Home Blog Page 664

NIRVANA – NEVERMIND (REISSUE)

0

It’s 1991, and the eyes of the alternative community are fixed on a rock band from the Seattle area that have just left their label, Sub Pop, to ink with a major. As it turns out, though, it is not grunge heavyweights Tad who crack the mainstream, but their recent European tour support – a young band from Aberdeen, Washington called Nirvana. In April 1990, Nirvana went into Smart Studios in Wisconsin with producer Butch Vig, where they debuted a new clutch of songs that replaced the Melvins-inherited punk sludge of debut album Bleach with a new, infectious sound. The band shopped the sessions around and following a recommendation from Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon, Geffen stepped in to buy them out of their Sub Pop contract. With that, Kurt Cobain, who’d hung with riot grrrls in Olympia, who idolised obscure groups like Vaselines and the Meat Puppets, was frontman of a major-label rock band. You know the rest, of course: a Faustian fable for the alternative age, the tale of a punk-rock group seized by the ambition to crack the glass ceiling, but once up there, stricken nauseous by vertigo. Nevermind may not be Nirvana’s most representative album, or even their best – arguably In Utero is their best synthesis of noisy abrasion and artistic vision – but it is hard to think of a record that better captures the adolescent experience. “Smells Like Teen Spirit†and “In Bloom†take the Pixies’ quiet-loud lurch and render it as hormonal temper tantrums, sluggish verses giving way to choruses of inchoate rage. Cobain’s lyrics, cut-up poetry sourced from his diaries, often read like gobbledegook, but the chaotic imagery, their blend of nihilism and sincerity, somehow captures something quintessentially teenage. “A mullato/An albino/A mosquito/My libido†may be literally meaningless, but delivered in Cobain’s throat-shredding howl, it has an immense power, nailing that sensation of being pissed off but unable to articulate exactly why. When Nevermind rocks, it does so extremely, “Territorial Pissings†and “Breed†showcasing Dave Grohl’s savage drumming and Krist Novoselic’s stringy, limber bass. Notably, though, it is here that Cobain realises his strengths as a songwriter. “Drain You†is an example of taut, harmonic pop songcraft as well-constructed as anything on, say, Meet The Beatles; here, though, love is depicted as a sort of laboratory coupling, two parasites locked in symbiotic embrace: “Chew your meat for you/Pass it back and forth/In a passionate kiss/From my mouth to yoursâ€. “Polly†and “Something In The Wayâ€, meanwhile, wrap up each side acoustically, early glimpses of the grunge Leadbelly we’d later meet on Unplugged In New York. Much of Nevermind’s success was surely thanks to its production. Butch Vig had heavy form, having produced Killdozer and Urge Overkill. But Nevermind was a far cry from Bleach (recorded, as its sleeve commemorated, for $606.17). Featuring overdubs and double-tracked vocals, Grohl’s drums augmented by snare samples added by mixer Andy Wallace, Nevermind sounded glossy, modern. The band were in two minds: Cobain claimed it sounded “closer to a Mötley Crüe record†than a punk record, but with the benefit of hindsight, Nevermind’s mix of cleanness and feedback, compression and distortion, was key to its success. It may have been a Faustian bargain, but ultimately, unquestionably, Nirvana got what they paid for. Whether the listener gets what they pay for with the new Deluxe Edition 4CD/1DVD box, retailing for in the region of £80, is a moot point. The last large-scale Nirvana reissue, 2004’s With The Lights Out, had the occasional feel of a barrel-scraping, and this is little different. New are a handful of takes from the pre-Geffen Smart Studios sessions, some largely worthless “Boombox Demosâ€, and a couple of BBC session tracks, notably an excellent, electric “Something In The Wayâ€. One CD and a DVD collects a gig from Seattle’s Paramount Theatre, but the carrot here is The Devonshire Mixes, which restores Butch Vig’s initial mix before Geffen commissioned Andy Wallace to spritz it further. Vig’s mix lacks some of Wallace’s more artificial-sounding drum samples, feeling grittier, less defined. There are a few plain differences – the “Territorial Pissings†is notably harsher, excising Novoselic’s opening holler and replacing the middle-eight with something more brutally skronky. Ultimately, though, little to justify the hefty pricetag. Sad to say it, but that cover of the baby grasping for a floating dollar is starting to look strangely prescient. Louis Pattison

It’s 1991, and the eyes of the alternative community are fixed on a rock band from the Seattle area that have just left their label, Sub Pop, to ink with a major. As it turns out, though, it is not grunge heavyweights Tad who crack the mainstream, but their recent European tour support – a young band from Aberdeen, Washington called Nirvana.

In April 1990, Nirvana went into Smart Studios in Wisconsin with producer Butch Vig, where they debuted a new clutch of songs that replaced the Melvins-inherited punk sludge of debut album Bleach with a new, infectious sound. The band shopped the sessions around and following a recommendation from Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon, Geffen stepped in to buy them out of their Sub Pop contract. With that, Kurt Cobain, who’d hung with riot grrrls in Olympia, who idolised obscure groups like Vaselines and the Meat Puppets, was frontman of a major-label rock band.

You know the rest, of course: a Faustian fable for the alternative age, the tale of a punk-rock group seized by the ambition to crack the glass ceiling, but once up there, stricken nauseous by vertigo. Nevermind may not be Nirvana’s most representative album, or even their best – arguably In Utero is their best synthesis of noisy abrasion and artistic vision – but it is hard to think of a record that better captures the adolescent experience.

“Smells Like Teen Spirit†and “In Bloom†take the Pixies’ quiet-loud lurch and render it as hormonal temper tantrums, sluggish verses giving way to choruses of inchoate rage. Cobain’s lyrics, cut-up poetry sourced from his diaries, often read like gobbledegook, but the chaotic imagery, their blend of nihilism and sincerity, somehow captures something quintessentially teenage. “A mullato/An albino/A mosquito/My libido†may be literally meaningless, but delivered in Cobain’s throat-shredding howl, it has an immense power, nailing that sensation of being pissed off but unable to articulate exactly why.

