Home Blog Page 324

Here’s how you can watch tonight’s David Bowie memorial concert

0

The second of two David Bowie memorial concerts is set to take place at Radio City Hall tonight.

Due to “unprecedented demand,” it will be available to stream live via Skype in exchange for a minimum £15 donation to charity.

Viewers will be asked to donate via the platform ammado in return for a link to the Skype live stream, and proceeds will go to a range of arts, music and education charities. The concert starts at 20:00 local time on Friday 1 April, which is around 01:00 UK time.

The event was originally organised by New York entrepreneur Michael Dorf as a Tribute concert to the singer, but it was changed to a memorial following his death in January. Dorf told Pollstar: “It’s all kind of a very bittersweet success in the sense that it’s now a tribute to someone who’s passed versus a tribute to someone who was probably going to be in attendance.”

Performers among those confirmed for tonight’s streamed concert include Blondie, Pixies and Michael Stipe. Stipe’s performances on both nights are thought to be his biggest since the dissolve of R.E.M in September 2011.

Mick Jagger and Paul McCartney were also tipped to be joining the line-up, a rumour McCartney’s spokesman dismissed as “tabloid rubbish.” Jagger’s representatives have not commented.

The first installment took place last night at Carnegie City Hall. Click here to watch the performances.

Bowie tributes are at the forefront of many minds this week, with Emily Eavis also announcing “several tributes” to the singer at this year’s Glastonbury.

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.

Brian Eno shares 21-minute-long new song, “The Ship”

0

Brian Eno has released a preview of his upcoming album, The Ship.

The 21-minute clip is the full title track from his first solo album since 2012’s Lux. Eno’s disembodied vocals can be heard over the quivering synths, marking the first time he has sung on a solo album since 2005’s Another Day On Earth.

Eno said in a statement: “The piece started as an Ambient work intended for a multichannel sound installation in Stockholm, but during the making of it I discovered that I could now sing a low C – which happens to be the root note of the piece. Getting older does have a few fringe benefits after all.

“From that point the work turned into an unusual kind of song… a type I’ve never made before where the vocals floats free, untethered to a rhythmic grid of any kind.”

Also on the album is a cover of Velvet Underground’s ‘I’m Set Free‘, written by Lou Reed and which, according to Eno: “seems more relevant now that it did then.”

The Ship will be available to buy from April 21.

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.

Keith Richards criticises modern artists for not writing their own music

0

Keith Richards has critisised contemporary chart topping artists for relying on multiple collaborators to write their music and produce their albums.

The singers in the firing line were Adele and Rihanna, who often share credits with teams of co-writers. He was asked by Time Out to compare their song writing process to that of the Rolling Stones, to which he responded: “Well, they can’t rely on themselves, can they?”

Adele worked with 11 other writers to create her most recent album 25, and Rihanna’s Anti album is credited with 12.

He extended his tirade toward modern music culture in general, blasting television talent shows. He said: “We’re in the midst of a heavy-duty ‘showbiz’ period, even stronger than when we killed it last time. The X Factor and all this competition shit. It’s just for people who want to be famous. Well if it’s fame you want, good luck. You’d better learn to live with it.”

Richards has just returned to the UK following the Stones’ historic gig in Cuba. Next week, the band launch their major retrospective, Exhibitionism, at the Saatchi Gallery in 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.

Watch David Gilmour play “Wish You Were Here” during rare TV appearance

0

David Gilmour played “Wish You Were Here” during his first American TV appearance in 10 years.

He also played “Rattle That Lock” on Jimmy Kimmel Live, which was broadcast on Monday March 28.

You can watch both performances below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=1&v=LTGwB6CBuX0

Gilmour recently began a short run of North American tour dates in support of Rattle That Lock. These include a two-night stand in Toronto on March 31 and April 1, followed by shows in Chicago and New York.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DcGju-xvcZM

Later this year, Gilmour will also return to Pompeii: the site of the 1971 film, Pink Floyd: Live At Pompeii.

“Agreement reached. After 45 years David Gilmour will play again at Pompeii on 7 and 8 July,” culture minister Dario Franceschini tweeted.

Elton John is also scheduled to perform at Pompeii in July.

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 White Stripes and Jack White announce Record Store Day releases

0

Third Man Records have announced details of this year’s Record Store Day releases.

Among them are rarities from The White Stripes and Jack White.

The White Stripes‘ Peel Sessions will receive their first official release on two albums, one red and one vinyl. The band’s two sessions for John Peel took place in 2001. A standard black vinyl version of this release will be available later this year.

Jack White, meanwhile, will release a limited edition green vinyl 7″ of Stevie Wonder’s “You Are The Sunshine Of My Life“. This single includes White’s cover from his appearance on their show earlier this Spring with the Muppets house band, The Electric Mayhem, on the a-side, plus the special TV rendition, featuring the rest of the Muppets singing along, as the b-side.

Also for Record Store Day, B52 vocalist Kate Pierson releases “Venus” b/w “Radio in Bed” in the Blue Series 7″. Both tracks are produced by Jack White.

Other artists who will have releases on Record Store Day include David Bowie, Bob Dylan and Patti Smith.

A trio of Bowie releases include a picture disc of the 1970 album The Man Who Sold The World, a picture-disc seven-inch of “TVC15” and a 12-inch EP, “I Dig Everything“, compiling six tracks Bowie recorded and released as three different singles for Pye in 1966.

