Home Blog Page 31

Arooj Aftab, Dungen, Wet Leg: End Of The Road 2023 – Day 3

0

Having been lulled into a false sense of serenity by the lush cello-driven shoegaze of Mabe Fratte and the sonorous Irish folk of John Francis Flynn, the Garden Stage is about to be jolted into life. Avalanche Kaito are billed as a Belgian-Burkinabé avant-punk trio, although it’s only the first p...

Having been lulled into a false sense of serenity by the lush cello-driven shoegaze of Mabe Fratte and the sonorous Irish folk of John Francis Flynn, the Garden Stage is about to be jolted into life. Avalanche Kaito are billed as a Belgian-Burkinabé avant-punk trio, although it’s only the first part of that equation that’s initially visible on-stage: two seasoned art-rock dudes locking into an angular Afro-punk groove. Then suddenly they stop, and a loud voice hollers from deep in the crowd. Frontman Kaito Winse is here after all – he’s just decided to start the set in the audience (evidently he knows this is a band worth watching). Wince eventually finds his way onto the stage, engaging the crowd in gruff call-and-response chants while also playing a mean peul flute. Invigorating.

Caroline have been coming to End Of The Road since they were teenagers and are visibly thrilled to be playing on “the best stage everâ€. But that doesn’t mean they’re here to people-please. After a 30-minute soundcheck, the Sussex troupe proceed to play their stunning deconstructed chamber-folk at an agonisingly glacial pace, soon losing at least half of the large crowd who’ve initially gathered to watch them. “When are they going to finish warming up?†wonders one wag on his way out. Unperturbed, Caroline continue to make the slowest, quietest noise that eight people could conceivably conjure up together. Those who do remain are completely entranced – and when the band dedicate a Low cover to the late Mimi Parker, there isn’t a dry eye in the field.

“Hi, we’re Oasis!†yells Rhian Teasdale of Saturday’s not-so-secret guests Wet Leg. But frankly, even if the Gallagher brothers had decided to reform and launch their comeback here on the Dorset/Wiltshire borders, they’d struggle to beat the frenzied reception that greets Wet Leg’s arrival. Quickly proving that they’re much more than one-hit wonders, every song is a joyous sing-aloud riposte to whoever’s twisting your melon this week. And when they do finally play that song, the place goes bananas – not least the people who’ve lugged an actual fucking chaise longue into the moshpit.

Dungen have been kicking around for more than 20 years now, to the point where we’re in danger of taking them for granted. But a terrific set on the Boat stage is a timely reminder of their brilliance. By every available metric – quality of guitar tone, length of flute solo, thickness of cardigan – they are the greatest band at this festival. To call them psych-rockers feels too reductive given the agility of their prog-funk rhythms, the splendour of their three-part harmonies, their dense organ-driven groove. Endearingly, they are also very Swedish, bickering about whether signature song “Ta Det Lugnt” translates as “take it easy†or “chill the fuck out†– a directive that could be aimed at guitarist Reine Fiske who slams his instrument down at the end of a storming set, perhaps frustrated at not receiving due recognition for some of the most blistering solos ever played by a man in a knitted tank top.

Not many festivals would dare to put a drum-less ambient jazz trio at the top of the bill, but Arooj Aftab is simply too good not to be headlining the Garden Stage. Back with her original trio of double bassist Petros Klampanis and (heavily pregnant) harpist Maeve Gilchrist, the spell they weave together is mesmerising and at times almost unbearably beautiful. Thankfully Aftab is quick to puncture any pretentiousness with her usual withering New York humour, instructing the photographers to “make me look hot†and complaining that the roses she usually throws to crowd have been sent “to some other fucking stage!†There are new songs too, which bodes well for that hotly anticipated Vulture Prince follow-up.

Aftab lauds her fellow bandmates’ musical skills as “almost offensive†while defining her own role in proceedings as merely “drinking red wine and talking shitâ€. She’s right about the first bit, but couldn’t be more wrong about the second; Aftab is simply the greatest singer that most of us will ever see outside of an opera house or an Elizabeth Frazer gig. Even as silent discos and late-night secret punk shows call, you’d be happy for her to keep singing “Mohabbat†forever.

Catch up with all of Uncut’s coverage of End Of The Road 2023 here.

75 Dollar Bill Q&A: End Of The Road 2023 – Day 3

0

The Dire Straits influence on 75 Dollar Bill’s freeform desert jazz is, to be fair, subtle at best. “Mark Knopfler is in every guitar player’s top five in Mauritania,†guitarist Che Chen told Tom Pinnock during the second of End Of The Road’s Uncut Q&A sessions at the Talking Heads stage, ...

The Dire Straits influence on 75 Dollar Bill’s freeform desert jazz is, to be fair, subtle at best. “Mark Knopfler is in every guitar player’s top five in Mauritania,†guitarist Che Chen told Tom Pinnock during the second of End Of The Road’s Uncut Q&A sessions at the Talking Heads stage, considering the lessons he learned in the West African country during his eleven days under the Moorish guitar tutorage of Jheich Ould Chighaly in 2013.

“I got a crash course in the Moorish modal system,†he explained. “Ten years later I’m still digesting the things that I saw and learned there. It’s an important touchstone for the way I play guitar.â€

His percussionist bandmate Rick Brown was keen to stress that the band’s influences stretched far beyond Mauritanian styles, let alone the “Money For Nothing†riff. “The minimalist composers of the ‘70s, free jazz musicians, soul jazz musicians and Afro-Caribbean rhythms,†he said, “all of those things are important to one of both of us.†And so it would prove, as the pair wove liquid guitar and exotic polyrhythm into dream-like extended passages during their early evening Boat Stage set.

The duo arrived at the Q&A – delayed but unflustered – fresh from two nights at Dalston’s Café Oto, one of which, by chance, saw them play with baritone saxophonist Cheryl Kingan, who had appeared on 2019’s I Was Real album. Having played there as a duo after US shows as a ten-piece band (best exemplified by 2020’s Live At Tubby’s release, Brown argued), discussion naturally turned to their formation on the New York underground scene of 2012, where Brown became a regular at Chen’s shows with his experimental band True Primes. “People didn’t like us,†Chen joked, “so if you turned up repeatedly at our gigs you were pretty conspicuous.â€

Brown immediately saw in Chen a musician with the skill and vision worthy of accompanying a crate he’d found in the street. “I’d found this five-pieces-of-plywood crate on the street in New York years before,†he said. “I didn’t play it very much but I knew when I hit it with my fist it made this nice ‘boom’ sound that I liked and it was open in the back so I could put stuff in it and it didn’t take up too much space. [Chen] heard it and thought ‘these ideas I have with guitar might work with that thing’.â€

The box, Brown explained, has “mutated along the decades. The one I’m playing tonight has bits of wood from Italy, Norway and some of the original stuff. It’s all hybridised.†And Brown himself has done some mutating too. Pinnock steered him towards a few choice reminiscences of moving to NYC at the height of the CBGBs punk period, diving into the no wave scene inspired by Pere Ubu and running into a young Sonic Youth.

“I played in a band at the Speed Trials,†he explained. “It was a few-day festival in downtown New York, The Fall were a part of that, Swans and some other bands including Sonic Youth.†You need to write a book, Pinnock urged. “I’m a very slow writer – I’m working on it,†Brown grinned, then corrected himself. “I’m planning on working on it.â€

Catch up with all of Uncut’s coverage of End Of The Road 2023 here.

Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Cass McCombs: End Of The Road 2023 – Day 2

0

Sylvie are demob-happy. It’s the last date of a long European tour and as soon as they exit stage right, they’re “going to a spa to get back massagesâ€. But if they’re feeling ragged and worn-out, you’d never tell. Now a seven-piece, complete with pedal steel, their ’70s Laurel Canyon h...

Sylvie are demob-happy. It’s the last date of a long European tour and as soon as they exit stage right, they’re “going to a spa to get back massagesâ€. But if they’re feeling ragged and worn-out, you’d never tell. Now a seven-piece, complete with pedal steel, their ’70s Laurel Canyon homages are pristine and note-perfect. Bandleader Ben Schwab formed Sylvie partly to pay tribute to his dad’s sunshine pop band Mad Anthony, who never made it out of their garage back in the day. Here, they give one of his old songs the audience it deserves, alongside a stunning rendition of their own instant classic “Falls On Meâ€.

