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Hear Fleet Foxes’ Robin Pecknold cover the Five Keys’ “Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind”

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Robin Pecknold has shared a cover of the Five Keys' "Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind". Pecknold posted the song on the Fleet Foxes' Facebook page to coincide with the Thanksgiving break in America. Pecknold wrote, "Happy holidays - here's a cover." The cover is credited to "Robin Pecknold: Vocals, etc....

Robin Pecknold has shared a cover of the Five Keys’ “Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind”.

Pecknold posted the song on the Fleet Foxes’ Facebook page to coincide with the Thanksgiving break in America.

Pecknold wrote, “Happy holidays – here’s a cover.”

The cover is credited to “Robin Pecknold: Vocals, etc. Neal Morgan: Percussion, Gabe Wax: Engineering & Mixing”.

Pecknold and Morgan had previously collaborated on an off-Broadway production, Wyoming, earlier this year.

https://soundcloud.com/robin-pecknold/out-of-sight-out-of-mind-the-five-keys

The Fleet Foxes have yet to release a follow-up to 2011’s Helplessness Blues. In April, 2014, Pecknold wrote on Facebook, “For anyone who’s curious, this is a short Fleet Foxes update – been a while! So, after the last round of touring, I decided to go back to school. I never got an undergraduate degree, and this felt like the right time to both see what that was about and to try something new after a while in the touring / recording lifestyle. I moved to New York and enrolled at Columbia, and I’ve mostly been doing that, but I’m working on songs and excited for whatever happens next musically, even if it’s down the line. Hope all is well out there.”

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Black Friday: get 50% off annual subscriptions to Uncut and History Of Rock!

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To coincide with this year’s Black Friday event, we’re offering half price subscriptions to both Uncut and our sister title, History Of Rock. Now you can enjoy both your favourite quality rock monthlies for a fraction of the price. Uncut is available as both print and digital subscriptions; Hi...

To coincide with this year’s Black Friday event, we’re offering half price subscriptions to both Uncut and our sister title, History Of Rock.

Now you can enjoy both your favourite quality rock monthlies for a fraction of the price.

Uncut is available as both print and digital subscriptions; History of Rock is only available as a print subscription.

This amazing offer is available for anyone, anywhere in the world, until 12am GMT on Monday, November 30.

Just click on the links below, and you’ll find all the information you need to sign up to Uncut and History Of Rock!

Subscribe to Uncut by clicking here.

Subscribe to History Of Rock by clicking here.

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Jonny Greenwood on new Junun album: “We pretended we were playing with James Brown and Miles Davis”

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Jonny Greenwood has discussed the making of Junun, the new album he's created in collaboration with Shye Ben Tzur and The Rajasthan Express, speaking in the new issue of Uncut, out now. The Radiohead guitarist travelled to the Mehrangarh fort in Jodhpur to record with the collective, in sessions do...

Jonny Greenwood has discussed the making of Junun, the new album he’s created in collaboration with Shye Ben Tzur and The Rajasthan Express, speaking in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

The Radiohead guitarist travelled to the Mehrangarh fort in Jodhpur to record with the collective, in sessions documented by director Paul Thomas Anderson. The musical and visual results are out now.

“My role was overseeing production,” explains Greenwood. “Basically to sit in with the drummers and pretend we were accompanying James Brown and Miles Davis. What I didn’t want was an overly reverential ‘field’ recording of – terrible name – ‘world music’. We were making a record.

“We were using every last piece of equipment we had – we brought everything from the Radiohead studio. These limitations were good for us: Nigel [Godrich] and Sam constructed an echo chamber in a basement of the fort, so it felt like the whole building became part of the record.”

The new issue of Uncut, dated January 2016, is out now.

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Dr John: “People had never seen things onstage like Chicken Man biting the heads off chickens…”

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For over 40 years, he’s been a Doctor, but really Mac Rebennack – the 71-year-old musician who performs as Dr John – is rather more stately than any normal physician. His hat at a jaunty angle, his walking stick rattling with eclectic souvenirs, a cheroot at his lips, he seems more like a visi...

For over 40 years, he’s been a Doctor, but really Mac Rebennack – the 71-year-old musician who performs as Dr John – is rather more stately than any normal physician. His hat at a jaunty angle, his walking stick rattling with eclectic souvenirs, a cheroot at his lips, he seems more like a visiting dignitary from some incredibly exotic foreign clime.

Which isn’t really an incorrect impression. A man with deep roots in New Orleans music and also the city’s spiritual culture, Dr John’s worldview is as unique as his life experience – ex-junkie; ex-con; ex-guitarist – is alarmingly wide. At our meeting in his central London hotel, Mac is a man entirely on his own wavelength but who happily receives any enquiry on that frequency.

For all he is a good interview, music is how Dr John communicates, and it’s a language he’s been evolving since he started out over 50 years ago. “I was taught as a studio musician to be aware, and to play all music the best that you could play it, whether you’re familiar with it, or even if you don’t like it, play it to the best of your ability,” he says today. “And that’s a code I still live by.”

_________________________________

When we were recording The Sun, Moon & Herbs album in London, you put a gris-gris cross on my head. What is it, and what does it do?
Bobby Whitlock, Derek And The Dominos
Well, it’s a blessing, and any blessing is good. But, for Bobby’s information, I thought it would be a good idea for Bobby: he was playing with Eric (Clapton)’s band when they was Derek And The Dominos. I thought Bobby was a good singer and a good musician, but he just needed to have something called… perseverance. Because I could see he was going two ways at once.

How did you end up in prison?
J Gerard, via email
I was arrested for narcotics. In those days, there wasn’t rehabs or the places you can go today. In some ways I think I was blessed to go to a federal joint rather than a state joint, because they treated you better, though I can’t say that for a fact, because I never went to a state joint. Listen, I’ll tell you this. Prisons are not made for the betterment of people – all they teach you is how to be a better criminal. There are more people in prisons in the USA than there ever was, and that’s mainly because of drugs. It’s not a smart idea, to put people in drug culture in prisons. There are alternatives.

How do you rate Hugh Laurie’s piano playing?
Phil Newman, Brighton
I thought he played good. My little friend here [assistant/girlfriend, Susie] turned me on to Hugh Laurie – her friend knew his friend and whatever, and all of a sudden, I went to do a record with him in LA. He sent me a recording with Bessie Smith singing a soul song, and I cut it [for Laurie’s debut album, 2011’s Let Them Talk], and it was cool, and he played piano on it and that was cool, too. When things happen like that, it’s spiritual.

The Beatles – 1+

At the very beginning, the way the Beatles looked was as important as the way they sounded. It was impossible to separate the scrubbed Merseybeat rhythm guitar and the sweet-and-sour two-part harmonies from the lengthening forward-combed hair and the black polo-necks. A compilation of their promo fi...

At the very beginning, the way the Beatles looked was as important as the way they sounded. It was impossible to separate the scrubbed Merseybeat rhythm guitar and the sweet-and-sour two-part harmonies from the lengthening forward-combed hair and the black polo-necks. A compilation of their promo films and other significant bits of video enables us to fast-forward through evidence of the huge changes they underwent, individually and collectively, in those crowded eight years together.

