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We want your questions for Peter Gabriel!

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As he prepares to release his new concert film, Peter Gabriel: Back To Front, Peter Gabriel 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 musician? Does he ever get self-conscious watching himself on film performing? Is he planning to release new music any time soon? Does he still have any of his famous costumes from the Genesis days? Send up your questions by noon, Friday, February 7 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Peter's answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question. Peter Gabriel: Back To Front is released in cinemas on March 20

As he prepares to release his new concert film, Peter Gabriel: Back To Front, Peter Gabriel 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 musician?

Does he ever get self-conscious watching himself on film performing?

Is he planning to release new music any time soon?

Does he still have any of his famous costumes from the Genesis days?

Send up your questions by noon, Friday, February 7 to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com. The best questions, and Peter’s answers, will be published in a future edition of Uncut magazine. Please include your name and location with your question.

Peter Gabriel: Back To Front is released in cinemas on March 20

Edwyn Collins – My Life In Music

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Deluxe reissues of all of Orange Juice’s seminal albums are out on February 3 – to celebrate that, this week’s archive delves back to November 2007 (Take 126), when the band’s frontman (and, of course, successful solo artist) takes us through the records he L.O.V.E. loves… Interview: Steph...

Deluxe reissues of all of Orange Juice’s seminal albums are out on February 3 – to celebrate that, this week’s archive delves back to November 2007 (Take 126), when the band’s frontman (and, of course, successful solo artist) takes us through the records he L.O.V.E. loves… Interview: Stephen Troussé

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The First Single I Bought

Donovan – Jennifer Juniper (1968)

I was eight years old. It was a magic time. I was living near Dundee, going to school, having friends over. Laughter, high excitement and energy. I was a bit naïve and a bit carefree and I liked Donovan. It’s weird – I suppose it does sound a bit like a Belle And Sebastian record now. A happy record. Do I still like it? Ha ha, no, not at all!

The Record That Reminds Me Of Punk

Subway Sect – Don’t Split It (1978)

It’s a thrilling record from the time of punk. This song was on the B-side of “Nobody’s Scared”. They played in Edinburgh with The Clash, The Buzzcocks and The Slits and so on. I was in The Nu-Sonics playing punk myself. Vic Godard is a friend of mine now, but he thought we were all idiots back then. But slowly he came around to us and I ended up producing a record for him.

A Record By A Local Hero

Aztec Camera – Oblivious (1983)

Roddy Frame was 17 when Aztec Camera started. I was 21. I suppose I did discover him. I persuaded him to be on Postcard. Am I still friends with [label boss] Alan Horne? No chance! We didn’t feel betrayed when Roddy signed with Rough Trade – we were like, “Good luck to you!” “Oblivious” and High Land, Hard Rain are just great.

A Record That Inspired Me

The Slits – Typical Girls (1979)

“Typical Girls” is an exciting record: reggae and dub meets… Ari Up! I know her now. She’s mad, but a great girl. They inspired me to experiment more, with sound and atmosphere, and… life! Orange Juice went on to work with [Cut producer] Dennis Bovell. Back then young groups would listen to reggae and soul – that doesn’t happen so much now, which is sad.

A Record That I’m Proud To Have Produced

The Cribs – The New Fellas (2005)

They’re a young group that I produced. I’m very proud of the album. They’re an exciting punk group once more, a three-piece from Yorkshire, all brothers. In fact, my son William is a fan. I like producing bands – but it’s hard to do now because of my hand. But [studio partner] Seb Lewsley is helping me. I’ve found a voice again, and an attitude. I’m pleased with my progress.

A Record That Made Me Want To Play Guitar

Creedence Clearwater Revival – Green River (1969)

They had such a great sound on this record. A fantastic, very different sound. The guitar lines move up and down the frets. There’s atmosphere aplenty. Lots of instruments. But above all, John Fogerty’s amazing guitar. I adore it. I’m not playing right now. I can do chords OK, but my right hand can’t pick them out. Give me another year or two…

A Record That Reminds Me Of Scotland

The Corries – Sally Free And Easy (1969)

The Corries were a Scottish folk group in the early 1960s. “Sally Free And Easy” influenced me quite a lot! “Sally Free And Easy, that would be her name…” and so on. The Corries, most of their songs are rubbish, but I like that one a lot. The song “Leviathan” on the new album is inspired by that kind of thing.

A Record I Couldn’t Live Without

Bob Dylan – I Want You (1966)

I love all of Bob Dylan, but I especially love this song. It’s such a crafty record. An exciting record. His most creative record ever… And the words are just so wonderful… and the atmosphere is wonderful. The lyric is succinct. His voice is great. What can I say. It’s all just great!

The Record I’d Like To Be Played At My Funeral

Parliament – The Silent Boatman (1970)

I’d like this played at my funeral. I’d like to be remembered as a man whose main aim was to be kind, to be generous to people. To be exhilarating. “The Silent Boatman”, it’s about being dead, isn’t it? But it’s a fantastic record, and of course, the backing is immense. I enjoy the songs and the voice. I really got into funk in the ’80s. Funkadelic… Chic…

A Record That Makes Me Laugh

Sir Harry Lauder – (Keep Right On To) The End Of The Road (1936)

Good old Harry! He was a Scottish music hall comedian from the 1930s. He wore a lot of tartan. Most of his old 78s are not so good, but I do enjoy this record. “Tho’ you’re tired and weary/Still journey on, till you come to your happy abode/Where all you love you’ve been dreaming of/Will be there, at the end of the road.” It’s inspiring!

This month in Uncut

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The Ramones, the Small Faces, Neil Young and Stephen Malkmus all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated March 2014 and out now. Surviving members, collaborators and friends piece together the complete story of the Ramones – how the four weirdest kids in New York revolutionised rock’n’roll. “I lost touch with reality,” explains drummer Tommy Erdelyi. “I was in Ramones world, not the normal world…” Ian McLagan and Kenney Jones of the Small Faces recall the creation of all their classic singles, from “Whatcha Gonna Do About It?” to “Afterglow (Of Your Love)”. We review Neil Young’s surprisingly hit-heavy set at Toronto’s Massey Hall and hook up with Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks to discuss their new album Wig Out At Jagbags, life in Berlin, playing indie-rock in your forties and deciding which decade is the best for music. Elsewhere, producer Bob Johnston recalls his mind-blowing experiences recording with Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Johnny Cash, Lindisfarne and more, and all four members of XTC, plus producer Steve Lillywhite and engineer Hugh Padgham discuss the creation of “Making Plans For Nigel” – blood-soaked bass guitars, terrible videos, jealousy and all. We chart the 50 greatest American punk LPs, from Hüsker Dü to the Big Boys, while darlings of the ’60s psychedelic counter-culture, Jefferson Airplane, take us through their catalogue, album by album. Film director Jim Jarmusch answers your questions in this month’s Audience With… feature, discussing Neil Young’s “psychic rays”, threats from Tom Waits, the state of the world’s glaciers and remembering Joe Strummer. In our Instant Karma section, we remember Phil Everly, hear about new projects from Marc Almond and Thurston Moore, see how Kacey Musgraves and Brandy Clark are revolutionising country music, and meet Australian newcomer Courtney Barnett. Neneh Cherry reveals the eight records that have most shaped her life, while, in our 40-page reviews section, we take a look at releases from Beck, The Beatles, Mike Bloomfield, St Vincent and Benmont Tench. As well as Neil Young at Massey Hall, we also catch The Waterboys and Cass McCombs live, and review new films and DVDs including Dallas Buyers Club, Only Lovers Left Alive and Parks And Recreation. Our free CD, Hey! Ho! Let’s Go!, includes songs from Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, Dum Dum Girls, Angel Olsen, Snowbird, East India Youth and Glenn Tilbrook. The new issue of Uncut is out today (January 31).

The Ramones, the Small Faces, Neil Young and Stephen Malkmus all feature in the new issue of Uncut, dated March 2014 and out now.

Surviving members, collaborators and friends piece together the complete story of the Ramones – how the four weirdest kids in New York revolutionised rock’n’roll.

