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Hear Bryan Ferry’s cover of Bob Dylan’s “She Belongs To Me”

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Bryan Ferry has announced details of his first, career-spanning solo compilation – Retrospective: Selected Recordings 1973-2023.

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

Totalling 81 tracks, the collection is due for release on October 25 via BMG.

The set includes “Star“, Ferry’s first original song to be released in over a decade, and a cover of Dylan’s “She Belongs To Me” which you can hear below.

Retrospective: Selected Recordings 1973-2023 will be released in multiple formats, including a 5CD deluxe box set featuring 81 songs, accompanied by a 100-page hardback book containing extensive new liner notes, rare and unseen photographs and imagery. A 2LP gatefold edition presents The Best Of Bryan Ferry, containing 20 songs pressed to black vinyl with variants including a green/blue vinyl pressing and a clear vinyl pressing. A 1CD version will also feature the same 20 songs and a booklet containing liner notes and photographs. An 81-track edition of the album will be released digitally.

Retrospective: Selected Recordings 1973-2023 5 CD Track Listing:

Disc One: The Best Of Bryan Ferry

1. A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall

2. These Foolish Things

3. The ‘In’ Crowd

4. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes

5. Casanova

6. Let’s Stick Together

7. Sign of the Times

8. Slave To Love

9. Don’t Stop The Dance

10. Windswept

11. Kiss and Tell

12. As Time Goes By

13. Your Painted Smile

14. I Put A Spell On You

15. Which Way To Turn

16. Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door

17. Make You Feel My Love

18. You Can Dance

19. Love Letters

20. Johnny and Mary

Disc Two: Compositions

1. Can’t Let Go

2. Tokyo Joe

3. This Island Earth

4. Love Me Madly Again

5. Limbo

6. When She Walks In The Room

7. Boys and Girls

8. Zamba

9. Chain Reaction

10. Bête Noire

11. I Thought

12. The Only Face

13. Valentine

14. Loop De Li

15. Reason or Rhyme

Disc Three: Interpretations

1. The Price of Love

2. Shame Shame Shame

3. Hold On (I’m Coming)

4. Just One Look

5. Girl of My Best Friend

6. What Goes On

7. That’s How Strong My Love Is

8. You Go To My Head

9. Where or When

10. The Way You Look Tonight

11. One Night

12. Simple Twist of Fate

13. Positively 4th Street

14. Song to the Siren

15. Fooled Around and Fell In Love

Disc Four: The Bryan Ferry Orchestra

1. Virginia Plain

2. Do The Strand

3. While My Heart Is Still Beating

4. This Island Earth

5. Bitter-Sweet

6. Dance Away

7. Zamba

8. Reason or Rhyme

9. Avalon

10. Back To Black

11. Limbo

12. Young and Beautiful

13. Love Is The Drug

14. Sign of the Times

15. Chance Meeting

Disc Five: Rare and Unreleased

1. Feel The Need

2. Mother of Pearl (Horoscope Version)

3. Don’t Be Cruel

4. I Don’t Want To Go On Without You

5. I Forgot More Than You’ll Ever Know

6. Crazy Love

7. Whatever Gets You Through The Night

8. Bob Dylan’s Dream

9. He’ll Have To Go

10. A Fool For Love

11. Lowlands Low

12. Is Your Love Strong Enough

13. Sonnet 18

14. She Belongs To Me

15. Oh Lonesome Me

16. Star (with Amelia Barratt)

Retrospective: Selected Recordings 1973-2023 Digital Track Listing:

1. A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall

2. These Foolish Things

3. The ‘In’ Crowd

4. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes

5. Casanova

6. Let’s Stick Together

7. Sign of the Times

8. Slave To Love

9. Don’t Stop The Dance

10. Windswept

11. Kiss and Tell

12. As Time Goes By

13. Your Painted Smile

14. I Put A Spell On You

15. Which Way To Turn

16. Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door

17. Make You Feel My Love

18. You Can Dance

19. Love Letters

20. Johnny and Mary

21. Can’t Let Go

22. Tokyo Joe

23. This Island Earth

24. Love Me Madly Again

25. Limbo

26. When She Walks In The Room

27. Boys and Girls

28. Zamba

29. Chain Reaction

30. Bête Noire

31. I Thought

32. The Only Face

33. Valentine

34. Loop De Li

35. Reason or Rhyme

36. The Price of Love

37. Shame Shame Shame

38. Hold On (I’m Coming)

39. Just One Look

40. Girl of My Best Friend

41. What Goes On

42. That’s How Strong My Love Is

43. You Go To My Head

44. Where or When

45. The Way You Look Tonight

46. One Night

47. Simple Twist of Fate

48. Positively 4th Street

49. Song to the Siren

50. Fooled Around and Fell In Love

51. Virginia Plain

52. Do The Strand

53. While My Heart Is Still Beating

54. This Island Earth

55. Bitter-Sweet

56. Dance Away

57. Zamba

58. Reason or Rhyme

59. Avalon

60. Back To Black

61. Limbo

62. Young and Beautiful

63. Love Is The Drug

64. Sign of the Times

65. Chance Meeting

66. Feel The Need

67. Mother of Pearl (Horoscope Version)

68. Don’t Be Cruel

69. I Don’t Want To Go On Without You

70. I Forgot More Than You’ll Ever Know

71. Crazy Love

72. Whatever Gets You Through The Night

73. Bob Dylan’s Dream

74. He’ll Have To Go

75. A Fool For Love

76. Lowlands Low

77. Is Your Love Strong Enough

78. Sonnet 18

79. She Belongs To Me

80. Oh Lonesome Me

81. Star (with Amelia Barratt)

Retrospective: Selected Recordings 1973-2023 2LP / 1CD Tracklist: 

1. A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall

2. These Foolish Things

3. The ‘In’ Crowd

4. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes

5. Casanova

6. Let’s Stick Together

7. Sign of the Times

8. Slave To Love

9. Don’t Stop The Dance

10. Windswept

11. Kiss and Tell

12. As Time Goes By

13. Your Painted Smile

14. I Put A Spell On You

15. Which Way To Turn

16. Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door

17. Make You Feel My Love

18. You Can Dance

19. Love Letters

20. Johnny and Mary

Retrospective: She Belongs To Me EP Track Listing

1. She Belongs To Me

2. Let’s Stick Together

3. Slave to Love

4. I Put A Spell On You

5. Make You Feel My Love

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Introducing the Ultimate Genre Guide: Soft Rock

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“No assholes need apply”

When Stevie Nicks played in the UK in mid-July there wasn’t a dry eye in the house – and by house we mean really large park. Some of that was down to the emotional power of Stevie’s mystical pop music. Much of it, however, also derived from an emotional connection with Stevie’s friend and Fleetwood Mac colleague Christine McVie, who had died since Stevie’s last visit to the country. Images of Christine were projected; tears flowed.

It was a very soft rock moment – a testament to the enduring power of this gentle and supremely melodic music. Perhaps the stars of, say, psychedelic rock were more musically or socially controversial, but as you’ll read in this revised special edition, just because artists in this genre sold an exceptional number of albums – if you enjoy large numbers please see our sales chart on p118 – didn’t mean that they were writing vapid jingles to do so. 

Think of Fleetwood Mac, turning the thorny emotional details of their private lives into generational anthems. Or Genesis, mutating in a new decade from Edwardian-era prog into clever and accessible pop. Or, most particularly, of our cover stars Steely Dan, whose huge success was surely an ironic one: two highly-intelligent liberal arts graduates transforming their social difficulty, misanthropy and esoteric musical reference into drivetime staples adored by millions. 

Did they crave it? Evidently not. In his 2017 obituary for the Dan’s Walter Becker, Uncut’s David Cavanagh pointed out that the band could relish being unrelatable. Steely Dan apparently approached their song “Chain Lightning” as “a song so abstruse it could never be deciphered”. As time passed and clues were reluctantly dropped, it emerged that the song joins two Nazis at a political rally, plucking up the courage to shake Hitler’s (or perhaps any extremist leader’s) hand. After the guitar solo, we meet them again 40 years later as they travel incognito to the same site on an occult itinerary.

In this particular mission, Steely Dan may have been on their own. But as you’ll read on these pages, Soft Rock was a broad and sophisticated church. From the all-conquering Eagles to Hall and Oates, via Supertramp, Boz Scaggs, Wings and Linda Ronstadt, it was a place which embraced femininity, complexity and melody, which worked live or in the studio, and could solve problems as well as start them. Where to begin? We’ve compiled our Top 40 Soft Rock songs to get you started, a primer to Soft Rock rivalry, and a review of its legacy. 

It’ll give you a peaceful, easy feeling. Enjoy the magazine. It’s out Friday but you can pre-order here now.

Phil Manzanera unveils 50 Years Of Music box set

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Roxy Music guitarist Phil Manzanera has today announced a new solo box set, compiling eleven of his remastered albums, plus bonus tracks and a 100-page book.

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

Among the nine previously unreleased tracks are Roxy Music’s live version of “Impossible Guitars” and Pink Floyd’s early version of “One Slip” called “Demo PM 1”.

Hear “Listen Now (Velvet Season And The Hearts Of Gold Remix)” below:

50 Years Of Music will be released on November 1; pre-order here.

Read the tracklisting for Neil Young’s Archives Vol III (1976 – 1987)

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Neil Young has released a trailer for his massive upcoming boxset Archives Vol III: 1976 – 1987, due for release on September 6 via Reprise Records in a number of configurations.

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

First, here’s the video…

The 17-CD limited edition boxed set of Archives Vol III features a total of 198 musical tracks, including 121 previously unreleased versions of live, studio, mixes, or edits, and 15 previously unreleased songs, available here for the first time ever. 62 tracks have been available on various recordings. The set will be packaged in a slim folding box with a poster. Pre-order here.

Click here to read Uncut’s review of Archives Vol. 1: 1963–1972

Click here to read Uncut’s review of Archives Vol. II: 1972–1976

In addition, a double vinyl LP-only set titled Takes, will also be available on September 6. Takes is a 16-track compilation featuring one track from each of the 16 out of the 17 CDs in the Archives Vol III box set. This collection will include 3 unreleased songs and 12 previously unreleased versions and will be the only vinyl edition to feature these songs.

