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An interview with John Carpenter: “I want to turn everyone crazy!”

To coincide with yesterday's momentous news that Carpenter is to make his live debut at ATP next year, I thought I'd post the full transcript of my interview with Carpenter from our February 2015 issue. Ostensibly, we were due to talk about Carpenter's debut album, Lost Themes, which was about to be...

To coincide with yesterday’s momentous news that Carpenter is to make his live debut at ATP next year, I thought I’d post the full transcript of my interview with Carpenter from our February 2015 issue. Ostensibly, we were due to talk about Carpenter’s debut album, Lost Themes, which was about to be released – but the conversation also covered Carpenter’s great movies (and their soundtracks), his early failure at the violin and the possible return of Snake Plissken.

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Why have you decided to make an album now?
In the way it was done, there’s no ‘why’ to it. A couple of years ago, my son and I, he would come over to my house and we’d play video games and then we’d go downstairs to my Logic Pro computer set up and we’d improvise some music. Then we’d come back to the video games and then go back to the music and that just kept going and then we had about 60 minutes worth of music done. I was searching for a new music internee, and she asked me, ‘Do you have anything new?’. So, I sent over what my son and I had done and then a month or two later we had a record deal. But yeah, why now? I don’t know. I have no clue.

Do you feel like this is a continuation of the work that you’ve been doing for the last 40 years?
Yeah, it is in a sense. This is the first music that I’ve done that has nothing to do with image – it has to do simply with the music and the joy of playing and improvising – so that’s the difference. It reflects all the years that I’ve been doing this and it also affects my son’s abilities and my Godson’s abilities – Daniel Davies, he also worked on it. So, it’s a family affair! I’ve taken the two young guys and exploited them and tried to make myself rich.

It seems of a part with those great soundtracks like Assault On Precinct 13…
Well, the music is in you. That’s what it is all about. It’s either there or it’s not and it’s in me.

Those records were made on old analog synths weren’t they?
Yeah! And this one was to, but just on a modern synth.

Do you remember the first synth that you bought?
I think I got one as a gift once, but I don’t know if I have ever bought one. I still have a synth that my wife bought me a Korg Tribe and I love that thing. It’s unbelievable – I used it for the last two movies that I scored. I’ve had it for over ten years.

When did you first start making music?
My father was a music professor, he graduated from Eastman School Of Music and was a virtuoso violinist. When I was young, he decided that maybe it was time for me to learn to play the violin. Unfortunately, I had no talent, but we struggled through some lessons anyway and I picked up some basics. I played the violin for a while, but unfortunately that made me a mark for any of the bullies in high-school. Like, carrying your violin case to school is not a good idea, but those were the old days. So I went from there to keyboards to guitars and such.

As film maker, your influences are Hawks and Ford. What about your musical influences?
Classical music, generally. That’s what I first grew up with. But then movie scores, rock and roll, all influences.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGME6jCwqw0

Which movie scores were particularly influential on you?
I loved Bernard Hermann, Dimitri Tiomkin and some of the low-budget, science fiction and horror scores. But there are a number of composers but especially Bernard Hermann because of his hardcore progressions and his use of simplicity to get across a mood and I really responded to that – because simple music is all I can basically do. So the idea was, in film school, I started to score student films because nobody has any money to hire somebody to score a film for you and with the low budgets movies that I started with it’s still the same model – there’s no money. But I was cheap and I was fast and that just kind of kept going and then that just became another part of my directing – it became another voice and creative process.

When you’re writing or directing a scene in a film, are you also thinking about the music? Do you ever work a scene and think ‘I’ve got this good riff that will work with that…’?
No, nothing quite as romantic as that. It’s after the movie is cut together. I take the movie and synchronise it with a keyboard and then I begin improvising, right from the first image. I just provide whatever the scene needs and it’s all an after thought. It’s all done afterwards and it’s a process of discovery, but then I’ll suddenly find I’m playing something that I like and I’ll be like, “Wow, where did that come from?” I have no idea, probably from another movie.

Do you have a favourite score of your own?
I don’t think I have ever thought that, but the more complicated ones that came later in my career – I really thought I did a pretty good job with Big Trouble In Little China. That score was pretty good. It was the complexity of it and it had different kinds of sounds.

How did Ennio Morricone come to score The Thing?
Because he is a genius! First of all though, the studio didn’t even consider me for it, but then I got to have him! And it’s the same thing with Starman and Jack Nitzsche – God he is a genius. He was unbelievable – what a composer!

There are some great titles on this album – “Vortex”, “Abyss”, “Purgatory”…
Well, the thinking behind the titles was, “Gee, we need some titles for these – let me make up some dark words…” This album is for the movie that’s playing in your head because most people have a movie in their head or an image of something or and actor or a place or a thing. So, my album is to score that for you. So turn down the lights, put the album on and let that movie in your head go and I’ll be the music for it. I want to turn everybody crazy!

Are you aware of the significance of your soundtrack work?
Well okay, I know it because you are telling me this – but do I know it? No. Directors, when they are done with their work just want to be alone and they want to get away from people – especially actors. So no one tells me these things, I know a fan or two here and there but I don’t have any idea what influences and I don’t know why. Why would I be an influence? I can barely play.

But you must of seen something like Drive, heard the soundtrack and thought, ‘Hang on a minute, that’s a bit familiar…’
No I don’t think I have seen that! Nor would I know the influence but I have some favourite composers now though – not because they remind me of anything, but because they are great! I love Hans Zimmer and I think Trent Reznor is doing some great stuff! His stuff is just really interesting.

So what’s the plan after this album?
I’ll continue to live my life, hopefully or I’ll keep watching basketball. It’s fun and it’s awesome and it’s really something that I never dreamed would happen – making music like this. But I am still making music as we speak, with the same group we’re still working on stuff. And we’ll see – maybe another album or two or maybe not.

What about films?
If something comes along that I love, I’ll do it! But I am an old man now, what do you want from me? I’m 67 in January and that’s old!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8-LDW7tWwAI

Do you still see Kurt Russell at all?
I do occasionally, yeah.

Is there any chance of a third outing for Snake Plissken?
You never know. We have talked about a couple of things, but you never know. The business has changed a lot since then and I don’t know if modern Hollywood has any fans of the movie. They are more pre-occupied with cartoon characters and super heroes – Marvel comic book heroes. He is a little tougher than they are!

I keep hearing rumours of remakes…
You know how it goes in the movie business. Most of the movies that I have made are co-owned with companies and a big company is Canal Plus. And they keep trying to resuscitate these corpses and remake them and get life in them – so they go out there and bang the bushes but it’s not me doing it. So maybe they’ll get something up and I’ll get a pay cheque or maybe not.

How do you spend your days?
What, when I’m not talking to journalists like you? I tend to play video games. I’ll probably go play them a few minutes after talking to you. I watch NBA Basketball. I play music and we have some projects under development – which means we are trying to raise some money. But my days are spent not getting up at in the morning. Not walking around on set and not having the stress of movie making which profound.

What games are you enjoying at the moment?
I’m playing Far Cry 4 right now – it’s an awesome game.

Do you ever see the influence of your films on computer games?
No. I’m not that egocentric, I’m just not. I don’t sit around and think, ‘Oh boy, I influenced that.’ That’s just full of insanity, I think.

YOU CAN FIND OUT MORE ABOUT JOHN CARPENTER’S PERFORMANCE AT ATP ICELAND 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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The 34th Uncut Playlist Of 2015

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Not sure whether me playing actual whalesong in the office the other day was welcomed enthusiastically by all my colleagues, but David Rothenburg's interesting comp sits nicely in this reasonably eclectic selection. NYC Taper's come up trumps again with a killer Steve Gunn & The Black Twig Picke...

Not sure whether me playing actual whalesong in the office the other day was welcomed enthusiastically by all my colleagues, but David Rothenburg’s interesting comp sits nicely in this reasonably eclectic selection. NYC Taper’s come up trumps again with a killer Steve Gunn & The Black Twig Pickers session from the Hopscotch fest in Raleigh last month, plus there’s a new track from the mighty Spacin’ streaming at their website.

