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Sting set to co-write Newcastle themed musical ‘The Last Ship’

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Sting is set to co-write a musical based around the lives of people in his home city of Newcastle. The musical, which is set to be titled 'The Last Ship', will, according to the New York Times, feature music and lyrics from Sting and a book by Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award winning writer Brian Yor...

Sting is set to co-write a musical based around the lives of people in his home city of Newcastle.

The musical, which is set to be titled ‘The Last Ship’, will, according to the New York Times, feature music and lyrics from Sting and a book by Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award winning writer Brian Yorkey.

The musical is reportedly set in the 1980s in Newcastle, with characters set to include a priest, a industrial titan and a former shipyard worker.

Yorkey said of the project: “It’s Sting’s first foray into writing for musical theatre. I won’t say the score is complete because the score’s not complete until God knows when. But he’s written a couple dozen, maybe 20, 24, amazing new songs for the show. He’s writing great theatre music. It’s very, very distinctly Sting, but it also is theatre music. It’s not just pop music transposed into the theatre.”

Sting has recently been in the news after he has cancelled a scheduled live date in Kazakhstan because he didn’t want to promote the country’s “repression” of its oil and gas workers.

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Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks, “Mirror Traffic” + Lindsey Buckingham, “Seeds We Sow”

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Bit of a hack through the backlog today, beginning with a mild disappointment, Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks’ “Mirror Traffic”. No arguing about the clarity of Beck’s production – there’s the same crispness he brought to the Thurston Moore solo set earlier this year. Nevertheless, I’m not convinced that the relative tightness and economy that he brings is the best showcase for Malkmus’ skills these days. I guess I rate “Real Emotional Trash” just about as highly as any Pavement album, mostly because of the way the Jicks collectively bend and stretch Malkmus’ characteristically crafted songs into frequently rearing jams. In comparison, “Mirror Traffic” is a more discreet and tidy beast, and maybe the closest analogue in Malkmus’ back catalogue is “Brighten The Corners”; in some ways more conventional and poppy than the record that precedes it, but oddly harder to get into (for me, at least). “Senator”, for instance, is a terrific song that feels a little squeezed; there’s a point at the end when Malkmus starts a solo, before putting the brakes on in a weirdly anti-climactic way. Malkmus albums can take a while to bed in, of course; it was months before the marvels of “Pig Lib” fully revealed themselves. In the meantime, I can particularly recommend the sweet expansions of “Brain Gallop”; “Spazz” (a varispeed précis of Malkmus’ career, after a fashion, leaning quite heavily on “Wowee Zowee”); the oddly needling solo that ends “Long Hard Book”. Quite a bit written about “Mirror Traffic” has noted how it was recorded while Malkmus was preparing for the Pavement reunion, as if that duty somehow reined in his more psychedelic excesses. It’s not the usual way that solo projects are used, and certainly not how Lindsey Buckingham seems to work. Last time I wrote about Buckingham and “Gift Of Screws”, my self-professed ignorance/suspicion of a lot of Fleetwood Mac drew a fair bit of approbrium from his more dedicated fans. Nevertheless, I’ll risk it again, because “Seeds We Sow” is another really interesting record. Even more than that last album, “Seeds We Sow” feels like a hermetically-sealed, satisfyingly odd album, an absolutely driven pursuit of a singular artistic vision. On one level, “In Our Own Time” is a pretty orthodox rock song, but Buckingham smartly flaunts his home studio solipsism and his ProTools rig rather than faking a virtual band with it. The results are fractured and disorienting, with some unearthly, obsessive-compulsive guitar textures. While there are certainly some beautiful, rippling reveries like the title track and “Stars Are Crazy”, which hark back to “Under The Skin”, many of the songs on “Seeds We Sow” sound – to a relative neophyte, remember – like they’d work pretty well for Fleetwood Mac. It’s the treatments - so micro-managed and fastidious; hyper-sharp and dreamy at the same time – that see Buckingham really asserting his independence. I like it, if that’s OK with his proper fans…

Bit of a hack through the backlog today, beginning with a mild disappointment, Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks’ “Mirror Traffic”.

Inspiral Carpets reunite with original frontman Stephen Holt

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Inspiral Carpets have reunited with original singer Stephen Holt for the first time since 1989. The Manchester stalwarts, who originally reunited in 2003, were thought to have split up earlier this summer after then-vocalist Tom Hingley put out an announcement saying that the band had parted ways. ...

Inspiral Carpets have reunited with original singer Stephen Holt for the first time since 1989.

The Manchester stalwarts, who originally reunited in 2003, were thought to have split up earlier this summer after then-vocalist Tom Hingley put out an announcement saying that the band had parted ways. However, it has since been revealed that they have reconciled with Holt and are recording their first new material for over 15 years.

Keyboardist Clint Boon told XFM of the reunion: “We’ve not actually started writing new material yet, but we are getting in the studio with the intention of doing just that. We’re also going to be re-recording some of the songs we did back in the mid to late ’80s. We’re celebrating the birth of the band and going back to the garage-y roots.”

Boon confirmed that the band would make their live comeback with Holt at a show supporting Interpol. He also revealed that Noel Gallagher auditioned to replace Holt when he first left in 1989.

He said: “When Steve left the band, very amicably, that’s when Noel Gallagher auditioned to take his place as a singer for the Inspirals. We ended up with Tom Hingley, who’s a great singer and still is. Imagine if we’d taken on Noel? That’s another chapter of the Inspirals‘ history that we should maybe one day investigate.”

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Hear Jack White’s collaboration with rappers Insane Clown Posse

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Jack White has joined forces with the Insane Clown Posse to record a tune called 'Leck Mich Im Arsch', which apparently translates as 'Lick Me In The Arse'. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen. The former White Stripes man has teamed up with Shaggy 2 Dope and Violent J of the...

Jack White has joined forces with the Insane Clown Posse to record a tune called ‘Leck Mich Im Arsch’, which apparently translates as ‘Lick Me In The Arse’. Scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen.

The former White Stripes man has teamed up with Shaggy 2 Dope and Violent J of the rap/metal act to produce the song and will release it on his Third Man Records label as an exclusive 7” and also digitally on September 13.

Using a melody line composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1782, ‘Leck Mich Im Arsch’ also sees JEFF The Brotherhood as the backing band. The B-side will be ‘Mountain Girl’, reports Pitchfork.

According to Third Man: “Back in ’82, ahem, 1782, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote a piece that’s been left out of the spotlight ever since. The title of the piece is ‘Leck Mich Im Arsch’ or literally translated to English as ‘Lick Me In The Arse’. Understandably this piece has figuratively been swept under the rug. So who better to give this piece it’s due respect than the wildly successful, much misunderstood, and divisive Southwest Detroit rappers Insane Clown Posse?”

Insane Clown Posse – Leck Mich Im Arsch by Third Man Records

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Adele, PJ Harvey, Elbow to perform at Mercury Music Prize ceremony

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PJ Harvey, Adele and Elbow will perform live at the Barclaycard Mercury Prize ceremony next week, on September 6. It has been announced that for the first time in the competition's history every single one of the nominated artists will perform at the ceremony itself. The event, which takes place a...

