Home Blog Page 65

Macie Stewart – Mouth Full of Glass

0
“Finally,†sings Macie Stewart, on the opening track of their debut album, “I tell the truth to myself, to you.†The songwriter, singer and composer is much-loved in the jazz, improvisational and indie music scenes of their native Chicago, but Mouth Full Of Glass offers up a deeply intimate,...

“Finally,†sings Macie Stewart, on the opening track of their debut album, “I tell the truth to myself, to you.†The songwriter, singer and composer is much-loved in the jazz, improvisational and indie music scenes of their native Chicago, but Mouth Full Of Glass offers up a deeply intimate, skilfully crafted, alternative portrait of their inner world.

You’ve probably heard Stewart’s work without knowing it: on strings for artists as diverse as SZA and Whitney, as a touring multi-instrumentalist with The Weather Station and Claire Rousay or, most likely, as one half of art-rock duo Finom (until recently, Ohmme) with Sima Cunningham. There are parallels to be drawn between all of those and Stewart’s first music under their own name – but the precise arrangements and experimental flourishes perhaps most closely resemble Stewart and Cunningham’s recent collaboration with Iron & Wine on an EP of songs by the country musician Lori McKenna.

Although Stewart began recording the songs that would become Mouth Full Of Glass in 2019, pausing the project while Finom worked on their second album Fantasize Your Ghost, the bulk of the work – unsurprisingly – took place during the pandemic, with their more collaborative creative avenues closed off to them. Living alone after a major relationship breakup, grappling with loss of structure as a touring musician and dealing with family bereavement, Stewart took lots of long walks around the nature preserve close to their home, giving them time to ponder, process and learn from their inner self, their queerness, their relationships and their hopes for the future.

The version of truth-telling Stewart ultimately lands on is poetic, minimalist and image-rich in turn. The titular reptile on “Garter Snake†– which Stewart recalls crossing paths with frequently on those Chicago walks – becomes a metaphor for shedding one’s less desirable traits and starting fresh, the singer’s confessions to qualities such as wickedness and indecision sung without guilt or shame. “What Will I Doâ€, perhaps the wordiest song on the album, exquisitely captures the tension and pain at the end of a long-term relationship both parties know is over: “I see you in the street, in open air and in my core/I feel a rhythm of a song I knew beforeâ€. At the other end of the scale, the airy almost-title track “Mouthful Of Glass†barely features lyrics at all: the song was inspired by a dream featuring the central image and Stewart draws out the words like their voice was itself an instrument, the approach that of an impressionist artist to the paintbrush.

But the lyrics are only part of the story, with Stewart bringing the full depth of their experience as a composer, violinist, pianist and string arranger to the album’s 30-minute runtime. Tonal shifts do much of the emotional heavy lifting: “Finally†begins with a sweet, lilting, guitar-picked melody before sweeping the listener up in a lush, romantic string arrangement; “What Will I Do†is elegant chamber music for piano and guitar until a moment of brash, electronic noise creates a gap into which an elegant string arrangement can flow.

Stewart recorded and stitched together many of the instrumental parts at home, but several notable Chicago musicians add additional flourishes: Sen Morimoto’s serpentine saxophone entangles Stewart’s acoustic guitar on “Garter Snakeâ€, and regular collaborator VV Lightbody adds a dancing flute part to the deceptively pretty “Defeatâ€. Cellist Lia Kohl (who has released two duo albums for violin and cello with Stewart) adds heft to the string arrangements of “Finally†and “Tone Pomeâ€. The title of the last of these alludes to the orchestral ‘tone poems’ inspired by landscapes and nature, and its lyrics and instrumentation capture the changing of the Chicago seasons: the softness of newly fallen snow, the twinkling shoots of life beginning anew.

