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Exclusive! Watch a video for The Wedding Present’s new song, “The Loneliest Time Of Year”

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A year ago, Uncut brought you the news that The Wedding Present were marking the 30th anniversary of their Hit Parade caper by repeating the feat of releasing a single every month throughout 2022. And having pulled it off once more with aplomb, where else to end but with a traditional seasonal weepi...

A year ago, Uncut brought you the news that The Wedding Present were marking the 30th anniversary of their Hit Parade caper by repeating the feat of releasing a single every month throughout 2022. And having pulled it off once more with aplomb, where else to end but with a traditional seasonal weepie?

Watch the video for “The Loneliest Time Of Year” below:

“Ah, the old ‘Christmas song’,” writes bandleader David Gedge. “To be honest, I’ve kind of been one of those ‘bah, humbug’ types ever since I realised that the only thing we’re really celebrating on 25 December is capitalism! ‘Thanks for the list of stuff you want me to buy for you, here’s a list of stuff I want you to buy for me.’ There’s nothing wrong with that, I suppose, but, for me, one of the most appealing things about the festive season is the way pop songs always seem more poignant when they’re also Christmas songs. It’s all about heightened expectation and disappointment, perhaps.

“I’ve had a go myself a couple of times over the years, of course, and it seemed fitting to have another crack at it for the grand finale of 24 Songs. Hence, ‘The Loneliest Time Of Year’ has a huge, melancholy chorus, sleigh bells, and an appropriately surreal video. The other song on our final 7” of 2022, ‘Memento Mori’, is a perkier affair which was written while I gazed admiringly at the snow-topped Cascade Mountain Range in Washington State.”

“The Loneliest Time Of Year” will be released on Friday December 16. You can buy the 7″ – either individually or as part of the complete box set of all 12 24 Songs singles – by clicking here.

Uncut – February 2023

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HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME Neil Young, Margo Price, The Stooges, Mimi Parker, Lawrence, Cymande, The Meters, New Order, Mike Scott, Keith Levine and Ivor Cutler all feature in the new Uncut, dated February 2023 and in UK shops from December 8 or available to buy online now. This issu...

HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME

Neil Young, Margo Price, The Stooges, Mimi Parker, Lawrence, Cymande, The Meters, New Order, Mike Scott, Keith Levine and Ivor Cutler all feature in the new Uncut, dated February 2023 and in UK shops from December 8 or available to buy online now. This issue comes with an exclusive free 15-track CD of the month’s best new music.

NEIL YOUNG: Neil Young is out there in the wilderness, travelling on his bus back towards his Canadian homeland. This literal journey into his past also seems a suitable metaphor for Young’s peripatetic 2022. Over the past 12 months, this most capricious of musicians has hurtled backwards and forwards through his history and the present day – from 1970s ‘bootlegs’ via mythic lost albums and powerful new recordings with his doughty lieutenants Crazy Horse before arriving, finally, at a 50th-anniversary edition of his celebrated album Harvest. In this exclusive interview, Young – accompanied by Crazy Horse and producer Rick Rubin – looks back over a prolific year and attempts to make sense of the different, sometimes contradictory Neil Youngs who have emerged along the way. “I got a lot of stuff to clean up,” he tells Damien Love. “I’ve got a big mess that I left behind.”

OUR FREE CD! THERE’S A WORLD: 15 tracks of the month’s best new music

This issue of Uncut is available to buy by clicking here – with FREE delivery to the UK and reduced delivery charges for the rest of the world.

Inside the issue, you’ll find:

MARGO PRICE: Back from the wilds of Topanga Canyon with a “psychedelic” new album fired by weed and tequila, Margo Price is moving far beyond her country-tonk roots. But will inner flight, personal loss and newfound wisdom tame her wayward impulses? “It’s been a long, weird road to get to the person that I am,” she tells Stephen Deusner. “But here I am.”

THE STOOGES: A band in disarray. A fancy hotel in West London. Heavy riffs and delinquent ballads. Fifty years since the release of Iggy and The Stooges’ Raw Power, Nick Hasted convenes a crack team of heads – including J Mascis, Jim Reid, Mark Arm and Bob Mould – to dig deep into one of the most influential records in rock history. “All three Stooges albums are equal to me,” says Iggy Pop. “But Raw Power, that’s the big one.”

MIMI PARKER: Uncut pays tribute to Mimi Parker as friends and collaborators including Jeff Tweedy and Steve Albini celebrate the music and influence of Low’s beloved vocalist, songwriter and instrumentalist. “She was the calmest of oceans,” learns Stephen Deusner. “She was the ebb and flow of it all.”

2023 ALBUMS PREVIEW: One is a three-act rock opera about artists being exiled into space, another is influenced by Uzbekistani disco, while a third features a song called “Layla” inspired by its creator’s apparent “Oedipal hatred of Eric Clapton”. Join us, then, for Uncut’s essential guide to many of 2023’s key albums. Brace yourselves for news of The Cure, Blondie, The Rolling Stones, Dexys, Lucinda Williams, Elvis Costello, Robert Forster, The Damned, Natalie Merchant, Margo Cilker, Modern Nature, Graham Nash, Sparks and more…

LAWRENCE: The Felt, Denim and now Mozart Estate mainman on baseball caps, Record Store Day and his elusive quest for fame: “I’m prepared to pay a price for that, yes”

CYMANDE: The making of “Bra”.

THE METERS: Funk session supremo Leo Nocentelli looks back on a stellar career

NEW ORDER: The Waterboys skipper on the records that forever rock his boat: “I wanted to live in music”

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new records from John Cale, Meg Baird, Guided By Voices, Whitehorse and more, and archival releases from New Order, Gong, Lightships, and others. We catch the Cat Power live; among the films, DVDs and TV programmes reviewed are Glass Onion, Corsage, Peter Von Kant, Pigdy and Alcarràs; while in books there’s Bez and Trevor Horn.

Our front section, meanwhile, features Keith Levine, Ivor Cutler, Complete Mountain Almanac, Harvey Mandel, while, at the end of the magazine, Mike Scott shares his life in music.

You can pick up a copy of Uncut in the usual places, where open. But otherwise, readers all over the world can order a copy from here.

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

Echo and the Bunnymen to play Ocean Rain in full with orchestra on four UK shows

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Echo and the Bunnymen have announced a special UK tour for autumn 2023. ORDER NOW: Neil Young is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Will Sergeant: “I don’t hate The Beatles, but we were sick of hearing about them” The band will be playing their fourth album Ocean R...

Echo and the Bunnymen have announced a special UK tour for autumn 2023.

The band will be playing their fourth album Ocean Rain in full for four shows around the country in Nottingham, Edinburgh, their hometown of Liverpool and London’s Royal Albert Hall in September 2023. They will be accompanied by the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra.

Ocean Rain was released in 1984 and was recorded mostly in Paris with a 35-piece orchestra. It features songs such as “The Killing Moon”, “Silver” and “Seven Seas”.

Tickets will go on sale at 10am on Friday (December 9) – check out the full list of dates below.

SEPTEMBER 2023
12 – Nottingham, Royal Concert Hall
14 – Edinburgh, Usher Hall
16 – Liverpool, M&S Bank Arena
18 – London, Royal Albert Hall

Echo & The Bunnymen
Will Sergeant and Ian McCulloch of Echo & The Bunnymen perform onstage headling day 2 of Rockaway Festival 2019 at Butlins on January 12, 2019 in Bognor Regis. Image: Ollie Millington / Redferns

Echo and the Bunnymen are also set to appear on the Sunday of next year’s Isle of Wight Festival, which will be headlined by Pulp, George Ezra, The Chemical Brothers and Robbie Williams. The post-punk legends have also been confirmed for the lineup of next year’s Bearded Theory, which will take place in Derbyshire in May 2023.

Elsewhere, the band’s frontman, Ian McCulloch, recently sang at the funeral of Happy Mondays bassist Paul Ryder, who passed away in August at the age of 58.

Back in June, Echo and the Bunnymen supported The Rolling Stones at their first show in Liverpool for 50 years as part of their SIXTY UK and European anniversary tour.

