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Jeff Lynne announces ELO tour for 2016

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Jeff Lynne has announced a 10 date UK tour, to take place in April 2016.

Lynne will release Alone In The Universe, his first album of new material under the ELO name since 2001’s Zoom, on November 13.

Later this week, Jeff Lynne’s ELO will be performing a live set for BBC Radio 2 In Concert on Thursday, November 12 at the BBC Radio Theatre in London, and also is confirmed to play the Royal Variety Performance which will air in December ITV.

Jeff Lynne’s ELO will play:

April 2016
Tue 5th LIVERPOOL, Echo Arena
Thu 7th NOTTINGHAM, Capital FM Arena
Sat 9th LEEDS, First Direct Arena
Sun 10th MANCHESTER, Arena
Tue 12th GLASGOW, The SSE Hydro
Thu 14th NEWCASTLE, Metro Radio Arena
Sat 16th BIRMINGHAM, Genting Arena
Sun 17th BIRMINGHAM, Genting Arena
Wed 20th LONDON, The O2
Fri 22nd LONDON, The O2

Tickets for the UK shows go on-sale at 9am on Friday, November 13 and can be purchased by clicking here.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Ask John Cale

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A man who needs no introduction in these pages, John Cale is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular An Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’d like us to ask him?

What are his favourite memories of Lou Reed?
How did he come to produce the Stooges?
Where did he watch the Wales-England game in this year’s Rugby World Cup?

Send up your questions by noon, Monday, November 16 to uncutaudiencewith@timeinc.com.

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

Please include your name and location with your question.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Deep Purple: “We were dangerous, unpredictable… it wasn’t cabaret”

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Their magnificent guitarist, Ritchie Blackmore, has long since left the band for a life of quasi-medieval music-making. Their keyboard player, that classically trained gentleman of arts and letters Jon Lord, has lately passed away. And yet, in a band with just one member of the original lineup remaining, there is still in Deep Purple’s music a vibrantly beating heart, their live reputation undiminished by the passing years or the band’s many changes in personnel. Now What!?, their first studio record in eight years, finds them in strong voice: the organ/guitar blueprint that Blackmore and Lord conceived of still in operation, albeit explored by different people. Drummer Ian Paice, singer Ian Gillan and bassist/producer Roger Glover – mainstays of the classic “mark II” lineup – were on hand to talk Uncut through their classic works. Interview: John Robinson. Originally published in Uncut’s June 2013 issue (Take 193).

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SHADES OF DEEP PURPLE
PARLOPHONE, 1968
In two days, the MKI, extensively backcombed Deep Purple record a debut of classically influenced, vaguely psych rock and covers. Derek Lawrence, an associate from Ritchie Blackmore’s days working on Joe Meek sessions, produces. A massive US hit follows.

IAN PAICE: Chris Curtis, the drummer of The Searchers, had an idea of a band like a roundabout – you came on, and after a while you got off. It was all mad, totally mad. But in this madness, he had got together Jon Lord and Ritchie Blackmore, who was a bit of a legend among British musos. The whole first album was written and rehearsed in this crazy old farm called Deeves Hall. We were living there for a couple of months – in the parts of it that weren’t being destroyed by two builders. Through Derek Lawrence there was a record deal in place for a new English band on a US label [Tetragrammaton] set up by Bill Cosby. The first record was recorded in two four-hour sessions. We did four hours in the afternoon, then Derek mixed it in the evening. We came back the next day and did the same thing, and that was it. That was in the old Pye Studios. It did OK in England but it had a lot of push in the US because of this new label. “Hush”, the single, everyone knew, and whatever we did to it, they seemed to like, and it became a big hit. We went over there for our first tour and thought we’d made it – only to discover that it’s not quite that easy.

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CONCERTO FOR GROUP AND ORCHESTRA
HARVEST, 1969
Jon Lord’s strong, occasionally marginalised work. Orchestral tunes meet rock jamming in the Albert Hall.

ROGER GLOVER: It tells us everything that Jon Lord was about – that music has no boundaries.

IAN GILLAN: The first movement is a battle – two giants circling each other. The slow second movement, they start to show respect for each other. The third movement is beautiful harmony.

ROGER GLOVER: Ian Gillan and I had been in the band five or six weeks at this point. In at the deep end? Not half. Not being able to read music, our cue sheets were a sight to behold. We all made our own notes: “Wait for the silly tune, then watch Jon.” That was our entrance.

IAN GILLAN: After the dress rehearsal we went for an Italian meal. I remember Jon saying, “I wonder, dear boy, if you’re going to get around to writing the lyrics before we go onstage?” I duly completed them in the restaurant and had them put up on a music stand on a napkin.

ROGER GLOVER: Our first meeting with the orchestra was at a rehearsal halls. It wasn’t a warm welcome. Malcolm Arnold really gee’d them up, but I can’t tell you what he said.

IAN GILLAN: He said: “You are all playing like a bunch of cunts.” They hated us – there’s so much snobbery in music. I thought, ‘You bunch of arseholes. I’ve seen you on a Tom Jones session with your sandwiches on the floor, reading your Tit-Bits magazine…’

ROGER GLOVER: We put our faith in Malcolm Arnold, and he in us. That was a mark of the man – he was brave, he wasn’t scared of change.

Exclusive! Watch the Grateful Dead play “China Cat Sunflower” and “I Know You Rider” from their Fare Thee Well tour

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The Grateful Dead have announced details of their forthcoming box sets documenting the band’s final concerts at Soldier’s Field in Chicago on July 3, 4 and 5.

A few weeks ago, we we brought you “Truckin’“, from the July 5 show – which you can watch by clicking here.

Today, we can unveil “China Cat Sunflower” and “I Know You Rider”, live from Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois on July, 5 2015.

The Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead sets will be available on November 20 through Rhino on a number of formats.

