Home Blog Page 352

Expanded editions of Van Morrison’s Astral Weeks and His Band And Street Choir announced

0

Van Morrison‘s albums Astral Weeks and His Band And Street Choir are to be released as expanded editions.

These single-disc expanded and remastered versions will be released by Rhino on October 30 on CD and digital formats.

They follow the Moondance deluxe edition that Rhino released in 2013.

The tracklistings for both albums is:

ASTRAL WEEKS
Track Listing
“Astral Weeks”
“Beside You”
“Sweet Thing”
“Cyprus Avenue”
“The Way Young Lovers Do”
“Madame George”
“Ballerina”
“Slim Slow Slider”
Bonus Tracks – Previously Unreleased
“Beside You” (Take 1)
“Madame George” (Take 4)
“Ballerina” (Long Version)
“Slim Slow Slider” (Long Version)

HIS BAND AND THE STREET CHOIR
Track Listing
“Domino”
“Crazy Face”
“Give Me A Kiss”
“I’ve Been Working”
“Call Me Up In Dreamland”
“I’ll Be Your Lover, Too”
“Blue Money”
“Virgo Clowns”
“Gypsy Queen”
“Sweet Jannie”
“If I Ever Needed Someone”
“Street Choir”
Bonus Tracks – Previously Unreleased
“Call Me Up In Dreamland” (Take 10)
“Give Me A Kiss” (Take 3)
“Gypsy Queen” (Take 3)
“I’ve Been Working” (Alternate Version)
“I’ll Be Your Lover, Too” (Alternate Version)

This latest announced comes days after Sony announced release plans for the Van Morrison titles they have acquired.

Sony’s Van Morrison archive includes all of his solo works from 1971 to the present as well as the recordings made with the Them from 1964 through 1966.

33 Van Morrison album titles will be made available as digital releases and through all streaming services beginning Friday, August 28.

That same day, Legacy Recordings will release the Essential Van Morrison, a 37-track career-spanning anthology, available digitally and as a 2CD physical album.

Later this year, Van Morrison’s early recordings with the Them will be available on Legacy Recordings.

Legacy will launch the label’s ongoing Van Morrison library release project with new compilations, deluxe Legacy Editions of classic album titles and a digital rollout of the full Van Morrison catalogue.

Most of the Van Morrison catalogue has never been available for streaming and many titles have long been unavailable online through iTunes or other DSPs. Much of the catalogue has been out-of-print in any format, with some titles being unavailable for as long as 15 years.

Forthcoming new Van Morrison releases on the Legacy label will include a new career-spanning single CD compilation and deluxe Legacy Editions of Van Morrison solo albums: Saint Dominic’s Preview, It’s Too Late To Stop Now, Hard Nose The Highway and Enlightenment.

Morrison released his most recent studio album, Duets: Re-Working The Catalogue, earlier this year.

He was also awarded a knighthood in the Queen’s birthday honours, which he described as “a huge honour“.

Click here to read our review of Van Morrison live at The Royal Albert Hall, March 25, 2015

Available Digitally and Streaming on Friday, August 28:

St. Dominic’s Preview (1972)
Hard Nose The Highway (1973)
It’s Too Late To Stop Now (Live) (1974)
Veedon Fleece (1974)
A Period Of Transition (1977)
Wavelength (1978)
Into The Music (1979)
Common One (1980)
Beautiful Vision (1982)
Inarticulate Speech Of The Heart (1983)
Live At The Grand Opera House, Belfast (Live) (1984)
A Sense Of Wonder (1984)
No Guru, No Method, No Teacher (1984)
Poetic Champions Compose (1987)
Irish Heartbeat (w/the Chieftains) (1988)
Avalon Sunset (1989)
Enlightenment (1990)
Hymns To The Silence (1991)
Too Long In Exile (1993)
A Night In San Francisco (Live) (1994)
Days Like This (1995)
How Long Has This Been Going On? (1995)
Tell Me Something: The Songs Of Mose Allison (1996)
The Healing Game (1997)
The Philosopher’s Stone (2CD outtakes compilation, 1998)
Back on Top (1999)
The Skiffle Sessions: Live In Belfast (Live) (2000)
Down the Road (2002)
What’s Wrong With This Picture? (2003)
Magic Time (2005)
Pay The Devil (2006)
Keep It Simple (2008)
Astral Weeks “Live At The Hollywood Bowl” (Live) (2009)

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The 29th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

0

No extract to share from the new Necks album (“Vertigo” is a relatively abbreviated 44 minutes in total), but a section of Duane Pitre’s terrific drone “Bayou Electric” has turned up, along with a track from the new Chris Forsyth and Koen Holtkamp album, and fresh music from Weyes Blood, Peaches, !!! and more. See what you think; it’s been a good week.

Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

1 Duane Pitre – Bayou Electric (Important)

2 Balloon Ascents – Cutout (Self-released)

3 Bill MacKay & Ryley Walker – Land Of Plenty (Whistler)

4 Steve Hauschildt – Where All Is Fled (Kranky)

5 Bert Jansch – Moonshine (Earth)

6 Hieroglyphic Being & The JITU Ahn-Sahm-Buhl – We Are Not The First (RVNG INTL)

7 The Necks – Vertigo (Northern Spy

8 Chris Forsyth & Koen Holtkamp – The Island (Trouble In Mind)

9 Peaches – Rub (I U She Music)

10 Ballaké Sissoko & Vincent Segal – Musique De Nuit (No Format)

11 Dave Heumann – Here In The Deep (Thrill Jockey)

12 !!! – As If (Warp)

13 Weyes Blood – Cardamom Times (Mexican Summer)

14 Israel Nash – Israel Nash’s Silver Season (Loose/Thirty Tigers)

15 Girl Band – Holding Hands With Jamie (Rough Trade)

16 Laraaji – Ambient 3: Day Of Radiance (Glitterbeat)

17 US Girls – Half Free (4AD)

18 Various Artists – Rastafari: The Dreads Enter Babylon 1955-83 (Soul Jazz)

19 Blitzen Trapper – All Across This Land (Lojinx)

Taste – I’ll Remember

0

When Melody Maker’s Roy Hollingworth broke the news to his readers in 1970 that Taste, the popular Irish trio, were disbanding, his tone was one of shock. “After one of the most ludicrous of upsets… You couldn’t really believe what was actually going on.” Many of the 600,000 attendees of the Isle of Wight Festival, held six weeks earlier, would have agreed with him. Fronted by guitarist and singer Rory Gallagher, Taste had stormed the festival’s Friday evening slot and seemed poised for a breakthrough, not a break-up.

What was it about Taste that could ignite the Isle of Wight yet end in a bitter, inexplicable divorce? Why did Gallagher never play their songs in public again? There are no easy answers on I’ll Remember, a Taste live-and-studio boxset that follows the recent Gallagher anthologies Kickback City, Live At Montreux and Irish Tour ’74. Over four discs (1967-70), we hear a blues-rock band stretching out onstage – and showing off their folk and jazz influences in the studio – but the one thing we never get is a sense of climax or closure. Are Taste one of rock’s great what-might-have-beens? If so, Gallagher’s solo career (1971-95) had to serve as their alternative history.

Gallagher emerged from the Irish showbands of the mid-’60s as a teenage prodigy and blues fanatic. He formed Taste with two Cork musicians, Eric Kitteringham (bass) and Norman D’Amery (drums), soon descending on Belfast, 200 miles to the north, where the Maritime Hotel still reverberated from the excitement of seeing Van Morrison and Them in 1964. On a demo recorded at the Maritime to attract the interest of Decca in London, Taste sound like a beat combo with blues leanings; there are times when Gallagher’s harmonica is as prominent as his guitar. But an instrumental, “Norman Invasion”, suggests he may be paying close attention to Jimi Hendrix. And be thinking, perhaps, that Taste should become more of a power trio.

They start to record. A 1968 single, “Blister On The Moon”, with its strange lyrics about a totalitarian society crushing a little man who dares to fight back, is backed by the equally striking “Born On The Wrong Side Of Time”, which crams the entire repertoire of the Yardbirds into three minutes and 20 seconds. Captured live at the Woburn Music Festival that summer, Taste are loose and fiery, like Ten Years After channelling the MC5. Hendrix, who topped the Woburn bill the night before, would surely have been impressed by the way Taste tear it up on their 11-minute closing medley, which includes “Baby Please Don’t Go” and “You Shook Me”.