PJ Harvey, Adele and Elbow will perform live at the Barclaycard Mercury Prize ceremony next week, on September 6.

It has been announced that for the first time in the competition’s history every single one of the nominated artists will perform at the ceremony itself. The event, which takes place at the Grosvenor Hotel in London, will host live performances from the likes of Katy B, Tinie Tempah and Anna Calvi.

The ceremony will be broadcast on BBC Two from 10pm, with coverage also taking place throughout the evening on BBC 6Music. The event will be hosted, as ever, by Jools Holland.

PJ Harvey is currently the bookmakers’ favourite for the prize with odds of 11/8, with Anna Calvi second favourite at 5/1 and James Blake and Adele joint third with odds of 6/1.

The Barclaycard Mercury Prize was won in 2010 by The XX for their self-titled debut album.

The full list of nominees is:

Anna Calvi – ‘Anna Calvi’

Elbow – ‘Build A Rocket Boys!’

James Blake – ‘James Blake’

Katy B – ‘On A Mission’

Metronomy – ‘The English Riviera’

Tinie Tempah – ‘Disc-Overy’

PJ Harvey – ‘Let England Shake’

Gwilym Simcock – ‘Good Days At Schloss Elmau’

Everything Everything – ‘Man Alive’

Ghostpoet – ‘Peanut Butter Blues & Melancholy Jam’

King Creosote & Jon Hopkins – ‘Diamond Mine’

Adele – ’21’

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Pulp: London Brixton Academy, August 31, 2011

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It is hard not to be nostalgic on nights like this. About an NME night when Pulp were on the bottom of a bill headlined, I think, by Kingmaker. About the party for “OU” at the Leadmill, with a problematic balloon launch and a large papier mache head, and the party for “Do You Remember The First Time” at the ICA. About Glastonbury, of course, and Reading, and the ‘shoegazing’ show at the Underworld, when the band played behind picture frames made from gold-painted shoes and Suede supported, appearing without Justine Frischmann for the first fateful time. About an extraordinary night at the Dome in Tufnell Park, when Pulp opened with a ten-minute instrumental to soundtrack Jarvis Cocker feeding the sparse audience miniature doughnuts off his fingers. And about the farewell show in a Rotherham museum. In many ways, Pulp can come across as a rather callous band, but they are also one with a repertoire – “Do You Remember The First Time”, “Disco 2000”, naturally - that could have been written for sentimental reunions. So it is that 2011’s most noted revival act nears the end of its summer activities with a relatively intimate show at, as Cocker notes early on, a venue with an actual roof. The Mis-Shapes are back, too, though one suspects a good proportion have grown into decent media careers. Watching the BBC’s Reading coverage at the weekend, a few things about Pulp were striking: how they could once again make such an imposing racket out of relatively crude musical skills; how many great songs they have, and how few actual hits. The Reading show looked brilliant, and was brilliantly constructed, balancing the rueful intimacies with surging epics: “This Is Hardcore”, “Sunrise”, “F.E.E.L.I.N.G.C.A.L.L.E.D.L.O.V.E.”, “I Spy”. But those last two songs sadly don’t make an appearance at Brixton - tonight, the setlist doesn’t have quite the same graceful arc. It does, though, have a bunch of songs dug out of the less frequented areas of their catalogue: “Bad Cover Version” and a mightily atmospheric, if somewhat lost, “Wickerman” from “We Love Life”; the art school disco of “Countdown” from “Separations” (though not, unfortunately, “My Legendary Girlfriend”); and a superb “O.U”, its frazzled, homebaked take on spacerock given extra muscle by an extended lineup that includes Leo Abrahams on guitar. Richard Hawley also sits in with his former employers on a few numbers, most notably “Lipgloss” - a song which Cocker admits they’ve always had trouble playing – where Hawley out of the four guitarists seems to be handling the peculiar, rapidly looping main riff. It’s not always obvious what this army of musicians are actually doing, but the sound they make, especially when they cluster round the Peter Thomas sample that threads through “This Is Hardcore”, is seriously impressive. “This Is Hardcore” remains, to these ears, Pulp’s best and most wrenching – poignant even, after a fashion – song. It’s run close by a few more in this set, though: the aforementioned “Sunrise”, still sounding like a cross between Roxy Music, Spiritualized and something very roughly approximating folk music; the jangling and ecstatic “Babies”; and of course, “Common People”. It was to Pulp’s commercial benefit and, perhaps, ultimate misfortune, that Britpop came along, giving them a vehicle into the mainstream that other putative genres (I remembered, mid-gig, one dreamed up by Stuart Maconie and Andrew Collins, called Lion Pop, ostensibly to take the piss out of Steve Lamacq’s energetic neologising) had failed to provide. Away from all that, though, it’s clearer than ever that it was an accident of circumstance that lumbered Pulp with such a tag. In reality, they belonged – and belong – to an older and better tradition of chippy British artrock, one that from time to time comes into fleeting but delicious contact with the mainstream. A reminder, then, of the powers of a great band, but also of what the British music scene currently, and so grievously, lacks. SETLIST 1. Do You Remember the First Time? 2. Countdown 3. Lipgloss 4. O.U. 5. Have You Seen Her Lately? 6. Something Changed 7. Disco 2000 8. Sorted For E's & Wizz 9. Wickerman 10. Bad Cover Version 11. Babies 12. Underwear 13. This Is Hardcore 14. Sunrise 15. Bar Italia 16. Common People ~ 17. Razzmatazz 18. Mis-Shapes

It is hard not to be nostalgic on nights like this. About an NME night when Pulp were on the bottom of a bill headlined, I think, by Kingmaker. About the party for “OU” at the Leadmill, with a problematic balloon launch and a large papier mache head, and the party for “Do You Remember The First Time” at the ICA.

Lindsey Buckingham: ‘Fleetwood Mac will be back next year’

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Fleetwood Mac will return next year for an album and tour, says guitarist Lindsey Buckingham. The 61-year-old, who releases his new solo album 'Seeds We Sow' on September 6, said: "We're doing something for sure." In an interview with Rolling Stone magazine, he added: "I wouldn't be shocked if i...

Fleetwood Mac will return next year for an album and tour, says guitarist Lindsey Buckingham.

The 61-year-old, who releases his new solo album ‘Seeds We Sow’ on September 6, said: “We’re doing something for sure.”

In an interview with Rolling Stone magazine, he added: “I wouldn’t be shocked if it was a tour and possibly an album. We’ll have to wait and see. Nothing is on the books right now. With Fleetwood Mac, there’s a lot of landmines out there politically and it’s hard to get everybody on the same page at the same time – but I think this might be one of those years where everyone will want to do the same thing. Whatever that is.”

Buckingham originally joined Fleetwood Mac in 1974 with Stevie Nicks, in time for the band’s eponymously titled album a year later.

The band, now a long way from their mid-’60s blues days with an almost all-new line-up, released ‘Rumours’ in 1977 to become one of the biggest bands in the world. It was famously recorded amid a blizzard of cocaine abuse and the divorce of members John and Christine McVie.

“Working in a band is a lot like what I imagine making movies is like,” added Buckingham. “It’s political and it takes a lot of verbalisation to get from point A to point B. When I work alone, it’s more like painting. You are one with the canvas and it’s a subconscious, meditative process.”