Among a work that is often extraordinary, sometimes spectacular, two tracks in particular stand out. “Golden (For Mark)†is a sombre hymn for someone who died in childhood but, while the imagery is stark (“a picture upon her mantle/Saw her cry a handful of times wondering who you’d have beenâ€), by keeping the music sparse and leaving space for the song to breathe, Stewart ends up with something that lingers long past the three-minute mark. And “Wash It Awayâ€, the closing track on the original US version of the album, is a precision-crafted composition, Stewart’s voice practically soaring above Ayanna Woods’ horn arrangement before the song’s discordant, more experimental chorus hits like a reset button. Whether the album has scratched Stewart’s solo creative itch remains to be seen, but it’s hard to imagine a better record to finally put their own name on.

Richard Dawson – The Ruby Cord

0
Richard Dawson is on quite some creative streak. The past 12 months have already seen one great album from the Tyneside bard – Henki, a collaboration with the Finnish metal alchemists Circle. Now here’s another: The Ruby Cord is framed as the conclusion to a trilogy of albums that Dawson began b...

Richard Dawson is on quite some creative streak. The past 12 months have already seen one great album from the Tyneside bard – Henki, a collaboration with the Finnish metal alchemists Circle. Now here’s another: The Ruby Cord is framed as the conclusion to a trilogy of albums that Dawson began back in 2017. The first of the three, Peasant, surveyed a number of colourful characters living in the Middle Ages kingdom of Bryneich back circa the 6th century AD. It was followed by 2020, which cast an empathetic eye across the lives of those occupying familiar early 21st-century spaces – the football field, the local pub, the Amazon fulfilment centre. Where next? To the future, of course – specifically 500 years into the future, into a sort of liminal reality that straddles real life and something more virtual.

It’s certainly within the scope of Dawson’s powers to pull off some kind of neon-lit space opera. But this is not that album. The Ruby Cord certainly has some epic qualities – for one, it’s long, clocking in at an hour and 20 minutes in length, and kicking off with an opening track, “The Hermitâ€, that itself stretches out to a panoramic 40 minutes. But where 2020 felt direct and upfront, both in its music and in the manner of its storytelling, The Ruby Cord feels more cryptic, dense and complex, as if Dawson – never not ambitious in his art – is intentionally raising the stakes.

There is some feat of imaginative creation going on here, and it’s only by scrutinising the lyric sheet that you can really begin to comprehend the shape of the world that Dawson has designed. The Ruby Cord is set in an augmented reality, humans existing somewhere between the world we know and a virtual space in which the lines between history, mythology and imagination blur. On “The Hermitâ€, the familiar intermingles with the deeply strange. One minute Dawson is sketching a bucolic scene of “crow-pocked copses†and a “caterpillar’s ardent mandiblesâ€; the next he’s singing of “an update to my visual and ontoceptual cortexesâ€. “Museumâ€, meanwhile, follows an unnamed visitor as they explore a complex that contains an archive of human memory, projected onto the walls. One reference point for The Ruby Cord’s storytelling might be science fiction – think the rich and detailed world-building of a figure like Ursula Le Guin or Philip K Dick. Another might be video games – fantasy RPGs like Skyrim that dispense little nuggets of lore as you explore, giving you a sense of a wider world beyond your immediate experience.

The narratives here can be dark and discomfiting, but the mood is generally calm and tranquil, largely lacking the roar and churn we hear in much of Dawson’s work. He’s backed by a mini-ensemble consisting of harpist Rhodri Davies, violinist Angharad Davies and drummer Andrew Cheetham. On “The Hermitâ€, they sprawl out in improvisatory fashion, more concerned with mellifluous texturing than familiar song structure. Deeper into the album, there are moments that raise the temperature a couple of notches: the wild harp freakouts buried in the midst of “The Foolâ€; the romping metal riff that briefly flowers at the heart of “The Tip Of An Arrowâ€. But these are generally used as a sort of dramatic punctuation, and consequently are fairly short-lived.