A new rhythm section – Richard McCracken (bass) and John Wilson (drums) – was installed before Taste made their self-titled Polydor debut album in the autumn of ’68. Released the following April, it showcases Gallagher the way Led Zeppelin, in January, had showcased Jimmy Page: as a bluesman, a folkie, a multi-faceted whizzkid, a maestro. Some of the soloing on Taste is delicious. “Hail”, an acoustic blues, is dazzlingly accomplished for a 20-year-old. And his effortless slide playing on Lead Belly’s “Leaving Blues” is the sort of thing the Stones had to hire Ry Cooder to do for them. No wonder Gallagher was later considered as a replacement for Mick Taylor.

McCracken and Wilson don’t stand out on the debut LP, but they’re more of a force on the follow-up. On The Boards (1970) shows Taste exploring and advancing. Wilson was a fan of Tony Williams’ Lifetime. Gallagher, studying his Eric Dolphy records, taught himself to play an alto saxophone in a matter of weeks. On The Boards is progressive, recalling Family here and there, but Gallagher’s smoky alto solo on the title track, with Wilson on rimshots and ride cymbal, is something different entirely – like John Densmore getting together with the Don Rendell-Ian Carr quintet and not worrying about any boundaries. Taste had come a long way in 12 months. “I’ll Remember”, which gives the boxset its title, is typically schizophrenic, one minute a brooding rock song, the next a jazzy swing tune.

The 1970 Isle of Wight appearance is omitted from the four discs, alas (though a DVD/CD release of it is planned), but I’ll Remember features two live performances from the same year. One is a recording for Radio 1’s In Concert, which suffers from muffled mono sound and too much hiss. Much better (and in stereo) is a 50-minute chunk of Taste in Stockholm, on their final European tour, where they play with remarkable intensity for three men who are barely speaking. Gallagher, encouraged by Taste’s manager to regard the rhythm section as dispensable sidemen, had quickly become convinced that he could succeed without them. He irritated Wilson and McCracken by launching into solo blues numbers onstage, often several at a time, giving them nothing to do. Wilson disliked encores. Gallagher wanted to play ten a night. They argued over missing money, each suspecting the other. It later transpired that the manager was the one with the Polydor deal, not them. If he hadn’t been so fond of the music biz practices of the ’60s, he could have had one of the major bands of the ’70s.

Prior to Gallagher’s death in 1995, a reconciliation took place of the classic Taste lineup, and there was even talk of them playing a peace concert for Northern Ireland. But it didn’t happen, and resentment over old contracts continued to linger. Bassist McCracken lives in London now, working for the company that owns Wembley Stadium. He avoids interviews about Taste and, according to Wilson, seldom discusses the band in private. Wilson himself formed a trio in 2000 to play material from the Taste era, incensing Gallagher’s fans (and brother-manager Donal) by calling the new band Taste. After throat cancer surgery two years ago, however, Wilson was advised by doctors to avoid strenuous activity and sold his drumkit. Listening to Taste on I’ll Remember as young musicians with their lives ahead of them, it’s poignant to think that none of them plays music any more.

Q&A
JOHN WILSON (Taste drummer, 1968-70)
What are your feelings about Taste now?

Most people who refer to Taste are talking about Rory. They see it as one facet of Rory’s career. My main feeling about Taste is that I was privileged to play with Rory – and Richard – at a time when bands were allowed to be at their most expressive. There was no pressure on Rory or any of us. We were just three guys who went onstage every night and had fun.

Taste are often called a blues band, but you were more flexible than that. Rock, folk, jazz…
We put no labels on anything. To quote the phrase from Star Trek, it’s the blues, Jim, but not as we know it. Coming from Ireland in that era, we all had lots of influences. The showbands played everything from trad jazz to rock’n’roll. I came from brass bands, playing cornet and euphonium. Rory liked country music, a lot of jazz stuff. We just experimented and tried incorporating things into our songs to see if they worked. There was no format, no setlist, nothing like that.

The boxset has some alternate takes from the two studio albums. Would you record, say, three or four takes of each song?
Some of them may have been one take. Those studio dates were very quick. Straight in and straight out, not a lot of thought going into it. I would have preferred releasing live albums. The studio stuff seemed a bit false, in a way, compared to what we were giving the punters every night.

Was there anything that could have kept Taste together?
Yes. Better management. We were good friends who loved playing music, but unfortunately no-one was getting any financial reward other than our manager. And by a method of divide-and-conquer, he split the band. I tried to give him the benefit of the doubt. It was only afterwards that I realised how bad he was.

DONAL GALLAGHER (Taste road manager, brother of Rory)
The first Taste album has Rory’s face on the cover and seems like a vehicle for his talent as a guitarist. Did Polydor instantly single him out as the star of the band?

What had occurred with Taste Mark I was that they’d got a residency at the Marquee and Polydor had gone to see them. They had them go into the studio. They evaluated the tapes when they came back and said, “We’ll sign the guitar player, but we want a different drummer and bass player.” It emanated from that. It was very much seen by Polydor as Rory with two other guys. And to a certain extent that’s how Rory saw it too.

How big did Taste seem to be getting by 1970?
They’d broken huge ground in Europe, in Scotland and in the north-east. But they were ignored by sections of the UK music press, who took the attitude of “How can you have a rock band from Ireland?” People made condescending remarks. But then they did the Isle of Wight Festival, playing on the Friday when everyone was just waiting to rock. A huge army of Taste fans had come over from France, Germany, Holland and Denmark. For a lot of those people, Taste were their band. They did five encores.

You saw Taste’s split from Rory’s point of view. Why had such a huge gap opened up between him and other two?
Management issues and financial issues played a huge part. The band were playing through the PA system that Rory had inherited from his showband days. They were travelling in a small Ford Transit with me as their road manager. There were four of us, and the back seat was a bench seat from an old Volkswagen propped up on a Marshall stack. They were making very good money, and yet they were living in bedsits in Earl’s Court. It was obvious they weren’t being managed correctly. So Rory went to the other two and said, “We need to get rid of the manager.” But the manager was from Northern Ireland, and so were the other two, and they sided with him. A split became inevitable.

Did Rory regret Taste’s break-up in later years?
Musically, he liked working with the other two – in fact, in the ’90s when he was forming a new lineup, he considered getting in touch with John – but the break-up caused a huge depression in him. He felt a huge opportunity had been passed by. He never performed Taste’s songs onstage again. Some nights you’d hear him break into the riff of one of them, and you could tell he’d be itching to play the whole song, and the audience would be dying to hear it, but he never did. I suppose he felt he’d lost ownership of that music.
INTERVIEWS: DAVID CAVANAGH

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Hear Julia Holter’s new track, “Sea Calls Me Home”

0

Julia Holter has released a new track from her forthcoming album, Have You In My Wilderness.

The song, “Sea Calls Me Home“, is about “moving away from things that trap you, the scary wonder in discovering freedom,” she said in a statement.

You can watch the video for the song below.

You can read a long interview with Holter in the new issue on Uncut, which is available in UK shops now and can also be bought digitally by clicking here.

Holter has also announced a world tour in support of the album. She will play some dates – marked with an asterisk below – with Beirut. The dates include six shows in the UK.