Paul McCartney – Ultimate Music Guide

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In the year of his 80th birthday, our latest Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide celebrates the songwriting genius of Paul McCartney - over a massive 148 pages. Buy the issue from our online store and you’ll receive an exclusive alternate cover, and a free poster! Buy a copy of the magazine here. Misse...

In the year of his 80th birthday, our latest Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide celebrates the songwriting genius of Paul McCartney – over a massive 148 pages. Buy the issue from our online store and you’ll receive an exclusive alternate cover, and a free poster!

Buy a copy of the magazine here. Missed one in the series? Bundles are available at the same location…

Introducing the Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide to Paul McCartney

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BUY THE PAUL MCCARTNEY DELUXE ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE HERE As anyone who has been to see him live in the last few years will know, Paul McCartney does a very good job indeed of managing his past and his present. Before he even left the Beatles he’d written a song implying how difficult it would be...

BUY THE PAUL MCCARTNEY DELUXE ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE HERE

As anyone who has been to see him live in the last few years will know, Paul McCartney does a very good job indeed of managing his past and his present. Before he even left the Beatles he’d written a song implying how difficult it would be to live a life outside them – but in the room he makes it look pretty easy. Classic Beatles number follows huge-selling Wings song. Something from the new album dropped in there to change the pace. Even if you were compiling a mixtape you’d hesitate putting “Live and Let Die” before “Hey Jude” (too much? Too strong?), but McCartney, inevitably, pulls it off.

He has a huge wealth of music to draw on, and that’s what we’re celebrating in this overdue new deluxe edition of our Ultimate Music Guide. 2022 hasn’t only been the year Paul celebrated his 80th birthday, it’s also marked 60 years of top-flight recording, and here we look back on a substantial chunk of it. On the following pages, you’ll find in-depth reviews of every Paul solo album from the experimental, intimate debut McCartney from 1970, all the way to his most recent rockdown, 2020’s McCartney III.

It’s been an incredible 52 years solo so far and the variety of material Paul has issued reflects the ebb and flow of some enduring themes. The interest in being in a band which might get back on the road, and back to basics. There’s the engagement with contemporary recording trends, and working with vogue producers. You will have enjoyed the respectful nods to his matchless past career, and to his departed colleagues. Then there’s the joy of the off-piste self-titled albums, in which, released from his high expectations of himself, McCartney does very much his own thing.

What’s just as gratifying is that when the time has been right, Paul has also taken the time to talk to us about what he’s been doing. This doesn’t generally mean a tour of the new album, but a generous and extended roam around the rolling estate of his entire career – and how being in the Beatles has informed who he is now. In his wide-reaching 2020 interview with Uncut included here, for example, Paul tells Michael Bonner about how John Lennon is never far from his thoughts when he’s writing new songs. Specifically, thinking back on his guidance about when to persevere, and when to completely rethink something.

“We collaborated for so long, I think, ‘Okay, what would he think of this?” Paul remembered. “What would be say now?’”

Meeting the other Beatles, he continues, gave him permission to find freedom through creativity. Surely these days, Uncut ventures, being Paul McCartney, he can do whatever he wants? Paul’s answer is tellingly humble.

He laughed. “I wish I knew I was Paul McCartney, it would be so much easier… Look, you can achieve a lot of fame, but you’re still the same person inside. Hopefully, you grow and learn things – but we’re all a bit fragile inside. I don’t think it’s a bad thing. It’s life, isn’t it?”

Enjoy the magazine. Buy it from us here, and get an exclusive cover and free poster, while stocks last!

Enjoy the magazine.

Buy a copy of the magazine here. Missed one in the series? Bundles are available at the same location…

An audience with Michael Head: “I’ve been lucky – when things were tough, I’ve had a creative outlet”

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The creator of one of Uncut’s best albums of 2022 on his magical Mersey adventures with The Pale Fountains, Shack, Arthur Lee and Lee Mavers, in the latest issue of Uncut magazine – in UK shops from Thursday, November 10 and available to buy from our online store. It’s the morning after Li...

The creator of one of Uncut’s best albums of 2022 on his magical Mersey adventures with The Pale Fountains, Shack, Arthur Lee and Lee Mavers, in the latest issue of Uncut magazine – in UK shops from Thursday, November 10 and available to buy from our online store.

It’s the morning after Liverpool’s pulsating victory over Manchester City at Anfield, and Mick Head is understandably buzzing. “It feels good. I was listening on the radio and I heard a couple of pundits talking about the atmosphere and saying they’d never heard anything like it – and this was before the game!” Head has further cause for celebration when informed that his latest album with the Red Elastic Band, the triumphant Dear Scott, has been named one of Uncut’s best albums of 2022. “That’s amazing,” he beams. “It’s just recognition for what everyone’s put into it. We’re all really proud of it.” Earlier this year, the album became his first ever Top 10 record in a long career of heroic near-misses. “We were on tour when the album got released and that was brilliant. It was like being in the Paleys again: we’re all excited in the back of the van, listening to the charts. A real highlight.”

Is this the happiest he’s been? “Yeah. The world’s fucking mad, but creatively, if you put everything on the table and look down on it from above, then yeah. Maybe it’s ’cos I’ve got lucidity. I’m feeling good physically – surprisingly! Still functioning emotionally. And that has an impact on the songs. There’s no better feeling than when someone tells you what a particular song means to them. Somebody once told me they walked down the aisle to “As Long As I’ve Got You” and that blew me away. But that’s what songs are for. Music can do things. It’ll catch on.”

The new album sounds so fresh. Is songwriting getting easier the older you get – or harder? – Peter Livesey, Salford

I think it gets easier. A lot of it is down to the mindset. Obviously I’ve enjoyed songwriting all my life, ’cos it’s what I do. But I do find it’s getting easier as I get older, because I’m enjoying it more.

How did the collaboration with Bill Ryder-Jones for Dear Scott come about? – Tom Newton, via email

We all know Bill really well – Liverpool’s quite a small village, musically. Nat [Cummings] from the Red Elastic Band had been working in Bill’s studio in West Kirby and when he said, ‘What do you think about this as an idea?’ I bit his hand off. Because I’d met Bill at gigs, I loved The Coral, and I knew how talented he was. Bill has mentioned that he was into the Paleys and Shack growing up, which is always refreshing to hear. And it showed when we were recording because he kinda knows where I’m going. I had a lovely conversation with Bill last week, and I think we’ve got some [studio] time pencilled in early next year. There’s six, seven, eight songs that we wanna put down. It was a joy to work on the last album, so keep it simple. You don’t change a winning team!

Aside from a ride on “The Ten”, what other places to check out would you recommend for someone visiting Kensington in Liverpool? – Nick Cullen, via Twitter

There’s a necropolis on the corner of West Derby Road, where we used to play football. In the 19th century it was overflowing with dead bodies after the Napoleonic wars, so we built this amazing necropolis. You’ve got the Olympia where we played a couple of months ago. And Buffalo Bill and his travelling circus came down West Derby Road in the 1900s. But saying that, once you got there, you’d think, ‘What the fuck’s Mick Head on about?’ There’s not much there now, but it’s steeped in history.

PICK UP THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT TO READ THE FULL STORY

Jeff Tweedy honours Christine McVie with acoustic cover of Fleetwood Mac’s “Little Lies”

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Jeff Tweedy has paid tribute to Fleetwood Mac’s late singer and keyboardist Christine McVie, covering the band’s 1987 track "Little Lies" during a show in Michigan. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Christine McVie remembered Tweedy perform...

Jeff Tweedy has paid tribute to Fleetwood Mac’s late singer and keyboardist Christine McVie, covering the band’s 1987 track “Little Lies” during a show in Michigan.

Tweedy performed at Three Oaks’ Acorn Theatre in Michigan last Friday (December 2), where his cover of “Little Lies” was the sixth song on his setlist. The track itself was co-written by McVie and her then-husband, Eddy Quintela, and first appeared on Fleetwood Mac’s 14th album, Tango In The Night.