Whatever Dawson is writing about, he tends to return to human stories – our ambitions, fears, disappointments and frailties. You get the feeling that he’s contrived the setting of The Ruby Cord as a way of tackling such a theme from a variety of unusual vantage points. “Thicker Than Water†is a gentle canter of chiming guitars and little flourishes of harp, but it holds a sense of terrible absence at its core; the narrator, fleeing from cyberspace back into the real world, passes through deserted cities and empty dual carriageways, in search of the bodies that he and his family long ago left behind. “The Fool†seems to hark back to the territory of Peasant, a love affair conducted in a medieval town – or presumably the simulation of one? – that ends with an enigmatic fizzle. The remarkable “The Tip Of An Arrowâ€, meanwhile, has the feel of a video game quest, the narrator and her plucky daughter Isagog crafting arrows before venturing “into the realm of the fabled three-faced hareâ€. There, we are reminded that pride comes before a fall.

Dawson’s work has always required a certain amount of buy-in from the listener, which it traditionally pays back with dividends. The Ruby Cord is no different, and in its depth and ambition may go further than any of his records before. If Dawson’s discography was the books of Tolkien, this wouldn’t be The Hobbit, or even Lord Of The Rings, but The Silmarillion. As such, this might not be the first Richard Dawson record you would recommend to a newcomer: too much, too soon. Still, if you’ve got the measure of him and his work, The Ruby Cord won’t fail to impress. You leave it mind reeling, happily baffled, dazzled by the scope of its achievement.

Wilko Johnson has died aged 75

0
Wilko Johnson has passed away aged 75. ORDER NOW: David Bowie and our Review of 2022 star in the latest issue of Uncut The news of Johnson’s death was confirmed via a post on his official social media accounts, revealing that he died at home on Monday (November 21). The tribute read: â€...

Wilko Johnson has passed away aged 75.

The news of Johnson’s death was confirmed via a post on his official social media accounts, revealing that he died at home on Monday (November 21).

The tribute read: “This is the announcement we never wanted to make, & we do so with a very heavy heart: Wilko Johnson has died.

“He passed away at home on Monday 21st November. Thank you for respecting the family’s privacy at this very sad time. RIP Wilko Johnson.â€

Johnson was diagnosed with terminal pancreatic cancer in 2013, saying at the time that he did not want to receive treatment or chemotherapy.

The following year however, Johnson underwent an operation and declared himself cancer free, revealing later that he was told he only had 10 months to live and remarking: “I shouldn’t be here at all.â€

Julien Temple’s 2015 documentary The Ecstasy Of Wilko Johnson charted his death-defying recovery from cancer.

Johnson played lead guitar with Dr Feelgood from the band’s formation in 1971 until he left in 1977. During his stint, the band scored a Number One album with their 1976 live LP Stupidity. After departing, Johnson played with The Blockheads for a brief spell in 1980 and released a succession of albums with The Wilko Johnson Band. His autobiography Looking Back At Me was published in June 2012.

Johnson’s final album, Blow Your Mind, came out in 2018 with The Wilko Johnson Band. He kept performing live right up until his death, appearing last month (October 18) at London’s Shepherd’s Bush Empire as part of Planet Rock’s Rocktober event.

A look into David Bowie’s career defining album, Hunky Dory

0
In 1971, DAVID BOWIE was all about ch-changes. Inspired by the America of Andy Warhol and Lou Reed, Bob Dylan and After The Gold Rush, he delivered a daring, career-reviving triumph with his first truly great album. As a new boxset, Divine Symmetry, digs deep into the 12 months that led up to the r...

In 1971, DAVID BOWIE was all about ch-changes. Inspired by the America of
Andy Warhol and Lou Reed, Bob Dylan and After The Gold Rush, he delivered a daring, career-reviving triumph with his first truly great album. As a new boxset, Divine Symmetry, digs deep into the 12 months that led up to the release of Hunky Dory, collaborators and confidants reveal the secrets of this major turning point in Bowie’s evolution. “With David, it was onward and upward all the time,†learns Peter Watts. Look out, you rock’n’rollers, in the latest issue of Uncut magazine – in UK shops from Thursday, November 10 and available to buy from our online store.