Julia Holter will play:

October 06 San Diego, CA – Open Air Theater *
October 07 Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Palladium *
October 08 Los Angeles, CA – Hollywood Palladium *
October 10 Berkeley, CA – Greek Berkeley *
October 12 Portland, OR – Bunk Bar
October 13 Seattle, WA – Paramount Theatre *
October 24 New York, NY – Rough Trade
October 27 Zurich, Switzerland – Ziegel Oh Lac
October 28 Munich, Germany – Kammerspiele Theatre
October 29 Frankfurt, Germany – Brotfabrik
October 30 Hamburg, Germany – Uebel & Gefahrlich
November 01 Helsinki, Finland – Tavastia
November 02 Stockholm, Sweden – Etablissemanget
November 03 Oslo, Norway – Parktheatret
November 04 Copenhagen, Denmark – Vega
November 05 Berlin, Germany – Berghain
November 07 Den Bosch, Netherlands – November Music
November 09 Brighton, England – Komedia
November 10 Bristol, England – The Lantern @ Colston Hall
November 11 Birmingham, England – Glee Club
November 12 London, England – Islington Assembly Hall
November 13 Glasgow, Scotland – The Hug and Pint
November 14 Leeds, England – Brudenell Social Club
November 16 Paris, France – New Morning
November 17 Brussels, Belgium – AB Club
November 18 Brugge, Belgium – Biekorf
November 19 Utrecht, Netherlands – Le Guess Who? Festival
November 24 Kyoto, Japan – Metro
November 25 Osaka, Japan – Conpass
November 26 Tokyo, Japan – WWW
December 09 Sydney, Australia – Newtown Social Club
December 10 Brisbane, Australia – Black Bear Lodge
December 11 Melbourne, Australia – Howler
December 12 Victoria, Australia – Meredith Music Festival

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Ryan Adams, Kim Gordon, Sharon Van Etten and more to perform at Neil Young tribute festival

0

Ryan Adams, Kim Gordon’s Body/Head, The Black Keys’ Patrick Carney, Jakob Dylan, Gaslight Anthem’s Brian Fallon, Sharon Van Etten are among the artists scheduled to perform at the inaugural Neil Young festival.

Neil Fest: A Night To Celebrate The Music Of Neil Young will take place on September 13 and 14 at New York City’s Bowery Ballroom.

The event has been put on by The Best Fest organisation, whose previous events have celebrated other artists including, Bob Dylan, Tom Petty and the Rolling Stones.

The Neil Fest is sponsored by Jameson’s Irish Whiskey; ticket sale proceeds will benefit the Sweet Relief Musicians Fund on behalf of the Jameson Neighborhood Fund.

The list of artists so far confirmed to participate is Norah Jones, Ryan Adams, Body/Head, Patrick Carney, Ruby Amanfu, Jakob Dylan, Brian Fallon, Butch Walker, Matt Hitt (The Drowners), Nick Zinner (Yeah Yeah Yeahs), Valerie June, Charles Bradley, Sharon Van Etten, Adam Green, Ryan Miller (Guster), Elvis Perkins, Summer Moon, Danny Masterson, Adam Busch, Michelle Branch, Sammy James Jr., Steve Schiltz, Nicole Atkins, Sasha Dobson, Jade Castrinos, Caveman, Danny Clinch, Johnny T, Chase Cohl, Daniel & David Gibson (Streets Of Laredo) and Donald Cumming as well as the Best Fest’s acclaimed Cabin Down Below Band.

Tickets for Neil Fest: A Night to Celebrate the Music of Neil Young on sale Friday August 28.

You can buy tickets for the September 13 show by clicking here.
You can buy tickets for the September 14 show by clicking here.

Neil Young has announced a fresh batch of dates for his Rebel Content tour.

Young and Promise Of The Real appeared to have finished their Rebel Content tour on July 24, 2015 at the Wayhome Festival in Ontario.

Writing in his end of tour report on Facebook, Young enthused, “I loved rocking with Promise of the Real I love this band Lets keep it going…”

Although both Young and Promise Of The Real were due to perform again at this year’s 30th anniversary Farm Aid event on September 19, they have now announced a second leg to the tour, beginning on October 1 at the Adam Center/University of Missoula, Montana.

They will play 11 new dates, finishing on October 17 at the Greek Theater, Berkeley, California.

The full set of tour dates are:

October 01 – Adam Center/U of Missoula – Missoula, Montana
October 02 – Arena Spokane – Spokane, Washington
October 04 – Wa Mu Theatre – Seattle, Washington
October 05 – Queen Elizabeth Theatre – Vancouver, British Columbia [solo acoustic show]
October 07 – Chiles Center – Portland, Oregon
October 08 – Matthew Knight Arena – Eugene, Oregon
October 10 – Santa Barbara Bowl – Santa Barbara, California
October 11 – Cosmopolitan – Las Vegas, Nevada
October 13 – RIMAC Arena – San Diego, California
October 14 – The Forum – Los Angeles, California
October 17 – Greek Theater – Berkeley, California

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Track premiere! Hear an unreleased version of the Faces’ classic, ”Whole Lotta Woman”

0

Welcome to the third our of exclusive track premieres from the Faces‘ upcoming box set, You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything (1970 – 1975).

Previously, we’ve brought you the previously unheard “Flying (Take 3)” and an unreleased version of “Jealous Guy” recorded live at the Reading Festival in August 1973.

For our final exclusive, we bring you “Whole Lotta Woman (Outake)” which is a bonus track on Long Player.

Unfortunately, this track is only available to UK viewers.

You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything (1970 – 1975) will be available on August 28 through Rhino on CD, digitally and as a limited edition vinyl.

The box set contains newly remastered versions of all four of the band’s studio albums, plus a bonus disc of rarities.

You can pre-order the CD set by clicking here. And you can pre-order the vinyl set by clicking here.

Scroll down for the full tracklisting.

Meanwhile, Rod Stewart, Ron Wood and Kenney Jones are to reunite The Faces to play a show for Prostate Cancer UK.

They will perform at Rock ‘n’ Horsepower at Hurtwood Park Polo Club in Ewhurst, Surrey on Saturday, September 5, 2015.

“This year is the 40th anniversary since The Faces parted ways so it’s about time we got together for a jam,” said Stewart. “Being in The Faces back in the day was a whirlwind of madness but my God, it was beyond brilliant. We are pleased to be able to support Prostate Cancer UK.”

Faces_LP_Box

The track listing for You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything (1970 – 1975) is:

THE FIRST STEP
1. “Wicked Messenger”
2. “Devotion”
3. “Shake, Shudder, Shiver”
4. “Stone”
5. “Around The Plynth”
6. “Flying”
7. “Pineapple And The Monkey”
8. “Nobody Knows”
9. “Looking Out The Window”
10. “Three Button Hand Me Down”
11. “Behind The Sun” (Outtake) *
12. “Mona – The Blues” (Outtake) *
13. “Shake, Shudder, Shiver” (BBC Session) *
14. “Flying” (Take 3) *
15. “Nobody Knows” (Take 2) *

LONG PLAYER
1. “Bad ‘n’ Ruin”
2. “Tell Everyone”
3. “Sweet Lady Mary”
4. “Richmond”
5. “Maybe I’m Amazed”
6. “Had Me A Real Good Time”
7. “On The Beach”
8. “I Feel So Good”
9. “Jerusalem”
10. “Whole Lotta Woman” (Outtake) *
11. “Tell Everyone” (Take 1) *
12. “Sham-Mozzal” (Instrumental – Outtake) *
13. “Too Much Woman” (Live) *
14. “Love In Vain” (Live) *

A NOD IS AS GOOD AS A WINK…TO A BLIND HORSE
1. “Miss Judy’s Farm”
2. “You’re So Rude”
3. “Love Lives Here”
4. “Last Orders Please”
5. “Stay With Me”
6. “Debris”
7. “Memphis”
8. “Too Bad”
9. “That’s All You Need”
10. “Miss Judy’s Farm” (BBC Session) *
11. “Stay With Me” (BBC Session) *

OOH LA LA
1. “Silicone Grown”
2. “Cindy Incidentally”
3. “Flags And Banners”
4. “My Fault”
5. “Borstal Boys”
6. “Fly In The Ointment”
7. “If I’m On The Late Side”
8. “Glad And Sorry”
9. “Just Another Honky”
10. “Ooh La La”
11. “Cindy Incidentally” (BBC Session) *
12. “Borstal Boys” (Rehearsal) *
13. “Silicone Grown” (Rehearsal) *
14. “Glad And Sorry” (Rehearsal) *
15. “Jealous Guy” (Live) *

* previously unreleased

BONUS LP
1. “Pool Hall Richard”
2. “I Wish It Would Rain” (With A Trumpet)
3. “Rear Wheel Skid”
4. “Maybe I’m Amazed”
5. “Oh Lord I’m Browned Off”
6. “You Can Make Me Dance, Sing Or Anything (Even Take The Dog For A Walk, Mend A Fuse, Fold Away The Ironing Board, Or Any Other Domestic Short Comings)” (UK Single Version)
7. “As Long As You Tell Him”
8. “Skewiff (Mend The Fuse)”
9. “Dishevelment Blues”

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Morrissey’s debut novel: front cover and publication date revealed

0

Fresh details have emerged about Morrissey‘s forthcoming debut novel, List Of The Lost.