A US-only limited edition 22-disc Deluxe Edition box set will also be available via the Greedy Hand Store. It features all 17 CDs, and 5 Blu-Rays which compile 11 films, 4 of which are previously unreleased. The Blu-Rays include 128 tracks, over 14 hours of film. The Deluxe Edition box also includes a 176-page book and a poster.

The music covers live performances with Crazy Horse, solo, with Nicolette Larson and with Devo and with The International Harvesters, along with unreleased studio recordings and outtakes.

NEIL YOUNG ARCHIVES VOL III Tracklisting:

Disc 1: Across The Water I (1976) Neil Young & Crazy Horse

1. Let It Shine (previously unreleased live version)

2. Mellow My Mind (previously unreleased live version)

3. Too Far Gone (previously unreleased live version)

4. Only Love Can Break Your Heart (previously unreleased live version)

5. A Man Needs a Maid (previously unreleased live version)

6. No One Seems to Know (previously unreleased live version)

7. Heart Of Gold (previously unreleased live version)

8. Country Home (previously unreleased live version)

9. Don’t Cry No Tears (previously unreleased live version)

10. Cowgirl in the Sand (previously unreleased mix)

11. Lotta Love (previously unreleased live version)

12. The Losing End (When You’re On) (previously unreleased live version)

13. Southern Man (previously unreleased live version)

14. Cortez the Killer (previously unreleased live version)

Disc 2: Across The Water II (1976): Neil Young & Crazy Horse

1. Human Highway (previously unreleased live version)

2. The Needle And The Damage Done (previously unreleased live version)

3. Stringman (previously unreleased mix)

4. Down By The River (previously unreleased live version)

5. Like a Hurricane (previously unreleased live version)

6. Drive Back (previously unreleased live version)

7. Cortez the Killer (previously unreleased live version)

8. Homegrown (previously unreleased live version)

Disc 3: Hitchhikin’ Judy (1976-1977): Neil Young

1. Rap

2. Powderfinger (previously released on Hitchhiker)

3. Captain Kennedy (previously released on Hawks & Doves, Hitchhiker and Hawks & Doves)

4. Hitchhiker (previously released on Hitchhiker)

5. Give Me Strength (previously released on Hitchhiker)

6. The Old Country Waltz (previously released on Hitchhiker)

7. Rap

8. Too Far Gone (previously released on Songs For Judy)

9. White Line (previously released on Songs For Judy)

10. Mr. Soul (previously released on Songs For Judy)

11. A Man Needs A Maid (previously released on Songs For Judy)

12. Journey Through the Past (previously released on Songs For Judy)

13. Campaigner (previously released on Songs For Judy)

14. The Old Laughing Lady (previously released on Songs For Judy)

15. The Losing End (When You’re On) (previously released on Songs For Judy)

16. Rap

17. Helpless (previously released on The Last Waltz)

18. Four Strong Winds (previously released on The Last Waltz (2002 edition))

19. Rap

20. Will To Love (previously released on American Stars ‘n Bars and Chrome Dreams)

21. Lost In Space (previously unreleased original)

Disc 4: Snapshot In Time (1977): Neil Young with Nicolette Larson & Linda Ronstadt

1. Rap

2. Hold Back The Tears (previously released on Chrome Dreams)

3. Rap

4. Long May You Run (previously unreleased version)

5. Hey Babe (previously unreleased version)

6. The Old Country Waltz (previously unreleased version)

7. Hold Back the Tears (previously unreleased version)

8. Peace of Mind (previously unreleased version)

9. Sweet Lara Larue (previously unreleased version)

10. Bite the Bullet (previously unreleased version)

11. Saddle Up the Palomino (previously unreleased version)

12. Star of Bethlehem (previously unreleased version)

13. Bad News Comes To Town (previously unreleased version)

14. Motorcycle Mama (previously unreleased version)

15. Rap

16. Hey Babe (previously released on American Stars N Bars)

17. Rap

18. Barefoot Floors (previously unreleased version)

Disc 5: Windward Passage (1977) The Ducks 

1. Rap

2. I Am A Dreamer (previously released on High Flyin’)

3. Sail Away (previously unreleased original)

4. Wide Eyed and Willin’ (previously released on High Flyin’)

5. I’m Tore Down (previously released on High Flyin’)

6. Little Wing (previously released on High Flyin’)

7. Hey Now (previously released on High Flyin’)

8. Windward Passage (previously unreleased edit)

9. Cryin’ Eyes (previously unreleased original)

Disc 6: Oceanside  Countryside (1977): Neil Young 

1. Rap

2. Field of Opportunity (previously unreleased mix)

3. It Might Have Been (previously unreleased version)

4. Dance Dance Dance (previously unreleased version)

5. Rap

6. Pocahontas (previously unreleased mix)

7. Peace of Mind (previously unreleased mix)

8. Sail Away (previously unreleased mix)

9. Human Highway (previously unreleased mix)

10. Comes A Time (previously unreleased version)

11. Lost In Space (previously released on Hawks & Doves)

12. Goin’ Back (previously unreleased mix)

Disc 7: Neil Young & Nicolette Larson Union Hall (1977):

1. Comes A Time (previously released on Comes A Time)

2. Love/Art Blues (previously unreleased version)

3. Rap

4. Are You Ready For the Country? (previously unreleased version)

5. Dance Dance Dance/Love is a Rose (previously unreleased version)

6. Old Man (previously unreleased version)

7. The Losing End (When You’re On) (previously unreleased version)

8. Heart Of Gold (previously unreleased version)

9. Already One (previously unreleased version)

10. Lady Wingshot (previously unreleased song)

11. Four Strong Winds (previously unreleased version)

12. Down By The River (previously unreleased version)

13. Alabama (previously unreleased version)

14. Are You Ready For the Country? (reprise) (previously unreleased version)

15. Rap

16. We’re Having Some Fun Now (previously unreleased song)

17. Rap

18. Please Help Me, I’m Falling (previously unreleased version)

19. Motorcycle Mama (previously released on Comes A Time)

Disc 8: Boarding House I (1978): Neil Young 

1. Rap

2. Shots (previously unreleased live version)

3. Thrasher (previously unreleased live version)

4. The Ways of Love (previously unreleased live version)

5. Ride My Llama (previously unreleased live version)

6. Sail Away (previously unreleased live version)

7. Pocahontas (previously unreleased live version)

8. Human Highway (previously unreleased live version)

9. Already One (previously unreleased live version)

10. Birds (previously unreleased live version)

11. Cowgirl in the Sand (previously unreleased live version)

12. Sugar Mountain (previously unreleased live version)

13. Powderfinger (previously unreleased live version)

14. Comes a Time (previously unreleased live version)

Disc 9: Devo & Boarding House II (1978): Neil Young and Devo

1. Rap

2. Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black) (previously unreleased version)

3. Back to the Boarding House

4. My My, Hey Hey (Out of the Blue) (previously unreleased live version)

5. Homegrown (previously unreleased live version)

6. Down by the River (previously unreleased live version)

7. After the Gold Rush (previously unreleased live version)

8. Out Of My Mind (previously unreleased live version)

9. Dressing Room

Disc 10: Sedan Delivery (1978): Neil Young with Crazy Horse 

1. Bright Sunny Day (previously unreleased song)

2. The Loner (previously released on Live Rust)

3. Welfare Mothers (previously released on Rust Never Sleeps)

4. Lotta Love (previously released on Live Rust)

5. Sedan Delivery (previously released on Rust Never Sleeps)

6. Cortez the Killer (previously released on Live Rust)

7. Tonight’s the Night (previously released on Live Rust)

8. Powderfinger (previously released on Rust Never Sleeps)

9. When You Dance, I Can Really Love (previously released on Live Rust)

10. Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black) (previously released on Rust Never Sleeps)