Walk 10 minutes uphill from Beckenham Junction station, past the squat new developments and elegant townhouses, and you’ll eventually arrive at the corner of Southend Road and Shannon Way. Today, it’s a block of square brick apartments, similar to many buildings in this corner of south-east London. But before it was demolished in the early ’80s, this was the site of Haddon Hall, where David Bowie lived with his wife Angie and an assortment of musicians from 1969 until 1972. A sprawling Victorian villa, Haddon Hall was effectively the cradle for Bowie’s fast-moving transition from folkie to futuristic superstar.

When 80-year-old south Londoner Terry moved into his flat three years ago, he had no notion of the building’s musical heritage. He’s since done his research, prompted by the gaggles of tourists who make pilgrimages here and pose for photographs in the street outside his home. “Oh yes, it was all a bit of a to-do,†says Terry. “All those parties. They reckon The Beatles and the Stones came to visit. Imagine that.â€

We agree that it’s impossible to imagine The Beatles, the Stones or even David Bowie ever coming to this unglamorous suburban spot. Yet Terry – who admits he’s not really a Bowie fan (he prefers the Stones) – mentions a video his daughter sent him. “It shows Boy George taking the 54 from Eltham to Beckenham and staring up at my flat,†smiles Terry. “Now Boy George, he definitely would have been a fan of Bowie.â€

Boy George was indeed a visitor to Haddon Hall in 1971, one of several south London music fans who’d come to stare at the local freak – and got told to “fuck off†by his new wife, Angie.

“Haddon House was inspiring,†says Mick “Woody†Woodmansey, Bowie’s drummer, who shared the house with a roving cast of characters that included the Bowies, Tony Visconti and Mick Ronson. “It was part commune, part flatshare. We didn’t get the Beatles and Stones, it was more like Marc Bolan or Roy Harper. They’d say, ‘Roy’s doing a concert tonight in Tony’s bedroom,’ and in you’d go. There was a wine cellar underneath that we used as a place to rehearse, so you could write and play whenever you wanted. David had a piano and the 12-string was usually in the lounge. He’d say, ‘Woody, I’ve finished one,’ and you’d go and have a listen.â€

Bowie was entering a period of extraordinary productivity that saw him record Hunky Dory, his first great album, and write much of its life-changing successor, The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars at Haddon Hall. But it was also a time of uncertainty and anxiety. As Bowie struggled to escape the orbit of his sole 1969 hit, “Space Oddityâ€, he pursued an alternative career as a producer/songwriter for hire, writing songs for friends and other singers. This journey is charted in Divine Symmetry, a new boxset that examines in detail how Hunky Dory came together and why it was such a turning point in his career. There are home recordings from Haddon Hall and American hotel rooms, BBC sessions, previously unheard originals, demos and a pivotal live performance that heralded the direction Bowie would take.

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

Ryuichi Sakamoto announces new album 12

0
Ryuichi Sakamoto has announced 12, his first non-soundtrack studio album in nearly six years. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Ryuichi Sakamoto: Coda review The album is set to arrive on January 17 via Milan Records, and follows up 2017's asyn...

Ryuichi Sakamoto has announced 12, his first non-soundtrack studio album in nearly six years.

The album is set to arrive on January 17 via Milan Records, and follows up 2017’s async. It was recorded throughout 2021 and 2022, with each of its dozen tracks titled after the dates they were written.

In a statement, the Japanese composer and Yellow Magic Orchestra founder – who revealed last year he had been diagnosed with cancer for a second time, and is receiving ongoing treatment – discussed how the compositions on 12 began forming.

“After I finally ‘came home’ to my new temporary housing after a big operation, I found myself reaching for the synthesizer,” Sakamoto said. “I had no intention of composing something; I just wanted to be showered in sound. I’ll probably continue to keep this kind of ‘diary’.”

