A new clip has been shared of Nick Cave and Warren Ellis's upcoming film This Much I Know To Be True – check it out below.
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A new clip has been shared of Nick Caveand Warren Ellis’s upcoming film This Much I Know To Be True – check it out below.
You can see the latest clip below, in which the pair discuss creating together.
The film, directed by Andrew Dominik, serves as a companion piece to the 2016 music documentaryOne More Time With Feeling, and premiered at the Berlin Film Festival this month.
This Much I Know To Be True will explore Cave and Ellis’ creative relationship and feature songs from their last two studio albums, 2019’s Ghosteen (by Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds) and last year’s Carnage(by Cave and Ellis).
It will feature the first ever performances of the albums, filmed in Spring 2021 ahead of their UK tour. The film also features a special appearance by close friend and long-term collaborator, Marianne Faithfull.
Mogwai have shared a soaring new single called "Boltfor" - listen to it below.
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Released Tuesday (April 26), "Boltfor" was "initially recorded during the sessions for As The Love Continue...
Mogwai have shared a soaring new single called “Boltfor” – listen to it below.
Released Tuesday (April 26), “Boltfor” was “initially recorded during the sessions for As The Love Continues at Vada Studios” according to a statement, “and then completed at the band’s very own Castle of Doom studios in March 2022.”
Speaking about the song’s accompanying video, director Sam Wiehl said: “The video is a visual metaphor for the constant movement in life and the unceasing urge to move forward as individuals…in the form of a metaphysical road movie.”
Watch the video below:
The band will soon begin their European and UK tour in Copenhagen on April 30, heading to London’s Alexandra Palace on May 27. All original tickets will remain valid, however a new date for their Utrecht show is still to be confirmed. Find tickets here.
This follows the band’s North American dates, which began on April 5 in Washington, DC, rolling through a further 13 US and two Canadian cities before wrapping up in San Diego on Sunday April 24.
Mogwai’s 2022 UK and European tour dates:
APRIL 2022
Saturday 30 – Copenhagen, Denmark, Grey Hall
MAY 2022
Sunday 1 – Malmo, Sweden – Plan B
Monday 2 – Aarhus, Denmark – Voxhall
Saturday 7 – Paris, France – Salle Pleyel
Monday 9 – Rome, Italy – Atlantico
Tuesday 10 – Milan, Italy – Fabrique
Wednesday 11 – Moderna, Italy – Vox Club
Tuesday 17 – Cologne, Germany – Live Music Hall
Wednesday 18 – Brussels, Belgium – Anciennce Belgique
Saturday 21 – Berlin, Germany – Tempodrom
Sunday 22 – Munich, Germany – Muffathalle
Monday 23 – Heidelberg, Germany – Halle 02
Friday 27 – London, UK – Alexandra Palace
The Scottish group released their 10th studio album As The Love Continues back in February 2021, going on to score their first-ever UK Number One with the project. In celebration of achieving the feat, they later confirmed a special homecoming show for November.
These questions are made for asking, and that's just what we'll do… Yes, Uncut's next Audience With star is the incomparable Nancy Sinatra, currently overseeing a lavish reappraisal of her back catalogue via Light In The Attic.
Following the solo compilation Start Walkin' 1965-76 and the reissu...
These questions are made for asking, and that’s just what we’ll do… Yes, Uncut’s next Audience With star is the incomparable Nancy Sinatra, currently overseeing a lavish reappraisal of her back catalogue via Light In The Attic.
Following the solo compilation Start Walkin’ 1965-76 and the reissue of her 1966 debut album Boots, May 20 will herald the first ever official reissue of her much-loved 1968 duets album with Lee Hazlewood, Nancy & Lee. It contains two bonus tracks – including a cover of The Kinks’ “Tired Of Waiting For You” – and is available to pre-order in all formats here.
In the meantime, what do you want to ask a lifelong style icon who’s mingled with everyone from Elvis to Wilco, The Rat Pack to The Sopranos, Mel Tillis to Sonic Youth? Send your questions to audiencewith@www.uncut.co.uk by Thursday (April 28) and Nancy will answer the best ones in the next issue of Uncut.
It remains one of the great Top Of The Pops appearances. On February 25, 1982, The Associates made their first serious assault on the national consciousness, performing the transgressive pop of “Party Fears Two” to a teatime audience. The spectacle of Billy Mackenzie – resplendent in belted ra...
It remains one of the great Top Of The Popsappearances. On February 25, 1982, The Associates made their first serious assault on the national consciousness, performing the transgressive pop of “Party Fears Two” to a teatime audience. The spectacle of Billy Mackenzie – resplendent in belted raincoat and beret as he negotiates the thrilling peaks and plains of the determinedly Delphic lyric – still excites four decades later.
Based on a glistening piano line written before The Associates even existed, “Party Fears Two” evolved into the first song recorded for the band’s classic third album, Sulk, becoming their sole Top 10 hit and signature song. Its blend of pop smarts, elegantly unexpected hooks, swooping vocals and disquieting lyrics render it a glorious puzzle defying easy explanation.
A deceptively unguarded examination of outsiderdom, Mackenzie claimed it was inspired by two girls trying to crash a party his younger brother was attending by smashing in the windows with their stilettos. Alan Rankine, Mackenzie’s partner in The Associates and the song’s co-writer, divines a deeper meaning. “I think it’s more nebulous than a specific event,” says Rankine. “It might have been based on that, but Bill and I were always just fucking outsiders. We never fitted. We felt like imposters. We felt like we’d got in with forged papers. Even when we did get into parties, we were bored shitless, but we had to prove to ourselves that we could get inside. For me it’s about feeling alienated, like you don’t belong and feeling also that other people seem to be doing it with ease.”