“I lost touch with reality,” explains drummer Tommy Erdelyi. “I was in Ramones world, not the normal world…”

Ian McLagan and Kenney Jones of the Small Faces recall the creation of all their classic singles, from “Whatcha Gonna Do About It?” to “Afterglow (Of Your Love)”.

We review Neil Young’s surprisingly hit-heavy set at Toronto’s Massey Hall and hook up with Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks to discuss their new album Wig Out At Jagbags, life in Berlin, playing indie-rock in your forties and deciding which decade is the best for music.

Elsewhere, producer Bob Johnston recalls his mind-blowing experiences recording with Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Johnny Cash, Lindisfarne and more, and all four members of XTC, plus producer Steve Lillywhite and engineer Hugh Padgham discuss the creation of “Making Plans For Nigel” – blood-soaked bass guitars, terrible videos, jealousy and all.

We chart the 50 greatest American punk LPs, from Hüsker Dü to the Big Boys, while darlings of the ’60s psychedelic counter-culture, Jefferson Airplane, take us through their catalogue, album by album.

Film director Jim Jarmusch answers your questions in this month’s Audience With… feature, discussing Neil Young’s “psychic rays”, threats from Tom Waits, the state of the world’s glaciers and remembering Joe Strummer.

In our Instant Karma section, we remember Phil Everly, hear about new projects from Marc Almond and Thurston Moore, see how Kacey Musgraves and Brandy Clark are revolutionising country music, and meet Australian newcomer Courtney Barnett.

Neneh Cherry reveals the eight records that have most shaped her life, while, in our 40-page reviews section, we take a look at releases from Beck, The Beatles, Mike Bloomfield, St Vincent and Benmont Tench. As well as Neil Young at Massey Hall, we also catch The Waterboys and Cass McCombs live, and review new films and DVDs including Dallas Buyers Club, Only Lovers Left Alive and Parks And Recreation.

Our free CD, Hey! Ho! Let’s Go!, includes songs from Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, Dum Dum Girls, Angel Olsen, Snowbird, East India Youth and Glenn Tilbrook.

The new issue of Uncut is out today (January 31).

Pye Corner Audio and Bohren & Der Club Of Gore

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I was struck by a couple of tweets this morning from Peter Watts (@peter_watts and the author of this month’s Ramones cover story in Uncut). The first ran, “I read the word 'liminal' in the Standard the other day. I think that's psychogeography's 'hippie wigs in Woolworths' moment.” The second linked to a graph showing the radical increase in literary use of ‘liminal’ in the past 20 years. It’s indicative, perhaps, of a certain crepuscular aesthetic gaining serious cultural traction: of the preoccupations of goth informing narratives of place (I just finished reading, with reservations, Gareth Rees’ “Marshlands”, a study of my favourite part of London, Walthamstow and Hackney Marshes) and migrating into more critically acceptable areas; like, say, hauntology. It was a timely reference, since there are a couple of records redolent of all this that I’ve been playing a lot for the last fortnight, in spite of my residual suspicions of the whole schtick. Pye Corner Audio, for a start, has strong affiliations with the Ghost Box label, nexus of hauntology and a scene that, while producing some fine music (notably the Broadcast & The Focus Group collaboration) often feels like a bunch of ‘70s TV theorists and Bagpuss fetishists finding academically justifiable ways of saying that “Children Of The Stones” was kind of scary. A degree of subterfuge and whimsy surrounds British producer Martin Jenkins, not least his generally anonymous role as “The Head Technician” of Pye Corner Audio. “Black Mill Tapes Volumes 3&4”, however, is very pleasing because it indulges in another kind of nostalgia: as a throwback to the point 20-odd years ago when Warp artists started appropriating German kosmische and Detroit techno for their own uncanny ends. Jenkins’ track titles are a pretty useful indication of what he’s up to here, redolent as they are less of radiophonic phantasy and more of IDM’s crypto-scientific utilitarianism (though he doesn’t go quite as far as Autechre’s deranged chemical neologising). Seven of them are labelled “Electronic Rhythm”, while the album’s high point has a name as well as a sound that could have been lifted from The Aphex Twin’s “Selected Ambient Works Volume One”; ““Dystopian Vector Part One”. There is, of course, plenty of the requisite creepy ambience in the mix, though Jenkins on this occasion seems, again, to be working closer to the artful murk of Boards Of Canada rather than the cut’n’paste ‘70s nightmares of some of his contemporaries. It’s an elegant reboot all round. Writing a review of the new Bohren & Der Club Of Gore album the other day, I must confess I almost slipped in the word “liminal”, for my sins. In this case, the aesthetic is in now way hauntological, but a kind of finessing of the bohemian art-goth business epitomised by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds in their Berlin phase, and the avant-garde, “respectable” redeployment of black metal by Sunn 0))) and their salon of doom.

I was struck by a couple of tweets this morning from Peter Watts (@peter_watts and the author of this month’s Ramones cover story in Uncut). The first ran, “I read the word ‘liminal’ in the Standard the other day. I think that’s psychogeography’s ‘hippie wigs in Woolworths’ moment.”

The second linked to a graph showing the radical increase in literary use of ‘liminal’ in the past 20 years. It’s indicative, perhaps, of a certain crepuscular aesthetic gaining serious cultural traction: of the preoccupations of goth informing narratives of place (I just finished reading, with reservations, Gareth Rees’ “Marshlands”, a study of my favourite part of London, Walthamstow and Hackney Marshes) and migrating into more critically acceptable areas; like, say, hauntology.

It was a timely reference, since there are a couple of records redolent of all this that I’ve been playing a lot for the last fortnight, in spite of my residual suspicions of the whole schtick. Pye Corner Audio, for a start, has strong affiliations with the Ghost Box label, nexus of hauntology and a scene that, while producing some fine music (notably the Broadcast & The Focus Group collaboration) often feels like a bunch of ‘70s TV theorists and Bagpuss fetishists finding academically justifiable ways of saying that “Children Of The Stones” was kind of scary.

A degree of subterfuge and whimsy surrounds British producer Martin Jenkins, not least his generally anonymous role as “The Head Technician” of Pye Corner Audio. “Black Mill Tapes Volumes 3&4”, however, is very pleasing because it indulges in another kind of nostalgia: as a throwback to the point 20-odd years ago when Warp artists started appropriating German kosmische and Detroit techno for their own uncanny ends.

Jenkins’ track titles are a pretty useful indication of what he’s up to here, redolent as they are less of radiophonic phantasy and more of IDM’s crypto-scientific utilitarianism (though he doesn’t go quite as far as Autechre’s deranged chemical neologising). Seven of them are labelled “Electronic Rhythm”, while the album’s high point has a name as well as a sound that could have been lifted from The Aphex Twin’s “Selected Ambient Works Volume One”; ““Dystopian Vector Part One”.

There is, of course, plenty of the requisite creepy ambience in the mix, though Jenkins on this occasion seems, again, to be working closer to the artful murk of Boards Of Canada rather than the cut’n’paste ‘70s nightmares of some of his contemporaries. It’s an elegant reboot all round.

Writing a review of the new Bohren & Der Club Of Gore album the other day, I must confess I almost slipped in the word “liminal”, for my sins. In this case, the aesthetic is in now way hauntological, but a kind of finessing of the bohemian art-goth business epitomised by Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds in their Berlin phase, and the avant-garde, “respectable” redeployment of black metal by Sunn 0))) and their salon of doom.

Bohren & Der Club Of Gore – Piano Nights (Album Teaser) from PIASGermany on Vimeo.

Again, this is a scene that I have finite time for (age-old anti-goth feelings will linger, it seems). But, again, this German quartet’s records consistently transcend those misgivings. Essentially, Bohren’s big idea – heard to best effect on 2008’s “Dolores”, though most of their albums of the past 20 years are nearly as good – is to apply the melodically slothful heaviness of Sunn 0))) (and the tradition from which it derives, from Black Sabbath through Earth) to cocktail jazz.

It sounds like a ridiculous idea on paper but, as “Piano Nights” proves, it genuinely works. The trappings can be strained – not least the shots which accompanied a recent Pitchfork stream of the album, which focused repeatedly on candles being burned in beer bottles – but the music is substantially prettier and more restful than the blackened aesthetic might suggest, in much the same way as Angelo Badalamenti’s music for “Twin Peaks” and “Blue Velvet” operated shorn of its context.