Pride of place this week, though, goes to the new Soldiers Of Fortune album; a New York coalition I haven’t come across before (and which has been misleadingly promoted in the UK as an Interpol/Spiritualized supergroup), but which features among others Kid Millions and Pat Sullivan from Oneida, the redoubtable Matt Sweeney, and Jesper Eklow. Eklow and – latterly – Sweeney’s work in Endless Boogie is satisfyingly key here, and I can’t recommend “Early Risers” enough: featured vocalists include Steve Malkmus, Cass McCombs and Comets On Fire/Howlin Rain/Heron Oblivion’s Ethan Miller. A decade ago, a Comets/Endless Boogie supergroup would’ve struck me as the best thing ever. As of today, it pretty much is; two songs below for your delectation. Let me know what you think…

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

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

2 Steve Gunn & The Black Twig Pickers – 2015-09-11 Hopscotch Music Festival, Kennedy Theatre, Raleigh, NC (www.nyctaper.com)

3 Various Whales/David Rothenberg – New Songs of the Humpback Whale (Important)

4 Alex Bleeker & The Freaks – Country Agenda (Sinderlyn)

5 Kelley Stoltz – In Triangle Time (Castle Face)

6 Mark McGuire – Beyond Belief (Dead Oceans)

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

8 2001 – Broke Me In Two (Soundcloud)

https://soundcloud.com/2001band/broke-me-in-two

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

10 Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band – Intensity Ghost (No Quarter)

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

12 Floating Points – Elaenia (Pluto)

13 Spacin’ – Titchy (Richie/www.spacin.org)

14 Chris Forsyth & Koen Holtkamp – Early Astral (Blackest Rainbow)

15 The Necks – Vertigo (ReR/Northern Spy)

16 Tinariwen – Live In Paris: Oukis N’Asuf (Wedge)

17 Rod Stewart – Another Country (Capitol)

18 Nots – We Are Nots (Heavenly)

19 Soldiers Of Fortune – Early Risers (Mexican Summer)

20 Nectarine No 9 – Saint Jack (Heavenly)

21 Skyray – Neptune Variations (Ochre)

22 Dave Rawlings Machine – Nashville Obsolete (Acony)

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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

John Carpenter announces first ever live performance

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John Carpenter will make his live debut at All Tomorrow's Parties festival in Iceland. The festival will take place from July 1 - 3, 2016 in Keflavík. Carpenter will play selections from last year's Lost Themes album - which is available to order from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here - alongside his...

John Carpenter will make his live debut at All Tomorrow’s Parties festival in Iceland.

The festival will take place from July 1 – 3, 2016 in Keflavík.

Carpenter will play selections from last year’s Lost Themes album – which is available to order from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here – alongside his classic film scores and new music.

He will be joined by his son Cody, godson Daniel Davies, and a full live band for the show. You can watch a trailer announcing the show below.

“We are incredibly honoured to present the first ever show by this legendary film-maker and composer. Having had the opportunity to present the maestro Ennio Morricone twice in recent years, it has been a burning ambition of ours to also present John Carpenter, who is both a pioneer and a huge influence on us and so many great musicians and film-makers that we work with. You’d be fucking crazy to miss this,” said ATP’s Barry Hogan.

You can find more info about tickets, accomodation and travel 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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Jesus And Mary Chain are working on their first album in 17 years

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The Jesus And Mary Chain have announced that they are working on their first new album in 17 years. The band released their last album, Munki, in 1998, now preparing to follow it up with a "more mature" record. "We’re doing an album now. We actually just started recording," lead singer Jim Reid ...

The Jesus And Mary Chain have announced that they are working on their first new album in 17 years.

The band released their last album, Munki, in 1998, now preparing to follow it up with a “more mature” record.

“We’re doing an album now. We actually just started recording,” lead singer Jim Reid told Time Out New York.

Reid continued, “It’s early days, but I would say it’s a more mature sound for the Mary Chain. But let’s just wait and see.”

Reid told the NME earlier this year that plans were afoot to work on some new music. “We’ve got the material, we’ve talked about doing an album for so long now,” Reid said. “We got back together in 2007 and it was the plan then. We thought ‘We’ve got a bunch of songs, this would make a pretty good Mary Chain album’ – and then there was the usual slaps and scratches between my brother and myself. ‘I wanna do it here’ and ‘I don’t’ and then it was all ‘Fuck you’ and swinging at each other. The usual shit basically.”

However, Reid admitted that since the band started touring their Psychocandy album, to celebrate its 30th anniversary, a new album seems more likely than ever. “We are kind of coming round to being in agreement, which is a bit weird for us, he commented. “There will be an album – we will get it together. I’m more convinced now than I ever have been that there will be a new Mary Chain album.”

Speaking about the problems that have plagued recording new material in the past, Reid explained: “We couldn’t agree how to approach the songs. At the time when the band got back together my kids were very young and William lives in LA and wanted to record out there, and I didn’t want to go and spend months away from my family. But my kids are a bit older now and I’m kind of in the middle of a divorce, so it seems like a good time to get the hell out of town.”

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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch The Dead Weather reveal sonic secrets in a new video directed by Jack White

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The Dead Weather have released a new video to coincide with the release of their new album, Dodge And Burn. In this episode, guitarist Dean Fertita reveals the process of writing and recording new song, “Let Me Through”. The video, directed by Jack White, concludes with a live performance of t...

The Dead Weather have released a new video to coincide with the release of their new album, Dodge And Burn.

In this episode, guitarist Dean Fertita reveals the process of writing and recording new song, “Let Me Through”.

The video, directed by Jack White, concludes with a live performance of the track.

The band have already released two other videos showing the workings of Dodge And Burn – which you can order from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here.

Dodge And Burn features eight new songs alongside four previously released tracks that have been remixed and remastered for this album.

Open Up (That’s Enough)“, Rough Detective”, “Buzzkill(er)” and “It’s Just Too Bad” were previously available as subscription-only 7″s.

The tracklisting for The Dead Weather’s Dodge And Burn is:

I Feel Love (Every Million Miles)
Buzzkill(er)
Let Me Through
Three Dollar Hat
Lose The Right
Rough Detective
Open Up
Be Still
Mile Markers
Cop and Go
Too Bad
Impossible Winner

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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Titus Andronicus – The Most Lamentable Tragedy

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When Patrick Stickles began talking to the press in September 2013 about his band Titus Andronicus’ forthcoming fourth record, a 30-track concept album entitled The Most Lamentable Tragedy, he had just one song committed to tape, the raucous, self-lacerating “Fatal Flaw”. This would seem, on t...

When Patrick Stickles began talking to the press in September 2013 about his band Titus Andronicus’ forthcoming fourth record, a 30-track concept album entitled The Most Lamentable Tragedy, he had just one song committed to tape, the raucous, self-lacerating “Fatal Flaw”. This would seem, on the surface, to be foolhardy – we know what happens to the best-laid schemes, after all. But as Stickles had it, there was method in his madness. By talking about it, he had to follow through with this gigantic undertaking – or self-destruct in the process.

Now it has finally appeared, Titus Andronicus’ fourth album feels, if anything, more ambitious in reality than on paper. A musical tale in five acts, it follows the story of an unnamed protagonist who comes face to face with his own doppelgänger, sending him on a “transformative odyssey” and to the brink of sanity along the way. Stickles is keen to point out that The Most Lamentable Tragedy is fiction, and this certainly is a strand that runs through Titus Andronicus. Here, after all, is a group who take their name from Shakespeare’s most bloodthirsty revenge tragedy, and once titled a song “Albert Camus”. But truthfully, it is hard – and probably unhelpful – to disentangle the album’s theme from Stickles’ biography, which encompasses an ongoing struggle with manic depression, suicidal ideation, a lifetime on medication and a rare eating disorder. It’s not that Stickles isn’t a skilled enough writer to spin a brilliant story – indeed the opposite is true. More that he’s burrowed far enough down the artistic rabbit hole to a place where art and life are essentially indistinguishable.

Just as fundamental to understanding Titus Andronicus is knowing this band hail from New Jersey, and how that fact is imprinted on their DNA. Punk rock and Springsteen are the twin pillars of Stickles’ musical philosophy, and Titus Andronicus songs have that soused, celebratory feel, even when – as on “I Lost My Mind” or the good-time boogie “Lonely Boy” ¬– the written contents go to the darkest places. It’s a mark of Stickles’ voracious creative energies that all these competing currents don’t feel so much reconcilable as pure and instinctual. The result, on The Most Lamentable Tragedy, is a collison of blue-collar brawn and baroque artistry, like Springsteen And The E-Street Band covering Neutral Milk Hotel’s In The Aeroplane Over the Sea, or The Replacements with David Foster Wallace installed as their creative director.

