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PJ Harvey – B-sides, Demos & Rarities

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Let’s start at the end. The final track on this exhaustive trawl of the ditches and crossroads of PJ Harvey’s oeuvre is “Red Right Hand”, the signature song of Harvey’s one-time collaborator Nick Cave. It is a song about devilry, written in blood; subsequently reshaped as the theme of the...

Let’s start at the end. The final track on this exhaustive trawl of the ditches and crossroads
of PJ Harvey’s oeuvre is “Red Right Hand”, the signature song of Harvey’s one-time collaborator Nick Cave. It is a song about devilry, written in blood; subsequently reshaped as the theme of the haircut gangster drama Peaky Blinders.

For Cave, “Red Right Hand” is a chance to embrace rock’n’roll at its most blood-raw. It is a tent-revival song in which fear and belief are locked in hideous quickstep. Since its subject is Hell and its declining suburbs, no performance of it can be too extreme. PJ Harvey, of course, is no stranger to shock and awe. Her early career was constructed from fragments of spit, feather and bone. But in Harvey’s “Red Right Hand” the horror comes wreathed in understatement. There is a tolling piano, a wailing harmony and abominable news delivered in a whisper. It is a lullaby performed by a siren, sung quietly because the children are already asleep.

It’s possible that Harvey would have taken “Red Right Hand” in a different direction if she had performed it a few years earlier. This 3CD or 6LP set shows how her career has been a matter of calibration. It caps a programme of reissues in which the demo versions of Harvey’s albums have been compared, often favourably, to the more polished official releases.

Steve Albini’s recording of Harvey’s second album, 1993’s Rid Of Me, has been the subject of much critical circumspection. Like (another controversial Albini production) Nirvana’s In Utero, it favours pain over relief, volume over restraint. And since Albini is a master of the choreography of headbanging, there is a kind of poetic power in his rhythm of drills. But it’s a tough workout.

How else could it have been? The first five tracks (four previously unreleased) present Harvey’s demos from Rid Of Me, recorded in Dorset in 1991–92. First, “Dry – Demo”. There is nothing wrong with the finished version, except perhaps that it allows Harvey to hide behind the electric fury of the guitar. It sounds like a dry run for Nirvana. The demo has a different flavour: the guitar still grindslike an argument conducted inside
a cement mixer, but the vocal is brighter. Albini focuses on the pain, while on the demo Harvey licks the bruise. Likewise, “Man-Size – Demo”. Harvey’s home recording is more primal, less concerned with sonic architecture. Albini does a thing with a drum and an off-kilter rhythm. The demo just burns. Albini’s “Missed” wears grunge fatigues and sounds like a steamroller landscaping a peace garden. The demo moans and weeps. Instead of submitting to rhythmic pugilism, the song’s sense of hurt emerges through the clatter. The voice remains similarly upfront on “Me-Jane – Demo”, which has the urgency of a busk in a warzone, delivering the song with heightened theatrics and breathless despair. It offers a prototype for The White Stripes, with Meg in charge. Only the demo of “Highway 61 Revisited” sounds weaker than the original album version, though that in itself was an experiment in playful irrelevance.

There are nine other unreleased tracks, of which “Why D’Ya Go To Cleveland” is the only entirely unheard thing. An offcut from the Dance Hall At Louse Point sessions with John Parish, it offers a clattering rearrangement of rock’n’roll cliche (a motor car, an American dreamboat, a dead-end love affair) and is more fun than it should be. The other unreleased demos bring the story up to date, but the differences in shading reflect Harvey’s evolving understanding of how her music should sound. On the sleeve of Uh Huh Her (2004), Harvey’s handwritten notes are instructive: turned up loud but playing gently; keep all noises, crashes, hiss and bangs; all that matters is my voice. Consequently, the demos from this period offer less contrast. “Cat On The Wall – Demo” is murkier, with a dash of melodica, “You Come Through – Demo ” has more restraint, “Uh Huh Her – Demo” is another memo for the attention of Jack White. “Evol – Demo” is not the most interesting song, but offers a brief primer in the sexual power of the electric guitar.

Not everything is unsalted. The B-sides and rarities – many from film soundtracks – allow Harvey to stretch herself into Brechtian oompah, Beefheartian discord, neo-folk. Some of these waifs and strays are excellent. “Losing Ground” from a Rainer Ptacek tribute (with Parish and Eric Drew Feldman) is a vital cacophony, and Harvey’s song for Jeff Buckley, “Memphis”, carries much emotional weight. “Guilty”, on which she invents Fontaines D.C., is more restrained in demo format; the demo of “I’ll Be Waiting” is grimier than the original. “Homo Sappy Blues” is a slight thing, playful, lyrically bleak. “The Age Of The Dollar” was recorded for the film A Dog Called Money but was shunted to the closing titles after John Parish told Harvey it sounded “like a jam in a pub”.

It’s quite a journey. By the end it’s clear that Harvey has learned how to turn the volume up by making less noise. Perhaps she always knew. One of the highlights is “Nina In Ecstasy 2”, a 1996 recording, released as a B-side in 1999. It’s a funereal fairytale, a hymn of innocence which segues into a chorus of “Where’s your mama gone?” from the multi-million-selling anthem of child abandonment, “Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep”. It sounds both serene and alarming, because sometimes the most dangerous place in
the world is the Middle Of The Road.

Bob Dylan announces Fragments – Time Out Of Mind Sessions (1996 – 1997): The Bootleg Series Vol. 17

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Bob Dylan has announced the latest release in his ongoing Bootleg Series. Fragments - Time Out Of Mind Sessions (1996 - 1997): The Bootleg Series Vol. 17 features a 2022 remix of the album alongside previously unreleased recordings including studio outtakes, alternate versions and live performanc...

Bob Dylan has announced the latest release in his ongoing Bootleg Series.

Fragments – Time Out Of Mind Sessions (1996 – 1997): The Bootleg Series Vol. 17 features a 2022 remix of the album alongside previously unreleased recordings including studio outtakes, alternate versions and live performances from 1997 – 2001.

It’s released by Columbia Records and Legacy Recordings on Friday, January 27 and will be available as a deluxe box set in 5CD and 10LP 12″ vinyl editions. Also available, a two-disc/4LP standard edition of Fragments which includes the Time Out of Mind 2022 remix disc and a disc of twelve select Outtakes and Alternates highlights.

Digital versions of the complete (five disc) and highlights (two disc) editions of Bob Dylan – Fragments – Time Out of Mind Sessions (1996-1997): The Bootleg Series Vol.17 will be available on all streaming platforms on Friday, January 27.

You can pre-order by clicking here.

Here’s a taster of what to expect:

And also here’s version 2 of “Love Sick” recorded January 14, 1997 at Criteria Studios.

