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Norah Jones – Come Away With Me: 20th Anniversary Super Deluxe Edition

On its release in February 2002, expectations for Norah Jones’ debut album were “modest†in the extreme, as the liner notes accompanying this expanded 20th-anniversary edition tell us. In Uncut’s brief original review, we suggested that Jones’ sultry voice sat somewhere between Sade and Sh...

On its release in February 2002, expectations for Norah Jones’ debut album were “modest†in the extreme, as the liner notes accompanying this expanded 20th-anniversary edition tell us. In Uncut’s brief original review, we suggested that Jones’ sultry voice sat somewhere between Sade and Shelby Lynne, but did at least hint that she might go on to outstrip both of them. Nine Grammy awards, 30 million sales and two decades later, that judgement seems a tad cautious but not too far wide of the mark.

Since her debut Jones has recorded half a dozen more huge-selling albums and lent her beguiling voice to collaborations with Foo Fighters, Dolly Parton, Danger Mouse, Jeff Tweedy, Mavis Staples and among others.

Yet it is Come Away With Me, recorded when she was 22 and which Jones herself self-deprecatingly calls “my moody little recordâ€, which has remained her biggest seller and her calling card.

After graduating from the University of North Texas, Jones moved to New York in 1999 and began playing jazz gigs in restaurants around Manhattan. Her 21st birthday found her singing at a brunch with the JC Hopkins Biggish Band. After the gig she gave a three-track demo to Shell White, who happened to be not only Hopkins’ wife but also an executive with EMI Publishing.

White passed the demo to Blue Note president Bruce Lundvall and the long and winding road to Come Away With Me which ensued is chronicled here in a collection that augments the album’s 14 released tracks with another 30. They include demos, early sessions and an entire version of the album recorded with producer Craig Street, subsequently scrapped when Jones went back into the studio with Atlantic veteran Arif Mardin.

Sequenced chronologically, we get a unique insight into the evolution of a classic album, starting with the three self-recorded demos that first persuaded Blue Note that Jones had something special. What is most striking is that at the time the singer clearly regarded herself primarily as a jazz chanteuse. “Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Mostâ€, a song made famous by Ella Fitzgerald, was recorded solo in Jones’ school band room but finds her sounding like a precociously assured lounge singer. Nat King Cole’s “Walkin’ My Baby Back Home†is even jazzier with double bass and trumpet, and it’s only on the Bonnie Raitt-like “World Of Trouble†that we get a hint of the jazz-pop troubadour mode eventually heard on Come Away With Me.

Those three songs initially got Jones signed on a demo deal rather than a full contract and she was sent away to work on original material with her guitarist Jesse Harris and bassist Lee Alexander. “We let her find her own direction,†Brian Bacchus, Blue Note’s head of A&R, explained. “We knew that if she could develop her songwriting, it would work.â€

Only a handful of the 14 new songs she recorded found their way on to Come Away With Me but they included Harris’ “Don’t Know Whyâ€. Recorded in a single take, it’s the hit version that ended up on the finished album with only the lightest overdubs. Also retained from those early sessions was a wondrous jazz-blues take on John D Loudermilk’s “Turn Me Onâ€, singled out as her finest vocal performance in Uncut’s review of the album 20 years ago.

Among the unreleased songs, perhaps the most revealing is “Something Is Calling Youâ€, which has a raga-like circular guitar motif and Indian tabla accompaniment. At the time it was not widely known that Jones was the daughter of Ravi Shankar.

The simple, unpretentious integrity of the demo sessions beguiled Blue Note’s big-wigs and on being offered a full recording contract, Jones requested that Street should produce, inspired by his work on Cassandra Wilson’s 1995 Grammy-winning New Moon Daughter, which she regarded as a touchstone.

The aborted album they put together at Allaire Studios near Woodstock offers an intriguing glimpse into the record that Come Away With Me might have been. In the end, three of the 13 tracks from the sessions made it onto the final album and one can hear why the Street-produced versions of songs such as “Come Away With Me†and “Turn Me On†were ultimately rejected. Given the kind of moody, textured wash associated with Daniel Lanois, they’re terrific in their own right and Jones sings them exquisitely; but the vibe has strayed a long way from the simpler, jazzier mood of the demos that had excited Blue Note in the first place.

The version of Come Away With Me that was eventually released cherry-picked the best moments from the three different sources. “Don’t Know Why†and “Turn Me On†came from the demo sessions, “Seven Years”, “Feelin’ The Same Way†and “The Long Day Is Over†from the Street-produced set, and nine songs were recorded or re-recorded with Mardin, who added a burnished veneer of sophistication without subtracting from the freshness that had characterised the demos.

As a deep dive into how a talented young artist and a smart record label go about feeling their way to greatness, this 20th-anniversary edition is not only endlessly fascinating but required listening for anyone involved in the business of making records as a foundation course in how it should be done.

? and the Mysterians – 96 Tears/Action

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On April 2, 1968, Rudy ‘?’ Martinez was one of three men picked up by Michigan state police in a lay-by near the Zilwaukee Bridge, not far from his home town of Saginaw, the trio arrested for possession of “several tubes of glue and brown bags containing glueâ€. In the wrong place at the wron...

On April 2, 1968, Rudy ‘?’ Martinez was one of three men picked up by Michigan state police in a lay-by near the Zilwaukee Bridge, not far from his home town of Saginaw, the trio arrested for possession of “several tubes of glue and brown bags containing glueâ€. In the wrong place at the wrong time with very much the wrong drugs, the perma-shaded
? And The Mysterians singer thus found himself about as far from the psychedelic action as he could have been, an improbable local success story recast as something of a laughing stock.

Naive, sci-fi crazy, Mexican-American youngsters from a blue-collar backwater two hours’ drive from Detroit, ? And The Mysterians contrived to record the second-biggest-selling US single of 1966 (outsold only by The Mamas & The Papas’ “California Dreamin’â€) in a basic studio in Bay City, Michigan. A wounded rant with a killer keyboard sound, “96 Tears†sold a million, but the two albums the band released – now back on vinyl after a long spell in legal limbo – went largely unnoticed, with mismanagement, racism and more goings-on elsewhere helping to seal the band’s fate as a one-hit wonder. As ? whoops presciently on the debut album’s “Ten O’Clockâ€: “You miss your train, now your name’s erasedâ€.

However, for lovers of garage rock – the genre post-rationalised into existence following Lenny Kaye’s 1972 compilation of overlooked small-time 7†singles, Nuggets – ? And The Mysterians’ underachievement remains heroic. These crystal-clear new versions of
96 Tears (1966) and Action (1967) show a band impervious to the psychedelic winds of change, persisting in playing lascivious, Brit-style R&B at teenage velocity, in blissful ignorance of anything The Beatles, The Rolling Stones – or indeed anyone else – had done since 1965.

Once a covers band, ? And The Mysterians hit on a neat gimmick when ? renounced his birth name, but seemed fated to go nowhere, their first attempts at recording vanishing after the studio owner was murdered in Detroit. They got a second chance, with “96 Tears†going viral after receiving a limited release on the tiny Pa-Go-Go label, becoming a hit in Saginaw, then Flint, then Detroit, before a deal with the Cameo-Parkway label helped propel it to the national No 1 spot in October 1966.

With future Casablanca disco mogul Neil Bogart whipping them on, the Mysterians recorded two albums in the space of six months, guitarist Bobby Balderrama and 15-year-old Vox Continental wizard Frankie Rodriguez providing tunes for their hyperactive frontman to adorn with campy yelps and rather less subtle come-ons. Quite how
no-one at the relatively strait-laced Cameo-Parkway noticed him muttering “girl, you masturbate me†on Action’s fuzztoned calling card “Girl (You Fascinate Me)†is anyone’s guess.

If they were young and a little unsubtle, ? And The Mysterians were not the musical lightweights some latter-day fans would perhaps like them to be. Frankie Gonzalez’s sly drop of a passage of “Mary Had A Little Lamb†into “I Need Somebody†– the opening track from the debut album – is evidence of a band that knew their history. Fellow Saginaw keyboard king Stevie Wonder slipped a bit of the same tune (on harmonica) into his 1963 No 1 “Fingertipsâ€.

