The Monkees have announced details of a 24-date North American tour.
The surviving members - Mike Nesmith, Micky Dolenz and Peter Tork - will kick off their tour, called A Midsummer's Night With the Monkees, in New York, on July 15.
"The reaction to the [2012 reunion] tour was euphoric," Dolenz to...
The Monkees have announced details of a 24-date North American tour.
The surviving members – Mike Nesmith, Micky Dolenz and Peter Tork – will kick off their tour, called A Midsummer’s Night With the Monkees, in New York, on July 15.
“The reaction to the [2012 reunion] tour was euphoric,” Dolenz told Rolling Stone. “It was pretty apparent there was a demand for another one.”
The 2012 reunion tour marked the first time Nesmith had played with the band since 1997, when he appeared on some UK dates, and the first time he’s played with the group on American soil since 1970, when he left the Monkees.
For this tour, the band intend to perform their sets in chronological order. Speaking about the death of Davy Jones in February 12, Dolenz admitted, “This time we probably won’t lean so heavily on the David situation. I think we have to move on. Everybody has to move on. He’ll always be remembered and acknowledged, but possibly not as much as on that particular tour. We will, of course, still perform ‘Daydream Believer‘ and all the other hits.”
July 15 Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, NY
July 16 Citi Performing Arts Center, Boston, MA
July 17 Count Basie Theatre, Red Bank, NJ
July 19 NYCB Theatre at Westbury, Westbury, NY
July 20 Mann Music Theatre, Philadelphia, PA
July 21 Warner Theatre, Washington, D.C.
July 23 Memorial Auditorium, Raleigh, NC
July 24 Ryman Auditorium, Nashville, TN
July 26 St. Augustine Amphitheatre, St. Augustine, FL
July 27 Mizner Park Amphitheatre, Boca Raton, FL
July 28 Ruth Eckerd Hall, Clearwater, FL
July 31 Long Center, Austin, TX
August 1 Arena Theatre, Houston, TX
August 2 Verizon Theatre, Grand Prairie, TX
August 3 Brady Theater, Tulsa, OK
August 5 Paramount Theatre, Denver, CO
August 9 Mesa Arts Center, Mesa, AZ
August 10 Green Valley Events Center, Henderson, NV
August 11 Humphreys, San Diego, CA
August 12 Terrace Theatre, Long Beach, CA
August 14 Mountain Winery, Saratoga, CA
August 15 Uptown Theatre, Napa, CA
August 17 Benaroya Hall, Seattle, WA
August 18 Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland, OR
Mike D and Ad-Rock have reportedly signed a deal to release their memoirs in 2015.
The book comes following the two remaining members of the Beastie Boys signing a deal with Random House imprint, Spiegel & Grau. The New York Times reports that the book is currently untitled and that it is unlikely to follow the structure of a traditional biography, focusing instead on a "pastiche of voices, images, irreverent humor and pop-culture reference points".
Julie Grau of Spiegel and Grau offered some insight into what fans can expect from the book upon its release, suggesting it may take a similar tone and form to the group's 1990 magazine Grand Royale. The Beastie Boys are "interested in challenging the form and making the book a multidimensional experience," Grau said in an interview. "There is a kaleidoscopic frame of reference, and it asks a reader to keep up." The book will be edited by Sacha Jenkins, a hip-hop journalist, and will be loosely structured as an oral history of the group from their beginnings in the music industry to the death of Adam Yauch in 2012.
Mike D and Ad-Rock have reportedly signed a deal to release their memoirs in 2015.
The book comes following the two remaining members of the Beastie Boys signing a deal with Random House imprint, Spiegel & Grau. The New York Times reports that the book is currently untitled and that it is unlikely to follow the structure of a traditional biography, focusing instead on a “pastiche of voices, images, irreverent humor and pop-culture reference points”.
Julie Grau of Spiegel and Grau offered some insight into what fans can expect from the book upon its release, suggesting it may take a similar tone and form to the group’s 1990 magazine Grand Royale. The Beastie Boys are “interested in challenging the form and making the book a multidimensional experience,” Grau said in an interview. “There is a kaleidoscopic frame of reference, and it asks a reader to keep up.” The book will be edited by Sacha Jenkins, a hip-hop journalist, and will be loosely structured as an oral history of the group from their beginnings in the music industry to the death of Adam Yauch in 2012.
The Rolling Stones played a tiny club show in Los Angeles on Saturday night (April 27).
The gig took place at The Echoplex in the Echo Park neighbourhood, with most tickets distributed to fans via a ticket lottery which took place earlier in the day at the El Rey venue across town, after the news o...
The Rolling Stones played a tiny club show in Los Angeles on Saturday night (April 27).
The gig took place at The Echoplex in the Echo Park neighbourhood, with most tickets distributed to fans via a ticket lottery which took place earlier in the day at the El Rey venue across town, after the news of the show went online that morning.
After playing the second song of the evening, 1978’s “Respectable”, Mick Jagger joked: “Welcome to Echo Park, a neighbourhood that’s always coming up – and I’m glad you’re here to welcome an up and coming band.” Scroll down to watch footage from the gig.
Jagger was on energetic form throughout the 90 minute show, dancing and chatting with the crowd. “Thank you very much, you’re too good to us,” he said towards the end of the set. “The first show of the tour, probably the best one!”
A host of VIPs also attended the Echoplex gig – which served as a warm up for the band’s forthcoming arena tour – including Johnny Depp, Bruce Willis, Owen Wilson and members of Green Day and No Doubt. The tour starts officially on May 3 at Los Angeles’ Staples Center, visiting a number cities in North America before they headline Glastonbury Festival on June 29 and play London’s Hype Park on July 6 and 13.
The band, who were evidently in a playful mood, took to the stage at 9.15pm (PT) and played a 14-song set, which included covers of songs made famous by Chuck Berry (“Little Queenie”), Otis Redding (“That’s How Strong My Love Is”) and The Temptations (“Just My Imagination”) as well as their own classic material, including hits “Miss You” and “Street Fighting Man”.
Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Charlie Watts and Ronnie Wood were backed by Darryl Jones, Chuck Leavell, Bernard Fowler, Lisa Fischer and Bobby Keys for the show. Mick Taylor also joined the band onstage, playing on their version of Robert Johnson’s “Love In Vain” as well as “Midnight Rambler”.
Before the band exited the stage, after an encore of “Brown Sugar” and “Jumpin’ Jack Flash”, Jagger said: “Thank you very much everybody, you’ve given us hope, peace, love and understanding. Goodnight!”
George Jones has died, aged 81.
Jones was reportedly hospitalized at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee with an illness on April 18.
Jones, whose songs included "White Lightening" and "Why Baby Why", was called "the second best singer in America" by Frank Sinatra.
He released his first album, Grand Ole Opry's New Star, in 1957. The previous year, he'd been named the Most Promising New Country Vocalist. He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1992, and in 2012 he was presented with a Grammy Lifetime Achievement award.
Born in Saratoga, Texas, Jones was married to Tammy Wynette between 1969 and 1975.
Jones had 143 Top 40 country hits; fourteen of which went to Number One. In 1994, he recorded The Bradley Barn Sessions, which featured a guest appearance from Keith Richards. You can watch Richards talk about playing with Jones below.
In August 2012, he announced 'The Grand Tour' - essentially, his farewell tour which was scheduled to conclude on November 22, 2013, at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville. He was also due to release a duets album with Dolly Parton.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0QnxG4BoUi8
George Jones has died, aged 81.
Jones was reportedly hospitalized at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee with an illness on April 18.
Jones, whose songs included “White Lightening” and “Why Baby Why”, was called “the second best singer in America” by Frank Sinatra.
He released his first album, Grand Ole Opry’s New Star, in 1957. The previous year, he’d been named the Most Promising New Country Vocalist. He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1992, and in 2012 he was presented with a Grammy Lifetime Achievement award.
Born in Saratoga, Texas, Jones was married to Tammy Wynette between 1969 and 1975.
Jones had 143 Top 40 country hits; fourteen of which went to Number One. In 1994, he recorded The Bradley Barn Sessions, which featured a guest appearance from Keith Richards. You can watch Richards talk about playing with Jones below.
In August 2012, he announced ‘The Grand Tour’ – essentially, his farewell tour which was scheduled to conclude on November 22, 2013, at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville. He was also due to release a duets album with Dolly Parton.
All Tomorrow's Parties have confirmed that their regular weekender events are to come to a close at the end of the year with two final 'End Of An Era' events - including Television playing "Marquee Moon" in full.
The ATP events have taken place regularly since 1999 and routinely took place in holi...
All Tomorrow’s Parties have confirmed that their regular weekender events are to come to a close at the end of the year with two final ‘End Of An Era’ events – including Television playing “Marquee Moon” in full.
The ATP events have taken place regularly since 1999 and routinely took place in holiday camps including Pontin’s Camber Sands and Butlin’s in Minehead. The two weekend long End Of An Era event will return to Camber Sands with Television taking part in End Of An Era – Part 1 which takes place on the weekend of November 22-24. Hosted in conjunction with Primavera Festival, the line-up also includes Chelsea Light Moving, Dinosaur Jr, Dinos Chapman, Les Savy Fav, múm, Oneohtrix Point Never, Hebronix, Mike Watt, Forest Swords and The Haxan Cloak.
Meanwhile, Loop have reformed to play End Of An Era – Part 1, which takes place at the same venue the following weekend on November 29 – December 1. Loop split in 1991 but have reunited for the festival and will curate a line-up which so far includes The Pop Group, 23 Skidoo, Fennesz, The KVB, Dirty Beaches, Eaux, Hookworms and Thought Forms.
Issuing a statement on the end of ATP weekenders, Barry Hogan states: “When we started all this fourteen years ago, we had no idea how a festival curated by a single artist and based in a family holiday camp would play out. It was a mad idea that somehow came to fruition, helped by the fact that people were looking for something different from the overpriced conveyor belt corporate rock sponsor-fests that populate the British summer. Looking back we have so many great memories – where else would you find Iggy Pop, Matt Groening, Patti Smith or Nick Cave holed up in a basic chalet at a Pontins’ Holiday Camp? The support from the artists and festival-goers alike has been incredible but it’s time to move on and look towards the future, it may also be time to let Camber Sands rest in peace!”
Meanwhile, upcoming events such as the summer edition of ATP’s festivals – which will feature performances from Deerhunter and TV On The Radio – will go ahead as planned.