Bob Dylan previews his new album, Fallen Angels, with a 7″ EP, Melancholy Mood.

Patti Smith releases Horses Live Electric Lady Studios – a full live performance of Smith’s debut album recorded in August 2015.

Record Store Day will take place on 16 April 2016. You can find the full releases for the UK here and America by clicking 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.

Glastonbury Festival 2016: full line-up announced

0

The full line-up for this year’s Glastonbury Festival has been announced.

Joining headliners Muse, Adele and Coldplay are PJ Harvey, LCD Soundsystem, New Order and Beck.

Also playing are Kurt Vile, Kamasi Washington, John Grant and Jeff Lynne’s Electric Light Orchestra.

The festival runs from June 22 – 26, at Worthy Farm, Pilton, Somerset.

The full line-up is as follows:

Muse
Adele
Coldplay
Foals
Beck
Jeff Lynne’s Electric Light Orchestra
LCD Soundsystem
PJ Harvey
ZZ Top
Disclosure
New Order
Earth Wind & Fire
Ellie Goulding
The Last Shadow Puppets
Skepta
The 1975
Grimes
Annie Mac
Sigur Rós
Underworld
James Blake
The Syrian National Orchestra
Savages
Floating Points (Live)
Laura Mvula
Stormzy
Art Garfunkel
Bring Me the Horizon
Santigold
Chvrches
Vince Staples
Daughter
Richard Hawley
The Lumineers
Gregory Porter
Ronnie Spector
Ezra Furman
M83
Kurt Vile
Mercury Rev
Jess Glynne
Madness
Wolf Alice
Baaba Maal
Ernest Ranglin
Bastille
Róisín Murphy
John Grant
Years & Years
Little Simz
Carl Cox
Nao
Fatboy Slim
Guy Garvey
Kamasi Washington
Jack Garratt
Cyndi Lauper
Explosions in the Sky
AlunaGeorge
Bat for Lashes
Protoje
Two Door Cinema Club
Jake Bugg
Mac DeMarco
Of Monsters and Men
Dua Lipa
Unknown Mortal Orchestra
Saint Etienne
Band of Horses
Lady Leshurr
Rokia Traoré
Hinds
Blossoms
Låpsley

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.

Tom Petty reveals new Mudcrutch album; shares “Trailer” track

0

Tom Petty’s Mudcrutch have announced details of their second album.

2 will be released by Reprise Records on May 20.

The new album has been produced by Tom Petty and Mike Campbell with Ryan Ulyate.

The current line up is: Tom Petty (bass/vocals), Tom Leadon (guitar/vocals), Benmont Tench (keyboards/vocals), Mike Campbell (guitar/vocals), and Randall Marsh (drums/vocals).

Three instant downloads are available with pre-orders on MudcrutchMusic.com, including “Trailer“, which you can hear below.

Mudcrutch has also announced their first American tour, starting at Denver’s Ogden Theater on May 26. Tickets for all headline shows go on-sale Friday, April 1st (10am local venue time) and every online ticket purchased for the headline tour includes a CD copy of the new album, 2.

The first single “Trailer” with b-side “Beautiful World” will be released as a limited edition vinyl 7 inch on Record Store Day.

“2” Album Tracklist:
Trailer
Dreams of Flying
Beautiful Blue
Beautiful World
I Forgive It All
The Other Side Of The Mountain
Hope
Welcome To Hell
Save Your Water
Victim of Circumstance
Hungry No More

Mudcrutch 2016 Tour Dates:
Thursday, May 26th @ Ogden Theatre, Denver, CO
Sunday, May 29th @ Summer Camp Festival*, Chillicothe, IL
Tuesday, May 31st @ Ryman Auditorium, Nashville, TN
Thursday, June 2nd @ Tabernacle, Atlanta, GA
Friday, June 3rd @ Bunbury Music Festival*, Cincinnati, OH
Monday, June 6th @ 9:30 Club, Washington, DC
Tuesday, June 7th @ The Fillmore, Philadelphia, PA
Friday, June 10th @ Webster Hall, New York, NY
Saturday, June 11th @ Webster Hall, New York, NY
Tuesday, June 14th @ Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, NY
Wednesday, June 15th @ House of Blues, Boston, MA
Sunday, June 19th @ The Fillmore, San Francisco, CA
Monday, June 20th @ The Fillmore, San Francisco, CA
Saturday, June 25th @ The Fonda Theatre, Los Angeles, CA
Sunday, June 26th @ The Fonda Theatre, Los Angeles, CA
Tuesday, June 28th @ The Observatory, Santa Ana, CA

* Tickets purchased for the festivals do not include CD of “2”

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.

Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy & Bitchin Bajas reviewed!

0

The mysteries of Will Oldham are such that, on the rare occasions when we actually learn something intimate about him, knowledge only seems to deepen the enigma. In a recent interview with the Aquarium Drunkard website, Oldham revealed that he’d spent the last 30 years collecting the gentle mottos contained in fortune cookies. He did not, characteristically, explain his motives. “I’ve always wondered why I keep these fortunes,” he told the interviewer, “and when we started to get together for this I thought, ‘Oh, this is going to be a good thing.’”

This, it turns out, is a project based around the wisdom of fortune cookies; a beatitudinous vibe-in in the company of three kosmische dudes from Chicago who go by the name of Bitchin Bajas. The hook-up has already produced an album, Epic Jammers And Fortunate Little Ditties, providing Oldham and his Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy persona with an escape route from the environs of folk music. Now, the quartet have taken up residence at London’s Café Oto for three nights, during which they will usher in the New Age using synths, reeds, the odd guitar, myriad delays and a lyrical palette that consists entirely of those fortune cookie homilies.