The instrumental “Set Aside†and “Midnight Hour†show that the Mysterians had jazz and blues chops too, but if they aspire to the alpha-male thud of the Spencer Davis Group’s “Keep On Running†on “Don’t Break This Heart Of Mineâ€, ?’s Prince-pitched vocals subtly queer their pitch. He comes on like a repentant Little Richard on a take of “Stormy Monday†– the only cover on 96 Tears – and plays the wounded innocent superbly on the featherweight “Why Meâ€, a wet lettuce approximation of Love’s “My Little Red Bookâ€.

Producer Bogart perhaps recognised this appealing androgyny in ? when he forced the soppy “Can’t Get Enough Of You Baby†(previously recorded by “A Lover’s Concerto†hitmakers The Toys) on to the band for Action. The hackneyed attempt to graft the keyboard line from “96 Tears†on to this potential comeback hit sounded clueless to the teenaged Balderrama (see interview), but ?’s slightly mocking delivery suggests he may be in on a joke somewhere.

Toughened up by an intense bout of touring, the Mysterians essay the streetwalking cheetah bit rather more convincingly on Action. Groovy, laidback and nasty, “Smokes†does the Muddy Waters “I’m A Man†bit as ? scowls: “I don’t care if you’re blue or red/I’ll take you any time anywhere in the nightâ€. The fade-out to the hard-edged “It’s Not Easy†is similarly lusty, the singer promising: “I got kisses and I can hug you and I can… I said I can…†Meanwhile, the jaunty “Don’t Hold It Against Me†is a gaslighter’s excuse for infidelity on the lines of Shaggy’s “It Wasn’t Meâ€, ? sorry/not sorry as he keens “you were gone and she was thereâ€.

If the Mysterians can pass as leathery road warriors, ?’s hard-man act continues to mask a more delicious ambiguity. In the intro to “Girl (You Captivate Me)â€, he has a strange premonition of Patti Smith as he intones, “Dark alleys and streetlights I’d walk a lonely sleepless night/The shadows were all I had until you came into my lifeâ€, a knowing wink – perhaps – to a love that might have been wary of speaking its name in Saginaw. Elsewhere, he delights in tossing off romantic cheese like “Just Like A Rose†and high-kicks his way through the Isley Brothers’ “Shout†while the “la la laâ€s of his own “I’ll Be Back†show that he may have missed his true calling as a Ronette.

However, as a commercial proposition, ? And The Mysterians were not about to be anyone’s baby. Even at the dawning of the Age of Aquarius, the colour of their skin probably closed doors for them, and ?’s eccentricity perhaps did not help (he was liable to tell interviewers that he was from Mars, and had been walking the earth since the time of the dinosaurs).

Cameo-Parkway kept vainly chasing another hit, the band putting out further doomed singles plus would-be novelty hits as the Fun Sons and the Semi-Colons? for the label, which went bust in September 1967. Beatles lawyer Allen Klein picked up ? And The Mysterians’ back catalogue in the subsequent fire sale, but his ABKCO label blocked any large-scale reissues until relatively recently. Meanwhile, the band barely survived into the 1970s; Capitol put out a one-off single, “Make You Mineâ€, in 1968, but a third album – recorded for Ray Charles’ Tangerine label – remains unreleased.

“96 Tears†fared pretty well without them, though. Recorded by Aretha Franklin, Eddie & The Hot Rods and Suicide among others, it provided minor hits for Big Maybelle, The Stranglers and Thelma Houston, as well as the “I’ve got 96 tears in 96 eyes†hook for The Cramps’ ’50s slasher “Human Flyâ€. ? And The Mysterians’ two LPs don’t quite live up to that improbable hit, but they at least highlight the subtle musical smarts and off-stage drama integral to a story where the sweet smell of success gives way to the disorienting fog of solvents. Read between the lines and you’ve got a novel.

Neil Young – Official Bootleg Series: Royce Hall, 1971/Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 1971/Citizen Kane Jr Blues (Live The Bottom Line)

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As with so many other things, Neil Young’s attitude towards bootlegs has been inconsistent, to say the least. An oft-circulated film clip from the early 1970s shows him angrily confronting a hapless record store clerk over a stack of unauthorised CSNY releases, eventually absconding with them, unp...

As with so many other things, Neil Young’s attitude towards bootlegs has been inconsistent, to say the least. An oft-circulated film clip from the early 1970s shows him angrily confronting a hapless record store clerk over a stack of unauthorised CSNY releases, eventually absconding with them, unpaid for. By the early 1990s, however, he had changed his tune. “More power to them – they can sell ’em in the parking lot, I don’t give a shit,†Young told biographer Jimmy McDonough. “I have nothing against bootlegs – for an artist like me, they’re essential.â€

In the 2020s, Neil has leaned even further in the latter direction. Last year saw the launch of his Official Bootleg Series with Carnegie Hall 1970 (though in typically haywire fashion, this was in fact a previously un-bootlegged performance). Now, he’s released three more volumes, all solo acoustic, capturing two early 1971 concerts and one surprise small-club gig in 1974. Thanks to upgraded sonics (but retaining their charmingly amateur graphic design), they’re are all worthy additions to Young’s ever-expanding canon. But fans will almost certainly have a few quibbles about this latest batch of boots.

As Neil rightly notes, bootlegs have been essential for understanding and contextualising a career as long and varied as his. He’s played with a host of different bands, he’s gone through countless phases and side trips, he’s left entire albums unreleased for decades. Any die-hard will tell you Young’s officially released records tell only a fraction of his story (case in point: “Dance Dance Danceâ€, the only song on all three of these new Official Bootlegs, didn’t show up on a Young release until 2007).

However, with the release of two more 1971 acoustic shows, Neil can probably close the book on his post-Déjà Vu/post-After The Gold Rush solo era. Royce Hall, 1971 and Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 1971, recorded days apart, join the aforementioned Carnegie Hall 1970, Young Shakespeare, Live At The Cellar Door, and Live At Massey Hall 1971, all of which feature similar setlists. Throw in two earlier sets, Sugar Mountain – Live At Canterbury House 1968 and Live At The Riverboat 1969, and we’ve got a more than full portrait of Neil as a young artist, alone onstage. Taken on their own merits, Royce Hall and Dorothy Chandler are prime examples of Young in early ’71 … but maybe we can move on to other territory now? Future Official Bootlegs announced but now pushed back include a Tonight’s The Night-era gig at London’s Rainbow Theatre and a 3LP collection of recordings made in 1977 with Young’s virtually undocumented band The Ducks, plus Archives III, due this year.

Dorothy Chandler is the one to get; the 8+-minute “Sugar Mountainâ€, with numerous spoken-word digressions, is Neil at his most hilariously droll. The impossibly delicate “See The Sky About To Rain†may well be the definitive version of this underrated ballad. Finally, the snippet of “You And Me†(a song he wouldn’t finish until more than two decades later) that presages “I Am A Child†is the kind of thing that Shakey Heads live for. You’ve doubtless already heard the version of “Needle And The Damage Done†on Royce Hall — it’s this take that would later appear on Harvest.

Why is this period so important to Neil? “I loved itâ€, he told Cameron Crowe of his early ’70s solo tours. “It was real personal. Very much a one-on-one thing with the crowd.†That warm rapport comes across nicely on Royce Hall and Dorothy Chandler Pavilion – both venues are in the LA area, so they were virtually homecoming concerts for Neil. A reference he makes to the “memory of the Buffalo Springfield†at Royce Hall gets such a rapturous response that it’s safe to assume that many in the crowd had been there back in the Sunset Strip days. But these shows are no nostalgia trips, old bands notwithstanding. Maybe Neil sees this era as the point where he truly came into his own as a solo performer, with no need for the Springfield, CSNY or Crazy Horse.

