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LCD Soundsystem’s farewell concert to be released in full for Record Store Day

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LCD Soundsystem's farewell concert is set to be released in full for Record Store Day. The Long Goodbye: LCD Soundsystem Live At Madison Square Garden will come out on five LP vinyl on April 19, with a wider vinyl and digital release set for May 19. The recording will be an unabridged version of th...

LCD Soundsystem‘s farewell concert is set to be released in full for Record Store Day.

The Long Goodbye: LCD Soundsystem Live At Madison Square Garden will come out on five LP vinyl on April 19, with a wider vinyl and digital release set for May 19. The recording will be an unabridged version of the band’s final gig, coming in at almost four hours long. Scroll down for a full tracklisting. It includes ‘North American Scum’ with guest vocals from Arcade Fire and ’45:33′ featuring Reggie Watts. The show, which took place on April 2 2011 in New York, was documented by the film Shut Up And Play The Hits.

‘The Long Goodbye’ tracklisting is:

‘Dance Yrself Clean’

‘Drunk Girls’

‘I Can Change’

‘Time To Get Away

‘Get Innocuous!’

‘Daft Punk Is Playing At My House’

‘Too Much Love’

‘All My Friends’

‘Tired / Heart Of The Sunrise’

’45:33 Intro’

‘You Can’t Hide (Shame On You)’

‘Sound Of Silver’

‘Out In Space’

‘Ships Talking’

‘Freak Out / Starry Eyes’

‘Us v Them’

‘North American Scum’

‘Bye Bye Bayou’

‘You Wanted A Hit’

‘Tribulations’

‘Movement’

‘Yeah’

‘Someone Great’

‘Losing My Edge’

‘Home’

‘All I Want’

‘Jump Into The Fire’

‘New York, I Love You But You’re Bringing Me Down’

Neil Young announces additional live dates

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Neil Young has announced an additional date for his run of solo acoustic shows at the Dolby Theatre, Los Angeles. Young will now play four dates at the venue: March 29, 30, April 1 and 2. Meanwhile, he has also confirmed that he and Crazy Horse will play Liverpool's Echo arena on July 13 – almos...

Neil Young has announced an additional date for his run of solo acoustic shows at the Dolby Theatre, Los Angeles.

Young will now play four dates at the venue: March 29, 30, April 1 and 2.

Meanwhile, he has also confirmed that he and Crazy Horse will play Liverpool’s Echo arena on July 13 – almost a year after their booked date was cancelled last year due to Poncho Sampedro’s hand injury.

Earlier this week, Young announced plans for a new memoir, which will be released in autumn.

Morrissey: “I don’t know a single person who wants a Smiths reunion”

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Morrissey has claimed he doesn't know anyone who wants a Smiths reunion in a new interview with Billboard. "I don't know a single person who wants a Smiths reunion!" he told the publication when discussing what bands he would like to see reform. "But, no, there aren't any bands I like to see again...

Morrissey has claimed he doesn’t know anyone who wants a Smiths reunion in a new interview with Billboard.

“I don’t know a single person who wants a Smiths reunion!” he told the publication when discussing what bands he would like to see reform. “But, no, there aren’t any bands I like to see again because your memory of them is how they were in their prime or at their best or at their most desperate, and you look to them to be someone that they no longer are.”

He also spoke about the bout of illness he suffered in 2013, which included double pneumonia, a bleeding ulcer and a gastrointestinal disorder. “Well, I’m expected to see Easter,” Morrissey said of the diagnosis. “It was a bad year. I was in hospitals so frequently that the doctors were sick to death of me, and there’s nothing more ageing than lying in a hospital bed, trying to recover from hospital food.”

He continued: “If your illness doesn’t kill you then the hospital food sees you off. That’s what it’s there for. Anyway, it was my time to go to pieces. Much overdue.”

Asked about the 50th anniversary of The Beatles‘ first trip to America, the singer revealed: “I thought four of their songs were magnificient, and if a band can give you four magnificient songs then that’s good enough for me. But was I ever influenced by The Beatles? No.”

Morrissey is due to be joined by Cliff Richard and Tom Jones on two dates on his US tour this summer. On the performers – who will join him at LA’s Los Angeles Sports Arena on May 10 and Brooklyn’s Barclays Center on June 21 – he said: “Tom and Cliff qualify greatly in the style department, and age has nothing to do with it. There are millions of obese 19-year-olds who only buy clothes that blend in with the couch.”

This month in Uncut

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David Bowie, Bruce Springsteen, Afghan Whigs and Johnny Cash all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2014 and out now (February 28). The story of Bowie’s 1974 LP, Diamond Dogs, and the subsequent hedonistic US tour, is told by friends and collaborators, including producer Ken Scott, ...

David Bowie, Bruce Springsteen, Afghan Whigs and Johnny Cash all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2014 and out now (February 28).

The story of Bowie’s 1974 LP, Diamond Dogs, and the subsequent hedonistic US tour, is told by friends and collaborators, including producer Ken Scott, musicians Alan Parker, Tony Newman and Herbie Flowers, backing vocalist/dancer/confidant Geoff MacCormack and backing vocalist Ava Cherry.

“We weren’t lairy,†says MacCormack of the Diamond Dogs tour today. “We weren’t like rockers, we were more aesthetic than that. We misbehaved very badly, but not the archetypal rock’n’roll thuggery…â€

Uncut heads to Perth to catch Bruce Springsteen live in front of a stadium full of Australian superfans, and to Los Angeles to hang out at chief Afghan Whig Greg Dulli’s house, to discuss the band’s reunion, drugs and the haunting in his home.

We also look at Johnny Cash’s turbulent 1980s, including muppets, dangerous ostriches and Cash as a superhero bank robber, with help from a host of the country legend’s friends, collaborators and backing musicians. Peter Gabriel answers your questions on Genesis, his solo work and writing songs with monkeys, while The Beat recall the making of “Mirror In The Bathroomâ€.

The War On Drugs’ Adam Granduciel discusses the life-changing creation of the group’s new album, while Paul Rodgers takes us through his career in LPs with Free, Bad Company, The Firm, Queen and solo.

There’s death, drugs and boogie with Little Feat, whose mercurial, tragic story is told by the surviving bandmembers, and in our front section we speak to the reformed Slowdive, Ned Doheny, Willy Vlautin and Robert Ellis, while Peggy Seeger pays tribute to her late half-brother, Pete Seeger.

In the reviews section, we look at new releases from The Hold Steady, Wilko Johnson & Roger Daltrey, Elbow and Metronomy, among others, along with archive releases from Dr John, T.Rex, Miles Davis, Elton John and more.

This month’s free CD, Rock’n’Roll With Us, features tracks from David Crosby, Drive-By Truckers, The War On Drugs, Real Estate, The Hold Steady, Sun Kil Moon, Linda Perhacs, Robert Ellis and more.

The new Uncut is out now (February 28).

