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Manic Street Preachers reveal they have been asked to appear on ‘Question Time’

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Manic Street Preachers have revealed they have been asked to appear on Question Time. The band shared the unusual press request with fans on Twitter yesterday (September 26): "Been asked to do question time again- time to unleash my inner nye bevan/malcolm tucker(thick of it)onto the tv screens of...

Manic Street Preachers have revealed they have been asked to appear on Question Time.

The band shared the unusual press request with fans on Twitter yesterday (September 26):

“Been asked to do question time again- time to unleash my inner nye bevan/malcolm tucker(thick of it)onto the tv screens of britain???x”

In a follow-up tweet, the band hinted that they would probably turn the invitation down by writing “Maybe not-xxx”.

Meanwhile, Manic Street Preachers released their largely acoustic 11th studio album, Rewind The Film, on September 16. Recorded in the band’s own studio in Cardiff, Rockfield in Monmouthshire and Hansa in Berlin, the album features guest appearances from Lucy Rose (on ‘This Sullen Welsh Heart’) Cate Le Bon (on ‘4 Lonely Roads’) and Richard Hawley on the title track.

The band are due to wrap up a six-date UK tour in support of the album with gigs at Manchester’s Ritz tonight (September 27) and Glasgow’s Barrowlands on Sunday (September 29).

Elbow hint at new album

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Elbow have hinted that a new album could be on its way by promising to make a "special announcement" next week. The band posted a photo of themselves in the studio on their Facebook wall accompanied by the message: "Elbow will be making a special announcement next week. Make sure you're signed up t...

Elbow have hinted that a new album could be on its way by promising to make a “special announcement” next week.

The band posted a photo of themselves in the studio on their Facebook wall accompanied by the message: “Elbow will be making a special announcement next week. Make sure you’re signed up to the newsletter.” Fans are then directed to a sign-up page for the band’s mailing list.

Elbow released their fifth and most recent album, Build A Rocket Boys!, in March 2011. Their last live shows came during a six-date UK arena tour which took place during November and December of last year (2012).

Speaking on stage during a gig at Nottingham’s Capital FM Arena on November 26, frontman Guy Garvey told the crowd: “We’re taking a gap year”.

Shortly before the tour began, Garvey had outlined the band’s plans for a hiatus in an interview with The Sun. “We’ve got our arena tour this November and December, which will be like a farewell party,” he explained. “We’ve already done six songs for the next album, then we’ll come back to finish it next year.”

Jack White says digital recordings are ‘anything but fail-safe’

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Jack White has spoken out about his thoughts on digital versus analogue recording, saying that digital formats have "proven to be anything but fail-safe" when it comes to the preservation of music. Speaking to The Atlantic, White commented: "A lot of the digital formats in the last 20 years have p...

Jack White has spoken out about his thoughts on digital versus analogue recording, saying that digital formats have “proven to be anything but fail-safe” when it comes to the preservation of music.

Speaking to The Atlantic, White commented: “A lot of the digital formats in the last 20 years have proven to be anything but fail-safe. The tapes break or the information can’t be retrieved.”

White – who recently donated $200,000 (£124,914) to the National Recording Preservation Foundation, a United States non-profit who seek to preserve and make accessible the recorded history of America – believes that more modern ways of recording aren’t as reliable as older approaches when it comes to keeping the original versions of songs safe. He also spoke about how people dismissed the masters of early phonograph recordings in the States, saying: “There are stories of early phonograph companies taking apart the masters used to press wax discs so they could be sold as roofing shingles. They didn’t think a recording was a document of anything cultural. It was just a way to sell phonographs.”

The Third Man Records founder spoke fondly about sheet music in the article, saying: “My mother was telling me in the ’30s when she was a little girl you could go to the department store downtown and there was a sheet music section. You could pick out a piece of sheet music and the lady running the section would play it for you on a piano.”

White’s Third Man Records are to co-release Paramount Records’ back catalogue on vinyl, starting from next month. Established in 1917, Paramount Records was home to artists such as Louis Armstrong, Ma Rainey, Fletcher Henderson, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Jelly Roll Morton, King Oliver and Ethel Walters. Third Man will release a comprehensive 800-song collection of the label’s material from its first decade in existence titled ‘The Rise and Fall of Paramount Records, Volume One (1917-27)’ on October 29.

White is also currently working on new songs with his band The Dead Weather. They released their debut album, Horehound, in 2009 and followed it in 2010 with Sea Of Cowards.

The Waterboys’ Mike Scott: “We could make magic on the head of a pin – U2 needed six artic trucks to do it!”

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Mike Scott discusses the epic creation of Fisherman’s Blues in the new issue of Uncut (dated November 2013), out now, as well as the competition between The Waterboys and U2. “Was there competition between us? Bloody hell, yes,” says Scott. “They were the big band in town – we wanted to...

Mike Scott discusses the epic creation of Fisherman’s Blues in the new issue of Uncut (dated November 2013), out now, as well as the competition between The Waterboys and U2.

“Was there competition between us? Bloody hell, yes,” says Scott. “They were the big band in town – we wanted to depose them.

“I thought we wrote better songs and we could play better and we could make magic on the head of a pin – they needed six artic trucks to do it.”

Scott talks about his relocation to Dublin, his rejection of The Big Music and embracing of folk, and the two years of intensive sessions for Fisherman’s Blues – as well as the unreleased gems included on the mammoth Fisherman’s Box set.

The November 2013 issue of Uncut is out now.

Photo: Steve Meany

Kinks 50th anniversary reunion: “Let’s see,” says Ray Davies

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Ray Davies has responded to comments from his brother, Dave, who told Rolling Stone there was a possibility that the Kinks would play shows to celebrate their 50th anniversary. Speaking to Uncut, Ray Davies said, “I’ve heard about the article but I haven’t read it. I saw Dave a couple of week...

Ray Davies has responded to comments from his brother, Dave, who told Rolling Stone there was a possibility that the Kinks would play shows to celebrate their 50th anniversary.

Speaking to Uncut, Ray Davies said, “I’ve heard about the article but I haven’t read it. I saw Dave a couple of weeks ago and he mentioned the idea of doing a tour. I said, ‘Yeah, but you’re the guy who keeps saying it’ll never happen.’

“I don’t understand where this new line, this new tack, has come from.

“But he’s a great player. Whenever I write a song, I think of how it could be improved by having him on it, and what his power chords would bring to it.

“I don’t know what next year will bring. Let’s see if he’s polite to me the next time we meet.”

That the two Davies brothers are talking and meeting once again is a major development in their relationship. For years it is believed they communicated only by fax and email, as neither was prepared to risk a potentially highly volatile meeting. In separate interviews with Uncut in 2012, the brothers admitted that they currently had no direct contact with each other whatsoever, and didn’t expect the situation to change. Ray even claimed to be unaware of where Dave lived.

The Kinks reissue Muswell Hillbillies on October 7, which will feature five previously unreleased songs as well as a smattering of alternate recordings and tracks taken from John Peel radio sessions on the BBC. Unreleased tracks include ‘Lavender Lane’, ‘Mountain Woman’, ‘Kentucky Moon’ and ‘Queenie’, in addition to a demo recording of the song ‘Nobody’s Fool’.

Can announce new box set details

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Can are to release a vinyl box set containing remastered versions of all their studio albums. The 17-piece set will be released on 180g vinyl housed in a lined wrapped box. It is released by Mute Records on December 2. The box set features 13 of the band’s classic albums, alongside Out Of Reach,...

Can are to release a vinyl box set containing remastered versions of all their studio albums.

The 17-piece set will be released on 180g vinyl housed in a lined wrapped box. It is released by Mute Records on December 2.

The box set features 13 of the band’s classic albums, alongside Out Of Reach, which has been unavailable in any official format since its original release in 1978, and Can Live, a bonus live disc featuring the classic Can line up of Holger Czukay (bass), Michael Karoli (guitar), Jaki Liebezeit (drums) and Irmin Schmidt (keyboards). Can Live was recorded at Sussex University in 1975 and will be unavailable in any format outside of the Can Vinyl Box.

The artwork for the individual albums is all in its original form and five posters and a 20-page 12” booklet accompanies the box set featuring unseen photographs from the Can archive and sleevenotes by the author, Alan Warner (Morven Caller).

CAN VINYL BOX CONTENTS

Monster Movie

Soundtracks

Tago Mago (over two vinyl)

Ege Bamyasi

Future Days

Soon Over Babaluma

Delay

Unlimited Edition (over two vinyl)

Landed

Flow Motion

Saw Delight

Can

Rite Time

Out Of Reach

Can Live, Sussex University 1975

Can released The Lost Tapes box set in 2012.

David Bowie to appear in Louis Vuitton ad campaign

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David Bowie has reportedly been signed by to appear in the latest television ad campaign by designer Louis Vuitton. Bowie will star in Vuitton's forthcoming campaign, L'Invitation au Voyage, alongside model Arizona Muse. The advert was shot in Venice this summer and due to be released later this ye...