In addition to the tour, Buckingham hinted his and Stevie Nicks’ 1973 LP ‘Buckingham Nicks’ will eventually will be released on CD.

“We keep talking about that,” he said. “It’s been a victim of inertia. We have every intention of putting that album back out and possibly even doing something along with it, but I can’t put any specifics on that.”

Buckingham’s comments follow on from similar remarks made by Stevie Nicks.

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The Beach Boys to release ‘lost’ album Smile after 44 years

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The Beach Boys are set to release their 'lost' album 'Smile' on October 31. 'The Smile Sessions' sees three of the surviving members of the band collaborating to release "an approximation of what was intended to be the completed" album, reports The Guardian. Brian Wilson released his own version o...

The Beach Boys are set to release their ‘lost’ album ‘Smile’ on October 31.

‘The Smile Sessions’ sees three of the surviving members of the band collaborating to release “an approximation of what was intended to be the completed” album, reports The Guardian.

Brian Wilson released his own version of the 1966/67 album in 2004, but this version of the album sees Wilson collaborating with Al Jardine and Mike Love to ‘polish’ the original session masters, which were abandoned 44 years ago.

The album will be available in double CD, double vinyl and a number of different boxsets. Four albums’ worth of bonus material, including demos, alternate takes, mixes and studio banter will accompany the long-awaited release.

A biopic of The Beach BoysBrian Wilson is currently in the works. River Road Entertainment has acquired the life rights to The Beach Boys‘ founder and those of his wife, Melinda Wilson.

Throughout his life Wilson has battled mental illness, including what was thought to be depression and bipolar disorder. It was rumoured that a major factor in his breakdown was the cancellation of the ambitious ‘Smile’.

Deadline reports that Oren Moverman, who was nominated for an Academy Award for The Messenger, is writing the screenplay. Moverman is also currently working on the biopic of Kurt Cobain for Universal and Working Title. No director or star is yet attached to the project.

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Gillian Welch and David Rawlings: “Until a song is right, we basically exist in a state of misery”

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John Mulvey joins Gillian Welch and David Rawlings in Nashville in the lead-up to the release of The Harrow And The Harvest. Topics up for discussion include the torturous process of writing a song, their stunning back catalogue and why they're terrible at being traditional musicians. Originally pub...

John Mulvey joins Gillian Welch and David Rawlings in Nashville in the lead-up to the release of The Harrow And The Harvest. Topics up for discussion include the torturous process of writing a song, their stunning back catalogue and why they’re terrible at being traditional musicians. Originally published in Uncut’s August 2011 issue (Take 171).

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In the second week of May, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings drove from Los Angeles to Nashville. The journey took 31 hours, and Welch filmed a small portion of it on her iPhone. The clip is framed by an open car window, and outside you can see the flooded Mississippi stretching away from the edge of the road to the horizon: a new inland sea for the beleaguered American South.

The car radio is audible in the background, tuned to a digital station that plays nothing but The Grateful Dead. As Welch and Rawlings speed through this submerged part of Arkansas along the I-40 highway, the station is broadcasting, with at least partial serendipity, “Rain And Snow”. When they reach the Tennessee state line, “Tennessee Jed” will be on the air.

This epic journey has become a routine for the couple; in the past year, they have crossed the States by car ten times. Rawlings has developed a “terrible phobia” of flying and, while it has been eight years since the duo released an album under Welch’s name, work on The Harrow And The Harvest has ended in something of a rush, precipitating a good few concentrated expeditions through the southern states. This time, after last-minute adjustments to the mastering and the artwork, they left their apartment in LA on Monday and arrived back at their Nashville base around midnight on Wednesday.

“Travel is much more enjoyable by car,” explains Welch, sitting in the lobby of Woodland Studios, their expansive Nashville complex, “and it’s contributed to this record immensely. There’s the tremendous freedom when you get in the car and drive. Dave put it rather nicely: he had this feeling of gathering weight – mental weight, personal weight – whereas when you fly, you dissipate. You switch off in a bad way, and that’s really bad for both of our brains.

“I mean, I’m doing everything I can to not switch off. We live in a fairly isolated world – our band is very small, our world is very small – and so I actually struggle to remain of the world. It’s way easier for me to separate, but when I drive I’m confronted by beautiful language and poetry constantly in the shape of highway signs and town names. I’m confronted by history, to a shocking degree.

“We drove in this time on I-40, and we spent a solid eight hours driving through the Cherokee nation and the Seminole nation and the Creek nation, and then we hit the Mississippi and it was flooded three miles over its bank. I’m aware that people feel really dislocated most of the time from events that occur in folk songs, but I’m just here to tell you it’s not any different. What did I encounter on my drive? I hit a dust storm and a flood, y’know?”

Between 1996 and 2003, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings released four albums – 39 original songs, plus two covers – and appeared on the soundtrack of O Brother, Where Art Thou?, which has sold seven and a half million copies in the States alone. It’s a small body of work, but a powerful one, in the way it makes vital new art from the bones of tradition, with a clarity and lack of ostentation that borders on the uncanny.

Much of Welch’s music features little more than her calm, authoritative voice following the strum of her guitar, while Rawlings harmonises and improvises around her. They are a totally collaborative duo, who use the name of their lead singer as a convenient brand name. “You get the sense that there’s a direct channel between her heart and her lips,” says an admiring Colin Meloy, who employed Welch to sing backup on the last Decemberists album, The King Is Dead. “I don’t think the girl has an oesophagus – she’s got some kind of weird, fleshy soul-conduit.”

Welch and Rawlings’ albums are beautiful and potent, and they often wish this music could stand totally apart from their personal histories. “I would’ve loved to see what happened if our records had come out and people knew nothing about who we were,” says Rawlings.

But their backstory has rankled with some country fans ever since Welch’s debut, Revival, appeared in 1996. For those hung up on unrealistic notions of authenticity, it grated to hear Welch sing of leasing “20 acres and one Ginny mule from the Alabama trust”. She was, after all, the adopted daughter of an LA showbiz family who had met Rawlings in the cloistered environment of Boston’s Berklee School Of Music.

Mostly, Welch is irritated by the supposed disparity between her music and her upbringing. But sometimes it puzzles even her why she has always been so attracted to old folk songs, predominantly from the American South. Around the time of 2003’s Soul Journey, she discovered that her unnamed birth mother was an Appalachian girl studying in New York, and began speculating that her father could have been a musician – Levon Helm, perhaps, or Bill Monroe – passing through town. “It was interesting how much it confused things,” says Rawlings, who occasionally speaks for his partner on awkward subjects. “Because then,” he turns to Welch, “you don’t even know whether you’re on the nature or nurture side of the argument.”

She laughs. “I don’t even know what team I’m on!”