A 3-CD/2 Blu-ray, 3/CD-DVD, 2 Blu-Ray or 2-DVD sets will be released in shops and digitally which includes full audio from the band’s final show on July 5.

A 2 CD/digital Best Of edition will feature highlights from all three shows. You can order it by clicking here.

Meanwhile, a 12-CD/Blu-ray set and a 12-CD-DVD set will be available exclusively on Dead.net the official Grateful Dead website, and will be limited to 20,000 individually numbered copies per sets.

FARE THEE WELL – Dead.net Exclusive Complete Versions
12-CD/7-Blu-ray Complete Version – Full audio and high-definition video from all three shows on CD and Blu-ray plus exclusive bonus Blu-ray of behind-the-scenes footage and three CDs of intermission music by Circles Around The Sun. Individually numbered, limited edition of 20,000.

12-CD/7-DVD Complete Version – Full audio and video from all three shows on CD and DVD plus exclusive bonus DVD of behind-the-scenes footage and three CDs of intermission music by Circles Around The Sun. Individually numbered, limited edition of 20,000.

FARE THEE WELL – Retail Versions
3-CD/2-Blu-ray Version – Full audio and high-definition video from final show (July 5) on CD and Blu-ray.
3-CD/2-DVD Version – Full audio and video from final show (July 5) on CD and DVD.
2-Blu-ray Version – Full high-definition video from final show (July 5) on Blu-ray.
2-DVD Version – Full video from final show (July 5) on DVD.
2-CD “Best Of” Version – Audio highlights from all three shows.
Digital Download – Audio and video from the final show (July 5) will be available as well as audio from the “Best Of” version.

Tracklisting for Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead Dead.Net edition:

July 3rd, 2015
Disc One
1. “Box of Rain”
2. “Jack Straw”
3. “Bertha”
4. “Passenger”
5. “The Wheel”
6. “Crazy Fingers”
7. “The Music Never Stopped”

Disc Two
1. “Mason’s Children”
2. “Scarlet Begonias”
3. “Fire On The Mountain”
4. “Drums”
5. “Space”

Disc Three
1. “New Potato Caboose”
2. “Playing In The Band”
3. “Jam”
4. “Let It Grow”
5. “Help On The Way”
6. “Slipknot!”
7. “Franklin’s Tower”
8. “Ripple”

Disc Four
Intermission Music by Circles Around The Sun
1. “Space Wheel”
2. “Mountains Of The Moon”
3. “Praying For The Band”
4. “Tripple”
5. “Deal Breaker”
6. “Deadometer”
7. “Borrow From A Friend”
8. “Grimes Surf Story”

July 4th, 2015
Disc Five
1. “Shakedown Street”
2. “Liberty”
3. “Standing On The Moon”
4. “Me And My Uncle”
5. “Tennessee Jed”
6. “Cumberland Blues”
7. “Little Red Rooster”
8. “Friend Of The Devil”
9. “Deal”

Disc Six
1. “Bird Song”
2. “The Golden Road (To Unlimited Devotion)”
3. “Lost Sailor”
4. “Saint Of Circumstance”
5. “West Of L.A. Fadeaway”

Disc Seven
1. “Foolish Heart”
2. “Drums”
3. “Space”
4. “Stella Blue”
5. “One More Saturday Night”
6. “U.S. Blues”

Disc Eight
Intermission Music by Circle Around The Sun
1. “Hallucinate A Solution”
2. “Ginger Says”
3. “Saturday’s Children”
4. “Eartha”
5. “Split Pea Shell”

July 5th, 2015
Disc Nine
1. “China Cat Sunflower”
2. “I Know You Rider”
3. “Estimated Prophet”
4. “Built To Last”
5. “Samson and Delilah”
6. “Mountains On The Moon”
7. “Throwing Stones”

Disc Ten
1. “Truckin'”
2. “Cassidy”
3. “Althea”
4. “Terrapin Station”
5. “Drums”

Disc Eleven
1. “Space”
2. “Unbroken Chain”
3. “Days Between”
4. “Not Fade Away”
5. “Touch Of Grey”
6. “Attics Of My Life”

Disc Twelve
Intermission Music by Circles Around The Sun
1. “Gilbert’s Groove”
2. “Farewell Franklins”
3. “Hat And Cane”
4. “Never Too Late”
5. “Scarlotta’s Magnolias”

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Elvis Costello – Unfaithful Music & Disappearing Ink

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Elvis Costello was always a gas to interview because he had opinions about everything, all of them worth listening to. He’d had an initially spiky relationship with the press, with whom he was often at best terse, and otherwise a lot worse. But by 1989 when I interviewed him in Dublin, just after Spike came out, there was no shutting him up, or any want to. He was a wonderful raconteur. Stories about Bob Dylan, Springsteen, Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy Orbison, Bowie, Paul McCartney, Nick Lowe and more poured out of him as fast as the drinks that fuelled us through those four or five hours kept arriving from the hotel bar.

A lot of them are handsomely repeated in Unfaithful Music & Disappearing Ink, a vast memoir that across 600 pages looks back at his life and career with candour, humour and a welcome lack of rancour. There are moments of pique, mostly to do with his not selling records any more, although this has been the case for years. But mostly the book is generous, and you could heat a village with the warmth of his writing about his family, especially his father, the raffish entertainer Ross MacManus, a ladies’ man in whose philandering Costello sees an anticipation of his own multiple infidelities, which he doesn’t half go on about.

Abandoning linear narrative like a more garrulous version of Dylan’s Chronicles, Unfaithful Music continually intercuts scenes from a childhood in London and Liverpool with The Attractions in the studio. There’s a hilarious account of his time at the Elizabeth Arden factory in Acton, even funnier accounts of his first forays into folk clubs. Then he’s a small boy listening to acetates of Beatles songs with his father, who’d been sent them to learn for later performance with the popular Joe Loss Orchestra. Now he’s struggling to get his music heard, now recalling idyllic Merseyside summers before a series of vivid accounts of nightmarish American tours, a blur of girls, gigs and drugs.