Sakamoto has also announced a ticketed livestream concert, which will air on December 10. For it, the composer will premiere a career-spanning concert recorded at 509 Studios in Tokyo. A preview of the album will be available following the livestream, accessible exclusively to ticketholders.

Sakamoto has stayed busy since async arrived in 2017, recording soundtracks for a range of film and television projects. Those have included the 2019 Black Mirror episode ‘Smithereens’ and last year’s Netflix film Beckett. Last month, Sakamoto released a soundtrack for the Netflix anime series Exception.

In January last year, Sakamoto shared a letter on his website saying that while the throat cancer he had been diagnosed with in 2014 was in remission, he had received a recent diagnosis of rectal cancer. “The news was disheartening, but thanks to the excellent doctors I met, the surgery I underwent was a success. I am now undergoing treatment,” he said.

“Due to these circumstances, traveling long distances for work will be difficult. Still, I will continue to work as much as I can while in treatment,” Sakamoto explained. “From now on, I will be living alongside cancer. But, I am hoping to make music for a little while longer.”

Next month, Milan Records will release a Sakamoto tribute album titled To The Moon And Back. The compilation will include reworks of Sakamoto’s songs by Thundercat (whose “remodel” of “Thousand Knives” was released last month), Devonté Hynes (Blood Orange), Fennesz, the Cinematic Orchestra and more.

The cover art for Ryuichi Sakamoto's '12'
The cover art for Ryuichi Sakamoto’s 12

The tracklist for Ryuichi Sakamoto’s 12 is:

01. “20210310”
02. “20211130”
03. “20211201”
04. “20220123”
05. “20220202”
06. “20220207”
07. “20220214”
08. “20220302 – sarabande”
09. “20220302”
10. “20220307”
11. “20220404”
12. “20220304”

Blur add second Wembley Stadium gig “due to phenomenal demand”

0
Blur have announced a second reunion show at London's Wembley Stadium "due to phenomenal demand". ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Last week the band shared details of a one-off UK reunion gig at the stadium on July 8, 2023. Now, they're playing an addition...

Blur have announced a second reunion show at London’s Wembley Stadium “due to phenomenal demand”.

Last week the band shared details of a one-off UK reunion gig at the stadium on July 8, 2023. Now, they’re playing an additional show the following day (July 9). Tickets are on sale now hereTickets are on sale now here.

The summer 2023 gigs mark the Britpop icons’ first headline show since 2015 when they released their comeback album The Magic Whip. Details of other world tour dates are currently unknown, except for a French festival date a few days before the Wembley show.

Slowthai, Self Esteem and Jockstrap are set to support Blur on the July 8 date. It’s not yet known if all three acts will support them the following night.

Blur have spoken about what to expect from their massive reunion gigs. Drummer Dave Rowntree described them as a “bucket list†dream.

“Turns out it’s incredibly difficult to arrange something like this, you know, the technical resources, the staff, the places to play. All of these things are in very, very short supply,†he told Tickets are on sale now here. “So it went right up to the wire, but it’s very hard to turn something like that down.

“We’re a band that’s done almost everything it’s possible to do… what an iconic place, what an iconic venue. It’s just incredibly exciting.â€

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

He continued: “It’s one of these iconic places that are secretly up on your bucket list, even though you pretend they’re not,†adding: “I sincerely hope we are a band that can fill a stadium like that. I don’t want there to be four people and a dog.â€

The drummer also joked that the band, who formed in 1989, are now “kind of embarrassing grandadsâ€, but that they look forward to performing the hits again.

Jack White shares “Seven Nation Army” live video from rooftop Soho gig and announces live album

0
Jack White has announced a new live album of his 2021 Soho rooftop performance in London – watch a clip of "Seven Nation Army" from the gig below. ORDER NOW: David Bowie is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Last September, White played a surprise set on the London rooftop of Damien...

