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Ringo Starr shares drumming tips as he accepts honorary degree: “I just hit the buggers”

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Ringo Starr was awarded an honorary doctorate from the Berklee College Of Music on June 2 and during his acceptance speech, imparted some drumming advice. ORDER NOW: Queen are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut The former Beatles drummer was supposed to receive the honour last month ...

Ringo Starr was awarded an honorary doctorate from the Berklee College Of Music on June 2 and during his acceptance speech, imparted some drumming advice.

The former Beatles drummer was supposed to receive the honour last month but couldn’t make it, sharing a short video message instead. But while on tour with his All Starr Band, Ringo Starr was able to take part in the special ceremony.

“It’s far out, I don’t have a lot to say,” began Starr’s speech after showing off the certificate to the room. “The idea that I’m a doctor blows me away.”

“You know, I just hit them,” he continued, talking about his drumming technique. “That’s all I do. I just hit the buggers. And it seems to be, I hit them in the right place.”

Starr then got behind the drum kit that was on the stage, and showed off a simple beat that he used to show kids he was teaching. “And if they couldn’t do that, I’d politely tell them ‘maybe piano for you’.”

“The other side of that story is that I gave my son Zak (Starkey, drummer for The Who) that lesson. Then a couple of weeks later, I gave him another lesson,” Starr continued, playing a slightly more complex beat. “He said ‘I can do that Dad’ so I said ‘well, you’re on your own’ and he turned out pretty good.”

Starr said receiving the award was like “some strange fairy tale. I started out playing in the factory I worked at and it just so happened my next door neighbour played guitar and my best friend at the factory played bass. We’d play for the men in the basement, those were my first gigs. But life is good. I love the drums,” he continued.

He then went on to say how he received his very first drum while recovering from tuberculosis. “I hit that drum and it was like madness. I just wanted to be a drummer from that moment on. It was my big dream and it’s still unfolding.”

“I’m not going to go on forever,” said Starr, finishing up his speech. “I’m just going to say thank you, and peace and love.”

Ringo Starr And His All Starr Band – which features Toto‘s Steve LukatherMen At Work‘s Colin Hay, Warren Ham, Gregg BissonetteAverage White Band‘s Hamish Stuart and Edgar Winter – kicked off their North American tour at the end of last month and will run until July. They will hit the road again in October.

Nick Cave dedicates “I Need You” to his sons at Primavera Sound

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Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds played Primavera Sound Festival on Saturday (June 4) and dedicated a song to Cave’s two sons. ORDER NOW: Queen are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds on new B-Sides & Rarities compilation: “You can’t buy t...

Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds played Primavera Sound Festival on Saturday (June 4) and dedicated a song to Cave’s two sons.

Before performing “I Need You”, from 2016’s Skeleton Tree, Nick Cave told the crowd “This is a song I want to dedicate to my two boys, Luke and Earl. They’re probably over there waiting for Bauhaus to begin.”

“Hang on, is my hair alright,” he joked after the emotional performance, before performing “Waiting For You” from 2019’s Ghosteen.

The show was only the second gig Nick Cave has played since the death of his son Jethro Lazenby, after The Bad Seeds headlined Northside Festival earlier this week. Jethro passed away at the start of May at the age of 31. Another of Cave’s sons, Arthur, died in 2015.

Following the death of Jethro, Cave shared a thank-you note to fans.

“I have no question for you today,” Teresa from Australia wrote to Cave, via his The Red Hand Files blog. “I just wanted to send my heartfelt condolences on the tragic loss of Jethro. All I can do is offer the collective love of all who read your letters. Much love to you and all your family.”

Cave responded: “Dear Teresa. Thank you for your letter. Many others have written to me about Jethro, sending condolences and kind words. These letters are a great source of comfort and I’d like to thank all of you for your support.”

In 2019, Cave spoke about how he coped with the loss of Arthur.

“For us, grief became a way of life, an approach to living, where we learned to yield to the uncertainty of the world, whilst maintaining a stance of defiance to its indifference. We surrendered to something over which we had no control, but which we refused to take lying down,” he wrote.

“Grief became both an act of submission and of resistance — a place of acute vulnerability where, over time, we developed a heightened sense of the brittleness of existence. Eventually, this awareness of life’s fragility led us back to the world, transformed.”

 

This Much I Know To Be True, which was in cinemas for one night only on May 11, is a documentary-meets-performance film that centres on the creative relationship between Cave and his Bad Seeds bandmate and longtime collaborator Warren Ellis, and looks at the creation of their most recent albums Ghosteen and CARNAGE.

Mark Ronson shares Amy Winehouse’s demo vocal for “Back To Black”

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Mark Ronson has shared behind-the-scenes insight into working with Amy Winehouse – hear her demo vocal for "Back To Black" below. ORDER NOW: Queen are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Ronson was one of the late singer’s most influential collaborators, having produced her semina...

Mark Ronson has shared behind-the-scenes insight into working with Amy Winehouse – hear her demo vocal for “Back To Black” below.

Ronson was one of the late singer’s most influential collaborators, having produced her seminal second album, also called Back to Black, in 2006.

Sharing a TikTok video of how they made the song together, Ronson said: “Amy came to my studio right here and we met for the first time and I instantly loved her and she played me all of this great Sixties music and she left and I got very inspired and I came up with this piano right here,” going on to play the piano riff from “Back To Black”.

“The next day she came in and wrote these incredible lyrics which she scribbled in the back room,” he added, captioning the post: “All hail the lioness.”

Watch the TikTok below.

@markronson

#stitch with @ruben.tt all hail the lioness ❤️

♬ original sound – Mark Ronson

Last year, Ronson expressed regret over the way he treated Winehouse while she was at the height of her addiction issues.

“Obviously, we had our ups and downs, and it was troubling,” Ronson told The Guardian. “I don’t know if I fully loved the way that I behaved around her.”

The DJ and producer subsequently explained that he wished he had been more vocal in supporting Winehouse throughout her struggles.

“When she was going through addiction, I wish I’d been a little bit more upfront or confrontational about it,” he explained. “But I just was like, ‘Ah, she’ll sort it out – she did it already once.’”

Winehouse underwent a stay in rehab in 2008, but continued to struggle with alcohol abuse. She died from accidental alcohol poisoning in 2011.

Last summer (July 2021) marked 10 years since the late music icon’s death, with tributes pouring in from the music world.

Norman Whitfield’s desire for creative control took him to war: “He was a winner, but you can’t win all the time”

When the pressure grew too much, Motown producer Norman Whitfield disappeared off the face of the earth. Quitting the studio overnight without explanation, he drove from Los Angeles through the desert to Las Vegas. “We’d set off in his Jensen [convertible sports car] at 3am,” remembers The Und...