Music holds the disparate narrative strands together, usually his own songs the link. Discussion of “Another King’s Shilling” and “American Without Tears” leads into a fabulous family and history, mostly centred on his grandfather Pat, a bandsman on transatlantic liners between Liverpool and New York. “The Birds Will Still Be Singing”, that gorgeous lament from The Juliet Letters, frames a moving account of his father’s death from Parkinson’s induced dementia. Costello doesn’t flinch from much here. Even Bebe Buell gets a tense mention. Most painful of all, he has to confront again the notorious drunken row in a Midwest motel with Stephen Stills and Bonnie Bramlett (whose name he can’t bring himself to mention) when to provoke them he said such despicable things about Ray Charles and James Brown a vindictive American press branded him a racist, an incident that still haunts him.

You can buy Costello’s tome from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch Joanna Newsom perform “Leaving The City”

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Joanna Newsom performed “Leaving The City” on BBC’s Later… With Jools Holland last night [November 3, 2015].

You can watch the footage below.

The track is taken from her current album, Divers, which has been produced by Steve Albini and Noah Georgeson and features contributions from Nico Muhly, Ryan Francesconi and Dave Longstreth.

You can buy the album from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here.

The tracklisting for Divers is:

Anecdotes
Sapokanikan
Leaving the City
Goose Eggs
Waltz of the 101st Lightborne
The Things I Say
Divers
Same Old Man
You Will Not Take My Heart Alive
A Pin-Light Bent
Time, As a Symptom

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch Paul Weller’s new video for “Pick It Up”

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Paul Weller has unveiled a new video taken from his album, Saturns Pattern.

The clip is for “Pick It Up”, which will be released as a single on December 18th.

Talking about the song, Weller explains: “I was trying to get a Meters vibe to it. Stan (the producer) had a drum loop and I put a funky guitar on it and that was all we had for a while. Eventually we pieced it all together. “Whatever shatters pick it up”: pretty straight-forward message.”

The video for “Pick It Up” features Martin Freeman performing some rather surreal DIY in an orange jumpsuit and wielding a chainsaw. The video has been difrected by Ben Smallwood.

“Pick It Up” will be released on 7” vinyl and as a 2-track Download / Stream, backed by a previously unreleased Dub Mix. A special 7” bundle via paulweller.com includes an exclusive bonus 7” including the previously unreleased track “On Days Like These” b/w “Praise If You Wanna” which was previously only available on Japanese formats of the Saturns Pattern album.

Weller tours the UK in November and December. He plays:

November
Mon 16 – Belfast – Waterfront
Tues 17 – Dublin – Olympia Theatre
Wed 18 – Dublin – Olympia Theatre
Fri 20 – Brighton – Centre SOLD OUT
Sat 21 – Bournemouth – BIC
Sun 22 – Cardiff – Motorpoint Arena
Tue 24 – Glasgow – The SSE Hydro
Wed 25 – Newcastle – Metro Radio Arena
Fri 27 – Birmingham – Barclaycard Arena
Sat 28 – Manchester – Arena
Sun 29 – Leeds – First Direct Arena

December
Fri 4 – London – Hammersmith Apollo
Sat 5 – London – Hammersmith Apollo SOLD OUT

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Introducing… The History Of Rock 1969

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Heartfelt thanks to all of you who’ve made our History Of Rock project such a success since it launched in the summer. This Thursday, the latest issue – a forensic trawl through the critical musical business of 1969 – arrives in UK shops. Mick Jagger, wearing his man-dress in Hyde Park, is on the cover, and you can order a copy right now. We’d also, naturally, encourage you to subscribe to The History Of Rock. But in the meantime, here’s John Robinson to introduce the new issue…

Welcome to 1969! A word much in use this year is “heavy”. It might apply to the weight of your take on the blues, as with Fleetwood Mac or Led Zeppelin. It might mean the originality of Jethro Tull or King Crimson. It might equally apply to an individual – to Eric Clapton, for example the Beatles are the saints of the 1960s, and George Harrison an especially “heavy person”.

This year heavy people flock together. Clapton and Steve Winwood join up in Blind Faith. Steve Marriott and Pete Frampton meet in Humble Pie. Crosby, Stills and Nash admit a new member, Neil Young. Supergroups, or more informal supersessions, serve as musical summit meetings for those who are reluctant to have their work tied down by the now antiquated notion of the “group”.

Trouble of one kind or another this year awaits the leading examples of this classic formation. Our cover stars the Rolling Stones this year part company with founder member Brian Jones. The Beatles, too, are changing – how, John Lennon wonders, can the group hope to contain three contributing writers?

The Beatles diversification has become problematic. While 1968 began with their retreat with a spiritual advisor, the Maharishi, this year begins with their appointment of a heavyweight financial advisor, the American businessman Allen Klein. Their spiritual goals have been supplanted by the desire to resolve some intractable fiscal problems.

Making sense of it all, (even providing a sounding board for increasingly media-aware stars), were the writers of the New Musical Express and Melody Maker. This is the world of The History Of Rock, a monthly magazine which reaps the benefits of their extraordinary journalism for the reader decades later, one year at a time. In the pages of this fifth issue, dedicated to 1969, you will find verbatim articles from frontline staffers, compiled into long and illuminating reads.

What will still surprise the modern reader is the access to, and the sheer volume of material supplied by the artists who are now the giants of popular culture. Now, a combination of wealth, fear and lifestyle would conspire to keep reporters at a rather greater length from the lives of musicians.

At this stage though, representatives from New Musical Express and Melody Maker are where it matters. Mutilating plastic dolls with John Lennon. With a rail-thin David Bowie, hearing his views about skinheads. Preparing for the Hyde Park concert with Mick Jagger.

Join them there. As Mick says: “It’ll blow your mind”.