A quick detour via the sylvan harmonies and box-of-wine anecdotes of Lilo on the Piano Stage brings us to the loquacious art-rock racket of Blue Bendy in the Folly. They’re one of those groups where each member looks – and sometimes plays – like they’re in completely different bands. But in a good way, obviously. In his long coat and baseball cap, singer/ranter Arthur Nolan holds forth in the grand tradition of wayward indie bards like Gerard Langley and Julian Cope. Even if the finer details of his wry declamations are often lost in the chaos, you’re behind him all the way.

Post-rock party band Horse Lords are two chaps in smart shirts and slacks, a shaggy haired saxophonist/percussionist and a drummer resembling Garth from Wayne’s World. One tune starts with what sounds like the piano riff from Happy Mondays’ “Step On” before mutating into a manic Celtic jig. In 7/4 time. Others come on like Trout Mask Replica (the !!! remix). People don’t quite know how to dance to it, but they dance anyway. Tremendous stuff.

Sessa brings a touch of Brazilian flair to the Talking Heads stage, playing solo and acoustic save for an occasional female vocalist. In true bossa nova style, his songs present as urbane and breezy, but passionate currents whirl beneath. At the end of a starkly brilliant version of Helene Smith’s southern soul swooner “I Am Controlled By Your Loveâ€, he resorts to swatting his guitar wildly before composing himself for one final, beautiful chord.

It’s a similar scene at the Garden Stage, where Cass McCombs responds to a somewhat restless early-evening crowd by seeming to play more softly, more intently, forcing you to really lean in and listen. You’re rewarded with picaresque tales of Greek goddesses and “a tremendous harmonica player whose name now escapes meâ€, as well as gorgeously restrained all-timers like “County Line”. But eventually the sleeping volcano must explode: towards the of set, without warning, McCombs and his band unleash a three-minute torrent of noisy Electric Miles weirdness – no lyrics required.

Unknown Mortal Orchestra are determined not to play a clichéd festival headline set: no guests, no gimmicks, just Ruban Nielson and his supremely tight four-piece band, silhouetted against their own band logo. For all the apparent worldliness detailed in songs like “Multi-Loveâ€, there is an appealing vulnerability to Nielson’s voice; he’s the kid stumbling into the adult’s party, both perturbed and fascinated by what he finds. This innocent quality even pervades crisp upbeat numbers like “Hunnybee†and “Can’t Keep Checking My Phone†(which is easy enough, given there’s no reception here anyway – and, hey, there’s a near-full moon to gawp at instead).

But for the full Peter Pan experience, look no further than Panda Bear & Sonic Boom, the space cadets who never grew up. It’s hard to hang on to your idealism, but by reaching back to the pre-rock era for inspiration, the duo have come up with something totally fresh and life-affirming. They cleave closely to the tracklisting of last year’s excellent Reset, but have begun to toy with the songs a little more, teasing out moments of pure, uncomplicated euphoria, accompanied by primary-coloured visuals and retina-scorching strobes. Who needs a rave tent?

Angeline Morrison Q&A: End Of The Road 2023 – Day 2

0

Fingers gently sweeping an autoharp, on the Talking Heads stage Angeline Morrison sings her haunting untold stories. “Mad-Haired Moll O’Bedlamâ€, sentenced to the sanitorium for raising her voice at a policeman. The victims of the port town race riots in the wake of WWI. The plantation slaves l...

Fingers gently sweeping an autoharp, on the Talking Heads stage Angeline Morrison sings her haunting untold stories. “Mad-Haired Moll O’Bedlamâ€, sentenced to the sanitorium for raising her voice at a policeman. The victims of the port town race riots in the wake of WWI. The plantation slaves lured to England by the promise of money, land and the African queen they were told ruled the country.

All tracks are from her recent album The Sorrow Songs: Folk Songs Of Black British Experience, which formed the basis of the first of the weekend’s Uncut Q&A sessions on the same stage just an hour earlier. “It’s a re-storying of Britain’s lost and forgotten black ancestors, who have been here for over 2,000 years, since Roman times at least, but who seem to be missing from the folk and traditional songs of these islands,†she told host Tom Pinnock.

Morrison’s immersive journey and research into their stories made for a fascinating, eye-opening and often moving discussion. Talk began on the track “Unknown African Boy (D. 1830)†which Morrison recently performed solo on Later… With Jools Holland, about “a child whose estimated age was around eight years of age who was washed ashore when a slave ship was wrecked off the Isles of Scilly.â€

“I went to the grave,†Morrison said, “it was so emotional. The story really broke my heart – he was a child and he should have been having fun and playing with his friends and instead was abducted and trafficked halfway across the world destined for a life of torture and an early death by drowning. I wanted to honour that. When it’s a child involved it highlights the bigger picture.â€

Discussion moved on to “The Beautiful Spotted Black Boyâ€, based on the early 19th Century story of George Alexander Gratton, trafficked form St Vincent’s by circus entrepreneur John Richardson at the age of four or five because his vitiligo would have made him a popular exhibit in European freak shows as one of what were called “the spotted childrenâ€. “He was bought for a thousand guineas and exhibited around the country,†Morrison explained, “and John Richardson was said to have absolutely adored this boy and loved him as his own child.†When he died, she said, Richardson bankrupted himself building a brick mausoleum to protect the child’s valuable body. “He’s said to have died from a broken heart shortly afterwards and is buried with the child. It’s abhorrent, with notes of ‘ooh’.â€

That these stories had been “airbrushed out†of Britain’s folk traditions, Morrison argued, reflected the invisible nature of so many black Britons throughout history. “So many of these black ancestors weren’t officially recorded,†she said. “Unless you had a birth certificate, marriage certificate, death certificate or an official burial in a church, you weren’t recorded. So there’s going to be more than we’re able to count.â€

Her next album, she revealed, would be about the art of alchemy: “each song will be a meditation on one of the alchemical stagesâ€. Has she mastered the power of alchemy, Pinnock asked? “It’s a little early to say,†she chuckled. “I’m getting there.â€

Angel Olsen, The Mary Wallopers: End Of The Road 2023 – Day 2

0

“Tonight we shall burn in hell,†yells a bloke called Joe as a DJ in a fisherman’s hat and his saxophonist sidekick jog on the spot to some rabid electronic post-ska. A minute ago, everyone was bobbing at the knees to the cabaret drop-down section of a piece of skittering jazz rock that couldn...

“Tonight we shall burn in hell,†yells a bloke called Joe as a DJ in a fisherman’s hat and his saxophonist sidekick jog on the spot to some rabid electronic post-ska. A minute ago, everyone was bobbing at the knees to the cabaret drop-down section of a piece of skittering jazz rock that couldn’t be more South London if it had inadequate transport options. This is Fat Dog, freshly signed to Domino and kicking off EOTR Day 2 in customarily esoteric fashion.

Across at the main Woods stage, Brooklyn’s Say She She – named as a tribute to Chic for reasons which swiftly become apparent – are spinning and sync-dancing through a sort of psychedelic disco funk they call discodelia, caught in the exact midpoint between ‘60s psych soul and ‘70s funk where it’s acceptable to sing lines like “be my lover on an astral planeâ€.

Mid-afternoon at the Talking Heads stage, Angeline Morrison bewitches a crowd perched on hay-bail pews with her haunting folk laments on domestic violence, her supernatural bond to her late grandfather and several sorry tales of slavery, racism and maltreatment from her recent album The Sorrow Songs: Folk Tales Of Black British Experience.

They might share a folk tradition but there could barely be a sharper clash of vibes all day than that between Morrison and The Mary Wallopers on the idyllic Garden Stage. “We all have fleas and we’re proud of it!†they yell, bantering wildly between crazed traditional jigs, reels and yarns celebrating Cork’s red-light district and rich people going to hell. The key signifier? “If you have brand name underwear, you’re fucking rich.†They too boast their fair share of historical social commentary; one battle ballad confronts the warmongering rich while The Dubliners’ “Building Up And Tearing England Down†tackles the Irish “navvy†struggle. But we’re moved here in a very different manner; whirled by the elbow rather than hurled by the heartstrings.

By nightfall, exuberance burnt, a chill descends. “You staying warm?†Angel Olsen asks the Garden Stage crowd as she wraps her country quilt across its shoulders. Hers are opulent Americana songs of big-sky drama and romance; alt-country with an Oppenheimer co-write, Lana writ large.