Young’s fondness for the early 1970s might also have something to do with the fact that he had just met actress Carrie Snodgress, with whom he’d quickly fallen in love. By May of 1974, however, the bloom was off the rose for Neil and Carrie — and along with the legendary Homegrown (finally released in 2020), Citizen Kane Jr Blues (Live The Bottom Line) is a stirring document of his heartache in the wake of their dissolving love affair. “Here’s another bummer for you,†Young jokes at one point, before launching into an epically lonesome “Ambulance Bluesâ€.

Neil was about to embark on an CSNY arena tour, but he dropped in unannounced to the 400-capacity Bottom Line in NYC to debut a set of mostly new, mostly downcast material. It’s a unique performance, with a wealth of rarely played material, from opener “Pushed It Over The End†to “Motion Picturesâ€, a song Neil has yet to play ever again (sacrilegiously, Neil has edited some of the original banter out). Even if devastation is the overarching theme of the new material, Young sounds alert and lucid, his guitar work precise, his vocals expressive. Thankfully recorded by taper Simon Montgomery, the Bottom Line bootleg was the kind of listening experience that turned casual fans into obsessives. Now remastered and officially part of Neil’s ongoing saga, its seductive power remains undimmed.

Suede tease unknown track in new Coming Up montage

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Suede have shared a new montage of clips featuring songs from their 1996 album Coming Up, including what appears to be an unknown track. ORDER NOW: Queen is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut The short clip, which you can view below, sees snippets from "Trash", "Beautiful Ones" and "...

Suede have shared a new montage of clips featuring songs from their 1996 album Coming Up, including what appears to be an unknown track.

The short clip, which you can view below, sees snippets from “Trash”, “Beautiful Ones” and “Saturday Night” before a screen of interference features a couple of seconds of the unknown song. It is unclear whether it is new material or a previously unreleased track.

The band are currently touring Coming Up across Europe with a date pencilled in at Barcelona Razzmatazz on May 19 before they head on to Tomavistas 2022 festival in Madrid the following night (May 20).

They will play further shows in Luxembourg (May 22) and Brussels (May 23) later this week.

The band recently released a new photojournal called So Young: Suede 1991-1993.

The journal, which was compiled by drummer Simon Gilbert, documented his arrival in the band in 1991 through to 1993, when the group’s self-titled debut album reached number one.

Speaking about the project at the time, Gilbert said: “So Young is the book that’s been in my head for over 30 years. When I was getting into music I was more interested in seeing bands away from the bright lights of Top of the Pops. Photos of the Pistols in the pub or The Clash at a checkpoint in Belfast fascinated me, and filled me with visions of what it was actually like to be in a band.”

Meanwhile, Suede also previously called on their fans to submit voice recordings for their next record, detailing a list of instructions which included singing and shouting “along when we ask you toâ€.

“Everything you send in will be gratefully received. If you can do two or even three recordings, that would be even better,†the band said at the time.

View Suede’s tour schedule and remaining tickets, here.

Cocteau Twins’ Elizabeth Fraser shares new song with Sun’s Signature project

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Former Cocteau Twins vocalist Elizabeth Fraser has shared the second song from her new project, Sun's Signature – listen to "Underwater" below. Sun’s Signature is the project of Fraser and her partner, former Spiritualized and Echo and the Bunnymen drummer Damon Reece. ORDER NOW: Que...

Former Cocteau Twins vocalist Elizabeth Fraser has shared the second song from her new project, Sun’s Signature – listen to “Underwater” below.

Sun’s Signature is the project of Fraser and her partner, former Spiritualized and Echo and the Bunnymen drummer Damon Reece.

The project was announced last month with the first single “Golden Air”, and both tracks will feature on Sun’s Signature’s forthcoming self-titled EP, which is set to arrive on June 18 via Partisan for Record Store Day.

Fraser announced the forthcoming Sun’s Signature EP back in March. “Underwater” is a rare 2000 single which Fraser performed at the ANOHNI-curated Meltdown Festival in London in 2012, where ideas for Sun’s Signature first began.

Listen to “Underwater” below.

Fraser’s last single was 2009’s “Moses”, though she has collaborated extensively with other artists since then. Last year, she joined Oneohtrix Point Never on a new version of his track “Tales From The Trash Stratum”. In 2020, she teamed up with Sigur Rós frontman Jónsi, appearing on his track “Cannibal”.

Earlier this year, former Cocteau Twins guitarist Robin Guthrie released a new EP titled ‘Springtime’, which consists of four instrumental tracks.

The EP was issued on January 4 via Soleil Après Minuit in time for his 60th birthday, marking his first release of the year.

Springtime follows up a prolific year in 2021 for the musician, who issued two four-track EPs with Riviera in December and Mockingbird Love in October.

Back in November, Guthrie released his sixth full-length album Pearldriving, which was his first album since 2012’s Fortune, which was also all-instrumental.

The Smile debut new song “Friend Of A Friend” as they kick off European tour

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The Smile began their debut European tour this week (May 16), debuting a new song called "Friend Of A Friend" – check out footage, setlist, ticket details for the rest of the tour and more below. The band – comprising Thom Yorke, his Radiohead bandmate Jonny Greenwood and Sons of KemetÂ...

The Smile began their debut European tour this week (May 16), debuting a new song called “Friend Of A Friend” – check out footage, setlist, ticket details for the rest of the tour and more below.

The band – comprising Thom Yorke, his Radiohead bandmate Jonny Greenwood and Sons of Kemet drummer Tom Skinner – formed last year and released their debut album, A Light For Attracting Attention last week.

After making their live debut at Glastonbury’s Live At Worthy Farm livestream last summer, The Smile played their first proper live shows with a three-gig run within 12 hours at London’s Magazine venue last month.

Their full UK and European tour began in Zagreb, Croatia on Monday, and saw tracks from A Light For Attracting Attention performed alongside the brand new cut “Friend Of A Friend”.

Friend Of A Friend” saw Yorke at the guitar with Greenwood playing melancholy chords at the piano. Behind them, Skinner played free and loose jazz drums.

See footage of the new song, the band’s full setlist, remaining tour dates and ticket details below.

The Smile played:

“Pana-vision”
“The Smoke”
“Speech Bubbles”
“Thin Thing”
“Open The Floodgates”
“Free In The Knowledge”
“A Hairdryer”
“Waving A White Flag”
“We Don’t Know What Tomorrow Brings”
“Skrting On The Surface”
“The Same”
“The Opposite”
“You Will Never Work in Television Again”

“Friend Of A Friend”
“Just Eyes and Mouth”
“Feeling Pulled Apart By Horses”

The Smile
The Smile. Image: Press

See the band’s remaining UK and European tour dates below. Pick up tickets for the gigs here.

MAY
19 – Prague, Forum Karlin
20 – Berlin, Tempodrom
23 – Stockholm, Cirkus
24 – Oslo, Sentrum Scene
27 – Amsterdam, Paradiso
29 – London, Roundhouse
30 – London, Roundhouse

JUNE
1 – Edinburgh, Usher Hall
2 – Manchester, Albert Hall
4 – Lille, L’Aéronef
6 – Paris, Philarmonie de Paris
7 – Paris, Philarmonie de Paris
8 – Lyon, Les Nuits de Fourvière
10 – Barcelona, Primavera Sound
12 – Dijon, Festival VYV Les Solidarites
24 – Reims, La Magnifique Society
25 – Werchter, TW Classic Festival
27 – Luxembourg, The Neumünster Abbaye
29 – Gdynia, Open’er Festival

JULY
5 – Barcelona, Poble Espanyol
6 – Madrid, Noches del Botánico
8 – Lisbon, Coliseum
11 – Nimes, Festival de Nimes
12 – Montreux, Montreux Jazz Festival
14 – Milan, Fabrique Milano
15 – Ferrara, Piazza Trento Trieste
17 – Macerata MC – Arena Sferisterio
18 – Rome, Auditorium Parco della Musica
20 – Taormina, Teatro Antico di Taormina

Rare LPs and memorabilia from John Peel’s private collection will be auctioned off next month

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A series of records owned by legendary DJ John Peel will be sold at an auction in London next month. ORDER NOW: Queen is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut Before his death in 2004, Peel amassed a weighty collection spanning over 26,000 LPs, 40,000 seven-inch singles and countless C...