When the pressure grew too much, Motown producer Norman Whitfield disappeared off the face of the earth. Quitting the studio overnight without explanation, he drove from Los Angeles through the desert to Las Vegas. “We’d set off in his Jensen [convertible sports car] at 3am,” remembers The Undisputed Truth’s lead singer Joe “Pep” Harris, one of
the musicians who’d accompany Whitfield on such trips. “We’d wake up in daylight, we’re in the damn car, people walking up and down the damn street! He’d tell the studio, ‘I’m in Vegas.’ ‘Say what?’ Then he’d tell them: ‘Keep working. The record ain’t close to being finished.’”

Norman had a credit line at Caesars Palace of $5 million,” says Duane Moody, Whitfield’s former manager and PR. “He’d drive to Vegas to feed his energy and competitive spirit. Norman didn’t smoke, drink or get high, but he loved gambling. Norman loved shooting dice and playing craps for two to three days straight, putting $20–30,000 on a number. He used the energy he got from that to write another Temptations song.”

A teetotal gambler with a taste for fast exits, Norman Whitfield had many eye-catching qualities. As a songwriter and producer, he was capable of similar extremes. Among his masterpieces for Motown, Marvin Gaye’s “I Heard It Through The Grapevine” and The Temptations’ “Papa Was A Rollin’ Stone” were full of simmering, cinematic tension, recorded by singers who Whitfield pushed to their limits. His brace of psychedelic soul hits were critical, not just for their wild sonic experimentation but the way that they radically updated the Sound of Young America for changing times.

Norman was the most creative producer Motown ever had,” says Shelly Berger, The Temptations’ manager since 1965. “Berry Gordy feels the same. Norman was grittier and more varied than Holland-Dozier-Holland or Smokey Robinson.”

“I saw Michael Jackson sitting with Norman once, because he wanted information,” says Joe Harris. “Michael said, ‘I can tell when it’s a Whitfield song, because all that other stuff sounds like it’s standing still.’”

Whitfield’s time at Motown was characterised by a relentless battle for independence and control; later, when he founded Whitfield Records in 1975, his riotous, eccentric tendences were given free rein. He carried himself in the studio as if he was the star, with an attitude and fashion sense as outsized as his lavish productions.

“He always had a big ’fro comb in his hair,” laughs Isy Martin, guitarist with The Undisputed Truth. “He had this big, shit-eating grin on his face that just let you know: ‘I’m Norman.’” At the same time, Whitfield kept himself to himself, preferring to keep his real feelings hidden from view. “He looked like he held things inside,” says Martin. “Things that he didn’t want to talk to anyone about.”

Kate Bush granted Stranger Things permission to use “Running Up That Hill” because she’s a fan

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Kate Bush reportedly gave permission to Stranger Things to use her song "Running Up That Hill" because she's fan of the series. ORDER NOW: Queen are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Kate Bush on her album The Dreaming: “I wanted to take control of everything” Str...

Kate Bush reportedly gave permission to Stranger Things to use her song “Running Up That Hill” because she’s fan of the series.

Streams of the ’80s synth pop track had increased by 153 per cent after the song appeared on the latest season of the Netflix show. Bush’s seminal hit features on the first episode, in a key moment involving Max Mayfield (Sadie Sink).

The song, taken from Bush’s Hounds Of Love, overtook “Wuthering Heights” on Spotify to become her most popular title on the service after it experienced a surge in streams on Spotify. It was described as “the biggest gainer on the Global Spotify chart” by the streaming giants.

Now, the show’s music supervisor Nora Felder has explained to Variety how they were able to get Bush’s permission to use the track on the show.

“Each of the prospective song placements in the initial scripts was tagged with the placeholder, ‘TBD Max song’,” Felder said. “From there, I made an effort to internally align myself with what the Duffers felt were the most important elements needed, and my own intuitive grasp of Max’s complex feelings.”

Felder went on to say that when she landed on “Running Up That Hill”, the song “immediately struck me with its deep chords of the possible connection to Max’s emotional struggles and took on more significance as Bush’s song marinated in my conscious awareness.”

“I sat with my clearance coordinator, and laid out all the scripted scenes for song uses that we knew of at that point,” she continued. “Knowing the challenges, we proceeded to create elaborate scene descriptions that provided as much context as possible so that Kate and her camp would have a full understanding of the uses. When we finished, we were on edge, but excited and hopeful.”

Next, the music supervisor had to track down the publisher, which brought her to Wende Crowley, Sony Music Publishing’s SVP of creative marketing, film and TV, received the request.

Stranger Things 4
STRANGER THINGS (L to R) Caleb McLaughlin as Lucas, Sadie Sink as Max, Joe Keery as Steve, Gaten Matarazzo as Dustin in STRANGER THINGS. Image: Courtesy of Netflix © 2022

“Nora Felder came to us pre-pandemic to discuss the idea of using it as Max’s ‘song’ for this season,” Crowley said. “She wanted to make sure it was within the realm of possibility before she got the [executive producers] The Duffer Brothers on board with the idea since the song was going to be “such a focal point to Max’s storyline.”

Crowley continued: “Kate Bush is selective when it comes to licensing her music and because of that, we made sure to get script pages and footage for her to review so she could see exactly how the song would be used.”

Bush, being a fan of the show granted them permission after understanding the intent and vision meant for the song.

Wilco – Cruel Country

After the amiable twang of their 1995 debut A.M. and the more ambitiously conceptual rock’n’roll of 1996’s Being There, Wilco went straight-up pop on 1998’s Summerteeth, trading the pedal steel for an orchestra and treating The Beach Boys as their new Gram Parsons. Country, even alt.country,...

After the amiable twang of their 1995 debut A.M. and the more ambitiously conceptual rock’n’roll of 1996’s Being There, Wilco went straight-up pop on 1998’s Summerteeth, trading the pedal steel for an orchestra and treating The Beach Boys as their new Gram Parsons. Country, even alt.country, was far too restrictive, too conservative both musically and culturally, for many bands identified with that movement, and some of the biggest acts – The Old 97s, Joe Henry, The Jayhawks – were toying with power pop and art rock. Few, however, went as far or as hard as Wilco, who by the 2000s were embracing noise and krautrock to capture something essential about America at the turn of the century.