Sustained Mellotron notes (they appear very keen on the choral setting) imbue the spare sax, piano and brushed cymbal manoeuvres with a fetching grandeur. And while “Fahr Zur Hölle” (“Driving To Hell”) is a predictable track name, the outstanding “Segeln Ohne Wind” (“Sailing Without Wind”) is a more serendipitous one.

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

Neil Young releases new video – watch

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Neil Young has released a new video for his song "Mother Earth". Scroll down to watch it. The video opens with footage from Young's January 19, 2014 show at the Jack Singer Hall in Calgary, Alberta as part of his recent Honor The Treaties run of dates. The video also features footage from Peter Mettler's documentary Petropolis: Aerial Perspectives on the Alberta Tar Sands. At a press conference ahead of the first Honour The Treaties date, Young launched a blistering attack on Canada's federal government and Alberta’s oilsands development, accusing officials of "killing" First Nations through their exploitation of the Alberta tar sands. According to a statement accompanying the release of the "Mother Earth" video, "Recently, Neil Young completed a brief tour of his native Canada consisting of four benefit concerts under the banner of 'Honor The Treaties.' The nature of these shows were assembled to raise money and awareness for the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation (ACFN) Legal Defense Fund. The ACFN refer to themselves as K'ai Taile Dene, meaning 'people of the land of the willow.' A Legal Defense fund was set up to support the ACFN's legal challenges against oil companies and government that are obstructing their traditional lands and rights. As people of the land the ACFN have used and occupied their traditional lands in the Athabasca region for thousands of years, hunting, trapping, fishing and gathering to sustain themselves and continue spiritual cultural rights passed down through generations. The ACFN's legal challenges will ensure the protection of their traditional lands, eco-systems and unique rights guaranteed by Treaty 8, the last and largest of the nineteenth century land agreements made between First Nations and the government of Canada, are upheld for the benefit of future generations." "Mother Earth" first appeared on Young's 1990 album, Ragged Glory. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t7hTATM4i_8

Neil Young has released a new video for his song “Mother Earth“.

Scroll down to watch it.

The video opens with footage from Young’s January 19, 2014 show at the Jack Singer Hall in Calgary, Alberta as part of his recent Honor The Treaties run of dates.

The video also features footage from Peter Mettler’s documentary Petropolis: Aerial Perspectives on the Alberta Tar Sands. At a press conference ahead of the first Honour The Treaties date, Young launched a blistering attack on Canada’s federal government and Alberta’s oilsands development, accusing officials of “killing” First Nations through their exploitation of the Alberta tar sands.

According to a statement accompanying the release of the “Mother Earth” video, “Recently, Neil Young completed a brief tour of his native Canada consisting of four benefit concerts under the banner of ‘Honor The Treaties.’ The nature of these shows were assembled to raise money and awareness for the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation (ACFN) Legal Defense Fund. The ACFN refer to themselves as K’ai Taile Dene, meaning ‘people of the land of the willow.’ A Legal Defense fund was set up to support the ACFN’s legal challenges against oil companies and government that are obstructing their traditional lands and rights. As people of the land the ACFN have used and occupied their traditional lands in the Athabasca region for thousands of years, hunting, trapping, fishing and gathering to sustain themselves and continue spiritual cultural rights passed down through generations. The ACFN’s legal challenges will ensure the protection of their traditional lands, eco-systems and unique rights guaranteed by Treaty 8, the last and largest of the nineteenth century land agreements made between First Nations and the government of Canada, are upheld for the benefit of future generations.”

“Mother Earth” first appeared on Young’s 1990 album, Ragged Glory.

David Bowie, Lou Reed, Genesis memorabilia for new music exhibition

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Historic music club Friars Aylesbury is the focus of a major new rock music exhibition featuring rare memorabilia from David Bowie, Lou Reed, The Velvet Underground, Iggy Pop, Queen, Genesis, Blondie and more. Entitled The Evolution of Friars (1969-2014), the exhibition runs from March 1 – July 5, 2014 at the Buckinghamshire County Museum in Aylesbury, and will feature rare posters, photographs and memorabilia from Friars archive as well as unique items on loan from artists who have performed there. The venue opened in 1969 and played host to many British and American artists. David Bowie played there in September, 1971 with Mick Ronson, Mick Woodmansey and Trevor Bolder in the earliest days of the Ziggy Stardust project. Tickets to the exhibition are on sale from February 1, 2014. Tickets are available online from: www.theticketsellers.co.uk or 0844 870 0000.

Historic music club Friars Aylesbury is the focus of a major new rock music exhibition featuring rare memorabilia from David Bowie, Lou Reed, The Velvet Underground, Iggy Pop, Queen, Genesis, Blondie and more.

Entitled The Evolution of Friars (1969-2014), the exhibition runs from March 1 – July 5, 2014 at the Buckinghamshire County Museum in Aylesbury, and will feature rare posters, photographs and memorabilia from Friars archive as well as unique items on loan from artists who have performed there.

The venue opened in 1969 and played host to many British and American artists. David Bowie played there in September, 1971 with Mick Ronson, Mick Woodmansey and Trevor Bolder in the earliest days of the Ziggy Stardust project.

Tickets to the exhibition are on sale from February 1, 2014. Tickets are available online from: www.theticketsellers.co.uk or 0844 870 0000.

Brett Anderson reveals Suede are working on a new album

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Brett Anderson has revealed that Suede are working on a new album. Speaking to NME at the launch of the Teenage Cancer Trust's annual series of gigs, he said that they are currently working on a follow-up to 2013's Bloodsports. "We're busy writing at the moment," he said. "I'm very proud of Bloods...

Brett Anderson has revealed that Suede are working on a new album.

Speaking to NME at the launch of the Teenage Cancer Trust’s annual series of gigs, he said that they are currently working on a follow-up to 2013’s Bloodsports.

“We’re busy writing at the moment,” he said. “I’m very proud of Bloodsports, and the best thing about it is that it showed us that we can write new music, and relevant new music.”

He added: “We want to carry on writing and pushing forward, so we’re taking it somewhere else now. I think it’ll be out next year, as we’re just writing at the moment so realistically it will be next year.”

Suede will close the Teenage Cancer Trust’s annual series of gigs on Saturday March 30. They will play their second album Dog Man Star in its entirety to mark the 20th anniversary of its release. Suede last performed for the charity in 2010, their first show after a lengthy hiatus.

“That was our comeback show,” said Anderson. “We hadn’t played for seven or eight years and as a result it was a very emotional night. The Albert Hall is a very special venue too, I’ve got a lot of great memories of that place from down the years. Lots of elements like that made for an amazing show and if I had to choose my favourite show from 25 years of playing live it would be that one.

“I remember coming off stage and seeing [organiser] Roger Daltrey. I asked him what he thought and he said ‘It was great. A bit loud though.’ So if Roger Daltrey is saying a show was loud that’s quite an achievement. This time we’re doing Dog Man Star and part of the reason is the 20th anniversary, another part is that the 2010 show was so good we shouldn’t try to top it by doing the same thing again.”

Talking of Dog Man Star, Suede’s second album and final recording with their guitarist Bernard Butler, Anderson said it didn’t feel 20 years old, adding: “I’ve become objective about it, where once, when we released it, I was subjective. You don’t see an album with any perspective when you release it, but I suppose if 20 years later you still thought a record that’s actually shit was very good then there’d be something slightly crazy about you.”

“It’s hard for me to listen to in places because it does remind me of fights we were having, but it’s a beautiful record, dramatic and heartfelt. There should be more drama and emotion in music, that’s definitely lacking. And turbulence in a band is an important element, it can be a creative thing.”

He also ruled out Bernard Butler’s return for the live show, saying: “I don’t think he wants to come back. He’s happy doing what he’s doing.”

Roger Daltrey says The Who will make a new album this year

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Roger Daltrey says he will reunite with Pete Townshend this year to make a new Who album. Speaking to NME as he announced the line-up for this March's annual series of Teenage Cancer Trust gigs, curated by Daltrey, he revealed that Townshend has been working on new material. "Pete's got hundreds ...