Here’s the tracklisting for the deluxe 5CD box set:

Disc One – Time Out of Mind (2022 Remix)
1. Love Sick
2. Dirt Road Blues
3. Standing in the Doorway
4. Million Miles
5. Tryin’ to Get to Heaven
6. ‘Til I Fell in Love with You
7. Not Dark Yet
8. Cold Irons Bound
9. Make You Feel My Love
10. Can’t Wait
11. Highlands

Disc Two – Outtakes and Alternates
1. The Water is Wide (8/19/96, Teatro)
2. Dreamin’ of You (10/1/96, Teatro)
3. Red River Shore – version 1 (9/26/96, Teatro)
4. Love Sick – version 1 (1/14/97, Criteria Studios)
5. ‘Til I Fell in Love with You – version 1 (10/3/96, Teatro)
6. Not Dark Yet – version 1 (1/11/97, Criteria Studios)
7. Can’t Wait – version 1 (1/21/97, Criteria Studios)
8. Dirt Road Blues – version 1 (1/12/97, Criteria Studios)
9. Mississippi – version 1 (1/11/97, Criteria Studios)
10. ‘Til I Fell in Love with You – version 2 (1/16/97, Criteria Studios)
11. Standing in the Doorway – version 1 (1/13/97, Criteria Studios)
12. Tryin’ to Get to Heaven – version 1 (1/18/97, Criteria Studios)
13. Cold Irons Bound (1/9/97, Criteria Studios)

Disc Three – Outtakes and Alternates
1. Love Sick – version 2 (1/14/97, Criteria Studios)
2. Dirt Road Blues – version 2 (1/20/97, Criteria Studios)
3. Can’t Wait – version 2 (1/14/97, Criteria Studios)
4. Red River Shore – version 2 (1/19/97, Criteria Studios)
5. Marchin’ to the City (1/5/97, Criteria Studios)
6. Make You Feel My Love – take 1 (1/5/97, Criteria Studios)
7. Mississippi – version 2 (1/11/97, Criteria Studios)
8. Standing in the Doorway – version 2 (1/13/97, Criteria Studios)
9. ‘Til I Fell in Love with You – version 3 (1/16/97, Criteria Studios)
10. Not Dark Yet – version 2 (1/18/97, Criteria Studios)
11. Tryin’ to Get to Heaven – version 2 (1/12/97, Criteria Studios)
12. Highlands (1/16/97, Criteria Studios)

Disc Four – Live (1998-2001)
1. Love Sick (6/24/98, Birmingham, England)
2. Can’t Wait (2/6/99, Nashville, Tennessee)
3. Standing In The Doorway (10/6/00, London, England)
4. Million Miles (1/31/98, Atlantic City, New Jersey)
5. Tryin’ to Get to Heaven (9/20/00, Birmingham, England)
6. ‘Til I Fell in Love with You (4/5/98, Buenos Aires, Argentina)
7. Not Dark Yet (9/22/00, Sheffield, England)
8. Cold Irons Bound (5/19/00, Oslo, Norway)
9. Make You Feel My Love (5/21/98, Los Angeles, California)
Previously released on the “Things Have Changed” maxi-single
10. Can’t Wait (5/19/00, Oslo, Norway)
11. Mississippi (11/15/01, Washington, D.C.)
12. Highlands (3/24/01, Newcastle, Australia)

Disc Five – Bonus Disc (Previously Released on The Bootleg Series Vol. 8: Tell Tale Signs: Rare and Unreleased 1989–2006)
1. Dreamin’ of You – Tell Tale Signs (10/1/96, Teatro)
2. Red River Shore – Tell Tale Signs, version 1 (1/19/97, Criteria Studios)
3. Red River Shore – Tell Tale Signs, version 2 (1/8/97, Criteria Studios)
4. Mississippi – Tell Tale Signs, version 1 (9/96, Teatro)
5. Mississippi – Tell Tale Signs, version 3 (1/17/97, Criteria Studios)
6. Mississippi – Tell Tale Signs, version 2 (1/17/97, Criteria Studios)
7. Marchin’ to the City – Tell Tale Signs, version 1 (1/5/97, Criteria Studios)
8. Marchin’ to the City – Tell Tale Signs, version 2 (1/6/97, Criteria Studios)
9. Can’t Wait – Tell Tale Signs, version 1 (10/1/96, Teatro)
10. Can’t Wait – Tell Tale Signs, version 2 (1/5/97, Criteria Studios)
11. Cold Irons Bound – Tell Tale Signs, live (6/11/04, Bonnaroo Music Festival)
12. Tryin’ to Get to Heaven – Tell Tale Signs, live (10/5/00, London, England)

Introducing the Ultimate Music Guide to Patti Smith

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BUY THE PATTI SMITH DELUXE ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE HERE It’s June 2009, but that’s about all that we can really say with any certainty about time and space here: on the stage, there’s a bit of a melée in progress. We’re at the Royal Festival Hall, and this is notionally a set by Ornette Col...

BUY THE PATTI SMITH DELUXE ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE HERE

It’s June 2009, but that’s about all that we can really say with any certainty about time and space here: on the stage, there’s a bit of a melée in progress. We’re at the Royal Festival Hall, and this is notionally a set by Ornette Coleman, who has curated this year’s Meltdown festival here on London’s South Bank.

Ornette is definitely up there, and so are his band, but the number of additional players is proliferating. First, the Master Musicians Of Joujouka add to the swelling sound. Then, a figure in a black jacket strolls unannounced to the front of the stage. Once she’s there, she begins a freewheeling incantation, rising and falling with the music like she’s surfing a precipitous wave.

As a tacit introduction to Patti Smith, this is just about perfect. As it turns out, Patti is a longtime Ornette fan. She has improvised with him before and will do again, but there’s something in the spontaneity of what happens here – the power and scope of the music; Patti’s ease riding its currents – which is completely electrifying.

It’s a tightrope act of improvisation and art that we celebrate in our latest Ultimate Music Guide. As you enjoy the in-depth new writing on the following pages you’ll find the story of Patti’s unwillingness to commodify her music, a journey which begins with the free-roaming seditions of Horses and continues – with a break to raise a family – to this day in questing and allusive work. Whether it’s with her own group, in collaboration with a musician like Kevin Shields, or with her latest collaborators, Soundwalk Collective, she continues to try open up new and more adventurous perspectives.

As you’ll read in the archive interviews we’ve selected here, in an era of corduroy and scarves, not everyone was taken by Patti’s crashing of boundaries between songwriting, poetry and jazz improvisation. With the British music press, things frequently get hostile. Having slated Horses already, one writer decides to travel and meet the Patti Smith Group in person, the better to more fully address their many shortcomings. At one boozy press event, hostile remarks and sandwiches are thrown. Throughout, though, Patti remains much as we see her when she performs in Rolling Thunder Revue – A Bob Dylan Story. Facing down the sceptics, she creates her own momentum by sheer focus and conviction.