Photo: Terry O’Neill/Getty Images

The making of… Buzzcocks’ “Ever Fallen In Love (With Someone You Shouldn’t’ve)”

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To mark the sad news of Pete Shelley's death, here's Shelley, Steve Diggle, producer Martin Rushent and manager Richard Boon on the creation of the band’s powerpop perennial. From Uncut’s March 2008 issue [Take 130]. ___________________ We have other great songs,†says Pete Shelley of ‘E...

To mark the sad news of Pete Shelley’s death, here’s Shelley, Steve Diggle, producer Martin Rushent and manager Richard Boon on the creation of the band’s powerpop perennial. From Uncut’s March 2008 issue [Take 130].

___________________

We have other great songs,†says Pete Shelley of ‘Ever Fallen In Love (With Someone You Shouldn’t’ve)’, “but this is the one the man on the Clapham omnibus would recognise.â€

You can certainly argue that, 30 years on from its release, Buzzcocks’ “Ever Fallen In Love…†remains a two-minute 42-second high-water mark of punk. Although sticking to the genre’s template of buzzsaw guitars and snarky vocals, it’s shot through with a heavily melodic hookline that’s been highly adaptable, as wildly varying covers by Fine Young Cannibals, Thea Gilmore and Jeff Tweedy have proved.

Inspired by a line from Guys And Dolls, and written in a van parked outside a post office in Edinburgh, it was one of the elite 142 seven-inch records kept in a 2ft-long wooden box that constituted the crown jewels in John Peel’s record collection. And it should be in yours, too.

___________________

Fact File

Written by: Pete Shelley

Performers: Pete Shelley, Steve Diggle, John Maher, Steve Garvey and Martin Rushent (backing vocals)

Produced by: Martin Rushent

Recorded at: Olympic Studios

Released as a single: September 1978

Highest UK Chart Position: 12

___________________

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=terg_LPT3X0

Pete Shelley (vocals, guitar, songwriter): We were in the Blenheim guesthouse, Blenheim Place, Edinburgh, on our first headline tour, following the release of “Orgasm Addictâ€. Barry Adamson was playing bass; Steve Garvey didn’t join until the end of the tour. We’d done the White Riot tour [with The Clash, Subway Sect and The Slits], but now we were on United Artists it all felt very modern. I’d written songs before I met Howard Devoto. It was pretty easy: he’d write the lyrics and I’d do the music. Then, when he left, I had to finish them off. So I always had my ear out for lyrics. Guys And Dolls was on the TV and there’s a line: “Have you ever fallen in love with someone you shouldn’t have? Just wait ’til it happens to you.â€

I thought it was a wonderful phrase, and the next day, parked outside the post office in Edinburgh, I started writing the song. The opening line was originally “You piss on my natural emotionsâ€, but because “Orgasm Addict†hadn’t been getting radio play because of its title, I needed something a bit subtler. So I came up with “spurnâ€. It had the same sort of disregard, but wasn’t as likely to offend! Of course it’s from personal experience – I tend to write songs to get my own back and turn the knife, but some details are changed to protect the innocent, and it also helps make them more universal.

The producer, Martin Rushent, was a very good facilitator. When it came time to do the vocals, the entire band went shopping with their significant others, leaving the donkeywork to Martin and me. We’d done them all by the time they came back. The great thing about Martin was there was none of this “It’ll be all right in the mix†stuff other producers give you. He mixed as he went along and made everything sound great – when he’d woven those three-part harmonies together, that’s when everyone realised this was going to be huge. It leapt out of the speakers.

In 2005, I went into the studio for the first day of re-recording the song for the John Peel tribute. It was pretty chaotic – a lot of the contributions were done by international link. But one thing I was pleased about was that it demonstrated how much the song still stands up – people don’t necessarily equate punk with what you’d call classic songwriting. Peel himself had meant a lot to me growing up. It was on his show where I first heard Can, and he was brave enough to stop playing Tangerine Dream in favour of The Undertones, always open to new music. It was a real honour that his family chose “Ever Fallen In Love…†to celebrate his memory.

___________________

Steve Diggle (guitar): It was a whirlwind time for us. The punk rock atom had been split open. Our songwriting came to the fore. A lot of bands were just there for the party, but the ones that had the material lived on. There was competition between Pete and I. We’re completely different people, polar opposites in some ways. I damaged my foot on a bike years ago so I always used to say to Pete, if you’re Shelley I must be Byron because I’ve got a bad ankle. That was more my thing – drink, drugs women and reading poetry – I never had the problems with love affairs that he seemed to.

We’d go to a rehearsal room in Manchester when we got off tour and run through batches of songs really quickly – in time to get to the pub at five o’clock. You could hear other bands still running through an intro in the room next door by the time we’d done three or four songs! The magic and power of our band was that we had so much great material.

“Ever Fallen In Love†didn’t particularly stand out – whatever other songs we were doing at the time were just as good, I think. It’s certainly not as great as “Harmony In My Headâ€. A lot of punters will say that “Ever Fallen…†is just a love song, whereas “Harmony…†is inspired by James Joyce, it has cinematic images. That’s my preference.

I guess that song’s been a blessing and a burden. People pigeonhole us by it, but in truth, we wrote about the whole spectrum of the human condition. I was on holiday when they cut the Peel tribute. But even with all those people it didn’t make a blind bit of difference. Elton John, Robert Plant, Dave Gilmour – it was great to have them on it, but the essence of the thing comes from the heart and soul of what we were doing. Too many ’Cocks spoil the broth.

___________________

Richard Boon (manager): Howard and I were old school friends. I was at art school at Reading when he and Pete came down to see the Pistols in London. I moved back to Manchester when they formed a band, my job being to create a project, make something happen. When Howard left, Pete’s brand of doomed romanticism got foregrounded, and their sound became poppier. “Ever Fallen…†was part of that development. The long-term project was to move, quite deliberately, from punk to pop, in a more commercial direction. The universality of the lyric was a big attraction. There was a feeling that Pete had written it about Linder Sterling, who had done the ‘iron maiden’ collage for the “Orgasm Addict†cover. Pete was coming out of a problematic personal relationship and looking at Howard and Linder, who were an item at the time, but it was never directly articulated. I was very fond of the sleeve – it was based on a collage by Marcel Duchamp. I really liked getting Duchamp into the Top 20!

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Martin Rushent (producer): I’d just got myself a new job as an A&R at United Artists under Andrew Lauder when he played me the “Spiral Scratch†EP. I went to see them and knew we had to do them straight away – it sounded like they had an endless string of number ones.

We cracked the formula to record them very early on – drummer on a riser, the band all around him – just like they were onstage, playing as they did live. We got off to a false start with “Orgasm Addict†because we used a small room – TW Studios in Fulham. The Buzzcocks needed a big acoustic; their whole sound was about reverberating noise, so the guitars could blur and spin together. Compared to everything we did afterwards, “Orgasm Addict†sounds shit. As soon as we went to Olympic studios in Barnes, where the Stones, Beatles and Zeppelin had done a lot of recording, we knew it was where they belonged.