When Nevermind rocks, it does so extremely, “Territorial Pissings†and “Breed†showcasing Dave Grohl’s savage drumming and Krist Novoselic’s stringy, limber bass. Notably, though, it is here that Cobain realises his strengths as a songwriter. “Drain You†is an example of taut, harmonic pop songcraft as well-constructed as anything on, say, Meet The Beatles; here, though, love is depicted as a sort of laboratory coupling, two parasites locked in symbiotic embrace: “Chew your meat for you/Pass it back and forth/In a passionate kiss/From my mouth to yoursâ€. “Polly†and “Something In The Wayâ€, meanwhile, wrap up each side acoustically, early glimpses of the grunge Leadbelly we’d later meet on Unplugged In New York.

Much of Nevermind’s success was surely thanks to its production. Butch Vig had heavy form, having produced Killdozer and Urge Overkill. But Nevermind was a far cry from Bleach (recorded, as its sleeve commemorated, for $606.17). Featuring overdubs and double-tracked vocals, Grohl’s drums augmented by snare samples added by mixer Andy Wallace, Nevermind sounded glossy, modern. The band were in two minds: Cobain claimed it sounded “closer to a Mötley Crüe record†than a punk record, but with the benefit of hindsight, Nevermind’s mix of cleanness and feedback, compression and distortion, was key to its success. It may have been a Faustian bargain, but ultimately, unquestionably, Nirvana got what they paid for.

Whether the listener gets what they pay for with the new Deluxe Edition 4CD/1DVD box, retailing for in the region of £80, is a moot point. The last large-scale Nirvana reissue, 2004’s With The Lights Out, had the occasional feel of a barrel-scraping, and this is little different. New are a handful of takes from the pre-Geffen Smart Studios sessions, some largely worthless “Boombox Demosâ€, and a couple of BBC session tracks, notably an excellent, electric “Something In The Wayâ€. One CD and a DVD collects a gig from Seattle’s Paramount Theatre, but the carrot here is The Devonshire Mixes, which restores Butch Vig’s initial mix before Geffen commissioned Andy Wallace to spritz it further. Vig’s mix lacks some of Wallace’s more artificial-sounding drum samples, feeling grittier, less defined. There are a few plain differences – the “Territorial Pissings†is notably harsher, excising Novoselic’s opening holler and replacing the middle-eight with something more brutally skronky.

Ultimately, though, little to justify the hefty pricetag. Sad to say it, but that cover of the baby grasping for a floating dollar is starting to look strangely prescient.

Louis Pattison

WILCO – THE WHOLE LOVE

0
Wilco fans are as polarised as the US congress. Some revel in the band’s eardrum-pulverising forays into the sonic unknown, introduced on 2002’s art-damaged Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and refined on 2004’s brutally beautiful A Ghost Is Born. The rest are entranced by what Jeff Tweedy describes as â€...

Wilco fans are as polarised as the US congress. Some revel in the band’s eardrum-pulverising forays into the sonic unknown, introduced on 2002’s art-damaged Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and refined on 2004’s brutally beautiful A Ghost Is Born. The rest are entranced by what Jeff Tweedy describes as “cinematic-sounding country music…you know, folk musicâ€, represented by 2007’s glorious Sky Blue Sky and 2009’s intermittently captivating Wilco (The Album).

The latest version of Wilco, (containing only two original members in Tweedy and bassist John Stirrat), is the most stable unit Tweedy has assembled in the band’s 17-year history, in marked contrast to its volatile first decade. Ironically, the current lineup, completed with the additions of guitarist Nels Cline and multi-instrumentalist Pat Sansone, is far more suited to experimentation than any previous iteration, though this dimension is less overtly displayed on the most recent two albums.

It’s tempting to view The Whole Love –released on their own label, dBpm – as a dialectical conversation between Wilco and the two camps. They set up the contrast dramatically on the wonderfully titled seven-minute opener “Art Of Almostâ€, powered by a customised motorik groove somewhere between Ghost’s “Spiders (Kidsmoke)†and Wilco (The Album) standout “Bull Black Novaâ€. The groove appears out of the crackle of static and takes on percolating cross-rhythms behind Glenn Kotche’s marvellous drumming, the sonics gradually morphing from Mellotron-washed gorgeousness to a savage intensity, as guitarist Nels Cline whips himself into a head-exploding frenzy. After such a beginning, the hardcore have to be hopeful that the wait is finally over. But that’s pretty much it for shrieking over-the-top-ness. What we get instead in the body of The Whole Love is an alternating mix of trademark rockers and ballads, bonded by Tweedy’s central presence, shifting between scarred and elated, and the arrangements, which play off the bandleader’s range of moods. While the album is packed with inventive moments, there’s no more lacerating skronk, for a very good reason: the emotions the band is mirroring don’t call for it.

On “I Mightâ€, the first of the upbeat tracks, the band bangs out a clattering, garage-y groove in the spirit of Elvis Costello And The Attractions’ Get Happy, with Mikael Jorgensen making like Steve Nieve on the Farfisa. Here, Tweedy rolls with his signature blend of puppy dog earnestness and relatable real-life agitation (sample lyric: “You won’t set the kids on fire/Oh but I mightâ€), but the prevailing emotion is his sheer joy at being part of this killer band in full-on rave-up mode. “Born Alone†chugs along with country-rock amiability, Tweedy’s hayseed vocal set off by Cline’s trumpeting lines as the other players rise up to make ecstatic noise alongside him, in the vein of Sky Blue Sky’s sublime “Impossible Germanyâ€. Half musical snapshot, half long-distance love note, “Capitol City†visits the antique Americana of Randy Newman, Cline impersonating a Dixieland clarinet with his slide lines. “Standing O†picks up where “I Might†left off, sounding like some newly discovered outtake from the Stiff Records catalogue. The title track is the album’s warmest, most relaxed and poppiest cut, Tweedy going for some falsetto lines amid the band’s merry bounce.