Around the time of Meltdown in 2009, Patti spoke to The Guardian newspaper, praising “music that conjures up words, poetry, portals to another dimension.” She was speaking about Ornette Coleman’s work – but she could just as easily have been evaluating her own.

Enjoy the magazine.

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

Patti Smith – Ultimate Music Guide

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As she celebrates the publication of a new book, we present the Ultimate Music Guide to Patti Smith. Beatnik out of time. Improviser. Harbinger of punk... and yet somehow evading every definition, we celebrate a unique and multi-disciplined artistic output. “I’m gonna be a big star and I will ne...

As she celebrates the publication of a new book, we present the Ultimate Music Guide to Patti Smith. Beatnik out of time. Improviser. Harbinger of punk… and yet somehow evading every definition, we celebrate a unique and multi-disciplined artistic output. “I’m gonna be a big star and I will never return…”

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

The Walkmen to reunite for first shows in nearly a decade

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The Walkmen have announced they will reunite next year for their first performances since 2014. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: The Walkmen – You & Me: The Sun Studio Edition review The New York indie rockers – one of several bands that...

The Walkmen have announced they will reunite next year for their first performances since 2014.

The New York indie rockers – one of several bands that spearheaded the so-called “post-punk revival” of the early 2000s – will play a pair of concerts at Webster Hall in New York City, on April 26 and 27. Tickets for the shows will go on sale this Friday (November 18), with a pre-sale beginning on Wednesday (November 16) at 10am EST.

In a statement shared on social media announcing the shows, frontman Hamilton Leithauser referenced bassist Peter Bauer telling the Washington Post the band were going on an “extreme hiatus” in 2013.

“I assumed that meant there would be a lot of Monster energy drinks and maybe that red-headed snowboarder guy would be hanging around a lot… but none of that actually happened,” Leithauser joked.

“Instead, in the ensuing years we’ve all worked on a ton of different projects in a ton of different places. Recently, someone sent us a clip of us playing at Irving Plaza from 2003, and it just looked very exciting. So, we’ve decided we’d like to play together again.”

The Walkmen teased their reunion earlier this month, sharing a video on social media that featured archival footage of them performing their signature song, “The Rat”.

Bauer announced The Walkmen’s hiatus in November of 2013, with the band playing a farewell show in Philadelphia the following month. “We have no future plans whatsoever,” he said at the time. They performed for the last time before their hiatus in February 2014, with a show in New Orleans.

The Walkmen’s last album together was 2012’s Heaven. “I don’t think any of us wanted to write another Walkmen record,” Bauer said when announcing the band’s hiatus the following year. “Maybe that will change down the line, maybe it won’t.”

Since embarking on a hiatus, members have all pursued separate creative endeavours. Leithauser, Bauer, guitarist Paul Maroon and multi-instrumentalist Walter Martin have all released solo albums.

Drummer Matt Barrick worked with Fleet Foxes in a touring and session capacity, contributing to their 2017 album Crack-Up and playing with the band live. Barrick also formed the supergroup Muzz with Interpol frontman Paul Banks and Josh Kaufman of Bonny Light Horseman, with the trio releasing their self-titled debut album in 2020.

Roberta Flack’s ALS diagnosis has made it impossible for her to sing

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Roberta Flack is unable to sing following her recent ALS diagnosis. ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Roberta Flack – First Take: 50th Anniversary Deluxe Edition review A spokesperson for Flack – known for her ballads "The First Time Ever I S...

Roberta Flack is unable to sing following her recent ALS diagnosis.

A spokesperson for Flack – known for her ballads “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” and “Killing Me Softly with His Song” – confirmed the singer’s condition in a press statement on November 14.

The representative said Flack’s battle with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, has made it “impossible to sing and not easy to speak”. The press statement did not disclose how long the 85-year-old has been suffering from the disease.

Despite the impact of ALS on Flack’s voice, the statement insisted that she will remain “active in her musical and creative pursuits”, which include her eponymous foundation committed to animal welfare and music education.

The statement continued: “[Flack’s] fortitude and joyful embrace of music that lifted her from modest circumstances to the international spotlight remain vibrant and inspired… It will take a lot more than ALS to silence this icon.”

Among Flack’s future pursuits is a forthcoming children’s book titled The Green Piano: How Little Me Found Music, co-written by the singer with author Tonya Bolden.

Early next year, Flack’s life and artistry will be chronicled in Roberta, a documentary based on the singer’s decades-spanning career directed by Antonino D’Ambrosio. Both the book and documentary will be released in January 2023, the same year as the 50th anniversary of Flack’s most popular album, Killing Me Softly.

Released in 1973, Flack’s fourth studio LP spawned the Billboard Chart-topping single “Killing Me Softly With His Song”, and later won the 1974 Grammy Award for Record of the Year. It is due to be reissued next year in celebration of the five decades since its release.

Flack suffered a stroke in 2016, and spoke of the importance of singing in an interview amid her return to the stage two years later. “I could sing any number of songs that I’ve recorded through the years, easily,” Flack told Associated Press in 2018. “I could sing them, but I’m going to pick those songs that move me.”

Damon Albarn teams up with Fatoumata Diawara on upbeat new song “Nsera”

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Damon Albarn has teamed up with Fatoumata Diawara on her new song "Nsera". ORDER NOW: Bob Dylan is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut The track, which you can listen to below, is taken from the Malian singer songwriter’s forthcoming new album, the follow up to her 2018 LP Fenfo (Som...

Damon Albarn has teamed up with Fatoumata Diawara on her new song “Nsera”.

The track, which you can listen to below, is taken from the Malian singer songwriter’s forthcoming new album, the follow up to her 2018 LP Fenfo (Something To Say).

The pair previously worked on the Gorillaz 2020 track “Désolé” which saw the cartoon group teleport via a portal to Lake Como where they performed the song with Diawara.

It was part of the band’s Song Machine project at the time and went on to feature in the Song Machine Live cinema release last year.

Albarn has teamed up with his old bandmates Blur for a one-off UK reunion gig at London’s Wembley Stadium for summer 2023.

The Britpop icons will be playing their only UK show of next year at the iconic venue on Saturday, July 8. The band will be supported by SlowthaiSelf Esteem and Jockstrap. This marks the band’s first headline show since 2015, when they released their long-awaited and critically-acclaimed comeback album The Magic Whip.

The making of: Neu!’s “Hero”

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The origins and influence of NEU!'s "Hero" – a groundbreaking combination of driving motorik guitars and angry proto-punk vocals in the latest issue of Uncut magazine – in UK shops from Thursday, October 13 and available to buy from our online store. After a year apart, guitarist Michael Rot...