Pete played me “Ever Fallen In Love…†there for the first time and my jaw hit the floor. I felt it was the strongest song that they had written – clever, witty lyrics, great hooklines.

I suggested backing vocals – to highlight the chorus and make it even more powerful. No-one could hit the high part – so I did it. I’d sung in bands in my youth and I also worked as a backing singer.

Pete and Steve had a finely worked-out guitar style – their tunings were a tiny bit out, just enough to swirl when they met in mid air.

The January 2019 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jack White on the cover. Inside, White heads up our Review Of The Year – which also features the best new albums, archive releases, films and books of the last 12 months. Aside from White, there are exclusive interviews with Paul Weller, Elvis Costello, Stephen Malkmus, Courtney Barnett, Low and Mélissa Laveaux. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best music of 2018.

Dave Davies to play first UK gig in 13 years

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Dave Davies has announced his first UK gig in 13 years. The Kinks guitarist will play London's Barbican on April 11, to 'celebrate the 50th anniversary of the revolutionary guitar sound that changed rock'n'roll'. Davies suffered a serious stroke in 2004, but was recovered enough by 2006 to play ...

Dave Davies has announced his first UK gig in 13 years.

The Kinks guitarist will play London’s Barbican on April 11, to ‘celebrate the 50th anniversary of the revolutionary guitar sound that changed rock’n’roll’.

Davies suffered a serious stroke in 2004, but was recovered enough by 2006 to play guitar, walk and talk. Recent years have seen increased talk of a possible Kinks reunion, but nothing concrete has yet materialised.

Tickets go on sale on Friday (February 28) at 9am.

Beck on course for first Number One with new album ‘Morning Phase’

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Beck is heading for his first ever Number One on the Official Albums Chart with new album, 'Morning Phase'. Official Chart Company data reveals that the US singer-songwriter's latest album is currently ahead of Bastille's 'Bad Blood' at No.2. Beck has had six Top 40 albums in the UK – includin...

Beck is heading for his first ever Number One on the Official Albums Chart with new album, ‘Morning Phase’.

Official Chart Company data reveals that the US singer-songwriter’s latest album is currently ahead of Bastille’s ‘Bad Blood’ at No.2.

Beck has had six Top 40 albums in the UK – including a Top 10 with 2008’s Modern Guilt (9) – but has never managed to score a Number One before. The final chart will be revealed on BBC Radio 1 this Sunday.

There are four other new entries on this week’s Official Albums Chart Update with Wild Beasts new at No.8 today (February 26) with their fourth album ‘Present Tense’. Reverend And The Makers are new at nine with their new album ‘ThirtyTwo’ while St Vincent is on course for a UK Top 20 entry with her self-titled album at 12.

Blondie and Dolly Parton confirmed for Glastonbury

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Blondie and Dolly Parton have confirmed that they will perform at Glastonbury in June. Blondie announced their appearance at last night's NME Awards with Austin, Texas while both Dolly Parton and organiser Emily Eavis have confirmed that the 'Jolene' singer will appear at Worthy Farm this year. ...

Blondie and Dolly Parton have confirmed that they will perform at Glastonbury in June.

Blondie announced their appearance at last night’s NME Awards with Austin, Texas while both Dolly Parton and organiser Emily Eavis have confirmed that the ‘Jolene’ singer will appear at Worthy Farm this year.

Speaking to Metro on the red carpet, Debbie Harry revealed that Blondie will be at the festival, saying: “We just heard today – we’re going to be doing Glastonbury.” They join headliners Arcade Fire, Lily Allen, Warpaint and Staton Warriors on the list of artists due to perform at this year’s festival, which takes place between June 25-29.

Tweeting about her upcoming appearance at Glastonbury, Parton said she will perform on June 29, the Sunday of the festival. Meanwhile, Emily Eavis said that she “couldn’t be happier” with the booking.

Tickets for Glastonbury Festival 2014 sold out in record time after going on sale on October 6. 120,000 tickets were snapped up in one hour and 27 minutes, beating last year’s record of one hour and 40 minutes. Eavis revealed that over one million people had registered for tickets for next year’s event.

Damon Albarn: ‘Blur recorded 15 new songs together’, but no new album for a few years

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Damon Albarn, who collected the Award For Innovation at the NME Awards 2014 with Austin, Texas last night (February 26), says Blur have recorded 15 new songs for a new album, but they won’t see the light of day for years. The award winner also says he would give an Innovation Award to Richard R...

Damon Albarn, who collected the Award For Innovation at the NME Awards 2014 with Austin, Texas last night (February 26), says Blur have recorded 15 new songs for a new album, but they won’t see the light of day for years.

The award winner also says he would give an Innovation Award to Richard Russell, his collaborator on forthcoming solo album ‘Everyday Robots’ .

Earlier in the ceremony, held at London’s O2 Brixton Academy, Albarn presented Paul McCartney with the Songwriter’s Songwriter award.

Click below to watch.

The Eighth Uncut Playlist Of 2014

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Another song this week from what’s rapidly shaping up to be one of my favourite 2014 albums, Hurray For The Riff-Raff’s “Small Town Heroesâ€. Have a look, too, at the trailer for Lance Bangs’ Slint documentary, “Breadcrumb Trailâ€, which is the music film I’ve enjoyed most since the Source Family doc. Some hardy perennials here: Ali Roberts and Hiss Golden Messenger’s MC Taylor covering Townes Van Zandt; a new live set from Cian Nugent. New Wooden Wand sounded good on first listen, too. I should of course plug the new issue of Uncut at this point, not least the Afghan Whigs comeback interview and the rediscovery of Ned Doheny. Out today, I believe: Bowie, Johnny Cash, Peter Gabriel, Hold Steady, Slowdive, The War On Drugs, Little Feat, Paul Rodgers, The Beat, Dr John… full details here. Thanks. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Hurray For The Riff-Raff – Small Town Heroes (ATO) 2 Hiss Golden Messenger & Alasdair Roberts – If I Needed You (http://bamshakalah.tumblr.com) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1OuUUN5Ysc 3 Sufjan Stevens, Son Lux & Serengeti present Sisyphus – Sisyphus (Asthmatic Kitty) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dVVvgFWn14c 4 HÃ¥kon Stene - Lush Laments for Lazy Mammal (Hubro) 5 The Horrors – Luminous (Sampler) (XL) 6 J Roddy Walston & The Business – Essential Tremors (ATO) 7 Factory Floor - How You Say (Daniel Avery Remix) (DFA) 8 The Bohicas – XXX (Domino) 9 Wye Oak – Shriek (City Slang) 10 Dan Sartain – Dudesblood (One Little Indian) 11 Slint – Spiderland Box Set (Touch & Go) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LVdU_bLD2-M 12 Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Phosphorescent Harvest (Silver Arrow) 13 Heterotic – Weird Drift (Planet Mu) 14 Woo – When The Past Arrives (Drag City) 15 Thee Oh Sees – Drop (Castleface) 16 Bobby Charles - Bobby Charles (Light In The Attic) 17 Bob Frank - Bob Frank (Vanguard/Light In The Attic) 18 K Leimer - A Period Of Review (RVNG INTL) 19 Wooden Wand - Farmer's Corner (Fire) 20 Pink Mountaintops - Get Back (Jajaguwar) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aaaZyVat6UM 21 Millie & Andrea - Drop The Vowels (Modern Love) 22 Cian Nugent – February 19, 2014, Union Pool, New York ( NYC Taper ) 23 Wild Beasts – Present Tense (Domino)

Another song this week from what’s rapidly shaping up to be one of my favourite 2014 albums, Hurray For The Riff-Raff’s “Small Town Heroesâ€. Have a look, too, at the trailer for Lance Bangs’ Slint documentary, “Breadcrumb Trailâ€, which is the music film I’ve enjoyed most since the Source Family doc.

