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Brian Johnson reportedly says he’s been “kicked to the curb” by AC/DC

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Brian Johnson feels like he’s been “kicked to the curb” by AC/DC after suffering problems with his hearing, says a friend of the singer.

The band recently rescheduled a handful of US live dates after Johnson was advised by doctors to “stop touring immediately or risk total hearing loss“.

The group issued a statement on their website confirming that the remaining dates of their US tour will be “made up later in the year, likely with a guest vocalist”.

Following speculation over Johnson’s future, comedian Jim Breuer spoke about the situation on his The Metal In Me podcast.

During the episode, Breuer described a conversation he allegedly had with Johnson recently where the singer said he was feeling “really depressed” and like a “hired gun” whose been “kicked to the curb” by the group.

Breuer says Johnson “didn’t say he wanted to quit and “didn’t say he was done”.

Johnson also allegedly told Breuer that he believes the band has already hired his replacement to continue touring and releasing music.

Breuer and Johnson are close friends and have worked together several times in the past, with the AC/DC singer even recording vocals for the comedian’s rock album.

However, he later clarified his comments, saying that he got “carried away”.

Writing on Facebook: “I have seen some stories circulating about my podcast. As a friend, I saw Brian withdrawn for the first time in my life. He’s not a quitter, he seemed hurt by the situation of being between a rock and a hard place. I spoke as a true fan and friend, simply venting as if he was a brother of mine. I hope to see him Rock Out one more time. You have to remember I’m a comedian & a storyteller. I definitely exaggerate and sometimes I get a little carried away!! And this was one of those times!”

On Twitter, he added:

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Sony to buy Michael Jackson estate’s share of Sony/ATV Music Publishing

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Sony has agreed to buy out the Michael Jackson estate’s 50-percent share of Sony/ATV Music Publishing. By paying the Jackson estate $750 million, Sony now completely controls music the publishing company, Billboard reports. Currently a memorandum of understanding between the parties, an agreement is expected by the end of the month, with the deal scheduled to close in late 2016 or early 2017.

Michael Jackson purchased ATV Music in 1985 for over $40 million. Ten years later, he sold Sony a 50-percent share in the company for over $100 million to create Sony/ATV.

Jackson’s estate was $500 million in debt at the time of his death in 2009. With the new deal, the estate will be debt-free and, in fact, will be in surplus. In a statement, the estate’s co-executors John Branca and John McClain said:

This transaction further allows us to continue our efforts of maximizing the value of Michael’s Estate for the benefit of his children. It also further validates Michael’s foresight and genius in investing in music publishing. His ATV catalogue, purchased in 1985 for a net acquisition cost of $41.5 million, was the cornerstone of the joint venture and, as evidenced by the value of this transaction, is considered one of the smartest investments in music history.

Sony Entertainment CEO Michael Lynton said:

This acquisition will enable Sony to more quickly adapt to changes in the music publishing business, while at the same time continuing to be an unparalleled leader in the industry and a treasured home for artists and writers. All of us at Sony look forward to continuing to work with the Estate to further Michael Jackson’s legacy in many different ways.

Jackson’s estate will retain its 10-percent stake in EMI Music Publishing, as well as Mijac Music, which owns songs written by Jackson and other writers, in addition to Jackson’s master recordings.

Recently, Sony’s imprint Legacy Recordings reissued Michael Jackson’s 1976 album Off the Wall.

 

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Wayfaring Strangers: The lost outriders of Americana

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The next issue of Uncut is still a week or two away, but one of the features we have in there is a piece by Jason Anderson on the culture of reissue labels, and their quest to discover music of quality that has remained lost and unheard, even at this late date. One of the fervid and articulate record-hunters who Anderson interviewed was Ken Shipley, from the Chicago imprint, Numero Group.

Asked about the myth of crate-diggers finding these gems in record shops, Shipley was dismissive. “That’s just some fantasy shit that the media wants to portray of people on their stomachs crawling around on basement floors,” he told Anderson. “The reality is all the best records are in people’s houses. And really, the best stuff right now is stuff that’s undiscovered and people never even knew existed.”

It is sometimes hard to countenance that this “best stuff” genuinely exists. Surely, it’s more likely that rare records are now being rediscovered and repromoted due to a fetishisation of obscurity, rather than as a celebration of excellence? The Numero Group’s ongoing series of “Wayfaring Strangers” compilations eloquently suggests otherwise, bearing witness to the fact that great tranches of valuable music are still out there, having been hidden at the back of remote American attics for the past 40-odd years. The focus of “Wayfaring Strangers” is on private press records – releases on indie labels that were often little more than personal vanity projects. Copies would rarely number more than a few hundred. Distribution would mostly be limited to the artists’ neighbourhood and nearby towns. Ambitions would, almost without exception, be stymied.