Accompanied by a string duo, occasional harpsichord and sensitive band, the ghostly melodies of “Give It Up†are imbued with strident emotion, “Unfucktheworld†becomes a devastated waltz. Yet for all the Lynchian haze and sumptuous sadness shrouding her music – she even closes with an impassioned if somewhat tongue-in-cheek cover of Badfinger’s “Without You†– there is also plenty of hope on show. “Sister†balloons with sonic optimism and “Shut Up Kiss Meâ€, the 2016 hit she craftily introduces as “a song I wrote last nightâ€, catches much of its infectious joy from it sheer determination for love. “We’ve got two more songs,†she says towards the end, “amazing, I love freezing!†But her audience, tonight, burn in heaven.

Jaimie Branch – Fly Or Die Fly Or Die Fly Or Die ((World War))

0

The contemporary jazz world was stunned by the untimely death of avant-garde trumpeter and composer Jaimie Branch when she passed away last August at the age of 39. Branch was fierce and thrilling, a trailblazer known for her uncompromising, politically infused jazz and distinct style of composition...

The contemporary jazz world was stunned by the untimely death of avant-garde trumpeter and composer Jaimie Branch when she passed away last August at the age of 39. Branch was fierce and thrilling, a trailblazer known for her uncompromising, politically infused jazz and distinct style of composition. Her work deftly occupied a zone of creative music that could just as easily be termed punk-jazz. She was a busy collaborator too, leaving her uniquely dynamic mark on a swath of albums in a variety of settings, most notably in the experimental electro-jazz duo Anteloper. But it’s her music with the Fly Or Die band that really propelled her to the position of one of contemporary jazz’s most compelling artists. Now, her final album with her main ensemble is ready to be heard by the rest of the world.

Fly Or Die Fly Or Die Fly Or Die ((World War)) consists of nine songs composed by Branch and then recorded in April 2022 with Fly Or Die (cellist Lester St Louis, bassist Jason Ajemian and drummer Chad Taylor) during her residency at the Bemis Centre for Contemporary Art in Omaha, Nebraska. When Branch died, the album was in a nearly completed state. Her family members, bandmates and other collaborators convened to make the final tweaks and add the finishing touches. What should have been the next step in Branch’s innovative career became a tragically beautiful final document that captured an artist cresting a peak.

Surprisingly lush and melodically expansive, the album opens with the electro-gospel “Aurora Risingâ€, clocking in just under two minutes before resolving precisely into the instantly catchy groove of “Borealis Dancingâ€, a track that sounds just like its title feels. With steady rhythmic grooves augmented by the sweet melancholy of strings, this song would be right at home on Joe Henderson’s 1974 album The Elements.

She may have been known most for her fiery trumpet, but Branch’s voice was just as vital to her composition and performance. She leaned into it on this album, bringing it front and centre on the incendiary “Burning Greyâ€. Her perceptive gaze is turned to our crumbling world, the words an exhortation not to forget to fight and urgent reminder that the future lives inside us. The music grooves and swings, tipping towards the sublime tension of cacophony that marks the best free jazz. “Burning Grey†is potent and electrifying, furiously reflective of the depth of love that powers a revolutionary spirit.

That mix of anger and love is just as clearly present on “Take Back The Worldâ€, a song that exemplifies Branch’s political point of view. Her voice is front and centre here too, a passionate howl that proves she could have easily led a hardcore band. But she takes the song in a different direction, manipulating her voice to create a psychedelic effect that feels like time dilating, stressing the urgency of her message.

One of the more unexpected (if you never saw Fly Or Die perform, that is) choices is “The Mountainâ€, a sparse reimagining of the Meat Puppets’ “Comin’ Downâ€. The original song is country-inflected grunge and the cover here preserves the country influence, stripping the music down even further to Ajemian’s upright bass paired with his and Branch’s voices, concluding with a trumpet solo.

The fun-loving side of Branch is present too, not just in the communal vibes that animate her music but also in the literal components. Look at the credits and you’ll notice she has one for “happy appleâ€, the Fisher Price toy with an apple face and chimes inside. You hear them most clearly at the end of the album on “World War ((Reprise))â€, a sonic coda that sparkles and cries, drawing from all the elements that made Branch’s music soar, down to the playful possibility found within a child’s toy.

Fly Or Die… is many things, but above all it seems to be about the simple act of paying attention. In a political sense, sure, but also to the pleasure of connection, drawing a direct link between empowerment and enjoyment, action and emotion. It’s entirely fitting, then, that the album is dedicated to the lovers and the fighters who live to make the world a more compassionate and generous place. In a world without Branch, her voice reaches us from beyond with a simple but powerful plea to take care of the planet and each other.

Hiss Golden Messenger – Jump For Joy

0

Hiss Golden Messenger’s music reflects faith in an open-armed notion of divinity. This is seen most clearly in a similarly open idea of rock’n’roll rooted in the American South’s soil and spirit, and deepened during Hiss lynchpin MC Taylor’s wonderstruck wanderings across America. But when...

Hiss Golden Messenger’s music reflects faith in an open-armed notion of divinity. This is seen most clearly in a similarly open idea of rock’n’roll rooted in the American South’s soil and spirit, and deepened during Hiss lynchpin MC Taylor’s wonderstruck wanderings across America. But when all that was shut down by the pandemic, their ninth full album, 2021’s Quietly Blowing It, instead absorbed Taylor’s bewilderment, and his country’s chaos. “People often look at Hiss songs like beacons of hope,†he considers, “but those [Covid] years of uncertainty tested my capacity for it. Mentally I went about as low as I could go, and on Quietly Blowing It I can hear how low I was. In its tempo and type of self-reflection, it feels like the last record I can make like that.â€

The Sounding Joy: Hiss Golden Messenger Meets Revelators On South Robinson Street (2021), with Spacebomb/Bonny Light Horseman bassist Cameron Ralston, was what Taylor dubs an “instrumental, grooving, cacophonous, free jazz recordâ€, shaking off both his previous album’s heaviness and rigid musical boundaries. Going back on the road with Hiss in 2022, and feeling his returning audience’s hunger, he then began writing songs around a teenage alter ego, Michael Crow, reaching back as he did so to his original musical fervour.

Jump For Joy is the loose-limbed, exuberant result, a Hiss Golden Messenger record designed to close the gap with his recent slew of live albums, and let us dance our troubles away. It’s hardly Hiss Goes Disco, but Americana, too often neutered into an almost literary form, here resumes its bodily origins. Gospel, funk and soul, Memphis and New Orleans flit through highly personal Southern rock, played by the live Hiss band with easy generosity. Little Feat are enduring Taylor influences, exemplars, he says, in meshing “ferocious groove and writing that is smart and deepâ€. So this music rolls: guitars arrive on the title track like a helping hand, and slide-guitar on “The Wondering†slyly slips in with a wink.

“God, I’m only 16,†Taylor murmurs on “Jesus I’m Boredâ€, over the drums’ railway chug, heading steadily out of his teenage town. “I want to be something/Can you give me a sign?†The autobiography continues with “The Wonderingâ€, as Michael Crow housebreaks and hunts experience, and Hammond organ shimmers. Here and in “Feeling Eternalâ€, “I Saw The New Day In The World†and the blinding light and cleansing rock of “Sunset On The Fadersâ€â€™, there’s a sense of daily, cosmic wonder which the singer is innately part of.

“Woke up this morning, my God I’m feeling happy,†he declares like an anti-blues singer during “Shinboneâ€â€™s bright, blissful funk, further enquiring: “Taking chances… If you lose it all, can you love what’s left?†Continuing on from the Revelators album, Taylor is laying down weighty cares, and falling back into the flow of life. Songwriting itself is central to this change, as “The Wondering†pines for the simplest truth: “Let me write just one verse that doesn’t feel like persuasion…â€

Taylor has observed a similar shift in perspective in peers across numerous spheres since the pandemic, a recalibrating of what really matters akin to a near-death experience. “I’ve spent decades choosing to put music first, missing weddings and my beloved grandmother’s funeral because I was on the road,†he states. “I’m just not going to be doing that any more.†Hiss Golden Messenger albums have always wrestled with faith, struggling to glean God in Taylor’s North Carolina home. Now one of his most lovely, nakedly autobiographical songs, “My Old Friendsâ€, finds “something to believe in†in longtime compadres, as he returns from his troubadour trials to declare his love. The bass ambles, and slide and acoustic guitars make gossamer harmony, forging a melody that might have fallen off Harvest, or a Cat Stevens record. “My transgressions/May I forgive, the way I’ve been forgiven,†Taylor incidentally prays, pausing lyrically afterwards, as if waiting to be answered.