David Bowie has reportedly been signed by to appear in the latest television ad campaign by designer Louis Vuitton.

Bowie will star in Vuitton’s forthcoming campaign, L’Invitation au Voyage, alongside model Arizona Muse. The advert was shot in Venice this summer and due to be released later this year, according to a story in WWD.

Lou Reed: “I’ve lied so much about the past, I can’t tell what is true any more”

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In this archive piece from our March 2003 issue (Take 70), Uncut meets Lou Reed in his favourite Manhattan restaurant to discuss Edgar Allen Poe, Eminem, T’ai Chi, his illustrious career and his hatred of journalists: “I think in an interview what they essentially want to know is how big is your...

In this archive piece from our March 2003 issue (Take 70), Uncut meets Lou Reed in his favourite Manhattan restaurant to discuss Edgar Allen Poe, Eminem, T’ai Chi, his illustrious career and his hatred of journalists: “I think in an interview what they essentially want to know is how big is your dick…” Words: Gavin Martin / Photo: Julian Schnabel

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Downtown New York, December 9 2002. It’s 10.30 on a sunny but ice-cold morning in the back room of Pastis, Lou Reed’s favourite neighbourhood restaurant. Around the corner, the Hudson river gives off a foreboding chill. In here, the power breakfasting stockbrokers are settling into their morning routine in a faux continental setting.

The surrounding neighbourhood – with its expensive loft apartments and real estate – has changed out of all recognition from the sleazy haunts that inspired Lou’s early work. But, Lou remains and lives nearby with the “love of his life”, artist Laurie Anderson. The former drug-addled poet of rock’s underbelly is now an international man of letters and the toast of the New York demimonde. Earlier this year he and Anderson duetted on The Drifters’ “Save The Last Dance For Me” at a tribute concert for the terpsichorean/ dance legend, Bill T Jones.

Four years in the making, Lou regards his latest album – the sprawling double CD The Raven – as the culmination of everything he’s striven to attain in a career that’s spanned five decades of rock’n’roll outrage. Based on the work of Edgar Allen Poe, The Raven grew out of a collaboration with Robert Wilson, the theatrical director Reed previously worked with on Time Rocker and who also provided the theatrical starting points for Tom Waits’ recent Alice and Blood Money albums.

The Raven is immense in its lyrical, musical and thematic scope. The connection between the writer of dark classics like The Pit And The Pendulum, The Fall Of The House Of Usher and The Masque Of The Red Death – who, according to one critic, wielded his pen like “a scalpel, knife or a Tomahawk” – and the 21st-century rock legend is obvious. The most purposefully literate rocker of his generation, Reed has used his guitar, pen and stoic voice to perform autopsies on both the American dream and the human condition.

Lou arrives in Pastis a little late, snuggled inside a flamboyant black fur-lined leather jacket. There is a small Mandarina Duck designer handbag over his shoulder and he’s wearing leather trousers and heavy biker boots. He is a fascinating study in opposites, theatrical hand gestures and flouncy mannerisms when he’s giving his French-born PR Annie precise instructions to attain extra tickets for the evening’s “hottest ticket in town” – the premiere of Gangs Of New York. But he becomes noticeably wary, retreating into a macho shell as he approaches the interview table.

He gives the most non-committal handshake imaginable. The hand-over of a present, a new CD compilation of ’60s deep soul duo Eddie and Ernie, takes him off guard.

“Uhhn what is this? Omigod where did you get this… how did you even know to get this… fhh whoaah I didn’t even know this existed… whaa…” Reed scrutinises the CD up close. He’s not wearing glasses and seems to have trouble with contact lenses. He has a hand over his inflamed right eye. Up close, his thin-lipped, wrinkled and worn face shows the mixed effects of years of hard living and recuperation.

During the interview suspicion is often Lou’s first response to a question and he’ll suspect criticisms where there are none. He can be precious as a newborn baby’s heartbeat one minute, as flippant as a bar-room cynic the next. How do you gain the trust of someone whose parents sent him to have electric shock therapy in his teens? Don’t even try.

Lou has many tactics to avoid discussing the man who has created the cast of misfits, penitents, hedonists and heretics in his songs. He employs one immediately by picking up my mini-disc and embarking on a discourse on the history of digital technology. I hurriedly draw his attention to a promo copy of The Raven.

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UNCUT: With the spoken-word contributions from Steve Buscemi and Willem Dafoe, the musical liaisons with Bowie, Laurie Anderson, Ornette Coleman and The Blind Boys Of Alabama, and all the research, The Raven must be the most ambitious album of your career.

LOU REED: Have you heard the double, the Grand Mal version? Can you imagine what it took to do that? I mean, I’m serious. Imagine! Even now I can’t believe that we’ve done it. This might be a nice way to say ‘Goodbye’, a good way to go out.

Really, you see it like a grand farewell, as suggested on “Vanishing Act”?

Yeah, it’s like ‘Pheww!’ Really. Anyway, I don’t think you’ll get a chance to make records like this with people downloading their music… unless you take the viewpoint that there’s only one good track on it.

You’ve always expanded the parameters of rock’n’roll. In recent years, you’ve talked about leaving the business entirely. Is that part of what The Raven is about?

I’ve been writing plays, I’ve got photography shows and I’m putting a photo book together. I’ve been involved with Hal Willner in his Halloween shows at St Anne’s church. When I read Poe’s The Tell Tale Heart aloud there, it was the first time I really understood it. I have a degree in English literature, and I still can’t remember when I first read Poe. Of course, I can’t remember things from last week. I’m kind of Reaganesque with that.

But I do know that, before, my understanding was only superficial. That’s one of the nice things about getting older – you can read something like that and have a better chance of taking it how it was meant by the writer. Poe is so incredible to read. In the essay, The Imp Of The Perverse, he’s saying, “Why are we drawn to that which we know is bad for us?” Now if there’s a human being on Earth with a pulse who doesn’t understand that, hasn’t experienced that or doesn’t know what that is about, I haven’t met them.

I was just ready, really, primed and ready when Bob [Wilson] came up with the idea. I do martial arts and there’s a saying that when you’re ready the teacher appears.

You turned 60 during the making of this record. Was that a major landmark?

No.

You didn’t mark it in any way?

Nope.

Do you feel blessed, lucky to be alive?

Do you? This is not what I want to talk about. I talk about music. If you want to talk about the ageing process, you should talk about someone who concentrates on that.

Burroughs imagined the writing machine, the place where all the great ideas are churned out. Is that where you get your creative juice?

Oh, I miss Burroughs. I love his writing. No one has taken his place, it’s so special and unique unto him, just as what Poe does is special and unique unto him. I’m also a big film noir fan, keep that in mind. If film noir had a drum, it would be me. I’m such a fan of that.

On “Who Am I?”, you depict a universe where God has left the stage.

Well there is a whole philosophical school of thought that God is dead. When I was at university it was one of the ideas I studied. God made a watch and walked away, you know all that stuff.

Is that still an attractive concept for you?

That requires a large bottle of Barola, my friend, a cigar and many hours to kick around. Would that I were wiser.

Are you nervous about how The Raven will be received?

Let me tell you something. I put out a thing called Metal Machine Music, and 20 years after the fact they put out an anniversary edition of it and it’s performed live by an orchestra in Berlin. It’s the sort of thing that I’ve had happen with a bunch of records. I would hate to see that happen with this. If people don’t get into it because of its length and complexity then you’ll just continue to have what you have. And you’ll deserve it.

There’s a strong gospel undercurrent on the album, the idea that community can overcome the dark torments Poe’s imagination unleashes, most explicitly on “I Wanna Know”, your duet with The Blind Boys Of Alabama.

I do things on instinct and if you ask me to explain it I wouldn’t be able to explain it. Well, I can make up an explanation, but I don’t want to bother any more. I’ve always loved The Blind Boys Of Alabama, and Jimmy [Carter] holds a note on there that sounds like it lasts a day, it’s just astonishing.

On “Old Poe”, the author addresses his younger self. If you had a chance to talk to the Lou Reed of 20 or 30 years ago, what would you say?

Bravo!

A big round of applause for the guy with the blond hair dye and the Iron Cross shaved on the temple?

I was young. I was having fun. You’ll never hear me saying, “How come you dye your hair purple or why are you piercing your cheek with a four-inch spike?” That’s what I was doing at that age, because that’s what you do when you’re that age. I love looking at photos of myself from back then. It was something you could get away with if you were a rock star.

These days, you can be on the furthest alternative whatever trajectory and it will be absorbed like purple hair, pins and spikes, and it becomes a business. It’s hilarious when you think about it… people are against something, then they see you can make money out of it. The culture is a massive sponge, a money sponge.

Have you always been conscious of having a “Guardian Angel”?

I keep the songs in the songs. If I start to apply them to me, I feel weird. But in the context of the album, I wanted an upbeat ending. Not just a Poe ending, with the King and all his cronies dressed as orang-utans going up in flames, or The Pit And The Pendulum or The Tell Tale Heart – all of which have pretty dark endings. I wanted something that was me, not him.