Disc 11: Coastline (1980-1981): Neil Young 

1. Coastline (previously released on Hawks & Doves)

2. Stayin’ Power (previously released on Hawks & Doves)

3. Hawks And Doves (previously released on Hawks & Doves)

4. Comin’ Apart at Every Nail (previously released on Hawks & Doves)

5. Union Man (previously released on Hawks & Doves)

6. Winter Winds (previously unreleased song)

7. Southern Pacific (previously released on RE-AC-TOR.)

8. Opera Star (previously released on RE-AC-TOR.)

9. Rapid Transit (previously released on RE-AC-TOR.)

10. Sunny Inside (previously unreleased original)

11. Surfer Joe and Moe the Sleaze (previously released on RE-AC-TOR.)

12. Get Up (previously unreleased song)

Disc 12: Trans (1981) & Johnny’s Island (1982): Neil Young 

1. Rap

2. Sample and Hold (previously released on Trans)

3. Mr. Soul (previously released on Trans)

4. Computer Cowboy (previously released on Trans)

5. We R In Control (previously released on Trans)

6. Computer Age (previously released on Trans)

7. Transformer Man (previously released on Trans)

8. Rap

9. Johnny (previously unreleased song)

10. Island In The Sun (previously unreleased song)

11. Rap

12. Silver & Gold (previously unreleased version)

13. If You Got Love (previously unreleased version)

14. Raining in Paradise (previously unreleased song)

15. Big Pearl (previously unreleased song)

16. Hold On To Your Love (previously released on Trans)

17. Soul Of A Woman (previously unreleased original)

18. Rap

19. Love Hotel (previously unreleased song)

Disc 13: Evolution (1983-1984): Neil Young 

1. California Sunset (previously unreleased original)

2. My Boy (previously unreleased original)

3. Old Ways (previously unreleased version)

4. Depression Blues (previously released on Lucky 13)

5. Cry, Cry, Cry (previously released on Everybody’s Rockin’)

6. Mystery Train (previously released on Everybody’s Rockin’)

7. Payola Blues (previously released on Everybody’s Rockin’)

8. Betty Lou’s Got A New Pair Of Shoes (previously released on Everybody’s Rockin’)

9. Bright Lights, Big City (previously released on Everybody’s Rockin’)

10. Rainin’ In My Heart (previously released on Everybody’s Rockin’)

11. Get Gone (previously unreleased original)

12. I Got A Problem (previously unreleased original)

13. Hard Luck Stories (previously unreleased original)

14. Your Love (previously unreleased version)

15. If You Got Love (previously unreleased version)

16. Razor Love (previously unreleased original)

Disc 14: Grey Riders (1984-1986): Neil Young with The International Harvesters 

1. Amber Jean (previously unreleased original)

2. Get Back To The Country (previously unreleased original)

3. Are You Ready For The Country? (previously released on A Treasure)

4. It Might Have Been (previously released on A Treasure)

5. Bound For Glory (previously released on A Treasure)

6. Let Your Fingers Do the Walking (previously released on A Treasure)

7. Soul of a Woman (previously released on A Treasure)

8. Misfits (Dakota) (previously unreleased live version)

9. Nothing is Perfect (previously unreleased version)

10. Time Off For Good Behavior (previously unreleased song)

11. This Old House (previously unreleased original)

12. Southern Pacific (previously released on A Treasure)

13. Interstate (previously unreleased live version)

14. Grey Riders (previously released on A Treasure)

Disc 15: Touch The Night (1984): Neil Young with Crazy Horse

1. Rock (previously unreleased song)

2. So Tired (previously unreleased song)

3. Violent Side (previously unreleased live version)

4. I Got A Problem (previously unreleased live version)

5. Your Love (previously unreleased song)

6. Barstool Blues (previously unreleased live version)

7. Welfare Mothers (previously unreleased live version)

8. Touch The Night (previously unreleased live version)

Disc 16: Road Of Plenty (1984-1986): Neil Young 

1. Drifter (previously released on Landing On Water)

2. Hippie Dream (previously released on Landing On Water)

3. Bad News Beat (previously released on Landing On Water)

4. People On The Street (previously released on Landing On Water)

5. Weight of the World (previously released on Landing On Water)

6. Pressure (previously released on Landing On Water)

7. Road of Plenty (previously unreleased song)

8. We Never Danced (previously unreleased original)

9. When Your Lonely Heart Breaks (previously unreleased original)

Disc 17: Summer Songs (1987): Neil Young 

1. Rap

2. American Dream (previously unreleased original)

3. Someday (previously unreleased original)

4. For The Love Of Man (previously unreleased original)

5. One Of These Days (previously unreleased original)

6. Wrecking Ball (previously unreleased original)

7. Hangin On A Limb (previously unreleased original)

8. Name Of Love (previously unreleased original)

9. Last Of His Kind (previously unreleased original)

10. Rap

Blu-Ray 1:

Across The Water

Blu-Ray 2:

Boarding House

Rust Never Sleeps

Blu-Ray 3:

Human Highway

Trans

Berlin

Blu-Ray 4:

Solo Trans

Catalyst

A Treasure

Blu-Ray 5:

In A Rusted Out Garage

Muddy Track

Takes (vinyl only) Tracklisting: 

Side A: 1.Hey Babe (previously unreleased version) (From: Snapshot In Time: Neil Young with Nicolette Larson & Linda Ronstadt)

2.Drive Back (previously unreleased live version) (From: Across The Water II: Neil Young & Crazy Horse)

3.Hitchhikin’ Judy (From: Hitchhikin’ Judy: Neil Young) 4.Let It Shine (previously unreleased live version) (From: Across The Water I: Neil Young & Crazy Horse)

Side B:

1. Sail Away (previously unreleased original) (From: Windward Passage: The Ducks)

2. Comes A Time (previously unreleased version) (From: Oceanside Countryside: Neil Young)

3. Lady Wingshot (previously unreleased song) (From: Union Hall: Neil Young & Nicolette Larson) 

4. Thrasher (previously unreleased live version) (From: Boarding House I: Neil Young)

Side C:

1. Hey Hey, My My, (Into The Black) (From: Boarding House II: Neil Young)

2. Bright Sunny Day (previously unreleased song) (From: Sedan Delivery: Neil Young with Crazy Horse)

3. Winter Winds (previously unreleased song) (From: Coastline: Neil Young)

4. If You Got Love (previously unreleased version) (From: Trans/Johnny’s Island: Neil Young)

Side D:

1. Razor Love  (From: Evolution: Neil Young)

2. This Old House (previously unreleased original) (From: Grey Riders: Neil Young and The International Harvesters)

3. Barstool Blues (previously unreleased live version) (From: Touch The Night: Neil Young with Crazy Horse)

4. Last Of His Kind (previously unreleased original) (From: Summer Songs: Neil Young)

Jimi Hendrix: a new documentary and deluxe box set are coming

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Electric Lady Studios: A Jimi Hendrix Vision – a new documentary and box set chronicling the creation of the New York recording studio and Hendrix’ work there – will be released on September 13, by Experience Hendrix L.L.C., in partnership with Legacy Recordings.

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

The deluxe box set contains 39 tracks (38 previously unreleased) that were recorded by the new-look Jimi Hendrix Experience (Billy Cox on bass, Mitch Mitchell on drums) at Electric Lady Studios between June and August of 1970.

The set also includes 20 newly created 5.1 surround sound mixes of the entire First Rays Of The New Rising Sun album plus three bonus tracks: “Valleys Of Neptune”, “Pali Gap” and “Lover Man”.

The Blu-ray includes the full-length documentary Electric Lady Studios: A Jimi Hendrix Vision, featuring interviews with Steve Winwood, Billy Cox and original Electric Lady staff members. The documentary includes never-before-seen footage. The package includes an extensive booklet filled with unpublished photos, Hendrix’s handwritten song drafts and comprehensive liner notes.

You can pre-order the set here, meanwhile all confirmed worldwide theatrical bookings for the film can be found here.

You can watch the new music video for “Angel [Take 7]” below.

And here’s a trailer for the documentary…

Hear Jane’s Addiction’s new track, “Imminent Redemption”

Jane’s Addiction have shared a new track, “Imminent Redemption“. It’s the first new music from the original line-up for 34 years. You can hear it below.

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Speaking on the new single, singer Perry Farrell, guitarist Dave Navarro, drummer Stephen Perkins and bassist Eric Avery said – “It is different this time. To have everyone back together, releasing new music. It’s time. Welcome to the next chapter of Jane’s Addiction. Imminent Redemption is only the beginning.”

The band released three records – 1987’s self-titled live album, 1988’s Nothing Shocking and 1990’s Ritual De Lo Habitual – before their initial break-up in 1991.

Hear new Pixies track, “Chicken”

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Pixies return with a new track, “Chicken“, which you can hear below.

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The track is taken from The Night The Zombies Came – their first new music since 2022’s Doggerel – which is released on October 25 via BMG.

The Night The Zombies Came features new bass player Emma Richardson (Band Of Skulls) and has been produced by Tom Dalgety, who’s worked on the band’s since 2016’s Head Carrier.

The tracklisting for The Night the Zombies Came is…

Primrose

You’re So Impatient

Jane (The Night the Zombies Came)

Chicken

Hypnotised

Johnny Good Man

Motoroller

I Hear You Mary

Oyster Beds

Mercy Me

Ernest Evans

Kings of the Prairie

The Vegas Suite

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Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion (reissue, 2009)

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The place: New York City. The date: January 2001. In the financial district, the Twin Towers stand tall. Somewhere in town, a band of young hopefuls calling themselves The Strokes are preparing to release their debut EP “The Modern Age”. But tonight, your Uncut correspondent is at the Mercury Lounge in Manhattan, watching a bill of local underground up-and-comers. Later, the Moldy Peaches will reduce the crowd to hysterics with their wry hipster folk. But first up is a duo going by the name of Avey Tare and Panda Bear. The pair dart around the floor, triggering electronics, bashing away at percussion and singing in strange, otherworldly cries. It’s a captivating performance, teeming with ideas. But right now, at least, it feels way out of step with the zeitgeist: a glimpse of something strange going on way out at the margins.

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What a difference eight years makes. As 2009 dawns, Avey Tare and Panda Bear – real names Dave Portner and Noah Lennox – and their friend Brian Weitz, aka Geologist, are most talked-about band in indie rock. This is thanks to their eighth album under the name Animal Collective, Merriweather Post Pavilion – 12 tracks of bright neo-psychedelia threading together dub and African rhythms, soaring Beach Boys harmonies and shimmering rave, housed in a bright leaf-covered sleeve drawing employing the Japanese psychologist Akiyoshi Kitaoka’s concept of illusory motion. The album debuts at No 13 on the Billboard 200 a couple of places below Mariah Carey, which is unusual enough. But perhaps even more surprising is that its momentum seems to build and build throughout the year. There are late-night TV appearances, rapturously received performances at Glastonbury, Sonar and Lollapalooza, and critical acclaim from all quarters – including from Uncut, whose critics vote Merriweather… the best album of 2009.

Did Animal Collective change to get here? Undoubtedly, but it was an evolution, rather than a full-on metamorphosis. What’s striking is that the wider world, it seemed, had now tuned into their wavelength. The preceding years of the noughties had seen the rise of ‘landfill indie’ – a string of bands taking the formula set down by The Strokes and diluting it into something increasingly tired and generic. It had also seen the explosion of peer-to-peer filesharing and the rise of MP3 blogs, breeding a new generation of open-minded and omnivorous listeners. This was the landscape that “Brother Sport” dropped into when it leaked online in November 2008. A euphoric swirl of technicolour electronics, carnival drums and vocal harmonies that tumbled over one another like a troupe of circus gymnasts, it felt both more accessible than anything they’d done before, and crammed with possibilities: a yellow brick road leading somewhere new.

If Merriweather… felt surprising on its release, it still has the capacity to surprise 15 years on. The band had been workshopping its songs live for over a year when they entered Mississippi’s Sweet Tea studio in early 2008, further refining an electronic, sample-based sound that Lennox had debuted on his 2007 solo album as Panda Bear, Person Pitch. The album still sounds distinctive, occupying as it does a strange and vivid soundworld. Much of it has a sharp, shimmering quality – listen to a song like the opening ticker-tape explosion “In The Flowers” and it’s all up in the higher registers. But “Lion In A Coma” and “Guys Eyes” come with a low-end thump that, played on a good system, hit you right in the chest – a quality enhanced by the album’s co-producer Ben Allen, an Atlanta recording engineer who had honed his craft on records by Notorious BIG and Cee-Lo Green.