It’s probably a coincidence that the upcoming 20th anniversary of Wilco’s 2001 breakout album Yankee Hotel Foxtrot is preceded by a new studio album that gets back to their country roots. While it’s still a far cry from anything coming out of Nashville at the moment, Cruel Country is self-consciously grounded in classic country music and old-time folk – two styles that influenced Jeff Tweedy’s earliest music 30 years ago, first with Uncle Tupelo and then with Wilco. Yet it’s not that far removed from their recent Ode To Joy, partly because their idea of country is expansive. Emphasising acoustic instruments and relatively austere arrangements, it encompasses the CSNY harmonies on “A Lifetime To Find”, the two-step rhythms underpinning “Falling Apart (Right Now)”, the string-band plucks of “Sad Kind Of Way”, and even the bucolic psychedelia of the eight-minute epic “Many Worlds”.

Fittingly, the members of Wilco gravitated toward the country setting organically. Cruel Country arose from informal jams at The Loft in Chicago, with the musicians picking up instruments they’d been neglecting recently: acoustic guitars, pedal steel, dobro. There are still electric guitars, but they’re played more in the style of The Buckaroos than Can or Nilsson. Because they found themselves obsessed with this particular palette, they put aside the more “traditional” Wilco album they’d been making and devoted themselves to pursuing this very particular sound. And because Tweedy was incredibly prolific during the pandemic, they found themselves with enough songs for a double album.

Cruel Country sounds like a band playing first and foremost for and to themselves, which means there’s a zippy energy to these songs, even the slower, sparser ones like “The Universe” and “Tonight’s The Day”. It’s invigorating to hear these musicians question how their instruments fit within the songs and rethink how Wilco does what Wilco does. “The Empty Condor” creeps along on Mikael Jorgenson’s muted piano rhythm, which adds a sense of menace and movement to the verses. The song is all push-and-pull: the lightness of Nels Cline’s guitar solo is undone by Tweedy holding his notes just a bit longer than his voice can go. That friction is all the more unsettling for being so understated.

No-one in the band seems to be questioning their role quite as much as Tweedy himself, whose vocals sound nuanced and expressive – acutely alive to the subtleties of emotion his lyrics convey. That’s clearest on the time-stopping “Ambulance”, a harrowing tale of a near-death experience. Its fractured imagery sits uneasily in this country setting: “Once just by chance, I made a friend in an ambulance”, he sings over a gently picked bluegrass guitar line. “I was half man, half broken glass”. He sounds like someone who just got back from a brief stopover in the afterlife, and the placidity of the music evokes the painful fragility of life.

Of course, “country” on Cruel Country refers not just to a musical setting, but to a larger idea prickly with political and cultural implications. Wilco explore that duality most explicitly on the title track, which makes even the dissent of Ode To Joy sound tentative. This song is angrier, animated by a relatable outrage at a particularly American divide: “I love my country, stupid and cruel, red white and blue”, Tweedy exclaims. It’s about performative righteousness, but Wilco complicate it by implicating themselves in the prevailing discord. When Tweedy sings, “All you have to do is sing in the choir”, it’s easy to imagine a red-state strawman, at least until he adds, “… with me” to the end of that declaration.

Cruel Country is so thoroughly a Wilco album that even diehard fans might wonder if that twang wasn’t there all along. In addition to redeeming A.M., which no longer sounds like the band’s least essential album, these 21 songs direct listeners to some relatively dark corners in Tweedy’s songwriting career, such as the dreamy old-time songs on Uncle Tupelo’s March 16–20, 1992 (specifically “I Wish My Baby Was Born”) and his folksier contributions to the supergroup Golden Smog (“Please Tell My Brother”, notably). Moreover, these songs suggest that country music – “a kind of comfort food”, Tweedy says – has always informed Wilco’s music, even when the band actively resisted that label. It’s there underpinning the noise on Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, the migraine jams of A Ghost Is Born, even the self-referential in-jokes on Wilco (The Album). Cruel Country is the rare album that throws everything that came before it into sharp relief – a small miracle for a band 30 years into its run.

The Smile – A Light For Attracting Attention

“There was a point a year and a half ago when I wondered whether I would be doing this again,” admitted Thom Yorke on stage at the Albert Hall last October. “I’m a British musician, and I was told during the pandemic, like all British musicians, that I should consider retraining. And after w...

“There was a point a year and a half ago when I wondered whether I would be doing this again,” admitted Thom Yorke on stage at the Albert Hall last October. “I’m a British musician, and I was told during the pandemic, like all British musicians, that I should consider retraining. And after we finally left [the EU] they told us we didn’t really need to tour around Europe anyway, did we? So perhaps I’m one of a dying breed… who knows?”

That classic Radiohead sense of embattled, paranoid defiance was only amplified by Mark Jenkin’s video for The Smile’s “Skrting On The Surface”, released in March, which cast Yorke as a miner, 200 feet beneath Cornwall, his face grimy with soot and sweat as he trundled his lonely cart down a rail track.

Is UK indie rock one more venerable heartland industry to be blithely cast onto the national slagheap? Could Thom and Jonny Greenwood’s next jobs be in cyber? It’d take a heart of stone not to smirk – but there’s something heartening about Yorke and Greenwood’s vocational commitment to angular, knotty, intensely pissed-off art-rock. While their ’90s contemporaries have wandered far and wide in search of fresh purpose in the 21st century, they have remained steadfast, even when venturing through abstract electronica or orchestral soundtracks, in mining the same rich seam of truculence and awe.

So much so that The Smile, ostensibly a lockdown project for Thom, Jonny and Sons Of Kemet drummer Tom Skinner, along with long-time producer Nigel Godrich, feels more like a refreshment, refinement or even fulfilment of Radiohead core principles, rather than an extracurricular dalliance. An early version of “Skrting…” was in fact a feature of the parent band’s live shows at least as far back as The King Of Limbs, while the surging, splenetic debut single “You Will Never Work In Television Again” (“He’s fat fucking mist/Young bones spat out/Girls slitting their wrists…”) suggests the apprentice work of a neural network trained on the Yorke lyrical canon. On the irresistible one-two of “Open The Floodgates” into “Free In The Knowledge”, he even ventures as close as he’s come to the acoustic balladry of The Bends in a couple of decades.

Funnily enough, though A Light… feels on first listen like Continuity Radiohead, you might find the source or mother lode in a backstage performance from 2008, just Yorke and Greenwood with a couple of acoustic guitars, fingerpicking through Portishead’s “The Rip” as though they had just come up with it in an idle jam session. The album begins with the forlorn life-support bleep of a fritzing antique Moog, and it surfaces like a subterranean river throughout an album which seems to chart the same blasted, war-torn landscape as Portishead’s Third.