Maybe the younger Lou might have gone with the darker ending. Is the desire to have an upbeat ending a result of age and wisdom?

I certainly hope so. There’s a lot of thrills and chills in there and you can just leave it at that or you can explicate, which is what I chose to do. I don’t know the answers to some of those questions. I know you think I do, but I don’t. I don’t question when I’m writing. If I kept asking why, I might not get anywhere. I just go with it.

You recorded “Fire Music” two days after September 11 in a studio close to Ground Zero. What was that like?

Everything I experienced is in that piece of music. I really and truly mean that I can’t sum it up in words, that’s what music is for. It’s a very compressed piece, played in real time. It’s not looped. It is the big brother of Metal Machine Music, the next step. What I like is, it doesn’t have a key and the rhythm is always shifting – a very free form of music which I’ve been a fan of all the way back to Ornette Coleman and Albert Ayler. To have Ornette on this album doing Ornette is beyond thrilling. I mean, is there anyone else in the world called Ornette?

How has New York changed since September 11?

I can’t tell you that. We’re here to talk music. I can’t give a good answer to something like that. That’s really a book.

How do you feel about the way your government has responded. Is it scary to see freedoms being restricted?

What about being in London – is it scary there? Tony Blair linking up with Mr Bush. I’m sure you have your own thoughts on that. I don’t get into these types of questions. I keep trying to pull you back toward music. You’re trying to do a personality thing, I guess.

You’ve done interviews before. You know the game.

I think in an interview what they essentially want to know is how big is your dick. Everything else is superfluous. It’s like, “Just tell us that, now.”

There is a quite frank assessment of the effect the ageing process has on the genitalia in the song “Change”.

[He quotes himself, shrieking with glee] “Your balls shrivel up in their sack.” Ha! To my mind that song – imagine Little Richard singing it instead of me. If I could have, I would have got him to sing it. That’s the way I wrote it and heard it. It’s my version of it, but I’m singing Little Richard. The minute you say that the song becomes much clearer.

Do you think rock’n’roll is a dying culture?

I don’t know anything. It’ll come through another door, there’s always going to be bands, people like bands getting together. There are two radio stations I listen to all the time, and you hear The White Stripes and The Strokes and hundreds more. Is it as exciting now as it was 30 years ago? I’m not a critic, but 30 years ago things were new. It’s not new now. What’s new is the technology. The sounds producers are getting today are just fantastic, really exciting, amazing. I couldn’t comment on what the songs are saying because it’s very hard to understand the words.

Do you listen to Eminem?

He’s very funny – and maybe it’s not fair to say this, but he is young and maybe as he gets older he might change. I just don’t like people advocating violence against other people.

But on “Who Am I?”, you fantasise about slitting someone’s throat and ripping their heart out.

…on the other hand, there’s some pretty extraordinarily tasteless things on my very own records so I can’t throw a rock at anybody. I like that rock stays raw and that includes Eminem.

I’d like to hear Eminem do “Street Hassle”.

A great epic, that one. I remember playing it to Clive [Davis, head of Reed’s then-label Arista] and it starts out “Hey, that c***’s not breathing, I think she’s had too much”, and Clive said, “There you go, that’s just like you. No airplay for this.” And there wasn’t any. A 12-minute song – just finished, dead in the water. This wasn’t the days when something could go underground. That didn’t happen, it just got killed.

Do you resent that?

No. I don’t resent anything along those lines. Those are business people. They do what they do and I have nothing to do with it. I would resent it if it drove me out of the whole thing, but I’ve survived. There’s room for everybody I guess, including me.

When The Velvet Underground split and you went back to work with your father, did you think your career was over?

Part of the myth? Look, why should any of that shit be true? What was the question? I’ve lied so much about the past I can’t even tell myself what is true any more.

The ’70s was the period when rock mythology was shaped. Were you a willing participant?

Rock interviews had never been done before. There weren’t sound systems. It was like the Wild West out there. The idea of being able to hear the lead singer was a whole new deal. It was like the Wright Brothers and the aeroplane. Then you got a guy like Lester Bangs trying to write with the rhythm of rock, but all those people, they were just doing it because they couldn’t be in a band.

Did you look down on them because of that?

I would look down on a journalist whether he wanted to be in a band or not, just because of their occupation. It’s just a game. Journalists ask if you look down on journalists and they’re baiting you. They want you to say yes, of course.

You were supposedly close to death several times.

And you know what? That shit, why should any of it be true?

Does Chinese medicine and T’ai Chi take the place in your life once filled by heroin, speed and alcohol?

Ha ha ha, you just won’t stop will you? Let me tell you something. Eagle Claw, Ying Ja Pow, T’ai Chi are about the most amazing physical experiences I can think of. I’m part of a foundation that is connected to all that, I’ve been studying it for 20 years. I’m not trying to make any converts but if you want to know something I feel strongly about, there it is. And, of course, it keeps your dick really big. Haven’t you figured that out yet?

_______________

The interview over, I offer him another present, a copy of An Introduction To The Velvet Underground. You’d imagine this was the last thing he’d need, but he’s never seen a copy and accepts it, as graciously as he can. He looks at the cover shot and shakes his head. “Poor Sterling, he missed all this,” he says, gesturing around the restaurant.

“And here we are,” he smirks and raises his glass, “drinking water.”

Cheers, Lou.

The Clash – Sound System

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Great things come in crazy packages. Newly remastered albums, plus remastered ephemera... You can bake your tapes. You can preserve the oxides, futureproof your masters against all future music formats. But you’ll never improve on the authenticity of a group talking into a journalist’s tape recorder in 1976. Barely audible through the background noise (clanking coffee cups; rattling tube train carriages), on “Listen”, one of the early tracks collected here, the young Clash are interviewed by Tony Parsons, about whether they think they will succeed in “changing stuff”. Joe Strummer, (for all the logans on his shirts, a realist) is certain: “I don’t think we’ll ever have the power,” he says. “You just have to do what you can do.” Sound System (pitched as “the ultimate box set”) reminds us that one thing The Clash did succeed in changing was The Clash. Not a band shy of drawing an ideological line in the sand as far as music was concerned, whether that was “White Man In Hammersmith Palais” or “1977” (“No Elvis or Beatles or the Rolling Stones…”), The Clash still refused to be painted into a corner by punk. In a time when bands defined themselves by what they opposed, The Clash were about an embracing of possibilities. It was a policy that alienated as many people as it thrilled. If you were the kind of punk who couldn’t understand that a band from your subculture had given you the keys to a city filled with Zydeco, hip-hop, funk and dub, then you probably wouldn’t be the person to enjoy Sandinista – and indeed you were discouraged from buying it by the singer in the group. For all their military chic, The Clash didn’t want an army – they wanted free thinkers. Sound System poses the question of just how free-thinking a Clash fan is these days. Is there anything “punk” about a box set that collects the band’s first five albums and three discs of rarities into a box styled like a boombox stereo? Initial fan reaction would suggest not – not even when it includes repro fanzines, posters, stickers and Clash “dog tags”. As with the legacy material of Jimi Hendrix, Clash fans have a clear idea of want they rather than simply lapping up what they’re given. In the former list of demands are a live album from the band’s 1981 stand at Bond’s Casino in New York, and an issue of Rat Patrol From Fort Bragg, the moot double album from which Combat Rock was ultimately derived. Clash completists won’t be overwhelmed by Sound System. The “Extras” discs do contain interesting items: the band’s 1976 Beaconsfield Film School recordings with Julien Temple, and the Guy Stevens first album demos. Joe Strummer thought these left “White Riot” sounding “like Matt Monroe” because the producer insisted he pronounce the letter “t”. The accompanying DVD provides evocative film medleys of the early Clash from the collections of Temple and Don Letts. While these discs help with your Clash housekeeping, collecting B-sides and the scarce “Capital Radio” EP, actual unissued rarities are limited to the first two tracks of Rat Patrol: “The Beautiful People Are Ugly Too” and “Idle In Kangaroo Court” (formerly “Kill Time”). The unedited Straight To Hell and “Midnight To Stevens”, completists will already have from The Clash On Broadway. This, after all, is not a treasure trove – it is a handsome box with a poster tube shaped like a cigarette. Still, that paucity of extras obliquely provides more evidence for the band’s spontaneous creativity – there wasn’t a lot “spare”. As we know, “Train In Vain” was delivered too late for a sleeve credit on London Calling, and much of Sandinista was written in the studio. Even after their demise, The Clash were driven by spontaneity not strategy: as recently as 2010 a long-moot 30th anniversary reissue of Sandinista simply failed to materialize. The mood, we imagine, just wasn’t right. Instead, it and its partner albums are collected here in book style sleeves (a bit more recording detail wouldn’t have hurt), in remastering by Tim Young that is crisp, punchy and detailed. The debut benefits enormously from the enterprise, revealing anew how Mick Jones’s Mott-like lead lines served to elevate the group’s playing. Hearing Cut The Crap as an enormously loud military epic helps rehabilitate it somewhat, even if it can’t work miracles on what is basically three strong opening songs. The true breakthrough, London Calling could retain a thrilling room sound played down the line from a red phone box, and inevitably does so here. With their last two albums, as we know, the band attempted (not always successfully) to create empathetic music, without boundaries. With songs like “Magnificent Seven” and “Rebel Waltz” or “Straight To Hell” we’re hearing just how successfully The Clash had enacted a revolution on themselves – from a hardline, to music that was without orthoxy or dogma of any kind. So maybe the path to this point hadn’t actively changed stuff. The Clash had done what they could do – now society needed to follow their example. John Robinson

Great things come in crazy packages. Newly remastered albums, plus remastered ephemera…

You can bake your tapes. You can preserve the oxides, futureproof your masters against all future music formats. But you’ll never improve on the authenticity of a group talking into a journalist’s tape recorder in 1976. Barely audible through the background noise (clanking coffee cups; rattling tube train carriages), on “Listen”, one of the early tracks collected here, the young Clash are interviewed by Tony Parsons, about whether they think they will succeed in “changing stuff”. Joe Strummer, (for all the logans on his shirts, a realist) is certain: “I don’t think we’ll ever have the power,” he says. “You just have to do what you can do.”