 

EL VY – Return To The Moon

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Sixteen years in, The National remain together because they effectively split between records in order to pursue diverse peripatetic activities. In particular, guitarists Aaron and Bryce Dessner have the indie-rock and classical worlds licked, their reputations inviting collaborations with acts as diverse as Mumford & Sons and the Kronos Quartet. There have been outlandish collaborations with visual artists, an acclaimed documentary, comedy cameos; they’ll release an all-star Grateful Dead tribute compilation featuring Bob Weir before the next National record, their seventh.

Frontman Matt Berninger figures the least in these side-projects. A classic words-only man à la Michael Stipe, he plays no instruments, and writes to music rather than filling journals with potential lyrics. He makes an unlikely collaborator, not least because his iconic croon would only dominate new company; at any rate, his insularity helps make him a captivating leading man. But in ex-Menomena multi-instrumentalist Brent Knopf, Berninger found a challenge to get out of context. The pair met when The National played with Menomena back in 2003. Years later, Berninger asked the prolific Knopf, now leading solo project Ramona Falls, to share some sketches for him to write to.

This casual arrangement is evident in their debut as EL VY (pronounced el-vie, as in the plural of Elvis), which captures Berninger’s seldom-seen playful side. He killed off his louche bachelor past on 2005’s Alligator, where he charmed women by dancing on tables, “cock in hand” (“Karen”), and smothered anxiety in bravado on “Mr November”. EL VY’s “I’m The Man To Be” seems to synthesise those two songs exactly, but from the perspective of a washed-up rock star rattling around his hotel room rather than an aspiring one. Atop bursts of clenched guitar, Berninger breaks out of his usual forlorn voice to affect a sleazy drawl on the memorable chorus: “I’m peaceful cos my dick’s in sunlight held up by kites/Cos I’m the man to be.” The parody doesn’t quite work – it’s hooked around brand names (the pathetic figure drinks offensively expensive shampoo and wipes his tears with a designer tie) rather than emotion and self-awareness, as was High Violet’s “Sorrow”, and feels a little insincere for it.

What rings true is the sense of imposter syndrome. In the Mistaken For Strangers documentary, Tom Berninger described his older brother as “a rock star – and he always has been”. But a lifelong sense of fraudulence emerges on Return To The Moon, where 42-year-old Berninger leaps back quarter of a decade to consider his anxious teenage years in Cincinnati, Ohio. On the glimmering, tumbling “Paul Is Alive”, he finds himself crying into his lemonade outside a punk club, listening to Hüsker Dü through the walls. “Need A Friend” is tougher, all flinching groove and suspicious stabs of piano, evoking the encroach of a panic attack in the club’s toilets. By the end of the song he’s repeatedly screaming “this is heartbreaking”, that sense of frustration bristling close to the surface of his skin.

Return To The Moon could do with more of these visceral lyrical moments to differentiate it from Berninger’s day job. There’s plenty of magnetic imagery: “I imagine myself being cool in the backseat of your car,” he sings on the breezy title track. “Silent Ivy Hotel” finds him hiding out on another bathroom floor drinking “pool water martinis” in the kind of weird sanctuary he evokes so well. The majority of the other songs mine familiar territory: alienation, ineffable pain, desperation for comfort. Once or twice, Berninger’s usual knack for oblique poetry starts to sound like someone impersonating him; like the title track’s “Bought a saltwater fish from a colourblind witch ‘cos she said she loved it.”

If you’re familiar with Menomena‘s knotted guitar and high piano melodies, then Knopf’s presence offers few surprises. There are some outliers: “No Time To Crank The Sun” and “It’s A Game” are tender piano devotionals, but they’re followed by the two nastiest and best songs on the record, where Knopf and Berninger’s violent sensibilities collide well. The brittle, stuttering “Sad Case” has an almost industrial thwack to the chorus, and a reeling outro that sequences so sharply into “Happiness, Missouri” that the latter sounds like an equally intense extension rather than a new song. Return To The Moon is fully realised and offers plenty of intrigue, but the moments like this final one-two are sadly lacking: rarely do they sound like a unit, and surprisingly, Berninger is the one that ends up sounding a little lost.

Q&A
MATT BERNINGER
Was the record made remotely?

95 per cent of it, which is not unlike the way I’ve been working for a while – even The National’s last record I did all my vocals out here in LA.

You’ve said it’s your most personal record.
It has the most autobiographical foundation to it. It’s the most I’ve dug into my past. One of the perspectives is of a Cincinnati teenager who’s falling in love with music and maybe a person – they’re falling in love together through music.

Why reflect on your teenage years?
I’ve been listening to a lot of old stuff from the ’80s – punk, the Minutemen – that took me back there. There are a lot of Minutemen references on this record: their documentary We Jam Econo was an inspiration, mostly because of how music was the glue of the friendship between those three guys. It gave me some perspective on the fact that music was my salvation or basis of identity as a teenager, adolescent, and as a young man – my whole life.

Will this record affect the way you write for The National?
Brent and I were almost never in a room together, the whole writing of this record; The National – we’re trying to do totally the opposite. We were all together at Aaron’s house a few months ago, and now they’re coming out to LA in a couple of weeks. We’re going to camp out in a studio and write together in a room. It’s already been working really well.
INTERVIEW: LAURA SNAPES

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Kurt Cobain’s cardigan and John Lennon’s hair up for auction

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The cardigan Kurt Cobain wore on Nirvana’s MTV Unplugged performance is to be auctioned.

The online auction website Juliens Live is carrying new listings for a number of items of rock memorabilia.

As well as Cobain’s cardigan, a lock of John Lennon‘s hair is also up for sale, which comes with a card signed by the late Beatle himself. The card reads: “Love from ‘Bald’ John Lennon xxx”. Bidding for the item starts at $10,000.

Meanwhile, a Valium pill bottle belong to Elvis Presley is up for sale, as well as his guitar pick, prescription for muscle relaxant drugs and his life insurance policy.