Sensationally so on “Speech Bubbles”, the beautifully mournful centrepiece of the record, set in the eerie calm after a terror attack (“Devastation has come, left in a station with a mortar bomb”). The serpentine guitar figure might be a cousin of the one that unravelled through the verses of “Paranoid Android”, but what takes the track to a new dimension is Greenwood’s orchestration. If Robert Kirby’s strings once roamed over the vales of Nick Drake songs like the cumulus clouds in a Constable landscape, then here Greenwood’s rippling piano, breaking through looming uneasy strings and woodwind, feels like a sunbeam in an otherwise foreboding Ravilious seascape.

On “The Smoke”, Greenwood’s heady brew of horns and flutes rise moodily and magnificently through Tom Skinner’s cavernous beat, like steam from the streets of New York in some early-’70s blaxpoitation movie. In fact, it feels like Skinner is the catalyst that’s refreshed the YorkeGreenwood creative bromance. Around The King Of Limbs, Radiohead felt the need to add a second drummer to supplement Phil Selway on the songs’ skittering polyrhythms, but Skinner seems to be a one-man rhythm factory, turning his hands impressively from motorik to afrobeat, from algebraic math-rock to the avant-garage racket of Sonic Youth circa Daydream Nation.

And maybe it’s Skinner’s presence too that helps usher songs like “Pana-Vision” from the fringes of Satie to the kind of afro-futurist soundworlds Bowie approached with the help of Donny McCaslin on Blackstar. “Don’t bore us, get to the chorus”, sings Thom, quoting the immortal words of Roxette, on the hymnal “Open The Floodgates”, but at its best A Light… feels like a subtle jazz improvisation on old Radiohead themes, finding new paths through familiar territory.

I’m stuck in a rut in a flatland drainage ditch/And I’m drowning in irrelevance”, Yorke squawks on “We Don’t Know What Tomorrow Brings”, which races nervily like Magazine trying their hand at Fleetwood Mac’s “The Chain” – but in truth he hasn’t sounded so invigorated and energised since the days of Kid A. If Radiohead’s hiatus is looking increasingly permanent, then The Smile will do very nicely.

Pistol

In Steve Jones’s splenetic autobiography, Lonely Boy, the Sex Pistols’ guitarist does his best to puncture the fables which have grown up around the group. He admits to being hazy about the facts – relying on a radio interview he did with manager Malcolm McLaren in 2005 for the chronology of h...

In Steve Jones’s splenetic autobiography, Lonely Boy, the Sex Pistols’ guitarist does his best to puncture the fables which have grown up around the group. He admits to being hazy about the facts – relying on a radio interview he did with manager Malcolm McLaren in 2005 for the chronology of how the band evolved. Jones’ tenure as the frontman of Kutie Jones And His Sex Pistols ended when McLaren was urged by Vivienne Westwood to look out for a good-looking boy called John. John Lydon is hired, though it transpires that the John that Westwood had in mind was John Ritchie, the future Sid Vicious. And the rest is history, or at least myth.

Pistol is loosely based on Lonely Boy, but it has an uncertain tone, fluctuating between cartoonish awe and the predictable dynamics of a rock’n’roll exploitation film. Pistol’s creator, Baz Luhrmann collaborator Craig Pearce, and writer Frank Cottrell-Boyce, flatten Jones’s plainspokenness to the point of self-parody. “I screw a lot of birds and I act tough,” Jones (Toby Wallace) says, explaining his inadequacy as a frontman. “But when I’m up there I’ve got nowhere… nowhere left to hide.”

Jones is presented as an amphetamine-fueled herbert whose early flirtations with the music business involve stealing equipment from the Hammersmith Odeon. Wallace doesn’t quite convince as Jones – his streetwise charms have a whiff of Jamie Oliver. Glen Matlock (Christian Lees) is introduced as “a jumped up little ponce who likes The Beatles” and never really recovers. Paul Cook (Jacob Slater) is Jones’s straight man and little else. Ironically, as Lydon has been vociferous in his disapproval of the TV series, Anson Boon’s mincing Rotten is one of the more convincing impersonations, perhaps because the real-life Rotten seems to exist within the realms of performance, and Boon can anchor the character in his sneers and verbal tics. Chrissie Hynde (Sydney Chandler) floats around McLaren/Westwood’s shop Sex, resisting Jones’ advances, being endearing and quite unlike Chrissie Hynde. Jordan (Maisie Williams) gets to set up a joke by wearing a see-through top on a suburban train. “Being seen is a political act,” she says, explaining that she has embarked on a vulva-powered revolution. “Why take the train if you’ve got a Volvo?” Jones replies.

Visually, it’s lovely. Director Danny Boyle brings his customary panache. The dilapidation of 1970s London is framed with fusty news clips which highlight the dull conformity the Pistols’ were trying to smash. There are some low-key eureka moments, such as the hamster cameo which gives Sid Vicious his name. The use of music – non-punk – is fantastic. Jordan’s defiance is soundtracked by Lesley Gore’s “You Don’t Own Me”, The Kinks add colour to a journey through Soho, and the growing confidence of Rotten as a singer is hailed with a blast of the Bay City Rollers’ “Shang-A-Lang”. Scam or revolutionary act? In McLaren’s telling, the Sex Pistols were both. Pistol opts for a bit of a Carry On.

Watch The Rolling Stones play “Out Of Time” live for the first time, honour Charlie Watts in Madrid

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More than five and a half decades since it was released, The Rolling Stones have finally delivered a live performance of their 1966 single "Out Of Time". ORDER NOW: Queen 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 R...

More than five and a half decades since it was released, The Rolling Stones have finally delivered a live performance of their 1966 single “Out Of Time”.

The legendary rockers played in Madrid last night (June 1), kicking off their SIXTY tour of Europe and the UK. As its name suggests, the run comes in celebration of the Stones’ six-decade tenure, having officially formed in June of 1962 (they’d perform their first show as The Rolling Stones a month later). The set spanned 19 songs in total, covering nine of the band’s 23 studio albums.

As Rolling Stone points out, the band had been rehearsing regularly at Madrid’s Wanda Metropolitano stadium over the days leading up to last night’s show, and could be heard performing “Out Of Time” in their practices. It was also reported that they’d rehearsed “Mother’s Little Helper”, another 1966 single that had only been performed a few times during that year.

Take a look at fan-shot footage of The Rolling Stones debuting “Out Of Time” live below:

Before taking to the stage, The Rolling Stones began their Madrid set with a video tribute to drummer Charlie Watts, who died last December at the age of 80. 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.