Laura Marling has unveiled the first four tracks from her new album Once I Was An Eagle via a short film, entitled When Brave Bird Saved.
Click below to watch the 18-minute long When Brave Bird Saved, which soundtracks the songs "Take The Night Off", "I Was An Eagle", "You Know" and "Breathe".
The...
Laura Marling has unveiled the first four tracks from her new album Once I Was An Eagle via a short film, entitled When Brave Bird Saved.
Click below to watch the 18-minute long When Brave Bird Saved, which soundtracks the songs “Take The Night Off”, “I Was An Eagle”, “You Know” and “Breathe”.
The film was directed by Fred & Nick, who said, “When Brave Bird Saved is an introduction to a visual journey directly inspired, informed, and narrated by the first four tracks of Once I Was An Eagle. Having collaborated with Laura over the last four years, the ambition and scope of this film marks an exciting new direction for us – and we were given total freedom to focus strongly on the distinct journey of the four tracks.”
Once I Was An Eagle is set for release on May 27. You can read Uncut’s exclusive interview with the singer-songwriter in the new issue of Uncut, on sale now.
Bob Weir left the stage early last night (April 25), during a set by Further at the Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, New York.
According to music website jambase, Weir was seen struggling throughout the show and was eventually helped into a chair onstage by two crew members.
The band left the stag...
Bob Weir left the stage early last night (April 25), during a set by Further at the Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, New York.
According to music website jambase, Weir was seen struggling throughout the show and was eventually helped into a chair onstage by two crew members.
The band left the stage, returning without Weir.
Bassist Phil Lesh explained to the audience that Weir had suffered a strained shoulder earlier that day.
As members of the Grateful Dead, Weir and Lesh played the Capitol Theatre 18 times between 1970 and 1971.
Weir will play four dates on the Bob Dylan/Wilco/My Morning Jacket AmericanaramA tour. Weir will join Dylan and co on:
June 26th @ Cruzan Amphitheatre – West Palm Beach, FL
June 27th @ Live Nation Amphitheatre – Tampa, FL
June 29th @ Aaron’s Amphitheatre – Atlanta, GA
June 30th @ The Lawn at Riverfront Park – Nashville, TN
Big Deal: The Breeders’ best LP reissued as a seven-disc vinyl/3CD boxset on its 20th anniversary...
In the red corner: the heavyweight, Charles MK Thompson IV, known to the world as Black Francis. In the blue corner: the maverick, the former “Mrs John Murphy”, Kim Deal. Who was your money on? The guy who wrote 95% of the songs, or the gal who kicked 95% of the ass?
In the battle of the post-Pixies projects, Charles was the overwhelming favourite. Kim was well-loved, and “Gigantic” and “Do You Love Me Now?” – originally released on The Breeders’ 1992 “Safari” EP, included here – proved that she could write a killer tune. But even the staunchest Kim supporters harboured niggling doubts about whether the bawdy, beer-swilling bassist could be trusted to skipper her own vessel without the steadying hand on the tiller of a Black Francis, or even a Tanya Donelly (who left The Breeders after “Safari”to focus on Belly). In the end, though, it was Kim who came out on top. Last Splash, The Breeders’ triumphant second album, comfortably outsold Frank Black’s chugging solo debut – and every Pixies album, too, come to that. Even if Kim wasn’t into schadenfreude, it must’ve made up for being sidelined on the last two Pixies albums before being informed of their dissolution via fax.
Ironically, it was Kim’s band that cleaved closest to the sound of the Pixies in their shitkicking pomp. Last Splash, with its scuzzed-up take on early-’60s jukebox fodder, sounded more like a Bossanova sequel than a follow-up to 1990’s serpentine debut Pod. In their own rasping style, The Breeders had a crack at girl group romance (“Do You Love Me Now?”), surf-rock (“Flipside”), country (“Drivin’ On 9”) and tiki-bar twang (“No Aloha”). Instead of UFOs and surfer girls there was sarky S&M (“I’ll be your whatever you want”), droll feminism (“motherhood means mental freeze!”) and plenty of gleeful innuendo (what else did you think “Divine Hammer” was about?), all delivered in the Deal twins’ sweetly savage harmonies, honed to perfection years before in the biker bars of Dayton.
Still, it takes a lot of effort to sound this effortless. Kim’s desire to prove herself led to the band tracking Last Splash in two studios simultaneously, with the singer obsessing over drum sounds and mutilating Jim Macpherson’s cymbals to obtain that perfectly dishevelled feel. The clutch of pre-album demos on LP3 of the boxset reveal how tightly plotted her vignettes were before The Breeders even entered the studio. Only “Cannonball” (working title: “Grunggae” – grunge meets reggae, see?) had yet to fully take shape, suggesting that the band weren’t sure until the last minute if this was a potential anthem or a throwaway goof.
Luckily they chose right. Josephine Wiggs’ immortal bassline inevitably receives the loudest cheer of the night during the frisky live show preserved for posterity on LP2, recorded at Stockholm’s Club Gino in May 1994. The first half was previously released as the fan-club-only EP, “Live In Stockholm”; the LSXX edition restores “Cannonball”, “Happiness Is A Warm Gun” and a pummelling “Head To Toe” to the setlist, with shout-outs to the bartender who kept the band in mudslides throughout the night.
The post-Last Splash EPs are manna from heaven for college rock connoisseurs, featuring covers of Sebadoh’s “The Freed Pig” and Guided By Voices’ “Shocker In Gloomtown”, not to mention an alternate version of “Do You Love Me Now?” with bonus caterwauling from J Mascis. The only black mark against LSXX is that the brighter, re-recorded single versions of “Divine Hammer” and “Saints” serve to make the album originals sound a little underpowered.
In the long term, of course, The Breeders proved to be as flaky as everyone first feared. Kelley was bundled off to rehab in ’95 and the band have only produced two rather slight LPs since. Last Splash, though, is a concentrated burst of pure pleasure, and “Divine Hammer” and “Cannonball” remain two of the most giddily exhilarating songs in the alt.rock canon. Try to play either of them now without grinning madly, punching the air, goosing a stranger or spitting in a wishing well. That’s the beauty of Last Splash: for 40 minutes, it makes you feel as cool as Kim Deal.
EXTRAS: The Stockholm Syndrome (live in Stockholm 1994); BBC sessions, pre-album demos; four EPs – (“Safari”, “Cannon-ball”, “Divine Hammer”, “Head To Toe”); 24pp booklet of unpublished photos and reminiscences.
Sam Richards
Q+A
Kim Deal
What are your enduring memories of the Last Splash recording sessions?
I remember it being really, really tiring. We had two studios up and running at one time. I felt like I couldn’t even go to the restroom because there was always something that needed to be done. I thought the album was going to kill me.
What was the reasoning behind working in two studios simultaneously?
I booked Coast in San Francisco because I liked the gear and the board, but I didn’t think about the specs of the room itself. When I got there and I saw this small square box with linoleum on the floor I was very confused. We started setting up the drums and they didn’t sound vibey at all. So we found another studio a few blocks over and a few blocks down. It was in the Mission District, which was a really sketchy area back then. That’s another thing I remember: walking from the hotel to the studio and just seeing bums galore. Not the nice-looking bums – really scary bums. Schizophrenic bums with crack problems.
Did that edginess find its way onto the record?
I’d like to say yeah, but I don’t think I need anything like that to make it weird. I’m always going to make it strange and weird anyway.
In the liner notes, Kelley talks about running her sewing machine through a Marshall amp while you and Jim dropped his cymbals out of a second-storey window because they sounded “too new”. Was there quite a spontaneous atmosphere in the studio?
Spontaneous? No. To me, it all makes complete sense. How else are we going to get the cymbals to stop ringing out? Since then, I’ve seen that you can buy cracked cymbals, so I’m not crazy. As far as mic’ing up the sewing machine, that is a little weird. But it does sound good.
Did you know in your heart of hearts that Pixies were over by the time you came to make Last Splash?
I knew that Charles wanted to do something different. Kelley told me that Pixies broke up when we were in the studio – this would have been January ’93. It didn’t come as a shock. Although I didn’t know it was going to be announced, it didn’t make any difference to what we were doing. I know it would sound great for the TV movie if I was able to go, ‘Having heard that Charles broke up the band, I then returned to the studio knowing I was making the best record of my life!’ But it wasn’t like that.
Now that the Last Splash lineup has reformed for the LSXX World Tour, do you have any plans for recording new material?
Not yet. But I’ve played with both Josephine and Jim Macpherson in the meantime, so I could very well see us doing some stuff together.
INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS
Big Deal: The Breeders’ best LP reissued as a seven-disc vinyl/3CD boxset on its 20th anniversary…
In the red corner: the heavyweight, Charles MK Thompson IV, known to the world as Black Francis. In the blue corner: the maverick, the former “Mrs John Murphy”, Kim Deal. Who was your money on? The guy who wrote 95% of the songs, or the gal who kicked 95% of the ass?
In the battle of the post-Pixies projects, Charles was the overwhelming favourite. Kim was well-loved, and “Gigantic” and “Do You Love Me Now?” – originally released on The Breeders’ 1992 “Safari” EP, included here – proved that she could write a killer tune. But even the staunchest Kim supporters harboured niggling doubts about whether the bawdy, beer-swilling bassist could be trusted to skipper her own vessel without the steadying hand on the tiller of a Black Francis, or even a Tanya Donelly (who left The Breeders after “Safari”to focus on Belly). In the end, though, it was Kim who came out on top. Last Splash, The Breeders’ triumphant second album, comfortably outsold Frank Black’s chugging solo debut – and every Pixies album, too, come to that. Even if Kim wasn’t into schadenfreude, it must’ve made up for being sidelined on the last two Pixies albums before being informed of their dissolution via fax.
Ironically, it was Kim’s band that cleaved closest to the sound of the Pixies in their shitkicking pomp. Last Splash, with its scuzzed-up take on early-’60s jukebox fodder, sounded more like a Bossanova sequel than a follow-up to 1990’s serpentine debut Pod. In their own rasping style, The Breeders had a crack at girl group romance (“Do You Love Me Now?”), surf-rock (“Flipside”), country (“Drivin’ On 9”) and tiki-bar twang (“No Aloha”). Instead of UFOs and surfer girls there was sarky S&M (“I’ll be your whatever you want”), droll feminism (“motherhood means mental freeze!”) and plenty of gleeful innuendo (what else did you think “Divine Hammer” was about?), all delivered in the Deal twins’ sweetly savage harmonies, honed to perfection years before in the biker bars of Dayton.
