Wayne Shorter has died aged 89.
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His publicist confirmed his death to the New York Times.
One of the great jazz saxophonists, Shorter had been at the core of modern jazz since he joined Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers in 19...
His publicist confirmed his death to the New York Times.
One of the great jazz saxophonists, Shorter had been at the core of modern jazz since he joined Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers in 1958. He eventually became musical director for the Jazz Messengers, composing pieces for the band, before joining Miles Davis in 1964.
Shorter played with Davis’ Second Great Quintet alongside Herbie Hancock on piano, Ron Carter on bass and Tony Williams on drums, playing on a peerless run of albums: E.S.P., Miles Smiles, Sorcerer, Nefertiti, Miles In The Sky and Filles de Kilimanjaro.
Speaking to Uncut last year, Hancock said of the Quintet: “When Wayne finally joined, that was the link we really needed. It was hard work, because the level of musicianship was so high. Those were the best guys in the business.”
Shorter continued to work with Davis after the Quintet broke up, playing on his 1969 masterpiece, In A Silent Way.
He formed pioneering fusion band Weather Report in 1970, with whom he remained until 1986.
Meanwhile, Shorter collaborated outside jazz, appearing on multiple Joni Mitchell albums, Steely Dan‘s 1977 album Aja – where he played a memorable solo on the title track – Santana, the Rolling Stones and others.
Shorter’s own catalogue was equally progressive and open-minded. The many highlights included the trio of albums he released in 1964 – Speak No Evil, Night Dreamer and JuJu – during his time on Blue Note, and “Footprints” from his 1966 album Adam’s Apple, a different recording of which also appeared on Miles Smiles.
Shorter formed his own Quartet in 2000. He retired in 2018, after having spent almost 70 years performing.
Steve Mackey, Pulp's bass player, has died aged 56.
The news was broken by his family earlier today [March 2]. “After three months in hospital, fighting with all his strength and determination, we are shocked and devastated to have said goodbye my brilliant, beautiful husband, Steve Mackey.”
...
Steve Mackey, Pulp‘s bass player, has died aged 56.
The news was broken by his family earlier today [March 2]. “After three months in hospital, fighting with all his strength and determination, we are shocked and devastated to have said goodbye my brilliant, beautiful husband, Steve Mackey.”
Pulp also wrote, “Our beloved friend & bass player Steve Mackey passed away this morning. Our thoughts are with his family & loved ones. Safe travels, Steve. We hope to catch up with you one day. All our love.”
Our beloved friend & bass player Steve Mackey passed away this morning. Our thoughts are with his family & loved ones. Safe travels, Steve. We hope to catch up with you one day. All our love xx pic.twitter.com/pickNV56Nl
Mackey joined Pulp in 1989, playing on their run of commercially successful albums including 1994’s His ‘n’ Hers and 1995’s Different Class.
As a producer and songwriter, Mackey worked with Marianne Faithfull, M.I.A., Florence + The Machine and Arcade Fire.
Although Mackey had participated in Pulp’s 2011 – 2013 reunion, he announced in October last year that he would not be involved with the upcoming 2023 live shows.
The Public Enemy commander on the records that inspired him to bring the noise: “It was scientific alchemy! I was blown to pieces”, in our APRIL 2023 issue of Uncut, available to buy here.
RUN-DMC
“Rock Box”
Profile 1984
We can talk about anything by Run-DMC: “My Adidas”, “Pet...
The Public Enemy commander on the records that inspired him to bring the noise: “It was scientific alchemy! I was blown to pieces”, in our APRIL 2023 issue of Uncut, available to buy here.
RUN-DMC “Rock Box” Profile 1984
We can talk about anything by Run-DMC: “My Adidas”, “Peter Piper” “Rock Box”, “Sucker MC’s”… but if I had to choose one to be the most influential, it’s “Rock Box”. It showed that hip-hop and rock could really work. Run-DMC was a big thing – there was nothing like it.
They were able to take the elements of everything that had gone before, from 1973 to 1983. They were like a synopsis or a culmination of the whole 10 years of hip-hop before that. The unbelievable aspect of Run-DMC is that they compressed a decade into a recording act: two dudes and a DJ. Run-DMC made me seriously know that hip-hop can be as big as rock’n’roll.
ISAAC HAYES Hot Buttered Soul Stax, 1969
Towards the end of the ’60s, Stax were stripped of their catalogue, which was all owned by Atlantic on a handshake sort of deal. So Al Bell made a merger deal with Gulf+Western and they were supplied with a good bit of money, and he had the brilliant idea of creating 27 albums. The studio was loaded and people thought it was crazy, but all of a sudden Stax had a catalogue. Isaac Hayes made two albums, and the second album was Hot Buttered Soul, which changed the whole world of album artists for black people. It was black psychedelic, you know? Take your head into the groove. Isaac Hayes is my musical godfather.
STEVIE WONDER “Fingertips”
Tamla, 1963
I come from a Motown, Stax, Atlantic house-hold. My moms always played music while we were told to do chores around the house. In fact we wanted to get away from the music, so we got away from the duty of choice! But Stevie Wonder’s “Fingertips” was manic enough to make us tear up the damn house. People talk about James Brown’s Live At The Apollo, but “Fingertips” was this live single that resonated to us as kids. You got a lot of kids yelling, the harmonica blowing, it was just a manic cut. People throw ‘genius’ around but there are no words for Stevie Wonder. I’m 62 and I’ve been listening to this dude since I was three years old. Go figure!
CHIC “Good Times”
Atlantic, 1979
There’s no record like “Good Times”. It’s the bridge between all that was before and all that came after, between the realms of black music and rock, R&B and soul, and hip-hop on the other end of it. It was the Big Bang Theory. With Chic, Nile Rodgersand Bernard Edwards took us from R&B to disco, they upped the tempo and then they slowed the whole environment down with “Good Times”. Nile Rodgers is a king, man. There’s Nile, Prince, Stevie Wonder, George Clinton– absolute geniuses. Why did “Good Times” become a foundation stone of hip-hop? It’s the pulse of the blood. Trying to describe it is like trying to explain, “Why is water wet?”
THE BEATLES Let It Be
Apple, 1970
I’m 12 years older than hip-hop. It didn’t come out of nowhere for me – it was a momentum forming, like lava pooling. So I can’t erase the fact that there’s influences that go beyond today’s narrative of what they think hip-hop is. Dude, I’m part of the result of the British Invasion. I’m four years old dancing to “I Want To Hold Your Hand”, and everything else that The Beatlesoffered. They had a whole bunch of different approaches on how they were going to create music for the masses, that we all could not not hear. So I’m a Beatles fan. There’s nothing crafted better than “Let It Be”. That says it all.
GRANDMASTER FLASH, MELLE MEL, KURTIS BLOW, DJ STARSKI ET AL Live At The Armory
Unreleased cassette, 1979
What really got me into this thing was a cassette tape being passed around from a gathering at The Armory [in Jamaica, Queens, NYC] in 1979. You can find it on YouTube. “Rapper’s Delight” had been released a couple of weeks before; “Christmas Rappin’” was yet to be released. And this is the closest inside look at the fever of hip-hop and rap, before records. These cats were just going for it. It was probably the greatest live event of the combination of MCing and DJing ever. It was absolutely scientific alchemy! I was fuckin’ blown to pieces.
JAMES BROWN “Say It Loud – I’m Black And I’m Proud”
King, 1968
How can you put James Browninto a sentence? It’s impossible, man. James Brown is best described by an “uh!” and you go from there. If I had to pick one song that was influential politically, it’s “Say It Loud – I’m Black And I’m Proud”. But James Brown was beyond what you saw and heard – you had to feel James Brown. My father was part of the Columbia record club that gave you albums for a penny. We had a record player connected to a Motorola TV: you could play records and watch TV on the same device. James Brown and Aretha Franklin were played in the house like they were uncles and aunts.
