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Ryan Adams announces deluxe reissue of solo debut Heartbreaker

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Ryan Adams has announced details of a deluxe edition reissue of his solo debut album, Heartbreaker.

The record will be released on 180gm 4LP/DVD and 2CD/DVD and digitally by Caroline Records and Universal Music on May 6.

Remastered from the original tapes, the album will come in a deluxe box set that features the 15 song album plus demos and unreleased outtakes.

The package will also include a DVD featuring never before released footage of a complete solo acoustic show at the Mercury Lounge in New York City in October 2000, and a booklet of rare and unseen photos with liner notes written by collaborator Ethan Johns.

The band featured Ryan Adams on guitars, vocals, piano and harmonica, Ethan Johns on bass and drums, Dave Rawlings and Gillian Welch on guitars and backing vocals and Pat Sansone on keyboards.

The album also included guest vocals by Emmylou Harris, Kim Richey and Alison Pierce.

The full tracklisting Heartbreaker Deluxe Box Set is:

LP 1
Side A
(Argument with David Rawlings concerning Morrissey)
To Be Young (is to be sad, is to be high)
My Winding Wheel
AMY

Side B
Oh My Sweet Carolina
Bartering Lines
Call Me On Your Way Back Home
Damn, Sam (I love a woman that rains)

LP 2
Side A
Come Pick Me Up
To Be The One
Why Do They Leave?
Shakedown On 9th Street

Side B
Don’t Ask For The Water
In My Time Of Need
Sweet Lil Gal (23rd/1st)

LP 3
Side A
Hairdresser On Fire (previously unreleased outtake from original album session)
To Be Young (is to be sad, is to be high) (previously unreleased outtake from original album session)
Petal In A Rainstorm (previously unreleased outtake from original album session)
War Horse (previously unreleased outtake from original album session)
Oh My Sweet Carolina (previously unreleased outtake from original album session)

Side B
Come Pick Me Up (outtake from original album session)
Punk Jam (previously unreleased outtake from original album session)
When The Rope Gets Tight (alt) (previously unreleased outtake from original album session)
When The Rope Gets Tight (outtake from original album session)
Goodbye Honey (bonus track from original release)
In My Time Of Need (previously unreleased outtake from original album session)

LP 4
Side A
Bartering Lines (demo)
Come Pick Me Up (demo)
To Be The One (demo)
Don’t Ask For The Water (demo)
In My Time Of Need (demo)

Side B
Goodbye Honey (demo)
Petal In A Rainstorm (demo)
War Horse (demo)
Locked Away (previously unreleased outtake from original album session)

DVD
Filmed live at The Mercury Lounge (New York, NY) on October 20, 2000.
Oh My Sweet Carolina
Gimme Sunshine
To Be Young (is to be sad, is to be high)
AMY
Call Me On Your Way Back Home
Just Like A Whore
Wonderwall
Damn, Sam (I love a woman that rains)
Sweet Lil’ Gal (23rd/1st)
Come Pick Me Up
My Winding Wheel

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Radiohead release statement regarding album claims

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Radiohead have released a statement today, (April 15) regarding comments made by Brian Message about a new album.

During an interview at the ‘In Conversation’ event at London’s Wanstead Tap last night (April 14), Message said the album is “nothing like you’ve ever heard.” This was confirmed by the Wanstead Tap’s Twitter page, which has since been deleted.

The band have clarified their relationship with Message, stating that he is “not Radiohead’s manager – he is a partner in Courtyard Management but plays no operational role, and therefore quote’s from last night’s event, or any supposition arising from them, should not be attributed to Radiohead’s management or be seen as official quotes on behalf of the group.”

The full statement can be read here:

“At an industry event in London last night Brian Message was asked about new Radiohead music. Quotes attributed to him and taken from his talk have subsequently appeared, describing him as Radiohead’s manager. Brian Message is not Radiohead’s manager – he is a partner in Courtyard Management but plays no operational role, and therefore any quotes from last night’s event, or any supposition arising from them, should not be attributed to Radiohead’s management or be seen as official quotes on behalf of the group. Radiohead are managed by Chris Hufford and Bryce Edge at Courtyard Management.”

Radiohead are due to play a number of festival and tour dates this year:

May 20-21 – Amsterdam, Netherlands – Heineken Music Hall

May 23-24 – Paris, France – Le Zénith

May 26-28 – London, England – Roundhouse

June 1 – Lyon, France – Les Nuits Des Fourvieres

June 3 – Barcelona, Spain – Primavera Sound Festival

June 17 – Reyjkavik, Iceland – Secret Solstice

July 2 – St. Gallen, Switzerland – Openair St. Gallen

July 8 – Lisbon, Portugal – Nos Alive Festival

July 26-27 – New York, NY – Madison Square Garden

July 28-31 – Chicago, IL – Lollapalooza

July 29-31 – Montreal, Québec – Osheaga Music and Arts Festival

August 4 – Los Angeles, LA – Shrine Auditorium

August 5-7 – Golden Gate Park, CA – Outside Lands

August 8 – Los Angeles, LA – Shrine Auditorium 

August 20 – Osaka, Japan – Summersonic Festival

August 21 – Tokyo, Japan – Summersonic Festival

September 11 – Berlin, Germany – Lollapalooza

October 3-4 – Mexico City, Mexico – Palacio de los Deportes

 

Listen to Lotus Flower here:

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Father John Misty covers Nine Inch Nails – watch

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Father John Misty covered Nine Inch Nail’s Closer last night at a show at the Riviera Theatre in Chicago, IL.

He jokingly told the crowd, “it’s a little sappy but I would like to play my favourite love song for you” ahead of the performance.

Watch his cover of Closer here:

Father John Misty is currently on tour. He is due to play the following UK dates:

May 11 – Leeds, O2 Academy

May 12 – Glasgow, O2 ABC

May 13 – Manchester, Albert Hall

May 14 – Gateshead, The Sage

May 15 – Nottingham, Rock City

May 17 – Bristol, Colston Hall

May 18-20 – London, Roundhouse

May 21 – Southampton, O2 Guildhall

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The 11th Uncut Playlist Of 2016

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Back from holiday (hence no playlist last week; apologies) and up to my neck in deadlines, but look: yet another new Bitchin Bajas record; William Tyler’s blissful new country motorik trip (and a great mixtape from him aka Sebastian Speaks); plus a bunch of nagging reminders to check out Brigid Mae Power, Steve Gunn and the Skiffle Players…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Brigid Mae Power – Brigid Mae Power (Tompkins Square)