Still, it takes a lot of effort to sound this effortless. Kim’s desire to prove herself led to the band tracking Last Splash in two studios simultaneously, with the singer obsessing over drum sounds and mutilating Jim Macpherson’s cymbals to obtain that perfectly dishevelled feel. The clutch of pre-album demos on LP3 of the boxset reveal how tightly plotted her vignettes were before The Breeders even entered the studio. Only “Cannonball” (working title: “Grunggae” – grunge meets reggae, see?) had yet to fully take shape, suggesting that the band weren’t sure until the last minute if this was a potential anthem or a throwaway goof.
Luckily they chose right. Josephine Wiggs’ immortal bassline inevitably receives the loudest cheer of the night during the frisky live show preserved for posterity on LP2, recorded at Stockholm’s Club Gino in May 1994. The first half was previously released as the fan-club-only EP, “Live In Stockholm”; the LSXX edition restores “Cannonball”, “Happiness Is A Warm Gun” and a pummelling “Head To Toe” to the setlist, with shout-outs to the bartender who kept the band in mudslides throughout the night.
The post-Last Splash EPs are manna from heaven for college rock connoisseurs, featuring covers of Sebadoh’s “The Freed Pig” and Guided By Voices’ “Shocker In Gloomtown”, not to mention an alternate version of “Do You Love Me Now?” with bonus caterwauling from J Mascis. The only black mark against LSXX is that the brighter, re-recorded single versions of “Divine Hammer” and “Saints” serve to make the album originals sound a little underpowered.
In the long term, of course, The Breeders proved to be as flaky as everyone first feared. Kelley was bundled off to rehab in ’95 and the band have only produced two rather slight LPs since. Last Splash, though, is a concentrated burst of pure pleasure, and “Divine Hammer” and “Cannonball” remain two of the most giddily exhilarating songs in the alt.rock canon. Try to play either of them now without grinning madly, punching the air, goosing a stranger or spitting in a wishing well. That’s the beauty of Last Splash: for 40 minutes, it makes you feel as cool as Kim Deal.
EXTRAS: The Stockholm Syndrome (live in Stockholm 1994); BBC sessions, pre-album demos; four EPs – (“Safari”, “Cannon-ball”, “Divine Hammer”, “Head To Toe”); 24pp booklet of unpublished photos and reminiscences.
Sam Richards
Q+A
Kim Deal
What are your enduring memories of the Last Splash recording sessions?
I remember it being really, really tiring. We had two studios up and running at one time. I felt like I couldn’t even go to the restroom because there was always something that needed to be done. I thought the album was going to kill me.
What was the reasoning behind working in two studios simultaneously?
I booked Coast in San Francisco because I liked the gear and the board, but I didn’t think about the specs of the room itself. When I got there and I saw this small square box with linoleum on the floor I was very confused. We started setting up the drums and they didn’t sound vibey at all. So we found another studio a few blocks over and a few blocks down. It was in the Mission District, which was a really sketchy area back then. That’s another thing I remember: walking from the hotel to the studio and just seeing bums galore. Not the nice-looking bums – really scary bums. Schizophrenic bums with crack problems.
Did that edginess find its way onto the record?
I’d like to say yeah, but I don’t think I need anything like that to make it weird. I’m always going to make it strange and weird anyway.
In the liner notes, Kelley talks about running her sewing machine through a Marshall amp while you and Jim dropped his cymbals out of a second-storey window because they sounded “too new”. Was there quite a spontaneous atmosphere in the studio?
Spontaneous? No. To me, it all makes complete sense. How else are we going to get the cymbals to stop ringing out? Since then, I’ve seen that you can buy cracked cymbals, so I’m not crazy. As far as mic’ing up the sewing machine, that is a little weird. But it does sound good.
Did you know in your heart of hearts that Pixies were over by the time you came to make Last Splash?
I knew that Charles wanted to do something different. Kelley told me that Pixies broke up when we were in the studio – this would have been January ’93. It didn’t come as a shock. Although I didn’t know it was going to be announced, it didn’t make any difference to what we were doing. I know it would sound great for the TV movie if I was able to go, ‘Having heard that Charles broke up the band, I then returned to the studio knowing I was making the best record of my life!’ But it wasn’t like that.
Now that the Last Splash lineup has reformed for the LSXX World Tour, do you have any plans for recording new material?
Not yet. But I’ve played with both Josephine and Jim Macpherson in the meantime, so I could very well see us doing some stuff together.
The National played two songs from their forthcoming sixth studio album Trouble Will Find Me on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon last night (April 25).
The Brooklyn band performed "Sea Of Love" and a web exclusive of "I Need My Girl" on the programme – scroll down to watch footage of both.
Trouble W...
The National played two songs from their forthcoming sixth studio album Trouble Will Find Me on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon last night (April 25).
The Brooklyn band performed “Sea Of Love” and a web exclusive of “I Need My Girl” on the programme – scroll down to watch footage of both.
Trouble Will Find Me is set for release on May 20. You can read Uncut’s exclusive interview with the band in the new issue of Uncut, on sale now.
David Bowie has finally broken his silence on his comeback album The Next Day.
American novelist Ricky Moody, writing for literary website The Rumpus, persuaded Bowie to comment – in a manner – on his album, after asking for a "work flow diagram" explaining his creative approach.
Moody writes...
David Bowie has finally broken his silence on his comeback album The Next Day.
American novelist Ricky Moody, writing for literary website The Rumpus, persuaded Bowie to comment – in a manner – on his album, after asking for a “work flow diagram” explaining his creative approach.
Moody writes: “…I wanted to think about [the album] in light of what he was thinking about it, I wanted to understand the lexicon of The Next Day, and so I simply asked if he would provide this list of words about his album, assuming, like everyone else waving madly trying to get his attention, that there was not a chance in hell that I would get this list, because who the fuck am I, some novelist killing time writing occasionally about music, and yet astonishingly the list appeared, and it appeared without further comment, which is really excellent, and exactly in the spirit of this album, and the list is far better than I could ever have hoped, and it’s exactly like Bowie, at least in my understanding of him, impulsive, intuitive, haunted, astringent, and incredibly ambitious in the matter of the arts…”
Bowie recorded a new version of Tin Machine’s “I Can’t Read” for the 1997 movie adaptation of Moody’s novel, The Ice Storm.
The full list of words Bowie sent to Moody is as follows:
Effigies
Indulgences
Anarchist
Violence
Chthonic
Intimidation
Vampyric
Pantheon
Succubus
Hostage
Transference
Identity
Mauer
Interface
Flitting
Isolation
Revenge
Osmosis
Crusade
Tyrant
Domination
Indifference
Miasma
Pressgang
Displaced
Flight
Resettlement
Funereal
Glide
Trace
Balkan
Burial
Reverse
Manipulate
Origin
Text
Traitor
Urban
Comeuppance
Tragic
Nerve
Mystification
Meanwhile, Bowie was recently spotted wearing long brown religious robes alongside actor Gary Oldman on set for the video for the third single taken from the album – the title track, “The Next Day”.
Jackson Browne features heavily in Uncut’s piece on the making of the Eagles’ Desperado – in the new issue, dated June 2013 and out now – and here, in this archive feature, originally from August 2010’s Uncut (Take 159), Browne takes us through the creation of his greatest albums. Intervie...
Jackson Browne features heavily in Uncut’s piece on the making of the Eagles’ Desperado – in the new issue, dated June 2013 and out now – and here, in this archive feature, originally from August 2010’s Uncut (Take 159), Browne takes us through the creation of his greatest albums. Interview: Bud Scoppa
____________________
“Music has an impact because a lot of people experience it at the same time, and that can’t happen exactly the same way again,” says Jackson Browne, whose five ’70s LPs are the quintessence of the SoCal singer/songwriter genre. “But people want to hear that artist do that thing over and over. It’s great when an artist can continually grow, and the audience accepts that.” Over the past decade, he’s put out a pair of LPs with his band, some solo acoustic runs through his fat song- book and the recent Love Is Strange, with longtime collaborator David Lindley.
____________________
JACKSON BROWNE – JACKSON BROWNE
(Asylum, 1972)
Already an oft-covered writer at 23, Browne signed with David Geffen’s new Asylum label and cut his debut album with some of SoCal’s finest, anchored by James Taylor’s rhythm section: drummer Russ Kunkel and bassist Lee Sklar…
Jackson Browne: “To me, it’s always the same thing; it’s making a bunch of songs and how you get the songs finished. I want to play with people that make the song sound good and make the ideas come out – or give me better ideas. Making that first LP was painstaking because I was feeling my way. I’d never played with a band; I’d always played acoustic by myself. I didn’t want to be hooked up with a prominent producer, who might supplant whatever ideas I came up with. So I chose to go with this engineer Richard Orshoff, who’d done a James Taylor album with Peter Asher at Crystal Sound. I’d planned to use David Lindley, but he was in England. Then I lucked into an amazing band. Sure, they were James’ rhythm section, but also, there was a way in which Peter Asher worked that I emulated – I became a stowaway in his productions. The prevailing method in Hollywood and New York was to make albums in a few days. My approach was simply getting these guys together to figure out what worked. They called them ‘head arrangements’. They’d get in a room and make stuff up, just like The Beatles did. We were just trying to get the most out of a song. That record was one of the first where artists were left to their own devices and allowed to work the way they wanted to work.”
JACKSON BROWNE – FOR EVERYMAN
(Asylum, 1973)
With Lindley, David Crosby, Elton John and Joni Mitchell joining the sessions, Browne’s second LP produces classics like “Take It Easy” and the title song…
“Going on tour with David Lindley was a very formative experience for me. I got to spend practically a year playing these songs with the one other musician I’d forged a lifelong musical chemistry with. It helps to have a genius multi-instrumentalist in your back pocket when you step out there, and it helps give dimension to the songs. With that musical collaboration in place, it wasn’t hard to add bass and drums to those arrangements, which is what I did. The album took about nine months to make, and I’m lucky that I was given the freedom to try just about anything, because a lot of stuff I tried didn’t work. We were working at Sunset Sound, and the album was recorded by a great engineer, John Haeny. He was one of my important teachers, because he taught me a lot about editing tracks. I really think that I’m more of an editor than anything else, including when I’m writing. During a break in the middle of recording the first album, I took a road trip in this old beat-up Willys Jeep and I went to Utah and Arizona. On that trip I started to write ‘Take It Easy’, and when I came back, I played it for Glenn Frey, and he asked if the Eagles could cut it when it was done. So I said, ‘Just finish it’, and he wrote the last verse and turned it into a real song. It was their first single, and what those guys did with it was incredible.”