Still, the post-Joni women collected on the “Ladies From The Canyon” edition of “Wayfaring Strangers” (2006), and the American Primitives who fill the “Guitar Soli” set (2008), suggest a rich hinterland of music-makers: briefly transcendent; ultimately thwarted. “Cosmic American Music”, the latest volume, is perhaps the strongest yet, evidence of how an adventurous idea of roots-rock permeated every level of the country’s music business in the 1970s. The Eagles might have been finessing frontier tropes for a mainstream rock audience, and becoming America’s biggest band in the process. But at the same time, Chapel Hill’s Arrogance were struggling to be heard beyond their immediate environs – even though the strafed honky-tonk of “To See Her Smile” was every bit the equal of the songs released by their Hollywood contemporaries.

“To See Her Smile”‘s excellence is endemic of “Cosmic American Music”, and a good indication of how straitened circumstances and general obscurity did not mean that the records collected here sound remotely amateurish. There’s a fluency and craftsmanship consistently on show, far removed from any assumptions about naïve art or outsider music – not least when Clarence White, prototyping his and Gene Parsons’ Stringbender gadget, adds plaintive steel effects to Mistress Mary’s ambling “And I Didn’t Want You”.

At least one of Arrogance, Don Dixon, ended up playing a critical part in the ongoing development of the sound, co-producing REM’s “Murmur” and “Reckoning” with Mitch Easter. White Cloud, meanwhile, harboured two key players: Eric Weissberg, who essayed “Duelling Banjos” on the Deliverance soundtrack; and frontman Thomas Jefferson Kaye, who would produce Gene Clark’s “No Other”. White Cloud’s “All Cried Out” is a small classic of country-soul, at once lush and distrait, and a useful reminder that Kaye’s fantastic, self-titled solo album from 1973 itself languishes mystifyingly out of print.

Keen students of the genre will recognise a couple more “Cosmic American Music” contributors from other recent reissues, notably Colorado ex-Marine Kenny Knight: his louche chugger, “Baby’s Back”, resurfaced with its 1980 parent album, “Crossroads”, on the Paradise Of Bachelors label a year ago. The outstanding FJ McMahon, likewise, has had his Fred Neil-ish “Spirit Of The Golden Juice”, dating from 1969, in circulation via Rev-Ola since 2009. Bill Madison, whose “Buffalo Skinners” could plausibly be the work of Bert Jansch circa “LA Turnaround”, apparently saw his “Sunday Mornin’ Hayride” (1973) slipped back out on Yoga around the same time.

They, thus far, are the lucky ones. Explaining the competitive ethos of the reissues business, Ken Shipley told Jason Anderson that “You gotta keep this shit super tight,” and as a consequence it’s hard to know whether, for instance, the rest of Sandy Harless’ “Songs” is a match for the delicately Gene Clarkish “I Knew Her Well”. Harless’ bad luck is twofold. First, he paid for the recording of “Songs” from the profits of his “27-tank fish-breeding business”, only to be ripped off by a sham record label. Second, his faint online profile is overshadowed today by that of a female singer sharing the same name. The second Sandy Harless is a strenuously Christian proselytiser: her vision of cosmic American music may not, one suspects, be quite the same thing at all.

Radiohead announce new live shows

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Radiohead have announced a series of live shows later this year which, together with the festival dates already announced and a few more international festival dates to follow, will complete their touring schedule for 2016.

The headline shows include three nights at London’s Roundhouse in May, and two nights at Madison Square Garden in New York in July.

Tickets for the shows go on sale at 9am this Friday, March 18.

The new shows are:

MAY 20 AMSTERDAM, HEINEKEN MUSIC HAL
MAY 21 AMSTERDAM, HEINEKEN MUSIC HALL
MAY 23 PARIS, LE ZENITH
MAY 24 PARIS, LE ZENITH
MAY 26 LONDON, ROUNDHOUSE
MAY 27 LONDON, ROUNDHOUSE
MAY 28 LONDON, ROUNDHOUSE
JULY 26 NEW YORK, MADISON SQUARE GARDEN
JULY 27 NEW YORK, MADISON SQUARE GARDEN
AUGUST 4 LOS ANGELES SHRINE AUDITORIUM
AUGUST 8 LOS ANGELES SHRINE AUDITORIUM
OCTOBER 3 MEXICO CITY PALACIO DE LOS DEPORTES
OCTOBER 4 MEXICO CITY PALACIO DE LOS DEPORTES

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

First Look – Whit Stillman’s Love & Friendship

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In a splendid piece of counter-intuitive programming, Whit Stillman’s first film for 14 years – Damsels In Distress – was released in UK cinemas on the same day as Marvel’s superhero team-up, Avengers Assemble.

An predictably elegant and distinctive comedy, Stillman’s film mixed references to the works of obscure British novelists with lengthy discussions on “the decline of decadence” and the unusual sexual proclivities of a 12th century religious order. As a reminder of Stillman’s core strengths after so long an absence, it was perfect. Notionally set during the present day, it felt a lot like Stillman’s previous dispatches from the drawing rooms of Manhattan’s Upper East Side; artful chamber pieces that in turn evoked earlier eras.

