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Beach Boys to release “brand new” album in June

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The Beach Boys are set to release an album comprising all-new material in June, according to band member Bruce Johnston. The band are reuniting for an extensive world tour to celebrate their 50th anniversary this summer, with founding members Brian Wilson, Mike Love and Al Jardine all involved. No...

The Beach Boys are set to release an album comprising all-new material in June, according to band member Bruce Johnston.

The band are reuniting for an extensive world tour to celebrate their 50th anniversary this summer, with founding members Brian Wilson, Mike Love and Al Jardine all involved.

Now speaking to Billboard.com, Johnson has said the band are planning to release a new album to coincide with the jaunt on June 5, with Wilson contributing a large portion of the material. The album’s first single is set to be “That’s Why God Made The Radio“.

Johnson commented: “It’s all brand new,” before adding: “There’s a lot of what you’d hope to hear from Brian [Wilson] on there. It’s not a quilt or a pot luck dinner, it’s not like, ‘OK, everybody show up with your songs.’ It’s not one of those kind of albums.”

He added: “There’s a lot of Brian in there, and Mike [Love]. It’s just nice to know there is a Mike Love and a Brian Wilson still around to write together.”

Johnston, who first joined the Beach Boys in 1965, said he has a new song in contention for inclusion on the album, ‘She Believes In Love’, which dates back to the 1980s. “I took it from a recording we made of it in ’85 and just stripped it down and softened it up and finally got it right. I have no idea if it’s going in or not. The label picks the songs, not me,” he commented.

Johnson added that the band’s reunion tour will be a one-off, rather than a permanent arrangement. The jaunt kicks off in Arizona in July before taking in dates across Europe and finishing up in Japan.

Dexys, Paul McCartney, Tom Petty, John Lydon, Neil Young in new Uncut

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The new Uncut is on sale from Thursday, and we’re blushingly pleased with it. Dexys are on the cover, and we have an exclusive interview with Kevin Rowland in advance of their keenly-awaited comeback album, the astonishing One Day I’m Going To Soar. I know a lot of people who still had hair when Dexys released their last album, so it’s been a while – a quite unbelievable 27 years, in fact. This is a long time to keep your fans waiting for a new record, unless you’re dead or Sting, who can take as long as he likes to put out another record and in a perfect world actually won’t release anything new in my lifetime or yours. Anyway, in a brilliant interview with Stephen Trousse, Kevin looks back with what you can only describe as candid honesty at a career correctly described “as one of the most strange and gripping as any in British rock history, involving addiction, theft, international No 1s and penury” and also, let’s not forget, includes some of the greatest music of the last 30-odd years. Admittedly, there’s not that much of it – Searching For The Young Soul Rebels, Too-Rye-Ay and Don’t Stand Me Down by Dexys Midnight Runners, Kevin’s two solo albums, The Wanderer and My Beauty, and now the glorious One Day I’m Going To Soar – but nigh on every minute of it is something as a fan you will have cherished. There’s also a preview in the new issue of Neil Young’s Americana, a new album on which in the company of a reunited Crazy Horse, he attacks the Great American Folk Songbook with typically grizzled gusto with rampaging versions of campfire favourites of yore like “My Darling Clementine”, “Tom Dula”, “Jesus’ Chariot (She’ll Be Coming Round The Mountain)” and “Oh, Susannah” (which took me back to The Byrds’ version on Turn! Turn! Turn!). Elsewhere, we are at home in Malibu with Tom Petty, Paul McCartney recalls the trauma of recording of Ram in the grim aftermath of The Beatles’ messy break-up and the legal strife that duly followed, Lenny Kaye looks back at Nuggets, his legendary compilation of 60s’ garage rock and John Lydon is at hand to deliver some typically rasping opinions on this and also that. Also appearing in the issue are Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy, Nick Cave, Bob Seger, Peter Hook, Greg Dulli, Sharon Van Etten and The Adverts, while a packed reviews section includes the definitive word on new albums by Damon Albarn, PiL, Father John Misty, Richard Hawley, Paul Buchanan, Beach House. Our recently-introduced Archive section, meanwhile, features reissues from My Bloody Valentine, The Small Faces, Billy Bragg & Wilco and a 4CD box set dedicated to the great Vanguard label. For this month’s free CD, I’ve put together Americana 2012, which pulls together 15 brilliant new tracks of Cosmic American Music, and includes tracks from new albums by Dr John, Beachwood Sparks, Father John Misty, Spain, Deer Tick, Hans Chew and new favourites The Deep Dark Woods and Sons Of Bill. Anyway, have a good week, enjoy the issue when you get it and let me know if you have a moment what you think of it. You can reach me at the usual address: allan_jones@ipcmedia.com. Allan

The new Uncut is on sale from Thursday, and we’re blushingly pleased with it. Dexys are on the cover, and we have an exclusive interview with Kevin Rowland in advance of their keenly-awaited comeback album, the astonishing One Day I’m Going To Soar.

I know a lot of people who still had hair when Dexys released their last album, so it’s been a while – a quite unbelievable 27 years, in fact. This is a long time to keep your fans waiting for a new record, unless you’re dead or Sting, who can take as long as he likes to put out another record and in a perfect world actually won’t release anything new in my lifetime or yours.

Anyway, in a brilliant interview with Stephen Trousse, Kevin looks back with what you can only describe as candid honesty at a career correctly described “as one of the most strange and gripping as any in British rock history, involving addiction, theft, international No 1s and penury” and also, let’s not forget, includes some of the greatest music of the last 30-odd years.

Admittedly, there’s not that much of it – Searching For The Young Soul Rebels, Too-Rye-Ay and Don’t Stand Me Down by Dexys Midnight Runners, Kevin’s two solo albums, The Wanderer and My Beauty, and now the glorious One Day I’m Going To Soar – but nigh on every minute of it is something as a fan you will have cherished.

There’s also a preview in the new issue of Neil Young’s Americana, a new album on which in the company of a reunited Crazy Horse, he attacks the Great American Folk Songbook with typically grizzled gusto with rampaging versions of campfire favourites of yore like “My Darling Clementine”, “Tom Dula”, “Jesus’ Chariot (She’ll Be Coming Round The Mountain)” and “Oh, Susannah” (which took me back to The Byrds’ version on Turn! Turn! Turn!).

Elsewhere, we are at home in Malibu with Tom Petty, Paul McCartney recalls the trauma of recording of Ram in the grim aftermath of The Beatles’ messy break-up and the legal strife that duly followed, Lenny Kaye looks back at Nuggets, his legendary compilation of 60s’ garage rock and John Lydon is at hand to deliver some typically rasping opinions on this and also that.

Also appearing in the issue are Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy, Nick Cave, Bob Seger, Peter Hook, Greg Dulli, Sharon Van Etten and The Adverts, while a packed reviews section includes the definitive word on new albums by Damon Albarn, PiL, Father John Misty, Richard Hawley, Paul Buchanan, Beach House. Our recently-introduced Archive section, meanwhile, features reissues from My Bloody Valentine, The Small Faces, Billy Bragg & Wilco and a 4CD box set dedicated to the great Vanguard label.

For this month’s free CD, I’ve put together Americana 2012, which pulls together 15 brilliant new tracks of Cosmic American Music, and includes tracks from new albums by Dr John, Beachwood Sparks, Father John Misty, Spain, Deer Tick, Hans Chew and new favourites The Deep Dark Woods and Sons Of Bill.

Anyway, have a good week, enjoy the issue when you get it and let me know if you have a moment what you think of it. You can reach me at the usual address: allan_jones@ipcmedia.com.