2 Olivia Wyatt + Bitchin Bajas – Sailing A Sinking Sea (Drag City)

3 Christian Fennesz & Jim O’Rourke – It’s Hard For Me To Say I’m Sorry (Editions Mego)

4 William Tyler – Modern Country (Merge)

5 Steve Gunn – Eyes On The Lines (Matador)

6 Various Artists – Loma: A Soul Music Love Affair – Volume One: Something’s Burning 1964-68 (Light In The Attic)

7 Various Artists – Loma: A Soul Music Love Affair – Volume Two: Get In The Groove 1964-68 (Light In The Attic)

8 The Still – The Still (Bronzerat)

9 Frazey Ford – Indian Ocean (Nettwerk)

10 Bob Dylan – Melancholy Mood (Columbia)

11 Holger Czukay – Movie! (Gronland)

12 The Family Of Apostolic – The Family Of Apostolic (Vanguard/Future Days)

13 Aquarium Drunkard Presents: Sebastian Speaks – A Mixtape (Aquarium Drunkard.com)

14 Allen Toussaint – American Tunes (Nonesuch)

15 Mark Pritchard – Under The Sun (Warp)

16 The Skiffle Players – Skifflin’ (Spiritual Pajamas)

17 Sly & The Family Stone – Fresh (Epic)

18 Van Morrison – Into The Music (Mercury)

19 Van Morrison – Common One (Mercury)

Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide: The Rolling Stones

As The Rolling Stones’ Exhibitionism show opens in London, it seems a good time for us to publish our deluxe, upgraded and updated Ultimate Music Guide to The Rolling Stones. In it, you’ll find a definitive survey of the band’s storied career, told with the aid of in-depth reviews of every single Stones album and a wealth of interviews from the archives of NME, Melody Maker and Uncut.

“At the moment and for the next 10 years I’m happy,” Keith Richards announces in 1964. “Whether it will last, I don’t know.”

Our 148 pages act as testament to the fact that the Stones did what no-one, 50 years ago, thought was possible: make an engrossing lifelong career out of the uncertain business of being in a rock’n’roll band.

“It’s ‘orrible to be the Grand Old Men,” Jagger told Melody Maker in, yes, 1972. “If all this talk gets any worse I’ll be getting another band…”

 

Order Print Copy

Reviewed! Chris Forsyth And The Solar Motel Band – The Rarity Of Experience

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It’s possible to tell a lot about an artist not only by the songs they cover, but also the manner in which they choose to perform them. Here, Philadelphia-based guitarist Chris Forsyth closes The Rarity Of Experience with a version of Richard Thompson’s “The Calvary Cross”. While discretely respectful to the original, Forsyth maps his own path through the song – a long, winding journey showcasing the formidable clarity of Forsyth’s playing. The rest of The Rarity Of Experience bristles with similar moments of high drama – expansive jams interwoven with razor-sharp dynamics. This album pushes and pulls in so many directions, it should fall apart; remarkably, it doesn’t.

The Rarity Of Experience is the second album recorded with Forsyth’s Solar Motel Band, whose line-up features Peter Kerlin (bass) and Steven Urgo (drums). The band’s previous record, 2014’s Intensity Ghost, foregrounded the formidable interplay between Forsyth and Paul Sukeena, whose twin guitars evoke great tag-teams passim like Neil Young and Danny Whitten, Lou Reed and Robert Quine or – most pertinently – Tom Verlaine and Richard Lloyd. There are changes afoot on The Rarity Of Experience. Not only has Paul Sukeena been replaced by Nick Millevoi, but the album’s opener “Anthem I” begins with an oscillating synth line (courtesy of Jamie Fennelly, from Forsyth’s previous band, Peeesseye); elsewhere, Forsyth sings.

But the alterations are not just cosmetic. The album’s wide-ranging scope is critical. The Rarity Of Experience is a double album: most of the material on Disc One has been honed on the road for the last year, while the second disc is more experimental in nature. Forsyth has also re-recorded some tracks from elsewhere in his catalogue that fit in with his current set. Both discs reflect the different aspects of Forsyth: the formidable guitarist with a killer live band and the improvisatory musician operating on the fringes of space rock and free jazz.

The first three minutes of “Anthem II” are an explosive showcase for the band’s strengths. Driven by Urgo’s pounding drums and Kerlin’s vigorous basslines, the guitars weave and rut, alternately squalling and keening. “The Rarity Of Experience Pt 1” – a compact 2:23, the shortest track here – finds Forsyth singing in a dryly disaffected voice not unlike Thurston Moore (Moore and Ranaldo are perhaps another comparable pairing to Forsyth and Millevoi). Meanwhile, the descending guitar motif of “… Pt 2”, threatens to burst into “Marquee Moon” at a moment’s notice. Buttressed by echoey organ stabs from regular collaborator Shawn Hansen, it reveals taut, New Wave rhythms, echoed by Forsyth’s minimalistic lyrics: “Think once/Think twice/Can’t think/Soul on ice”.

The 10-minute “High Castle Rock” never breaks its energy; each part of the song is a conduit to another delirious Forsyth solo or else it simply ploughs on forward, powered by the band’s formidable rhythm section. The mic setup on Urgo’s drums captures a deep, resonant boom that provides a solid foundation for the febrile playing of the two guitarists. “High Castle Rock” also makes clear the distinctions between Forsyth and Millevoi’s playing. Forsyth seems to chisel out each chiming note – he studied guitar with Richard Lloyd in the late 1990s – whereas Millevoi favours tight, spidery scrabblings that occasionally recall Nels Cline. Disc One finishes with “Harmonious Dance”, a looser, more cosmic number that loops round a mellifluous guitar refrain.

Disc Two opens with the outstanding “The First Ten Minutes Of Cocksucker Blues”: an imagined alternative score to the beginning of Robert Frank’s 1972 Stones doc that pulses with a period-authentic sense of menace. Forsyth originally recorded this on 2012’s solo set, Kenzo Deluxe; for this version, the band is joined by free jazz player Daniel Carter, whose woozy saxophone and trumpet lines add sinister undercurrents to the song. Elsewhere, Forsyth’s guitar on the down-tempo “Boston Street Lullabye” recalls the sepulchral twang of Low’s Alan Sparhawk. Initially favouring some graceful acoustic strumming, “Old Phase” slowly builds itself to full strength as Forsyth and Sukeena’s guitar lines spiral and rise with fine fluidity. The album closes with “The Calvary Cross”: Thompson’s mysterious invocation to his poetic muse. The song’s blank verse suits Forsyth’s semi-spoken delivery here. But presumably taking his cue from the extended live version included on Thompson’s (guitar/vocal) album, Forsyth’s version is marvelously digressive; a fitting coda to an album rich in such extemporisations.

As for Forsyth himself, “The Calvary Cross” can perhaps been seen as a neat metaphor for his career to date. “My claw’s in you and my light’s in you,” the song goes, highlighting the creative urges that are currently driving Forsyth onwards, never quite taking the same route twice.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch Paul McCartney perform “A Hard Day’s Night” live for the first time in over 50 years

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Paul McCartney launched his new One On One world tour last night (April 13, 2016] in Fresno, California by playing two Beatles songs live for the first time since becoming a solo artist.