Jump For Joy is a panoramic, magical reverie on the sometimes hard gift of a life in American music. “I wanted to trace my life as a devotee of music, and as a wandering soul,†Taylor agrees. “And I am finding a lot of solace in this idea that I’m living the life that I dreamed about as a teenager – being footloose in America, and able to create poetic things.†In catastrophe’s slipstream, Hiss Golden Messenger have decided to count their blessings.

Uncut’s New Music Playlist for September 2023

0

You'll have hopefully noticed by now that End Of The Road is on this weekend - Tom, Sam and Mark are on site covering the festival for Uncut - which promises a ton of great things. You can read today's first EOTR report over here, where Wilco sound like they delivered another excellent headline set....

You’ll have hopefully noticed by now that End Of The Road is on this weekend – Tom, Sam and Mark are on site covering the festival for Uncut – which promises a ton of great things. You can read today’s first EOTR report over here, where Wilco sound like they delivered another excellent headline set. Having seen them in Spain a few weeks ago – more on that in next month’s Uncut – I’m reminded, not for the first time, that they’re probably my favourite live band of the last 15 years or so.

But in the meantime, if you’re not going to End Of The Road, please take solace in our latest Playlist – the usual mix of new stuff including Ty, Devendra, Handsome Family, Andy Bell, Beirut and some lanquid, experimental soundscaping from Istanbul-born Berke Can Özcan in cahoots with our favourite Norwegian trumpet mastermind, Arve Henriksen

1
TY SEGALL

“Voidâ€
[DRAG CITY]

2
JEFFREY MARTIN

“There Is A Treasureâ€
[LOOSE]

3
BEIRUT

“So Many Plansâ€
[POMPEII]

4
BERKE CAN ÖZCAN FEATURING ARVE HENRIKSEN & JONAH PARZEN-JOHNSON

“Snake Behind Valleyâ€
[OMNI SOUND]

5
DEVENDRA BANHART

“Nunâ€
[MEXICAN SUMMER]

6
HENRY PARKER

“In The Valleyâ€
[TOMPKINS SQUARE]

7
THE HANDSOME FAMILY

“The King Of Everythingâ€
[LOOSE]

8
OTTO WILLBERG

“Reap What Thou Sowâ€
[BLACK TRUFFLE]

9
JEREMIAH CHU

“In Electric Timeâ€
[INTERNATIONAL ANTHEM]

10
PYE CORNER AUDIO

“FtrTrxâ€
[self-released]

11
ISRAEL NASH

“Can’t Stopâ€
[LOOSE]

12
ROBERT FINLEY

“You Got It (And I Need It)â€
[EASY EYE SOUND]

13
ANDY BELL & MASAL

“Hallogalloâ€
[SONIC CATHEDRAL]

14
THE MARY WALLOPERS

“The Blarney Stoneâ€
[BC Records]

Wilco, Deerhoof: End Of The Road 2023 – Day 1

0

“This must be the largest audience we’ve ever played for,†grins Deerhoof drummer Greg Saunier, peering out at End Of The Road’s sizeable early-doors crowd, dampened but not disheartened by Thursday’s insidious drizzle. Just the sort of meeting of minds that EOTR was made for. An band of p...

“This must be the largest audience we’ve ever played for,†grins Deerhoof drummer Greg Saunier, peering out at End Of The Road’s sizeable early-doors crowd, dampened but not disheartened by Thursday’s insidious drizzle. Just the sort of meeting of minds that EOTR was made for. An band of possibly selective appeal – such are their disjointed songs of math-rock virtuosity, blasts of beastly riffs and delicate Björk-meets-Yoko vocals about death and onions – playing to an attentive crowd of sonic aficionados hungry for a challenge.

It’s what has, over its 17 years, made EOTR Britain’s most refined, exploratory and cultured festival; a place the devoted flock to whatever the line-up, an arthouse Glastonbury. And Deerhoof, like Khruangbin last year, act as a means to become re-accustomed to its values.

Stretches of angular post-rock and looping, hypnotic chorus-pedal guitar lines drift from the stage, stilted and chopped to the degree that they often trip over themselves and land face first in a drum solo (occasionally accompanied by a bout of death-themed poetry). Singer Satomi Matsuzaki does can-can kicks in a green party dress, singing about seeing too many seagulls and growing tomatoes from dead onions. At points they go full Townshend, invent crank metal chanson (“L’Amour Storiesâ€), or just muck about for a laugh. As they segue their math-rock version of the Knight Rider theme into Eddie Grant’s “Electric Avenueâ€, anyone following along online might assume the wags have got at Setlist.fm again.

It’s been a year of boutique festivals shooting their bolt early – Spiritualized headlined the Thursday night of Green Man, for example – and EOTR wholeheartedly joins in. Wilco top the first night’s limited bill, with Jeff Tweedy in grateful mood, the band quicksilver of motion. Into the gentle Americana of “Handshake Drugs†swoop squealing, hawk-like guitars; over the indie rock regret of “I Am Trying To Break Your Heart†grows an avant-garde clatter and clamour reflecting the turmoil of the vindictive mind.

Slow-burn alt-country ventures into the cosmic are a speciality. “Bird Without A Tail/Base Of My Skull†moves from bristling folk self-flagellation – Tweedy lyrically beating himself with sticks and stabbing himself with a penknife – into a scorching segment that could be a lap around the afterlife. The languid “Impossible Germany†becomes a storm in Austin. The gorgeous country folk of “Misunderstood†builds to a chest-pounding finale, Tweedy bawling “Nothing! Nothing!†in anguished rock staccato. A howl from the precipice.

After so much atmosphere-building, it’s refreshing when the set shifts into a simpler lane, “Jesus, Etc†sinking into its sweet country pop melody and the beat pop of “Dawned On Me†coming on like alt-country’s answer to – oh yes – “Alright†by Supergrass. “Gonna play some country music for you,†Tweedy says, strapping on an acoustic guitar for the honky-tonk-ish “Falling Apart (Right Now)â€, “that what you’ve been waiting for?†If it is, we’re only briefly indulged: before long, “Shot In The Arm†is making chemtrails across the Nashville skyline. Consider EOTR 2023’s gates not so much open as comprehensively breached.

We’re off to End Of The Road Festival 2023

0

Bags packed, toothbrush ready, weather forecast checked... and we're off to this year's End Of The Road festival. You can read our daily coverage of the festival on this site throughout this weekend. As well as headliners like Wilco and Angel Olsen, we'll be digging The Mary Wallopers, Arooj Afta...

Bags packed, toothbrush ready, weather forecast checked… and we’re off to this year’s End Of The Road festival.

You can read our daily coverage of the festival on this site throughout this weekend. As well as headliners like Wilco and Angel Olsen, we’ll be digging The Mary Wallopers, Arooj Aftab, Panda Bear & Sonic Boom, Joan Shelley, Sam Burton and a host more.

As well as reporting from around the festival, we’re also holding the Uncut Q&As each day, where Tom Pinnock will be chatting to some very special guests on the Talking Heads stage:

Angeline Morrison: Talking Heads, Friday, 16:00 – 16:45

75 Dollar Bill: Talking Heads, Saturday, 16:00 – 16:45

King Gizzard And The Lizard Wizard: Talking Heads, Sunday, 16:00 – 16:45

All in all, it’s a very busy weekend for Uncut and we can’t wait for the gates to open.

See you down the front!

Ultimate Music Guide Definitive Edition: Queen

0

“It’s a huge honour!†That’s what Queen's Brian May says about our latest issue in his special new introduction to the magazine - and who are we to argue with a man with all those qualifications? It’s a very special Ultimate Music Guide that we’ve got for you in a couple of weeksâ...

“It’s a huge honour!â€

That’s what Queen’s Brian May says about our latest issue in his special new introduction to the magazine – and who are we to argue with a man with all those qualifications?

It’s a very special Ultimate Music Guide that we’ve got for you in a couple of weeks’ time. As the surviving bandmembers get ready for the USA/Japan leg of their tour, and Freddie Mercury’s personal effects are auctioned in London, we present the Definitive 172-page guide to… Queen!