A series of records owned by legendary DJ John Peel will be sold at an auction in London next month.

Before his death in 2004, Peel amassed a weighty collection spanning over 26,000 LPs, 40,000 seven-inch singles and countless CDs. A selection of those, as well as various items of memorabilia, will be auctioned off at Bonhams’ Knightsbridge location on Tuesday June 14. It takes place a week before the 50th anniversary of Glastonbury, which has long honoured Peel with a stage named in his honour.

According to a press release, the records on offer were “carefully selected by the family, whist retaining the integrity of the John Peel Record Collectionâ€.

Key pieces in the lot include an annotated mono pressing of John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s Two Virgins LP (which holds an estimated value of £15,000-20,000), a promotional album signed by The Rolling Stones (£6,000-8,000), a copy of the rare Marc Bolan album Hard On Love (£5,000-6,000) and a copy of Queen II that comes with a letter hand-written to Peel by Freddie Mercury (£1,000-1,500).

In the way of merchandise, Peel’s estate are offering up a handful of his ultra-rare posters – including one for Joy Division’s Unknown Pleasures valued at £3,000-4,000) – a five-page letter from David Bowie that features a series of original sketches (worth £3,000-4,000), and his ‘93 NME Award for Godlike Genius (£800-1,200).

In a statement shared with the announcement of the sale, the Ravenscroft family commented: “By virtue of the role he played in it, John/Dad was in a position to have access to many of the most celebrated people and events in the history of popular music. This is reflected in a wealth of souvenirs he collected throughout his life.

“He had not only a voracious appetite for vinyl, but a keen sense of what memorabilia, ephemera and correspondence might find an interested audience in decades to come (though it could be argued that this was achieved by a strategy of keeping almost everything that crossed his path).

“In going through the accumulation of 40 years of pop music moments, we decided that some of the most interesting items might find a home, with fans of his programme or of the artists whose music he played. Bonhams have assisted us to carefully select what is being offered for sale, and we hope these items find the attention and appreciation that we’re sure John/Dad would feel they warranted.

“We had no desire to split up his beloved record collection but have included in the sale a selection of particularly rare or unique records that do not take away from the integrity of his archive.â€

Katherine Schofield – the director of Bonhams’ Popular Culture department – added that Peel “had an incredible impact on the new music landscapeâ€, and declared that “without his passionate advocacy of emerging talent, generations of music lovers may never have heard the sounds of The Fall, The Undertones, The Sex Pistols, and countless othersâ€.

She continued: “This collection, offered directly by the family, comprises some of Peel’s most collectible and rare records, spanning decades in music – many of which are accompanied by letters from the artists or their management. A number of the test-pressings in this collection were the source of the first airplay for landmark songs.â€

In 2012, Peel’s record collection was made into an interactive online museum. It came part of The Space, an experimental service organised and funded by the Arts Council and the BBC.

In 2020, nearly 1,000 classic sets performed for the John Peel Sessions series – aired on BBC Radio 1 across his 37-year tenure at the station – were catalogued and made available online. Throughout the years, Peel had overseen more that 4,000 live sessions by over 2,000 artists.

The last hurrah of The Clash: “Combat Rock gets stronger as time goes onâ€

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For The Clash, the question in 1982 was: where next? 1980’s Sandinista! had covered a lot of ground across its six sprawling sides. Now, as sessions for The Clash’s fifth studio album moved from London to New York’s Electric Lady studio in November 1981, their recently reappointed manager Bern...

For The Clash, the question in 1982 was: where next? 1980’s Sandinista! had covered a lot of ground across its six sprawling sides. Now, as sessions for The Clash’s fifth studio album moved from London to New York’s Electric Lady studio in November 1981, their recently reappointed manager Bernie Rhodes anticipated a return to straight-ahead rock’n’roll. He couldn’t have been more wrong. Covering dub, funk and hip-hop, and with guest spots from Allen Ginsberg and NY graffiti artist Futura 2000, Combat Rock was almost as diverse as its predecessor. “The city found its way into the music,†says singer Ellen Foley, who was also Jones’ partner at the time. Mixed by Glyn Johns back in the UK, singles “Rock The Casbah†and “Should I Stay Or Should I Go†were punched up for maximum chart impact.

Nevertheless, Combat Rock arrived in shops on May 14, 1982 to a mixed reception. “In England people were like, ‘Oh fuck, The Clash have sold out’ – which was ridiculous,†says filmmaker Don Letts. “In America, they were going from strength to strength.†Yet despite the album’s ambitious mix of styles, all was not well within the band. “They were falling apart,†admits Letts. “Musical differences were happening. As demonstrated by Mick Jones’ original Combat Rock mix [Rat Patrol From Fort Bragg]. I’ve still got the C90. It was more dance-orientated.†Topper Headon had been sacked just days before the album was released, owing to his escalating heroin habit, replaced on the band’s upcoming tour by original drummer Terry Chimes. “Topper was the fucking rock,†says Letts. “Once Topper was gone, there was no proper foundation.â€

As the title suggests, conflict was rife – and not just within the band. Combat Rock was released during the Falklands War. This gave many of Strummer’s songs an additional urgency. “They feel like you’re a war correspondent on the front line – or postcards from the edge,†says The Pop Group’s Mark Stewart.

“Rock The Casbah†reached No 8 in America, as the band embarked on a stadium tour supporting The Who. “Paul Simonon said to me right at the beginning, ‘If I ever get any money, Mark, I want a waterproof telly that I can watch in the bath,’†says Stewart. “When Combat Rock broke through, I hoped Paul got that telly.â€

Such celebrations were short-lived. By 1983, Mick Jones had been sacked; the original Clash were no more. But even today, Combat Rock sounds bullish and brilliant. “They’d flown off into orbit, gone through their prog phase with Sandinista!,†says Stewart. “Then they landed here. Knowing them, and what they were trying to do, this is the classic Clash album.â€

“Forty years later,†adds Sex Pistol Paul Cook, “I think Combat Rock gets stronger as time goes on.â€

The Who return to Cincinnati for the first time since 1979 tragedy: “There are no words”

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The Who's North American tour has taken them to Cincinnati, Ohio, for their first performance in the city for nearly 45 years. ORDER NOW: Queen is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Pete Townshend’s Top 10 deep cuts from The Who Sell Out box The midwest US city was th...

The Who’s North American tour has taken them to Cincinnati, Ohio, for their first performance in the city for nearly 45 years.

The midwest US city was the centre of an infamous tragedy during the band’s tour in December of 1979. A crowd crush that occurred while fans were entering the Riverfront Coliseum left 11 dead and dozens more injured. A documentary on the tragedy, The Night That Changed Rock, aired in 2019 and featured interviews with frontman Roger Daltrey and guitarist Pete Townshend.

After a failed attempt to return in 2020, The Who performed at Cincinnati’s TQL Stadium over the weekend (May 15). The band waived their fee for the performance, donating all ticket proceeds to local charities. The families of nine of the 11 victims were also in attendance, as they were given VIP front row tickets to the show.

“I’ve been trying to think of what to say, what would be cool to say, [and] what would be uncool to say,” said Townshend to the audience. “Really, there are no words that we can say that can mean (as much as) the fact that you guys have come out tonight and supported this event. Thank you so much.”

Watch fan-shot footage from the performance below:

The Cincinnati Enquirer reports that the band paid direct tribute to the victims of the 1979 tragedy during their performance of “Love, Reign O’er Me”. Black-and-white photos of the 11 victims were projected onto the screen, with the full list of names presented following the performance.