This is undoubtedly Titus Andronicus’ best-sounding album to date. Assembled over five months at five different studios between New York and Massachusetts, each song explodes with organ, clarinet, mandolin and saxophone, with violin and viola parts arranged and played by Owen Pallett. “No Future Part IV: No Future Triumphant” and “Stranded (On My Own)” set the scene, harrowing portraits of the tormented artist that articulate the life-ebb of depression with lyrical extravagance. “Fragrance of a pungent skunk/Hung in the repugnant dungeon where I had sunk,” sings Stickles on the former, before acknowledging the line is a good one, and singing it again.

The plot gets moving on Act Two’s opener “Lookalike”, a one-minute punk thrash that sees our hero come face to face with his double (“He don’t act like me/But we look alike!”). This is the cue for a remarkable 20 minutes of music that encompasses a radically reassembled take on Daniel Johnston’s “I Had Lost My Mind”; “Fired Up”, a triumphant screed against organised religion and physicians who drug children; and “Dimed Out”, a voracious hymn to living in the red that resembles a manic episode rendered as song. (This isn’t just conjecture: one of Stickles’ touchstones here is Kay Redfield Jamison’s book Touched With Fire: Manic-Depressive Illness And The Artistic Temperament, which applies modern psychological learning to the works of Byron, Van Gogh and Virginia Woolf.)

For a 91-minute album, The Most Lamentable Tragedy feels astonishingly consistent. There is little sense of flag throughout, even as it zigs and zags madly to its creator’s whim. There is a nine-minute heavy metal headbanger called “(S)HE SAID/(S)HE SAID”, a casually tossed in cover of The Pogues’ “A Pair Of Brown Eyes”, a rousing chorus of “Auld Lang Syne” that ends on a tolling note of doom. Come the final, fifth act, the plot is coming a little unstuck, and not everything hits – in particular, the closing “Stable Boy”, a deliberately naïve cassette-recorded piece about how cats and horses don’t fear death, played by Stickles on a chord organ, makes for a shambolic climax. But by now you’ve long since given up on Stickles serving up a coherent denouement, accustomed as you are by being flung around on the storm of his moods.

You could place The Most Lamentable Tragedy into a grand lineage of concept albums about a young man pitted against a cruel world that stretches from The Who’s Tommy through Hüsker Dü’s Zen Arcade to Fucked Up’s David Comes To Life. But more than trying to slot into any existing canon, you sense that Stickles is more interested in assembling his own body of work. “No Future Part IV: No Future Triumphant” and “No Future Part V: In Endless Dreaming” continue a series that commenced on Titus Andronicus’ debut LP, while other moments hark back to earlier work – see mandolin shanty “More Perfect Union”, which revisits the themes of patriotism and liberty invoked on “A More Perfect Union” from 2010’s The Monitor.

Instead, Stickles calls The Most Lamentable Tragedy his Gesamtkunstwerk – a term coined by the German philosopher Karl Trahndorff that translates as “total artwork”, drawing on multiple mediums to create an artwork of the future. Exactly how this plays out live we shall see, but prior to the album’s release landed a 15-minute video, The Magic Morning, Stickles and band dramatising the album’s standout second act with added dance routines. It’s low-budget and playfully done – with the aid of some clever angling, Stickles plays both himself and his doppelgänger, one in sweatpants and sporting a full fisherman’s beard, the other clean-shaven and darting around in white gym kit. Still, it leads you to reflect on the album’s themes further. Is one the manic Stickles and the other the depressed Stickles? Is one the real Patrick Stickles – and if so, which?

Titus Andronicus are undoubtedly a band scholarly about their rock history. But The Most Lamentable Tragedy feels like a quintessentially modern album, a scintillating examination of mania and neurosis that uses the history of rock’n’roll as mere stage dressing for its bravura performance. Stickles is no Springsteen, writing relatable songs for the American Everyman. Instead, what he does here sounds close to unprecedented in the field of rock music: he journeys right to the heart of madness, and through artistic ambition and sheer determination, he grasps it and bends it to his will.

Q&A
Patrick Stickles
So your new album, The Most Lamentable Tragedy…

TMLT. That’s what I call it. Like “tumult”. Like the tumultuous state that all life is permanently affixed in.

So it’s intended to be an acronym?
Primarily, it’s an allusion to the Shakespeare play from which we named our band – but it also turned out to be an acronym. I didn’t know about the acronym when we had the notion it might be the title, but when I realised the acronym was there – and what the acronym said – then it was a lock. I took that as a sign from the universe, a secret message that was hidden from me, in the works of Shakespeare. If only we had the eyes to see it and the ears to hear it, because the poetry of the universe is being spoken around us all the time.

Shakespeare is an enduring influence for you.
The thing about it is… hold on a second [mutters to someone]. Sorry, that’s our new pianist Elio DeLuca, he’s just joined the band. We’re a six-piece band now. He’s played as session musician on every record we’ve done, but now he’s a full-time member of the band. We’re not kidding around anymore. He’s put his chips down. But he spent the night at my apartment, we did our first little recording last night on the radio. But anyway, what I was going to say about the Bard – your old buddy from Stratford On Avon – is that when I was a young guy, in my small town where I grew up there was a very influential drama teacher named Okey Canfield Chenoweth III. He’s still alive, but he’s super-old – he must be 85 now, I guess. This guy was a mad scientist of theatre, all the artsy-fartsy people looked up to him. He retired when I was in the fourth grade, but I was lucky enough to study under him for two years. And he basically laid the foundation for my understanding of the artist’s job. Always tell the truth, first things first. And if the truth doesn’t get you there, then you’ve got to raise the stakes. Those were his big lessons. And that was the beginning of my education as an artist. I actually went over his house with my four-track, and he performed some readings that appeared on our first two albums – on the first album he read from Camus’ The Stranger, and on the second album, our Civil War album, he read from the writings of Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President of the United States.

Why did you decide to write a rock opera?

Well, when you get right down to it, when you call an album a rock opera, that’s the first indication this isn’t just a regular run-of-the-mill record to put on while you’re making dinner. There are a lot of elevator music bands out there today making our money, and that’s what a lot of people look for in music – an opiate you can use to tune out at the end of a long and humiliating day. I want it to be abundantly clear to even the most casual observer that we have no interest in entering ourselves into that contest. We are not in competition with those bands who treat music as a fucking tranquiliser, or for people to put on like some kind of status symbol – collecting these bands like Pokémon, or some fucking charm bracelet, you know? We’re trying to do everything we can to alienate ourselves from that whole thing. We went out of our way to make a record that wouldn’t fit into any narrative, to any zeitgeist – that would create its own zeitgeist. To us, this is heaven – and heaven is a place on earth, right? So that’s one part of it. The whole “fuck everybody” part. We’re not going to be a pawn in anyone’s game.

Describing The Most Lamentable Tragedy, you invoke the notion of a Gesamtkunstwerk, or “total artwork”. What does that say about what you’re trying to achieve?
Well, even though we work in a particular idiom, rock’n’roll in this case, that’s not the length or width of our interests. We are interested in other things. And as a vocalist who, in my more pretentious moments, talks of what I do in literary terms, I’m trying to curate a certain emotional experience for the listener. When you put the album on, I want you to surrender – in the same way that you might to a great movie, or a book. The way that I am overjoyed to surrender to Lars Von Trier, or Louis CK, or Alan Moore. Anyone who is fearless, or stretching the boundaries of the field that they are working in. I love “Tutti Frutti” and fucking “Louie Louie”, and you’d better believe at the end of “Louie Louie” I’m fucking grateful. But it’s not the same experience you get when you’re immersed in a great book, or the feeling you get when you’ve seen a great movie and it’s shaken up your interior. They light a spark in your brain. I’m a musician and we’re a fucking rock’n’roll band, and that’s the number one thing. But at the same time I still want to do to people what the artists I just described did to me. Artists that wanted to take us on a ride. Whatever the hell we’re doing, whatever the format is – whether it’s a rock album, movie, TV sitcom – it’s all just to get the audience member to a certain emotional point, or lead them on an emotional journey.
INTERVIEW: LOUIS PATTISON

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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The Velvet Underground to release The Complete Matrix Tapes

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The Velvet Underground – The Complete Matrix Tapes, is a four-CD, 42-track box due for release on November 20 by Polydor/Universal Music Catalogue(UMC). The material was recorded on November 26 and 27, 1969 at The Matrix club in North Beach, San Francisco, during the band's lengthy residency at t...