Have a look at the tribute below:

The Rolling Stones’ SIXTY tour will continue in Germany on Sunday (June 5), when they take to the stage at the Olympic Stadium in Munich. They’ll head to Liverpool next, playing the Anfield Stadium with Echo And The Bunnymen supporting.

For their two shows in London, the Stones will be supported by Sam Fender, Phoebe Bridgers, The War On Drugs and Courtney Barnett. Fender and Bridgers will appear on the first date, slated for Saturday June 25, while TWOD and Barnett will play the second on Sunday July 3.

Meanwhile, the Stones have several releases lined up to celebrate their 60th anniversary, including their Live At The El Mocambo album and a box set of all their single releases from 1963-1966. The BBC will also air a four-part docuseries, My Life As A Rolling Stone, throughout the British summer. Each one-hour episode will dedicated to the band’s four members: Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Charlie Watts.

Sons Of Kemet to break up after remaining 2022 live shows

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Sons Of Kemet have announced that they're set to break up after finishing up their 2022 touring schedule. ORDER NOW: Queen are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Sons Of Kemet – Black To The Future review The jazz quartet, led by saxophonist Shabaka Hutchings and feat...

Sons Of Kemet have announced that they’re set to break up after finishing up their 2022 touring schedule.

The jazz quartet, led by saxophonist Shabaka Hutchings and featuring Tom Skinner of Radiohead side-project The Smile on drums, were nominated for the 2018 Mercury Prize for Your Queen Is A Reptile.

The band are set to play a host of gigs across 2022, including a show in Barcelona for Primavera Sound next week (June 6), and have told fans in a statement that the shows will be their last “for the foreseeable future.”

The statement read: “This year will be the last chance to see us in the form to which you’ve grown accustomed.

“After 10 years we have decided that from the end of our scheduled 2022 shows we will be closing this chapter of the band’s life for the foreseeable future. We’re excited to play our remaining gigs for you and to make this summer a fitting send off.”

See the post below.

Sons Of Kemet released their third album, Black To The Future, back in May of 2021. It follows 2018’s Mercury-nominated. Your Queen Is A Reptile, which earned the group a Mercury Prize nomination.

Watch The National perform three new songs in Paris

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The National performed three new songs at their gig in Paris on Monday (May 30) – scroll down the page to watch fan-shot footage now. The tracks were previously given their live debuts at the tour-opening show in Pamplona, Spain on Saturday (May 28). ORDER NOW: Queen are on the cover of ...

The National performed three new songs at their gig in Paris on Monday (May 30) – scroll down the page to watch fan-shot footage now.

The tracks were previously given their live debuts at the tour-opening show in Pamplona, Spain on Saturday (May 28).

During the first of two dates at Paris’ Salle Pleyel venue, The National once again aired “Tropic Morning News (Haversham)”, “Grease In Your Hair (Birdie)”, and “Bathwater (Mount Auburn)”. The first song elements of The Cure in its vocal melodies, with frontman Matt Berninger’s voice accompanied by a propulsive beat and bright guitar lines.

“I was suffering more than I let on,” Berninger sings in the chorus. “The tropic morning news was on / There’s nothing stopping me now / From saying all the painful thoughts out loud.”

“Grease In Your Hair (Birdie)” builds from sparse verses to a driving chorus, with the frontman singing over a rousing hook: “Down we go underground / Magnets make machines go crazy / I used to know you well.”

Meanwhile, “Bathwater (Mount Auburn)”, which kicked off the encore, is laced with brass and cuts a more melancholy form than the other new tracks. “Move forward now, there’s nothing new,” Berninger sings. “Can’t turn around, I can’t follow you.”

Watch footage of all three songs in the video above – “Tropic Morning News (Haversham)” starts at 45:40, “Grease In Your Hair (Birdie)” at 55:58, and “Bathwater (Mount Auburn)” at 1:32:20.

The National
The National’s Matt Berninger. Image: Getty Images

In a social media post shared last week (May 26), The National shared that they have been working on new material. “Rehearsals are underway,” they wrote on Instagram. “It’s great for the seven of us to finally be back together in a room working on music both fresh and familiar. Nos vemos en Pamplona.”

Guitarist Bryce Dessner previously confirmed that the band were working on their next album – the follow-up to 2019’s I Am Easy To Find – although he “wasn’t sure when new music will come”.  “It’s all very exciting: it kind of feels back to the classic National sound in a way, which was really just the five of us, and it has a lot of energy in it,” he explained. “Maybe it’s like bursting out of the closed doors of COVID or something? I don’t know. But we’re excited and I would think it would be imminent at some point.”

The National’s summer tour plans continue with shows at Barcelona’s Primavera Sound on Friday (June 3), followed by headline shows and festival appearances across Europe and North America. The band will perform at London’s All Points East in August, alongside dates in Manchester and Edinburgh. Find more information and tickets for their UK shows here.

Julian Lennon releases official cover of father’s ‘Imagine’ for Ukraine relief

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Julian Lennon, son of John Lennon, has released an official cover of "Imagine". Listen to the track below. ORDER NOW: Queen are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: A Long Rewinding Road – 10 Highlights From The Beatles: Get Back Documentary In April, he performed the ...

Julian Lennon, son of John Lennon, has released an official cover of “Imagine”. Listen to the track below.

In April, he performed the track for the first as part Stand Up For Ukraine campaign, a global fund-raising effort broadcast from Warsaw, Poland. At the time, he wrote “Today, for the first time ever, I publicly performed my Dad’s song, ‘Imagine’” adding: “The song reflects the light at the end of the tunnel, that we are all hoping for.”

A portion of the proceeds from the new release will be donated to Ukraine refugee relief through Lennon’s nonprofit, The White Feather Foundation to Global Citizen.

“I had always said, that the only time I would ever consider singing “Imagine” would be if it was the ‘End of the World’,” Lennon previously said about the infamous song.

He continued: “The War on Ukraine is an unimaginable tragedy. As a human, and as an artist, I felt compelled to respond in the most significant way I could.”

“Within this song, we’re transported to a space, where love and togetherness become our reality, if but for a moment in time,” Julian said. “The song reflects the light at the end of the tunnel, that we are all hoping for.”

Last year, Julian said that watching the new Beatles documentary Get Back was a “life-changing” experience that “made me love my father again”.

Peter Jackson’s three-part film, which came to Disney+ last November, focuses on the making of the band’s penultimate studio album Let It Be and showcases their final concert as a band, on London’s Savile Row rooftop, in its entirety.

