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King Crimson

History of Rock

Welcome to 1969… A word much in use this year is “heavy”. It might apply to the weight of your take on the blues, as...

U2 – the early years: “There was a presence, a magnetism…”

U2’s shock-released new album, Songs Of Innocence, is largely themed around the band’s childhoods and adolescence in Dublin, according to Bono. Well, here’s what came next… This is the full story, as told by those who were there, of U2’s rise from indie hopefuls to becoming the Biggest Rock Band On The Planet. Written by Stephen Dalton, and originally published in Uncut’s December 1999 issue (Take 31).

The Flaming Lips reveal tracklisting for Sgt. Pepper’s tribute album

The Flaming Lips have revealed the full tracklisting and contributor list for their remake of The Beatles' album Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. Set for release on October 28, With A Little Help From My Fwends, features a version of 'Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds' which sees guest appearances from Miley Cyrus and Moby. With the full tracklisting now released, appearances from J Mascis, MGMT and Tegan & Sara have also been confirmed. The With A Little Help From My Fwends tracklisting is:

The new Uncut: Joni Mitchell, Robert Fripp, AC/DC, George Harrison, Bob Dylan, 50 greatest singer-songwriter albums and more!

We’re all still reeling from the shocking news of Lou Reed’s death on Sunday. Reading through the tributes that have poured in over the last few days, the one that’s resonated most with me came from John Cale, who in his wise and moving testimonial to his old sparring partner, wrote: “we have the best of our fury laid out on vinyl, for the world to catch a glimpse”. We’ll be running out own full tribute to Lou in a future issue of Uncut.

The Rolling Stones’ 1969 Hyde Park gig was “almost Biblical”

The story of The Rolling Stones’ legendary free show at Hyde Park is told in the new issue of Uncut (dated August 2013, and out on Thursday, July 4).

Robert Fripp steals the show in David Bowie documentary

I don’t know if you saw it, but BBC2’s David Bowie documentary, Five Years, screened at the weekend, was very entertaining. A lot of the archive footage was familiar, but there were also some splendidly unexpected highlights, like a sequence of Bowie filmed at Andy Warhol’s Factory, which rather vividly suggested that Bowie’s talent for mime isn’t perhaps all it’s cracked up to be in which he pretended to unspool his own entrails and pluck out his heart, a performance that was doubtless accompanied by much sniggering from Andy's crowd.
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