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The Libertines reunite for London Hyde Park show in July

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The Libertines will reunite for a live show at Hyde Park in London this July. The band will headline the British Summer Time festival on July 5 on a bill that also includes The Pogues, Spiritualized, Maximo Park and The Enemy. Rumours about a potential reunion emerged over the weekend after Pete ...

The Libertines will reunite for a live show at Hyde Park in London this July.

The band will headline the British Summer Time festival on July 5 on a bill that also includes The Pogues, Spiritualized, Maximo Park and The Enemy.

Rumours about a potential reunion emerged over the weekend after Pete Doherty gave an interview in which he claimed he had been approached with an offer to reunite the band for a live show.

Carl Barât subsequently revealed that the chances of the band reuniting “very much a possibility” and, when pushed for a date on which any live show may take place, added: “keep the 5th July free”.

The Libertines last played live together in 2010 at the Reading and Leeds Festivals.

Photo credit: Roger Sargent

The 16th Uncut Playlist Of 2014: hear new Neil Young, Jack White and much more…

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Beyond the Ebay landfill mountains of luminous “Ghostbusters” singles, there were a weird few days this week when it seemed as if no-one had actually located a copy of Neil Young’s “A Letter Home” on Record Store Day. After everything, did it actually exist? Had Neil, in his current capricious mood, personally had it removed it from the stockrooms of record stores on Friday night? Gradually, though, sightings came in: we located one owner on Twitter who’d bought a copy direct from Third Man in Nashville (but not played it). And, now, we’ve been privileged to hear it ourselves, as Warner Brothers gear up for one of the stranger major label campaigns involving an A-list artist in recent memory. I’ll try and write something about this odd, crackling gem in the next few days, though unfortunately it’ll have to wait until I’ve navigated the pile of page proofs for our forthcoming Ultimate Music Guide on The Cure, due on sale in the UK on May 19. From today, though, you can buy the new issue of our mag in which Young is interviewed by a notably determined Nick Hasted. Plenty more in there worth reading, too - Full details here - and I’d like to flag up Andrew Mueller’s interview with Toumani and Sidiki Diabaté in Bamako as especially worth your time. As is plenty of this playlist, I reckon, kicking off with Jack White’s “Lazaretto”. Don’t miss the new Plaid one and a lovely William Tyler live set from NYC Taper. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Jack White – Lazaretto (Third Man/XL) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYF0LtfUvJs 2 Brian Reitzell – Auto Music (Smalltown Supersound) 3 Tune-Yards – Nikki Nack (4AD) 4 LCD Soundsystem - The Long Goodbye (Live At Madison Square Garden) (DFA/PArlophone) 5 The Soft Pink Truth – Why Do The Heathen Rage? (Thrill Jockey) 6 [REDACTED] 7 John Hiatt – Terms Of My Surrender (New West) 8 Mike Cooper - Trout Steel (Paradise Of Bachelors) 9 Mike Cooper - Places I Know/The Machine Gun Co (Paradise Of Bachelors) 10 Courtney Love – You Know My Name (Cherry Forever) 11 Plaid – Reachy Prints (Warp) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AJ6I6J0yrHQ 12 William Tyler – April 16, 2014 Union Pool, New York (NYC Taper) 13 Mogwai – Come On Die Young (Chemikal Underground) 14 Kasai All Stars – Beware The Fetish (Crammed Discs) 15 Neil Young – A Letter Home (Third Man/Reprise) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6H47jI6xanA 16 John Murry – Califorlornia (Rubyworks) 17 Tim Pope – I Want To Be A Tree (Fiction) 18 Dylan Howe – Subterranean: New Designs On Bowie's Berlin (Motorik) 19 Fennesz – Bécs (Editions Mego) 20 Lewis – L’Amour (Light In The Attic) 21 Tomas Barfod – Love Me (Secretly Canadian)

Beyond the Ebay landfill mountains of luminous “Ghostbusters” singles, there were a weird few days this week when it seemed as if no-one had actually located a copy of Neil Young’s “A Letter Home” on Record Store Day. After everything, did it actually exist? Had Neil, in his current capricious mood, personally had it removed it from the stockrooms of record stores on Friday night?

Gradually, though, sightings came in: we located one owner on Twitter who’d bought a copy direct from Third Man in Nashville (but not played it). And, now, we’ve been privileged to hear it ourselves, as Warner Brothers gear up for one of the stranger major label campaigns involving an A-list artist in recent memory. I’ll try and write something about this odd, crackling gem in the next few days, though unfortunately it’ll have to wait until I’ve navigated the pile of page proofs for our forthcoming Ultimate Music Guide on The Cure, due on sale in the UK on May 19.

From today, though, you can buy the new issue of our mag in which Young is interviewed by a notably determined Nick Hasted. Plenty more in there worth reading, too – Full details here – and I’d like to flag up Andrew Mueller’s interview with Toumani and Sidiki Diabaté in Bamako as especially worth your time.

As is plenty of this playlist, I reckon, kicking off with Jack White’s “Lazaretto”. Don’t miss the new Plaid one and a lovely William Tyler live set from NYC Taper.

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

1 Jack White – Lazaretto (Third Man/XL)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYF0LtfUvJs

2 Brian Reitzell – Auto Music (Smalltown Supersound)

3 Tune-Yards – Nikki Nack (4AD)

4 LCD Soundsystem – The Long Goodbye (Live At Madison Square Garden) (DFA/PArlophone)

5 The Soft Pink Truth – Why Do The Heathen Rage? (Thrill Jockey)

6 [REDACTED]