Julian and his brother Sean attended a special screening of the documentary in Los Angeles ahead of an event held by Stella McCartney.

“What an Amazing night,” Julian reflected in an Instagram post after the event. “Firstly seeing Get Back and then [attending] Stella’s event afterwards. The One True thing I can say about it all is that it has made me so proud, inspired & feel more love for my/our family, than ever before.”

Recently, Julian released two new singles from his upcoming seventh studio album, Jude.

Billy Childish: “Dylan always got away with doing what he wanted”

Once, Chatham Dockyard on the River Medway was one of the biggest dockyards in the country, employing thousands of men and women to make boats for the Royal Navy. Closed in 1984, the dockyard has since been converted into a museum; its silent acres filled with industrial skeletons in the form of cra...

Once, Chatham Dockyard on the River Medway was one of the biggest dockyards in the country, employing thousands of men and women to make boats for the Royal Navy. Closed in 1984, the dockyard has since been converted into a museum; its silent acres filled with industrial skeletons in the form of cranes, anti-aircraft guns, wooden figureheads, rusting anchors and long corridors of warehouses. Above one such warehouse, up a fire escape next to a naval bookshop, you will find the painting studio of Billy Childish, musician, artist, writer and poet.

This large, square room was once used to make rope. Now it’s lined with canvases, stacked against the walls six deep. There’s a battered sofa, a small selection of art books and a trestle table piled with neatly arranged photographs of possible subjects for future paintings. Against one wall is a half-finished landscape of a cypress swamp, a favoured theme for Childish. The artist, wearing a beret and brown overalls bearing the logo of his Hangman record label, has a show coming up in Berlin. With no time to waste, he paints throughout our interview, adding dabs of browns, greys and greens before filling the top half with bright orange blossom.

Childish first worked at Chatham in the 1970s as an apprentice stonemason, sketching co-workers and dreaming of punk rock. In that sense, not much has changed. Although his paintings are in great demand, Childish still spends an implausible amount of time making music. He’s recorded 17 albums in the past 18 months – including three volumes of The New And Improved Bob Dylan, which features a coruscating series of Dylan covers by Childish’s latest venture, the folk-rock William Loveday Intention.

“It’s not a homage and it’s not a parody,” he explains. “I am getting into the soul of what the songs are about, taking it seriously, absolutely, but then making a joke about how serious I’m taking it. Everything for me is like getting home from school and deciding what game to play. This game was let’s play at being Bob Dylan. But if you are playing a game as a kid, the more seriously you take it the better it will be. That’s probably something that Dylan guy realises. It’s all nonsense, but you take the joke seriously.”

Listen to Beth Orton’s soaring new single, “Weather Alive”

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Beth Orton has released a new single called "Weather Alive" - check it out below. It's the title track from her new album, which is released on September 23 via Partisan Records - her first for the label. You can pre-order it here. ORDER NOW: Queen are on the cover of the latest issue of Un...

Beth Orton has released a new single called “Weather Alive” – check it out below.

It’s the title track from her new album, which is released on September 23 via Partisan Records – her first for the label. You can pre-order it here.

A statement about the new album describes it as “a record that collates memories and experiences spanning a lifetime, with stories that touch on struggles, on healing and of beauty.”

Collaborators on the album include The Smile’s drummer Tom Skinner, Mancunian jazz star Alabaster dePlume, multi-instrumentalist/composed Shahzad Ismaily, and The Invisible’s bassist Tom Herbert.

Listen to “Weather Alive” here:

Orton heads out on tour in support of Alanis Morissette later this month before taking “Weather Alive” out on tour this October across the UK and Ireland.

Tickets for her headline tour will be on sale on June 10 here. Check out the dates here:

OCTOBER
7 – Academy 2, Birmingham
8 – St. Bartholomew’s Church, Brighton
9 – KOKO, London
10 – Arts Centre, Norwich
12 – St George’s, Bristol
13 – Classic Grand, Glasgow
15 – RCMN Concert Hall, Manchester
16 – Brudenell Social Club, Leeds

Orton’s support slot with Morissette were rescheduled after celebrations for the 25th-anniversary celebrations of Morissette’s Jagged Little Pill were postponed due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

The shows were originally due to take place in autumn 2020 but were then moved to October 2021 and November 2021 before being cancelled once more.

Last October, Morissette wrote on Twitter: “Stay tuned for the rescheduled dates (coming very soon), and please hold onto your tickets as they will be valid for the new ones. I can’t wait to see you each as soon as we possibly can.”

Hear Cat Power’s cover of the Stones’ “You Got The Silver”

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Cat Power has shared a cover of The Rolling Stones' track, "You Got The Silver" - listen to it below. ORDER NOW: Queen are on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Cat Power – Covers The song featured on The Stones' 1969 album Let It Bleed and was the band's first song to ...

Cat Power has shared a cover of The Rolling Stones’ track, “You Got The Silver” – listen to it below.

The song featured on The Stones’ 1969 album Let It Bleed and was the band’s first song to feature Keith Richards on lead vocals. A Mick Jagger version was also recorded, but the band released Richards’ version on the album.

Cat Power shared a new covers album earlier this year, but the Stones’ cover did not feature on that.

Listen to the song here:

 

Covers was released on January 14 via Domino, and featured renditions of songs by the likes of Iggy Pop, Nick Cave, Billie Holiday and more.

Power released a version of Frank Ocean’s 2012 track “Bad Religion” to announce the album, which she also performed on The Late Late Show with James Corden last year.

In a statement, the singer revealed that the “Bad Religion” cover originated when she started pulling lyrics out from the track to incorporate into her own song “In Your Face” while performing live, in order to distance herself from the pain of the track.

“That song was bringing me down,” she said, “so I started pulling out lyrics from “Bad Religion” and singing those instead of getting super depressed.

“Performing covers is a very enjoyable way to do something that feels natural to me when it comes to making music.”

In recent years, Cat Power has also covered Rihanna’s “Stay”, released a cover of Cassius‘ 2006 single “Toop Toop” as a tribute to member Philippe Zdar on the first anniversary of his passing, and collaborated with Lana Del Rey.

Ronnie Hawkins dies aged 87

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Rockabilly legend Ronnie Hawkins, an early mentor of The Band, has died aged 87. The news was confirmed by his wife Wanda, revealing that Hawkins died early Sunday morning (May 29). Talking to CBC, Wanda said: "He went peacefully and he looked as handsome as ever." Born in Arkansas, Hawkins' m...

Rockabilly legend Ronnie Hawkins, an early mentor of The Band, has died aged 87.

