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Ride’s Andy Bell shares new cover of Pentangle’s “Light Flight”

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Ride's Andy Bell has shared a new cover of Pentangle's "Light Flight" as a B-side for a new single – check it out below. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Andy Bell – Flicker review The track comes as part of a new single called "Lifeline...

Ride’s Andy Bell has shared a new cover of Pentangle’s “Light Flight” as a B-side for a new single – check it out below.

The track comes as part of a new single called “Lifeline”, which appears on Bell’s recent solo album Flicker.

Discussing “Lifeline”, the former Oasis member said: “In my opinion it’s important to be there for people we love who have gone down rabbit holes, ready to accept them when they come back.

“I hope and want to believe that they will be back from the wilderness at some point.”

Listen to “Lifeline” and the cover of “Light Flight” below.

Flicker followed Bell’s 2020 solo debut The View From Halfway Down and was released on February 11 via Sonic Cathedral.

Speaking about Flicker, Bell explained in a statement: “When I think about Flicker, I see it as closure. Most literally, on a half-finished project from over six years ago, but also on a much bigger timescale.

“Some of these songs date back to the ’90s and the cognitive dissonance of writing brand new lyrics over songs that are 20-plus years old makes it feel like it is, almost literally, me exchanging ideas with my younger self.”

“The ‘flicker’ I’m talking about in the lyrics of “Something Like Love” is that flame that makes a person who they are,” Bell said of the track. “I wanted to find that in myself, so I went back to the teenage me – a technique I learned in therapy and have been doing ever since – and got some advice on how to live and be happy in the 2020s.

“The View From Halfway Down” was about turning 50 during a time of introspection; Flicker is about gathering the tools to equip myself mentally for life in 2022 and beyond – post-pandemic, post-Brexit, post-truth.”

Ride are also reissuing their early albums and EPs to mark the 30th anniversary of their debut album.

The announcement came ahead of Ride’s 2022 Nowhere 30th anniversary UK headline tour, which took place earlier this year.

“This new album has given us a chance to create some new (but old school) Ride artwork, in conjunction with the team at Wichita, which we are pretty pleased with,” Bell said.

Osees’ John Dwyer: “I’m like the mythical shark that has to keep moving”

“What the fuck is going on?/Human life is not that long” (Osees, “Funeral Solution”) Given that he’s currently averaging four album releases a year, it’s probably no surprise to learn that John Dwyer barrels through life on a faster speed setting than everyone else. “Let’s get som...

What the fuck is going on?/Human life is not that long” (Osees, “Funeral Solution”)

Given that he’s currently averaging four album releases a year, it’s probably no surprise to learn that John Dwyer barrels through life on a faster speed setting than everyone else. “Let’s get something to eat,” he declares, striding out into Brixton rush-hour traffic in search of a restaurant he doesn’t yet know exists. Dwyer walks and talks like he records: quickly, and with purpose. He doesn’t miss a beat when an over-eager young fan accosts him at the crossing to ask for musical recommendations (brilliantly, he tells them to go and listen to “The Kettle” by Colosseum). Deploying the highly tuned cultural antennae that have allowed him to surf – and often direct – the currents of 21st-century underground rock, within minutes he’s seated in a booth at one of South London’s hippest noodle joints, slurping on a hearty bowl of ramen while simultaneously attempting to shut down a threatened leak of Osees’ new album.

Dwyer, of course, is not just the band’s frontman, bandleader, chief songwriter and garrulous spokesman – he’s also their manager and label boss. “Oh yeah, I’m a total control freak,” he grins, wiping the ramen broth from his moustache. “I like doing it and by a process of elimination I found out I was pretty good at it. I had no formal training in any of this shit – I’ve lied my way into every job I’ve ever had. Even the guitar I learned by falling ass-backwards into it.”

Ass-backwards or not, Dwyer has spent the last couple of decades building Osees – and the excellent Castle Face label he co-founded, initially just to release their records – into a veritable psychedelic cottage industry. Back at the turn of the century, OCS (as they were styled on their first releases) were just a weird home-recording diversion for Dwyer from his main bands Coachwhips and Pink & Brown. But when their journeys both fizzled out, he realised that in order to continue making the type of music he wanted in the way he wanted, he’d have to assume total control. “Luckily, my guys, I think, realise the amount of work I do makes it a little bit easier on them. We have a good socialist system of payment going, but they don’t have to do things like pay for hotels or book the shows. I’m essentially managing everything because I like doing it. I’m good at it, but I also like controlling! So it’s a little win-win all round.”

John is generous and protective as a bandmate, and so fun to be around,” says Brigid Dawson, a key Osees contributor for more than 10 years and still a member of the Castle Face family. “He runs a tight ship and expects you to play to the best of your abilities, which makes the band tight and the music better. Getting to play in such a great band – I feel very lucky.”

Neil Young and Crazy Horse preview Toast album with single “Timberline”

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Neil Young and Crazy Horse have shared a first preview of their upcoming album Toast – listen to "Timberline" below. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Neil Young – Official Bootleg Series: Royce Hall, 1971/Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 1971/Ci...

Neil Young and Crazy Horse have shared a first preview of their upcoming album Toast – listen to “Timberline” below.

The album was originally recorded by Young and the band in 2001 before being shelved. It was then finally announced for a July 8 release date earlier this year.

Young revealed his plans to drop Toast – named for the San Francisco studio in which it was minted – in a post shared to his blog, the Neil Young Archives. Though that post has since been deleted, Toast is locked in for release on Friday (July 8) via Reprise. CD and vinyl pre-orders are available from Young’s webstore, The Greedy Hand, with a sell describing the record as “heavy and distressed, brimming with electrifying tension”.

Saying that the album was “so sad at the time that I couldn’t put it out,” Young added of “Timberline”: “The scene changes to a religious guy who just lost his job. He’s turning on Jesus. He can’t cut any more trees. He’s a logger.”

Listen to “Timberline” below.