Some hardy perennials here: Ali Roberts and Hiss Golden Messenger’s MC Taylor covering Townes Van Zandt; a new live set from Cian Nugent. New Wooden Wand sounded good on first listen, too.

I should of course plug the new issue of Uncut at this point, not least the Afghan Whigs comeback interview and the rediscovery of Ned Doheny. Out today, I believe: Bowie, Johnny Cash, Peter Gabriel, Hold Steady, Slowdive, The War On Drugs, Little Feat, Paul Rodgers, The Beat, Dr John… full details here. Thanks.

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

1 Hurray For The Riff-Raff – Small Town Heroes (ATO)

2 Hiss Golden Messenger & Alasdair Roberts – If I Needed You (http://bamshakalah.tumblr.com)

3 Sufjan Stevens, Son Lux & Serengeti present Sisyphus – Sisyphus (Asthmatic Kitty)

4 HÃ¥kon Stene – Lush Laments for Lazy Mammal (Hubro)

5 The Horrors – Luminous (Sampler) (XL)

6 J Roddy Walston & The Business – Essential Tremors (ATO)

7 Factory Floor – How You Say (Daniel Avery Remix) (DFA)

8 The Bohicas – XXX (Domino)

9 Wye Oak – Shriek (City Slang)

10 Dan Sartain – Dudesblood (One Little Indian)

11 Slint – Spiderland Box Set (Touch & Go)

12 Chris Robinson Brotherhood – Phosphorescent Harvest (Silver Arrow)

13 Heterotic – Weird Drift (Planet Mu)

14 Woo – When The Past Arrives (Drag City)

15 Thee Oh Sees – Drop (Castleface)

16 Bobby Charles – Bobby Charles (Light In The Attic)

17 Bob Frank – Bob Frank (Vanguard/Light In The Attic)

18 K Leimer – A Period Of Review (RVNG INTL)

19 Wooden Wand – Farmer’s Corner (Fire)

20 Pink Mountaintops – Get Back (Jajaguwar)

21 Millie & Andrea – Drop The Vowels (Modern Love)

22 Cian Nugent – February 19, 2014, Union Pool, New York ( NYC Taper )

23 Wild Beasts – Present Tense (Domino)

Johnny Cash in the ’80s “was in pain… he was looking for helpâ€

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Johnny Cash’s 1980s years in the commercial wilderness are examined in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2014 and out tomorrow (February 28). Friends, relations and collaborators, including son John Carter Cash, his guitarist Marty Stuart, singer-songwriter and son-in-law Rodney Crowell and h...

Johnny Cash’s 1980s years in the commercial wilderness are examined in the new issue of Uncut, dated April 2014 and out tomorrow (February 28).

Friends, relations and collaborators, including son John Carter Cash, his guitarist Marty Stuart, singer-songwriter and son-in-law Rodney Crowell and harmonica player Mickey Raphael, who toured with Cash when he was part of The Highwaymen, recall the highs and lows of the country star’s bizarre decade – Muppets, ostriches and Elton John impressions included.

“I knew there were pills, but they weren’t recreational,†says Raphael.

“He was in pain. I remember one night we all gathered around with our hands on him and one of the guys was praying. It was very powerful.

“He was looking for help. There was definitely pain involved, emotional pain and physical pain.â€

A lost album from Cash’s ‘80s sessions, Out Among The Stars, is released on March 24.

The new issue of Uncut is out tomorrow (February 28).

Photo: Jim Marshall Photography LLC

Bruce Springsteen plays The Wild, The Innocent And The E Street Shuffle in full at final Australia show

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Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band played their 1973 album, The Wild, The Innocent And The E Street Shuffle in full at their final show in Australia today [February 26]. The band opened with a cover of the Bee Gees' "Stayin' Alive", and were joined by Eddie Vedder for a cover of AC/DC's "Highw...

Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band played their 1973 album, The Wild, The Innocent And The E Street Shuffle in full at their final show in Australia today [February 26].

The band opened with a cover of the Bee Gees‘ “Stayin’ Alive”, and were joined by Eddie Vedder for a cover of AC/DC’s “Highway To Hell” during the encores. Vedder had previously joined the band to play the same song in Melbourne on Saturday, February 15.

The band will now head to New Zealand for two shows in Auckland on March 1 and 2.

Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band played:

Stayin’ Alive

It’s Hard To Be A Saint In The City

Does this Bus Stop at 82nd Street?

Growin’ Up

Spirit In The Night

High Hopes

Just Like Fire Would

You Can Look (But You’d Better Not Touch)

Sherry Darling

Save My Love

Fade Away

The E Street Shuffle

4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)

Kitty’s Back

Wild Billy’s Circus Story

Incident On 57th Street

Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)

New York City Serenade (w/ strings)

Darlington County

Waitin’ On A Sunny Day

The Rising

The Ghost Of Tom Joad

Badlands

ENCORE

Glory Days

Born To Run

Bobby Jean

Dancing In The Dark

Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out

Highway To Hell (with Eddie Vedder)

Thunder Road (solo)

Read the Rolling Stones set list from Tokyo Dome, February 26

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The Rolling Stones played the first of three shows at Tokyo Dome today [February 26]. The show was part of the band's 14 On Fire tour, which began in Abu Dhabi on February 21. The band return to Tokyo Dome on March 4 and 6 before heading to Macau on March 9. The Rolling Stones played: Get Off Of ...

The Rolling Stones played the first of three shows at Tokyo Dome today [February 26].

The show was part of the band’s 14 On Fire tour, which began in Abu Dhabi on February 21. The band return to Tokyo Dome on March 4 and 6 before heading to Macau on March 9.