As the Bajas hum empathetically, and Oldham recites the greatest hits of his cookie collection – “Your heart is pure, your mind is clear, your soul devout,” for instance – with a flourish of his right hand, a tiny light glowing on his index finger, it’s easy to see the whole operation as a satire on off-the-shelf spirituality. That would underestimate, though, the alluringly cultish ambience on this third night, and the sense that we are participating in a playful but profound exercise: how can context and performance invest even the most facile messaging with sacred heft?

Oldham has never sung better, his voice a tool of great strength and subtlety where once it was a parched croak. Even when loops allow him to harmonise with himself, there remains an uncanny clarity, as if this lavishly-bearded new guru has manifested simultaneously in all four corners of the room. The occasional zithers and flute, freestyling around Oldham’s incantations, mean that the closest comparison might be Brian Eno’s old protégé Laraaji: an artist deadly serious about his New Age explorations, but one who also uses laughter workshops as a means to achieve meditative bliss.

So it is, perhaps, with Oldham. Towards the end of the 90-minute set, he chooses one more gnomic insight from the cookie jar: “Laugh, and the world laughs with you. Snore, and you sleep alone.” By now, the quartet have been joined by the drummer Charles Hayward, fresh from the reunion of his old band, This Heat. Where Bitchin Bajas are discreet, Hayward is an edgier presence, working through his percussive arsenal of a tin drum, another tin drum, some bells, a gong, a bigger gong. Even his most vigorous clanks, however, cannot disrupt the yogic calm; it simply sounds like a complementary ritual being enacted in another part of the temple.

At one point, Hayward refrains from fiddling with his toys, and sets to more orthodox work on a snare drum. There is a zither, a persistent organ riff, a saxophone, and Oldham twanging away on mouth harp, and for a moment the clouds of metaphorical incense clear to reveal not improvising creatures of spirit, but fleshly guys jamming in a room, a sort of Spiritualized without the bombast. Oldham is dancing, provocatively, in his chair now, reincarnated as a grooving celebrant. “Your hard work is about to pay off,” he serenely pronounces. “Congratulations…”

Phil Collins on ‘In The Air Tonight’: “I have no idea what it’s about”

The prog-rocker’s personal nightmare that became an ambient-electro, drum-holocaust sensation… Words: David Cavanagh. Originally published in Uncut’s June 2008 issue (Take 133). Picture: Peter Still/Redferns

________________________

At the end of 1980, if you’d been looking for an artist to take British synth-pop into its darkest territories, you wouldn’t have glanced twice at Phil Collins, genial frontman of Genesis and drummer with jazz-fusioneers Brand X. Yet in January 1981, in those cold, confusing weeks following John Lennon’s murder, a singular piece of obsessive minimalism, climaxing in a cataclysm of drums, leapt from 36 to 4 in the UK charts. It was time to shift some paradigms.

Collins’ “In The Air Tonight” was only denied a UK No 1 place by Lennon’s posthumous chart-topper “Woman”. Intense and menacing, “In The Air…”, beloved of air-drummers and vocoder mimics, popularised a far-reaching new studio effect (“gated drum”, or “gated reverb”) discovered by engineer Hugh Padgham during 1979 sessions for Peter Gabriel’s third album in London. “In The Air…” was to become an enduring favourite of classic rock radio programmers, NFL footballers, foul-mouthed rappers and chocolate-advertising gorillas. It has even cultivated its own urban myth. In the most popular version, Collins witnesses a real-life murder (“I was there and I saw what you did”), and later lures the unsuspecting killer to one of his concerts where he sings “In The Air…” while a spotlight is trained on the guilty man’s face.

________________________

PHIL COLLINS (writer, performer): During the 1978 Genesis world tour, my marriage broke up. I came back to a virtually empty house. I moved everything out of the master bedroom, put a studio in, and threw myself into home recording. I had a Brennell 8-track, an electric piano, a Prophet-5 synthesiser and a drum machine. I had no intention of making a record. I was just keeping myself busy.

One of the songs was a moody thing with a bit of an atmosphere. I found some chords for it, which I liked, and rather than over-arrange it I decided to put a vocal on next. I was trying to move away from the complicated Genesis stuff, go in a simpler direction. I didn’t have any lyrics prepared, but I started singing, and what came out is what you hear on “In The Air…”.

It’s wonderful that an urban myth has grown up around it, and that people on courses at universities have tried to decipher its meaning, because I can say with hand on heart that I have no idea what it’s about. Obviously, having my wife leave me, and losing my two little ones, there was anger, bitterness and hurt. Those emotions are in the song, but in an abstract way. I’ve no idea what “coming in the air tonight” means – apart from an impending darkness, possibly.

About a year later, I played my demoes to our manager Tony Smith and also Ahmet Ertegun [Genesis were signed to Atlantic in America]. To me they were still just doodles, but Ahmet said: “You’ve got to make a record.” I’d met Hugh Padgham when I played drums on Peter Gabriel’s album [“Intruder”, “No Self-Control”], and bonded with him straight away as someone who could make my drums sound huge.