The origins and influence of NEU!’s “Hero” – a groundbreaking combination of driving motorik guitars and angry proto-punk vocals in the latest issue of Uncut magazine – in UK shops from Thursday, October 13 and available to buy from our online store.

After a year apart, guitarist Michael Rother and drummer, singer and guitarist Klaus Dinger had opposing visions when they regrouped as Neu! in 1974. Rother wanted to develop the textural music he’d recently been exploring with Harmonia, while his bandmate was shifting towards more primal rock’n’roll. The compromise was Neu! 75, which appears along with its two predecessors and a remix album on the boxset Neu! 50!: our archive album of 2022.

The showpiece of Neu! 75 is “Hero”, where Rother’s gorgeous melodies and drones are stampeded by Dinger’s proto-punk vocals, raging against the perceived injustices of his personal life and career. It ends with a bitter declaration: “Your only friend is music until your dying day!” The message is intensified by the powerful playing of his brother Thomas and Hans Lampe, two drummers who went on to record with Dinger as La Düsseldorf.

“The way Klaus sings on “Hero” is so impressive,” marvels Rother. “He wasn’t used to doing vocals, but he did it – bang! – just like that. And of course it gives that track so much of its energy.”

As with the rest of Neu! 75, “Hero” was guided by producer Conny Plank, the godfather of the German kosmische scene. Rother and Dinger were polar opposites as personalities, never socialising together and rarely discussing the music they made, but Plank was able to illuminate their unique studio chemistry. “Conny was a marvellous producer, because he had a spirit that just made things happen,” explains Lampe. “You were somehow inspired to be different. Recording with him was really magical.”

Rother and Dinger had already decided to go their separate ways by the time the album was released in the spring of 1975. “Klaus and I never saw ourselves as a band, it was a project,” says Rother, who attempted to reunite with Dinger a decade later, only for the sessions to fall apart amid much bitterness. “After creating Neu! 75 he went with La Düsseldorf and was very successful. I went back to Harmonia and was very unsuccessful. But happy!”

When Dinger died in 2008, Neu! had long passed into legend, with Neu! 75 arguably their greatest and most influential work. “It’s astonishing to think that people still talk about us 50 years later,” Rother reflects, “because we were only concerned with making music together. It was just two people clicking.”

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

Robert Smith announces listening party to celebrate 30th anniversary of The Cure’s Wish

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Robert Smith has announced a Twitter listening party for the 30th anniversary of The Cure's ninth studio album Wish. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: The Cure – Wish (Reissue, 1992) review The listening party will take place on Friday Novemb...

Robert Smith has announced a Twitter listening party for the 30th anniversary of The Cure’s ninth studio album Wish.

The listening party will take place on Friday November 25 at 11pm GMT under the hashtag #WishListeningParty.

Smith will lead the Tweet-along commentary of their classic album backstage following the band’s upcoming show at Amsterdam’s Ziggo Dome in the Netherlands.

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

This summer, The Cure announced a 30th anniversary reissue of Wish, containing 24 previously-unreleased tracks.

The band kicked off their 2022 world tour in Latvia last month, debuting new tracks “Alone” and “Endsong”.

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

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

NOVEMBER 2022
15 – ZENITH, Nantes, France
17 – FESTHALLE, Frankfurt, Germany
18 – ZENITH, Strasbourg, France
19 – ST JAKOBSHALLE, Basel, Switzerland
21 – HANS-MARTIN-SCHLEYER-HALLE, Stuttggart, Germany
22 – LANXESS ARENA, Cologne, Germany
23 – SPORTPALEIS, Antwerp, Belgium
25 – ZIGGO DOME, Amsterdam, Netherlands
27 – STADE, Lievin, France
28 – ACCOR ARENA, Paris, France

DECEMBER 2022
01 – 3ARENA, Dublin, Ireland
02 – SSE, Belfast, Northern Ireland
04 – OVO HYDRO, Glasgow, Scotland
06 – FIRST DIRECT ARENA, Leeds, England
07 – UTILITA ARENA, Birmingham, England
08 – MOTORPOINT ARENA, Cardiff, Wales
11 – THE SSE ARENA, Wembley, London, England

Blur announce 2023 Wembley Stadium reunion gig

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Blur have announced details of a one-off UK reunion gig at London's Wembley Stadium for summer 2023. Check out ticket details below. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut The Britpop icons will playing their only UK show of 2023 at the iconic venue on Saturday, ...

Blur have announced details of a one-off UK reunion gig at London’s Wembley Stadium for summer 2023. Check out ticket details below.

The Britpop icons will playing their only UK show of 2023 at the iconic venue on Saturday, July 8. The band will be supported by Slowthai, Self Esteem and Jockstrap. This marks the band’s first headline show since 2015, when they released their long-awaited and critically-acclaimed comeback album The Magic Whip. Details of other world tour dates are currently unknown.

Tickets will go on general sale from 10am on Friday November 18 and will be available hereavailable here.

Looking ahead to delivering a greatest hits set, frontman Damon Albarn said: “We really love playing these songs and thought it’s about time we did it again.”

Guitarist Graham Coxon agreed: “I’m really looking forward to playing with my Blur brothers again and revisiting all those great songs. Blur live shows are always amazing for me: a nice guitar and an amp turned right up and loads of smiling faces.”

Bassist Alex James, meanwhile, said: “There’s always something really special when the four of us get in a room. It’s nice to think that on July 8 that room will be Wembley Stadium.”

Drummer Dave Rowntree added: “After the chaos of the last few years, it’s great to get back out to play some songs together on a summer’s day in London. Hope to see you there.”

Blur have announced details of a 2023 reunion gig at London's Wembley Stadium. Credit: Kevin Westenberg
Blur have announced details of a 2023 reunion gig at London’s Wembley Stadium. Image: Kevin Westenberg

After going on hiatus following the world tour for 2003’s Think Tank, then band first reunited in 2009 for a lengthy tour and Glastonbury headline performance.

This comes after Albarn previously claimed to NME that the band had been in talks and “had an idea” of how to make their comeback, before Rowntree teased that live activity would be on the cards if all members were “up for it” and Coxon appeared to downplay the chances of a reunion.

Coxon, who recently released his autobiography Verse, Chorus, Monster!, is also set to release the debut album with THE WAEVE, his side-project with former Pipettes member-turned-Mark Ronson collaborator and singer-songwriter Rose Elinor Dougall.

After releasing acclaimed solo album The Nearer The Fountain, More Pure The Stream Flows in 2021, Albarn will release new album Cracker Island with Gorillaz in February.

Rowntree, meanwhile, is gearing up for the release of his debut solo album Radio Songs.