McCartney opened his set with his first solo live performance of “A Hard Day’s Night“, which was last performed by The Beatles in 1965.

He also played “Love Me Do” for the first time since 1964.

The show also included pre Beatles material with the inclusion of The Quarrymen’s “In Spite Of All The Danger“.

The setlist also saw McCartney play “You Won’t See Me” live the first time live in America.

The Set List:
“A Hard Day’s Night”
“Save Us”
“Can’t Buy Me Love”
“Letting Go”
“Temporary Secretary”
“Let me Roll It”
“I’ve Got a Feeling”
“My Valentine”
“Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five”
“Here, There and Everywhere”
“Maybe I’m Amazed”
“We Can Work It Out”
“In Spite of All the Danger”
“You Won’t See Me”
“Love Me Do”
“And I Love Her”
“Blackbird”
“Here Today”
“Queenie Eye”
“New”
“The Fool on the Hill”
“Lady Madonna”
“FourFiveSeconds”
“Eleanor Rigby”
“Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!”
“Something”
“Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da”
“Band on the Run”
“Back in the U.S.S.R.”
“Let It Be”
“Live and Let Die”
“Hey Jude”

Encore:
“Yesterday”
“Hi, Hi, Hi”
“Birthday”
“Golden Slumbers”
“Carry That Weight”
“The End”

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

M Ward – More Rain

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M Ward’s CV is almost as heavy on the high-profile hook-ups as it is the solo recordings. He’s released seven of those since 1999, alongside one Monsters Of Folk album and five with Zooey Deschanel as She & Him. In addition, there are countless guest appearances for the likes of Bright Eyes, My Morning Jacket, Jenny Lewis and Howe Gelb, plus production credits for Lewis, Carlos Forster and, most recently, Mavis Staples’ Livin’ On A High Note.

Small wonder, then, that the Portland-based singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist is viewed as much in the light of his collaborations as his independent albums. But his MO is hardly that of a driven spotlight seeker; you get the impression that if he’s noticed at all, Ward doesn’t give a damn.

The man certainly gets around, but there’s been a commonality in his choices since the rickety and down-home, dust-covered alt.country of his solo debut, Duet For Guitars # 2. It’s hard to avoid the word “nostalgic” in regard to the warmly intimate and over-easy, Americana/folk pop that has become his trademark, but he’s no dogmatic revivalist. Ward’s skill is to make what might otherwise seem slight – as She & Him’s sugary retroism sometimes does – play as effortless, unselfconscious charm.

Despite the title, More Rain is framed as a shelter from the troubled world, a place where uplift and contentment reign, and naïvety is embraced. It’s telling that Ward plays his yesteryear references – jive, doo-wop, gospel, rock’n’roll, honky tonk – pretty straight. And lyrically, there isn’t a single knowing wink, not even on the swinging, barroom gospel of “I’m Going Higher”, where he croons, “Lift me high, so that I can see the dark shine beyond my darkest day.” The lack of ironic twist is both slightly unsettling and hugely refreshing.

Vocals figure more strongly on More Rain than usual, in that Ward’s familiar laidback tone gets a more expressive workout (the winding “Slow Driving Man” and Cali-Mex reminiscence “Girl From Conejo Valley” are standouts on that score) and backing singers help shape the songs, rather than just fill out spaces. As Ward told Uncut: “The idea was to rely on voice and vocal harmonies the way street singers used their voices – vocals as horns and strings, etc. The record grew from there and I replaced some vocal parts with actual instruments, but that’s the backbone of the record. I normally rely on guitars to make all the drama.”

Without abandoning his favourite decade, on More Rain Ward winds back from 2012’s ’60s-focused A Wasteland Companion to the ’50s, and lets rip a little, with guests including Peter Buck, KD Lang, Neko Case and The Secret Sisters. It’s a brief (12 tracks in under 40 minutes) encapsulation of a particular world view, all unabashed romanticism and guileless honesty, impeccably produced and pitched so up-close and personal that on “Phenomenon”, you can hear Ward’s wet mouth on the mic. It opens with the rumble of a (simulated) storm and the sound of rain, out of which emerges “Pirate Dial”, a sweetly spangled mix of acoustic guitar and pedal steel ostensibly about trawling the frequencies, although something in Ward’s “I can hear ya” suggests communication of a deeper kind is on his mind. Next is “Time Won’t Wait Up”; it cuts some rug via a mix of soda shop jive, doo-wop and glam, into which Ward slyly drops the hook from “Get It On”. It seems he shelved his original plan for an exclusively doo-wop set, but there are more than residual traces. “I’m Listening (Child’s Theme)” splices it with country-soul languor and adds strings and flugelhorn, while “Little Baby”, featuring KD Lang, is almost a homage to The Drifters. Elsewhere, there are nods to Elvis and Bobby Darin, notes of mariachi, Moog, mandolin and of Buck’s Rickenbacker, while the extended list of band members reads like a who’s who of Americana and alt.country/folk veterans.

Ward likes his cover versions. He’s previously recorded songs by Buddy Holly, Tony Martin, Bowie (his reworking of “Let’s Dance” is a revelatory gem) and Daniel Johnston, but here, it’s his beloved Beach Boys. “You’re So Good To Me” opens with the words “you’re kinda small” and features a cheesily attenuated “lalalalala”, but Ward’s in no way laughing at the song – he’s a little in love with it. It’s that affection that makes More Rain hard to resist.

Q&A
How is More Rain your refuge from a troubled America?

Music has always been a refuge or escape for me – listening to it or making it. American culture is sick and getting sicker, but I think art can help.

The title isn’t just an environmental reference.
It comes from reading the New York Times front-page stories every day. “More rain” is another way of saying more bad news, but it’s meant to only be a backdrop for the record. I’m more interested in the ways people transcend it. I think that’s what every good story ever written has been about, from Hamlet to Bilbo Baggins to Louis CK.

What did Peter Buck et al bring?
I’m lucky to have very talented musician friends; they are the rain and sun that make songs and records grow. I love recording their first instincts in the studio, because you normally get something unexpected that ends up becoming my favorite part of the song.

What do you like about ’50s rock’n’roll?
A lot of it is a waste of time signifying nothing, but a very small amount of digging uncovers an obscure James Brown or Chuck Berry song that quickly becomes essential to living.

“Phenomenon” seems to be about self-belief.
Part of the reason this is an especially hard song to talk about, is it’s a song about things that are hard to talk about.

How do you keep cynicism at bay?
I guess I’m pretty bored with cynicism. Besides a few Pavement records, has it ever achieved anything good?
INTERVIEW: SHARON O’CONNELL

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Julia Holter announces new tour dates

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Julia Holter has announced new tour dates.