Allan

Dave Alvin & The Guilty Ones, London Jazz Café, April 20, 2012

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When he first toured the UK with The Blasters, in 1981 or thereabouts, Dave Alvin was a swaggering young yahoo in rockabilly duds with a 50s quiff, attitude to spare and the unblemished good looks of someone still fairly new to what the rest of his life would become, the bulk of it since spent mostly on the road, playing whatever bar, club, juke joint, tavern, theatre, festival, hootenanny or hoe-down that would have him. He certainly has the appearance nearly 30 years after The Blasters last played the UK of someone who’s done his share of hard travelling. Last Friday at a rare London show at Camden’s Jazz Café he looked beneath his Stetson not unlike the weather-beaten Robert Duvall of Open Range, a veteran saddle-tramp, leathery and laconic, more than a bit like the music he played, which was roughly the equivalent of the kind of roadhouse blues that occupies so much of Dylan’s set lists these days. He’s just going on when I get there, playing a ghostly version of the traditional “Blackjack David”, title track also of his outstanding 1998 album, and listening to it’s like watching something from the early days of photography slowly developing, already sepia-tinged and reminiscent therefore of faraway times and the people who lived in them, now gone. This is apt, because there are ghosts aplenty haunting a lot of the songs Alvin plays tonight. Part of his current mission, it sometimes seems, is to honour through his music the memories of the people who helped shape it. These include close friends and former band members, like Amy Farris, formerly the fantastic fiddle player in Dave’s band The Guilty Women, who died in 2009, and Chris Gaffney, a longstanding member of Alvin’s previous touring band, The Guilty Men, who died a year earlier. Farris is recalled in the achingly beautiful cantina requiem, “Black Rose Of Texas”, whose last verse tonight consists of not much more than Alvin’s hushed voice, a few guitar notes and a host of memories, the song somehow suspended in these last minutes, before the band reintroduce themselves for an elegant coda. Gaffney, meanwhile, is celebrated on the blistering Bo Diddley blues of “Run Conejo Run”, a highlight also of Alvin’s most recent album, last year’s terrific Eleven Eleven. Elsewhere the spectre of the dying Hank Williams is called up on the old Blasters’ number, “Long White Cadillac”, while Big Joe Turner, an early idol, is affectionately recalled on “Boss Of The Blues” and “Johnny Ace Is Dead”, another song from Eleven Eleven, brilliantly tells the story of the cocky young R&B singer who shot himself in the head during an ill-advised game of Russian Roulette, backstage at Houston’s Civic Auditorium in 1954. The pounding “Ashgrove”, meanwhile, is a valedictory requiem for a whole host of legendary bluesmen who played the LA ballroom of that name, and is ablaze with incendiary guitar. The long gone Blasters are themselves brought briefly back to life on a roaring “Marie Marie”, and the extended jam at the end of “Fourth Of July”, when Alvin leads his hot little band into an instrumental version of “So Long Baby, Goodbye”, for almost as long as they lasted a blazing climax to Blasters’ shows, Alvin here taking the solos that used to be played back then by the late great New Orleans sax player Lee Allen. At a stroke, as they say, he brings back more memories than a room this size can hold, of nights, more than you can count, that you thought would never end when the music, every time, was this good always. Set List Blackjack David Harlan County Line Boss Of the Blues The Black Rose Of Texas Long White Cadillac Abilene King Of California Run Conejo Run Ashgrove Dry River Marie Marie Johnny Ace Is Dead Fourth Of July Dave Alvin pic: Marilyn Kingwill

When he first toured the UK with The Blasters, in 1981 or thereabouts, Dave Alvin was a swaggering young yahoo in rockabilly duds with a 50s quiff, attitude to spare and the unblemished good looks of someone still fairly new to what the rest of his life would become, the bulk of it since spent mostly on the road, playing whatever bar, club, juke joint, tavern, theatre, festival, hootenanny or hoe-down that would have him.

He certainly has the appearance nearly 30 years after The Blasters last played the UK of someone who’s done his share of hard travelling. Last Friday at a rare London show at Camden’s Jazz Café he looked beneath his Stetson not unlike the weather-beaten Robert Duvall of Open Range, a veteran saddle-tramp, leathery and laconic, more than a bit like the music he played, which was roughly the equivalent of the kind of roadhouse blues that occupies so much of Dylan’s set lists these days.

He’s just going on when I get there, playing a ghostly version of the traditional “Blackjack David”, title track also of his outstanding 1998 album, and listening to it’s like watching something from the early days of photography slowly developing, already sepia-tinged and reminiscent therefore of faraway times and the people who lived in them, now gone.

This is apt, because there are ghosts aplenty haunting a lot of the songs Alvin plays tonight. Part of his current mission, it sometimes seems, is to honour through his music the memories of the people who helped shape it. These include close friends and former band members, like Amy Farris, formerly the fantastic fiddle player in Dave’s band The Guilty Women, who died in 2009, and Chris Gaffney, a longstanding member of Alvin’s previous touring band, The Guilty Men, who died a year earlier.

Farris is recalled in the achingly beautiful cantina requiem, “Black Rose Of Texas”, whose last verse tonight consists of not much more than Alvin’s hushed voice, a few guitar notes and a host of memories, the song somehow suspended in these last minutes, before the band reintroduce themselves for an elegant coda. Gaffney, meanwhile, is celebrated on the blistering Bo Diddley blues of “Run Conejo Run”, a highlight also of Alvin’s most recent album, last year’s terrific Eleven Eleven.

Elsewhere the spectre of the dying Hank Williams is called up on the old Blasters’ number, “Long White Cadillac”, while Big Joe Turner, an early idol, is affectionately recalled on “Boss Of The Blues” and “Johnny Ace Is Dead”, another song from Eleven Eleven, brilliantly tells the story of the cocky young R&B singer who shot himself in the head during an ill-advised game of Russian Roulette, backstage at Houston’s Civic Auditorium in 1954.

The pounding “Ashgrove”, meanwhile, is a valedictory requiem for a whole host of legendary bluesmen who played the LA ballroom of that name, and is ablaze with incendiary guitar. The long gone Blasters are themselves brought briefly back to life on a roaring “Marie Marie”, and the extended jam at the end of “Fourth Of July”, when Alvin leads his hot little band into an instrumental version of “So Long Baby, Goodbye”, for almost as long as they lasted a blazing climax to Blasters’ shows, Alvin here taking the solos that used to be played back then by the late great New Orleans sax player Lee Allen.

At a stroke, as they say, he brings back more memories than a room this size can hold, of nights, more than you can count, that you thought would never end when the music, every time, was this good always.

Set List

Blackjack David

Harlan County Line

Boss Of the Blues

The Black Rose Of Texas

Long White Cadillac

Abilene

King Of California

Run Conejo Run

Ashgrove

Dry River

Marie Marie

Johnny Ace Is Dead

Fourth Of July

Dave Alvin pic: Marilyn Kingwill

Jack White live: Kentish Town Forum, London, April 23, 2012

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How to tell whether Jack White has brought his male or his female band along to a show? As the suited roadcrew prepare the stage at the Forum, one suspects the answer might be in the drumkit, sheathed until the very last moment; something about the positioning of Daru Jones’ bass drum, perhaps? When the sheet comes off, at 9.45, the kit is configured more or less normally – though sat at stage front, to one side, in the kind of space once occupied by Meg White. This is where Carla Azar will ply her trade, at one end of a stage-wide curve of female musicians who are required to do tonight’s shift as White’s backing band. White might stalk over to her kit from time to time and eyeball her in the way he used to approach his sister, but from the moment Azar starts playing “Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground”, her style is radically different – more intricate, perhaps inevitably – than her predecessor. “Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground” is a good test case for the new, expanded White vision: can his old White Stripes songs withstand being worked over by a big band, with fiddle, pedal steel and cascading keyboards to the fore? The answer, reassuringly, is yes. The accumulated gravity doesn’t make this and “Seven Nation Army” (now with bassline played on an actual bass) sound any less like Led Zeppelin. But it does illustrate how robust and flexible White’s songs are. Liberated from the minimalist novelty of The White Stripes, their power is undimmed; their odd, quivering potential to excite remains just as strong. Some, you could argue, even come out stronger: “Hotel Yorba”, flourishing as a full hoedown; a grandly hysterical “I’m Slowly Turning Into You”, with White’s vocals dissolving in every line into those of Ruby Amanfu; “My Doorbell”, with Brooke Waggoner taking the piano line and White fleshing out the original wonky strut of the song with his guitar. Only “We Are Going To Be Friends” comes out worse, to these ears. Early on in the life of these new bands, White is evidently fascinated by the rich possibilities of how his songs can be filled out. Sometimes, as with “Friends”, a little more space would be a useful weapon, a respite from the ominous drone of the violin and steel which packs every available space in nearly all of these songs. Of the new material, “Hypocritical Kiss” and “Weep Themselves To Sleep” remain outstanding, allowing Waggoner to come to the fore with her dramatic piano lines, and pushing the fiddle of Lilie May Rische a little more into the background (Rische, incidentally, emerges as White’s main foil as the evening progresses, stepping into his floor space for some slightly awkward face-offs). “Weep Themselves To Sleep” features, too, a small and wonderfully splenetic guitar solo from the unusually restrained White. If there’s a main criticism of the show, in fact, it may be that White doesn’t let rip often enough, as if the experiment of working through these songs with a full band is rather inhibiting his explosive guitar playing. Besides “Weep…”, a glimpse of his power can be found in the sliding, geometrical frenzy of “Freedom At 21”. But it’s not until “Ball And Biscuit”, closing the main set, that he unleashes the sort of astonishing, wild extemporisations that made his name. Tonight, perhaps, is a showpiece of his other talents: his arranging skills, brilliant knack for a gimmick; his general charisma and, above all, his terrific songwriting. It’s telling that two of the best songs are taken from one of his least well-received albums, the Raconteurs’ “Consolers Of The Lonely”. “Top Yourself” and, especially, the Dylanish parable “Carolina Drama” aren’t just great songs, they’re the old songs that are least altered from their original incarnations. If the sparky piano pop of “Blunderbuss” has affinities with “Get Behind Me Satan”, its ornate bombast has its most obvious roots in that curious, underrated second Raconteurs album. Let me know what you thought if you were at the show, anyhow – and, come to that, what you think of “Blunderbuss” now it’s finally been released. I’m also very keen to hear your reports of the male band, if you’ve caught White with them. A reminder, too, that my interview with Jack White is in the issue of Uncut on sale for the next couple of days. And here are some links to other things I’ve written about him in the past: A piece about “Blunderbuss” The White Stripes, “Under Great White Northern Lights” The White Stripes, Hyde Park, July 2007 The Raconteurs, Hammersmith Apollo, May 2008 The White Stripes, “Icky Thump” The Raconteurs, “Consolers Of The Lonely” SETLIST 1. 'Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground' 2. 'Freedom At 21' 3. ‘Missing Pieces’ 4. 'Love Interruption' 5. 'Top Yourself' 6. 'Hotel Yorba' 7. 'Hypocritical Kiss' 8. 'Weep Themselves To Sleep' 9. 'I'm Slowly Turning Into You' 10. 'Two Against One' 11. 'We're Going To Be Friends' 12. 'On And On And On' 13. 'Blue Blood Blues' 14. 'Ball And Biscuit' # 15. ‘Sixteen Saltines’ 16. 'Take Me With You When You Go' 17. 'My Doorbell' 18. 'Carolina Drama' 19. 'Seven Nation Army' 20. 'Goodnight, Irene' Follow me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/JohnRMulvey