JACKSON BROWNE – LATE FOR THE SKY
(Asylum, 1974)
A split with his wife drove Browne to write these songs, resulting in one of the deepest, most powerful break-up albums ever…
“For Late For The Sky, I had the songs pretty much written. It was the first time I’d sat down and written songs with the information of how I was going to record them. I went to Asylum and got $10,000 to rehearse the band for a month before we went in the studio. I liked the bands that worked that way, like Creedence and the Eagles, and I was aware of the fact that the stuff I really loved was a product of them playing together for a while. I just wanted the record to be like a band, and there were only the five people playing on the record. We rehearsed everything in a room in my house – the house I grew up in, which my grandfather had built. This room we were working in had stained glass windows, a pipe organ and a choir loft, high ceilings. It was a little like being in a church. It might have been one reason the songs sound kind of church-y. But Lindley was the key. What he played was incredible, and it was what we arrived at after playing together for a couple months and really knew the songs. It always proceeded from the way we played together – what he felt when I sang, and how that came out on the violin, or whatever he was playing. When Lindley wasn’t playing electric guitar, he’d be playing acoustic guitar, or if he wasn’t playing lap, he’d be playing fiddle. And I was either playing piano and Jai [Winding] was playing organ. Or if I was playing acoustic guitar, then he would play piano. That sound of the piano and the organ together was especially important. I thought it was a great thing between us, because the way I play piano is like a lot of whole chords. And combined with Jai’s organ, it kind of gave the songs a particular kind of sound, very major-y. I’d bought my own piano, so I really had a great piano for the first time during that time. One of the first songs I wrote on it was ‘For A Dancer’. With ‘Late For The Sky’, I had this one phrase, ‘late for the sky’, and I wrote that whole song in order to say that one phrase at the end of it. People have always referred to those songs as ‘Late For The Sky kind of songs’, and I think they’re referring to the subject of songs like ‘Late For The Sky’, ‘For A Dancer’ and ‘The Late Show’, but I don’t have any name for that kind of song. It has to do with our expectations and battling your loss of innocence. You resolve your expectations with your resignation and mortality, you know?”
JACKSON BROWNE – THE PRETENDER
(Asylum, 1975)
Ceding control for the first time to an outside producer (Jon Landau, Springsteen’s manager), Browne altered his freewheeling approach to recording. Crosby (again), Nash, Lowell George and Don Henley guest…
“Up through Late For The Sky, I was still recording by simply playing with David until it coalesced, but that record was the culmination of that way of working. With The Pretender, I started working with Jon Landau, and what he set about doing was to change that. Not because he didn’t like the result, but he saw that there was something that we weren’t doing that we could be doing, and he made it more difficult to resort to my old habits. We had to discuss everything. He changed my priorities. He was really hands-on, and he got me involved in arranging and making clear-cut decisions; I’d just have kept playing the song and things would develop. In the middle of recording ‘The Pretender’, Jon was working with Jeff Porcaro [drums] and Craig Doerge [piano] and getting a certain dramatic thing to happen. Landau said, ‘Do you like that?’ And I said, ‘I like it, but I’d have to write some more words.’ And he looked at me and smiled and said, ‘Well, you’re a writer. Go write some more words.’ In ‘The Pretender’, there’s the line, ‘Were they only the fitful dreams of some greater awakening?’ It’s really talking about the same thing that ‘For Everyman’ was talking about, and it comes back and around again in a number of ways in my songs.”
WARREN ZEVON – WARREN ZEVON
(Asylum, 1976)
Browne met Zevon in LA in 1968. He was later instrumental in Asylum signing Zevon and handled production duties on his breakthrough.
“Because I’d made a bunch of records, I wanted to help Warren get his first album made. But I’m not the kind of producer that is really ambitious. The last thing on my mind was how to make a hit record; I just thought people needed to hear him. So we’d make the best versions of his songs we could. Geffen had the feeling I was just making a record for a friend – doing somebody a favour. It wasn’t until after the LP was done that he really heard it for what it was, especially when the critics hailed it. Warren had ‘Excitable Boy’ and ‘Werewolves Of London’ written, but I thought he should save them for his second LP because, if he didn’t record ‘Frank And Jesse James’, ‘Desperados Under The Eves’ and ‘The French Inhaler’ on the first album, they weren’t gonna get recorded later. I used to play ‘Werewolves Of London’ live, and the record company would say, ‘You’re gonna cut that song, right?’ And when I told them it was for Zevon’s second record, they thought I was crazy, because they believed I could have a hit with it myself. But that was wrong, and you can see it now. I didn’t think anybody got Warren but me. That’s the kind of writer he was – he spoke to your inner cynic. There was a dialogue that went on inside of him that’s going on inside of everybody. I’m still a huge fan of his writing.”
JACKSON BROWNE – RUNNING ON EMPTY
(Asylum, 1977)
A live LP containing all new material, recorded onstage, in various motel rooms and “on a bus somewhere in New Jersey”. Still Browne’s best-selling album…
“I thought making a live record would be something to do while I tried to come up with another LP of songs like The Pretender. That’s what happens when you get recognition. You go, ‘OK, great, let’s try to do something more like that.’ But that’s not what you were doing when you did it in the first place. You were just doing what you wanted to do next. And Running On Empty became my most successful record. For the first time I was getting paid enough to take this band who’d been on my albums [Russ Kunkel, Lee Sklar, Craig Doerge and guitarist Danny Kortchmar] on tour. They were huge fans of David Lindley, and they’d been on recording dates with him, so they were the most accommodating of bands with what David and I already had going on. My favourite thing was recording in motel rooms… we actually sang in the shower. That album was about a shared common experience that we all had touring, that we all knew pretty well. Most of those ideas came from us touring with different people. Stagehands to this day come up and say, ‘”The Load-Out” is our anthem.’
JACKSON BROWNE – LIVES IN THE BALANCE
(Asylum, 1986)
Browne became politically active in the ’80s – he helped found Musicians United For Safe Energy after the 1979 Three Mile Island disaster. Lives… was a response to the Reagan administration’s activities in Central America…
“In my songs, the subjects pick me; and I try to represent them. Lives In The Balance was a turning point, when I began to talk about what I’d been reading and thinking about. Everybody accepted the status quo version of America that was ludicrous. Lives In The Balance was an attempt to write clearly on subjects that you shouldn’t be oblique about. My favourite album of the day was Little Steven’s Voice Of America, and if I was emulating anyone, it was his outspokenness. But when people attribute a decline in my sales and stature to these political songs, I disagree. The record company didn’t like the record or know what to do with it. But I never took it as meaning you shouldn’t sing about politics. The past 20 or 30 years bears me out. Yes, my intention was confrontational, but the record also contained ‘In The Shape Of A Heart’, and if your politics are as personal as anything else, you’ve got to talk about them. So, in that sense, the political songs and ‘In The Shape Of A Heart’ were compatible.”
JACKSON BROWNE – LOOKING EAST
(Elektra, 1996)
On 1993’s I’m Alive, Browne assembled the band he still records with today; this subsequent album found them gaining their footing as a unit…
“This is a band, just like the one on Late For The Sky. We had Luis Conte doing live percussion, and Waddy [Wachtel] got added to ‘Looking East’ – he made the song, just playing rhythm guitar and rockin’ the track. ‘Looking East’ is fantastic, but I don’t think people even heard the song because of the track. The song becomes much more audible when it’s sung in this acoustic way in which the writing is in high relief. My favourite version is the one on [2010 live album] Love Is Strange with Lindley playing on it. Even the guys in my band say this new one is their favourite. Although they made a great version, something about the bombast of the track gets in the way of hearing what the song is saying. That’s what keeps happening; I guess I’m not making the right record the first time out. When the song first gets recorded, it’s almost like the last instalment in writing the song. But there’s still something that happens beyond that. What it’s shown me is that, even though you make a record, that doesn’t mean that’s the only way of playing it.”
JACKSON BROWNE – THE NAKED RIDE HOME
(Elektra, 2002)
Follow-up to Looking East, with Browne’s most vivid batch of songs since Late For The Sky…
“How records get made is the most fascinating thing to me. I love ‘The Naked Ride Home’ as a recording. [Band guitarist] Mark Goldenberg was playing structurally on the original session, and I was gonna overdub him doing a lead on top, but I wound up adding this great guitarist Val McCallum to the band just to play that part. He played this incredible part on the first take. It’s a deceiving song; it plays a trick on the listener because ‘Just take off your clothes and I’ll drive you home’ sounds like a pick-up line. You don’t find out until the end that these are married people. The assumption is there that it’s about one thing when it’s really about another. I love language so much in that way. I’m a songwriter, so that’s what people focus on – the songs. But how I get there is by playing in a band. On the last few records, I’ve begun finishing songs with the band. We just keep playing and when something great happens, everybody knows it. We’re not trying to play perfectly; we’re trying to find something that no one even knows what it is. So I now feel like I’m the singer and lyricist in a band.”
The Eagles have revealed that their forthcoming world tour may well be their last,
Speaking in London earlier today (April 25) ahead of the UK premier of their History Of The Eagles documentary at the Sundance London festival, the band opened up about their planned tour.
“We’re about to begin ...
The Eagles have revealed that their forthcoming world tour may well be their last,
Speaking in London earlier today (April 25) ahead of the UK premier of their History Of The Eagles documentary at the Sundance London festival, the band opened up about their planned tour.
“We’re about to begin rehearsals next month for our world tour,” said Glenn Frey. “I don’t want to say it’s our last world tour, but it very well could be. That’s the only immediate plan. We’ve been working on this documentary. That’s all I know.”
Added Joe Walsh, “We’re going to reinvent, new show, new stage, new lights. Lots of video. It’s amazing what they can do now. And revisit some of the catalogue.”
Continued Frey, “It’s somewhat confounding, but people still want to see us play. It doesn’t seem to end for us. You’d think people would get tired of us. But you know, people haven’t. We haven’t played some shows for quite a while. It’s been pretty much a solo year this year, plus we were all working on different parts of The History Of The Eagles, but we went and played a show in Las Vegas about four weeks ago. It was after the DVD had played on Showtime, and the audience was rabid. I had to laugh, they were so into it and so committed. It seems we have this phenomenon we have to deal with. So we have to keep figuring out ways to keep it a little bit interesting for us, a little bit more interesting for them, change a few things here and there while still playing mopst of the songs we’re known for. It’s amazing people still want to see us.”