ERIC B & RAKIM Follow The Leader Uni/MCA, 1988
Follow The Leader was music made for 2035. Rakim cannot be misunderstood or underappreciated. His mind operates differently, as his faith was based on numerology from another era, know what I’m saying? So that’s how he approached that record. And also Eric B’s willingness to know that this is happening and make it happen in a way that was so futuristic… People still haven’t caught up with that record. I also gotta mention Boogie Down Productions’ “Poetry”, from [1987’s] Criminal Minded. That was just genius. Basically KRS-One is saying, “This is what rapping really is – we’re poets as much as Jim Morrison.”
Chuck D’s art book Livin’ Loud is out now, published by Genesis Publications (£35); see more at chuckdbook.com.
Billy Bragg has announced a new box set to mark his four decades in music, The Roaring Forty – find all the details below.
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The singer-songwriter and left-wing activist is due to release the career-spanning collection on...
Billy Bragg has announced a new box set to mark his four decades in music, The Roaring Forty – find all the details below.
The singer-songwriter and left-wing activist is due to release the career-spanning collection on October 27. Its deluxe CD version will comprise 14 discs, with the vinyl edition coming as a 3xLP (40 tracks) or a single ‘primer’ LP (13 tracks).
According to a press release, the 300-song CD box set is made up of Bragg’s 12 studio albums to date as well as a host of non-album singles and B-sides, session tracks, rare live recordings, collaborations and previously unreleased material from the past 40 years.
It also boasts a large format book containing images of 40 significant objects from the musician’s career, including his debut NME cover, the hand-tinted flyer to his first solo gig, the original lyrics to “A Lover Sings”, the Red Wedge manifesto, his membership card to the Smokey Robinson & The Miracles fan club, along with with commentary from Bragg himself.
In a statement, Bragg recalled of first starting out: “It seems like just the other day that I was handing John Peela mushroom biryani and asking him to play my first record. The music business has changed dramatically since then, but my belief in the power of the song is undimmed.”
In the early 80s, I realised if I wanted to hear music that said something about the state of the world, I’d have to make it myself. To mark my 40th anniversary, I’ve compiled a number of commemorative releases spanning my career since then. Pre-order: https://t.co/BuRCFT8RJSpic.twitter.com/Or2sN0JqVh
He added on Twitter: “In the early 80s, I realised if I wanted to hear music that said something about the state of the world, I’d have to make it myself. To mark my 40th anniversary, I’ve compiled a number of commemorative releases spanning my career since then.”
1xLP
A1. “A New England” (2013 Remaster) from Life’s A Riot With Spy Vs. Spy (1983)
A2. “Between The Wars” (2006 Remaster) from Between The Wars E.P. (1985)
A3. “Levi Stubbs’ Tears” (2006 Remaster) from Levi Stubbs’ Tears(1986)
A4. “Greetings To The New Brunette” (2006 Remaster) from Talking With The Taxman About Poetry (1986)
A5. “Waiting For The Great Leap Forwards” (2006 Remaster) from Workers Playtime (1988)
A6. “Sexuality” (2006 Remaster) from Don’t Try This At Home (1991)
A7. “Accident Waiting To Happen (Red Star Version)” (1999 Remaster) from Accident Waiting To Happen (1992)
B1. “Upfield” (2006 remaster) from William Bloke (1996)
B2. “The Boy Done Good” (1999 Remaster) from Bloke On Bloke(1997)
B3. “California Stars” (Live October / November 1998) from Mermaid Avenue Tour / You Can Call Me Cupcake (1999) – Billy Bragg & The Blokes
B4. “I Keep Faith” from Mr. Love & Justice (2008)
B5. “The L&N Don’t Stop Here Anymore” from Shine A Light: Field Recordings From The Great American Railroad (2016) – Billy Bragg &Joe Henry
B6. “I Will Be Your Shield” from The Million Things That Never Happened(2021)
3xLP/2xCD
A1. “A New England” (2013 Remaster) from Life’s A Riot With Spy Vs. Spy (1983)
A2. “The Milkman Of Human Kindness” (2013 Remaster) from Life’s A Riot With Spy Vs. Spy (1983)
A3. “To Have And Have Not” (2013 Remaster) from Life’s A Riot With Spy Vs. Spy (1983)
A4. “The Man In The Iron Mask” (2013 Remaster) from Life’s A Riot With Spy Vs. Spy (1983)
A5. “St. Swithin’s Day” (2006 Remaster) from Brewing Up With(1984)
A6. “The Saturday Boy” (2006 Remaster) from Brewing Up With(1984)
A7. “Between The Wars” (2006 Remaster) from Between The Wars E.P.(1985)
A8. “The World Turned Upside Down” (2006 Remaster) from Between The Wars E.P. (1985)
A9. “Which Side Are You On?” (2006 Remaster) from Between The Wars E.P.(1985)
B1. “Levi Stubbs’ Tears” (2006 Remaster) from Levi Stubbs’ Tears(1986)
B2. “Greetings To The New Brunette” (2006 Remaster) from Talking With The Taxman About Poetry (1986)
B3. “There Is Power In A Union” (2006 Remaster) from Talking With The Taxman About Poetry (1986)
B4. “Help Save The Youth Of America” (2006 Remaster) from Talking With The Taxman About Poetry (1986)
B5. “She’s Leaving Home” (1999 Remaster) from She’s Leaving Home(1988) – Billy Bragg with Cara Tivey
B6. “She’s Got A New Spell” (2006 Remaster) from Workers Playtime (1988)
B7. “Must I Paint You A Picture” (2006 Remaster) from Workers Playtime(1988) Continued…/
C1. “Waiting For The Great Leap Forwards” (2006 Remaster) from Workers Playtime (1988)
C2. “The Internationale” (2006 Remaster) from The Internationale (1990)
C3. “Tank Park Salute” (2006 Remaster) from Don’t Try This At Home(1991)
C4. “Sexuality” (2006 Remaster) from Don’t Try This At Home (1991)
C5. “Accident Waiting To Happen (Red Star Version)” (1999 Remaster) from Accident Waiting To Happen (1992)
C6. “Upfield” from William Bloke (1996)
D1. “The Boy Done Good” (1999 Remaster) from Bloke On Bloke (1997)
D2. “Walt Whitman’s Niece” from Mermaid Avenue (1998) Billy Bragg and Wilco
D3. “Way Over Yonder In The Minor Key” from Mermaid Avenue (1998) Billy Bragg and Wilco
D4. “My Flying Saucer” from Mermaid Avenue II(2000) Billy Bragg and Wilco
D5. “California Stars (Live October / November 1999)” from Mermaid Avenue Tour / You Can Call Me Cupcake (1999) Billy Bragg and The Blokes
D6. “Some Days I See The Point” from England, Half English (2002) – Billy Bragg & The Blokes
E1. “England, Half English” from England, Half English(2002) Billy Bragg and The Blokes
E2. “Take Down The Union Jack (Band Version)” (2006 Remaster) from Take Down The Union Jack (2002) – Billy Bragg & The Blokes
E3. “Old Clash Fan Fight Song” from Johnny Clash (2007)
E4. “I Keep Faith” from Mr. Love & Justice(2008)
E5. “Bugeye Jim” from Mermaid Avenue III (2012)
E6. “Never Buy The Sun” from Fight Songs (A Decade Of Downloads) (2011)
F1. “No One Knows Nothing Anymore” from Tooth & Nail(2013)
F2. “Handyman Blues” from Tooth & Nail (2013)
F3. “The L&N Don’t Stop Here Anymore” from Shine A Light: Field Recordings From The Great American Railroad – Billy Bragg and Joe Henry
F4. “King Tide And The Sunny Day Flood” from Bridges Not Walls (2017)
F5. “Mid-Century Modern” from The Million Things That Never Happened (2021)
F6. “I Will Be Your Shield” from The Million Things That Never Happened(2021)
14-disc CD
Disc 1. 1983 – 1984: Life’s A Riot… Plus
Disc 2. 1984 – 1985: Brewing Up With… Plus
Disc 3. 1986 – 1988: Talking With The Taxman… Plus
Disc 4. 1988 – 1989: Workers Playtime… Plus
Disc 5. 1990 – 1991: The Internationale… Plus
Disc 6. 1991 – 1992: Don’t Try This At Home… Plus
Disc 7. 1996 – 1997: William Bloke / Bloke On Bloke… Plus
Disc 8. 1998 – 2012: The Mermaid Avenue Recordings
Disc 9. 1998 – 2002: England, Half English… Plus
Disc 10. 2006 – 2010: Mr. Love & Justice / Pressure Drop… Plus
Disc 11. 2011 – 2015: Tooth & Nail… Plus
Disc 12. 2016 – 2017: Shine A Light / Bridges Not Walls… Plus
Disc 13: 2021 The Million Things That Never Happened Plus
Disc 14: 1990 – 2015: Rare & Previously Unreleased Recordings
Kurt Vile will be touring the UK and Europe later this year.
