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The 36th Uncut Playlist Of 2014

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No point in messing about this week: scroll down to hear new music from, among others, Neil Young, Cool Ghouls, Bryan Ferry, Frazey Ford, Kendrick Lamar, Joan Shelley and the extremely promising D.D. Dumbo, plus a couple of amazing full gigs from Hiss Golden Messenger and a Purling Hiss/Spacin' supersession, both courtesy of the invaluable www.nyctaper.com. And also stick with the Beatles art experiment by Rutherford Chang: 100 old copies of "The White Album" is quite something, gradually, especially if you've a taste for stuff like MBV and Fennesz… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Cool Ghouls - A Swirling Fire Burning Through The Rye (Empty Cellar) 2 Neil Young - Who's Gonna Stand Up (solo, Crazy Horse and orchestral versions) (Reprise) 3 Shellac - Dude Incredible (Touch & Go) 4 Thompson - Family (Concord) 5 [REDACTED] 6 Robert Wyatt - Different Every Time: Benign Dictatorships (Domino) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MHCSMT1Q1OY 7 Various Artists - New Orleans Soul: The Original Sound of New Orleans Soul 1960-76 (Soul Jazz) 8 Hiss Golden Messenger - September 18, 2014 Rough Trade NYC (www.nyctaper.com) 9 Ariel Kalma - An Evolutionary Music (Original Recordings: 1972 - 1979) (RVNG INTL) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l7RMs9OduI0 10 Perfume Genius - Too Bright (Caroline) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z7OSSUwPVM4 11 Loscil - Sea Island (Kranky) 12 Kendrick Lamar - I (Top Dawg) 13 Rutherford Chang/The Beatles - The White Album: Side 1 x 100 12 James Last - Non Stop Dancing 1973 (Polydor) 13 [REDACTED] 14 Lee Ranaldo & The Dust - Acoustic Dust (El Segell Del Primavera) 15 D.D Dumbo - Tropical Oceans (4AD) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VgtO9mCAIHo 16 Joan Shelley - Electric Ursa (No Quarter) 17 Kassé Mady Diabaté - Kiriké (No Format!) 18 The Young Sinclairs - This Is The Young Sinclairs (Ample Play) 19 Gazelle Twin - Unflesh (Anti-Ghost Moon Ray) 20 Steve Gunn - Way Out Weather (Paradise Of Bachelors) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ckSY12Dmw8Q 21 Frazey Ford - Indian Ocean (Nettwerk) 22 Rumer - Into Colour (Atlantic) 23 Fugazi - First Demo (Dischord) 24 Spacin’ & Purling Hiss - September 5, 2014 Hopscotch Music Festival, Tir na Nog, Raleigh, NC (www.nyctaper.com) 25 Anthony D'Amato - The Shipwreck From The Shore (New West) 26 Bryan Ferry - Avonmore (BMG) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TiicVWYh_v4

No point in messing about this week: scroll down to hear new music from, among others, Neil Young, Cool Ghouls, Bryan Ferry, Frazey Ford, Kendrick Lamar, Joan Shelley and the extremely promising D.D. Dumbo, plus a couple of amazing full gigs from Hiss Golden Messenger and a Purling Hiss/Spacin’ supersession, both courtesy of the invaluable www.nyctaper.com.

And also stick with the Beatles art experiment by Rutherford Chang: 100 old copies of “The White Album” is quite something, gradually, especially if you’ve a taste for stuff like MBV and Fennesz…

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

1 Cool Ghouls – A Swirling Fire Burning Through The Rye (Empty Cellar)

2 Neil Young – Who’s Gonna Stand Up (solo, Crazy Horse and orchestral versions) (Reprise)

3 Shellac – Dude Incredible (Touch & Go)

4 Thompson – Family (Concord)

5 [REDACTED]

6 Robert Wyatt – Different Every Time: Benign Dictatorships (Domino)

7 Various Artists – New Orleans Soul: The Original Sound of New Orleans Soul 1960-76 (Soul Jazz)

8 Hiss Golden Messenger – September 18, 2014 Rough Trade NYC (www.nyctaper.com)

9 Ariel Kalma – An Evolutionary Music (Original Recordings: 1972 – 1979) (RVNG INTL)

10 Perfume Genius – Too Bright (Caroline)

11 Loscil – Sea Island (Kranky)

12 Kendrick Lamar – I (Top Dawg)

13 Rutherford Chang/The Beatles – The White Album: Side 1 x 100

12 James Last – Non Stop Dancing 1973 (Polydor)

13 [REDACTED]

14 Lee Ranaldo & The Dust – Acoustic Dust (El Segell Del Primavera)

15 D.D Dumbo – Tropical Oceans (4AD)

16 Joan Shelley – Electric Ursa (No Quarter)

17 Kassé Mady Diabaté – Kiriké (No Format!)

18 The Young Sinclairs – This Is The Young Sinclairs (Ample Play)

19 Gazelle Twin – Unflesh (Anti-Ghost Moon Ray)

20 Steve Gunn – Way Out Weather (Paradise Of Bachelors)

21 Frazey Ford – Indian Ocean (Nettwerk)

22 Rumer – Into Colour (Atlantic)

23 Fugazi – First Demo (Dischord)

24 Spacin’ & Purling Hiss – September 5, 2014 Hopscotch Music Festival, Tir na Nog, Raleigh, NC (www.nyctaper.com)

25 Anthony D’Amato – The Shipwreck From The Shore (New West)

26 Bryan Ferry – Avonmore (BMG)

Bruce Springsteen to release first seven albums in newly remastered box set

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Bruce Springsteen is to release a new box set that compiles his first seven albums. Bruce Springsteen: The Album Collection Vol. 1 1973-1984 will be remastered by respected engineers Bob Ludwig and Toby Scott, in conjunction with the artist himself. The albums have been newly transferred from orig...

Bruce Springsteen is to release a new box set that compiles his first seven albums.

Bruce Springsteen: The Album Collection Vol. 1 1973-1984 will be remastered by respected engineers Bob Ludwig and Toby Scott, in conjunction with the artist himself.

The albums have been newly transferred from original analogue masters using the Plangent Process playback system.

The set will also feature a 60-page book featuring vintage press clippings, photos and other memorabilia from the first 11 years of Springsteen’s recording career.

It is scheduled for release on November 17.

Included will be much of the work that has come to define Springsteen’s music, including 1973 debut Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J., Born To Run, and Nebraska.

The collection will be available to purchase on CD, vinyl or digital download.

None of the seven records have been remastered on vinyl before.

Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J. (1973)*

The Wild, The Innocent And The E Street Shuffle (1973)*

Born To Run (1975)

Darkness On The Edge Of Town (1978)

The River (1980)*

Nebraska (1982)*

Born In The U.S.A. (1984)*

*denotes first time remastered on CD

Uncut is also available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Watch Laura Marling cover Bob Dylan’s “Like A Rolling Stone” with songwriter Eddie Berman

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Laura Marling has covered Bob Dylan's "Like A Rolling Stone" with singer songwriter Eddie Berman. Click below to watch the pair's rendition of the classic track, which will feature on Berman's forthcoming new album Polyhymnia, which is out October 21. The video was recorded at Kingsize North Studi...

Laura Marling has covered Bob Dylan’s “Like A Rolling Stone” with singer songwriter Eddie Berman.

Click below to watch the pair’s rendition of the classic track, which will feature on Berman’s forthcoming new album Polyhymnia, which is out October 21.

The video was recorded at Kingsize North Studios in Los Angeles.

The pair have previously covered Springsteen’s “Dancing In The Dark”.

Earlier this year Marling covered Townes Van Zandt’s “Colorado Girl” for the eTown programme on US radio station NPR.

Laura Marling released her fourth album, Once I Was An Eagle, in May 2013, reaching Number Three on the Official UK Albums Chart – her highest position to date.