The drum fill on “In The Air…” became a landmark, I suppose. I’ve been at traffic lights and seen guys in cars pounding along to it on their steering-wheels. When we started getting visitors down to the studio, people like Eric Clapton, we’d play “In The Air…” to them – loud, obviously – and when the drums came in, they’d be flattened to the walls. It wasn’t my choice as single. When I did Top Of The Pops, it was No 36 in the charts. Dave Lee Travis said to me: “That’s going to be Top 3 next week.”

I thought: ‘Nah…’ It was the famous Top Of The Pops with the paint pot on the piano. Ironically, when I sang the original demo, and wrote down the words afterwards, I used a piece of decorator’s stationery. The decorator that my wife went off with. An interesting piece of memorabilia, there, should I ever wish to sell it.

The American Dreamer

In the winter of 1970-71, the writer and actor LM “Kit” Carson visited his friend Dennis Hopper’s house outside Taos, in the desert of New Mexico. Hopper had recently returned from shooting The Last Movie in Peru’s and was busy editing the 48 hours of footage he’d brought back. After five days, Carson was convinced the process needed to be documented for posterity. Joining forces with photographer-turned-director Lawrence Schiller, the pair returned with a 16mm camera to shoot a free-form portrait of Hopper in his wild and lonely kingdom.

By turns excruciating and mesmerising, embarrassing, sordid, banal and beautiful, the resulting film has since become legend. Partly because few other director portraits find the auteur under study stripping off and strolling naked along a suburban sidewalk. And partly because, for 45 years, it has been practically impossible to see.

As part of his countercultural mission statement – and his mission to boost his revolutionary image – Hopper instructed Schiller and Carson to only distribute the film on university campuses. For decades, then, The American Dreamer existed only as scratched college prints or bleary bootlegs. But now, fuly restored, it is finally being released. The film will be available on the arthouse video-on-demand service MUBI from February 12-March 13; meanwhile, a region-free Blu-Ray/ DVD combo has been issued by Etiquette Pictures in the US.

If The American Dreamer was envisaged as a countercultural rallying cry in 1971, what lends it potency today is our retrospective knowledge of what came next. The film ostensibly captures Hopper at his height, having shaken the industry with the phenomenal success of Easy Rider and poised to make the film of his dreams.

In fact, though, it freezes him at the edge of an abyss, about to experience the career-wrecking commercial failure of The Last Movie, and enter a wilderness from which it would take a decade-and-a-half to emerge. Most striking is how, beneath his exhausted bluster and bat-shit posturing, Hopper seems to sense it coming. Early on, Schiller asks what will happen if The Last Movie doesn’t find an audience. Hopper assures him it will; then, tellingly, ruminates on Orson Welles, whom he’d recently encountered going cap-in-hand around the studios, failing to get funding.

Pressure was building on Hopper. For different reasons, the acidheads of the counterculture and the heads of Universal studio were both on his back, impatient to see his Easy Rider follow-up. Added to the weight of their expectations were his own. The Last Movie meant far more to him than Captain America. It was a movie he’d been dreaming about since the early-1960s, and a deeply personal statement about Hollywood’s destructive effects. As he started editing, though, he found it slipping out of reach. Originally scheduled for three months, it would take him over a year to complete his cut.

Meanwhile, he’d just come out of his disastrous eight-day marriage to Michelle Phillips, and was looking to sleep with every woman he could. Meanwhile again, his appetite for booze and drugs was tipping into addiction. More than filming him working on The Last Movie, Carson and Schiller film Hopper not working on it: firing rifles in the desert; offering philosophical pearls such as, “I don’t believe in reading”; and, indeed, bent double on a broken bed, baring his ass for fondling by a coterie of 30 naked young women, in a toe-curling group “sensitivity encounter.”

Alongside Orson Welles, the other phantom on Hopper’s mind is Charles Manson, whom he admits having recently visited in jail. At points, filling his compound with stoned chicks and lecturing them, it seems like Hopper, having already grown the beard, is considering picking up where Manson left off.

Then again, it pays to consider how much Hopper is playing “Dennis Hopper” here. It’s key to remember that, behind the camera, Carson had recently starred in David Holzman’s Diary, the brilliant 1967 mockumentary that debunked cinema verite and shared themes with The Last Movie: namely, how the very presence of a camera warps reality, rendering it fake. Hopper makes the very point in a scene where he takes Schiller to task over his invasive filming – a confrontation that was itself staged.

The American Dreamer isn’t simply a significant documentary about New Hollywood. With its reflexive nature, and its nagging suggestion of something that has just been missed ¬– the impending sense of “we blew it” – it’s a key movie of that wave. See it, remember the wild Dennis that was, and hope that, someday, The Last Movie itself will be released from limbo.

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.

Batman Vs Superman: Dawn Of Justice reviewed

0

In 2006, Ben Affleck took a second shot at playing a superhero. His first – Daredevil, three years previously – was an underwhelming figure in a derivative, flat and halfhearted film. But in Hollywoodland, he played the actor George Reeves, TV’s Superman during the 1950s, who was found dead in 1959. Affleck’s Reeves’ was witty, self-deprecating and melancholy. Hollywoodland was released the same year as Superman Returns; but arguably it is Affleck we remember best as the Man of Steel rather than Brandon Routh’s solemn, smoothly-contoured version.