For Love & Friendship, Stillman has adapted a Jane Austen novella, Lady Susan. Austen’s comedy of manners is an easy fit for Stillman, and he is reunited here with Kate Beckinsale and Chloë Sevigny, the stars of his 1998 almost-hit, The Last Days Of Disco. Beckinsale plays Lady Susan Vernon – “a genius of an evil kind”, a widow out to secure her position in society via favourable marriages for herself and her daughter. Confronted at one point with some unflattering truths, she poo-poos them, “Facts are such horrid things.”

Stillman directs with the zing of a Howard Hawks comedy while his screenplay fluidly reshapes Austen’s formal prose (in this case, Lady Susan was an epistolary novella) into sharp, accessible dialogue. Around Susan orbit a series of largely clueless, if often well-meaning male characters. They are described by on screen captions as, variously, “a divinely attractive man” or “a bit of a rattle”. There is Tom Bennett as a considerably wealthy but hopelessly dim suitor; The Thick Of It’s Justin Edwards as Susan’s soft-hearted brother-in-law; Stephen Fry as Sevigny’s gouty husband; James Fleet as the concerned father of one of Susan’s intended victims. Thankfully, Bill Nighy is nowhere in sight.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

High-Rise

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Considering how deeply JG Ballard’s novels have penetrated popular culture, it’s surprising how few have made it to the big screen. Spielberg’s Empire Of The Sun and Cronenberg’s Crash are the most well-known, but there’s also Jonathan Weiss’s rarely screened 1999 adaptation of The Atrocity Exhibition, and Aparelho Voador a Baixa Altitude – a Portuguese-Swedish co-production based on a short story, Low-Flying Aircraft. Previously, Nic Roeg, Paul Mayersberg and Bruce Robinson have all toiled unsuccessfully to film Ballard’s 1975 breakthrough novel, High-Rise. In the event, Ben Wheatley has finally brought it to cinemas in his first major work since A Field In England: another piece about a very English type of psychosis.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LYmY2tBYins

Wheatley envisions High-Rise as an occult, psychedelic seizure; nowhere near as coldly alarming as Ballard’s book, but horrific in its own way. The story takes place in a newly-built tower block whose occupants turn on one another when the building’s systems begin to fail. After a prim, orderly beginning, where Tom Hiddleston’s Dr Robert Laing moves into the tower, Wheatley lets reality slip away – a Regency fancy dress party; a white horse clip-clopping across the roof terrace garden; a car-park full of burned out cars – before pitting floor against floor in all-out block war.

Hiddleston – resembling Low-era Bowie – makes Laing detached and indifferent, a coolly immaculate cipher for the film’s events. Around him orbit, Luke Evans’ documentary maker Richard Wilder who responds viscerally to the building-wide mayhem. As the building’s architect Anthony Royal, Jeremy Irons is at his most Jeremy Irons – inscrutable, implacable. Sienna Miller, as Laing’s free-spirited neighbour, is one of the few characters who seem able to navigate the twisting psychological landscape inside the tower. Elsewhere, James Purefroy and Reece Shearsmith deliver grotesque comic performances. Portishead’s stately cover of ABBA’s “S.O.S” soundtracks a montage of freewheeling chaos.

Wheatley may lack Ballard’s satirical edge – the issues of class that percolate the novel have been sidelined, for instance – but his devilish glee is infectious.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Stevie Wonder to play Songs In The Key Of Life live in London

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Stevie Wonder will play his album Songs In The Key Of Life in full in London’s Hyde Park this July.

Wonder is the latest act to be confirmed for the Barclaycard presents British Summer Time festival, which also sees Carole King play Tapestry in full for the first time.

Wonder has been playing Songs In The Key Of Life in full on American dates since 2014.

The Hyde Park show takes place on 10 July, 2016.

Tickets go on sale on Friday, 18 March from 09:00 BST.

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Kendrick Lamar’s surprise Untitled album debuts at No. 1 on Billboard 200 Chart

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Kendrick Lamar scores his second chart-topping album in a year after surprise release Untitled Unmastered album debuts at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart. Billboard reports that the release earned 178,000 equivalent album units in the week ending March 10 and of that sum, 142,000 were in pure album sales.

The album was released without advance notice on March 4 and gives Lamar his second chart-topping set following To Pimp a Butterfly. The latter (his first No. 1) was released on March 16, 2015, and sat at the top the list with 363,000 equivalent album units in its first week, of which 324,000 were in pure album sales.

The Billboard 200 chart ranks the most popular albums of the week in the U.S. based on multi-metric consumption, which includes traditional album sales, track equivalent albums (TEA) and streaming equivalent albums (SEA).

Lamar is the third act since January 2015 to notch two No. 1s in a period shorter than 12 months, following Drake and Future.