You can find more about these items and others by clicking here.

Kurt Cobain is also on the cover of the new issue of Uncut, which is in UK shops and also available to buy digitally by clicking here.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Ritchie Blackmore announces one-off Rainbow/Deep Purple show

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Ritchie Blackmore has announced a one-off UK show.

The guitarist will play the Birmingham Genting Arena on Saturday, June 25, 2016 specifically to celebrate the music he made with Rainbow and Deep Purple.

The full band line up for this show will be announced on November 4.

Says Blackmore, “I just felt like playing some rock ‘n’ roll for a few days, of just playing the old rock stuff, Purple stuff and Rainbow. I’m doing it for the fans, for nostalgia, and the singer I found is very exciting; he’s a cross between Ronnie James Dio meets Freddie Mercury. So this will mean exposing a new singer to the masses, and I’m sure he’ll become pretty famous because of his voice.”

Blackmore will play only three European shows. Tickets for the November 4 show will go on sale on Friday, November 6.

Blackmore joined Deep Purple in 1968, recording landmark albums including Deep Purple in Rock and Machine Head, before leaving in 1975 to form Rainbow. Rainbow disbanded in 1984.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Listen to Animal Collective’s 24-minute improvised jam “Michael, Remember”

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Animal Collective have shared a 24-minute jam, “Michael, Remember“.

Reportedly, this was recorded in May, 2015 during the band’s first practice in 18 months. It features Avey Tare, Panda Bear, and Geologist, and was recorded at Drop of Sun Studios in Asheville, NC.

The footage appears on Youtube accompanied by an underwater video recorded in July 2014 within the Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary over two nights by Colin Foord (Coral Morphologic), with additional camera and lighting by Deakin and Geologist.

The raw jam and video were later shared, and the resulting video was edited by Jared McKay (Coral Morphologic), October 2015 in Miami, FLA.

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Keith Richards wants Rolling Stones to record new album in April

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Keith Richards has confirmed that he wants The Rolling Stones to return to the studio and work on new music in April 2016.

Richards confirmed that all four members of the band recently met and agreed to record a new album, now telling The Sunday Times Magazine: “These guys aren’t getting any younger, but at the same time, they’re getting better. I’d love to shove them in the studio in April, hot off the road”.

Richards also expressed his surprise at the band’s long career, saying: he “never thought I’d get this far”.

Richards recently denied that the band would be splitting up any time soon. “People have said we’re splitting up since every tour from about 1975,” said Richards.

“If anybody should be interested in when we’re going to quit, it should be the Stones, and they’re not particularly interested in doing so.”

Meanwhile, the Stones recently released their latest archival album, Live At The Tokyo Dome 1990, on iTunes, DVD, Blu-ray, vinyl album and as a DVD + CD set.

The show was one of ten that the Stones played between February 14 and 27 during the Steel Wheels World Tour.

These were the first concerts the Rolling Stones ever performed in Japan. The footage has been restored and the sound newly mixed by Bob Clearmountain.

The tracklisting is:
Intro: Continental Drift
Start Me Up
Bitch
Sad Sad Sad
The Harlem Shuffle
Tumbling Dice
Miss You
Ruby Tuesday
Almost Hear You Sigh
Rock And A Hard Place
Mixed Emotions
Honky Tonk Women
Midnight Rambler
You Can’t Always Get What You Want
Can’t Be Seen
Happy
Paint It Black
20,000 Light Years From Home
Sympathy For The Devil
Gimme Shelter
It’s Only Rock ’n’ Roll
Brown Sugar
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction
Jumpin’ Jack Flash

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Hear ELO’s new song, “One Step At A Time”

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Jeff Lynne has revealed the latest track from ELO’s new album, Alone In The Universe.

Alone In The Universe is Lynne’s first album of new material under the ELO name since 2001’s Zoom. It will be released on November 13.

“Music is such a powerful force in our lives,” said Lynne. “A good song can make people feel much less alone in this universe. And trying to create one of those songs somehow makes me feel less alone too. My whole life – from being that kid with a dream in Birmingham right until today – proves how much music can do.”

Lynne performed at BBC Radio 2’s Festival In A Day in Hyde Park, London, in September 2014, marking ELO’s return to the UK stage 28 years after their last full concert performance. During the 75-minute set, Lynne told the 50,000-strong crowd: “I’ll do this again.” Lynne had been talked into performing at the annual event by BBC Radio 2 Breakfast Show host Chris Evans.

The tracklisting for Alone In The Universe is:

“When I Was a Boy”
“Love and Rain”
“Dirty to the Bone”
“When the Night Comes”
“The Sun Will Shine on You”
“Ain’t It a Drag”
“All My Life”
“I’m Leaving You”
“One Step at a Time”
“Alone in the Universe”

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch Patti Smith perform live with U2

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Patti Smith joined U2 on stage in London last night [November 29].

She sang “Gloria” and “Power To The People” with the band who are currently in the middle of a six night residency at the O2.

You can watch footage below.

Meanwhile, Smith has recently been reunited with a number of stolen possessions, 38 years after they were taken from her tour truck.

Smith was reading from her new memoir M Train at Dominican University in Illinois when she was approached by a woman named Doreen Bender.

“A woman stood up and told Patti that she had a bag of clothes that belonged to her 40 years ago and would like to return it. Smith (and everybody) looked totally confused, but asked the person to come up to the stage and hand her the bag. Patti looked inside and just froze,” said one eye witness.

The missing items also included a shirt Smith wore on Rolling Stone’s 1978 cover, a Keith Richards t-shirt and a piece of cloth given to the singer from her late brother and road manager Tom Smith, who died in 1994. Bender said an unnamed male friend, who worked for U-Haul at the time, gave her and her roommate Smith’s missing possessions decades ago, which they divided between them.