7 John Hiatt – Terms Of My Surrender (New West)

8 Mike Cooper – Trout Steel (Paradise Of Bachelors)

9 Mike Cooper – Places I Know/The Machine Gun Co (Paradise Of Bachelors)

10 Courtney Love – You Know My Name (Cherry Forever)

11 Plaid – Reachy Prints (Warp)

12 William Tyler – April 16, 2014 Union Pool, New York (NYC Taper)

13 Mogwai – Come On Die Young (Chemikal Underground)

14 Kasai All Stars – Beware The Fetish (Crammed Discs)

15 Neil Young – A Letter Home (Third Man/Reprise)

16 John Murry – Califorlornia (Rubyworks)

17 Tim Pope – I Want To Be A Tree (Fiction)

18 Dylan Howe – Subterranean: New Designs On Bowie’s Berlin (Motorik)

19 Fennesz – Bécs (Editions Mego)

20 Lewis – L’Amour (Light In The Attic)

21 Tomas Barfod – Love Me (Secretly Canadian)

Hear Portishead’s Beth Gibbons cover Black Sabbath

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Portishead's Beth Gibbons has covered Black Sabbath's 1971 song "Black Sabbath" as Black Sabbeth. The track, which you can hear by clicking below is by Bristol based stoner rock band Gonga and features Gibbons on vocals. Meanwhile, back in February, Adrian Utley of Portishead said that the band members were "clearing our schedules" in order to work on their fourth album. Speaking at By:Larm Festival in Oslo he commented: "We're clearing our schedules so we can get on with it, otherwise it will be another 10 years," referencing how busy the members of the band are with other projects. Utley added that he had recently discussed plans for the follow-up to 2008's 'Third' with Geoff Barrow, saying: "We were both really enthusiastic, and enthusiasm counts for a lot in Portishead world." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-mc7D6hs5U Portishead will headline the Electric Picnic festival this year alongside Outkast and Beck. The three-day festival, held in the Stradbally Estate in County Laois, Ireland, runs from August 29-31. Other artists set to appear on the line-up include Foals, Pet Shop Boys and Paolo Nutini.

Portishead’s Beth Gibbons has covered Black Sabbath’s 1971 song “Black Sabbath” as Black Sabbeth.

The track, which you can hear by clicking below is by Bristol based stoner rock band Gonga and features Gibbons on vocals. Meanwhile, back in February, Adrian Utley of Portishead said that the band members were “clearing our schedules” in order to work on their fourth album.

Speaking at By:Larm Festival in Oslo he commented: “We’re clearing our schedules so we can get on with it, otherwise it will be another 10 years,” referencing how busy the members of the band are with other projects. Utley added that he had recently discussed plans for the follow-up to 2008’s ‘Third’ with Geoff Barrow, saying: “We were both really enthusiastic, and enthusiasm counts for a lot in Portishead world.”

Portishead will headline the Electric Picnic festival this year alongside Outkast and Beck. The three-day festival, held in the Stradbally Estate in County Laois, Ireland, runs from August 29-31. Other artists set to appear on the line-up include Foals, Pet Shop Boys and Paolo Nutini.

Ben Watt – Hendra

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Stark, beautiful return for the solo Everything But The Girl man... A lot has happened in the 31 years since Ben Watt’s first (last) solo album, North Marine Drive. Empires have fallen, musical revolutions have come and gone. Watt hasn’t been idle, of course. He played with Tracey Thorn in Everything But The Girl for 20 years, and did another decade as a club DJ and boss of the dance label Buzzin’ Fly. Then there’s the real-life stuff. Watt was being a father. He almost died from an auto-immune disease, which he chronicled in his book Patient. He has just published a second book, Romany and Tom, which explores his late mother and father’s relationship, while containing much autobiographical reflection. As he was writing that, Watt’s sister Jennie died unexpectedly. In the midst of this turmoil, Watt found himself retreating to his basement, writing songs. He did this on the guitar, mostly, changing the tunings to challenge himself. But he was also, it seems, trying to reconnect with his younger self, and see what might have happened if he hadn’t teamed up with EBTG. That quest, as Watt surely knows, is impossible, but as fools’ errands go, it’s an interesting one. Amidst all this loss and self-examination, it’s easy to see why he might want to re-engage with the ghosts of youthful optimism. It’s also true that musical fashions have reverted. That stripped-down folk aesthetic couldn’t be more contemporary (Watt counts Hiss Golden Messenger’s Bad Debt as a recent favourite). What’s new is the worldview, and that’s what gives Hendra its stark power. These are beautiful songs, penned from midlife. “Young Man’s Game” – “a folk song about DJ-ing” – tackles the subject head on: “Every mirror just tells the time/can you name a great fighter over 45?” Watt has always sounded older than his years, but he now has the life experience to suit his temperament. He’s also more confident musically. Here, he employs Bernard Butler, casting him as the album’s Mick Ronson. If Butler’s stark guitar lines add splashes of blood to Watt’s pallid canvas, they never threaten the sense of reserve which hangs over the project. The title track sets the mood. It’s a stark invocation of emotional resilience. In the words, Watt imagines the dreams of his late sister, a rural shopkeeper in Somerset. The lyrics are plainspoken and honest to the point where they produce a shudder of embarrassment. The sense of loss is palpable, and it slides into the second song, “Forget”, which is musically brighter, but turns on the phrase “who am I fooling when I say I have no regrets?” It’s a very English-sounding record. The autobiographical detail means that the songs offer a tour of the landscape. “Matthew Arnold’s Field” travels from Beaconsfield to Headington, as Watt prepares to scatter his father’s ashes near Oxford. The funereal tone is maintained by Watt’s delicate electric piano. “The Levels”, with Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour playing lovely slide guitar, is another exploration of grief, employing the flooded ditches of Somerset as a metaphor. Two songs were inspired by an American road trip, but they employ the same emotional palette. “The Gun” makes an emotional case for gun control with a tale of an accidental shooting. The bluesy “Nathaniel” was inspired by a sign Watt saw painted next to a trailer in Oregon commemorating a boy killed in a road accident, and compares the contemporary fashion for “secondary grieving” with the piercing pain of familial loss. So, the mood is serious. But it’s tough, rather than glum. The gently jazzy “Golden Ratio” is like John Martyn playing with EBTG. And then there’s “Spring” written as a counterweight to the prevailing mood. Searching for ideas, Watt noticed a Bill Evans album on the studio floor, with the title You Must Believe In Spring. He borrowed the theme, and composed one of his loveliest songs; a gentle, Lennon-esque hymn to endurance and hope. Ironically, or not, it would sound great at a funeral. Alastair McKay Q&A Ben Watt What was your plan for the album? I wanted to somehow reconnect with the person I was in that pre-Everything But The Girl Period. When I was a precocious 19 year-old on Cherry Red thinking I had the right to call up Robert Wyatt and ask him to be on my first EP. And to connect with the direction I might have gone in had I not teamed up with Tracey (Thorn). When two colours merge, you’re going to get a new colour. Was it influenced by the book you wrote about your parents, Romany and Tom? Lyrically, I definitely wanted to write a bunch of unsentimental songs. I wanted to write a set of songs that were very true. Quite a few of them came out of the process of thinking I went through when I was writing my book. Then towards the end of that, my sister, who I was very close to, died, quite unexpectedly. She was only 58. It all came to head, and I wanted to get some of this stuff down. It’s quite dark emotionally. I always think I write songs about some form of resilience. There is some form of hope, even in the darker moments. I’m always looking for that in the characters in the songs. They have a tough exterior, even if they have a soft interior. INTERVIEW: ALASTAIR McKAY

Stark, beautiful return for the solo Everything But The Girl man…

A lot has happened in the 31 years since Ben Watt’s first (last) solo album, North Marine Drive. Empires have fallen, musical revolutions have come and gone. Watt hasn’t been idle, of course. He played with Tracey Thorn in Everything But The Girl for 20 years, and did another decade as a club DJ and boss of the dance label Buzzin’ Fly.