Untitled Unmastered was released to digital retailers and streaming services on March 4 through Top Dawg/Aftermath/Interscope Records. A physical CD release of Untitled’s explicit edition followed on March 11, while an edited version is due out March 18.

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Eric Clapton – The Studio Album Collection (1970-1981)

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Pick any one of the four sides of Layla & Other Assorted Love Songs, the 1970 double-album by Derek & The Dominos, and you’ll hear a 25-year-old Eric Clapton wracked with anguish, down on his knees and baring his soul. A howl of unrequited love for Pattie Boyd, the wife of his friend George Harrison, Layla remains one of Clapton’s greatest works. It’s a monolith of blues metaphors, real-time agonies and scorching guitar solos. His way of coping with the pain it unleashed was to retreat to Hurtwood Edge, his villa in Surrey, where he took heroin for two years and never left the house.

It’s been suggested that Clapton got so close to the essence of the blues on Layla that it did something terminal to his muse. Certainly, his guitar and voice were much changed – more restrained, not so fearless – when he re-emerged in a Miami studio in 1974. If there’s a word that sums up this boxset (a vinyl-only collection of eight albums from 1970 to 1981), it’s ‘withdrawal’. Withdrawal from heroin. Withdrawal into an alcoholic haze. But withdrawal, too, from the burden and responsibility of being rock’s foremost living guitarist, so that the former Cream hero was seen, by the mid-’70s, to mutate into a quite different beast: a leisurely, laidback, south-of-England facsimile of JJ Cale. Watch the first 20 minutes of Clapton’s 1977 Old Grey Whistle Test special, where he’s strumming an acoustic while his American bandmate George Terry takes all the solos, and witness a man once hailed as God reducing himself to the role of a minor apostle.

All the same, more than one of these eight albums sold millions (for example, Slowhand in 1977), and between them they featured some of Clapton’s biggest international hits, including “Layla”, “I Shot The Sheriff” and “Lay Down Sally”. The producers he worked with (Tom Dowd, Glyn Johns, Rob Fraboni) operated at the top end of AOR sophistication, while the musicians in his band – bassist Carl Radle, keyboardist Dick Sims and drummer Jamie Oldaker – were among the best of the American ‘feel’ players that captivated stars like Rod Stewart, Steve Winwood and The Rolling Stones in the ’70s.

Radle, Sims and Oldaker were masters of a gentle, rolling, country- and blues-influenced style known as the ‘Tulsa sound’. While Rod Stewart’s ’70s albums with Tom Dowd struggled with a blandness problem, Clapton’s had a Tulsa chemistry and a fleet-footed flexibility, allowing them to explore the sleepy grooves of Cale and the new rhythms of reggae. A song called “High” (on There’s One In Every Crowd, 1975) slips and slides exquisitely, its uneven metre so strange and beguiling that it’s both impossible to dance to and impossible to sit still to. Clapton was leaving his British blues roots far behind.

Cale, a little-known Tulsa songwriter, had been surprised and intrigued when Clapton covered “After Midnight” on his first solo album, 1970’s Eric Clapton. Cale’s inspiration as a straight-arrow minimalist was to hover over Clapton’s ’70s output – even on albums like 461 Ocean Boulevard (1974), where none of his songs were actually performed – and grew stronger, if anything, towards the end of the decade. Not only did Clapton start Slowhand with Cale’s “Cocaine” (and sing “I’ll Make Love To You Anytime” on the 1978 follow-up, Backless), but he appropriated Cale’s whispering, chugging sound for his Top 40 singles “Lay Down Sally” and “Promises”. It was a style popular with radio listeners and fellow musicians alike. Among those who emulated Clapton emulating Cale was Mark Knopfler, the singer and leader of the emerging Dire Straits.

Other Clapton followers, however, were frustrated by the absence of drama and risk in his post-Layla music. No Reason To Cry (1976), depending on how one looked at it, was either a stellar symposium of rock socialites – Bob Dylan, Ronnie Wood, Robbie Robertson and The Band – or a study in underachievement by a clique of self-satisfied drunks. Dylan, rhyming “sign language” with “eating a sandwich”, isn’t the only one who sounds keen to get the recording session finished and the party started.

It’s a depressing thought, listening to this boxset, that Clapton was sometimes merely making music that sounded half-decent to him when he was pissed. No Reason To Cry isn’t the sole offender, but as we listen to Clapton bizarrely impersonating The Band’s Richard Manuel on “Black Summer Rain”, we’re bound to wonder if one of Britain’s most illustrious guitarists has drunk so much that he’s forgotten who he is.

The ’70s was a decade when Clapton coveted, mourned and finally wooed the girl. But look what happened as a result. Having immortalised Pattie Boyd in “Layla”, he sentimentalised her in “Wonderful Tonight”. To go from “Hellhound On My Trail” to “The Lady In Red” would not be every bluesman’s idea of musical progression. Then again, unlike Robert Johnson, Clapton survived to tell the tale.