The Rolling Stones played:

Get Off Of My Cloud

It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll (But I Like It)

Tumbling Dice

Wild Horses

Emotional Rescue

Doom And Gloom

Bitch

Slipping Away (with Keith on lead vocals and Mick Taylor joining on guitar)

Before They Make Me Run (with Keith on lead vocals)

Midnight Rambler (with Mick Taylor)

Miss You

Paint It Black

Gimme Shelter

Start Me Up

Brown Sugar

Jumpin’ Jack Flash

Sympathy For The Devil

ENCORE

You Can’t Always Get What You Want

(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction (with Mick Taylor)

Uncle Tupelo – No Depression: The Legacy Edition

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Not for now, just for forever. Insurgent Country's big bang... They were still wet behind the ears in 1987, barely into their twenties, but Belleville, Illinois trio Uncle Tupelo (guitarist Jay Farrar, bassist Jeff Tweedy, drummer Mike Heidorn) had been woodshedding in various combinations around St. Louis for years, first as upstart rockabillies (the Plebes), later as garage/punk acolytes (the Primitives). Soaking up every conceivable influence, they spun out everything: Nuggets-style ‘60s garage tunes, indie rock (leaning, especially, on the styles of the Replacements, Green on Red, and the Minutemen), the folk and folk-rock of Dylan and the Byrds, blues and hardcore country. By the time their first true original songs arrived, though, they were beyond it all, and asking the hard questions; fun time was over. Or, as Tweedy later snapped in an interview: "This was not a game." “Before I Break,†“Screen Door,†and “Whiskey Bottle,†grim vignettes laid down on lo-fi cassettes (and included here as alternate takes), ushered in a tidal wave of brutally honest material documenting—and defying—hopelessness, of being trapped with a nowhere life in a nowhere town. The songs, focused treatises on poverty and the search for meaning, were immersed in booze and disillusionment, tapping deep into the tattered psyche of Ronnie Reagan’s now decimated 'City on a Hill' generation. "Well, time won't wait, better open the gate," Farrar barks out, in a rush of words on No Depression's opening blast, "Graveyard Shift." "Get up and start what needs to be done." These sentiments could be delivered in a gale-force rush of explosive electric guitar, noisy slabs of rhythm, and tricky, stop-on-a-dime time changes. Or, alternatively—and stunningly—with a wistful, floating melody dug out from A.P. Carter's dusty songbooks, accented by banjo, mandolin, fiddles, pedal steel, and gorgeous two-part harmonies. Both methods were equally devastating. This almost randomized reconnection to America's deepest musical roots was timely. Mainstream country music, abandoning all self-respect, had transmogrified into something truly ghastly. Embracing line dancing, big hats, and a new generation of crossover stars — Garth Brooks, Billy Ray Cyrus — they kicked Cash, Buck, Merle, and Possum to the curb. Blue-collar indie rock was on the run, too, soon to be subsumed into the pop mainstream in the post-Nirvana years. No Depression—mixing, on one hand, age-old sentiments of trial and trouble with urgent, cut-throat punk rock and, on the other, age-old musical styles with contemporary yearning for a better life—felt revelatory, inspirational, real.    Plenty of others — Jason & the Scorchers, the Blasters, Rank and File — had been pounding it out for years, searching for, among other things, common ground between the Clash and George Jones. But Tupelo's ability to reclaim the very fabric of American music, especially its distressed, hardscrabble underpinnings, to personalize it, and shepherd it into the conscience of a new generation, well, that was a different thing entirely. By the mid-1990s, youngsters like Whiskeytown, Old '97s, and Gillian Welch, rediscovered treasures like Lucinda Williams and Billy Joe Shaver, even legendary old-timers — like Johnny Cash — were in ascension. Produced by Paul Kolderie and Sean Slade, fresh off work with indie heroes Dinosaur Jr., No Depression was out as summer 1990 dawned. Farrar was indisputably band's visionary at this point, handling most of the singing and writing. "Graveyard Shift", "Before I Break" and "Whiskey Bottle" flying by in an adrenalin rush, were the hardest hitters, swinging at a pugilistic sonic presentation the band would, inevitably, drift away from. Slightly scaled-back, subtler numbers, though, like "Outdone" and the Tweedy-written "That Year," were just as affecting. The beatific title cut, of course, a cover of the Carter Family's soul-searching, spirit-seeking gem, was a stroke of genius. This expanded edition appends 22 tracks, including a dozen cuts from those primordial cassettes—highlighted by a fine acoustic version of the Flying Burrito Brothers' "Sin City". The crown jewel, though, is Not Forever, Just for Now, a 10-song demo assembled for record-label attention in 1989. All the major No Depression material is here, fully formed, plus a fateful, forgotten masterpiece—"I Got Drunk"—fusing dark, galloping bluegrass hues to an all-too-familiar protagonist drinking himself into oblivion. With a fluid, gutsy sound leaning ever so slightly toward power pop, the start-stop, punch-in-the-face dynamics of the official versions are (slightly) less pronounced here, as if they're not trying quite so hard. A blistering portrait of the group just uncovering the breadth of their power.            Luke Torn Q&A Mike Heidorn You had garage-band roots; where did the country influences come from? The punk rock, the garage rock was definitely the common element that Jeff and Jay had. Jay's family and his upbringing lent itself to the acoustic instruments by way of the Missouri Ozarks [his mother's home], a very rural area southwest of Belleville. But his folks had banjos—I remember going there as a 14-year-old—fiddles, harmonicas, pianos, acoustic guitars galore. Jeff, his upbringing brought acoustic [instruments] to the family gatherings. I think he had some uncles who played country, so those two were in touch with the country. When they brought those acoustic guitars and harmonicas to band practice, that was really fascinating. It was like 'Hell, we can do all these things!'    A lot of these songs, the restlessness and frustration, still resonate now, really hold up... I think that while Jeff was right behind him, that premise from Jay's lyrics really hit home with me as an individual living in Belleville. The lyric that personified Uncle Tupelo for many years—well other than "On liquor I'll spend my last dime" (from "Before I Break") was from the song "Whiskey Bottleâ€: “not forever, just for now," in other words, there's a life out there, a life worth living. Those songs seemed so real to me. It was like these guys were really looking around. What strikes me is how the early Tupelo songs connect to the past, into age-old emotions, yet played for a very young crowd? I think if you'd have tried to purposely study how to do that, you'd have failed! The future takes its course… INTERVIEW: LUKE TORN

Not for now, just for forever. Insurgent Country’s big bang…

They were still wet behind the ears in 1987, barely into their twenties, but Belleville, Illinois trio Uncle Tupelo (guitarist Jay Farrar, bassist Jeff Tweedy, drummer Mike Heidorn) had been woodshedding in various combinations around St. Louis for years, first as upstart rockabillies (the Plebes), later as garage/punk acolytes (the Primitives). Soaking up every conceivable influence, they spun out everything: Nuggets-style ‘60s garage tunes, indie rock (leaning, especially, on the styles of the Replacements, Green on Red, and the Minutemen), the folk and folk-rock of Dylan and the Byrds, blues and hardcore country.

By the time their first true original songs arrived, though, they were beyond it all, and asking the hard questions; fun time was over. Or, as Tweedy later snapped in an interview: “This was not a game.”