The Velvet Underground – The Complete Matrix Tapes, is a four-CD, 42-track box due for release on November 20 by Polydor/Universal Music Catalogue(UMC).

The material was recorded on November 26 and 27, 1969 at The Matrix club in North Beach, San Francisco, during the band’s lengthy residency at the club.

The band features Lou Reed, Sterling Morrison, Maureen Tucker and Doug Yule.

Some versions of these performances were first issued in 1974 by Mercury Records as part of a double LP, 1969: The Velvet Underground Live, others appeared on The Quine Tapes – cassette recordings made by future Lou Reed guitarist, Bob Quine – while 18 tracks featured on the Super Deluxe Edition of the Velvets’ third album, released last year.

The Complete Matrix Tapes features 42 recordings that have been mixed down directly from the original in-house multi-tracks, including nine previously unreleased performances, marking the first time all the available tapes will be released commercially.

Set One includes previously unreleased versions of “Some Kinda Love” and “Sweet Jane”, while Set Two’s rarities include performances of “There She Goes Again”, “After Hours” and “We’re Gonna Have a Real Good Time Together”.

Rare live takes of “Venus in Furs” (one on Set One, the other Set Two) and Set One’s “The Black Angel’s Death Song” are also notable for their inclusion here.

Track Listing:

SET ONE
1. I’M WAITING FOR THE MAN (Version 1) (14:06) ***
2. WHAT GOES ON (Version 1) (8:58) **
3. SOME KINDA LOVE (Version 1) (4:59) *
4. HEROIN (Version 1) (8:13) ***
5. THE BLACK ANGEL’S DEATH SONG (6:20) ***
6. VENUS IN FURS (Version 1) (4:38) +
7. THERE SHE GOES AGAIN (Version 1) (3:08) +
8. WE’RE GONNA HAVE A REAL GOOD TIME TOGETHER (Version 1) (3:16) **
9. OVER YOU (Version 1) (2:24) **
10. SWEET JANE (Version 1) (5:12) *
11. PALE BLUE EYES (6:08) +
12. AFTER HOURS (Version 1) (2:58) +

SET TWO
1. I’M WAITING FOR THE MAN (Version 2) (6:38) **
2. VENUS IN FURS (Version 2) (5:16) ***
3. I CAN’T STAND IT (Version 1) (7:54) **
4. THERE SHE GOES AGAIN (Version 2) (2:54) *
5. SOME KINDA LOVE (Version 2) (4:12) + / **
6. OVER YOU (Version 2) (3:07) +
7. AFTER HOURS (Version 2) (2:37) *
8. WE’RE GONNA HAVE A REAL GOOD TIME TOGETHER (Version 2) (3:42) *
9. SWEET BONNIE BROWN/TOO MUCH (7:54) **
10. HEROIN (Version 2) (10:08) **
11. WHITE LIGHT/WHITE HEAT (Version 1) (9:30) ***
12. I’M SET FREE (4.48) +

SET THREE
1. WE’RE GONNA HAVE A REAL GOOD TIME TOGETHER (Version 3) (3:18) *
2. SOME KINDA LOVE (Version 3) (4:40) *
3. THERE SHE GOES AGAIN (Version 3) (3:02) *
4. HEROIN (Version 3) (8:34) **
5. OCEAN (11:03) **
6. SISTER RAY (37.08) + / ***

SET FOUR
1. I’M WAITING FOR THE MAN (Version 3) (5:31) +
2. WHAT GOES ON (Version 2) (4:34) +
3. SOME KINDA LOVE (Version 4) (4:46) *
4. WE’RE GONNA HAVE A REAL GOOD TIME TOGETHER (Version 4) (3:26) +
5. BEGINNING TO SEE THE LIGHT (5:42) + / **
6. LISA SAYS (6:05) + / **
7. NEW AGE (6:41) **
8. ROCK AND ROLL (6.58) + / ** / ***
9. I CAN’T STAND IT (Version 2) (6:54) +
10. HEROIN (Version 4) (8:18) +
11. WHITE LIGHT/WHITE HEAT (Version 2) (8:45) + / **
12. SWEET JANE (Version 2) (4:20) + / **

All mixes previously unreleased, except +
+ appears on The Velvet Underground (3rd album) Super Deluxe Edition
* previously unreleased performance
** performance appears on 1969: The Velvet Underground Live
*** performance appears on The Quine Tapes Box Set

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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Yo La Tengo – Stuff Like That There

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Three-quarters of the way through one of their finest albums, 1997’s I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One, Yo La Tengo cut from the breezy bossa-nova of “Center Of Gravity” and move straight into “Spec Bebob”, a borderline-unlistenable 10-minute jam between drums and distorted organ. It’s...

Three-quarters of the way through one of their finest albums, 1997’s I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One, Yo La Tengo cut from the breezy bossa-nova of “Center Of Gravity” and move straight into “Spec Bebob”, a borderline-unlistenable 10-minute jam between drums and distorted organ. It’s a typical spin between extremes for a group who have often found it hard to keep things simple.

So far, the only moment on record where they’ve resisted the urge to demonstrate their full – and admittedly thrilling – range is 1990’s Fakebook, their mainly acoustic fourth album. With Georgia Hubley and Ira Kaplan joined by Dave Schramm on electric guitar and Al Greller on double bass, the record is still a low-key delight, a fan favourite more intimate and warm than anything else the group have produced.

Developed by Kaplan and Hubley during stripped-down radio sessions promoting the previous year’s President Yo La Tengo album, Fakebook included adept covers of songs by the likes of Cat Stevens, John Cale and The Kinks, reworked versions of older YLT songs such as “Barnaby, Hardly Working” and a handful of brand new tracks, including the effortless, sublime opener “Can’t Forget”. A follow-up to the album, then – a Fakebook 2, if you like – is a surprising, though very welcome move for Yo La Tengo to make 25 years later.

Stuff Like That There mimics its forebear in nearly every way, welcoming back Dave Schramm on guitar, though this time alongside longtime YLT bassist James McNew. Throughout, Schramm’s playing is a delight, his electric guitar swathed in delay and tremolo on “Deeper Into Movies”, and his slide achingly quicksilver on a cover of Hank Williams’ “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry”.

The gorgeous version of Great Plains’ “Before We Stopped To Think”, sung by Kaplan, is a sure high-point, but the most affecting, heartbreaking songs on Stuff are all sung by Hubley, whose voice seems to have grown richer and more melancholy with each passing year of the last quarter-century. On the evidence of her performances here on Darlene McCrea’s country ballad “My Heart’s Not In It”, Antietam’s stately “Naples” and especially “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry”, she’s stealthily become one of America’s most quietly impressive vocalists. A hushed take on “Deeper Into Movies”, originally a fuzzy highlight of I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One, even utilises the classic Yo La Tengo trick of having Kaplan and Hubley harmonise, except with the guitarist taking the higher part and Hubley the lower.

Of the two new songs, “Rickety” is almost acoustic motorik – on a more orthodox Yo La Tengo album, it would perhaps end up as a close relation of Summer Sun’s “Little Eyes” – while “Awhileaway” is a pretty, waltzing ballad that would have sat well on 2000’s tender And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside Out.

Not all of the songs work, however – the band’s take on The Cure’s “Friday I’m In Love” sticks out as a little too predictable and rushed among its more subtle neighbours. Indeed, as seems to be the case with most sequels, Stuff Like That There can’t quite match up to Fakebook. For all the album’s strengths, something – novelty, most likely – is often lost when a trick is repeated, no matter how successful it was the first time around.

Yet these are minor gripes – on the majority of Stuff Like That There, Yo La Tengo are able to recapture the magic of those sessions a quarter of a century ago, and introduce us to some more underrated classics. Alone with its stylistic predecessor in their catalogue, Stuff is a comforting listen, startlingly consistent in mood and featuring some of Yo La Tengo’s – and especially Georgia Hubley’s – most touching moments. Frankly, it would be churlish to refuse a second helping.