The other thing that strikes you about Merriweather… is the warmth of sentiment running through it. Lennox really finds his voice here – a clear and plaintive cry, which he multitracks into harmonies recalling The Beach Boys at their most wistful and reflective. He and Portner also come with songs that, either by accident or design, seamed to speak to the current generational moment. Merriweather… landed amid an unfolding global financial crisis that saw millennials facing a bleak future of limited job prospects and withering opportunities. In this context, the carefree romance of “Summertime Clothes” or Lennox’s “My Girls” – a rejection of material wealth and social status that longed only for “four walls and adobe slats for my girls” – felt like a balm.

Like so many surprise hits from the indie underground, Merriweather Post Pavilion made Animal Collective reluctant stars. It brought a lot of new listeners into the tent, not all of whom ultimately vibed with the group’s more bristly, experimental qualities. Over releases like 2010’s “visual album” ODDSAC and 2012’s Centipede HZ – both made with returning member Josh Dibb, aka Deakin, back in the fold – they got more awkward and feral again, gradually retreating to a more comfortable spot on the margins. But the success of Merriweather… left a mark. Its breadth of influence and adventurous sonic signature changed the culture, opening a portal through which a wider cohort of adventurous experimental groups – the likes of Deerhunter and Tuneyards, Dirty Projectors and Gang Gang Dance – would scurry into the mainstream. And it changed indie rock forever, into something wilder, braver, weirder. Fifteen years on, the reverberations are still being felt.

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Jake Xerxes Fussell – When I’m Called

Every Wednesday afternoon, Jake Xerxes Fussell hosts a radio show with his pal Jefferson Currie II on WHUP FM, a community station in Hillsborough, North Carolina. They play songs from far and wide – a recent episode moved quite naturally from Bob Dylan’s “Hearts Of Fire” to Nigerian soul music to Swedish fiddle to June Tabor singing “Pork Pie Hat” – but they have a particular passion for songs of the American south, interpreted in the most expansive sense. Though they are both learned students of American folklore, they’re at pains to distance themselves from hidebound notions of authenticity and antiquity. “As much as we cherish our pre-war blues 78s and old-time fiddle tunes,” they insist, “we also love hip-hop, bounce, banda and norteña.”

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The title of the show, Fall Line Radio, is taken from a geological term for those areas where piedmont highlands meets the coastal plains (Jefferson has a day job in conservation as riverkeeper of the Lumber River). Fall lines are marked by rapids and waterfalls, powering mills and hydro-electrics power plants. They traditionally mark the limits of upstream travel, and they’re the place where different flora, fauna and cultures meet. “We’re intrigued by junctions of such seemingly incongruous elements and the wonderful, endless alluvium to which they give rise,” the pair note wryly, as though adjusting mock-professorial spectacles.

Over the past decade, Jake Xerxes Fussell has been patiently, diligently and beautifully charting his own particular fall line through American folk musics. Fussellania, if we might give a name to the territory, is rooted in Georgia’s Chattahoochee Valley where he grew up, the son of folklorists himself, but it expands wildly across borders of time and space, from Florida fishmongers to Irish rovers, from the North Carolina mills to the Mexico hills, from ancient highland ballads to singing schoolteachers from the Ozarks.

But the alluvium has never been quite so rich and strange as it on his fifth album, his first for Fat Possum, When I’m Called. It’s a record that begins way out on the west coast, with a lonesome but determined painter saddling up his pony, cantering right across the country to East 47th Street, Manhattan, and showing up like Jon Voight in Midnight Cowboy to bring Andy Warhol the news that there’s a new art sheriff in town.

The title track, meanwhile, adapted from lines found in a discarded schoolbook at the side of a Californian highway (“I will answer when I’m called / I will not breakdance in the hall / I will not laugh when the teacher calls my name”), is an eerie folk song that might be sung by Bart Simpson if he grew up to be the last of the high plains drifters.

Elsewhere, the album travels back in time to the Prestatyn classroom where Benjamin Britten composed “Cuckoo!” for schoolboys’ singing classes in the 1930s, back deeper into the dark green forest of English song with the traditional “Who Killed Poor Robin”, up to Milngavie to meet a couple of 18th century wastrels who prefer the alehouse to the job market, out to Alabama where “the water tastes like cherry wine”, and venturing even as far as Ilo, Peru on the sea shanty “Gone To Hilo”, before eventually touching down back home in Georgia.

That’s to say, there’s a new liberty and licence to Fussell’s musical freewheeling, but also a sense of longing for home after long nights roaming the highways and byways of song. Since his last record, 2022’s lush yet forlorn Good And Green Again, Fussell has become a father. As a result, there are dreamy flights of lullaby to some of the tunes here – the skylarking string arrangement on “Cuckoo”, the murder mystery of “Poor Robin” – as though he’s gently inducting a third generation of Fussells into the lore and mystery of the great traditional songbook. But there’s also a rueful reckoning with the temptations of the road (both “One Morning In May” and the closing “Going To Georgia” warn young maidens to “never place your affections on a green, growing tree”), and a sense of regret that professional obsessions can end up taking you far from the family home.

When I’m Called is the second album Fussell has made with James Elkington, the English home counties fingerpicker who has somehow, through his work with Wilco, Steve Gunn, Nathan Salsburg and Joan Shelley, established himself as a linchpin of modern Americana. If those early albums had a raggedy wildness to them, rowdy with the smell of pork and beans, the clang of the shipyards and the blare of the marketplace, on Good And Green Again Elkington brought a verdant, dappled orchestration to Fussell’s songworld. It’s like the polar opposite of field recording – these battered, barnacled, ancient songs ascending from the soil, river and rails to some lambent, reverbed Daniel Lanois dream realm.

On When I’m Called, the contrast is even more pronounced. Album opener “Andy” was composed by Gerald “The Maestro” Gaxiola, the aircraft mechanic who reinvented himself as the Bay Area’s answer to Vincent Van Gogh, a sharp-shooting outsider artist in rhinestone. Listen to the original, on the Maestro’s 1986 cassette Go’n To New York, and the Bontempi rhythms suggest a kind of jaunty, downhome John Shuttleworth auditioning for Canned Heat. Fussell’s stately fingerpicking interpretation renders it sadder and spookier; the line “You can tell Andy Warhol the ghost rider’s on his way” sounds ominous rather than funny.

The version of “Cuckoo” that follows is sublime, with Fussell’s plainspoken baritone gilded with Joan Shelley’s harmonies, his fingerpicking augmented by piano, horns and strings. There’s a curatorial genius in placing an off-kilter maverick like the Maestro next to the lionised establishment genius of Britten, but the question lingers, does introducing them to each other within the frame of a single album cause new sparks to fly, or simply gloss over what makes them distinctive, flatten out their differences into a kind of mellow tastefulness? Is Fussell the musical equivalent of one of those publishing imprints like NYRB Classics that reprints neglected, out-of-print volumes in handsome but uniform new editions?

In practice, it’s hard to quibble with such a gorgeous, deeply felt record. While Good And Green Again was distinguished by a trio of Fussell instrumentals, strictly speaking there are no originals this time around. But “When I’m Called” is the boldest in its interpretation, and perhaps tellingly the most compelling track here. It’s a very free adaptation of the venerable old folk blues “Long Lonesome Road”, so free that the playing sails off, unmoored from the anchor of song into a kind of enchanted reverie, woodwind rising like mist from a river, Elkington’s lead guitar sparking like the first scintillating rays of sun. The first verse of schoolboy penitence, the inexplicably touching detail of breakdancing in the hall, melts into the old chorus – “Look up, look down that long, lonesome road / Hang down your head and cry…” – and manages to compress an entire lifetime, its youthful mischief soured into midlife regret.

The miraculous, heartbreaking conjunction of found text and ancient lament, forged together in the alchemy of Elkington’s production, feels the most perfect realisation yet of Fussell’s project: tradition sparked back to life by unexpected everyday encounters. There’s magic and mystery still to be divined in those fall line currents, down amidst the detritus and the alluvium. At moments like this, Jake Xerxes Fussell remains our finest musical mudlarker.

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Watch the first trailer for the Bob Dylan biopic, A Complete Unknown

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A teaser trailer has been released for James Mangold‘s upcoming Bob Dylan biopic, A Complete Unknown.

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The film stars Timothée Chalamet as Dylan – here’s some blurb about it.

Set in the influential New York music scene of the early 60s, A COMPLETE UNKNOWN follows 19-year-old Minnesota musician BOB DYLAN’s (Timothée Chalamet) meteoric rise as a folk singer to concert halls and the top of the charts – his songs and mystique becoming a worldwide sensation – culminating in his groundbreaking electric rock and roll performance at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965.

A Complete Unknown opens in the UK and Ireland in January 2025.

Uncut readers will, of course, remember Todd HaynesI’m Not There, which Uncut described as “an audaciously prismatic portrait of Dylan wholly as contrary, confrontational, playful, provocative, unpredictable, enigmatic, allusive and often just as downright funny as its subject.”

John Mayall has died aged 90

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John Mayall, the pioneering Blues musician, has died aged 90.

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Mayall came to prominence in the ’60s with his band, the Bluesbreakers, which acted as a finishing school for the future stars of the British blues boom – including Mick Fleetwood, John McVie, Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce and Mick Taylor.

A statement on Mayall’s Instagram page announced that the musician died on Monday at his home in California. “It is with heavy hearts that we bear the news that John Mayall passed away peacefully in his California home yesterday, July 22, 2024, surrounded by his loving family. Health issues that forced John to end his epic touring career have finally led to peace for one of this world’s greatest road warriors. John Mayall gave us ninety years of tireless efforts to educate, inspire and entertain.”

Born in Macclesfield in 1933, he discovered jazz and blues through his father’s record collection. After spending three years in Korea for his National Service, Mayall studied at art college, working as a graphic designer before turning professional musician in 1963.

As part of the emerging London blues scene, encouraged by Alexis Corner and Cyril Davis, he played with the Powerhouse Four before forming the Bluesbreakers in 1963.

“There was a lot of driving,” Mayall told Uncut in 2017. “If it was within reach, we’d play it. You’d do a Friday night gig at the Flamingo, a Saturday early show, a Saturday late-night show. We’d rack up eight or nine shows a week. It was a lot of hard work, mostly just get in the van and drive to where we’re playing. But the reward comes once you get onstage and start playing.”