The 27 short films on 1, a single CD/DVD, and the further 23 on 1+, a double set, all with restored visuals and remastered sound, also invite the viewer to speculate on precisely when each member of the group was at his aesthetic peak. Any conclusions are likely to be subjective, but here are mine. George, with the advantage of the best hair and cheekbones, most perfectly incarnates the basic Beatle look early on, around the time of “A Hard Day’s Night” (which appears on the single disc in the form of a performance in June 1965 at the Palais des Sports in Paris). By May 1966, when they mime to “Rain” in the gardens of Chiswick House, Ringo has added an interesting layer of mature introspection to his lovable goofiness. John’s look for the “Penny Lane” video, shot in February 1967, features the combination of droopy moustache, reefer jacket, striped college scarf and granny specs that would become de rigueur for the more intellectual types on the barricades in Paris 15 months later. Paul’s full beard, worn on the Apple roof concert in January 1969, reduces the familiar winsomeness and signals his new healthy outdoor grown-up life with Linda.

The visual shifts and nuances are endlessly fascinating as the protagonists merge and separate and reconvene in a parade of evolving preoccupations and changing loyalties. Nothing is more affecting than the promo clip for “Something” put together in October 1969, blending footage of the four couples: Paul and Linda gambolling with Martha, the celebrity Old English sheepdog, on the Mull of Kintyre; Ringo and Maureen on a pair of monkey bikes in their garden; George and Patti exchanging moonstruck gazes at home in Esher; John and Yoko gliding down the steps of Tittenhurst Park in long black capes, as if on their way to a black mass. The Beatles’ life together is coming apart, along with the stockbroker-belt existence that was the default domestic setting when the money started flowing in.

Very little of this selection of clips involves actual live performance (“From Me to You” at the 1963 Royal Variety Performance is among a handful of exceptions). Most of it is mimed, including a marvellous “Twist and Shout” for Granada TV’s Scene At 6.30 show in August 1963, in which the anonymous director creates the bold high-contrast black and white iconography that would turn up three months later on the cover of With the Beatles.

The obvious stuff includes Peter Goldmann’s magnificent “Strawberry Fields Forever” film and “All You Need Is Love” from the One World international telecast. The “Come Together” animation created in 2000 for the launch of thebeatles.com is one of the few duds. For capturing their essence, nothing betters the group of songs – here represented by “Day Tripper”, “I Feel Fine”, “We Can Work It Out”, “Ticket to Ride” and “Help!” – filmed by Joe McGrath in a single day at Twickenham Studios in November 1965. As Ringo rides an exercise bike positioned where the drum kit should be and John sings while gobbling fish and chips out of a newspaper, the last pretence of fidelity to stage performance falls away, the victim of their world-changing disinclination to observe the old rules.

The colour restoration is immaculate and the audio tracks benefit immensely from new stereo mixes by Giles Martin and Sam Okell, although the 5.1 surround version is excessive: the Beatles never sounded as pristine, as glistening, as that. It’s the equivalent of using the film restoration team to make visual repairs to Paul’s chipped front tooth, John’s NHS fillings and George’s decaying molars, which feature in the early clips and, when exposed on the Ed Sullivan Show, must have contributed significantly to the average American’s scornful view of British dentistry.

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Best Albums Of 2015

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OK so I've decided I can't wait any longer to let this go; here are my 140 favourite albums of 2015, more or less ranked. As ever, a few caveats. The ranking is predictably pretty arbitrary beyond the top 20 or so; Natural Snow Buildings, say, should certainly not feel aggrieved to be at Number 140...

OK so I’ve decided I can’t wait any longer to let this go; here are my 140 favourite albums of 2015, more or less ranked.

As ever, a few caveats. The ranking is predictably pretty arbitrary beyond the top 20 or so; Natural Snow Buildings, say, should certainly not feel aggrieved to be at Number 140, given they could have ended up somewhere inside the top 50 on another day. I know admissions of imprecision like this don’t do much to foster an impression of empirical truth and authority, but I figure it’s best to be honest about how ad hoc the construction of a personal chart can be.

Nevertheless, there’s obviously a lot of sport and pleasure in ranking so many albums. I imagine plenty of you will be rather sceptical about there being 140 albums good enough to bother with from 2015, and while it’d be disingenuous of me to claim that every one here is to my mind an unimprovable classic, I’ve enjoyed them all and believe they all, without exception, deserve at the very least a few listens.

I probably say this around this time at 12 month intervals, but I remain convinced that every year is a good one for music, if you have the time, energy and enthusiasm to dig deep. That’s why I always think it’s useful to compile lists of such excessive length rather than tight little top 20s, or whatever: I’d like a lot more people to listen to, for instance, Byron Westbrook’s “Precipice” on the Root Strata label, so if I can give a bunch of these things a platform, and contextualise them with a few more familiar albums, that seems like a good plan to me.

I should say that for a much more democratic summary of the year’s music, we have a very fine Top 75 in the current issue of Uncut, compiled from the votes of 40-odd writers and staffers. If you’re concerned that Father John Misty and Jason Isbell’s albums are absent from my list, you’ll certainly find them there.

I’m sure, though, that a few things have slipped my memory, and that you’ll be able to turn me on to some other records I may have missed, so please post your own favourites/charts/recommendations etc at the bottom of the page. Many thanks, in advance – and thanks for your indulgence in reading this…

Follow me on Twitter @JohnRMulvey

 

140 Natural Snow Buildings – Terror’s Horns (Ba Da Bing)

139 !!! – As If (Warp)

138 Saun & Starr – Look Closer (Daptone)

137 Patrick Higgins – Bachanalia (Telegraph Harp)

136 Alif – Aynama-Rtama (Nawa Recordings)

135 Cat’s Eyes – The Duke Of Burgundy: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (Caroline)

134 The Unthanks – Mount The Air (Rabble Rouser)

133 Beirut – No No No (4AD)

132 Samba Toure – Gandadiko (Glitterbeat)

131 Pops Staples – Don’t Lose This (Anti-)

130 The Dead Weather – Dodge And Burn (Third Man)

129 Cannibal Ox – Blade Of The Ronin (iHiphop)

128 Lubomyr Melnyk – Rivers and Streams (Erased Tapes)

127 Blond-ish – Welcome To The Present (Kompakt)

126 Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe & Ariel Kalma – FRKWYS Vol. 12: We Know Each Other Somehow (RVNG INTL)