Q&A
Ira Kaplan
Why did you decide to revisit Fakebook as a concept after 25 years?

We often play acoustically and we do lots of covers anyway, so I think we’d circled around [the idea] and gotten kind of near it almost constantly. Then the idea came up and it felt right. We didn’t really question it much more deeply than that. But I think for a while we felt the need to establish that we were not that band, that even when we made Fakebook that was a side of us but not the whole band. Even at the time, Fakebook wasn’t a plan or a strategy, it just seemed to make sense in the moment.

How did you go about choosing the covers?
There’s a number that we have done fairly steadily over the years, then once we knew this was what we were gonna do, a bunch of new ideas just flooded into us – The Parliaments song, the Darlene McCrea song… We also did a Sun City Girls song that didn’t end up on the record.

Georgia’s voice is getting richer as time goes on.
Very quickly it became apparent to all of us that we wanted her to sing more on this record than she’s ever sung. I mean, she’s definitely carrying the singing. With something like “Naples”, she did more than in the past to make sure she was singing in a key that she felt comfortable in – we do it in a different key than Antietam did. In the first song, when I hear her sing “my heart’s not in it”, my heart just melts.
INTERVIEW: TOM PINNOCK

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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

The story behind Bob Dylan’s Bringing It All Back Home cover revealed!

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The sleeve art for Bob Dylan's Bringing It All Back Home is the subject of a new documentary, which you can watch below. The documentary has been made by PopSpots, who explore locations where interesting events in the history of Pop Culture took place; this new film anticipates the release of Dylan...

The sleeve art for Bob Dylan‘s Bringing It All Back Home is the subject of a new documentary, which you can watch below.

The documentary has been made by PopSpots, who explore locations where interesting events in the history of Pop Culture took place; this new film anticipates the release of Dylan’s upcoming The Cutting Edge 1965–1966: The Bootleg Series Vol. 12, which contains material from the album.

The documentary features an interview with photographer Daniel Kramer, who shot the sleeve at the house of Albert Grossman, Dylan’s manager.

Rolling Stone reports that this documentary will be followed by films focussing on the artwork for the other albums included in this latest installment of Dylan’s Bootleg series – Highway 61 Revisited and Blonde On Blonde.

The deluxe six-CD anthology The Cutting Edge 1965–1966: The Bootleg Series Vol. 12 – which can be pre-ordered from Amazon.co.uk by clicking here – will be released by Columbia Records/Legacy Recordings on November 6, and features previously unheard songs, outtakes, rehearsal tracks and alternate versions from the sessions. All the recordings have been mixed from the original studio tracking tapes. The set includes an annotated book featuring rare and previously unseen photographs, memorabilia and new essays written by Bill Flanagan and Sean Wilentz.

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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Peter Buck announces new album featuring Jeff Tweedy and Krist Novoselic

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Peter Buck has announced a new solo album, Warzone Earth. The album will be released on vinyl on October 16 by Little Axe Records. According to a report on Stereogum, guests on the album include Jeff Tweedy, Krist Novoselic, Scott McCaughey, Bill Rieflin, Kurt Bloch, Chris Slusarenko, Annalisa Tor...

Peter Buck has announced a new solo album, Warzone Earth.

The album will be released on vinyl on October 16 by Little Axe Records.

According to a report on Stereogum, guests on the album include Jeff Tweedy, Krist Novoselic, Scott McCaughey, Bill Rieflin, Kurt Bloch, Chris Slusarenko, Annalisa Tornfelt, Chloe Johnson and Kristin Tornfelt.

Buck announced the album on REM’s website.

“I’ve just had an exciting couple of weeks working with Tucker Martine on the new record by The Jayhawks which is a stunning tour de force. I think it will blow a lot of minds. I spent yesterday with my good friend Mike, who came to town to add some Millsian glamour to the proceedings. And I am pleased to announce this morning my new magnum opus Warzone Earth is now available. The record features two alternate covers by the folk art legend Mingering Mike. I never thought I’d look so good in tights!

“All kidding aside, it’s the best solo record I have made, and I’m excited for it to be out in the world. It’s available through littleaxerecords.com who distributes the record. It should also be available in all the cool independent record stores in your neighborhood, once again, vinyl only, but feel free to make a cassette for your friends.”

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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Tom Waits on the mysteries of Stonehenge and laughing at funerals

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A vintage interview with Tom Waits has been animated by PBS as part of their ongoing Blank On Blank series. The PBS’ Blank On Blank series has previously featured animated archival interviews with Joni Mitchell, Lou Reed, John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Elliott Smith and Jim Morrison. The interview wi...

A vintage interview with Tom Waits has been animated by PBS as part of their ongoing Blank On Blank series.

The PBS’ Blank On Blank series has previously featured animated archival interviews with Joni Mitchell, Lou Reed, John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Elliott Smith and Jim Morrison.

The interview with Waits took place in 1988, around the release of his Big Time album. The interview was conducted for Melody Maker by Chris Roberts, a former Uncut writer.

In the interview, Waits discusses subjects ranging from Stonehenge to showbusiness and laughing at funerals.

“I’ve never been to Stonehenge,” he admits. “There are moles in Stonehenge… the most elaborate systems of mole catacombs is in Stonehenge. There are more moles at Stonehenge than there are anywhere in the world. In the community, they reward moles that have the courage to tunnel beneath great rivers, it takes an understanding of physics and engineering, that type of thing.”

On showbusiness, he said: “When I first got into show business, my stepfather bought me a wild shirt, which said more about what he thought show business was than what I thought it was. It was like this lime green shirt, with like seven different kinds of fabrics and textures on it, with wooden buttons, like a Hawaiian nightmare.

“He gave it to me, he was very serious when he gave it to me, it was like he was giving me a sword to go out into the world of show business, and ‘kill some dragons, pal, and bring us back the skins.’ And I looked at that shirt and I went ‘goddamn.’”

On laughing at funerals, Waits admitted, “I was always laughing in church. There’s nothing that makes me laugh more than being in the situation where you’re not supposed to laugh. Funerals. People crying. Breaking down. Telling you their life. I’m the worst. I’m the worst at that.”

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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Budget supermarket chain launches new music streaming service…

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Budget supermarket chain Aldi have teamed up with Napster to launch their own music streaming service. Music Week reports that users will have access to Napster's catalogue for €7.99 per month, €2 cheapper than Napster itself. At the moment the service - Aldi Life Musik - is only available in ...

Budget supermarket chain Aldi have teamed up with Napster to launch their own music streaming service.

Music Week reports that users will have access to Napster’s catalogue for €7.99 per month, €2 cheapper than Napster itself.

At the moment the service – Aldi Life Musik – is only available in Aldi’s native Germany.

It’s not yet confirmed whether this service will be available in the UK.

The service will be available in apps for Android, iOS, Windows and desktops, and will include access to 4,000 radio stations as well as 10,000 audiobooks.

Recent statistics from Germany’s Federal Music Industry Association showed a 87 per cent increase in online streaming from the previous year. Streaming revenue now accounts for 12.8 per cent of all music sales in the country.

“Digital business is the driving force in the German market,” said Philip Ginthör, CEO Sony Music GSA. “The music industry will achieve sustainable growth if we continue to focus on investing in talent and fair digital revenue models.”

BVMI Managing Director Dr Florian Drücke told Billboard of the news, “The 87 percent increase in music streaming even exceeds the forecast contained in the streaming study we published back in March. With regard to current discussions about copyright amendments, it’s important we don’t forget that the digital licensing business needs reliable conditions to function effectively, and this requires involving creatives and their partners in the revenues generated by the platforms to the appropriate degree.”

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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Watch Jenny Lewis and St Vincent cover “Groove Is In The Heart”

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Jenny Lewis performed at the Trans-Pecos Music Festival of Music and Love in Marfa, Texas last week. During the course of her set, Consequence Of Sound reports, she was joined by special guest, St Vincent's Annie Clark. The pair performed a new Jenny Lewis song, “Girl On Girl” (with Clark on g...

Jenny Lewis performed at the Trans-Pecos Music Festival of Music and Love in Marfa, Texas last week.