Sound System (pitched as “the ultimate box set”) reminds us that one thing The Clash did succeed in changing was The Clash. Not a band shy of drawing an ideological line in the sand as far as music was concerned, whether that was “White Man In Hammersmith Palais” or “1977” (“No Elvis or Beatles or the Rolling Stones…”), The Clash still refused to be painted into a corner by punk. In a time when bands defined themselves by what they opposed, The Clash were about an embracing of possibilities.

It was a policy that alienated as many people as it thrilled. If you were the kind of punk who couldn’t understand that a band from your subculture had given you the keys to a city filled with Zydeco, hip-hop, funk and dub, then you probably wouldn’t be the person to enjoy Sandinista – and indeed you were discouraged from buying it by the singer in the group. For all their military chic, The Clash didn’t want an army – they wanted free thinkers.

Sound System poses the question of just how free-thinking a Clash fan is these days. Is there anything “punk” about a box set that collects the band’s first five albums and three discs of rarities into a box styled like a boombox stereo? Initial fan reaction would suggest not – not even when it includes repro fanzines, posters, stickers and Clash “dog tags”. As with the legacy material of Jimi Hendrix, Clash fans have a clear idea of want they rather than simply lapping up what they’re given. In the former list of demands are a live album from the band’s 1981 stand at Bond’s Casino in New York, and an issue of Rat Patrol From Fort Bragg, the moot double album from which Combat Rock was ultimately derived.

Clash completists won’t be overwhelmed by Sound System. The “Extras” discs do contain interesting items: the band’s 1976 Beaconsfield Film School recordings with Julien Temple, and the Guy Stevens first album demos. Joe Strummer thought these left “White Riot” sounding “like Matt Monroe” because the producer insisted he pronounce the letter “t”. The accompanying DVD provides evocative film medleys of the early Clash from the collections of Temple and Don Letts.

While these discs help with your Clash housekeeping, collecting B-sides and the scarce “Capital Radio” EP, actual unissued rarities are limited to the first two tracks of Rat Patrol: “The Beautiful People Are Ugly Too” and “Idle In Kangaroo Court” (formerly “Kill Time”). The unedited Straight To Hell and “Midnight To Stevens”, completists will already have from The Clash On Broadway.

This, after all, is not a treasure trove – it is a handsome box with a poster tube shaped like a cigarette. Still, that paucity of extras obliquely provides more evidence for the band’s spontaneous creativity – there wasn’t a lot “spare”. As we know, “Train In Vain” was delivered too late for a sleeve credit on London Calling, and much of Sandinista was written in the studio. Even after their demise, The Clash were driven by spontaneity not strategy: as recently as 2010 a long-moot 30th anniversary reissue of Sandinista simply failed to materialize. The mood, we imagine, just wasn’t right.

Instead, it and its partner albums are collected here in book style sleeves (a bit more recording detail wouldn’t have hurt), in remastering by Tim Young that is crisp, punchy and detailed. The debut benefits enormously from the enterprise, revealing anew how Mick Jones’s Mott-like lead lines served to elevate the group’s playing. Hearing Cut The Crap as an enormously loud military epic helps rehabilitate it somewhat, even if it can’t work miracles on what is basically three strong opening songs.

The true breakthrough, London Calling could retain a thrilling room sound played down the line from a red phone box, and inevitably does so here. With their last two albums, as we know, the band attempted (not always successfully) to create empathetic music, without boundaries. With songs like “Magnificent Seven” and “Rebel Waltz” or “Straight To Hell” we’re hearing just how successfully The Clash had enacted a revolution on themselves – from a hardline, to music that was without orthoxy or dogma of any kind.

So maybe the path to this point hadn’t actively changed stuff. The Clash had done what they could do – now society needed to follow their example.

John Robinson

The Haim Wars

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Yesterday afternoon, I did something that I should probably, as a curious and more or less responsible music journalist, have done weeks ago: I listened to the debut album by Haim, “Days Are Gone”. The album is streaming at NPR, and it instantly provoked a good deal of social media praise for Haim, and a degree of rancour aimed at their detractors (perhaps surprisingly, considering my interests, I wasn’t actually hearing much from these purportedly omnipresent detractors on my Twitter timeline). Given the embattled tone of some of Haim’s fans, you’d be forgiven for thinking they were defending a minority cult like New Model Army (Number 20 in the midweeks, as I type) rather than the most universally celebrated new band of 2013. A lot of the Haim haters were misogynists, it was claimed, while Jonathan Dean of The Sunday Times suggested, “Middle-aged men moaning about Haim being derivative are the new boring.” I haven’t, thus far, paid a huge amount of attention to Haim, not least because I’ve found their media ubiquity a bit wearing. “Days Are Gone”, though, is an imposingly well-written and constructed album, and I genuinely like “Falling” (I’ve heard that one before; well done, me) and a warped R&B track, “My Song 5”, that calls to mind Destiny’s Child’s terrific “Get On The Bus”. Not all of the album is exactly to my taste, though, something crystallised by a note alongside the stream at NPR written by Ann Powers. “Geoff Barrow of the revered English band Portishead,” she reports, “recently maligned the fast-rising Los Angeles sister act with a snippy tweet: ‘Hiam [sic] sound like Shania Twain... When did that become a good thing?’ To which this critic replies: Who said it isn't?” Nevertheless, it really is a weird situation, at least for old-school music snobs, when a song that does sound a bit like Shania Twain (it’s called “The Wire”) seems to win broadly consensual critical approval. In the great scheme of things, it’s not a bad development that pop music formerly sneered at as disposable is treated much more seriously – and more than that, is unambiguously and enthusiastically liked by serious music writers - now. Not so long ago, in the halcyon days of landfill indie, the poptimists would complain about, say, a Rachel Stevens single being ignored in an aggrieved tone reminiscent of Steve Lamacq berating NME’s editor for not putting Leatherface on the cover (or of me championing Red House Painters against Oasis, if I’m honest). Now, the pro-pop stance is the majority critical voice, epitomised by The Guardian choosing Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Call Me Maybe” as the best single of 2012. I don’t want to align myself with a lot of the anti-Jepsen commenters who responded to that decision on Guardian blogs (now there was misogyny, for sure). But it does feel professionally risky to say, actually, I don’t really enjoy most of the Haim album. Amusingly risky, I’ll concede; our come-uppance may well be overdue after so many years of entitlement, and I don’t want this blog to come across like a wail of indignation from the Great Oppressed White Middle-Class Male. After all, I am fortunate enough to work for a magazine that continues to provide a handsome platform for my indulgences. My problem isn’t that “Days Are Gone” is derivative, as such: it actually seems to fuse a range of different influences rather than assiduously copy one of them (a sage colleague at Uncut reckons Ladyhawke is their closest antecedent). To adapt Dean’s indictment, I’m a middle-aged man moaning not because Haim are derivative, but because they’re derivative of some music I never much liked in the first place. Tweaked ‘90s/millennial R&B (especially Timbaland productions)? That’s fine, I was keen on a lot of that. Digitally upgraded ‘80s soft rock, latterday Fleetwood Mac, Shania Twain? Less so. You could justifiably argue that, instead of fussing over a record that really wasn’t designed for me, I should concentrate on new music I like, so I’ll swiftly link to a few recent blogs aboutCian Nugent and Chris Forsyth, Bill Callahan and Matthew E White. But I am old enough to remember a time when there were music critics who didn’t like “Tango In The Night” (an album which, interestingly, didn’t even make NME’s Top 60 of 1987). The generational shifting of critical attitudes; the past being reconsidered and rewritten (I wrote about this in a blog called ’Nostalgia, anti-nostalgia, personal revisionism and one last sort-of review of Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories’); the debunking of elite male rock hegemonies – these are usually healthy and useful developments. But few things can rouse a critic more than the opportunity to be a dissenting or misunderstood voice, to assume the role of underdog, even victim. “Each person must, on some level, take himself as the calibration point for normalcy,” wrote Teju Cole in the book I was reading this morning, Open City, “must assume that the room of his own mind is not, cannot be, entirely opaque to him. Perhaps this is what we mean by sanity: that, whatever our self-admitted eccentricities might be, we are not the villains of our own stories.” I’m not crazy about Haim, and I really should have better things to do than feel self-reflexively guilty about it. Now let me tell you about how much I prefer Lindsey Buckingham solo to Fleetwood Mac… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

Yesterday afternoon, I did something that I should probably, as a curious and more or less responsible music journalist, have done weeks ago: I listened to the debut album by Haim, “Days Are Gone”.