“I just thought, ‘Oh my God, these are her clothes and they still have sweat on them,’” Bender told the Tribune. She added: “The feeling of making your hero happy, it was a moment. It was the highlight of my life.”

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Don Henley: “The Eagles could have done our last show”

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Don Henley discusses his new solo album, Cass County, and the future of the Eagles in the new issue of Uncut, dated December 2015 and out now.

Henley’s new country-influenced album features guest appearances from Dolly Parton, Mick Jagger and Merle Haggard, and sees the singer returning to his Texan roots.

Referring to the future of the Eagles, he explains: “We’ve been together now longer since the reunion than we were originally. I don’t know if we’ll ever play together again, we could have done our last show; or we may decide in a year or two to go out and do some more dates together.

“It’s a little tougher being in the solo spotlight all the time,” Henley adds, “singing all the songs in a set: in the Eagles we get to rotate, so I get to rest my voice between songs; but when I have to get up there and sing for an hour and a half without stopping, it’s really tough.”

The new Uncut, featuring Kurt Cobain on the cover, is available to buy in shops now and can also be bought digitally by clicking here.

Photo: Danny Clinch

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Black Sabbath: “The Eagles were recording next door, but we were too loud for them”

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Ozzy Osbourne is in high spirits as he calls from Los Angeles. “I’m having the time of my life,” he says, revelling in the success that has greeted the reformation of the classic Black Sabbath lineup for a new album and tour. “We’re having a fucking blast,” he adds. “We played the Hollywood Bowl last Sunday. The last time we played there it was a fucking disaster. It was 42 years ago: we had to cut the show short because we were all going to pass out from drug overdoses.”

Not this time. The only downside for fans is the absence of Bill Ward (with whom an agreeable deal could not be struck). But all is not lost, Ozzy says,  as he prepares to look back on his nine albums with Black Sabbath. “In the future, all three of us would love to have Bill up there…”

Words: John Robinson. Originally published in Uncut’s July 2014 issue (Take 206).

___________________________________

BLACK SABBATH
Vertigo, 1970
The black and blues. The newly christened Sabbath rock out, pretty much live.

OZZY OSBOURNE: We were made by Jim Simpson… he used to have a club, Henry’s Blues House. We used to carry our equipment around in case someone didn’t turn up, and say, “We’ll play”. We started off as a blues/jazz band like Ten Years After, or Jethro Tull: the hip crowd.
TONY IOMMI: “Black Sabbath” was the second song we’d written, so we called ourselves that.
GEEZER BUTLER: The first time we played “Black Sabbath” was in this tiny pub in Lichfield near Brum. The whole pub went mental.
OZZY: The first one was a live album with no audience. The manager said, go to this place Regent Sound… we’d never been into a studio before. We did the album in about 12 hours and then went to do a residency in Switzerland…
GEEZER: [Producer] Rodger Bain was like a fifth member of the band. We’d been to six different record companies and producers, and they’d all told us, “Come back when you can write proper music.” Rodger was the first person on the business side who understood what we were trying to do. He just said, “Play what you do live.”
OZZY: When we come back from Switzerland, Jim said, “Come in and I’ll play you your finished album.” It had a gatefold sleeve and started with all this thunder and lightning – it blew my mind.
GEEZER: I loved the cover – but I didn’t like the inverted cross on the inside. It was the first time we’d had something to take to our parents and show we were doing something constructive.

Peter Gabriel – the first four solo albums remastered

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After leaving Genesis in 1975, Peter Gabriel’s first instinct was to put as much daylight as possible between himself and his former band. Each of his first four solo albums snipped away at the strands of DNA connecting him to Genesis until, following the release of Peter Gabriel 4 in 1982, Gabriel had successfully reinvented himself as an idiosyncratic art-rocker.

These are significant records, and all four have been remastered and reissued on 180g vinyl as limited-edition double albums, playing at 45rpm (the third and fourth are also being re-released in their German vocal versions, for anyone who yearns to hear “The Family And The Fishing Net” in Deutsch).

The first two albums most obviously reflect the aftermath of leaving Genesis. On Peter Gabriel 1, released in 1977 and colloquially known as “Car” after Hipgnosis’s cover image, Gabriel’s personal and professional rebirth is explicitly referenced in rousing hit single “Solsbury Hill”, where he cries freedom in 7/4 time. But a sense of creative unshackling is also apparent in the range of musical ground covered. There are styles here absent from any other Gabriel solo record: barbershop and flapper-jazz pastiche (“Excuse Me”), three-in-the-morning piano blues (“Waiting For The Big One”, on which he sounds very like Randy Newman), and frantic disco-funk (“Down The Dolce Vita”). Yet this appealing but rather odd record also forays into the territory Gabriel will subsequently stake out more rigorously – most notably the closing ballad “Here Comes The Flood”, which is overcooked here but will later become a centrepiece of Gabriel’s live show.

Robert Fripp played on “Car” and is promoted to producer on Peter Gabriel 2 – aka “Scratch” – released in 1978. It’s tighter and more focused than its predecessor. “On The Air” and “DIY” have a streamlined new wave directness, and Roy Bittan’s piano adds a fresh, distinctive texture, particularly on the airy “Mother Of Violence”, but Gabriel still hasn’t forged a coherent musical identity. He bounces from jokey reggae (“A Wonderful Day In A One-Way World”) to Plastic Ono Band intensity (“Flotsam And Jetsam”, “Home Sweet Home”), while “Animal Magic” sounds a bit like the theme tune to Minder.

The tonally rich experiment of “Exposure”, meanwhile – on which Gabriel mumbles and shrieks over Fripp’s esoteric guitar loops – points towards Peter Gabriel 3, or “Melt”, released in 1980 and heralding the fully fledged emergence of Gabriel as art-rock trailblazer.