It should go without saying that this is the only place to find our usual top-quality blend of classic interviews and in-depth new reviews. In the former, Freddie is on form throughout (“Darling, I’m too good…â€), confronting a music press which is often rude, occasionally bordering on hostile about what he and the band does – even as the public adore it. In the latter, Uncut’s squadron of foot-stomping rockers get stuck into exactly what it is that makes Queen Queen.

In this 172-page definitive edition, however, you’ll find the magazine going all out, piling on the quality like Queen stacking harmonies. Mama mia! Yes, that really is a collectable lenticular cover. The best 30 Queen songs? Bismillah! Here you’ll find Roger Taylor, Brian May and Adam Lambert picking their favourites, from big hits to fan favourites – and giving the lowdown on how they were made and why they still play them now. It’s a great read but I’m afraid that, no, they can’t tell you what “Bicycle Race†is all about.

But don’t stop us now. Before you can even think “huge pink tricycleâ€, we can direct you to our entertaining new interview with Adam Lambert, who tells us about his journey from American Idol to fronting the band, and guides us through the preparation and responsibility of bringing Queen + Adam Lambert to the stage in 2023. Motorcycles. Heated debates. And no milk! It’s all here. Brian May also drops in again for a word about his part in the performance and the presentation: “At one point I appear to be on top of an asteroid…â€

If there’s one thing Queen know about, it’s a big finish. And the same is true with us: the publication’s not over until the exclusive eight-page chronology unfolds. Here we present the Six Ages Of Queen, from early days to afterlife, via the “Red Specialâ€, the Bohemian Rhapsody video, the “Under Pressure†sessions, Live Aid and more…

No! You will not let it go. Pre-order your exclusive lenticular edition here:

Pink Floyd to release standalone remaster of Dark Side Of The Moon

0

Pink Floyd are to release a standalone remaster of their Dark Side Of The Moon album on October 13. This edition first appeared earlier this year in the Dark Side 50th anniversary box. It'll now be released on CD, LP and Blu-ray. The Blu-ray contains the Dolby Atmos and a 5.1 Surround mix as well...

Pink Floyd are to release a standalone remaster of their Dark Side Of The Moon album on October 13.

This edition first appeared earlier this year in the Dark Side 50th anniversary box. It’ll now be released on CD, LP and Blu-ray. The Blu-ray contains the Dolby Atmos and a 5.1 Surround mix as well as the remastered Stereo version. The package comes with commemorative postcards, stickers and a 24-page booklet.

The Floyd album is in shops a week after Roger Waters‘ reimagining of Dark Side is released, on October 6.

As part of the general Dark Side 50th anniversary celebrations, the Floyd have also announced a competition to create animated music videos for any of the 10 songs on the album. Animators can enter up to 10 videos, one per song on the album. A winner will be selected from a panel of experts which will include Nick Mason and Aubrey ‘Po’ Powell. The deadline for submissions is November 30, 2023. To enter and for more information go to https://www.pinkfloyd.com/competition/

Soft Cell announce super deluxe Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret

0

Soft Cell are releasing an expanded edition of their 1981 debut, Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret. It will now land as a 6-CD 98-track super deluxe edition featuring 40 unreleased tracks. You can hear "Frustration (Extended Version)" below. https://open.spotify.com/track/2Rgb7YcnjFLYidA3emHeHW?si=2e66b...

Soft Cell are releasing an expanded edition of their 1981 debut, Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret.

It will now land as a 6-CD 98-track super deluxe edition featuring 40 unreleased tracks. You can hear “Frustration (Extended Version)” below.

It’s released by Mercury-EMI / UMR on October 20 and you can pre-order it here.

CD1: Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret: 2023 Remaster + Singles, B-Sides & Edits
Frustration 04:12
Tainted Love 02:35
Seedy Films 05:05
Youth 03:21
Sex Dwarf 05:47
Entertain Me 03:00
Chips On My Shoulder 04:06
Bedsitter 03:36
Secret Life 03:37
Say Hello, Wave Goodbye 05:34
Memorabilia (Single Version) 04:49
A Man Could Get Lost (Single Version) 03:17
Persuasion (Edit of 12†Single B-Side) 03:36 *
Where Did Our Love Go? (Single B-Side) 03:14
Facility Girls (Single B-Side) 02:23
Fun City (Edit of 12†Single B-Side) 04:24
Torch (Single Version) 04:08
Insecure Me (Single B-Side) 04:40
What! (Single Version) 02:51
…So (Single B-Side) 03:49

CD2: Non-Stop Extended Cabaret: Full-Length Versions & New Remixes
Frustration (Extended Version) 06:02 *
Tainted Love (2021 10″ Extended Version) 05:05
Seedy Films (2023 Extended Version) 05:16 *
Youth (2018 ‘Wasted On The Young’ Extended Version) 05:41
Sex Dwarf (2023 Extended Version) 05:45 *
Entertain Me (2023 Extended Version) 06:05 *
Chips On My Shoulder (2018 Extended Version) 06:16
Bedsitter (1981 Original 12†Mix) 07:52
Secret Life (2018 Extended Version) 05:20
Say Hello, Wave Goodbye (2018 Dave Ball ‘Lateral Mix’) 07:07
A Man Could Get Lost (2023 Extended Version) 05:08 *
Memorabilia (Daniel Miller 2023 Remix) 05:16
Memorabilia (The Hacker 2023 Remix) 06:37

CD3: Non-Stop Exotic Cabaret: Curios, Rarities, Sessions & Alternate Mixes
Frustration (Original ‘Mutant Moments’ Version) 03:32
Tainted Love (New 2023 Version) 03:01 *
Seedy Films (Richard X Remix) 05:20
Youth (Dave Ball ‘Warhol Funeral’ Mix) 03:05 *
Sex Dwarf (Live On BBC ‘Old Grey Whistle Test’ 4th February 1982) 05:16
Entertain Me (Richard Skinner Session, Radio 1, 26th July 1981) 03:45
Chips On My Shoulder (Live From ‘The Oxford Road Show’ 22nd January 1982) 03:28 *
Bedsitter ((Richard Skinner Session, Radio 1, 26th July 1981) 03:34
Secret Life (George Demure Remix) 05:10
Say Hello, Wave Goodbye (Live From ‘The Oxford Road Show’ 22nd January 1982) 04:33 *
A Man Could Get Lost (Live at Leeds Warehouse, 16th July 2018) 03:30 *
Torch (Live from ‘Top Of The Pops 2’, 28th January 2002) 04:05 *
Tainted Love/Where Did Our Love Go (US Radio Edit) 04:01 *
Seedy Films (Richard Skinner Session, Radio 1, 26th July 1981) 03:58
Youth (Live On BBC ‘Old Grey Whistle Test’ 4th February 1982) 03:15 *
Chips On My Shoulder (Richard Skinner Session, Radio 1, 26th July 1981) 04:20
Tainted Love (Live from ‘Top Of The Pops’ 1981 Reunion, 2001) 03:14 *
Bedsitter (‘Flexipop’ Version) 03:45 *
Memorabilia (2023 Dub Mix) 5:44 *
Tainted Love (Aborted 1981 Studio Take) 1:07 *

CD4: Non-Stop Instrumental Cabaret: Instrumentals & Bonus Demos
Frustration (Instrumental) 04:15 *
Tainted Love (Instrumental) 03:01 *
Seedy Films (Instrumental) 05:10 *
Youth (Instrumental) 03:25 *
Sex Dwarf (Instrumental) 05:15 *
Entertain Me (Instrumental) 02:57 *
Chips On My Shoulder (Instrumental) 04:09 *
Bedsitter (Instrumental) 03:39 *
Secret Life (Instrumental) 04:03 *
Say Hello, Wave Goodbye (Single B-Side Instrumental) 03:54
A Man Could Get Lost (Original Daniel Miller Instrumental Version) 03:30 *
Torch (Instrumental) 04:12 *
What! (Instrumental) 03:11 *
Insecure Me (Instrumental) 03:12 *
Tainted Love (Original 1981 Daniel Miller Demo) 02:47
Seedy Films (Original 1981 Demo) 04:02 *
Sex Dwarf (Original 1981 Demo) 06:53 *
Chips On My Shoulder (Original Demo) 03:50 *
Secret Life (Original 1981 Demo) 03:39 *
Say Hello, Wave Goodbye (Original 1981 Demo) 04:39 *