Famously, the Bluebreakers provided opportunities for future stars. “Everybody was given total freedom in my bands and that’s one of the things that attracts musicians to me,” he told us. “So if someone leaves, it is no big deal, it’s a natural process, and you get someone else.”

Mayall moved to California at the end of the 1960s, where he moved away from straight blues towards acoustic music and then into jazz and funk as the ’70s progressed.

He broke-up and then reformed the Bluesbreakers, releasing over 50 albums in a career spanning seven decades and continuing to tour. When Uncut spoke to Mayall, who was then 83, he was still playing 100 shows a year around the world.

“You get up onstage and you play,” he told us. “Is there much room to improvise? Yeah, of course. That’s the blues.”

Jack White – No Name

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Even before he formed Third Man Records, Jack White had perfected the art of the guerilla record drop – he once hid a bunch of seven inches inside re-upholstered sofas. But he’ll have to go some way to top the release strategy for his surprise sixth album – his first new music since 2022’s Fear Of The Dawn and Entering Heaven Alive. An anonymous white label, No Name was given away free with any purchase at White’s Third Man stores on Friday while a very limited number of copies were also sent to customers at random in the mail. Its mysterious grooves contained 14 tracks of raw, fresh, fierce garage blues – seven on each side. There were no official song titles, no hint at the artist – but there was no doubt that this was the work of Jack White himself.

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Although the opening song, a menacing “Killing Floor” style blues, includes the tongue-in-cheek line that “nothing is this world is free”, customers who got a copy of No Name were encouraged by Third Man to “rip it” and the album is now freely available on You Tube. Any thoughts that this might be a gimmick are dispelled before the end of the first side, with the psych rattle of “Side One, Track Six”. By the time you reach the majestic “Side Two, Track Five”, with cool Hammond and an amazing R&B Graham Bond Organisation groove, it’s clear that this is one of the best albums of the year.

No Name has some of White’s most memorable riffs since Blunderbuss and is his most red-blooded rock record since Elephant. White has released great solo records since then and his live shows are a blast, but he’s never sounded quite as unshackled and delirious as he does here, pounding out the sort of wild garage blues that made his name. “I’m on a mission baby,” he roars on “Side Two, Track Six” – and suddenly it’s 2001 all over again.

As well as referencing his beloved number seven on the brilliant “Side One, Track Five”, a song that manages to combine spoken word, Sabbath, Hendrix and Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, White has rifled through the White Stripes equipment warehouse. Here are some of the greatest guitar sounds heard on any record in 2024, from the new wave solo of “Side One, Track Two”, the frantic Cream-style riffs of “Side One, Track Four” and the distorted slide guitar of “Side Two, Track Two”.

Several tracks have a hard rock feel. “Side Two, Track One”, which starts like Dr Feelgood before building into a speaker-thrashing AC/DC-inspired crescendo, or the Miller’s Crossing-referencing “Side One, Track Seven”. Led Zeppelin are a major reference point, but always filtered through a punk-garage lens. The closing number, “Side Two, Track Seven”, sees White and his band (perhaps Dominic Davis on bass and Daru Jones on drums?) explore “Kashmir”-style Zep territory, while dogs howl and bark, enjoying the show. Like all great artists, White has a fear of repetition, but looking back doesn’t have to mean regression. On No Name, he’s done something special on his own terms, delighted and surprised his audience, and provided one of the great rock moments of the year.

Watch the video for Brian Eno’s “Stiff”

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To coincide with the release of the Official Soundtrack to Gary Hustwit’s generative film Eno, a new video has been released for the track “Stiff“, made from footage newly unearthed during the making of the documentary.

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Watch the video below.

“Stiff” was originally included on the Eno album My Squelchy Life, which was due for release in 1991, but never saw the light of day in 2015.

The vinyl edition of the Official Soundtrack album comes as 2LP recycled black vinyl and 2LP pink & white vinyl (only available from Eno’s website), and a 73-minute long CD with an illustrated 16 page booklet.

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Toumani Diabaté – Album By Album

As tribute to Toumani Diabaté, who has died aged 58 following a short illness, here’s our Album By Album interview with the Malian kora master from Uncut’s February 2011 issue [Take 165].

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Born into the griot bloodline of West African storytellers and poets, Toumani Diabaté is the 71st generation in his family to play the kora, the 21-string harp with which he creates a dazzling kaleidoscope of musical colours. The Malian is a man of many parts. A Goodwill ambassador for the UN and a bosom buddy of Damon Albarn, he has collaborated with everyone from Bjork to Herbie Hancock, and is as comfortable playing ATP as WOMAD. “There is too much misunderstanding between people, between nations and cultures,” he says. “We need to come together and play together.” Delving into the highlights of his remarkable career, it’s clear he puts his music where his mouth is.

TOUMANI DIABATÉ

Kaira

HANNIBAL, 1988. PRODUCED BY LUCY DURAN

Diabaté makes an immediate impression with his first album, a haunting collection of solo kora improvisations recorded in London in a couple of hours when he is just 22.

Kaira is the name of the movement that took care of our culture when the French came to colonise Mali. My mum and dad walked around playing our music, from town to town. My father Sidiki was the king of the kora and his technique was putting the three functions together: bass line, melody and improvisation. When you listen it’s like three men playing at the same time, and I learned the kora that way. So Kaira was saying, “Here is my style and my family’s kora style.” It was like my ID card: “OK, this is the Toumani passport for the Malian style on the kora.” I did it for Joe Boyd at Hannibal Records. He dropped me off at Firehouse studio and went to get something to eat for me. It was a lovely autumn day in London, and before he came back I’d recorded these five songs. To me that was only the beginning of the album. I wanted to overdub, but Joe came back with the food and said, “No, no, it’s finished.” I was frustrated, I didn’t understand – let me play! But he said he loved it like this. It was done in one take, no overdubbing. He had rented the studio for three days, but in two and a half hours the record was done. I wasn’t happy that day, but later on I understood he was right.

TOUMANI DIABATÉ

Djelika

HANNIBAL, 1995. PRODUCED BY LUCY DURAN, JOE BOYD

Named after his daughter, on Djelika Diabaté collaborates with veteran balaphonist Keletigui Diabaté and young ngoni player, Basekou Kouyate, as well as two bass players: the legendary Danny Thompson and Javier Colina from Ketama, the Spanish flamenco band who worked with him on Songhai I and II. The results are rich, inventive and playful.

It was like: “On Kaira you’ve listened to Toumani solo with the kora, now you’re going to listen to the kora in the middle of all the traditional Malian instruments.” Ngoni and balaphone are all very important to the griot sound. What we play isn’t written. It’s not like orchestral music, and people don’t always understand that. It’s natural and fresh, but at the same time it’s very old and talks about our history from 700 years ago. It’s older than Mozart, older than Bach. We’ve been listening to it for a long, long time! We started this album in December 1993 in London at the BBC Maida Vale studios and finished in Brussels. It was all recorded live. Danny Thompson and Javier from Ketama played double bass, just to have two different styles on the record. Javier is from a flamenco gypsy family, and Danny is totally different, he’s a jazz-blues musician. I wanted that mix. Danny and me, we had a very good time together! We have a great admiration. When Danny plays I love it, and he loves my music. We had a deep connection between us, like father and son.

TOUMANI DIABATÉ AND BALLAKÉ SISSOKO

New Ancient Strings

HANNIBAL, 1999. PRODUCED BY LUCY DURAN  

In 1970, two of Mali’s greatest exponents of the kora – Toumani’s father Sidiki Diabaté and his friend Djelimadi Sissoko – made the landmark Ancient Strings album. Nearly 30 years later, the sons of both men unite to play the same songs in a series of magical new improvisations.

I wanted to record a duo kora album. I need to thank [producer, ethnomusicologist and Radio 3 presenter] Lucy Duran. She gave me lots of good ideas about my job, and she brought this idea to me to make an album of ‘new’ Ancient Strings, although she didn’t suggest doing it with Ballaké. My father and Ballaké’s father were always playing together, and when I asked my mum who could I play with, she said, “Call Ballaké.” It was recorded in Mali with Lucy and engineer Nick Parker. Finally, we decided to record in the marble hall of the Palais de Congres in Bamako, a very grand building. It was late in the night [of September 22, 1997], and in two hours the record was done. No rehearsing or anything. Lucy and Nick were there for two weeks, but it was done in a night so they had a holiday! I come from a Muslim family, and all of these improvisations are God willing. The kora is about divine inspiration coming to us. When I play the divine inspiration comes through my body and goes through to the strings. It can be fast or slow, but I’m lucky – always the inspiration seems to come fast.

TOUMANI DIABATÉ WITH DAMON ALBARN, KO KO KAN SO SATA DOUMBIA, AFEL BOCOUM & FRIENDS

Mali Music

HONEST JON’S, 2002. PRODUCED BY DAMON ALBARN

This spirited, experimental and heartfelt meeting between Mali and the West is based on recordings made by Albarn on an Oxfam-organised trip in 2001, travelling around the country armed with a melodica and a DAT tape. Modern textures are later overdubbed back in London.

Oxfam called me and advised me about Damon’s visit. I really didn’t know him before, but they told me he was a great British superstar and they wanted me to take care of this project, talk to Damon and introduce him to different musicians, show him around. He came with lots of media people, but he was great. Our song “4am At Toumani’s” was like a joke. He came to my place late at night and we drank lots of tea, Damon played his melodica and I took a kora. In my family we build the kora. This was a new one, it wasn’t really finished, and it wasn’t really in tune. I didn’t know our jam was being recorded for release or I would have done it with more seriousness. One year later Damon called me and said, “OK, the record is going to be released.” I was in Sydney, and I asked him to send it. I listened to it and I wanted to do it properly, but he thought it was good like that. So, no problem! I respect Damon. He’s my brother. He’s the only one in all UK who really connected with Malian music, and he’s tried to do some positive things for the musicians and Mali.