“Party Fears Two” was recorded at the start of the wild sessions for Sulk, The Associates’ third album, produced by Mike Hedges, who had worked with the band since their 1980 debut, The Affectionate Punch. Its regal progress was the peak of their brief reign of magnificence. Rankine left soon afterwards, frustrated by Mackenzie’s inability to play the promo game. “None of the then requirements to consolidate success were in any way part of Billy’s nature,” says bassist Michael Dempsey. “The idea of him marking his diary with a year of repeated activity spent waking, travelling, sound checking and performing was, to all who knew him, never remotely likely to be realised.”
Though Rankine and Mackenzie explored the possibility of an Associates reunion not long before Mackenzie took his own life in 1997, “Party Fears Two” stands as the ultimate testament to their partnership. In a catalogue scattered with gems, it’s revered as the brightest diamond. “I’m good with that,” says Rankine. “Very happy indeed.”
Arcade Fire have spoken about Peter Gabriel and Father John Misty's contributions to their upcoming new album, WE.
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The Canadian band are due to release their sixth studio ...
The Canadian band are due to release their sixth studio effort on May 6 via Columbia Records. It was produced by long-termRadiohead collaborator Nigel Godrich along with the group’s Win Butler and Régine Chassagne.
During a recent interview with the Montreal Gazette, it was noted that Gabriel contributed to a dance-oriented album track called “Unconditional II (Race and Religion)” on which Chassagne takes the lead.
“[Gabriel] came to the studio and we had a day to work on it,” Butler told the outlet. “He does this thing where he double-tracks his voice, high and low. As soon as he put the high vocal down, I was like, ‘Oh s—, that’s Peter Gabriel‘.”
In a separate conversation with The New York Times, Butler and Chassagne said it was gratifying to spend time with an artist who had a similar approach to pursuing music.
“We feel crazy sometimes,” Butler explained. “It’s nice to meet other people that know what we’re talking about.”
Chassagne, meanwhile, said it was “so special” to hear the finished collaboration.
Arcade Fire. Image: Michael Marcelle
Elsewhere in their chat with the Montreal Gazette, Butler opened up about the experience of him and Chassagne being separated from their bandmates as the couple worked on new material throughout the pandemic.
“We didn’t know when or if it would be possible to get the band together. We were very inspired and very plugged in, but the world we were making the record for was changing so much,” Butler remembered.
In the NYT’sinterview, it was revealed that Joshua Tillman – aka Father John Misty – flew in from Los Angeles to act as an external “sounding board” for Butler and Chassagne early on in the songwriting process.
Butler told the Montreal Gazette: “The goal was to write — independent of genre — songs we could play around the piano with guitar, and to just work on structure, melody and the bones of songs as much as we could, because we had time.”
Six months later, Butler and Chassagne reunited with the rest of the band and WE started to properly come together. “Every night, I would grill food and we would sit around the fire and play songs,” the frontman recalled. “It was a very uncertain but beautiful time.”
Peter Gabriel previously covered Arcade Fire’s “My Body Is A Cage”, with Butler and co. later returning the favour by recording a rendition of the formerGenesismusician’s solo track “Games Without Frontiers”.
Back in 2015, Father John Misty put his own spin on Arcade Fire’s 2010 song “The Suburbs” from their Grammy-winning third album of the same name.
Arcade Fire have previewed WE with the double lead single “The Lightning I, II” and are expected to release “Unconditional I (Lookout Kid)” soon. The band played the forthcoming track during their surprise Coachella set last weekend.
The group will make their return to the UK next Friday (April 29) to play an intimate concert at London’s KOKO to mark the long-awaited reopening of the venue. Tickets are now sold out.
Pavement have announced a 30th anniversary reissue of their debut album, Slanted & Enchanted.
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The 1992 album came out 30 years ago last week via Mat...
Pavement have announced a 30th anniversary reissue of their debut album, Slanted & Enchanted.
The 1992 album came out 30 years ago last week via Matador Records, and comes ahead of the band’s live reunion this summer.
The new reissue, set to come out on August 12, will see the original LP released on red/white/black splatter vinyl, alongside a cassette edition titled Courting Shutdown Offers, which features demo versions of the album that the band used to shop the album to record labels.
The band’s latest reissue follows the release of Terror Twilight: Farewell Horizontal, a special reissue of their final studio album Terror Twilight. The band’s fifth studio LP was originally released in June 1999 and was produced byRadioheadcollaborator Nigel Godrich.
See the tracklist for the 30th anniversary edition of Slanted & Enchanted below, and pre-order your copy here.
SLANTED & ENCHANTED
1. “Summer Babe” (Winter Version)
2. “Trigger Cut / Wounded-Kite At :17”
3. “No Life Signed Her”
4. “In the Mouth a Desert”
5. “Conduit For Sale!”
6. “Zurich Is Stained”
7. “Chesley’s Little Wrists”
8. “Loretta’s Scars”
9. “Here”
10. “Two States”
11. “Perfume-V”
12. “Fame Throwa”
13. “Jackals, False Grails: The Lonesome Era”
14. “Our Singer”
COURTING SHUTDOWN OFFERS
1. “Chesley’s Little Wrists”
2. “Jackals, False Grails: The Lonesome Era”
3. “No Life Signed Her”
4. “Two States”
5. “Trigger Cut”
6. “Fame Throwa”
7. “Pain Smiles”
8. “The Wounded Kite”
9. “Summer Babe”
10. “Perfume-V”
11. “My First Mine”
12. “Baptist Blacktick”
13. “Loretta’s Scars”
14. “Pillowjack”
15. “Here”
George Harrison's widow Olivia has written a book of poetry dedicated to her late husband.
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The collection, titled Came The Lightening, contains 20 poems that Oli...
George Harrison’s widow Olivia has written a book of poetry dedicated to her late husband.
The collection, titled Came The Lightening, contains 20 poems that Olivia penned to George following his death in 2001.
The work is set for publication on June 21 via Genesis Publications and is available to pre-order here.
In a statement about the work, Olivia said: “Here on the shore, 20 years later, my message in a bottle has reached dry land. Words about our life, his death but mostly love and our journey to the end.”