CD5: Non-Stop Original Cabaret: The 1981 / 1982 12†Mixes & B Sides
Tainted Love/Where Did Our Love Go? (Original 12″ Version) 08:57
Memorabilia (Original 12″ Version) 07:47
Torch (Original 12″ Version) 08:28
What! (Original 12″ Version) 06:09
Tainted Dub (Original Version) 09:14
Persuasion (Original 12″ Version) 07:35
Facility Girls (Original 12″ Version) 07:16
Fun City (Original Version) 07:33
Insecure Me (Original 12″ Version) 08:16
…So (Original 12″ Version) 08:29

CD6: Non-Stop Intimate Cabaret: Live In Concert, London 2021 & 2018
Frustration (Live at Eventim Apollo London, November 2021)
Tainted Love (Live at Eventim Apollo London, November 2021)
Seedy Films (Live at Eventim Apollo London, November 2021)
Youth (Live at Eventim Apollo London, November 2021)
Sex Dwarf (Live at Eventim Apollo London, November 2021)
Entertain Me (Live at Eventim Apollo London, November 2021)
Chips On My Shoulder (Live at Eventim Apollo London, November 2021)
Bedsitter (Live at Eventim Apollo London, November 2021)
Secret Life (Live at Eventim Apollo London, November 2021)
Say Hello, Wave Goodbye (Live at Eventim Apollo London, November 2021)
Torch (Live at Eventim Apollo London, November 2021)
Memorabilia (Live at Eventim Apollo London, November 2021)
Insecure Me (Live at 02 Arena London, 30 September 2018
What! (Live at 02 Arena London, 30 September 2018
Tainted Love/Where Did Our Love Go? (Live at 02 Arena London, 30 September 2018

Neil Young reveals new Crazy Horse guitarist

0

Neil Young has revealed Nils Lofgren's replacement in Crazy Horse for two shows on September 20 and 21. ORDER NOW: Tom Waits is on the cover of the latest UNCUT The shows are part of a benefit to mark the 50th anniversary of The Roxy in Los Angeles - which Young opened with the Santa Monica...

Neil Young has revealed Nils Lofgren‘s replacement in Crazy Horse for two shows on September 20 and 21.

The shows are part of a benefit to mark the 50th anniversary of The Roxy in Los Angeles – which Young opened with the Santa Monica Flyers. Their shows were recorded and released as the 2018 live album, Roxy: Tonight’s the Night Live.

As Lofgren will be playing with Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band for the Roxy’s 50th anniversary shows, Young has drafted in Micah Nelson. Nelson has already played substantially with Young, as part of the Neil Young + Promise Of The Real line-up that toured between 2014 and 2019.

Young confirmed the news on his archives website.

With Springsteen touring until the end of September and then from November to December, it’s possible Nelson will continue to deputise for Lofgren should further Crazy Horse dates emerge…

Wiltshire joy!

0

We've already got our bags packed in anticipation of this weekend's End Of The Road Festival. While we can't wait to see old favourites like Wilco, King Gizzard, Panda Bear & Sonic Boom and Cass McCombs, here's End Of The Road co-founder Simon Taffe's six picks to seek out at this year’s festi...

We’ve already got our bags packed in anticipation of this weekend’s End Of The Road Festival. While we can’t wait to see old favourites like Wilco, King Gizzard, Panda Bear & Sonic Boom and Cass McCombs, here’s End Of The Road co-founder Simon Taffe’s six picks to seek out at this year’s festival… and don’t forget you can read the full line-up here.

FLOODLIGHTS
It’s perfect indie-pop from Australia: really catchy songs, great-sounding vocals. I don’t usually like music like that, but they make it work. There’s an honesty to their songwriting that feels very personal. They’re one of the new bands I got most excited about last year, and we booked them to come over before they were signed. I think this will be their first UK trip.

INFINITY KNIVES & BRIAN ENNALS
They made my album of the year last year [King Cobra]. It’s bedroom hip-hop but it sounds big, and the lyrics are amazing – just so funny and interesting. Honestly, I think it’s up there with Kendrick Lamar’s first couple of records. The album has a lot of variation, from late-’80s/early-’90s hip-hop to soul and gospel, and some of it even sounds like Anohni! I’m excited to see where they go. I feel like they’re going to write a big hit.

CHARLOTTE CORNFIELD
She just gets better and better with every record. There’s something so personal and intimate about her songwriting which you can relate to, a bit like a female Jonathan Richman. Some of it reminds me of Neil Young and Joni Mitchell, or The Beatles’ classic songwriting. There’s a great song on her latest album [] about going to see a Magnetic Fields gig. She’s a real storyteller.

JOHN FRANCIS FLYNN
I saw him on The Boat stage last year and he really blew me away, so I went up to him straight away and he became the first act booked for this year. I guess he’s in that same world as Lankum. It’s almost as if Portishead were doing Irish folk music – he has these trancey, drone elements, but it really works with the traditional Irish sound. He’s made it his own in a very original way.

75 DOLLAR BILL
They were booked to play before the pandemic, and we’ve finally got them playing this year down at The Boat. It’s a massive sound that they somehow create, just the two of them. I guess it reminds me of post-rock bands like Tortoise, but even more uplifting: sometimes it’s jazz, sometimes it’s quite folky, sometimes it’s metal! And it’s really upbeat, almost like dance music. I loved the records, but I didn’t realise how danceable they could be until I saw them live.

THE MARY WALLOPERS
This is a band that I shouldn’t really like, but I love them, they’re infectious. Obviously, they remind me of The Pogues – it’s traditional Irish folk music played by a bunch of punks with mullets. It’s just so uplifting, I think it’ll be an amazing live show. I saw them play twice at Glastonbury and it was crazy. Even in the tiny Crow’s Nest, people were smashing into each other and crowd-surfing. They bring the party.

End Of The Road 2023 takes place at Larmer Tree Gardens near Salisbury on August 31 – September 1. To get you in the mood for this year’s festival, why not remind yourselves of the highlights from last year’s edition

Hear Ty Segall’s new track, “Void”

0

Ty Segall has released a new track, "Void". Clocking in at almost seven minutes, it's his first new material since last year's Hello Hi album. You can watch the video - directed by Ty and Denée Segall - below. ORDER NOW: Tom Waits is on the cover of the latest UNCUT https://www.youtub...

Ty Segall has released a new track, “Void“. Clocking in at almost seven minutes, it’s his first new material since last year’s Hello Hi album.

You can watch the video – directed by Ty and Denée Segall – below.

The track is available to buy on Segall’s Bandcamp page.

Segall has also announced a slew of live dates in the States for next year.

Wednesday, September 6 – Topanga Canyon, CA @ Theatricum Botanicum*
Thursday, September 7 – Topanga Canyon, CA @ Theatricum Botanicum*
Thursday, October 5 – Milwaukee, WI @ Turner Hall Ballroom^
Friday, October 6 – Detroit, MI @ Majestic Theatre^
Saturday, October 7 – Indianapolis, IN @ Deluxe at Old National Centre^
Thursday, October 26 – Austin, TX @ LEVITATION
Friday, November 10 – Jersey City, NJ @ White Eagle Hall – Solo Acoustic
Saturday, November 11 – Hamden, CT @ Space Ballroom – Solo Acoustic
Tuesday, February 20 – San Francisco, CA @ Great American Music Hall
Wednesday, February 21 – San Francisco, CA @ Great American Music Hall
Saturday, February 24 – Solana Beach, CA @ Belly Up
Friday, April 19 – Tucson, AZ @ 191 Toole
Saturday, April 20 – Albuquerque, NM @ Sister Bar
Tuesday, April 23 – Jackson, MS @ Duling Hall
Wednesday, April 24 – Nashville, TN @ Brooklyn Bowl
Friday, April 26 – Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel
Saturday, April 27 – Washington, DC @ Atlantis
Sunday, April 28 – Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer
Monday, April 29 – New York, NY @ Webster Hall
Wednesday, May 1 – Boston, MA @ Royale
Thursday, May 2 – Montreal, QC @ Club Soda
Friday, May 3 – Toronto, ON @ Danforth Music Hall
Sunday, May 5 – Cleveland, OH @ Beachland Ballroom
Monday, May 6 – Chicago, IL @ Thalia Hall
Tuesday, May 7 – Omaha, NE @ The Waiting Room
Thursday, May 9 – Englewood, CO @ Gothic Theatre
Saturday, May 11 – Sacramento, CA @ Harlow’s

* Acoustic set w/ The Freedom Band
^ w/ Axis: Sova

Buck Meek – Haunted Mountain

0

Shortly before Judee Sill died prematurely in her LA apartment in 1979, she left an entry in a journal. Forty-five years later, that journal was entrusted by Sill’s estate to Buck Meek after he appeared in a documentary about the singer. He turned this set of unfinished lyrics dedicated to Sill’...