Roger Daltrey says he will reunite with Pete Townshend this year to make a new Who album.

Speaking to NME as he announced the line-up for this March’s annual series of Teenage Cancer Trust gigs, curated by Daltrey, he revealed that Townshend has been working on new material.

“Pete’s got hundreds of songs,” he said. “so the only question is whether we get around to it, but he wants to make an album and I’m always ready and raring to go. We’ll see. I never know what I’m doing next, it’s about what comes through my letterbox tomorrow, but I don’t see why we wouldn’t. My voice is still in good shape. The hearing isn’t so great, but the voice is fine.”

The album would be The Who‘s first studio album since 2006’s Endless Wire. Daltrey, who has curated the Teenage Cancer Trust’s annual concerts at the Royal Albert Hall since 2000, said he and Townshend won’t be performing at the gigs this year as they have done during the past 14 years. Asked if the gap in the schedule on Friday March 29 could be a slot for them, he said: “No, it’s definitely not us. We have someone, but we can’t announced them until this band has announced something else first.”

He did, however, say he may take to the stage with former Dr Feelgood guitarist Wilko Johnson, with whom he’s recently recorded an album. He said: “It’s a tricky one. Wilko and I have got a show on February 25, but as I’m sure you know Wilko has terminal pancreatic cancer so we can’t make plans for things like that. His tumour is like a grapefruit and getting bigger by the day, but I will say if he’s still with us, and let’s hope he is, we will do something. It’ll only be a quick support slot, but we’ll be there.”

Of the pair’s album, Going Back Home which will be released on March 10, Daltrey said: “We’ve been trying to make this album for about four years and it kept not happening for one reason or another, but when he was diagnosed, I said ‘Wilko, whatever you want me to sing, let’s do it’. And it’s a great record, really good songs, and it was fabulous making it, so refreshing. It’s going back to what I did in the early 60s with fast, three-minute R&B songs. No bullshit, just good songs.”

Asked if he will mark The Who’s 50th anniversary, Daltrey said: “I don’t know. Possibly it’ll be this album. I haven’t thought about it, to be honest. We didn’t think it was going to last the week, let alone 50 years. We were The Who, we used to break up after every show.”

The Cure are among the line-up for the run of gigs in March. They last played for the Teenage Cancer Trust in 2006, although getting them back wasn’t an easy task. “Robert Smith doesn’t answer his emails!” joked Daltrey. “He’s hard to get hold of, but I remember them playing in 2006 and they did a three-hour set which was just magical. Robert lives round the corner from me, although I’ve never seen him, nor have his neighbours. I think he must only come out at night.”

Beck: “I was so busy with other things, I wasn’t sure if I was going to make another record”

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Beck, speaking in the new issue of Uncut, explains that he wasn’t sure if he would make another album before recording Morning Phase as he felt “on the sidelines”. Morning Phase is reviewed in the new issue, and Beck discusses the influences on the record, including Nick Drake and Bert Jans...

Beck, speaking in the new issue of Uncut, explains that he wasn’t sure if he would make another album before recording Morning Phase as he felt “on the sidelines”.

Morning Phase is reviewed in the new issue, and Beck discusses the influences on the record, including Nick Drake and Bert Jansch.

“I didn’t have any sense of what I was looking for,” Beck says. “For a while I was so busy with other things, I wasn’t sure if I was going to make another record, or if it was going to be later down the line. I was really just on the sidelines. It has changed. I’m trying to push things forward. It feels like the right time.”

The new issue of Uncut is out tomorrow (January 31).

Syd Barrett’s back catalogue released on Spotify

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Syd Barrett's back catalogue has been made available on Spotify. The music streaming service is now hosting the two studio albums The Madcap Laughs (1970) and Barrett (1970), the rarities album Opel (1988), a 1970 John Peel Session and the 2010 An Introduction To Syd Barrett, which compiles Barrett...

Syd Barrett‘s back catalogue has been made available on Spotify.

The music streaming service is now hosting the two studio albums The Madcap Laughs (1970) and Barrett (1970), the rarities album Opel (1988), a 1970 John Peel Session and the 2010 An Introduction To Syd Barrett, which compiles Barrett material, solo and with Pink Floyd.

The release follows the launch of Pink Floyd’s entire catalogue on Spotify in June 2013.

Last week news broke that a rare Syd Barrett live recording live recording from January 27, 1972, at the Corn Exchange in Cambridge is soon to be released.

You can read Uncut‘s extensive tribute to Syd Barrett, published shortly after his death in 2006, here.