How to tell whether Jack White has brought his male or his female band along to a show? As the suited roadcrew prepare the stage at the Forum, one suspects the answer might be in the drumkit, sheathed until the very last moment; something about the positioning of Daru Jones’ bass drum, perhaps?

When the sheet comes off, at 9.45, the kit is configured more or less normally – though sat at stage front, to one side, in the kind of space once occupied by Meg White. This is where Carla Azar will ply her trade, at one end of a stage-wide curve of female musicians who are required to do tonight’s shift as White’s backing band. White might stalk over to her kit from time to time and eyeball her in the way he used to approach his sister, but from the moment Azar starts playing “Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground”, her style is radically different – more intricate, perhaps inevitably – than her predecessor.

“Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground” is a good test case for the new, expanded White vision: can his old White Stripes songs withstand being worked over by a big band, with fiddle, pedal steel and cascading keyboards to the fore? The answer, reassuringly, is yes. The accumulated gravity doesn’t make this and “Seven Nation Army” (now with bassline played on an actual bass) sound any less like Led Zeppelin. But it does illustrate how robust and flexible White’s songs are. Liberated from the minimalist novelty of The White Stripes, their power is undimmed; their odd, quivering potential to excite remains just as strong.

Some, you could argue, even come out stronger: “Hotel Yorba”, flourishing as a full hoedown; a grandly hysterical “I’m Slowly Turning Into You”, with White’s vocals dissolving in every line into those of Ruby Amanfu; “My Doorbell”, with Brooke Waggoner taking the piano line and White fleshing out the original wonky strut of the song with his guitar. Only “We Are Going To Be Friends” comes out worse, to these ears. Early on in the life of these new bands, White is evidently fascinated by the rich possibilities of how his songs can be filled out. Sometimes, as with “Friends”, a little more space would be a useful weapon, a respite from the ominous drone of the violin and steel which packs every available space in nearly all of these songs.

Of the new material, “Hypocritical Kiss” and “Weep Themselves To Sleep” remain outstanding, allowing Waggoner to come to the fore with her dramatic piano lines, and pushing the fiddle of Lilie May Rische a little more into the background (Rische, incidentally, emerges as White’s main foil as the evening progresses, stepping into his floor space for some slightly awkward face-offs). “Weep Themselves To Sleep” features, too, a small and wonderfully splenetic guitar solo from the unusually restrained White.

If there’s a main criticism of the show, in fact, it may be that White doesn’t let rip often enough, as if the experiment of working through these songs with a full band is rather inhibiting his explosive guitar playing. Besides “Weep…”, a glimpse of his power can be found in the sliding, geometrical frenzy of “Freedom At 21”. But it’s not until “Ball And Biscuit”, closing the main set, that he unleashes the sort of astonishing, wild extemporisations that made his name.

Tonight, perhaps, is a showpiece of his other talents: his arranging skills, brilliant knack for a gimmick; his general charisma and, above all, his terrific songwriting. It’s telling that two of the best songs are taken from one of his least well-received albums, the Raconteurs’ “Consolers Of The Lonely”. “Top Yourself” and, especially, the Dylanish parable “Carolina Drama” aren’t just great songs, they’re the old songs that are least altered from their original incarnations. If the sparky piano pop of “Blunderbuss” has affinities with “Get Behind Me Satan”, its ornate bombast has its most obvious roots in that curious, underrated second Raconteurs album.

Let me know what you thought if you were at the show, anyhow – and, come to that, what you think of “Blunderbuss” now it’s finally been released. I’m also very keen to hear your reports of the male band, if you’ve caught White with them.

A reminder, too, that my interview with Jack White is in the issue of Uncut on sale for the next couple of days. And here are some links to other things I’ve written about him in the past:

A piece about “Blunderbuss”

The White Stripes, “Under Great White Northern Lights”

The White Stripes, Hyde Park, July 2007

The Raconteurs, Hammersmith Apollo, May 2008

The White Stripes, “Icky Thump”

The Raconteurs, “Consolers Of The Lonely”

SETLIST

1. ‘Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground’

2. ‘Freedom At 21’

3. ‘Missing Pieces’

4. ‘Love Interruption’

5. ‘Top Yourself’

6. ‘Hotel Yorba’

7. ‘Hypocritical Kiss’

8. ‘Weep Themselves To Sleep’

9. ‘I’m Slowly Turning Into You’

10. ‘Two Against One’

11. ‘We’re Going To Be Friends’

12. ‘On And On And On’

13. ‘Blue Blood Blues’

14. ‘Ball And Biscuit’

#

15. ‘Sixteen Saltines’

16. ‘Take Me With You When You Go’

17. ‘My Doorbell’

18. ‘Carolina Drama’

19. ‘Seven Nation Army’

20. ‘Goodnight, Irene’

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

June 2012

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Excuse me for looking perhaps a little startled, but I've just been told in the slightly murmuring voice of someone similarly shocked by the turn of events that on May 1, just after this issue goes on sale, it will be 15 years since we put out the first Uncut. I'd suggest a drink if we had the time...

Excuse me for looking perhaps a little startled, but I’ve just been told in the slightly murmuring voice of someone similarly shocked by the turn of events that on May 1, just after this issue goes on sale, it will be 15 years since we put out the first Uncut.

I’d suggest a drink if we had the time, which we don’t at the moment, deadlines snapping at our heels like angry dogs and all that and still quite a bit to do as I write before the final pages are finished and dispatched to the printer. We’ve had one or two unscheduled dramas that have made the last few days a little lively, but there’s been nothing truly comparable to the flat-out sense of breathless mayhem that attended the 1997 launch of Uncut, that galloping rush to meet a looming on sale date that with every passing day grew ominously closer, like some malignant asteroid heading our way.

We had been given the green light to go ahead with Uncut on the singular and somewhat sobering condition that we get that first issue out in a little over six weeks, our confident bravado that this would be easily accomplished quickly giving way to nervous apprehension. I mean, at the time there was no staff to speak of, just me and our original art editor. Since we didn’t actually have an office for the first week, either, it was probably just as well we hadn’t yet hired anyone to work with us as there would have been nowhere to put them – no desks, no chairs, no computers, nothing.

When we eventually moved into the empty space that would be our home for the next few years, there were a few more of us, a fax machine no-one could successfully figure out how to work, the random pressing of buttons producing from the thing only a tragic wheeze or two that made it sound like it was expiring in quiet anguish, a bit like those of us who were by now feeling more than a bit ragged as a succession of very long days now included regular night shifts, no-one getting out of what passed for the Uncut office until what are commonly known as the wee small hours, a hollow-eyed time.

We made our deadlines, of course, with no staff fatalities, and on the designated date nervously revealed ourselves to the world. Looking back at it now, the issue no doubt shows signs of its hasty assembly, but what for the foreseeable future Uncut would be is already there, with an editorial lineup that mixed features on Elvis Costello, Taxi Driver, Bob Dylan, Sam Peckinpah, The Who, Clint Eastwood, Counting Crows and Quentin Tarantino.

If you’ve been with Uncut from the start, or somewhere near it, thanks for sticking with us and I hope you enjoy the new issue and everything in it – the Dexys interview, by the way, is a cracker.