During the course of her set, Consequence Of Sound reports, she was joined by special guest, St Vincent‘s Annie Clark.

The pair performed a new Jenny Lewis song, “Girl On Girl” (with Clark on guitar), while Clarke also played drums on “Just One of the Guys”, fromm Lewis’ album The Voyager and her own “Cheerleader”.

They also covered Deee-Lite’s “Groove Is in the Heart” with Austin-based musician, David Garza.

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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Beck, Cat Power, Jakob Dylan and more cover Sixties’ folk rock classics for tribute album and concert

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Beck, Cat Power, Jakob Dylan and Fiona Apple are among the artists taking part in Echoes In The Canyon, a special event designed to mark the 50th anniversary of the birth of Southern Californian folk rock. Pitchfork reports that Echoes In The Canyon will take place in Los Angeles' Orpheum Theatre o...

Beck, Cat Power, Jakob Dylan and Fiona Apple are among the artists taking part in Echoes In The Canyon, a special event designed to mark the 50th anniversary of the birth of Southern Californian folk rock.

Pitchfork reports that Echoes In The Canyon will take place in Los Angeles’ Orpheum Theatre on October 12.

The show will see contemporary artists covering songs by the Beach Boys, the Byrds, the Mamas & the Papas, the Turtles, the Association, Buffalo Springfield and more.

The concert will be followed by a covers album – which is due to be released next year – which will featuring the artists who will appear at the event.

Below, you can hear Cat Power and Jakob Dylan cover the Turtles’ “You Showed Me“, which was written by the Byrds’ Gene Clark and Roger McGuinn.

https://soundcloud.com/echointhecanyon/you-showed-me-feat-jakob-dylan-cat-power

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 November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Beach House – Depression Cherry

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At no point on Beach House’s last two albums, Teen Dream (2010) and Bloom (2012), do Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally overcomplicate matters – for instance, none of the songs require the services of a symphony orchestra or a guest appearance by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. And yet, as their pop...

At no point on Beach House’s last two albums, Teen Dream (2010) and Bloom (2012), do Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally overcomplicate matters – for instance, none of the songs require the services of a symphony orchestra or a guest appearance by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.

And yet, as their popularity grew with those albums, the Baltimore duo sometimes seemed to struggle to preserve the feeling of intimacy that was so enchanting on their self-titled 2006 debut and its follow-up, 2008’s Devotion. Their beguiling, languid dream-pop, born out of wee-hours bedroom recording, by necessity swelled into something that was large enough to fill concert halls and festival fields; a journey that took Beach House and its music to “a place farther from our natural tendencies”, as the two have collectively admitted.

With fifth album Depression Cherry, then, they head back to square one, stripping away the layers of guitars, keyboards, effects and vocals that made up Bloom’s wall of sound. In their place comes simpler, sparer arrangements and a whole lot more room to breathe. On the album’s most spectral moments, Legrand doesn’t seem to sing the songs so much as exhale them. With its spoken intro and signature coo, the mesmerising “PPP” even evokes the narcoleptic girl-group pop of Phil Spector’s eeriest early hit, the Paris Sisters’ “I Love How You Love Me”.

Crucially, this simplification process has meant dusting off the drum machines that supplied the rudimentary rhythms on their early works. The songs on Depression Cherry are very much designed to be about everything but the beat, which is a good thing given the skeletal click-track-like template underpinning the songs. It might seem unlikely that this kind of no-frills structural support would be sufficient for something as sumptuous as “Beyond Love”, but it in fact enhances the song’s other parts. And since the percussive and rhythmic components get so much less emphasis than they do on the majority of contemporary music, the boldest songs gain their force from other elements, like Scally’s thicket of fuzz guitar in “Sparks” or the cascading keyboard notes in “Space Song”.

Of course, this sort of well-intentioned return-to-first-principles move is often stymied by the fact that it’s not so easy to forget all the lessons and habits that have been learned in the interim. Thankfully, it’s to Depression Cherry’s great advantage that Legrand and Scally are able to incorporate Bloom’s level of songwriting sophistication and strong understanding of dynamics into their original, sparser template. As a result, by reducing the scope and rediscovering the value of nuance, Beach House end up sounding bigger and better than ever before.

Nowhere is this clearer than in the songs that bookend the album. In “Levitation”, the looping swirls of guitar and endlessly sustained organ notes foster an intoxicating feeling of suspension. Yet whereas some of the duo’s other songs succumb to inertia, this one keeps surging forward. Legrand’s fragmentary lyrics ponder the fleeting nature of even our most ardent passions, yet as forlorn as her voice can sound, she once again emphasises the need to celebrate the moments at hand. “There is no right time,” she sings.

What with that carpe-diem attitude, a less sensitive group may very well have been tempted to enlist a children’s choir for “Days Of Candy”, a ghostly closer that suggests what The Beach Boys’ “Our Prayer” might have sounded like if Cocteau Twins had covered it on Treasure. Again, the canny arrangement of carefully selected elements – multi-tracked voices, plaintive piano notes, a guitar filigree and churchy organ chords – creates an unexpected grandeur. There’s also a feeling of delicacy, something that could have easily been overwhelmed had there been a conventional amount of low-end ballast. However chintzy it may initially seem, the Bontempi-style rhythm track is exactly what’s needed.

And, as Legrand murmurs in the song’s climactic stages, “Just like that, it’s gone.” Together with her Beach House partner, she’s always excelled at holding onto those temporary moments of transcendence and preserving them in amber. But rarely before have the pair achieved that with this much grace and finesse.

SLEEVENOTES
Recorded at: Studio In The Country in Bogalusa, Louisiana
Produced by: Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally with Chris Coady
Personnel: Victoria Legrand (vocals, keyboards, organ, piano), Alex Scally (guitars, bass, keyboards, organ, piano)

Q&A
Alex Scally
Why the decision to pare down the Beach House sound and get back to the drum machines?

It was a really natural process for us – it wasn’t necessarily so much about intellectual decisions. We were yearning to put a certain level of communication and depth into the music. Drums make everybody turn up and I think sometimes turning up leads to a certain feeling and that feeling is not necessarily the right feeling. Victoria and I can feel like we can’t be ourselves if there are drums in the room because it makes you sing hard and you don’t hear the subtlety of a guitar part – you have to play something simpler and clearer because there’s all this noise.

Were you also curious about what these rudimentary rhythm tracks would create?
Drums are such a complicated thing so this has been a huge thought for us. I was listening to the Sly And The Family Stone’s There’s A Riot Goin’ On. Funk and soul have always been rooted in the drums, but he was like, “I don’t want drums – I want this drum machine.” There’s this other thing that’s really mystical that the drum machine creates, and it’s all over that record.

So you weren’t necessarily trying to escape the tyranny of all that is big and beaty in modern music?
I definitely don’t think we are a reaction to anything today. But maybe it is because this weird sound of computer quantisation is so domineering. Everything gets made on this crazy grid so you feel that grid constantly when you hear music on the radio. Then again, I think that’s what people like now. I remember we were at this show a couple years ago and there was this band playing and it was all electronic – you could really feel that grid. The whole crowd was pulsing and excited. Then the next band was this rock band with just guitar and drums and it was all loose and baggy and human and everyone just sat down! I thought, “Damn, these are the times we’re in.”
INTERVIEW: JASON ANDERSON

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

Meanwhile, the November 2015 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – featuring Rod Stewart, Joanna Newsom, Julian Cope, Otis Redding, John Grant, The Doors, Harmonia, Linda Ronstadt, Dave Gahan, John Cooper Clarke and more.

Uncut: the spiritual home of great rock music.

Reviewed! Dave Heumann, GospelbeacH, Duane Pitre, Ballaké Sissoko/Vincent Segal

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One band that have kept me pretty well sustained these past few years have been Baltimore's Arbouretum, along with frontman Dave Heumann's auxiliary projects like Human Bell and Coil Sea. Among a bunch of fine records being released in the next few weeks, there's "Here In The Deep", ostensibly Heuma...

One band that have kept me pretty well sustained these past few years have been Baltimore’s Arbouretum, along with frontman Dave Heumann’s auxiliary projects like Human Bell and Coil Sea. Among a bunch of fine records being released in the next few weeks, there’s “Here In The Deep”, ostensibly Heumann’s first solo album.