125 Peacers – Peacers (Drag City)

124 Panda Bear – Panda Bear Vs The Grim Reaper (Domino)

123 Wand – 1000 Days (Drag City)

122 Marry Waterson And David A. Jaycock – Two Wolves (One Little Indian)

121 M Dwinell – Golden Ratio (Amish)

120 Follakzoid – III (Sacred Bones)

119 Duke Garwood – Heavy Love (Heavenly)

118 Dungen – Allas Sak (Smalltown Supersound)

117 Aye Aye – Aye Aye (Richie/Testoster Tunes)

116 Tom Carter – Long Time Underground (Three Lobed Recordings)

115 Chris Connolly – Alameda (Caldo Verde)

114 Wand – Golem (In The Red)

113 Master Musicians Of Bukkake – Further West Quad Cult (Important)

112 Robert Glasper – Covered (Blue Note)

111 Trembling Bells – The Sovereign Self (Tin Angel)

110 Nick Cave & Warren Ellis – Loin Des Hommes: Original Motion Picture (Goliath Entertainment)

109 Elephant Micah – Where In Our Woods (Western Vinyl)

108 Matt Valentine – Midden Mound (Child Of Microtones)

107 Leon Bridges – Coming Home (Columbia)

106 Fraser A Gorman – Slow Gum (Milk!/Marathon Artists)

105 Shye Ben Tzur, Jonny Greenwood And The Rajasthan Express – Junun (Nonesuch)

104 Darts & Arrows – Altamira (Ears & Eyes)

103 The Arcs – Yours, Dreamily (Nonesuch)

102 Alasdair Roberts – Alastair Roberts (Drag City)

101 Moon Duo – Shadow Of The Sun (Sacred Bones)

100 Howlin Rain – Mansion Songs (Easy Sound Recording Co)

99 Alela Diane & Ryan Francesconi – Cold Moon (Believe Recordings)

98 Mbongwana Star – Kinshasa (World Circuit)

97 The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion – Freedom Tower – No Wave Dance Party (Bronzerat)

96 Omar Souleyman – Bahdeni Nami (Monkeytown)

95 Promised Land Sound – For Use And Delight (Paradise Of Bachelors)

94 Thunderbitch – Thunderbitch (Blackfootwhitefoot)

93 King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – Paper Mâché Dream Balloon (Heavenly)

92 Gospelbeach – Pacific Surf Line! (Alive Naturalsound)

91 Simon Scott – Insomni (Ash International)

90 King Midas Sound/Fennesz – Editions 1 (Ninja Tune)

89 Michael Chapman – Fish (Tompkins Square)

88 Deradoorian – The Expanding Flower Planet (Anticon)

87 Yo La Tengo – Stuff Like That There (Matador)

86 Cath & Phil Tyler – The Song-Crowned King (Ferric Mordant)

85 Arthur’s Landing – Second Thoughts (Buddhist Army)

84 Bassekou Kouyaté & Ngoni Ba – Ba Power (Glitterbeat)

83 Rachel Grimes – The Clearing (Temporary Residence)

82 Sonny Vincent And Rocket From The Crypt – Vintage Piss (Swami)

81 Chilly Gonzales – Chambers (Gentle Threat)

80 Crying Lion – The Golden Boat (Honest Jon’s)

79 Todd Rundgren/ Emil Nikolaisen/Hans-Peter Lindstrøm – Runddans (Smalltown Supersound)

78 Laurie Anderson – Heart Of A Dog (Nonesuch)

77 Laura Marling – Short Movie (Virgin)

76 The Cairo Gang – Goes Missing (God?)

75 Hot Chip – Why Make Sense? (Domino)

74 Colleen – Captain Of None (Thrill Jockey)

73 Courtney Barnett – Sometimes I Just Sit And Think And Sometimes I Just Sit (Anxiety/Marathon)

72 Byron Westbrook – Precipice (Root Strata)

71 Circles Around The Sun – Interludes For The Dead (Rhino)

70 Laura Cannell – Beneath Swooping Talons (Front And Follow)

69 Blanck Mass- Dumb Flesh (Sacred Bones)

68 United Bible Studies – The Ale’s What Cures Ye (MIE Music)

67 Goran Kajfeš Subtropic Arkestra – The Reason Why Vol 2 (Headspin)

66 Rhiannon Giddens – Tomorrow Is My Turn (Nonesuch)

65 Liam Hayes – Slurrup (Fat Possum)

64 Steve Hauschildt – Where All Is Fled (Kranky)

63 Lou Barlow – Brace The Wave (Domino)

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

61 William Basinski – Cascade (2062/Temporary Residence)

60 Martin Courtney – Many Moons (Domino)

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

58 James Elkington & Nathan Salsburg – Ambsace (Paradise Of Bachelors)

57 Richard Thompson – Still (Proper)

56 Sleater-Kinney – No Cities To Love (Sub Pop)

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

54 Áine O’Dwyer – Music For Church Cleaners Vol. I & II (MIE)

53 Wolfgang Voigt – Rückverzauberung 10 (Kompakt)

52 Daniel Bachman – River (Three-Lobed)

51 Kurt Vile – B’lieve I’m Goin Down (Matador)

50 Sun Kil Moon – Universal Themes (Rough Trade)

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

48 Peaches – Rub (I U She Music)

47 Sufjan Stevens – Carrie & Lowell (Asthmatic Kitty)

46 Eleventh Dream Day – Works For Tomorrow (Thrill Jockey)

45 Bop English – Constant Bop (Blood And Biscuits)

44 Joan Shelley – Over And Even (No Quarter)

43 Unknown Mortal Orchestra – Multi-Love (Jagjaguwar)

42 Low – Ones And Sixes (Sub Pop)

41 Kamasi Washington – The Epic (Brainfeeder)

40 Rob St John – Surface Tension (Surface Tension)

39 Necks – Vertigo (RER Megacorps/Northern Spy)

38 Jessica Pratt – On Your Own Love Again (Drag City)

37 Neil Young & The Promise Of The Real – The Monsanto Years (Reprise)

36 Meg Baird – Don’t Weigh Down The Light (Wichita/Drag City)

35 Dean McPhee – Fatima’s Hand (Hood Faire)

34 Thee Oh Sees – Mutilator Defeated At Last (Castle Face)

33 Houndstooth – No News From Home (No Quarter)

32 Holly Herndon – Platform (4AD)

31 Badbadnotgood & Ghostface Killah – Sour Soul (Lex)

30 Dave Rawlings Machine – Nashville Obsolete (Acony)

29 Kelley Stoltz – In Triangle Time (Castle Face)

28 Bitchin Bajas – Transporteur (Hands In The Dark)

27 Bjork – Vulnicura (One Little Indian)

26 Sir Richard Bishop – Tangier Sessions (Drag City)

25 Bilal – Another Life (BBE)

24 Nadia Reid – Listen To Formation, Look For The Signs (Scissor Tail/Spunk)

23 Soldiers Of Fortune – Early Risers (Mexican Summer)

22 Steve Gunn & The Black Twig Pickers – Seasonal Hire (Thrill Jockey)

21 Sam Lee & Friends – The Fade In Time (Nest Collective)

20 Matthew E White – Fresh Blood (Spacebomb/Domino)

19 Jamie xx – In Colour (Young Turks)

18 Godspeed You! Black Emperor – Asunder, Sweet and Other Distress (Constellation)

17 Floating Points – Elaenia (Pluto)

16 Jim O’Rourke – Simple Songs (Drag City)

15 Wilco – Star Wars (dBpm)

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

13 Robert Forster – Songs To Play (Tapete)

12 Julia Holter – Have You in My Wilderness (Domino)

11 Four Tet – Morning/Evening (Text)

10 Alabama Shakes – Sound &; Color (Rough Trade)

9 Ryley Walker – Primrose Green (Dead Oceans)

8 Duane Pitre – Bayou Electric (Important)

7 Phil Cook – Southland Mission (Thirty Tigers)

6 The Deslondes – The Deslondes (New West)

5 Natalie Prass – Natalie Prass (Spacebomb)

4 Natural Information Society & Bitchin Bajas – Autoimaginary (Drag City)

3 The Weather Station – Loyalty (Paradise Of Bachelors)

2 Joanna Newsom – Divers (Drag City)

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

 

 

 

Paul Westerberg and Juliana Hatfield share new song, “King Of America”

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Paul Westerberg and Juliana Hatfield have released a new song as The I Don't Cares. The collaborative project between Westerberg and Hatfield first came to light earlier this year, when they released a single, "1/2 2 P", on Halloween. They have followed that up with "King Of America", which is ava...