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READ MORE: Kurt Vile: “It’s finally accepted that I can just space out all the time”
The tour follows the release of his album, (watch my moves), which ...
Kurt Vile will be touring the UK and Europe later this year.
The tour follows the release of his album, (watch my moves), which came out in April of 2022, and includes dates at Black Deer Festival in Kent and London’s Koko. The London show will be Vile’s first gig in the capital since 2019.
King Hannah will be opening on select UK dates. Tickets will go on sale on Friday (March 3) at 10am – you can buy yours here.
Kurt Vile will play the following dates:
JUNE 2023
11 – Hilvarenbeek, Best Kept Secret
12 – London, Koko
15 – Bristol, SWX
16 – Kent, Black Deer Festival
18 – Westmeath, Body and Soul Festival
19 – Manchester, New Century
20 – Newcastle, Boiler Shop
21 – Edinburgh, Queens Hall
22 – Nottingham, The Level
23 – Birmingham, O2 Institute
25 – Brighton, Chalk
26 – Tourcoing, Le Grand Mix
27 – Heidelberg, Karlstorbahnhof
28 – Munich, Muffathelle
30 – Turin, Spazio 211 Open Ai
JULY 2023
1- Prato, Off Tune Festival
2 – Ferrara, Ferrera Comfort Festival
3 – Ljubljana, Kino Siska
5 – Zurich, Rote Fabrik
7 – Ile Du Gaou, Pointu Festival
9 – Brugge, Cactusfestival
10 – Amsterdam, Live at Amsterdamse Bos
Neil Young performed live for the first time in over four years this weekend - check out footage of "Heart Of Gold" and "Comes A Time" below.
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READ MORE: Neil Young with Crazy Horse – World Record review
On February 25...
Neil Young performed live for the first time in over four years this weekend – check out footage of “Heart Of Gold” and “Comes A Time” below.
On February 25 Young turned up at a march and rally in support of the United For Old Growth campaign, which is looking to stop the Canadian government from allowing logging companies from destroying old-growth forests.
“I’m only here for those trees up there,” Young told the audience. “It’s a precious, sacred thing, these old trees. They show us the power of nature when we are being threatened. They show us the past. They show us our future. That’s something that I hope our Canadian government and business section will recognise. These trees have lasted so long. They deserve Canada’s respect.”
He then performed “Heart Of Gold” from 1972’s Harvest and “Comes A Time” from the 1978 album of the same name. Check out fan-shot footage below:
That's right, Neil Young performed at #United4OldGrowth to deliver a message to the Canadian government and @bcndp? And yes we were all sobbing as soon as he started playing Heart of Gold? pic.twitter.com/SaCpAwN9c4
@Neilyoung made a surprise appearance at the #United4OldGrowth rally today showing his support for the @bcndp to immediately halt logging of at-risk old growth forests while providing conservation financing to First Nations & a just transition for workers.#yyj#bcpolipic.twitter.com/Ea00sNEUvq
What an incredible moment to be a part of, thank you Neil for bringing your gift of music to us and for using it to help save the ancient forests. pic.twitter.com/X2N4D8vkll
Neil Young’s last public performance before this weekend was in September 2019, when the veteran artist headlined a benefit concert in Lake Hughes, California alongside Norah Jones and Father John Misty.
A week later, Young is set to perform as part of Willie Nelson‘s star-studded 90th birthday celebrations as part of a line-up that includes Beck, Snoop Dogg, Kacey Musgraves, Orville Peck and many more.
Celebrating the centenary of canny Scots poet and much-loved indie touchstone Ivor Cutler, in our FEBRUARY 2023 issue of Uncut, available to buy here.
Having enchanted The Beatles as lugubrious would-be bus conductor Buster Bloodvessel during the making of Magical Mystery Tour, Ivor Cutler receiv...
Celebrating the centenary of canny Scots poet and much-loved indie touchstone Ivor Cutler, in our FEBRUARY 2023 issue of Uncut, available to buy here.
Having enchanted The Beatles as lugubrious would-be bus conductor Buster Bloodvessel during the making of Magical Mystery Tour,Ivor Cutler received what he considered an indecent proposal from one of the Fab Four to work with their children as a private tutor. The sporran-dry Scottish humorist said he turned the offer down “on socialist principles”, adding: “What made their kids more special than other kids?”
Released to commemorate what would have been his 100th birthday on January 15, BruceLindsay’s new biography A Life Outside The Sitting Room shows how Cutler was far too determinedly strange to be anyone’s pet eccentric. The Glaswegian’s surreal poems, songs and meditations on his Govan childhood entranced generations, from the smart set at Peter Cook’s Establishment club to generations of John Peel listeners. Cutler’s voice-and-harmonium combination graced the finale of Robert Wyatt’s 1974 masterwork Rock Bottom and his perverse records were released on the hippest labels of his age: Virgin and Harvest in the 1970s, Rough Trade in the ’80s and Creation in the ’90s.
“It’s the imagination of the man,” says Lindsay, explaining Cutler’s appeal. “He can sing a beautiful song like “I’m Going In A Field” – one of Paul McCartney’s favourites – and he can sing a song from the perspective of a yellow fly.” Matt Brennan (aka Citizen Bravo), who co-ordinated 2020’s all-star Cutler tribute LP, Return To Y’Hup, adds: “He created an absolutely unique and self-contained world through his music, prose and poetry. By operating on the fringes of so many forms of music and art, he attracted admirers from all genres into his orbit.”
A sensitive boy deemed too dreamy to complete his training as an RAF navigator during World War II, Cutler drifted into teaching, including a revelatory spell at AS Neill’s “school without rules”, Summerhill. He continued to work in London primary schools while eventually deciding to perform his own material after publishers could not persuade any artists to record his strange songs. The Beatles dragged him onto the Magical Mystery Tour bus after hearing him on BBC radio and he would continue to be a solitary presence on the margins of the London cultural scene (amusing himself by leaving gnomic sticky notes around town while riding his bicycle out from his Camden flat) until his death, aged 83, in March 2006.
Emma Pollock was entranced by the grim twinkle of Cutler’s Life In A Scotch Sitting Room stories, which were tour-bus go-tos during her time with The Delgados. “It’s that kind of withering wit – that very Scottish take on life when there’s just the hint of a joke but not any more than that,” she tells Uncut. “He had a very individual outlook and he didn’t seem to give a damn what anyone thought.” Lindsay agrees: “There are certainly comparisons with people like Spike Milligan. But with Ivor, I think everything he did, he did primarily for himself.”
Lindsay never got to interview Cutler himself, but assembles his complicated story with the help of a raft of friends and relatives – not least Cutler’s two sons, and poet Phyllis April King, who as Cutler’s partner for much of his later life did not need to address him as “Mr Cutler”, a protocol the artist demanded of anyone meeting him for the first time. Stern and inscrutable but mischievous and at times painfully poignant (hear 1998’s “I Built A House” and weep), Cutler said of himself: “If I am a genius, I’m a genius in a very small way indeed.” Here, his tiny light shines bright.
Ivor Cutler: A Life Outside The Sitting Room is published by Equinox, Jan 15 (£25).