According to Young, Toast is “an album that stands on its own in [his] collection”. He cited the record’s melancholic tone as a reason why it never left the studio, explaining in last May’s aforementioned blog post: “Unlike any other, Toast was so sad that I couldn’t put it out. I just skipped it and went on to do another album in its place. I couldn’t handle it at that time. 2001.”

He went on to say that the record was “about a relationship”, chronicling a particularly bleak point in its dissolution. He continued: “There is a time in many relationships that go bad, a time long before the break up, where it dawns on one of the people, maybe both, that it’s over. This was that time.

“The sound is murky and dark, but not in a bad way. Fat. From the first note, you can feel the sadness that permeates the recording… These songs paint a landscape where time doesn’t matter – because everything is going south. A lady is lost in her car. The dark city surrounds her – past present and future. It’s a scary place. You be the judge.”

Elsewhere, Young has announced his plans to release Noise & Flowers, a live album and film compiled from material recorded during his most recent tour of Europe and the UK.

Young embarked on the nine-date run with Promise Of The Real as his backing band, taking in four shows in Germany – as well as one each in Denmark, Belgium, the Netherlands, England and Ireland – across July of 2019. The album and film will feature recordings from all of the shows; the CD and two-disc vinyl release will sport 14 tracks, but it’s unclear if the film (which was co-directed by Bernard Shakey and DH Lovelife) contains the same content.

Both iterations of the release will land on August 5 via Warner Records, with pre-orders available here.

Yesterday (July 4), the music of Crosby, Stills and Nash returned to Spotify after the musicians initially removed all of their music earlier this year in solidarity with Young.

Hüsker Dü bassist Greg Norton diagnosed with cancer, friends launch GoFundMe page

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Former Hüsker Dü bassist Greg Norton has been diagnosed with cancer, the musician has disclosed on social media. "At the beginning of June, I was diagnosed with prostate cancer," Norton wrote in a post on Facebook last Friday (July 1). "My doctors at the Mayo Clinic believe I have excellent odd...

Former Hüsker Dü bassist Greg Norton has been diagnosed with cancer, the musician has disclosed on social media.

“At the beginning of June, I was diagnosed with prostate cancer,” Norton wrote in a post on Facebook last Friday (July 1). “My doctors at the Mayo Clinic believe I have excellent odds, but we need to get in right away and move forward with treatment and surgery.”

Norton went on to say that his band, UltraBomb, has cancelled planned tour dates in the UK and would be postponing North American dates, in order to allow him “time to recover and return in full force”.

Friends of Norton have launched a GoFundMe campaign to assist with his medical costs. They hope to reach a goal of $30,000 – at the time of writing, the campaign has reached its goal and exceeded $46,000.

“We can’t imagine the stress and anxiety he and his family must be going through. One thing that’s for sure, though, is that the cost of treatment in the United States is eyewatering,” a statement on the page reads. “We want to help alleviate some of that pressure.”

Norton formed Hüsker Dü alongside Bob Mould and Grant Hart in 1979. Along with Mould and Hart, he remained in the band until its dissolution in 1988 and played on all six of their studio albums, from 1983’s Everything Falls Apart to 1987’s Warehouse: Songs and Stories. In 2017, Hart died of complications from liver cancer, aged 56.

Norton’s new band, UltraBomb, also features Finny McConnell of The Mahons and Jamie Oliver of U.K. Subs. In Norton’s Facebook post, he reveals they will be releasing their debut album on July 15 via DCJam and will be performing one show, at the Hook and Ladder in Minneapolis, the following evening.

Stereolab announce 2022 UK and EU tour dates

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Stereolab have announced a new run of UK and European dates, which will take place in October, November and December this year. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Stereolab, Kikagaku Moyo: End Of The Road Festival 2021 – Day 1 The band will ...

Stereolab have announced a new run of UK and European dates, which will take place in October, November and December this year.

The band will begin their tour in Paris at La Gaité Lyrique on October 26, after their extensive US tour finishes up in North Carolina. The Paris show is followed by dates in Lisbon, Amsterdam, Rome, Berlin and more.

They head to the UK on November 24, where they’re due to play Concorde 2 in Brighton, with shows in Leeds, Manchester, Edinburgh and Glasgow shortly after.

The tour culminates with a takeover of both stages at EartH in London on December 3, where the band will be be joined by four other acts that are still to be announced.

Afterwards, Tim, Laetitia and Martin will be playing disks in the main room until 3am for the UltraDisco. All attendees of the UltraDisco will also receive a Duophonic Super 45s gift.

Tickets for all dates will be on sale from Friday, July 8 at 10am BST – see full dates below and find tickets here.

The tour announcement follows on from the recent news that the fifth instalment of the group’s Switched On reissue campaign would be released on September 2. Pulse of the Early Brain [Switched On Volume 5] is out via Warp Records and Duophonic UHF Disks and can be pre-ordered herehere.

The previous instalment of the Switched On series was 2021’s Electrically Possessed. It included rarities, outtakes and non-album tracks including “The First Of The Microbe Hunters”, unreleased outtakes from the Mars Audiac Quintet and Dots And Loops sessions, and a track called “Dimension M2”, which was first released in 2005 on the Disko Cabine compilation.

Stereolab also recently released “Robot Riot” from Pulse of the Early Brain [Switched On Volume 5], which was originally written for a sculpture made by Charles Long – an artist that the band had previously collaborated with on 1995’s Music For The Amorphous Body Study Center project.

Sessa: “We have to find a way to survive, to make people feel pleasure”

When Sergio Sayeg showed up in Joel Stones’ Tropicália in Furs record shop around 2007, it seemed like a fluke. Stones had seen the angular young man with a big cloud of dark hair around Manhattan’s East Village for weeks. But the stranger’s interest in the Brazilian-specific vinyl haven quic...