She is due to play in Manchester, Bristol, Glasgow, Bristol, Newcastle and Brighton. This is alongside her biggest headline show to date at London’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire on November 14. Circuits Des Yeux will be the supporting act from November 11–21.

Holter has also confirmed a number of festival dates including Green Man Festival, Primavera Sound, Pitchfork Music Festival, La Route Du Rock and Iceland Airwaves.

Have You In My Wilderness was Uncut’s #1 Album of the Year last year.

The dates are:

May 15 – FORM: Arcosanti, Mayer, AZ. Tickets here

May 19-21 – Moogfest, Durham, NC. Tickets here

May 30 – Sasquatch Festival, Georgia, WA. Tickets here

June 2 – Kilbi Festival, Düdingen, Switzerland. Tickets here

June 4 – Primavera Sound Festival, Barcelona. Tickets here

June 6 – Le 106, Rouen. Tickets here

June 7 – Les Nuits De Botanique Festival, Brussels. Tickets here

June 9 – NOS Primavera Sound Festival, Porto. Tickets here

June 23 – Sled Island Music & Arts Festival, Calgary, AB. Tickets here

July 15-17 – Pitchfork Music Festival, Chicago, IL. Tickets here

August 6-7 – Pickathon, Happy Valley, OR. Tickets here

August 11 – Øya Festival, Oslo. Tickets here

August 12 – Way Out West Festival, Gothenburg. Tickets here

August 13 – Haldern Pop Festival, Haldern-Rees, Germany. Tickets here

August 14 – La Route Du Rock Festival, Saint-Malo. Tickets here

August 16 – Paradiso Noord, Amsterdam. Tickets here

August 18 – DR Studio 2, Copenhagen. Tickets here

August 21 – Green Man Festival, Brecon Beacons. Tickets here

August 28 – FYF Festival, Los Angeles, CA. Tickets here

August 31 – The Chapel, San Francisco, CA. Tickets here

September 1 – The Old Redwood Barn, Sonoma, CA. Tickets here

November 3-6 – Iceland Airwaves, Reykjavik. Tickets here

November 8 – Arts Carmarlis Festival, Katowice. Tickets here

November 11 – Gaite Lyrique, Paris. Tickets here

November 12 – Le Guess Who Festival, Utrecht. Tickets here

November 14 – Shepherd’s Bush Empire, London. Tickets here

November 15 – Cathedral, Manchester. Tickets here

November 16 – The Sage, Newcastle. Tickets here

November 17 – Art School, Glasgow. Tickets here

November 19 – Vicar Street, Dublin. Tickets here

November 20 – Anson Rooms, Bristol. Tickets here

November 21 – Concorde 2, Brighton. Tickets here

Listen to Sea Calls Me Home here:

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Bob Dylan’s childhood pal to publish memoir of their friendship

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Bob Dylan’s childhood best friend is reportedly writing a memoir, The Boys From The North Country: My Life With Robert Zimmerman And Bob Dylan.

The book will be published by Random House, according to The Rogovoy Report.

Louie Kemp met Dylan in 1954 at Jewish summer camp Camp Herzl in Webster, Wisconsin. He subsequently went on to manage the 1975-76 Rolling Thunder Revue tours, provided the smoked salmon for The Last Waltz and lived with Dylan in California for three years in the 1980s.

The book will be co-written with Kinky Friedman.

Kemp made his name with an independent fisheries business in Duluth and Alaska, which is now owned by Sysco.

Meawhile, Dylan has confirmed details of his new album, Fallen Angels.

The album is released on May 20 by Columbia Records.

The complete track listing for Fallen Angels is:

Young At Heart
Maybe You’ll Be There
Polka Dots And Moonbeams
All The Way
Skylark
Nevertheless
All Or Nothing At All
On A Little Street In Singapore
It Had To Be You
Melancholy Mood
That Old Black Magic
Come Rain Or Come Shine

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Allen Toussaint’s final album set for release

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Allen Toussaint‘s final studio recordings are being released on a new album, American Tunes.

The album will be released by Nonesuch on June 10, 2016.

The album features solo and band performances, with works by Toussaint, Professor Longhair, Duke Ellington, Fats Waller and Paul Simon.

American Tunes has been produced by Joe Henry.

The album sessions began with solo piano recordings at Toussaint’s New Orleans home studio in 2013, and later with the rhythm section of Jay Bellerose and David Piltch – joined by guests Bill Frisell, Charles Lloyd, Greg Leisz, Rhiannon Giddens and Van Dyke Parks – in Los Angeles in October 2015.

Joe Henry first worked with Toussaint when he invited the pianist to join the sessions for I Believe To My Soul. Henry subsequently acted as producer on Toussaint’s post-Katrina collaboration with Elvis Costello, The River In Reverse.

Henry describes the most recent sessions: “I have been working with Allen Toussaint – under his spell and subject to his influence – for a full decade now. He was a quiet radical, musically-speaking, and a prince of great humility.”

American Tunes is available to pre-order now at iTunes and nonesuch.com, with the track “Big Chief” as an instant download; nonesuch.com pre-orders come with a limited-edition print.

A two-LP vinyl version, also available June 10, includes three bonus tracks.

The tracklising for American Tunes is:

1. Delores’ Boyfriend
By Allen Toussaint

2. Viper’s Drag
Thomas “Fats” Waller

3. Confessin’ (That I Love You)
Doc Daugherty, Ellis Reynolds & Al Neiburg

4. Mardi Gras In New Orleans
Henry Roeland “Roy” Byrd (Professor Longhair)

5. Lotus Blossom
Billy Strayhorn

6. Waltz For Debby
Bill Evans

7. Big Chief
Earl King

8. Rocks In My Bed
Duke Ellington

9. Danza, op. 33
Louis Moreau Gottschalk

10. Hey Little Girl
Henry Roeland “Roy” Byrd

11. Rosetta
Earl “Fatha” Hines

12. Come Sunday
Duke Ellington

13. Southern Nights
Allen Toussaint

14. American Tune
Paul Simon

Vinyl LP bonus tracks:

15. Her Mind Is Gone
Henry Roeland “Roy” Byrd

16. Moon River
Henry Mancini & Johnny Mercer

17. Bald Head
Henry Roeland “Roy” Byrd

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Bruce Springsteen announces new dates for The River tour

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Bruce Springsteen has added more dates to his River Tour.

He will now play Trondheim on July 26, Oslo on July 28 and Zurich on July 31.

Last week, Springsteen canceled a show scheduled for Sunday in North Carolina as a protest against the state’s controversial House Bill 2. Known officially as the Public Facilities Privacy and Security Act, the Bill requires individuals to use gender-specific bathrooms, as defined by their birth certificates, and is seen by many as discriminatory against transgender people.

Springsteen pulled the band’s April 10 gig in Greensboro writing on his website, “Some things are more important than a rock show and this fight against prejudice and bigotry – which is happening as I write – is one of them.”