According to a press release from Penguin Books, the title will be published on September 24, 2015 at £7.99.

The press release contains the following notes written by Morrissey.

“Beware of the novelist … intimate and indiscreet … pompous, prophetic airs … here is the fact of the fiction … an American tale where, naturally, evil conquers good, and none live happily ever after, for the complicated pangs of the empty experiences of flesh-and-blood human figures are the reasons why nothing can ever be enough. To read a book is to let a root sink down. List of the lost is the reality of what is true battling against what is permitted to be true”.

News of the novel first broke on August 22 via quasi-official fansite, True To You.

According to a post dated August 22, “Morrissey’s first novel, List of the Lost, will be published by Penguin Books (UK) at the end of September. The book will be issued in softcover/paperback as a New Fiction title, and comes almost two years after Morrissey’s very successful Autobiography publication of October 2013.

“Penguin Books will confirm an on sale date within this coming week. List of the Lost will be available in the UK, Ireland, Australia, India, New Zealand and South Africa.”

Morrissey launched his memoir at a book signing in Gothenburg, Sweden on October 17, 2013.

The book topped the best sellers chart in its first week of sale, selling just under 35,000 copies according to sales figures in trade magazine The Bookseller.

You can read the Uncut review of Autobiography 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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Angelo Badalamenti to score new Twin Peaks series

0

Angelo Badalamenti has reportedly signed up to score David Lynch’s new series of Twin Peaks.

Badalamenti – who composed the original series’ score and also collaborated with Lynch on films including Blue Velvet and Mulholland Drive – has been linked to the new series ever since it was announced last October by Showtime.

Though the network has yet to officially confirm his involvement, TVLine reports that he has already started work on music for the new episodes.

Earlier this month, David Nevins, president of Showtime, revealed Lynch’s proposed shooting methods for this new series. Lynch and the show’s co-creator Mark Frost have penned one long script for the series, which Lynch will shoot as a continuous movie before editing down into individual episodes.

Though Showtime originally commissioned nine new episodes of Twin Peaks, the new series is now expected to run considerably longer. Lynch announced in April that he had pulled out of the revival series, but then confirmed in May that he was back on board to direct the new episodes.

“I never had doubt we would get him back, Twin Peaks is a huge priority for us,” Nevins said in May. “It became clear it would take more than nine episodes, which we had planned and budgeted for. We had to sort that out. Lynch wanted to direct all episodes, and we wanted him to direct all episodes. We are looking to be in great shape.”

The Twin Peaks series is expected to premiere on Showtime in late 2016 or early 2017. Kyle MacLachlan is confirmed to be returning as Special Agent Dale Cooper, while Nevins has said of the series’ cast: “You should be optimistic that the people that you want [back] will be there, and then there will be some surprises in addition.”

A special edition of the original series was released last year. You can read Uncut’s review 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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

In praise of The Velvet Underground’s Loaded

0

Following yesterday’s news that the Velvet Underground’s Loaded is to due a posh six-disc anniversary reissue, I thought I’d dig out my review of the album that originally appeared in our Lou Reed: Ultimate Music Guide. It’s funny, the older I find myself coming round to the idea that the Velvets were a better band after John Cale had left and – whisper it – I even quite like Squeeze…

Incidentally, you can find interviews I conducted for the anniversary reissue of the third Velvets album with Doug Yule and Moe Tucker by clicking here.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

——–

umg_lou-small

Looking back on the circumstances around his departure from the Velvet Underground, Lou Reed had this to say in 1972: “I gave them an album loaded with hits and it was loaded with hits to the point where the rest of the people showed their colours. So I left them to their album full of hits that I made.” The recording of Loaded was clearly an emotional time for Reed. The period between the March 1969 release of The Velvet Underground and the start of Loaded’s principal recording sessions in April 1970 was especially fraught for the group. They began work on a fourth studio album in May, 1969. But by August, the band had parted company with MGM – new MD Mike Curb envisaged a more wholesome direction for the label, and suspecting how that might pan out the for his charges, manager Steve Sesnick extricated the group from their contract. By November, the album had disappeared. Reed, meanwhile, was having problems of his own. His long-running affair with Shelley Corwin, his muse, was in a slow decline. Increasingly disturbed by the effects of long-term drug use on close friends including Factory compatriot Billy Name, Reed responded by getting even more out of it. “Lou went out of his skull and ended up with a warped sense of time and space that lasted several weeks,” journalist Richard Meltzer is quoted by Reed’s biographer, Victor Bockris.

UMG_Loaded

At the start of 1970, the Velvet Underground signed to Atlantic Records, while still $30,000 in debut to MGM. Moe Tucker, meanwhile, took maternity leave in March; her stand-in was Doug Yule’s younger brother, Billy. Existing frictions between Reed and Sterling Morrison continued. “I had hardly spoken to Lou in months,” Morrison admitted to NME’s Mary Harron in 1981. “Maybe I never forgave him for wanting Cale out of the band. I was so mad at him, for real or imaginary offences, and I just didn’t want to talk. I was zero psychological assistance to Lou.” Elsewhere, other equally toxic dramas were being played out. Writing in The Velvet Underground fanzine in 1996, Doug Yule revealed, “Sesnick, always looking for the advantage, was driving wedges between everyone, trying to keep the bickering going and the communication between us shut off.”

By the time the Velvets convene to record Loaded, you could be forgiven for wondering whether they’d actually finish the album, or simply combust in the studio. The April to July sessions at Atlantic Studios, New York overlapped with a ten-week homecoming residency at Max’s Kansas City. Reed, worried about his straining his voice, ceded four lead vocals to Doug Yule. “The sessions for Loaded were extremely different than those which produced the third album,” Yule wrote. “Many of the songs had been played live, but the recorded versions were very different than the road versions. The emphasis was on air time. Every song was looked at with the understanding that there was a need to produce some kind of mainstream hit… Songs were built intellectually rather than by the processes that live performances brought to bear, instinct and trial and error.”

The songs – including their roll call of ladies: Jane, Ginny, Miss Linda Lee, Polly May and Joanna Love – represent a refinement of the band’s aesthetic – a healthy middle ground between the avant garde stylings of the first two albums and Reed’s Top 40 sensibilities. And such variety! From jaunty, Monkees style pop (“Who Loves The Sun”) to freewheeling rave-ups (“Oh, Sweet Nuthin’”). And then there’s “Sweet Jane” and “Rock & Roll”. The former, with its sensational ‘D-A-G-Bm-A’ hook, finds Reed on familiar territory, “Standing on the corner / Suitcase in my hand”, watching Jack and Jane, two straights: a banker and a clerk. Reed describes the differences between male and female, conservative and liberated, old and new, shifting perspectives as the song progresses, double backing on himself, wrong-footing the listener. It’s an immense and highly complex piece of narrative songwriting, followed by “Rock & Roll” – one of the great songs about the transformative power of music. Possibly autobiographical, it’s about five-year old Jenny, who “one fine morning turns on a New York station and she doesn’t believe what she heard at all.” Her “life is saved by rock and roll” and she is elevated to the ultimate Reed condition: “It was alright”.