A new album is due in the new year.

Uncut is also available as a digital edition! Download here on your iPad/iPhone and here on your Kindle Fire or Nook.

Neil Young confirms November release date for Storeytone album

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Neil Young has confirmed that his new album, Storeytone, will be released in November. The news came via a press release from his record company, Reprise, who also released on their official Soundcloud three versions of Young's new song, "Who's Gonna Stand Up?". The versions - live with Crazy Hors...

Neil Young has confirmed that his new album, Storeytone, will be released in November.

The news came via a press release from his record company, Reprise, who also released on their official Soundcloud three versions of Young’s new song, “Who’s Gonna Stand Up?“.

The versions – live with Crazy Horse, orchestral and acoustic – had originally been streaming on Young’s website. The

The song was originally performed at a Crazy Horse UK show this summer – read Uncut‘s review here – and more recently part of Young’s solo acoustic set at Farm Aid on September 13, at Walnut Creek Amphitheater in Raleigh North Carolina.

Young also recorded the track backed by a 92-piece symphony and choir.

The press release promises more information about Storeytone to be announced soon.

Live version with Crazy Horse:

Orchestral version:

Solo Acoustic version:

The BFI London Film Festival 2014: Music Films Preview!

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Björk, Nas, the French House music scene and a beguiling tribute to the work of Alan Lomax are among the highlights of this year's BFI London Film Festival. Watch the trailers below. I hope you'll be aware by now, but the 58th BFI London Film Festival kicks off on October 9. Running through to O...

Björk, Nas, the French House music scene and a beguiling tribute to the work of Alan Lomax are among the highlights of this year’s BFI London Film Festival. Watch the trailers below.

I hope you’ll be aware by now, but the 58th BFI London Film Festival kicks off on October 9. Running through to October 20, there’s a lot of strong movies in the line-up – Peter Strickland’s The Duke Of Burgundy, Brad Pitt’s Fury, The White Haired Witch Of Lunar Kingdom, The Salvation and a restored print of Robert Altman‘s Come Back To The Five & Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean.

But, of course, as ever there’s also a rich seam of music films in evidence at the festival. And below, here’s trailers for my five recommendations. By the way, you can find more general information about this year’s festival by clicking here. But I’ve embedded specific links to each of the individual films below.

The 78 Project Movie

Taking their cue from Alan Lomax, Alex Steyermark and Lavinia Jones Wright traveled America recording record today’s musicians on 1930s technology.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nAEEWi0-spw

Click here for screening details.

Björk: Biophilia Live

Peter Strickland has a busy Festival: his drama, The Duke Of Burgundy, starring Borgen’s Sidse Babett Knudsen, is in the festival’s Official Competition. He also has this, an extraordinary document of Björk’s live Biophilia experience.

Click here for screening details.

Eden

The French do coming-of-age dramas better than anyone; especially those set against strong cultural backdrops. Here, Mia Hansen-Løve – director of Father Of My Children – gives us a snapshot of French youth set during the French House music scene that spawned Daft Punk and many others.

Click here for screening details.

Keep On Keepin’ On

One of the last of the true greats, trumpeter Clark Terry has played with everyone from Duke Ellington to Miles Davis; in Alan Hicks’ debut documentary, we witness his evolving friendship with blind protégé Justin Kauflin.

Click here for screening details.

Nas: Time is Illmatic

Absorbing documentary on Nas’ 1994 album, Illmatic, tracing his trajectory from New York’s Queensbridge projects to high-level rapper.

Click here for screening details.

Pink Floyd release short trailer for new album ‘The Endless River’ – watch

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Pink Floyd have released a 30-second teaser trailer for their upcoming album 'The Endless River'. Click below to watch. The clip was posted via the band's various social media outlets and features a short, guitar-heavy audio snippet. The Endless River' – which will be Pink Floyd's first album i...

Pink Floyd have released a 30-second teaser trailer for their upcoming album ‘The Endless River’. Click below to watch.

The clip was posted via the band’s various social media outlets and features a short, guitar-heavy audio snippet. The Endless River’ – which will be Pink Floyd’s first album in 20 years – is due for release on November 10.

You can read about The Endless River in this month’s Uncut, in shops now.

In addition to the record’s cover art and tracklisting, which were released earlier this week, the group published a statement via their website, revealing that the LP will include music recorded with multi-instrumentalist Richard Wright, who died in 2008 aged 65.

“The Endless River is a tribute to Rick Wright, whose keyboards are at the heart of the Pink Floyd sound,” read the statement. “It is a mainly instrumental album with one song, ‘Louder Than Words’, (with new lyrics by Polly Samson), arranged across four sides and produced by David Gilmour, Phil Manzanera, Youth and Andy Jackson.”

The record will not feature original Pink Floyd bassist Roger Waters, who left the band in 1985. Speaking last year, drummer Nick Mason revealed that he would be interested in a full band reunion, but was not certain it will ever materialise.

“I would do it… I’m ready to go,” he said when asked about the prospects of a reunion. “I’m packed, I have my drum kit, a suitcase and a wash bag by my front door ready for it when I ever get the call. But I’m not holding my breath.”

‘The Endless River’ tracklisting is:

‘Things Left Unsaid’

‘It’s What We Do’

‘Ebb And Flow’

‘Sum’

‘Skins’

‘Unsung’

‘Anisina’

‘The Lost Art Of Conversation’

‘On Noodle Street’

‘Night Light’

‘Allons-y (1)’

‘Autumn’68’

‘Allons-y (2)’

‘Talkin’ Hawkin”

‘Calling’

‘Eyes To Pearls’

‘Surfacing’

‘Louder Than Words’

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHtlwQNVQeo

Section of ‘Ed Sullivan Show’ set signed by The Beatles to be sold

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A portion of the famous Ed Sullivan Show set displayed during The Beatles' US television debut is to be sold. Rolling Stone reports that the backdrop – also signed by the Fab Four – will be on sale at The Fest for Beatles Fans, which takes place in Los Angeles from October 10 to 12. It is expected to go for $550,000 (approximately £337,000). The seller is Wayne Johnson, owner of Rockaway Records. Among the other items up for purchase includes a copy of the band's 11th US release Yesterday And Today featuring the rare 'Butcher' cover, which is priced at $4,500 (approximately £2,750), and the band's first US contract with Vee Jay Records, on sale for $100,000 (approximately £62,000). The Fest for Beatles Fans was started in 1974 to mark the 10th anniversary of the band's first visit to the US. In its history, the event has accepted donated musical instruments from all four Beatles, which have been auctioned for charity. The Beatles' first Ed Sullivan Show appearance took place on February 9, 1964 to an estimated audience of 73 million viewers. The performance included the famous 'Sorry girls, he's married' caption on a close-up of John Lennon. Earlier this week, a sculpture of Eleanor Rigby made of £1m of used banknotes went on display in Liverpool. Created by Leonard Brown, the five-foot-two-inch statue is made of thousands of shredded £5, £10 and £20 notes, which were supplied by the Bank Of England in the form of pellets.

A portion of the famous Ed Sullivan Show set displayed during The Beatles‘ US television debut is to be sold.

Rolling Stone reports that the backdrop – also signed by the Fab Four – will be on sale at The Fest for Beatles Fans, which takes place in Los Angeles from October 10 to 12. It is expected to go for $550,000 (approximately £337,000).

The seller is Wayne Johnson, owner of Rockaway Records. Among the other items up for purchase includes a copy of the band’s 11th US release Yesterday And Today featuring the rare ‘Butcher’ cover, which is priced at $4,500 (approximately £2,750), and the band’s first US contract with Vee Jay Records, on sale for $100,000 (approximately £62,000).

The Fest for Beatles Fans was started in 1974 to mark the 10th anniversary of the band’s first visit to the US. In its history, the event has accepted donated musical instruments from all four Beatles, which have been auctioned for charity.