Gillian Welch/David Rawlings interview: Nashville, May 2011. Part Two

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This is the second part of a lengthy piece I wrote for Uncut earlier this summer. The first part is here. “Until a song is right,” says Welch, “Dave and I basically exist in a state of misery, and a constant – I mean a never-ending – process of problem-solving. It’s one of the things that I don’t see in our peers. We’ll leave no stone unturned and we will go to the very last millisecond. I love to hear that other people are that crazy, because we are. So when I heard that Peter Jackson was still editing one of the Lord Of The Rings movies until the last moment, that warms my heart. We have done that. I’ve thrown Dave the car keys and we have raced to Fed Ex with the masters, because we were working to the last second we had.” It seems strange that a record conceived over eight years should be so rushed, but Welch has an explanation. “It’s not as if we were working on this record for eight years. This is a record of the stripe that I like. I love to hear that someone made a record in a consolidated length of time and that it represents a focused moment, a focused look at their mind and what they were thinking. “This record was written basically in about four months between October and January, and recorded in February here. There’s one really old song – ‘The Way It Will Be’ – that we always had in our head as the beginning of this record.” Which was written in 2004. She laughs. “And then we never wrote anything that went with it that we liked. Any number of people would have put out three, four records in this span, and we could have too. There were songs. We did stuff. We didn’t stop. But we were usually were too pissed off with stuff to even record it. We have a very similar inner compass that we can’t lie to or fool for very long.” That’s mind-bending patience. “It is mind-bending. I went through so many peaks and furrows of stress and despair and frustration. It’s eight years of knowing that the next thing is going to be scrutinised, and wanting it to be perfect, and I’m so happy that this record isn’t perfect, and errs on the side of spontaneity and honesty. It’s so pared-down, it’s so of the moment. They’re live performances, usually the first or second take. There’s no overdubs, there’s no fixes, there’s no tuning. I feel it’s a very mature record for us because there is this certain confidence in the recording technique and in everything: this is what we do. Here’s what we sound like – in fact, here are the sounds we like. If you don’t care for them, that’s fine.” For years, then, Welch and Rawlings recorded guest appearances (harmonising with Bright Eyes and Tom Jones, among others), worked on new songs, and played a few of them at live shows. “The Way It Will Be”, an elegantly wracked duet with an air of Neil Young, became so feted (under its alternate title of “Throw Me A Rope”) that one blogger offered to send a high-quality live MP3 of it to anyone who wrote to him articulating their love for Welch. Other songs, like “Lawman” and “Knuckleball Catcher”, sound excellent in multiple Youtube versions. Their fate, currently, remains unknown. “I would love to say we took six years off, we had this amazing vacation and alternate life,” says Rawlings, whose manic exuberance seems at odds with such creative paralysis. “Largely it was failed attempts at making music, and horror.” Rawlings has a good theory about how songwriters go on streaks, only to be interrupted by promotional and touring obligations. He fears the songwriting glut that produced The Harrow And The Harvest may dry up again when they head out on the road for the rest of the year. Welch agrees. “We don’t want to step away from it too far this time,” she says. “Not many people go and come back that many times in their career. It doesn’t get any easier. I was talking about writing to Garrison Keillor the other day, and about the problems with it, and he was like, ‘Yeah, y’know, it only gets harder.’ I’m like, ‘Yeah, I know.’” Eventually, prompted by a song called “Ruby” that it seemed logical for Rawlings to sing, they came upon a novel way of circumnavigating the block. “People just gave up,” says Welch. “They thought another record would never come. And I definitely had come to wonder if I was ever going to be happy with anything we did again, enough to put it out. That was one of the important things about making Dave’s record.” Gathering some of the friends who had contributed to Soul Journey’s Basement Tapes vibe, the pair reconfigured themselves in 2009 as The Dave Rawlings Machine, with Rawlings fronting an easy-going collection of revisited old songs, new ones and covers. “I thought the record that we finally made as Gillian Welch would be so much better if we figured out again how we made records,” says Rawlings. “Dave,” says Welch, “threw his first solo record under the wheels for the sake of my next record. I’m making a joke of it, but you’ll rarely find a more self-sacrificing man.” “We played this show in Manhattan,” continues Rawlings, “and the reviewer said he liked the show, but we played one or two songs with Gill singing, and he wrote about what a ‘waste of resources’ my record was, about how much better it was when Gill sings. In the course of what has now been a 15 year career we took five weeks to make a record of mine. And he made some snide remark about how it was like watching someone wear a jacket inside out. I got his point; it was very writerly, it was clever, whatever. And then later I thought, well sometimes you have to turn a jacket inside out to fix the seams. There was truly something useful about turning our music upside down.” From there, it only took a couple more years to reach a point where a Gillian Welch record could be made, one full of songs that – like Woodland Studios itself – used history to create something new. Certain critics might worry about authenticity, but Welch and Rawlings understand how folk music can be a constantly evolving beast. “I love,” says Rawlings, “that there’s a verse added to ‘I’ll Fly Away’ that Gill wrote, it’s on the O Brother thing, and it’s now part of ‘I’ll Fly Away’. People sing it.” There’s a song on The Harrow And The Harvest called “Hard Times”, that Welch began work on during the sessions for Rawlings’ album. Levon Helm was scheduled to come down and play (he eventually had to cancel due to laryngitis), so Welch tried to write a song, rich with images of a Camptown man and his mule, that she thought Helm would like. One particular line, “It’s a mean old world, heavy and mean, that big old machine is just picking up speed,” reads like a lament for how the world progresses in great leaps. Welch and Rawlings’ preference, one suspects, is for something more cumulative, where nothing is left behind in the slow push onwards. Rawlings says provocatively, “I have no interest in traditional music except to steal from it and to enjoy it as a listener,” and claims they are terrible at being traditional musicians. But he also says, “When things move forward or change, there is a sense of loss and things are forgotten.” “It’s like airplane travel,” Welch continues. “You’ll get there, but you might not realise what you’ve missed. You may have some bizarre sense of loss, and not even be aware of what was lost.” The next afternoon, Gillian Welch and David Rawlings return to Woodland Studios for photographs. The previous night, they had driven to their favourite restaurant in Nashville, a Japanese place, only to find it had closed down. It was their fault, they speculated, for having been out of town so long. They remove the bags from the microphones in Studio B, and discuss how to preserve the exact alignment of the set-up; they are pondering the use of lasers, says Rawlings, and it is difficult to tell whether he is joking. It’s difficult, too, to equate these lanky and engaging people with the artists who memorialise their “Dark Turn Of Mind”, whose songs have at their most positive a certain fatalistic air, and more often a forensic fascination with the grimmer aspects of life. “With one of my penpals,” grins Welch, “we end our letters, ‘Please enjoy my pain.’” Sitting down in the studio, they start distractedly playing their guitars as the photographer circles, and soon songs emerge out of the jam. One is a 1920s country number by Kelly Harrell called “My Name Is John Johanna”, collected by Harry Smith on his Anthology Of American Folk Music. Another is “Tecumseh Valley” by Townes Van Zandt. Both are timeless songs about poverty and travelling away to find work that end, with a certain relish, very badly. As she sings, Welch seems so rapt, so consumed, it is as if she wrote them herself yesterday. Later, David Rawlings remembers buying a Dries Van Noten suit from Barney’s department store. He wore it onstage, he says, and reviewers called it a sharecropper’s suit. It’s the same as how writers always think Welch wears gingham dresses. They are both animated now, droll but indignant. She has, as a matter of record, never worn gingham. “People are funny,” Rawlings decides, wonderingly. Welch looks up from her lunch. “People are funny,” she agrees.