Have a look at some footage of the cover, as well as the full setlist, below:

McVie died on Wednesday (November 30) at the age of 79. It isn’t yet known exactly how she passed, however in a statement, her family explained that it came “following a short illness”.

McVie was widely seen as one of Fleetwood Mac’s most integral members. She served three stints with the band – first from 1970 to 1996, then 1997 to 1998, and finally from 2014 until her death. In that time, she performed on 13 of the band’s 17 studio albums.

Other artists paying tribute to McVie have included bandmates Mick Fleetwood, Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham, as well as Bill Clinton, Haim, LCD Soundsystem, Harry Styles, Keith Urban and many more.

David Byrne shares new Christmas song “Fat Man’s Comin'”

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David Byrne has shared a new festive song, "Fat Man’s Comin'". ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: David Byrne’s American Utopia review The track, which you can listen to below, was written while he was working on his collaborative album with...

David Byrne has shared a new festive song, “Fat Man’s Comin'”.

The track, which you can listen to below, was written while he was working on his collaborative album with St. Vincent, Love This Giant. It was produced by Jherek Bischoff.

“I always wanted to write a holiday song,” the former Talking Heads frontman said in a press release (via Consequence). “I wouldn’t call it a Christmas song, as the visitation of Santa (formerly known as St. Nicholas, who mainly did punishing) seems to have evolved to be a more secular consumer moment than a religious or spiritual affair.”

The track is available on Bandcamp under a pay-what-you-can model here, with all proceeds going towards Reasons To Be Cheerful, the good-news-only publication Byrne founded in 2019.

Meanwhile, Byrne recently featured on an abortion rights benefit album alongside the likes of Pearl Jam, R.E.M. and Wet Leg.

The compilation LP – Good Music To Ensure Safe Abortion Access To All also featured further contributions from Death Cab For CutieAnimal CollectiveMy Morning JacketFleet FoxesKing Gizzard And The Lizard WizardMac DeMarcoTy Segall, Amanda Shires and Jason Isbell.

100 per cent of the proceeds went to non-profit organisations working to provide abortion care access including Brigid Alliance – a referral-based service that provides travel, food, lodging, child care, and other logistical support for people seeking abortions and NOISE FOR NOW, which is working with Abortion Care Network to support independent abortion clinics.

It came in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade earlier this year, which meant abortion would no longer be protected as a federal right in the US for the first time since 1973, and each state would be able to decide individually whether to restrict or ban abortion.

The Beach Boys – Sail On Sailor 1972

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As hard as they swam against it, nostalgia always pulled The Beach Boys back. As we left them at the end-of-season cliffhanger of their last boxset, their new manager Jack Rieley had recently tried to bring the band up to date. They embraced ecological issues, politics and new technology; they grew ...

As hard as they swam against it, nostalgia always pulled The Beach Boys back. As we left them at the end-of-season cliffhanger of their last boxset, their new manager Jack Rieley had recently tried to bring the band up to date. They embraced ecological issues, politics and new technology; they grew their hair and played with the Grateful Dead. Even as it broke new ground, however, 1971’s wonderful Surf’s Up ended on familiar territory. Bruce Johnston wrote a song (“Disney Girls”) that hymned the very mom-and-pop America the band were allegedly trying to leave behind. The album concluded, meanwhile, with “Surf’s Up” itself, a song rescued from the abandoned Smile sessions of 1967 – and an image of children playing in the waves.

In this new box, we join the group in a period about which we are likely to have mixed feelings. Much of the music is still delightful, of course. But that joy is tinged with a certain sadness as we know what awaits them. Even with new blood in The Beach Boys, Carl Wilson having recently recruited Blondie Chaplin and Ricky Fataar from South African rockers The Flames, we are aware that this is the band’s last substantial push forward before a flush of successful retrospective albums and tours sets them irrevocably on a path as an oldies act.

In the meantime, The Beach Boys (“a new Beach Boys…” as a radio ad included here calls them) are on a crusade to convert audiences to their new music. On two discs of the six here, we find The Beach Boys on stage at Carnegie Hall in November 1972. This is a previously unreleased show from the tour that gave us The Beach Boys In Concert album, and we hear how well they deliver newer stuff like “You Need A Mess Of Help To Stand Alone” and “Only With You” and bring a deep instrumental swing to “Leaving This Town”. The crowd, though, are demonstrably more up for the smattering of hits that follow. “Save your requests,” says Mike Love at one point. The show, he says, is “not only for those who came to hear ‘Barbara Ann’…”.

If the band were concerned about people focusing on their older material, they might have done well to have a word with whoever decided to promote their then-current album, 1972’s Carl And The Passions“So Tough”, by packaging it with a copy of Pet Sounds. The comparison was not so flattering. Recorded in Brian’s home studio, but without peak-fitness Brian, Carl… has influential fans among the members of Saint Etienne and its diaspora but it’s not widely loved beyond it. Album sessions were intimate and gave up some solid tracks (Brian’s “Marcella” and “You Need A Mess Of Help To Stand Alone” are both good), but it feels a little slight. Try as Al Jardine and Mike Love might to make it a heavy number, “All This Is That” (where Robert Frost meets the Maharishi) feels more like an interesting outro to a bigger song that isn’t there. It’s not the suite of beautifully sequenced material that Surf’s Up has led us to hope for.

The record is named for Carl (in a nostalgic nod to an occasion when the band renamed itself in his honour for an early appearance at Hawthorne High School), but it’s other Beach Boys who emerge triumphantly. Blondie Chaplin and Ricky Fataar’s “Hold On Dear Brother” is delightful – and also biographically on-brand for the company they now keep. Meanwhile, with Brian creatively recessive, Dennis volunteered songs destined for a speculative solo project called, semi-seriously, ‘Poops/Hubba Hubba’. “Make It Good” and more expansively the orchestral deep dive of “Cuddle Up”, written with his collaborator Daryl Dragon, give the album a vulnerable and introspective mood becoming to the new decade. Among the most important outtakes in this box is the superb, fractionally later “Carry Me Home” in which Dennis imagines himself as a US soldier in Vietnam.

By the time of Holland, however, it was clear that The Beach Boys had rallied. Even if Brian and Carl were devoting an inordinate amount of time to the “Mount Vernon And Fairway” concept, which hasn’t retained all the charm it was once thought to have, it was clear Dennis’ compositions would have to fight harder for their place. Quite why Jack Rieley decided that a way out of a creative impasse for The Beach Boys was to build a studio in Los Angeles at huge expense and then have it rebuilt in a Dutch barn isn’t entirely clear. Whatever the thinking, the ends justified the means.

While it felt as if Carl…, great titles notwithstanding, spread its inspiration thinly over its eight songs and long vamps, Holland is far more robust. It was, as it said on the sleeve “one and a half long-playing records” with songs to spare and the “Mount Vernon…” tale on a separate EP. There was also something more like a unifying concept: a suite of complementary songs that found The Beach Boys messing about in boats and on some accustomed coastal routes, but also navigating their way into deeper subjects.

If Brian’s “Sail On Sailor” joyously established the theme, “Steamboat” found Dennis on a boat trip to deep and melancholic reverie, all Sgt Pepper gear changes and Fender Rhodes. It’s such a wonderfully 1972 sound, you could swear it was David Gilmour on guitar. With the help of Mike Love, Al Jardine continued to channel Americana, exploring the natural wealth of the American West Coast and its “new-born fauns” in “California Saga”. Elsewhere, Carl came into his own magnificently with “The Trader”.

Along a melody that seems to have escaped from Surf’s Up, he investigates the morality of western expansion. At precisely halfway through the song, it is as if he remembers that he can be an expert manipulator of mood, and changes down a gear into two-and-a-half minutes of minimal, beautiful music (“Reason to live…”) up there with anything in the band’s recorded history. From this, the impeccably sequenced album flows into Ricky Fataar’s “Leaving This Town”, which sounds like Peter Gabriel guesting on a horizontal Steely Dan number.

There was more. Among the outtakes here are tracking tapes, another Chaplin/Fataar number (“We Got Love”) and long-rumoured but undeveloped extracts (“Spark In The Dark”, “Body Talk”, “Oh Sweet Something”). Oddly, given what seems to have been a creative outpouring, the exuberant opener “Sail On Sailor” was devised later and added to the mix after the band had returned to Los Angeles.