When Sergio Sayeg showed up in Joel Stones’ Tropicália in Furs record shop around 2007, it seemed like a fluke. Stones had seen the angular young man with a big cloud of dark hair around Manhattan’s East Village for weeks. But the stranger’s interest in the Brazilian-specific vinyl haven quickly revealed itself as soon as he started speaking, his English rounded with the distinctive full-bodied lilt of a Brazilian accent. The teenage Sayeg became a regular  in the store, absorbing its contents – songs, discographies, track lists, liner notes, credits – like a sponge. Stones’ record shop would turn out to be a gravitational force for Sayeg, who’s now on his second Tropicália-indebted album under the name Sessa. His time there as a clerk and a customer changed his relationship with music forever, giving him a portal that hurtled him into the rest of his life.

“You soak in, like, what’s a song? When do the drums come in? How should they sound?” Sayeg recalls, pulling apart a sweet, puffy brioche croissant in the sunny front window of a small Portuguese café in Jersey City. On stage and off, Sayeg dresses himself in striking vintage clothes that vaguely recall the 1960s-era psychedelia that seeps into his music. Though Stones calls Sayeg “a little Bob Dylan”, the mysterious Minnesotan would never be seen in such bold attire. Bob’s loss, really.

Fifteen years after he first stepped into Stones’ shop, Sayeg is nearing the end of a United States tour opening for the freewheeling Turkish psych-folk band Altin Gün. At the Music Hall of Williamsburg the night before we meet – the second of two sold-out shows there – the 33-year-old sat hunched over his honey-coloured acoustic guitar on a late April evening. He introduced songs from his second album, Estrela Acesa, carrying a soothing, radiant energy. The project’s title, in Portuguese, means “burning star”.

Sayeg made the record at the home studio of his São Paulo friend Biel Basile on Ilhabela – “beautiful island” – located about 200km southeast of São Paulo. There, the pair built the album’s rhythmic foundation from a beachside locale. But Sayeg’s journey toward being an ascendant steward of one of Brazil’s beloved musical exports began well before he ever stepped across the threshold of an enticingly named record store with a guitar in the window.

Now 33, Sayeg doesn’t remember when or where he came by the nickname Sessa. He uses the title as a mononym for a full band, where he’s joined by singers and a drummer. Sayeg grew up in the very small enclave of São Paulo’s Sephardic Jewish community. “I don’t think people that attend synagogue would say, ‘Oh, this is a music place,’” Sayeg recalls. “It is very musical. But it’s just chance.”

Pink Floyd are finally releasing their 2018 remaster of Animals

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Four years after it was initially due to come out, Pink Floyd will release a remastered version of their 10th studio album, 1977’s Animals, this September. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut  Dubbed the ‘2018 Remix’ edition of Animals, the album will...

Four years after it was initially due to come out, Pink Floyd will release a remastered version of their 10th studio album, 1977’s Animals, this September.

Dubbed the ‘2018 Remix’ edition of Animals, the album will land on September 16 via Sony. The physical release will include both standard CD and SACD formats, 12-inch vinyl and Blu-Ray. A deluxe edition – slated to ship on October 7 – will include the vinyl, CD and Blu-Ray, plus an exclusive DVD and 32-page book. Pre-orders for all of the versions can be found here.

The selling point for this release is an entirely new mix of Animals, reworked into 5.1 Stereo by legendary sound engineer James Guthrie. On the Blu-Ray and DVD releases, this will be paired with the original 1977 mix. It also sports new artwork by Aubrey “Po” Powell, who was a partner of the original cover’s artist, Storm Thorgerson, as a member of the London-based collective Hipgnosis.

In a statement shared on social media, Pink Floyd explained that Powell took new photos of the building pictured on the Animals cover – the Battersea Power Station on the south bank of the River Thames – during recent conversion work, adding to the narrative behind the album’s concept.

Powell himself said: “With the original 1977 album cover being such an iconic piece of stand-alone art, I had the chance to update it, which was a rather daunting task, but Hipgnosis took the opportunity to re photograph the image to reflect a changing world, and by using modern digital colouring techniques I kept Pink Floyd’s rather bleak message of moral decay using the Orwellian themes of animals, the pig ‘Algie’, faithful to the message of the album.”

Have a look at the cover art for the ‘2018 Remix’ edition of Animals – as well as the band’s full statement on its release – below:

As implied by its name, the ‘2018 Remix’ edition of Animals was finalised four years ago, just after the album celebrated its 40th anniversary. Plans to release it then were axed because of a feud between guitarist David Gilmour and ex-bassist Roger Waters, which reportedly stemmed from a dispute over the album’s newly re-written liner notes.

Waters wrote four of the album’s five songs entirely by himself, while he and Gilmour collaborated (and shared lead vocals) on the track “Dogs”. Last June, Waters wrote in a blog post that Gilmour refused to authorise the new release unless the liner notes, written by journalist Mark Blake, were scrapped from its packaging. “[Gilmour] does not dispute the veracity of the history described in Mark’s notes,” Waters said, “but he wants that history to remain secret.”

It’s unknown whether those liner notes will indeed appear on the ‘2018 Remix’ edition of Animals, but they are already publicly accessible – when he shared the above claims of Gilmour’s dissatisfaction with them, Waters posted them to his website.

Meanwhile, last week saw Pink Floyd announce a physical release for their Ukraine benefit single “Hey Hey Rise Up”, which marked the band’s first new song in 25 years when it arrived digitally in April. In the UK, Europe and selected other markets, a seven-inch vinyl and CD single will be available on July 15. It will be released on August 3 in Japan, while in North America, Canada, Australia and Mexico, it will arrive on October 21.

The B-side will feature a reworked version of “A Great Day For Freedom”, from Pink Floyd’s 1994 album The Division Bell, reimagined by David Gilmour based on the original tapes for the track.

Authorised biography of The Rolling Stones’ Charlie Watts announced

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An official biography of Charlie Watts, authorised by both The Rolling Stones and Watts' family, has been announced. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Kurt Vile, Cat Power and more dig deep into the genius of The Rolling Stones’ Exile On Main ...