Then there’s the real-life stuff. Watt was being a father. He almost died from an auto-immune disease, which he chronicled in his book Patient. He has just published a second book, Romany and Tom, which explores his late mother and father’s relationship, while containing much autobiographical reflection. As he was writing that, Watt’s sister Jennie died unexpectedly.

In the midst of this turmoil, Watt found himself retreating to his basement, writing songs. He did this on the guitar, mostly, changing the tunings to challenge himself. But he was also, it seems, trying to reconnect with his younger self, and see what might have happened if he hadn’t teamed up with EBTG. That quest, as Watt surely knows, is impossible, but as fools’ errands go, it’s an interesting one. Amidst all this loss and self-examination, it’s easy to see why he might want to re-engage with the ghosts of youthful optimism.

It’s also true that musical fashions have reverted. That stripped-down folk aesthetic couldn’t be more contemporary (Watt counts Hiss Golden Messenger’s Bad Debt as a recent favourite). What’s new is the worldview, and that’s what gives Hendra its stark power. These are beautiful songs, penned from midlife. “Young Man’s Game” – “a folk song about DJ-ing” – tackles the subject head on: “Every mirror just tells the time/can you name a great fighter over 45?”

Watt has always sounded older than his years, but he now has the life experience to suit his temperament. He’s also more confident musically. Here, he employs Bernard Butler, casting him as the album’s Mick Ronson. If Butler’s stark guitar lines add splashes of blood to Watt’s pallid canvas, they never threaten the sense of reserve which hangs over the project.

The title track sets the mood. It’s a stark invocation of emotional resilience. In the words, Watt imagines the dreams of his late sister, a rural shopkeeper in Somerset. The lyrics are plainspoken and honest to the point where they produce a shudder of embarrassment. The sense of loss is palpable, and it slides into the second song, “Forget”, which is musically brighter, but turns on the phrase “who am I fooling when I say I have no regrets?”

It’s a very English-sounding record. The autobiographical detail means that the songs offer a tour of the landscape. “Matthew Arnold’s Field” travels from Beaconsfield to Headington, as Watt prepares to scatter his father’s ashes near Oxford. The funereal tone is maintained by Watt’s delicate electric piano. “The Levels”, with Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour playing lovely slide guitar, is another exploration of grief, employing the flooded ditches of Somerset as a metaphor.

Two songs were inspired by an American road trip, but they employ the same emotional palette. “The Gun” makes an emotional case for gun control with a tale of an accidental shooting. The bluesy “Nathaniel” was inspired by a sign Watt saw painted next to a trailer in Oregon commemorating a boy killed in a road accident, and compares the contemporary fashion for “secondary grieving” with the piercing pain of familial loss.

So, the mood is serious. But it’s tough, rather than glum. The gently jazzy “Golden Ratio” is like John Martyn playing with EBTG. And then there’s “Spring” written as a counterweight to the prevailing mood. Searching for ideas, Watt noticed a Bill Evans album on the studio floor, with the title You Must Believe In Spring. He borrowed the theme, and composed one of his loveliest songs; a gentle, Lennon-esque hymn to endurance and hope. Ironically, or not, it would sound great at a funeral.

Alastair McKay

Q&A

Ben Watt

What was your plan for the album?

I wanted to somehow reconnect with the person I was in that pre-Everything But The Girl Period. When I was a precocious 19 year-old on Cherry Red thinking I had the right to call up Robert Wyatt and ask him to be on my first EP. And to connect with the direction I might have gone in had I not teamed up with Tracey (Thorn). When two colours merge, you’re going to get a new colour.

Was it influenced by the book you wrote about your parents, Romany and Tom?

Lyrically, I definitely wanted to write a bunch of unsentimental songs. I wanted to write a set of songs that were very true. Quite a few of them came out of the process of thinking I went through when I was writing my book. Then towards the end of that, my sister, who I was very close to, died, quite unexpectedly. She was only 58. It all came to head, and I wanted to get some of this stuff down.

It’s quite dark emotionally.

I always think I write songs about some form of resilience. There is some form of hope, even in the darker moments. I’m always looking for that in the characters in the songs. They have a tough exterior, even if they have a soft interior.

INTERVIEW: ALASTAIR McKAY

Watch Bruce Springsteen’s video for Record Store Day release, “American Beauty”

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Bruce Springsteen released a new EP, "American Beauty", for Record Store Day 2014. The a 12" vinyl EP featured four unreleased tracks - "American Beauty", "Mary Mary", "Hey Blue Eyes" and "Hurry Up Sundown". To accompany the release, Springsteen and the E Street Band shot an impromptu video for th...

Bruce Springsteen released a new EP, “American Beauty”, for Record Store Day 2014.

The a 12″ vinyl EP featured four unreleased tracks – “American Beauty”, “Mary Mary”, “Hey Blue Eyes” and “Hurry Up Sundown”.

To accompany the release, Springsteen and the E Street Band shot an impromptu video for the song “American Beauty” before their gig at Charlotte, North Carolina on Record Store Day itself – April 19.

Click below to watch the video.

Springsteen recently inducted the E Street Band into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. You can read the full transcript of his induction speech here.

Neil Young & Crazy Horse: new live show announced

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Neil Young & Crazy Horse have announced a new live date to their forthcoming European tour itinerary. They will now play Stockholm Music & Arts Festival on August 3, 2014. Yesterday [April 24], Young revealed additional formats for his new album, A Letter Home. Apart from the vinyl edition...

Neil Young & Crazy Horse have announced a new live date to their forthcoming European tour itinerary.

They will now play Stockholm Music & Arts Festival on August 3, 2014.

Yesterday [April 24], Young revealed additional formats for his new album, A Letter Home. Apart from the vinyl edition already released on Jack White’s Third Man label for Record Store Day, Young’s regular record company will also release the album on CD, digitally and in a deluxe box set next month.