Rosanne Cash – The River & The Thread

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Mesmerising trek through the land of Dixie: R Cash paints her masterpiece... Even the lightest-hearted of Rosanne Cash’s superb 35-year repertoire often carries with it the weight of history, the struggle for self-discovery and a sense of place. It’s hardly surprising given her station, born into the first family of American music royalty. On The River & The Thread, Cash’s first album of original material in seven years, and first since brain surgery in 2007, those vibes run deeper than ever, plunging into complicated emotions, impossible situations, piquant insights, fate and history, and the meaning of it all in the land of Dixie. Playing like a travelogue through time, space and place, The River & The Thread opens – with a yawning, bluesy guitar chord – in the northwestern Alabama burg of Florence. This is “A Feather’s Not A Bird”, and it finds Cash flitting between emotional and geographical landscapes to a sinewy, swampy mix of hot-wired guitars, silky harmonies and a revelatory, ominously impassioned vocal. The setting could be right now, or 100 years either direction. “There’s never any highway when you’re looking for the past,” she declares, part of a kind of cumulative taking stock. Cash and guitarist/producer/husband John Leventhal assembled an exemplary lineup of musicians for The River & The Thread: singers Allison Moorer, Amy Helm and John Paul White (The Civil Wars), Allmans guitarist supreme Derek Trucks and, as she puts it, the Voice Of God Choir – Rodney Crowell, John Prine, Tony Joe White, Kris Kristofferson – who pitch in on one cut. That said, it’s Cash, at the top of her game as a singer, who carries the day. Her voice is a persistent wonder, a flexibly crystalline instrument, which with a tiny shift in intonation, a subtle turn of phrase, alters the texture or perspective, imbuing the songs with trenchant, kaleidoscopic shades of meaning. One might think of The River & The Thread as the glorious summation in her post-dad-death trilogy, following 2006’s grief-stricken Black Cadillac and 2008’s tradition-grounded, Johnny Cash-inspired album of covers, The List. It feels as if this is now the point where the internal turmoil subsides, the clouds part, new connections await. Then again, it just might just as easily signal a rather momentous rebirth. Not that there’s not always more grief around the corner. Sung in a kind of stunned mix of determination, vulnerability, and fatalism, “Etta’s Tune” is at the heart of The River & The Thread, indeed the spark, the first piece written for the album. A tribute in part to fallen Tennessee Two bassist and close friend Marshall Grant (a prime architect of her dad’s boom-chicka-boom sound), who passed away in 2011 at 83, and Etta, his wife of 65 faithful years, this song is celebration and mourning. It’s deeply personal yet connected to everything, a glimpse into the fabric of centralising, salt-of-the-earth, real-life characters. Every stanza is teardrop territory. The altogether snappier “Modern Blue” kicks in next, changing up the mood, the album’s shiniest, coolest-rocking coin. Hinging on Leventhal’s catchy guitar curlicues echoing down through the verses, it’s, ostensibly, a world travelers’ tale. The protagonist traipses through a litany of locales, all of them not Memphis, before the epiphany comes: “I went to Barcelona and my mind got changed,” Cash leans into on the song’s pivotal verse, “So I’m heading back to Memphis on the midnight train.” The ghostly blues stomp of “World Of Strange Design”, meanwhile, Trucks percolating the rhythms on slide guitar, is Cash pushing her poetic edge, heading off into deepest mystery, exploring the identity of place, the forces of fate (“If Jesus came from Mississippi…” she ponders), on perhaps the album’s most powerfully affecting track. Along the way, Cash touches upon the quest for spiritualism in a world of loneliness (“Tell Heaven”) and the wits-end desperation of a Dust Bowl-era Arkansas farmer (“The Sunken Lands”). “Night School” feels more contemporary lyrically, but with its sparkling, orchestral 1860s parlor-ballad arrangement, it joins most of its peers in defying the conventional parameters of time; musically, it’s The River & The Thread’s most daring, surprising piece. Foreboding heartbreak permeates the characters’ stark realities in the aching Civil War-era portrait “When The Master Calls The Roll” – the principals scrolling by as in a novel. Within the general structure of a classic Celtic ballad, gorgeous mandolin and fiddle accents, and the her so-called Voice Of God Choir, Cash plunges into myth and reality, magnificence and tragedy, her voice delivering each chapter in the story with an aching beauty. “50,000 Watts”, though, a shuffling blues, grasps new hope, alas a new identity, and optimism in the post-war South – in short, a new start: “We’ll be who we are, not who we were,” she sings in scrumptious, anticipatory harmony with Wandering Sons singer Cory Chisel. The song doesn’t name names, but it might as well be referencing Johnny Cash’s clarion calls “Hey Porter” or “Big River” blasting out of Memphis’ WSM in 1958. The spidery “The Long Way Home” is the album’s sleeper, at first slipping by unsuspectingly. But here, amid a Leventhal string arrangement seemingly awash in kudzu, David Mansfield’s nimble violin and viola touches, and Cash channeling her purest gothic voice, emerges one of the album’s central truths – the resolute inescapability of place: “You thought you’d left it all behind,” she avers. By the time The River & The Thread completes its mesmerising trek, tracing the history and its myriad characters, the feel and the psyche of the deepest South in its closer, “Money Road”, the troupe has arrived in tiny Money, Mississippi, upon a rural roadway adjacent to Robert Johnson’s mythical crossroads. Spooky as a pitch-black midnight walk across Bobbie Gentry’s (also adjacent) Tallahatchie Bridge, Cash’s voice cutting like a scythe through keyboards that rise and fall like ghosts, all the themes, a million micro-bits of the story, converge, before Leventhal suddenly, shockingly, takes the listener out with a prickly electric sitar, time heading in both directions. Luke Torn Q+A Rosanne Cash I have a recent quote from you: “If I never make another album, I’ll be content because I made this one.” Yeah, you know what? That comment is going to come back to haunt me! Well, but I felt it and I feel it. I feel I have been working towards this album for a long time, and I finally wrote some songs I had been trying to reach in myself and outside myself for a long time. I think I was feeling my own mortality when I said that, but it’s pretty true. I do feel that way. Why weren’t you able to reach them before? Well, the last time I wrote an album was seven years ago, my last album was a covers album. A lot happened in that seven years. I think I’m just at the point in my life where these are the songs available to me. This one has a bluesy, swampy feel to it… That was a conscious decision. You know, we decided to make this record about the South and obviously we had to follow some musical direction that made sense for that, and we wanted to cover a lot of territory, everything from that kind of Southern pop, you know Dusty [Springfield] or Bobbie Gentry with the cascading strings thing. Everything from that to really bluesy stuff like “World Of Strange Design”. Then on into “Night School”, which is really more of an orchestral piece – another tradition! …and a sense of being on the road. I mean there’s a lot of geography in the songs, real geography, but I think the thread that goes through it is both real travel and time travel. And the heart opening. When did you first start to write the album, what was the spark? It started to form in 2011. Arkansas State University had purchased my dad’s boyhood home, and they asked me to participate in the restoration and in the fundraising for the restoration. It was really the first Johnny Cash project I had wanted to get involved in. I thought, you know, my dad would really love this, this would be important to him. And it was important to me too, and I thought it would be important to my kids. The house was about to fall down, but they were able to get it. I started organising this fundraiser and while I was down there, Marshall Grant died. That is “Etta’s Song”? Yeah. What was your relationship with Marshall? Oh my God, it was really close. He had become like a surrogate dad to me after my dad’s death. He was the third person to hold me after I was born! We talked every few months. He would go over and over all the stories from the road. He was anguished that he couldn’t prevent my dad’s drug addiction. He remembered all the tours, he’d saved everything, and he was trying to settle his memories. And then he died when I was down there [at Arkansas State], so my heart kinda got cracked open. At the same time I was making a lot of trips down South, and the idea just started to form. And Etta, she was Marshall’s wife for 65 years, she is like family. “The South” is a broad subject. How did you edit? The first way we pared it down was we weren’t going to proselytise, we weren’t going to try to bust any stereotypical myths people have about the South. The songs would be enough, just to point the arrow to the Delta – this is the heartbeat of the country – music, the revolution, the Civil Rights era, the blues, slave songs, gospel, and so much came from there. You think about Bobbie Gentry and Emmett Till, where Till was murdered. The proximity, it was all just right there – where Robert Johnson was buried – it’s all in a few square miles. What came from this experience? That particular trip where we went down Money Road, we took for John’s [Leventhal] birthday, then we went to Oxford, Mississippi, and went to Faulkner’s house, and then deep into the heart of where all the great blues musicians came from – Greenwood, Dockery Farms. We went to Dockery Farms, where Charley Patton had sat on the porch of a juke joint. That in itself was chilling. We met this 90-something-year-old man who knew Bill Faulkner and Eudora Welty, he said [affecting a proper Southern gentleman’s voice], “Eudora was a lovely woman.” And then you add the layer of my own ancestry in Arkansas, and going to the place where my dad grew up, it was just so deep. It was a life-changing experience. What is your favorite track? Well, it depends. “A Feather’s Not A Bird” is real important to me because it lays out the landscape of the whole record. But, some days it’s “50,000 Watts”. It feels like such a heart-opener, looking into the future with so much hope, and knowing everything will be all right. And then some days it’s “When The Master Calls The Roll”, because it feels so timeless to me. I’ve always loved so much those Celtic and Appalachian ballads, story songs, you know, that end in a real heartbreaking way. “World Of Strange Design”, that’s just a great turn of phrase… I was allowing my madness to run riot, free-associative stuff. I thought if I was really in that dense, weird, wonderful South and looking out for a minute – how might my world be, how might it look? Well… Jesus would come from Mississippi. I was able to tap into some madness. Since you spent so much of your upbringing in California, it seems like you are both an insider and an outsider in the South? Exactly. Maybe if I had lived in Money, Mississippi I wouldn’t have been able to do this. You know, I was born in Memphis, I still have a lot of relatives there. There are many layers to this. I can love it freely now, but the first few years I moved away I’d go back and my stomach would start hurting. It would just feel claustrophobic. Now I go back, I’m excited. You know that line from TS Eliot, what is it… “We arrived where we started and know it for the first time”? INTERVIEW: LUKE TORN Photo credit: Clay Patrick McBride

Mesmerising trek through the land of Dixie: R Cash paints her masterpiece…

Even the lightest-hearted of Rosanne Cash’s superb 35-year repertoire often carries with it the weight of history, the struggle for self-discovery and a sense of place. It’s hardly surprising given her station, born into the first family of American music royalty. On The River & The Thread, Cash’s first album of original material in seven years, and first since brain surgery in 2007, those vibes run deeper than ever, plunging into complicated emotions, impossible situations, piquant insights, fate and history, and the meaning of it all in the land of Dixie.

Playing like a travelogue through time, space and place, The River & The Thread opens – with a yawning, bluesy guitar chord – in the northwestern Alabama burg of Florence. This is “A Feather’s Not A Bird”, and it finds Cash flitting between emotional and geographical landscapes to a sinewy, swampy mix of hot-wired guitars, silky harmonies and a revelatory, ominously impassioned vocal. The setting could be right now, or 100 years either direction. “There’s never any highway when you’re looking for the past,” she declares, part of a kind of cumulative taking stock.

Cash and guitarist/producer/husband John Leventhal assembled an exemplary lineup of musicians for The River & The Thread: singers Allison Moorer, Amy Helm and John Paul White (The Civil Wars), Allmans guitarist supreme Derek Trucks and, as she puts it, the Voice Of God Choir – Rodney Crowell, John Prine, Tony Joe White, Kris Kristofferson – who pitch in on one cut. That said, it’s Cash, at the top of her game as a singer, who carries the day. Her voice is a persistent wonder, a flexibly crystalline instrument, which with a tiny shift in intonation, a subtle turn of phrase, alters the texture or perspective, imbuing the songs with trenchant, kaleidoscopic shades of meaning.