An official biography of Charlie Watts, authorised by both The Rolling Stones and Watts’ family, has been announced.

Charlie’s Good Tonight: The Authorised Biography of Charlie Watts is due to be released on September 15 in the UK and October 11 in the US, according to Rolling Stone. The book features forewords from both Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, plus a prelude from the band’s former manager/producer Andrew Loog Oldham.

The longtime Rolling Stones drummer died at the age of 80 last August prompting a huge outpouring of tributes from the music world and beyond.

His surviving bandmates reflected on the “huge loss” in September last year before later dedicating their first show of 2021 to Watts.

The new biography has been written by author-broadcaster Paul Sexton and includes new interviews with Jagger, Richards, and Ronnie Wood, as well as friends, family and collaborators.

“Our dear friend Charlie Watts was not just a fantastic drummer but a wonderful person,” the Rolling Stones said in a statement. “He was funny and generous and a man of great taste and we miss him terribly. It’s great that his family have authorized this official biography by Paul Sexton, who’s been writing and broadcasting about Charlie and the band for many years.”

Sexton added: “One of Charlie’s good friends said to me that he was a very easy man to love. Having had the pleasure of his company on so many occasions over the course of more than a quarter of a century, that’s a sentiment I echo wholeheartedly. To be able, with the help and encouragement of those who knew him best, to draw on my time with this unique man and his fellow Rolling Stones to write his authorized biography, is a thrill and an honor.”

The Stones’ SIXTY UK and European anniversary tour kicked off in Madrid on June 1. At that show, they delivered the first-ever live performance of their 1966 single ‘Out Of Time’ and delivered a tribute to Watts.

Filling his spot on the SIXTY tour is session drummer Steve Jordan, who the band confirmed in March would record parts for their upcoming 24th album.

The Stones postponed two gigs on the tour in Amsterdam, Netherlands and Bern, Switzerland due to Jagger’s ill health, resuming in Milan on June 21. The band are due to play the second of their BST Hyde Park shows on July 3, with Sam Fender and Courtney Barnett on support.

Kendrick Lamar announces Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers vinyl release

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Kendrick Lamar’s Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers is officially set for release on vinyl. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Kendrick Lamar – Mr Morale & The Big Steppers review The rapper first announced the record's existence on Th...

Kendrick Lamar’s Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers is officially set for release on vinyl.

The rapper first announced the record’s existence on Thursday (June 30), and made it available for pre-order Friday (June 1). Orders will begin to roll out from August 26.

The gatefold release includes the entirety of the double-disc album, which spans 18 songs over 73 minutes. The records will be available in both regular black and exclusive gold-brown pressings.

The vinyl rollout comes weeks after the digital release of Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers, which hit streaming services on May 13. The project marked Lamar’s fifth studio album, and first solo full-length since 2017’s DAMN (which earned the rapper a Pulitzer Prize for Music in 2018).

Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers also marks Lamar’s final album release under Top Dawg Entertainment, which he signed to in 2005. Since then, Top Dawg has distributed all of the rapper’s studio albums including 2011’s Section.80, 2012’s Good Kid, M.A.A.D City and 2015’s To Pimp A Butterfly.

More recently, Lamar curated and produced Black Panther: The Album for the 2018 film of the same name, and last year featured on Terrence Martin’s Drones alongside Ty Dolla $ign, James Fauntleroy and Snoop Dogg.

Kendrick Lamar – Mr Morale & The Big Steppers

Kendrick Lamar is one of the finest instrumentalists of his era, although his instrument happens to be his own voice. On previous albums but especially on his latest, Mr Morale & The Big Steppers, he raps in many modes, varying his pitching and flow on nearly every song, switching up his cadence...

Kendrick Lamar is one of the finest instrumentalists of his era, although his instrument happens to be his own voice. On previous albums but especially on his latest, Mr Morale & The Big Steppers, he raps in many modes, varying his pitching and flow on nearly every song, switching up his cadence as though changing his identity. He sounds impossibly nimble and declarative on opener “United In Grief”, even as he warns the listener, “I’ve been goin’ through something/Be afraid”. He goes low and legato on “Crown”, then spry and playful on “N95”. He uses short, choppy lines on “Count Me Out” to unsettle the listener, then delivers “Auntie Diaries” in a near whisper, as though drawing you closer to tell you a secret. The album is a remarkable series of disruptive transformations.

Lamar isn’t the only rapper who bends his flow into so many different shapes, but few others pull it off so dramatically or so eloquently, and almost no-one achieves the same emotional payoff. It heightened the tension of his 2012 breakthrough, good kid, M.A.A.D. City, and made 2015’s To Pimp A Butterfly one of the best albums of the decade, a bursting-at-the-seams concept album that positioned Lamar as an heir to Marvin Gaye, Chuck D and George Clinton, among others. He synthesises a startling range of sounds and styles, but it’s all in service to his vocals. Because he often sounds like he’s rapping to himself, externalising his internal monologue, these different deliveries reveal an artist wrestling with his demons in real time. He unleashes them (or they unleash themselves) to tell deeply intricate stories of black experiences in America and to further complicate narratives that might have become too pat, too predictable.

Mr Morale & The Big Steppers is a sprawling double album. How sprawling? The excellent, Marvin Gaye-sampling first single, “The Heart Pt 5”, doesn’t even appear on the tracklist, crowded out by a storyline with multiple framing devices, intersecting subplot and a full choir of collaborators. That means there are more Kendricks speaking to us and few of them have very many fucks to give. There is the Kendrick who has become a cultural institution, who became the only rapper and the rare pop artist to win a Pulitzer Prize, and who has already inspired several books and academic studies. He bobs and weaves with supreme vocal agility and uses Duval Timothy’s avant-garde piano chords as a foil on “Crown”. On “United In Grief”, he questions everything – sexism, commercialism and even hip-hop as a vehicle for examining those issues – over a pulsating drum line that pushes the song along at a reckless pace. It’s a bracing introduction to a thorny album.