Of the reflective songs, “Sunloathe†settles into a “Strawberry Fields Foreverâ€-like pastoral eeriness, “Black Moon†is as noir-ish as the title suggests, “Open Mind†hints at the psychological devastation of Neil Young’s Tonight’s The Night and “Rising Red Lung†finds Tweedy singing in a near-whisper over a fingerpicked acoustic, while the band floats on sunset clouds overhead. On the 12-minute-plus closer “One Sunday Morning (Song For Jane Smiley’s Boyfriend)â€, the band inverts the buildup of “Art Of Almostâ€, moving with dexterity from anguish to acceptance, as Tweedy’s describes the emotional wounds inflicted by a father who takes his disappointment in his son to his grave, the band tracing the course of the narrator’s struggle and ultimate release with intensity.

Wilco’s latter-day character is now readily apparent. No longer the American Radiohead, as the true believers proclaimed a decade ago, this incarnation of Wilco is closer to a post-millennial Buffalo Springfield – especially when Cline, Tweedy and Sansone’s electric guitars blaze away together. And if Jeff Tweedy is no longer the tortured soul who ripped Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and A Ghost Is Born out of the recesses of his ravaged psyche, that is something worth celebrating.

Bud Scoppa

The Beatles’ early recordings with Tony Sheridan to be released

0
The Beatles' earliest recordings with singer Tony Sheridan are set to be released. A deluxe double CD set entitled 'The Beatles With Tony Sheridan: First Recordings' will compile tracks cut by the quartet, with former sticksman Pete Best on drums, in Hamburg, reports Variety. The band performed w...

The Beatles‘ earliest recordings with singer Tony Sheridan are set to be released.

A deluxe double CD set entitled ‘The Beatles With Tony Sheridan: First Recordings’ will compile tracks cut by the quartet, with former sticksman Pete Best on drums, in Hamburg, reports Variety.

The band performed with Sheridan as Polydor artists after music executive Bert Kaempfert discovered them performing in a German nightclub in 1961.

The Beatles‘ numbers include ‘Ain’t She Sweet’, which sees John Lennon taking up vocal duties and the George Harrison-penned instrumental ‘Cry For a Shadow’. It is set to be released in the US on November 8. No date has yet been set in the UK.

The release will be accompanied by a booklet full of rarely seen photographs, taken by one-time Beatles guitarist Stuart Sutcliffe’s fiancee Astrid Kirchherr, band contracts, poster art of early shows and handwritten biographies by each member of the group.

New documents recently revealed The Beatles refused to play to a “segregated crowd” when they toured the US in the mid-1960s.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

PJ Harvey to perform ‘Let England Shake’ in front of David Cameron

0
PJ Harvey is set to perform in front of the UK's Prime Minister David Cameron this weekend on the BBC's Andrew Marr Show. The singer will play material from her Mercury Prize-winning album 'Let England Shake' on Sunday (October 2). This is the second time the singer has performed on the show in f...

PJ Harvey is set to perform in front of the UK’s Prime Minister David Cameron this weekend on the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show.

The singer will play material from her Mercury Prize-winning album ‘Let England Shake’ on Sunday (October 2).

This is the second time the singer has performed on the show in front of a UK Prime Minister. Harvey played the title track of her album in front of ex-PM Gordon Brown last year, one week ahead of the General Election.

The star, whose album deals primarily with war, also recently spoke out over the London riots.

“I can’t say I was surprised. It was just a matter of time,” she told NME. “[We will] just wait and see what the government chooses or what it puts in place to start addressing some of the issues that brought it about in the first place. We’ll have to wait and see.”

She added: “People are finding their voices. There’s been an awful amount of suppression and censorship. The world is becoming more and more based on moneymaking and less and less on supporting a good quality of life for everybody, and everything we’re seeing, people getting so frustrated that they feel like they have to rise up, is partly because of this.”

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Radiohead cover REM during their live comeback in New York

0
Radiohead paid tribute to REM during their live comeback at New York's Roseland Ballroom last night (September 28). The band, who were known to be fans of the Georgia trio, covered their hit single 'The One I Love' during the intro to their track 'Everything In Its Right Place'. The gig was the ...

Radiohead paid tribute to REM during their live comeback at New York‘s Roseland Ballroom last night (September 28).

The band, who were known to be fans of the Georgia trio, covered their hit single ‘The One I Love’ during the intro to their track ‘Everything In Its Right Place’.

The gig was the first that Radiohead have formally played since they released their new album ‘The Kings Of Limbs’, having previously only played live in a secret show at Glastonbury.

The band played a set which drew from across their career last night, with seven tracks aired from ‘The Kings Of Limbs’.

Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke confirmed recently that the band would be touring in 2012, saying: “The idea is to go out and play next year on and off during the year.”

Radiohead played:

‘Bloom’

‘Little By Little’

‘Staircase’

‘Weird Fishes/Arpeggi’

‘Feral’

‘Subterranean Homesick Alien’

‘All I Need’

‘The One I Love’/’Everything In Its Right Place’

‘Lotus Flower’

’15 Step’

‘Myxomatosis’

‘Codex’

‘Bodysnatchers’

‘Reckoner’

‘Give Up the Ghost’

‘The National Anthem’

‘Morning Mr Magpie’

‘Street Spirit (Fade Out)’

‘Nude’

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Elbow announce plans for one-off homecoming show

0
Elbow have announced plans for a one-off homecoming show next month. The band are set to be backed by the Halle Youth Choir for the show, which is being organised by Radio 2 as part of their In Concert series, at Manchester Cathedral on October 27. The choir performed on tracks from their recent a...

Elbow have announced plans for a one-off homecoming show next month.

The band are set to be backed by the Halle Youth Choir for the show, which is being organised by Radio 2 as part of their In Concert series, at Manchester Cathedral on October 27.