“Before I Break,†“Screen Door,†and “Whiskey Bottle,†grim vignettes laid down on lo-fi cassettes (and included here as alternate takes), ushered in a tidal wave of brutally honest material documenting—and defying—hopelessness, of being trapped with a nowhere life in a nowhere town. The songs, focused treatises on poverty and the search for meaning, were immersed in booze and disillusionment, tapping deep into the tattered psyche of Ronnie Reagan’s now decimated ‘City on a Hill’ generation. “Well, time won’t wait, better open the gate,” Farrar barks out, in a rush of words on No Depression’s opening blast, “Graveyard Shift.” “Get up and start what needs to be done.”

These sentiments could be delivered in a gale-force rush of explosive electric guitar, noisy slabs of rhythm, and tricky, stop-on-a-dime time changes. Or, alternatively—and stunningly—with a wistful, floating melody dug out from A.P. Carter’s dusty songbooks, accented by banjo, mandolin, fiddles, pedal steel, and gorgeous two-part harmonies. Both methods were equally devastating.

This almost randomized reconnection to America’s deepest musical roots was timely. Mainstream country music, abandoning all self-respect, had transmogrified into something truly ghastly. Embracing line dancing, big hats, and a new generation of crossover stars — Garth Brooks, Billy Ray Cyrus — they kicked Cash, Buck, Merle, and Possum to the curb. Blue-collar indie rock was on the run, too, soon to be subsumed into the pop mainstream in the post-Nirvana years. No Depression—mixing, on one hand, age-old sentiments of trial and trouble with urgent, cut-throat punk rock and, on the other, age-old musical styles with contemporary yearning for a better life—felt revelatory, inspirational, real.

  

Plenty of others — Jason & the Scorchers, the Blasters, Rank and File — had been pounding it out for years, searching for, among other things, common ground between the Clash and George Jones. But Tupelo’s ability to reclaim the very fabric of American music, especially its distressed, hardscrabble underpinnings, to personalize it, and shepherd it into the conscience of a new generation, well, that was a different thing entirely. By the mid-1990s, youngsters like Whiskeytown, Old ’97s, and Gillian Welch, rediscovered treasures like Lucinda Williams and Billy Joe Shaver, even legendary old-timers — like Johnny Cash — were in ascension.

Produced by Paul Kolderie and Sean Slade, fresh off work with indie heroes Dinosaur Jr., No Depression was out as summer 1990 dawned. Farrar was indisputably band’s visionary at this point, handling most of the singing and writing. “Graveyard Shift”, “Before I Break” and “Whiskey Bottle” flying by in an adrenalin rush, were the hardest hitters, swinging at a pugilistic sonic presentation the band would, inevitably, drift away from. Slightly scaled-back, subtler numbers, though, like “Outdone” and the Tweedy-written “That Year,” were just as affecting. The beatific title cut, of course, a cover of the Carter Family’s soul-searching, spirit-seeking gem, was a stroke of genius.

This expanded edition appends 22 tracks, including a dozen cuts from those primordial cassettes—highlighted by a fine acoustic version of the Flying Burrito Brothers‘ “Sin City”. The crown jewel, though, is Not Forever, Just for Now, a 10-song demo assembled for record-label attention in 1989. All the major No Depression material is here, fully formed, plus a fateful, forgotten masterpiece—”I Got Drunk”—fusing dark, galloping bluegrass hues to an all-too-familiar protagonist drinking himself into oblivion. With a fluid, gutsy sound leaning ever so slightly toward power pop, the start-stop, punch-in-the-face dynamics of the official versions are (slightly) less pronounced here, as if they’re not trying quite so hard. A blistering portrait of the group just uncovering the breadth of their power.           

Luke Torn

Q&A

Mike Heidorn

You had garage-band roots; where did the country influences come from?

The punk rock, the garage rock was definitely the common element that Jeff and Jay had. Jay’s family and his upbringing lent itself to the acoustic instruments by way of the Missouri Ozarks [his mother’s home], a very rural area southwest of Belleville. But his folks had banjos—I remember going there as a 14-year-old—fiddles, harmonicas, pianos, acoustic guitars galore. Jeff, his upbringing brought acoustic [instruments] to the family gatherings. I think he had some uncles who played country, so those two were in touch with the country. When they brought those acoustic guitars and harmonicas to band practice, that was really fascinating. It was like ‘Hell, we can do all these things!’   

A lot of these songs, the restlessness and frustration, still resonate now, really hold up…

I think that while Jeff was right behind him, that premise from Jay’s lyrics really hit home with me as an individual living in Belleville. The lyric that personified Uncle Tupelo for many years—well other than “On liquor I’ll spend my last dime” (from “Before I Break”) was from the song “Whiskey Bottleâ€: “not forever, just for now,” in other words, there’s a life out there, a life worth living. Those songs seemed so real to me. It was like these guys were really looking around.

What strikes me is how the early Tupelo songs connect to the past, into age-old emotions, yet played for a very young crowd?

I think if you’d have tried to purposely study how to do that, you’d have failed! The future takes its course…

INTERVIEW: LUKE TORN

Oasis to re-issue Definitely Maybe for 20th anniversary

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Oasis's 1994 debut album Definitely Maybe will be reissued to mark its 20th anniversary this May. Meanwhile, Oasis are the subject of Uncut's next Ultimate Music Guide, which goes on sale on March 13. The remastered version of Definitely Maybe will be released on May 19 and will include rare and u...

Oasis‘s 1994 debut album Definitely Maybe will be reissued to mark its 20th anniversary this May.

Meanwhile, Oasis are the subject of Uncut’s next Ultimate Music Guide, which goes on sale on March 13.

The remastered version of Definitely Maybe will be released on May 19 and will include rare and unreleased recordings. The reissue is the first in the new Chasing The Sun series from Big Brother Recordings, with Oasis’s follow-up albums What’s The Story (Morning Glory)? and Be Here Now to also be reissued later this year.

The 20th anniversary edition of Definitely Maybe will be available as a standard CD and digital download of the original album, a three-disc Special Edition version including the rare recordings and demos, a 12″ vinyl LP featuring all the bonus CD content as a free download, and a Deluxe box set which features the LP and the CDs. It has also been revealed that the band will re-issue their single “Supersonic” as a 12″ vinyl to coincide with this year’s Record Store Day on April 19.

Among the bonus content included in the reissue is a disc featuring the band’s stand-alone single “Whatever“, unheard acoustic versions of the tracks “Live Forever” and “Shakermaker” recorded in Paris, an early demo of “Half The World Away” recorded in Noel Gallagher’s Tokyo hotel room, a demo of the extremely rare song “Strange Thing” and a live recording of “Sad Song” show at Manchester Academy.

Limited edition cassette replicas of the band’s rare Original 1993 Demos, meanwhile, are now available from www.oasisinet.com, including new sleevenotes from Definitely Maybe producer Mark Coyle. Only eight copies of the original demo tapes were made.

Uncut’s Oasis: The Ultimate Music Guide contains classic interview from the archives of Melody Maker, NME and Uncut, as well as brand new, in depth reviews of all Oasis, Beady Eye and Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds albums.