Shortly before Judee Sill died prematurely in her LA apartment in 1979, she left an entry in a journal. Forty-five years later, that journal was entrusted by Sill’s estate to Buck Meek after he appeared in a documentary about the singer. He turned this set of unfinished lyrics dedicated to Sill’s boyfriend and his daughter into “The Rainbowâ€, the final song on his third solo album. Lyrically, “The Rainbow†is a slender affair, a series of abstract, rhetorical questions that Meek grafts to a sweet, Sill-like folk setting. But the project shows the level of trust now afforded to Meek as a songwriter and interpreter thanks to his work with Big Thief as sympathetic collaborator to Adrienne Lenker. Meek clearly enjoys writing partnerships, and in the absence of Lenker he turns on Haunted Mountain to Jolie Holland, who co-writes five of the 11 songs, including the album’s three stand-outs – the title track, “Paradise†and “Lullabiesâ€.

Although Haunted Mountain was recorded by much the same personnel as Meek’s previous solo album, 2021’s Two Saviors, it’s a very different record. That one was recorded in a house in New Orleans in a week, a quick and lo-fi approach that suited songs about loss and heartbreak. Haunted Mountain is largely about love of various kinds, and Meek and producer Mat Davidson (The Low Anthem/Twain) took the band to Sonic Ranch in Texas and gave the record a much more expansive, full-sounding presentation, a resounding and confident tone that matches these optimistic and often unfiltered emotions.

The one thing undercutting that is Meek’s voice, which, with striking nominative determinism, is faltering and a little hesitant, with a high-pitched country edge that recalls Slim Whitman via Hank Williams. On songs like the Neil Young-inspired “Cyclades†– with rollicking refrain “too many stories to rememberâ€, this adds an intriguing edge, as if Meek isn’t entirely sure about what he is singing, lacking confidence not so much in the sentiment but more in himself for expressing it. On “Paradiseâ€, he delivers a beautiful song entirely about the magic of looking in a lover’s eyes; the vocal catch accentuates the mood, that of somebody overcome by the hold another person has over them. “Where You’re Coming From†sees Meek sing of a friendship which holds no doubts, the crunching guitar providing the underlying note of confidence and happiness. A similar theme is covered on the sparkling “Didn’t Know You Thenâ€, about falling in love, no ifs, no buts, no caveats – “I knew the moment that I saw you/That my life would never be the sameâ€. There is much beauty in the simplicity and unfettered honesty of these statements of love.

Meek also explores Big Thief-style territory of greater ambiguity. The opening song, “Mood Ringâ€, is full of treated effects, delays and echoes that appear to be designed to unsettle, while country lament “Lagrimas†(Spanish for ‘tears’) is about a mysterious necromancer who sends a message to the dead on the wings of a bird. On “Secret Sideâ€, he admits “I’ll never know the secret side of youâ€, while the Flaming Lips-style “Undae Dunes†boasts a slightly off-kilter, wild guitar and general sense of psychedelia that very much suits an enjoyably weird song about, maybe, space.

The two songs that really stick in the brain are “Haunted Mountain†and “Lullabiesâ€. The first was largely written by Holland then finished by Meek, a song about the majestic appeal of nature and place with a hint of death. It’s set to a melody that rolls and yearns, with some lovely pedal steel by Davidson, and is as close to anthemic as Buck Meek is likely to get, recalling artists such as Phosphorescent or Jason Isbell. “Lullabies†is a wonderful track about the bond between mother and daughter. It’s beautifully observed by Meek, who writes with subtlety and sensitivity about childbirth – a subject many men would actively avoid, or not even consider worth exploring. In this case, Meek used Holland as more of a sounding board, and she added some colour but otherwise gave it the seal of feminine approval. It is, like much of Haunted Mountain, audacious in an understated way. Meek but not mild.

Call The Cosmos!

0

“I really enjoyed meself,†says Shaun Ryder of Mantra Of The Cosmos’s rabble-rousing debut show at The Box in London in June. “I mean, a bunch of 60-year-olds forming a new band’s gotta be punk, annit?†To be fair, drummer Zak Starkey – the band’s instigator – and guitarist Andy Be...

“I really enjoyed meself,†says Shaun Ryder of Mantra Of The Cosmos’s rabble-rousing debut show at The Box in London in June. “I mean, a bunch of 60-year-olds forming a new band’s gotta be punk, annit?†To be fair, drummer Zak Starkey – the band’s instigator – and guitarist Andy Bell are still very much in their fifties, but the point stands: they all seem to be revelling in this little sabbatical from their more famous bands, blasting off together into the great unknown.

“It’s really good fun being with those guys,†confirms Bell. “Whether we’re making music or just sitting around chatting, they’re very entertaining people. The added element of chaos for me is Bez. At one point [during the gig] he dragged me to the front of the stage and suddenly I found myself pulling some guitar hero moves! He brought me out of my shell a little bit.â€

It was Starkey who originally floated the idea of a “21st century Hawkwindâ€, writing the band’s debut single “Gorilla Guerilla†with his wife Sshh. He reveals that, for the position of frontman, Ryder was on a shortlist of one. “I knew that the only singer and poet [who’s] psychedelic and different enough would be Shaun. If he hadn’t’ve said ‘Yeah’, I don’t think I would have taken it any further. Everyone’s calling it a supergroup, but that was never the aim. The aim was to just be different and fantastic.â€

Bell describes his role in the band as “creating an atmosphereâ€, citing Public Image Limited and dub reggae as sonic touchstones. “He’s a psychedelic soundscape genius,†enthuses Starkey. “I really didn’t want anyone who does riffs. There’s a lot of songs with one fucking chord in. There aren’t any rules and anything can go anywhere.â€

Ryder, too, has free rein to improvise: “We just press record and I get to throw a shitload of ideas down,†he grins. Lyrical themes are “whatever floats me boat at the time.†One song is based entirely on an article from a 1973 edition of NME he found in Starkey’s studio. Others are more topical, threatening to “put the boot in to Putin†– “It started off worse than that, but we thought ‘Let’s give this band a chance before we all get poisoned’†– or rhyming “laughing gas†with “working classâ€, prompted by a discovery of nitrous oxide canisters in his teenage son’s bedroom. How does a man with Ryder’s reputation for debauchery approach the ‘drugs chat’? “Me two youngest are 14 and 15 so they’re going through that stage of experimenting. I’m not gonna condone it, but I certainly understand. We just have to educate them, really. We don’t smoke in the house, we don’t have alcohol in the house, we don’t have fuckin’ laughing gas in the house! But the best thing is to just leave it to their mother…â€

Mantra Of The Cosmos played The Box as a four-piece, but at Glastonbury they expanded to include Brix Smith on bass. “Another 60-year-old!†cackles Ryder. “It’s not ‘life begins at 40’ any more, it’s life ‘begins at 60’. I’m a lot busier now than I ever used to be.†As well as Mantra Of The Cosmos, he’s playing shows with Happy Mondays throughout the summer and has just recorded a new Black Grape album for release in the autumn. “I’ve finally worked out that life is a lot easier without being off your tits.â€

Mantra Of The Cosmos’s latest single, “X (Wot You Sayin?)â€, is out now on BMG. Watch the video below:

We’re New Here – Horse Lords

0

Their official bio still says they’re a “band from Baltimoreâ€, but three out of four Horse Lords currently live in Germany. Andrew Bernstein (saxophone), Max Eilbacher (bass/electronics) and Owen Gardner (guitar) all decamped a few years ago, leaving drummer Sam Haberman as the sole Stateside ...

Their official bio still says they’re a “band from Baltimoreâ€, but three out of four Horse Lords currently live in Germany. Andrew Bernstein (saxophone), Max Eilbacher (bass/electronics) and Owen Gardner (guitar) all decamped a few years ago, leaving drummer Sam Haberman as the sole Stateside member. “It wasn’t part of some big strategy,†Bernstein insists. “But it started to make sense for the three of us, and it’s worked out well so far.â€

Whatever the reasoning, Horse Lords fit into the long and distinguished lineage of avant-garde American artists finding a more welcoming response across the pond. “Moving to Europe has had a big effect on the resources available to us,†says Gardner. “In Berlin, experimental music is all around you – it’s almost unfair to compare it to other places. There’s a real appetite for challenging music and huge levels of support for it here, at least relative to the US.â€

Horse Lords’ music can certainly be challenging – the group draw from a deep well of minimalism, serial composition, free jazz and polyrhythmic folk music. But don’t let that scare you away. As shown on their masterful 2022 LP Comradely Objects, the band are as inviting (and often as tuneful) as they are adventurous. Listeners may hear echoes of Captain Beefheart’s Magic Band, Devo or This Heat in the album’s seductive grooves and pleasingly eccentric textures. It begs the question: do Horse Lords consider themselves, when all is said and done, a rock band?