The River Tour will reach the UK on May 25 with a show at Manchester’s Etihad Stadium.

The tour coincides with the recent release of The Ties That Bind: The River Collection, a comprehensive look at the era of the 1980 album, The River.

The dates are:

Wednesday May 25: Etihad Stadium, Manchester
Wednesday June 1: Hampden Park, Glasgow
Friday, June 3: Ricoh Arena, Coventry
Sunday, June 5: Wembley Stadium, London

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Line-up announced for all-star Bob Dylan birthday tribute

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Best Fest has announced a festival to honour Bob Dylan’s 75th birthday.

Dylan Fest: A Celebration of Bob Dylan’s 75th Birthday will take place at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium on May 23 and 24. The event will see a wide array of artists take to the stage to perform.

“We are thrilled and grateful to celebrate the life and legacy of Bob Dylan at the legendary Ryman Auditorium,” says founder Austin Scaggs. “To honor Bob and raise money for a wonderful charity is a win-win.” Best Fest have previously held festivals in honour of Neil Young, Tom Petty and the Rolling Stones.

The list of artists so far confirmed to participate in Dylan Fest are: Emmylou Harris, Jason Isbell, Kacey Musgraves, Ann Wilson, Kurt Vile, Wynonna & The Big Noise, Boz Scaggs, Kesha, City & Colour, Moon Taxi, Brothers Osborne, Dhani Harrison, John Paul White, Nikki Lane, Brendan Benson, Rayland Baxter, Holly Williams, Langhorne Slim, Eric Pulido of Midlake, Ruby Amanfu, Karen Elson, Amanda Shires, Danny Masterson, Bijou Phillips, The Whigs, Cory Chisel, Adriel Denae, Jonathan Tyler, Robert Ellis, Shelly Colvin and Tommy Emmanuel.

Money raised from ticket sales is benefiting Nashville-based charity Thistle Farms. The charity is committed to helping survivors of abuse, addiction, trafficking and prostitution.

Tickets go on sale April 15 at 10am CT.

Tickets for May 23 show can be purchased here
Tickets for May 24 show can be purchased here

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Tim Hecker’s Love Streams reviewed

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When My Bloody Valentine disappeared from view after Loveless in the early 1990s, it left the newly emboldened young noise aesthete with something of a dilemma. Kevin Shields may have taught them that noise could be profoundly beautiful as well as transgressive, but where might they find similar succour now he had apparently retired from the game?

For a while, the ranks of shoegazers worked well enough. But when Ride and their kin were revealed to be essentially orthodox indie-rock bands with a mild effects pedal fetish, a more daring, avant-garde scene gradually revealed itself, located somewhere in the hinterland between post-rock and electronica. The billowing fuzz pastoralia of Flying Saucer Attack proved a strong entry point, the deeper ambient recesses of Boards Of Canada and the Warp label a satisfying next step. Then came murky drum’n’bass subversive Third Eye Foundation, and on into an experimental zone occupied by painterly sound artists like Pluramon, William Basinski and, perhaps best of all, the Viennese guitarist Christian Fennesz.

It is into this discrete musical continuum, this expanding index of possibilities, that we can usefully plant Tim Hecker. Hecker, originally from Vancouver, has been around for about 15 years now, releasing a series of albums (Love Streams is the ninth) on which melodies are often processed, smashed and re-imagined in endearing new contexts. There are plenty of other ways to categorise his consistently lovely music. Sometimes he’s been bracketed alongside the ambient creatives who populated his old label, Kranky. At others, he’s been seen as one of those ADD digital collagists like Oneohtrix Point Never, an occasional collaborator. A third perspective ranks him as part of the burgeoning post-classical movement, though his music is rarely quite as polite as much of that scene. Love Streams might have roots in the 15th Century chorales of Josquin Des Prez, but it’s emphatically not a gauzy updating of classical music for Sigur Ros fans.

That said, Hecker’s new home of 4AD also allows him to be seen as part of yet another tradition of radically beautiful music; Love Streams wouldn’t look out of place in a record collection between Le Mystere Des Voix Bulgares and the Cocteau Twins’ Treasure. The 4AD-friendly old trope of “sonic cathedrals” might be worth dusting down, too, given Hecker’s recurrent meddling with liturgical music, a procedure which often unmoors the ecstasies of those original pieces from their devotional purpose. The core of 2011’s Ravedeath 1972 was played on a Reykjavík church pipe organ, casting Hecker as a potent millennial Bach, and Love Streams finds him back in Iceland, exploring what might happen when he feeds the human voice into his elaborate systems.

The genesis of Love Streams is complex, but seems to involve Hecker tampering with Josquin recordings on his computer, using a programme to print out a new score, then employing the local composer Johann Johannsson to help create living choral performances out of the adulterated work. To complicate matters further, Hecker reportedly asked the singers to imitate Chewbacca at critical points. Then, of course, he artfully mangled the heavenly voices once more, subjecting them to all manner of buffeting interference, and came out with an album where divisions between the fleshly and the digital are seductively blurred.

Hecker evidently delights in high concepts, in an Eno-like sense of theoretical play, and some of his titles – “Voice Crack”, “Castrati Stack”, “Collapse Sonata” – keenly celebrate his modus operandi. But it never feels like he is more interested in the process of making music than the actual end result. As a consequence, the likes of “Music Of The Air” and “Violet Monumental I” weave innumerable snatches of the choir, ebbing synths and phased white noise together into a remarkable filigree construct. Elsewhere, there’s more space than in some previous Hecker records. “Bijie Dream” begins like one of those oddly courtly Aphex Twin pieces – “Girl/Boy Song”, say – and even when the noise billows in, like a fractious weather system, it still leaves room for the melody to work itself out, relatively unadorned.

Maybe this is the key to Love Streams’ success. For all its diverting technical backstory, for all our attempts to manoeuvre Tim Hecker into various neat genre boxes, ancient and modern, his music is ultimately ravishing in a way that transcends method and context. When the ghosts in the machine sing so sweetly, it’s not strictly necessary to know how they became trapped there.

Q&A: Tim Hecker

What attracts you to sacred music?

I think that it’s so loaded with the promises of transcendence, and reverence for something that isn’t obvious and material. I think a lot of art is devotional, in the sense that it is committed to or affirms something, but I’m more interested in using the veneer of transcendental music as an elastic surface to bend, mutate and replicate it into something else.

I started this record by overtly appropriating musical scores from the 15th Century composer Josquin Des Prez. Even at that time he wrote both sacred and secular music, so the distinction isn’t all that important. I worked on mutations of those pieces with a synthesizer, then worked with the composer Johann Johannsson to write choral arrangements that interacted with the original reworked pieces as an almost ouroboros of the voice. Interesting things come from misalignment and discord.

How do you think you’ve evolved as an artist over these past few years?