Paul Westerberg and Juliana Hatfield have released a new song as The I Don’t Cares.

The collaborative project between Westerberg and Hatfield first came to light earlier this year, when they released a single, “1/2 2 P“, on Halloween.

They have followed that up with “King Of America“, which is available to buy from iTunes for $0.99.

An album, Wild Stab, is reportedly due in the New Year.

The I Don’t Cares is Westerberg’s first new music since The Replacements disbanded earlier this year – for the second time.

Westerberg announced from the stage at Primavera Porto on Friday, June 5 that it was be their final show together, reports The Guardian. He also noted that the rest of the band – who reformed in 2013 – had stayed at their hotel rather than soundchecking, calling them “lazy bastards to the end”.

Considering the band’s future in an interview with Uncut earlier this year, Westerberg said, “There’s a 50/50 chance that we might not ever play another note, or it might last another 5 years. As of today, I don’t even know who’s in the band! My bet is that we’ll finish this year out with the same four as last year, hopefully no one will die, and we’ll reassess. If it continues to be fun, we’ll play. If it’s not fun, we can at least get it up for the show. It’s what I wanna do for now, anyway.”

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Bridge Of Spies

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Steven Spielberg was 11 years old in 1957, roughly the same age as Roger – a young boy in Bridge Of Spies whose fertile imagination is fired by public service broadcasts instructing viewers on tips to survive a nuclear attack. While Roger is busy filling the bath to conserve water, his father is c...

Steven Spielberg was 11 years old in 1957, roughly the same age as Roger – a young boy in Bridge Of Spies whose fertile imagination is fired by public service broadcasts instructing viewers on tips to survive a nuclear attack. While Roger is busy filling the bath to conserve water, his father is closer to the heart of the Cold War than perhaps he’d like. Played by Tom Hanks, James B Donovan is a partner in a New York law firm who is assigned to represent Rudolph Abel (Mark Rylance), a Russian spy who faces the death penalty if found guilty. The first half of Spielberg’s Bridge Of Spies slyly plays Hanks’ show and tell against the more nuanced Rylance, an actor who inhabits rather than exhibits.

Hanks’ Donovan represents the film’s James Stewart-style moral centre – a man doing his job, who believes in due process, even if the windows in his living room are shot out. He finds himself warming to Abel, while the rest of the judicial community – and America, in general – believe he should be strung up. The second half of the film, meanwhile, shifts a gear. Following the downing over Soviet airspace of U2 pilot Francis Gary Powers, the incarcerated Abel suddenly becomes a valuable commodity, and Donovan is dispatched to wintry Berlin to arrange an exchange: Abel for Powers. Berlin, we learn, is “a complicated place” and the film slowly drifts away from Hollywood classicism into muddier waters more suited to a LeCarre story – or, perhaps, Munich, which remains Spielberg’s most dark, conflicted film.

Late in Bridge Of Spies, Donovan laments, “There’s a lot of fictions going on.” For a filmmaker usually as unambiguous as Spielberg, it’s surprising that the thrust of Bridge Of Spies is fictions. Abel’s fictional cover, the fiction behind the US government’s covert methods of gathering information, the fictions Powers reveals under interrogation, the fictions played out by Russian and GDR representatives during their negotiations with Donovan. And, indeed, Donovan’s own fictions – as his Berlin conversations play out, he is revealed as being a shrewd fixer. It’s interesting that the Coen brothers worked on the script for Bridge Of Spies: their presence seems particularly strong on the Berlin sequences, which feature a handful of Coensy grotesques, but also in blurring between truth and fiction, a kind of mischievous game of bluff they excel at. It’s one of Spielberg’s best – anchored by solid work from Hanks but given grace and wit by Rylance. “I’m not afraid to die,” says Abel. “Although it wouldn’t be my first choice.”

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

PJ Harvey announces first live show of 2016

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PJ Harvey has announced her first live show of 2016. She will headline Field Day on London's Victoria Park on June 12. This will be her first UK live show with a full band since she played at the Royal Albert Hall in 2011. Other acts confirmed for the festival include Deerhunter, Four Tet and Cas...

PJ Harvey has announced her first live show of 2016.

She will headline Field Day on London’s Victoria Park on June 12.

This will be her first UK live show with a full band since she played at the Royal Albert Hall in 2011.

Other acts confirmed for the festival include Deerhunter, Four Tet and Cass McCombs for Saturday June 11; while Beach House, John Grant and The Thurston Moore Band will appear on the Sunday along with Harvey.

Harvey recently showcased new material at the London Literature Festival held at the city’s Southbank Centre in October.

The event coincided with the publication of her new poetry and photography book, The Hollow Of The Hand; a collaboration with photographer Seamus Murphy.

The book of poetry and images was created during Harvey and Murphy’s travels to destinations including Kosovo, Afghanistan, and Washington, DC between 2011 and 2014.

The event included poetry readings and new songs performed by PJ Harvey alongside images and a short film by Murphy.

A number of the songs played were generated during the Recording In Progress sessions that took place at London’s Somerset House earlier this year. Click here to read Uncut’s report of those sessions.

Tickets for Field Day are available by clicking here.

The full list of confirmed acts so far is:

SATURDAY
Ata Kak
Avalon Emerson
Cass McCombs
Dean Blunt
Deerhunter
DJ Koze
Dusky (live)
Floating Points (live)
Four Tet
Holly Herndon (live)
KINK (live)
Meilyr Jones
Motor City Drum Ensemble
Mount Kimbie (DJ)
Mura Masa
Orchestra Baobab
Paradise Bangkok Molam International Band
Red Axes (live)
Roman Flugel
Skepta
Soak
Special Request
Wild Nothing
Yorkston Thorne Khan
Youth Lagoon

SUNDAY
PJ Harvey
Beach House
Ben Watt
Declan McKenna
Goat
John Grant
Junior Boys
Molly Nilsson
Optimo
Thurston Moore Band

The January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Cynthia Robinson, founding member of Sly And The Family Stone, dies aged 69

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Cynthia Robinson, a founding member of Sly And The Family Stone, has died aged 69. According to a post on her Facebook page, she died on Monday, November 23. "Friends, Famliy and Fans through out the world, Cynthia Robinson, Trumpeter and Co- Founder of Sly and The Family Stone has passed. "Our co...

Cynthia Robinson, a founding member of Sly And The Family Stone, has died aged 69.

According to a post on her Facebook page, she died on Monday, November 23.