And then there is the Kendrick who is suspicious of that kind of recognition and applause. These sections are often caustic in their antagonism. “I am not for the faint of heart”, he declares on “Worldwide Steppers”, and on “Savior” he admonishes the listener: “Kendrick made you think about it, but he is not your savior”. It can be incredibly compelling, but it can also be tiresome: Kendrick’s biggest moment comes on “We Cry Together”, as he and Zola actor Taylour Paige argue violently over a sample from Florence + The Machine’s “June”. It’s ugly, but self-consciously ugly, theatrically ugly – a humourless take on Otis Redding and Carla Thomas’s “Tramp” – and its points about toxic masculinity and black feminism parrot rather than question received wisdom.

By far the most compelling persona on Mr Morale & The Big Steppers is the Kendrick who is trying to make sense of the horrors of his own family, who raps about incest and recrimination in a sober flow. On “Auntie Diaries” he recounts the stories of two transgendered family members, and while he deadnames them and gratuitously repeats a certain homophobic slur, he does so in order to examine his relationship with them and to trace the evolution of his own thinking – from dumb schoolyard taunts to acceptance and admiration. The heart of this dense album, however, is “Mother I Sober”, about false accusations of sexual abuse that divided his family for generation. It hinges on a lovely, deeply sympathetic chorus sung by Portishead’s Beth Gibbons, as Lamar tells the story
with forensic focus. He tries to forgive those who once refused to believe him, even as he chastises himself for profiting off his own trauma (“traded in my tears for a Range Rover”).

It’s a tour de force, almost but not quite as revelatory as “DUCKWORTH”, a similar family saga off 2017’s DAMN. And the best moment is when the strings swell and Lamar’s voice changes. As his careful, stoical flow morphs into a more emphatic, even triumphant exultation, one Kendrick gives way to another Kendrick: “As I set free all you abusers,
this is transformation!

There are so many more Kendricks on Mr Morale & The Big Steppers: some oddball versions of himself that pop up only for two lines or resist any easy understanding of their motives. And they all converge on closer “Mirror”, with its cinematic strings and stuttering beat. “My demons is off the leash for a moshpit”, he exclaims, noting the irony of working through private issues in a public form. He raps to figure it all out, to impose order on a chaotic world: “Sorry I didn’t save the world, my friend”, he raps with a hard-won clarity and perspective. “I was too busy buildin’ mine again”.

Elvis

Buy Now Of all the filmmakers who could have made an Elvis biopic, it had to be one whose aesthetic is more Vegas bloat than Sun Studios leanness. Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis lives up to the swooning excess of his Moulin Rouge, even down to its digital diamanté-studded end credits. Less a narr...

Of all the filmmakers who could have made an Elvis biopic, it had to be one whose aesthetic is more Vegas bloat than Sun Studios leanness. Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis lives up to the swooning excess of his Moulin Rouge, even down to its digital diamanté-studded end credits. Less a narrative than a deluxe jukebox musical with touches of Douglas Sirk melodrama, Elvis is framed as a sort of Citizen Kane deathbed reverie from Colonel Tom Parker, Presley’s Dutch-born, Mephistophelean manager. He’s played by Tom Hanks with a bizarre, undefinable European accent, in makeup suggesting a cross between the Penguin and a papier-mâché effigy of Rupert Murdoch.

How Parker ‘created’, or rather enslaved Presley is the narrative drift, but the film’s real pleasure lies in its full-tilt comic-strip stylistics and a terrific performance by Austin Butler (a TV stalwart previously seen in Tarantino’s Once Upon A Time…). His Elvis is something of a coy innocent, less of a confident joker than the original, not quite aware of his powers, but rebellious when it comes to doing things his own way, as on the ’68 TV Comeback Special.

Don’t expect the dark stuff – the decline isn’t touched on, nor his attempts to ingratiate himself with Richard Nixon (this film paints Elvis as a tender-hearted liberal). Priscilla, played by Olivia de Jonge, barely gets a look-in. The film is best experienced as a showbiz panto, with famous names flitting by – Kelvin Harrison Jr as BB King, Alton Mason show-stealing as Little Richard.

The emphasis on Elvis’s debt to black music might have expressed itself more subtly than with tarted-up rap recreations of his work – Doja Cat, CeeLo Green and Eminem are among the soundtrack contributors – but then this is no more a film for purists than Luhrmann’s Romeo + Juliet was for Stratford-on-Avon regulars. Elvis is hyperbolic, one-dimensional and ludicrous – but as high-excess cinematic myth-making, it’s a blast.

Iury Lech – Musica Para El Fin De Los Cantos

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Iury Lech’s second album, Música Para El Fin De Los Cantos (‘Music For The End Of The Songs’), has taken a while to reach its audience. Originally released by Spanish label Hyades Arts, which was run by writer and director Antonio Diaz and musician Dr Héctor, its understated beauty eventuall...

Iury Lech’s second album, Música Para El Fin De Los Cantos (‘Music For The End Of The Songs’), has taken a while to reach its audience. Originally released by Spanish label Hyades Arts, which was run by writer and director Antonio Diaz and musician Dr Héctor, its understated beauty eventually attracted a wave of bloggers who were interested in albums that slipped between genres, sitting as it does between minimalism, New Age and Fourth World musics. Reissued five years ago by CockTail d’Amore, with altered artwork, for this reissue, Wah Wah and Lech have gone back to the master tapes and restored the original cover.