One might think of The River & The Thread as the glorious summation in her post-dad-death trilogy, following 2006’s grief-stricken Black Cadillac and 2008’s tradition-grounded, Johnny Cash-inspired album of covers, The List. It feels as if this is now the point where the internal turmoil subsides, the clouds part, new connections await. Then again, it just might just as easily signal a rather momentous rebirth.

Not that there’s not always more grief around the corner. Sung in a kind of stunned mix of determination, vulnerability, and fatalism, “Etta’s Tune” is at the heart of The River & The Thread, indeed the spark, the first piece written for the album. A tribute in part to fallen Tennessee Two bassist and close friend Marshall Grant (a prime architect of her dad’s boom-chicka-boom sound), who passed away in 2011 at 83, and Etta, his wife of 65 faithful years, this song is celebration and mourning. It’s deeply personal yet connected to everything, a glimpse into the fabric of centralising, salt-of-the-earth, real-life characters. Every stanza is teardrop territory.

The altogether snappier “Modern Blue” kicks in next, changing up the mood, the album’s shiniest, coolest-rocking coin. Hinging on Leventhal’s catchy guitar curlicues echoing down through the verses, it’s, ostensibly, a world travelers’ tale. The protagonist traipses through a litany of locales, all of them not Memphis, before the epiphany comes: “I went to Barcelona and my mind got changed,” Cash leans into on the song’s pivotal verse, “So I’m heading back to Memphis on the midnight train.”

The ghostly blues stomp of “World Of Strange Design”, meanwhile, Trucks percolating the rhythms on slide guitar, is Cash pushing her poetic edge, heading off into deepest mystery, exploring the identity of place, the forces of fate (“If Jesus came from Mississippi…” she ponders), on perhaps the album’s most powerfully affecting track.

Along the way, Cash touches upon the quest for spiritualism in a world of loneliness (“Tell Heaven”) and the wits-end desperation of a Dust Bowl-era Arkansas farmer (“The Sunken Lands”). “Night School” feels more contemporary lyrically, but with its sparkling, orchestral 1860s parlor-ballad arrangement, it joins most of its peers in defying the conventional parameters of time; musically, it’s The River & The Thread’s most daring, surprising piece.

Foreboding heartbreak permeates the characters’ stark realities in the aching Civil War-era portrait “When The Master Calls The Roll” – the principals scrolling by as in a novel. Within the general structure of a classic Celtic ballad, gorgeous mandolin and fiddle accents, and the her so-called Voice Of God Choir, Cash plunges into myth and reality, magnificence and tragedy, her voice delivering each chapter in the story with an aching beauty.

“50,000 Watts”, though, a shuffling blues, grasps new hope, alas a new identity, and optimism in the post-war South – in short, a new start: “We’ll be who we are, not who we were,” she sings in scrumptious, anticipatory harmony with Wandering Sons singer Cory Chisel. The song doesn’t name names, but it might as well be referencing Johnny Cash’s clarion calls “Hey Porter” or “Big River” blasting out of Memphis’ WSM in 1958.

The spidery “The Long Way Home” is the album’s sleeper, at first slipping by unsuspectingly. But here, amid a Leventhal string arrangement seemingly awash in kudzu, David Mansfield’s nimble violin and viola touches, and Cash channeling her purest gothic voice, emerges one of the album’s central truths – the resolute inescapability of place: “You thought you’d left it all behind,” she avers.

By the time The River & The Thread completes its mesmerising trek, tracing the history and its myriad characters, the feel and the psyche of the deepest South in its closer, “Money Road”, the troupe has arrived in tiny Money, Mississippi, upon a rural roadway adjacent to Robert Johnson’s mythical crossroads. Spooky as a pitch-black midnight walk across Bobbie Gentry’s (also adjacent) Tallahatchie Bridge, Cash’s voice cutting like a scythe through keyboards that rise and fall like ghosts, all the themes, a million micro-bits of the story, converge, before Leventhal suddenly, shockingly, takes the listener out with a prickly electric sitar, time heading in both directions.

Luke Torn

Q+A

Rosanne Cash

I have a recent quote from you: “If I never make another album, I’ll be content because I made this one.”

Yeah, you know what? That comment is going to come back to haunt me! Well, but I felt it and I feel it. I feel I have been working towards this album for a long time, and I finally wrote some songs I had been trying to reach in myself and outside myself for a long time. I think I was feeling my own mortality when I said that, but it’s pretty true. I do feel that way.

Why weren’t you able to reach them before?

Well, the last time I wrote an album was seven years ago, my last album was a covers album. A lot happened in that seven years. I think I’m just at the point in my life where these are the songs available to me. This one has a bluesy, swampy feel to it… That was a conscious decision. You know, we decided to make this record about the South and obviously we had to follow some musical direction that made sense for that, and we wanted to cover a lot of territory, everything from that kind of Southern pop, you know Dusty [Springfield] or Bobbie Gentry with the cascading strings thing. Everything from that to really bluesy stuff like “World Of Strange Design”. Then on into “Night School”, which is really more of an orchestral piece – another tradition!

…and a sense of being on the road.

I mean there’s a lot of geography in the songs, real geography, but I think the thread that goes through it is both real travel and time travel. And the heart opening.

When did you first start to write the album, what was the spark?

It started to form in 2011. Arkansas State University had purchased my dad’s boyhood home, and they asked me to participate in the restoration and in the fundraising for the restoration. It was really the first Johnny Cash project I had wanted to get involved in. I thought, you know, my dad would really love this, this would be important to him. And it was important to me too, and I thought it would be important to my kids. The house was about to fall down, but they were able to get it. I started organising this fundraiser and while I was down there, Marshall Grant died.

That is “Etta’s Song”?

Yeah.

What was your relationship with Marshall?

Oh my God, it was really close. He had become like a surrogate dad to me after my dad’s death. He was the third person to hold me after I was born! We talked every few months. He would go over and over all the stories from the road. He was anguished that he couldn’t prevent my dad’s drug addiction. He remembered all the tours, he’d saved everything, and he was trying to settle his memories. And then he died when I was down there [at Arkansas State], so my heart kinda got cracked open. At the same time I was making a lot of trips down South, and the idea just started to form. And Etta, she was Marshall’s wife for 65 years, she is like family.

“The South” is a broad subject. How did you edit?

The first way we pared it down was we weren’t going to proselytise, we weren’t going to try to bust any stereotypical myths people have about the South. The songs would be enough, just to point the arrow to the Delta – this is the heartbeat of the country – music, the revolution, the Civil Rights era, the blues, slave songs, gospel, and so much came from there. You think about Bobbie Gentry and Emmett Till, where Till was murdered. The proximity, it was all just right there – where Robert Johnson was buried – it’s all in a few square miles.

What came from this experience?

That particular trip where we went down Money Road, we took for John’s [Leventhal] birthday, then we went to Oxford, Mississippi, and went to Faulkner’s house, and then deep into the heart of where all the great blues musicians came from – Greenwood, Dockery Farms. We went to Dockery Farms, where Charley Patton had sat on the porch of a juke joint. That in itself was chilling. We met this 90-something-year-old man who knew Bill Faulkner and Eudora Welty, he said [affecting a proper Southern gentleman’s voice], “Eudora was a lovely woman.” And then you add the layer of my own ancestry in Arkansas, and going to the place where my dad grew up, it was just so deep. It was a life-changing experience.

What is your favorite track?

Well, it depends. “A Feather’s Not A Bird” is real important to me because it lays out the landscape of the whole record. But, some days it’s “50,000 Watts”. It feels like such a heart-opener, looking into the future with so much hope, and knowing everything will be all right. And then some days it’s “When The Master Calls The Roll”, because it feels so timeless to me. I’ve always loved so much those Celtic and Appalachian ballads, story songs, you know, that end in a real heartbreaking way.

“World Of Strange Design”, that’s just a great turn of phrase…

I was allowing my madness to run riot, free-associative stuff. I thought if I was really in that dense, weird, wonderful South and looking out for a minute – how might my world be, how might it look? Well… Jesus would come from Mississippi. I was able to tap into some madness.