“Cool It Down” is more up-tempo pop, this time with a Stonesy barroom piano, before “New Age” – another example of Reed’s next level song writing on this album. A love song of sorts – delivered by Yule – full of tender nostalgia for a “fat blond actress… over the hill now / And you’re looking for love”. But the real thing here is the song’s audacious three-act structure, beginning with the verses, rising at 3:08 to what you assume is the outro and then slipping in a majestic middle eight at 3:32 to lead you out of the song across the next minute and a half. “Head Held High” is a fun stomping boogie followed by the almost comically jaunty “Lonesome Cowboy Bill” and the beautiful “I Found A Reason” which walks a line between the doo wop so beloved by the young Reed and the stoned balladry of “Pale Blue Eyes”. The pace quickens with “Train Round The Bend” draped in eerie swathes of tremolo, before we reach the album’s hymnal-like closer, “Oh, Sweet Nuthin’”. Step forward Sterling Morrison, who delivers some fine intuitive guitar playing here opposite Reed: whatever issues they might otherwise have had, they operated entirely in synch here as Morrison’s loose, rolling guitar chords sit perfectly against Reed’s wide-ranging solos. Credit, though, is also due to Doug Yule: an accomplished multi-instrumentalist, whose work here – on bass, piano, guitar and vocals – provides a consistently solid bedrock for Reed’s flourishing songwriting.

Lou Reed left the Velvet Underground on August 28, 1970 after the final show at Max’s, leaving New York for his parents’ home in Freeport, Long Island. The strain had become too much for him. In his absence, Sesnick meddled with Loaded: he cut the “wine and roses” bridge section from “Sweet Jane”, trimmed back the ending to “New Age” and messed with Reed’s intended sequencing. Further, he shunted Reed’s name below Yule and Morrison on the band line-up for the album’s original pressing, and attributed the songwriting credits as: “All selections are by The Velvet Underground”. It took a subsequent court case to restore Reed’s full rights to all the material.

While Reed spent 1970 and 1971 in exile, Yule ploughed on with the Velvet Underground, fulfilling dates in Europe. It was a dismal end – their explosive promise fizzing out in European backwaters during the early Seventies, the corpse growing cold somewhere between Kingston Polytechnic and Northamptonshire Cricket Club. A fifth album, Squeeze, appeared in February, 1973 although this was ostensibly a Doug Yule solo record (with, curiously, Deep Purple’s Ian Paice on drums).

None of this, though, can diminish the power and brilliance of Loaded. As Reed himself observed, “Despite all the amputations, you know you could just go out and dance to a rock and roll station.” The power of rock and roll conquers all. It was alright.

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Van Morrison’s back catalogue gets digital release

0

Van Morrison‘s back catalogue is due to be released digitally this coming Friday [August 28, 2015].

The news comes from Legacy Recordings, the catalogue division of Sony Music Entertainment, who have acquired the rights to Morrison’s back catalogue.

Van Morrison archive includes all of Morrison’s solo works from 1971 to the present as well as the recordings made with the Them from 1964 through 1966.

33 Van Morrison album titles will be made available as digital releases and through all streaming services beginning Friday, August 28.

That same day, Legacy Recordings will release the Essential Van Morrison, a 37-track career-spanning anthology, available digitally and as a 2CD physical album.

Later this year, Van Morrison’s early recordings with the Them will be available on Legacy Recordings.

Legacy will launch the label’s ongoing Van Morrison library release project with new compilations, deluxe Legacy Editions of classic album titles and a digital rollout of the full Van Morrison catalogue.

Most of the Van Morrison catalogue has never been available for streaming and many titles have long been unavailable online through iTunes or other DSPs. Much of the catalogue has been out-of-print in any format, with some titles being unavailable for as long as 15 years.

Forthcoming new Van Morrison releases on the Legacy label will include a new career-spanning single CD compilation and deluxe Legacy Editions of Van Morrison solo albums: Saint Dominic’s Preview, It’s Too Late To Stop Now, Hard Nose The Highway and Enlightenment.

Morrison released his most recent studio album, Duets: Re-Working The Catalogue, earlier this year.

He was also awarded a knighthood in the Queen’s birthday honours, which he described as “a huge honour“.

Click here to read our review of Van Morrison live at The Royal Albert Hall, March 25, 2015

Available Digitally and Streaming on Friday, August 28:

St. Dominic’s Preview (1972)
Hard Nose The Highway (1973)
It’s Too Late To Stop Now (Live) (1974)
Veedon Fleece (1974)
A Period Of Transition (1977)
Wavelength (1978)
Into The Music (1979)
Common One (1980)
Beautiful Vision (1982)
Inarticulate Speech Of The Heart (1983)
Live At The Grand Opera House, Belfast (Live) (1984)
A Sense Of Wonder (1984)
No Guru, No Method, No Teacher (1984)
Poetic Champions Compose (1987)
Irish Heartbeat (w/the Chieftains) (1988)
Avalon Sunset (1989)
Enlightenment (1990)
Hymns To The Silence (1991)
Too Long In Exile (1993)
A Night In San Francisco (Live) (1994)
Days Like This (1995)
How Long Has This Been Going On? (1995)
Tell Me Something: The Songs Of Mose Allison (1996)
The Healing Game (1997)
The Philosopher’s Stone (2CD outtakes compilation, 1998)
Back on Top (1999)
The Skiffle Sessions: Live In Belfast (Live) (2000)
Down the Road (2002)
What’s Wrong With This Picture? (2003)
Magic Time (2005)
Pay The Devil (2006)
Keep It Simple (2008)
Astral Weeks “Live At The Hollywood Bowl” (Live) (2009)

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Velvet Underground’s Loaded to receive six disc 45th anniversary re-release

0

The Velvet Underground album Loaded is to be re-released on October 30 by Rhino.

A six-disc Loaded: Re-Loaded 45th Anniversary Edition follows on from previous anniversary editions of The Velvet Underground And Nico, White Light White Heat and The Velvet Underground.

The set contains the original 1970 album remastered in both stereo and mono; demos, early versions and alternate mixes from that era; a newly remastered/re-edited version of Live At Max’s Kansas City; an unreleased May 1970 concert recorded in Philadelphia.

Remastered stereo and mono versions of the album fill out the first two discs, along with various outtakes, and the mono mix for the unissued single: “Rock & Roll” b/w “Lonesome Cowboy Bill.” The third disc explores the creative process behind many of the songs on the album with more than 20 demos, early versions and alternate mixes.

Also included is a remastered version of Live At Max’s Kansas City, which was recorded at the storied New York nightclub on August 23, 1970, the day Lou Reed left the band. Along with the performances from the original 1972 album, the disc includes additional performances selected from the expanded version of the album that Rhino introduced in 2004.

An unreleased club performance feature on the fifth disc. It was recorded on May 9, 1970 at the Second Fret in Philadelphia. The band was down to a trio that night: Lou Reed, Sterling Morrison and Doug Yule, who alternated between bass and drums to fill in for Moe Tucker, who was pregnant at the time. Loaded, which came out six months after the show, is well represented with seven songs, including: “Cool It Down,” “Oh! Sweet Nuthin’” and “Sweet Jane”.

The final disc is an audio only DVD that features three different mixes of Loaded:
– Surround Sound Remix in DTS and Dolby Digital
– 96/24 High resolution Stereo Downmix
– 96/24 High resolution Original Stereo Mix

For the Surround Sound and Stereo Downmix, the original track listing has been re-sequenced slightly to include the segue that was originally planned for “I Found A Reason/Head Held High.”

The tracklisting for Loaded: Re-Loaded 45th Anniversary Edition is:

Disc One: Loaded Remastered
“Who Loves The Sun”
“Sweet Jane” – Full Length Version
“Rock & Roll” – Full Length Version
“Cool It Down”
“New Age”
“Head Held High”
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill”
“I Found A Reason”
“Train Round The Bend”
“Oh! Sweet Nuthin’”

Session Outtakes:
“I’m Sticking With You” – New Remix
“Ocean”
“I Love You”
“Ride Into The Sun”

Disc Two: Loaded Remastered: Promotional Mono Version
“Who Loves The Sun”
“Sweet Jane” – Full Length Version
“Rock & Roll” – Full Length Version
“Cool It Down”
“New Age”
“Head Held High”
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill”
“I Found A Reason”
“Train Round The Bend”
“Oh! Sweet Nuthin’”

Singles and B-Sides
“Who Loves The Sun”
“Oh! Sweet Nuthin’”
“Rock & Roll” *
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill” *

Disc Three: Demos, Early Versions and Alternate Mixes
Demos
“Rock & Roll” – Demo
“Sad Song” – Demo
“Satellite Of Love” – Demo
“Walk And Talk” – Demo
“Oh Gin” – Demo
“Ocean” – Demo
“I Love You” – Demo
“Love Makes You Feel Ten Feet Tall” – Demo Remix
“I Found A Reason” – Demo