“It was great help that they still knew all the words,” added Joe Walsh.
Speaking about the possibility of playing Europe, Frey confirmed: “Were going to start in July in the United States in Canada, but Europe is definitely in our sights for 2014. I fully expect to see the Eagles here sometime in the next 15 months.”
The band’s world tour begins on July 6, KFC Yum! Center, Lousiville, Kentucky.
The History Of The Eagles Part 1 screens at the Sundance London festival this weekend. You can find more details here. It is released on DVD on April 29.
You can read about the making of the Eagles’ Desperado album in this month’s Uncut, on sale now.
Seeing as how Matthew E White and his band are on tour in the UK this week (I’m seeing him play in London tomorrow), it seemed a good time to post the feature about my visit to Richmond a couple of months ago. I’ve put a few links to stuff in here, too, so you can get a taste of the really inter...
Seeing as how Matthew E White and his band are on tour in the UK this week (I’m seeing him play in London tomorrow), it seemed a good time to post the feature about my visit to Richmond a couple of months ago. I’ve put a few links to stuff in here, too, so you can get a taste of the really interesting music coming out of the scene that revolves around White. Long read, this one…
He might be one of 2013’s more acclaimed newcomers, but Matthew E White seems some way off being concerned about invasions of his privacy. On the first night of March, his rented house in Richmond, Virginia, has been opened up as a concert venue. Admission is free. There is beer in the fridge rather than any kind of bar. Just next to White’s bedroom, a ladder-like staircase leads up into a ramshackle, if rather tidy, attic studio, where around 40 people and a Boston terrier are listening to frantic, mournful jazz in the vein of Ornette Coleman, played by some of the local performers that White uses to flesh out his expansive musical visions.
Here, too, is where much of White’s debut album, Big Inner, was recorded. The evidence is everywhere: the Native American flute made out of a turkey bone that provides the squawking sound 11 seconds into “Big Love”. A piano, whose treacherous ascent up the staircase ranked as the scariest experience of White’s life thus far. A post-it note on the vintage mixing desk that advises, gnomically, “A little bit at a time”. And, most striking, a bunch of paintings that act as a brisk index of White’s heroes: Randy Newman, Allen Toussaint, King Tubby, Dr John, Marvin Gaye, his mother, his father.
Matthew E White (the E stands for Edgar; not, as his British publicist hoped, Ellington), 30, is quite candid about a lot of things. There is his Christian faith, nurtured by missionary parents and pronounced boldly in many of the songs on Big Inner. There is his academic virtuosity, which means he can thoughtfully construct his tunes with university jazz graduates. And there is his encyclopaedic knowledge and love of musical traditions, a sense that his own work can evolve through the assiduous study of what has gone before.
White sometimes thinks that he can best articulate what he does by showing people his collection of music books: Greil Marcus’ Mystery Train, Alex Ross’ The Rest Is Noise, This Is Reggae, histories of Columbia, Stax and Motown, scholarly tomes on Louis Armstrong and every era of jazz, Dylan’s Chronicles. When he enlisted Trey Pollard, a Richmond contemporary, to write the string arrangements for Big Inner, he gave him three pointers: “Tropicalia, Ray Charles, The Impressions’ Young Mods’ Forgotten Story. That was it.”
“We talk referentially a lot when we’re working out music,” says Cameron Ralston, the bassist who is one of White’s closest and longest-serving collaborators. “We always come back to the great shit: Miles Davis, Ray Charles, Jorge Ben, Duke Ellington, Otis Redding, early Bob Marley – the big figures that we all adore. Those are the ones we reference, not the little fucking indie band that nobody’s heard of. We like the stuff that’s time-tested and keeps getting greater: it gives you a very tall top of the mountain to be climbing towards.”
The next day, after the empty bottles have been tidied away, White is talking about the musical project which he has embarked upon. Spacebomb is a record label built on an old-fashioned concept that is at once creatively ambitious and economically pragmatic. Artists, in theory, will roll up to Spacebomb and have their songs arranged, produced, played by the house band, recorded at speed, published and released by the same organisation. Skilled string sections, horn players and choirs will be available on a budget. The sort of rapturously orchestrated fantasias that adorn Big Inner – an album that was to some degree conceived as a showcase for Spacebomb’s skills – come as part of the deal.
“I’m a student,” White says, though he’s earned a living in recent years by teaching guitar, “and I learn from the past. That’s the vocabulary I know, but it’s important to me that we move this forward.”
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Matthew E White is six feet, three inches tall – too tall, it transpires, for the American Civil War. When Steven Spielberg and the Lincoln crew arrived in Richmond looking for men with beards, using the old Confederate capital as a somewhat ironic substitute for Washington DC, White’s attempt to be cast as an extra was stymied by his height. Abraham Lincoln apart, it seems imposing six-footers were not prevalent at the time.
White has lived in Richmond for the past decade or so, but he originally comes from the coastal town of Virginia Beach, 100 miles to the east. His family is, to say the least, religious. “My brother-in-law is a pastor,” he says, “my brother is a Christian writer and professor, my dad runs a mission, my mom helps my dad run the mission.” While still at high school, White co-authored a book with his father on flatwater canoeing in Maryland and Delaware. Before that, the family spent several years in the Philippines and Japan, where his father spread the evangelical word. As Big Inner makes explicit, White’s faith has remained constant, even as his political beliefs have diverged from those of his parents.
“It’s troublesome how the beautiful, unique part of what the Christian faith can be gets co-opted by a political agenda. I’ve been close to a Christian environment that’s been really good to me, and I appreciate a lot that it brings, but I also see how unhealthy parts of it are. There’s a little bit of me reaching across the two versions of America and saying, Hey, I’m a rock’n’roll musician. I’m around the most liberal people on the planet. I get this world. People have a lot of love in their hearts and a lot of desire for things to get better. And I’m also around a lot of incredibly conservative Christians and that world: Southern, politically conservative, economically conservative. It’s the same thing there.”
It was the church that provided White with an initial entrée into the music business. Among the family friends at Virginia Beach Community Chapel in the late 1990s was Rob Ulsh, who owned Master Sound Studios in the town, at the time the operational hub of Missy Elliott and her producer, Tim ‘Timbaland’ Mosley. The 14-year-old White’s keenness to hang around the facility led to him taking any work Ulsh could offer him – chiefly painting the studio’s outside wall. He passed on his “shitty” demo tape, too, though Ulsh mistakenly played a Parliament track White had put on the flipside: “He came out and said, ‘Who the hell is playing bass for you?’ I felt so dumb.”
By High School, White had formed a folk-rock band with his friend Andy C Jenkins who, typically, remains part of White’s creative circle (Jenkins contributed lyrics to a few Big Inner songs). But it was a move to Richmond, and to Virginia Commonwealth University, that really kickstarted White’s musical activities. “I’ve always been more naturally a rock’n’roll kid than a jazz kid,” he says. Nevertheless, he enrolled as a guitar student on VCU’s jazz programme, and found himself part of a generation of musicians with the energies and ability to radicalise a moribund local scene.
“There are a lot of really talented players, very strong voices, in our age group,” says Cameron Ralston. “We’re proud of the things we’re building here, and it takes a guy like Matt, who’s a great unifier, to bring it together with a vision.”
Initially, that vision was focused on “a sort of promotion organisation” called The Patchwork Collective. Soon, though, it evolved into a rambunctious jazz big band called Fight The Big Bull, co-ordinated by White and featuring most of the musicians on the Spacebomb team. “They had a pretty wild style,” remembers John Darnielle of The Mountain Goats, who hired White to arrange the horns on his 2012 album, Transcendental Youth. “A great amalgam of so many styles; curious, engaged arrangements.”
One of White’s many clubbable attributes is that he comes across as a subtle networker, and he soon made connections for Fight The Big Bull far outside Virginia, with established jazz musicians like Steven Bernstein and Ken Vandermark. Simultaneously, The Great White Jenkins (now featuring Fight The Big Bull’s drummer, Pinson Chanselle) were setting off on “bogus national tours – we’d book our own shows, tramp around and lose a shit-ton of money”, that established links within the indie-rock world.
“During this whole time,” says White, “I was voraciously reading about how records are made. I wanted to make arrangements on other people’s records, or get the Richmond community to guest on other people’s records. I wanted to produce a record and I wanted to curate – the A&R thing. I wanted to create an umbrella for all the things I wanted to do as a musician, because there are many hats that I like wearing.”
Inducting fellow “music nerds” Ralston and Chanselle as his house band rhythm section, and roping in other friends to help with the business side of the operation, White came up with the idea and the name of Spacebomb (he had no idea that Spacebomb was also a variety of marijuana; a “strong, spicy, citrussy, cheese-scented bud,” recommends one user at leafly.com). White’s knowledge of the workings of Stax and Motown, with house musicians, arrangers and producers working swiftly and efficiently, meant that Spacebomb would have economic as well as aesthetic imperatives. It might superficially appear to be a nostalgic exercise, but it was also one that would, ideally, prove financially viable in straitened times.
“When you’re talking about the industry right now, nobody is making a ton of money off one record. But if you can have your hands in ten records a year, then this can make sense. It all comes back to the fact that people could make those records back then because the musical language they were speaking allowed them to work quickly. I could only make Big Inner in a week because I could put music in front of string players and horn players to play. I think there’s a point where written music and trained musicianship sort of top out. That’s not where great things come from. But it allows you to get there faster.”
White likes dub reggae a lot, too, and finds Jamaican music “a huge inspiration. The idea of being excessively creative, experimental and selling product are not different worlds to them. We look at dub and say, ‘that’s some far-out shit’, but that’s a way to monetize a product twice.”
At High School in Virginia Beach, White was taught art by a woman who, he says, partied with Dylan and was “just too much to handle” for the Christian establishment. “Art,” she told White, “is never finished, it only stops in interesting places.”
“If you’re going to release something you have to be pragmatic,” he says, “you’re going to want it to stop in the most interesting place. But with dub music, you take a track, turn it around and look at it a different way, and I think the Spacebomb process really lends itself to that. I’d like to make a dub version of Big Inner.”
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Spacebomb’s first client was a singer-songwriter from the Pacific Northwest named Karl Blau, who they had met while touring with The Great White Jenkins. White, though, had a plan to test out his system by simultaneously making a solo record. “I had lots of ideas about what it was going to sound like. But, at the same time, there were a million things that could go wrong. If the roof was going to come crashing down on someone, I preferred that it would be me.”