Watch first trailer for Abbey Road Studios documentary with Paul McCartney, Elton John and more

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The first trailer for If These Walls Could Sing, a new documentary charting the importance of Abbey Road Studios, has landed. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Directed by Paul McCartney's daughter Mary McCartney, If These Walls Could Sing is released next m...

The first trailer for If These Walls Could Sing, a new documentary charting the importance of Abbey Road Studios, has landed.

Directed by Paul McCartney’s daughter Mary McCartney, If These Walls Could Sing is released next month in celebration of the famous recording studios’ 90th anniversary.

The documentary premieres on Disney+ on December 16 and includes interviews with The Beatles’ Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, as well as Elton John, Nile Rodgers, Noel Gallagher, Roger Waters, Celeste and George Lucas (whose Star Wars soundtracks were partly recorded at Abbey Road).

Abbey Road Studios was the backdrop for some of history’s greatest musical moments. The Beatles set up camp there in the ’60s and named their penultimate album after the studios and the St John’s Wood road.

“When you enter a place with so much history around it, it’s kind of sacred in a way,” Elton John says at the start of the new trailer, which you can watch below. “People want to come here. They want the sound of Abbey Road.”

The trailer for If These Walls Could Sing also shows pictures of director Mary crawling on the rugs of the studios before spotlighting her father. “This was our home, we spent so much time here,” Paul says.

The Smile on their latest album A Light For Attracting Attention: “Everything moved very fast”

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Uncut catches up with The Smile's Jonny Greenwood, Thom Yorke and Tom Skinner to talk about their latest album A Light For Attracting Attention. Here are snippets of that conversation, available in full in the latest issue of Uncut magazine – in UK shops from Thursday, November 10 and available to...

Uncut catches up with The Smile’s Jonny Greenwood, Thom Yorke and Tom Skinner to talk about their latest album A Light For Attracting Attention. Here are snippets of that conversation, available in full in the latest issue of Uncut magazine – in UK shops from Thursday, November 10 and available to buy from our online store.

UNCUT: How does a Smile song take shape? Is there a lot of jamming, or do you begin with chords and a melody?

GREENWOOD: Every song’s been different – some were already written – but broadly, there was just lots of frustration at not getting a chance to write or play with anyone, coupled with having many pent-up ideas. It was a glorious release, suddenly playing with Thom and Tom. It led to all this music suddenly coming to life. They’re very inspiring company – it was very fast.

UNCUT: There are moments on the album, particularly “Free In The Knowledge”, that feel almost hopeful. What gives you hope at the moment?

YORKE: Other people. You know… the normal ones. Not the right-wing freaks currently feeding off fear and hate that have taken our governments hostage. Perhaps we have all forgotten, but there was a lot of taking to the streets going on during the pandemic, a huge women’s movement formed and then Black Lives Matter. I took part in the huge Brexit protest march in London with my family – I can’t remember ever seeing so many people together in one place. Some said close to a million. This all had a very deep effect on me.

There is only so long right-wing zealots can gaslight their own population, and as we are seeing, their empty promises and use of force mean very little when millions take to the streets.

UNCUT: It must have been a little bit daunting to be invited into a group with Thom and Jonny. How did they put you at ease, and what kind of instruction or encouragement did they give you?

SKINNER: The band has always felt like a three-way conversation. We all bring different things to the project, and from a musical perspective my knowledge and experience are coming from quite a different place to Thom and Jonny, so it’s felt really collaborative and like we’re all learning but also surprisingly complementary. I feel like I can be relaxed and myself musically as much as, or more, than at any other time.

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

Joni Mitchell announces new live album of comeback Newport Folk Festival performance

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Joni Mitchell has announced plans to release her comeback Newport Folk Festival performance as a live album. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Joni Mitchell: “I can’t believe how good my voice sounds!” Earlier this summer, Mitchell perfor...

Joni Mitchell has announced plans to release her comeback Newport Folk Festival performance as a live album.

Earlier this summer, Mitchell performed a surprise set at the legendary music festival – which she last appeared at in 1969 – delivering a 13-song “JONI JAM” set that featured Carlile on the tracks “Carey”, “A Case Of You” (for which Marcus Mumford was also welcomed out) and “Big Yellow Taxi”.

In a new rare interview with Elton John on his Rocket Hour radio show for Apple Music, Mitchell revealed that plans are in place to release the performance as an album.

John said: “I’ve seen you through music, and of course your incredible rehabilitation, but music has helped you so much and it’s beautiful to watch you evolve. And people out there, you haven’t heard things from the Newport Folk Festival yet, but I think there’s going to be an album coming out of that one?”

Mitchell then replied: “Yeah, we’re trying to put that out.” Going on to reveal that she “didn’t have any” rehearsals ahead of the performance, Mitchell then spoke about standing up to play the guitar during the performance.

“Yeah, that I had to figure out what I did,” she said. “And I couldn’t sing the key, I’ve become an alto, I’m not a soprano anymore, so I couldn’t sing the song. And I thought people might feel lighted that if I just played the guitar part but I like the guitar part to that song. So anyway, it was very well received, much to my delight.”

Next year, Mitchell is set to continue her return to the stage, playing her first headline show in 23 years.

The revelation came during musician Brandi Carlile’s appearance on The Daily Show, as Pitchfork reported, with the artist telling host Trevor Noah that Mitchell would be taking to the stage in Grant County, Washington next June. Carlile will perform her own show in the city on Friday June 9, taking to the stage at the 27,500-capacity Gorge Amphitheatre – during her interview with Noah, she dropped the news that Mitchell will play the same venue the following night.

Hawkwind co-founder and saxophonist Nik Turner has died aged 82

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Hawkwind co-founder and saxophonist Nik Turner has died aged 82. In a post on his Facebook page, a spokesperson for the musician revealed that he died peacefully at home on Thursday evening (November 10). "We are deeply saddened to announce the passing of Nik Turner - The Mighty Thunder Rider,...

Hawkwind co-founder and saxophonist Nik Turner has died aged 82.

In a post on his Facebook page, a spokesperson for the musician revealed that he died peacefully at home on Thursday evening (November 10).

“We are deeply saddened to announce the passing of Nik Turner – The Mighty Thunder Rider, who passed away peacefully at home on Thursday evening,” the post read.

“He has moved onto the next phase of his Cosmic Journey, guided by the love of his family, friends and fans. Watch this space for his arrangements.”

We are deeply saddened to announce the passing of Nik Turner – The Mighty Thunder Rider, who passed away peacefully at…

Posted by Nik Turner on Friday, November 11, 2022

Turner founded Hawkwind alongside Dave Brock, Mick Slattery, John Harrison and Terry Ollis, initially performing roadie duties with the band before officially joining as a full-time member in 1969.