Jack White has announced a new live album of his 2021 Soho rooftop performance in London – watch a clip of “Seven Nation Army” from the gig below.

Last September, White played a surprise set on the London rooftop of Damien Hirst to celebrate the grand opening of his new Third Man Records store down the road.

Now, after his two 2022 solo albums – Fear Of The Dawn and Entering Heaven Alive – were named Albums Of The Year by Rough Trade, White has released the full Soho rooftop set as a live album on vinyl.

The Live From Marshall Street bonus LP is released alongside the two solo albums in a triple vinyl collectors’ set and can be ordered here.

Watch the performance of “Seven Nation Army” from the gig below.

At the gig, White opened with The White Stripes‘ “Dead Leaves On The Dirty Ground”, going on to play “Lazarretto”, The Raconteurs track “Steady As She Goes” and more from across his career.

Of the gig’s surroundings, he added: “I wanna play a song to all the neighbours we’re upsetting now, to the neighbours we’re about to be friends with now, and to Damien Hirst who let us use his balcony.†He then performed White Stripes track “We Are Gonna Be Friends” before ending with “Seven Nation Army”.

Prior to his rooftop performance, White performed in the basement of the store itself, where he rolled through The White Stripes’ “Hello Operator”, “Why Can’t You Be Nicer To Me” and “Icky Thump” as well as solo favourites “Sixteen Saltines’” “What’s Done Is Done” and “Love Interruption”.

Richard Dawson – Album By Album

0
The idiosyncratic songsmith’s path from “very bad†debut to multi-layered latest – Uncut takes a look at Richard Dawson's finest work, in the latest issue of Uncut magazine – in UK shops from Thursday, November 10 and available to buy from our online store. “Is it OK to big up your ow...

The idiosyncratic songsmith’s path from “very bad†debut to multi-layered latest – Uncut takes a look at Richard Dawson’s finest work, in the latest issue of Uncut magazine – in UK shops from Thursday, November 10 and available to buy from our online store.

“Is it OK to big up your own music?†asks Richard Dawson, partway into our discussion. “I’ve slagged off everything so far, but I was just paving the way for a huge self-aggrandising which will be the rest of the interview…â€

While the Newcastle songwriter is certainly critical of his own work, there’s really no need: across the last decade or so, the guitarist and singer has built a compelling and deeply unique body of music. Here he takes Uncut through his records so far, from his “very bad†debut and the a cappella triumph of The Glass Trunk right through to the mighty, labyrinthine Peasant, his heavy collaboration with Finnish rockers Circle and his latest, sci-fi-inspired opus, The Ruby Cord, which appears in our 75 Best Albums Of 2022.

“It’s going to be interesting finding out what people think of the new one,†Dawson says, “because I’m prepared for all eventualities. I guess it’s probably not the most immediate record… This has been a great therapy session, anyway!â€

RICHARD DAWSON
SINGS SONGS AND PLAYS GUITAR
DOWNBEAT, 2005

Dawson’s embryonic first long-player, released by the Newcastle record shop where he worked

I feel like this is the work of someone else. Probably there’s some nice melodies here and some nice ideas, but there’s just so many problems with it. There’s a lot of imitation, not least the awful American accent, which I think is a problem for a lot of singers when they’re starting out… But I wasn’t really starting out, so there’s no excuse! I think it’s very bad.

The lyrics are clumsy, the whole vibe is simpering, it’s too self-obsessed, it’s a mess. I don’t want to spoil it, because some people might enjoy it, and I don’t want to put anybody off releasing their bad first album. I used to work at the record shop Alt.Vinyl, and this was the first release on their label. I want to apologise to my good friend Graham for being so down about it, because the job they did was great. The open tunings didn’t come until later.

I was wrestling with a friend outside a pub, and they were gonna fall quite heavily, so I put my hand under them and snapped my little finger. It was really bad at the time because I thought it wasn’t gonna heal right at all – and it hasn’t, but it has given us a longer reach on that digit. But I had loads of gigs lined up, so I figured out how to play a bunch of songs in open tuning so I could just use one or two fingers. Then I wrote a few songs in that tuning and went from there.