EXTRAS 4/10: All remastered, these LPs come packaged in a box.

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Read Greg Lake’s tribute to Keith Emerson: “He was a pioneer”

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Greg Lake has released a statement following the death of Keith Emerson.

Emerson’s death was announced on Friday, March 11. He died of a single gunshot wound to the head, reports Rolling Stone, with Santa Monica police ruling the keyboardist’s death as a suicide.

“To all ELP friends and fans all over the world, I would like to express my deep sadness upon hearing this tragic news,” wrote Lake in a message on his website. “As you know Keith and I spent many of the best years of our lives together and to witness his life coming to an end in the way that it has is painful, both to myself and to all who knew him.

“As sad and tragic as Keith’s death is, I would not want this to be the lasting memory people take away with them. What I will always remember about Keith Emerson was his remarkable talent as a musician and composer and his gift and passion to entertain. Music was his life and despite some of the difficulties he encountered I am sure that the music he created will live on forever.

“My deepest condolences go to Keith’s family.

“May he now be at peace.

“Greg Lake”

Meanwhile, Emerson and Lake’s former bandmate Carl Palmer wrote on Facebook: “I am deeply saddened to learn of the passing of my good friend and brother-in-music, Keith Emerson.

“Keith was a gentle soul whose love for music and passion for his performance as a keyboard player will remain unmatched for many years to come.

“He was a pioneer and an innovator whose musical genius touched all of us in the worlds of rock, classical and jazz.

“I will always remember his warm smile, good sense of humor, compelling showmanship, and dedication to his musical craft. I am very lucky to have known him and to have made the music we did, together.”

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Iron Maiden’s tour plane damaged in airport accident

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Iron Maiden‘s tour plane, Ed Force One, was damaged in a collision with a tow truck at Chile’s Santiago International Airport on Saturday (March 12).

Billboard reports that the Boeing 747 was being moved to refuel and prepare for a flight to Argentina, where the band were scheduled to perform.

According to a post on the band’s website, “Ed Force One was this morning tethered to a tow truck to be taken for refuelling prior to flying over the Andes to Cordoba for the next show. On moving the steering pin that is part of the mechanism that connects the ground tug to the aircraft seemingly fell out. On making a turn the aircraft had no steering and collided with the ground tug badly damaging the undercarriage, two of the aircrafts engines and injuring two ground tug operators, both of whom have been taken to hospital. We hope of course that they make a full and speedy recovery and we will be closely monitoring their progress. The flight engineers are on site and evaluating the damage, but their initial report is that the engines have suffered large damage and will require an extended period of maintenance and possibly two new engines.”

A later post revealed that, “We are happy to tell our fans in Cordoba that our Killer Krew has sorted out all logistics for us to be there with our full show for you all tomorrow. We expect no disruption to the tour in any way and are looking for a replacement 747 Ed Force One while our current beauty is healed. More news on that later. Until then, believe me, we will get to you all on this tour one way or another wherever you are.

“We are also delighted to say that we have been officially informed that the two Chilean airport staff who were injured following the malfunction of the tow truck connecting bolt will make a complete recovery. Best wishes to them and their families.”

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Keith Emerson dies aged 71

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Keith Emerson has died aged 71.

The news was confirmed by his former band Emerson, Lake And Palmer.

“We regret to announce that Keith Emerson died last night at his home in Santa Monica, Los Angeles,” the band wrote on their Facebook page.

“We ask that the family’s privacy and grief be respected.”

Former bandmate Carl Palmer wrote on Facebook: “I am deeply saddened to learn of the passing of my good friend and brother-in-music, Keith Emerson.

“Keith was a gentle soul whose love for music and passion for his performance as a keyboard player will remain unmatched for many years to come.

“He was a pioneer and an innovator whose musical genius touched all of us in the worlds of rock, classical and jazz.

“I will always remember his warm smile, good sense of humor, compelling showmanship, and dedication to his musical craft. I am very lucky to have known him and to have made the music we did, together.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7RSRoM_fc9I

Emerson came to prominence in The Nice, formed in 1967. He co-founded ELP in 1970.

Their key albums included 1970’s self-titled debut, 1972’s Trilogy, and 1973’s Brain Salad Surgery.

ELP broke up in 1979, although the band’s members continued to tour in various iterations over the years.

Emerson Lake and Palmer last performed together in 2010, when they staged a 40th anniversary reunion at the High Voltage Festival in London.

Emerson also released several solo albums and scored movies including 1980’s Inferno and 1984’s Murder Rock.