Perhaps he is being disingenuous. “There aren’t any of Matt’s decisions or projects that haven’t succeeded,” says Pinson Chanselle, his housemate for the past decade. “That’s a big part of why I wanted to try this thing. It’s high-risk, but everything else that he’s done has done really well. I think of him as the editor, in everything.”
“Matt has a lot of great traits,” says Cameron Ralston, “and one of them is that he’s naturally comfortable in the leadership role. He’s great at organising people and events and bands, putting things together and on a well thought-out track.”
White’s general demeanour seems to be relaxed, but watchful. In many ways, his closest contemporary could be Jack White: another man of charisma, authority and knowledge, with an elevated DIY ethos and a gift for channelling his enthusiasms into far-reaching projects. Phil Cook, who currently plays in Megafaun but previously was Justin Vernon’s bandmate in DeYarmond Edison, first encountered Matt White in 2007. Cook arranged the choir on Big Inner, and describes his friend as “A ‘Big Picture’ guy. He lays it all out and plans things years and chapters in advance. I don’t think he anticipated the huge response his music has elicited, but let’s just say his Google calendar is thick as a brick.”
“This is a record that has been covered in every major musical place in the world, and I’m thankful for that,” White says. “But I’ll tell you this. There’s not one Christian journalist that has called me, and believe me, there’s a line out of the door of people who want to talk about shit. I’ve got friends who are pastors, and I tell them this is an undeniable example of how out-of-touch the Christian culture is with bigger world things. I’ve not had one Christian writer say, ‘Hey, you’re chanting “Jesus Christ is our lord/Jesus Christ He is your friend” for five minutes at the end of the record. You want to talk about something?’”
It occurs that this transporting climax to “Brazos” (appropriated from an old Jorge Ben song, “Brother”) might also encourage some of White’s growing live audience to chant along, even if they have no faith themselves; as if the evangelical mission of his family has found an outlet in White’s music. He’s not so sure, not least because of the song’s ambiguity. “Brazos” tells of two slaves on the run, relying on – or, perhaps, questioning – the Christianity that has been imposed upon them by their white oppressors. “It’s the most dynamic musical part of the record,” White acknowledges, “but when he says, ‘Jesus Christ is your friend’, is that true? Is this a faith that you can lean on regardless of the cultural world you’re coming out of, or is it just bullshit? To put it very clearly and unpoetically, there’s a question mark at the end of the phrase. And I think that’s, to a large degree, where I am.”
Nevertheless, the Gospel influences that permeate White’s work are a lot less ambivalent or metaphorical than those deployed by some of the artists he’s been compared with (notably Jason Pierce and Spiritualized). A performance at last September’s Hopscotch Festival in Raleigh, North Carolina, was billed as “One Incantation Under God”, even though the vast majority of the 30 musicians in White’s band were atheists and agnostics.
The Hopscotch show acted as a kind of fanfare for the American release of Big Inner. In January, Domino facilitated a UK edition, triggering further ecstatic reviews and sending White on a trajectory for 2013 far from the one he and his band had envisaged. If Spacebomb’s plans for the next six months had been to hunker down in White’s studio, they now find themselves committed to the road, with a summer full of festival appearances stretching out in front of them.
“We’re ambassadors for Spacebomb, that’s how we’re approaching it,” says Ralston. “There’s a compromise. All these experiences are very new for us.”
“It’s certainly a balancing act,” White admits. “But the way I look at it, that’s the best problem you can have. You can have a bunch of other problems, like that the record sucks and you’re in debt. Fortunately Spacebomb has items that are recorded and ready to go.”
Beyond the distraction of promoting his solo career, White has four more-or-less extraordinary records in the can: the set by Karl Blau (“A far-out motherfucker”); albums by a fine Nashville singer-songwriter called Natalie Prass and by Joe Westerlund, the drummer from Megafaun; plus a seven-inch from Ivan Howard, whose exquisitely soulful vocals were last heard alongside those of Justin Vernon on the Gayngs album in 2010.
“You’re only going to see the whole Spacebomb picture when it’s a collage of records,” says White. “I guess people think of Spacebomb as this big ‘70s production, kind of Randy Newman, Motown. I have a certain affinity for late ‘60s and early ‘70s music that’s going to come across. But Joe doesn’t, so that sort of vibe doesn’t exist on his record in the same way. Natalie’s record has it a little, and Ivan’s record is much more like Sade or something – it’s groovy, early-‘80s type shit.”
“Spacebomb is us musically,” says Trey Pollard, “and Matt is the decider. He keeps things clear. Even though all the records sound very different, there’s a continuity, and that comes from the one person who has the final say.”
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Two days after the jazz show, White, Chanselle, Pollard and Ralston reconvene in the Spacebomb attic to demo a couple of new tunes. It is, at least by rock standards, an unusual session: White spends much of the two hours quietly poring over musical notation and even Chanselle, the drummer, makes precise emendations on his copy of the score. Perhaps to emphasise the idea of a Spacebomb democracy, they focus on a song by Pollard and Ralston, built on a Meters-like rhythm, then overlaid with a spacey, meditative piano line from Pollard that recalls Bill Evans. It’s a rigorous, old-fashioned way of working, modernised only slightly by Pollard keeping time with a metronome on his iPhone. A new White song, meanwhile, is bluesy and Lennonish. The Beatles are his favourite British band, and he enjoys posing a question to people he meets – who are the greatest American rock band? White’s own answer is corroborated by a boxset of CDs on the back seat of his car: Sly & The Family Stone.
The more successful he becomes, the more opportunities White has to study with the old masters. In New Orleans, he took Ivan Neville, son of Aaron and a onetime Rolling Stones keyboardist, out to lunch. In New York, he quizzed his jazz mentor Steven Bernstein for stories about Allen Toussaint, Dr John and Levon Helm. He tapped Howard Johnson, a veteran tuba player, to hear about working with Ray Charles, Gil Evans and Charles Mingus. A German DJ living near Richmond provided tales from his time on the road with James Brown.
White secured Les Paul’s son, Gene, to master Big Inner. He has visited the plantations where Robert Johnson and Charley Patton worked, talked with the last inheritors of the fife and drum music of Panola County, Mississippi, communed with scholars of Sacred Harp singing, painted the studio where Missy Elliott rapped. He knows the history, and he has an insatiable appetite to discover even more.
“There are a lot of people who are going to be leaving us shortly,” says White, “who were part of a real golden age. When you think about recorded music, it’s a hundred years old. It’s not that old. We’re still so close to the beginning. There are a lot of ways to learn, but there are certain things about music you can only learn first-hand. So I try to throw myself at anybody like that. You never know when you might hear something unique.”
White cedes lead vocals to his old schoolfriend, Andy C Jenkins. Rickety indie-folk, for the most part, though the New Orleans horn processional of “Railroad” is a sign of things to come.
FIGHT THE BIG BULL
All Is Gladness In The Kingdom (CLEAN FEED, 2010)
Second album from White’s Mingus-like big band, joined this time by their mentor Steven Bernstein. Includes a rowdy breakdown of The Band’s “Jemima Surrender”.
DAVID KARSTEN DANIELS & FIGHT THE BIG BULL
I Mean To Live Here Still (FATCAT, 2010)
A North Carolina-based singer-songwriter, a little like Sufjan Stevens, recruits FTBB to back his musical settings of Henry David Thoreau. Interesting, if not entirely successful.
OLD NEW THINGS
Ghosts (www.oldnewthings.bandcamp.com, 2011)
A Trey Pollard-led project, also featuring Cameron Ralston on bass. Begins with an Albert Ayler cover, moving into unusual and rewarding jazz/folk hybrids. Hints of Jim O’Rourke, Robert Stillman.
#
* When this feature appeared in the mag, I added some more detail in a blog about my Richmond trip. Also, belated acknowledgement and thanks to Joe Uchill, who transcribed the lengthy interviews for this piece.
The Teardrop Explodes are to re-release their second - and final - studio album, Wilder.
The album, which was originally released in November 1981, will be accompanied by a second disc compiled and sequenced by Julian Cope containing all the related singles, b-sides and BBC radio sessions. Cope als...
The Teardrop Explodes are to re-release their second – and final – studio album, Wilder.
The album, which was originally released in November 1981, will be accompanied by a second disc compiled and sequenced by Julian Cope containing all the related singles, b-sides and BBC radio sessions. Cope also provides track by track sleeve notes, while his other band mates Dave Balfe and Troy Tate provide further notes.
Wilder will be released through Mercury/Universal Music Catalogue on June 24.
CD1 – Original Album
1. Bent Out Of Shape
2. Colours Fly Away
3. Seven Views Of Jerusalem
4. Pure Joy
5. Falling Down Around Me
6. The Culture Bunker
7. Passionate Friend
8. Tiny Children
9. Like Leila Khaled Said
10. … And The Fighting Takes Over
11. The Great Dominions
CD2 – B-Sides and BBC Sessions
1. Christ Versus Warhol (B-side ‘Passionate Friend’)
2. Rachael Built A Steamboat (B-side ‘Tiny Children’)
3. Suffocate (B-side ‘You Disappear From View’)
4. Window Shopping For A New Crown Of Thorns (B-side ‘Colours Fly Away’)
5. Ouch Monkeys (B-side ‘You Disappear From View’)
6. East Of The Equator (B-side ‘Colours Fly Away’)
7. Sleeping Gas (Live from Club ZOO, December 1981) (B-side ‘Tiny Children’)
8. The In-Psychlopedia (B-side ‘You Disappear From View’)
9. You Disappear From View
10. Soft Enough For You (B-side ‘You Disappear From View’)
11. Pure Joy Wins Out Again (BBC Session, Peel Plus, 1981)
12. Like Leila Khaled Said (BBC Session, Peel Plus, 1981)
13. I’m Not The Loving Kind (BBC Session, Richard Skinner, August 1981)
14. The Culture Bunker (BBC Session, Peel Plus, 1981)
15. …And The Fighting Takes Over (BBC Session, Richard Skinner, August 1981)
16. Better Scream / Make That Move (BBC Session, Richard Skinner, August 1981
17. Bent Out Of Shape (BBC Session, Richard Skinner, August 1981)
18. Screaming Secrets (BBC Session, Richard Skinner, August 1981)
The new issue of Uncut, out today (April 25), features Jeff Buckley, the Eagles, The National and Todd Rundgren.