The choir performed on tracks from their recent album, ‘Build A Rocket Boys!’. Proceeds from the concert at the 15th century church will go towards supporting scholarships for youngsters to attend neighbouring Chetham’s School For Music.

Frontman Guy Garvey explained that the band are still at a very early stage in the process, but are trying out a new technique to come up with new material for their next album.

The singer said: “[Drummer] Rich [Jupp] went into the studio and recorded several different drum patterns for me. We’ve never worked this way before, but we’ll see what happens.”

For more information about the gig, head to Radio 2.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Radiohead, Pearl Jam, Beastie Boys pick songs on Sonic Youth collection

0
Radiohead, Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam and Mike D of Beastie Boys are among the musicians and celebrity fans to have picked songs for inclusion on a Sonic Youth 'best of' collection. Entitled 'Hits Are For Squares', the album – which received a limited release on Starbucks Music in 2008 – will ge...

Radiohead, Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam and Mike D of Beastie Boys are among the musicians and celebrity fans to have picked songs for inclusion on a Sonic Youth ‘best of’ collection.

Entitled ‘Hits Are For Squares’, the album – which received a limited release on Starbucks Music in 2008 – will get a full release through Universal on October 31. The album features a host of actors, musicians, directors and artists who have chosen Sonic Youth songs for the album, including Beck, actress Portia De Rossi, screenwriter Diablo Cody, author Dave Eggers, actress Michelle Williams, director Gus Van Sant, actress Chloe Sevigny, and The Flaming Lips.

The documentary ‘1991: The Year Punk Broke’ will also be available on October 31 for the first time on DVD. Featuring Sonic Youth, Nirvana, the Ramones, Dinosaur Jr. and Babes In Toyland, the film contains live Sonic Youth footage as well as behind the scenes reportage. Scroll down to watch the trailer.

The DVD comes with 65 minutes of bonus material, including the previously unreleased film ‘(This Is Known As) The Blues Scale, which features a performance by Nirvana of In Bloom. The DVD also hosts Broken Punk, a 2003 panel discussion with Thurston Moore, Steve Shelley and Lee Ranaldo, Dinosaur Jr’s J. Mascis and the 1991: The Year Punk Broke filmmaker Dave Markey.

The Hits Are For Squares tracklisting is:

‘Bull In The Heather’ (selected by Catherine Keener)

‘100%’ (selected by Mike D)

‘Sugar Kane’ (selected by Beck)

‘Kool Thing’ (selected by Radiohead)

‘Disappearer’ (selected by Portia de Rossi)

‘Superstar’ (selected by Diablo Cody)

‘Stones’ (selected by Allison Anders)

‘Tuff Gnarl’ (selected by Dave Eggers and Mike Watt)

‘Teenage Riot’ (selected by Eddie Vedder)

‘Shadow Of A Doubt’ (selected by Michelle Williams)

‘Rain On Tin’ (selected by Flea)

‘Tom Violence (selected by Gus Van Sant)

‘Mary-Christ’ (selected by David Cross)

‘The World Looks Red’ (selected by Chloe Sevigny)

‘Expressway To Yr Skull’ (selected by The Flaming Lips)

‘Slow Revolution’ (new track)

Watch the trailer for 1991: The Year Punk Broke below:

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

The Cure to perform first three albums live at Royal Albert Hall

0
The Cure are set to perform their debut album 'Three Imaginary Boys' (1979) and its follow-up records 'Seventeen Seconds' (1980), and 'Faith' (1981), in their entirety at London's Royal Albert Hall on November 15. Following similar shows entitled Reflections in Australia earlier this year, the band...

The Cure are set to perform their debut album ‘Three Imaginary Boys’ (1979) and its follow-up records ‘Seventeen Seconds’ (1980), and ‘Faith’ (1981), in their entirety at London‘s Royal Albert Hall on November 15.

Following similar shows entitled Reflections in Australia earlier this year, the band will also take the special concert to Los Angeles Pantages Theatre for November 21-23 and to New York Beacon Theatre for November 25-27.

Each album set will last approximately 40 minutes and the evening will be concluded with a 30-minute encore of other songs from the band’s early career. The shows will see former members of the band appearing in the line-up. The current line-up of the band headlined Bestival earlier this month.

Tickets for the show go on sale at 9am on September 30.

It was announced earlier today that The Cure have been shortlisted for next year’s Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame.

Guns N’ Roses, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Beastie Boys, Joan Jett And The Blackhearts, The Faces, The Spinners and Donovan have also been nominated for entry next year. Between five and seven of the nominees are likely to make it for inclusion at a ceremony in Cleveland, Ohio, on April 1, 2012.

To check the availability of [url=http://www.seetickets.com/see/event.asp?artist=the+cure&filler1=see&filler3=id1nmestory]The Cure tickets[/url] and get all the latest listings, go to [url=http://www.nme.com/gigs]NME.COM/TICKETS[/url] now, or call 0871 230 1094.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

November 2011

0
14 brilliant tracks, including Grizzly Bear, Ganglians, Plush, Van Dyke Parks, Gruff Rhys and Sufjan Stevens The day in October 1987 that the issue of Melody Maker comes out with a review IÂ’ve written of Bob Dylan at whatÂ’s now Wembley Arena, I get a call from someone I can barely hear even thoug...

14 brilliant tracks, including Grizzly Bear, Ganglians, Plush, Van Dyke Parks, Gruff Rhys and Sufjan Stevens

The day in October 1987 that the issue of Melody Maker comes out with a review I’ve written of Bob Dylan at what’s now Wembley Arena, I get a call from someone I can barely hear even though he’s shouting over the constant squawk of announcements being made over a startlingly loud public address system. It turns out to be someone I’ve never met called Larry Eden – “As in ‘Gates Of. . .’” he tells me. Larry, it turns out, is a big Dylan fan and he’s calling because he’s just read the new issue of MM and was surprised to find a review of Dylan in it and even more startled to discover that at a time when Dylan’s critical standing is at perhaps an all-time low, the review describes the concert as one of the most exciting, if contrary and confrontational I’ve ever seen.