Producer Steve Lillywhite had been working with Siouxsie & The Banshees, and his enthusiasm for post-punk experimentation helped shape a record on which many terrific songs (the Bowie-esque funk-rock of “I Don’t Remember”, the electro-soul of “No Self Control”) are greatly enhanced by a vaulting spirit of adventure. Gabriel’s ban on cymbals and the cavernous stone room at Townhouse Studios colluded to create a monolithic drum sound, unveiled to formidable effect on opener “Intruder”, which finds Gabriel at his most menacing as the stalker who “likes the touch and the smell of all the pretty dresses you wear”.

Lyrically, the album is full of shadows. “Family Snapshot” is a beautiful three-part epic about an assassin’s craving for notoriety, hot-housed by childhood alienation. Despite Kate Bush sighing seductively in French, the album’s big hit, “Games Without Frontiers”, is an icy Cold War nursery rhyme, and hardly commercial catnip. On “Lead A Normal Life”, Gabriel sings about life in a psychiatric institution with the baleful vulnerability of Robert Wyatt.

The closing “Biko” is his first overtly political song, depicting the 1977 murder of anti-apartheid activist Steve Biko. The track’s message tends to dominate, but the medium is pretty impressive, too, Gabriel conjuring an atmosphere of dread with a stark backing of brooding drums and streaks of distorted guitar.

This arid sonic landscape is reprised on “The Rhythm Of The Heat”, the first track on his fourth eponymous album, released in 1982 and titled Security in the United States. Here is the emergence of Gabriel as world music avatar. Feverish and dream-like, “The Rhythm Of The Heat” deploys Ghanaian drums in its clattering finale. Elsewhere there are Latino rhythms (“Kiss Of Life”), pulsing evocations of Native American struggle (“San Jacinto”), and, on “Wallflower”, an empathetic hymn to political prisoners in South America.

Alongside these stirring songs of social conscience, something else is occurring. The repetitively funky US hit “Shock The Monkey” acts as prelude of sorts to what will come next: “Sledgehammer”, So and the final act of Gabriel’s transformation from Lawnmower Man to global pop star.

Q&A
Steve Lillywhite
Describe the mood while you were making Peter Gabriel 3.

The album is very dark and when you listen to it you get the sense of furrowed brows, but the overall feeling was absolute joy – other than the usual Peter thing of not quite finishing his lyrics on time! The table tennis matches between me, [engineer] Hugh Padgham and Peter were legendary. There were basic ground rules: no presets on the computer; no cymbals; basically, anything that had come before was not allowed. He was fearless, he wanted to push things sonically.

How did that famous ‘gated’ drum sound emerge?
The Townhouse had this amazing stone room, plus the new SSL desk had compressors on them. It was a perfect storm. Peter will say he invented that drum sound, Hugh will say he did, and I will say I did. It was a group effort, but I had been using that idea before.

Amazing to think his US record company, Atlantic, refused to release the album and dropped him…
His A&R man at Atlantic would come to the studio to listen, and we would turn the air conditioning to freezing just before he arrived because we didn’t want him to be comfortable or stay that long. Isn’t that awful! It was schoolboy humour, it wasn’t malicious. So maybe that didn’t help…
INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Hear Son Volt’s previously unreleased demo for “Drown”

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Son Volt‘s debut album, Trace, is due to receive the 20th anniversary treatment with a special edition.

To mark this event, we’re delighted to be able to premier two previously unreleased tracks from the set – the original demo for “Drown” and a version of the song recorded live. Scroll down to hear them.

Due in shops on October 30, 2015, this 2-disc edition Trace 20th Anniversary Edition includes a remastered version of the original album alongside more than two dozen unreleased bonus tracks.

The first disc features previously unreleased demos for eight album tracks, including “Drown”, “Live Free“, “Windfall” and an acoustic version of “Route“.

The second disc contains an unreleased live performance recorded at The Bottom Line in New York’s Greenwich Village on February 12, 1996. At the show, the band played nearly every song from Trace, covered Del Reeves’ “Looking At The World Through A Windshield” and performed “Cemetery Savior”, which wouldn’t surface until the following year on Son Volt’s sophomore release, Straightaways.

The show also features songs originally recorded by Uncle Tupelo including “Slate”, “True To Life” and the title track from the band’s final album Anodyne (1993).

“Drown (demo)”

“Drown”, Live at the Bottom Line on February 12, 96

You can pre-order a copy of Trace by clicking here.

The tracklisting for Trace: 20th Anniversary Edition is:

Disc One
1. “Windfall”
2. “Live Free”
3. “Tear Stained Eye”
4. “Route”
5. “Ten Second News”
6. “Drown”
7. “Loose String”
8. “Out Of The Picture”
9. “Catching On”
10. “Too Early”
11. “Mystifies Me”
12. “Route” -Acoustic Demo*
13. “Drown” – Demo*
14. “Out Of The Picture” – Demo*
15. “Loose String” – Demo*
16. “Live Free” – Demo*
17. “Too Early” – Demo*
18. “Catching On” – Demo*
19. “Windfall” – Demo*


Disc Two: Live from Bottom Line 2/12/96

1. “Route”*
2. “Loose String”*
3. “Catching On”*
4. “Live Free”*
5. “Anodyne”*
6. “Windfall”*
7. “Slate”*
8. “Out of the Picture”*
9. “Tear Stained Eye”*
10. “True to Life”*
11. “Cemetery Savior”*
12. “Ten Second News”*
13. “Fifteen Keys”*
14. “Drown”*
15. “Looking For a Way Out”*
16. “Chickamauga”*
17. “Too Early”*
18. “Looking at the World Through a Windshield” – Del Reeves cover*

*previously unreleased

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Deerhunter – Fading Frontier

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It’s hard not to hear a glimmer of gratitude in Bradford Cox’s voice as, not long into his band’s thrilling and unexpectedly affirmative seventh album, he sings, “I’m living my life, I’m living my life”. The idea that Deerhunter’s frontman has a stake in the here and now also seems to elicit a measure of surprise – he repeats the phrase as if he’s trying to convince himself that it’s true. Then again, a life-threatening encounter with a swiftly moving hunk of steel and glass is bound to make anyone consider their place in the world.

