on double CD on September 9 and as a double LP and deluxe 2 CD/2LP box set on November 18, which features a reproduction of the original theatrical poster and a 48 page hardback book with rare photos.

The book also contains enlightening notes from the movie’s editor Graeme Clifford who reveals that he used Pink Floyd’s Dark Side Of The Moon as a temp soundtrack while working on the film.

“On my original cut, I scored the entire movie to Pink Floyd’s Dark Side Of The Moon. I think I used every single track on the album. The whole movie was Pink Floyd except for the one piece at the end, and it worked beautifully. The movie was made for that score! I don’t know if there was any serious attempt to get Dark Side Of The Moon cleared for our project but obviously, that never happened.”

Alongside Stomu Yamash’ta, John Phillips composed and recorded much of the music for the film and the majority of Phillips’ compositions have been unavailable for 40 years.

The Man Who Fell To Earth will be back in cinemas in the UK on September 9, and available to own as a collector’s edition, Blu-Ray, DVD and download from October 24. You can find a full list of where the film is playing by clicking here.

Keep checking www.uncut.co.uk for more exciting David Bowie news soon…

The tracklisting is:

CD1
Stomu Yamashta – Poker Dice
Louis Armstrong – Blueberry Hill
John Phillips – Jazz II
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra – Venus: The Bringer Of Peace
John Phillips – Boys From The South
Stomu Yamashta – 33 1/3
John Phillips – Rhumba Boogie
The Kingston Trio – Try To Remember
Stomu Yamashta – Mandala
John Phillips – America
Stomu Yamashta – Wind Words
John Phillips – Jazz

CD2
Stomu Yamashta – One Way
John Phillips – Space Capsule
John Phillips – Bluegrass Breakdown
John Phillips – Desert Shack
Stomu Yamashta – Memory Of Hiroshima
John Phillips – Window
John Phillips – Alberto
Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra – Mars: The Bringer Of War
John Phillips – Liar, Liar
John Phillips – Hello Mary Lou
Robert Farnon – Silent Night
Genevieve Waite – Love Is Coming Back
John Phillips – The Man Who Fell To Earth

The September 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on Tom Waits, plus Tom Petty, Teenage Fanclub, Pink Floyd, Aaron Neville, Bat For Lashes, De La Soul, Chet Baker, Cass McCombs, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Ryley Walker, Kendrick Lamar, Lord Buckley, Sex Pistols, Brexit and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.