Affleck returns to the cape and cowl business as the newest screen incarnation of Batman. He’s in it for the long game, too. His Batman will be one of the key characters in a forthcoming series of Justice League movies and also a new, solo Batman film – the first since Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Rises in 2012. First, though, he has to tough his way through Zack Snyder’s Batman Vs Superman: Dawn Of Justice (that title! So chewy!) – a boring, confused film swollen with self-importance.

Snyder’s film is a riff on The Dark Knight Returns – Frank Miller’s DC Comics’ mini-series from 1986. Miller’s story presented an aged Bruce Wayne turned vigilante and culminated with a nuclear showdown against Superman. Miller’s ultra-violent series helped reshape the comic industry and establish the tone and presentation of the subsequent Bat films: Batman as a brooding, avenging angel and Gotham city as a dark and forbidding place. The sombre aesthetic and intellectual pretention of Nolan’s three Bat films, meanwhile, trickled down to Man Of Steel – Snyder’s noisy, humourless Superman reboot.

His new film opens at the end of Man Of Steel, where Superman and General Zod duked it over in the skies above Metropolis. We meet Affleck’s Bruce Wayne as he dashes across the city, too late to avert the destruction of the Wayne Tower with hundreds of employees inside. Here, Snyder plainly invokes 9/11; later, there are scenes set in a terrorist camp in Africa, talk proliferates of dirty bombs and Homeland security while other current concerns – immigration and isolationism – are filtered through. To those of a more perceptive disposition, it might seem a tad offensive to use events like 9/11 as the basis for entertainment; but evidently, Zack Snyder is not one of them. When he’s not stuffing in contemporary issues, Snyder’s other preoccupation is with the spiritual – from Judeo-Christian imagery to Classical mythology. “Men fall from the sky, gods hurl thunderbolts,” notes one character. Unsurprisingly, such theological conceits sit awkwardly with Snyder’s forays into real world issues. Critically, he mistakes seriousness for humourlessness: tonally, this film is entirely flat where not only a lightness of touch but a lightness of spirit would go a long way to alleviating the boredom. The carpentry is all wrong; nothing quite fits together as it should.

To cut to the chase: the substance of Snyder’s film is crude and unambiguous, lacking any ideological or emotional nuance. Hans Zimmer‘s score is made of lead. Characters intone expository dialogue in a manner that suggests they are heavily constipated. Even an actress as deft as Amy Adams – returning as Lois Lane – struggles. There are too many players here: Henry Cavill as Superman, Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor, Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman plus Laurence Fishburne, Jeremy Irons, Diane Lane and – from beyond the grave! – Kevin Costner. It is a busy, and not altogether satisfying arrangement compounded by Snyder’s apparent lack of empathy for his characters. Affleck does a reasonable job as this latest incumbent of Wayne Manor: his Bat has a larder full of grievances, a number of them directed at Superman for his part in collapsing the Wayne Tower. Cavill is a distant, interior Superman. Eisenberg – who plays Luthor as a Mark Zuckerberg-style techbrat – is mannered and hammy.

And yet, for all that, the film is redeemed – sort of – by Gadot’s Wonder Woman. Gadot, who served in the Israeli army, is a veteran of several Fast And Furious films: another testosterone-fired series that packages comic book craziness in sleek and sharp machinery. As Diana Prince – Wonder Woman’s alter ego – she glides, while everyone else in the film stomps. When she unveils Wonder Woman for Snyder’s overwrought, overlong finale, she quite literally does so smirking: a strangely endearing response, quite distinct from Affleck and Cavill, who are largely required to act with their chins.

Gadot’s smile suggests she implicitly understands the adolescent fantasies being played out in front of her and – unlike the film’s director – isn’t taking it all so bloody seriously.

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.

The 9th Uncut Playlist Of 2016

0

Lots of time taken up with not one but two Dead tributes this week, and I’m pleased to add some music from them into the playlist here. Strong love, too, for the new Mark Pritchard album, especially the Thom Yorke collab that you can hear below…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 Various Artists – Songs To Fill The Air (WFMU)

2 King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – Nonagon Infinity (Heavenly)

3 Various Artists – Day Of The Dead (4AD)

4 Brian Eno – The Ship (Warp)

5 Jenks Miller & Rose Cross NC – Blues From WHAT (Three-Lobed)

6 Kendrick Lamar – Untitled Unmastered (Top Dawg)

7 Jambinai – A Hermitage (Bella Union)

8 Lera Lynn – Resistor (Resistor)

9 Tim Hecker – Love Streams (4AD)

10 Tim Hecker – Ravedeath 1972 (Kranky)

11 The Skiffle Players – Skifflin’ (Spiritual Pajamas)

12 Mary Lattimore – At The Dam (Ghostly International)

13 Mary Lattimore & Jeff Zeigler – Slant Of Light (Thrill Jockey)

14 Mark Pritchard – Under The Sun (Warp)

15 Ryley Walker & Charles Rumback – Cannots (Dead Oceans)

16 Beth Orton – Kidsticks (Anti-)

17 Case/Lang/Veirs – Case/Lang/Veirs (Anti-)

18 Date Palms – Of Psalms (Root Strata)

19 Fiona Brice – Postcards From (Bella Union)

Watch The National, The War On Drugs, Courtney Barnett and more cover The Grateful Dead

0

The all-star Grateful Dead tribute album, Day Of The Dead is released on May 20 by 4AD.

Today, five of the album’s 59 tracks have been made available to coincide with the album’s pre-order details.