The Beatles’ first Ed Sullivan Show appearance took place on February 9, 1964 to an estimated audience of 73 million viewers. The performance included the famous ‘Sorry girls, he’s married’ caption on a close-up of John Lennon.

Earlier this week, a sculpture of Eleanor Rigby made of £1m of used banknotes went on display in Liverpool. Created by Leonard Brown, the five-foot-two-inch statue is made of thousands of shredded £5, £10 and £20 notes, which were supplied by the Bank Of England in the form of pellets.

Cat Stevens cancels first New York show in 40 years in protest over ticket touts

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Cat Stevens (aka Yusuf) has cancelled his first New York appearance in 40 years, in protest over ticket touts. Last week, the singer announced a string of live dates – his first tour since 1976 – to take place in Europe and North America in November and December. However, he has now pulled hi...

Cat Stevens (aka Yusuf) has cancelled his first New York appearance in 40 years, in protest over ticket touts.

Last week, the singer announced a string of live dates – his first tour since 1976 – to take place in Europe and North America in November and December. However, he has now pulled his New York show due to the city’s restrictions on paperless tickets, which he believes leads to touts selling tickets at inflated prices.

“Unfortunately I will not be performing in NYC this time around but I am looking forward to playing for fans in Philadelphia on December 4 and hope to return to NYC at a future date,” a statement on his website reads. “My fans will understand and I thank them for informing me about the extortionate tickets prices already being listed on some websites. I have been a longtime supporter of paperless tickets to my shows worldwide and avoiding scalpers.”

He added: “Unfortunately NY has a state law that requires all tickets sold for shows in NYC to be paper, enabling them to be bought and sold at inflated prices. I’m sorry about not being able to now play in NYC but hope to find an opportunity that aligns with my support of this issue in the near future, God willing. Looks like the Peace Train is going to arrive at New York a little bit later than expected.”

The singer also reiterated the point on his Facebook page, linking to an old interview in which he hit out at ticket touts: “I was so angry that at one point I seriously considered buying the tickets off of the touts and re-distributing them to my loyal fans,” he said.

The Peace Train… Late Again tour coincides with the release of Tell ‘Em I’m Gone, a blues album produced by Rick Rubin.

Yusef will play:

London Hammersmith Apollo (November 4, 5)

Brussels Forest National (9)

Milan Mediolanum Forum (11)

Vienna Stadthalle (13)

Paris Zenith (16)

Berlin Tempodrom (20)

Hamburg CCH1 (23)

Dusseldorf Mitsubishi Electric Hall (25)

Toronto Massey Hall (December 1)

Boston Wang Theatre (4)

New York Beacon Theatre (7)

Chicago Chicago Theatre (9)

San Francisco Masonic Auditorium (12)

Los Angeles Nokia Theatre (14)

Bernard Sumner: “I think Hooky resented the fact he wasn’t the singer in New Order”

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Bernard Sumner looks back to Joy Division and his childhood, and forward to upcoming New Order work, in the new issue of Uncut, dated November 2014 (Take 210) and out now. In the interview, Sumner explains why Peter Hook acrimoniously quit the group in 2007, suggesting that he was jealous of the ...

Bernard Sumner looks back to Joy Division and his childhood, and forward to upcoming New Order work, in the new issue of Uncut, dated November 2014 (Take 210) and out now.

In the interview, Sumner explains why Peter Hook acrimoniously quit the group in 2007, suggesting that he was jealous of the attention Sumner received as frontman.

“I think he resented the fact that he wasn’t the singer in New Order,” says Sumner. “I didn’t fight for the role – it was Rob [Gretton, manager] who decided I should be the singer, and I’m always up for a challenge.

“I just thought, ‘OK, why not? Maybe I’ll learn something.’ I think Hooky likes attention.”

The new issue of Uncut is out now.

AC/DC announce Malcolm Young’s retirement and new album

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AC/DC have announced a brand new studio album, "Rock Or Bust", set to be released on December 1. The group have also confirmed founding guitarist Malcolm Young's retirement from the band, due to health problems, which makes "Rock Or Bust" the group's first ever release without Young. Instead, th...

AC/DC have announced a brand new studio album, “Rock Or Bust”, set to be released on December 1.

The group have also confirmed founding guitarist Malcolm Young’s retirement from the band, due to health problems, which makes “Rock Or Bust” the group’s first ever release without Young.

Instead, the Young brothers’ nephew, Stevie Young, joins the group on the new album and on its accompanying world tour.

The 11-track “Rock Or Bust” was produced by Brendan O’Brien and recorded at Warehouse Studio, Vancouver, earlier this year. It will be AC/DC’s first album since 2008’s Black Ice, which has sold nearly eight million copies since its release.

A track from the new album, “Play Ball”, will receive its premiere on Turner Sports as part of the 2014 Major League Baseball Postseason campaign, from September 27.

The Replacements reportedly planning new album

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The Replacements are reportedly planning to record a new album, their first since 1990's All Shook Down. The reunited Minneapolis group, fronted by Paul Westerberg, even have a bunch of new songs ready for the projected release, according to Rolling Stone. Two titles that Westerberg revealed are "...

The Replacements are reportedly planning to record a new album, their first since 1990’s All Shook Down.

The reunited Minneapolis group, fronted by Paul Westerberg, even have a bunch of new songs ready for the projected release, according to Rolling Stone.

Two titles that Westerberg revealed are “Are You In It For The Money?” and “Dead Guitar Player”, perhaps a reference to the group’s original lead guitarist, Bob Stinson, who died in 1995.

Westerberg and bassist Tommy Stinson last year teamed up with drummer Josh Freese and guitarist Dave Minehan for a set of North American dates, including a headline slot at April’s Coachella, but they are yet to hit British shores.

Jack White and Neil Young among artists to perform at upcoming Bob Dylan tribute concert

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Bob Dylan is to be honoured at a gala concert this February with an all-star lineup slated to perform. Jack White, Neil Young, Beck, The Black Keys, Norah Jones, Willie Nelson, Eddie Vedder, Tom Jones, John Mellencamp, Bonnie Raitt and Crosby, Stills & Nash are among the artists who will appe...

Bob Dylan is to be honoured at a gala concert this February with an all-star lineup slated to perform.

Jack White, Neil Young, Beck, The Black Keys, Norah Jones, Willie Nelson, Eddie Vedder, Tom Jones, John Mellencamp, Bonnie Raitt and Crosby, Stills & Nash are among the artists who will appear at the gig.

The event marks The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences’ decision to select Dylan as the 2015 MusiCares Person of the Year. It will take place on February 6 as part of Grammy Week – two days before the award show itself.

“In celebrating the 25th anniversary of our MusiCares Person of the Year tribute, it is most fitting that we are honouring Bob Dylan, whose body of creative work has contributed to America’s culture, as well as that of the entire world, in genuinely deep and lasting ways,” said Neil Portnow, CEO of the MusiCares Foundation and The Recording Academy, in a statement.

Proceeds from the concert will go to MusiCares, a foundation that provides help to music people in need. Its Person of the Year award recognises musicians not just for their artistic achievement, but their dedication to philanthropy. Previous recipients include Brian Wilson, James Taylor and Bruce Springsteen.

In July, a hotel inspired by Bob Dylan’s life opened in Woodstock, New York. The Hotel Dylan is located just a few miles from where the singer used to record on Route 28.