The tracklisting for the three-disc Special Edition reissue of Definitely Maybe is as follows:

Disc 1

1. ‘Rock’n’Roll Star’

2. ‘Shakermaker’

3. ‘Live Forever’

4. ‘Up In The Sky’

5. ‘Columbia’

6. ‘Supersonic’

7. ‘Bring It On Down’

8. ‘Cigarettes & Alcohol’

9. ‘Digsy’s Dinner’

10. ‘Slide Away’

11. ‘Married With Children’

Disc 2

1. ‘Columbia’ (White Label Demo)

2. ‘Cigarettes & Alcohol’ (Demo)

3. ‘Sad Song’

4. ‘I Will Believe’ (Live)

5. ‘Take Me Away’

6. ‘Alive’ (Demo)

7. ‘D’Yer Wanna Be A Spaceman?’

8. ‘Supersonic’ (Live)

9. ‘Up In The Sky’ (Acoustic)

10. ‘Cloudburst’

11. ‘Fade Away’

12. ‘Listen Up’

13. ‘I Am The Walrus’ (Live Glasgow Cathouse June 1994)

14. ‘Whatever’

15. ‘(It’s Good) To Be Free’

16. ‘Half The World Away’

Disc 3

1. ‘Supersonic’ (Live At Glasgow Tramshed)

2. ‘Rock’N’Roll Star’ (Demo)

3. ‘Shakermaker’ (Live Paris in-store)

4. ‘Columbia’ (Eden Studios Mix)

5. ‘Cloudburst’ (Demo)

6. ‘Strange Thing’ (Demo)

7. ‘Live Forever’ (Live Paris in-store)

8. ‘Cigarettes & Alcohol’ (Live At Manchester Academy)

9. ‘D’Yer Wanna Be A Spaceman?’ (Live At Manchester Academy)

10.’Fade Away’ (Demo)

11. ‘Take Me Away’ (Live At Manchester Academy)

12. ‘Sad Song’ (Live At Manchester Academy)

13. ‘Half The World Away’ (Live, Tokyo hotel room)

14. ‘Digsy’s Dinner’ (Live, Paris in-store)

15. ‘Married With Children’ (Demo)

16. ‘Up In The Sky’ (Live Paris in-store)

17. ‘Whatever’ (Strings)

The tracklisting for the Original 1993 Demos, meanwhile, is as follows:

Side One

‘Cloudburst’

‘Columbia’

‘D’Yer Wanna Be A Spaceman?’

‘Strange Thing’

Side Two

‘Bring It On Down’

‘Married With Children’

‘Fade Away’

‘Rock’N’Roll Star’

David Bowie wrote ‘Rebel Rebel’ “to piss Mick Jagger offâ€

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David Bowie came up with the Stones-y riff for “Rebel Rebel†in order to “piss off†Mick Jagger, says guitarist Alan Parker. Parker performed on the track and a number of other songs on Bowie’s 1974 LP, Diamond Dogs, which also featured the Stones-influenced title track. “He said, â€...

David Bowie came up with the Stones-y riff for “Rebel Rebel†in order to “piss off†Mick Jagger, says guitarist Alan Parker.

Parker performed on the track and a number of other songs on Bowie’s 1974 LP, Diamond Dogs, which also featured the Stones-influenced title track.

“He said, ‘I’ve got this riff and it’s a bit Rolling Stonesy – I just want to piss Mick off a bit’,†remembers Parker. “I spent about three-quarters of an hour to an hour with him working on the guitar riff – he had it almost there, but not quite.

“We got it there, and he said, ‘Oh, we’d better do a middle…’ So he wrote something for the middle, put that in. Then he went off and sorted some lyrics. And that was us done.â€

The hedonistic story of Diamond Dogs is told in the new issue of Uncut, including interviews with a host of people involved in the creation of the album and in Bowie’s fascinating transition from Ziggy Stardust to a ‘plastic soul’ crooner.

The new Uncut is out on Friday (February 28).

David Cameron ‘let out a little cry of joy’ at David Bowie’s Brit Awards speech

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David Cameron has commented on David Bowie's Brit Awards speech – which was read by Kate Moss – in which he called for Scottish voters to reject independence. As reported, Bowie was not at the venue to pick up his award for British Male, and instead sent Moss to pick up the prize on his behalf...

David Cameron has commented on David Bowie‘s Brit Awards speech – which was read by Kate Moss – in which he called for Scottish voters to reject independence.

As reported, Bowie was not at the venue to pick up his award for British Male, and instead sent Moss to pick up the prize on his behalf and read out his acceptance speech.

Moss, who was presented with the award by Noel Gallagher, told the crowd: “David has asked me to say this: ‘In Japanese myth, the rabbits on my old costume that Kate’s wearing live on the moon. Kate comes from Venus, and I from Mars. I’m completely delighted to have a Brit for being the Best Male. I think it’s a great way to end the day. Thank you very much – and Scotland, stay with us.”

Speaking to the Daily Telegraph , Cameron revealed that he let out a “little cry of joy” when Moss delivered the politically charged speech. Speaking during a visit to Aberdeen, Cameron said: “I was watching the Brit Awards and when I saw Kate Moss leap to the stage and utter those words I have to say I did let out a little cry of joy. I’m sure that maybe someone like David Bowie might be able to reach parts of Scotland that perhaps I can’t.”

Meanwhile, in this month’s issue of Uncut we celebrate the 40th anniversary of David Bowie’s album Diamond Dogs. You can find details about it here.

Sharon Van Etten announces release date for new album

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Sharon Van Etten is set to release her new album, Are We There?, on May 26. She will support the release of the follow up to 2012's Tramp with a one-off UK show at London's KOKO on June 5, and will play Green Man Festival in August. Scroll down for the Are We There? tracklisting. The album is se...

Sharon Van Etten is set to release her new album, Are We There?, on May 26.

She will support the release of the follow up to 2012’s Tramp with a one-off UK show at London’s KOKO on June 5, and will play Green Man Festival in August. Scroll down for the Are We There? tracklisting.

The album is self-produced with guests turns from Shearwater’s Jonathan Myberg and Adam Granduciel and Dave Hartley from The War on Drugs.

“Most of the songs are a lot more soul-oriented and beat-driven, with more organ sounds and bass, and less guitars,” Van Etten told Uncut. “They’re mostly about being in a transitional point in my life, settling down and growing up, and deciding to make music and make New York my home. I’m really proud of the songs. It’s the first time I’ve really been at the helm. It’s different, but it’s still me.â€

The Are We There tracklisting is:

‘Afraid Of Nothing’

‘Taking Chances’

‘Your Love Is Killing Me’

‘Our Love’

‘Tarifa’

‘I Love You But I’m Lost’

‘You Know Me Well’

‘Break Me’

‘Nothing Will Change’

‘I Know’

‘Every Time the Sun Comes Up’

Neil Young to release new memoir this autumn

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Neil Young is to publish a second memoir, following 2012's Waging Heavy Peace. According to Billboard , the new book will focus on Young's passion for cars, while also featuring stories about his life in music. Blue Rider, an imprint of Penguin Random House, told The Associated Press on Monday th...