For all their heavy psychedelic groupthink, Arbouretum have often looked from a distance like a vehicle for Heumann’s own vision, and the correlation between
“Here In The Deep” and what has preceded it implicitly confirms as much. Arbouretum’s thicker drones are sometimes replaced by more dappled textures that privilege the folk-rock formalism that has long underpinned much of Heumann’s music, with the lovely “Ides Of Summer” chiming in a way reminiscent of REM’s “Green Grow The Rushes”.

An incantatory churn through the traditional “Greenwood Side”, though, would’ve sat neatly enough on Arbouretum’s last set, “Coming Out Of The Fog” (2013). And it’s fitting that the album pivots on a ruminative jam, “Ends Of The Earth”, on which Heumann, in elevated Richard Thompson-esque form, is joined by his regular bandmates.

Moving on, Brent Rademaker’s diligent preservation of a certain LA country-rock sound has seen him pilot some handy groups, notably The Beachwood Sparks. The typographically awkward GospelbeacH is Rademaker’s latest band, and one which stays true to the aesthetic that’s sustained him for around two decades. Gram love proliferates, then, along with a hint of early ’70s Grateful Dead – due, perhaps, to the presence of guitarist Neal Casal (away from the Chris Robinson Brotherhood, he composed interval music for the Dead’s recent farewell gigs).

Casal’s virtuosity also means that while GospelbeacH’s California good vibes may sometimes err on cheesiness, they avoid the indie spindliness of some Rademaker projects; the hectic “Nashville West”-style fluency of “Mick Jones” being an outstanding case in point.

I’ve been listening to a fair bit of drone of late, especially when I get into the office early. One favourite has been Byron Westbrook’s “Precipice”, on the Root Strata label, but I keep coming back to a tremendous new album on Important by New Orleans’ Duane Pitre. Pitre’s recent run of albums – “Feel Free” (2012), “Bridges” (2013) and now “Bayou Electric” – have pushed him discreetly to the forefront of contemporary drone music.

If that genre often seems chilly and academic, Pitre’s slow and graceful arcs have substantially more emotional heft. “Bayou Electric”, in particular, is earthed in place and memory, its sustained organ and string tones augmented by field recordings made on long-held family land in Louisiana, as massed crickets resonate down the generations. The obligatory Eno comparison would be to “Apollo: Atmospheres And Soundtracks”, but maybe think of this is an accidental adjunct to the “Ambient” series: not “Music For Airports”, but “Music For Bayous”.

Finally this week, nine heavenly face-offs between kora and cello. Over the past few years, the kora has found a home in western salons as well as world music festivals, its serene and rarefied tone given a classical gloss on albums like Toumani Diabaté’s “Mandé Variations”. Ballaké Sissoko and Vincent Segal’s artfully-titled “Chamber Music” (2009) exploited that connection, pitting the Malian kora master and French cellist in a series of agile duets. “Musique De Nuit” is a quietly ravishing follow-up, recorded in part on Sissoko’s Bamako rooftop; distant city hum can sometimes be detected beneath the pair’s refined jousting. Nimble takes on Malian party music (“Super Etoile”) are inventive additions. Mostly, though, an airy grace predominates, pitching the duo as baroque successors to the seminal Toumani Diabaté/Ali Farka Touré hook-up.

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Peter Cook and Dudley Moore’s Derek and Clive albums reassessed…

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The enduring image of Peter Cook and Dudley Moore comes from a 1965 sketch routinely trotted out for best of clips shows on TV. It’s the duo in an art gallery: “The sign of a good painting with their backs towards you is if the bottoms follow you around the room.” The sketch underscores the br...

The enduring image of Peter Cook and Dudley Moore comes from a 1965 sketch routinely trotted out for best of clips shows on TV. It’s the duo in an art gallery: “The sign of a good painting with their backs towards you is if the bottoms follow you around the room.” The sketch underscores the brilliance of Cook and Moore’s partnership. Upper-class versus working-class; tall versus short; deadpan versus clowning. But by the time they came to create Derek and Clive, almost a decade later, their careers were diverging. There were solo ventures (Cook’s short-lived chat show Where Do I Sit? and The Rise And Rise Of Michael Rimmer; Moore’s 30 Is a Dangerous Age, Cynthia); while Cook’s alcoholism was beginning to nag at their relationship.

At first, Derek (Moore) and Clive (Cook) gave the two men a chance to let off steam in an informal environment. Between performances of their 1973 Broadway revue Beyond The Fridge, they convened at Bell Sound Studios, the Bottom Line in Greenwich Village and with engineer Eddie Kramer at Electric Lady studios on Chris Blackwell’s ticket. Essentially an update of their Pete and Dud characters, Derek and Clive bypassed the wit of their early collaborations in favour of lots of swearing.

Released between 1976 and 1978, the three Derek and Clive studio albums – included here with a ‘greatest hits’ set and a disc of rarities – map the degeneration of Cook and Moore’s professional relationship. It begins as sweary bants between pals over drinks – subjects include retrieving lobsters from Jayne Manfield’s rectum, Winston Churchill’s phlegm, masturbation, sodomy and cottaging. Jokes pivot round Moore’s delivery of the phrase “willy winkie wanky” or hearing Cook tell a yarn involving a “fucking gorilla fucking the arse off my fucking wife”. Blackwell circulated the tapes among his industry pals, engendering a formal release three years later. The Director of Public Prosecution rejected complaints from four police forces who wanted the comics prosecuted for obscenity. Buoyed by the controversy, Cook’s biographer Harry Thompson notes …(Live) sold 100,000 copies.

After the success of …(Live), Cook and Moore were offered a new film project, The Hound Of The Baskervilles, directed by Warhol protégé Paul Morrissey. The film failed; and the pair’s subsequent records develop an increasingly sour tone as they turn their frustrations inward towards each other. As Cook wryly admitted, Come Again is “a stream of obscenities about unpleasant subjects”. Released in 1977 on Virgin, …Come Again outflanked punk in its capacity to shock. Take, for instance, Cook serenading Moore with “My old man’s a dustman, he’s got cancer too/Silly fucking arsehole, he’s got it up the flue”, knowing that his partner had recently lost his own father due to the disease. Elsewhere, Moore considers raping the victims of road traffic accidents and later discusses cutting out his wife’s hymen with an electric carving knife.

Recorded in September 1978, just as Moore’s film career was beginning to take off (10 was barely a year away), Ad Nauseam is even further out there. In one sketch, Cook talks about repeatedly kicking his wife in the vagina. Later, he discusses masturbating over images of the late Pope; another sketch is simply called “Rape, Death And Paralysis”. At one point during the film of the Ad Nauseam sessions, Derek & Clive Get The Horn, Cook’s vitriol becomes unbearable – “Your mother thinks very simply that you’re a cunt” – and Moore temporarily walks out. It is Let It Be without the tunes.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17-IDPQEqaw

Critically, while …(Live) was never intended to be heard in public, both …Come Again and Ad Nauseam were recorded for commercial release. As much as it’s possible to interpet the first record as simply the two men gamely trying to out-gross each other as much as possible, the second and third Derek and Clive records are remarkable for their sustained levels of cruelty: the awful misanthropic bleakness of the thing. They are comedy records that aren’t funny, principally. But what they reveal of the bizarre, unraveling relationship between the two comedians is fascinating; and at the very least means they shouldn’t be overlooked.

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

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Hear Brian Eno deliver the fifth annual John Peel lecture

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Brian Eno delivered this year's John Peel lecture last night [September 27], speaking at length on the subject of "the ecology of culture." Eno's speech can be heard via BBC 6Music by clicking here. The inaugural lecture was given by Pete Townshend in 2011, with Billy Bragg, Iggy Pop and Charlotte...

Brian Eno delivered this year’s John Peel lecture last night [September 27], speaking at length on the subject of “the ecology of culture.”

Eno’s speech can be heard via BBC 6Music by clicking here.

The inaugural lecture was given by Pete Townshend in 2011, with Billy Bragg, Iggy Pop and Charlotte Church following in subsequent years.

Prior to the talk, the BBC claimed Eno would “show how cultural processes confer essential and important benefits on society”.

Eno has previously said that Peel “had a profound effect on my musical life and indeed my becoming a musician at all”. He added: “His career as a non-musician who altered the course of music has been an inspiration to me and forms the basis of this talk.”