Particularly interesting among the demos (and these really are early sketches) is the entertaining “Out In The Country” (banjos, acoustic guitars, an Eagles vibe), which is taken two radically different ways; seeming to show that the band didn’t just have one route out of the perpetual summer of 1964 and into the introspective, soft-rock 1970s, they had several – this one even involving country rock.

The Beach Boys would record new music again, of course. But with Brian in uncertain condition, and a ready demand for offering the American Graffiti version of themselves to a happy public, their future was solely in the past and pleasing the crowds. Ultimately, in spite of all their pushing at their music’s limits, it was a formula that now just couldn’t be fucked with.

Bill Orcutt – Music for Four Guitars

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Bill Orcutt and Adris Hoyos’ ’90s band Harry Pussy were described by critic Douglas Wolk as “just about the most abrasive band America has ever seen”. The noise and chaos masked some of the most important and influential music of the era, though; an often harrowing amalgamation of free jazz ...

Bill Orcutt and Adris Hoyos’ ’90s band Harry Pussy were described by critic Douglas Wolk as “just about the most abrasive band America has ever seen”. The noise and chaos masked some of the most important and influential music of the era, though; an often harrowing amalgamation of free jazz and blues filtered through the eyes of hardcore. Beloved by contemporaries such as Sonic Youth, they released five albums, most notably on the Ohio-based Siltbreeze label, but split after Orcutt and Hoyos divorced in 1997. Orcutt moved to San Francisco to become a software engineer and retired from music for over a decade.

Inspired by putting together a compilation of Harry Pussy, Orcutt began making music again, beginning with the release of A New Way To Pay Old Debts on his own Palilalia label in 2009. Enthused by seeing his previous band through fresh eyes and hindsight, Orcutt reconditioned an old Kay acoustic guitar, slackening the strings to make the guitar playable and set about elaborating on the idiosyncrasies he saw in his guitar playing.

By the time A History Of Every One was released in 2013, the vivid array of aggressively clipped attack, open expansive chords and unique awareness of space was fully formed and released upon a series of wild covers taken from the great American songbook. Brutally honest versions of songs such as “Zip A Dee Doo Dah”, “Over The Rainbow” and “Onward Christian Soldiers” were presented in a way that celebrated America, warts and all. As Orcutt told The Guardian: “I was thinking of this record as a white trash version of [Bob Dylan’s] The Basement Tapes – instead of all this mystical American culture, I’m taking the most unpoetic, un-mysterious aspects of American culture.” At the root of this record, and the ones that followed, Orcutt is a wonderfully expressive guitarist. There are echoes of Lightin’ Hopkins, John Fahey and even John McLaughlin’s playing on Bitches Brew, but he manages to transcend these comparisons with a technique unmistakably his own.

Music For Four Guitars is stylistically a departure from the languid chord studies of his most recent work such as 2019’s flawless Odds Against Tomorrow; here he focuses on rhythm, interplay and dynamics. Each of the 14 pieces is comprised of four multi-tracked guitar progressions of different signatures dancing around each other, never quite arriving back at the same place, rolling, gathering momentum with ever-increasing technicality and complexity. It’s refreshing to listen to a record that one might describe as ‘experimental’ living up to the adjective; it feels like Orcutt has systems and objectives in place, and whether they land or not isn’t really the primary concern.

Sonically, the music is ruthlessly minimal. The four guitars are identical in tone and it’s often impossible to differentiate between the lattice of melody that bulldozes along. The elaborate orchestration feels uncomfortably dense, but by the middle of the record and the pairing of “On The Horizon” and “Glimpsed While Driving”, the loping rhythms transcend their intricate construction and the music becomes mesmerising. The accumulative effect is transformative but focusing on the moving parts, the elaborate patterns and the mazes that constantly expand and unwind is fascinating. The stark reality of the music’s often caustic infrastructure is never far from the surface; it nags and vies for your attention amid the hum. The landscape is beautiful, but it’s made of chaos, struggle and violence.

While comparisons could be made to Steve Reich’s early work, it would be reductive to call this minimalism. In many ways it has more in common with the indeterminate or chance music of composers such as John Cage, so the inclusion of a notated score in the sleevenotes offers a tantalising glimpse as to where this path could lead Orcutt. The stark fidelity and similarity in tone of the four guitars occasionally gives the recording a frustratingly monophonic quality, so the proposition of these compositions being performed by four different guitarists or by four different instruments entirely is intriguing. Having essentially retired from making music, the body of work Orcutt has amassed since he re-emerged 13 years ago is both inspiring and admirable. To have maintained a lucid palette over such a progressively diverse collection of records shows Orcutt as an artist very secure in his own ability, and confident in his convictions. The door that he’s opened with Music For Four Guitars undoubtedly leads to some very exciting places.

The Rolling Stones to release star-studded 2012 show as live album GRRR Live!

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The Rolling Stones have announced a new live album and accompanying concert film DVD, entitled GRRR Live! ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut The show, which took place in December 2012 at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, was originally broadcast a...

The Rolling Stones have announced a new live album and accompanying concert film DVD, entitled GRRR Live!

The show, which took place in December 2012 at the Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey, was originally broadcast as the pay-per-view event The Rolling Stones: One More Shot. It has now been re-mixed and re-edited for a new release, which will be released as a triple-album vinyl and a double-album CD. GRRR Live! will also be released on both DVD and Blu-Ray.

The show, which took place as part of the band’s 50 and Counting world tour, was notable for its long list of special guests. Lady Gaga joined the band on-stage to duet with Mick Jagger on “Gimme Shelter”, with John Mayer and Gary Clark Jr. guesting on “Going Down”.

Later in the show, both members of The Black Keys jammed with the Stones on a cover of Bo Diddley’s “Who Do You Love”, while New Jersey native Bruce Springsteen performed Exile On Main Street single “Tumbling Dice”. The band also welcomed their former guitarist Mick Taylor to the stage for a rendition of “Midnight Rambler”.

Watch a trailer for the album and DVD below:

In a statement shared to social media, GRRR Live! was described as “the definitive concert film, recorded on one of the most memorable shows in the band’s history”. Its release in February 2023 will mark the band’s second archival live album in as many years; this past May saw the band release El Mocambo 1977, which marked the first official release of a secret show the Stones played at Toronto’s El Mocambo club.

Away from archival releases, the band are reportedly at work on completing the follow-up to 2016’s Blue and Lonesome – which will feature the final recordings of their late drummer, Charlie Watts.

Lindsey Buckingham pays tribute to “musical comrade” Christine McVie

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Lindsey Buckingham of Fleetwood Mac has paid tribute to his ex-bandmate Christine McVie following her passing on November 30. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Christine McVie remembered In a handwritten note posted on Instagram, the lead guita...

Lindsey Buckingham of Fleetwood Mac has paid tribute to his ex-bandmate Christine McVie following her passing on November 30.

In a handwritten note posted on Instagram, the lead guitarist wrote: “Christine McVie’s sudden passing is profoundly heartbreaking. Not only were she and I part of the magical family of Fleetwood Mac, to me Christine was a musical comrade, a friend, a soul mate, a sister. For over four decades, we helped each other create a beautiful body of work and a lasting legacy that continues to resonate today.”

“I feel very lucky to have known her. Though she will be deeply missed, her spirit will live on through that body of work and that legacy.”

Buckingham joins Stevie Nicks and Mick Fleetwood in paying respects to McVie. Nicks addressed her tribute to her “best friend in the whole world”, writing, “since Saturday, one song has been swirling around in my head, over and over and over. I thought I might possibly get to sing it to her, and so, I’m singing it to her now. I always knew I would need these words one day. (Written by the Ladies Haim). It’s all I can do now…”

Fleetwood reminded fans to cherish their loved ones in his tribute to McVie, writing, “Part of my heart has flown away today..I will miss everything about you Christine McVie. Memories abound..they fly to me.”