Neil Young is to publish a second memoir, following 2012’s Waging Heavy Peace.

According to Billboard , the new book will focus on Young’s passion for cars, while also featuring stories about his life in music.

Blue Rider, an imprint of Penguin Random House, told The Associated Press on Monday that the new book is scheduled for the autumn and is currently untitled.

New Rider says the second memoir is an “eclectic amalgam” that also will include artwork by Young and his thoughts on politics and the environment.

Meanwhile, Young is expected to unveil his high-resolution digital music-download service Pono at South By South West festival on Tuesday, March 11. Graham Nash has claimed that the first release on Pono will be the long-delayed CSNY 1974 tour box set.

Young is also to release A Letter Home , an album of cover versions to be released on Jack White‘s Third Man label. Young has said that the record will be released in March and the record is described as: “An unheard collection of rediscovered songs from the past recorded on ancient electro mechanical technology captures and unleashes the essence of something that could have been gone forever…”.

Young is also due to play two solo acoustic shows in Los Angeles in March and a number of European dates with Crazy Horse over the summer. You can read the dates here.

The new Uncut revealed! David Bowie, Peter Gabriel, Johnny Cash, Bruce Springsteen, The War On Drugs, Afghan Whigs in new issue!

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“On ‘Sweet Thing’, he asked me to imagine myself as a young, French drummer who was witnessing his first execution,†recalls veteran drummer Tony Newman, recalling the sessions for David Bowie’s 1974 album Diamond Dogs in John Robinson’s cover story for this month’s Uncut, which goes on sale this Friday, February 28. Set in a largely ruined future and partly inspired by George Orwell’s dystopian classic 1984, Diamond Dogs was Bowie’s first album of original material following the melodramatic break-up of The Spiders From Mars and the ‘retirement’ of Ziggy Stardust in 1973 and 40 years on the thrill of Bowie moving on from glam into less charted musical territories is vividly evoked by some of his closest associates from a period of exciting transition, a drift away from rock towards what he would later call the ‘plastic soul’ of Young Americans. Also in the issue, Graeme Thomson navigates the sometimes wayward paths taken by Johnny Cash in the 80s, usually seen as Cash’s ‘lost decade’, when his career floundered and he struggled to make sense of himself and what country music had become. Elsewhere, we pay a flying visit to Philadelphia to catch up with Adam Granduciel, as The War On Drugs prepare for the release of their brilliant new album, Lost in The Dream. In Los Angeles, we drop in on Greg Dulli, who explains why after he’s reformed The Afghan Whigs who next month release their first album in 16 years. There’s also a look back on one of my favourite American bands of the 70s, Little Feat, who under the inspired if often unpredictable Lowell George made some of the greatest music of the era before the usually sloppy mess of competing egos and too many drugs eventually did for them, Lowell going off and dying before his solo career had properly got under way. In our regular franchises, we have An Audience With Peter Gabriel, former Free, Bad Company and – more briefly - Queen vocalist Paul Rodgers talks us through his classic albums and The Beat recall the making of their 1980 hit, â€Mirror In The Bathroomâ€. The Uncut review section is as bustling as ever, with new releases from The Hold Steady and Drive-By Truckers, both spectacularly on-form, and releases from Wilko Johnson and Roger Daltrey, Elbow, Real Estate, Metronomy and Linda Perhacs, who breaks one of the longest silences in popular music with the release of her second album, a mere 44 years after her debut. There are also reissues of classic albums by Dr John and Miles Davies and a live review from Australia of a typically triumphant Bruce Springsteen And The E-Street Band show in Perth. Finally, we bid farewell to the great American folk singer and activist Pete Seeger, who died in January, aged 95. And I shouldn’t quit this space without mentioning this month’s free CD, which includes tracks from the new albums by The War On Drugs, David Crosby,The Hold Steady, Drive-By Truckers, Sun Kil Moon, Spain, and Linda Perhacs. I’ll be back soon with a complete tracks listing and some trailers for the CD. In the meantime, enjoy the issue and please share any thoughts about it with. You can find me here: allan_jones@ ipcmedia.com All the best.

“On ‘Sweet Thing’, he asked me to imagine myself as a young, French drummer who was witnessing his first execution,†recalls veteran drummer Tony Newman, recalling the sessions for David Bowie’s 1974 album Diamond Dogs in John Robinson’s cover story for this month’s Uncut, which goes on sale this Friday, February 28.

Set in a largely ruined future and partly inspired by George Orwell’s dystopian classic 1984, Diamond Dogs was Bowie’s first album of original material following the melodramatic break-up of The Spiders From Mars and the ‘retirement’ of Ziggy Stardust in 1973 and 40 years on the thrill of Bowie moving on from glam into less charted musical territories is vividly evoked by some of his closest associates from a period of exciting transition, a drift away from rock towards what he would later call the ‘plastic soul’ of Young Americans.

Also in the issue, Graeme Thomson navigates the sometimes wayward paths taken by Johnny Cash in the 80s, usually seen as Cash’s ‘lost decade’, when his career floundered and he struggled to make sense of himself and what country music had become.

Elsewhere, we pay a flying visit to Philadelphia to catch up with Adam Granduciel, as The War On Drugs prepare for the release of their brilliant new album, Lost in The Dream. In Los Angeles, we drop in on Greg Dulli, who explains why after he’s reformed The Afghan Whigs who next month release their first album in 16 years.

There’s also a look back on one of my favourite American bands of the 70s, Little Feat, who under the inspired if often unpredictable Lowell George made some of the greatest music of the era before the usually sloppy mess of competing egos and too many drugs eventually did for them, Lowell going off and dying before his solo career had properly got under way.

In our regular franchises, we have An Audience With Peter Gabriel, former Free, Bad Company and – more briefly – Queen vocalist Paul Rodgers talks us through his classic albums and The Beat recall the making of their 1980 hit, â€Mirror In The Bathroomâ€.

The Uncut review section is as bustling as ever, with new releases from The Hold Steady and Drive-By Truckers, both spectacularly on-form, and releases from Wilko Johnson and Roger Daltrey, Elbow, Real Estate, Metronomy and Linda Perhacs, who breaks one of the longest silences in popular music with the release of her second album, a mere 44 years after her debut. There are also reissues of classic albums by Dr John and Miles Davies and a live review from Australia of a typically triumphant Bruce Springsteen And The E-Street Band show in Perth.

Finally, we bid farewell to the great American folk singer and activist Pete Seeger, who died in January, aged 95.

And I shouldn’t quit this space without mentioning this month’s free CD, which includes tracks from the new albums by The War On Drugs, David Crosby,The Hold Steady, Drive-By Truckers, Sun Kil Moon, Spain, and Linda Perhacs.

I’ll be back soon with a complete tracks listing and some trailers for the CD. In the meantime, enjoy the issue and please share any thoughts about it with. You can find me here:

allan_jones@ ipcmedia.com

All the best.