TOUMANI DIABATÉ AND ALI FARKA TOURÉ

In The Heart of the Moon

WORLD CIRCUIT, 2005. PRODUCED BY NICK GOLD

A ground-breaking collaboration between Diabaté and one of Africa’s most celebrated musicians, killer guitarist Ali Farka Touré. Ry Cooder adds the occasional lick, but the real joy lies in hearing these two musicians from opposite ends of Mali’s cultural spectrum conversing through their music. Won the 2006 Grammy for Best Traditional World Music Album.

I was the first Malian musician to come and live in the UK. I was living at Lucy Duran’s house in Camden Town and Lucy was always inviting people for dinner. I got a chance to meet a lot of friends, including people from the BBC and Anne Hunt [from the World Circuit record label]. Anne decided to come to Mali to meet Ali. He was a friend of my father’s, they worked together at the national radio in Mali although they didn’t play music together. To help Anne, I went back to Mali and put them together, and then Ali came to England. He wanted to record one song with me, so we went to the studio. When we played that song together the idea of doing a full album came from Nick Gold [founder and producer at World Circuit].

We recorded the entire album in Mali in two or three days at the Hotel Mandé. Very quick, very nice, relaxed. Everything was clear, simple, easy. I’ve had a chance to play with a lot of musicians in my life, but playing with Ali Farka Touré was something different. It was the first meeting between musicians from the north of Mali, where he was from, and the south. Ali was not a griot, and I am, and the music from the griot people is very old music. Ali was from a different background: different concepts, different tradition of musicians. He is a unique voice from his mountain, and Toumani is a unique voice from his mountain. I never thought that he could play griot, but he was so intelligent. He knew a lot about music in Mali. I still remember the respect that he brought to me, and he loved my kora playing style.

Ali never, ever practised. He wanted to keep the natural things in the music, and I’m the same. I like to play in a soft way, ready to give and ready to learn. That’s what I’m always doing. It’s not from the head, it’s from the heart. To produce that kind of great music you need to have a good soul. Ali had that. When you met him for the first time, you felt like you met him 20 years ago. That love we had for each other and the people is what Mali is like. It’s the tradition and the culture here. The ambience in the music, the feeling coming from it, you can feel that. And it won the Grammy, which was great!

TOUMANI DIABATÉ AND THE SYMMETRIC ORCHESTRA

Boulevard De L’Independence

WORLD CIRCUIT, 2006. PRODUCED BY NICK GOLD

The culmination of a decade of weekly jam sessions held at Diabaté’s Hogon club in Bamako, featuring a mighty 50-piece big band hailing from all over west Africa. A riot of horns, percussion, strings and the blinding vocal power of Kasse Mady Diabaté, the album covers everything from Senegalese salsa to old Mandé empire tunes, tied together by Diabaté’s kora.

In the 80s I started building this band to rebuild Manden Empire in a cultural way, to play at different ceremonies in Mali, especially at the President’s Palace. The musicians are all from west African Manden countries. I took the best from Senegal, Ghana, Guinea, Burkina Faso, Mauretania, and I put them all together. When I was in Mali every Friday night I would play with them at my club Hogon. It was great. Playing with them is like a laboratory! We prepared all the songs for the record like that and recorded them at the Hotel Mandé. The kora is in the middle of the project, it gets shared with the band. So, for example, the bass player plays the kora bass line. It’s a meeting between old and modern. My dream is to keep this band. Computers can do the job of 40 musicians in the studio, but they don’t have any emotion. When the bass player or drummer is happy he can give you a new song; the computer can’t do that. So it was dream to do this. It’s not easy, but it’s great when you see them all together.

TOUMANI DIABATÉ

Mandé Variations

WORLD CIRCUIT, 2008. PRODUCED BY NICK GOLD

Diabaté returns after two decades to the haunting solo acoustic kora sounds of his first album. A mixture of visionary interpretations of classic themes and new improvisations, the results are simply sublime.

It was to get back to Kaira with 20 years worth of experience, playing with different musicians and doing my kora style. I get a lot of fans playing with Bjork, with Damon, with Taj Mahal, with Ketama, with Danny Thompson, but sometimes people might think: “This man has forgotten where he comes from.” So I go back to solo kora. It’s really a very emotional album, but very quick, recorded in Livingston studios with Nick Gold and [engineer] Jerry Boys. It was only me, so there wasn’t much to do. It’s an education for Western people to know how far the kora can go. When you say “African music” in western countries they think about percussion and dance, they don’t understand that there’s more to learn than this. We have everything: we have classical, we have music from different traditions. Western people don’t really know about variations. The song “Jarabi” is also on Kaira. Listen to both and you can hear exactly what level I went to with the variation. Two songs – “El Nabiyouna” and “Ali Farka Touré” – I just tuned the kora and played. Just played, one time – ping, that’s it. I wanted to keep this idea and this instinct, to keep everything fresh. To compose and record it right away. It’s not easy to do that.

TOUMANI DIABATÉ AND ALI FARKA TOURÉ

Ali & Toumani

WORLD CIRCUIT, 2010. PRODUCED BY NICK GOLD

Recorded in London over three days in 2005, just a few months before Farka Touré succumbed to bone cancer in March 2006 at the age of 66. This poignant context only makes the spellbinding music all the more powerful.

After the success of the first one I talked to Nick Gold, without telling Ali, and said I wanted to record more with Ali Farka Touré. Ali was suffering with his health. He was sick and it was difficult sometimes. We had to stop the recording when he was in pain, but he wanted to continue. I remember one thing: he was always laughing, and when we asked him, “Are you all right?”, he’d say: “Yes, Toumani, I’m OK!” He never complained. He didn’t want people to feel he wasn’t happy, he was always in the middle of things. I will never forget that. He was always happy to play with me, you know. And I’m very, very happy today that Ali and me had a chance – thank God – to record together for the world. Ali & Toumani is like a book. It’s an education about music, about tradition, about a culture. I think the world needs that today. When you listen to this music you can learn the past, you can learn the present, and you can learn the future also. I prefer it more than the first one. We had more time, it wasn’t recorded in a hurry, and the sound and the idea is clearer than the first.

AFROCUBISM

AfroCubism

WORLD CIRCUIT, 2010. PRODUCED BY NICK GOLD

Originally intended to take place in 1994 but scuppered when the Malian contingent never arrived, this beautiful collaboration between members of Cuba’s Buena Vista Social Club and many of Mali’s most revered musicians finally took place in 2009 in Madrid.

When I play with other musicians, I don’t play their music. I play my music. And I don’t let them play my music! I say, “Play your music and I’ll play mine.” We put it together and it becomes a new music, from the heart. So on this record we didn’t play Cuban music and they didn’t play Malian music. We just played and put it together, and now it’s new music called AfroCubism. There’s no direct connection between Mali and Cuba, but one thing is true: although they are both very poor countries financially, they are number one culturally, which is very important. The only problem is that we couldn’t communicate. The Cubans didn’t speak French or English, and the Malians don’t speak Spanish, but music creates it’s own language. The G, the A, the C on the guitar is the same in Cuba as it is in Mali, the same in Senegal, South Africa and Japan. You don’t need to speak English to play with Ali Farka Touré. Toumani didn’t need to speak English to play with Bjork. I don’t need to speak American to play with Herbie Hancock or Damon Albarn. With the Cubans, away from the music there was no real communication: just “Hi! Hola! Bien!” That’s all we could say, but we still made this fabulous record together.

Exclusive! Inside a new collection of unreleased Arthur Lee songs: “The music covers his wide-ranging taste and adeptness…”

Exclusive! High Moon Records boss George Wallace on a tantalising new collection of unreleased Love songs

GEORGE WALLACE: “This unprecedented collection of Arthur Lee/Love recordings were made during the last 15 years of his life – from 1990 until Arthur’s final studio recording, in the summer of 2005. In a Memphis hospital in 2006, after a long battle against leukaemia, Arthur gave his wife, Diane, two CDs he’d compiled and asked her if she would oversee the release of the songs after he was gone. Arthur Lee Is Love Just To Remind You is comprised of the songs that Arthur put on the CDs.

“Sourced from Arthur’s trove of tapes, the music covers his wide-ranging taste and adeptness, from Forever Changes-style, haunting strings and brass-adorned productions, to Arthur at the piano, playing Ray Charles-inspired licks and singing with glorious, soulful abandon.

READ THE MAKING OF LOVE’S “SHE COMES IN COLORS” HERE

Baby Lemonade, who Arthur anointed as his ‘new Love’ in 1993, contribute their stellar musicianship to half of the album’s tracks. Earlier this year, in March, we booked the current band, led by Johnny Echols, into LA’s Sunset Sound, Studio A – the very same studio where Love recorded their first three albums – to record a final instrumental track for one of the songs on the CDs that Arthur gave to Diane. Joe Blocker, who played drums with Love in the mid-’70s, and was a lifelong friend of Arthur’s, was brought in to produce this unconventional session. The band was recording live to an Arthur vocal track (recorded the year before they joined up with him) and a lovely orchestral arrangement created by David Angel, who arranged and orchestrated Forever Changes. The session marked the 60th anniversary of Arthur and Johnny’s first studio collaboration: Arthur Lee and The L.A.G’s single, ‘The Ninth Wave’ b/w ‘Rumble-Still-Skins’, on Capitol Records.”

Hear “Five String Serenade” from Arthur Lee Is Love Just To Remind You below…

High Moon Records will release Arthur Lee Is Love Just To Remind You

Hear Gillian Welch and David Rawlings new track, “Empty Trainload Of Sky”

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Gillian Welch and David Rawlings are releasing a new album, Woodland, on their own Acony Records label on August 23.

You can hear “Empty Trainload Of Sky” from the album below.

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

Woodland was named for and recorded at Welch and Rawlings’ own Woodland Sound Studios in Nashville, TN. Of the album and studio and studio, Welch and Rawlings said, “Woodland is at the heart of everything we do, and has been for the last twenty some years. The past four years were spent almost entirely within its walls, bringing it back to life after the 2020 tornado and making this record. The music is (songs are) a swirl of contradictions, emptiness, fullness, joy, grief, destruction, permanence. Now.”

The album is available to pre-order here.