Early Versions
“Cool It Down” – Early Version, Remix
“Sweet Jane” – Early Version, Remix
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill” – Early Version, Remix
“Head Held High” – Early Version, Remix
“Oh! Sweet Nuthin’” – Early Version, Remix

Alternate Mixes
“Who Loves The Sun” – Alternate Mix
“Sweet Jane” – Alternate Mix
“Cool It Down” – Alternate Mix
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill” – Alternate Mix
“Train Round The Bend” – Alternate Mix
“Head Held High” – Alternate Mix
“Rock & Roll” – Alternate Mix

Disc Four: Live At Max’s Kansas City Remastered
“I’m Waiting For The Man”
“White Light/White Heat”
“I’m Set Free”
“Sweet Jane”
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill”
“New Age”
“Beginning To See The Light”
“I’ll Be Your Mirror”
“Pale Blue Eyes”
“Candy Says”
“Sunday Morning”
“After Hours”
“Femme Fatale”
“Some Kinda Love”
“Lonesome Cowboy Bill” – Version 2

Disc Five: Live At Second Fret, Philadelphia, 1970*
“I’m Waiting For The Man”
“What Goes On”
“Cool It Down”
“Sweet Jane”
“Rock & Roll”
“Some Kinda Love”
“New Age”
“Candy Says”
“Head Held High”
“Train Round The Bend”
“Oh! Sweet Nuthin’”

*previously unreleased

Disc Six: Audio DVD
96/24 Hi-Resolution Surround Sound Remix
96/24 Hi-Resolution Stereo Downmix
96/24 Hi-Resolution Original Stereo Mix

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Grateful Dead members announce Dead & Company tour dates

0

Dead & Company, the band formed by members of the Grateful Dead and John Mayer, have confirmed dates for their forthcoming tour.

At the start of August, Billboard revealed that three of the Dead’s “core four” players – guitarist Bob Weir and drummers Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann – were going out as Dead & Company, with John Mayer on guitar.

Uncut first reported rumours this was afoot back in May.

Dead & Company’s first appearance will be on October 31 at New York’s Madison Square Garden – the site of more than 50 Grateful Dead shows.

Tickets for the New York show go on sale on Friday, August 14 and cost between $75 – $99.

Now they have announced eight more gigs, according to a new report on Billboard.

Dead & Company will play:

Oct. 29 – Albany, NY @ Times Union Center
Oct. 31 – New York City, NY @ Madison Square Garden
Nov. 1 – New York City, NY @ Madison Square Garden
Nov. 5 – Philadelphia, PA @ Wells Fargo Center
Nov. 6 – Washington, DC @ Verizon Center
Nov. 10 – Worcester, MA @ DCU Center
Dec. 27 – San Francisco, CA @ Bill Graham Civic Auditorium
Dec. 28 – San Francisco, CA @ Bill Graham Civic Auditorium
Dec. 30 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Forum
Dec. 31 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Forum

The Dead & Company announcement comes shortly after the Grateful Dead’s run of five sold-out shows earlier this summer, billed as Fare Thee Well.

You can read our report about the Fare Thee Well anniversary shows by clicking here.

“Those songs weren’t done with us,” Bob Weir explained to Billboard. “It was a matter of who wanted to get back out on the road and keep doing it.” Mayer’s enthusiasm, he adds, “was the cherry on the sundae that made this project look like a good idea.”

Added Bill Kreutzmann, “When we first started playing years ago, it was with Pig Pen, and he was nothing but a blues guy. We took that and made it into the Grateful Dead and we’re doing that with John. And John gets to open up to many styles and doesn’t have to be locked into any one genre. And I think that’s why John is excited to play with us because we offer up a whole new cookie. He’s told me that he’s been at home working on our material like crazy. He’ll be one of us.”

Says Mickey Hart: “All the pieces just fell together magically. There was a kind of serendipity there – when you’re not actually looking for anything and then all of a sudden, it all appears.”

In addition to Mayer, Dead & Company will feature the Allman Brothers’ Oteil Burbridge on bass and keyboardist Jeff Chimenti, who played on the recent Fare Thee Well shows.

The band have launched a website: http://deadandcompany.com/.

In other Dead news, Uncut has been hosting a series of online exclusives, previewing unheard tracks from the band’s forthcoming 30 Trips Around The Sun set. Click here to listen to our latest exclusive: an unreleased version of “Scarlet Begonias”. We’ll have another one for you on September 10.

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Todd Haynes’ Carol reviewed

0

In Todd Haynes new film Carol, women are frequently viewed through glass. Car windows, mirrors, shop windows; in one scene, rows of female dolls are seen exhibited behind display cases in Frankenberg’s, a high end Manhattan department store where suburban housewife Carol first meets curious, reserved Therese. It is as if women are strange, unfathomable creatures; best scrutinized at a distance.

Haynes is a skilled chronicler of while middle class women’s emotional pain – from Safe to Far From Heaven and Mildred Pierce. For Carol, though, Haynes moves expertly onto another level. Set across the Christmas and New Year of 1951/2, his film documents the lesbian relationship between Carol and Therese, a young shop assistant, in a less tolerant society. Visually, Haynes delivers a typically lavish experience – from the cars to the clothes, the film has been meticulously dressed down to the smallest detail. It’s so rich; it’s a little like drowning in double cream. But Carol is more than just about the furs and furnishings: this is quiet, significant cinema from a master filmmaker operating at the peak of his powers.

Rooney Mara plays passive Therese Belivit, who relieves her dreary life at Frankenberg’s with an extra-curricular interest in photography. Working the toy counter in the run-up to Christmas, she meets Carol Aird (Cate Blanchett): a well-heeled socialite who is looking for a doll as a gift for her daughter. “The Bright Betsy. She cries and wets herself.” Carol leaves her gloves on the counter, giving Therese an opportunity to contact her. Soon, they lunch together: though Therese admits, “I barely even know what to order.” The besotted Carol murmurs, “What a strange girl you are. Flung out of space.”

The early part of Carol focuses on the unlikely relationship between the two. Therese has an oddly defensive stillness about her; as if she is waiting for something to happen. Carol, meanwhile, is in perpetual motion: a swish of her fur coat, a turn of her heel, carried along on restless, flickering energy. As the film progresses, we learn that Carol is more fragile than she first appears. Perhaps she is worn-down by attempts to suppress her nature; yet, with Therese, she is determined to pursue her instincts, at whatever cost. Haynes is reunited here with Blanchett – the hopped-up “electric” Bob from his Dylan biopic, I’m Not There – who conveys a kind of heavy-lidded sadness behind her immaculate movie star looks. Although Carol is essentially melodrama, Blanchett is thankfully more reined in here than in Blue Jasmine. It transpires she is in the final stages of a loveless marriage to Harge (Kyle Chandler). Taking off with Therese in her cream-coloured Packard convertible, Carol heads off on a road trip that reaches its conclusion in a motel in Waterloo, Iowa.

Haynes fifth consecutive period piece, Carol is based on Patricia Highsmith’s 1952 novel, The Price Of Salt. The script – adapted by Phyllis Nagy – carries much of Highsmith’s elegant wordplay. Carol and Therese are described as being “like physics – pinballs, bouncing off each other.” Looking over Therese’s photographs, Carol notes, “I have a friend who tells me I should be more interested in humans.” As one character, a movie buff, declares, “I’m charting the correlation between what the characters say and what they feel” – which is very true of this excellent film. Critically, Haynes mimics the reserve of the era, depending on glances or gestures to communicate the powerful, dangerous feelings that pass between Carol and Therese.