Lech, a multi-disciplinary creator of Ukrainian origin, recorded the album across 1989 and 1990, while he was based in Barcelona. Indeed, he’s spent most of his life in Spain, pursuing an unpredictable career that’s taken in music, film, literature and multimedia – his first album, 1989’s cassette-only Otra Rumorosa Superficie, drew from soundtracks to several of his early-’80s films. His music, rich with gentle, poetic synthesis and luxuriant, slow-moving melody, also sat particularly well within a broader scene in Spain that explored the nexus of post-industrial, post-minimalism, and nascent techno/electronica, and Música Para… nestles neatly alongside contemporaneous work from the likes of Esplendor Geometrico, Miguel A Ruiz, Adolfo Nuñez, Pep Llopis, José Luis Macias, Finis Africae, Orquesta De Las Nubes and Mecanica Popular.

“Cuando Rocío Dispara Sus Flechas” (“When Rocío Shoots Her Arrows”) opens Música Para… with dizzy arpeggio patterns, suggesting the Berlin School relocated to sunnier climes. But as with much of Música Para…, Lech soon takes this composition in other directions – languid yet piercing high-pitch tones repeatedly rupture the surface of “Cuando Rocío…”, lending it a tense beauty, as electric piano spirals and descends into the song’s silences. “Barreras” (“Barriers”) follows, a chime-scape of clacking, glistening textures, see-sawing a simple chord change over a whirring hum, its gentle grandeur suggesting the Cocteau Twins’ “Lazy Calm”, from their 1986 album Victorialand, if it had been arranged by Portuguese composer Nuno Canavarro.

If “De La Melancolia” (‘Of Melancholy’) plays out loosely like a variation on a theme – cellular melodies repeating over pulsing drones that hint at natural phenomena and shape-shifting, rhizomatic networks – “Ukraïna” (‘Ukraine’), the album’s centrepiece, is more personal, internalised, a 17-minute hymn to Lech’s family home that shimmers in pellucid light, a synthetic choir singing wordless, ghostly chants; it has a similar sense of ‘epic stasis’ as Popol Vuh’s “Vuh”, from In Den Gärten Pharaos, but this feels like the ecstatic afterglow. By the time we reach the astral analgesic of the closing “Postmeridiano” (‘Afternoon’), Música Para…’s sanctified ambience has done its work: time has slowed to a crawl, but blissfully so.

Michael Nesmith – Tantamount To Treason Vol 1 (reissue, 1972)

There’s added poignancy in this reissue of Nesmith’s fourth post-Monkees album, following his death in December last year. Yet rather than being a sentimental salute, Tantamount To Treason underscores Nez’s status as a country-rock forefather of a rather idiosyncratic bent. ORDER NOW: TH...

There’s added poignancy in this reissue of Nesmith’s fourth post-Monkees album, following his death in December last year. Yet rather than being a sentimental salute, Tantamount To Treason underscores Nez’s status as a country-rock forefather of a rather idiosyncratic bent.

Produced by Nesmith himself, Tantamount To Treason was his only recording with the Second National Band, a sextet featuring just him and pedal-steel guitarist Orville “Red” Rhodes from the first incarnation, plus session musicians including bassist Johnny Meeks, who did time as lead guitarist with the Blue Caps, and noted jazz drummer Jack Ranelli. In the run-up to release, Nez had been feeling the impact of diminishing market returns on his First National Band records, which makes this set even more of a triumph. It’s the full realisation of his aesthetic, interpreted by skilled players – nine tracks of expansive country rock with psychedelic and jazzy flourishes, intriguing experimental touches and a relaxed, almost meditative feel.

This remastered edition – expanded for both vinyl and CD – follows right behind 7a’s reissue of And The Hits Just Keep On Comin’, from later the same year. First up is the stomping “Mama Rocker”, equal parts Chuck Berry and CCR, with a touch of Jimmy Page – likely a bid to win listeners over ahead of the more reflective and/or out-there tracks. It’s in sharp contrast to what immediately follows: “Lazy Lady” is cast as a traditional country number with lachrymose pedal-steel work, though it’s skewed by an odd, descending guitar coda. It’s also a reminder, were it needed, of the tender honesty of Nesmith’s lyrics and the keening power of his voice.

Ravishing epic “In The Afternoon”, a reflection on change and the building of a home, is similarly languid and a standout, while the irresistibly woozy flow and reverb manipulations of “You Are My One” throw forward to Eric Chenaux’s “bent jazz” style. The band’s cover of the Lee/Duffy standard “She Thinks I Still Care” is a diametric opposite, but nowhere near as strikingly so as “Highway 99 With Melange”. Written by keyboardist Michael Cohen, it opens with metallic clanging, then suggests a car radio flipping between stations (faint snatches of Nesmith’s voice, sudden sub-Zep blasts), adding seagull cries and thunder. The song proper adopts a comically exaggerated tone for a road-trip monologue, while pianos hammer out what sounds like two different bar-room tunes behind. Cohen’s song is a curate’s egg but it’s also an indication of the breadth of Nesmith’s vision and his enthusiasm for change.

Record company pressure won the day, however, and rather than Tantamount To Treason Vol 2, he (and just Rhodes) delivered the more commercially viable And The Hits Just Keep On Comin’.

R.E.M. to reissue their debut EP Chronic Town to mark its 40th anniversary

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R.E.M. are set to reissue their 1982 debut EP Chronic Town in August to celebrate its 40th anniversary. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut  READ MORE: Michael Stipe and Mike Mills reveal the secrets of R.E.M.’s “Electrolite” The band's first EP fe...

R.E.M. are set to reissue their 1982 debut EP Chronic Town in August to celebrate its 40th anniversary.

The band’s first EP featured five songs – “Wolves, Lower”, “Gardening At Night”, “Carnival Of Sorts (Boxcars)”, “1,000,000” and “Stumble” – and was originally released on August 24, 1982 as the follow-up to their 1981 debut single “Radio Free Europe”.

R.E.M. will now reissue Chronic Town as a CD, picture disc and cassette on August 19 via I.R.S./UMe.

It will be the first time that the record will be available to buy as a standalone CD, which will feature extensive liner notes by the original producer Mitch Easter.