“Friends, Famliy and Fans through out the world, Cynthia Robinson, Trumpeter and Co- Founder of Sly and The Family Stone has passed.
“Our condolences go out to the Robinson Family and her bandmates and all family & friends ! You are in our thoughts and prayers and we are here for you. Please continue to support the Cynthia Robinson Cancer Care Fund due to the rising medical costs ( anything helps ). This site will stay up in her memory. God bless you Cynthia!”

Born in Sacramento, California, Robinson met Sly Stone while still in high school and began working with him in 1966, when the bandleader put together a group called the Stoners.

As a trumpet player and vocalist, she played with Sly And The Family Stone until the band’s break up in 1975, but continued to collaborate with Stone.

She also played with George Clinton and Prince, as well as her cousin – and fellow member of the Family Stone – Larry Graham in Graham Central Station.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6q1vAa0br0w

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 January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Thom Yorke: Tony Blair’s “advisers tried to blackmail me”

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Thom Yorke has claimed that advisers of Tony Blair "tried to blackmail" him into meeting with the former British Prime Minister. Speaking in interview with Paris-based magazine Télérama, Yorke claims that the incident took place when he was a spokesperson for climate change campaign The Big Ask i...

Thom Yorke has claimed that advisers of Tony Blair “tried to blackmail” him into meeting with the former British Prime Minister.

Speaking in interview with Paris-based magazine Télérama, Yorke claims that the incident took place when he was a spokesperson for climate change campaign The Big Ask in 2003.

The musician was working on behalf of environmental organisation Friends of the Earth to lobby politicians on the issue of climate change.

“We were in the midst of the Iraq War and The Big Ask campaign was proving very successful,” explains Yorke in the interview. “So Blair said: ‘‘I should meet this guy’’. Then Blair’s advisors tried to blackmail me, saying: ‘‘if you don’t agree to meet the Prime Minister, Friends of the Earth will be denied all access to him.’’ because of the Iraq war, I didn’t want to do it. I felt it was morally unacceptable for me to be photographed with Blair.

Elsewhere in the Télérama interview, Yorke explains how he has responded to climate change as a musician, including turning vegetarian and forming a carbon neutral touring initiative with Radiohead.

Yorke recounted becoming aware of climate change in the late 90’s. He has since worked with Greenpeace, Friends of The Earth and art.350.org.

Asked whether he would consider writing a protest song, Yorke replied, “if I was going to write a protest song about climate change in 2015, it would be shit.”

“In the 60’s, you could write songs that were like calls to arms, and it would work. Well, kind… ish. It’s much harder to do that now,” he said. “If I was going to write a protest song about climate change in 2015, it would be shit. It’s not like one song or one piece of art or one book is going to change someone’s mind. However, things happen gradually and accusatively and that is when it snowballs.”

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 January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Ringo Starr auctioning off first copy of the ‘White Album’

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Ringo Starr is auctioning off more than 1,300 items from his personal collection of artwork and heirlooms, including the first pressing of The Beatles' 'White Album'. Dangerous Minds reports that the auction also contains a Sgt. Pepper upholstered leather chair, a Yellow Submarine Rock-Ola jukebox,...

Ringo Starr is auctioning off more than 1,300 items from his personal collection of artwork and heirlooms, including the first pressing of The Beatles’ ‘White Album‘.

Dangerous Minds reports that the auction also contains a Sgt. Pepper upholstered leather chair, a Yellow Submarine Rock-Ola jukebox, a script from Help!, and Starr’s Ludwig Oyster black three piece drum kitdrum kit.

Other items include John Lennon‘s 1964 Rose-Morris Rickenbacker, given to Starr in 1968, and a 2000 Mercedes Coupe once owned by George Harrison.

Proceeds are expected to top $10 million, and will benefit Starr’s charity, The Lotus Foundation.

The auction is being hosted by Julien’s Auctions of Beverly Hills, and you can see the full itinerary by clicking here.

The rarest piece of rock memorabilia is Starr’s copy of the ‘White Album’, numbered 0000001.

As Dangerous Minds notes, it’s accepted that copies one to four are in the possession of Beatles’ members, with it previously assumed John Lennon had No. 0000001.

Until now, according to Vinyl Factory, the lowest numbered UK first mono pressing album to come to market was No.0000005 – which sold for just under $30,000 back in 2008.

Julien’s estimates the LP will fetch anywhere between $40,000 and $60,000. at the auction, which will be held between December 3-5.

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 January 2016 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Paul Weller, David Bowie, Best Of 2015, Roger Waters, Father John Misty, Pere Ubu, Robert Forster, Natalie Prass, James Brown, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, Neil Young, Janis Joplin and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

January 2016

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Paul Weller, David Bowie, Roger Waters and the best albums of 2015 all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out now. We join Paul Weller on tour in San Francisco, and find the Modfather five years sober, “enjoying the clarity” of playing to enthusiastic crowds and breaking the US, his way. “I ...

Paul Weller, David Bowie, Roger Waters and the best albums of 2015 all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

We join Paul Weller on tour in San Francisco, and find the Modfather five years sober, “enjoying the clarity” of playing to enthusiastic crowds and breaking the US, his way.

“I love playing music,” he tells Uncut. “I can’t imagine that passion ever stopping.”

Also in the new issue, we delve inside David Bowie’s new, ambitious Blackstar album. As well as an extensive, in-depth review, Blackstar’s bandleader, saxophonist Donny McCaslin, reveals all about Bowie’s remarkable working practices, including jazz solos, conceptual feedback and sushi lunches.

“I remember Tony [Visconti] and David both saying, ‘Wow, this is going so fast. You’re doing a great job.’ David took everything we did during the day home at night and listened intently to it, trying to figure out what he wanted and so on. His attention to detail that way was eye-opening.”

Elsewhere, as he prepares to release a new film of The Wall, Roger Waters discusses war, Pink Floyd and a lifetime of being “a very angry young man”. “If you’re honest in any way,” he tells us, “you paint what you see. I lived in a political household, so politics was always part of my life.”

Also in the issue, we reveal the finest albums, reissues, films and books of 2015, all voted for by Uncut’s staff and contributors, and put your questions to Josh Tillman aka Father John Misty. “If anyone could provide a fragrance experience that would encapsulate what it means to be a young woman today, it was me,” he quips.

Pere Ubu’s original members, including frontman David Thomas and synth pioneer Allen Ravenstine, take us through the creation of their debut single, “30 Seconds Over Tokyo” – “we had to assure the pressing plant that that was what the song was supposed to sound like!” says Thomas.

In our ‘album by album’ feature this month, Robert Forster recalls The Go-Betweens, recreating a photograph of James Joyce for the cover of his debut solo album, and why he “never made a bad record in London”.

The 40-page reviews section includes releases from David Bowie, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, The Magnetic Fields and Laurie Anderson, while U2 and Joanna Newsom‘s live sets are reviewed.

Neil Young, Janis Joplin, Miracle Legion and Gwenno are all to be found within our Instant Karma news section, while Natalie Prass takes us through the songs and albums that have shaped her life.