The album is streaming at NPR, and it instantly provoked a good deal of social media praise for Haim, and a degree of rancour aimed at their detractors (perhaps surprisingly, considering my interests, I wasn’t actually hearing much from these purportedly omnipresent detractors on my Twitter timeline).

Given the embattled tone of some of Haim’s fans, you’d be forgiven for thinking they were defending a minority cult like New Model Army (Number 20 in the midweeks, as I type) rather than the most universally celebrated new band of 2013. A lot of the Haim haters were misogynists, it was claimed, while Jonathan Dean of The Sunday Times suggested, “Middle-aged men moaning about Haim being derivative are the new boring.”

I haven’t, thus far, paid a huge amount of attention to Haim, not least because I’ve found their media ubiquity a bit wearing. “Days Are Gone”, though, is an imposingly well-written and constructed album, and I genuinely like “Falling” (I’ve heard that one before; well done, me) and a warped R&B track, “My Song 5”, that calls to mind Destiny’s Child’s terrific “Get On The Bus”. Not all of the album is exactly to my taste, though, something crystallised by a note alongside the stream at NPR written by Ann Powers. “Geoff Barrow of the revered English band Portishead,” she reports, “recently maligned the fast-rising Los Angeles sister act with a snippy tweet: ‘Hiam [sic] sound like Shania Twain… When did that become a good thing?’ To which this critic replies: Who said it isn’t?”

Nevertheless, it really is a weird situation, at least for old-school music snobs, when a song that does sound a bit like Shania Twain (it’s called “The Wire”) seems to win broadly consensual critical approval. In the great scheme of things, it’s not a bad development that pop music formerly sneered at as disposable is treated much more seriously – and more than that, is unambiguously and enthusiastically liked by serious music writers – now. Not so long ago, in the halcyon days of landfill indie, the poptimists would complain about, say, a Rachel Stevens single being ignored in an aggrieved tone reminiscent of Steve Lamacq berating NME’s editor for not putting Leatherface on the cover (or of me championing Red House Painters against Oasis, if I’m honest).

Now, the pro-pop stance is the majority critical voice, epitomised by The Guardian choosing Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Call Me Maybe” as the best single of 2012. I don’t want to align myself with a lot of the anti-Jepsen commenters who responded to that decision on Guardian blogs (now there was misogyny, for sure). But it does feel professionally risky to say, actually, I don’t really enjoy most of the Haim album. Amusingly risky, I’ll concede; our come-uppance may well be overdue after so many years of entitlement, and I don’t want this blog to come across like a wail of indignation from the Great Oppressed White Middle-Class Male. After all, I am fortunate enough to work for a magazine that continues to provide a handsome platform for my indulgences.

My problem isn’t that “Days Are Gone” is derivative, as such: it actually seems to fuse a range of different influences rather than assiduously copy one of them (a sage colleague at Uncut reckons Ladyhawke is their closest antecedent). To adapt Dean’s indictment, I’m a middle-aged man moaning not because Haim are derivative, but because they’re derivative of some music I never much liked in the first place. Tweaked ‘90s/millennial R&B (especially Timbaland productions)? That’s fine, I was keen on a lot of that. Digitally upgraded ‘80s soft rock, latterday Fleetwood Mac, Shania Twain? Less so.

You could justifiably argue that, instead of fussing over a record that really wasn’t designed for me, I should concentrate on new music I like, so I’ll swiftly link to a few recent blogs aboutCian Nugent and Chris Forsyth, Bill Callahan and Matthew E White. But I am old enough to remember a time when there were music critics who didn’t like “Tango In The Night” (an album which, interestingly, didn’t even make NME’s Top 60 of 1987).

The generational shifting of critical attitudes; the past being reconsidered and rewritten (I wrote about this in a blog called ’Nostalgia, anti-nostalgia, personal revisionism and one last sort-of review of Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories’); the debunking of elite male rock hegemonies – these are usually healthy and useful developments.

But few things can rouse a critic more than the opportunity to be a dissenting or misunderstood voice, to assume the role of underdog, even victim. “Each person must, on some level, take himself as the calibration point for normalcy,” wrote Teju Cole in the book I was reading this morning, Open City, “must assume that the room of his own mind is not, cannot be, entirely opaque to him. Perhaps this is what we mean by sanity: that, whatever our self-admitted eccentricities might be, we are not the villains of our own stories.”

I’m not crazy about Haim, and I really should have better things to do than feel self-reflexively guilty about it. Now let me tell you about how much I prefer Lindsey Buckingham solo to Fleetwood Mac…

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

Dave Davies says there’s a 50/50 chance The Kinks will tour next year

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Dave Davies has said there is a "50/50" chance that the band could reform and tour together next year. In an interview with Rolling Stone, Davis said that there was a possibility that the group would play shows to celebrate their 50th anniversary, but he also warned that it would depend on the rela...

Dave Davies has said there is a “50/50” chance that the band could reform and tour together next year.

In an interview with Rolling Stone, Davis said that there was a possibility that the group would play shows to celebrate their 50th anniversary, but he also warned that it would depend on the relationship with his brother Ray and ruled out the chance of them reuniting to record a new album.

Davies said he had met with Ray three times over the summer but said that although initial discussions were positive, they had become more difficult as they progressed. “The first two meeting were great,” he said. “We talked about the old days and maybe doing something next year. I thought to myself, ‘Oh shit, maybe we could do something before we fall down dead.’ It was very positive.”

He then added: “We had tea right before I came over to America, and he was so negative, grumpy and just mean. It was like he fell into a black hole. He didn’t want me to come back to America. I think it’s because I’m happy and I was doing something without his approval. I feel like he was miserable because I’m happy. He’s a really troubled man.”

Asked what the chances were of them playing together next year, he replied: “I’d say the odds of that happening are 50/50. The ball is very much in Ray’s court. We used to play tennis, and when I was beating him he’d always develop a strategy.

“Basically, when I was winning he’d be like, ‘Oh, I hurt my back!’ I’d sort of back off, and then he’d get aggressive again. Then I’d get real angry. He’d smile, and it was really like the Emperor in Star Wars testing Luke’s character. When he got Luke angry, the Emperor would be like ‘Yes! I’ve got you!'”

On the subject of making an album together, meanwhile, he simply said: “I can’t face the concept of days and days in the studio with Ray. I just can’t do it.”

The Kinks reissue Muswell Hillbillies on October 7, which will feature five previously unreleased songs as well as a smattering of alternate recordings and tracks taken from John Peel radio sessions on the BBC. Unreleased tracks include ‘Lavender Lane’, ‘Mountain Woman’, ‘Kentucky Moon’ and ‘Queenie’, in addition to a demo recording of the song ‘Nobody’s Fool’.

The tracklisting for the 2CD Deluxe Edition of ‘Muswell Hillbillies’ is as follows:

Disc One

’20th Century Man’

‘Acute Schizophrenia Paranoia Blues’

‘Holiday’

‘Skin And Bone’

‘Alcohol’

‘Complicated Life’

‘Here Come The People In Gray’

‘Have A Cuppa Tea’

‘Holloway Jail’

‘Oklahoma USA’

‘Uncle Son’

‘Muswell Hillbilly’

Disc Two

‘Lavender Lane’ (Unreleased)

‘Mountain Woman’ (Unreleased)

‘Have A Cuppa Tea’ (Alternate version)

‘Muswell Hillbilly’ (1976 remix)

‘Uncle Son’ (Alternate version)

‘Kentucky Moon’ (Unreleased)

‘Nobody’s Fool’ (Demo – unreleased)

’20th Century Man (Instrumental)

’20th Century Man (1976 remix)

‘Queenie’ (Unreleased)

‘Acute Schizophrenia Paranoia Blues’ (BBC Peel Session)

‘Holiday’ (BBC Peel Session)

‘Skin And Bone’ (BBC Peel Session)

Watch Christine McVie join Fleetwood Mac onstage at London’s 02 Arena for “Don’t Stop”

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Christine McVie joined Fleetwood Mac onstage last night [September 25] at London's O2 Arena. Receiving a rapturous reception, she sang "Don't Stop" with the group on the second of their three nights at the venue on their current tour of the UK. Another former bandmember, Peter Green - who left the ...