A video message from Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder was also shared prior to the first encore of the evening. Vedder, who is currently also on tour in North America, told the Cincinnati audience that he was “hoping to be” at the show but was unable to attend. “We’re all thinking about you,” he said to the audience. “It’s a great thing remembering those young people, who will never be forgotten.”

Vedder went on to mention that both Daltrey and Townshend had been there for him following Pearl Jam’s own tragedy, when nine people were killed during a stampede at the Roskilde Festival in 2000 while the band was performing.

For the final song of the evening, “Baba O’Riley“, the band were joined on-stage by students from Finneytown High School, a nearby school in Cincinnati. Three of the victims of the 1979 tragedy went to Finneytown High, and the school established its P.E.M. Memorial Scholarship Fund in the wake of it.

“You never get over it, but you gotta live,” Daltrey said as the band took its final bows of the evening.

The Who will wrap the current leg of the tour next week at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

Sun Ra House listed as historic Philadelphia landmark

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Sun Ra House, the Philadelphia building that has been home to the late Sun Ra’s evolving Arkestra collective since the 1960s, has been listed as a historic Philadelphia landmark. ORDER NOW: Queen is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Sun Ra – Lanquidity (Definitive Ed...

Sun Ra House, the Philadelphia building that has been home to the late Sun Ra’s evolving Arkestra collective since the 1960s, has been listed as a historic Philadelphia landmark.

Recognised by the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places, the building at 5626 Morton Street – also known as the Arkestral Institute of Sun Ra – still houses a number of Arkestra members, including current bandleader Marshall Allen.

Allen, who first moved into the Sun Ra House in 1968 and took over the legendary jazz collective following Sun Ra’s death in 1993, revealed last year in an interview with Music Mxdwn that the building had partially collapsed.

“Water had dripped on [the floor], and probably termites had eaten the sub-basement,†Allen stated. “One day it just – schlkup – fell in.”

On Friday (May 13), the Philadelphia Historical Commission unanimously voted to grant protected status for the building, a representative for the register told Pitchfork.

Moving forward, the Historical Commission will overlook any adjustments to the building and make sure they meet historic preservation standards, as well as advising on its restoration and maintenance.

Sun Ra
Sun Ra Arkestr’s Marshall Allen. Image: Raymond Boyd / Getty Images

The designation came about with help from the Robert Bielecki Foundation, a philanthropist organisation that provides grants, awards and donations to emerging, under-recognised artists, musicians, writers and organisations.

You can check out the Historical Commission’s proposal for the nomination.

The home of Dr. John E. Fryer, psychologist and gay activist, was also recently listed on the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places.

Best known for a pivotal speech against psychiatry’s classification of homosexuality as a mental disorder in 1972, he delivered this speech in disguise at a convention for the American Psychiatric Association (APA).

The Sun Ra discography is one of the largest discographies in music history, spanning over 100 full-length albums.

Sun Ra Arkestra’s last release was 2020’s Swirling – its first album in decades – which was nominated for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album award at the 2022 Grammys.

Uncut – July 2022

HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME Queen, The Clash, King Crimson, Joan Shelley, Nancy Sinatra, The Delines, Billy Childish, Norman Whitfield, Yo La Tengo and Dennis Bovell all feature in the new Uncut, dated July 2022 and in UK shops from May 19 or available to buy online now. This issue c...

HAVE A COPY SENT STRAIGHT TO YOUR HOME

Queen, The Clash, King Crimson, Joan Shelley, Nancy Sinatra, The Delines, Billy Childish, Norman Whitfield, Yo La Tengo and Dennis Bovell all feature in the new Uncut, dated July 2022 and in UK shops from May 19 or available to buy online now. This issue comes with an exclusive free CD, comprising the best tracks of the month.

QUEEN: Welcome to Uncut’s deep dive into Queen’s 30 greatest songs – from glam smashes to arena-sized anthems, deep cuts and more. Brian May, Roger Taylor and Adam Lambert share with John Lewis tales behind the band’s thrilling body of work and celebrate the many career highs of their inimitable frontman Freddie Mercury. Stand by for cameos from Groucho Marx, an Alfa Romeo and rock’s only known bicycle-bell solo, learn the secrets of “the Deaky box†and discover how The Who and Aretha Franklin proved to be unlikely influences on the band’s sound…

OUR FREE CD! KILLER CUTS: 15 of the best new tracks this month, including songs by Chris Forsyth, Faye Webster, Ty Segall, David Michael Moore and more.

This issue of Uncut is available to buy by clicking here – with FREE delivery to the UK and reduced delivery charges for the rest of the world.

Inside the issue, you’ll find:

THE CLASH: For The Clash, the making of Combat Rock was a time of chaos and internal conflict. Yet 40 years on, its infectious mix of dub, funk, punk and hip-hop remains as glorious as ever. Here, collaborators, eyewitnesses, fans and contemporaries – including Jim Jarmusch, Don Letts, Julien Temple, Glen Matlock, Paul Cook and Mark Stewart – celebrate the last hurrah of Strummer, Jones, Simonon and Headon. “Knowing them, and what they were trying to do,†we learn, “this is the classic Clash album.â€

KING CRIMSON: An excellent new documentary, made to mark the 50th anniversary of King Crimson, may in fact commemorate the band’s “completionâ€. Uncut talks to Robert Fripp, King Crimson frontman Jakko Jakszyk and filmmaker Toby Amies to uncover a tale of bereavement, self-censorship and the importance of “getting out of the way of the musicâ€. “It’s not 12-bar blues,†learns John Robinson.

THE DELINES: The Delines’ atmospheric blend of country soul balladry and hard-luck tales has reached stunning new heights with their latest album, The Sea Drift. Willy Vlautin and Amy Boone help Laura Barton join the dots between Richmond Fontaine, “low-level coke dealers†and “Rainy Night In Georgiaâ€. Their secret? “We’re eavesdropping into people’s lives for moments at a time.â€

BILLY CHILDISH: Over the last 40 years, the freewheelin’ Billy Childish has produced a gargantuan body of work encompassing bracing R&B, blues-infused punk, raucous rockabilly, art, poetry and beyond. Currently, he is bringing his rough and rowdy ways to the Bob Dylan songbook. But how does the Bard of Hibbing fare against Chatham’s very own Renaissance man? ““Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door” is about the shortest song Dylan has ever done,†he tells Peter Watts. “So I wrote another 12 verses…â€

NANCY SINATRA: Much more than “Frank’s daughter who sang “Boots…”â€, the ’60s icon talks Nancy & Lee, Kill Bill, Elvis, Sonic Youth and flooring her Ford Thunderbird.

YO LA TENGO: The making of “Sugarcubeâ€.

DENNIS BOVELL: Album by album with the reggae guitarist.

JOAN SHELLEY: New parenthood and a songwriting circle helps increasingly ‘swell’-assisted songs attain captivating new heights.

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

In our expansive reviews section, we take a look at new records from Wilco, The Smile, Steve Earle & The Dukes, Current ’93 and more, and archival releases from Al Stewart, Frank Sinatra, Barbara Keith, and others. We catch Nick Mason and Ride live; among the films, DVDs and TV programmes reviewed are Vortex, Everything Everywhere All At Once, Men, The Innocents and Benediction; while in books there’s Rory Sullivan-Burke and Bob Stanley.

Our front section, meanwhile, features Mavis Staples & Levon Helm, John Prine, Sounds Of The New World on vinyl, the Bickershaw Festival and Steve Reich, while, at the end of the magazine, Laura Veirs shares her life in music.

You can pick up a copy of Uncut in the usual places, where open. But otherwise, readers all over the world can order a copy from here.

CLICK TO GET THE NEW UNCUT DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

Iggy Pop pays tribute to guitarist and David Bowie collaborator Ricky Gardiner

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Iggy Pop has led the tributes to the guitarist Ricky Gardiner, who has died at the age of 73. The Scottish musician's death was confirmed May 15 by Tony Visconti, who told his Facebook followers that he was informed of Gardiner's passing by his wife Virginia. "Another guitar genius and persona...