The Europe tour dates for Neil Young and Crazy Horse so far are:

July 07, Laugardalshöllin, Reykjavík, Iceland

July 10, Live At The Marquee, Cork, Ireland

July 12, Hyde Park, London, England

July 13, Echo Arena, Liverpool, England

July 15, KüçükÇiftlik Park, Istanbul, Turkey

July 17, Yarkon Park, Tel-Aviv, Israel

July 20, Münsterplatz, Ulm, Germany

July 21, Collisioni Festival, Barolo, Italy

July 23, Wiener Stadthalle, Wien, Austria

July 25, Warsteiner Hockeypark, Mönchengladbach, Germany

July 26, Filmnächte am Elbufer, Dresden, Germany

July 28, Zollhafen – Nordmole, Mainz, Germany

July 30, København Forum, København, Denmark

August 1, Bergenhus Festning – Koengen, Bergen, Norway

August 3, Stockholm Music & Arts Festival – Stockholm, Sweden

August 5, Lokerse Feesten, Lokeren, Belgium

August 7, Monte-Carlo Sporting Summer Festival, Monaco, France

August 8, Foire aux Vins de Colmar, Colmar, France

Fleet Foxes update: Robin Pecknold is “working on songs”

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Robin Pecknold has updated fans on the future of Fleet Foxes, revealing that he is working on new songs. In a post on the band's official Facebook page, he accounts for their lack of activity since 2011's Helplessness Blues, revealing that he has enrolled at university. Pecknold writes: "For anyo...

Robin Pecknold has updated fans on the future of Fleet Foxes, revealing that he is working on new songs.

In a post on the band’s official Facebook page, he accounts for their lack of activity since 2011’s Helplessness Blues, revealing that he has enrolled at university.

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

Pecknold will appear at this year’s here End Of The Road festival as part of The Gene Clark No Other Band, a collaborative project featuring Beach House’s Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally, Grizzly Bear’s Daniel Rossen, former Walkmen member Hamilton Leithauser, ex-Fairport Convention member Iain Matthews and members of Lower Dens, Wye Oak and Celebration.

Photo credit: Pieter M Van Hattem

Send us your questions for Harry Dean Stanton!

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As he prepares to release his debut album at the sprightly age of 87, Harry Dean Stanton is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature. So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the legendary cult actor? What are his memories of co-starring with Bob Dylan in Pat Garrett And Billy The Kid? How did he end up living with Jack Nicholson for a year? What kind of show could we expect if we saw him perform with The Harry Dean Stanton Band? Send up your questions by noon, Friday, May 2 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Harry's answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

As he prepares to release his debut album at the sprightly age of 87, Harry Dean Stanton is set to answer your questions in Uncut as part of our regular Audience With… feature.

So is there anything you’ve always wanted to ask the legendary cult actor?

What are his memories of co-starring with Bob Dylan in Pat Garrett And Billy The Kid?

How did he end up living with Jack Nicholson for a year?

What kind of show could we expect if we saw him perform with The Harry Dean Stanton Band?

Send up your questions by noon, Friday, May 2 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Harry’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Emmylou Harris – Wrecking Ball

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1995 masterpiece reissued with disc of out-takes and making-of DVD... Upon its original release, Wrecking Ball prompted acclaim and bewilderment in equal measure. It was, unquestionably, a great record. It just didn’t sound very much like the sort of great record that Emmylou Harris made. Her canon of great records to this point, while formidable, also conformed to a certain type: orthodox Nashville country lightly doused with essence of Laurel Canyon folk-rock. It was a template that had served Harris well more or less up to Wrecking Ball’s immediate predecessor, 1993’s “Cowgirl’s Prayer”. While very much the kind of thing that people expected of Harris, from the title downwards – and actually not a bad album – Cowgirl’s Prayer was not, at least by Harris’s standards, successful. The choice ahead of her seemed stark: resignation to a long dotage as a heritage act trading her considerable past glories, or reinvention. She chose the latter – to a degree which, she later admitted, caused some of her fans to wonder if the real Emmylou Harris had been kidnapped by aliens. She assembled the sort of all-star ensemble that you can really only summon if you are, in fact, Emmylou Harris, including Steve Earle, Neil Young, Lucinda Williams, Larry Mullen Jr, Kate and Anna McGarrigle. Besotted by Daniel Lanois’s production of Bob Dylan’s 1989 album Oh Mercy, and by Lanois’s debut solo album Acadie, she enlisted him as producer. With her career-long ear for a great song, she and Lanois chose tracks by various members of her new backing group, as well as cuts by Gillian Welch, Julie Miller and Jimi Hendrix. Anybody who still expected another helping of Harris’s usual sweetheart-of-the-rodeo trundling was served more or less instant notice to quit by the opening track, Lanois’s “Where Will I Be”. For possibly the first time in Harris’s career, a track on which she appears is dominated by something other than her own vocals (even when she appeared as a backing singer, as on Gram Parsons’ solo albums, she had a tendency to occlude everything else, as a voice like hers will). “Where I Will I Be” is a Lanois production in more than the literal sense, echoing both the epic sweep of his work with U2 – Lanois himself provides an Edge-ish shimmer of guitar and Adam Clayton-like grumble of bass – and the cavernous gloaming of the backdrops he created for Dylan. Harris herself sounds unusually fragile, her voice a trebly whisper at the top of her range. The same approach is taken to the cuts on (i)Wrecking Ball(i) which had already appeared elsewhere. Steve Earle’s “Goodbye”, released earlier in 1995 on “Train A-Comin’” as a gruff, sparse acoustic blues, is turned into a stately, shuffling, almost trip-hop ballad (something Earle surely recalled as he flirted with electronica on 2007’s “Washington Square Serenade”). The arrangement of Dylan’s “Every Grain Of Sand”, which originally closed Dylan’s 1981’s Shot Of Love – and sounded like Dylan was making it up as he went, in a shed – is similarly polished: again, Harris plays against it with a haunted, almost cracking vocal which amplifies the song’s vulnerability (in company with Sheryl Crow, she sang “Every Grain Of Sand” at Johnny Cash’s funeral in 2003). Weirdest of all is the version of Hendrix’s “May This Be Love”, all backwards-sounding guitars and Lanois’s backing vocals elevated almost to the status of duet partner, providing effectively portentous counterpoint. The extras included with this reissue are a documentary, Building The Wrecking Ball, which explains how Wrecking Ball came to be, and a disc of out-takes which mostly demonstrates how Wrecking Ball could have ended up had the nerve of all concerned not held. The versions of the songs that made the finished album – including “Where Will I Be”, “All My Tears”, “Deeper Well” – are much closer to what most early purchasers of Wrecking Ball would have expected from Emmylou Harris, and now serve mostly as a reminder of how ambitious and audacious the album was. The versions of Richard Thompson’s “How Will I Ever Be Simple Again” and Harris’s own “Gold” – which later surfaced on 2008’s All I Intended To Be – are, however, magnificent. Andrew Mueller

1995 masterpiece reissued with disc of out-takes and making-of DVD…

Upon its original release, Wrecking Ball prompted acclaim and bewilderment in equal measure. It was, unquestionably, a great record. It just didn’t sound very much like the sort of great record that Emmylou Harris made. Her canon of great records to this point, while formidable, also conformed to a certain type: orthodox Nashville country lightly doused with essence of Laurel Canyon folk-rock.