The Necks started in 1987 as an experiment conducted in private, not intended for public exposure. That changed as soon as the three musicians realised how well their collectively improvised music was working, and with Travel, their 19th studio album, they stay true to the process that has served th...
The Necks started in 1987 as an experiment conducted in private, not intended for public exposure. That changed as soon as the three musicians realised how well their collectively improvised music was working, and with Travel, their 19th studio album, they stay true to the process that has served them so effectively. Unchanging in its essence but never standing still, it has carried its members, two Australians and a New Zealander, from their late twenties to their early sixties on a steadily unfurling wave of creativity, as richly nourishing to their devoted audience as to themselves.
Consciously or not, there’s a lot of Zen in the way The Necks go about making music, most particularly in the way habits are used as a way of breaking habits. In the improvisations that make up their live performances, one member of the group is designated to begin before the others join in at a time and in a manner of their choosing. To construct Travel, The Necks created four shorter live-in-the-studio improvisations and subjected them to the sort of post-production techniques used on many of its predecessors, overdubbing extra layers of sonic texture, most frequently the pianist Chris Abrahams’ Hammond organ and the guitars of the drummer Tony Buck. Through these methods they dramatise each piece, enhancing the quality so cherished by their admirers: a slow-burn narrative arc that can lead anywhere, but never on a whim.
The length of the pieces was determined by the decision to make each of the four to fit a side of a 12-inch vinyl LP, meaning that Travel exists as a double album as well as an 80-minute single CD. This repeats the format used on Unfold, released in 2017 on the Ideologic Organ label. Pieces of a similar length were also created for the three-track CDs Chemist(2009) and Three (2020) and the two-track Mindset (2011), but the results here feel more fully realised, richer and deeper.
The first of the four pieces, “Signal”, opens with a supple two-bar riff from Lloyd Swanton’s warm-toned double bass, joined by Chris Abrahams’ single-note piano lines and by Tony Buck’s susurrating cymbals and ticking rimshots. The piano is replaced after several minutes by a watery organ figure, joined by a pair of Buck’s overdubbed guitars playing ska-type double-time backbeat chords on either side of the stereo picture, slightly out of sync. As the organ fades, the bass riff is subjected to small variations and the piano returns to resume its increasingly elaborate meditations, a prod in the bass end of the keyboard occasionally reinforcing Swanton’s constant repetition of the piece’s root note. Then the organ arrives from another direction and in a different guise, gently growling a new riff laid asymmetrically across the basic two-bar pattern, thickening the texture supporting the piano. Buck’s drumming stays in place throughout the 20 minutes, churning busily but discreetly under the groove in such a way as to give the impression that he’s steadily speeding it up, which in fact he is, since he and his colleagues have smoothly accelerated from 110 to 120 beats per minute over the course of the piece. By the end the bass has reduced itself to silence, the chack-chack of the ska-style guitars maintains the pulse, the piano repeats a two-note treble phrase and the cymbals shimmer to a halt in a distant heat-haze.
“Forming” is defined by the Moorish accent of Abrahams’ piano phrases, spreading over the tempo-free textures of Buck’s tom-toms, Swanton’s alternation of sonorous lower-register bowed phrases and the high strumming of a single string, and organ chords discreetly hovering in the background. While Abrahams floats above it, Swanton grounds the piece, working furiously to create an almost orchestral effect before retreating as Buck looms out of the mist with a wild pounding that is beautifully held back in the mix. While there’s no explicit rhythm, there is now an extremely powerful flow over which Abrahams can use delay within his phrasing to create the illusion of slowing the time down. The incantatory effect is enhanced by Swanton, who returns with bow in hand, sawing furiously, amplifying the turbulence under the serene piano. For a moment you’re tempted to think that this is where McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison and Elvin Jones might have gone, had the classic John Coltrane Quartet stayed together.
Swanton’s bowed bass harmonics, sounding surprisingly like the breathy tone of a shakuhachi, open “Imprinting” against the sort of shuffling noises Buck often makes by manipulating strands of small metal objects across the head of his snare drum with one hand while the other is pattering across his tom-toms, working up a rhythm that is regular but not subdivided by bar lines or cadences. As the organ seeps into the backdrop, soft-toned single-note phrases emerge from what sounds like some non-binary instrument sharing the precise articulation of a piano and the note-bends of an electric guitar: most likely some processed version of the former, whose true sound is occasionally allowed to emerge. Essentially, “Imprinting” is a gently relentless one-chord jam on the blues in E minor.
There’s a lot of blues, too, in the final track, or LP side. The Necks’ history includes a number of concerts in churches, using on-site pipe organs, and the majestic tones of such an instrument provide the opening fanfare of “Bloodstream”, joined by surprising gospel phrases from the piano, with Abrahams channelling the ’60s soul-funk style of such jazz pianists as Bobby Timmons and Les McCann. It’s a reminder that the combination of organ and piano was a staple of black church music before finding its way into rock via Procol Harum (Matthew Fisher and Gary Brooker) and The Band (Garth Hudson and Richard Manuel); this is an extended exploration of its possibilities, the piano growing more florid and the organ more celestial. Swanton’s bass keeps up a thrumming and droning background while Buck adds rolling thunderclouds and occasional flashes of lightning to another piece that never falls into a regular metre.
“By the time we’re well into a piece, it’s really hard to imagine even how it got there from where it started,” Buck said to me many years ago, while Abrahams remarked on how their music brought “an understanding that things can find a way of becoming other things while you’re performing”. If Travel perhaps lacks the sense of profound revelation that can result from total immersion in The Necks’ hour-long epics, whether in person or in their studio creations, the relative brevity of these four pieces permits an easier engagement with their approach, with the way these three remarkable musicians, while working at their own pace on every level, continue to explore a sound-world and a collective methodology entirely of their own conception.
Is it among their best? It’s another Necks album, meaning another 80 minutes of what, when considering the 35 years of their career to date, can seem like gazing out of the window on a marathon flight crossing continents, each vista – deserts, mountain ranges, forests, seas – imperceptibly or abruptly giving way to the next. Sand, rocks, trees, water: all are the same and yet never the same twice. The music that began in 1987 continues on its unbroken path, always familiar but always different. Travelis well named.
John Lee Hooker wrote his biggest hit because he just couldn’t get to work on time. After scoring a residency at the Apex Bar in Detroit in the early 1940s, he developed a habit of showing up well after his first set was supposed to begin, and the bartender – a woman named either Willow or Willa...
John Lee Hooker wrote his biggest hit because he just couldn’t get to work on time. After scoring a residency at the Apex Bar in Detroit in the early 1940s, he developed a habit of showing up well after his first set was supposed to begin, and the bartender – a woman named either Willow or Willa – would regularly cock her finger like a gun, point at him, and scold the bluesman: “Boom boom, you’re late again.” Eventually he realised there might be a song in that rhythmic declaration, and Hooker began playing around with a start-stop composition. Always behind schedule, he didn’t actually record it until nearly 20 years later, but “Boom Boom” became one of his biggest hits and arguably his most enduring composition.
A lusty strut with a leering guitar lick and a tight call-and-response with his backing band – which included members of the Funk Brothers, already renowned as the house band at Motown – “Boom Boom” opens Hooker’s 1962 album Burnin’, a masterpiece of electrified Detroit boogie blues and his greatest long-player. Sixty years later, it sounds like a pivotal album, a foundational text for the blues-rock explosion of the mid-1960s. “Boom Boom” was quickly covered by The Animals, The Yardbirds, Them and seemingly every other skinny white guy who picked up a guitar in the 1960s, not to mention Dr Feelgood
on their ’75 debut. Hooker encouraged the attention and even recorded with many of his acolytes later in the ’60s, ensuring that blues would remain in rock’n’roll’s DNA.
Born to sharecroppers outside Clarksdale, Mississippi, in either 1912 or 1917, Hooker ran away to Memphis as a teenager and cut his teeth busking on Beale Street, then headed north to Detroit. He worked at the Ford factory during the day and played local clubs at night, and when the city crowds got too noisy, he traded his acoustic guitar in for an electric, which helped to distinguish Detroit blues as something very different – heavy, industrialised, modern – from the more acoustic sound favoured down South.