Christine McVie joined Fleetwood Mac onstage last night [September 25] at London’s O2 Arena.

Receiving a rapturous reception, she sang “Don’t Stop” with the group on the second of their three nights at the venue on their current tour of the UK. Another former bandmember, Peter Green – who left the group in 1970 – was in the crowd for the show, and Stevie Nicks dedicated the song “Landslide” to the founding member of Fleetwood Mac.

See below to watch McVie perform “Don’t Stop” with the band.

You can read Uncut’s review of Fleetwood Mac’s o2 show from Friday, September 27 here.

David Crosby: “My new solo album is like sex – it’s warm and wet… and it feels really good”

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David Crosby reveals that his new solo album is “like sex”, in the new issue of Uncut (dated November 2013), out now. The Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young singer-songwriter explains that the forthcoming record, tentatively titled Dangerous Night, and produced by Dan Garcia and Crosby’s son ...

David Crosby reveals that his new solo album is “like sex”, in the new issue of Uncut (dated November 2013), out now.

The Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young singer-songwriter explains that the forthcoming record, tentatively titled Dangerous Night, and produced by Dan Garcia and Crosby’s son James Raymond, is hard to label.

“Putting labels on this music is very tough,” he says. “It’s like trying to describe sex – it’s warm and wet, you go in and out and it really feels good. Somehow words just don’t convey the experience. Let’s just say that most people will be surprised by this record.”

The album will be Crosby’s fourth solo release, following 1993’s Thousand Roads.

The singer-songwriter takes us through some of the tracks on his new album, and also talks about the release of a new CSNY live album recorded in 1974 in the piece.

The November 2013 issue of Uncut is out now.

Bob Dylan announces Complete Album Collection Vol. One

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A new box set, Bob Dylan Complete Album Collection Vol. One, collecting Dylan's entire official discography, is due for release on Monday 4 November 2013. The CD boxed set contains 35 studio titles (including the first-ever North American release of 1973's Dylan album on CD) as well as 6 live albums and a hardcover book featuring extensive new album-by-album liner notes penned by Clinton Heylin and a new introduction written by Bill Flanagan. It also contains two "Side Tracks" discs which round up previously released non-album singles, tracks from Biograph and other compilations, songs from films and more. The Bob Dylan Complete Album Collection Vol. One will also be available as a limited-edition harmonica-shaped USB stick containing all the music, in both MP3 and FLAC lossless formats, with a digital version of the hardcover booklet, housed in a deluxe numbered box. 14 albums have been remastered especially for this set. A new compilation, The Very Best Of Bob Dylan, is also released on the same date. The Bob Dylan Complete Album Collection Vol. One includes: Studio Albums Bob Dylan (1962) The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan (1963) The Times They Are a-Changin' (1964) Another Side of Bob Dylan (1964) Bringing It All Back Home (1965) Highway 61 Revisited (1965) Blonde on Blonde (1966) John Wesley Harding (1967) Nashville Skyline (1969) *Self Portrait (1970) - newly remastered for this collection New Morning (1970) *Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid (1973) - newly remastered for this collection *Dylan (1973) - newly remastered for this collection Planet Waves (1974) Blood on the Tracks (1975) The Basement Tapes (1975) Desire (1976) *Street Legal (1978) - newly remastered for this collection Slow Train Coming (1979) *Saved (1980) - newly remastered for this collection Shot of Love (1981) Infidels (1983) *Empire Burlesque (1985) - newly remastered for this collection *Knocked Out Loaded (1986) - newly remastered for this collection *Down in the Groove (1988) - newly remastered for this collection Oh Mercy (1989) *Under the Red Sky (1990) - newly remastered for this collection *Good as I Been to You (1992) - newly remastered for this collection *World Gone Wrong (1993) - newly remastered for this collection Time Out of Mind (1997) Love and Theft (2001) Modern Times (2006) Together Through Life (2009) Christmas in the Heart (2009) Tempest (2012) Live Albums Before the Flood (1972) *Hard Rain (1976) - newly remastered for this collection *Bob Dylan at Budokan (1979) - newly remastered for this collection *Real Live (1984) - newly remastered for this collection Dylan & the Dead (1989) MTV Unplugged (1995) "Side Tracks" Baby, I'm in the Mood for You Mixed-Up Confusion Tomorrow Is a Long Time (live) Lay Down Your Weary Tune Percy's Song I'll Keep It with Mine Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window? Positively 4th Street Jet Pilot I Wanna Be Your Lover I Don't Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met) (live) Visions of Johanna (live) Quinn the Eskimo Watching the River Flow When I Paint My Masterpiece Down in the Flood I Shall Be Released You Ain't Goin' Nowhere George Jackson (acoustic version) Forever Young You're a Big Girl Now Up to Me Abandoned Love Isis (live) Romance in Durango (live) Caribbean Wind Heart of Mine (live) Series of Dreams Dignity Things Have Changed The Very Best Of Bob Dylan tracklisting: Formats: 1 CD Standard / Standard Digital 2 CD Deluxe / Deluxe Digital Disc 1 Like a Rolling Stone Blowin' in the Wind Subterranean Homesick Blues Lay, Lady, Lay Knockin' on Heaven's Door I Want You All Along the Watchtower Tangled up in Blue Don't Think Twice, It's All Right Hurricane Just Like a Woman Mr. Tambourine Man It Ain't Me Babe The Times They Are A-Changin' Duquesne Whistle Baby, Stop Crying Make You Feel My Love Thunder on the Mountain Disc 2 (2 CD Deluxe / Deluxe Digital version only) Maggie's Farm Rainy Day Women #12 & 35 Girl from the North Country Positively 4th Street A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall Shelter from the Storm Mississippi (Quinn the Eskimo) The Mighty Quinn I Shall Be Released It's All Over Now, Baby Blue Forever Young Gotta Serve Somebody Things Have Changed Jokerman Not Dark Yet Ring Them Bells Beyond Here Lies Nothin'

A new box set, Bob Dylan Complete Album Collection Vol. One, collecting Dylan’s entire official discography, is due for release on Monday 4 November 2013.

The CD boxed set contains 35 studio titles (including the first-ever North American release of 1973’s Dylan album on CD) as well as 6 live albums and a hardcover book featuring extensive new album-by-album liner notes penned by Clinton Heylin and a new introduction written by Bill Flanagan.

It also contains two “Side Tracks” discs which round up previously released non-album singles, tracks from Biograph and other compilations, songs from films and more.

The Bob Dylan Complete Album Collection Vol. One will also be available as a limited-edition harmonica-shaped USB stick containing all the music, in both MP3 and FLAC lossless formats, with a digital version of the hardcover booklet, housed in a deluxe numbered box.

14 albums have been remastered especially for this set.

A new compilation, The Very Best Of Bob Dylan, is also released on the same date.

The Bob Dylan Complete Album Collection Vol. One includes:

Studio Albums

Bob Dylan (1962)

The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan (1963)

The Times They Are a-Changin’ (1964)

Another Side of Bob Dylan (1964)

Bringing It All Back Home (1965)

Highway 61 Revisited (1965)

Blonde on Blonde (1966)

John Wesley Harding (1967)

Nashville Skyline (1969)

*Self Portrait (1970) – newly remastered for this collection

New Morning (1970)

*Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid (1973) – newly remastered for this collection

*Dylan (1973) – newly remastered for this collection

Planet Waves (1974)

Blood on the Tracks (1975)

The Basement Tapes (1975)

Desire (1976)

*Street Legal (1978) – newly remastered for this collection

Slow Train Coming (1979)

*Saved (1980) – newly remastered for this collection

Shot of Love (1981)

Infidels (1983)

*Empire Burlesque (1985) – newly remastered for this collection

*Knocked Out Loaded (1986) – newly remastered for this collection

*Down in the Groove (1988) – newly remastered for this collection

Oh Mercy (1989)

*Under the Red Sky (1990) – newly remastered for this collection

*Good as I Been to You (1992) – newly remastered for this collection

*World Gone Wrong (1993) – newly remastered for this collection

Time Out of Mind (1997)

Love and Theft (2001)

Modern Times (2006)

Together Through Life (2009)

Christmas in the Heart (2009)

Tempest (2012)

Live Albums

Before the Flood (1972)

*Hard Rain (1976) – newly remastered for this collection

*Bob Dylan at Budokan (1979) – newly remastered for this collection

*Real Live (1984) – newly remastered for this collection

Dylan & the Dead (1989)

MTV Unplugged (1995)

“Side Tracks”

Baby, I’m in the Mood for You

Mixed-Up Confusion

Tomorrow Is a Long Time (live)

Lay Down Your Weary Tune

Percy’s Song

I’ll Keep It with Mine

Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window?