McVie passed away on November 30 after suffering a short illness, though the cause of her death has not been disclosed publicly. The singer-songwriter, who penned “Little Lies”, “Everywhere”, and “Songbird” among many other timeless hits, left the band shortly after they were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1998 but reunited with the group in 2014.

Hear “Yerimayo Celebration” from Baaba Maal’s new album, Being

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Baaba Maal has announced details of a new studio album, Being, which will be released by Marathon Artists on March 31, 2023. Featuring regular collaborators including Cheikh Ndoye on bass ngoni and Momadou Sarr on percussion and produced by Johan Karlberg, this seven-track album is his first sin...

Baaba Maal has announced details of a new studio album, Being, which will be released by Marathon Artists on March 31, 2023.

Featuring regular collaborators including Cheikh Ndoye on bass ngoni and Momadou Sarr on percussion and produced by Johan Karlberg, this seven-track album is his first since 2016’s The Traveller.

You can hear “Yerimayo Celebration” from Being below.

Says Maal, “However far I travel, whatever direction, I will always return home. It is the nomadic nature. To wander, but to return home, eventually. Home is where you start from, where you begin to learn what really matters, and home is where you finish. [His hometown] Podor is the perfect place for me when I need some time to think, to see my music with a fresh eye, to surprise it, snare it, catch it unawares as if coming across it for the first time.”

The tracklisting for Being is:

Yerimayo Celebration
Freak Out
Ndungu Ruumi
Agreement
Boboyillo
Mbeda Wella
Casamance Nights

You can pr-order the album by clicking here.

Baaba Maal headlines The Barbican on Tuesday May 30, 2023.

We’re New Here – Dry Cleaning

Riveting post-punk pop, fuelled by art, anxiety and "cheap chocolate mousse". Sharon O'Connell talks to DRY CLEANING about their newest album New Long Leg, previously in our JANUARY 2022 issue of Uncut, available to buy here. “Now that we have records out and are signed to a label, it’s hard ...

Riveting post-punk pop, fuelled by art, anxiety and “cheap chocolate mousse”. Sharon O’Connell talks to DRY CLEANING about their newest album New Long Leg, previously in our JANUARY 2022 issue of Uncut, available to buy here.

“Now that we have records out and are signed to a label, it’s hard to communicate just how casual the whole thing was,” says Florence Shaw, still with a faint note of wonder in her voice, four years on. The singer is considering the early days of London four-piece Dry Cleaning, whose deadpan name belies the driving post-punk tension in their music and the intimate nature of Shaw’s lyrics, as exemplified by their 2021 debut, New Long Leg.

Shaw was – and still is – a visual artist with no prior band experience when she was invited by friend Tom Dowse (guitar) to join the kickabout weekend project he had with Lewis Maynard (bass) and Nick Buxton (drums). Buxton texted her links to tracks – including Grace Jones’ “Private Life” and “Guys Are Not Proud” by Alaskan punks The Anemic Boyfriends – which were “more an invitation to be creative in my approach to being a frontperson than references as to what I should do in the band, reminding me that I didn’t necessarily have to belt it out”. Their first group rehearsal in October of 2017 was “an instantaneous thing where we were excited by the sound all four of us made together”.

The 2019 EPs Sweet Princess and Boundary Road Snacks And Drinks found them exploring a range of moody sounds – Joy Division, Sonic Youth, MBV – with Shaw’s disaffected vocals a defining feature, along with a lyrical obsession with food. New Long Leg’s smörgåsbord includes an old sandwich, a Twix and oven chips (in “Scratchcard Lanyard”), sausages, “cheap chocolate mousse” and “crappy, crazy pizzas”. “A lot of my writing comes from daydreaming,” Shaw admits, “just letting my mind wander. Or it can be much more direct, whereby I just transcribe thoughts and feelings as they come and then edit. That’s a huge part of what I do – it’s mainly editing, actually. My writing is supposed to be accessible; I don’t want it to be mysterious, so it’s possible the food is there to say something direct.”

As she has it, the name Dry Cleaning speaks to “the general theme within the band of something extraordinary and ordinary at the same time”. All admit to a certain level of peculiarly understated theatricality, too: “Lewis in particular often talks about the band not just being something where you have your own little moment of self-expression but where you communicate with people, as an outward-facing thing. That’s an important thing we talk about a lot.”

Their second album, again with John Parish in the producer’s chair, is already well underway. Shaw reveals that “the sound has certainly evolved, so there are more shorter and perhaps more joyful songs. We’ve had quite a difficult year in terms of our personal lives – we’ve suffered a few losses – and I think in a strange way it’s galvanised us. We learned a lot about the things we hold close, I guess.” Of Dry Cleaning’s studio process, Shaw cheerfully admits that “it’s hard work on all fronts. We’re all individuals and we try to act as a democracy, generally speaking, so that means there’s a hell of a lot of discussion and a hell of a lot of push and pull. It’s not a beautiful, symbiotic process all of the time but I think we all thrive on that. It’s where the enjoyment is, as well.”

New Long Leg is out now on 4AD.

The Cure release upgraded version of 1991 documentary Play Out

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The Cure have released an upgraded and extended HD version of their 1991 documentary Play Out – watch it in full below. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: The Cure – Wish (Reissue, 1992) review The new two-hour and 15-minute version of the f...

The Cure have released an upgraded and extended HD version of their 1991 documentary Play Out – watch it in full below.

The new two-hour and 15-minute version of the film arrives hot on the heels of the band’s recent reissue of their classic album Wish.

Released in 1992, Wish features the singles “Friday I’m In Love”, “High” and “A Letter To Elise”. It reached Number One on the UK albums chart and Number Two on the Billboard 200 in the US.

Released on October 7, the 30th anniversary collection includes the full original album, which has been remastered by frontman Robert Smith and Miles Showell at the legendary Abbey Road Studios.

It also boasts 24 previously-unreleased tracks – including demos, instrumentals and rare 12″ mixes – as well as four songs that will be coming to CD and digital platforms for the first time. The 3CD edition comes with four tracks from Lost Wishes, a 1993 mail-order only cassette, which have never been available on CD or streaming.

You can watch Play Out in full below. A synopsis reads: “Play Out follows the band as they perform new songs at a club gig, play Wembley Arena, appear on the Jonathan Ross show, rehearse for and perform their legendary MTV Unplugged show and receive the award for Best British Group at The Brit Awards.”

In terms of new music, The Cure kicked off their 2022 world tour in Latvia last month and debuted new tracks “Alone” and “Endsong”.

The tracks were followed by further debuts including “And Nothing Is Forever”, “I Can Never Say Goodbye” and “A Fragile Thing” offering a sense of what to expect from forthcoming new album Songs Of A Lost World, which Smith said was “almost finished” back in May.

The Cure are currently on their UK and European tour – you can find remaining tour dates below and purchase remaining tickets here.

DECEMBER 2022
01 – Dublin, 3Arena
02 – Belfast, SSE Arena
04 – Glasgow, OVO Hydro
06 – Leeds, First Direct Arena
07 – Birmingham, Utilita Arena
08 – Cardiff, Motorpoint Arena
11 – London, OVO Arena Wembley
12 – London, OVO Arena Wembley
13 – London, OVO Arena Wembley

Neil Young will only tour again if it’s fully environmentally sustainable

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Neil Young has said that he will only go on tour again in the future if it can be done completely sustainably. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Neil Young with Crazy Horse – Toast review Earlier this year the singer indicated that he’s not...

Neil Young has said that he will only go on tour again in the future if it can be done completely sustainably.

Earlier this year the singer indicated that he’s not yet ready to play concerts, saying that he doesn’t think it is safe amid the ongoing COVID pandemic.

In a new interview with The New Yorker, Young said that he’s “not sure I want to” tour again full stop but if he were to change his mind it would have to be a with a completely environmentally sustainable plan.

“I have a plan,” Young said. “I’ve been working on it with a couple of my friends for about seven or eight months. We’re trying to figure out how to do a self-sustaining, renewable tour. Everything that moves our vehicles around, the stage, the lights, the sound, everything that powers it is clean. Nothing dirty with us. We set it up; we do this everywhere we go.