CAROL OPENS IN THE UK ON NOVEMBER 27

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide: Led Zeppelin

Valhalla we are coming! Uncut’s latest deluxe Ultimate Music Guide is dedicated to the mighty and imperious Led Zeppelin. Inside this fully upgraded and updated edition you’ll discover the entire story of Page, Plant, Jones and Bonham, told through amazing interviews from the NME and Melody Maker archives. They reveal a band with unquenchable appetites – for global domination, for boundless excess and, most strikingly, for musical excellence. An uncommonly driven band, with terrifyingly high standards and surprisingly thin skins.
The Ultimate Music Guide also includes in-depth reviews of every single Led Zeppelin album, a forensic look at Jimmy Page’s 2014/2015 remasters, and a load of new stuff about the solo adventures of Robert Plant. It’s the complete tale of a band who took the blues to unimaginable new places, who transformed the heartsong of the disenfranchised into the conqueror’s battle hymn. Good times, bad times; you’re about to get your share…

 

Order Print Copy

Download Digital Edition

Paul McCartney’s banana and the new issue of Uncut…

0

What would you do with Paul McCartney’s banana? One evening a few weeks ago, I diligently interrupted my holiday to go through some emails back at the hotel room. One, from my colleague Michael Bonner stood out. Michael had written it at Ashford Station, on the way back to London after spending some time at McCartney’s studio near Rye.

Ostensibly, McCartney was talking to Uncut about the imminent reissues of Pipes Of Peace and Tug Of War. As Michael put it in the email, though, “he can’t really stop himself talking about The Beatles,” and the interview opened up into an intimate and wide-ranging chat that used “Here Today” as a jump-off point to discuss much about McCartney’s relationship with John Lennon. From their earliest songwriting attempts, through the Beatles split, right up to the distressing aftermath of Lennon’s death, McCartney is candid and poignant, to an almost unnerving degree.

He remembers in detail the day he heard Lennon had been shot, for instance, remembers Linda telling him the news, then deciding to go ahead with a planned recording session (with The Chieftains) because “you’re always advised to work through your grief.”

“I came out and was still in shock,” he tells Michael. “I didn’t want to see any paparazzi but they were there. There was guy with a mic. He said, ‘What do you think of John…’ We were driving past, so it wasn’t like I was standing doing a big interview. I just couldn’t think of anything. I said, ‘It’s a drag.’ And I meant, ‘An unholy fucking bastard worst drag ever.’ But the words that came out, ‘It’s a drag’, sounded so casual. It certainly didn’t sum up what I was feeling. Anyway, there you go. Too bad. That’s what happened.

“Then I came home and just cried and saw the news and tried to find out some more details on the news and saw pundits coming on and doing what people had wanted me to do. Which was to be sensible about his death and what a tragedy it was, du-du-du-du-du-du, and he was a great man and du-du-du-du-du-du. But I couldn’t. I couldn’t get any of that together. In fact, I rather despised the pundits who did. I can’t blame them now, but they were old friends or casual acquaintances and they’d been hauled in to say something. Yeah, but it was a hell of a shock for months at least, on an immediate level, and then there were all sorts of repercussions and stuff.”

You can read the whole interview in this month’s new issue of Uncut, on sale today in the UK, and a pretty good example of how we’re trying to draw powerful connections between rock’s canonical superstars (I would use the word ‘iconic’ at this point, but it’s become so naff and meaningless nowadays that I’ll do anything to avoid it) and the very best music being made in 2015. As a consequence, we have terrific interviews with McCartney, Keith Richards and John Lydon, alongside equally compelling pieces about Julia Holter and Kurt Vile.

There are also pieces on Dan Auerbach, Squeeze, Mercury Rev, Richard Farina, Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats and Beirut, and deep reviews of Bjork, Link Wray, Robert Forster, Low, New Order, David Gilmour, Wilco and the Dave Rawlings Machine. Low, Lydon, Auerbach’s Arcs, Uncle Acid and Forster are also on this month’s free CD, along with the likes of Phil Cook, Bilal amd Titus Andronicus, a wonderful lost gem from Elyse Weinberg (featuring Neil Young on guitar), and a revelatory version of “Reel Around The Fountain” by James Elkington & Nathan Salsburg that shows how Johnny Marr was a folkie all along.

Anyway, about that banana. “Macca,” wrote Michael in his original email, “gave me a banana for the train” I’d like to say we’ve preserved it in some way as a holy relic, as part of an Uncut museum of gifts from rock’s beneficent grandees. Unfortunately, though, the iniquities of the national rail network put paid to that dream. “It’s proved useful,” he continued, “as I’ve been at Ashford for an hour due to a derailment further down the line…”

 

John Lennon – Lennon: The Vinyl Box Set

0

Despite his claim that he considered himself part American since the first time he heard Elvis, in the final analysis America was not good for John Lennon. He may have left Britain seeking freedom from the small-mindedness and the racism directed at Yoko, but the impact on his creativity was just catastrophic, as this boxset of vinyl reissues demonstrates in the contrast between the vicious purity of his solo debut, John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band, and the sweeter pop perfection of the follow-up Imagine, with anything that followed.

Influenced by undergoing Primal Scream Therapy, John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band presents the singer peeled to his core, dredging up tormenting traumas – notably, parental abandonment – and dispelling them through cathartic bursts of honesty rarely heard in pop music. This confrontational approach involves Lennon being progressively scoured of illusions, notably in the angry “I Found Out” and bitter “Working Class Hero”, eventually culminating in “God”, a litany of iconoclastic demurral rejecting not just religion but all the bogus pillars supporting his previous worldview, leaving him utterly alone, save for a single buttress: “Just believe in me; Yoko and me”. It’s a brutally selfish album – the long-held first syllable of “Isolation” is what the project’s all about, ultimately – and it’s never an easy listen: the backings, with Lennon accompanied by just Ringo Starr and Klaus Voorman, are likewise pared-back to match the material, leaving just his voice, carefully treated by Phil Spector, to occupy the foreground.

By comparison, Imagine is a joyous reaffirmation of pop naivete, for all the hard-edged bitterness of “I Don’t Want To Be A Soldier” and “Gimme Some Truth”, and the wilful spite of the McCartney-baiting “How Do You Sleep”, all of which are more readily listenable than the previous album. There’s a delight and uplift about “Oh Yoko!” that’s utterly infectious, and even the emotional palsy of “Crippled Inside” is dealt with in jaunty, singalong style. The naive charm of “Imagine” has sustained better than most utopian anthems, but the clincher here is “Jealous Guy”, as sweet as anything Lennon wrote: the whistling is a masterstroke, at once vulnerable and apologetic, tender and unthreatening.

But then, it all starts to go pear-shaped, with the crude sloganeering and rabble-rousing of Some Time In New York City, where the couple’s wafer-thin insights on contemporary issues like feminism, black power and the Troubles are set to generic rock music with nothing remotely revolutionary about it – even the Zappa/Mothers contributions on the live tracks are limp by their standards. A year later, Mind Games was written and recorded just as John and Yoko were splitting, and Lennon was under constant FBI surveillance – though the stress doesn’t seem to have prompted any sharp response beyond a few anodyne apophthegms, patronising homilies and bland apologies. And tellingly, the mantra-like title-track, the clear standout here, dated from the John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band era.

Things went from bad to worse with Walls And Bridges, which features the worst opening track on any ex-Beatle album (“Going Down On Love”) and a tranche of uninspired, self-pitying funk-soul cuts, the best of which – “Scared” and “Steel And Glass” – ape Bobby Bland’s contemporary R&B style. But perhaps the saddest aspect of the album is that Lennon needed a little of Elton John’s charisma to score the only Number One solo single of his lifetime with “Whatever Gets You Through The Night”, whose cheesy, sax-riffing effervescence hasn’t aged at all well.

The oldies album Rock’n’Roll was better, but still patchy. “Peggy Sue” sounds too thick, “Rip It Up/Ready Teddy” too thin, and the reggaefied “Do You Wanna Dance” is an abomination. But “Be-Bop-A-Lula” stalks along nicely, and “Stand By Me” shifts engagingly from folksy opening to soul climax. The album was partly legal payback for Lennon using a line from “You Can’t Catch Me” in “Come Together”, though rather than whisking lightly along like the Chuck Berry original, the version here is mired in lolloping boogie brass.

Following five years of house-husbandry raising his son Sean, Double Fantasy was better than expected, but still mediocre. The air of domestic tranquility, while rather irritating, was well conveyed in “Beautiful Boy” and “Woman”, the simplicity of the sentiment echoed in the melody and arrangement; but it was a patchy affair, despite the clear improvement in Yoko’s contributions. By the posthumous Milk And Honey, four years later, her tracks display a greater variety and charm than Lennon’s, which are sadly more meat and potatoes than milk and honey: to be generous, possibly demos denied their due development.