Larry asks me if I’d like him to send me some live tapes he’s made of recent Dylan shows. Larry, it further transpires, doesn’t miss many Dylan concerts, is in fact at Heathrow, hence the background hubbub, waiting for a flight to Spain, where Dylan that night starts a European tour, Larry with tickets for every show, all of which he intends taping. “I have quite a collection,” he says with what turns out to be considerable understatement.

Anyway, as much as a month later, the IPC post room calls to say theyÂ’re in receipt of a special delivery for me that someone will bring up to my office. Not much later, a couple of burly fellows stagger into my office with an enormous cardboard box, big enough to pack a horse in.

WhatÂ’s in the box, finally revealed after much hacking at the layers of sticky tape mummifying its contents, are hundreds of C90 cassettes, each one of a bootleg of different Dylan show, going back I donÂ’t know how far, possibly from the sheer quantity of tapes all the way to Greenwich Village.

This is how I generally think of bootlegs at the time – clandestine recordings made at concerts by obsessive fans and then put into circulation for similarly obsessed types. There is, however, a greater bootleg sub-culture that amounts almost to a secret history of rock, the most famous example being The Beach Boys’ Smile.

With Smile finally getting an official release, like famous bootlegs before it, including records by Dylan, Bowie, The Beatles, Prince and The Who, we wondered if there were any great albums still only available bootlegs. The answer was a resounding yes and the 50 best are listed in this monthÂ’s cover story. As ever, let me know if weÂ’ve missed out any records you think we should have included, via email to the usual address.

In other news, Uncut has teamed up with Sonic Editions, who specialise in high quality limited edition music photography, to host Sonic Editions Present The Uncut Collection At The Royal Albert Hall, an exhibition that runs at the iconic London venue from October 5 to November 1, 2011, which Sonic Editions rather kindly asked me to curate for them. Readers who arenÂ’t attending any concerts at the RAH during the exhibitionÂ’s run can view it on special Open Days on October 8, 22 and 23, from 11-3pm

REM to release three brand new songs

0

Despite announcing their split last week, REM are set to release three brand new songs on a greatest hits album, which is out on November 14. 'We All Go Back To Where We Belong', 'A Month Of Saturdays' and 'Hallelujah' will feature on the 40-song collection 'Part Lies, Part Heart, Part Truth, Part Garbage, 1982 – 2011'. The three tracks were recorded in the band’s hometown of Athens, Georgia over the summer with producer Jacknife Lee, after the release of their final album 'Collapse Into Now'. The album will cover their 31 years as a band from their early days on the IRS label (1982-1987) to their time with Warner Bros. Records (1988-2011). Before their split the band had sold more than 85 million albums across the world. Of compiling the album Mike Mills said: "Working through our music and memories from over three decades was a hell of a journey. We realised that these songs seemed to draw a natural line under the last 31 years of our working together." The tracklisting for 'Part Lies, Part Heart, Part Truth, Part Garbage, 1982–2011' is: Disc 1: 'Gardening At Night' 'Radio Free Europe' 'Talk About The Passion' 'Sitting Still' 'So. Central Rain (I'm Sorry)' '(Don’t Go Back To) Rockville' 'Driver 8' 'Life And How To Live It' 'Begin The Begin' 'Fall On Me' 'Finest Worksong' 'It's The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)' 'The One I Love' 'Stand' 'Pop Song 89' 'Get Up' 'Orange Crush' 'Losing My Religion' 'Country Feedback' 'Shiny Happy People' Disc 2: 'The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonite' 'Everybody Hurts' 'Man On The Moon' 'Nightswimming' 'What's The Frequency, Kenneth?' 'New Test Leper' 'Electrolite' 'At My Most Beautiful' 'The Great Beyond' 'Imitation Of Life' 'Bad Day' 'Leaving New York' 'Living Well Is The Best Revenge' 'Supernatural Superserious' 'Überlin' 'Oh My Heart' 'Alligator_Aviator_Autopilot_Antimatter' 'A Month Of Saturdays' 'We All Go Back To Where We Belong' 'Hallelujah' Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Despite announcing their split last week, REM are set to release three brand new songs on a greatest hits album, which is out on November 14.

‘We All Go Back To Where We Belong’, ‘A Month Of Saturdays’ and ‘Hallelujah’ will feature on the 40-song collection ‘Part Lies, Part Heart, Part Truth, Part Garbage, 1982 – 2011’.

The three tracks were recorded in the band’s hometown of Athens, Georgia over the summer with producer Jacknife Lee, after the release of their final album ‘Collapse Into Now’.

The album will cover their 31 years as a band from their early days on the IRS label (1982-1987) to their time with Warner Bros. Records (1988-2011). Before their split the band had sold more than 85 million albums across the world. Of compiling the album Mike Mills said: “Working through our music and memories from over three decades was a hell of a journey. We realised that these songs seemed to draw a natural line under the last 31 years of our working together.”

The tracklisting for ‘Part Lies, Part Heart, Part Truth, Part Garbage, 1982–2011’ is:

Disc 1:

‘Gardening At Night’

‘Radio Free Europe’

‘Talk About The Passion’

‘Sitting Still’

‘So. Central Rain (I’m Sorry)’

‘(Don’t Go Back To) Rockville’

‘Driver 8’

‘Life And How To Live It’

‘Begin The Begin’

‘Fall On Me’

‘Finest Worksong’

‘It’s The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)’

‘The One I Love’

‘Stand’

‘Pop Song 89’

‘Get Up’

‘Orange Crush’

‘Losing My Religion’

‘Country Feedback’

‘Shiny Happy People’

Disc 2:

‘The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonite’

‘Everybody Hurts’

‘Man On The Moon’

‘Nightswimming’

‘What’s The Frequency, Kenneth?’