It was a template that had served Harris well more or less up to Wrecking Ball’s immediate predecessor, 1993’s “Cowgirl’s Prayer”. While very much the kind of thing that people expected of Harris, from the title downwards – and actually not a bad album – Cowgirl’s Prayer was not, at least by Harris’s standards, successful. The choice ahead of her seemed stark: resignation to a long dotage as a heritage act trading her considerable past glories, or reinvention.

She chose the latter – to a degree which, she later admitted, caused some of her fans to wonder if the real Emmylou Harris had been kidnapped by aliens. She assembled the sort of all-star ensemble that you can really only summon if you are, in fact, Emmylou Harris, including Steve Earle, Neil Young, Lucinda Williams, Larry Mullen Jr, Kate and Anna McGarrigle. Besotted by Daniel Lanois’s production of Bob Dylan’s 1989 album Oh Mercy, and by Lanois’s debut solo album Acadie, she enlisted him as producer. With her career-long ear for a great song, she and Lanois chose tracks by various members of her new backing group, as well as cuts by Gillian Welch, Julie Miller and Jimi Hendrix.

Anybody who still expected another helping of Harris’s usual sweetheart-of-the-rodeo trundling was served more or less instant notice to quit by the opening track, Lanois’s “Where Will I Be”. For possibly the first time in Harris’s career, a track on which she appears is dominated by something other than her own vocals (even when she appeared as a backing singer, as on Gram Parsons’ solo albums, she had a tendency to occlude everything else, as a voice like hers will). “Where I Will I Be” is a Lanois production in more than the literal sense, echoing both the epic sweep of his work with U2 – Lanois himself provides an Edge-ish shimmer of guitar and Adam Clayton-like grumble of bass – and the cavernous gloaming of the backdrops he created for Dylan. Harris herself sounds unusually fragile, her voice a trebly whisper at the top of her range.

The same approach is taken to the cuts on (i)Wrecking Ball(i) which had already appeared elsewhere. Steve Earle’s “Goodbye”, released earlier in 1995 on “Train A-Comin’” as a gruff, sparse acoustic blues, is turned into a stately, shuffling, almost trip-hop ballad (something Earle surely recalled as he flirted with electronica on 2007’s “Washington Square Serenade”). The arrangement of Dylan’s “Every Grain Of Sand”, which originally closed Dylan’s 1981’s Shot Of Love – and sounded like Dylan was making it up as he went, in a shed – is similarly polished: again, Harris plays against it with a haunted, almost cracking vocal which amplifies the song’s vulnerability (in company with Sheryl Crow, she sang “Every Grain Of Sand” at Johnny Cash’s funeral in 2003). Weirdest of all is the version of Hendrix’s “May This Be Love”, all backwards-sounding guitars and Lanois’s backing vocals elevated almost to the status of duet partner, providing effectively portentous counterpoint.

The extras included with this reissue are a documentary, Building The Wrecking Ball, which explains how Wrecking Ball came to be, and a disc of out-takes which mostly demonstrates how Wrecking Ball could have ended up had the nerve of all concerned not held. The versions of the songs that made the finished album – including “Where Will I Be”, “All My Tears”, “Deeper Well” – are much closer to what most early purchasers of Wrecking Ball would have expected from Emmylou Harris, and now serve mostly as a reminder of how ambitious and audacious the album was. The versions of Richard Thompson’s “How Will I Ever Be Simple Again” and Harris’s own “Gold” – which later surfaced on 2008’s All I Intended To Be – are, however, magnificent.

Andrew Mueller

Neil Young’s A Letter Home: CD, download and deluxe box set revealed

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Neil Young has announced details of the CD, download and box set editions of A Letter Home. The vinyl edition of the album was released by Jack White's Third Man label on Record Store Day [April 19]. Young will now release the album via Warner Bros/Reprise Records on May 19 across multiple formats...

Neil Young has announced details of the CD, download and box set editions of A Letter Home.

The vinyl edition of the album was released by Jack White’s Third Man label on Record Store Day [April 19].

Young will now release the album via Warner Bros/Reprise Records on May 19 across multiple formats.

A Letter Home will be released on CD and digital album as well as a limited edition deluxe box set, which includes a special “direct feed from the booth” audiophile vinyl version and a DVD that captured the original electro-mechanical process, along with comments from the producers and recording engineers. It includes:

* Standard audio LP pressed on 180-gram black vinyl

* Audiophile LP pressed on 180-gram black vinyl

* Standard audio CD

* DVD

* 12″ x 12″, 32-page full color booklet

* Seven 6” vinyl discs pressed on clear vinyl; a 7th disc of this set features a version of “Blowin’ In The Wind” backed with an alternate take / arrangement of “Crazy”.

The album was recorded at Third Man Records, Nashville and co-produced by Jack White, who also plays piano and provides vocals on “On The Road Again” and “I Wonder if I Care As Much”.

On April 22, Young finished the last scheduled date on his solo acoustic tour in Chicago. You can read the set list here.

Young discusses A Letter Home and his other current projects in the new issue of Uncut, on sale Friday, April 25.

Track Listing for A Letter Home:

A Letter Home intro

“Changes” (Phil Ochs)

“Girl From The North Country” (Bob Dylan)

“Needle of Death” (Bert Jansch)

“Early Morning Rain” (Gordon Lightfoot)

“Crazy” (Willie Nelson)

“Reason To Believe” (Tim Hardin)

“On The Road Again” (Willie Nelson)

“If You Could Read My Mind” (Gordon Lightfoot)

“Since I Met You Baby” (Ivory Joe Hunter)

“My Hometown” (Bruce Springsteen)

“I Wonder If I Care As Much” (Everly Brothers)

David Bowie announces “Diamond Dogs” picture disc

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David Bowie is releasing a 7" picture disc of "Diamond Dogs" on June 16. The single was originally released in June, 1974. For this fortieth anniversary reissue, it will be a double A-side with Tony Visconti's 2005 mix of the version of the song that appears the David Live album. This is the lates...