He scored his first hit with “Boogie Chillen” in 1949 and continued recording throughout the 1950s. He hit his creative and commercial peak at the height of the folk revival, which resurrected the careers of so many blues artists, but Hooker didn’t really need a kickstart. He’d never stopped recording or performing, and while he did briefly recast himself as a rural bluesman, which was the trend at the time, the role never really fitted him.
As a guitar player and as a performer, Hooker had his own sense of timing. In addition to running late to gigs, he rarely stuck to a strict tempo or played a song the same way twice, which made it difficult for backing musicians to keep up. In that regard, Burnin’is a small miracle. Hooker’s longtime pianist, Joe Hunter, corralled members of the Funk Brothers to play on these sessions. They were already renowned for playing on Motown’s earliest hits, including The Miracles’ “Shop Around” and The Marvelettes’ “Please Mr Postman” (both from 1960), but they sound grittier here, a little rowdier but not less precise or evocative, as though they were enjoying a little more freedom away from Hitsville USA.
The Funk Brothers rein Hooker in. The rhythm section of drummer Benny Benjamin and bassist James Jamerson keeps these songs tight and focused, lending “Let’s Make It” its streamlined momentum and “Drug Store Woman” its lowdown gait. The entire band, Hooker included, move and lurch as one organism, with the saxophones adding breathy commentary on the droning “What Do You Say” that barely skirts bawdiness. The music is inventive, sly, even hilarious, like when they borrow the main riff from The Champs’ “Tequila” for “Keep Your Hands To Yourself”, a raucous warning to a romantic rival that sounds more like a party than a scuffle.
But Burnin’ is Hooker’s show, and he proves to be an immensely charismatic frontman, enlivened rather than tamed by his band. His guitar nimbly rides the groove of each song, splitting the difference between rhythm and lead. On the up-tempo songs he raves and howls to cajole the other players along, and on the slower numbers he moans and wails, his talking-blues delivery imbuing plaints like “Drug Store Woman” and “Process” with gravity, menace even.
During the early 1960s folk revival, Burnin’was an anomaly: a fully plugged-in album that straddles blues and R&B, a beautifully rambunctious collection that makes no gesture toward history but simply ploughs forward into the future of pop music.
The V&A's David Bowie Is... exhibition is set to be made into permanent UK venue celebrating his legacy.
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The exhibition, wh...
The V&A’s David Bowie Is… exhibition is set to be made into permanent UK venue celebrating his legacy.
The exhibition, which first went on show 2013, will now be housed in the new David Bowie Centre for the Study of Performing Arts at the V&A’s East Storehouse, in London’s Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park.
It will open from 2025 and made possible by a £10million donation from the Blavatnik Family Foundation and Warner Music Group.
The centre will feature more than 80,000 items from across Bowie’s boundary-breaking 60-year career.
V&A Director Dr Tristram Hunt said: “David Bowie was one of the greatest musicians and performers of all time. The V&A is thrilled to become custodians of his incredible archive, and to be able to open it up for the public. Bowie’s radical innovations across music, theatre, film, fashion, and style – from Berlin to Tokyo to London – continue to influence design and visual culture and inspire creatives from Janelle Monáe to Lady Gaga to Tilda Swinton and Raf Simons.
“Our new collections centre, V&A East Storehouse, is the ideal place to put Bowie’s work in dialogue with the V&A’s collection spanning 5,000 years of art, design, and performance. My deepest thanks go to the David Bowie Estate, Blavatnik Family Foundation and Warner Music Group for helping make this a reality and for providing a new sourcebook for the Bowies of tomorrow.”
We are thrilled to announce that the exceptional archive of legend @DavidBowieReal is coming to the V&A! Spanning 80,000 items across his 60 year career, you can explore Bowie’s life’s work in ways never possible before at @vam_east Storehouse from 2025 #DavidBowieArchivepic.twitter.com/sTGtJnydKB
A spokesperson from the David Bowie Estate added: “With David’s life’s work becoming part of the UK’s national collections, he takes his rightful place amongst many other cultural icons and artistic geniuses. The David Bowie Centre for the Study of Performance- and the behind the scenes access that V&A East Storehouse offers– will mean David’s work can be shared with the public in ways that haven’t been possible before, and we’re so pleased to be working closely with the V&A to continue to commemorate David’s enduring cultural influence.”
Bowie’s collaborator and friend Tilda Swinton said of the news: “In 2013, the V&A’s David Bowie Is… exhibition gave us unquestionable evidence that Bowie is a spectacular example of an artist, who not only made unique and phenomenal work, but who has an influence and inspiration far beyond that work itself. Ten years later, the continuing regenerative nature of his spirit grows ever further in popular resonance and cultural reach down through younger generations.
“In acquiring his archive for posterity, the V&A will now be able to offer access to David Bowie’s history – and the portal it represents – not only to practicing artists from all fields, but to every last one of us, and for the foreseeable future. This is a truly great piece of news, which deserves the sincerest gratitude and congratulations to all those involved who have made it possible.”
A limited edition vinyl reissue of The Velvet Underground's Loaded has been announced.
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Loaded (Fully Re-loaded Edition) is a new vinyl box set t...
Loaded (Fully Re-loaded Edition) is a new vinyl box set that includes nearly all of the music from its expansive 2015 CD reissue but comes with nine LPs boasting stereo, mono and “full-length” mixes of the original album.
Demos, studio outtakes and live recordings also feature in the box set and several tracks will be available on vinyl for the first time.
The £250 box set is available to pre-order here exclusively via Dig! ahead of its March 24 release. It’s limited to just 1,970 copies.
Loaded (Fully Re-loaded Edition) comes in a deluxe, foil-wrapped slipcase containing the vinyl, a poster of the album’s cover art, and an illustrated booklet with liner notes by Lenny Kayethat appeared in Loaded: Re-Loaded 45th Anniversary Edition.
In addition to the nine LPs, the set also comes with four 7″s that reproduce the official singles and B-sides released from Loaded.
The songs “Rock & Roll” and “Who Loves The Sun” both come in the generic record sleeves used at the time by Cotillion, the band’s label. The former is being reissued for the first time ever because the original release was cancelled in 1970, while the latter is being reissued for the first time since 1970. The other two singles come in picture sleeves originally released in Europe: “Head Held High” in France and “Sweet Jane” in Germany.
Loaded (Fully Re-loaded Edition) opens with three different versions of the original studio album: remastered stereo and mono mixes, plus a “full-length” version featuring extended takes of “Sweet Jane”, “Rock & Roll” and “New Age”.
Early versions of “Oh! Sweet Nuthin'” and “Lonesome Cowboy Bill” as well as alternate mixes for “Rock & Roll” and “Train ’Round The Bend” feature, as do songs that eventually appeared on frontman Lou Reed’s 1972 solo debut (early versions of “Ocean”, “I Love You” and “Ride Into The Sun”).
Those studio recordings are bolstered by a selection of live performances recorded before Loaded was released in November 1970, including a show at Second Fret in Philadelphia in May 1970.
A fan, Bob Kachnycz, who hitchhiked to the gig recorded it on reel-to-reel as The Velvet Underground played just as a trio that night: Lou Reed, Sterling Morrison. and Doug Yule. The three band members alternated between bass and drums to fill in for Moe Tucker, who was pregnant at the time. The show recording is available for the first time ever on vinyl and uncovers early performances of several songs destined for the album: “Cool It Down”, “Rock & Roll” and “New Age”.
Meanwhile, the second performance was recorded in New York City at Max’s Kansas City nightclub on August 23, 1970, the day that Reed left The Velvet Underground.
Several songs from the show were released in 1972 as the live album, Live At Max’s Kansas City. In 2004, Rhino released a remastered version of the live album that was expanded to include both sets the band played that night.
Featured on two LPs in the new collection, the recordings touch on all the band’s past albums with live versions of “I’m Waiting For The Man”, “White Light/White Heat”, “Pale Blue Eyes” and “Sweet Jane”.