Iggy Pop has led the tributes to the guitarist Ricky Gardiner, who has died at the age of 73.

The Scottish musician’s death was confirmed May 15 by Tony Visconti, who told his Facebook followers that he was informed of Gardiner’s passing by his wife Virginia.

“Another guitar genius and personal friend passed into the next world last night,” Visconti wrote. “Ricky Gardiner, who joined David Bowie for the albums Low and Iggy Pop’s The Idiot, ended a long battle with Parkinson’s. His multi-talented wife Virginia sent me an email this morning.”

Another guitar genius and personal friend passed into the next world last night. Ricky Gardiner, who joined David Bowie…

Posted by Tony Visconti on Sunday, May 15, 2022

Gardiner, who also formed the progressive rock band Beggars Opera in 1969, played guitar on Bowie’s 1977 album Low, which was co-produced by Visconti.

Gardiner first met Iggy while recording Low at the Château d’Hérouville in France, and subsequently became a member of his live band.

The guitarist later worked on Iggy’s Lust For Life album in 1977, co-writing “The Passenger”, “Success” and “Neighbourhood Threat” and playing lead guitar on such tracks as “Lust For Life”.

Iggy paid tribute to Gardiner in a message that was shared on Twitter this morning (May 16). “Dearest Ricky, lovely, lovely man, shirtless in your coveralls, nicest guy who ever played guitar,” he wrote.

“Thanks for the memories and the songs, rest eternal in peace.”

In addition to his work with Bowie and Iggy, Gardiner worked as a solo artist and released such records as The Flood (1985), Precious Life (1987) and 2015’s Songs For The Electric.

In 1995 Gardiner fell ill and developed electromagnetic hypersensitivity, which restricted the amount of time he could spend with computer devices while recording music.

Jarvis Cocker is on a quest to find woman who inspired Pulp’s “Common People”

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Jarvis Cocker says it's still a "mystery" who he wrote Pulp hit "Common People" about, but is determined to find out. ORDER NOW: Miles Davis is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: The Making Of… Pulp’s "Common People" In the iconic 1995 song's opening lines, Cocker s...

Jarvis Cocker says it’s still a “mystery” who he wrote Pulp hit “Common People” about, but is determined to find out.

In the iconic 1995 song’s opening lines, Cocker sings of a woman who “came from Greece [and] had a thirst for knowledge,” studying sculpture at London’s St. Martin’s College.

Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s This Cultural Life (via The Mirror), Cocker addressed claims that the inspiration was Danae Stratou, a Greek woman who attended St Martin’s at the same time as Jarvis, but confirmed that “it wasn’t her because she had blonde hair and the girl had dark hair.â€

Of the origin of the song, Cocker said: “We went to the pub and she just came out with that she wanted to live in Hackney with common people.

“In 2011 we played at St Martin’s and someone showed me a picture on their phone and said, ‘Is that the girl you wrote the song about?’ I went, ‘Yeah, I think it is’” he remembered.

“Unfortunately, I didn’t ask them for the picture and I can’t remember who showed it to me so it’s still a mystery.â€

Back in 2015, Deborah Bone, the inspiration behind Pulp‘s 1995 hit “Disco 2000”, died at the age of 51. The mental health worker had been battling multiple myeloma – a type of bone marrow cancer.

Born in Sheffield, Bone and Cocker were close growing up and their friendship inspired the band’s famous track, which begins with the lyric: “Well we were born within an hour of each other. Our mothers said we could be sister and brother. Your name was Deborah. Deborah. It never suited ya.â€

Bone moved to Letchworth at aged 10 and went on to become a nurse, later setting up the Step2 health service for the Hertfordshire Community NHS Trust in Stevenage. She won various awards for her work in mental health and, just hours after her death, it was announced that she was to receive an MBE in recognition of her services to children and young people as part of the 2015 New Year’s Honours List.

Later this year, Cocker will release new memoir Good Pop, Bad Pop. Set to arrive on May 26 through Vintage Publishing, Cocker describes the book as an “inventoryâ€. It’s centred around the former Pulp frontman coming across “a jumble of objects that catalogue his story†while clearing out his loft, with the various ephemera used as a jumping off point to reflect on Cocker’s life and career. Pre-orders are available here.

His band JARV IS… recently composed the score for new BBC comedy drama This Is Going To Hurt and the full soundtrack was shared back in March.

Check out the full catalogue for Thom Yorke and Stanley Donwood’s Test Specimens art exhibition

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Thom Yorke and Stanley Donwood's upcoming art exhibition Test Specimens is now being previewed online - you can check out the full catalogue of drawings below. ORDER NOW: Miles Davis is on the cover of the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Radiohead – Kid A Mnesia review Test Specimens,...

Thom Yorke and Stanley Donwood’s upcoming art exhibition Test Specimens is now being previewed online – you can check out the full catalogue of drawings below.

Test Specimens, an exhibition of 60 drawings by the Radiohead frontman and Donwood (who has created the cover art for all of Radiohead’s albums since The Bends in 1995), will go on display at 8 Duke Street in London from May 25-29.

The artwork was all created by Yorke and Donwood between 1999 and 2001 when the pair were working on art for Radiohead’s albums Kid A (2000) and Amnesiac (2001).

Test Specimens offers an extraordinary, intimate glimpse into the minds of these creative geniuses at a pivotal moment in British cultural history,” curator Siobhan Andrews Kapoor said in a statement. “For us the viewers, it’s a privilege to be let behind the scenes and explore this fantastical world for ourselves.”

Donwood confirmed earlier May 16 that the full catalogue for Test Specimens is now available to view online, which you can see here.

A limited number of timed entry tickets for Test Specimens are available to book here.

Tin Man Art, who are presenting the exhibition, said in a statement last month: “We’re opening the pages of Thom and Stanley’s sketchbooks to the public for the first time, following the frenzy of interest over the exhibition of works associated with Kid A and Amnesiac at Christie’s during Frieze week last year.

“These pieces were made at a time of war and political upheaval, strangely enough mirrored by today’s tinderbox climate, making the timing particularly poignant. The message holds true: humanity can be chaotic and cruel, but art, collaboration and invention can shine a light in any darkness.”

Arooj Aftab: “If you’re an artist with an ego, you’re not a good artist”

We get a brief glance of Arooj Aftab’s home base – a light-filled room in a shared brownstone in Brooklyn’s Bed-Stuy, borrowed double bass propped against the wall – before she politely asks to switch the camera off. It’s still early, and the singer is feeling a little worse for wear follo...

We get a brief glance of Arooj Aftab’s home base – a light-filled room in a shared brownstone in Brooklyn’s Bed-Stuy, borrowed double bass propped against the wall – before she politely asks to switch the camera off. It’s still early, and the singer is feeling a little worse for wear following a heavy session at a local bar the previous evening. “It was a really warm day after five months of winter,†she pleads. “So we just lost our minds and went out and drank so much gin for absolutely no reason.â€

As it turns out, this is not an uncommon occurrence for Aftab. “I’m the biggest hedonist,†she admits. “I love being social, I love talking to people, I love just being out and about. I’m inspired by the sheer energy of people saying crazy shit to each other. I think that solitude, for some people, helps them clear their mind and do incredible things. But for me, I prefer being in the middle of a big moving organism. Being in the centre of many energies is inspiring to me.â€

This confession may come as a surprise to those who have recently found solace in Aftab’s fantastic 2021 album, Vulture Prince. A stunning and largely beatless affair that masterfully blends Sufi devotional music with smoky jazz and blues, ambient soundscapes and Buckley-esque acoustic flourishes, it transmits a sense of deep spiritual yearning and rarified, otherworldly calm. Reviews praised the album in awed, quasi-religious terms: it was “mesmerisingâ€, “mysticalâ€, “rhapsodicâ€. Suffice to say it is pretty much the exact opposite of the music you might expect to hear bubbling up from the hectic streets of Bed-Stuy, scene of Do The Right Thing and Biggie Smalls’ rap battles, a place where Aftab admits it’s tricky to record at home because of the constant blare of “airplanes and sirens and kids playing in the streetâ€. Still, she wouldn’t have it any other way.