Enjoy the issue and any thoughts you have on it, let me know, as ever, at: allan_jones@ipcmedia.com

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Paul McCartney: ‘I was getting ready to lose the plot’

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Paul McCartney has revealed the turmoil behind the making of his second solo album Ram, in an all-new interview in the latest Uncut, out on Thursday, April 26. The record, credited to Paul and Linda McCartney and originally released in 1971, was written and recorded at a time when the bassist was...

Paul McCartney has revealed the turmoil behind the making of his second solo album Ram, in an all-new interview in the latest Uncut, out on Thursday, April 26.

The record, credited to Paul and Linda McCartney and originally released in 1971, was written and recorded at a time when the bassist was locked in a lawsuit with the other Beatles and being hounded by the press.

In the all-new interview, McCartney explained that his marriage and his farm on the remote Kintyre peninsula in Scotland kept him sane, saying: “Linda encouraged me not to get too down… I was getting ready to lose the plot.

“I think we’d both had enough of cities. It was a big relief to escape.”

Ram, reissued on May 21, was recorded just before McCartney filed a lawsuit against the other Beatles to dissolve their partnership.

In the new issue of Uncut, the legend explains the background to the court action, and also clarifies the extent of the jibes aimed at John Lennon in songs like “Too Many People”.

The new issue of Uncut, dated June 2012, is in shops from Thursday, April 26.

Picture: © Paul McCartney. Photographer: Linda McCartney.

Jack White brings ‘Blunderbuss’ to London for first solo UK show

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Jack White played his first solo UK show last night [April 23], headlining the HMV Forum the day his debut solo album Blunderbuss'was released. The former White Stripes man was watched by stars including The Mighty Boosh duo Noel Fielding and Julian Barratt, plus Alabama Shakes, who are set to supp...

Jack White played his first solo UK show last night [April 23], headlining the HMV Forum the day his debut solo album Blunderbuss’was released.

The former White Stripes man was watched by stars including The Mighty Boosh duo Noel Fielding and Julian Barratt, plus Alabama Shakes, who are set to support him on his May UK tour dates, and BBC Radio One’s Fearne Cotton.

Blunderbuss hit the shelves yesterday and the set was heavy with songs from the record. However, he and his all-female backing band also found space for The White Stripes “My Doorbell”, “Hotel Yorba”, “We’re Going To Be Friends” and “Seven Nation Army”.

Tracks by his other bands The Raconteurs and The Dead Weather also got a look in, with “Top Yourself” and “Carolina Drama” by the former and “Blue Blood Blues” and “I Cut Like A Buffalo” by the latter making the setlist. He also played “Two Against One”, from his Rome collaboration album with Danger Mouse and Daniel Luppi, plus folk standard “Goodnight, Irene” to close the show.

White is set to return in June for more UK gigs, including a set at Radio 1’s Hackney Weekend event in London on June 23.

Jack White played:

‘Dead Leaves And The Dirty Ground’

‘Freedom At 21’

‘First song on album’

‘Love Interruption’

‘Top Yourself’

‘Hotel Yorba’

‘Hypocritical Kiss’

‘Weep Themselves To Sleep’

‘I’m Slowly Turning Into You’

‘Two Against One’

‘We’re Going To Be Friends’

‘On And On And On’

‘I Cut Like A Buffalo’

‘Blue Blood Blues’

‘Ball And Biscuit’

‘Take Me With You When You Go’

‘My Doorbell’

‘Carolina Drama’

‘Seven Nation Army’

‘Goodnight, Irene’

Cat Power announces release of new album, Sun

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Cat Power is set to release her ninth album, Sun, this autumn. The LP will follow the singer songwriter's 2008 covers album Jukebox and 2006's The Greatest and will be out in the UK on September 10. Over Christmas last year Cat Power posted the video for her single "King Rides By" featuring a cam...

Cat Power is set to release her ninth album, Sun, this autumn.

The LP will follow the singer songwriter’s 2008 covers album Jukebox and 2006’s The Greatest and will be out in the UK on September 10.

Over Christmas last year Cat Power posted the video for her single “King Rides By” featuring a cameo from boxer Manny Pacquiao online. The track was available as a download from the singer’s official website, with its proceeds going towards the charities the Festival Of Children Foundation and The Al Forney Centre.

In December 2011, the singer also took to her Twitter page Twitter.com/catpower to confirm that she had nearly finished work on the new album.

Previously, Cat Power had stated her intention to play every instrument on the record. “There’s an inspiration in being furious that you want to achieve your goals. I think I was inspired by being disappointed in myself that I’d just been holding the microphone and I was disappointed in myself that I hadn’t been playing an instrument,” she explained.

“I think I wanted to prove to myself that I could try to create a relationship with it [playing an instrument] again and feel like I felt close to it. It’s definitely there and it’s a need [for me to play], but it hasn’t been around.”

The Flying Burrito Brothers’ Chris Ethridge dies

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Chris Ethridge, bass player with The Flying Burrito Brothers, has died at the age of 65, from complications from pancreatic cancer according to the Los Angeles Times. Ethridge also played with the Willie Nelson Family Band, and it was Nelson who confirmed news of his bandmate's death, via Twitter, ...

Chris Ethridge, bass player with The Flying Burrito Brothers, has died at the age of 65, from complications from pancreatic cancer according to the Los Angeles Times.

Ethridge also played with the Willie Nelson Family Band, and it was Nelson who confirmed news of his bandmate’s death, via Twitter, writing:

WN&F are sad to hear of the passing of Family member & friend Chris Ethridge he was a talented musician & we were honored to call him Family

Last week, musician Booker T Jones wrote on Twitter: “Just talked to Chris Ethridge, (Burritos, Willie Nelson), hospitalized in Meridian, MS – send love and hope – doctors say he will pass soon.”

Ethridge co-wrote a number of songs with fellow Flying Brother Brothers member Gram Parsons, who died in 1973, including Parson’s solo track, ‘She’. Both were also members of the International Submarine Band. The Flying Burrito Brothers released their debut album, The Gilded Palace of Sin, in 1969.

In the late 1970s, Ethridge became a well respected session player in the country rock world, working with the likes of Linda Ronstadt, Jackson Browne, Ry Cooder and Leon Russell.

Ex-Byrd and Burrito Brother Chris Hillman said in a statement to the LA Times: “Here’s what people don’t know or don’t remember. Three of Gram’s greatest songs were co-written by Chris: those would be ‘Hot Burrito #1,’ ‘Hot Burrito #2’ and ‘She.’ And I’ve always said: Gram Parsons’ greatest recorded vocals were those two [‘Hot Burrito’] songs. Maybe it’s my opinion, but I was there and I know I never heard him sing better than he did on those two songs. He just nailed ‘em.”