“Head Held High” “Lonesome Cowboy Bill” “I Found A Reason” “Train ‘Round The Bend” “Oh! Sweet Nuthin'”
Loaded – Fully loaded version (remastered)
Side one:
“Ride Into The Sun” – Session outtake* “Ocean” – Session outtake* “I Love You” – Session outtake* “I’m Sticking With You” – Session outtake* “Rock & Roll” – Demo* “Sad Song” – Demo*
Side two:
“I Found A Reason” – Demo* “Satellite Of Love” – Demo* “Oh Gin” – Demo* “Walk And Talk” – Demo* “Ocean” – Demo* “I Love You” – Demo* “Love Makes You Feel Ten Feet Tall” – Demo*
Side three:
“Cool It Down” – Early version* “Sweet Jane” – Early version* “Lonesome Cowboy Bill” – Early version* “Head Held High” – Early version* “Oh! Sweet Nuthin'” – Early version* “Who Loves The Sun” – Alternate mix*
Former indie-popster crafts lush ambient jazz inspired by the North Sea coast, in our APRIL 2023 issue of Uncut, available to buy here.
Andrew Wasylyk’s mostly instrumental music exists in the soft borders between jazz, post-rock and classical music, with field recordings, minimalist and ambien...
Former indie-popster crafts lush ambient jazz inspired by the North Sea coast, in our APRIL 2023 issue of Uncut, available to buy here.
Andrew Wasylyk’s mostly instrumental music exists in the soft borders between jazz, post-rock and classical music, with field recordings, minimalist and ambient elements underlying quietly grand arrangements of bittersweet, beautiful tunes. His work is rooted in his native Dundee and the Scottish coast. A key member of now defunct indie-pop band The Hazey Janes and current bassist for Idlewild, Wasylyk has also played with School Of Language and The Electric Soft Parade. Since debuting with 2015’s Soroky, his seven solo albums to date form a cohesive, increasingly impressive world.
Once, though, he had very different dreams. “When I was younger, I was obsessed with following in my brother’s footsteps to play football professionally,” says Wasylyk (whose given surname is Mitchell – he uses his Ukrainian grandad’s name for his music). “Then music left this door ajar to another, euphoric world.”
His first influences were auspiciously broad, from Olivia Tremor Control to Fairport Convention,The Beatles to The Meters. “There’s a thread through all those artists of melody and groove,” he explains. Indeed, a love for Philly soul and disco gives a rhythmic kick to his otherwise meditative tunes. “We used to bunk off school to watch Ironside because we loved the Quincy Jonestheme tune so much!” he laughs. “Then that pushed me into [David] Axelrod territory. I can be shooting for Axelrod and Talk Talk, but because I don’t have their ability, I always miss. You end up in this grey area that you make your own.” Wasylyk is similarly diffident about his relationship with classical music. “I’m drawn to it because I’m not classically trained. So I don’t have any idea of what I’m listening to, and it washes over you in this beautiful, immersive way.” He could be describing his own indefinable sound.
Wasylyk focused on a sense of place after a commission to write about parts of Dundee led to his second album, Themes For Buildings And Spaces(2017). “The idea of exploring outwards to better understand things within yourself was there already,” he recalls. “The North Sea’s presence and the particular light here in Dundee has an intoxicating quality that gets to you.” 2019’s The Paralian (which means dweller by the sea) resulted from an artistic residency along the coast in Arbroath. Scrambling onto some rocks to tape the sea’s roar, he was almost literally consumed by his subject. “I didn’t realise that this wave was getting bigger and bigger beside me,” he laughs. “It nearly swept me away!”
Collaboration has remained crucial to his solo albums – witness “Dreamt In The Current Of Leafless Winter”, the 16-minute opener to last year’s Hearing The Water Before Seeing The Falls, where Alabaster dePlume’s questing tenor sax interweaves with Wasylyk’s minimalist piano in a mesmeric, jazzy suite. That record was another multimedia commission, responding to an exhibition by Scottish photographer Thomas Joshua Cooper. “I found his work melancholic, but the photos were quietly euphoric as well. That all fed into the album.”
Wasylyk’s latest, Parallel Light, is an “alternative mix” of 2020’s Fugitive Light And Themes Of Consolation, a title that could sum up his music. “It would be incredible if my work does console anyone,” he says modestly, “but I was thinking more of consolation prizes. I like themes for the underdog.”
Suede performed three songs for BBC Radio 2’s Piano Room on February 21, including a cover of Patti Smith‘s "Because The Night".
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This year’s line-up for BBC...
Suede performed three songs for BBCRadio 2’sPiano Room on February 21, including a cover of Patti Smith‘s “Because The Night”.
This year’s line-up for BBC Radio 2’sPiano Room was announced last month, with award-winning artists due to perform with the BBC Concert Orchestra from January 30 to February 24.
Each artist was asked to perform three tracks – a new song, one of their well-known tracks and a classic cover version from another artist.
Suede performed live from Maida Vale, where they played two of their own tracks – 1999 hit “She’s In Fashion” and new single, “The Only Way I Can Love You”.
Sharing the cover on Twitter, bassist Matt Osman wrote: “Our take on Patti Smith’s ‘Because The Night’ with the fabulous BBC Orchestra”.
The full performance will be available shortly on BBC iPlayer but you can watch the Patti Smith cover below.
Ahead of their performance, Suede’s Brett Anderson said: “We’re delighted to be involved with Radio 2’s Piano Room. It’s so, so exciting to be able to freshly explore our songs old and new with the esteemed accompaniment of the BBC Concert Orchestra. Can’t wait.”
Previous artists to have played Piano Room include Sugababes (February 3), Tom Chaplin (February 7) and Suzanne Vega (February 9).
This week, there will be performances from Sophie Ellis-Bextor, Jake Shears and Stormzy.
The band were set to perform at the O2 Academy Brixton on March 25 and 26 in support of their ninth studio album Autofiction as part of their 2023 UK headline tour. But these have now been postponed to December 15 and 16 after the venue’s licence was suspended until April.
The band have also announced an extra date at Bexhill De La Warr Pavilion on March 25.
A new five-part documentary, Willie Nelson & Family, digs into every chapter of his long and colourful life, in our APRIL 2023 issue of Uncut, available to buy here.
In the late 1960s, Willie Nelson spent $150 on a new Martin acoustic guitar that he named Trigger, after Roy Rogers’ horse. H...
A new five-part documentary, Willie Nelson & Family, digs into every chapter of his long and colourful life, in our APRIL 2023 issue of Uncut, available to buy here.
In the late 1960s, Willie Nelson spent $150 on a new Martin acoustic guitar that he named Trigger, after Roy Rogers’ horse. He still plays it more than 50 years later. It’s a story that’s been told many times, but it takes on new significance in Willie Nelson & Family, an upcoming new five-part documentary by co-directors Oren Moverman (The Messenger, Rampart) and Thom Zimny (Bruce Springsteen’s go-to film guy).
“I knew that story,” says Moverman, “but when Willie was telling it to us, he’d share a detail that went just beyond what you knew. And there was a musicality to his voice when he described buying Trigger – and then he’d say he bought a horse and some rope for the same price. Maybe you know all that from a book, but hearing him tell the story gives it some magic. That was one of the many surprises making the film, just the power of his storytelling.”
Willie Nelson & Family, which premiered at Sundance, delves deep into Nelson’s long life and career, allowing the man himself to tell his own story both through new interviews and archival footage. There’s a deep melancholy in his voice when he discusses his childhood in rural Texas, where he and sister Bobbie were raised by their grandparents. There’s no little frustration when he recalls his early professional struggles as a young songwriter in Nashville and no little regret when he describes his poor treatment of his first two wives. Spanning nearly a century, the documentary tells some new stories and sheds fresh light on old ones.
“We wanted to bring Willie from every decade,” says Zimny. “We wanted to bring his voice from the past. We didn’t want it to be a story about an old man looking back on his life. We wanted a 35-year-old Willie to tell us about the late ’60s, and we wanted a 55-year-old Willie to tell us about the ’80s. It took a lot of digging to get every chapter of his life into the story.”