The tracklisting for Woodland is:


Empty Trainload Of Sky

What We Had

Lawman

The Bells And The Birds

North Country

Hashtag

The Day The Mississippi Died

Turf The Gambler

Here Stands A Woman

Howdy Howdy

Suede / Manic Street Preachers – Alexandra Park, London, July 18

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“I am a selection of dismantled almosts” reads the Anne Sexton quote emblazoned across screens erected in a glade beneath the imposing frontage of Alexandra Palace as Manic Street Preachers take the stage, exposing perhaps one of the unspoken stigmas of the co-headline tour. As much as they can be blockbuster money-spinners – Elton duelling pianos with Billy Joel; Jay-Z and Beyoncé cashing in on the world’s most famous marriage – they can also act as a means to muster joint fanbases for acts that only scraped the stadium league by themselves.

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

Nothing feels “almost” about the Manics and Suede’s joint tour, mind. Both of these iconic ’90s bands – swapping the headline spot and playing a tight 75 minutes apiece – are back in the ascendent. The Welsh rock insurrectionists bagged their first UK No 1 album since 1998 with 2021’s The Ultra Vivid Lament, while London’s suave indie sleaze originators are riding high on acclaim for 2022’s raw-edged Autofiction album. This joint tour, begun in North America in 2022 and revived for the UK this summer, is no Britpop cash-in charabanc – both bands would balk at the tag anyway. It’s simply an uncynical celebration of some of the most euphoric and exciting music the ’90s ever produced.

It feels bizarre to hear era-defining showstoppers like “You Love Us”, “Everything Must Go” and “Motorcycle Emptiness” knocked out in quick succession not long past seven o’clock. But such is the hit-heavy nature of such occasions. Recent Manics albums have ventured into chamber rock grace (2013’s Rewind The Film) and grief-stricken bombast (The Ultra Vivid Lament) but, drawing the first-on straw, they swerve such indulgences to go in two-footed on their formidable singles catalogue.

It’s difficult to imagine a finer, better-balanced Manics set. Their glory punk early era (“From Despair To Where”, “Little Baby Nothing” with a pink-clad The Anchoress taking Traci Lords’ defiant part) merges masterfully with the mid-period grandeur of “A Design For Life” and “No Surface All Feeling”, adorned with a snippet of Smashing Pumpkins‘ “Today” as if in honour of another recent alt-rock double header, Pumpkins versus Weezer.

When they dip into relative rarity, it’s only to pluck out refined treats: the sumptuous glide rock of “This Is Yesterday” or the polka-infused “Walk Me To The Bridge”. They’re battling a soundsystem so weedy it makes All Points East sound like AC/DC, rendering “Orwellian” and “To Repel Ghosts” airy, incorporeal affairs. But with Nicky Wire glamorously high-kicking his way through “Your Love Alone Is Not Enough” and James Dean Bradfield spinning on the spot through his quicksilver solos, they’re a god-tier band at any volume.

“Enjoy Suede, they’re gonna give you hell,” declares a departing Bradfield. And they do. Bold behind their readjusted critical armours, Brett Anderson’s black-clad rock Baudelaires open with the adrenalised noir of Autofiction track “Turn Off Your Brain And Yell” and chance several more of the record’s motorik rock moments in “Shadow Self” and “She Still Leads Me On”, a roaring tribute to Anderson’s late mother.

“We Are The Pigs” gets a new metal intro and they even dare a brand-new track, Anderson adopting a Lydon snarl for the punkish “Antidepressants”. But every corner of their music, draped with Anderson’s salacious melodies and Richard Oakes’ cumulonimbus atmospheres, is inherently magnificent, and Anderson has aged into a transfixing onstage beast.

He’s never been more Bowie than when straddling “New Generation” tonight, more celebratory than during a full-throated “Trash” or leaping into the crowd for “The Drowners”, or more heartfelt than when spilling gigantic torch songs like “Still Life”, “The Wild Ones” and “Saturday Night” down the hill to encompass all the seedy romances of North London. A life-affirming night.

Suede setlist
Turn Off Your Brain And Yell
Trash
Animal Nitrate
The Drowners
We Are The Pigs
The Only Way I Can Love You
Still Life
New Generation
Filmstar
Antidepressants
Saturday Night
She Still Leads Me On
Shadow Self
The Wild Ones
So Young
Metal Mickey
Beautiful Ones

Manic Street Preachers setlist
You Love Us
Everything Must Go
Motorcycle Emptiness
This Is Yesterday
You Stole The Sun From My Heart
To Repel Ghosts
Little Baby Nothing
Your Love Alone Is Not Enough
Elvis Impersonator: Blackpool Pier
A Design For Life
La Tristesse Durera (Scream To A Sigh)
Walk Me To The Bridge
Kevin Carter
Orwellian
From Despair To Where
No Surface All Feeling
If You Tolerate This Your Children Will Be Next

Cindy Lee – Diamond Jubilee

Retaining mystery in the digital age is a difficult thing. And even more difficult in this time of over-saturation is releasing a record through entirely unconventional means and having it make a dent, let alone a meaningful impact. On Diamond Jubilee – the seventh album from Patrick Flegel’s alter-ego drag artist persona – Cindy Lee manages to achieve both.

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

This album is not available to buy on any physical format yet. Nor is it on Spotify, Bandcamp or Apple. It is available only to download (for free, with donations encouraged) via the web 1.0 hosting site Geocities or to stream, ad-free, via YouTube. There is no accompanying press or liner notes, no artist bio, no interviews; just a sprawling two-part, two-hour record that has dropped in from nowhere like a parachute from the sky containing precious cargo. Although rather than disappearing into the ether as it lands, ignored by the algorithms, playlists and radio stations who have no access to the tracks to promote it, the album has instead landed to fervent hype.

Although, remarkably, such buzz appears genuinely justified. Diamond Jubilee feels like the work of an artist operating at the peak of their powers who is able to harness and crystallise all that potency and charge into a record that, on the surface, should be far too large, messy and stretched out to contain such a cohesive body of work.

Flegel has always shown chops as a songwriter; in their previous band Women they potently blended art-rock with flourishes of both pop and noise, while their previous records as Cindy Lee have shown promise by equally straddling the lines between experimentation and accessibility. However, Diamond Jubilee sounds like a record on which everything has come together and moved into another realm.

It blurs genres with glee, gliding between ’50s doo wop, ’60s girl groups, psychedelic pop and lo-fi indie, all delivered with a woozy, dreamy, occasionally crepuscular tone. “Always Dreaming” sounds like new-age dream-pop filtered through a busted four-track; “Demon Bitch” comes across as exactly the kind of thing you’d be delighted to hear on an album of outtakes from the self-titled Velvet Underground album, while “Glitz” recalls early Tame Impala if they really amped up the glam but wound down the production.

There is an inescapable feeling of duality to the record, in that it feels tender yet raw, immersive yet fractured, varied yet coherent. Given that Cindy Lee is a drag persona of Flegel, it’s not too much of a stretch to suggest that they are someone who is in a prime position to inherently understand the psychology, nuances and expressive capabilities of having, and exploring, dual identities and personalities. While there is not a stark night and day difference between the two parts of the album, there is a shift in shade, a subtle tweaking that seems to unlock another side to Cindy Lee. Tracks like “Gayblevision” feel like moving from the bedroom to the nightclub, as synths shimmer and an almost 1980s darkwave sheen moves in, completely shifting the tone, pace and punch of the album. These dualities often exist within single songs too. “What’s It Going To Take” feels like it owes as much to the bucolic and progressive sounds of the Canterbury Scene, as it does to avant-funk and bedroom pop. The vocals – as is generally the case throughout the record – are sparse, ethereal and minimal, often feeling more like a ghostly presence that swings by from time to time than a constant narrator.

But ultimately, where Cindy Lee thrives is not necessarily existing in one particular place or genre – or part of the album – but existing in the in-between, operating in blurred lines, misty shadows and the cracks. There is an inherently dreamy, almost Lynchian quality to this record that allows for a deeply and richly immersive listen that seems to float endlessly between varied places while losing little of its flow. Which is all the more impressive to achieve over a whopping 32 tracks.

While tonally, structurally and thematically it’s vastly different, there is something of a similar feeling and result here to The Magnetic Fields’ classic 69 Love Songs. Both manage the incredibly difficult feat of feeling vast and scattered across bountiful tracks, yet also complete, connected and the embodiment of a songwriter capable of tapping into a broad range of music seemingly on a whim.

Diamond Jubilee is a rare beast of an album in many ways. A genuine bolt out of the blue wrapped in mystery that unfurls with unpredictable dream-like logic. Everything about it – from its production to its delivery – feels distinctly analogue and from another era, adding to its almost alien-like landing. Here, Cindy Lee has managed to buck just about every trend, convention and expectation of what releasing music in the digital age is supposed to look and like. And, even more crucially, it sounds just as refreshing.

Tom Verlaine – Warm And Cool / Songs And Other Things / Around

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By the time Tom Verlaine stepped into the studio to record his first instrumental album, Warm And Cool [1992], he’d pretty much burned out on the endless cycle of record-release-tour dynamics that goes with life on a major label. Having played the game long enough, Verlaine had taken stock, and was keen to redraw the parameters of both his artistic and his everyday life. He’d long entertained a desire to record an instrumental collection, and there did seem to be something particularly appropriate about one of the most idiosyncratic and individual of guitar players going the instrumental route. For anyone who’d listened to the ecstatic flight of Verlaine’s bird-like guitar over the preceding two decades, Warm And Cool was no surprise; it was simply good to hear Verlaine in this new setting, one that so neatly suited his aesthetic.

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

There were other things going on, of course. Warm And Cool was released in the same year as Television’s third, ‘comeback’ album. This self-titled set was received curiously; like everything Verlaine had done to this point, it suffered from living under the shadow of the band’s debut album, 1977’s Marquee Moon, by any measure an extraordinary rock album, and one that was already considered an iconic statement by critical and cultural consensus alike. Listening back, that third Television album works differently to what came before – as you’d expect, given the 14-year gap between it and its predecessor, Adventure – but it’s an album that doesn’t compromise, that doesn’t stint on great songs and playing, and that stands proud alongside Marquee Moon. It’s neither better nor worse, just different.