This is the second part of a lengthy piece I wrote for Uncut earlier this summer. The first part is here.

Wilco: “The Whole Love”

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As has probably been pointed out ad nauseam, Jeff Tweedy seems to take a constant pleasure in wrongfooting Wilco fans. So it is with the start of “The Whole Love”, the band’s eighth studio album. “Art Of Almost” begins with a burst of staticky guitar and pulses along, mixing orchestral stabs, a plausibly funky bassline, a motorik core akin to “Spiders” and “Bull Black Nova”, and a distracted melody from Tweedy. After about five minutes, though, Nels Cline steps up for one of the most frantically disruptive solos he’s contributed to a Wilco studio effort. As an opening gambit, it seems as if Tweedy and his bandmates are reasserting their quasi-leftfield credentials from the start; is this the return to “Ghost Is Born” territory requested by all those who believe - wrongly, I think – that “Wilco (The Album)” and “Sky Blue Sky” – were bland cop-outs? Not quite, is the predictable answer. For the most part, once “Art Of Almost” is done, “The Whole Love” smuggles in its experiments undercover. “Sunloathe”, for example, once again showcases Tweedy’s Lennon/Harrison chamber fetish, but deeper in the mix there are all sorts of ambient dislocations, buried gems for the headphones set to catch on the ninth listen. It’s an odd record, in all sorts of ways – though of course not necessarily the ones you might have predicted. Save the confident powerpop throb of “Born Alone”, the boldness of “Wilco (The Album)” has been replaced by a more tentative, sketchy vibe. There’s a little less polish, and more of a sense of a band trying things out in their own space, retaining the odd abrasive scrape and strum. Tweedy, too, sounds less anchored and at his most airy, so that even his neater songs have an open-ended, spontaneous feel. Not all of it works completely, and there are songs in the middle of the record that don’t feel entirely cooked (the new wave “Standing O”, especially). The most successful often feel of a piece, being thoughtful, introverted and largely acoustic reveries that, in the case of “Black Moon” and “Rising Red Lung”, map out some aesthetic territory between “Five Leaves Left” and “Sister Lovers”. Both songs are lovely, but both ultimately feel like preludes to “The Whole Love”’s final track. "One Sunday Morning (Song for Jane Smiley's Boyfriend)" takes a mighty long time to unravel – a fraction over 12 minutes – and initially doesn’t seem to travel very far. It’s an illustration of how a simple folk figure can accrue a momentum over time that’s as compelling and hypnotic as any Krautrock drone, and a masterclass in subtlety; both of songwriting and of instrumentation – check how pianos, steel and sundry other Cline effects fade in and out of the mix in the acoustic guitar’s wake. Beyond that previous Nick Drake ref, I’m also reminded of Yo La Tengo – maybe something like “Night Falls On Hoboken” – another band who’ve discovered ways of turning their exploratory freakouts in on themselves. Having lived with this for a month or two, I’m not convinced “The Whole Love” is one of Wilco’s very greatest albums, but “One Sunday Morning” sounds more and more like as good a song as Tweedy’s ever been involved with. What do you think?

As has probably been pointed out ad nauseam, Jeff Tweedy seems to take a constant pleasure in wrongfooting Wilco fans. So it is with the start of “The Whole Love”, the band’s eighth studio album. “Art Of Almost” begins with a burst of staticky guitar and pulses along, mixing orchestral stabs, a plausibly funky bassline, a motorik core akin to “Spiders” and “Bull Black Nova”, and a distracted melody from Tweedy.

Manic Street Preachers announce one-off O2 Arena show for December

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Manic Street Preachers have announced a huge one-off show at London's O2 Arena for later this year. The Welsh trio will headline the 20,000 capacity venue on December 17 and have told NME that they will be playing each one of the 38 singles which make up their new compilation 'National Treasures' ...

Manic Street Preachers have announced a huge one-off show at London‘s O2 Arena for later this year.

The Welsh trio will headline the 20,000 capacity venue on December 17 and have told NME that they will be playing each one of the 38 singles which make up their new compilation ‘National Treasures’ as part of the live set.

Speaking to NME bassist Nicky Wire said of the gig: “We’ve never done anything on this scale before, so we’ll be playing for an hour-and-a-half, then there will be a half-an-hour interval, with lots of stuff, film stuff to do. And then we’ll finish with another 20 songs.”

He continued: “It’s going to be an immense project, production-wise, screens, videos, you name it. It will be a completely unique thing and we’ll never do it again.”

The band have indicated that ‘National Treasures’, which is released on October 31 and this show, will be their last activity for at least two years.

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.

James Hetfield: ‘Lou Reed asked us to stamp Metallica on ‘Lulu”

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Metallica and Lou Reed have spoken about their collaboration album 'Lulu', which is set for release on October 31. 'Lulu' was originally set to be Reed's musical adaptation of German playwright Frank Wedekind's 1913 play about the life of an abused dancer, but has now become a joint project with M...

Metallica and Lou Reed have spoken about their collaboration album ‘Lulu’, which is set for release on October 31.

‘Lulu’ was originally set to be Reed‘s musical adaptation of German playwright Frank Wedekind‘s 1913 play about the life of an abused dancer, but has now become a joint project with Metallica.

The San Francisco metal titans have revealed that the original plan for the joint album was to re-record some of the former Velvet Underground man’s “lost jewels”, before Reed proposed they record music to ‘Lulu’ instead.

Speaking about the project, Metallica frontman James Hetfield said: “We were very interested in working with Lou. I had these giant question marks: ‘What’s it going to be like?’ ‘What’s going to happen?’ So it was great when he sent us the lyrics for the Lulu body of work. It was something we could sink our teeth into. I could take off my singer and lyricist hat and concentrate on the music part. These were very potent lyrics, with a soundscape behind them for atmosphere. Lars and I sat there with an acoustic and let this blank canvas take us where it needed to go. It was a great gift, to be asked to stamp Metallica on it. And that’s what we did.”

Reed himself said of the project: “We had to bring Lulu to life in a sophisticated way, using rock and the hardest power rock you could come up with would have to be Metallica. This is the best thing I ever did. And I did it with the best group I could possibly find. By definition, everybody involved was honest. This has come into the world pure. We pushed as far as we possibly could within the realms of reality.”

Four titles from the album have also been named, with ‘Pumping Blood’, ‘Little Dog’, ‘Mistress Dread’ and ‘Junior Dad’ all set to be part of the 10-track LP.

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.