Zimny is keen to stress that “Willie was completely open about everything”, including his divorces, his wild 1971 concept album Yesterday’s Wine, and even the shootout with his wayward son-in-law that inspired his 1973 song “Shotgun Willie”. “He encouraged us to take on the imperfections in his story. If Willie threw us a curveball – and he did that every day – we learned that we just had to embrace it and go with it.”
Nelson, who turns 90 this year, still tours frequently and releases several albums each year (next up in March is his new collection of Harlan Howard covers called I Don’t Know A Thing About Love). He rarely slows down, but when the pandemic forced him to take a breather, Zimny and Moverman flew out to his home in Maui for several long sessions of interviews.
“We stepped into something we called Willie World,” says Moverman. “We had something very rare, which was a Willie Nelson who was not on tour, who was missing the road, who was missing just talking with people. I think he was hungry to communicate and reflect. The road and the bus are home for him, and the audience is his family. Those became the themes for the film.”
Together, the directors present a nuanced portrait of Nelson as someone who keeps moving forward constantly, through tragedies as well as triumphs. “Willie said something really amazing that didn’t make it into the film,” says Zimny. “When he misses the road, he’ll just go out and sit on his tour bus. That summed up Willie World for me. Being on the road makes him happy, so he’ll just sit out there and pretend he’s going somewhere.”
Neil Young and Crazy Horse's Ralph Molina, Billy Talbot and Nils Lofgren have announced a new album.
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The quartet are set to release the album, titled All Ro...
The quartet are set to release the album, titled All Roads Lead Home, under the moniker Molina, Talbot, Lofgren and Young. It is set to drop on March 31 via Reprise.
The 10-track album, which contains songs written by all four members, began life as a pandemic project for the members of Crazy Horse. Young was brought on board later, his sole writing credit being a live solo version of “Song Of The Seasons”, from the 2021 Crazy Horse album Barn, which came together concurrently with this project.
The other members of Crazy Horse wrote three songs each with different musicians for the project.
The quartet have also shared the first taste of the album in the form of the Lofgren-written song “You Will Never Know”. Check it out below:
TRACKLIST:
1. “Rain” (Billy Talbot)
2. “You Will Never Know” (Nils Lofgren)
3. “It’s Magical” (Ralph Molina)
4. “Song Of The Seasons” (Neil Young)
5. “Cherish” (Billy Talbot)
6. “Fill My Cup” (Nils Lofgren)
7. “Look Through The Eyes Of Your Heart” (Ralph Molina)
8. “The Hunter” (Billy Talbot)
9. “Go With Me” (Nils Lofgren)
10. “Just For You” (Ralph Molina)
The album arrives off the back of Neil Young and Crazy Horse’s recent project World Record, which came out in November. A few months prior, they released Toast, a scrapped album that was recorded back in 2001.
Two kids grow up inseparable friends in Naples until a shocking teenage incident sees their lives taking very different paths. Deep into midlife they must face a reckoning with their choices and the city that formed them. On the face it, this might be the plot of a novel by Elena Ferrante. Instead M...
Two kids grow up inseparable friends in Naples until a shocking teenage incident sees their lives taking very different paths. Deep into midlife they must face a reckoning with their choices and the city that formed them. On the face it, this might be the plot of a novel by Elena Ferrante. Instead Mario Martone’s film is an engrossing psychodrama about two men travelling towards their own defining rendezvous.
The first half of the film is carried by the magnificently hangdog Pierfrancesco Favino, possibly best known in the English-speaking world playing a gold statue of Columbus in Night At The Museum. He has returned after 40 years away from a successful life in Cairo to the city of his youth to visit his dying mother, and finds it remarkably unchanged – still a seething civil war between the Catholic Church (Francesco Di Leva relentless as the charismatic Father Luigi) and the Camorra gangsters. Nevertheless he longs to make peace with his teenage buddy Oreste, who has matured into a ruthless, self-loathing ganglord.
Though the film settles into familiar gangland tropes, it’s wonderfully alive with the sound and sensations of the modern city – you can almost smell the traffic fumes, ripe garbage, incense and surf. And the soundtrack – a heady mix of Egyptian electropop (“Ya Abyad Ya Eswed” by Cairokee), Bach and Tangerine Dream (including the 1966 psych-pop delight “Lady Greengrass”), is an absolute treat.
Think of a song, not any particular song, just the idea of a song. Say it’s the late 1970s when Laraaji was roaming the streets and parks of New York with his electrofitted autoharp. A song with its anticipated structure and its lyrical text is there to tell you about an experience. Laraaji’s mu...
Think of a song, not any particular song, just the idea of a song. Say it’s the late 1970s when Laraaji was roaming the streets and parks of New York with his electrofitted autoharp. A song with its anticipated structure and its lyrical text is there to tell you about an experience. Laraaji’s music is the experience.
The life of Edward Larry Gordon, born in Philadelphia in 1943, appears to have been one long chain of serendipity. Raised in New Jersey, he sang in Baptist church choirs as a kid before studying piano at Howard University. A talent for performing, comedy and role play brought him to Harlem’s Apollo Theatre, where he acted as host in the mid-’60s, while also serenading legendary boho hangouts Café Wha?, the Bitter End and the Village Gate with his folkish songbook. He even scored a role as long as a goldfish recall in Robert Downey Sr’s cult ad-men madness movie Putney Swope in 1969. But this is all ancient prehistory.
A little more sand runs through the hourglass and we’re in Washington Square Park, circa 1975. Ed Gordon is by now entrenched up to his scapula in the cosmopolitan alternative lifestyle movement in which everything from yoga and meditation to pot, improvised music and barefoot dancing is involved. His guitar has been pawned and in its stead an autoharp purchased on impulse. Jenny Lynch is passing by in the park and likes what she hears emanating from the autoharp, which he has stripped of its chord bars and amplified with an electric pickup. He taps and strums the pentatonic-tuned wires with chopsticks, brushes and metal slides. Jenny is a luthier who just built a hammered dulcimer for folk musician Dorothy Carter. She writes down his number, recommends him to Carter, and before you know it he’s accompanying her and running workshops on ‘electronic autoharp experiments with tuning and phase shifters’ at the 1976 Boston Globe Jazzfest and Music Fair.
The year 1976 is an epochal time for the age of Aquarius. Progressive music, radical psychiatry and alternative medicine melt together in a quiet counterculture-shock known as New Age. A transitional flap on the mystical wing of popular culture. Hippiedom’s last sigh, impotently puffing a farewell reefer as synths and sinewaves are swung up over the ocean. The dawning of a musical age impossible to imagine even just a handful of years back at Monterey and Woodstock.
This moment is Ed Gordon’s moment. Ed Gordon, Larry G, Laraaji – a morphology of name and identity in mirror sync with his expanding musical consciousness. Punks in dark clubs and dives snarl about music and society being on a road to nowhere. For Laraaji (and fellow voyagers) music is a healing force, a pathway to the mindful zone, a daily microdose of aural Ambien. On the two unbroken sides of Celestial Vibration from 1978, he made a record of the sort of stardust he was sprinkling around at creative dance companies, holistic drop-in centres and yoga classes at that time. “Bethlehem” and “All-Pervading”, 24 minutes each, only cease because the needle must skate to the stillpoint at the centre.
They’re both here at the start of Segue To Infinity, the first of four discs. The rest are parts of this period of Laraaji’s history we’ve never heard before. They are taken from ultra-rare acetates – spotted on eBay by a sharp-eyed collector. The mint A++ white labels, credited to Edward Larry Gordon, had been retrieved from a storage unit, sold at a flea market and finally offloaded online where a college student recognised the name and made a winning bid of $114. They are now in the safe hands of the archive label Numero Group, who have form when it comes to independent and private-press New Age re-releases.