Eno’s lecture took place during the Radio Academy’s Radio Festival at the British Library in London. The speech was broadcast on both BBC 6 Music and BBC Four.

During his speech, The Guardian reports that Eno said art and culture offered “a safe place for you to have quite extreme and rather dangerous feelings”. He said the reason people embraced it was because they knew they could “switch if off”, so art had a role as a “simulator” in people’s lives.

Eno said: “I think we need to rethink how we talk about culture, rethink what we think it does for us, and what it actually is. We have a complete confusion about that. It’s very interesting.”

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Spacemen 3 soundtrack trip sequence in The Simpsons

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Spacemen 3's track "Big City (Everybody I Know Can be Found Here)" appeared in The Simpsons. The Wall Street Journal reports that the song was used to soundtrack a trip sequence. In the epsiode - the first in the show's 27th season, which aired in America last night [September 27] - Homer and Marg...

Spacemen 3‘s track “Big City (Everybody I Know Can be Found Here)” appeared in The Simpsons.

The Wall Street Journal reports that the song was used to soundtrack a trip sequence.

In the epsiode – the first in the show’s 27th season, which aired in America last night [September 27] – Homer and Marge go through a trial separation, with Homer finding a new love interest in Candace, a pharmacist voiced by Girls’ star, Lena Dunham.

Halfway through the episode, Candice and Homer mix alcohol with prescription drugs, leading to Homer’s mind-altering experience.

“Everything they take is a prescription drug but not used in the way it’s supposed to,” says “Simpsons” showrunner Al Jean. “[The song] seemed really appropriate.”

According to the band’s Sonic Boom [aka Pete Kember], requests for Spacemen 3 tunes come in fairly steadily, but are frequently turned down.

“When I saw the script I was psyched,” Kember told WSJ. “I couldn’t imagine a sweeter use of that track in this context, and particularly in context of a “trip” scene. [That is] something that’s usually for me a high point of The Simpsons oeuvre. I imagine it is what people in bands secretly, or openly, dream of. Animation is so useful for these sort of stretches of reality.”

The song was chosen by writer J. Stewart Burns. “I would’ve expected this to at some point in the rewriting process somebody would have said “Oh what’s this song?,’” he told the WSJ. “There are safer choices. I was a little surprised that no one ever yanked this one.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tMqpxHY2nFs

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Pere Ubu – Elitism For The People 1975 – 1978

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Pere Ubu co-founder Peter Laughner died of chronic pancreatitis, brought on by alcoholism, on June 22, 1977. The golden boy of the fertile Cleveland underground was 24. The response from the band’s lynchpin, David Thomas, who had parted ways with the charismatic Creem magazine stringer a year earl...

Pere Ubu co-founder Peter Laughner died of chronic pancreatitis, brought on by alcoholism, on June 22, 1977. The golden boy of the fertile Cleveland underground was 24. The response from the band’s lynchpin, David Thomas, who had parted ways with the charismatic Creem magazine stringer a year earlier, has lost none of its myth-shattering force.

“What a world, what a world, what a big world, but a world to be drowned in,” he burbles atonally on “Humor Me“, eyeballs rolling at his old cohort’s dumb determination to become the first terminal Lou Reed wannabe. Morose resignation gives way to uncomprehending, sardonic fury. “It’s just a joke, man.”

Laughner’s early demise, and the negative energy generated by the two frighteningly precocious singles he helped Thomas to create – 1975’s double-A-side kamikaze raid “30 Seconds Over Tokyo”/”Heart Of Darkness” and 1976’s Oedipal hate binge “Final Solution” – felt-tipped dark shadows over everything the band created. This superbly retooled box, compiling Ubu’s independent singles, their first two albums proper, and a 1978 New York live set – tells a different and more inspiring story.

Middle-class aesthetes, itching to make the next post-Velvet Underground leap forward, Pere Ubu’s combination of gut-chugging post-Stooges rock and electronic noises evolved from a now-legendary non-starter band, Rocket From The Tombs, who essentially split in two. Cheetah Chrome and Johnny Mandansky left for New York to found punk schlockers the Dead Boys, while Thomas and Laughner stayed in Cleveland, bent on something more idiosyncratic.

The seven-inches they self-released on Thomas’ Hearpen label and 1978’s The Modern Dance created a dirty-bomb formula; a chassis of Nuggets garage rock, plastered with horn honks and machine chatter generated by their in-house Delia Derbyshire, future airline pilot Allen Ravenstine. That first album, however, marked the point when they sweated the filth from Ohio’s industrial cooling towers out of their systems; street-walking cheetahs on “Street Waves” and “Non-Alignment Pact”, free-forming spook noise mavens on “Sentimental Journey” and “Chinese Radiation”. Dark, daunting and peppered with Thomas’ tone-deaf-cockatoo vocals, it is a soundtrack to alienation, but with closing track “Humor Me” – a clear-headed rejection of rock’s dumbest conventions – the slate was wiped clean.

Album number two, released barely nine months later, sounds not so much like the work of another band as another species. “I’ve got these arms and legs that flip flop flip flop,” chirrups Thomas, marvelling at the wonder of existence as he dad-dances his way through Dub Housing‘s opening track, “Navvy”. Wonders rarely cease thereafter.

Smash martians gatecrash a beach party on “On The Surface”, while the title track splices Patti Smith’s “Land” with Roxy Music’s “For Your Pleasure”, Thomas’ narration a further warping of normality. “Hear the sound of the jibberty jungle,” he cries in mock terror. “In the dark, a thousand insect voices chitter-chatter.”

It gets odder still; Thomas reckons Pere Ubu were not crazy dub-heads – the album title was an in-joke about terraced properties on the road in to Baltimore – but “Thriller!” uses every trick in the Lee Perry book and more, all its moving parts slightly out of whack, Tom Herman‘s tiki guitar doodles giving way to a monstrous crunching sound, caterpillars chewing on eardrums.

The seasick feeling returns on “Drinking Wine Spodyody” – title lifted cheekily from a 1947 jump-blues novelty – and “(Pa) Ubu Dance Party”, Thomas gleefully talking through his creative processes: “I went out and stirred the air, my soup was steeped in strange ideas.” Few could have been more uncanny than “Blow Daddy-O”‘s mad juxtaposition of feedback, scampering phased guitar and lumbering aircraft engine noise. And then there’s “Codex”, a song about obsessive love that simultaneously mocks the concept of obsessive love and the concept of songs. “I think about you all the time,” Thomas repeats over a somnambulant forced march – a broken version of “The Song Of The Volga Boatmen” or a chain-gang approximation of Snow White’s “Heigh-Ho”.

“We had been promised the end of the world as children, and we weren’t getting it,” wrote Laughner’s ex-wife Charlotte Pressler, explaining her contemporaries’ dystopic worldview in a 1978 Cleveland scene memoir. Elitism For The People documents Pere Ubu creating their own private musical apocalypse, and then forging on to start the world anew. Not a world to be drowned in, but one to treasure.

Q&A
David Thomas
You have said that Pere Ubu fixed rock in this period: how did you think it was broken?

Rock gets broken when it loses its forward drive. When Pere Ubu formed, there were lots of local bands playing the main rock venues who could do covers of Spirit just perfect, and we just thought there was more to it than this. We despaired at the ordinariness of it.

Putting out your own record in 1975 was fairly unusual: what drove that decision?
Rocket From the Tombs ended very badly in the summer of ’75. I wasn’t going to mess with a band anymore – I just wanted to leave something behind. My ambition was to have a record in one of those Salvation Army record bins which somebody could come across in ten years’ time and say: ‘Wow, there was this band in 1975 in Cleveland…’.

Do you feel that you had any genuine peers musically outside Cleveland?
Peter loved Television. Did we see them as peers? I don’t know – I always see everybody as a rival. We were very much aware of what they were doing – but we were also aware of what other people were doing, in Indiana, San Francisco… One of the reasons that I despaired of the punk phenomenon was that it wiped out a whole generation of emerging bands. Punk was the new paradigm. It was the easy thing to copy. In a lot of ways the really great lasting bands from the early ’70s like Television, Pere Ubu, the Residents and Talking Heads were all pre-punk.
INTERVIEW: JIM WIRTH

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