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

Hear Roger Waters’ new recording of “Comfortably Numb”

0
Roger Waters has recorded a new version of "Comfortable Numb". It's available on all streaming platforms from today [November 18]. ORDER NOW: David Bowie and our Review of 2022 star in the latest issue of Uncut You can watch the video, produced and directed by Sean Evans, below: https://w...

Roger Waters has recorded a new version of “Comfortable Numb“. It’s available on all streaming platforms from today [November 18].

You can watch the video, produced and directed by Sean Evans, below:

“Comfortably Numb 2022†was recorded during Waters This Is Not A Drill North American tour and was produced by Waters and Gus Seyffert.

Appearing on the track are:

Roger Waters – Vocals
Gus Seyffert – Bass, Synth, Percussion, Vocals
Joey Waronker – Drums
Dave Kilminster – Vocals
Jonathan Wilson – Harmonium, Synth, Guitar and Vocals
Jon Carin – Synth, Vocals
Shanay Johnson – Vocals
Amanda Belair – Vocals
Robert Walter – Organ/Piano
Nigel Godrich – Strings, amp

“During Lockdown I made a demo of a new version of ‘Comfortably Numb‘ as an opener for our new show This Is Not A Drill,†says Waters. “I pitched it a whole step down, in A Minor, to make it darker and arranged it with no solos, except over the outro chord sequence, where there is a heartrendingly beautiful female vocal solo from Shanay Johnson, one of our new singers.â€

Roger Waters This Is Not A Drill will tour Europe in 2023 with 40 shows across 14 European countries, starting in Lisbon on 17 March 2023 at the Altice Arena.

Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth announced three UK events

0
Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth have announced three UK events for 2023. ORDER NOW: David Bowie and our Review of 2022 star in the latest issue of Uncut The duo have confirmed intimate live ‘in conversation with’ stage interviews for May, taking place in Oxford, London and Leeds. The e...

Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth have announced three UK events for 2023.

The duo have confirmed intimate live ‘in conversation with’ stage interviews for May, taking place in Oxford, London and Leeds.

The events will cover their groundbreaking work in Talking Heads, The Tom Tom Club and more.

Tickets are available by clicking here.

The dates are:
May 25 – SHELDONIAN THEATRE, OXFORD
May 27 – ELECTRIC BALLROOM, LONDON
May 28 – BRUNDELL SOCIAL CLUB, LEEDS

Frantz’ memoir, Remain In Love, was published in 2020 by White Rabbit Books.

One Eleven Heavy – Poolside

0
One Eleven Heavy were something of a transatlantic supergroup when they formed a few years ago. James Jackson Toth – aka Wooden Wand, the singer-songwriter behind numerous “New Weird America†outfits like Dunza, Grim Jim, Hassara and James And The Giants – met Bradford-born musician Nick Mit...

One Eleven Heavy were something of a transatlantic supergroup when they formed a few years ago. James Jackson Toth – aka Wooden Wand, the singer-songwriter behind numerous “New Weird America†outfits like Dunza, Grim Jim, Hassara and James And The Giants – met Bradford-born musician Nick Mitchell Maiato at a Manchester gig in 2010 and instantly bonded over a shared love of Neil Young, Little Feat and the Grateful Dead. After forming a band with assorted members of Royal Trux, Hiss Golden Messenger and Solar Motel Band, they started wearing these influences on their sleeve; the kind of connoisseurs who sonically curate half a century of leftfield Americana.

On Poolside, you can hear shades of everything from Gram Parsons to Willie Nelson, from Michael Hurley to David Crosby, from the Allman Brothers to Santana, with nods to Led Zeppelin, Mike Cooper and the Incredible String Band for good measure. But this is also an album that buzzes with cultural references, both high and low. “You mixed up Lee Majors with Mark E Smith when I said that I liked the Fall guy†is a typically bathetic line, and there are dozens of similar lyrics that namecheck everything from Twin Peaks to Grease, from “Chatanooga Choo Choo†to Little House On The Prairie, from trashy cowboy flicks to dark literary fiction.