T. Rex – Electric Warrior Deluxe Edition

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Glamiversary! Bolan's seminal rocker remastered with B-sides, demos and outtakes... Electric Warrior – released in September 1971 – is the fundament of glam rock. Falling between T.Rex and The Slider, and released in September 1971, its achievement is remarkable given that it came almost a full year before the release of Roxy Music and The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust…. T.Rex at this moment still offered the rarefied version of what the next wave (Mud, Sweet, Glitter, Slade) would soon convert into hod-carriers’ high camp – rock ’n’ roll for rouged roofers. The secret lay in the time-travelling eclecticism of all three; Bolan had been laundered through the washing machine of successive 60s subcultures, from Mod to psychedelic folk, but already in Tyrannosaurus Rex the nostalgic troubadour impulse had been lavishly embellished with orientalist, rococo degree of pantomime that bordered on kitsch – onyx statuettes glimpsed through aspidistra leaves. Bolan’s very public friendship with John Peel ensured plenty of radio exposure in the previous years, but he began to cut the DJ dead around now, jumping from the sinking Perfumed Garden/Middle Earth ship and restyling himself as a galactic rock star retooled for the 1970s. Even the ambience of Tony Visconti’s production is very different from the Joe Boyd/John Wood-style sound of folk-rock: Bill Legend’s drums swathed in a claustrophobic flutter-echo; Mickey Finn’s stipplings of congas and bongos; supermarket string arrangements; thong-tight humbucker fuzz from Bolan’s guitars; and his breathy vocal close up to the mic and shorn of its woolliest Tyrannosaurus Rex tics. No longer the clatter of a band in a room, the soundworld of Electric Warrior is an artificial acoustic palace of mirrors, curling smoke and follow-spots. “Mambo Sun” is an irresistibly seductive entry point: a sultry love-torpedo that knows what it wants and knows how to get it. Up next is “Cosmic Dancer” – a tune I can’t hear without recalling choreographer Michael Clark’s brilliant solo interpretation in the early 90s – whose luscious strings afford a taste of suave romanticism with none of Bolan’s former scene-scoffery. That cynicism rears its head on “Rip Off”, though you have to listen past some of Bolan’s absurdest couplets to date (“The President’s weird/He’s got a burgundy beard”? “Mountains of the moon/Remind me of my spoon”?). Bolan’s oral obsession – first noted on “Juniper Suction”, a tribute to girlfriend June Child’s skills as a fellatrix – resurfaces on “Jeepster” in slightly unsettling fashion: “Girl I’m just a vampire for your love… and I’m gonna suck ya!” Then of course, there’s “Get It On (Bang A Gong)” (the title was originally the other way round, until US jazz rockers Chase beat them to the punch with a different “Get It On” – thousands of sleeves needed to be overprinted). A brilliant pop single by any measure, fizzing with Spangles hysteria, you can hear the erotic sugar rush raging on Bolan’s pent-up count-in. EXTRAS: This edition includes the more sedate hit “Hot Love”, plus B sides “There Was A Time/Raw Ramp”, and “King Of The Mountain Cometh” and “Woodland Rock”, a smooth fusion of Chuck Berry and backwards-guitar psych. The bonus audio disc is a real treat, containing unheard alternative versions and startlingly intimate home demos recorded by a lone Bolan. The ten track DVD included with the Super Deluxe Edition displays a band growing up scarily fast over a two year period. On Top Of The Pops in March 1971 T.Rex still presented as a duo – Bolan and bassist Steve Currie – with Finn on drums apologetically buried in the gyrating crowd. A full year before Ziggy’s appearance, Bolan looks every inch the glam prince, resplendent in silver pyjamas. By Christmas – now with the full Electric Warrior line-up, augmented by Elton John on piano – he’s sporting glitter blobs on his cheeks, pink loon pants and a Flying V. With its frugging dollybirds, coruscating reflective surfaces and inventive camerawork, it’s an absolute classic TOTP clip that screams ‘rock star’ from every angle. Official promos for “Get It On” and “Jeepster”, by contrast, are daringly minimal and starkly lit, filmed handheld against a black backdrop. Six months later, in footage from the Empire Pool Wembley (unused scraps from the Born To Boogie movie), he’s noticeably aged and filled out, a reminder that this heyday for T.Rex would be fleeting. Electric Warrior captures the group at a time when there was still a trace of innocent pleasure left, and this remastered edition does it full justice. Rob Young Q&A TONY VISCONTI How much planning went into the album? There were no plans in those days! Electric Warrior was born amidst the chaos of a disastrous US tour. Marc’s management booked a little tour and at the same time I was back in New York on holiday. Whilst we were there I phoned [label boss] David Platz and was told that “Hot Love” was No 1 and they badly needed an album. We booked a little studio and did three tracks in New York: “Jeepster”, “Monolith” and “Girl”. By the time we left the US we had six songs recorded, then we came back to London and finished it. Were you aware you were creating something special? At times in the studio Marc and I wereabsolutely high on music. We were suddenly so clear about how to make a great record. I’ve had that since but that was the first time I’d experienced it. It was oozing from us. Is still sounds incredibly fresh... Most glam rock is sugary sweet and now sounds dated, but we were right at the beginning of that period. What happened immediately afterwards was glam rock, but we were simply making an organic rock’n’roll album with classic sounds. Everyone from Bono to Slash tells me that record was a major influence. INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Glamiversary! Bolan’s seminal rocker remastered with B-sides, demos and outtakes…

Electric Warrior – released in September 1971 – is the fundament of glam rock. Falling between T.Rex and The Slider, and released in September 1971, its achievement is remarkable given that it came almost a full year before the release of Roxy Music and The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust…. T.Rex at this moment still offered the rarefied version of what the next wave (Mud, Sweet, Glitter, Slade) would soon convert into hod-carriers’ high camp – rock ’n’ roll for rouged roofers. The secret lay in the time-travelling eclecticism of all three; Bolan had been laundered through the washing machine of successive 60s subcultures, from Mod to psychedelic folk, but already in Tyrannosaurus Rex the nostalgic troubadour impulse had been lavishly embellished with orientalist, rococo degree of pantomime that bordered on kitsch – onyx statuettes glimpsed through aspidistra leaves.

Bolan’s very public friendship with John Peel ensured plenty of radio exposure in the previous years, but he began to cut the DJ dead around now, jumping from the sinking Perfumed Garden/Middle Earth ship and restyling himself as a galactic rock star retooled for the 1970s. Even the ambience of Tony Visconti’s production is very different from the Joe Boyd/John Wood-style sound of folk-rock: Bill Legend’s drums swathed in a claustrophobic flutter-echo; Mickey Finn’s stipplings of congas and bongos; supermarket string arrangements; thong-tight humbucker fuzz from Bolan’s guitars; and his breathy vocal close up to the mic and shorn of its woolliest Tyrannosaurus Rex tics. No longer the clatter of a band in a room, the soundworld of Electric Warrior is an artificial acoustic palace of mirrors, curling smoke and follow-spots.

“Mambo Sun” is an irresistibly seductive entry point: a sultry love-torpedo that knows what it wants and knows how to get it. Up next is “Cosmic Dancer” – a tune I can’t hear without recalling choreographer Michael Clark’s brilliant solo interpretation in the early 90s – whose luscious strings afford a taste of suave romanticism with none of Bolan’s former scene-scoffery. That cynicism rears its head on “Rip Off”, though you have to listen past some of Bolan’s absurdest couplets to date (“The President’s weird/He’s got a burgundy beard”? “Mountains of the moon/Remind me of my spoon”?).

Bolan’s oral obsession – first noted on “Juniper Suction”, a tribute to girlfriend June Child’s skills as a fellatrix – resurfaces on “Jeepster” in slightly unsettling fashion: “Girl I’m just a vampire for your love… and I’m gonna suck ya!” Then of course, there’s “Get It On (Bang A Gong)” (the title was originally the other way round, until US jazz rockers Chase beat them to the punch with a different “Get It On” – thousands of sleeves needed to be overprinted). A brilliant pop single by any measure, fizzing with Spangles hysteria, you can hear the erotic sugar rush raging on Bolan’s pent-up count-in.

EXTRAS: This edition includes the more sedate hit “Hot Love”, plus B sides “There Was A Time/Raw Ramp”, and “King Of The Mountain Cometh” and “Woodland Rock”, a smooth fusion of Chuck Berry and backwards-guitar psych. The bonus audio disc is a real treat, containing unheard alternative versions and startlingly intimate home demos recorded by a lone Bolan.

The ten track DVD included with the Super Deluxe Edition displays a band growing up scarily fast over a two year period. On Top Of The Pops in March 1971 T.Rex still presented as a duo – Bolan and bassist Steve Currie – with Finn on drums apologetically buried in the gyrating crowd. A full year before Ziggy’s appearance, Bolan looks every inch the glam prince, resplendent in silver pyjamas. By Christmas – now with the full Electric Warrior line-up, augmented by Elton John on piano – he’s sporting glitter blobs on his cheeks, pink loon pants and a Flying V. With its frugging dollybirds, coruscating reflective surfaces and inventive camerawork, it’s an absolute classic TOTP clip that screams ‘rock star’ from every angle. Official promos for “Get It On” and “Jeepster”, by contrast, are daringly minimal and starkly lit, filmed handheld against a black backdrop. Six months later, in footage from the Empire Pool Wembley (unused scraps from the Born To Boogie movie), he’s noticeably aged and filled out, a reminder that this heyday for T.Rex would be fleeting. Electric Warrior captures the group at a time when there was still a trace of innocent pleasure left, and this remastered edition does it full justice.

Rob Young

Q&A

TONY VISCONTI

How much planning went into the album?

There were no plans in those days! Electric Warrior was born amidst the chaos of a disastrous US tour. Marc’s management booked a little tour and at the same time I was back in New York on holiday. Whilst we were there I phoned [label boss] David Platz and was told that “Hot Love” was No 1 and they badly needed an album. We booked a little studio and did three tracks in New York: “Jeepster”, “Monolith” and “Girl”. By the time we left the US we had six songs recorded, then we came back to London and finished it.

Were you aware you were creating something special?

At times in the studio Marc and I wereabsolutely high on music. We were suddenly so clear about how to make a great record. I’ve had that since but that was the first time I’d experienced it. It was oozing from us.

Is still sounds incredibly fresh…

Most glam rock is sugary sweet and now sounds dated, but we were right at the beginning of that period. What happened immediately afterwards was glam rock, but we were simply making an organic rock’n’roll album with classic sounds. Everyone from Bono to Slash tells me that record was a major influence.