“I think calm doesn’t meet calm very well,†she says, considering the apparent disparity between her “reckless and rowdy†lifestyle and the serenity of her music. “And also I think it’s about not feeling that self-important about your work, like, ‘this is sacred music’. While my music pretends to be minimal, it’s not repetitive structures – it has a lot of dynamic energy. And that definitely can’t happen if I’m just hanging out by myself, you know?â€

This Much I Know To Be True

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Andrew Dominik’s second documentary about Nick Cave begins with a feint worthy of This Is Spinal Tap. “I’ve retrained as a ceramicist,†Cave tells the camera, deadpan, “because it’s no longer viable to be a musician.†And it’s true. Inspired by his collection of Staffordshire pottery...

Andrew Dominik’s second documentary about Nick Cave begins with a feint worthy of This Is Spinal Tap. “I’ve retrained as a ceramicist,†Cave tells the camera, deadpan, “because it’s no longer viable to be a musician.†And it’s true. Inspired by his collection of Staffordshire pottery, Cave has diversified into trinkets. Not just any trinkets. After a flawed attempt to cast a mantelpiece ornament of a saint boiling in oil, Cave has moved on to a series of 18 figurines telling the story of the Devil. Here is the (unglazed) Devil as a baby.

Here he is “growing up and doing bold, dangerous thingsâ€. Does the camera linger when we get to the Devil killing his first child? It does, then it’s on to the Devil becoming separated from the world through his transgressions, then his remorse, and on – spoiler alert – to the Devil bleeding to death in a lake of blood with white swans, “goat-like things†and women holding torches.

The ceramic devilry in this Repair Shop-style interlude reflects the influence of Covid restrictions on Cave’s touring activity. This Much I Know To Be True is a continuation of Cave/Dominik’s 2016 documentary One More Time With Feeling, a haunting film that allowed Cave to address the tragic death of his son Arthur, and showed how he channelled despair into creativity. The intimacy between director and musician remains intact. The core of this film is the creative journey from Ghosteen (grief turned into myth) and Carnage (lockdown isolation, creative communion between Cave and the musically dominant Warren Ellis). Ellis talks of reaching a “meditative state†that “clicks into something transcendent†as he experiments with fractured sounds. Cave puts his more traditional songs aside to respond to Ellis’ wild energy. The musical sequences are impeccably rendered.

Cinematographer Robbie Ryan (who also filmed Cave’s solo lockdown event, Idiot Prayer) has a circular track surrounding the musicians, and after the enforced isolation of Idiot Prayer there is a communal feel to the performances with Cave and Ellis, plus an expanding group of players and singers, reaching an intensity that summons peephole glimpses of religiosity. Marianne Faithfull makes a suitably domineering cameo, removing her oxygen supply to read May Sarton’s Prayer Before Work, an intervention that serves to highlight the way in which Cave’s vocal style has become almost spoken word, fluctuating between sermon and stream-of-consciousness.

Cave is entirely in control throughout, of course, but he uses an interview sequence in the back of a taxi to suggest – or possibly confess – that his life now has “a real sense of meaning†that is not dependent on his work. “I’m much happier than I used to be,†he says, sounding freshly amazed.

Kevin Morby – This Is A Photograph

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What is Americana, exactly? Since its birth in the margins of Nashville, and in off-lying corners of the American South and Midwest, it’s become a vast, amorphous catch-all for American music that is vaguely rootsy, twangy and aware of tradition, but that does not purport to be country or blues. T...

What is Americana, exactly? Since its birth in the margins of Nashville, and in off-lying corners of the American South and Midwest, it’s become a vast, amorphous catch-all for American music that is vaguely rootsy, twangy and aware of tradition, but that does not purport to be country or blues. Today, in America at least, it’s swelled beyond a discernible sound or identity, making way for legions of imitators in brimmed hats and put-on Southern accents – working-class cosplay in search of a record deal on Music Row.

There is plenty of great music being crafted under its banner, to be sure, but its sprawling and watered-down status also begs for a reappraisal. Kevin Morby seems acutely aware of this as he edges steadily toward a new sound of tradition. With his latest, This Is A Photograph, he interrogates the people and places that comprise the Middle American region celebrated by Americana while also opening the door for a more nuanced, creative and inclusive future for the genre. He ditches its tropes for an aesthetic that combines the tortured soul of Memphis and the vastness of the Great Plains, tracing an arc from Americana’s mix of blues, rock and country, and the people of colour who pioneered those sounds.

It comes on the heels of a winding journey. Born in Texas and raised in Kansas, throughout his 34 years Morby has trodden a familiar path for those born outside of America’s cultural capitals. After high school, he moved to Brooklyn to see if it matched the movies, becoming a modern garage-rock hipster and friend to everyone cool. Then, to LA, where his sound became earthier, more bohemian and twangy, an indie-rock guy through the haze of Bakersfield and Laurel Canyon. And finally, the prodigal son returned home, to Kansas, where he embraced the coveted and precarious position of a Voice of Middle America, energised by his environs while subverting the outside forces that aim to box him in.

As with many former journeymen, Morby’s at his best when he mines from his own province. And with This Is A Photograph, he offers the wisest and most assured rendering of the Middle American vision he’s been honing of late, one where Dylan-esque anti-singing narrates impassioned, earnest and earthen tales of family, place, love and heroes, and a crack band shakes the rafters. It is a more dynamic and liberated Singing Saw, and a more expansive Sundowner. If Morby’s whole thing was ever perplexing, this is the album that will close the deal, that will erase any shred of doubt. It also hints at a new life for Americana, a rebirth shedding its costumes and prejudice, a welcome revisionist stance on who broadcasts the legacy of working people in marginalised corners, and what that sounds and looks like.

The eponymous lead single acts as a highly personal, soul-shaking warm-up to the LP’s impressionistic third track, “A Random Act Of Kindnessâ€, one of Morby’s finest recorded performances whose lyrical repetition and emotional crescendo recalls Gertrude Stein’s proposition that things are what they are until they very much aren’t. “Lift me up, by my hand/Lift me up, if you can/Lift me up, be my friend/Through a random act of kindness/One that’s done in blindnessâ€, he pleads ahead of blooming strings, an appeal to personal and communal consciousness.

Rising Nashville luminary Erin Rae’s singing opens “Bittersweet, TNâ€, a misty rumination steered by banjo and bittersweet nostalgia, a welcome union of voices. “A Coat Of Butterflies†finds Morby’s narrator back in the Volunteer State, this time in Memphis, pondering the greatness of Jeff Buckley and the passing of youth. His voice here is rhythmic and exacting, shimmying towards a rap atop backing vocals by students of the Stax Music Academy, while Makaya McCraven’s silken drumming and glimmering shards of harp and saxophone round out the soulful mood.

Album closer “Goodbye To Good Times†finds the frontman back in his childhood home in Kansas, navigating its modest halls and outsized memories, and singing of his family’s cultural heroes as well as America’s – Tina Turner, Diane Lane, Otis Redding and Mickey Mantle. “Sometimes the good die young, and sometimes they surviveâ€, he sings, proffering a merciful sense of resolve for cycles of fame, tragedy and legacy, closing on an image that is not a photograph, but a living document of life and art.

The Americans – Stand True

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The Americans’ profile is still pretty low-key, but the band comes with high-end endorsements. Greil Marcus was swept up by 2017 debut I’ll Be Yours and was left hankering for more. T Bone Burnett and Jack White commandeered them for The American Epic Sessions, with Burnett singing their virtues...