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Miles Davis – the making of Kind Of Blue, Bitches Brew and more

Originally published in Uncut’s September 2011 issue (Take 172). Interviews: John Robinson

Playing with Miles Davis, says Jimmy Cobb, the sole surviving member of the trumpeter’s Kind Of Blue quintet, “was a position”. The 82-year old drummer’s view is one shared by all of the musicians interviewed in this survey of Miles’ pivotal albums, be they funky fusioneer or hip-hop producer. The man directed his music boldly, and it was his musicians’ assignment to keep pace while he did so – or risk exposure to Miles’ witheringly laconic sense of humour. Whatever the stylistic changes Miles put his work through, one thing remained constant. Says Jimmy Cobb: “It was the best jazz band in the world.”

_________________

KIND OF BLUE
Columbia, 1959
Produced by Teo Macero, Irving Townshend
A wordy idea (George Russell’s theory, The Lydian Chromatic Concept of Tonal Organisation) helps Miles and band create one of the most accessible and beautiful albums in popular music. Kind Of Blue placed his ideas in settings as calm and progressive as a gallery space. It contains moments of exquisite melancholia and intellectual passion, but over 50 years on, retains its core swing.

JIMMY COBB (DRUMS): Kind Of Blue was a different style: before we were playing structured tunes, show tunes… tunes with a lot of changes in them. This was the exact opposite of that – what you call “modal”, with only a few changes, and scales. Sometimes jazz is kind of complicated for, let’s say, the average person. This was easier for most people to hear. Miles came in with that idea. It was his idea, his and [pianist] Bill Evans – it sounded more to me that it was more in the way that Bill played. If you listen to it you can hear that Bill brought a lot to the sessions. We just got on with it: like Miles would say, “This is a blues”. Or he’d play another tune and say “It’s in 3/4 time. Make it sound like it’s floating…” One time I was making circles on the snare drum with brushes and the engineer said: “Miles, what the drummer’s playing sounds like surface noise.” So Miles said: “That’s part of it…”

John [Coltrane, sax] was a conscientious guy – he was steeped in what he was doing. He was working on something, and he was going to get it. Sometimes he didn’t know how long he was playing for. I recall one time Miles saying to him, “Trane – why don’t you play 27 choruses instead of 28?” Miles loved it, though, or he wouldn’t have let him do it. It was a relaxed business: I was there with all them bad guys – I’m just trying to work out how I’m gonna be around them. I was a little nervous. But not so I couldn’t play.

At that time, my favourite was the blues, “Freddie Freeloader” – the one that Wynton Kelly plays [piano] on. Miles wanted him to play that particular tune. Miles did that at times: he wanted the best person for the best song – at one time he had Coltrane and Sonny Rollins, two tenor players. When Wynton got to the date and saw Bill there, he started to be pissed off. But I told him, “You on the date too, man, don’t go nuts. “I went by Miles’ house to hear it. It sounded good then, like it sounds good now. For me, all the records Miles made sounded good. I never thought it would be this vibrant this long, but I knew it was a good record when we made it. It was the best gig in the world. It was the best jazz band in the world. For anyone to join that band felt it was a… position, you know?

The 7th Uncut Playlist Of 2016

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Here we go: The Skiffle Players are Cass McCombs hooking up with Neal Casal and an LA country-psych crew, and I’ve got kind of obsessed with it these past few days. Much love too for the new Kendrick Lamar album, but there’s plenty more worth checking out beyond those too…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

1 The Skiffle Players – Skifflin’ (Spiritual Pajamas)

2 Kendrick Lamar – Untitled Unmastered (Top Dawg)

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

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

5 Joanna Brouk – Hearing Music (Numero Group)

6 Brian Eno – The Ship (Warp)

7 Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith – Ears (Western Vinyl)

8 Mary Lattimore – At The Dam (Ghostly International)

9 The Limiñanas – Malamore (Because)

10 PJ Harvey – The Hope Six Demolition Project (Island)

11 Cat’s Eyes – Treasure House (RAF/Kobalt)

12 The Walker Family – Panola County Spirit (Daptone)

13 Karl Blau – Introducing Karl Blau… (Bella Union)

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

15 Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever – Talk Tight (Ivy League)

16 Marissa Nadler – Strangers (Bella Union)

17 Tashi Dorji & Shane Parish – Expecting (MIE Music)

18 Ben Watt – Fever Dream (Unmade Road/Caroline)

19 Anohni – Hopelessness (Rough Trade)

20 Lindstrøm – Closing Shot (Smalltown Supersound/Feedelity Recordings)

21 Seratones – Get Gone (Fat Possum)

22 Dälek – Guaranteed Struggle (Profound Lore)

23 Sonny & The Sunsets – Well But Strangely Hung Man (Polyvinyl)

24 The Black Peaches – Get Down You Dirty Rascals (1965)

25 Linda Perhacs – The Dancer (Bandcamp)

26 Big Thief – Masterpiece (Saddle Creek)

27 Cassius – Action (Featuring Cat Power and Mike D) (Polydor/Interscope)

28 Kendrick Lamar – To Pimp A Butterfly (Top Dawg)

Stevie Wonder, Erykah Badu and more to feature on Miles Davis Tribute LP

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The legacy of Miles Davis will be celebrated on a pair of new releases curated by Grammy-winning pianist Robert Glasper. The first, Everything’s Beautiful, is an all-star tribute album that finds Glasper collaborating with guests Stevie Wonder, Erykah Badu, Laura Mvula, Bilal, John Scofield and more. The second LP is the soundtrack for the upcoming Davis biopic Miles Ahead. In addition to Davis classics, the soundtrack will also feature new music by Glasper alongside artists like Gary Clark Jr, Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock and Don Cheadle, who plays the trumpeter in the film.