INTERVIEW: GRAEME THOMSON

Bob Dylan pays tribute to Levon Helm

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Bob Dylan has paid tribute to Levon Helm, the former drummer with The Band, who passed away on Thursday April 19, aged 71. Dylan collaborated with The Band over the course of their career, first on Dylan's 1965 American tour. They worked together on the 1967 sessions that were eventually released a...

Bob Dylan has paid tribute to Levon Helm, the former drummer with The Band, who passed away on Thursday April 19, aged 71.

Dylan collaborated with The Band over the course of their career, first on Dylan’s 1965 American tour. They worked together on the 1967 sessions that were eventually released as The Basement Tapes, and also a joint 1974 tour.

Writing on bobdylan.com, Dylan said:

“He was my bosom buddy friend to the end, one of the last true great spirits of my or any other generation.

This is just so sad to talk about.

I still can remember the first day I met him and the last day I saw him. We go back pretty far and had been through some trials together. I’m going to miss him, as I’m sure a whole lot of others will too.”

Meanwhile, Martin Scorsese, who filmed The Band’s final live performance in 1976 at San Francisco’s Winterland, issued this statement:

“The late Jim Carroll once said that Levon Helm was the only drummer who could make you cry, and he was absolutely right. Levon’s touch was so delicate, so deft, that he gave you more than just a beat — he gave the music a pulse. And his high, ringing voice was just as soulful. His bandmate Robbie Robertson wrote “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down” for Levon to sing, and I’ll never forget how moving it was to watch him sing it during their final performance at Winterland, which is one of the high points of the movie we made from that show, The Last Waltz. Levon was a gentleman, a consummate artist (and, I might add, a wonderful actor — his performance as Loretta Lynn’s father in Coal Miner’s Daughter is rich, understated and very moving), and he loved music as deeply and truly as anyone I’ve ever met. I consider myself fortunate to have worked with Levon, and I am one among many, many people who will miss him.”

Spiritualized announce UK tour

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Spiritualized have announced a six-date UK tour for November. The band - whose new album, Sweet Heart Sweet Light, entered the UK Album Charts yesterday at No 11 - will play the following dates: Thu 1 November Gateshead, The Sage Gateshead Fri 2 November Cambridge, The Jun...

Spiritualized have announced a six-date UK tour for November.

The band – whose new album, Sweet Heart Sweet Light, entered the UK Album Charts yesterday at No 11 – will play the following dates:

Thu 1 November Gateshead, The Sage Gateshead

Fri 2 November Cambridge, The Junction

Sat 3 November Leeds, Metropolitan University

Sun 4 November Coventry, Warwick Arts Centre

Mon 5 November London, Roundhouse

Tue 6 November Brighton, Corn Exchange

Tickets go on sale at 9am on Wednesday, April 25.

Iggy Pop covers The Beatles, Frank Sinatra, Edith Piaf on new album

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Iggy Pop has announced that he will release a new covers album next month, which will feature renditions of tracks by the likes of Frank Sinatra, The Beatles and Edith Piaf. The album, which is titled Apres, will be released on May 9 and contains 10 tracks in total. Among them are covers of Sinat...

Iggy Pop has announced that he will release a new covers album next month, which will feature renditions of tracks by the likes of Frank Sinatra, The Beatles and Edith Piaf.

The album, which is titled Apres, will be released on May 9 and contains 10 tracks in total.

Among them are covers of Sinatra’s “Only The Lonely”, The Beatles’ “Michelle”, Edith Piaf’s “La Vie En Rose”, Serge Gainsbourg’s “La Javanaise” and Yoko Ono’s “I’m Going Away Smiling”.

The album is the follow-up to Iggy Pop’s 2009 album, Préliminaires.

Pop said of Apres: “All popular music forms of today get their strength from the beat. Rap, hip-hop, metal, pop, and rock producers will tell you that the beats they use imitate the human heartbeat and that is where the power lies. I’ve always loved this other feeling, one that is intimate, sometimes a little sad, and does not try to beat me on the head.”

He continued: “I wanted to sing some of these songs myself, hoping to bring the feeling I felt as a listener to my listeners through my voice. Many of these songs are in French, probably because it is French culture which has most stubbornly resisted the mortal attacks of the Anglo-American music machine.”

The tracklisting for Apres is as follows:

‘Et Si Tu N’existais Pas’

‘La Javanaise’

‘Everybody’s Talkin”

‘I’m Going Away Smiling’

‘La Vie En Rose’

‘Les Passantes’

‘Syracuse’

‘What Is This Thing Called Love?’

‘Michelle’

‘Only The Lonely’

No Last Waltz: A Tribute To Levon Helm By Simone Felice

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A couple of years ago when I was in Woodstock to interview Simone Felice and his band, The Duke & The King, Simone drove me around the mountains where he’d grown up, pointing out places of local and historical interest. These included Big Pink, the house on Parnassus Lane in West Saugerties, where Dylan and The Band recorded The Basement Tapes. The Band, of course, were a particular influence on Simone’s previous group, The Felice Brothers – on the cover of their Tonight At The Arizona album, they even looked like them, black-suited in a variety of hats, like figures from a pioneer landscape. When the bad news came through last week that Levon Helm had died, I remembered that afternoon in the Catskills, sunlight blazing through towering trees, hawks drifting full-winged in the sky above us as we took the mountain roads at a hair-raising lick, Simone recalling how as a kid he used to ride his bike by Big Pink, that place of legend, and how just recently he had played at one of Helm’s legendary Rambles. This morning, an email from Simone was forwarded to me that included the piece that follows, written by Simone in memory of Levon, after hearing about his death on the way to a show in Dublin on Saturday night. NO LAST WALTZ I am on a ferryboat from Hollyhead to Dublin when I get the news from home: Levon has passed away. First thing I do is turn my head to the window and find the cold blue sea beyond, the waves like a living, dancing quilt rolling out to meet the sky. Could it have been little more than a month back that I sat on a wooden bench not five feet from his drum-riser as he played and sang The Band classic “Ophelia” with the grace of a veteran dancer, the spirit of a country preacher, at once weather-worn, fiery, weary, lithe, laboured, imperishable. It is true there was a gleam in his eye. Like a school-boy skipping classes all afternoon to while the hours away with friends down by the river's edge, elemental wonders, joyful just to live within earshot of the sound of music. I've had the extraordinary privilege to have shared the stage with Levon, one of the great honours of my life, to have been one of those children dodging the truant officer, my toes in the rushing water, a dream. Levon Helm is more than a drummer. More than a singer. He is a natural force, akin to weather and rain, not very different from the quiet wood in which he made his home, the wind that whips the trees. You could walk from Arkansas to Alberta, Winnipeg to Woodstock and you'd be hard-pressed to find a more soulful, gracious man. I can't assume to know where our heroes go when they die. Nirvana. Heaven. The tremendous band in the sky, assembled in the round, together there on a sun-kissed, better shore. Whatever it's called, wherever it is, you can bet the farm that today the bells are ringing there, and the people are singing. Because Levon knows what we can only guess: that there is no last waltz. That we'll forever file in through the barn door with the ones we love, drawn by the firelight, grab our children and go round and round in a dance interminable. We doe-see-doe. We stomp the boards. Shout. Kiss. Cry. Sing. Spin. Laugh. Squeal. Study the stars through the gaps in the ceiling. Simone Felice, 19th of April, 2012 Levon helm pic: Ahron R Foster

A couple of years ago when I was in Woodstock to interview Simone Felice and his band, The Duke & The King, Simone drove me around the mountains where he’d grown up, pointing out places of local and historical interest. These included Big Pink, the house on Parnassus Lane in West Saugerties, where Dylan and The Band recorded The Basement Tapes.

The Band, of course, were a particular influence on Simone’s previous group, The Felice Brothers – on the cover of their Tonight At The Arizona album, they even looked like them, black-suited in a variety of hats, like figures from a pioneer landscape.

When the bad news came through last week that Levon Helm had died, I remembered that afternoon in the Catskills, sunlight blazing through towering trees, hawks drifting full-winged in the sky above us as we took the mountain roads at a hair-raising lick, Simone recalling how as a kid he used to ride his bike by Big Pink, that place of legend, and how just recently he had played at one of Helm’s legendary Rambles.

This morning, an email from Simone was forwarded to me that included the piece that follows, written by Simone in memory of Levon, after hearing about his death on the way to a show in Dublin on Saturday night.

NO LAST WALTZ

I am on a ferryboat from Hollyhead to Dublin when I get the news from home: Levon has passed away.

First thing I do is turn my head to the window and find the cold blue sea beyond, the waves like a living, dancing quilt rolling out to meet the sky.

Could it have been little more than a month back that I sat on a wooden bench not five feet from his drum-riser as he played and sang The Band classic “Ophelia” with the grace of a veteran dancer, the spirit of a country preacher, at once weather-worn, fiery, weary, lithe, laboured, imperishable.