Leonard Cohen’s “only preoccupation is the new songs he’s trying to finish”, says son Adam

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Friends, family and collaborators shed light on Leonard Cohen's working methods and creativity in the new issue of Uncut, dated November 2014 (Take 210) and out now. Cohen's son Adam, collaborators Sharon Robinson, Patrick Leonard and Rebecca De Mornay, among others, reveal what drives the great songwriter as he prepares to release new album Popular Problems and celebrate his 80th birthday. Famous fans including Antony Hegarty, Shane MacGowan and Will Oldham also pick their favourite Leonard Cohen songs. “He’s always working,” says Adam Cohen of his father. “It’s an isolated process – he went to monastic lengths. He told me, ‘When you’re exhausted and you’ve spent hours and days more than you thought you ever would on a song, that’s when you know the actual work has begun.’ That’s a wonderful emblem of his devotion, discipline and dedication. “There has never been a molecule of wavering. He’s solely unconcerned with songs he’s already written. His only preoccupation is the new songs he’s trying to finish.” The new Uncut is out today (September 23). Photo: Lorca Cohen

Friends, family and collaborators shed light on Leonard Cohen‘s working methods and creativity in the new issue of Uncut, dated November 2014 (Take 210) and out now.

Cohen’s son Adam, collaborators Sharon Robinson, Patrick Leonard and Rebecca De Mornay, among others, reveal what drives the great songwriter as he prepares to release new album Popular Problems and celebrate his 80th birthday.

Famous fans including Antony Hegarty, Shane MacGowan and Will Oldham also pick their favourite Leonard Cohen songs.

“He’s always working,” says Adam Cohen of his father. “It’s an isolated process – he went to monastic lengths. He told me, ‘When you’re exhausted and you’ve spent hours and days more than you thought you ever would on a song, that’s when you know the actual work has begun.’ That’s a wonderful emblem of his devotion, discipline and dedication.

“There has never been a molecule of wavering. He’s solely unconcerned with songs he’s already written. His only preoccupation is the new songs he’s trying to finish.”

The new Uncut is out today (September 23).

Photo: Lorca Cohen

Pete Seeger – A Song And A Stone

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Vintage doc follows the folk hero for 18 months... 1969 proved a vintage year for Pete Seeger. Marking his personal half century, the year also witnessed Seeger’s return from the wilderness years imposed back in the mid-Fifties, when he was blacklisted by Congress as ‘Un-American’. Seeger’s appearance on Johnny Cash’s hugely popular TV show marked his rehabilitation on the airwaves, while a few months later he was in Washington leading a march of half a million people demanding an end to the Vietnam war. For the folk icon, it was sweet validation. If Seeger’s re-emergence owed something to the times – the Peace Movement was at its zenith – the championship of Cash was significant. As A Song And A Stone opens, Seeger is en route to Nashville for his TV spot, sore that he won’t be able to sing about Vietnam but prepared to ‘compromise’ – “I have spent my whole life compromising,” he smiles ruefully. The back stage scenes with Cash are among the most arresting here, with the Man In Black (an old acquaintance) playing gracious host, describing him to camera as “One of the greatest American patriots I know”. The actual show - a duet on “It Takes A Worried Man” – is anodyne, but the sense of triumph palpable. The offstage Seeger at age 50 proves a more freewheeling character than one might expect from his reputation as po-faced folk purist; more dapper, more waggish, more Billy Braggish. Indeed, one problem is that Seeger the activist is way more impressive than Seeger the musician with his rudimentary banjo licks and well-worn set list – this was, after all, the year of “Space Oddity” and Zeppelin’s debut. He could perform, though, whether entertaining a crowd of doting college students, charming a bunch of children clustered at his feet or leading the protesting thousands on Lennon’s “Give Peace A Chance”. He exudes genial certainty even when making statements that were toxic to the establishment: “The American nation is going to be judged as criminals after this Vietnam incident”. Seeger’s energy was simply unstoppable. His 50th birthday coincided with the maiden voyage of Clearwater, a sloop built by Seeger and his wife Toshi in an early example of crowdfunding and to this day still active in ecological education and research on the Hudson river. Seeger never looks happier than when helping to haul the boat’s mainsail alongside young volunteers. When Seeger’s father is asked to list his son’s faults, he responds, “There nothing bad about Peter… except he’s getting bald”. A Song And A Stone itself is no classic. It’s often poorly shot, and its didactic tone now appears clumsy – the juxtaposition of boy scouts and marching troops, the soft focus shots of children who likely grew up to be Reagan-voting Judas Priest fans - but it’s a fascinating time capsule, and a glimpse into the soul of a Great American. Neil Spencer

Vintage doc follows the folk hero for 18 months…

1969 proved a vintage year for Pete Seeger. Marking his personal half century, the year also witnessed Seeger’s return from the wilderness years imposed back in the mid-Fifties, when he was blacklisted by Congress as ‘Un-American’. Seeger’s appearance on Johnny Cash’s hugely popular TV show marked his rehabilitation on the airwaves, while a few months later he was in Washington leading a march of half a million people demanding an end to the Vietnam war. For the folk icon, it was sweet validation.

If Seeger’s re-emergence owed something to the times – the Peace Movement was at its zenith – the championship of Cash was significant. As A Song And A Stone opens, Seeger is en route to Nashville for his TV spot, sore that he won’t be able to sing about Vietnam but prepared to ‘compromise’ – “I have spent my whole life compromising,” he smiles ruefully. The back stage scenes with Cash are among the most arresting here, with the Man In Black (an old acquaintance) playing gracious host, describing him to camera as “One of the greatest American patriots I know”. The actual show – a duet on “It Takes A Worried Man” – is anodyne, but the sense of triumph palpable.

The offstage Seeger at age 50 proves a more freewheeling character than one might expect from his reputation as po-faced folk purist; more dapper, more waggish, more Billy Braggish. Indeed, one problem is that Seeger the activist is way more impressive than Seeger the musician with his rudimentary banjo licks and well-worn set list – this was, after all, the year of “Space Oddity” and Zeppelin’s debut. He could perform, though, whether entertaining a crowd of doting college students, charming a bunch of children clustered at his feet or leading the protesting thousands on Lennon’s “Give Peace A Chance”. He exudes genial certainty even when making statements that were toxic to the establishment: “The American nation is going to be judged as criminals after this Vietnam incident”.

Seeger’s energy was simply unstoppable. His 50th birthday coincided with the maiden voyage of Clearwater, a sloop built by Seeger and his wife Toshi in an early example of crowdfunding and to this day still active in ecological education and research on the Hudson river. Seeger never looks happier than when helping to haul the boat’s mainsail alongside young volunteers. When Seeger’s father is asked to list his son’s faults, he responds, “There nothing bad about Peter… except he’s getting bald”.

A Song And A Stone itself is no classic. It’s often poorly shot, and its didactic tone now appears clumsy – the juxtaposition of boy scouts and marching troops, the soft focus shots of children who likely grew up to be Reagan-voting Judas Priest fans – but it’s a fascinating time capsule, and a glimpse into the soul of a Great American.