According to a statement from Genesis Publications, the poems will explore “the intimacy and emotional connection” of the Harrisons’ relationship, as well as “delve into the phenomenon of losing a partner and the passage of time”. The collection will also contain some never-before-seen images of the couple.
My book of 20 poems for George, in the 20th year of his passing, will be released on June 21st. ☀
I hope you enjoy these personal stories, recollections and reflections. Olivia Harrison
Martin Scorsese, who directed a wide-ranging documentary about George called Living in the Material World and who has written the introduction to the book, said: “Olivia evokes the most fleeting gestures and instants, plucked from the flow of time and memory and felt through her choice of words and the overall rhythm.
“She might have done an oral history or a memoir. Instead, she composed a work of poetic autobiography.”
A Beatles fan recently turned George Harrison’s childhood home into an Airbnb and a “living museum”.
Ken Lambert bought the property at 25 Upton Green in the suburb of Speke, Liverpool last November for around £171,000. According to the listing, Harrison lived at the three-bedroom house between 1949 and 1962.
The house was also used as a practice space for The Beatles, then known as The Quarrymen.
Sparks performed an impromptu rendition of "This Town Ain't Big Enough For The Both Of Us" at a public piano at Paris Gare du Nord on Wednesday (April 20) - you can watch a clip of the moment below.
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Sparksperformed an impromptu rendition of “This Town Ain’t Big Enough For The Both Of Us” at a public piano at Paris Gare du Nord on Wednesday (April 20) – you can watch a clip of the moment below.
The morning after their gig at Casino de Paris in the French capital on Tuesday (April 19), Sparks performed a short version of “This Town Ain’t Big Enough For The Both Of Us” at a public piano situated on the platforms at Paris’ Gare du Nord station.
The duo are seen performing the song – with the help of one excitable fan who happens to be walking past – in a short clip that has since been shared on Sparks‘ social media channels, which you can watch below.
Sparks’ European tour continues tonight (April 21) at Ab Flex in Brussels, Belgium.
The band will reissue five of their albums from 2000-2009 – 2000’s Balls, 2002’s Lil’Beethoven’, 2006’s Hello Young Lovers, 2008’s Exotic Creatures of the Deep and 2009’s The Seduction of Ingmar Bergman – on vinyl later this month and into next month.
Cat Power, aka Chan Marshall, has shared a new video for her cover of The Pogues hit, "A Pair Of Brown Eyes" - check out the video below.
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The video has been directed by Paterson dir...
Cat Power, aka Chan Marshall, has shared a new video for her cover of The Pogues hit, “A Pair Of Brown Eyes” – check out the video below.
The video has been directed by Paterson director Jim Jarmusch and it’s the first time the pair have collaborated on a work together.
Speaking about the project, Jarmusch said: “As someone who deeply loves Cat Power’s music, getting to collaborate with [Chan Marshall] on this video was like a dream come true,”
“She’s so inspiring to me, of course as an artist, but she’s also just such an extraordinary person.”
Watch the video here:
The track is taken from Power’s latest album, Covers, which sees the musician interpreting other people’s songs.
Meanwhile, Cat Power is among the new support acts that have been announced for Pearl Jam’s pair of Hyde Park shows this summer.
Pearl Jam will play at the BST Hyde Park series in central London on July 8 and 9, with Pixies already set to support the band on the opening night.
BST Hyde Park announced a host of support acts for both shows. Cat Power, White Reaper, The Murder Capital, The Glorious Sons, Simon Townshend, La Luz, Sick Joy and Dream Nails will all play on July 8 prior to Pearl Jam’s headline slot.
In 1972, England found itself staring down a very bleak decade. Inflation continued to soar, and unemployment hit its highest rate since the 1930s, with nearly one out of every four people out of work. Tensions in Ireland escalated, and uncertainty loomed on seemingly every front. Those and other tr...
In 1972, England found itself staring down a very bleak decade. Inflation continued to soar, and unemployment hit its highest rate since the 1930s, with nearly one out of every four people out of work. Tensions in Ireland escalated, and uncertainty loomed on seemingly every front. Those and other trends would culminate in blackouts and dole queues, and a general sense that the country and its culture were crumbling. But the sprite born Mark Feld existed in direct and ecstatic opposition to such doom and gloom. The country moped, but he rocked. That summer the rockstar rechristened Marc Bolan greeted his fans with a hearty mwaaaa-waaah-wahh-waaaaaah-oah! that served as a fanfare for the buoyant groove and giddy poesy of “Metal Guru” and for the poses and skewed introspection of The Slider. It wasn’t the best-selling album of the year – Rod Stewartoutsold Bolan with Never A Dull Moment – but Bolan arguably more than any other musician at the time seemed to represent the future of rock’n’roll, not just where it was headed but who was defining it.
1972 was, of course, a signal year for glam rock, with the release of Bowie’s…Ziggy Stardust…, Mott The Hoople’sAll The Young Dudes, Roxy Music’s self-titled debut and, from the American camp, Lou Reed’sTransformer. While all those albums were hits at the time and have only grown in esteem over the decades, the year belonged to Bolan. It was peak T.Rex-tasy, the most intense wave of pop fandom since Beatlemania a decade before, and none other than The Beatles themselves realised it, especially Ringo Starr. This was a youth moment, a means for a new generation of listeners (who weren’t of record-buying age when the Fab Four broke up) to plant their own flag and claim this frizzy-haired imp as their idol, their Elvis, their John, Paul,George, Ringo. With his ’50s rock riffs and fanciful lyrics, he spoke a language innately understood by teenagers, specifically young teenage girls, which sent the adults scrambling to keep up. After the unsmiling self-seriousness of the previous decade’s art-rock bands and hippie rockers, T.Rex were more subversive, more inscrutable, more joyful for sounding so facetious and unabashedly fantastical.