R.E.M. - 'Chronic Town' reissue
R.E.M. – ‘Chronic Town’ reissue

“Introducing their arpeggiated guitar playing, cryptic and often indecipherable lyrics, and radiant choruses that would soon emerge as signatures of the classic R.E.M. sound, Chronic Town is the sound of a restless band, chock full of ideas, operating on a post-collegiate budget,” a press release about the EP states.

“Charmingly ragged and refreshingly immediate, it established the band indelibly upon impact.”

You can see the tracklist for R.E.M.’s Chronic Town reissue below and pre-order the record here.

“Wolves, Lower”
“Gardening At Night”
“Carnival Of Sorts (Boxcars)”
“1,000,000”
“Stumble”

Fleetwood Mac’s Christine McVie on her compilation album, Songbird: “This may be my swansong”

It’s raining in London and Christine McVie is at home, enjoying a cup of afternoon tea. Home these days is an apartment in Belgravia – she pronounces it “Bel-gray-vee-yah”, giving it the requisite posh spin – complete with a roof garden well decorated with big pots and tubs. Since her last...

It’s raining in London and Christine McVie is at home, enjoying a cup of afternoon tea. Home these days is an apartment in Belgravia – she pronounces it “Bel-gray-vee-yah”, giving it the requisite posh spin – complete with a roof garden well decorated with big pots and tubs. Since her last stage appearance, on February 25, 2020 at the Peter Green tribute concert, McVie has spent more time at home than perhaps she anticipated. There has been Covid, of course, but more recently she’s been at the mercy of a minor back ailment, which has curtailed her activities. Not that this has dampened her spirit, mind. “You get the cortisone in your back and all of a sudden you feel like a spring chicken again,” she laughs, her warm, unhurried delivery undercut with a faint Brummie burr, a gentle reminder of her West Midlands childhood.

Today, though, we are here to discuss Songbird, a collection of material drawn from two albums in her lesser-spotted solo career. Unlike her fellow songwriters in Fleetwood Mac, McVie has always preferred to serve as part of collective rather than manage a parallel enterprise with her name above the door. Part of that comes from a dislike of fuss and unnecessary attention, but she thrives in collaborative situations – even during the early days, playing the Midlands pub circuit as part of a duo with Spencer Davis, or in Brumbeat bands like Sounds Of Blue and Chicken Shack, she found creative equanimity in the company of like-minded players.

When she finally recorded a solo album, 1970’s Christine Perfect – her maiden name – it was well received (she won a second Melody Maker award for Best Female Vocalist), but she’s dismissive about it today: “There’s maybe a couple of good songs on it.” She didn’t release a follow-up for another 14 years.

Whatever she may think of her solo work – some of it later recorded in a studio-cum-pub in her converted garage – her early songs for Fleetwood Mac were critical in helping the band find a way forward following the departure of founder Peter Green. Getting it together in the country during the early ’70s – first at Kiln House and then Benifold, both in Hampshire – McVie and the band’s other songwriters from this period, Danny Kirwan and Bob Welch, took the blues to surprising new places. The albums they made at this time – including Future Games and Bare Trees – capture the band in transition. The arrival of Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, meanwhile, pulled the band in yet another direction entirely.

Pet Shop Boys announce summer 2023 UK tour dates

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Pet Shop Boys have announced details of their summer 2023 UK arena tour. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut The duo, who headlined The Other Stage at Glastonbury 2022 last weekend, will continue their Dreamworld: The Greatest Hits Live tour next year. T...

Pet Shop Boys have announced details of their summer 2023 UK arena tour.

The duo, who headlined The Other Stage at Glastonbury 2022 last weekend, will continue their Dreamworld: The Greatest Hits Live tour next year.

The new tour dates will kick off with a show at London’s OVO Arena Wembley on June 17, 2023, with dates following in Aberdeen, Liverpool and Leeds.

Tickets for these shows are on sale now from here, and you can see details of Pet Shop Boys’ newly announced 2023 UK tour dates below.

June
17 – OVO Arena Wembley, London
21 – P&J Live, Aberdeen
23 – M&S Bank Arena, Liverpool
24 – First Direct Arena, Leeds

Pet Shop Boys were joined on stage at Glastonbury on Sunday night (June 26) by Years & Years’ Olly Alexander, with the two artists performing “Dreamland” together.

Earlier in the day, Alexander covered the Pet Shop Boys’ “It’s A Sin” during Years & Years’ set on The Other Stage.

Back in March, Pet Shop Boys joined forces with Soft Cell to release the joint single “Purple Zone”.

The song was originally intended to be remixed by Pet Shop Boys until it morphed into a full collaboration, which Soft Cell’s David Ball has labelled as “probably our finest pop moment since the early 1980s”.

“Working with the Pet Shop Boys was a pleasure, and this track is the perfect combination of us and them,” Soft Cell’s Marc Almond added, while Pet Shop Boys’ Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe said: “We are thrilled to collaborate with such an inspirational duo as Soft Cell on this gorgeous song.”

Send us your questions for Steve Hillage

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There were a fair few legends at Glastonbury this weekend, but perhaps none more closely associated with the festival than prog/ambient guitar master Steve Hillage. Having been a member of Gong during their imperial Radio Gnome Trilogy phase, Hillage actually helped to organise the 1979 Glastonb...

There were a fair few legends at Glastonbury this weekend, but perhaps none more closely associated with the festival than prog/ambient guitar master Steve Hillage.

Having been a member of Gong during their imperial Radio Gnome Trilogy phase, Hillage actually helped to organise the 1979 Glastonbury Fayre, backing Peter Gabriel as well performing a stunning solo headline set which is finally seeing an official release as The Glastonbury Experience: Live 1979 via Madfish on July 15.

After forming System 7 in the early ’90s, Hillage played a key role in setting up Glastonbury’s first official dance stage and was later involved in establishing a more DIY dance area, The Glade. In a long, varied and always open-minded career, Hillage has also toured with Kevin Ayers, produced The Charlatans, collaborated with Detroit techno originator Derrick May and played the Reading Festival with Sham 69!