“This is something that’s very important to me, if I’m ever going to go out again… and I’m not sure I want to, I’m still feeling that out. But if I’m ever going to do it, I want to make sure that everything is clean.”

The singer added: “What was the last thing you remember eating at a show, and how good was it? Was it from a farm-made, homegrown village? I don’t think so. It was from a factory farm that’s killing us. I’ve been working on this idea of bringing the food and the drink and the merch into the realm where it’s all clean. I will make sure that the food comes from real farmers.

“Once it’s up and going, and I’m finished with my part of the tour, there’s no reason why the tour has to stop. The tour can keep on going with another headliner. It’s about sustainability and renewability in the future, loving Earth for what it is. We want to do the right thing. That’s kind of the idea.”

Neil Young in 2019
Neil Young in 2019. Image: Gary Miller / Getty Images

Young has not performed in public since 2019. His latest comments echo ones made in December of last year, when he said he wouldn’t be returning to touring until COVID was “beat” and the pandemic was over. “I don’t care if I’m the only one who doesn’t do it,” he said during an interview with Howard Stern.

Last year Young also called on promoters to cancel “super-spreader” gigs while a pandemic was still ongoing.

Christine McVie remembered

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In May 2022, Uncut editor Michael Bonner spoke with Christine McVie about her entire career. Encompassing her early years on the Brumbeat scene to Rumours-era superstardom and much, much more. The interview, full of her trademark candour and self-deprecation, was among her last: McVie died on Nov...

In May 2022, Uncut editor Michael Bonner spoke with Christine McVie about her entire career. Encompassing her early years on the Brumbeat scene to Rumours-era superstardom and much, much more.

The interview, full of her trademark candour and self-deprecation, was among her last: McVie died on November 20, 2022. Here’s the interview in full below.

It’s raining in London and Christine McVie is at home, enjoying a cup of afternoon tea. Home these days is a penthouse apartment in Belgravia – she pronounces it “Bel-gray-vee-yah”, giving it the requisite posh spin – complete with a roof garden well decorated with big pots and tubs. Since her last stage appearance, on February 25, 2020 at the Peter Green tribute concert, McVie has spent more time at home than perhaps she anticipated. There has been Covid, of course; but more recently she’s been at the mercy of a minor back ailment, which has curtailed her activities. Not that this has dampened her spirit, mind. “You get the cortisone in your back and all of a sudden you feel like a spring chicken again,” she laughs, her warm, unhurried delivery undercut with a faint Brummie burr, a gentle reminder of her West Midlands childhood.

Today, though, we are here to discuss Songbird, a collection of material drawn from two albums in her lesser-spotted solo career. Unlike her fellow songwriters in Fleetwood Mac, McVie has always preferred to serve as part of collective rather than manage a parallel enterprise where her name is above the door. Part of that comes from a dislike of fuss and unnecessary attention, but she thrives in collaborative situations – even during the early days, playing the Midlands pub circuit as part of a duo with Spencer Davis, or in Brumbeat bands like Sounds Of Blue and Chicken Shack, she found creative equanimity in the company of like-minded players. When she finally recorded a solo album, 1970’s Christine Perfect – her maiden name – it was well received (she won Melody Maker’s award for Best Female Vocalist) but she’s dismissive about it today: “There’s maybe a couple of good songs on it.” She didn’t release a follow-up for another 14 years.

Whatever she may think of her solo work – some of it later recorded in a studio-cum-pub in her converted garage – her early songs for Fleetwood Mac were critical in helping the band find a way forward following the departure of founder Peter Green. Getting it together in the country during the early Seventies – first at Kiln House then Benifold, both in Hampshire – McVie and the band’s other songwriters from this period, Danny Kirwan and Bob Welch, took the blues in surprising new directions. The band’s albums – including Future Games and Bare Trees – capture the band in transition. The arrival of Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, meanwhile, pulled the band in yet another direction entirely.
Fleetwood Mac? While the band’s part is never entirely far away from a conversation with McVie – she even makes a genuinely surprising revelation about Rumours – its future often comes into focus. She is happy to discuss current relations with her bandmates, what might happen if, and when, the call to reconvene comes and how live dates might pan out. But until the phone rings, she is prepared to consider Songbird as her “swansong” – perhaps. From that perspective, she is happy to reflect and consider what connects Christine Perfect, as she was in in the mid ‘60s starting out as a music, and the person she is now. “Mentally, I’m still 16,” she says. “Looking back at the young Christine, I admire her sense of humour. I hope I’ve never lost it. The ability to laugh, especially at oneself, to be self-deprecating, is super precious, a real quality to have. Because you can join in with everyone and see the funny side of yourself.”

Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner

Songbird is a rare but welcome sighting of you as a solo artist… is it exciting to be centre stage?
No. I don’t like being center stage, I never have. A solo album, that’s different. But performing solo, that’s not my bag at all. I like to be part of a group. I was invited to make a selection of my own favourite songs outside of Fleetwood Mac – but “Songbird” was the exception, I was allowed to do them. When I met Glyn Johns at the Peter Green tribute concert, I asked him, “Maybe there’d be a chance you’d like to take a look at re-producing some of my old songs?” He agreed, so we went in and revamped them, adding a few instruments here and there. I think it sounds great. I love it.

Are you good at letting go of songs?
Oh, it’s like a painting or something. You’ve got to put the brush down at some point. But then other band members add their guitars, vocals, whatever and the song builds as the recording goes on. But yeah, I’m pretty good at letting go. I’m not a recording studio Nazi, or anything like that. I sit back and listen. If I have faith in the guys – and I usually do with people that I work with – I’m happy to let them do their thing.

There are five tracks here from 2004’s In The Meantime. Is that an album you were especially keen to bring back into the daylight?
Yeah. At the time, I didn’t go on the road, I wasn’t keen. So because I didn’t tour it, it didn’t sell so many copies. I always thought the songs were good, though. Dan, my nephew, produced it in my garage on ProTools. He did a pretty good job, but I got Glyn to revamp them. I’m pleased they’re getting another airing.

You mentioned your garage. Tell us a bit about it…
Swallows, my little bar-pub in Canterbury? It started off as a garage I converted into a lounge, with a bar attached. I put in some sofas, then a drumkit and an electric piano and we started knocking out the stuff. But it was mainly, to start with, just a party room.

It sounds very convivial.
It was, yes!

I saw you perform at the Peter Green tribute concert. You played “Stop Messin’ Round”, which was one of the first songs you recorded with Fleetwood Mac – before you joined them. Did the tribute concert feel like you were coming full circle, back to where you came into the band?
The whole concert was a bit like that, truth be told. When I was in Chicken Shack, if Fleetwood Mac were playing when we weren’t, we’d always trail around after them. We were huge fans. It was it was a very moving night. It felt like Peter was there, in a sense. The warmth from the audience was wonderful.

Were you close to Peter?
Mick and Peter were the really close friends. I knew Peter, but not quite so well. During those early Fleetwood Mac shows, you couldn’t take your eyes off them. The whole room throbbed. To me, they were like a bluesy Beatles. Each one had amazing charisma, but Peter stood out. He was a really commanding figure. There was a joke going around that Peter said to Mick one night: “I’ve got more swing in my left bollock than you do!” So that told Mick. Oh, Peter was definitely in charge.

When did you first hear the blues?
When I was about 14 or 15. I played classical piano so I could read music. I found a book of Fats Domino in the music stool in a living room. I started playing it, sight reading. I learned how to play the bass lines with the piano. It kicked off from there. I started to get really keen when I was at Chicken Shack. Andy Sylvester, who was our bass player, used to give me all kinds of records, African American blues artists and I got hooked. I ripped off a lot of licks from some of those records…

Can you tell us a bit about the Birmingham scene in the mid-Sixties?
I was in art college. Spencer Davis was at Birmingham University. I was seeing him and we used to go around to all these clubs. That’s how I got to know Steve Winwood. There were lots of good people around like Black Sabbath, Savoy Brown… It was quite punchy, back in those days. A lot of kick ass music. We were all very underground. People would get their pints and pay half a pound to watch these bands sweating it out in these big halls above pubs. It was an amazing time. Then we’d travel to places like Eel Pie Island.