As this new boxset makes clear, Bolan relished his imperial phase. Collecting The Slider along with B-sides, live sets, radio performances and the soundtrack to Born To Boogie, it depicts the glam auteur as an artist acutely aware of his own celebrity and alive to the effect fame had on his music. Very little on here is new or exclusive, but having it all together in one doorstop of a boxset brings out new details and implications in the music and offers fresh angles on a complicated artist at the height of his game.
The Slider is the centrepiece of 1972, but that’s not where the story begins. Bolan started the year with Electric Warrior still at No 1 on the UK albums chart, but he was over in America trying to capitalise on the success of “Get It On” (retitled “Bang A Gong” for blushing yanks). The radio performances find him alone with his acoustic guitar, without the backup of bassist Steve Currie, percussionist Mickey Finn or drummer Bill Legend. In this setting he reverts to his folkie incarnation, when he’d sit cross-legged and strum rapturously on expensive rugs. Bolan finds surprising depths to songs like “Main Man” and even “Jeepster”, and “Ballrooms Of Mars” melts abruptly into “Mystic Lady”, as though Bolan needs to dispel that melancholy as quickly as possible.
While it was based in American rock and R&B, Bolan’s brand of glam didn’t translate to American audiences circa Watergate, and “Bang A Gong” was the only T.Rex single to break the Top 10. Back in England, however, he was a conquering hero and played Wembley Arena in early March, with none other than Starr filming the show for a theatrical movie. From Wembley he travelled to the Château d’Hérouville outside Paris and then to Rosenberg Studios in Copenhagen, where he recorded tracks for The Slider. It was released on July 21, the day of the Bloody Friday bombings in Belfast and the same month as the dockworkers strike that would culminate in a national state of emergency. But The Slider finds new ways to swagger, in particular on “Buick McKane”, with its start-stop riffage and a scissoring cello solo.
It’s a massively inventive album, but it’s also a work of surprising self-reckoning. Bolan might claim he’s “never kissed a car before” on the title track (a dubious denial), but he also declares, “And when I’m sad, I slide!” Bolan turns that last word into a mission statement, a cry of joy and pain – one that evokes a hard truth rather than state it outright. T.Rex’s music was never merely escapist; rather, whimsy became a weapon to beat back the dread and stifling mundanity of the real world. He made every listener a rabbit fighter.
If The Slideris his deepest and most compelling statement, then Born To Boogie is the exclamation point. Directed by Starr and featuring an assemblage of live footage, studio jamming (with Elton John, no less), and lots of goofing around at John Lennon’s Tittenhurst estate, it’s a frothy, fizzy confection, self-indulgent but endearing and truly exciting whenever it cuts to the live footage. Especially on the epic live version of “Get It On”, which grooves manically for 11 minutes, T.Rex emerge as a full band, all rhythm section, as resourceful as it is mighty. Bolan seems to understand that his immaculate riffs and bubblegum imagery played better to millions of people than it did to just thousands, as though none of his songs was ever complete without the roar of his devoted fans. “Spaceball Ricochet” in particular is a love song to his audience, which makes these live versions sound all the more poignant: “Deep in my heart, there’s a house that can hold just about all of you”, he declares, but that “just about” injects a deep sadness into the song. No matter what he does or how hard he plays or how popular he becomes, it’s not quite enough.
In other words, The Slideris an album almost as dark as its times, and this boxset affectionately demonstrates how that darkness manifested in other aspects of his life and art, whether it was his increasing dependency on booze and drugs or the disarming solitude of his radio performances or the desperation of songs like “Main Man” and “Ballrooms Of Mars”. “I’m talkin’ ’bout night time”, he sings on the latter, “when the monsters call out the names of men”. Those monsters manifest on Tanx, which Bolan recorded in November 1972, an album that began a decline halted only by 1977’s Dandy In The Underworld. It would be one long slide downhill from 1973 onwards, then, but this boxset ends on a happy note, with a Christmas present to his fanclub: a delirious collage of sound effects, holiday greetings and sing-alongs. “I’d like to thank you for a really fine year,” he tells his fans. “Have a good year… and don’t cry.”
The original Get On Board by blues icons Terry and McGhee was a 10” album released on the Folkways label in 1952, the eventual fruits of a partnership formed a decade earlier and which thrived well into the ’60s. The record’s contents were key texts in the early musical education of both Mahal...
The original Get On Board by blues icons Terry and McGhee was a 10” album released on the Folkways label in 1952, the eventual fruits of a partnership formed a decade earlier and which thrived well into the ’60s. The record’s contents were key texts in the early musical education of both Mahal and Cooderduring their teenage years in California, and a shared love when both were members of The Rising Sons (although the band’s only album, recorded in ’65, went unreleased for more than quarter of a century).
However, this second set to bear the title is far from a straight tribute or reworking of the first. Just three of the nine songs from the old masters’ release feature here, and a wider net is cast to fill the remaining berths with material from the subsequent Terry/McGhee catalogue, found on arguably better-known albums the duo recorded as their profile became more visible on the burgeoning club and coffee house scene of the late ’50s and early ’60s.
The original three that do make the cut act as a template for the rest of the album, notably the shuffling prisoner lament “The Midnight Special” and the jaunty worksong “Pick A Bale Of Cotton”. The former is, in some respects, just as informed by the version Creedence Clearwater Revivalrecorded in ’69 as it is the Sonny/Brownie reading, imbued with a seam of solid rock’n’roll perhaps more palatable to a wider, mainstream listenership. Meanwhile, the latter is gloriously representative of the relaxed spontaneity that permeates the entire project, complete with chuckling when the players inadvertently step on each other’s vocal lines. There’s no doubting that both Mahal and Cooder are learned purists when it comes to the rich history of American music, and throughout Get On Boardthere’s a tangible sense of two old friends having the time of their lives, in the throes of a loose, laconic labour of love.