The Miles Ahead soundtrack is due out 1 April and Everything’s Beautiful arrives 27 May, the day after what would have been Davis’ 90th birthday.

Everything’s Beautiful Track List

1. “Talking Shit”
2. “Ghetto Walkin” featuring Bilal
3. “They Can’t Hold Me Down” featuring Illa J
4. “Maiysha (So Long)” featuring Erykah Badu
5. “Violets” featuring Phonte
6. “Little Church” featuring Hiatus Kaiyote
7. “Silence Is The Way” featuring Laura Mvula
8. “Song For Selim” featuring KING
9. “Milestones” featuring Georgia Ann Muldrow
10. “I’m Leaving You” featuring John Scofield and Ledisi
11. “Right On Brotha” featuring Stevie Wonder

Miles Ahead – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Track List

1. “Miles Ahead”
2. Dialogue: “It takes a long time…”
3. “So What”
4. Taylor Eigisti – “Taylor Made”
5. Dialogue: “Listen, you talk too goddam much…”
6. “Solea (excerpt)”
7. “Seven Steps To Heaven (edit)”
8. Dialogue: “If you gonna tell a story…”
9. “Nefertiti (edit)”
10. “Frelon Brun”
11. Dialogue: “Sometimes you have these thoughts…”
12. “Duran (take 6)” (edit)
13. Dialogue: “You own my music…”
14. “Go Ahead John” (part two C)
15. “Black Satin (edit)”
16. Dialogue: “Be musical about this shit…”
17. “Prelude #II”
18. Dialogue: “Y’all listening to them…?
19. Robert Glasper, Keyon Harrold, Marcus Strickland – “Junior’s Jam”
20. Robert Glasper, Keyon Harrold, Elena Pinderhughes – “Francessence”
21. “Back Seat Betty” (excerpt)
22. Dialogue: “I don’t like the word jazz…”
23. Don Cheadle, Robert Glasper, Gary Clark, Jr., Herbie Hancock, Keyon Harrold, Antonio Sanchez, Esperanza Spaulding, Wayne Shorter – “What’s Wrong With That?”
24. Robert Glasper, Keyon Harrold, Pharoahe Monch – “Gone 2015

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

AC/DC’s original singer offers to fill in for Brian Johnson

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AC/DC’s original vocalist Dave Evans has offered to reunite with the hard rock band after recent reports that they have rescheduled a handful of US live dates after Brian Johnson was advised by doctors to “stop touring immediately or risk total hearing loss”.

The band issued a statement on their official website confirming that the remaining dates of their US tour will be “made up later in the year, likely with a guest vocalist”.

Evans, who briefly sang in the band during 1974, told Australian newspaper The Sydney Morning Herald: ”It would be nice to do one guest performance [with AC/DC]. [Former members] were all part of the band no matters what era they were from.”

He added: “A lot of people make jokes about going deaf from listening to loud music. It’s never been a problem for me. I just thought it was sad news [about Brian Johnson]. It’s your lifeblood as a singer, live performances are so personal, without the crowd and the adrenaline, it’s going to be hard for him. Performances are the big highs in our lives.”

Evans (pictured below) appeared on just one AC/DC recording, the 1974 single ‘Can I Sit Next to You, Girl’.

Johnson has been AC/DC’s lead vocalist since 1980, joining the group following the death of previous singer Bon Scott.

AC/DC had also been set to perform stadium gigs in Manchester and London during June, although it is not currently known whether these shows will continue to go ahead with or without Johnson.

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Iggy Pop and Josh Homme’s Post Pop Depression – First Listen

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Tomorrow, Iggy Pop and Queens of the Stone Age and Eagles of Death Metal’s Josh Homme release Post Pop Depression, which Pop says could be his final record. Ahead of its release, the record is streaming in full via NPR. Listen now.

 

iggy_album

PJ Harvey premieres new song ‘The Community of Hope’

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PJ Harvey has returned with new song ‘The Community of Hope’ ahead of the release of her new studio album.

‘The Community of Hope’ is the opening song on Harvey’s forthcoming album ‘The Hope Six Demolition Project’ and can be heard here, after it was premiered on BBC 6 Music. Scroll to the 50 minute mark to hear the song in full.