‘New Test Leper’

‘Electrolite’

‘At My Most Beautiful’

‘The Great Beyond’

‘Imitation Of Life’

‘Bad Day’

‘Leaving New York’

‘Living Well Is The Best Revenge’

‘Supernatural Superserious’

‘Überlin’

‘Oh My Heart’

‘Alligator_Aviator_Autopilot_Antimatter’

‘A Month Of Saturdays’

‘We All Go Back To Where We Belong’

‘Hallelujah’

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Laura Marling adds four matinees to her UK cathedral tour

0
Laura Marling has added four matinees to her UK cathedral tour next month. The singer, who released her third album 'A Creature I Don't Know' on September 12, will set out on the tour, which is entitled the When The Bell Tolls Tour, in October. Marling, who has largely sold out the tour, will no...

Laura Marling has added four matinees to her UK cathedral tour next month.

The singer, who released her third album ‘A Creature I Don’t Know’ on September 12, will set out on the tour, which is entitled the When The Bell Tolls Tour, in October.

Marling, who has largely sold out the tour, will now play matinee performances at her shows in Gloucester on October 18, York on October 21, Sheffield on October 22 and Birmingham on October 29, the tour’s final day.

Earlier this year, Marling won both the Shockwaves NME Award for Best Solo Artist and the BRIT for Best British Female.

Laura Marling will now play:

Exeter Cathedral (October 14)

Winchester Cathedral (15)

Guildford Cathedral (17)

Gloucester Cathedral (18)*

York Minster (21)*

Sheffield Cathedral (22)*

Manchester Cathedral (24)

Bristol Cathedral (25)

London Central Hall Westminster (26)

Liverpool Anglican Cathedral (28)

Birmingham Cathedral (29)*

Dates marked with a * feature two shows a day, one with doors opening at 12.40pm and another at 7.30pm.

Tickets for the matinees will go on sale on Friday (September 30) at 10am (BST). To check the availability of [url=http://www.seetickets.com/see/event.asp?artist=laura+marling&filler1=see&filler3=id1nmestory]Laura Marling tickets[/url] and get all the latest listings, go to [url=http://www.nme.com/gigs]NME.COM/TICKETS[/url] now, or call 0871 230 1094.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Lou Reed and Metallica debut first full song from ‘Lulu’

0
Metallica and Lou Reed have unveiled the first full track from their new joint album 'Lulu'. The metal titans and former Velvet Underground man had previously made 30-second and 90-second previews of new track 'The View' available, but have now debuted the full version of the track, which you can ...

Metallica and Lou Reed have unveiled the first full track from their new joint album ‘Lulu’.

The metal titans and former Velvet Underground man had previously made 30-second and 90-second previews of new track ‘The View’ available, but have now debuted the full version of the track, which you can hear by scrolling down to the bottom of the page and clicking.

‘Lulu’, which is based around German playwright Frank Wedekind’s 1913 play about the life of an abused dancer, is due for release on October 31, with the North American release following a day later on November 1. Both parties have been secretive about the album’s contents so far.

The promotional poster for the album was recently banned on tube trains and in stations by London Underground after bosses ruled that the artwork for the album, which you can see on the right of your screen, looked too much like graffiti.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Suede’s Brett Anderson: ‘Our next album will be damned’

0
Suede singer Brett Anderson has admitted the band will be "damned" for recording a new album. The frontman, who recently revealed the band would record a new album as soon as he finishes promotional duties on his new solo album 'Black Rainbows', told the Daily Star that fans will always criticise a...

Suede singer Brett Anderson has admitted the band will be “damned” for recording a new album.

The frontman, who recently revealed the band would record a new album as soon as he finishes promotional duties on his new solo album ‘Black Rainbows’, told the Daily Star that fans will always criticise a future record no matter what happens.

“There are people who will inevitably say it sounds too much like we did in the 90s, others who will say it’s too modern,” he said. “We’re damned both ways. We just have to make a record we think is great and can be proud of.”

Following a series of gigs last year, Anderson said over the summer it was important the band move forward rather than just continue to “play the same set from the 90s year after year”.

“We’re going to give it a go,” he now added. “It would have to be as exciting and challenging as making a solo record for me, but we will dip our toes in the water.”

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Pink Floyd’s Nick Mason: ‘We will only ever reform for an event like Live 8’

0

Former Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason has said the band will only ever play together again for a major global event. The sticksman backed up Roger Waters' comments earlier this year that he had "no wish" to work with the band again despite the fact the remaining members all played together for Waters' 'The Wall Live' tour in May. The performance was the band's first since they performed at Live 8 six years ago, although between those events keyboard player Rick Wright died, in 2008. Mason said it is unlikely the band will ever play together again unless it is a similar global event to Live 8. "There are two elements to it, really," he said. "One is how Roger and Dave actually felt about working with each other, and whether there was some advantage in it that they would get something from it or achieve something they can't on their own. "And the other thing would be wanting to do something that could be a real force for change, a grander version of Live 8 driven by someone even more major than Bob Geldof - someone who could say, 'Look, we could put this event on and it would transform the Middle East peace process.'" The drummer also said he had regrets over late member Syd Barrett and he wishes the band had done more to help him with his reported use of psychedelic drugs. "Looking back on it, we didn't know any better," he told Jam.canoe.ca. "We should have just cut him free at the point when he didn't really want to be in a pop star band. It still might not have saved him. There still might have been a big drug problem or a psychosis." Barrett left the band in 1968 and became a recluse after a short-lived solo career. He died in 2006 aged 60 from pancreatic cancer. All 14 of Pink Floyd's studio albums have been remastered and repackaged for a new re-issue campaign which begins today (September 26). The band marked the occasion by re-enacting the artwork for their 1976 album 'Animals', by flying a pig over Battersea Power Station. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Former Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason has said the band will only ever play together again for a major global event.

The sticksman backed up Roger Waters’ comments earlier this year that he had “no wish” to work with the band again despite the fact the remaining members all played together for Waters’ ‘The Wall Live’ tour in May. The performance was the band’s first since they performed at Live 8 six years ago, although between those events keyboard player Rick Wright died, in 2008.