“I’ve begun trying to push ‘progressive rock’ as the genre that we play,†Gardner laughs. “But that might be a little misleading. We certainly use rock instrumentation and there are rock gestures in our music. The DNA of the band is based in rock, but it’s also not where we’re coming from at the same time. For example, everyone in a rock band kind of knows how a song goes once one part is in place. That’s not true in Horse Lords. We have to think about everything in a different way.â€

“Extra-musically, we operate as a rock band – or a punk band, more specifically,†offers Bernstein. “We’ve had a pretty DIY ethos, booking our own tours and all of that, just by necessity for most of the band’s history. That’s the world we came up in. If you want to play music with your friends, you form a band and play in basements.â€

Horse Lords may be new to Europe, but they’re far from a new band; they formed as a trio in 2010, with Bernstein joining the ranks soon after. “In the Baltimore scene at the time, it wasn’t uncommon for bands to start up, play one show and then the people involved would move on,†Gardner says. “For some reason, with Horse Lords, we started playing shows and writing songs and it just never stopped. There were a lot of commonalities between us and we kind of built this musical language together.â€

Part of that shared language is explicitly political – or at least as political as an instrumental band can get. “That might not be the overt aim,†muses Bernstein. “We’re trying to make things that sound interesting to us, first and foremost. But we’re also hoping that the music and the way we operate spurs the listener to think differently. Every act is political, and our decisions might make someone reconsider how they make music or how they go about their lives.â€

Horse Lords play Studio 9294, London (Aug 31), End Of The Road festival, Dorset (Sept 1) and Supersonic Festival, Birmingham (Sept 2)

Mellow Candle – Swaddling Songs

0

Along with Vashti Bunyan’s Just Another Diamond Day and Comus’s First Utterance, Swaddling Songs by Mellow Candle was one of those lost, cult LPs whose slow rediscovery helped to spark a renewed interest in the British and Irish psychedelic folk, around 25 years ago. While its potion of meadows,...

Along with Vashti Bunyan’s Just Another Diamond Day and Comus’s First Utterance, Swaddling Songs by Mellow Candle was one of those lost, cult LPs whose slow rediscovery helped to spark a renewed interest in the British and Irish psychedelic folk, around 25 years ago. While its potion of meadows, myth and magic still presses plenty of the right folk-rock buttons today, the band avoided too many overt Celtic tinges. It’s an album that can come out swinging capably hard as well as veiling itself with the odd dusky ballad. Anyone familiar with albums by Sandy Denny, Fotheringay and John & Beverley Martyn from the same era will find themselves on safe ground in its 12 tracks.

1971, when most of these songs were written, is the zenith of this bulge in folk music, the year when some of the best music was made in the British Isles, but also when the glut began to pile up and wither in a declining economy. Many of the bands you might associate with the pagan pastoralia of Mellow Candle – Comus, Trees, Forest, The Woods Band, Spirogyra, Heron and others – came and went at the same time with few albums left among the mulch.

The title, Swaddling Songs, promises a music to wrap yourself in. Or perhaps it was a music that the two women at the group’s centre, Clodagh Simonds and Alison O’Donnell, desired to be swaddled in. Because if the album has a story, it’s a typical one for the period and the generation, of wanting to move away from the stifling city and find freedom, enlightenment and escape out in the countryside, in a natural realm that is not free of strangeness and danger: wandering brigands, birds of ill omen, faery creatures, coffins and crows.

But at what point does protective swaddling tip over into overprotective suffocation? “Reverend Sistersâ€, slower, brooding and reflective, stands apart from the other tracks. It harks back to the girls’ younger days at the Holy Child Convent School in Dublin, where they met and began making music. The nuns who taught them, they recall, summoned them to their office to educate them that life is not a dream, and wisdom will come with the years. The song’s retort to the sisters is that wisdom did come, but not the kind they had in mind. “Now the veils are lifted from my eyes and I can see,†it concludes. The inclusion of this backstory gives the album a mature footing, their childhood a yardstick by which to measure the broader horizons they now aim at.

Simonds and O’Donnell stated making music together in 1963, at the age of 10, and took the name Mellow Candle a couple of years later. 1967 found the duo recording a demo which made its way – after receiving airplay on Radio Luxembourg – to the ears of a talent scout for the actor David Hemmings, who was then looking to break into music production. He invited them to London, where they recorded two songs with an orchestra. Simon Napier-Bell put them out as a single in August 1968, but it didn’t make much of a dent and the friends parted company. Three years on, in the kernel of Britain’s psych-folk Indian summer, they gave it another go. The girlish whimsy had given way to a more windswept vibe. O’Donnell brought David Williams, the guitarist in another band she’d been playing with. Initial rehearsals and writing sessions happened in the suitably rural stables at the home of Simonds’s parents’ house. John Peel hosted the Wexford Festival of Living Music, where the Candle were on the bill, and A&R man/future Chiswick/Ace Records founder Ted Carroll, then managing Thin Lizzy, among others, took them under his wing. (He arranged for Simonds to play keyboards and Mellotron on Lizzy’s second album, Shades Of A Blue Orphanage.) Eventually after a few false starts, including a demo recorded with Caravan’s drummer Richard Coughlan, new members Frank Boylan (bass) and William Murray (drums) were hired. December 1971 found them at Tollington Park Studios in North London, where they recorded Swaddling Songs in a few days. It was released on Deram, the experimental/progressive arm of Decca Records.

The rest of the scenarios are set out in the fields and moors, the perennial landscape of legend in these isles. “Heaven Heath†opens the record with a harpsichord waltz and a romantic vignette, in an Emily Bronte/Christine Rossetti mode, of a woman, a gravestone and a dead child. “Sheep Season†plays out the age-old enmity between shepherd and wolf, while the swaggering, Jefferson Airplane-ish “The Poet And The Witch†opens with an atmospheric snatch of taped tide and gulls. Like many of Mellow Candle’s songs, it’s a stream-of-consciousness mulch of folk-myth archetypes, watered by a diet of romantic lyrical ballads and the visionary-pastoral idealism of WB Yeats. It’s also a great example of the two women’s powerful combined vocals. The next, “Messenger Birdsâ€, showcases O’Donnell’s soaring solo voice in a song that sails a similar course to where Sandy Denny was heading at exactly the same time on The North Star Grassman and the Ravens.

Elsewhere, on “Vile Excesses†and the heavy “Lonely Manâ€, the Candle lock into their most appealing rhythmic grooves and suggest – in the absence of live tapes – their potential as a jam band, with some strong striding piano from Simonds and twanging electric guitar performance from Williams.

For Mellow Candle, the wilderness offered an enchanted antidote to the crushing boredom of city life. The last track contains just two lines of text, as well as wordless chants: “I know the Dublin pavements/Will be boulders on my graveâ€. Neither one of Candle’s founders allowed the rocks to gather, even though the band, broke and unnoticed, couldn’t struggle on much longer after the album’s release. They have each enjoyed fascinating, self-driven musical careers in the decades since. Clodagh Simonds was employed as Richard Branson’s PA at Virgin Records, and made guest vocal appearances on Mike Oldfield’s organic ambient LPs Hergest Ridge and Ommadawn. After residing in South Africa for many years she returned and in 2005 formed experimental folk band Fovea Hex. For Alison O’Donnell the 1970s involved being a member of folk band Flibbertigibbett, but in more recent times she has joined forces with Steven Collins’s alternative folk collective The Owl Service, formed her own unit United Bible Studies, and in 2022 released a solo folk album Hark The Voice That Sings For All. If anything remains of the Mellow Candle era in Fovea Hex and UBS, it’s the sense of openness to the moment, the musical fluidity and the focus on atmospheric texture. Above all, they have finally affirmed that it is possible to thrive on making an uncompromised music far away from anything perceived as the mainstream.