The recordings are of course not as primitive as the originals, with their early studio technology that left Terry and McGhee with little opportunity for sonic exploration, but here Cooder’s stripped-back production is essential in recreating an atmosphere of bygone times. The spacious echoes provide an aural backdrop on which every coarse rasp of Mahal’s voice, the intermittent scratches of Cooder’s fingers sliding up and down strings on a fretboard, and fizzy reverb of son Joachim’s snare drum paint effortlessly evocative pictures.
Scholars of the ’52 Folkways release have praised it for its success in capturing lightning in a bottle, for its authentic depiction of the subtle shifts in folk and blues during the immediate post-war years, and there’s a feeling that Cooder especially strives to honour that lightning. There are times when the album sounds for all the world like an impromptu jam in a rural shack, rather than the end result of sessions in a state-of-the-art facility.
It comes as little surprise to learn that all 11 tracks were done and dusted in the space of three short days last July, Cooder employing the similar fast-work guerrilla tactics of some of his own solo recordings from relatively recent times, in particular 2007’s My Name Is Buddy and the following year’s I, Flathead. There are, unavoidably, a few overdubs, allowing Cooder to embellish his acoustic guitar with flourishes of mandolin or banjo, while his signature electric slide makes occasional, welcome appearances. These amped-up elements bring extra texture to the thuggish blues of “My Baby Done Changed The Lock On The Door”, suggesting an extension of the wronged-man rage of Mahal’s woe-is-me vocal. It’s more intricate than anything McGhee’s own guitar served up back in the day, yet it’s nonetheless entirely in keeping with the sparser rudiments of the blues form.
Mahal’s harmonica, on the other hand, tends to stay respectfully closer to the bursts of melody for which Terry was famed; near note-for-note re-enactments on the prairie balladry of “What A Beautiful City” and the hillbilly toe-tapper “Packing Up Getting Ready To Go”.
It’s all over way too soon, though; 45 minutes of music that seems to fly by in a fraction of the time, such is the charm and allure of both the songs and the passion with which its makers perform them. “I Shall Not Be Moved” (the third of the songs from the original album) brings proceedings to a robust, testifying close, as the curtain falls on a record that acts as both a good-humour history lesson and a rousing party-starter for future generations to discover.
Nick Cave has announced details of a new release, Seven Psalms.
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It's a series of spoken word pieces from Cave set to music in collaboration with Warren Ellis.
"While in lockdown I wrote a number of psalms, or small, sacr...
Nick Cave has announced details of a new release, Seven Psalms.
It’s a series of spoken word pieces from Cave set to music in collaboration with Warren Ellis.
“While in lockdown I wrote a number of psalms, or small, sacred songs—one a day for a week,” Cave explains. “The seven psalms are presented as one long meditation—on faith, rage, love, grief, mercy, sex and praise. A veiled, contemplative offering borne of an uncertain time. I hope you like it.”
Released on June 17, on limited edition 10” vinyl and via streaming services, it’s available to pre-order by clicking here. The outer sleeve is printed on embossed petrol blue with a jewel-like title and crucifix rendered in metallic gold.
Elton John's Madman Across The Water is due a 50th anniversary reissue.
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It's coming as a 3-CD and 1 Blu-ray Super Deluxe Box Set, a 4-LP vinyl box set, a 1-LP Limited Edition coloured vinyl and a 2-CD set which are due for ...
Elton John‘s Madman Across The Water is due a 50th anniversary reissue.
It’s coming as a 3-CD and 1 Blu-ray Super Deluxe Box Set, a 4-LP vinyl box set, a 1-LP Limited Edition coloured vinyl and a 2-CD set which are due for release on June 10 from UMC / EMI. You can pre-order by clicking here.
You can hear a piano demo of “Tiny Dancer” here:
And here’s an unboxing video of the box set:
Here’s details of the four formats:
Super Deluxe box set 3-CD, 1-Blu-ray also featuring 18 previously unreleased tracks, also containing 1971 reproduction poster and 104-page book, photos and essay with interviews with those who helped make the album, as well as memorabilia and artwork taken from John’s archive. Blu-ray features 5.1 mix, and 1971 Sounds For Saturday and 1971 Old Grey Whistle Test performances
4-LP, 180g vinyl box set, includes a 40-page booklet with introductions by Elton and Bernie, photos and essay featuring interviews with many who helped make Madman Across The Water, plus a reproduction 1971 reproduction poster, as well as memorabilia and artwork from the Rocket Archive
2-CD set with original album, rarities and demos, includes a 40-page booklet with introductions by Elton and Bernie, plus essay highlights featuring interviews with many who helped make Madman Across The Water, as well as memorabilia and artwork taken from the Rocket Archive
1-LP limited edition remaster of Madman Across The Water, in blue and white coloured 180g vinyl
And here’s the track Listing…
3-CD / 1-Blu-ray Super Deluxe Box Set CD 1
Tiny Dancer (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Levon (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Razor Face (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Madman Across The Water (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Indian Sunset (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Holiday Inn (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Rotten Peaches (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
All The Nasties (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Goodbye (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Indian Sunset (Live Radio Broadcast)
Madman Across The Water (Original Version, featuring Mick Ronson)
Rock Me When He’s Gone
Levon (Mono Single Version)
Razor Face (Extended Version)
CD 2
Madman Across The Water (1970 Piano Demo)
Tiny Dancer (Piano Demo)
Levon (Piano Demo)
Razor Face (Piano Demo)
Madman Across The Water (1971 Piano Demo)
Indian Sunset (Piano Demo)
Holiday Inn (Piano Demo)
Rotten Peaches (Piano Demo)
All The Nasties (Piano Demo)
Goodbye (Piano Demo)
Rock Me When He’s Gone (Piano Demo)
Rock Me When He’s Gone (Full Version)
CD 3
Tiny Dancer (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
Rotten Peaches (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
Razor Face (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
Holiday Inn (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
Indian Sunset (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
Levon (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
Madman Across The Water (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
Goodbye (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
Taped November 11, 1971 / transmitted April 29, 1972
Blu-ray
Audio
Greg Penny 5.1 mix of Madman Across The Water (Original Version, featuring Mick Ronson)
Greg Penny 5.1 mix of Madman Across The Water