It is true there was a gleam in his eye. Like a school-boy skipping classes all afternoon to while the hours away with friends down by the river’s edge, elemental wonders, joyful just to live within earshot of the sound of music.

I’ve had the extraordinary privilege to have shared the stage with Levon, one of the great honours of my life, to have been one of those children dodging the truant officer, my toes in the rushing water, a dream.

Levon Helm is more than a drummer. More than a singer. He is a natural force, akin to weather and rain, not very different from the quiet wood in which he made his home, the wind that whips the trees. You could walk from Arkansas to Alberta, Winnipeg to Woodstock and you’d be hard-pressed to find a more soulful, gracious man.

I can’t assume to know where our heroes go when they die. Nirvana. Heaven. The tremendous band in the sky, assembled in the round, together there on a sun-kissed, better shore. Whatever it’s called, wherever it is, you can bet the farm that today the bells are ringing there, and the people are singing.

Because Levon knows what we can only guess: that there is no last waltz. That we’ll forever file in through the barn door with the ones we love, drawn by the firelight, grab our children and go round and round in a dance interminable. We doe-see-doe. We stomp the boards. Shout. Kiss. Cry. Sing. Spin. Laugh. Squeal. Study the stars through the gaps in the ceiling.

Simone Felice, 19th of April, 2012

Levon helm pic: Ahron R Foster

Paul McCartney pays tribute to Bert Weedon

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Paul McCartney has paid tribute to Bert Weedon, who died on Friday [April 20] aged 91. Known as Mr Guitar, Weedon was a huge influence on some of the biggest names in music. Eric Clapton has said that he had "never met a player of any consequence" who had not learned from Weedon's 'Play In A Day' ...

Paul McCartney has paid tribute to Bert Weedon, who died on Friday [April 20] aged 91.

Known as Mr Guitar, Weedon was a huge influence on some of the biggest names in music.

Eric Clapton has said that he had “never met a player of any consequence” who had not learned from Weedon’s ‘Play In A Day’ books.

Paul McCartney, George Harrison and John Lennon all admitted to using Weeden’s manuals to help them learn guitar.

In a message on his website, paulmccartney.com, the former Beatle wrote:

:Dear Bert – we will miss him. From early childhood throughout our lives he was Britain’s Mr Guitar. He seemed to be the first person we saw on television showing us how to play and he left a lasting impression on us. We use to joke about how he played a thousand notes a minute but we were always impressed with him. Like us, he loved the guitar and communicated that passion to many generations. Bert, we’ll miss you.”

Flaming Lips’ Record Store Day album for iTunes release

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Flaming Lips' frontman Wayne Coyne has confirmed that Heady Fewnds, the Lips' vinyl-only collaboration with Bon Iver, Nick Cave, Yoko Ono, Ke$ha, Neon Indian and others is due for a future digital release. Coyne confirmed in a Twitter conversation with Ke$ha that the album, released for Record Stor...

Flaming Lips‘ frontman Wayne Coyne has confirmed that Heady Fewnds, the Lips’ vinyl-only collaboration with Bon Iver, Nick Cave, Yoko Ono, Ke$ha, Neon Indian and others is due for a future digital release.

Coyne confirmed in a Twitter conversation with Ke$ha that the album, released for Record Store Day, will be released via iTunes in “about a month”.

The full tracklisting for Heady Fewnds is:

1. ‘2012 (You Must Be Upgraded)’ (featuring Ke$ha and Biz Markie)

2. ‘Ashes in the Air’ (featuring Bon Iver)

3. ‘Helping the Retarded to Find God’ (featuring Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros)

4. ‘Supermoon Made Me Want to Pee’ (featuring Prefuse 73)

5. ‘Children of the Moon’ (featuring Tame Impala)

6. ‘That Ain’t My Trip’ (featuring Jim James)

7. ‘You, Man? Human???’ (featuring Nick Cave)

8. ‘I’m Working at NASA on Acid’ (featuring Lightning Bolt)

9. ‘Do It!’ (featuring Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band)

10. ‘Is David Bowie Dying?’ (featuring Neon Indian)

11. ‘The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face’ (featuring Erykah Badu)

12. ‘Girl, You’re So Weird’ (featuring New Fumes)

13. ‘I Don’t Want You to Die’ (featuring Chris Martin)

Bright Eyes’ Conor Oberst to open his own bar

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Bright Eyes mainman Conor Oberst is to open his own bar in his home state of Omaha. The singer, who released his latest album The People's Key in early 2011, is planning the venture with friend and fellow Omaha musician, Phil Schaffart. The bar, which will not host live music, is set to be named T...

Bright Eyes mainman Conor Oberst is to open his own bar in his home state of Omaha.

The singer, who released his latest album The People’s Key in early 2011, is planning the venture with friend and fellow Omaha musician, Phil Schaffart.

The bar, which will not host live music, is set to be named The Pageturners Lounge after the bookshop which previously inhabited the space. Oberst and Schaffert bought the premises in February.

Schaffert told the Omaha World-Herald that he and Oberst have been planning to open a bar for years, but they were still at least three months away from being open for business. Oberst and Schaffert will have their application for an alcohol license heard tomorrow [April 24].

It was also revealed over the weekend that Conor Oberst will reunite with his former band Desaparecidos for a one-off show in August.

The band will perform alongside Garbage at the Maha Music Festival in their home state of Nebraska. It is set to be their first show since the summer of 2010.

Radiohead’s Thom Yorke joins Modeselektor on stage at Coachella

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Radiohead's Thom Yorke joined Modeselektor on stage at the final night of Coachella last night [April 22]. The singer performed at the end of the German electro duo's set to perform "Shipwreck", from their latest album Monkeytown, contributing vocals to "This" and "Shipwreck". Radiohead headed the...

Radiohead‘s Thom Yorke joined Modeselektor on stage at the final night of Coachella last night [April 22].

The singer performed at the end of the German electro duo’s set to perform “Shipwreck”, from their latest album Monkeytown, contributing vocals to “This” and “Shipwreck”.

Radiohead headed the bill again at the second night of week two of the festival in Indio, California at the weekend, where they played new track “Identikit”. In front of a flashy video show, which saw frontman Thom Yorke’s image distorted and projected on multi-coloured screens, the Oxford band went on the play “Idioteque” from 2000’s Kid A’ and “Lucky” from 1997’s OK, Computer.

After the show on Saturday night, Yorke DJed for a crowd of friends and family at the Parker Hotel in Palm Springs, taking to the decks at 4am and playing a set consisting of Snoop Dogg, Diana Ross and James Brown, before taking to the dancefloor himself, reports the LA Times.

It was the second DJ set of the night for Yorke, who had joined Flying Lotus and Gaslamp Killer earlier in the night.

Radiohead will tour Europe in the Autumn in support of their album King Of Limbs, including a trio of UK dates. They play Manchester’s Evening News Arena on October 6 and at London’s O2 Arena on October 8 and 9.

Alabama Shakes top the first ever Record Store Chart

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Alabama Shakes have topped the first ever Record Store Chart with their debut album Boys And Girls. The chart, which launched on Friday, is calculated on physical sales from independent record shops and is being overseen by the Official Charts Company. The Georgia band's debut came out on top this...

Alabama Shakes have topped the first ever Record Store Chart with their debut album Boys And Girls.

The chart, which launched on Friday, is calculated on physical sales from independent record shops and is being overseen by the Official Charts Company.

The Georgia band’s debut came out on top this week, narrowly ahead of Adele’s 21, which is Number Two and Trembling Bells’ The Marble Downs, which is Number Three.

Graham Coxon is at Number Four with A+E, with M.Ward at Number Five with A Wasteland Companion and Lana Del Rey at Number Six with Born To Die. Jim Lockey And The Solemn Sun, The Black Keys, Dr John and The Shins make up the rest of the Top 10.

Speaking about Alabama Shakes’ chart success, Geoff Travis, who runs the band’s label Rough Trade, said: “We are very proud that we have not entirely lost our musical marbles. Alabama Shakes deserve every accolade and success that may come their way. They do it right. Independent record stores are very important. They are staffed by people who feel the same way about music that we do and therefore can spread the gospel. Personal contact beats cyberspace every time.”

The Official Independent Record Store Chart was launched to coincide with Saturday’s Record Store Day.