I think it’s hard to survive as a ‘composer’ or musician these days. I haven’t gone the route of radically rebuilding from scratch on each album, but I do definitely question whether I need to make music and whether releasing work adds anything to the world. Without feeling that hopefully it does, I probably wouldn’t bother.

 

 

The Kinks confirm track listing for latest reissue

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The track listing for The Kinks’ Everybody’s in Show-biz has been revealed by RCA/Legacy Recordings.

Everybody’s in Show-biz was the group’s tenth studio album. It was originally released as a double-LP, with live recordings from the Carnegie Hall dates in March 1972.

The Legacy Edition will contain the original album and a second disc that will include previously unissued studio session outtakes from the original recording sessions, held at Morgan Studios in London.

There will also be more live recordings of songs performed at the Carnegie Hall shows, for songs like Sunny Afternoon, Get Back in Line and Complicated Life.

David Fricke has also written extended liner notes for the release.

The track listing for Everybody’s in Show-biz: Legacy Edition is here:

DISC ONE:

The Original Album

  1. Here Comes Yet Another Day
  2. Maximum Consumption
  3. Unreal Reality
  4. Hot Potatoes
  5. Sitting In My Hotel
  6. Motorway
  7. You Don’t Know My Name
  8. Supersonic Rocket Ship
  9. Look A Little On The Sunny Side
  10. Celluloid Heroes
  11. Top Of The Pops (live)
  12. Brainwashed (live)
  13. Mr. Wonderful (live)
  14. Acute Schizophrenia Paranoia Blues (live)
  15. Holiday (live)
  16. Muswell Hillbilly (live)
  17. Alcohol (live)
  18. Banana Boat Song (live)
  19. Skin And Bone (live)
  20. Baby Face (live)
  21. Lola (live)

DISC TWO:

Bonus Tracks

  1. ‘Til The End Of The Day (live)
  2. You’re Looking Fine (live) (previously unreleased commercially)
  3. Get Back In Line (live) *
  4. Have A Cuppa Tea (live) *
  5. Sunny Afternoon (live) *
  6. Muswell Hillbilly (live) *
  7. Brainwashed (live) *
  8. Acute Schizophrenia Paranoia Blues (live) *
  9. Holiday (live) *
  10. Alcohol (live) *
  11. Complicated Life (live) *
  12. She’s Bought A Hat Like Princess Marina (live)
  13. Long Tall Shorty (live) *
  14. History (studio outtake) *
  15. Supersonic Rocket Ship (alternate mix) *
  16. Unreal Reality (alternate mix) *
  17. Sophisticated Lady (early rehearsal version of “Money Talks”) *

* Previously Unissued

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Led Zeppelin in copyright trial

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A jury will decide whether Led Zeppelin plagiarised the opening to Stairway to Heaven.

Michael Skidmore, a trustee to Randy California, brought the case to court stating that California should have a writing credit on the song. He alleges that the opening of Stairway to Heaven sounds like the opening of Taurus by Spirit.

Taurus was released in 1968 and Stairway to Heaven was released in 1971. Led Zeppelin and Spirit toured the US together in 1968 and 1969.

District judge Gary Klausner ruled: “”While it is true that a descending chromatic four-chord progression is a common convention that abounds in the music industry, the similarities here transcend this core structure,” the judge ruled. “What remains is a subjective assessment of the ‘concept and feel’ of two works … a task no more suitable for a judge than for a jury.”

The defendants argue that the “chord progressions were so clichéd that they did not deserve copyright protection”

Listen to the two songs here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Q7Vr3yQYWQ

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Are The Avalanches releasing new music?

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This would be the band’s first new release since their cover of Judy Garland’s Get Happy in 2013, which was for the Australian stage version of King Kong. A new album would be their first since Since I Left You in 2000.

The image shows a gold butterfly on black material. It can be viewed on their Facebook, Twitter and their new Instagram page.

Listen to Frontier Psychiatrist here:

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

 

Reviewed! Lush, Oslo, London, April 11, 2016

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“Fucking hell, this is exhausting,” says Miki Berenyi, four songs into Lush’s first gig for almost 20 years. This is, perhaps, not the most auspicious way to celebrate her band’s comeback; but, then, there was always something a little self-deprecating about Lush. During the band’s heyday in the late Eighties/early Nineties, Berenyi – along with her co-conspirators, Emma Anderson, drummer Chris Acland and bassist Phil King – carried themselves in a likable, slightly larkish manner. They made sparkling, opulent records; but behaved as if they couldn’t quite believe the were among the hottest bands of the period. There was an ineffable, held-together-with-gaffer-tape charm to Lush which, it seems, still remains two decades since they last played together.

That Lush have returned at all seems partly a pragmatic decision, partly an emotional one. They can’t help but have noticed the recent success enjoyed by contemporaries Slowdive and Ride, who reformed in 2014 and 2015. But it also seems likely that they are keen to honour the memory of Acland, who committed suicide in October 1996. You suspect there is some trepidation – residual or otherwise – in playing this material for the first time without him. As it transpires, former Elastica drummer Justin Welch acquits himself well.

In the years since Lush formally announced their split – in February 1997 – the individual members have had different degrees of involvement in music. Guitarist/vocalist Anderson played in Sing Sing for ten years while King has juggled his commitments as picture researcher for Uncut with duties in the Jesus And Mary Chain. His predecessor, Steve Rippon, appears to have entirely retired from music. Berenyi, meanwhile, disappeared from the spotlight. Considering such circumstances, they are in commendably excellent shape. Gathered before a supportive audience at Oslo – a 300-capacity bar/eaterie/venue in Hackney – for a warm-up show ahead of this weekend’s Coachella festival, their set reminds us of their distinct charms.

Lush occupied a hazy middle-ground that was neither straight pop nor as experimental as some of their fellow 4AD signings. The sheets of feedback that dominated their early recordings – and is evident tonight on “Deluxe”, “Breeze” and “Scarlet” – were always complimentary to Berenyi and Anderson’s serene vocal harmonies. Lush were never as harsh or idiosyncratic as, say, the Cocteau Twins, or as dense and amorphous as Slowdive.

Instead, many of their best songs – “Thoughtforms”, “Sweetness And Light”, both of which are standouts at Oslo – were built around cascading melodies that motored them forward. It’s easy to forget how strong their forays into ‘proper’ songs are, too. Tonight’s tremendous, propulsive version of “Ladykillers” presents a tantalizing what if? scenario, where it is possible to speculate how successful they might have been had not Britpop swaggered along and, to all intents and purposes, spoilt the party for Lush and many of their peers. The new song, “Out Of Control“, meanwhile, sounds satisfyingly like the band picking up from where they left off.