Audio-Visual
Sounds For Saturday (Taped November 11, 1971 / transmitted April 29, 1972)
Old Grey Whistle Test (Transmitted on December 7, 1971)
4-LP Set LP1
A1 Tiny Dancer (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
A2 Levon (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
A3 Razor Face (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
A4 Madman Across The Water (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
B1 Indian Sunset (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
B2 Holiday Inn (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
B3 Rotten Peaches (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
B4 All The Nasties (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
B5 Goodbye (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
LP2
A1 Indian Sunset (Live Radio Broadcast)
A2 Madman Across The Water (Original Version, featuring Mick Ronson)
A3 Rock Me When He’s Gone
A4 Levon (Mono Single Version)
B1 Razor Face (Extended Version)
B2 Rock Me When He’s Gone (Piano Demo)
B3 Rock Me When He’s Gone (Full Version)
LP3
A1 Madman Across The Water (1970 Piano Demo)
A2 Tiny Dancer (Piano Demo)
A3 Levon (Piano Demo)
A4 Razor Face (Piano Demo)
A5 Madman Across The Water (1971 Piano Demo)
B1 Indian Sunset (Piano Demo)
B2 Holiday Inn (Piano Demo)
B3 Rotten Peaches (Piano Demo)
B4 All The Nasties (Piano Demo)
B5 Goodbye (Piano Demo)
LP4
A1 Tiny Dancer (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
A2 Rotten Peaches (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
A3 Razor Face (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
A4 Holiday Inn (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
B1 Indian Sunset (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
B2 Levon (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
B3 Madman Across The Water (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
B4 Goodbye (BBC Sounds For Saturday)
Taped November 11, 1971 / transmitted April 29, 1972
2-CD SET CD 1
Tiny Dancer (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Levon (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Razor Face (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Madman Across The Water (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Indian Sunset (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Holiday Inn (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Rotten Peaches (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
All The Nasties (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Goodbye (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
Indian Sunset (Live Radio Broadcast)
Madman Across The Water (Original Version, featuring Mick Ronson)
Rock Me When He’s Gone
Levon (Mono Single Version)
Razor Face (Extended Version)
CD 2
Madman Across The Water (1970 Piano Demo)
Tiny Dancer (Piano Demo)
Levon (Piano Demo)
Razor Face (Piano Demo)
Madman Across The Water (1971 Piano Demo)
Indian Sunset (Piano Demo)
Holiday Inn (Piano Demo)
Rotten Peaches (Piano Demo)
All The Nasties (Piano Demo)
Goodbye (Piano Demo)
Rock Me When He’s Gone (Piano Demo)
Rock Me When He’s Gone (Full Version)
1-LP Limited Edition Blue & White Vinyl
A1 Tiny Dancer (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
A2 Levon (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
A3 Razor Face (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
A4 Madman Across The Water (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
B1 Indian Sunset (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
B2 Holiday Inn (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
B3 Rotten Peaches (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
B4 All The Nasties (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
B5 Goodbye (2016 Bob Ludwig Remaster)
From the very beginning, Pink Floyd were thinking about how to make a show something more than a band simply playing songs. It was a mission that began with stroboscopic light experiments in the company of their landlord Mike Leonard, and concluded with the band erecting an enormous wall between the...
From the very beginning, Pink Floyd were thinking about how to make a show something more than a band simply playing songs. It was a mission that began with stroboscopic light experiments in the company of their landlord Mike Leonard, and concluded with the band erecting an enormous wall between themselves and the audience.
In between there were experiments. An enormous jelly. Frying bacon. Murmuring priests. An octopus, slowly inflating. Animated films. Oil lights and projections. A circular screen. Flying pigs. Flying sheep. As they explored ways to continue as a working band after the retirement of their singer and songwriter Syd Barrett, they moved beyond psychedelic songs into a place almost beyond songs – something more like a film soundtrack, designed to paint a mood on an epic scale.
In this struggle to find a way forward and to keep working, Pink Floyd made their live performances a laboratory for their grandest and most successful music. Songs from the classic albums Wish You Were Here, Animals and the whole suite of The Dark Side Of The Moon (performed live first just over 50 years ago) were first presented (sometimes falteringly; sometimes beset with “technical difficulties”) on stages in the British provinces.
It’s this creative evolution that we’re celebrating in this latest Ultimate Companion, one of our quarterly Special editions, designed to bring you closer to music you love. You might choose to think about the music we talk about here as rough prototypes for more streamlined studio version. Or you may, like us, come to think of them all as a noisy celebration of the creative process. If you dig them out, you’ll find astonishing versions of compositions you thought you knew.
That’s where we come in. Floyd spent a lot of time thinking about how they were going to present a show: the music, the show, the pyro and inflatables, even the placing of the intermission. So much so they don’t seem to have spent a lot of time curating hi-fi recordings of their performances.
So we’ve waded in among the live recordings from official to unofficial, to help guide you on Pink Floyd’s historic creative path – the tapes, the rarest songs, the thoughts of the eyewitnesses now they’ve had time to reflect. We’ve pulled back from the stage to bring put this all in the context of Pink Floyd’s imperial phase. From the archives, we’ve curated a selection of interviews illustrating what the band thought they were doing then, whether planning the perfect freakout, soundtracking a ballet that seems indefinitely postponed, or battling the “wankers” from the council who won’t let them turn all the lights out when they play.
As we learn from their inner circle, the band’s reluctance to stay in one place is the keynote of this secret history. “Roger was thinking ‘how can we better this?’,” Floyd creative director Aubrey Powell told Uncut. “It started way back at that Crystal Palace gig with that inflatable octopus. I think he realised that the audience appreciated something more than just the band.”
The Smile have announced their debut album, A Light For Attracting Attention, alongside the release of a brand new track called "Free In The Knowledge".