So what do you want to ask a fearless psychedelic guitar explorer? Send your questions to audiencewith@www.uncut.co.uk by Friday July 1 and Steve will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

Depeche Mode thank fans for “outpouring of love” following Andy Fletcher’s death

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Depeche Mode have thanked their fans and friends for the "outpouring of love" they've showed following the death of Andy Fletcher last month. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut "We wanted to take a moment and acknowledge the outpouring of love for Andy that...

Depeche Mode have thanked their fans and friends for the “outpouring of love” they’ve showed following the death of Andy Fletcher last month.

“We wanted to take a moment and acknowledge the outpouring of love for Andy that we’ve seen from all of you over the last few weeks,” remaining members Martin Gore and Dave Gahan wrote on Instagram. “It’s incredible to see all of your photos, to read your words, and to see how much Andy meant to all of you.”

“As you can imagine, it’s been a strange, sad, disorienting few weeks for us here, to say the least,” they continued. “But we’ve seen and felt all of your love and support, and we know that Andy’s family has too.”

Elsewhere in the post, the band revealed that Fletcher died of natural causes. “A couple weeks ago we received the result from the medical examiners, which Andy’s family asked us to share with you now. Andy suffered an aortic dissection while at home on May 26. So, even though it was far, far too soon, he passed naturally and without prolonged suffering.”

Depeche Mode then told fans about a “beautiful ceremony” held to celebrate Fletcher’s life which was attended by many of his friends and family and “our immediate DM family”.

“We had a celebration of Andy’s life in London last week, which was a beautiful ceremony and gathering with a few tears, but filled with the great memories of who Andy was, stories of all of our times together, and some good laughs,” they wrote. “Andy was celebrated in a room full of many of his friends and family, our immediate DM family, and so many people who have touched Andy’s and our lives throughout the years. All being together was a very special way to remember Andy and see him off.”

They concluded: “So thank you for all of the love you’ve shown Andy and his family and friends over the last few weeks. It honestly means the world to all of us. Andy, you’ll be missed, but certainly not forgotten.”

Fletcher was a member of the beloved synth-pop group for more than four decades since the release of their debut album Speak & Spell in 1981. The album included chart-topping hits, such as “Dreaming Of Me”, “New Life” and “Just Can’t Get Enough”. The band had their first international hit in 1984 with “People Are People”.

In 2020, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame along with longtime bandmates, Dave Gahan and Martin Gore and former members Vince Clarke and Alan Wilder.

Watch Phoebe Bridgers join The Jesus and Mary Chain for “Just Like Honey” at Glastonbury

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Phoebe Bridgers joined The Jesus and Mary Chain onstage to perform "Just Like Honey" during the band's Friday (June 24) set at this year's Glastonbury festival. ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Bridgers, who played her own Glasto set right before JAMC at ...

Phoebe Bridgers joined The Jesus and Mary Chain onstage to perform “Just Like Honey” during the band’s Friday (June 24) set at this year’s Glastonbury festival.

Bridgers, who played her own Glasto set right before JAMC at the John Peel Stage, supplied backing vocals for the rock legends, letting singer Jim Reid lead the performance. The appreciative crowd allowed the song to play almost uninterrupted before applauding the band and Bridgers as Reid thanked her at the end of the song.

Watch Bridgers join The Jesus And Mary Chain to perform “Just Like Honey” below.

Bridgers made headlines for her maiden Glastonbury set, where she denounced the recent decision of the US Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade, a 1973 case that made abortion legal on a federal level. The decision was officially made on June 24, meaning US states can set their own laws regarding the legality of abortions. 23 states are expected to make abortion illegal, Politico reports.

“This is my first time here and, honestly, it’s super surreal and fun, but I’m having the shittiest day,” Bridgers told the Glastonbury audience on June 24, before asking Americans in the crowd to chant, “Fuck the Supreme Court!”

Following the chant, Bridgers continued: “Fuck that shit. Fuck America. Like, fuck you. All these irrelevant, old motherfuckers trying to tell us what to do with our fucking bodies… Ugh. I don’t know, fuck it, whatever.”

Friday at Glastonbury saw a headline set by Billie Eilish at the Pyramid Stage, as well as other noteworthy performances by Sam Fender, IDLES, St. Vincent, Little Simz and more.

Paul McCartney duets virtually with John Lennon for Glastonbury headline set

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Paul McCartney duetted virtually with John Lennon during his Glastonbury headline set (June 25). ORDER NOW: The Beatles are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut  READ MORE: Paul McCartney turns 80: a look back at the Beatle’s numerous accomplishments Following the surprise arriva...

Paul McCartney duetted virtually with John Lennon during his Glastonbury headline set (June 25).

Following the surprise arrival of Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl and Bruce Springsteen during his set on the Pyramid stage, he linked up with former Beatles bandmate, the late Lennon during “I’ve Got A Feeling”.

Speaking to the crowd, McCartney revealed that the idea came from Peter Jackson, the director of the recent extensive documentary Get Back, which was based on the studio sessions for the band’s final album Let It Be.

The pair traded verses in the song, with Jackson having isolated Lennon’s vocal for the team-up. McCartney first debuted the collaboration with his former co-songwriter on his recent US tour.

“I’ve got a special little thing here,” he said introducing that track. “One day, Peter Jackson rings me up and says he can take John’s vocals and isolate them so that you can play live with John on tour. He said do you fancy that?”

“That’s so special for me man,” McCartney said following the collaboration. “I know it’s virtual but come on – it’s John. We’re back together.”

Earlier the show, Grohl joined the Beatle having flown all the way especially from the US for the show: the pair played “I Saw Her Standing There” and “Band On The Run”, while Springsteen covered The Boss’s 1984 single “Glory Days” and an early Beatles single, “I Wanna Be Your Man”.