David Bowie is releasing a 7″ picture disc of “Diamond Dogs” on June 16.

The single was originally released in June, 1974. For this fortieth anniversary reissue, it will be a double A-side with Tony Visconti’s 2005 mix of the version of the song that appears the David Live album.

This is the latest in the run of 40th anniversary 7″ picture discs released by Parlophone Records, following on from “Starman”, “John I’m Only Dancing”, “The Jean Genie”, “Drive In Saturday”, “Live On Mars”, “Sorrow”, “Rebel Rebel”. Last week, Bowie released “Rock’n’Roll Suicide” picture disc for Record Store Day.

DAVID BOWIE

DIAMOND DOGS LIMITED EDITION 40th ANNIVERSARY PICTURE DISC 33 1/3RPM

A-Side Diamond Dogs

Arranged & produced by David Bowie

Mixed by David Bowie & Tony Visconti

Recorded at Olympic & Island Studios, London

AA – Side Diamond Dogs (David Live – 2005 mix)

Produced & mixed by Tony Visconti

Recorded live at Tower Theater, Philadelphia, July 1974

Catalogue Number DBDOGS 40

The image on the A side of the picture disc is an outtake from the famous session shot by photographer Terry O’Neill and the AA side features a previously unseen image from the 1974 US tour.

The Handsome Family: “True Detective has shown us we’re not that weird – we just needed the right context”

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The Handsome Family tell the story of “Far From Any Road”, their 2003 song now used as the theme to HBO’s True Detective, in the new issue of Uncut, out on Friday (April 25). Rennie and Brett Sparks reckon the success of the track has shown that the band aren’t as left-field as they used ...

The Handsome Family tell the story of “Far From Any Road”, their 2003 song now used as the theme to HBO’s True Detective, in the new issue of Uncut, out on Friday (April 25).

Rennie and Brett Sparks reckon the success of the track has shown that the band aren’t as left-field as they used to think.

“We’ve had a lot of people over the years talking about how strange we are,” says Rennie. “You know, oddballs, way out, left-field…”

“All of that, you know, Gomez and Morticia bullshit,” adds Brett.

“But it turns out we’re not really that weird,” Rennie continues. “We just needed the right context. People have said one reason they like the show so much is that it mentions things in the mainstream that haven’t been mentioned there before. Things like us, and Beefheart, things that people thought can’t be appreciated by the mainstream – but it turns out people love that stuff, they’ve just been waiting for somebody to admit it!”

The Handsome Family explain how they wrote and recorded “Far From Any Road” in the new issue of Uncut, dated June 2014, and out on Friday (April 25).

Photo: Jason Creps

Watch Beck cover Arcade Fire’s “Rebellion (Lies)”

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Beck covered Arcade Fire's "Rebellion (Lies)" during his performance at the second Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on Sunday night (April 20). Click below to watch fan-shot footage of the performance, which sees Beck playing the opening of the song on acoustic guitar after telling a story ...

Beck covered Arcade Fire’s “Rebellion (Lies)” during his performance at the second Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on Sunday night (April 20).

Click below to watch fan-shot footage of the performance, which sees Beck playing the opening of the song on acoustic guitar after telling a story to the crowd about how he first heard the song whilst waiting in the rain outside a friend’s bar as the band played inside.

Later on in the evening Beck joined Arcade Fire on stage, wearing a papier mâché head of Pope Francis, while the band covered Prince’s “Controversy”.

Beck will bring his latest album Morning Phase to the UK during festival season, where he will headline three festivals. He will top the bill at Ireland’s Electric Picnic festival between August 29-31 before heading to Bestival on the Isle of Wight, which takes place September 4-7 and then Portmerion, Wales to play Festival No. 6 over September 5-7.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Im0JOPYgjec

Read the setlist for Neil Young’s show on April 22, 2014 at the Chicago Theatre, Chicago, Illinois

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Neil Young played the last of two dates at the Chicago Theatre, Chicago, Illinois last night [April 22]. These are the last two scheduled dates of Young's current acoustic solo tour, which has also seen him play the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, Dallas, Texas, Dolby Theatre, Los Angeles, in N...

Neil Young played the last of two dates at the Chicago Theatre, Chicago, Illinois last night [April 22].

These are the last two scheduled dates of Young’s current acoustic solo tour, which has also seen him play the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, Dallas, Texas, Dolby Theatre, Los Angeles, in New York and Canada.

Last weekend [Saturday, April 19] Young released his long-awaited album A Letter Home for Record Store Day. Another proposed Record Store Day reissue of Time Fades Away has since been postponed.

Young will tour Europe with Crazy Horse during the summer. You can read their current tour itinerary here.

Neil Young’s set list April 22, Chicago Theatre, Illinois:

From Hank To Hendrix

On The Way Home

Only Love Can Break Your Heart

Love In Mind

Philadelphia

Mellow My Mind

Reason to Believe

Someday

Changes

Harvest

Old Man

Cortez The Killer

Pocahontas

A Man Needs A Maid

Ohio

Southern Man

Mr. Soul

Harvest Moon

If You Could Read My Mind

After The Gold Rush

Heart Of Gold

Comes A Time

Long May You Run

Robert Plant: there is “zero” chance of Led Zeppelin performing again

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Robert Plant has ruled out the chance of Led Zeppelin performing live any time soon, saying there is "zero" chance of another reunion show. In an interview with the BBC about the forthcoming reissue of the band's first three albums, Jimmy Page said he was sure fans would be keen for another reunio...

Robert Plant has ruled out the chance of Led Zeppelin performing live any time soon, saying there is “zero” chance of another reunion show.

In an interview with the BBC about the forthcoming reissue of the band’s first three albums, Jimmy Page said he was sure fans would be keen for another reunion show, like the one the band did at London’s O2 seven years ago.

“I’m sure people would love to hear it,” Page said. “I’m not the one to be asking, I don’t sing.”

When asked about the possibility of a show, however, Robert Plant said the chance of it happening was “zero”.

The three reissues, which will be released on June 2, will feature dozens of previously unheard recordings. Snippets of two of the tracks – an early version of “Whole Lotta Love” and blues standard “Keys To The Highway” were heard on the BBC interview this morning.

Page has spent the last two-and-a-half years working on the reissues. “I don’t want to die and have somebody else do it,” he said. “I’m authoritative about what was done in the first place.”