Celestial Vibration has been aired once already on Soul Jazz Records. The remaining dug-up tracks won’t disappoint anyone familiar with Laraaji’s blissful lakes of kundalini stretching beneath billowing cumulonimbi of bliss. “Ocean” would be the ideal headphone accompaniment for standing too close to a Rothko canvas. A deep enveloping background accented with scudding strokes on the zither strings. “Koto” is composed of similar sonic ions, signposting the way ahead to beatless milestones like Steve Hillage’s Rainbow Dome Musick – which in turn thumbs its way towards The Orb and other ’90s ambient noodle bowls.
So far so rapturous, but the three tracks titled “Kalimba” provide the real revelations in this collection. Here Laraaji uses the zither both as a drum and a marimba. The first of them is 18 minutes, the others upwards of 22. These are audibly a far more physical test of endurance than the other tracks here. Thrumming sequences falling somewhere between central African logdrum rituals and one of Can’sEthno-Forgery jams. He keeps up a meditative yet somehow surging two-handed groove, striking rattling blows on the strings with wooden or metal beaters roughly four to six times per second. These “Kalimba” pieces are the most exciting addition to Laraaji’s canon – beautiful, intricate little cosmic clockwork mechanisms that must have been mesmerising to observe while they were being played. The track “Segue To Infinity”, that gives its name to the boxset, pairs Laraaji’s orcabone harp tones with lark-ascending flute from Richard Cooper. It’s the one that conforms to the most recognisable ‘New Age’ tropes although is still vastly more appetising – and less kitsch – than most of what you’ll hear on the stereo down your local crystal-and-tarot boutique.
Down on the street, Laraaji visualises his ideal record producer. The universe makes it so. A scrap of paper left in his zithercase in 1979 contains a phone number. At the end of the line is Brian Eno. Sleevenotes by Vernon Reid of Living Color, who has known Laraaji since the ’70s, and Numero Group archivist Douglas McGowan, perform admirable detective work without being able to conclude exactly when, where or for what precise purpose these unearthed tracks were recorded. Irreconcilable facts place them either just before or just after the 1980 release of Ambient 3: Day Of Radiance on Eno’s EG label.
In any case, these beautiful, vaporous exercises in musical mindfulness restored to us on Segue To Infinityare convincing proof that Laraaji didn’t need any Eno to help him read the map.
The deluxe, 148 page Ultimate Music Guide to one of the world’s most popular and enduring classic rock bands. Revolving stages! Many keyboard players! Health food!
Buy a copy of the magazine here. Missed one in the series? Bundles are available at the same location…...
The deluxe, 148 page Ultimate Music Guide to one of the world’s most popular and enduring classic rock bands. Revolving stages! Many keyboard players! Health food!
BUY THE YES DELUXE ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE HERE
Rick Wakeman is chasing a dog out of his office as he starts his call with Uncut to introduce our latest Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide. The intruder banished, the office door finally closed, Rick embarks on a far-reaching conversation which covers his se...
Rick Wakeman is chasing a dog out of his office as he starts his call with Uncut to introduce our latest Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide. The intruder banished, the office door finally closed, Rick embarks on a far-reaching conversation which covers his session musician work, praise for the material which Yes made after he left, and how his solo successes once led to him being greeted by a brass band on an airport runway, to the dismay of the other members of Yes – though it ultimately led to them all being offered solo album contracts too.
As you’ll learn from the features and in-depth reviews in our expanded, deluxe Ultimate Music Guide, the band’s journey – with Rick and without him – has been an incredible one. From orchestral psyche-pop to pastoral prog drama. Out the other side to encounter jazz fusion, and synth pop. The band have evolved to meet the times, and are now retrenching in the ecological mode of their classic era albums to the delight of a new generation of listeners.
From his first rehearsal, it was Rick’s job to make the collaborative jigsaw of Yes music fit together. “It started with Steve saying he had a riff, which was very nice,” Rick recalls in his introduction, “so we played it. Chris had a line. Bill said he had a fill. Then I said “Well I’ve got something which sort of goes with all of that,” and they thought it was good. But Chris said, they’re all in different keys – how are we going to put it all together? I said, ‘I know how to do that…’
“That was one of my jobs: when things were in ridiculous keys, all over the shop, to make things link up. I did all that. And by the end of that rehearsal we’d pretty much put ‘Roundabout‘ together.”
For Rick it’s remembering the joy of the collaboration, more than any of the material rewards, that has the retained magical.
“Yes music means a lot to me, it’s a major part of my musical life and career,” he says. “With Yes you have to give as much as you can take or it’s not going to work.”
To celebrate the 60th anniversary of their formation, The Kinks have announced a two-part anthology series called The Journey.
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Both r...
To celebrate the 60th anniversary of their formation, The Kinks have announced a two-part anthology series called The Journey.
Both releases will compile hits and other choice cuts from the London legends’ sprawling catalogue – which from 1963 to 1993, spanned 24 studio albums – by themes. The first part is due out on March 24 via BMG, and comes with its 30-song tracklist split into four themed mini-compilations (one per side for the two-disc vinyl set).
The first chunk of 10 songs will cover themes of “becoming a man, the search for adventure, finding an identity and a girl”, while the second chunk spans seven songs about “ambition achieved, bitter taste of success, loss of friends, [and when] the past comes back and bites you in the back-side”. The third part will also feature seven songs, with those being about “days and nights of a lost soul, songs of regret and reflection[s] of happier times”.
Finally, the last bracket of songs in part one of The Journey comprises six songs billed under the banner: “A new start, a new love, but have you really changed? Still haunted by the quest and the girl.”
In addition to the gatefold vinyl, The Journey, Part 1 will be released in a two-disc CD package and in both standard and HD digital formats. The physical editions will include booklets featuring exclusive photos and personal liner notes from each the band’s three remaining members (co-frontmen Ray and Dave Davies, and drummer Mick Avory), diving into all 30 songs individually with “memories of the time these tracks were recorded”.
In a press release, Ray said of the effort: “Ask yourself the question, is this journey really necessary? …Yes!”
Dave echoed his brother’s excitement, adding for himself: “I’m delighted with what I think is an inspiring selection of timeless and magical Kinks music.”
SIDE 1: ‘SONGS ABOUT BECOMING A MAN, THE SEARCH FOR ADVENTURE, FINDING AN IDENTITY AND A GIRL’ 1. “You Really Got Me” 2. “All Day And All Of The Night” 3. “It’s All Right” 4. “Who’ll Be The Next In Line” 5. “Tired Of Waiting For You” 6. “She’s Got Everything” 7. “Just Can’t Go To Sleep” 8. “Stop Your Sobbing” 9. “Wait Till The Summer Comes Along” 10. “So Long”
SIDE 2: ‘SONGS OF AMBITION ACHIEVED, BITTER TASTE OF SUCCESS, LOSS OF FRIENDS, THE PAST COMES BACK AND BITES YOU IN THE BACK-SIDE’ 1. “Dead End Street” 2. “Schooldays” 3. “The Hard Way” 4. “Mindless Child Of Motherhood” 5. “Supersonic Rocket Ship” 6. “I’m In Disgrace” 7. “Do You Remember Walter?”
SIDE 3: ‘DAYS AND NIGHTS OF A LOST SOUL, SONGS OF REGRET AND REFLECTION OF HAPPIER TIMES’ 1. “Too Much On My Mind” 2. “Nothin’ In The World Can Stop Me Worryin’ ‘Bout That Girl” 3. “Days” 4. “Where Have All The Good Times Gone” 5. “Strangers” 6. “It’s Too Late” 7. “Sitting In The Midday Sun”
SIDE 4: ‘A NEW START, A NEW LOVE, BUT HAVE YOU REALLY CHANGED? STILL HAUNTED BY THE QUEST AND THE GIRL’ 1. “Waterloo Sunset” 2. “No More Looking Back” 3. “Death Of A Clown” 4. “Celluloid Heroes” 5. “Act Nice And Gentle” 6. “This Is Where I Belong”
Details on part two of The Journey are yet to be revealed, with the band assuring fans that an announcement will be made later in 2023. Also confirmed is that “a host of global events and activities” will be detailed for both this year and next, with details rolling out on a gradual basis.