Jeff Buckley is on the cover – inside, the fascinating story of the late singer-songwriter’s years in New York are told, to celebrate 20 years since the release of his first EP, “Live At Sin-é”.
Bandmates, friends and champions in the industry recall Buckley’s impressive development and his move from Manhattan’s coffee houses to playing world tours in support of his only full studio album, Grace.
The story of the Eagles’ seminal Desperado album is told, The National let us in on a few of the secrets of their latest release, Trouble Will Find Me, and Todd Rundgren talks about wiring studios on psychedelics and producing “Springsteen spoof” Bat Out Of Hell.
Elsewhere, Laura Marling shows us round her new home, Los Angeles, and explains the “incredible darkness” that inspired her new album, Once I Was An Eagle; Deborah Harry answers your questions on topics ranging from Blondie and CBGB to The Muppets and Chris Stein’s occult interests; Deep Purple recall the making of all their classic albums, including Deep Purple In Rock and Machine Head.
The Moody Blues reveal how “Nights In White Satin” was made, and Kurt Vile takes us through the records that changed his life. In the front section, The Waterboys take us through their new 7CD boxset of Fisherman’s Blues, Shovels & Rope are profiled and Mark Mulcahy explains his long-awaited return.
Vampire Weekend, Primal Scream, Laura Marling, REM, Paul McCartney and Bob Marley all feature in our 39-page reviews section, and Fleetwood Mac’s return leads our live section.
The free CD, So Real, includes tracks from The House Of Love, Mikal Cronin, Robyn Hitchcock, The Black Angels, Marnie Stern and Steve Mason.
The new issue of Uncut, dated June 2013, is out today (April 25).
The new issue of Uncut, out today (April 25), features Jeff Buckley, the Eagles, The National and Todd Rundgren.
Jeff Buckley is on the cover – inside, the fascinating story of the late singer-songwriter’s years in New York are told, to celebrate 20 years since the release of his first EP, “Live At Sin-é”.
Bandmates, friends and champions in the industry recall Buckley’s impressive development and his move from Manhattan’s coffee houses to playing world tours in support of his only full studio album, Grace.
The story of the Eagles’ seminal Desperado album is told, The National let us in on a few of the secrets of their latest release, Trouble Will Find Me, and Todd Rundgren talks about wiring studios on psychedelics and producing “Springsteen spoof” Bat Out Of Hell.
Elsewhere, Laura Marling shows us round her new home, Los Angeles, and explains the “incredible darkness” that inspired her new album, Once I Was An Eagle; Deborah Harry answers your questions on topics ranging from Blondie and CBGB to The Muppets and Chris Stein’s occult interests; Deep Purple recall the making of all their classic albums, including Deep Purple In Rock and Machine Head.
The Moody Blues reveal how “Nights In White Satin” was made, and Kurt Vile takes us through the records that changed his life. In the front section, The Waterboys take us through their new 7CD boxset of Fisherman’s Blues, Shovels & Rope are profiled and Mark Mulcahy explains his long-awaited return.
Vampire Weekend, Primal Scream, Laura Marling, REM, Paul McCartney and Bob Marley all feature in our 39-page reviews section, and Fleetwood Mac’s return leads our live section.
The free CD, So Real, includes tracks from The House Of Love, Mikal Cronin, Robyn Hitchcock, The Black Angels, Marnie Stern and Steve Mason.
The new issue of Uncut, dated June 2013, is out today (April 25).
Amy Winehouse is to be the subject of a new documentary from the director of Senna, it has been confirmed.
The as yet untitled film will be directed by Asif Kapadia, who directed the 2010 film Senna, about Formula 1 driver, Ayrton Senna.
James Gay-Rees, who produced the Banksy documentary Exit Th...
Amy Winehouse is to be the subject of a new documentary from the director of Senna, it has been confirmed.
The as yet untitled film will be directed by Asif Kapadia, who directed the 2010 film Senna, about Formula 1 driver, Ayrton Senna.
James Gay-Rees, who produced the Banksy documentary Exit Through The Gift Shop is also attached to the project.
Releasing a statement about the film, Gay-Rees and Kapadia state: “This is an incredibly modern, emotional and relevant film that has the power to capture the zeitgeist and shine a light on the world we live in, in a way that very few films can,” said Kapadia and Gay-Rees. Amy was a once-in-a-generation talent who captured everyone’s attention; she wrote and sung from the heart and everyone fell under her spell. But tragically Amy seemed to fall apart under the relentless media attention, her troubled relationships, her global success and precarious lifestyle.
Adding: “As a society we celebrated her huge success but then we were quick to judge her failings when it suited us.”
The film is expected to include unseen footage of the singer.
The National are set to perform their song "Sorrow" for six full hours as part of an art installation at Moma PS1 in Long Island City, New York on May 5.
The band will play their High Violet track live for a collaboration with artist Ragnar Kjartansson called A Lot Of Sorrow.
A press release from...
The National are set to perform their song “Sorrow” for six full hours as part of an art installation at Moma PS1 in Long Island City, New York on May 5.
The band will play their High Violet track live for a collaboration with artist Ragnar Kjartansson called A Lot Of Sorrow.
A press release from the gallery reads: “By stretching a single pop song into a day-long tour de force the artist continues his explorations into the potential of repetitive performance to produce sculptural presence within sound.”
It continues: “As in all of Kjartansson’s performances, the idea behind A Lot of Sorrow is devoid of irony, yet full of humour and emotion. It is another quest to find the comic in the tragic and vice versa.”
The performance will take place from midday until 6pm (ET).
The National’s new album Trouble Will Find Me is set for release on May 20. You can read Uncut’s exclusive interview with the band in the new issue of Uncut, on sale now.
The band will now be playing extra shows at London’s Alexandra Palace on November 14 after the first date on November 13 sold out and also at Manchester O2 Apollo on November 12 after the November 11 date sold out.
The Rolling Stones have been forced to postpone the opening date of their upcoming North American tour.
The band were due to kick off the 50 & Counting tour on May 2 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. But the show has now been bumped back 24 hours to accommodate a sporting fixture - the National Basketball Association playoffs.
According to a message on the band's official Facebook page, "The Rolling Stones will now kick off their 50 & Counting tour in Los Angeles at STAPLES Center on Friday May 3. The original May 2 show was rescheduled due to the NBA playoff schedule. Hold on to your tickets as they will be honoured for the rescheduled date. The tour will continue on to Oakland, San Jose, Las Vegas, Anaheim, Toronto, Chicago, Montreal, Boston and Philadelphia."
The Stones will play London's Hyde Park on July 6.
The Rolling Stones have been forced to postpone the opening date of their upcoming North American tour.
The band were due to kick off the 50 & Counting tour on May 2 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. But the show has now been bumped back 24 hours to accommodate a sporting fixture – the National Basketball Association playoffs.
According to a message on the band’s official Facebook page, “The Rolling Stones will now kick off their 50 & Counting tour in Los Angeles at STAPLES Center on Friday May 3. The original May 2 show was rescheduled due to the NBA playoff schedule. Hold on to your tickets as they will be honoured for the rescheduled date. The tour will continue on to Oakland, San Jose, Las Vegas, Anaheim, Toronto, Chicago, Montreal, Boston and Philadelphia.”
The Stones will play London’s Hyde Park on July 6.
Not sure how many of you braved the scrums of Ebay dealers on Record Store Day, but one of the more interesting things to come out of the whole business this year was the surreptitious return of Boards Of Canada.
To cut a very long (and as yet far from resolved) story short, Warp appear to have stealthily planted a handful of 12-inches by BOC in record stores around the world, containing snippets of music and a sequence of numbers. This, predictably and entertainingly, has prompted a speculative numerological maths puzzle-cum-treasure hunt; a kind of occult counter to Daft Punk’s similarly effective teaser campaign. If you’re intrigued, I can strongly recommend the 2020k blog, which is logging the latest confusing developments as they emerge.
In other news, the new Uncut is in UK shops tomorrow, and probably in subscribers’ letterboxes today; there’s a blog about it here, which includes the transcript of a very old interview I did with this month’s cover star, Jeff Buckley.
And here’s the playlist. Pet-Tich-Eye, at least in this iteration, are another fine thing involving Hiss Golden Messenger. Last week’s mystery record can now be revealed as “Field Of Reeds” by These New Puritans. Have a look at These New Puritans’ trailer on their website; it’s very good, I think.
Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey
1 Danny Paul Grody – Between Two Worlds (Three Lobed)
2 Boards Of Canada – ——/——/——/XXXXXX/——/—–¬- (Warp)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qe4UCjjyr8U
3 Daft Punk – Get Lucky (Sony)
4 Mark Kozelek & Jimmy Lavalle – Perils From The Sea (Caldo Verde)
5 Funkadelic – The Naz (Featuring Sly Stone)
6 These New Puritans – Field Of Reeds (Infectious)
7 The Fall – Re-Mit (Cherry Red)
8 The Shouting Matches – Grownass Man (Middle West)
9 Pet-Tich-Eye – Roll On
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GCdTTVcp4_0
10 Steve Gunn – Time Off (Paradise Of Bachelors)
11 Date Palms – The Dusted Sessions (Thrill Jockey)
12 Lloyd Cole – Standards (Tapete)
13 Brandt Brauer Frick – Miami (!K7)
14 Waxahatchee – Cerulean Salt (Wichita)
15 Roedelius – Selbstportrait Vol. III: Reise Durch Arcadien (Bureau B)
16 Duane Pitre – Bridges (Excerpt) (Important)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4gvOcVyFO5c
17 Queens Of The Stone Age – ...Like Clockwork (Matador)
18 About Group – Between The Walls (Domino)
19 Ravi Shankar - The Living Room Sessions Part 2 (East Meets West Music)
20 Boards Of Canada – Geogaddi (Warp)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F7bKe_Zgk4o
Not sure how many of you braved the scrums of Ebay dealers on Record Store Day, but one of the more interesting things to come out of the whole business this year was the surreptitious return of Boards Of Canada.
To cut a very long (and as yet far from resolved) story short, Warp appear to have stealthily planted a handful of 12-inches by BOC in record stores around the world, containing snippets of music and a sequence of numbers. This, predictably and entertainingly, has prompted a speculative numerological maths puzzle-cum-treasure hunt; a kind of occult counter to Daft Punk’s similarly effective teaser campaign. If you’re intrigued, I can strongly recommend the 2020k blog, which is logging the latest confusing developments as they emerge.
In other news, the new Uncut is in UK shops tomorrow, and probably in subscribers’ letterboxes today; there’s a blog about it here, which includes the transcript of a very old interview I did with this month’s cover star, Jeff Buckley.