Television gave listeners their fill of Verlaine in songwriting mode, and in that respect, it also felt an extension of his run of superlative solo albums through the ’80s. Warm And Cool was its other side. It also set Verlaine on a new path, one where his music could nestle tidily within numerous different contexts. While the most obvious line you can sketch from Warm And Cool is to its instrumental 2006 successor, Around, it also points toward Verlaine’s work in soundtracking, and his improvisatory guitar duos with the likes of Jimmy Rip, including their performances playing alongside screenings of early 20th-century experimental film. Warm And Cool opened doors to experiences that Verlaine would chase for decades to come, all while letting the Television machine play out in slow motion – the odd tour here and there; some inconclusive recording sessions for a fabled, and never released, fourth album.

For anyone who thinks Warm And Cool would be an ambient drift, a collection of meanders and longueurs, though, listening back, it’s surprising how spiky it is at times. Recorded across two sessions, taking two days altogether to track – though mostly done on one night – Warm And Cool is a masterpiece in threading, where Verlaine seems to be grabbing hold of a simple melody, or cluster of chords and notes, throwing them to his fellow musicians to see what they make of them, and then capturing the wild, sometimes flustered ride of the moment. It helps, of course, that those fellow musicians are excellent players – on almost the whole album, it’s Patrick Derivaz on bass and Television’s Billy Ficca on drums. A song like “Ore” sparks with incandescence, Verlaine’s guitar shard-like as Ficca accents Verlaine’s playing with rumbling, clattering drums, Derivaz leaving notes hanging.

It’s also a welcome reminder that Verlaine wasn’t influenced by guitarists so much as he was free jazz saxophonists – John Coltrane, Albert Ayler and suchlike – and it’s that logic he pursues across much of Warm And Cool (the only guitarist that really seems a considered influence on Verlaine might be Mike Bloomfield). Sometimes things get subdued – the following “Depot (1958)”, or the spiralling, flinty “Saucer Crash” – and occasionally Verlaine’s guitar threads notes, like hints, across analogue silence, laying a trail of blinking lights through a darkened studio. The gently swinging “Harley Quinn” sits outside the general mood of Warm And Cool – satellited in from another session, it features Fred Smith of Television on bass, and Jay Dee Daugherty from Patti Smith’s band on drums.

It took Verlaine another 12 years to release Warm And Cool’s instrumental sequel, Around; on the same day in 2006, he also released Songs And Other Things, an album predominantly of vocal songs. Around seems lighter in the air than Warm And Cool, made up of a string of fleeting impressions, slippery statements for guitar. It’s rare for Verlaine’s music to sound like anyone else’s, but moments on Around recall the dustbowl laments of Neil Young’s Dead Man soundtrack, or the more stripped-back moments on Roy Montgomery’s albums – a similar psychic space is being explored here, perhaps.

Around was recorded across two days in December 1996, but Verlaine sat on the recordings for a decade. Ficca and Derivaz are in tow, again, though they are less present than on Warm And Cool – with Around, Verlaine fully embraced a less-is-more aesthetic, and the guitar playing here often shivers in its intimacy, its nakedness. But there’s also playfulness, as on the slow-mo highlife of “Meteor Beach”, where slide guitar and chiming riffs play against string scrape, and one of the most ridiculous muffled wah tones you’ll hear (it sounds like Verlaine was aiming for muted trumpet on the guitar).

Ficca and Derivaz also appear on Songs And Other Things, the album that is perhaps the real revelation of this reissue series. This was Verlaine’s first collection of songs since 1990’s underrated The Wonder; what’s particularly impressive about Songs And Other Things, though, is how convincing it sounds, how Verlaine seems to have reached a new level with his songwriting. The lyrics oscillate between suggestive poetry, evasive asides, chuckling character profiles and excerpts from unfilmed crime series – there’s a gaggle of different Verlaines in here, and they’re all wry and smart.

Most importantly, though, the songs are ecstatic things: from the simple, one-chord mantra of “The Day On You”, to the bleary-eyed, mystical waltz of “Blue Light”, and the elevated, rapturous bliss-out of “The Earth Is In The Sky”, the latter a virtual masterclass in Verlaine guitar playing too – spindly filigrees carved into the finely rendered sides of a glorious chord change that’s heaven-sent – Verlaine’s songs here are never less than lovely, and often mesmerising. The guitar across the album, too, feels particularly inspired, and the intimacy in the playing is so singular you feel you can hear Verlaine’s hands, fingers, nails, sinew, the blood pumping through veins: a masterclass in touch, a haptic listening experience.

In her liner notes to Sonic Youth’s 1993 reissue of Daydream Nation, artist and writer Jutta Koether quotes Verlaine, her life partner: “There are moments, rare on any record, where the wild searchings of the guitarists collide in what might be described as a ‘radiance’. It’s like being caught in the rapids, bumping off rocks, then going over the waterfall – and really liking it.” It’s a beautiful quote that sums up much of what made Verlaine’s guitar playing, both in interplay with Richard Lloyd and Jimmy Rip, and solo, so glorious and unpredictable. On these final three albums, Verlaine captured that radiance to its fullest, and unassumingly reached heightened states through the seemingly simple interface of one man and his guitar. It’s hallucinatory in effect – and revelatory.

Samantha Morton – My Life In Music

The actor, director and now singer on her essential aural companions: “When you’re lonely, music becomes your friend”

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN IS ON THE COVER OF THE NEW UNCUT – ORDER YOUR COPY HERE

BOB MARLEY

Exodus

ISLAND, 1977

My father, my real Dad, was into music in a big way. We had a huge wooden sideboard in the front room with a few records in, that we were not allowed to touch! I remember him playing Bob Marley over and over again, and this particular album was one of his favourites, so by default it was the soundtrack to playing out on the streets where I lived. Nottingham was a very multicultural place, so it was common to hear reggae on stereos. As a child, I didn’t really understand the lyrics, so I wouldn’t have realised that these were political songs – songs of freedom, if you like. But if anything, the lyrics are even more relevant today. And it’s just incredible music, so thanks Dad!

THE BEATLES

Abbey Road

APPLE, 1969

The next one, again, I have to thank my father for. He’d had the Beatles records since he was a kid and they were his everything. I just have these memories of being really little and peering over the record player and seeing the little apple cut in half in the middle of the vinyl. If Dad played a record it was an event, because we weren’t allowed to touch them. And we would sit in the same way as he would read books to us, Lord Of the Rings and The Hobbit. It was almost like, ‘This is your education, guys!’ I can’t go for too long without listening to The Beatles – it’s like oxygen, isn’t it? It’s in our DNA.

BOOGIE DOWN PRODUCTIONS

By All Means Necessary

JIVE, 1988

My brother was in the military. When he went away to the first Iraq war, he left behind a couple of tapes, one of which was By All Means Necessary. So I started listening to Boogie Down Productions and became an enormous hip-hop fan, especially of KRS-One’s lyrics. I suppose some of the hip-hop I’d heard on the radio felt quite misogynistic, but this blew my mind with the level of intelligence. I didn’t really go to school, which was quite sad. So music was an education – listening to people talk about their feelings and how they’re handling situations or just telling incredible stories through music. The message of American movies like Big or The Goonies was that everything’s rosy, but rappers were talking about their lives.

EMMYLOU HARRIS

Wrecking Ball

ELEKTRA, 1995

Growing up, my Mum – my real Mum – really loved country and western music. I used to have to get up and do Patsy Cline in the pub! There was an album by Emmylou Harris called Wrecking Ball that Daniel Lanois produced. I knew I recognised the sound, and it was only years later when I started really listening to U2 that I realised, ‘Oh my gosh, it’s the same person!’ The songs make me cry just thinking about them, they’re incredibly poignant. I think that album will stay with me for the rest of my life. It’s very important in my development as a musician, but also just as a creative. I would listen to it over and over again – it’s very healing.

RY COODER

Paris, Texas OST

WARNER BROS, 1985

I was about 19, and I’d been in this movie called Under The Skin. It had a really bad review that was so scathing of me as an actor and I thought, ‘Well, I’m obviously not going to work again – I’m fucked.’ I was not happy with how acting was going, so I decided to get rid of my agent and move to Bali. I only took a few CDs, and this was one of them. Weirdly, I hadn’t seen the film at that point, I just knew I liked Ry Cooder. I listened to it over and over again, and it’s so evocative of that time. Obviously I wasn’t in a desert, but I was travelling and I was alone and I was searching for something. So it was just perfect.

GLENN GOULD

Bach: The Goldberg Variations

COLUMBIA, 1956

I didn’t know very much about classical music growing up, so the first time I heard that piece of music was in Silence Of The Lambs. Then I saw a documentary about him [Glenn Gould] and that was my first introduction to seeking out classical music and who’s playing it and why. I don’t have words eloquent enough to describe how that music makes me feel. My understanding is that when classical music is recorded, it’s the music that’s important. Often, they don’t want to bring in the person. But his energy and his interpretation of that piece of music is incredible, it had never been played like that before. I feel like I’ve got a connection with the person, as opposed to listening to perfectly performed music.

SQUAREPUSHER

Ultravisitor

WARP, 2004

I’d moved back from New York to the UK and bought a house in North London. I didn’t have any London friends, I was really lonely. And when you’re lonely, music becomes your friend – it makes you feel safe or not alone. There’s a song called “Iambic 9 Poetry” which is epic in its scale, but yet it retains this level of personal intimacy. It seems so big and so wide and so beautiful, like looking at city skylines. It has that feeling of something’s gonna happen, like the future is coming and it’s really fucking good! It’s not exactly Ballard, but there’s certainly a connection between the architecture of a city and dance or electronic music.

COCTEAU TWINS

Garlands

4AD, 1982

I got out of London around 2007 or 8. I was trying to create this haven for my new baby, so we moved to this farm in the Peak District. It was a really special time living in this amazing Bronte-esque landscape, quite isolated but feeling really powerful. I’d heard the Cocteau Twins a lot growing up but hadn’t really had their records. So I bought the CD and I totally immersed myself, walking on the moors for hours with my baby, being taken to these other worlds. The music and the landscape seemed to fit so perfectly. Her [Elizabeth Fraser’s] voice is very spiritual to me. It’s almost as if you’re listening to choral music in a church, it’s on that level.

Sam Morton’s debut album Daffodils & Dirt is out on June 14 via XL Recordings