Uncut Playlist 32, 2011

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Been away for a while, so as you might imagine there are a lot of new things in here. Particularly liking The Field, Feist and James Blackshaw at this early stage. 1 The Field – Looping State Of Mind (Kompakt) 2 Ryan Adams – Ashes & Fire (Columbia) 3 Roedelius Schneider – Stunden (Bureau B) 4 Richard Buckner – Our Blood (Décor) 5 Hiss Golden Messenger – Poor Moon (Paradise Of Bachelors) 6 Jonathan Wilson – Gentle Spirit (Bella Union) 7 Radiohead – TKOL RMX (XL) 8 Feist – Metals (Polydor) 9 The Wild Magnolias With The New Orleans Project – The Wild Magnolias (Get On Down) 10 Dean McPhee – Son Of The Black Peace (Blast First Petite) 11 James Blackshaw – Holly/Boo Forever (Important) 12 Oneohtrix Point Never – Replica (Software) 13 Boom Bip – Zig Zaj (Lex) 14 Christina Vantzou – No. 1 (Kranky) 15 My Brightest Diamond – All Things Will Unwind (Asthmatic Kitty) 16 Leyland Kirby – Eager To Tear Apart The Stars (History Always Favours The Winners)

Been away for a while, so as you might imagine there are a lot of new things in here. Particularly liking The Field, Feist and James Blackshaw at this early stage.

KILL LIST

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Directed by Ben Wheatley Starring Neil Maskell, Michael Smiley Ben Wheatley’s debut Down Terrace was an unusual British crime thriller. Set in Brighton, it married kitchen sink naturalism with moments of brutal violence and dark comedy. For his follow-up, Kill List, Wheatley offers a similarly...

Directed by Ben Wheatley

Starring Neil Maskell, Michael Smiley

Ben Wheatley’s debut Down Terrace was an unusual British crime thriller.

Set in Brighton, it married kitchen sink naturalism with moments of brutal violence and dark comedy.

For his follow-up, Kill List, Wheatley offers a similarly fresh take on the hitman genre.

Initially, it plays like a domestic melodrama about the ailing marriage of Jay (Neil Maskell) and Shel (MyAnna Buring), a result of Jay’s unemployment. But matters perk up when Jay is offered the chance to reinvigorate his career by ex-partner Gal (Michael Smiley).

Jay and Gal are hitmen, and Gal proposes a job for which there will be a hefty pay-day. Kill List reveals its true nature gradually.

As we go further with Jay and Gal on their murderous assignment, the tone becomes more cryptic – folk horror classics like Witchfinder General and The Wicker Man become surprising touchstones. For those willing to take the trip, Kill List is an unusual delight.

Damon Wise

LINDSEY BUCKINGHAM: SEEDS WE SOW

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For almost four decades, on and off, Lindsey Buckingham has been the driving force behind one of the world’s biggest bands, Fleetwood Mac. He is the charismatic architect of Rumours and Tusk, whose songs are familiar to millions, yet it’s often the case that many Mac nuts, particularly outside the US, would be hard-pushed to name one of the guitarist’s five solo albums, let alone pick a highlight from any of them. That doubtless says more about the fairweather nature of the band’s conservative fanbase, though to his credit, Buckingham, one of the more gifted players of his generation, has never appeared to crave attention even though he’s spent his career in the spotlight. Cast as a maverick when he indulged various eccentric recording methods for 1979’s landmark Tusk, the tag has stuck. As a solo artist, Buckingham is, at the age of 61, enjoying a fine run of form. Seeds We Sow is his third album in five years, following 2006’s Under The Skin and 2008’s Gift Of Screws, records which the Californian singer-songwriter discovered were welcomed by a new audience who’d been enchanted by Fleetwood Mac’s surprisingly harmonious 2003 reunion and tour after 16 years apart. Their comeback set, Say You Will, from that year, was solid enough, its best song a tumbling, guitar-speckled Buckingham number called “Red Rover”. In concert, too, his solo rendition of “Big Love” illustrated the range of his exquisite fretwork and power of his star-crossed vocal. Comparison with Stevie Nicks’ latest solo effort is unnecessary, so let’s just say Buckingham’s passion for his craft is obvious. What’s noteworthy is that both Gift Of Screws and Under The Skin stemmed from or before those Mac sessions; Seeds We Sow, a mellower affair, is an entirely new set of songs, and, lush and reflective, it unfolds as such. Buckingham composed, produced and mixed the record in his LA home studio, playing almost every instrument, even overseeing its release via the independent label Eagle. Buckingham and Fleetwood Mac are out of contract with Warners, though you suspect the major would’ve stuck with him if he could guarantee a healthy return. As it is, removed from the pressure of label and band, he’s a free agent who can feed his rebellious streak. Go his own way, so to speak. Couple this with his happy domestic situation – he married in 2000 aged 50 and has three children – and it was always unlikely he’d produce a record as unhinged as 1984’s Go Insane. That’s not to say Buckingham is set in his ways. On the contrary, though he specialises in two types of song, the fluid acoustic flourish and the rockier stomp, he explores variations of these with the youthful vigour of a person one third his age. There’s a “Tusk”-like shuffle to “One Take” which he decorates with an outrageous Yngwie Malmsteen shred, while the distinctive shimmering harmony of “In Our Own Time” and simple interlocking riffs of “Rock Away Blind” can really only be called Buckinghamesque; no-one else plays with such elegance. If there’s one track that will draw newcomers to Seeds We Sow, it’s “Stars Are Crazy”, one of the loveliest songs Buckingham has ever written. Over tantalising fingerwork he pines for a lover before howling at the moon as the chorus erupts, sending shivers of delight through the listener. A closing tiptoe through the Stones’ “She Smiled Sweetly” could be Buckingham paying his dues to Jagger and Richards, but the distinction here is that, though his songbook, like theirs, is already abundant, Seeds We Sow suggests that there’s plenty more to come. Piers Martin

For almost four decades, on and off, Lindsey Buckingham has been the driving force behind one of the world’s biggest bands, Fleetwood Mac.

He is the charismatic architect of Rumours and Tusk, whose songs are familiar to millions, yet it’s often the case that many Mac nuts, particularly outside the US, would be hard-pushed to name one of the guitarist’s five solo albums, let alone pick a highlight from any of them.

That doubtless says more about the fairweather nature of the band’s conservative fanbase, though to his credit, Buckingham, one of the more gifted players of his generation, has never appeared to crave attention even though he’s spent his career in the spotlight. Cast as a maverick when he indulged various eccentric recording methods for 1979’s landmark Tusk, the tag has stuck.

As a solo artist, Buckingham is, at the age of 61, enjoying a fine run of form. Seeds We Sow is his third album in five years, following 2006’s Under The Skin and 2008’s Gift Of Screws, records which the Californian singer-songwriter discovered were welcomed by a new audience who’d been enchanted by Fleetwood Mac’s surprisingly harmonious 2003 reunion and tour after 16 years apart. Their comeback set, Say You Will, from that year, was solid enough, its best song a tumbling, guitar-speckled Buckingham number called “Red Rover”. In concert, too, his solo rendition of “Big Love” illustrated the range of his exquisite fretwork and power of his star-crossed vocal. Comparison with Stevie Nicks’ latest solo effort is unnecessary, so let’s just say Buckingham’s passion for his craft is obvious.

What’s noteworthy is that both Gift Of Screws and Under The Skin stemmed from or before those Mac sessions; Seeds We Sow, a mellower affair, is an entirely new set of songs, and, lush and reflective, it unfolds as such. Buckingham composed, produced and mixed the record in his LA home studio, playing almost every instrument, even overseeing its release via the independent label Eagle. Buckingham and Fleetwood Mac are out of contract with Warners, though you suspect the major would’ve stuck with him if he could guarantee a healthy return. As it is, removed from the pressure of label and band, he’s a free agent who can feed his rebellious streak. Go his own way, so to speak. Couple this with his happy domestic situation – he married in 2000 aged 50 and has three children – and it was always unlikely he’d produce a record as unhinged as 1984’s Go Insane.