He performed with the space rock pioneers until 1976, including a period with a pre-Motörhead Lemmy also in the band, before being kicked out. He then returned in 1982 for a two-year stint before leaving once again.

In the wake of Turner’s death, tributes have been pouring in online, with Motörhead’s official Twitter account writing: “We lost Lemmy’s old bandmate Nik Turner today. Play some Hawkwind nice and loud! Brainstorm here we go!”

Others to pay tribute included Anton Newcombe of The Brian Jonestown Massacre. See a range of tributes to Nik Turner below.

Public Image Ltd and The Clash guitarist Keith Levene has died aged 65

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Public Image Ltd and The Clash guitarist Keith Levene has died aged 65. The news was broken by author and writer Adam Hammond, who revealed that Levene died on Friday (November 11). "It is with great sadness I report that my close friend and legendary Public Image Limited guitarist Keith Leven...

Public Image Ltd and The Clash guitarist Keith Levene has died aged 65.

The news was broken by author and writer Adam Hammond, who revealed that Levene died on Friday (November 11).

“It is with great sadness I report that my close friend and legendary Public Image Limited guitarist Keith Levene passed away on Friday 11th November,” Hammond wrote.

“There is no doubt that Keith was one of the most innovative, audacious and influential guitarists of all time.”

The tribute continued: “Keith sought to create a new paradigm in music and with willing collaborators John Lydon and Jah Wobble succeeded in doing just that. His guitar work over the nine minutes of “Theme”, the first track on the first PiL album, defined what alternative music should be.

“As well as helping to make PiL the most important band of the age, Keith also founded The Clash with Mick Jones and had a major influence on their early sound. So much of what we listen to today owes much to Keith’s work, some of it acknowledged, most of it not.”

Hammond concluded: “Our thoughts and love go out to his partner Kate, sister Jill and all of Keith’s family and friends. The world is a darker place without his genius. Mine will be darker without my mate.”

After roadying for Yes in the early 1970s, Levene founded The Clash in 1976 alongside Mick Jones, famously persuading Joe Strummer to leave his band at the time – The 101ers – and join the band.

Levene then left The Clash before they began recording music, going on to form Public Image Ltd with John Lydon after the breakup of the Sex Pistols.

After leaving PiL in 1983, Levene tried his hand at solo material, production and more.

Those to pay tribute to Levene since news of his death was announced include PiL bassist Jah Wobble.

See a range of tributes to the late guitarist below.

Ride’s Andy Bell wrote: “RIP Keith Levene – a guitar tone like ground up diamonds fired at you through a high pressure hose.”

Elsewhere, The Brian Jonestown Massacre’s Anton Newcombe said he owes Levene “much of my guitar style, in some ways. he made it possible to be me.”

Primal Scream’s Bobby Gillespie also quoted a passage about Levene that he wrote in his memoir, Tenement Kid: “The ante is upped even further by the screaming, nerve jangling arrpegiated Byrdson-biker speed-laced-with-junk speedball genius guitar of Keith Levene. The Banshees’ John McKay and PIL’s Keith Levene reinvented rock guitar playing. After those two guys, people had to rethink how to play guitar. This was the future right here.”

The Beatles – Revolver: Special Edition

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Since it began in 2017, The Beatles’ lavish remix campaign has dealt with the downers. Paul McCartney might have relished making Sgt Pepper, but a tripping John Lennon was largely losing interest; much of The White Album was made solo by an increasingly disjointed band; Let It Be captures the grou...

Since it began in 2017, The Beatles’ lavish remix campaign has dealt with the downers. Paul McCartney might have relished making Sgt Pepper, but a tripping John Lennon was largely losing interest; much of The White Album was made solo by an increasingly disjointed band; Let It Be captures the group’s fatal disintegration and the mess that followed; and Abbey Road’s majesty was largely possible only because it was a last hurrah. To the rest of us, these are stunning, sometimes world-altering listens, but they certainly make being a Fab seem like a chore; it was a time of deadlines, joyless business meetings and sizzling resentment, as old friends grew apart and others fought for recognition.

Where was that camaraderie, that warmth, that sense of wonder that we associate with The Beatles? Certainly, Peter Jackson’s Get Back put a more positive spin on a dark time – but to find them truly united, excited and at their creative peak, we have to look to Revolver, the latest staging post on Giles Martin’s journey through the albums made by his old man and the Fabs. Here’s the group expanding the possibilities of recorded music just as they were expanding their minds with drugs, spirituality and avant-garde arts; taking influence from soul, funk, Indian music, the baroque and musique concrète; creating a sound far removed from the more polite Rubber Soul, released nine months earlier.

Revolver hardly needs improving, but Martin has done his best to revamp it for the 21st century. He’s had the assistance of some Terminator-level AI machine-learning developed in New Zealand during the making of the Get Back series. There it was used to separate music and speech on old Nagra tapes, but here it’s been employed to split instruments that have been imprisoned on a single track for decades, so opening the possibility of a remix. In “Taxman”, for example, drums, bass and guitar have been separated, and the results are fantastic, especially on Starr’s drums and McCartney’s bass, which are clearer, punchier and even more nuanced. Ringo is essential across this new Revolver: his inventive fills are foregrounded and endlessly fascinating, whether taut and heavy on “She Said She Said” or subtle and atmospheric on “Here, There And Everywhere”.

As with Martin’s other special-edition remixes, his work is subtle and tasteful. That’s not to say there aren’t noticeable changes, however. On “For No One”, McCartney’s Clavichord and piano are separated across the stereo field, lending the track a new lustrousness.
Starr’s drums were barely there in the original, drowned out by tambourine in the left channel, but that’s been rectified. The overall effect is now more reminiscent of Brian Wilson’s contemporary work, surely McCartney’s intention, and it clearly shows the song to be a stepping stone to the lusher “Penny Lane” the following year.

“Doctor Robert”, not Revolver’s strongest moment, is enhanced by a walloping bass
drum and snare, and fits closer with the super-compressed Revolver aesthetic. “Love
You To” benefits from a tighter, more upfront sound too, the sitars, tabla and fuzz guitars buzzing with a humming, psychedelic energy. “Here, There And Everywhere”, on the other hand, is opened up: the backing vocals are clearer than before, each singer discernible. The horns on “Got To Get You Into My Life” are still spiky, but they’re up close in the verses – reedy, breathy and present.

While there are no real revelations on “Tomorrow Never Knows”, it’s still a sea of sound, one of the most striking three minutes of music ever created. It’s a mongrel – Stockhausen tape loops meets Indian drone meets Tibetan Book Of The Dead – but the result seems entirely new, even 56 years later. Shockingly, of course, it was the first song recorded for Revolver.