The news was confirmed by his wife Wanda, revealing that Hawkins died early Sunday morning (May 29). Talking to CBC, Wanda said: “He went peacefully and he looked as handsome as ever.”

Born in Arkansas, Hawkins’ music career kicked off when he moved to Ontario, Canada in the early 1960s, forming his group The Hawks, which featured Robbie Robertson, Rick Danko, Garth Hudson and other members who would go on to perform alongside Bob Dylan and then eventually form The Band, of whom Hawkins was an early mentor.

Leading the tributes to his former bandmate, Robbie Robertson posted a message on Twitter after the news of Hawkins’ death broke, in which he wrote: “My heart sank when I heard “The Hawk” just flew into the sunset. The story of The Band began with Ronnie Hawkins. He was our mentor. He taught us the rules of the road. He was our mentor. He taught us the rules of the road.” Later in the message, Robertson called Hawkins “the godfather” and “the one who made this all happen.”

He added: “Ron prided himself in always having top notch players in his group. Levon Helm his drummer in the Hawks and I talked Ron into hiring Rick Danko on bass and vocals, Richard Manuel on piano and vocals and Garth Hudson on organ and sax. Along with Levon and me this became the magic combination.

“He had us rehearsing constantly into the wee hours,” he added. “We balked about it, but we got better and better. Our goal whether we knew it or not. After the Hawks left Ron and went out on our own, we joined up with Bob Dylan. Next the Hawks became The Band and the rest is history, as they say.”

The message concluded: “He was not only a great artist, a tremendous performer and bandleader, but had a style of humour unequaled. Fall down funny and completely unique. Yep, God only made one of those. And he will live in our hearts forever.”

See a number of tributes to Ronnie Hawkins, including from author Margaret Atwood, who called the news “very sad,” below.

Elvis Costello and Allan Mayes reunite for Rusty and announce new album

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Elvis Costello and Allan Mayes have reunited for their old musical project Rusty, and are releasing a new collection of music called The Resurrection Of Rust. ORDER NOW: Queen is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Elvis Costello – Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide Costello ...

Elvis Costello and Allan Mayes have reunited for their old musical project Rusty, and are releasing a new collection of music called The Resurrection Of Rust.

Costello joined Mayes’ band Rusty on New Year’s Day in 1972 and while the band toured extensively for the next year, they didn’t make it into the recording studio.

Now, Costello and Mayes have reunited and have made newly recorded renditions of six songs drawn from the band’s set lists from 1972.

There are recordings of two Nick Lowe songs, “Surrender To The Rhythm” and “Don’t Lose Your Grip On Love”, as well as a version of Kentucky songwriter Jim Ford’s “I’m Ahead If I Can Quit While I’m Behind”.

There are also two originals, “Warm House” and “Maureen And Sam” together with an arrangement incorporating the Neil Young songs “Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere” and “Dance, Dance, Dance”, the latter of which sees Costello making his debut on the electric violin.

The Resurrection Of Rust will be on sale on CD at Costello’s in-person events and concerts. It will also be available on CD and digitally in the UK on June 10, and will later be followed by a vinyl release this summer.

In a statement, Costello said: “Allan Mayes has been a hard working musician for more than the fifty years since we met. So, when he asked me if I wanted to celebrate this anniversary by getting together to play a few songs that we used to know. I said, ‘Absolutely not!’

“Let’s make the record we would have cut when we were 18, if anyone had let us.’ And this is what you will hear on The Resurrection Of Rust.

Elvis Costello
Elvis Costello in 1978. Image: Richard McCaffrey / Michael Ochs Archive / Getty Images

He continued: “Most of our own early compositions from the Rusty days exist only in lyrical form, scrawled in our old notebooks, the tunes long forgotten but we did have a reel‐to‐reel demo of “Warm House”, a song which I began when I was 17 and which could be found in nearly all of our set lists and found here [on their new album] with full vocal and band arrangement driven by mandolin.

“Remarkably, Allan still has an old school exercise book in which he kept a record of all the venues we ever played. The Resurrection Of Rust record sleeve is decorated with a collage of flyers, posters, playbills and diary entries of the time along with some of our setlist from that exercise book which also acted as an accounts ledger for our rather modest earnings, hitting the heady heights of £17 ‐ our largest fee coming at our very final gig, opening up for Cockney Rebel ‐ but frequently amounting to no more than a couple of quid and with several dispiriting entries which read: ‘Paid: Nil’.

“…Allan and I quickly re‐discovered the vocal blend that convinced us that we might conquer the world (or at least Widnes) when we were teenagers but to bring Rusty into the 21st Century, I enlisted the talents of The Imposters and we were delighted to invite our old pal, Bob Andrews, to revisit his signature Hammond organ and piano parts on the Brinsley Schwarz showstopper, “Surrender To The Rhythm”.”

In other news, Elvis Costello & The Imposters are set to tour the UK next month in support of their new album.

The Boy Named If tour kicks off at the Brighton Dome on June 5, 2022 before wrapping up at London’s Hammersmith Eventim Apollo on June 23. Charlie Sexton will also join Costello and co. on the 13-date tour.

You can see those dates here:

JUNE
Sunday 05 – Brighton Dome
Tuesday 07 – Glasgow Royal Concert Hall
Wednesday 08 – Newcastle O2 City Hall
Friday 10 – Liverpool Philharmonic
Saturday 11 – Manchester Opera House
Monday 13 – Birmingham Symphony Hall
Tuesday 14 – Leicester De Montfort Hall
Thursday 16 – Oxford New Theatre
Friday 17 – Bath The Forum
Sunday 19 – Portsmouth Guildhall
Monday 20 – Swansea Arena
Wednesday 22 – Ipswich Regent Theatre
Thursday 23 – London Eventim Apollo

Dennis Bovell – Album By Album

Pioneering producer, songwriter, dubmaster and now MBE, Dennis Bovell has been busy as ever as he heads towards his eighth decade. In the last year alone, there have been ongoing dub reimaginings for the likes of Animal Collective and The Smile, various archival and new Bandcamp releases, and Y In D...

Pioneering producer, songwriter, dubmaster and now MBE, Dennis Bovell has been busy as ever as he heads towards his eighth decade. In the last year alone, there have been ongoing dub reimaginings for the likes of Animal Collective and The Smile, various archival and new Bandcamp releases, and Y In Dub, a new version of The Pop Group’s seminal Bovell-produced debut.

“I got to get back into those tracks and marvel at the sounds I’d put down on the tape,” he explains of the latter. “They’re mad about dubbing, Mark Stewart especially, so they were going crazy!”