That’s not to say Buckingham is set in his ways. On the contrary, though he specialises in two types of song, the fluid acoustic flourish and the rockier stomp, he explores variations of these with the youthful vigour of a person one third his age. There’s a “Tusk”-like shuffle to “One Take” which he decorates with an outrageous Yngwie Malmsteen shred, while the distinctive shimmering harmony of “In Our Own Time” and simple interlocking riffs of “Rock Away Blind” can really only be called Buckinghamesque; no-one else plays with such elegance. If there’s one track that will draw newcomers to Seeds We Sow, it’s “Stars Are Crazy”, one of the loveliest songs Buckingham has ever written. Over tantalising fingerwork he pines for a lover before howling at the moon as the chorus erupts, sending shivers of delight through the listener. A closing tiptoe through the Stones’ “She Smiled Sweetly” could be Buckingham paying his dues to Jagger and Richards, but the distinction here is that, though his songbook, like theirs, is already abundant, Seeds We Sow suggests that there’s plenty more to come.

Piers Martin

THROWING MUSES – ANTHOLOGY

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Signed to a languid, art school indie label, Throwing Muses arrived under cover. Like another uncharacteristic 4AD signing of around this time – the Pixies – Throwing Muses therefore got to be a singularly explosive rock’n’roll band without being burdened by the need to act, talk or think like one. It’s not overly fanciful to perceive the Muses and Pixies – they toured together frequently upon their emergence – as the bridge from the punk-infuenced American college rock of the 1980s to the grunge of the early 1990s (significantly, Throwing Muses counted among their fans both Michael Stipe and Kurt Cobain). Given Throwing Muses’ cheerful disdain for anything resembling careerism, it is actually unsurprising that their biggest commercial hit, “Dizzy”, and several other of their best-known songs, including “Counting Backwards”, “Firepile” and “Shimmer” are omitted, along with the fizzier cuts contributed by Hersh’s half-sister Tanya Donelly during her tenure – while the bonus disc faithfully compiles their 22 b-sides. This, however, is a worthwhile acquisition even for those already in possession of the Muses’ catalogue, especially for the likes of “Cottonmouth”, “Hillbilly” and “Crayon Sun”, although their formidable onstage potence is under-represented, with just two live tracks. The strength of Throwing Muses was always that, to a greater degree than most artists, they were doing what they were doing because they had to. Hersh has often said that she feels less like an author of her songs than a conduit for fully formed work visited upon her by forces over which she has little control (the refrain of “Summer Street”, keening “One lonesome body/One lonesome song”, perhaps more briskly enapsulates Hersh’s relationship with her art). Certainly, it is difficult to imagine anyone sitting down and deliberately writing the agitated manifesto “Hate My Way”, or the catatonic yodel “A Feeling”, or the frenetic hoedown “Mania”: terrifying and funny, wretched and exuberant, often in the space of a single verse. In Hersh’s poised and hilarious memoir, Rat Girl, she concludes a bemusedly horrified description of “ambitious” musicians with the important caveat :“But the musicians who make noises for noise’s sake fascinate us. Their vocabulary is slamming joy and desperation, lethargy and force.” It’s difficult to improve on this catalogue of contradiction as a description of Throwing Muses’ palette. They were a band capable of the most exquisite prettiness: the fragile and spectral “Two Step”, which served as the finale of Throwing Muses poppiest album, 1991’s The Real Ramona. They could also summon immense squalls of (entirely rocking) rage: “Furious”, from 1992’s Red Heaven, rendered much of the output of the contemporary grunge boom somewhat milquetoast by comparison. Though Throwing Muses emerged from an underground milieu disdainful of almost all rock’n’roll orthodoxy, their ability to command the broad range of Hersh’s songs was enabled by an unmistakable degree of old-school – if unusually egoless – musicianship. Carrying Hersh’s voice were her own colossal guitar, and one of the finest rhythm sections ever assembled: a succession of elegant, sinous bassplayers (Leslie Langston, Fred Abong, Bernard Georges) and drummer David Narcizo, a deceptively diffident hybrid of The Attractions’ Pete Thomas and Blondie’s Clem Burke. Holding together something like the helter-skelter of “Bright Yellow Gun” is a good deal more difficult than they make it sound. Capricious track selection notwithstanding, this is a document that prompts renewed wonder at one of the most astonishing canons of the entire post-punk era. Twenty-five years ago, nobody had ever heard anything like Throwing Muses. Twenty-five years later, that’s still the case. Andrew Mueller Q+A KRISTIN HERSH How did you choose the songs on Anthology? I sort of left it up to [David] Narcizo. I have a tendency to cringe when I hear anything by us, so I’d have wanted everything taken off. How do you feel about these old songs now? The real songs have changed over time, because they’re real – they’re not static. The fake songs don’t do that – and there aren’t any on this album. A real song is so vivid, it’s a different kind of memory, like someone gave you a shot of the past. Your biggest hit single, “Dizzy”, is notable by its absence. Well, that’s a horrible song. We did that to give Warners a bad song to work on. They kept saying to us, implicitly at least, you should suck more. Any concrete news on the new Throwing Muses album? It’s this long piece where songs come and go and show up in each other. It’s like Broadway or something. Nobody would let us do it if they were in charge, but nobody cares anymore because we’re so old. INTERVIEW: ANDREW MUELLER

Signed to a languid, art school indie label, Throwing Muses arrived under cover. Like another uncharacteristic 4AD signing of around this time – the Pixies – Throwing Muses therefore got to be a singularly explosive rock’n’roll band without being burdened by the need to act, talk or think like one. It’s not overly fanciful to perceive the Muses and Pixies – they toured together frequently upon their emergence – as the bridge from the punk-infuenced American college rock of the 1980s to the grunge of the early 1990s (significantly, Throwing Muses counted among their fans both Michael Stipe and Kurt Cobain).

Given Throwing Muses’ cheerful disdain for anything resembling careerism, it is actually unsurprising that their biggest commercial hit, “Dizzy”, and several other of their best-known songs, including “Counting Backwards”, “Firepile” and “Shimmer” are omitted, along with the fizzier cuts contributed by Hersh’s half-sister Tanya Donelly during her tenure – while the bonus disc faithfully compiles their 22 b-sides. This, however, is a worthwhile acquisition even for those already in possession of the Muses’ catalogue, especially for the likes of “Cottonmouth”, “Hillbilly” and “Crayon Sun”, although their formidable onstage potence is under-represented, with just two live tracks.

The strength of Throwing Muses was always that, to a greater degree than most artists, they were doing what they were doing because they had to. Hersh has often said that she feels less like an author of her songs than a conduit for fully formed work visited upon her by forces over which she has little control (the refrain of “Summer Street”, keening “One lonesome body/One lonesome song”, perhaps more briskly enapsulates Hersh’s relationship with her art). Certainly, it is difficult to imagine anyone sitting down and deliberately writing the agitated manifesto “Hate My Way”, or the catatonic yodel “A Feeling”, or the frenetic hoedown “Mania”: terrifying and funny, wretched and exuberant, often in the space of a single verse.