Neil Spencer

Inside this month’s new Uncut…

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A month, perhaps, of surprises. On the rather intimidating new Scott Walker and Sunn O))) album, there appears to be a joke about Michael Flatley's testicles. Somewhere in the elevated aesthetics of Kate Bush's Before The Dawn, there's an equally dubious comedy routine that hinges on the punchline, "HP and mayo, it's the badger's nadgers." And then, just as we were finishing the new issue of Uncut (out today in the UK, as you may have seen), a U2 album suddenly materialised in iTunes, a bullish play to reassert them as the biggest pop group in the world. It would be nicely self-aggrandising to pretend that Uncut saw all this coming. We did, however, have an inside track on another of 2014's most unforeseen musical events: the return to action of Pink Floyd. For the past few months Michael Bonner, our Associate Editor, has been mapping The Endless River, from its source in 20-year-old sessions, to ending up as what one of the producers, Phil Manzanera, describes to us as "A Pink Floyd album for the 21st Century." En route, Michael discovered plenty, not only about the extraordinary working practices of Dave Gilmour and Nick Mason, but also how The Endless River became a kind of memorial to Rick Wright. It's the cover story of our new issue and, though it's obviously part of my job to say as much, a great piece, I think. In another serendipitous bit of business, earlier in 2014 we began contacting the friends, colleagues, fans and relations of Leonard Cohen, with a plan to commemorate his 80th birthday by collecting insights into 20 of his greatest songs. The responses - from Adam Cohen, Robert Plant, Sharon Robinson, Javier Mas, Mark Kozelek, Rebecca De Mornay, Anjali Thomas, Roscoe Beck and Judy Collins, among others - proved revelatory. The biggest surprise, though, came from Patrick Leonard, who let slip that he was just finishing off a new Cohen album. So it is that our piece now sits in the new issue alongside a deep review of "Popular Problems" by my illustrious predecessor, Allan Jones. What else? Underworld, John McLaughlin, Jimmy Cauty, Vashti Bunyan, Strand Of Oaks and The Guess Who. Stevie Nicks on the Fleetwood Mac reunion. An audience with Willie Nelson. Brian Wilson: the movie. The untold story of Joe Strummer's 101'ers. The usual hefty, definitive reviews section. And a fine interview with Bernard Sumner that involves New Order, Joy Division, soldering irons, gangs with swords, scooters, Wishbone Ash and the current state of his relationship with Peter Hook. For my own part, I've spent this month writing up my springtime adventures in North Carolina with Hiss Golden Messenger, digging into new albums by Chris Forsyth, Steve Gunn, Bonnie 'Prince' Billy, Bing & Ruth, MV & EE and Martin Duffy, investigating The Pop Group's "Cabinet Of Curiosities" and reviewing that astonishing Kate Bush show We also have a pointedly different perspective on Before The Dawn from one of our readers, Peter Beynon - which reminds me: please send your brickbats, bouquets, stern textual critiques, reminiscences, threats, meticulous crossword analyses, tearstained billets-doux and all other forms of printable correspondence to uncut_feedback@timeinc.com. As ever, we'd be delighted to hear from you… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

A month, perhaps, of surprises. On the rather intimidating new Scott Walker and Sunn O))) album, there appears to be a joke about Michael Flatley’s testicles. Somewhere in the elevated aesthetics of Kate Bush’s Before The Dawn, there’s an equally dubious comedy routine that hinges on the punchline, “HP and mayo, it’s the badger’s nadgers.” And then, just as we were finishing the new issue of Uncut (out today in the UK, as you may have seen), a U2 album suddenly materialised in iTunes, a bullish play to reassert them as the biggest pop group in the world.

It would be nicely self-aggrandising to pretend that Uncut saw all this coming. We did, however, have an inside track on another of 2014’s most unforeseen musical events: the return to action of Pink Floyd. For the past few months Michael Bonner, our Associate Editor, has been mapping The Endless River, from its source in 20-year-old sessions, to ending up as what one of the producers, Phil Manzanera, describes to us as “A Pink Floyd album for the 21st Century.” En route, Michael discovered plenty, not only about the extraordinary working practices of Dave Gilmour and Nick Mason, but also how The Endless River became a kind of memorial to Rick Wright. It’s the cover story of our new issue and, though it’s obviously part of my job to say as much, a great piece, I think.

In another serendipitous bit of business, earlier in 2014 we began contacting the friends, colleagues, fans and relations of Leonard Cohen, with a plan to commemorate his 80th birthday by collecting insights into 20 of his greatest songs. The responses – from Adam Cohen, Robert Plant, Sharon Robinson, Javier Mas, Mark Kozelek, Rebecca De Mornay, Anjali Thomas, Roscoe Beck and Judy Collins, among others – proved revelatory. The biggest surprise, though, came from Patrick Leonard, who let slip that he was just finishing off a new Cohen album. So it is that our piece now sits in the new issue alongside a deep review of “Popular Problems” by my illustrious predecessor, Allan Jones.

What else? Underworld, John McLaughlin, Jimmy Cauty, Vashti Bunyan, Strand Of Oaks and The Guess Who. Stevie Nicks on the Fleetwood Mac reunion. An audience with Willie Nelson. Brian Wilson: the movie. The untold story of Joe Strummer’s 101’ers. The usual hefty, definitive reviews section. And a fine interview with Bernard Sumner that involves New Order, Joy Division, soldering irons, gangs with swords, scooters, Wishbone Ash and the current state of his relationship with Peter Hook.

For my own part, I’ve spent this month writing up my springtime adventures in North Carolina with Hiss Golden Messenger, digging into new albums by Chris Forsyth, Steve Gunn, Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy, Bing & Ruth, MV & EE and Martin Duffy, investigating The Pop Group’s “Cabinet Of Curiosities” and reviewing that astonishing Kate Bush show

We also have a pointedly different perspective on Before The Dawn from one of our readers, Peter Beynon – which reminds me: please send your brickbats, bouquets, stern textual critiques, reminiscences, threats, meticulous crossword analyses, tearstained billets-doux and all other forms of printable correspondence to uncut_feedback@timeinc.com. As ever, we’d be delighted to hear from you…

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

Iggy Pop to deliver 2014 John Peel Lecture

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Iggy Pop will deliver this year's John Peel lecture, it has been announced. The singer, who hosts a Sunday afternoon show on BBC Radio 6 Music, will deliver a speech titled 'Free Music in a Capitalist Society' which will be broadcast on 6Music live on Monday, October 13 and will later be shown on ...

Iggy Pop will deliver this year’s John Peel lecture, it has been announced.

The singer, who hosts a Sunday afternoon show on BBC Radio 6 Music, will deliver a speech titled ‘Free Music in a Capitalist Society’ which will be broadcast on 6Music live on Monday, October 13 and will later be shown on BBC Four on October 19.

The John Peel Lecture is an annual event where a notable figure from the music industry is invited to shape a debate about an issue in the music industry. The inaugural lecture was given by The Who’s Pete Townshend in 2011 and Billy Bragg and Charlotte Church took on the task in subsequent years.

Iggy Pop said in a statement: “I get the feeling that John was the kind of guy who would have done his job for nothing, as long as he felt great about it. So we have that in common. Examining his life, I was interested to learn that he found his voice in large part through his wanderings in America.”

“Sometimes it takes strange circumstances to provide a mirror in which to find yourself,” he added. “I’ve never given a lecture in my life, but on the day I’m going to attempt a discussion on the subject of free music in a capitalist society. This is a struggle which never ends.”

Radio Festival 2014, where Iggy will appear, takes place at The Lowry, MediaCityUK in Salford from October 13th-15th 2014.

Thom Yorke teases fans with image of mysterious white vinyl

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Thom Yorke has teased fans by posting an image of a white 12-inch vinyl on a turntable. Next to the record appears to be artwork designed by Stanley Donwood – the band's long-time collaborator who has designed all of their album and poster art since 1994. A link to the image, which Yorke posted ...

Thom Yorke has teased fans by posting an image of a white 12-inch vinyl on a turntable.

Next to the record appears to be artwork designed by Stanley Donwood – the band’s long-time collaborator who has designed all of their album and poster art since 1994. A link to the image, which Yorke posted on his Tumblr page, was also tweeted by another long-time Radiohead collaborator, producer Nigel Godrich.

Radiohead drummer Phil Selway recently revealed to NME that the band are due to begin sessions on the follow-up to their 2011 album The King Of Limbs this month and said that they felt it was the right time to “start making music” together again.

He later told BBC 6 Music: “There’s always that sense that our best record is still to come…There’s still a lot creativity we can do together.”

Selway will release his new solo album Weatherhouse on October 6. Speaking in this week’s NME, the drummer is asked whether he can make any predictions as to what a new Radiohead album may end up sounding like. “I have absolutely no idea,” he says. “And that’s what keeps us all there until the end.”