The free CD, The Best Of 2015, includes some of the finest songs of the year, from the likes of Ryley Walker, Courtney Barnett, Wilco, Father John Misty, Björk, New Order and Julia Holter.

The new issue of Uncut is out 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.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Introducing the new issue of Uncut…

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Not to overstate matters, but putting together a Best Albums Of The Year list, at least before autumn has fully blown through, seems an increasingly perilous business. Twelve months ago, for instance, Uncut's extended family of staff and writers diligently submitted their favourites, unaware that an...

Not to overstate matters, but putting together a Best Albums Of The Year list, at least before autumn has fully blown through, seems an increasingly perilous business. Twelve months ago, for instance, Uncut’s extended family of staff and writers diligently submitted their favourites, unaware that an album which might have surpassed most of their choices – D’Angelo’s “Black Messiah” – would suddenly materialise on December 15.

Today, the new issue of Uncut arrives in UK shops, and I suppose there’s a fair chance something similar might happen again between now and the end of the year; these, I guess, are the gambles we have to take as part of putting together a monthly magazine.

For a brief period of intrigue, possibility and anticipation, it even looked as if a new David Bowie album might sneak artfully into this calendar year. As it turns out, “Blackstar”., is scheduled for release in January 2016, but inside the new Uncut you’ll find a first, forensic review of one of Bowie’s most audacious albums to date, plus a revelatory piece on the making of the album from Donny McCaslin, the jazz saxophonist who has taken on the role of Bowie’s key collaborator for the project.

Last-minute surprises notwithstanding, our list of this year’s top 75 new albums feels like a particularly fresh and eclectic one – and one which hopefully reflects Uncut’s continuing commitment to find exciting new music. If you’ve an appetite to dig deeper, I’m trying to pull together a personal list that I’ll post here in the next week or so, and which will probably stretch to around 140 albums that I’ve enjoyed to a greater or lesser degree in 2015.

For the time being, though, hopefully this issue should suffice. Besides the Bowie and end of year business, we have Paul Weller, Father John Misty, Roger Waters, Natalie Prass, Gwenno, Pere Ubu, Miracle Legion and an interview I conducted with one of my heroes, Robert Forster, in which we talk through a good few of his finest albums; Go-Betweens classics included, but also relatively unsung stuff like this…

“Every man for the rest of your life will be less than me…”

Hear new James song, “To My Surprise”

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James have returned with new single "To My Surprise" from their upcoming album Girl At The End Of The World. Girl At The End Of The World - James' 14th studio LP - will be released on March 18, 2016. The record was produced by Max Dingel (The Killers, Muse) and features a cameo from Brian Eno. It ...

James have returned with new single “To My Surprise” from their upcoming album Girl At The End Of The World.

Girl At The End Of The World – James’ 14th studio LP – will be released on March 18, 2016. The record was produced by Max Dingel (The Killers, Muse) and features a cameo from Brian Eno.

It follows on from 2014’s La Petite Mort.

You can listen to “To My Surprise” below.

The band’s Jim Glennie says of the album: “The songs for this record were written exclusively in Scotland. Not for any particular reason but still a fact. If you pay close attention whilst you’re listening, in a couple of places you can actually smell peat burning mixed with the salty tang of seaweed on the air. Also, possibly bagpipes but that might be just my tinnitus playing up.”

“Girl At The End Of The World is a record we are very proud of and picks up nicely where La Petite Mort left off. But hopefully, as always, pushes the edges out a little further. The songs are big but personal, abrasive but warming and after taking you on a journey and throwing you a few curve balls, ultimately uplifting.”

The tracklisting for the album is:

‘Bitch’
‘To My Surprise’
‘Nothing But Love’
‘Attention’
‘Dear John’
‘Feet Of Clay’
‘Surfer’s Song’
‘Catapult’
‘Move Down South’
‘Alvin’
‘Waking’
‘Girl At The End Of The World’

James will also play a full UK tour in May 2016. See those dates below. Tickets are on sale now.

Bristol Colston Hall (May 2, 2016)
Southend Cliffs Pavilion (3)
London O2 Shepherds Bush Empire (4)
London Forum (6)
London O2 Academy Brixton (7)
Norwich UEA (9)
Bournemouth O2 Academy (10)
Llandudno Venue Cymru Arena (12)
Manchester Arena (13)
Leeds First Direct Arena (14)
Hull City Hall (16)
Newcastle City Hall (17)
Glasgow The SSE Hydro (19)
Birmingham Barclaycard Arena (20)
Nottingham Royal Concert Hall (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 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.

This month in Uncut

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Paul Weller, David Bowie, Roger Waters and the best albums of 2015 all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out now. We join Paul Weller on tour in San Francisco, and find the Modfather five years sober, “enjoying the clarity” of playing to enthusiastic crowds and breaking the US, his way. “I ...

Paul Weller, David Bowie, Roger Waters and the best albums of 2015 all feature in the new issue of Uncut, out now.

We join Paul Weller on tour in San Francisco, and find the Modfather five years sober, “enjoying the clarity” of playing to enthusiastic crowds and breaking the US, his way.

“I love playing music,” he tells Uncut. “I can’t imagine that passion ever stopping.”

Also in the new issue, we delve inside David Bowie’s new, ambitious Blackstar album. As well as an extensive, in-depth review, Blackstar’s bandleader, saxophonist Donny McCaslin, reveals all about Bowie’s remarkable working practices, including jazz solos, conceptual feedback and sushi lunches.

“I remember Tony [Visconti] and David both saying, ‘Wow, this is going so fast. You’re doing a great job.’ David took everything we did during the day home at night and listened intently to it, trying to figure out what he wanted and so on. His attention to detail that way was eye-opening.”

Elsewhere, as he prepares to release a new film of The Wall, Roger Waters discusses war, Pink Floyd and a lifetime of being “a very angry young man”. “If you’re honest in any way,” he tells us, “you paint what you see. I lived in a political household, so politics was always part of my life.”

Also in the issue, we reveal the finest albums, reissues, films and books of 2015, all voted for by Uncut’s staff and contributors, and put your questions to Josh Tillman aka Father John Misty. “If anyone could provide a fragrance experience that would encapsulate what it means to be a young woman today, it was me,” he quips.

Pere Ubu’s original members, including frontman David Thomas and synth pioneer Allen Ravenstine, take us through the creation of their debut single, “30 Seconds Over Tokyo” – “we had to assure the pressing plant that that was what the song was supposed to sound like!” says Thomas.

In our ‘album by album’ feature this month, Robert Forster recalls The Go-Betweens, recreating a photograph of James Joyce for the cover of his debut solo album, and why he “never made a bad record in London”.

The 40-page reviews section includes releases from David Bowie, Bruce Springsteen, Sunn O))), Jonny Greenwood, Arthur Lee & Love, The Magnetic Fields and Laurie Anderson, while U2 and Joanna Newsom‘s live sets are reviewed.

Neil Young, Janis Joplin, Miracle Legion and Gwenno are all to be found within our Instant Karma news section, while Natalie Prass takes us through the songs and albums that have shaped her life.

The free CD, The Best Of 2015, includes some of the finest songs of the year, from the likes of Ryley Walker, Courtney Barnett, Wilco, Father John Misty, Björk, New Order and Julia Holter.