The opening track, “Tyrant Kingâ€, is apparently inspired by Richard Brautigan’s 1974 novel The Hawkline Monster – a gothic western about two itinerant contract killers hired by a Native American prostitute to murder a supernatural monster. The song manages to turn this dark source material into a piece of joyous, freewheeling Southern rock: one where machismo is a front for terrified, evasive men who are perpetually on the run. It’s followed by a very different kind of American gothic called “Bama Yetiâ€, a cheery, upbeat, Creedence-style boogie inspired by a news story about a sighting of a sasquatch crossing the Florida/Alabama border.

The band’s sound has changed considerably in recent years. Their first two LPs – 2018’s Everything’s Better and 2019’s Desire Path – sounded like jam-band sessions, recorded quickly in the brief windows of time that all five band members could assemble in a single studio (Mitchell Maiato lives in Spain, Toth and the other band members lived in completely different parts of the US). But, under lockdown, they had to find new ways of working. Poolside was recorded remotely: Toth and Mitchell Maiato swapped audio recordings, sang harmonies on each other’s songs and enlisted Stephen Malkmus’ drummer Jake Morris.

These are more structurally detailed and carefully considered arrangements, often epic in scale. One highlight is “Fruit Loopsâ€, an episodic suite which starts as a swaggering 12/8 Southern rock shuffle, goes into an introspective Pink Floyd-ish breakdown and features a Tropicalia-style interlude. Even the straight-up 12-bar blues workouts, like “Ciciâ€, transform into a hypnotic jabber of musique concrète. Throughout, Mitchell Maiato plays some wonderfully untutored piano parts, often sounding like a demented cat creeping along the keyboard.

Not all the lyrics move into magical realist territory. “Billy†is a wonky piece of tribal glam rock where Mitchell Maiato pays tribute to a faded local rock star whose career has been a failure (“third on the bill and over the hillâ€) but who remains a hero (“I had to bend my knees to look you in the eye but I still looked up to youâ€). Two compositions are about recovering from horrific hangovers: “Rizzo In The Wig†appears to narrate a drug-fuelled comedown in a suitably disjointed and funky 6/4 time signature (“I looked at the clock it was 4:89/It was out of the bag, I was legally blindâ€); while “Plinth†is a chaotic piece of Southern soul about a couple who spend an entire relationship wallowing in endless hangovers (“I remember one time I suggested we fly to somewhere hot in December/You said ‘I’m not a goose’ and walked out of the house/And went off on a three-day benderâ€).

“Michael Landon†is a piece of storytelling Dylanesque prose set to a tempo-defying piece of Dylanesque vocalese, featuring a violin solo from Sandy Lane, about a journey along a coastal mountain road. It was, apparently, inspired by a drive from Valencia to Benidorm, where Mitchell Maiato witnessed the surreal sight of a bar full of British expats watching an episode of the old western series Bonanza on a big screen (“the projection of Michael Landon, who had no idea where he wasâ€). This is cosmic American music, but one with a sense of distance and an international perspective.

PJ Harvey – B-sides, Demos & Rarities

0
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 Handâ€, 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 Handâ€, 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 – Demoâ€. 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 – Demoâ€. 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 – Demoâ€, 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, “Memphisâ€, carries much emotional weight. “Guiltyâ€, 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 pubâ€.

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 2â€, 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 Cheepâ€. 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

0
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

0
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

0
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…â€

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

0
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

0
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 speakâ€. 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 pursuitsâ€, 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.â€

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.â€

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

0
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 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.

The making of: Neu!’s “Hero”

0
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 “Heroâ€, 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.â€

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.â€

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!â€

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.â€

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

0
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