David Bowie unveils artwork for new single “Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)”

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David Bowie has revealed the artwork and tracklisting for his forthcoming new single "Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)". See the artwork above. The track will feature on the singer's forthcoming new greatest hits album Nothing Has Changed, and will be available on limited edition 10-inch vinyl and dig...

David Bowie has revealed the artwork and tracklisting for his forthcoming new single “Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)“. See the artwork above.

The track will feature on the singer’s forthcoming new greatest hits album Nothing Has Changed, and will be available on limited edition 10-inch vinyl and digital download from November 17.

The song was recorded earlier this year and was produced by Tony Visconti.

Nothing Has Changed also features the previously unreleased ‘Let Me Sleep Beside You’ from the album sessions for ‘Toy’, which was released in 2001. The download-only ‘Your Turn To Drive’ will also be making its debut on CD for ‘Nothing Has Changed’ and the 2001 re-recording of the 1971 outtake ‘Shadow Man’ is included too.

‘Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)’ 10-inch tracklisting:

A

‘Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)’ (7.24)

B

”Tis A Pity She Was A Whore’ (5.27)

‘Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime)’ (radio edit) (4.01)

Pink Floyd’s The Endless River – album track listing and Uncut cover story revealed!

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Pink Floyd are on the cover of the new issue of Uncut, on sale tomorrow – September 23. In the issue, we trace the secret sources of Pink Floyd’s new album, The Endless River, and discover how a 20 year-old saga became a tribute to the band’s fallen comrade, Rick Wright. Our cover story unco...

Pink Floyd are on the cover of the new issue of Uncut, on sale tomorrow – September 23.

In the issue, we trace the secret sources of Pink Floyd’s new album, The Endless River, and discover how a 20 year-old saga became a tribute to the band’s fallen comrade, Rick Wright.

Our cover story uncovers the album’s extraordinary journey, from vintage organ jams in the Royal Albert Hall to present-day goings on in London recording studios and a houseboat on the Thames.

Meanwhile, Pink Floyd have confirmed the tracklisting and release date for The Endless River.

Details about the album were revealed today as the album artwork appears on buildings in ten international cities, including an eight metre, lit installation on London’s South Bank.

The album is released on November 10. You can read the tracklisting below.

The Endless River has been produced by Phil Manzanera, Youth and Andy Jackson.

David Gilmour says: “The Endless River has as its starting point the music that came from the 1993 Division Bell sessions. We listened to over 20 hours of the three of us playing together and selected the music we wanted to work on for the new album. Over the last year we’ve added new parts, re-recorded others and generally harnessed studio technology to make a 21st century Pink Floyd album. With Rick gone, and with him the chance of ever doing it again, it feels right that these revisited and reworked tracks should be made available as part of our repertoire.”

Explains Nick Mason: “The Endless River is a tribute to Rick. I think this record is a good way of recognizing a lot of what he does and how his playing was at the heart of the Pink Floyd sound. Listening back to the sessions, it really brought home to me what a special player he was.”

The Endless River is mainly an instrumental album across ‘four sides’ with one song, “Louder Than Words” with new lyrics by Polly Samson.

You can hear 30 seconds of music from the new album here.

The concept for the album’s artwork of a man rowing on a ‘river’ of clouds was created by Ahmed Emad Eldin, an 18-year-old Egyptian digital artist. Ahmed’s image was then re-created by Stylorouge, award-winning UK design agency.

Pink Floyd’s album artwork, mostly created by Storm Thorgerson of Hipgnosis, is as legendary as the band’s music. With Storm’s passing in 2013, the task of finding an image that carried on Storm’s legacy passed to Aubrey ‘Po’ Powell, Storm’s original partner in Hipgnosis. Po said:

‘When we saw Ahmed’s image it had an instant Floydian resonance. It’s enigmatic and open to interpretation, and is the cover that works so well for The Endless River.”

You can pre-order the album here and here.

The Endless River tracklisting:

Side 1

Things Left Unsaid

It’s What We Do

Ebb And Flow

Side 2

Sum

Skins

Unsung

Anisina

Side 3

The Lost Art Of Conversation

On Noodle Street

Night Light

Allons-y (1)

Autumn ‘68

Allons-y (2)

Talkin’ Hawkin’