Page says it was “reassuring” to revisit the band’s early recordings. “It’s undeniable that we’re good,” he adds. “The band was the real deal.”

However, he said that listening to the tracks years later has given him a different perspective. “My enthusiasm sometimes got in the way of finesse. I listen to it and go, wow, why didn’t I shut up a bit?” he laughs. “I kind of overcooked it.”

There will be “lots of surprises” on the reissues, Page promised. The final three will be released in 2015.

“These things aren’t to study,” he said. “They’re to turn up very loud and say, hey, once upon at time, everything was just as easy as this.”

Record Store Day organisers respond to Paul Weller boycott

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Record Store Day organisers have responded to Paul Weller's decision to boycott of the event in future after copies of his limited run 7" "Brand New Toy" were being sold on Ebay for vastly inflated prices. A statement on the Record Store Day website says organisers are "disappointed" that touts ar...

Record Store Day organisers have responded to Paul Weller‘s decision to boycott of the event in future after copies of his limited run 7″ “Brand New Toy” were being sold on Ebay for vastly inflated prices.

A statement on the Record Store Day website says organisers are “disappointed” that touts are exploiting the event, which aims to support independent record shops. It also states that as only 500 copies of the single were available, “some re-selling was expected”.

“We share Paul Weller’s frustration at evidence that ‘Brand New Toy‘ has been offered for sale on eBay, and we are disappointed that despite our best efforts to drive out the touts, once again some people are seeking to exploit the goodwill of artists and labels by selling RSD exclusives at vastly-inflated prices on eBay,” the post reads.

“At just 500 copies Paul Weller’s ‘Brand New Toy’ was one of the most limited editions available on RSD and so some re-selling was expected. However, thanks to the measures we have taken on re-sales, overall the number of complaints about unauthorised sales this year is well down on previous years, though we continue to monitor eBay on an hour-by-hour basis.

We clearly cannot control the activities of members of the public, but the Record Store Day Code of Conduct makes it clear that any store found to be complicit in unauthorised sales on eBay faces being banned from future events.

Record Store Day would not exist without the support and commitment of artists and labels and we take our responsibility to them very seriously.”

Yesterday, Paul Weller said that he won’t be taking part in Record Store Day in the future.

Writing on his official website, Weller attacked the “touts” selling the limited edition Record Store Day releases and stated that the online sale of records “goes against the whole philosophy” behind the annual event.

“I agree with all of you who have sent messages expressing your anger and disappointment at the exploitation of these “limited editions” by touts,” Weller writes. “Apart from making the record, the rest has very little to do with me but I am disheartened by the whole thing and unfortunately I won’t be taking part in Record Store Day again.”

He continued: “It’s such a shame because as you know I am a big supporter of independent record stores but the greedy touts making a fast buck off genuine fans is disgusting and goes against the whole philosophy of RSD. It only takes a few to spoil a wonderful concept for everyone else. Shame on those touts.”

Bob Dylan, Brian Wilson, Roger Daltrey for Paul McCartney tribute album

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Bob Dylan, Brian Wilson and Roger Daltrey are among the artists contributing to a Paul McCartney tribute album. The Art Of McCartney features 32 artists who have recorded their covers with McCartney’s own backing musicians. The line-up includes Bob Dylan, Brian Wilson, Billy Joel, Steve Miller B...

Bob Dylan, Brian Wilson and Roger Daltrey are among the artists contributing to a Paul McCartney tribute album.

The Art Of McCartney features 32 artists who have recorded their covers with McCartney’s own backing musicians.

The line-up includes Bob Dylan, Brian Wilson, Billy Joel, Steve Miller Band, Jeff Lynne, Willie Nelson, Barry Gibb, Roger Daltrey, Jamie Cullum and Corinne Bailey Rae.

Boxset and collectors’ editions of the album will be released in the summer, with the standard album version coming out later in the year.

It has yet to be confirmed which specific song Dylan has covered, although fansite Isis reports sources claim it is “Things We Said Today” from A Hard Day’s Night.

The Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach: “We didn’t make another El Camino with Turn Blue – our attention span is too short”

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Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys explains how the group recorded their new album, Turn Blue, in the new issue of Uncut, out on Friday (April 25). Commenting on the fact that the follow-up to the hugely successful El Camino is less immediate and features more keyboard than the duo have ever used bef...

Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys explains how the group recorded their new album, Turn Blue, in the new issue of Uncut, out on Friday (April 25).

Commenting on the fact that the follow-up to the hugely successful El Camino is less immediate and features more keyboard than the duo have ever used before, Auerbach claims that the band have never set out to copy a previous record.

“I don’t know if that’s smart or not, but I think in the long run it’ll probably be smart,” says the frontman, “although it would keep most record labels scratching their heads as to why we would do that.

“Same with this record: we didn’t go in and make another El Camino. Our attention span is too short. I mean, we’re into so many things, and there’s too much to enjoy about music to get stuck on one thing.”

The new Uncut, dated June 2014, is out on Friday (April 25).

The new Uncut revealed! Arctic Monkeys, Neil Young, Kate Bush and Warren Zevon in new issue