Positively 4th Street

Jet Pilot

I Wanna Be Your Lover

I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met) (live)

Visions of Johanna (live)

Quinn the Eskimo

Watching the River Flow

When I Paint My Masterpiece

Down in the Flood

I Shall Be Released

You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere

George Jackson (acoustic version)

Forever Young

You’re a Big Girl Now

Up to Me

Abandoned Love

Isis (live)

Romance in Durango (live)

Caribbean Wind

Heart of Mine (live)

Series of Dreams

Dignity

Things Have Changed

The Very Best Of Bob Dylan tracklisting:

Formats:

1 CD Standard / Standard Digital

2 CD Deluxe / Deluxe Digital

Disc 1

Like a Rolling Stone

Blowin’ in the Wind

Subterranean Homesick Blues

Lay, Lady, Lay

Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door

I Want You

All Along the Watchtower

Tangled up in Blue

Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right

Hurricane

Just Like a Woman

Mr. Tambourine Man

It Ain’t Me Babe

The Times They Are A-Changin’

Duquesne Whistle

Baby, Stop Crying

Make You Feel My Love

Thunder on the Mountain

Disc 2 (2 CD Deluxe / Deluxe Digital version only)

Maggie’s Farm

Rainy Day Women #12 & 35

Girl from the North Country

Positively 4th Street

A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall

Shelter from the Storm

Mississippi

(Quinn the Eskimo) The Mighty Quinn

I Shall Be Released

It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue

Forever Young

Gotta Serve Somebody

Things Have Changed

Jokerman

Not Dark Yet

Ring Them Bells

Beyond Here Lies Nothin’

The Pogues to perform Rum, Sodomy & The Lash live

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The Pogues are set to play their classic 1985 album Rum, Sodomy & The Lash at four separate shows in the UK this December. The band will visit Manchester O2 Apollo on December 15, before gigs at Glasgow O2 Academy (December 17) and two shows at London's O2 Academy Brixton on December 19 and 20....

The Pogues are set to play their classic 1985 album Rum, Sodomy & The Lash at four separate shows in the UK this December.

The band will visit Manchester O2 Apollo on December 15, before gigs at Glasgow O2 Academy (December 17) and two shows at London’s O2 Academy Brixton on December 19 and 20. Tickets go on sale at 9.30am [BST] on September 27. As well as playing their second album in full, they will also perform other “favourite tracks”.

Earlier this year it was reported that The Pogues’ Shane MacGowan was searching for a dentist who could fix his infamously bad teeth so he might start a Hollywood film career. MacGowan’s hedonistic lifestyle caused his teeth to rot and fall out and, although he had dentures fitted in 2009, he no longer wears them. His girlfriend Victoria Mary Clarke launched an appeal on Twitter for a dentist to fix his gnashers and also promised that the frontman would front an advertising campaign in exchange for the work.

“Shane is keen to find a dentist, so he can start in Hollywood film,” she wrote. “Pogues/Shane fans who are great dentists please apply!” She later added: “Shane promises to do advertising campaign for the winning dentist!!!”

The Pogues released the live album and DVD Pogues In Paris: 30th Anniversary Concert At The Olympia, which features two shows in the French capital, in November 2012. Their last studio album, Pogue Mahone, was released in 1996.

Iron gates welded by Bob Dylan set to go on display at exhibition

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A new exhibition of iron works and original paintings by Bob Dylan is set to open at London's Halcyon Gallery on November 16. 'Mood Swings' will feature seven iron gates welded out of vintage iron by the legendary singer-songwriter, who, states a press release for the event, has had a "lifelong fascination with welding and metalwork." Dylan comments: "I've been around iron all my life ever since I was a kid. I was born and raised in iron ore country - where you could breathe it and smell it every day. And I've always worked with it in one form or another. Gates appeal to me because of the negative space they allow. They can be closed but at the same time they allow the seasons and breezes to enter and flow. They can shut you out or shut you in. And in some ways there is no difference." The exhibition, which will run until January 25, 2014, also features original silkscreen works on canvas by Dylan. President of the Halcyon Gallery, Paul Green, has said of the exhibition: "The forthcoming exhibition will be the most comprehensive and authoritative collection of Bob Dylan’s art to date. While Dylan has been a committed visual artist for more than four decades, this exhibition will cast new light on one of the world's most important and influential cultural figures of our time. His iron works demonstrate his boundless creativity and talent. As these artworks are made at home, not on the road, they give us a rare glimpse into another part of the artist's own personal universe." A series of Bob Dylan's paintings are also currently on display at London's National Portrait Gallery. The 12 pastel works are a mix of real and fictitious characters. 'Bob Dylan: Face Value' will be in the Contemporary Collection displays until January 5, 2014. Bob Dylan's welding skills have been reported previously in Uncut. In a 2011 interview in the magazine, David Stewart told us, "Jeff Rosen, who’s his publishing manager, was really laughing because Dylan very rarely responds to requests for this or that but… I bought this land with a friend in the woods in Jamaica and we were building this house and it had these broken down old stones and it had this bit where there could be a gate… and I sent a fax saying would Bob design these metal gates? And it came straight back – ‘I’m into it!’ He does metal welding, like sculptural, and he’s brilliant.”

A new exhibition of iron works and original paintings by Bob Dylan is set to open at London’s Halcyon Gallery on November 16.

‘Mood Swings’ will feature seven iron gates welded out of vintage iron by the legendary singer-songwriter, who, states a press release for the event, has had a “lifelong fascination with welding and metalwork.” Dylan comments: “I’ve been around iron all my life ever since I was a kid. I was born and raised in iron ore country – where you could breathe it and smell it every day. And I’ve always worked with it in one form or another. Gates appeal to me because of the negative space they allow. They can be closed but at the same time they allow the seasons and breezes to enter and flow. They can shut you out or shut you in. And in some ways there is no difference.”

The exhibition, which will run until January 25, 2014, also features original silkscreen works on canvas by Dylan. President of the Halcyon Gallery, Paul Green, has said of the exhibition: “The forthcoming exhibition will be the most comprehensive and authoritative collection of Bob Dylan’s art to date. While Dylan has been a committed visual artist for more than four decades, this exhibition will cast new light on one of the world’s most important and influential cultural figures of our time. His iron works demonstrate his boundless creativity and talent. As these artworks are made at home, not on the road, they give us a rare glimpse into another part of the artist’s own personal universe.”

A series of Bob Dylan’s paintings are also currently on display at London’s National Portrait Gallery. The 12 pastel works are a mix of real and fictitious characters. ‘Bob Dylan: Face Value’ will be in the Contemporary Collection displays until January 5, 2014.

Bob Dylan’s welding skills have been reported previously in Uncut. In a 2011 interview in the magazine, David Stewart told us, “Jeff Rosen, who’s his publishing manager, was really laughing because Dylan very rarely responds to requests for this or that but… I bought this land with a friend in the woods in Jamaica and we were building this house and it had these broken down old stones and it had this bit where there could be a gate… and I sent a fax saying would Bob design these metal gates? And it came straight back – ‘I’m into it!’ He does metal welding, like sculptural, and he’s brilliant.”

King Crimson unveil new-line up and 2014 tour plans

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Robert Fripp has unveiled a new incarnation of King Crimson. Speaking to Uncut, Fripp said: "King Crimson is returning to active service. We are on-call to be ready for a live performance on September 1, 2014. Seven members. Four English, three American. Three drummers. It’s a different configura...

Robert Fripp has unveiled a new incarnation of King Crimson.

Speaking to Uncut, Fripp said: “King Crimson is returning to active service. We are on-call to be ready for a live performance on September 1, 2014. Seven members. Four English, three American. Three drummers. It’s a different configuration of King Crimson than before. Some are familiar names, maybe more than others.”

This line-up – the 8th in the band’s history – will be Fripp, Gavin Harrison, Bill Rieflin, Tony Levin, Pat Mastelotto, Mel Collins and Jakko Jakszyk.

They are all former Crimson members, except Rieflin and Jakszyk who have been involved on the fringes of Crimson for a few years. Rieflin collaborated with Chris Wong, Robert Fripp and Toyah Willcox in a project called The Humans, while Jakszyk played in Jakszyk Fripp & Collins, alongside Robert Fripp and Mel Collins.

Fripp has been embroiled in a legal dispute with Universal Music Group for six years, which has only recently been resolved. This legal dispute caused him to retire from live performance. King Crimson last played together in 2008, while Fripp himself hasn’t performed live since 2010. There are no plans, he says, for the new King Crimson to enter a studio. They will play “reconfigured” versions of existing Crimson material.

“The first performance will take place in either North or South America,” Fripp told Uncut. “There will be rehearsals primarily in England, and the final batch of rehearsals will most likely be in America in August or September 2014. There is a plan to include the UK in the tour dates, but it depends on a number of circumstances. Right now the primary geographical focus is the United States.”