The War On Drugs – ‘Touch of Grey’
Phosphorescent, Jenny Lewis & Friends – ‘Sugaree’
Bruce Hornsby and DeYarmond Edison – ‘Black Muddy River’
Courtney Barnett – ‘New Speedway Boogie’
The National – ‘Morning Dew’

These are available as instant downloads with album pre-order, on streaming services and accompanied by a series of videos directed by Michael Brown, Nick Ciontea, and Christopher Bartlett.

Scroll down to watch the videos.

You can read more about The Day Of The Dead in our exclusive feature in this month’s Uncut, which is available in UK shops and to buy digitally

Phosphorescent, Jenny Lewis & Friends – “Sugaree”

The War On Drugs – “Touch Of Grey”

The National – “Morning Dew”

Courtney Barnett – “New Speedway Boogie”

Bruce Hornsby and DeYarmond Edison – “Black Muddy River”

You can pre-order Day Of The Dead from iTunes by clicking here.

You can pre-order Day Of The Dead from Amazon by clicking 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.

The Beach Boys announce Pet Sounds 50th anniversary editions

0

The Beach Boys‘ Pet Sounds – which was recently voted Uncut’s Greatest Album Of All Time – receives the deluxe treatment to coincide with its 50th anniversary.

On June 10, Capitol will release special expanded editions of Pet Sounds.

** A 4CD/Blu-ray Audio collectors edition presented in a hardbound book, featuring the remastered original album in stereo and mono, plus hi res stereo, mono, instrumental, and 5.1 surround mixes, session outtakes, alternate mixes, and previously unreleased live recordings

** A 2CD and digital deluxe edition pairing the remastered album in stereo and mono with highlights from the collectors edition’s additional tracks

** A remastered, 180-gram LP edition of the album in mono and stereo with faithfully replicated original artwork

You can read Uncut’s exclusive interview with Brian Wilson in our new issue, available in UK stores and to buy digitally

The tracklisting for the 4CD/Blu-ray Audio collectors edition is:

CD 1
Pet Sounds (Mono)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice
You Still Believe In Me
That’s Not Me
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)
I’m Waiting For The Day
Let’s Go Away For Awhile
Sloop John B
God Only Knows
I Know There’s An Answer
Here Today
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times
Pet Sounds
Caroline No

Pet Sounds (Stereo)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice
You Still Believe In Me
That’s Not Me
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)
I’m Waiting For The Day
Let’s Go Away For Awhile
Sloop John B
God Only Knows
I Know There’s An Answer
Here Today
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times
Pet Sounds
Caroline No
Additional Material
Caroline No (Promotional Spot #2)
Don’t Talk. . . (Unused Background Vocals)
Hang On To Your Ego (Alternate Mix)
Caroline No (Promotional Spot #1)

CD 2
The Pet Sounds Sessions
Sloop John B (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Sloop John B (Stereo Backing Track)
Trombone Dixie (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Trombone Dixie (Stereo Backing Track)
Pet Sounds (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Pet Sounds (Stereo Track Without Guitar Overdub)
Let’s Go Away For Awhile (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Let’s Go Away For Awhile (Stereo Track Without String Overdub)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Stereo Backing Track)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Stereo Track with Background Vocals)
You Still Believe In Me (Intro – Session)
You Still Believe In Me (Intro – Master Take)
You Still Believe In Me (Highlights from Tracking Date)
You Still Believe In Me (Stereo Backing Track)
Caroline No (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Caroline No (Stereo Backing Track)
Hang On To Your Ego (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Hang On To Your Ego (Stereo Backing Track)
I Know There’s An Answer (Vocal Session) [previously unreleased]
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder) (Brian’s Instrumental Demo)
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder) (Stereo Backing Track)
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder) (String Overdub)
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times (Highlights from Tracking Date)
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times (Stereo Backing Track)
That’s Not Me (Highlights from Tracking Date)
That’s Not Me (Stereo Backing Track)

CD 3
The Pet Sounds Sessions (continued)
Good Vibrations (Highlights from First Tracking Date)
Good Vibrations (Stereo Backing Track)
I’m Waiting For The Day (Highlights from Tracking Date)
I’m Waiting For The Day (Stereo Backing Track)
God Only Knows (Highlights from Tracking Date)
God Only Knows (Stereo Backing Track)
Here Today (Highlights from Tracking Date)
Here Today (Stereo Backing Track)

Alternate Versions
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Mono Alternate Mix 1)
You Still Believe In Me (Mono Alternate Mix)
I’m Waiting For The Day (Mono Alternate Mix, Mike sings lead)
Sloop John B (Mono Alternate Mix, Carl sings first verse)
God Only Knows (Mono Alternate Mix, with sax solo)
I Know There’s An Answer (Alternate Mix) [previously unreleased]
Here Today (Mono Alternate Mix, Brian sings lead)
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times (Mono Alternate Mix)
Banana & Louie
Caroline No (Original Speed, Stereo Mix)
Dog Barking Session
God Only Knows (With A Cappella Tag)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Mono Alternate Mix 2)
Sloop John B (Mono Alternate Mix, Brian sings lead throughout)
God Only Knows (Mono Alternate Mix, Brian sings lead)
Caroline No (Original Speed, Mono Mix)