Though Cox has been reluctant to divulge specific details about the car accident that left him hospitalised last December, the effect has clearly been profound. As he put it bluntly in an Instagram message while waiting for X-rays, “Can’t move much. Incredible pain.” Given Cox’s long history of suffering due to Marfan syndrome, one can barely comprehend all that’s contained in those last two words.

Cox has said the accident “erased all illusions for me” and was subsequently treated for depression. Yet he also claims to be pleased about the antidepressants’ dampening effects on his libido and the “manic urge” that fueled the making of 2013’s Monomania, the band’s most abrasive disc to date.

Regardless of how much Cox owes his current disposition to pharmaceutical benefit, Fading Frontier bursts with a far different kind of energy than the darker sort of recent years. Cox has gone so far as to liken Fading Frontier to the first day of spring after a brutal winter. While matters are not necessarily so sunny throughout the album’s entirety, never before has Deerhunter’s brand of noise been such a joyful one.

Of all their releases in the last decade, Fading Frontier strikes the most satisfying balance between the menacing, mantric grooves of 2006’s Cryptograms and the pop melodicism that emerged on 2010’s Halcyon Digest. From the sideways funk of first single “Snakeskin”, the beatific vocal harmonies of “Breaker” or the synth-drenched Tangerine Dream-iness of “Ad Astra”, the stylistic detours here somehow keep sending them further into the light.

Recorded with Halcyon Digest producer Ben H Allen in Atlanta, the new album may partially owe its lowered anxiety levels to the comforts that go with working close to home. And whereas the line between Cox’s Deerhunter activities and his solo endeavours as Atlas Sound has been blurry at times, Fading Frontier sounds very much like a group effort. Cox’s powerful presence is well-balanced by equally strong contributions by his Deerhunter co-founders, guitarist and keyboardist Lockett Pundt and drummer Moses Archuleta. (Officially enlisted in early 2013, Josh McKay returns on bass.) Indeed, “Breaker” is the first recording in which Cox and Pundt share lead vocals, a strategy that lends a Byrds-ian prettiness to the hazy but propulsive dream-pop template that prevails on Fading Frontier. With former Stereolab leader Tim Gane dropping by to add a Left Banke-like dusting of electric harpsichord, “Duplex Planet” is just as fetching. Broadcast’s James Cargill also makes a guest appearance to add tape manipulations and yet another layer of synthesiser gloss to “Take Care”, a hypnotic ballad that sounds custom-built for a night-time driving scene in a moody ’80s crime thriller.

Fading Frontier’s similarly cinematic centrepiece, “Leather And Wood” demonstrates the album’s richness in regards to texture and detail. Glitch-y bleeps, choppy beats and other discordant elements underpin a plaintive piano part and Cox’s eerie, treated vocal. “I believe we can die, I believe we can live again,” he croons, as matters of mortality again hijack his stream of thoughts.

And despite Cox’s claims about the benefits of living libido-free, there’s no lack of swagger in “Snakeskin”. Though this burst of bravura may contrast sharply with Fading Frontier’s more placid songs, it highlights the clarity of purpose and offhand sensuality shared by all of the songs here. The anger and anguish so prevalent in Monomania have been replaced by a greater sense of ease on Cox’s part.

That’s true even when he sings of a lover’s departure in the closing “Carrion”. Never one to miss an opportunity for wordplay, Cox delights in the confusion he creates as to whether he’s singing the unpleasant word in the title or imploring that special someone to “carry on”. Either way, the pun is perfectly suited to a work that could have been mired in despondency but is instead rife with a lust for life and an eagerness to engage with the moments at hand. As Cox sings in the final track, “I will stay strong, I will stay strong.” Fading Frontier leaves no doubt that he and Deerhunter have done just that.


Q&A
Bradford Cox
What kind of effect did the car accident and your recovery have on the making of Fading Frontier?

Any time you have something unexpected like that come along out of nowhere and knock you on your ass, you find a lot of time to re-evaluate your priorities. I had a broken pelvis and was bed-ridden. I had lots of time to catch up on reading and listening to piles of music I had collected to explore. There was a lot of worry that I would suffer long-term consequences, and I am very blessed that that was not the case. A lot of the time in bed was spent worrying about that. I found organising and arranging songs for the record to be a good distraction from the physical pain and discomfort.

You’ve been saying that Fading Frontier is your favourite of Deerhunter’s albums – what do you think you’ve achieved here?
Well, if you ask any musician, artist, writer, filmmaker or what have you to choose their favourite work, it would almost always be the most recent. As I have gotten older, I’ve become less self-critical about our early work. I’ve come to appreciate it for what it was and what we made given the circumstances and resources we had at our disposal. We had a lot of resources at our disposal for Monomania but decided to record in a very backwards and primitive way, bypassing a lot of that. This is the first album where I don’t think we made any sacrifices in sonic quality. Everything is either how I imagined it should be or better.

The band may have also attained the best balance between its experimental bent and its more melodic sensibility – is it always hard not to tip too far one way or the other?
I have always wanted to make music that could affect people and entertain them and engage them. I like to think of artists like Björk and Radiohead, and how in their best work, they never avoid the strange if it leads to moments of beauty. They have a wide appeal because they draw you in with something familiar and you trust them to take you somewhere that would otherwise be a little dissonant or uncomfortable. I find that inspiring.
INTERVIEW: JASON ANDERSON

The History Of Rock – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – a brand new monthly magazine from the makers of Uncut – is now on sale in the UK. Click here for more details.

Meanwhile, the December 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Kurt Cobain, PJ Harvey, Don Henley, Bob Dylan, Courtney Barnett, Noddy Holder, The Beatles, Neko Case, Ken Kesey’s Acid Tests, Jimi Hendrix and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.