As is customary with these special editions, there are also two discs of session highlights. As always, there’s great chat – the band’s argument about Paul’s organ at the start of an early version of “Got To Get You Into My Life”, for instance, or George Martin, Paul and the string octet discussing how to approach “Eleanor Rigby” – and some cuts we’ve heard on the Anthology series, such as the aqueous first take of “Tomorrow Never Knows”. But there are new treasures here too: the second version of “Got To Get You Into My Life” with fuzz guitars taking the place of the horns is meaner and perhaps better than the final version; Take 2 of the first version of “And Your Bird Can Sing” is a Byrds-y delight, all glittering 12-string, with different harmonies and the eventual main riff appearing only as a solo; “Yellow Submarine” arrives as a forlorn Lennon waltz (“In the place where I was born/No-one cared”) like something off Plastic Ono Band a lifetime later.

For the first time, The Beatles had the freedom to entirely arrange songs in the studio. As a result, there are a host of extra harmonies, melodies and overdubs on some of these earlier versions that didn’t make the final cut – “anybody got a bit of money” on “Taxman – Take 11”, say, or the “somehow, some way” on the chorus of “Got To Get You Into My Life – First Version, Take 5”. Perhaps that’s part of Revolver’s charm, as opposed to the woollier, Technicolor Pepper, for instance: in finalising the arrangements, the band and George Martin dramatically thinned them out, leaving only the best elements – often the noisiest electric guitars – in stark monochrome.

Some of these early versions also remind us of the hive-mind of The Beatles, of how ideas and inspirations flowed between them. Each writer, for instance, contributes a song based around a drone, with an occasional hinted chord a tone below: Lennon with “Tomorrow Never Knows”, Harrison with “Love You To” and McCartney with the verses of “Got To Get You Into My Life”. An early demo of “She Said…” is also built around a droning bass note, the chords shifting above that constant, while “Taxman” almost pulls the same trick in its middle-eight.

Listening to this package, it’s clearer than ever just how Revolver set the template for The Beatles’ future: the sound effects of “Yellow Submarine” bubbled up into “Revolution 9”, and “For No One” and “Eleanor Rigby” would blossom into “Penny Lane”, “Fixing A Hole” and “Martha My Dear”, while “She Said She Said” presaged the white-hot fuzz of “Revolution” and “Helter Skelter”, and “Love You To” would find reincarnation as “Within You Without You”.

Darker clouds are forecast here, too. “For No One” was recorded by only McCartney and Starr, a throw-forward to the studio fragmentation of Pepper and The White Album, while Harrison’s third composition was apparently only allowed when Lennon failed to deliver more songs – his lack of engagement, and material, would soon become an issue.

Before all that, though, The Beatles would play their final proper gig, three weeks after Revolver’s release, without ever performing a note of this album’s songs. They were a fully operational group no more. The aftershocks, as documented on the rest of Giles Martin’s remixed albums, are incredible, but the epicentre – their peak, as well as the end of something – can be found here. As McCartney writes in the new liner notes, “all in all, not a bad album.”

Big Joanie – Back Home

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By all rights, Big Joanie shouldn’t have enough spare time to sound as good as they do. Formed in 2013 as the result of a chance encounter – when drummer Chardine Taylor-Stone noticed that guitarist and singer Stephanie Phillips was carrying a Raincoats tote bag – this London trio of committed...

By all rights, Big Joanie shouldn’t have enough spare time to sound as good as they do. Formed in 2013 as the result of a chance encounter – when drummer Chardine Taylor-Stone noticed that guitarist and singer Stephanie Phillips was carrying a Raincoats tote bag – this London trio of committed, creative women have built something truly remarkable over the past nine years, becoming a formidable force in principled DIY music.

Philips, a music writer as well as a musician herself, started the collective DIY Diaspora Punx, which then founded Decolonise Fest, an event by and for DIY musicians of colour that is still thriving. She also wrote a book, Why Solange Matters, for University of Texas Press. Bassist Estella Adeyeri is a member of Girls Rock London, a branch of the Portland, Oregon, organisation set up to help young women and non-binary people get into making their own music. Taylor-Stone has won awards for her LGBT+ activism, and is working on her first book, Sold Out: How Black Feminism Lost Its Soul. They are the sort of band who would send Jacob Rees-Mogg running in terror to Nanny.

Their music walks the walk as much as the rest of what they do: their 2018 debut album, Sistahs, with its slanted, girl-group-flavoured, riot grrrl-laced indie punk, inspired Thurston Moore and Eva Prinz to set up a whole new label, Daydream Library Series, in order to release it. They’ve also put out 7”s on Kill Rock Stars and Third Man, as well as touring with Bikini Kill, appearing at Grace Jones’s Meltdown, and being picked by Sleater-Kinney to contribute towards a Dig Me Out tribute album. Their live shows, in which overt activism and delirious dancing collide delightfully, have won them instant converts from their early days at DIY Space for London to this year’s Glastonbury debut.

But what their second record, Back Home, underlines more than ever is that Big Joanie can’t be encompassed in an elevator pitch or a checking-off of influences. There’s an entrancing breadth of style and mood here, one that proves them keepers indeed. Opener “Cactus Tree” recalls the woozy, haunted indie of Belly and early Throwing Muses in its surreal, mystical imagery, heavy, swirling guitar and ghostly-sweet backing vocals. “He looks like home and I feel saved”, sings Phillips, the first of many references to homecomings on the album, whose title reflects on what “home” means for people with more than one heritage. The cover art is a tapestry, by artist Angelica Ellis, depicting Taylor-Stones’ nephew on a barber’s chair, made in a style evoking the wall hangings frequently seen in British-Caribbean living rooms after Windrush. “I can’t find you, come back home”, sings Philips on the chiming indie rock of “Today”, while on “Insecure” she boards a train to “ride far away from here… I sit and think of all the things that I could be”.

There’s plenty of demonstration of the things Big Joanie could be here: the gothic guitars and chill Euro synths of the brooding “Your Words”, the chunky, Amps-esque grunge-pop punch of “Taut”, the sweetly fuzzy Omnichord and charmingly naive beat of “Count To 10”. “Confident Man” exults in deliciously fat synth riffs and drum-machine handclaps, while “Happier Still”, inspired by Nirvana, hammers home the fake-it-’til-you-make-it aspect of grinding through depressive episodes with a brutal, bouncy grunge attack. “I Will” evolves from a deliciously languorous mood – muted organ and ghostly reverb softening the edge of Phillips’s promise: “If I could write the book on us/I’d tell the truth of what has passed”, to a Mellotron-laced psychy jam.