CD 4
Live Recordings [all previously unreleased]
Wouldn’t It Be Nice
Sloop John B
God Only Knows
Michigan State University, October 22, 1966
Good Vibrations
God Only Knows
Wouldn’t It Be Nice
Daughters of the American Revolution Constitution Hall, Washington DC, November 19, 1967
God Only Knows
Carnegie Hall, New York, November 23, 1972 (2nd Show)
God Only Knows
Jamaican World Music Festival, Montego Bay, Jamaica, November, 26, 1982
Sloop John B
Universal Studios, Universal City, California, May, 23, 1989
Caroline No
You Still Believe In Me
Paramount Theater, New York City, November 26, 1993
Stack-O-Vocals
Wouldn’t It Be Nice
You Still Believe In Me
That’s Not Me
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)
I’m Waiting For The Day
Sloop John B
God Only Knows
I Know There’s An Answer
Here Today
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times
Caroline No
Bonus Track
Good Vibrations (Master Track with Partial Vocal) (previously unreleased)

Blu-ray Pure Audio Disc
5.1 Surround Sound: 96kHz/24-bit
Mono; Stereo; Stereo Instrumental (new to hi res): 192kHz/24-bit
Wouldn’t It Be Nice
You Still Believe In Me
That’s Not Me
Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)
I’m Waiting For The Day
Let’s Go Away For Awhile
Sloop John B
God Only Knows
I Know There’s An Answer
Here Today
I Just Wasn’t Made For These Times
Pet Sounds
Caroline No
Additional Material in 5.1 Surround and Stereo
Unreleased Backgrounds (Unused Intro for “Don’t Talk (Put Your Head On My Shoulder)”)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Session Highlights)
Wouldn’t It Be Nice (Alternative Mix without Lead Vocal)
God Only Knows (Session Highlights)
God Only Knows (Master Track Mix with A Cappella Tag)
Summer Means New Love

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.

Win tickets to see Jeff Lynne’s ELO at intimate gig

0

Jeff Lynne’s ELO begin a 12 date UK tour next month.

The tour begins on April 5 in Liverpool and climaxes with four nights at London’s O2 Arena.

We have FIVE pairs of tickets to give away to the final rehearsal and full show run through at the Liverpool Echo Arena on April 4.

This will be an incredibly intimate event, with a crowd of just 150.

To be in with a chance of winning, just answer this question correctly:

What is the name of ELO’s debut album?

Send your answer along with your name, address and contact telephone number to UncutComp@timeinc.com by noon, Friday, April 1.

A winner will be chosen from the correct entries and notified by email. The editor’s decision is final.

Here’s some housekeeping…
Doors from 3pm, show to start 4pm: no entry after this.
All mobile phones are to be handed in at entry.
Competition winners only, no reviews.
Refreshments will be available.
No travel, accommodation or expenses to be covered.

Good luck!

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.

Brian Wilson: “I miss making music”

0

Brian Wilson invites Uncut into his Los Angeles home to discuss his music, his upcoming Pet Sounds 50th anniversary tour and the future, in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

Wilson reveals that he hasn’t written a song for 18 months, but admits that he misses making music and is planning to work on a new album later in 2016.

“I haven’t been inspired to write,” he tells Uncut‘s Bud Scoppa. “I might make an album later on this year. A tribute album to the great rock’n’roll artists like Chuck Berry, Bill Haley, Little Richard, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones…

“[Do I miss making music?] I do, yeah.”

During the feature, Wilson also discusses The Beach Boys‘ 2012 reunion, and his late brothers Dennis and Carl Wilson, while longtime cohorts Blondie Chaplin and Al Jardine let us in on what it’s like working with Brian.

“What I like about Brian now is that he’s really happy,” explains Chaplin. “He’s happy with the music that he did before, he’s happy to be doing it now and he’s more animated onstage.”

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.

David Bowie – Bowie At The Beeb

0

For an artist eager to stage-manage much of his life and career – including, as we discovered this year, his death – David Bowie was perversely happy to present his workings in public. Take 1973’s 1980 Floor Show TV special, where “1984” was previewed in an embryonic stage a year before it would appear on Diamond Dogs; or in December 1974, when a skeletal Bowie covered The Flares’ “Footstompin’” live on America’s Dick Cavett Show, and then thought nothing the following year of reusing Carlos Alomar’s riff for “Fame”.

Even the sheer number of references to movies, literature, philosophy and the occult in Bowie’s songs – from bardos to Billy dolls – practically invites the listener to peer beneath the surface and examine his influences and his bookshelves.

Bowie At The Beeb, reissued for the first time on vinyl after its release on CD in 2000, presents more of Bowie’s workings for our delectation. So quickly did he evolve between 1968 and 1972 that most of these sessions showcased songs that wouldn’t be in the shops for months. After four songs with the Tony Visconti Orchestra from 1968 and two recorded with Junior’s Eyes in late ’69 (not broadcast at the time), we find Bowie taking over Radio 1 for a full hour in February 1970. Though the session is still incomplete – no “Buzz The Fuzz”, “Karma Man” or “London Bye Ta-Ta” – we hear Bowie debut an incomplete, shorter “The Width Of A Circle” with his brand new sideman. “Michael’s just come down from Hull,” Bowie says. “I met him for the first time about two days ago.” And with the entrance of Mick Ronson’s aggressive, strangulated lead guitar, the sound of the Spiders From Mars is prematurely hatched.

An electric “Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud”, recorded in March 1970, is darker and stranger when shorn of its syrupy orchestrations, and from the same session, unearthed for this vinyl reissue, is a full-band version of “The Supermen”. Recorded a month before the version on The Man Who Sold The World, this is sleeker, heavier and more dynamic, with Ronson’s mangled lead lines supremely exciting.