And here’s the playlist. Pet-Tich-Eye, at least in this iteration, are another fine thing involving Hiss Golden Messenger. Last week’s mystery record can now be revealed as “Field Of Reeds” by These New Puritans. Have a look at These New Puritans’ trailer on their website; it’s very good, I think.
Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey
1 Danny Paul Grody – Between Two Worlds (Three Lobed)
2 Boards Of Canada – ——/——/——/XXXXXX/——/—–¬- (Warp)
3 Daft Punk – Get Lucky (Sony)
4 Mark Kozelek & Jimmy Lavalle – Perils From The Sea (Caldo Verde)
The latest chapter in the singer-songwriter’s evolution is a work of immense beauty and scale...
Sam Beam has come a long way since introducing himself as a bedroom troubadour of uncommon eloquence on The Creek Drank The Cradle back in 2002. The music of the South Carolina native (a onetime film-studies professor) underwent a metamorphosis on each of his next three albums – Our Endless Numbered Days (2004), The Shepherd’s Dog (2007) and Kiss Each Other Clean (2011) – as he progressively expanded his musical palate while deftly retaining the intimacy and focus of his initial solo work. Beam’s ongoing collaborators, producer Brian Deck and arranger/keyboardist Rich Burger, share the responsibility for the albums’ forays into new sonic territory – most recently making subtle but extensive use of synthesizers on Kiss Each Other Clean.
These incremental enlargements and stylistic juxtapositions have led Beam and his cohorts to Ghost On Ghost, which deftly integrates a broad, transparent soundstage and a Swiss watchmaker’s precision with the whispery tenderness at its center. Helping them these songs to life is a studio band composed of topflight session players including the Dylan-certified rhythm section of drummer Brian Blade and bassist Tony Garnier, pedal steel player Paul Niehaus (Calexico), a horn section of downtown New York veterans and five string virtuosos.
The opening “Caught In The Briars” introduces the album’s key musical elements: gilded acoustic guitar plucks, a horn section evoking the creaminess of Van Morrison’s Woodstock-era band, a chugging soul groove from the rhythm section, silky female voices floating over Beam’s mellifluous tenor – and the record’s first musical surprise – a brief but intense free jazz coda. These motifs recur in various proportions and levels of intensity through the panoramic finale “Baby Center Stage”, with its wistful pedal steel, gilded brass and uplifting strings, which would’ve worked beautifully as the end-title theme for Beasts Of The Southern Wild. Between these painstakingly crafted bookends is a cornucopia of tones and textures as lush and haunting as Bon Iver’s LPs.
On previous Iron & Wine albums, a female voice has frequently shadowed Beam, and this element is ramped up to a central role on Ghost On Ghost. A female chorale formed by the multitracked voices of Josette Newsome and Carla Cook purrs seductive countermelodies that shift in character from AM gold (“The Desert Babbler”, “New Mexico’s No Breeze”) to Steely Dan-like lustrousness (“Singers and the Endless Song”), forming a modern-day Greek chorus commenting on Beam’s elliptical narratives and representing the yin to the brass section’s yang. Like the backing vocals, the horns shift modes to enhance the feels of particular songs, evoking a New Orleans funeral on the muted waltz “Winter Prayers”, a marching band on the churning, gospel-flavored “Singers and the Endless Song”, and a smoking bebop combo in the climactic passage of the album’s edgiest piece, the penultimate “Lovers’ Revolution”.
Beam’s music has always been quintessentially bittersweet – his earliest classic was “Naked As We Came”, a song about a couple wrestling with their mortality – but here the focus is on living fully in the moment. The most overt expression of his life-affirming state of mind is a song called, simply and unequivocally, “Joy”, which posits romantic love as a sort of earthly salvation without an iota of irony or ambiguity, while the last words Beam offers up on the record are “falling into the light”.
In its musical and emotional immersiveness, the album plays subjective tricks with time. The miniatures “Grass Windows” and the reprise of “Back In The Briars” possess such musical intricacy and emotional depth that they’re full-bodied experiences despite their brevity, while the glorious final sequence – the Southwestern travelogue “New Mexico’s No Breeze”, the eruptive “Lovers’ Revolution” and the resolving “Baby Center Stage”, accounting for nearly 16 of the LP’s 44 minutes – moves with such gripping coherence that it seems to go by in a snap. Ghost On Ghost insinuates itself into the listener’s consciousness like a film – one that demands to be watched over and over. Professor Beam has made his first art movie, and it’s a stunner.
Bud Scoppa
Q&A
Sam Beam
Does this album tell a story?
When it’s time to go back in the studio, I see what songs I’ve got that could work together. On The Shepherd’s Dog, it was songs that had a dog in them, and the last record had a bunch of river images. This one was a little looser; the theme that kept popping up was this couple against the world, against each other, against their future or against circumstance. They almost feel like recurring characters in different cities or situations, and in hindsight it felt like the continuation of a narrative. So they weren’t formulated as a story but they were collected that way; more editorial than inspirational.
It seems to be about a road trip across America…
I’ve always tried to work with loaded subjects, whether it was biblical characters or American place names on this record. When you reference New Orleans, for example, there’s all kinds of baggage, good and bad. There’s history to these places, and it’s fertile territory to jump into.
Did you have any particular reference points?
This is an R&B record, but I didn’t want it to sound like one. So we talked about Nilsson Schmilsson, Ram – these homegrown records with human, frayed edges.
What inspired those free-jazz eruptions?
Contrast is fun. You don’t want people to get too comfortable, ’cause then they stop paying attention.
INTERVIEW: BUD SCOPPA
Photo credit: Craig Kief
The latest chapter in the singer-songwriter’s evolution is a work of immense beauty and scale…
Sam Beam has come a long way since introducing himself as a bedroom troubadour of uncommon eloquence on The Creek Drank The Cradle back in 2002. The music of the South Carolina native (a onetime film-studies professor) underwent a metamorphosis on each of his next three albums – Our Endless Numbered Days (2004), The Shepherd’s Dog (2007) and Kiss Each Other Clean (2011) – as he progressively expanded his musical palate while deftly retaining the intimacy and focus of his initial solo work. Beam’s ongoing collaborators, producer Brian Deck and arranger/keyboardist Rich Burger, share the responsibility for the albums’ forays into new sonic territory – most recently making subtle but extensive use of synthesizers on Kiss Each Other Clean.
These incremental enlargements and stylistic juxtapositions have led Beam and his cohorts to Ghost On Ghost, which deftly integrates a broad, transparent soundstage and a Swiss watchmaker’s precision with the whispery tenderness at its center. Helping them these songs to life is a studio band composed of topflight session players including the Dylan-certified rhythm section of drummer Brian Blade and bassist Tony Garnier, pedal steel player Paul Niehaus (Calexico), a horn section of downtown New York veterans and five string virtuosos.
The opening “Caught In The Briars” introduces the album’s key musical elements: gilded acoustic guitar plucks, a horn section evoking the creaminess of Van Morrison’s Woodstock-era band, a chugging soul groove from the rhythm section, silky female voices floating over Beam’s mellifluous tenor – and the record’s first musical surprise – a brief but intense free jazz coda. These motifs recur in various proportions and levels of intensity through the panoramic finale “Baby Center Stage”, with its wistful pedal steel, gilded brass and uplifting strings, which would’ve worked beautifully as the end-title theme for Beasts Of The Southern Wild. Between these painstakingly crafted bookends is a cornucopia of tones and textures as lush and haunting as Bon Iver’s LPs.
On previous Iron & Wine albums, a female voice has frequently shadowed Beam, and this element is ramped up to a central role on Ghost On Ghost. A female chorale formed by the multitracked voices of Josette Newsome and Carla Cook purrs seductive countermelodies that shift in character from AM gold (“The Desert Babbler”, “New Mexico’s No Breeze”) to Steely Dan-like lustrousness (“Singers and the Endless Song”), forming a modern-day Greek chorus commenting on Beam’s elliptical narratives and representing the yin to the brass section’s yang. Like the backing vocals, the horns shift modes to enhance the feels of particular songs, evoking a New Orleans funeral on the muted waltz “Winter Prayers”, a marching band on the churning, gospel-flavored “Singers and the Endless Song”, and a smoking bebop combo in the climactic passage of the album’s edgiest piece, the penultimate “Lovers’ Revolution”.
Beam’s music has always been quintessentially bittersweet – his earliest classic was “Naked As We Came”, a song about a couple wrestling with their mortality – but here the focus is on living fully in the moment. The most overt expression of his life-affirming state of mind is a song called, simply and unequivocally, “Joy”, which posits romantic love as a sort of earthly salvation without an iota of irony or ambiguity, while the last words Beam offers up on the record are “falling into the light”.
In its musical and emotional immersiveness, the album plays subjective tricks with time. The miniatures “Grass Windows” and the reprise of “Back In The Briars” possess such musical intricacy and emotional depth that they’re full-bodied experiences despite their brevity, while the glorious final sequence – the Southwestern travelogue “New Mexico’s No Breeze”, the eruptive “Lovers’ Revolution” and the resolving “Baby Center Stage”, accounting for nearly 16 of the LP’s 44 minutes – moves with such gripping coherence that it seems to go by in a snap. Ghost On Ghost insinuates itself into the listener’s consciousness like a film – one that demands to be watched over and over. Professor Beam has made his first art movie, and it’s a stunner.
Bud Scoppa
Q&A
Sam Beam
Does this album tell a story?
When it’s time to go back in the studio, I see what songs I’ve got that could work together. On The Shepherd’s Dog, it was songs that had a dog in them, and the last record had a bunch of river images. This one was a little looser; the theme that kept popping up was this couple against the world, against each other, against their future or against circumstance. They almost feel like recurring characters in different cities or situations, and in hindsight it felt like the continuation of a narrative. So they weren’t formulated as a story but they were collected that way; more editorial than inspirational.
It seems to be about a road trip across America…
I’ve always tried to work with loaded subjects, whether it was biblical characters or American place names on this record. When you reference New Orleans, for example, there’s all kinds of baggage, good and bad. There’s history to these places, and it’s fertile territory to jump into.
Did you have any particular reference points?
This is an R&B record, but I didn’t want it to sound like one. So we talked about Nilsson Schmilsson, Ram – these homegrown records with human, frayed edges.
What inspired those free-jazz eruptions?
Contrast is fun. You don’t want people to get too comfortable, ’cause then they stop paying attention.