As reported, Harvey’s ‘The Hope Six Demolition Project’ will be released on April 15. She will also appear at festivals including Glastonbury and Field Day this summer.

‘The Hope Six Demolition Project’ will be available on vinyl, CD and as a digital download. The full track-listing is:

‘The Community of Hope’
‘The Ministry of Defence’
‘A Line in the Sand’
‘Chain of Keys’
‘River Anacostia’
‘Near the Memorials to Vietnam and Lincoln’
‘The Orange Monkey’
‘Medicinals’
‘The Ministry of Social Affairs’
‘The Wheel’
‘Dollar, Dollar’

‘The Hope Six Demolition Project’ was created during Harvey and Seamus Murphy’s travels between 2011-2014 to destinations including Kosovo, Afghanistan and Washington, DC. The Hollow Of The Hand, a book of Harvey’s poetry from the same trip, was published last year.

The album was recorded at London’s Somerset House in 2015 during open recording sessions which the public could attend.

Harvey and Murphy also staged a multimedia show in London in October where ten new songs were performed alongside poems, photos and short films from Murphy.

‘Let England Shake’, PJ Harvey’s last studio album, was released in 2011.

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Paul McCartney announces the first dates of ‘One on One’ tour

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Paul McCartney has revealed the first string of US dates as part of his “One On One” tour.

A press release promises a newly redesigned set, as well as “no shortage of surprises.” McCartney’s previous tour, “Out There”, concluded last October.

The news comes following the passing of Beatles producer George Martin, who McCartney described as “a true gentleman”.

He added: “He guided the career of The Beatles with such skill and good humour that he became a true friend to me and my family. If anyone earned the title of the fifth Beatle it was George.

“From the day that he gave The Beatles our first recording contract, to the last time I saw him, he was the most generous, intelligent and musical person I’ve ever had the pleasure to know.”

Tickets for McCartney’s tour go on sale Monday, March 14 at 10am. The first seven dates are as follows:

04-13 Fresno, CA – SaveMart Arena
04-15 Portland, OR – Moda Center
04-17 Seattle, WA – Key Arena
04-19-20 Vancouver, British Columbia – Rogers Arena
04-30 Little Rock, AR – Verizon Arena
05-02 Sioux Falls, SD – Denny Sanford Premier Center

 

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

 

Graham Nash: ‘I Don’t Want Anything to Do With’ David Crosby

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The future of Crosby, Stills and Nash was thrown in doubt this weekend following comments Graham Nash made to a Dutch magazine where he declared that his days in CSN were likely over due to an ongoing feud with David Crosby. To further reiterate his point, Nash also spoke to Billboard to confirm, stating, “In my world, there will never, ever be a Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young record and there will never be another Crosby, Stills and Nash record or show.”

“Right now, I don’t want anything to do with Crosby at all. It’s just that simple,” Nash said, but didn’t go on to elaborate on why he’s upset with his longtime band mate.

However, while talking to Dutch magazine Lust for Life, Nash didn’t hold anything back while slamming Crosby. He blamed Crosby for first sparking a personal feud with Neil Young, which likely spelled the end of CSNY, and then behaving in a manner that made Nash question CSN’s future.

“I don’t like David Crosby right now. He’s been awful for me the last two years, just fucking awful,” Nash said. “I’ve been there and saved his fucking ass for 45 years, and he treated me like shit. You can’t do that to me. You can do it for a day or so, until I think you’re going to come around. When it goes on longer, and I keep getting nasty emails from him, I’m done. Fuck you. David has ripped the heart out of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young.”

Crosby eventually apologized to Young for comments he made about the rocker and his girlfriend Daryl Hannah. “I was completely out of line,” Crosby said. “I have screwed up massively. Daryl Hannah never wound up in a Texas prison. I’m screwed up way worse than that girl. Where do I get off criticizing her? She’s making Neil happy. I love Neil and I want him happy.”

After Crosby’s initial comments, Young all but dismissed any chance of a Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young reunion. “We were together for a long time. We did some good work. Why should we get together and celebrate how great we were? What difference does it make?,” Young said. “It’s not for the audience. It’s not for money, either. When you play music, you have to come from a certain place to do it and everything has to be clear and you don’t want to disturb that. I like to keep the love there, and if the love isn’t there, you don’t want to do it.”

“How can I not be sad? Look at the music we probably lost,” Nash, who releases his solo LP This Path Tonight on April 15, told Billboard. “The truth is, after being totally immersed in me and David and Stephen and Neil’s music, I’m done. I’ve had 10 years of it. Leave me the fuck alone. I need to concentrate on me now

The April 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring our cover story on the making of Bruce Springsteen’s album The River, Jeff Buckley, Free’s Paul Kossoff, Jeff Lynne, Tame Impala, Underworld, White Denim, Eddie Kramer, Chris Isaak, Miles Davis – The Movie and more plus 40 pages of reviews and our free 15-track CD

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.