Berenyi is still a confident stage presence, whether mock-apologising for no longer having trademark red hair or responding to good humoured audience banter. Despite having barely been on stage for the last 20 years, she seems remarkably unphased by tonight. Anderson, meanwhile, is a more stoical presence; silent save for singing harmonies. Contrarily, they don’t play “Single Girl” – their joint biggest chart hit – but instead their encore climaxes with the harsh squall of “Leaves Me Cold” and the dreamy refrain of “Monochrome”. Both represent the dual qualities of Lush: a fine return, then.

Oslo, April 11, 2016 set list:
De-Luxe
Breeze
Kiss Chase
Hypocrite
Lovelife
Thoughtforms
Light From A Dead Star
Untogether
Lit up
Etherial
Scarlet
For Love
Out Of Control
Ladykillers
Downer
Sweetness And Light

Encore:
Stray
Desire Lines
Leaves Me Cold
Monochrome

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Photo: Stuart Jones

The May 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on PJ Harvey’s new album, Brian Wilson, The National’s all-star Grateful Dead tribute, Jack White and T Bone Burnett’s American Epic, Cate Le Bon, Donovan, Jean-Michel Jarre, Cheap Trick, Graham Nash, Heartworn Highways, Sturgill Simpson and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Introducing our Rolling Stones Ultimate Music Guide

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Plenty been going on while I’ve been away on holiday, it seems, not least the auspicious opening of the Rolling Stones’ Exhibitionism show that Michael reviewed last week. In the second room of the show at London’s Saatchi Gallery, Michael reports, “The history of the Stones is played out across 72 screens. The footage begins and ends with fans screaming. It hits the familiar beats: drugs bust, Brian, Altamont. ‘First you shock them, then they put you in a museum,’ says the young Jagger, with one eye firmly on the future.”

A good time, then, for us to produce one of our deluxe Ultimate Music Guides, with a lavish update of the volume dedicated to The Rolling Stones. The mag goes on sale in the UK this Thursday, but you’ll be able to order our Stones Ultimate Music Guide from our online shop sooner. In it, you’ll find a definitive survey of the band’s storied career, told with the aid of in-depth reviews of every Stones album and a wealth of interviews from the archives of NME, Melody Maker and Uncut. “At the moment and for the next 10 years I’m happy,” Keith Richard (as he was known then) announces in 1964. “Whether it will last, I don’t know.”

Our 148 pages act as testament to the fact that the Stones did what no-one, 50 years ago, thought was possible: make an engrossing lifelong career out of the uncertain, possibly ephemeral business of being in a rock’n’roll band. That this music has been sustained for so long – become embedded in our culture, even – is due, in an enormous amount, to The Rolling Stones. It’s not just the excellence of their music, or their business genius. No, The Rolling Stones set a template for rock’n’roll that was much bigger than music. Rock’n’roll was inexorably hooked up with sex and drugs. It articulated adolescent rage, rebellion, boredom and pettiness better than any other art form. It at least pretended to be dirty, provocative, confusing, not a little menacing.

And it found its purest embodiment in their skinny, uptight white bodies. The Beatles might have been charming, easier to assimilate and, perhaps, musically superior. But the Stones were far more successful at capitalising on the principle of a counterculture. They were A Threat. Five young men who were taken to court for urinating in the street, who were regarded with fear and despair by right-thinking parents and who, with the canny assistance of their manager until 1967, Andrew Loog Oldham, made nastiness marketable. What could be easier to pull off and yet so radical, so appealing and so lucrative?

“I always imagined The Rolling Stones lasting, one was just not aware of in which form,” Oldham told me in 2002, from his home in Bogota, Colombia. “They were very professional and dedicated from the first moment. I told them who they were and they became it. They wore the bad boy tag like a suit of armour, and drew a veil over how professional they really were.”

It’s strange how a desire to do whatever you want can pan out. One of the most radical innovations of The Rolling Stones is that, with every day of their continuing existence, they force us to look at ageing in a new light: they aren’t merely dallying with the affectations of youth, they’re staying loyal to the tenets of a youth culture – a look-at-me decadence, a rebel theatre, an idiosyncratic style – that they helped to invent. As Exhibitionism draws attention to them once again, plenty of people will call The Rolling Stones a travesty of their former selves. But really, they’re perpetuating their legend, not debasing it. For if one of their principles is that rock’n’roll is innate, a calling, then it’s necessary for them to be seen to pursue it until the absolute end. They’re the proof that this music refuses to fade away, in spite of how transient it has appeared at times over the past 50 years.

They’re a band that demand analysis – and God knows we’re offering you plenty of that in our Ultimate Music Guide – but simultaneously transcend it: there’s only so much you can intellectualise about something so immediate and, still, exhilarating.

“It’s ‘orrible to be the Grand Old Men,” Jagger told Melody Maker in, yes, 1972. “If all this talk gets any worse I’ll be getting another band…”

Margo Price – Midwest Farmer’s Daughter

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In 2015, country music had an identity crisis. Stetson or snapback? ‘Authentic’ or ‘real’? Were breakthrough artists like Sturgill Simpson, Chris Stapleton and Kacey Musgraves even country, or Americana? What was Americana, actually? An industry consultant called female artists the unwanted ‘tomatoes’ of country radio’s ‘salad’; were you pro-lettuce or pro-tomato? If the latter, did you prefer bad girls, good girls or burnouts? And at its most basic, what did the critical distinction between ‘good country’ and ‘bad country’ real boil down to? Art, or a nastier comment on class?

Margo Price is the first country artist to sign to Jack White‘s Third Man Records, a starry indie precedent that will definitely stoke this tedious debate. “Margo is here to save us all from the Starbucking of America,” the label declared, provocatively. Based in Nashville, Third Man are credited with restoring the city’s reputation for rock, although White’s country credentials are well enshrined: he was inducted into the city’s Walk of Fame last summer alongside former collaborator Loretta Lynn, and his love of female country voices was obvious from 2001, when The White Stripes covered Dolly Parton’s “Jolene”. What does it mean that this relative newcomer, situated 1.5 miles from the city’s famed Music Row, is now brewing the local malt?

Price’s excellent debut wastes absolutely no energy trying to address her place in the country music ecosystem, and gets right to telling us who she is, rather than who she ain’t (a dispiriting trope in the genre’s identity wars). The title of Midwest Farmer’s Daughter evokes Lynn’s proud Coal Miner’s Daughter appellation, and is a plainspoken nod to Price’s own origins. It’s backed up by opener “Hands Of Time”, a capsule retelling of her hardscrabble life, which sounds almost improbably like the subject of a country song. She was born in small town Illinois; her dad lost the family farm when she was two, and went to work in a prison. Price quit college for Nashville, got exploited by sleazy managers, fell in with the wrong crowd and went to jail more than once. She worked humdrum jobs and eventually met her husband, who was already married. They formed the roots band Buffalo Clover, made a few albums, toured Britain and the US; they would routinely sell their possessions and try to leave town on tour (or otherwise), only to wind up back there again. Once settled, they had twins, but the firstborn died of a rare heart defect, and Price self-medicated to cope.