I didn’t realise that Chicken Shack did a stint at the Star Club in Hamburg in 1967. What do you remember about that?
Not very much! [laughs] The Star Club, Hamburg. I was 19 or 20. I was pissed all the time. It was a rave! The nightlife was amazing, but to be honest, we had to do three or four sets a day on rotation, so the music got a bit stale after a while. It was an experience, though.

You’re writing, as well. “It’s OK With Me Baby” and “When The Train Comes Back”…
Oh, “When The Train Comes Back”. Mick loves that song. He used to say, “I wish you’d written that when you were with us.”

What is interesting is that already you’ve got down the key components of Christine McVie songs: melody and melancholy…
It always comes back to the blues. I think it’s probably morphed into something a little more commercial over the years, but I can always slide back into that if I want to. Once you’ve got the blues in your veins, you can’t really get rid of it. You can’t sing the blues until you’re blue. Isn’t that true? How can you be depressing if you’re happy? You got to somehow make yourself be down. There are some happy blue songs as well. I’m not saying they’re all maudlin.

There’s the first solo album, Christine Perfect in 1970. What do you think of that album now?
Oh, God. Do I have to say? [laughs] I think it’s pretty rum. When I listen to it now – which is very seldom – I don’t get what I was doing at all. I think I was inexperienced at songwriting and too inexperienced to be holding a whole solo album on my own. There are a couple of good songs on there, but most of them are pretty mediocre. But you’ve just to keep on trying and you will eventually come out at some point with something you like, so if I’m feeling charitable about it, I could say at least it was part of the learning process.

Was going to Kiln House a way for Fleetwood Mac to regroup after Peter left?
Oh yeah. That was exactly what we were doing.

After you left Kiln House, you collectively bought Benifold. What was communal living like?
That was for financial reasons, mainly. If we wanted to have a big house with lots of garden area, we thought it was beneficial to share, because we weren’t making much money at that point. So we bought the house between the band and split it up into three, good sized flats. That worked for a while. Everybody ended up in my kitchen because I cooked the best food.

What would have been on the menu?
Very hippy vegetarian. Nut rissoles. That kind of stuff. “Health Food”. I’ll put that in quotes because we were probably drinking gallons of wine at the same time.

Looking back, was it inevitable that you’d get invited to join Fleetwood Mac after Peter left?
I didn’t presume. I was quite happy being a housewife, actually. I had given up my music to be with John, because otherwise we would never have seen each other. But without Peter, they were struggling, for sure. They wanted to carry on as a four-piece and not replace him. But they realised they needed another band member. Then one day Mick came out, followed by John and the other guys, and we all sat around a table. They said, “I know it’s short notice, but how would you feel about joining?” I said, “You don’t have to ask me twice.” Ten days after that I was in New Orleans with them. It happened that quickly. Gosh that was a moment, playing with my favourite band in New Orleans!

What was the mood in the band like at that point?
I think they were worried, obviously, because they’d lost their main guy. Peter’s style of writing, with things like “The Green Manalishi”, had become quite dark. They were brilliant as well, but they were left without that element. We turned into a bit of a mishmash of everything. That darkness of Peter’s was not there anymore, so Fleetwood Mac became a different object.

And you were in the thick of it! How conscious were you the need to change the band’s sound after Peter left?
Yeah. Mick had a chat with me one day and said, ‘You know, you’re so gifted, you should launch out and do something a bit commercial.” So I came up with something that was not just the 12 bar blues, which had been my main diet up to that point. I co-wrote with Bob Welch a few times before Stevie and Lindsey joined. I’m sure there’s a thread following through from my early days. I’m aware that when I start to write a song, the left hand usually comes in first and it has some kind of a boogie element to it. Then the chords might change on the right hand. But I’m grounded in the blues.

A song like “Morning Rain” on Future Games is a perfect example of that. It’s rooted in the blues, but it’s stretching out. You, Danny Kirwan and Bob Welch became the song writers during that period. You had all different strengths as songwriters, but where did you meet in the middle?
I think that’s always been the beauty of this band, because the songwriters are all so diverse – all the way up to present day with Neil [Finn]. Going back to Lindsey and prior to that, everyone had different talents. We all came together to sing the harmonies – which was so beautiful – and then we all branched out and did our own thing. It made for a lot of variety, for a start. Then there’s John and Mick, the solid rhythm section, that tied everything into a neat little bundle. Through the years, we’ve had some great configurations.

Is there a song that reminds you of Danny?
“Woman Of A 1000 Years” or “Tell Me”. He was a brilliant guitar player, really unique. He sang with a very English accent, which was very unusual. But he was a tough guitar player. Boy, he really belted those strings! He got the greatest sound. He was a very talented guy. But he was troubled. I remember he and Peter used to play duets together and echo each other in the most amazing way. Although Danny had his own style, he could work with Peter really well. It’s a pity, because it feels like all Fleetwood Mac guitarists fall by the wayside.

… and is there a song that reminds you of Bob Welch?
There were quite a few! “The Ghost” was a good one. “Sentimental Lady” was a bit slushy for my personal taste, but it was a great song. “Future Games”. He did some more funky, Wes Montgomery stuff, which I used to love. All that kind of semi jazz stuff. He had a really cool voice. You can have a good voice, but he had the perfect voice for the songs that he wrote. He was also very funny, Bob; he had a very good sense of humour.

Do you think those transitional albums are underappreciated?
It depends on the person’s tastes, really. During that period, we did our own thing. We didn’t really think about success. It changed when Stevie and Lindsey joined, of course. I remember hearing the Buckingham Nicks album and thinking, ‘Right, I better pull something out of the bag here and write some songs.’ We became a more commercial band. It was a good time for a while. Until we started killing each other.

That’s all been so well documented, of course. Is there one thing you could tell us about Rumours that tends to get overlooked?
How much we laughed. John and Mick or Lindsey, they’d always moan about what a tough time we had, blah, blah, blah. But I’d say, ‘Hang on. Don’t forget how much laughter we got in that studio!” We laughed a lot– in between the bouts of melancholy and suicide, of course. That’s something we’ve always had within all of the different versions of Fleetwood Mac, I must say, not just during the Rumours era.

When songs like “Don’t Stop” or “Songbird” were pouring out of you, did you ever consider siphoning off songs for more solo records?
I always had Fleetwood Mac in my mind when I wrote. I could always hear John and Mick. There might have been the odd song, like “Songbird”, that didn’t require a rhythm section, but otherwise I always wrote with the band in mind. I just don’t consider myself to be a solo artist. I’ve always been happy in confines of the five of us.

People tend to scrutinize your songs – especially the Rumours-era songs – for autobiographical clues.
But they’re not all about … if they were all about me personally, I’d have killed myself by now. I always write about unrequited love or love in some form or another. I don’t write about politics or the weather. I do include the sun and the sea quite a lot. They are songs from somebody else’s point of view sometimes. I find that refreshing to think along those lines. It gives me a different track to go down.

But you can understand how people might want to read them as autobiographical?
I think that’s certainly true with Rumours and I think people have come to look at the rest of our songs that way. I could be wrong. But… it’s true they all are intensely personal. But from my point of view, they’re not directly from me to somebody else per se. Sometimes they just evoke an emotion in somebody that they can relate to.

When were you happiest in Fleetwood Mac?
I’ve always felt very fortunate. Always. Obviously, some of the work was hard and it was tough going. When Stevie joined it was a bit weird because I’d never worked with a girl before. We just wanted to have Lindsey, but he said, “If I join my girlfriend comes with me.” So that was a debate. But I instantly liked her. She and I aren’t what you’d call close buddies, but if one of us was in trouble, the other would be there like a shot. At the time, I struggled with her superstardom for a bit because I felt like somebody kicked me off the stage. I got used to that and I kind of dug it the end, because I could hide behind the keyboard where I feel perfectly at home.

You mention Lindsey. It’s been five years since the Buckingham-McVie album – the last release with your name on it. Are you still writing music?
Me, personally? I haven’t written for a while, no.