The new issue of Uncut is out 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.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Third Man Records to open a vinyl pressing plant

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Jack White's record label Third Man Records is set to open its own vinyl pressing plant in Detroit. This will be the first new pressing plant in the city since the mid-60s. As well as printing the label's own records, Third Man are keen to open their plant up to smaller local acts, with label co-f...

Jack White‘s record label Third Man Records is set to open its own vinyl pressing plant in Detroit.

This will be the first new pressing plant in the city since the mid-60s.

As well as printing the label’s own records, Third Man are keen to open their plant up to smaller local acts, with label co-founder Ben Blackwell telling Pitchfork “Part of the concern in this world is that vinyl can very easily turn into an exclusionary thing… But this is going to make it easier for a little punk band to make 300 copies of a 7?”

There is no confirmed date for the opening of the new plant just yet.

Meanwhile, Courtney Barnett has unveiled a cover of “Shivers“, by Roland S Howard, which has been produced by Jack White.

“Shivers”, originally recorded by The Boys Next Door, will appear on the B-side to Barnett’s new Jack White-produced single.

The release forms part of Third Man’s Blue Series. The A-side is “Boxing Day Blues Revisited” — an epilogue to the Sometimes I Sit and Think, and Sometimes I Just Sit track “Boxing Day 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 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.

Underworld announce new album

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Underworld have announced details of their new album. Barbara Barbara, we face a shining future will be released on March 18, 2016. The tracklisting for the band's album - their seventh - is: I Exhale If Rah Low Burn Santiago Cuatro Motorhome Ova Nova Nylon Strung The band have also announced de...

Underworld have announced details of their new album.

Barbara Barbara, we face a shining future will be released on March 18, 2016.

The tracklisting for the band’s album – their seventh – is:

I Exhale
If Rah
Low Burn
Santiago Cuatro
Motorhome
Ova Nova
Nylon Strung

The band have also announced details of a short short run of shows to support the album. They play:

Thu 17: Columbia Halle, Berlin, Germany
Fri 18: Maimarktclub, Mannheim, Germany
Thu 24: Roundhouse, London
Fri 25: Roundhouse, London
Mon 28: Oosterpoort, Groningen, Netherlands
Wed 30: Cirque Royal, Brussels, Belgium
Thu 31: Paradiso, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Tickets will be on sale from 9am GMT on Friday November 27, 2015 from underworldlive.com.

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.

The Cure announce European tour

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The Cure have announced a major European tour. It will be the band's first European tour since 2008. The tour begins next October and will include 30 shows in 17 European countries. They have announced two UK shows, including Manchester and London. You can find the full list of dates below. Ti...

The Cure have announced a major European tour.

It will be the band’s first European tour since 2008.

The tour begins next October and will include 30 shows in 17 European countries.

They have announced two UK shows, including Manchester and London.

You can find the full list of dates below.

Tickets go on sale this Friday (November 27) at 9am.

Tour dates:

October
07 Helsinki Finland Hartwall Arena
09 Stockholm Sweden Ericsson Globe Arena
11 Oslo Norway Spektrum
12 Gothenburg Sweden Scandinavium
14 Copenhagen Denmark Forum
17 Hamburg Germany Barclaycard Arena
18 Berlin Germany Mercedes-Benz Arena
20 Lodz Poland Atlas Arena
22 Prague Czech Republic O2 Arena
24 Munich Germany Olympiahalle
26 Vienna Austria Marxhalle
27 Budapest Hungary Papp Laszlo Sports Arena
29 Bologna Italy Unipol Arena
30 Rome Italy Palalottomatica

November
01 Milan Italy Mediolanum Forum
04 Basel Switzerland St. Jakobshalle
06 Stuttgart Germany Hanns-Martin-Schleyer-Halle
08 Leipzig Germany Arena
10 Cologne Germany Lanxess Arena
12 Antwerp Belgium Sportspaleis
13 Amsterdam Holland Ziggo Dome
15 Paris France Accorhotels Arena [ex Bercy]
17 Lyon France Halle Tony Garnier
18 Montpellier France Park & suites Arena
20 Madrid Spain Barclaycard Center
22 Lisbon Portugal Meo Arena
24 Bilbao Spain BEC
26 Barcelona Spain Palau St Jordi
29 Manchester UK Manchester Arena

December
01 London UK The SSE Wembley Arena

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.

Ork Records – New York, New York

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Patti Smith’s independent debut “Piss Factory” came out in 1974; the following November, manager Terry Ork put out Television’s first single, “Little Johnny Jewel”, on his own label. They were the first flowerings of the New York renaissance. By 1976, big labels had carved up the CBGBs ...

Patti Smith’s independent debut “Piss Factory” came out in 1974; the following November, manager Terry Ork put out Television’s first single, “Little Johnny Jewel”, on his own label. They were the first flowerings of the New York renaissance.

By 1976, big labels had carved up the CBGBs underground; Television went to Elektra, Patti Smith to Arista, Talking Heads joined the Ramones on Sire, Blondie went to Private Stock and then Chrysalis. It was a feeding frenzy that drew aspiring oddballs to the Bowery in droves.

For a few months between 1976 and mid-1977, Ork – the scene’s only active independent – had their pick of the new arrivals, snaring Richard Hell & The Voidoids, Alex Chilton, a pre-dBs Chris Stamey and The Feelies among others. This lovingly assembled, 49-track collection pieces together the projects – completed, abandoned and otherwise – that Ork helped to instigate, as the hustler-cum-superfan and sometime business partner Charles Ball seized their moment.

William Terry Collins, AKA Terry Ork, had come to New York from San Diego in the late 1960s, working for Andy Warhol’s Inter/View magazine for a while before winding up as part-time manager of film knick-knack shop, Cinemabilia. Regaling his circle with the tale of how he once gave Lou Reed head, he set about creating a superstar factory of his own.

He completed the wiring of Television by introducing Cinemabilia employee Hell and Tom Verlaine to his leechy flatmate, guitarist Richard Lloyd (“There was a great love between us,” Lloyd remembered of Ork. “For him it was romantic, for me it was platonic”). Ork managed Television until their ascent demanded a more astute approach, but he kept busy, releasing the American version of Hell’s “Blank Generation” EP, before finding one member of bowl-cutted power-poppers the Marbles working at Cinemabilia, and making 1976’s gloriously feeble “Red Lights” his third release.

Preppy aesthete Ball kept the ball rolling. “Terry was always the public face of the label, a bon vivant more interested in chasing around Richard Lloyd than the music itself,” music journalist and Ork insider Roy Trakin tells Uncut. “Charles, on the other hand, was immersed in culture theory, Jean Luc-Godard and the mechanics of actually recording music.”

Excited by some audio verité demoes recorded in Memphis by journalist-turned-producer Jon Tiven, Ball and Ork hauled Alex Chilton up to their studio of choice ¬ Trod Nossel in Connecticut – to put down the five tracks that make up 1977’s surly “Singer Not The Song” EP. Chilton’s stag-horned “Free Again” and the excitable “Take Me Home And Make Me Like It” are deliriously grubby, though his excitable whoop of “call me a slut in front of your family” on the latter seemed a little far-fetched; so poor during his couch-surfing year in New York that for a while he did not even own shoes, Chilton was in no state to be introduced to anyone’s parents.