Mason said it is unlikely the band will ever play together again unless it is a similar global event to Live 8. “There are two elements to it, really,” he said. “One is how Roger and Dave actually felt about working with each other, and whether there was some advantage in it that they would get something from it or achieve something they can’t on their own.

“And the other thing would be wanting to do something that could be a real force for change, a grander version of Live 8 driven by someone even more major than Bob Geldof – someone who could say, ‘Look, we could put this event on and it would transform the Middle East peace process.'”

The drummer also said he had regrets over late member Syd Barrett and he wishes the band had done more to help him with his reported use of psychedelic drugs. “Looking back on it, we didn’t know any better,” he told Jam.canoe.ca. “We should have just cut him free at the point when he didn’t really want to be in a pop star band. It still might not have saved him. There still might have been a big drug problem or a psychosis.”

Barrett left the band in 1968 and became a recluse after a short-lived solo career. He died in 2006 aged 60 from pancreatic cancer.

All 14 of Pink Floyd‘s studio albums have been remastered and repackaged for a new re-issue campaign which begins today (September 26). The band marked the occasion by re-enacting the artwork for their 1976 album ‘Animals’, by flying a pig over Battersea Power Station.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Ryan Adams: ‘I threw out 80 per cent of my album when I heard Laura Marling’

0
Ryan Adams has admitted Laura Marling helped inspire his forthcoming new album Ashes & Fire'. The singer-songwriter said he ditched most of the songs he wrote for his 13th studio album after producer Glyn Jones passed on her 2010 LP 'I Speak Because I Can'. [quote]'I thought: 'For fuck's sake. ...

Ryan Adams has admitted Laura Marling helped inspire his forthcoming new album Ashes & Fire’.

The singer-songwriter said he ditched most of the songs he wrote for his 13th studio album after producer Glyn Jones passed on her 2010 LP ‘I Speak Because I Can’. [quote]’I thought: ‘For fuck’s sake. I literally threw out 80 per cent of what I had. And it felt good to ask: ‘What am I really capable of? I felt competitive again to write great songs.[/quote]

Recorded at Hollywood‘s Sunset Sound Factory, the album will be released on his own label, PAX-AM. Jones worked on Adams‘ albums ‘Heartbreaker’, ‘Gold’ and ’29’. He is the son Ethan Johns, who worked with Bob Dylan, The Beatles, The Who and The Rolling Stones.

Adams also revealed how he slipped into a period of heavy drug taking after he was diagnosed with Ménière’s disease in 2006. This disease is a degnerative condition which affects hearing and balance.

“All the stuff I was doing exacerbated the disease,” he told The Guardian. “You’re not supposed to smoke, you’re not supposed to drink alcohol, be stressed, eat salty foods. You’re probably not supposed to do speedballs.

“I didn’t know this at the time, but people have since said they were certain I would die.”

But the singer, who has since become sober, said taking opium helped him to write some of his songs. “I fully understand when people say Edgar Allen Poe used to smoke this stuff and have visions,” he said. “I wrote the entire song ‘How Do You Keep Love Alive’ [from 2005’s ‘Cold Roses’] without writing a word down, and I played it on piano. And I’ve tried to understand the chord pattern ever since, because I can’t fucking play it.”

Ashes & Fire’ is released on October 10 and coincides with a series of UK dates.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Smashing Pumpkins announce tracklisting for new album ‘Oceania’

0
Smashing Pumpkins have revealed the tracklisting for their ninth studio album 'Oceania'. The band's frontman Billy Corgan announce the album's final running order on his Twitter account Twitter.com/billy and wrote of the album: "I'm really, really proud of the work we've done. Our hearts are on th...

Smashing Pumpkins have revealed the tracklisting for their ninth studio album ‘Oceania’.

The band’s frontman Billy Corgan announce the album’s final running order on his Twitter account Twitter.com/billy and wrote of the album: “I’m really, really proud of the work we’ve done. Our hearts are on the line for sure. No cuts. 14 songs it will be.”

The Smashing Pumpkins, who now consist of Corgan, Jeff Schroeder on guitar, Nicola Fiorentino on bass and Mike Byrne on drums, will tour the UK later this year.

The tour takes in seven dates in November. These begin in Manchester at the O2 Apollo on November 11 and end at the O2 Academy Birmingham on November 19. The run also includes two nights at London‘s O2 Academy Brixton on November 15 and 16.

The tracklisting for ‘Oceania’ is as follows:

‘Quasar’

‘Stella P And The People Mover’

‘Panopticon’

‘The Celestials’

‘Violet Rays’

‘My Love Is Winter’

‘One Diamond, One Heart’

‘Pinwheels’

‘Oceania’

‘Pale Horse’

‘The Chimera’

‘Glissandra’

‘Inkless’

‘Wildflower’

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Los Angeles school renames itself Carlos Santana Arts Academy

0

A Los Angeles elementary school has renamed itself Carlos Santana Arts Academy after the legendary axeman. The school, which was previously known as the Valley Region Elementary School No. 12, will now be known as the Carlos Santana Arts Academy after the school's board decided to honour the guitarist for his longstanding musical achievements and for philanthropy with his Milagro Foundation, which works to provide education and health care for children. The Santana guitarist has thanked the school for the honour and wrote of his pride at receiving the accolade in a letter to the school's board, reports Fox News. Santana recently made headlines as one of the artists protesting against the changes to the Grammy Awards. In another letter, this time to the organizers of the awards, he described the decision to remove over 30 categories from the proceedings as doing "a disservice to the brilliant musicians who keep music vibrant." Santana's particular concern was the culling of category which celebrated Latin jazz. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk. Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

A Los Angeles elementary school has renamed itself Carlos Santana Arts Academy after the legendary axeman.