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is on sale in the UK on Tuesday, August 25 – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

October 2015

Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, Kurt Vile and John Lydon are all in the new issue of Uncut, dated October 2015 and out on August 25.

McCartney is on the cover, and inside he discusses his old Beatles songwriting partner, John Lennon, George Harrison‘s “late blooming” talent, the upcoming reissues of his ’80s hits Tug Of War and Pipes Of Peace, and how he learned to “block the shit”.

“When I think of John, I think of us writing together,” says McCartney. “‘A Day In The Life’… stuff like that.”

Keith Richards talks about his new solo album, Crosseyed Heart, his first LP under his own name in 23 years, and the future – “I tell you this, I ain’t retiring,” he says.

Ahead of the release of his new album, B’lieve I’m Goin’ Down…, Kurt Vile takes us through his career in albums, from God Is Saying This To You and The War On Drugs’ Wagonwheel Blues, to his own Smoke Ring For My Halo and his latest effort.

Uncut also meet John Lydon, the self-proclaimed king of punk, at his Malibu home and discover that he’s matured with age. Subjects under discussion include a Sex Pistols perfume range, his thoughts on David Cameron’s Britain and just what he intends to do with his body after he dies – “It’s very easy to be bitter and twisted,” he confesses.

Elsewhere, Dan Auerbach answers your questions on Akron, working with Dr John, stepping on Neil Young‘s foot and his new band, The Arcs. “We worked on The Black Keys every single day. Relentless. I treat music like it’s a job.”

Mercury Rev discuss the making of their Deserter’s Songs highlight, “Opus 40”, inspired by the Catskill Mountains and energised by The Band‘s Levon Helm.

We’re also in Los Angeles’ Echo Park for a trip with radical, mystical songwriter Julia Holter, and a look inside her fantastic new album, Have You In My Wilderness. We also chat to Squeeze cool cats Chris Difford, Glenn Tilbrook and co about their remarkable London story… involving both sweetshops and cop shops.

In the reviews section, we look at new albums from Low, Keith Richards, New Order, Robert Forster, David Gilmour and Mercury Rev, archive releases from Queen, Link Wray and the Faces, and DVDs and films on Wilco, NWA and Alejandro Jodorowsky. Live, we catch gigs from Björk and The Sonics.

Beirut‘s Zach Condon takes us through his life in records, while David Bowie, Roger Waters, Richard Farina and Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats all feature in our front section.

The issue also comes with a free CD, Coming Up, featuring tracks from Craig Finn, The Arcs, Wand, Phil Cook, PiL, Lou Barlow and Low.

The new issue of Uncut is in UK shops now and available to buy as a digital edition 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.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Paul McCartney track exclusive! Hear rare edit of “Take It Away”

0

Paul McCartney is on the cover of the new issue of Uncut, which is on sale in UK shops today [Tuesday, August 25, 2015] and available to buy digitally by clicking here.

In our world exclusive interview, we visit Sir Paul at his studio in Sussex where he talks openly about working with and without John Lennon – and discusses extensively the relationship that revolutionised music.

“When I think of John, I think of us writing together,” says McCartney. “‘A Day In The Life‘… stuff like that.”

To celebrate our with Macca, we’re delighted to host this remastered rarity from the McCartney archives: “Take It Away [single edit]“.

U221-PMcC-cover-Zinio

The full-length version of the track is available on the upcoming deluxe edition of Tug Of War which, along with Pipes Of Peace, is reissued on October 2, 2015.

Both albums will come with additional material – including previously unreleased tracks and never before seen video – and can be pre-ordered now from McCartney’s website.

Uncut’s October 2015 issue is in shops now.

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Jimi Hendrix fake memorabilia flooding auction sites

0

Mitch Mitchell‘s widow Dee Mitchell has warned Jimi Hendrix fans to beware of fake memorabilia currently flooding online auction sites.

As reported by Noise 11, Dee Mitchell has alerted fans of items on sale – such as equipment, clothes, books and instruments – that have been falsely attributed as having come ‘From The Estate of Mitch Mitchell’ or from herself.

According to Mitchell, most of the items fans may see online are “tacky, cheap rubbish” and advises collectors to “ask for plenty of authentication, dates, and a full provenance with loads of information” before making a purchase.

“Any provenance from me would be detailed and packed with information,” she said, adding that those interested in any memorabilia should “take great care not to buy anything which seems a bit dodgy”.

“Please, don’t get ripped off. Far too many already have. Let the buyer beware.”

Meanwhile, a new Jimi Hendrix documentary and CD are being lined up for release over the next few months.

On September 4, Showtime will air Jimi Hendrix: Electric Church, a new film about Hendrix’ Atlanta Pop set.

Experience Hendrix L.L.C. and Legacy Recordings will release the DVD and Blu-ray version on October 30, which will feature bonus content not included in the broadcast version.

Electric Church features interviews with Hendrix’s Experience band mates Billy Cox and the late Mitch Mitchell as well as Paul McCartney, Steve Winwood, Rich Robinson, Kirk Hammett, Derek Trucks, Susan Tedeschi, festival organizer Alex Cooley and many others.

The film contains colour 16mm footage of Hendrix’s appearance on July 4, 1970, which took place ten weeks before his death.

Freedom: Jimi Hendrix Experience Atlanta Pop Festival – due on August 28 – includes six performances not seen in the Showtime documentary.

This will be available as a 2CD set and also as a 200-gram 2LP vinyl set.

The first 5,000 vinyl units will be individually numbered.

Jimi Hendrix Experience – Freedom: Atlanta Pop Festival 2CD/2LP VINYL (release date: August 28)

Disc 1
Fire
Lover Man
Spanish Castle Magic
Red House
Room Full Of Mirrors
Hear My Train A Comin’
Message To Love

Disc 2
All Along The Watchtower
Freedom
Foxey Lady
Purple Haze
Hey Joe
Voodoo Child (Slight Return)
Stone Free
Star Spangled Banner
Straight Ahead

Jimi Hendrix: Electric Church DVD/Blu-ray (release date: October 30)
Contains performances of three additional songs not included in the broadcast version of the film, and other never before released Hendrix bonus content.

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is on sale in the UK on Tuesday, August 25 – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Morrissey announces debut novel, List Of The Lost

0

Morrissey‘s first novel, List Of The Lost, will be published next month, according to quasi-official fansite, True To You.

According to a post dated August 22, “Morrissey’s first novel, List of the Lost, will be published by Penguin Books (UK) at the end of September. The book will be issued in softcover/paperback as a New Fiction title, and comes almost two years after Morrissey’s very successful Autobiography publication of October 2013.

“Penguin Books will confirm an on sale date within this coming week. List of the Lost will be available in the UK, Ireland, Australia, India, New Zealand and South Africa.”

Morrissey launched his memoir at a book signing in Gothenburg, Sweden on October 17, 2013.

The book topped the best sellers chart in its first week of sale, selling just under 35,000 copies according to sales figures in trade magazine The Bookseller.

You can read the Uncut review of Autobiography by clicking here

Meanwhile, Morrissey has shared three previously unheard demos from the Years Of Refusal sessions.

They are initial run-throughs of “Something Is Squeezing My Skull“, “One Day Goodbye Will Be Farewell” and “Mama Lay Softly On The Riverbed” which were recorded in 2008.

They are currently streaming on True To You.

Years Of Refusal was Morrissey’s ninth solo album, following 2006’s Ringleader Of The Tormentors.

It was the first Morrissey album since 1992’s Your Arsenal not to feature long-time bandmate Alain Whyte on guitar.

In other news, Morrissey is due to play a handful of live dates in September.

He’ll play:

Plymouth, Plymouth Pavillions (September 15)
Hull, Hull Arena (September 18)
London, Eventim Hammersmith Apollo (September 20, 21)

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 October 2015 issue of Uncut is on sale in the UK on Tuesday, August 25 – featuring Paul McCartney, Keith Richards, John Lydon, Dan Auerbach, Julia Holter, Kurt Vile, Mercury Rev, Squeeze and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.