Side 4

Calling

Eyes To Pearls

Surfacing

Louder Than Words

Spoon – They Want My Soul

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Slow-burning experimental rockers achieve explosive release on terrific eighth... The phrase 'critical darling' is one of the worst brickbats that can be thrown at a band. Under the pretence of being a compliment, it suggests their work is not to be passionately celebrated, empathized with, or enthused about; merely evaluated, more a matter of the head than heart. Pity Spoon then, who, at least in the UK, are the definitive critical darling. According to the online reviews aggregator Metacritic, they are the most favourably-reviewed band of the noughties, placing them somewhere between, say, mumblecore and tagines in an elegant but underpopulated corner of this country's public imagination. All of which feels like a terrible misunderstanding, because Spoon exemplify the qualities of the very best bands. In the recent tradition of groups like The Sea and Cake, The Walkmen or Wilco, they're an urbane US outfit confident enough in themselves to play what they want, not what they think they should. What that means here is classic, joyous rock'n'roll, played on rickety pianos and cleanly strummed guitars, and filled with clever production tricks: a bit of studio chatter here, a flourish of mysterious static there. This is a group for whom form is everything, who can swagger through garage rock and bluesy stompers, hunched art-rock and pretty balladry, but always make sure it hangs correctly on their shoulders. It's proved a winning formula in the United States. On their last tour, they sold out Radio City Music Hall, while their last two albums have gone top ten. Front and centre here is Britt Daniel who, a bit like John Lennon, sings in an enjoyably adenoidal and bunged-up way, sometimes breaking free with a soulful chest-driven holler. Melodies are often carried by the basslines, played by the casually dextrous Rob Pope, while drummer Jim Eno slips in sly tricks to keep the driving rhythms ticking with an unreadable intention. Keyboards and guitars flesh out the songs without them ever running to fat. On early albums this sound took on a slightly happenstance air, which was then pared back for their first masterpiece Kill The Moonlight (2002) – piano chords were played with manic repetition in the album’s jittery anthems, assailed with claps and finger snaps. On next album Gimme Fiction, funk crept in, staying and maturing on the blockbusting Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga. 2010's Transference, however, seemed fraught with the anxious sounding music of their earliest records. These anxieties are swept away again on this, their eighth album, where everything shines out brighter and louder than ever before as they return from a three-year break. “Rent I Pay” opens with a sleazy electric shimmy, the central riffs underlined by swells of organ. As with the excellent “Rainy Taxi”, here Spoon let themselves drift into the red, the song's seams straining with distortion. Where once a band's graduation to the big leagues was marked by cleanliness, Spoon, like the Black Keys or Jack White (who these bluesily rocking tracks somewhat recall), are among those who enjoying the freedom to be as loud now they’re near the top as they were on the way up. And like the Black Keys, they know when to be slick. At the smoother end of the spectrum the album offers “Outlier”. Here, Edge-like guitars stream through synths, handclaps, and vocal hooks recalling, of all things, Pulp's disco moments. “Do You” straddles the clean/dirty impulses, with peppy guitar strumming soothing Daniel’s wracked vocals. Daniel used to make sound effects for videogames, and that talent for evocative sound pockmarks the album. On “Knock Knock Knock”, an eerily inhuman whistle floats up through the traditional guitar, while “Outlier” has its pomp shorn off by a slow introductory fade in – it feels as though the band are jamming for the pleasure of it and an arena crowd has merely stumbled in. As with Wilco’s Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, the production builds a rich emotional topography for the songs on They Want My Soul, rather than decorating them with shiny follies. Spoon are at their absolute best when they ratchet up this experimentation. 2002's “Paper Tiger”, just a few strands of sound floating past each other on their way to other songs, or “The Mystery Zone” from Transference, with a one-note bassline and an unchanging riff that suddenly cuts into silence. On “The Ghost of You Lingers” in 2007, which has no drums at all, Daniel calls bleakly at the song's walls: “I had a nightmare nothing could be put back together.” As if to suggest we expect the unexpected, here Spoon offer their most traditional moment ever: “I Just Don't Understand”, a simple cover of Ann-Margret's country waltz from 1961. It's fond rather than ironic, and certainly has charm, but the band remain best when drawing their own maps. They make up for it with their best song to date. On “Inside Out”, Daniel uses a surefooted old-school rap breakbeat as a focal point to help collect his thoughts. It sounds as if he's been knocked for six by love, and “time's gone inside out”, leaving him dazed but with a new perspective – one rendered by the gorgeously airy environs of the song. “I don't make time for holy rollers; there's only you I lead,” he sings, swooningly romantic and a little crotchety at the same time. A wonderful harp solo and ethereal trails of twinkling sound add the gilt edging to an exquisite portrait. They Want My Soul could well be the point in Spoon's career where respect turns to love. It may not have the dizzying conceptual highs of previous records that so enthralled critics, but has something equally valuable: a rock'n'roll band remembering the noise of rock and the swing of roll, and as such it may be their most crowdpleasing record. “Maybe things would have happened a lot quicker if I'd just gone out with Lindsay Lohan,” Daniel said to an interviewer a few years back. This album should finally ensure he never has to resort to that. Ben Beaumont-Thomas Q&A Britt Daniel Why did Spoon have a long break before this record? The beautiful part about being in a band is doing shows and making music, and being absorbed by music. And there's this other part: the business part, a popularity contest and competition, that personally I was getting too involved in. Competition was where my head was at for a while. Transference did alright, but it didn't do as well as we wanted it to. It just wasn't as fun for a while. It wasn't the most fun record to tour, the songs were internal; they're not blast on your car stereo kind of songs. I think it's a great record, it's more of a 'sit in your bedroom' record. So we said we should just go away for a while. You ended up with some brand new sounds: heavier rock, dancier tracks, more delicate ballads... We always try and do something we haven't done before. I suggested the band that they get together and make some music without me, that I could sing on top of, and they came up with some great stuff. Outlier, that was started by Jim and Eric, and as soon as I heard it I thought: this is fucking great – can I put some vocals on top of it? With Inside Out, we had a [demo] track that was me singing on top of an 8-note toy piano – I was in this phase where I was obsessed with Dr Dre, so this is our interpretation of him, basically. I have this attraction to melancholy in music, the bitter longing in songs – on Inside Out, the chord changes alone evoke that. You worked with outside producers for the first time. (Recent Morrissey producer)Joe Chiccarelli is a very pro, old-school producer, a traditional rock producer. We had too many disagreements with him about what the big picture should be – we wanted something a little bit weirder, less traditional. He wants to run the show, and I felt like he thought most of our ideas are bad, and I know our ideas aren't bad. So we had to make a switch. Dave Fridmann came in, mixed the whole album and produced about half of it – his deal is to make everything very maxed-out and noisy and distorted and dirty, that's his thing. What were you writing about lyrically this time round? Getting my heart broke. And breaking it myself. I kind of felt like the perspective of this one was... I remember when I was growing up and really becoming a person, maybe 15 or 16, and feeling like I didn't know any people older that 30 who were leading interesting lives. It just seemed like they were dead, and it was a terrible way to live. And I honestly thought that before I got to be 30 I would have offed myself or be dead in some way. I couldn't picture living past 30. Eventually I got out of my home town and saw that there were people over 30 who were living interesting, rich lives and being humane and making the world better. I get that now. But there's still that little 15 or 16 year old, screaming 'what the fuck is going on here?' Maybe that's why I'm in a rock n roll band. There's also a character from your album Kill The Moonlight, Jonathon Fisk, who reappears in the title track – why did you bring him back? Jonathon Fisk was a made up name for a person I really did know in middle school – he was not my friend, and a bit of a bully, and would fuck with me on the way home from school. They Want My Soul is a song about soul-suckers in general, people that front – I liked the title, it reminded me of a creepy Suicidal Tendencies song that would have freaked me out in high school. So I was thinking of these soul-suckers, and Jonathan Fisk was definitely one. I think it's a lost art, conjuring up these characters from other songs. You've become more and more popular, breaking the US top ten – have you started writing for a mainstream audience? When we make a record we're in our own insular world, and focus on what pleases us, and then our vantage point shifts to: well, I hope other people like it too. When we just got the basic track down on “Rent I Pay”, we were recording out in the country in upstate New York, and it was about 40 miles away from anything but a gas station. At the end of the day we'd all pile into our rental van and listen to what we did that day, and we put on Rent I Pay, and I got some shivers. I knew that was going to be a good one. It was hard rock in a way that we hadn't done before. And then it crosses your mind – people will like this, because I really like it. The band has been together for over 20 years – how have you changed in that time? I didn't know where I was going when I started out. We had a hard enough time just getting gigs, so when we started making the first songs, it was all about: what songs can we write that will go over well in a tiny bar? And get people jazzed enough to come see us next weekend? We thought that was loud, fast songs. Eventually we found ourselves in this position to actually make records, and it wasn't all about trying to bash people over the head, to get them to have a good time in bar. But I always wanted to make an album called Ten Bangers – all rockers. But then Miley Cyrus came out with Bangerz, and she ruined it for me. Is it still fun? There's nothing else I'd rather be doing. It's the best job. I love going out and doing shows, it's one of the most relaxing parts of my life, which some people find hard to believe. If you're out on the road doing shows, there's less you can do: I gotta eat today, shower at some point, find my way to soundcheck. It's almost like being a hunter gatherer; there's not much more you can worry about. Living in that frame of mind, I love it. I can't do it all the time, but when I get to do it, it's the best. INTERVIEW: BEN BEAUMONT-THOMAS

Slow-burning experimental rockers achieve explosive release on terrific eighth…

The phrase ‘critical darling’ is one of the worst brickbats that can be thrown at a band. Under the pretence of being a compliment, it suggests their work is not to be passionately celebrated, empathized with, or enthused about; merely evaluated, more a matter of the head than heart. Pity Spoon then, who, at least in the UK, are the definitive critical darling. According to the online reviews aggregator Metacritic, they are the most favourably-reviewed band of the noughties, placing them somewhere between, say, mumblecore and tagines in an elegant but underpopulated corner of this country’s public imagination.

All of which feels like a terrible misunderstanding, because Spoon exemplify the qualities of the very best bands. In the recent tradition of groups like The Sea and Cake, The Walkmen or Wilco, they’re an urbane US outfit confident enough in themselves to play what they want, not what they think they should. What that means here is classic, joyous rock’n’roll, played on rickety pianos and cleanly strummed guitars, and filled with clever production tricks: a bit of studio chatter here, a flourish of mysterious static there. This is a group for whom form is everything, who can swagger through garage rock and bluesy stompers, hunched art-rock and pretty balladry, but always make sure it hangs correctly on their shoulders. It’s proved a winning formula in the United States. On their last tour, they sold out Radio City Music Hall, while their last two albums have gone top ten.

Front and centre here is Britt Daniel who, a bit like John Lennon, sings in an enjoyably adenoidal and bunged-up way, sometimes breaking free with a soulful chest-driven holler. Melodies are often carried by the basslines, played by the casually dextrous Rob Pope, while drummer Jim Eno slips in sly tricks to keep the driving rhythms ticking with an unreadable intention. Keyboards and guitars flesh out the songs without them ever running to fat.