Since you spent so much of your upbringing in California, it seems like you are both an insider and an outsider in the South?

Exactly. Maybe if I had lived in Money, Mississippi I wouldn’t have been able to do this. You know, I was born in Memphis, I still have a lot of relatives there. There are many layers to this. I can love it freely now, but the first few years I moved away I’d go back and my stomach would start hurting. It would just feel claustrophobic. Now I go back, I’m excited. You know that line from TS Eliot, what is it… “We arrived where we started and know it for the first time”?

INTERVIEW: LUKE TORN

Photo credit: Clay Patrick McBride

Watch Bruce Springsteen’s tribute to Pete Seeger: “I lost a great friend”

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Bruce Springsteen paid tribute to Pete Seeger last night [January 28] at his show with the E Street Band at the Bellville Velodrome in Cape Town, South Africa. Scroll down to watch the footage. Springsteen said, "I lost a great friend and a great hero last night, Pete Seeger," before covering "We ...

Bruce Springsteen paid tribute to Pete Seeger last night [January 28] at his show with the E Street Band at the Bellville Velodrome in Cape Town, South Africa.

Scroll down to watch the footage.

Springsteen said, “I lost a great friend and a great hero last night, Pete Seeger,” before covering “We Shall Overcome“.

“He was a courageous freedom fighter. I took this song to heart and once you heard this song you were prepared to march into hell’s fire,” Springsteen said.

Springsteen also posted on his website the text to his tribute to Seeger at his 90th birthday celebration.

Among the other tributes paid to Seeger, President Barack Obama released a statement earlier in the day, writing in part, “Once called ‘America’s tuning fork,’ Pete Seeger believed deeply in the power of song. But more importantly, he believed in the power of community — to stand up for what’s right, speak out against what’s wrong, and move this country closer to the America he knew we could be.”

Slowdive confirm reunion + live shows

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Slowdive has confirmed they are to reunite. The band's original line-up - Neil Halstead, Rachel Goswell, Christian Savill, Simon Scott and Nick Chaplin - will perform at London'sVillage Underground on May 19. Tickets will be available here from Friday, January 31 at 9am. They will also play the Pr...

Slowdive has confirmed they are to reunite.

The band’s original line-up – Neil Halstead, Rachel Goswell, Christian Savill, Simon Scott and Nick Chaplin – will perform at London’sVillage Underground on May 19. Tickets will be available here from Friday, January 31 at 9am.

They will also play the Primavera Festival in Barcelona on May 30 on a bill that includes Pixies, The National and Slint.

Further live dates will be announced in the coming weeks.

Eric Clapton announces new UK dates

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Eric Clapton has announced two new UK shows. Clapton will play the SSE Hydro in Glasgow on June 21 and the First Direct Arena in Leeds on June 22. According to a post on Clapton's website, these are Clapton's only UK concerts and the final shows to be announced for the UK and Europe this year. Are...

Eric Clapton has announced two new UK shows.

Clapton will play the SSE Hydro in Glasgow on June 21 and the First Direct Arena in Leeds on June 22.

According to a post on Clapton’s website, these are Clapton’s only UK concerts and the final shows to be announced for the UK and Europe this year. Arena box office pre-sales begin for both dates on 29 January at 9AM (local to venue). Tickets go on sale to the general public 31 January at 9AM. Tickets will be sold by Ticketmaster UK. Other official ticket sellers are pending and information will be available later this week.

Peggy Seeger pays tribute to her half-brother Pete Seeger

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Peggy Seeger has released a statement following the death of her half-brother Pete on January 27. "As most of you will know by now, my beloved brother Pete died peacefully, surrounded by close family members, at the Presbyterian Hospital (Columbia), New York City, on January 27th at 9:17 pm. His da...

Peggy Seeger has released a statement following the death of her half-brother Pete on January 27.

“As most of you will know by now, my beloved brother Pete died peacefully, surrounded by close family members, at the Presbyterian Hospital (Columbia), New York City, on January 27th at 9:17 pm. His daughter Tinya, who had been caring for him for some time, was lovingly holding his hand. I was still in mid-air making a frantic attempt to get there from New Zealand. I arrived four hours too late. I take solace from our last phone calls where much was said but unspoken. I know many of you will be saddened by Pete’s death but we must remember that he led a very full and productive life. He leaves a prodigious body of work for us to enjoy, a legacy the enormity of which will continue to grow. He touched so many people’s lives, from children to the golden oldies like myself. As for me, I have lost the last person who has known me from birth and who has always been there for me. I cannot express how heavy losing Pete lies with me. My thanks to all for your kind and thoughtful condolences. Peggy.”

You can read an interview with Pete Seeger from the Uncut archives here.

The Fourth Uncut Playlist Of 2014

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Strong haul of rad gumbo here, as we’ve taken to saying. Never thought I’d want to hear another Hold Steady album after the last one, but “Teeth Dreams” pretty much reaffirmed the faith. And if you’re that way inclined, I can recommend the new Men album, too; their best, I think. Then there are the deep new Woods jams, and the small matter of the firs Afghan Whigs album in 16 years, to be discussed somewhere further down the line. This amazing Holly Herndon single. And three, maybe four, things I didn’t really like at all. Not bad, really. As is the new issue of Uncut, due any day now. The Ramones are on the cover, and I can especially recommend the feature on great American punk records that goes with it. Full details here. Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Vertical Scratchers – Daughter Of Everything (Merge) 2 The Hold Steady – Teeth Dreams (Washington Square) 3 Jimi Goodwin – Odulek (Heavenly) 4 Death – Death III (Drag City) 5 The Men – Tomorrow’s Hits (Sacred Bones) 6 Real Estate – Atlas (Domino) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pNvj_VLkEBg 7 Red House Painters – Old Ramon (Sub Pop) 8 Bohren & Der Club Of Gore – Piano Nights (PIAS) 9 Pye Corner Audio – Black Mill Tapes (Type) 10 Ned Doheny – Separate Oceans (Numero Group) 11 Woods – With Light And With Love (Woodsist) 12 Fat White Family – Touch The Leather (Hate Hate Hate) 13 EMA – The Future’s Void (City Slang) 14 Alice Boman – Waiting (Adrian)

Strong haul of rad gumbo here, as we’ve taken to saying. Never thought I’d want to hear another Hold Steady album after the last one, but “Teeth Dreams” pretty much reaffirmed the faith. And if you’re that way inclined, I can recommend the new Men album, too; their best, I think.

Then there are the deep new Woods jams, and the small matter of the firs Afghan Whigs album in 16 years, to be discussed somewhere further down the line. This amazing Holly Herndon single. And three, maybe four, things I didn’t really like at all. Not bad, really.

As is the new issue of Uncut, due any day now. The Ramones are on the cover, and I can especially recommend the feature on great American punk records that goes with it. Full details here.

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

1 Vertical Scratchers – Daughter Of Everything (Merge)

2 The Hold Steady – Teeth Dreams (Washington Square)

3 Jimi Goodwin – Odulek (Heavenly)

4 Death – Death III (Drag City)

5 The Men – Tomorrow’s Hits (Sacred Bones)

6 Real Estate – Atlas (Domino)

7 Red House Painters – Old Ramon (Sub Pop)

8 Bohren & Der Club Of Gore – Piano Nights (PIAS)

9 Pye Corner Audio – Black Mill Tapes (Type)

10 Ned Doheny – Separate Oceans (Numero Group)

11 Woods – With Light And With Love (Woodsist)

12 Fat White Family – Touch The Leather (Hate Hate Hate)

13 EMA – The Future’s Void (City Slang)

14 Alice Boman – Waiting (Adrian)

Alice Boman – Waiting from Jesper Berg on Vimeo.

15 Afghan Whigs – Do To The Beast (Sub Pop)

16 Weekend – The ’81 Demos (Blackest Ever Black)

17 Claypipe – A Daylight Blessing (MIE Music)

18 Hans Chew – Life And Love (At The Helm)

19 Little Feat – Rad Gumbo (Rhino)

20 Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy (No label)

21 Holly Herndon – Chorus (RVNG INTL)

The Ramones “were mightier than Led Zeppelin over 23 minutes”

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Television’s Richard Lloyd, speaking in the new issue of Uncut, says the Ramones were, over a short period, more powerful than Led Zeppelin. On the eve of the band’s 40th anniversary, Uncut pieces together the complete story of the Ramones, with the surviving members, collaborators and friend...