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Next month, Arctic Monkeys play two shows at London’s Finsbury Park to more than 100,000 people, which makes it a reasonable moment to look back at the band’s journey from the Sheffield suburb of High Green to their current all-conquering place in a rock pantheon where they are now comfortably settled as one of the great British bands of the last decade. In a series of exclusive interviews for the cover story of our new issue (on sale from this Friday, April 27), John Robinson speaks to Alex Turner and bandmates Matt Helders, Nick O’Malley and Jamie Cook, as well various of their collaborators, heroes and admirers, including John Cooper Clarke, Richard Hawley and Alain Johannes, the Queens of the Stone Age guitarist who worked alongside QOTSA’s Josh Homme on the band’s third album, Humbug. Elsewhere in the issue, there’s a personal update on his forthcoming projects from Neil Young, who’s been on the phone to tell Uncut about his ‘historic art project’, A Letter Home, the re-issue of Time Fades Away, an eventual release for Archives Volume 2 , a follow-up to his autobiography, Waging Heavy Peace, a “fucking weird” science fiction novel and the launch of his digital music player, the much-touted Pono, which will be available from October. Meanwhile, as an excited world waits for Kate Bush to make her live comeback in September and October with 22 shows at the Eventim Hammersmith Apollo, we reach back fully 25 years and discover in the archives of Melody Maker what experts have confidently described as her most revealing interview ever. “As far as I was concerned, he was one of the great writers of our time,” one of his former managers, Andy Slater, told me in an interview for a piece I’ve written for the new issue on the great American songwriter, Warren Zevon. Warren’s fans included legendary names like Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Bruce Springsteen, Jackson Browne and most of the LA luminaries of the mid-70s, who held him in an esteem not always shared by the public and queued up to appear on his albums. Friends from what Warren later described as his ‘cowboy years’ recall those demented times when Warren, a notorious alcoholic with an apparently insatiable appetite for drugs, guns and assorted mayhem, balanced twin careers as a full time hell-raiser and author of several albums that some of us regard as among the greatest ever made, the final tragedy of his career that he didn’t live long enough to make more of them, a rare kind of lung cancer claiming him in 2003. Also among the features in the forthcoming issue, we have a terrific piece on Toumani and Sidiki Diabate , by Andrew Mueller, who visited them in Mali, Graeme Thomson looks back at the incredible career of Stax superstar Isaac Hayes, the self-styled Black Moses, who in his creative heyday took soul music to new heights, The Handsome Family tell Tom Pinnock about the making of “Far From Any Road” and how it ended up as the theme for the recent True Detective TV series, John Sebastian talks us through his greatest albums, and Bob Mould answers your questions in An Audience With.. In the Uncut Review, The Black Keys take pole position in the New Albums section with their new release, Turn Blue, about which Dan Auerbach has plenty to say in an extended Q&A. Among the other new albums reviewed are releases from Roddy Frame, Sharon van Etten, Chuck E Weiss, Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires and Swans. Our Reisisue Of the Month is Skylarking by XTC and among other notable reissues are Nightclubbing by Grace Jones, Wreckless Eric and Oasis. Have a good week. Enjoy the issue and anything you want to take up with us, write to me at allan_jones@ipcmedia.com

Next month, Arctic Monkeys play two shows at London’s Finsbury Park to more than 100,000 people, which makes it a reasonable moment to look back at the band’s journey from the Sheffield suburb of High Green to their current all-conquering place in a rock pantheon where they are now comfortably settled as one of the great British bands of the last decade.

In a series of exclusive interviews for the cover story of our new issue (on sale from this Friday, April 27), John Robinson speaks to Alex Turner and bandmates Matt Helders, Nick O’Malley and Jamie Cook, as well various of their collaborators, heroes and admirers, including John Cooper Clarke, Richard Hawley and Alain Johannes, the Queens of the Stone Age guitarist who worked alongside QOTSA’s Josh Homme on the band’s third album, Humbug.

Elsewhere in the issue, there’s a personal update on his forthcoming projects from Neil Young, who’s been on the phone to tell Uncut about his ‘historic art project’, A Letter Home, the re-issue of Time Fades Away, an eventual release for Archives Volume 2 , a follow-up to his autobiography, Waging Heavy Peace, a “fucking weird” science fiction novel and the launch of his digital music player, the much-touted Pono, which will be available from October.

Meanwhile, as an excited world waits for Kate Bush to make her live comeback in September and October with 22 shows at the Eventim Hammersmith Apollo, we reach back fully 25 years and discover in the archives of Melody Maker what experts have confidently described as her most revealing interview ever.

“As far as I was concerned, he was one of the great writers of our time,” one of his former managers, Andy Slater, told me in an interview for a piece I’ve written for the new issue on the great American songwriter, Warren Zevon. Warren’s fans included legendary names like Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Bruce Springsteen, Jackson Browne and most of the LA luminaries of the mid-70s, who held him in an esteem not always shared by the public and queued up to appear on his albums.

Friends from what Warren later described as his ‘cowboy years’ recall those demented times when Warren, a notorious alcoholic with an apparently insatiable appetite for drugs, guns and assorted mayhem, balanced twin careers as a full time hell-raiser and author of several albums that some of us regard as among the greatest ever made, the final tragedy of his career that he didn’t live long enough to make more of them, a rare kind of lung cancer claiming him in 2003.

Also among the features in the forthcoming issue, we have a terrific piece on Toumani and Sidiki Diabate , by Andrew Mueller, who visited them in Mali, Graeme Thomson looks back at the incredible career of Stax superstar Isaac Hayes, the self-styled Black Moses, who in his creative heyday took soul music to new heights, The Handsome Family tell Tom Pinnock about the making of “Far From Any Road” and how it ended up as the theme for the recent True Detective TV series, John Sebastian talks us through his greatest albums, and Bob Mould answers your questions in An Audience With..

In the Uncut Review, The Black Keys take pole position in the New Albums section with their new release, Turn Blue, about which Dan Auerbach has plenty to say in an extended Q&A. Among the other new albums reviewed are releases from Roddy Frame, Sharon van Etten, Chuck E Weiss, Lee Bains III & The Glory Fires and Swans. Our Reisisue Of the Month is Skylarking by XTC and among other notable reissues are Nightclubbing by Grace Jones, Wreckless Eric and Oasis.

Have a good week. Enjoy the issue and anything you want to take up with us, write to me at allan_jones@ipcmedia.com

Paul Weller: “I won’t be taking part in Record Store Day again”

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Paul Weller has said that he won't be taking part in Record Store Day in the future after seeing his 2014 release sold online at vastly inflated prices. Weller put out a one-off 7-inch, "A Brand New Toy" b/w "Landslide."", for this year's Record Store Day, which took place on Saturday (April 19). A...

Paul Weller has said that he won’t be taking part in Record Store Day in the future after seeing his 2014 release sold online at vastly inflated prices.

Weller put out a one-off 7-inch, “A Brand New Toy” b/w “Landslide.”“, for this year’s Record Store Day, which took place on Saturday (April 19). As with a majority of other releases this year, copies of the record appeared on eBay later that same day while other fans complained of the release being sold out as soon as record shops opened their doors.

Addressing the issue on his official website, Weller attacks the “touts” selling the limited edition Record Store Day releases and states that the online sale of records “goes against the whole philosophy” behind the annual event.

“I agree with all of you who have sent messages expressing your anger and disappointment at the exploitation of these ‘limited editions’ by touts,” Weller writes. “Apart from making the record, the rest has very little to do with me but I am disheartened by the whole thing and unfortunately I won’t be taking part in Record Store Day again.”

He continues: “It’s such a shame because as you know I am a big supporter of independent record stores but the greedy touts making a fast buck off genuine fans is disgusting and goes against the whole philosophy of RSD. It only takes a few to spoil a wonderful concept for everyone else. Shame on those touts.”