One of the strangest sessions took place on June 3, 1971: with Hunky Dory still six months away, Bowie was joined at the BBC by George Underwood, who sings “Song For Bob Dylan” (not included here), Dana Gillespie, Geoff MacCormack, Arnold Corns guitarist Mark Carr-Pritchard, and Ronno, a group consisting of Ronson, Trevor Bolder and Woody Woodmansey. The jaunty opener, “Bombers”, is sublime, with Bowie “on piano and an amazing pair of trousers”, according to John Peel, while “Looking For A Friend”, written for Arnold Corns, is strutting but slighter. With “Oh! You Pretty Things” subsequently lost, the most historically valuable selection from this session is “Kooks”, written by Bowie to celebrate the birth of his son Zowie four days earlier. “I’d been listening to a Neil Young album,” he tells Peel, “and they phoned through and said my wife had had a baby on Sunday morning. And I wrote this about the baby.” He professes to be unsure of the words, but this meditative solo take is actually strikingly similar to the Hunky Dory version, a testament to Bowie’s faith in intuition.

Just a month after Hunky Dory’s release in December 1971, Bowie was back at the BBC, now performing in the guise, if not the name, of Ziggy. Out are the quirky piano ballads, and in are sleazy rockers such as “Hang On To Yourself”, “Ziggy Stardust” and a propulsive “I’m Waiting For The Man”. Returning in May 1972, the Spiders preview a metallic “Suffragette City”, which tops the album version for sheer energy. There’s more Velvets worship too, with a brazen “White Light/White Heat” (“White light… gonna make me feel like Lou Reed”), while the Spiders’ take on “Moonage Daydream” presages the more bombastic Aladdin Sane, with Ronson’s guitar spewing molten chords and Bolder’s bass buzzing and blown-out.

Later the same month, Bowie must have been feeling nostalgic, for here we’re shunted back in time with “Space Oddity”, “Changes”, “Andy Warhol” and “Oh! You Pretty Things”, before a session the following day brings us back to Ziggy with “Lady Stardust” – Bowie sounding even more like Elton John on the opening line than on the album – and a rawer “Rock’n’Roll Suicide”.

24 days later, Ziggy Stardust was released, and David Bowie would have no more time to chat with John Peel about Chuck Berry songs. Instead, he’d be producing his hero Lou Reed, and Bowie and America would devour each other with delight and disgust. There would be no room for the Spiders, for BBC sessions or for Ziggy himself.

Still, the short period covered by Bowie At The Beeb is a pivotal and fascinating one; if you want to hear Mick Ronson at the peak of his powers, “Kooks” in its infancy, or an ensemble cover of “It Ain’t Easy”, you’ll find them all here, often as stunning as their ‘official’ versions. Ultimately, even when it seems as if Bowie is letting us peer behind the curtain to see the nuts and bolts of his work, the magic remains intact.

EXTRAS 7/10: Four heavyweight LPs housed in a sturdy box. “The Supermen” is previously unreleased, while the duo version of “Oh! You Pretty Things” was a Japan-only bonus track on the 2000 CD release.

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 Blonde On Blonde: 50th anniversary tribute concerts announced

0

Bob Dylan‘s album Blonde On Blonde turns 50 in 2016 and there are plans to mark the event with tribute concerts in both the UK and America.

The Dylan Project – which features Dave Pegg, Simon Nicol and Gerry Conway – will perform the album in sequence and in its entirety during a run of dates in November and December, including a show at London’s Under The Bridge on December 12.

Meanwhile, an unconnected event takes place in Nashville on May 12 and 13, in CMA Theater at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, where Grand Ole Opry string band Old Crow Medicine Show will perform the album in its entirety.

Dylan himself releases a new album, Fallen Angels, this summer.

The album will be the follow-up to 2015’s Shadows In The Night, a set of covers of Frank Sinatra classics. Read our review of Shadows In The Night here.

Dylan will tour the US in June and July, supported by Mavis Staples on all dates.

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 Gillian Welch, David Rawlings and T Bone Burnett perform “Everything Is Free”

0

Gillian Welch and David Rawlings performed last week on Music City Roots – Nashville’s roots and Americana variety show.

They were joined by T Bone Burnett for their final song, “Everything Is Free“; the song originally appeared on Welch’s album Time (The Revelator).

You can watch the footage below.

The Tennessean reports that the duo and Burnett were presented with Berklee College of Music’s American Master Awards.

Music City Roots host Jim Lauderdale praised Welch and Rawlings as “modern-day icons who rebooted our ideas about folk and roots music.”

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.

Rare Beatles’ 10-inch acetate sells for £77,500 at auction

0

A rare Beatles acetate has sold for for £77,500 at auction.

The 10-inch acetate of “Till There Was You” and “Hello Little Girl” was recorded in 1962 and bears the handwriting of Brian Epstein.

The disc lay forgotten in the attic of Les Maguire – the keyboardist in another Liverpool band, Gerry and the Pacemakers.

BB News reports that the 78 RPM acetate was mislabelled by Epstein as “‘Til There Was You” and credited to “Paul McCartney & The Beatles“.

“Hello Little Girl”, on the other side, was also mistitled as “Hullo Little Girl” and credited to “John Lennon & The Beatles“.

In was used to help secure the band a recording contract with EMI Records.

The record was sold at Warrington auction house, Omega Auctions.

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.