Television’s Richard Lloyd, speaking in the new issue of Uncut, says the Ramones were, over a short period, more powerful than Led Zeppelin.

On the eve of the band’s 40th anniversary, Uncut pieces together the complete story of the Ramones, with the surviving members, collaborators and friends explaining how the four weirdest kids in New York revolutionised rock.

“It requires a great deal of physical strength to play those downstrokes for half-an-hour,” notes Lenny Kaye. “It’s exhausting to keep that sense of metric propulsion going.”

“Over 23 minutes Led Zeppelin couldn’t match them,” says Lloyd.

The new issue of Uncut is out on Friday (January 31).

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Pete Seeger: “You should never give up!”

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From Uncut's February 2013 issue (Take 189), the incredible Pete Seeger on Woody Guthrie, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen and the enduring power of protest songs. Interview: Neil Spencer __________________ If there were other 92-year-old dissidents on the Occupy Wall Street march, the only one to m...

From Uncut’s February 2013 issue (Take 189), the incredible Pete Seeger on Woody Guthrie, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen and the enduring power of protest songs. Interview: Neil Spencer

__________________

If there were other 92-year-old dissidents on the Occupy Wall Street march, the only one to make headlines was Pete Seeger. Veteran of a thousand demonstrations stretching back to the 1930s, the godfather of folk protest marched 30 New York blocks in winter cold to prove not everyone’s politics mellow with age. “I wanted to make the point – you should never give up!” Seeger told Uncut from his New York State home. “There’s a quote I like by a writer, Robert Fulghum: ‘There’s no hope, but I may be wrong.’”

In that indefatigable spirit come two new Seeger albums. To honour the centenary of friend and fellow legend Woody Guthrie, there’s Pete Remembers Woody, while A More Perfect Union, a collaboration with fellow folkie Lorre Wyatt, is a collection of gentle but serious songs tackling issues from Hurricane Katrina to the BP oil spill in the Gulf Of Mexico. Its guest voices include Arlo Guthrie, Emmylou Harris and Bruce Springsteen, the last having previously championed Seeger on 2006’s The Seeger Sessions, a record its namesake says he’s never heard. “I haven’t listened to any recorded music since I was 19,” claims Pete, a tad improbably. “I prefer to experience music live!”

Fulsome in his praise for Springsteen, Seeger swerves when asked about Bruce’s campaigning for President Obama. “I was singing with someone last week, and they had a song that went, ‘You’re not the man I voted for…’” This seems oblique for a man who was a guest at Obama’s 2008 inauguration, but one of Seeger’s aphorisms goes; ‘Be wary of great leaders.’ Raised by an intellectual, left-wing family, Seeger has always allied himself with ordinary people, joining the Communist Party as a young man (disgust with the Soviets later led him to leave) and becoming a musical emissary for left-wing causes. He still thinks of himself as a small ‘c’ communist – “which simply means, no poor, no rich”.

Seeger’s activism frequently landed him in trouble. In the 1950s he was blacklisted and his records banned, and when he refused to co-operate with the red-hunting House Un-American Activities Committee he was threatened with prison. He remained defiant. “I told the committee that asking someone to reveal who they voted for and who their friends were was a deeply un-American thing, entirely at odds with the constitution.”

As the author of such abiding anthems as “Where Have All The Flowers Gone” and “Turn! Turn! Turn!”, and one of the best Vietnam War protests, “Waist Deep In The Big Muddy”, Seeger’s mark on American history is etched deep. He’s still the godfather of folk, though Seeger doesn’t care much for the ‘f’ word. “We called what we played People’s Music, but it didn’t catch on.”

Perhaps one reason it didn’t is that the music enjoyed by regular US Joes and Janes was often anathema to the austere folkies, seen as tainted by commerce and capitalism. Rock’n’roll was plain vulgar. Hence the outrage when Bob Dylan ’went electric’ at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival. The story that Seeger was stalking around backstage with an axe, threatening to cut the electricity cable, is, alas, too good to be true, but Seeger admits he wanted to turn down the sound “because you couldn’t hear the lyrics”. Dylan, who had grown up with Seeger and Woody Guthrie as guiding lights (though he also dug Little Richard), described Seeger’s reaction to his set as “like a dagger through the heart”. No melodrama, then.

Bob Dylan was yet to be born when the 21-year-old Seeger first met Woody Guthrie at a 1940 benefit concert. Guthrie was six years his senior and already the Dustbowl Balladeer of legend. The pair became friends and co-activists, and their story is recounted on Pete Remembers Woody, its absorbing spoken tales interspersed with polite versions of Guthrie standards like “Do Re Mi” and “This Land Is Your Land”.

Seeger’s testimony dispels some myths about the hard-travelling folk hero, less the singing hobo of his songs than a shrewd sophisticate. “Woody must have been the most creative person of the 20th Century,” says Seeger. “There wasn’t a day he wasn’t writing stories, rhymes, songs, making jokes or pictures. I recall flying with him to Pittsburgh to play for strikers at the Westinghouse plant. He had written down the thoughts of the people below as our metal bird soared above them, then written what the stewardess would be doing that night. He threw away the paper but I picked it up.

“He read voraciously. He came across the French poet Rabelais in my sister’s library and read everything in a couple of days. Over the coming weeks I noticed he was imitating Rabelais, piling on the adjectives. He gave me a big education about America, right down to how to make money singing in saloons! He was funny but angry. He knew tragedy. His

four-year-old daughter died after setting herself on fire.”

What does he say to those who complain that protest changes nothing? “What I’ve always said – that it’s a see-saw with the establishment at one end and the people at the other, and that you might be the grain of sand that tips the scales.”

Seeger also cites the success of the Clearwater organisation he founded in 1969 to combat pollution of the Hudson River, on whose banks he lives, its ongoing grassroots campaign being supported by the annual Clearwater music festival. Most recently, Seeger joined Harry Belafonte, Jackson Browne and others in a New York concert to petition for the release of Native American activist Leonard Peltier, who has spent the last 37 years in jail after a trial widely held to be a miscarriage of justice. What’s next? “My hope for the future is unusual. I note that the Agricultural Revolution took centuries, the Industrial Revolution took a hundred years, but the Information Revolution has taken just decades. If we are creative with it, we can achieve a great deal quickly.”

Photo: Rex/Globe Photos

Afghan Whigs announce new album ‘Do To The Beast’

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Afghan Whigs will release their first new album in 16 years later this year. The band, fronted by Greg Dulli, will release 'Do To The Beast' on April 14 via Sub Pop. It is their first album of new material since '1965' was released in 1998. The band reunited briefly in 2012 for a series of festiv...

Afghan Whigs will release their first new album in 16 years later this year.

The band, fronted by Greg Dulli, will release ‘Do To The Beast’ on April 14 via Sub Pop. It is their first album of new material since ‘1965’ was released in 1998. The band reunited briefly in 2012 for a series of festival dates.

The Afghan Whigs will play live at Coachella around the release, performing at the Californian festival on April 11 and 18.

Speaking about his decision to reform the band with Spin in 2012, frontman Dulli revealed: “I did this acoustic tour about a year and a half ago and [Whigs bassist] John Curley did six of the shows with me, and we had a great time. We hadn’t spent any time on the road together since the band. In the spring, I spent a couple days in Minneapolis with [Whigs guitarist] Rick McCullom, and that was also a great time. Plus, I had nothing really pressing this summer, so it gives me something to do. ”

After forming in Ohio in 1986, The Afghan Whigs released six studio albums. Their debut album ‘Big Top Halloween’ was released in 1988 and was subsequently followed by albums including ‘Gentleman’ in 1993, ‘Black Love’ in 1996 and ‘1965’ in 1998. The band recorded a cover of Frank Ocean’s ‘Lovecrimes’ in 2012 and performed at South By Southwest in 2013.

Photo: Danny Clinch