But might you?
I don’t know. I need to sort my back out, so I don’t feel like sitting at the piano right now. Who knows? I don’t… feel it at the moment.

Do you miss it?
To be honest with you? No. Every once in a great while, an idea might pop into my head – but by the time I have woken up the next morning, I’ve forgotten it. I haven’t thought about making another record. The Songbird album might be my swan song. I’m going to be 80 next year, so I gotta slow down a bit, you know?

Are you still in contact with Mick and John?
Yes. Not Stevie very much and not Lindsey, for sure. There are no hard feelings between he and I. But since he left, we haven’t really been in touch.

If the call came for one last Fleetwood Mac tour, would you take it?
Not right now! I can barely stand up, because of my back. But I really don’t know. It would have to be quite a special event. If one was offered six major stadiums – New York, LA, London, whatever – I could manage that. But a lengthy tour? No.

Does it feel like semi-retirement?
Yes, but things change. I honestly don’t know what might come up… I always say, “You never know.” So let’s leave it at that.

Neil Young – Harvest Time

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Even for fans who know just how conscientiously Neil Young has documented his activities across his entire career, the sheer wealth and detail of the footage that makes up the two-hour documentary accompanying the 50th-anniversary edition of Harvest is astonishing. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on ...

Even for fans who know just how conscientiously Neil Young has documented his activities across his entire career, the sheer wealth and detail of the footage that makes up the two-hour documentary accompanying the 50th-anniversary edition of Harvest is astonishing.

Shot between January and September 1971, the film captures every aspect of the recording of the album in close-up: following Young and his ragtag family of cohorts from the famous sessions conducted in the barn at his bucolic Broken Arrow ranch in Northern California, across the ocean to a grey London for his collaboration with the London Symphony Orchestra, musicians separated by a common language as they attempt to capture “A Man Needs A Maid”. Finally, it lurches back to Nashville, for further tracking and overdubbing sessions amid a cast of Music City eccentrics.

Steering clear of voiceover narration, the film is an immersive, fly-on-the wall experience – particularly in the barn session sequences. The footage sits the audience right on the plaid-shirted shoulders of the Stray Gators band Young and co-producer Elliot Mazer assembled for the record as they work up tracks like “Alabama”, “Words” and “Are You Ready For The Country” – caught here in rawer, more immediate takes than those featured on the final album.

Memorable moments come thick and fast: Young defining himself as “a rich hippy”… Stray Gators bassist Tim Drummond demonstrating the correct use of an aquarium pump during downtime in Nashville… Young, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash discussing whether their studio is haunted while attempting to nail harmonies on “Words”… glimpses of Young and his then partner Carrie Snodgress huddling together on the sidelines any chance they get, the 1970s sunlight flaring around them.

Watching the film is a poignant experience for Young. “Seeing all those guys,” he says today, referring to the Stray Gators, “none of them are alive. So, y’know, that’s a trip. I’m looking at them and I’m the only one left. There’s a great jam in there, somewhere in the middle of the Harvest barn. It’s very cool hearing that. Very funky and spontaneous. I like things like that. I like the idea of getting this film out and having people see the real story – and the fact that I made the film, instead of someone else doing it.”

You can read more about Neil Young and the Harvest documentary in the next issue of Uncut

The Harvest Time film features as part of the Harvest 50th-anniversary boxset, alongside the original album, three studio outtakes on CD/7” vinyl, a book of liner notes, and another DVD of Young’s live 1971 solo performance for BBC TV

Joan Shelley & Nathan Salsburg talk about the inspirations and stories behind their amazing 2022

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During 2022, a lot of good music has come out of JOAN SHELLEY and NATHAN SALSBURG’s remote farm near Louisville, Kentucky – from Shelley’s timeless and vital album The Spur to the latest instalment in Salsburg’s Landwerk series of sound collages. Stephen Deusner heads into the woods to hear ...

During 2022, a lot of good music has come out of JOAN SHELLEY and NATHAN SALSBURG’s remote farm near Louisville, Kentucky – from Shelley’s timeless and vital album The Spur to the latest instalment in Salsburg’s Landwerk series of sound collages. Stephen Deusner heads into the woods to hear about how parenthood, isolation and upheaval have shaped the couple’s past 12 months, in the latest issue of Uncut magazine – in UK shops from Thursday, November 10 and available to buy from our online store.

“I ’m going to test out the acoustics of this place,” says Joan Shelley. Onstage at the Chapel of St Philip Neri, a neighbourhood cathedral in Louisville that now serves as a community arts centre and venue, she has just finished playing “Why Not Live Here A While”, a standout on her new album, The Spur. As she unstraps her acoustic guitar and sets it down gently on the boards, her backing band – including her husband and collaborator Nathan Salsburg – leave the stage through the baptistry door.

Clad in a long, brown dress, Shelley steps out of the apse spotlight and into the darkness
of the rows of intricately carved wooden pews, where she is joined by her keyboard player
for the evening, Lacey Guthrie, and local singer-songwriter Isaac Fosl-Van Wyke. The trio harmonise softly to Shelley’s a cappella song “Between Rock And Sky”, their voices drifting up toward the vaulted ceiling and filling the cathedral: “Over hills and valleys, between rock and sky / Hear the child arriving, heaving heart’s first cry”. As the melody fades into silence, someone in the audience is moved to shout, “Fuck yeah!” adding a bit of profane to the sacred.

Despite that outburst, it’s a quiet, intense moment during what has been billed as both a record release show and a homecoming for her and Salsburg – two musicians whose lives are entangled musically as well as romantically. “June was a long time ago,” Shelley laughs, noting the months-long delay between the release of The Spur and this party. It’s also just the fifth live performance the couple have given in 2022 and the only Louisville show of the year, ending a long absence from local stages.

The Chapel of St Philip Neri is an ideal setting, with its blue-and-white ceiling and bare-bulb lamps giving the impression of candlelight. Ornate tapestries on the walls mimic the iconography of stained-glass windows. Behind Shelley and Salsburg onstage, a banner depicts a massive dove of peace with an eyeball between its upspread wings – a surreal interpretation of scripture. “It’s pretty in here, isn’t it?” she says between songs. “I feel like I’m living in a dream.”

The Spur is a reaction to bad politics and dark times in America and more specifically here in Kentucky. Shelley’s crisp vocals and elegant folk melodies, in tandem with Salsburg’s jazzy, spidery guitar riffs and runs, belie a deep worry haunting these songs: worries about her place as a woman in the world, as an artist, as a wife, and – although she didn’t know it when she wrote them – as a mother. Talya was born just prior to recording, which only deepened their resonance. “My daughter needs a little light”, she says by way of introducing “When The Light Is Dying”.

PICK UP THE NEW ISSUE OF UNCUT TO READ THE FULL STORY

Natalie Merchant announces new album, Keep Your Courage

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Natalie Merchant has announced that her ninth studio album, Keep Your Courage, will be released by Nonesuch on April 14. It's her first album of new material since 2014’s self-titled record. Keep Your Courage features two duets sung with Abena Koomson-Davis of Resistance Revival Chorus, plus co...

Natalie Merchant has announced that her ninth studio album, Keep Your Courage, will be released by Nonesuch on April 14. It’s her first album of new material since 2014’s self-titled record.

Keep Your Courage features two duets sung with Abena Koomson-Davis of Resistance Revival Chorus, plus contributions from the Celtic folk group Lúnasa and Syrian virtuoso clarinetist Kinan Azmeh, and horn arrangements by jazz trombonist Steve Davis. Along with nine original songs by Merchant, it includes an interpretation of “Hunting The Wren” by Ian Lynch of Lankum.

“The songs contained within this album were written and recorded during the global pandemic that began in the winter of 2019,” says Merchant. “But this is not an album about the coronavirus or the chaos it caused. For the most part, this is an album about the human heart. The word ‘courage’ has its root in the Latin word for heart, cor, and we see it over and over in many languages: le coeur, il cuore, o coração, el corazón. This is a song cycle that maps the journey of a courageous heart.”

Pre-order Keep Your Courage here and peruse Natalie Merchant’s US tourdates here. European dates will be announced shortly.