ORDER NOW: Miles Davis is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut
The band – comprising Thom Yorke, his Radiohead bandmate Jonny Green...
The Smile have announced their debut album, A Light For Attracting Attention, alongside the release of a brand new track called “Free In The Knowledge”.
The band – comprising Thom Yorke, hisRadioheadbandmate Jonny Greenwood and Sons of Kemet drummer Tom Skinner – formed last year and have been sharing sporadic teasers of a debut album since.
On Wednesday (April 20), The Smile have confirmed the release of their much anticipated debut LP, A Light For Attracting Attention, which will arrive May 13 via XL Recordings.
Produced and mixed by Nigel Godrich and mastered by Bob Ludwig, the 13-track album will feature strings by the London Contemporary Orchestra and a full brass section of contemporary UK jazz players including Byron Wallen, Theon and Nathaniel Cross, Chelsea Carmichael, Robert Stillman and Jason Yarde.
The trio have also shared the latest preview of the album, “Free In The Knowledge”. The song was first previewed by Yorke as part of the Letters Live Royal Albert Hallevent he performed at back in December.
Watch the Leo Leigh-directed video for “Free In The Knowledge” below:
Last week, Yorke spoke on the process of writing the album. “Jonny had come with a bunch of ideas, and I hadn’t seen him for a while, so they all just came pouring out before I could go, ‘Wait, wait, wait,'” he told the Smartless podcast. “There was a lot of me retrospectively going, ‘Okay, what am I going to do with that?’ Which was really nice.”
Yorke added: “I like trying to find different ways to write lyrics. I like to find different ways to assemble music. I like to learn new instruments, like Jonny.
“It wakes me up in the morning and probably always will, unless I lose my ability to think straight. There isn’t anything else. There’s not like, ‘Now we must move into this area,’ there’s not any sort of aesthetic agenda. You’re influenced by what you listen to. I’m always sort of buying new music.”
The Smile’s debut live shows came earlier this year with three gigs in one night at the Magazine venue in Greenwich, London.
The Smile are set to embark on their first UK and European tour next month, with shows scheduled throughout May, June and July. See the dates below.
MAY 2022
16 – Zagreb, Hala
17 – Vienna, Gasometer
19 – Prague, Forum Karlin
20 – Berlin, Tempodrom
23 – Stockholm, Cirkus
24 – Oslo, Sentrum Scene
27 – Amsterdam, Paradiso
29 – London, Roundhouse
30 – London, Roundhouse
JUNE 2022
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 2022
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
Pete Doherty has announced that he'll publish a memoir called A Likely Lad this summer – get all the details below.
ORDER NOW: Miles Davis is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut
The Libertines frontman worked with Simon Spence on the book, which is set to come out on June 16 via Li...
Pete Doherty has announced that he’ll publish a memoir called A Likely Lad this summer – get all the details below.
The Libertines frontman worked with Simon Spence on the book, which is set to come out on June 16 via Little Brown.
A synopsis of the book promises “Doherty’s version of the story – the genuine man behind the fame and infamy. This is a rock memoir like no other.”
It adds: “In A Likely Lad, Doherty explores his darkest moments. With astonishing frankness – and his trademark wit and humour – he takes us inside decadent parties, substance-fuelled nights, prison and his self-destruction. Doherty also reflects on the turbulent relationships with various significant people in his life across the years.
“He discusses poetry, Paris, philosophy, politics, the music business and his key influences (from Hancock to Baudelaire). There is humour, warmth, insight, baleful reflection and a defiant sense of triumph.”
See the cover of A Likely Lad below, and pre-order a copy here.
EXCLUSIVE
A rock memoir like no other…@petedoherty and Simon Spence – 'A Likely Lad'
The long-awaited, candid memoir from talented musician and @libertines frontman Peter Doherty.
Last month, Doherty revealed in an interview that he “nearly lost my feet” while he was battling drug addiction.
The musician has now been clean for over two years, and spoke about that period, as well as his years battling addiction, in an interview with The Mirror.
Having moved to France with his new wife Katia de Vidas in early 2020, Doherty further credited meeting his latest collaborator Frédéric Lo – who released “The Fantasy Life of Poetry & Crime” with Doherty earlier this month – with helping him kick his addiction.
Pete Doherty. Image: Jo Hale / Redferns
Doherty’s latest release was the acclaimed collaborative album with French producer and songwriter Frédéric Lo, “The Fantasy Life of Poetry & Crime“.
As well as a number of huge outdoor UK shows and European dates, The Libertines will also be celebrating their seminal debut album Up The Bracket with a special gig at London’s Wembley Arena this summer. Visit here for tickets and more information.
Hot Chip have announced details of their new album Freakout/Release - you can hear their new single "Down" below.
ORDER NOW: Miles Davis is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut
The forthcoming record will be the follow-up to the five-piece's A Bath Full Of Ecstasy, which was released b...
Hot Chip have announced details of their new album Freakout/Release – you can hear their new single “Down” below.
The forthcoming record will be the follow-up to the five-piece’s A Bath Full Of Ecstasy, which was released back in June 2019.
Hot Chip’s eighth studio album Freakout/Release will be released on August 19 via Domino. Written and recorded in the band’s Relax & Enjoy studio in east London, the making of the album was particularly inspired by the band’s regular live cover of Beastie Boys’ “Sabotage”.
“The idea of being out of control is always there in dance music, in a positive sense,” Hot Chip’s Al Doyle said in a press release in relation to the cover’s influence on the new album, with frontman Alexis Taylor adding: “By the time we were able to be back together, we were turning on a tap and having a lot of ideas being poured out quite quickly.”
In regards to the lyrical themes of Freakout/Release, Joe Goddard said: “We were living through a period where it was very easy to feel like people were losing control of their lives in different ways. There’s a darkness that runs through a lot of those tracks.”