M Ward – A Wasteland Companion

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She & Him's Him returns to his dark, witty furrow... In conversation, Matt Ward is unfailingly polite, but he gives the strong impression he would rather not talk about himself at all. Even his stage name suggests an underactive ego. Not that Ward is obstructive. He is happy to confirm, for example, that “Clean Slate”, the opening track on his seventh solo album, was written for Alex Chilton, after Ward filled in at a Big Star concert soon after the singer’s death. The album’s title, it seems, is a nod to TS Eliot’s modernist poem – though the connection remains obscure. And, yes, that is Zooey Deschanel adding candyfloss vocals to his cover of Daniel Johnston’s “Sweetheart” (no real surprise, as Ward’s backwards walk into the spotlight includes a successful – continuing - stint as half of She & Him, a vehicle for the actress’s songs). Which leaves us where, exactly? Well, it might be an idea to take the hint and concentrate on the music. Here there are further misconceptions, because Ward is frequently referred to as a folk musician; which is true in the sense that Buddy Holly can be described as a folk musician. In other words, it is slightly true, sometimes. Since Ward is a modest man, let’s examine that Daniel Johnston cover more closely. Bold claims are made for Johnston as a songwriter, but the unprofessional nature of his recordings make it hard to tell whether he deserves to seen as more than a cult in search of a niche. “Sweetheart” first appeared on Yip/Jump Music, a cassette released in 1983. In Johnston’s rendering, a half-tuneless vocal does battle with a half-rhythmic rhythm, and the song’s appeal seems to reside in a charitable interpretation of the author’s intentions. Johnston’s charm is his naivety. In Ward’s hands, the song becomes a sweet rock’n’roll handclapper, with sighing guitar, rolling piano and a vocal dipped in sherbet. It’s retro to the point of timelessness. It sounds innocent, a quality - like sincerity - which is hard to fake. Mostly, it’s adhesive. Listen twice to that chorus and you won’t be able to comb the bubblegum from your hair. The common link between Johnston and Ward is The Beatles. Ward taught himself guitar by studying a Beatles songbook, and what he gleaned was an understanding of how Lennon and McCartney borrowed from the whole of popular music, not just the carbonated thrills of rock’n’roll. Clearly, Louis Armstrong is a touchstone. The other cover version is “I Get Ideas”, with Armstrong’s mournful serenade replaced by a kind of Babyshambles skiffle. But that’s not where you’ll hear Ward’s debt to Armstrong. Listen instead to “Crawl After You”. It’s a gorgeous, woozy, mysterious song, about a lovestruck man seeing an old flame walk by in the street. The hope and the pain are carried aloft by Amanda Lawrence’s violin, and Ward sings the mysterious lyric huskily (“I was raised by a tribe of Vegas cowboys/Who claim I was born from a union of dust and wind”). It works a treat. There are further echoes of Satchmo on the album’s title track. There’s levity in “Watch The Show”, a dream narrative about a man called Bill Burroughs (no relation), who hijacks a TV station after years of dubbing laughter onto sitcoms. And there’s a hint of gospel in the dreamy “Wild Goose” (with Howe Gelb on piano), which flows into the final song, “Pure Joy”, in which the singer overcomes depression by inhaling “the medicine of oxygen”. An optimistic conclusion, then, to an album which contains dark material, without ever sounding weighty. That, surely, is a matter of wit. Observe “There’s A Key”, and you’ll hear a writer fully in charge of his talent. Inside 10 short lines, he contemplates fate, oblivion, God, and the devil. Vocally, Ward sounds like Paul Simon. But that’s misdirection. Go past the tone of his voice, inhale the poetry, and you’ll taste a sweeter, less mordant Leonard Cohen. Alastair McKay Q&A M Ward Did you have a plan for this album? I produce my own songs the same way I produce Zoooey (Deschanel)’s songs. I demo them over and over again, and try to listen for where the song wants to go. That involves the imagination. The song is a direct connection between the inspiration and the listener’s ears, and you’re just trying to get out of the way. Your songs sound very immediate – is that deliberate? That might come from how I first started recording, on my 4-track in my bedroom when I was 15. For as long as I’ve been recording I’ve been trying to translate the intimacy and warmth that you get from a 4-track audio cassette onto two-inch tape. It’s been an interesting journey. That reminds me of Daniel Johnston (who you cover). His catalogue is the catalogue of pop music of the future. It’s just a matter of time before everyone goes back and listens to those old tapes. They are as good and as pure as John Lennon’s songs. Daniel Johnston was a very big Beatles fan, and when I hear those tapes I hear the Beatles filtered through an American lens, and that’s a big inspiration. INTERVIEW: ALASTAIR McKAY

She & Him’s Him returns to his dark, witty furrow…

In conversation, Matt Ward is unfailingly polite, but he gives the strong impression he would rather not talk about himself at all. Even his stage name suggests an underactive ego.

Not that Ward is obstructive. He is happy to confirm, for example, that “Clean Slate”, the opening track on his seventh solo album, was written for Alex Chilton, after Ward filled in at a Big Star concert soon after the singer’s death. The album’s title, it seems, is a nod to TS Eliot’s modernist poem – though the connection remains obscure. And, yes, that is Zooey Deschanel adding candyfloss vocals to his cover of Daniel Johnston’s “Sweetheart” (no real surprise, as Ward’s backwards walk into the spotlight includes a successful – continuing – stint as half of She & Him, a vehicle for the actress’s songs).

Which leaves us where, exactly? Well, it might be an idea to take the hint and concentrate on the music. Here there are further misconceptions, because Ward is frequently referred to as a folk musician; which is true in the sense that Buddy Holly can be described as a folk musician. In other words, it is slightly true, sometimes.

Since Ward is a modest man, let’s examine that Daniel Johnston cover more closely. Bold claims are made for Johnston as a songwriter, but the unprofessional nature of his recordings make it hard to tell whether he deserves to seen as more than a cult in search of a niche. “Sweetheart” first appeared on Yip/Jump Music, a cassette released in 1983. In Johnston’s rendering, a half-tuneless vocal does battle with a half-rhythmic rhythm, and the song’s appeal seems to reside in a charitable interpretation of the author’s intentions. Johnston’s charm is his naivety. In Ward’s hands, the song becomes a sweet rock’n’roll handclapper, with sighing guitar, rolling piano and a vocal dipped in sherbet. It’s retro to the point of timelessness. It sounds innocent, a quality – like sincerity – which is hard to fake. Mostly, it’s adhesive. Listen twice to that chorus and you won’t be able to comb the bubblegum from your hair.

The common link between Johnston and Ward is The Beatles. Ward taught himself guitar by studying a Beatles songbook, and what he gleaned was an understanding of how Lennon and McCartney borrowed from the whole of popular music, not just the carbonated thrills of rock’n’roll. Clearly, Louis Armstrong is a touchstone. The other cover version is “I Get Ideas”, with Armstrong’s mournful serenade replaced by a kind of Babyshambles skiffle. But that’s not where you’ll hear Ward’s debt to Armstrong. Listen instead to “Crawl After You”. It’s a gorgeous, woozy, mysterious song, about a lovestruck man seeing an old flame walk by in the street. The hope and the pain are carried aloft by Amanda Lawrence’s violin, and Ward sings the mysterious lyric huskily (“I was raised by a tribe of Vegas cowboys/Who claim I was born from a union of dust and wind”). It works a treat.

There are further echoes of Satchmo on the album’s title track. There’s levity in “Watch The Show”, a dream narrative about a man called Bill Burroughs (no relation), who hijacks a TV station after years of dubbing laughter onto sitcoms. And there’s a hint of gospel in the dreamy “Wild Goose” (with Howe Gelb on piano), which flows into the final song, “Pure Joy”, in which the singer overcomes depression by inhaling “the medicine of oxygen”. An optimistic conclusion, then, to an album which contains dark material, without ever sounding weighty. That, surely, is a matter of wit. Observe “There’s A Key”, and you’ll hear a writer fully in charge of his talent. Inside 10 short lines, he contemplates fate, oblivion, God, and the devil. Vocally, Ward sounds like Paul Simon. But that’s misdirection. Go past the tone of his voice, inhale the poetry, and you’ll taste a sweeter, less mordant Leonard Cohen.

Alastair McKay

Q&A

M Ward

Did you have a plan for this album?

I produce my own songs the same way I produce Zoooey (Deschanel)’s songs. I demo them over and over again, and try to listen for where the song wants to go. That involves the imagination. The song is a direct connection between the inspiration and the listener’s ears, and you’re just trying to get out of the way.

Your songs sound very immediate – is that deliberate?

That might come from how I first started recording, on my 4-track in my bedroom when I was 15. For as long as I’ve been recording I’ve been trying to translate the intimacy and warmth that you get from a 4-track audio cassette onto two-inch tape. It’s been an interesting journey.

That reminds me of Daniel Johnston (who you cover).

His catalogue is the catalogue of pop music of the future. It’s just a matter of time before everyone goes back and listens to those old tapes. They are as good and as pure as John Lennon’s songs. Daniel Johnston was a very big Beatles fan, and when I hear those tapes I hear the Beatles filtered through an American lens, and that’s a big inspiration.

INTERVIEW: ALASTAIR McKAY