Hands Of Time” is immensely graceful and stoic: Price recounts her story over tentative stand-up bass and subtle, shifting beds of strings and Fender Rhodes. Then the chorus hits, and she lets rip like her former bandmate Sturgill Simpson on “The Promise”, pushing her high, twangy voice to its fullest cinematic potential as she faces the future. “’Cause all I wanna do is make my own path/’Cause I know what I am, I know what I have/I wanna buy back the farm/And bring my mama home some wine/And turn back the clock on the cruel hands of time.” Her fortitude sets the tone for Midwest, which seldom wallows. There are a couple of ballads, and a few rounds of heavy sorrow-drowning, but their vibe is mostly, “well, your loss.” Instead, Price establishes that she knows the dignity a little money can bring, but very quickly makes clear that she cherishes her self-worth too much to trade it for success.

There’s some country music insider baseball here, though it’s not bitter; more pitying of an exploitative industry’s silly games and how they pale next to everything else Price has been through. “You wouldn’t know class if it bit you in the ass,” she sings at some bigwig on “About To Find Out”, an intoxicating slice of woozy honky-tonk. She ups the pace and adopts Dolly-style flair to twist the knife on “This Town Gets Around”, which exposes Nashville’s corrupt power structures: “It’s not who you know, but it’s who you blow that’ll put you in the show/And if that’s not the case, I hear you pay ’em,” she sings, upping the ante of Kacey Musgraves’ “Good Old Boys’ Club”. “But I don’t come easy and I’m flat broke/So I guess it’s me that gets the joke.”

Price is a comic lyricist who does a fine flipped country cliché: “Maybe I’d be smarter if I played dumb,” she sings on “This Town”, and on the yawping, boozy romp “Hurtin’ (On The Bottle)”, she observes, “You’re never too old to learn to crawl.” But most of the infectious fun of Midwest comes from the festive arrangements and Price’s almighty delivery. She and her sizeable band recorded at Memphis’ Sun Studios, and Midwest brings verve to tradition, inhabiting ballads and gritty ragers with striking, supple arrangements. “Tennessee Song” has the woozy outlaw feel of recent Hiss Golden Messenger, while the flinching “How The Mighty Have Fallen” sounds like the work of a regal ’60s girl group. “Weekender” is the least distinctive song musically, but Price’s account of mayhem at the county jail is spirited and unapologetic.

Her voice is the record’s real star: controlled, infectious, and rich with enviable natural twang. On “Four Years Of Chances”, Stevie Wonder-indebted Rhodes underpins Price’s shift from cool suspicion towards an ex who didn’t recognise what he had, to belting admonishment. She wavers at the start of acoustic closer “World’s Greatest Loser”, but quickly finds herself as a tremulous, lonesome balladeer a la Karen Dalton. Whichever mode, she absolutely sells every word, whether sung from the top of the world, the bottom of the bottle or the hard-won half-full spot in between. Midwest Farmer’s Daughter is never preachy, and outside of its obvious villains, is uninterested in questions of good or bad. Just like the genre she inhabits, Price is too resilient and timeless to get bogged down in that stuff. As she sings over the sleepy walking bass of “Since You Put Me Down”, “Even if I fall from grace, I’m gonna land back on the ground.”

Q&A
MARGO PRICE
When did music become your calling?

I got my first guitar after middle school graduation and started to pick out songs. Around 18, 19, I really started to practice every day, writing my own stuff. When I was about to enrol for my third year of college I ended up dropping out and moving to Nashville.

Why the move?
I came down for Spring Break. I loved it so much that I began looking for an apartment. I started going to the writers’ rounds and the clubs. I had maybe planned on going back to school and doing something with songwriting, but after I got here, I realised that I was getting a good education through real life experiences.

But soon people start screwing you over…

I was trying to figure out how to make money. I met a gentleman who seemed very well connected – he worked with the Dixie Chicks. He had a huge studio, so I went up there. He put something in my drink. It became really frightening. I was really lucky I got out without getting hurt.

Didn’t you move to Colorado to live in a tent?
Yes. My husband and I had been floundering, working lots of dead-end jobs. We felt really defeated by Nashville, so we sold everything and decided to try another city. He knew of this abandoned road you could camp on for free. We would busk until we had enough money for food and wine, then start again the next day. You tire of showering at the YMCA, and it started getting cold, so we came back to Nashville. It was a good adventure. We stayed about a month and a half.

Is that what “Tennessee Song” is about?
Less that time, but we had left a couple other times as well. It’s this long-running joke that no matter what we do, if we try to leave, we end up back in Nashville. There’s a love-hate I think that goes along with it, especially when you’re failing in the music business.

You sing about a jail spell in “Weekender”. What did you do?
I’ve been to jail more than once, but when I wrote that song it was just a weekend – I wrote it there. To protect my grandmother, I’ll say no comment. I was running around with the wrong people late at night, acting a little recklessly.

How long did it take to make this album?
For several years I had wanted to make a country record. I had the songs but not the financial means. The time came that I knew I had to get them out, about three years ago.

You’ve described it as a concept album about your life.
I decided to write very honestly, and then when I looked at all of the songs, I realised how personal they were. It was really strange to realise that I had done that on accident. I’m glad I did.

You’ve said before that it’s hard for you to be that vulnerable. What drew it out?
There’s other people who have had some of the same struggles I have had: I know other musicians who can relate to being pushed around; and regarding losing my son, and how that affected me. I wanna be able to give back.

Which albums did that for you?
I love Willie Nelson’s Phases And Stages, there’s so many songs from The Band and Bob Dylan that have gotten me through hard times, like “Tears Of Rage”. I love Karen Dalton’s In My Own Time, and Skip James.

What took you to Memphis to record?
I had recorded at so many different Nashville studios, and I think it goes back to me feeling like I didn’t belong here. We happened to be travelling through Memphis on our way to Texas and stopped to do Sun’s guided tour. I really felt the magic.

Do you still feel like an outcast in Nashville?
Not really. I feel like people respect what I’m doing. That’s a really nice feeling. I’ve found my home: Third Man is just a little ways off Music Row – not a great part of town, but everything about it feels right.

You’ve said they didn’t want you to change anything about the record. Did other labels want to mould you?
One label wanted to add more rock and soul. I had just done that with a band, it wasn’t working for me. A couple really large labels had me in. I would meet these women who seemed completely perplexed by what I was doing: “You’re not a hillbilly, but you play real country music?” Third Man were really happy that it was recorded at Sun, that it was analogue.

You have your Opry debut soon. What does that mean to you?
I’ve dreamed about this my whole life, it’s pretty surreal. I’m really glad my grandmothers are around and will get to witness it. They both instilled a huge love of country music in me.

INTERVIEW: LAURA SNAPES

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