The Americans’ profile is still pretty low-key, but the band comes with high-end endorsements. Greil Marcus was swept up by 2017 debut I’ll Be Yours and was left hankering for more. T Bone Burnett and Jack White commandeered them for The American Epic Sessions, with Burnett singing their virtues as “genius 21st-century musicians that are reinventing American heritage music for this century. And it sounds even better this century.â€

Belated second album Stand True reveals the West Coast threesome of Patrick Ferris (vocals/guitar), Jake Faulkner (bass) and Zac Sokolow (guitar) to be keenly attuned to the kind of roots-up music that built America. You can hear the heartland bleat of Springsteen or Bob Seger in their raw grooves, along with the rugged Southern churn of Jason Isbell or Drive-By Truckers. There’s plenty of soul here too, with Ferris clearly in thrall to ’70s Van Morrison on songs like “The Day I Let You Down†and “What I Would Doâ€, the latter flavoured with a distinct twist of Memphis. His quivering voice is particularly striking on the title track, a paean to commitment and staying power, often in the face of overwhelming odds, that sets up the lyrical theme of the album.

It’s the kind of impassioned stuff that demands a big canvas, the band reaching for the epic on the blustery “Give Wayâ€, the brutish, scorned “Romeo†and “Sore Bonesâ€, the heaviest thing on here. On “The Day I Let You Downâ€, Ferris sounds desolate – “If there’s penance to be paid/That’s just what I’ll do/I’ll get down on bended knee†– before being hauled up into a great surging chorus. A folkish acoustic guitar picks out the silken rhythm of “Guest Of Honourâ€, another song of loss that weighs heavy on his jilted heart. “I feel like nothing that you loved,†he pines, “And everything you touchedâ€. As emotional drama, it sounds wholly persuasive. Much like Stand True itself, in fact.

Kikagaku Moyo – Kumoyo Island

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Kikagaku Moyo seemed like a band going places. After initially struggling to make headway in their native country – despite tapping into a noble lineage of Japanese longhairs stretching back through Acid Mothers Temple to Happy End and Flower Travellin’ Band, Kikagaku bandleader Go Kurosawa comp...

Kikagaku Moyo seemed like a band going places. After initially struggling to make headway in their native country – despite tapping into a noble lineage of Japanese longhairs stretching back through Acid Mothers Temple to Happy End and Flower Travellin’ Band, Kikagaku bandleader Go Kurosawa complained to MonsterChildren.com that “most people [in Japan] don’t like this kind of thing, they like following the rules†– they’d been steadily building a worldwide following since relocating to Amsterdam in 2017. They toured with Wooden Shjips and hooked up with Ryley Walker at Le Guess Who? for a heady live improv set, released on his Husky Pants label as Deep Fried Grandeur; and last year they reached their biggest audience to date with a well-received set on the main stage at End Of The Road.

But now it’s all over. A brief statement on their website confirms that Kumoyo Island will be their final album and Kikagaku Moyo will “go on an indefinite hiatus†after their 2022 world tour, having “truly achieved our core mission as a bandâ€. Exactly what that mission was and how Kumoyo Island might be seen to have achieved it is not immediately clear. In death as in life, Kikagaku Moyo remain a tantalising enigma.

Kumoyo Island is not a grandiose swansong, bankrupting the band with a surfeit of orchestral indulgence; nor does it sound like a record made by musicians pulling in different directions, desperate to get away and do their own thing. There’s certainly an abundance of good ideas – often several within the course of one song, with hooks emerging from the fog before dissolving as quickly as they came – but the band seem to work through them in perfect harmony, on the way to even greater things. Psychedelic rock is, famously, all about the journey not the destination (man) but the lack of finality or certainty here is curious.

The PR spiel for the album gamely proffers a kind of ‘back to our roots’ narrative, but that too begins to crumble under scrutiny. As a result of the Netherlands’ strict lockdown rules, Kikagaku Moyo did indeed find themselves recording back in Tokyo, in the same studio where they made their first albums. But apart from the min’yo melody of the opening track “Monaka†– the name of a wafer-based snack and a Dragon Ball character – there isn’t too much else rooting the album in Japan.

Psychedelia is very much a global language and Kikagaku Moyo are of the generation where a whole world of musical adventure has always been available at the click of a mouse. Kumoyo Island contains strong ripples of Tropicália, dub, raga rock, new age, English folk, Anatolian psych and every shade of krautrock (there’s a reason why the band named their label Guruguru Brain). You can also hear the influence of hip-hop on the way they make use of percussion loops and breakbeats to drive the music forward or allow a kind of trance state to kick in. Led by Ryu Kurosawa’s stirring sitar riff, “Dancing Blue†is a terrific wedding stomp that gives Altin Gün a run for their money; it’s immediately followed by the gently clattering groove and reverbed fanfares of “Effeâ€, suggesting a kind of Balearic Can.

It might sound like they’re singing in Japanese, but most songs are actually in their made-up “Kika language†with syllables chosen not for their meaning but for their sonic effect. The two exceptions are a gorgeous cover of Erasmo Carlos’s “Meu Mar†and the wistful prog epic “Yayoi, Iyayoiâ€, whose lyrics were assembled, cut-up style, from various old poetry and nature books in order to avoid putting across anything too concrete. You’re left to conclude that ambiguity itself is the goal, the band swirling everything together until it starts to give off unexpected resonances. Final track “Maison Silk Road†is a beautiful ambient question mark, fragments of piano and untethered Göttsching-esque guitar floating off into the ether.

It’s too easy, these days, to situate yourself squarely in a pre-existing tradition and by slavishly following its rules attempt to claim a bogus authenticity. Kikagaku Moyo are having none of that – not least because doing what you want, and grabbing a little bit of everything like famished pilgrims at a hotel buffet, is much more fun. Having just made their best album, it’s a shame that their journey ends here, although you suspect that they’ll return in new permutations before too long. For now though, you have to say: mission accomplished.

The Rolling Stones announce 1963-1966 singles box set

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The Rolling Stones have announced the upcoming release of a box set featuring all their single releases from 1963-1966. ORDER NOW: Miles Davis is 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 Mai...

The Rolling Stones have announced the upcoming release of a box set featuring all their single releases from 1963-1966.

ABKCO Records will release The Rolling Stones Singles 1963-1966 on June 10 in celebration of the group’s 60th anniversary this year. You can pre-order the collection here.

The limited-edition set includes reproductions of the first 18 7†vinyl singles and extended play records, which were originally released by Decca and London Records. The tracks have all been remastered by 12-time Grammy Award-winning engineer Bob Ludwig.

The set will also come with a 32-page book with extensive liner notes by Stones expert Nigel Williamson, as well as rare photos and ephemera plus a set of five photo cards and a poster, all housed in a hard-shell box.

A companion second vinyl box set in the series, The Rolling Stones Singles 1966-1971, will be released next year.

You can see the collection here:

Rolling Stones
Rolling Stones new single collection. Image: Press

The Rolling Stones recently shared two previously unheard live recordings. The tracks, “Tumbling Dice” and “Hot Stuff”, were recorded in March 1977 during the Stones’ secret concerts at the 300-capacity Toronto club El Mocambo.

The two songs are set to feature on the upcoming Live At The El Mocambo album, which is being released in full for the first time on May 13.

That album will be available on double CD, 4xLP Black Vinyl, 4xLP Neon Vinyl and digitally. It features the Stones’ full set from the March 5 show, plus three bonus tracks from the March 4 gig, newly mixed by Bob Clearmountain. You can pre-order Live At The El Mocambo here.

Meanwhile, the 60th anniversary of The Rolling Stones is set to be celebrated with a special BBC docuseries and a radio programme featuring exclusive interviews with the band members.

The four-part series My Life As A Rolling Stone will air on on BBC Two and iPlayer this summer, with each one-hour episode dedicated to the legendary rock band’s four members: Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and the late Charlie Watts.

New interviews with the musicians (except for the late Watts, who died last year) and unseen footage will form “intimate portraits†in which they’ll reflect on their busy careers. For the Watts-focused episode, his story will be told via archive interviews and tributes from his fellow bandmates and musical peers.

The Rolling Stones’ manager Joyce Smyth said in a statement: “We are thrilled to celebrate 60 years of The Rolling Stones with these four films which give fans around the world a new and fascinating look at the band.â€