Perhaps the most irresistible hook on Back Home is “In My Arms”, a peppy rock’n’roll love song that plays to the yearning power of Phillips’ voice, with a finger-clicking sunny warmth and a lovely outro of chiming and intertwining vocals; it returns towards the close of the record in a stripped-back, Shangri-La’s like reprise. But probably the most impressive track is closer “Sainted”, whose thrummingly motorik synth-iced gothic flounces recall the best of big-coated ’80s post-punk. Amid all these stylistic wanderings, though, Big Joanie never forget to keep faith with their core sound – that raw punk heart and touch of girl-group sugar – with the result that Back Home is a cohesive, strong statement as well as an exciting one. This is a band at home with who they are, exploring who else they could be with thrilling verve.

A sneak peek at Uncut’s essential Review Of 2022

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The latest issue of Uncut is now available and features our essential albums, reissues, films and books from the last 12 months. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Inside, you will find brand new and exclusive interviews with as Elvis Costello, Sharon Van Ett...

The latest issue of Uncut is now available and features our essential albums, reissues, films and books from the last 12 months.

Inside, you will find brand new and exclusive interviews with as Elvis Costello, Sharon Van Etten and Makaya McCraven. Find out why 2022 has been a “release and relief” for McCraven, while Van Etten sees her year as a “mixed bag” while Costello explains why he won’t be appearing on Dancing On Ice anytime soon…

There are more exclusives, including the very first interview by all three members of The Smile: Thom Yorke, Jonny Greenwood and Tom Skinner. Find out how their debut album A Light For Attracting Attention came to be, their highlights of 2022, plans for 2023 and hear more from Yorke about what gives him hope at the moment: “Other people,” he tells us. “You know… the normal ones.”

Meanwhile, our free CD brings together 15 of the year’s best tracks, including Big Thief, Spiritualized, Cass McCombs, Wilco, The Weather Station, The Delines and many more.

Elsewhere, we chat with Michael Head, who is set to begin his UK tour from December 6. The singer-songwriter tells us about his adventures with The Pale Fountains, Shack and more!

There’s Michael Rother and Hans Lampe on the story behind Neu!‘s track, “Hero”, it’s influence on David Bowie and it’s potent legacy that still exists today. “The music has an appeal that’s timeless,” says New Order’s Stephen Morris, a fan of the band. “Their records still sound like they could’ve been made last week.”

This month’s Album by Album features idiosyncratic songsmith Richard Dawson, who walks us through his path from “very bad debut” to multi-layered latest record, The Ruby Cord.

Chess-playing, concept album-loving jazz proggers Black Midi are also feature in our look back at 2022. Learn how Count Dracula, Jeff Wayne’s War Of The Worlds and “circus music” helped shape the band’s exhilarating year while tourmates and contemporaries Black Country, New Road also tell us about their future plans following the departure of lead vocalist and guitarist Isaac Wood.

We travel to rural Kentucky, where Joan Shelley and Nathan Salsburg talk us through their 2022: a year in which both these exceptional artists have released career-best work while juggling parenthood and the frustrations of lockdown. “Everything has changed,” Shelley explains.

What more are you waiting for? Pick up your new copy of Uncut today, which also comes with two exclusive Hunky Dory art prints featuring this month’s cover artist, David Bowie.

The War On Drugs announce 2023 UK and European tour

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The War On Drugs have announced a UK and Ireland headline tour for 2023. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: The War On Drugs – I Don’t Live Here Anymore review The Adam Granduciel-fronted band are due to return to these shores next summer as...

The War On Drugs have announced a UK and Ireland headline tour for 2023.

The Adam Granduciel-fronted band are due to return to these shores next summer as part of a wider European stint. Following shows in Oslo, Warsaw, Prague and Berlin, the group will play begin the UK/Ireland leg at the Brighton Centre on June 17.

Further gigs are scheduled at The Eden Project in Cornwall (June 18), the OVO Hydro arena in Glasgow (20), The Piece Hall in Halifax (21) and Trinity College in Dublin (27). Additionally, The War On Drugs will perform at the Zénith arena in Paris on June 23.

The new dates mean that the band are currently free to appear at Glastonbury 2023 on either the Saturday (June 24) or Sunday (25). No acts have been announced for the festival as of yet.

Tickets for The War On Drugs’ 2023 UK and European tour go on general sale at 10am local time this Friday (November 11) with the exception of Paris (on sale next Monday, November 14).

You’ll be able to purchase your ticket(s) here – see the announcement post and full itinerary below.

JUNE 2023
8 – Loaded Festival, Oslo
12 – Progresja Summer Stage, Warsaw
13 – Forum Karlin, Prague
14 – Zitadelle, Berlin
17 – Brighton Centre, Brighton
18 – The Eden Project, Cornwall
20 – OVO Hydro, Glasgow
21 – The Piece Hall, Halifax
23 – Zenith, Paris
27 – Trinity College, Dublin

The War On Drugs last toured the UK and Ireland this April in support of their fifth studio album, I Don’t Live Here Anymore, which came out in October 2021.

Back in September, The War On Drugs shared two previously-unreleased songs – “Oceans Of Darkness” and “Slow Ghost” – as part of an extended deluxe edition of I Don’t Live Here Anymore.

Watch Robert Plant cover Low in tribute to Mimi Parker

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Robert Plant and Suzi Dian covered Low’s "Monkey" and "Everybody’s Song" at a recent concert, in tribute to the band's drummer and vocalist Mimi Parker who passed away earlier this week. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: An audience with Low: ...

Robert Plant and Suzi Dian covered Low’s “Monkey” and “Everybody’s Song” at a recent concert, in tribute to the band’s drummer and vocalist Mimi Parker who passed away earlier this week.

Plant and Dian are currently touring Scotland as Saving Grace and during their show at Glasgow’s King Theatre on Sunday night (November 6), they covered Low’s 2005 tracks “Monkey” and “Everybody’s Song”.

Originally both songs featured on Low’s The Great Destroyer, with Plant covering “Monkey” on his 2010 record Band Of Joy.

Speaking to the crowd, Plant said: “We’ve been together a while, between all the other stuff. We’ve been drawn to the music of the great duo Low. Sadly tonight we know that unfortunately we lost one of those two people, so we give our songs tonight to Mimi and Alan.”

He went on to say “they’ve been such a big inspiration for me, for a long, long time,” before performing the two songs. Check out fan-shot footage below:

Parker formed slowcore band Low with her husband Alan Sparhawk in 1993 and was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in late 2020. In August, the band cancelled a string of shows due to “recent developments and changes” in Parker’s treatment, with all 2022 dates then cancelled last month.

On Sunday, Sparhawk confirmed the death of Mimi Parker. “Friends, it’s hard to put the universe into language and into a short message, but she passed away last night, surrounded by family and love, including yours,” he wrote.

“Keep her name close and sacred. Share this moment with someone who needs you. Love is indeed the most important thing.”