His latest project is a career-spanning anthology, The Dubmaster, so Bovell’s agreed to take Uncut through nine of the pivotal albums he’s helped create, from Matumbi’s reggae classics through to production work for The Pop Group, The Slits and Fela Kuti, and right on to his latterday dub work.

“I have no problem calling the shots,” he says of his firm approach to making music. “You need that iron fist. If I didn’t like something, I let it be known. And if I thought it could be better done some other way, I let that be known as well!”

“MATUMBI”
Seven Seals
(1978, Harvest)

The debut album by the London reggae group, featuring Bovell on guitar

Our first studio session was in October 1971, so last year marked 50 years since the first Matumbi recording. When I ran the band like a totalitarian regime, it seemed to work a bit better, but then everyone went, “Urgh, it’s a bit totalitarian, yeah?” So I went, “All right, we’re all equal, everyone’s got an equal say.”

I think that was the beginning of it falling apart. We did this at Gooseberry Studios in Soho, then the band had a mutiny – they didn’t want me to mix the record, saying that I was gonna make the band sound like all the other bands I’d mixed and engineered. I thought, “What’s wrong with that, there’s success there?” But they said, “No, we want a white guy to mix it.” I go, “What, is that the only criteria, he has to be white?” The chief engineer at Gooseberry, Dave Hunt, had just taken a new job at Berry Street on my recommendation. They suggested Dave to mix the album, and because I’d suggested him as engineer there, I couldn’t say no. But I think it was a very good mix, except for on one song he put an echo on my rhythm guitar that seemed to me to be out of time. I complained about it, but the band said “We liked it.” The album did very well, though – it sold more in Japan than any other territory.

“BLACKBEARD”
Strictly Dub Wize
(1978, Tempus)

Bovell’s first solo album, a masterful psychedelic dub haze

Some people in Matumbi took offence to my solo career – they were like, “You’re in competition with the band.” There was one instance where my record was at No 1 in a chart and the band’s record was at No 7 or something. So I stopped singing and started making dub records – “See, I’m not in competition with the band anymore. I’m not singing, I’m just doing dubs.” That’s why the album’s called Strictly Dub Wize – it was a statement to the band. I got out of that one! This was all done at Gooseberry. We had a Revox tape machine that was doctored, so it could facilitate vari-speed. That was the main delay line, because then we could vary it to the tempo of the tune.

It worked fantastically, because then we could have any speed for the delays. We had two Roland delays and an AKG BX20 reverb, which was quite famed, and also an EMT reverb plate: lots of outboard gear, because that’s what we did there, a lot of dub work, so we had to have machines. I couldn’t really afford session fees for other musicians to come on board and play what I told them to play – and 10 to one, I’m gonna have to correct them afterwards. So I thought, “If I’m able to do it, I might as well.” I needed a drummer though, mainly because the control room was some distance from the drum booth, so it was quite a laborious process to play it and then come back to the control room to EQ it.

Listen to Bright Eyes’ first collection of Companion re-recordings

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Bright Eyes have released their first set of Companion re-recordings - check them out below. ORDER NOW: Queen is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Bright Eyes’ Conor Oberst – My Life In Music Earlier this year, Bright Eyes announced plans to reissue their entire...

Bright Eyes have released their first set of Companion re-recordings – check them out below.

Earlier this year, Bright Eyes announced plans to reissue their entire back catalogue.

The band – comprised of Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis and Nate Walcot – will reissue all nine of their studio albums over the course of the project, together with a Companion EP for each LP that features new recordings of songs from the original release, plus a cover version from an artist they found particularly inspiring at the time.

On May 27, their first three albums – A Collection Of Songs Written And Recorded 1995-1997, 1998’s Letting Off The Happiness and 2000 LP Fevers And Mirrors, were shared.

“It’s a meaningful way to connect with the past that doesn’t feel totally nostalgic and self-indulgent,” Oberst said in a statement about the releases. “We are taking these songs and making them interesting to us all over again. I like that. I like a challenge. I like to be forced to do something that’s slightly hard, just to see if we can.”

Back in February, the band also shared new recordings of “Falling Out Of Love At This Volume”, “Contrast And Compare” featuring Waxahatchee and “Haligh, Haligh, A Lie, Haligh” with Phoebe Bridgers, from the six track Companion EPs all of which you can listen to here.

The band have also announced a series of UK, Ireland and shows in Europe kicking off in London on August 30. Their tour will also call at Manchester, Birmingham, Glasgow and Dublin. You can purchase tickets here.

They will play:

AUGUST
30 – London Eventim Apollo
31 – Manchester O2 Apollo

SEPTEMBER
1 – Dublin Vicar Street
5 – Birmingham O2 Institute
6 – Glasgow, Scotland – Barrowland

Bright Eyes are currently touring the US tour which also been expanded further to include shows on the west coast up until July. Further information about dates can be found here.

Listen to Angel Olsen’s cover of Bob Dylan’s “One Too Many Mornings”

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Angel Olsen has covered Bob Dylan’s 1964 classic "One Too Many Mornings" - listen below. ORDER NOW: Queen is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: A look back at Bob Dylan’s landmark debut album Olsen's gentle reimagining of the track appears on the soundtrack to the A...

Angel Olsen has covered Bob Dylan’s 1964 classic “One Too Many Mornings” – listen below.

Olsen’s gentle reimagining of the track appears on the soundtrack to the Apple TV+ series Shining Girls (starring Elisabeth Moss).

The album features selections of the show’s original music composed by Claudia Sarne, with Olsen’s cover appearing as the third track on the record.

Based on the novel by Lauren BeukesShining Girls follows Kirby Mazrachi (Moss) as a Chicago newspaper archivist who is the survivor of a traumatic assault. When she learns of a recent murder that’s linked to her case, she teams up with journalist Dan Velazquez (Wagner Moura) to understand her blurred reality and uncover the killer’s identity.

In other news, Angel Olsen shared her new single “Through The Fires” earlier this month.

The song is taken from her forthcoming new album Big Time, which is set for release on June 3 via Jagjaguwar. It’s the follow-up to 2020’s Whole New Mess, which featured a host of reworkings of tracks from Olsen’s 2019 LP All Mirrors.

“Through The Fires” is the third preview of Big Time to be released following its title track and her March single “All The Good Times”.

Olsen will head out on a UK and Ireland tour in support of Big Time in October. You can see her upcoming tour dates below.

October
18 – O2 Academy Brixton, London
19 – The Forum, Bath
20 – Usher Hall, Edinburgh
21 – Albert Hall, Manchester
24 – Vicar Street, Dublin