The school, which was previously known as the Valley Region Elementary School No. 12, will now be known as the Carlos Santana Arts Academy after the school’s board decided to honour the guitarist for his longstanding musical achievements and for philanthropy with his Milagro Foundation, which works to provide education and health care for children.

The Santana guitarist has thanked the school for the honour and wrote of his pride at receiving the accolade in a letter to the school’s board, reports Fox News.

Santana recently made headlines as one of the artists protesting against the changes to the Grammy Awards. In another letter, this time to the organizers of the awards, he described the decision to remove over 30 categories from the proceedings as doing “a disservice to the brilliant musicians who keep music vibrant.”

Santana‘s particular concern was the culling of category which celebrated Latin jazz.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

REM split up after 31 years

0
REM have split up after 31 years. The band, considered one of the most influential groups of all time, as well as one of the most successful, announced their decision today (September 21) via their website REMhq.com. Their joint statement read:"To all our fans and friends: as REM, and as lifelong ...

REM have split up after 31 years.

The band, considered one of the most influential groups of all time, as well as one of the most successful, announced their decision today (September 21) via their website REMhq.com.

Their joint statement read:”To all our fans and friends: as REM, and as lifelong friends and co-conspirators, we have decided to call it a day as a band. We walk away with a great sense of gratitude, of finality, and of astonishment at all we have accomplished. To anyone who ever felt touched by our music, our deepest thanks for listening.”

The band members went on to add their own personal messages.

Singer Michael Stipe wrote. “A wise man once said: ‘The skill in attending a party is knowing when it’s time to leave. We built something extraordinary together. We did this thing. And now we’re going to walk away from it. I hope our fans realize this wasn’t an easy decision; but all things must end, and we wanted to do it right, to do it our way. We have to thank all the people who helped us be REM for these 31 years; our deepest gratitude to those who allowed us to do this thing. It’s been amazing.â€

Guitarist Peter Buck added: “One of the things that was always so great about being in REM was the fact that the records and the songs we wrote meant as much to our fans as they did to us. It was, and still is, important to us to do right by you. Being a part of your lives has been an unbelievable gift. Thank you.

“Mike, Michael, Bill and Bertis [Downs, manager] and I walk away as great friends. I know I will be seeing them in the future, just as you know I will be seeing everyone who has followed us and supported us through the years. Even if it’s only in the vinyl aisle of your local record store, or standing at the back of the club; watching a group of 19 year olds trying to change the world.”

Bass player Mike Mills concluded: “During our last tour, and while making ‘Collapse Into Now’ and putting together this greatest hits retrospective, we started asking ourselves, ‘what next?’ Working through our music and memories from over three decades was a hell of a journey. We realised that these songs seemed to draw a natural line under the last 31 years of our working together.

“We have always been a band in the truest sense of the word. Brothers who truly love, and respect, each other. We feel kind of like pioneers in this – there’s no disharmony here, no falling-outs, no lawyers squaring off. We’ve made this decision together, amicably and with each other’s best interests at heart. The time just feels right.”

REM formed in Athens, Georgia in 1980 and released 15 studio albums, from 1983’s ‘Murmur’ to this year’s ‘Collapse Into Now’. Drummer Bill Berry quit in 1997 to become a farmer, having suffered a brain aneurysm two years earlier. He was never officially replaced.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Neil Young’s ‘revealing and intimate’ autobiography to hit shelves in 2012

0
Neil Young's forthcoming autobiography will offer a "revealing [and] intimate" insight into the legendary singer-songwriter's career, according to its publisher. Titled Waging Heavy Peace, the tome is due to be published by Blue Rider Press - a new imprint of Penguin - in autumn 2012. In a stateme...

Neil Young‘s forthcoming autobiography will offer a “revealing [and] intimate” insight into the legendary singer-songwriter’s career, according to its publisher.

Titled Waging Heavy Peace, the tome is due to be published by Blue Rider Press – a new imprint of Penguin – in autumn 2012.

In a statement, Young said that sitting down to write his memoirs fit him “like a glove”. He remarked:”I started and I just kept going. That’s the way my daddy used to do it on his old Underwood up in the attic. He said, ‘Just keep writing, you never know what will turn up’.”

Blue Rider Press president David Rosenthal added that the book will “provide the window into Neil’s life and career that fans and admirers have always wanted”.

Young released his 33rd studio album, ‘Le Noise’, last year. He lost an estimated $850,000 worth (£540,000) of musical equipment and memorabilia in a fire at his San Francisco warehouse last November.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.

Coldplay’s Chris Martin: ‘Mylo Xyloto’ is like a musical’

0
Coldplay singer Chris Martin has compared their forthcoming album 'Mylo Xyloto' to a musical. The frontman said their fifth studio effort is loosely based on a love story, which is similar to a jazz musical. He told The Sun: "Our new record is sort of a story – it's not quite a musical, but it's ...

Coldplay singer Chris Martin has compared their forthcoming album ‘Mylo Xyloto’ to a musical.

The frontman said their fifth studio effort is loosely based on a love story, which is similar to a jazz musical. He told The Sun: “Our new record is sort of a story – it’s not quite a musical, but it’s dangerously close.”

Martin also said drummer Will Champion almost ended up singing on ‘Princess Of China’ before they roped Rihanna in. Champion previously sang on the track ‘Death Will Never Conquer’ during the their ‘Viva La Vida Tour’.

He said: “There’s a bit of a love story thread so we really needed someone to sing even higher than me,” he added. “For all Will’s good intentions, he can’t do it. You need to be a female.”

His comments come after he said the track was his “favourite bit” on the record. “When the song came out, it sort of asked for her to be on it,” Martin said. And I think at this point, we have nothing to lose, and so we’ve been trying some new things and trying to break down the perceived boundaries between different types of music.”

‘Mylo Xyloto’ is released on October 24.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Uncut have teamed up with Sonic Editions to curate a number of limited-edition framed iconic rock photographs, featuring the likes of Pink Floyd, Bob Dylan and The Clash. View the full collection here.