“Down”, the first single from Freakout/Release, was released Tuesday (April 19), and you can watch the Douglas Hart and Steve Mackey-directed video for the track above.
Freakout/Release also features contributions from Soulwax, Canadian rapper Cadence Weapon and the London-based DJ and musician Lou Hayter.
You can see the tracklist and album artwork for Hot Chip’s Freakout/Release below.
1. “Down”
2. “Eleanor”
3. “Freakout/Release”
4. “Broken”
5. “Not Alone”
6. “Hard To Be Funky” (feat. Lou Hayter)
7. “Time”
8. “Miss The Bliss”
9. “The Evil That Men Do” (feat. Cadence Weapon)
10. “Guilty”
11. “Out Of My Depth”
Hot Chip – Freakout/Release artwork
Hot Chip will perform a quartet of shows at London’s O2 Academy Brixton in September in support of their new album.
Tickets for these gigs go on general sale at 9am on Friday (April 22), see the dates below and find more info here.
September
21 – O2 Academy Brixton, London
22 – O2 Academy Brixton, London
23 – O2 Academy Brixton, London
24 – O2 Academy Brixton, London
Fontaines D.C. have added further dates to their upcoming 2022 UK and Ireland tour – you can see the full list of dates below.
ORDER NOW: Miles Davis is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut
READ MORE: Fontaines D.C. talk uprooting and having a sense of identity on Skinty Fia
The I...
Fontaines D.C. have added further dates to their upcoming 2022 UK and Ireland tour – you can see the full list of dates below.
The Irish band’s tour – which is in support of their forthcoming new album Skinty Fia – is set to kick off at Hull Bonus Arena on November 7, with dates also lined up in Manchester, London, Glasgow and Dublin.
After last month adding an extra three dates to the schedule in Manchester, London and Dublin, Fontaines D.C. have now added further shows to the jaunt.
The band will now also head to the O2 Academy Leeds on November 9, O2 Academy Glasgow on November 18, London’s Eventim Apollo for a third night on November 26, and finish up the run with a second night at Belfast’s Ulster Hall on December 8.
“We’re pleased to announce a second night in Leeds, Glasgow and Belfast and a third night in London on our UK & Ireland Tour this November,” the band wrote in a social media announcement.
Tickets for the newly announced shows are on sale now. You can see the full list of tour dates below and find more info here.
We’re pleased to announce a second night in Leeds, Glasgow and Belfast and a third night in London on our UK & Ireland Tour this November. Tickets on sale now (Belfast on sale tomorrow at 10am). https://t.co/1Mo2NPDH8Qpic.twitter.com/kpRynCoqRh
Earlier this week (April 19), Fontaines D.C. shared a brand new single called “Roman Holiday”.
The song is the fourth to be lifted from the Irish band’s upcoming new album, Skinty Fia, which is set for release on Friday (April 22) via Partisan Records, following previous singles “I Love You”, “Jackie Down The Line” and the album’s title track.
Presenting our latest online exclusive: The Ultimate Companion to Pink Floyd Live. The deep dive into Pink Floyd's road to their masterpieces – from Piper to The Wall. Includes a massive new interview, 50th year anniversary of The Dark Side Of The Moon. Also: rediscovered interviews, all in this l...
Presenting our latest online exclusive: The Ultimate Companion to Pink Floyd Live. The deep dive into Pink Floyd’s road to their masterpieces – from Piper to The Wall. Includes a massive new interview, 50th year anniversary of The Dark Side Of The Moon. Also: rediscovered interviews, all in this latest issue.
During 1973, the Rainbow – a palatial former cinema in London’s Finsbury Park – was arguably the home of rock in Britain. In October, you could take in a Lou Reed residency, with the New Yorker resplendent in his Rock’n’Roll Animal phase. The following month, Pink Floyd, fresh from the suc...
During 1973, the Rainbow – a palatial former cinema in London’s Finsbury Park – was arguably the home of rock in Britain. In October, you could take in a Lou Reed residency, with the New Yorker resplendent in his Rock’n’Roll Animal phase. The following month, Pink Floyd, fresh from the success of The Dark Side Of The Moon, played a tribute concert for the recently injured Robert Wyatt. A week later, Roxy Music’sStranded tour reached the capital, introducing dazzled audiences to a post-Eno future. Just a few days after, on November 19, Miles Davis returned to the Rainbow for the third and final time that year. Ostensibly a jazz trumpeter, Davis was now as flamboyant as Roxy, as cutting and charismatic as Reed and as exploratory as the Floyd.
“He travelled the world like a rock star,” says Colin Hodgkinson, whose band Back Door had supported Davis at the Rainbow during an earlier appearance on July 10 that year. “The Rainbow was a proper rock venue, a great venue with good sound. He had the big sunglasses and all that – and a red trumpet, I think. Oh yeah, that was very unusual.”
Davis had been at the forefront of jazz for decades; now nearing 50, he was once again in the middle of something new. “There was some great, great shit,” recalls Dave Liebman, on saxophone that night in July. “When he picked up the trumpet to play, the focus was incredible. It was like a laser beam from another planet.”
When Davis had first appeared at the Rainbow on October 1, 1960, during his debut British tour, he was basking in the glow of the previous year’s Kind Of Blue, leading a now-legendary band – including Jimmy Cobb and Paul Chambers – finely turned out in immaculate Italian suits. But in 1973, Davis was the ringmaster of a psychedelic funk troupe – as heavy, amplified and out-there as the most riotous rock group. The suits were gone, replaced by tasselled leather jackets, flares, high-heeled boots, sequinned vests, scarves and huge, insectoid sunglasses.
“People thought Miles was turning his back to the audience,” says Davis’s bassist, Michael Henderson. “But that was so he could watch his own band – so he could stare through those glasses at us. Being in that band, it was like you were with some bizarre basketball team. Music can be anything. We didn’t rehearse… we’d have some heads [melody lines] we would play, and we’d improvise the rest of it. It was a well-oiled machine. Miles enjoyed it.”