On early albums this sound took on a slightly happenstance air, which was then pared back for their first masterpiece Kill The Moonlight (2002) – piano chords were played with manic repetition in the album’s jittery anthems, assailed with claps and finger snaps. On next album Gimme Fiction, funk crept in, staying and maturing on the blockbusting Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga. 2010’s Transference, however, seemed fraught with the anxious sounding music of their earliest records. These anxieties are swept away again on this, their eighth album, where everything shines out brighter and louder than ever before as they return from a three-year break.

“Rent I Pay” opens with a sleazy electric shimmy, the central riffs underlined by swells of organ. As with the excellent “Rainy Taxi”, here Spoon let themselves drift into the red, the song’s seams straining with distortion. Where once a band’s graduation to the big leagues was marked by cleanliness, Spoon, like the Black Keys or Jack White (who these bluesily rocking tracks somewhat recall), are among those who enjoying the freedom to be as loud now they’re near the top as they were on the way up.

And like the Black Keys, they know when to be slick. At the smoother end of the spectrum the album offers “Outlier”. Here, Edge-like guitars stream through synths, handclaps, and vocal hooks recalling, of all things, Pulp’s disco moments. “Do You” straddles the clean/dirty impulses, with peppy guitar strumming soothing Daniel’s wracked vocals.

Daniel used to make sound effects for videogames, and that talent for evocative sound pockmarks the album. On “Knock Knock Knock”, an eerily inhuman whistle floats up through the traditional guitar, while “Outlier” has its pomp shorn off by a slow introductory fade in – it feels as though the band are jamming for the pleasure of it and an arena crowd has merely stumbled in. As with Wilco’s Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, the production builds a rich emotional topography for the songs on They Want My Soul, rather than decorating them with shiny follies.

Spoon are at their absolute best when they ratchet up this experimentation. 2002’s “Paper Tiger”, just a few strands of sound floating past each other on their way to other songs, or “The Mystery Zone” from Transference, with a one-note bassline and an unchanging riff that suddenly cuts into silence. On “The Ghost of You Lingers” in 2007, which has no drums at all, Daniel calls bleakly at the song’s walls: “I had a nightmare nothing could be put back together.” As if to suggest we expect the unexpected, here Spoon offer their most traditional moment ever: “I Just Don’t Understand”, a simple cover of Ann-Margret’s country waltz from 1961. It’s fond rather than ironic, and certainly has charm, but the band remain best when drawing their own maps.

They make up for it with their best song to date. On “Inside Out”, Daniel uses a surefooted old-school rap breakbeat as a focal point to help collect his thoughts. It sounds as if he’s been knocked for six by love, and “time’s gone inside out”, leaving him dazed but with a new perspective – one rendered by the gorgeously airy environs of the song. “I don’t make time for holy rollers; there’s only you I lead,” he sings, swooningly romantic and a little crotchety at the same time. A wonderful harp solo and ethereal trails of twinkling sound add the gilt edging to an exquisite portrait.

They Want My Soul could well be the point in Spoon’s career where respect turns to love. It may not have the dizzying conceptual highs of previous records that so enthralled critics, but has something equally valuable: a rock’n’roll band remembering the noise of rock and the swing of roll, and as such it may be their most crowdpleasing record. “Maybe things would have happened a lot quicker if I’d just gone out with Lindsay Lohan,” Daniel said to an interviewer a few years back. This album should finally ensure he never has to resort to that.

Ben Beaumont-Thomas

Q&A

Britt Daniel

Why did Spoon have a long break before this record?

The beautiful part about being in a band is doing shows and making music, and being absorbed by music. And there’s this other part: the business part, a popularity contest and competition, that personally I was getting too involved in. Competition was where my head was at for a while. Transference did alright, but it didn’t do as well as we wanted it to. It just wasn’t as fun for a while. It wasn’t the most fun record to tour, the songs were internal; they’re not blast on your car stereo kind of songs. I think it’s a great record, it’s more of a ‘sit in your bedroom’ record. So we said we should just go away for a while.

You ended up with some brand new sounds: heavier rock, dancier tracks, more delicate ballads…

We always try and do something we haven’t done before. I suggested the band that they get together and make some music without me, that I could sing on top of, and they came up with some great stuff. Outlier, that was started by Jim and Eric, and as soon as I heard it I thought: this is fucking great – can I put some vocals on top of it? With Inside Out, we had a [demo] track that was me singing on top of an 8-note toy piano – I was in this phase where I was obsessed with Dr Dre, so this is our interpretation of him, basically. I have this attraction to melancholy in music, the bitter longing in songs – on Inside Out, the chord changes alone evoke that.

You worked with outside producers for the first time.

(Recent Morrissey producer)Joe Chiccarelli is a very pro, old-school producer, a traditional rock producer. We had too many disagreements with him about what the big picture should be – we wanted something a little bit weirder, less traditional. He wants to run the show, and I felt like he thought most of our ideas are bad, and I know our ideas aren’t bad. So we had to make a switch. Dave Fridmann came in, mixed the whole album and produced about half of it – his deal is to make everything very maxed-out and noisy and distorted and dirty, that’s his thing.

What were you writing about lyrically this time round?

Getting my heart broke. And breaking it myself. I kind of felt like the perspective of this one was… I remember when I was growing up and really becoming a person, maybe 15 or 16, and feeling like I didn’t know any people older that 30 who were leading interesting lives. It just seemed like they were dead, and it was a terrible way to live. And I honestly thought that before I got to be 30 I would have offed myself or be dead in some way. I couldn’t picture living past 30. Eventually I got out of my home town and saw that there were people over 30 who were living interesting, rich lives and being humane and making the world better. I get that now. But there’s still that little 15 or 16 year old, screaming ‘what the fuck is going on here?’ Maybe that’s why I’m in a rock n roll band.

There’s also a character from your album Kill The Moonlight, Jonathon Fisk, who reappears in the title track – why did you bring him back?

Jonathon Fisk was a made up name for a person I really did know in middle school – he was not my friend, and a bit of a bully, and would fuck with me on the way home from school. They Want My Soul is a song about soul-suckers in general, people that front – I liked the title, it reminded me of a creepy Suicidal Tendencies song that would have freaked me out in high school. So I was thinking of these soul-suckers, and Jonathan Fisk was definitely one. I think it’s a lost art, conjuring up these characters from other songs.

You’ve become more and more popular, breaking the US top ten – have you started writing for a mainstream audience?

When we make a record we’re in our own insular world, and focus on what pleases us, and then our vantage point shifts to: well, I hope other people like it too. When we just got the basic track down on “Rent I Pay”, we were recording out in the country in upstate New York, and it was about 40 miles away from anything but a gas station. At the end of the day we’d all pile into our rental van and listen to what we did that day, and we put on Rent I Pay, and I got some shivers. I knew that was going to be a good one. It was hard rock in a way that we hadn’t done before. And then it crosses your mind – people will like this, because I really like it.

The band has been together for over 20 years – how have you changed in that time?

I didn’t know where I was going when I started out. We had a hard enough time just getting gigs, so when we started making the first songs, it was all about: what songs can we write that will go over well in a tiny bar? And get people jazzed enough to come see us next weekend? We thought that was loud, fast songs. Eventually we found ourselves in this position to actually make records, and it wasn’t all about trying to bash people over the head, to get them to have a good time in bar. But I always wanted to make an album called Ten Bangers – all rockers. But then Miley Cyrus came out with Bangerz, and she ruined it for me.

Is it still fun?

There’s nothing else I’d rather be doing. It’s the best job. I love going out and doing shows, it’s one of the most relaxing parts of my life, which some people find hard to believe. If you’re out on the road doing shows, there’s less you can do: I gotta eat today, shower at some point, find my way to soundcheck. It’s almost like being a hunter gatherer; there’s not much more you can worry about. Living in that frame of mind, I love it. I can’t do it all the time, but when I get to do it, it’s the best.

INTERVIEW: BEN BEAUMONT-THOMAS