Almost as an afterthought, Ork simultaneously put out “Girl” by Tiven’s band Prix – a delicious analogue to Chris Bell’s Big Star contributions. Tiven was not destined to be Chilton’s new musical foil, though, his time as a sideman ending when the singer tried to stub a cigarette out in his face. Stamey had a much more successful dalliance with the ex-Box Top, Chilton helping piece together the North Carolina moptop’s skinny-tie thunderbolt “The Summer Sun” – the final Ork release of 1977.

With the label momentarily buoyant, a major-label distribution deal was sought, but Ork and Ball’s failure to snare one meant a raft of projects were mothballed. A Rolling Stones tribute LP vanished without trace, and tapes of The H-Bombs – featuring Stamey’s future dBs foil Peter Holsapple – and Lester Bangs were farmed out to other labels. A first release from New Jersey’s splendidly uptight Feelies also went begging, the frenetic version of “Fa Ce La” here canned at the band’s request, though the song resurfaced as their Rough Trade debut two years later.

Ball went his own way, his Lust/Unlust imprint later giving first exposure to some of New York’s most abrasive outfits. He died in 2012. “Ork and Ball’s split was not an amicable one,” Trakin remembers. “I’m not sure if they ever reconciled as two strong-willed personalities who blamed one another for their massive, if-only fail.”

Ork, meanwhile, enlisted new financial backers – Hassidic Jews with decidedly unorthodox heroin habits. “Little Johnny Jewel” was repressed as a 12”, but the reactivated label evidently found the CBGBs waters of 1979 much over-fished. Ork’s final releases featured uninspiring cock-rock from the Idols – featuring ex-New York Dolls Arthur Kane and Jerry Nolan – and unremarkable one-offs from the Revelons and the Student Teachers. The last Ork release – former Dead Boy Cheetah Chrome’s “Still Wanna Die” – was an Iggy Stardust glam-punk classic, much undermined by an incongruous flower-power sleeve.

Ork clung on New York for a while, managing hardcore band the Worst, before fading into legend. He wrote for a West Coast arts magazine as Noah Ford, and was jailed from 1991 to 1994, for passport fraud, cheque fraud or Andy Warhol fraud, according to conflicting reports. He died of colon cancer in 2004.

“I like Terry,” Verlaine said in 1979, showing uncommon generosity as he summed up Ork. “He has no business sense, but he’s a great guy.” At the bottom of the rear sleeve of Television’s era-defining Marquee Moon is a note reading: “This album is dedicated to William Terry Ork.” Like this collection, a small credit where it was due.

EXTRAS 8/10: A pleasantly bitchy book gives all Ork acts their due, a raft of rare tracks completing the picture. Prix offcuts are essential listening for Big Star fetishists, while unreleased Ork singles by Patti Smith-worshippers the Erasers, and angry loner Kenneth Higney feature, along with both sides of Link Cromwell’s “Crazy Like A Fox” – the 1966 Brit-invasion knock-off voiced by Patti Smith Group guitarist Lenny Kaye, which was re-circulated by Ork. Another discovery is the first version of Richard Lloyd’s sparkly “I Thought You Wanted To Know”, later re-voiced and released by Stamey on his Car label when it emerged that the object of Ork’s affections was still under contract at Elektra.

Q&A
dB Chris Stamey and Feelie Glenn Mercer remember their Ork years
How would you describe Terry Ork?

Chris Stamey: I never met Jerry Garcia, but Terry always reminded me of what I imagined Garcia might be like – very upbeat and positive, a dreamer. He never seemed like a businessman, but he was a great cheerleader and he had a vision and this really mattered to everyone at the time. Both he and Charles Ball came from a film background, not a musical one, which was interesting. And you have to remember that it wasn’t just Terry – Charles was a huge part of it all.
Glenn Mercer: We had played an audition night at CBGB and the house soundman, Mark Abel, told us that he planned to invite Ork to our next gig because he thought Terry would like our sound. I don’t remember that much about it, but I think I was surprised by the way he looked. You didn’t see too many beards or much long hair among the punk rock crowd. We didn’t talk much about music, actually. He was more of a movie fan and talked more about foreign films than he did about music.

Was Television’s success a big factor in bands coming to New York in this period?
Chris Stamey: I’d seen Television play at CBs in the summer of 1975 and was blown away. This was directly a big reason for my move to New York – no question about it. It was the kind of music I wanted to make – transcendent, electric and immediate. I’d made a false leap in thinking that there were lots of bands that sounded like them – in actual fact, they were the sole flagbearers of that kind of playing at the time, that kind of “punk jazz”, I guess you could call it. And honestly, I never found any other bands on the scene that held a candle to them, although sometimes playing with Alex would have some of that flavour, later on.
Glenn Mercer: More than anything, being original and unique was what was required in that musical landscape. I doubt that Terry was grooming The Feelies as the new Television. He was smart enough to realise that we weren’t really that similar to Television. I also think that he knew that the New York underground music scene probably wouldn’t ever become mainstream and there wasn’t an ideal model for success.

There was not much money around, but Ork seemed to have a lot of ideas on the go, no?
Chris Stamey: Well, we didn’t need all that much money. I do remember having to walk everywhere and relying on major-label press parties for meals sometimes. It just seemed bohemian; Rimbaud and Nerval were in the air – it was a Left Bank scene in that way. Alex Chilton was pretty much unknown to the CBs scene – the third Big Star record only existed on a few bootleg cassettes. He was in fine shape, just a bit shy and trying to get over a major romance that was ending. His problem, as I see it, was that he was totally broke that year in New York City. Ork tried to help for a while but didn’t have any money really. People would not buy him dinner, but they would buy him unlimited drinks. So he drank instead of ate.
Glenn Mercer: I remember Terry having an idea to record “Chinese Rocks” with the ‘Ork Orchestra’, since the Ramones didn’t initially want to use the song. At the session, there was Bob Quine, Jody Harris, Chris Frantz and Dee Dee Ramone. I played bass because Dee Dee only wanted to sing. I also remember often hanging out with Richard Lloyd at Terry’s place. In general, the bands supported each other and there was a sense of ‘us v them’ in regard to the music in the mainstream.

Do you remember Terry Ork and Charles Ball fondly?
Glenn Mercer: I have many fond memories of both Terry and Charles, and of that time period. Unfortunately, we lost touch after we stopped working together. The last time I saw Terry was at the premier of the film Smithereens in 1982, but we didn’t get a chance to talk much then.
Chris Stamey: Terry helped The dB’s in talks with Warner Bros, UK, which was great. It wasn’t so great that the talks fell apart when his deal stopped, leaving us with some unpaid studio bills. But this worked out in the end, resulting in the first dB’s record, Stands For deciBels. This record probably would not have existed without Terry’s UK connections. Terry always seemed genuinely interested in helping the musicians and bands he liked. It seems odd now, but rock musicians doing ‘non-commercial’ music had not yet realised that it was possible to bypass the commercial labels.
INTERVIEWS BY JIM WIRTH

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