In Hersh’s poised and hilarious memoir, Rat Girl, she concludes a bemusedly horrified description of “ambitious” musicians with the important caveat :“But the musicians who make noises for noise’s sake fascinate us. Their vocabulary is slamming joy and desperation, lethargy and force.” It’s difficult to improve on this catalogue of contradiction as a description of Throwing Muses’ palette. They were a band capable of the most exquisite prettiness: the fragile and spectral “Two Step”, which served as the finale of Throwing Muses poppiest album, 1991’s The Real Ramona. They could also summon immense squalls of (entirely rocking) rage: “Furious”, from 1992’s Red Heaven, rendered much of the output of the contemporary grunge boom somewhat milquetoast by comparison.

Though Throwing Muses emerged from an underground milieu disdainful of almost all rock’n’roll orthodoxy, their ability to command the broad range of Hersh’s songs was enabled by an unmistakable degree of old-school – if unusually egoless – musicianship. Carrying Hersh’s voice were her own colossal guitar, and one of the finest rhythm sections ever assembled: a succession of elegant, sinous bassplayers (Leslie Langston, Fred Abong, Bernard Georges) and drummer David Narcizo, a deceptively diffident hybrid of The Attractions’ Pete Thomas and Blondie’s Clem Burke. Holding together something like the helter-skelter of “Bright Yellow Gun” is a good deal more difficult than they make it sound.

Capricious track selection notwithstanding, this is a document that prompts renewed wonder at one of the most astonishing canons of the entire post-punk era. Twenty-five years ago, nobody had ever heard anything like Throwing Muses. Twenty-five years later, that’s still the case.

Andrew Mueller

Q+A KRISTIN HERSH

How did you choose the songs on Anthology?

I sort of left it up to [David] Narcizo. I have a tendency to cringe when I hear anything by us, so I’d have wanted everything taken off.

How do you feel about these old songs now?

The real songs have changed over time, because they’re real – they’re not static. The fake songs don’t do that – and there aren’t any on this album. A real song is so vivid, it’s a different kind of memory, like someone gave you a shot of the past.

Your biggest hit single, “Dizzy”, is notable by its absence.

Well, that’s a horrible song. We did that to give Warners a bad song to work on. They kept saying to us, implicitly at least, you should suck more.

Any concrete news on the new Throwing Muses album?

It’s this long piece where songs come and go and show up in each other. It’s like Broadway or something. Nobody would let us do it if they were in charge, but nobody cares anymore because we’re so old.

INTERVIEW: ANDREW MUELLER

Ask Ravi Shankar

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We're honoured that the venerable sitar hero, Ravi Shankar, will soon be answering your questions in our regular An Audience With... feature. He has lived an extraordinary life so far. He performed at Woodstock, hung out at the Oval Office with George Harrison and then-US President Gerard Ford, and served as a member of the upper house in the Parliament of India. So, what would you like to ask Ravi? What are his memories of the Concert For Bangladesh? What was it like visiting Paris in the 1930s? What has he learned from a life devoted to music? Send your questions to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Tuesday, August 30. We'll put the best ones to Ravi, and they'll appear in a forthcoming edition of Uncut.

We’re honoured that the venerable sitar hero, Ravi Shankar, will soon be answering your questions in our regular An Audience With… feature.

He has lived an extraordinary life so far. He performed at Woodstock, hung out at the Oval Office with George Harrison and then-US President Gerard Ford, and served as a member of the upper house in the Parliament of India.

So, what would you like to ask Ravi?

What are his memories of the Concert For Bangladesh?

What was it like visiting Paris in the 1930s?

What has he learned from a life devoted to music?

Send your questions to uncutaudiencewith@ipcmedia.com by Tuesday, August 30. We’ll put the best ones to Ravi, and they’ll appear in a forthcoming edition of Uncut.

James Blake and Bon Iver collaboration surfaces online

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James Blake and Bon Iver have posted their ‘Fall Creek Boys Choir’ collaboration online – and you can hear it at the bottom of the page. The pair premiered the track on BBC Radio One earlier this evening (August 24), just six days after Blake had announced via Twitter that he and Justin Vern...

James Blake and Bon Iver have posted their ‘Fall Creek Boys Choir’ collaboration online – and you can hear it at the bottom of the page.

The pair premiered the track on BBC Radio One earlier this evening (August 24), just six days after Blake had announced via Twitter that he and Justin Vernon of Bon Iver had written a song together. His tweet simply read: “24th August 2011 – James Blake & Bon Iver’s ‘Fall Creek Boys Choir’.”

Although there is no information as to whether the collaboration will be just a one-off track or if there is more material to come, it has been revealed that the pair did not meet in person to work together but instead composed the song over email in the spring of this year.

The track will also be made available via iTunes on August 29.

Earlier this month, James Blake announced a four-date UK tour to take place this November. The singer will play:

Leeds University (November 25)

Manchester Warehouse Project (26)

Bristol Anson Rooms (29)

HMV London Forum (30)

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.

Watch the trailer of Martin Scorsese’s George Harrison documentary

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The trailer for Martin Scorsese's documentary about the life of George Harrison Living In The Material World has been posted online, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to watch it. The project has been co-produced with Harrison's widow Olivia and will feature home movies and interviews with surviving members of the Beatles. The film traces Harrison's life from his musical beginnings in Liverpool through to his later life as a filmmaker and philanthropist. It will be released on DVD on October 10. Living In The Material World includes interviews with Eric Clapton, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Paul McCartney, Yoko Ono, Phil Spector, Ringo Starr and Jackie Stewart. It is Scorsese's third in-depth musical documentary in recent years, after his epic Bob Dylan film No Direction Home in 2005 and his 2008 film Shine A Light about The Rolling Stones' 'A Bigger Bang' world tour. The two-part film will be shown first on US cable channel HBO in the autumn and then distributed on DVD by Lionsgate on October 10. An accompanying book, written by his late wife, will feature photographs, letters and diary extracts from his life. Harrison died of lung cancer in 2001. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xnx87LIDO9k 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 trailer for Martin Scorsese‘s documentary about the life of George Harrison Living In The Material World has been posted online, scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to watch it.

The project has been co-produced with Harrison‘s widow Olivia and will feature home movies and interviews with surviving members of the Beatles. The film traces Harrison‘s life from his musical beginnings in Liverpool through to his later life as a filmmaker and philanthropist. It will be released on DVD on October 10.

Living In The Material World includes interviews with Eric Clapton, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Paul McCartney, Yoko Ono, Phil Spector, Ringo Starr and Jackie Stewart. It is Scorsese‘s third in-depth musical documentary in recent years, after his epic Bob Dylan film No Direction Home in 2005 and his 2008 film Shine A Light about The Rolling Stones‘A Bigger Bang’ world tour.

The two-part film will be shown first on US cable channel HBO in the autumn and then distributed on DVD by Lionsgate on October 10. An accompanying book, written by his late wife, will feature photographs, letters and diary extracts from his life.

Harrison died of lung cancer in 2001.

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.