The 35th Uncut Playlist Of 2013

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Conspicuously wealthy blues collectors probably know about this by now, but a copy of Tommy Johnson’s “Alcohol And Jake Blues” has surfaced – only the second that’s ever been found – and is on sale at Ebay. It’ll be interesting to see how bidding shapes up before the auction closes around 10 tonight (UK time): at time of writing, the highest offer is $16,800.00. There’s a great exchange in the Ebay Q&A when someone tries to get the seller to digitise his copy and replace the scratchy transfer that currently circulates (as on the Youtube link below). That doesn’t work, as you might imagine. Back in 2013, there’s a nice new Limiñanas record, the best Alasdair Roberts in a while, King Champion Sounds (a Dutch-based band featured one of The Ex and Ajay from one of my favourite lost ‘90s noise bands, Donkey, and the Daniel Bachman and Trans (interesting story there…) releases get better with each listen. Also, if you were drawn in by my Television/Forsyth/Nugent/Nico blog last week, there’s a trailer for the Chris Forsyth album gone live, that I’ve embedded below. And a quick reminder that our new issue is on sale today (Read about the November 2013 Uncut here): cool, I think, to have The Waterboys, Clarence White, Throwing Muses, Archie Shepp and Laraaji in there, among all the other stuff. As ever, let us know what you think… Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey 1 Daniel Bachman – Jesus I’m A Sinner (Tompkins Square) 2 Kurt Vile & The Violators - it's a big world out there (and i am scared) EP (Matador) 3 The Limiñanas - Costa Blanca (Trouble In Mind) 4 Cliff Martinez – Solaris: Original Music (Invada) 5 Van Morrison – Into The Mystic (Unreleased Version) (Warner Bros) 6 Neil Young – Reason To Believe (Live At Farm Aid) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Du98mhHRdGI 7 Date Palms – The Dusted Sessions (Thrill Jockey) Read my live review of Date Palms here 8 Roy Harper – Man And Myth (Bella Union) Read my live review of Roy Harper here 9 Alasdair Roberts & Robin Robertson – Hrta Songs (Stone Tape) 10 Tommy Johnson – Alcohol And Jake Blues (Paramount) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ayltwUwpW04 11 Chris Forsyth – Solar Motel (Paradise Of Bachelors)

Conspicuously wealthy blues collectors probably know about this by now, but a copy of Tommy Johnson’s “Alcohol And Jake Blues” has surfaced – only the second that’s ever been found – and is on sale at Ebay. It’ll be interesting to see how bidding shapes up before the auction closes around 10 tonight (UK time): at time of writing, the highest offer is $16,800.00.

There’s a great exchange in the Ebay Q&A when someone tries to get the seller to digitise his copy and replace the scratchy transfer that currently circulates (as on the Youtube link below). That doesn’t work, as you might imagine.

Back in 2013, there’s a nice new Limiñanas record, the best Alasdair Roberts in a while, King Champion Sounds (a Dutch-based band featured one of The Ex and Ajay from one of my favourite lost ‘90s noise bands, Donkey, and the Daniel Bachman and Trans (interesting story there…) releases get better with each listen. Also, if you were drawn in by my Television/Forsyth/Nugent/Nico blog last week, there’s a trailer for the Chris Forsyth album gone live, that I’ve embedded below.

And a quick reminder that our new issue is on sale today (Read about the November 2013 Uncut here): cool, I think, to have The Waterboys, Clarence White, Throwing Muses, Archie Shepp and Laraaji in there, among all the other stuff. As ever, let us know what you think…

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

1 Daniel Bachman – Jesus I’m A Sinner (Tompkins Square)

2 Kurt Vile & The Violators – it’s a big world out there (and i am scared) EP (Matador)

3 The Limiñanas – Costa Blanca (Trouble In Mind)

4 Cliff Martinez – Solaris: Original Music (Invada)

5 Van Morrison – Into The Mystic (Unreleased Version) (Warner Bros)

6 Neil Young – Reason To Believe (Live At Farm Aid)

7 Date Palms – The Dusted Sessions (Thrill Jockey)

Read my live review of Date Palms here

8 Roy Harper – Man And Myth (Bella Union)

Read my live review of Roy Harper here

9 Alasdair Roberts & Robin Robertson – Hrta Songs (Stone Tape)

10 Tommy Johnson – Alcohol And Jake Blues (Paramount)

11 Chris Forsyth – Solar Motel (Paradise Of Bachelors)

Chris Forsyth – Solar Motel (teaser) from Chris Forsyth on Vimeo.

12 Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – Idea & Deed/On My Way Home Again/You Have Cum In Your Hair And Your Dick Is Hanging Out/Time To Be Clear (Ace Hotel & Jackpot! Recording MFNW Sessions)

Download the Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy tracks for free here

13 Trans – Trans Red EP (Rough Trade)

14 Date Palms – USA & Europe Dusted Sessions Tour 2013 (Date Palms)

15 Dead Meadow – Warble Womb (Xemu)

16 Olan Mill – Hiraeth (Preservation)

17 Jeffrey Novak – Lemon Kid (Trouble In Mind)

18 Autechre – L-Event (Warp)

19 Cian Nugent & The Cosmos – Born With The Caul (No Quarter)

20 King Champion Sounds – Different Drummer (Wormer Brothers)

This month in Uncut!

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Pink Floyd, John Lydon, The Waterboys and Vampire Weekend are in the new issue of Uncut (dated November 2013), out now. In the cover feature, Nick Mason, Alan Parsons, Roy Harper and more finally reveal the secrets of The Dark Side Of The Moon, 40 years after its release. “However much success...

Pink Floyd, John Lydon, The Waterboys and Vampire Weekend are in the new issue of Uncut (dated November 2013), out now.

In the cover feature, Nick Mason, Alan Parsons, Roy Harper and more finally reveal the secrets of The Dark Side Of The Moon, 40 years after its release.

“However much success you have,” Mason tells Uncut, “it’s never quite enough to ease the egos of everyone.”

John Lydon talks us through the rocky creation of his greatest albums, from the Sex Pistols’ Never Mind The Bollocks… and Public Image Limited’s Metal Box to his own Psycho’s Path and PiL’s This Is PiL from 2012.

Mike Scott also reveals how he got deep into folk, started competing with U2 and made The Waterboys’ 1988 folk masterpiece Fisherman’s Blues, while Vampire Weekend reflect on their impressive trilogy of albums, and why being into preppy things at 29 is “a bit stunted”.

Elsewhere, The Animals discuss the making of “We’ve Gotta Get Out Of This Place”, David Crosby talks about his new solo album and a CSNY ’74 live album, Giant Sand’s Howe Gelb answers your questions and the astounding, tragic tale of Clarence White, the Byrd who sparked two musical revolutions, is told.

Returning alternative heroes Throwing Muses look back over their history, champagne, painkillers and Jagger’s bed included, while Uncut meets teenage rabble-rousers The Strypes, and Graham Parker takes us back through the records that have defined his life.

In the huge reviews section, new albums by Paul McCartney, Arcade Fire, Jonathan Wilson, Prefab Sprout and Linda Thompson are reviewed, alongside archive material from John Martyn, Nirvana, The Beta Band and Bruce Springsteen.

The film and DVD section looks at Captain Phillips, The Wicker Man and Basically, Johnny Moped, while The Replacements, End Of The Road Festival and Björk are reviewed in our live section.

Uncut’s CD this month includes tracks from Okkervil River, Jonathan Wilson, Linda Thompson, Bill Callahan, Tony Joe White, Howe Gelb and The Sufis.

The new issue of Uncut (dated November 2013) is out now.

John Lennon interactive album app due for release

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A new interactive album app called John Lennon: The Bermuda Tapes will be released on November 5. The app, which is to be launched exclusively through the iTunes App Store, is directed by Michael Epstein, who previously wrote and directed by documentary, LENNONYC. The app is based on Lennon's 1980 visit to Bermuda, and his collaborations with Ono, which informed the Double Fantasy album. According to a report in Billboard, users will be able to navigate stormy seas to Bermuda, visit a disco, and hear Lennon's demos of tracks like “Woman”, “Starting Over”, “I’m Losing You”, “(Just Like) Starting Over”, “Nobody Told Me” and “Dear Yoko". "Writing Double Fantasy was a very exciting time creatively for both John and me," said Yoko Ono. "I think the album app captures the sense of discovery and the artistic dialogue that John and I shared at that time and provides a new way to help us imagine a world without hunger." http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mhV5dtzHY1w

A new interactive album app called John Lennon: The Bermuda Tapes will be released on November 5.

The app, which is to be launched exclusively through the iTunes App Store, is directed by Michael Epstein, who previously wrote and directed by documentary, LENNONYC.

The app is based on Lennon’s 1980 visit to Bermuda, and his collaborations with Ono, which informed the Double Fantasy album. According to a report in Billboard, users will be able to navigate stormy seas to Bermuda, visit a disco, and hear Lennon’s demos of tracks like “Woman”, “Starting Over”, “I’m Losing You”, “(Just Like) Starting Over”, “Nobody Told Me” and “Dear Yoko”.

“Writing Double Fantasy was a very exciting time creatively for both John and me,” said Yoko Ono. “I think the album app captures the sense of discovery and the artistic dialogue that John and I shared at that time and provides a new way to help us imagine a world without hunger.”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mhV5dtzHY1w