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Neil Young confirms the next three albums in his Official Bootleg Series

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Neil Young has announced details of the next three albums in his Official Bootleg Series. The albums are Royce Hall, 1971, a solo acoustic gig which was recorded January 30th on the UCLA campus; Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 1971 is also a solo acoustic performance and was the last US show of his 19...

Neil Young has announced details of the next three albums in his Official Bootleg Series.

The albums are Royce Hall, 1971, a solo acoustic gig which was recorded January 30th on the UCLA campus; Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 1971 is also a solo acoustic performance and was the last US show of his 1971 solo tour; and Citizen Kane Jr. Blues (Live at The Bottom Line) is a much-loved boot recorded in New York City, 1974.

Young had previously revealed these titles would be made available, along with Somewhere Under The Rainbow – Neil Young & The Santa Monica Flyers at London’s Rainbow on November 5, 1973 – and High Flyin’, which is the only document of Young & The Ducks, recorded during their existence during summer 1977. These last two bootlegs have disappeared off the schedule for the time being.

The albums will be release on vinyl, CD and digital formats, and are now available to pre-order here. All pre-orders will receive an instant download of a track from the relevant album: “Don’t Let It Bring You Down” (from Dorothy Chandler Pavilion)

Journey Through The Past” (from Royce Hall)

and “Revolution Blues” (from Citizen Kane Jr. Blues).

Official Bootleg Series tracklists:

Dorothy Chandler Pavilion (Los Angeles: February 1st, 1971)
On the Way Home
Tell Me Why
Old Man
Journey Through the Past
Cowgirl in the Sand
Heart of Gold
A Man Needs a Maid
Sugar Mountain
Don’t Let It Bring You Down
Love in Mind
The Needle and the Damage Done
Ohio
See the Sky About to Rain
I Am a Child
Dance Dance Dance

Royce Hall (Los Angeles: January 30th, 1971)
‘On the Way Home
Tell Me Why
Old Man
Journey Through the Past
Cowgirl in the Sand
Heart of Gold
A Man Needs a Maid
See the Sky About to Rain
Sugar Mountain
Don’t Let It Bring You Down
Love in Mind
The Needle and the Damage Done
Ohio
Down by the River
Dance Dance Dance
I Am a Child

Citizen Kane Jr. Blues (Live The Bottom Line) (NYC: May 16th, 1974)
Pushed It Over The End
Long May You Run
Greensleeves
Ambulance Blues
Helpless
Revolution Blues
On the Beach
Roll Another Number (For the Road)
Motion Pictures
Pardon My Heart
Dance Dance Dance

Young has been busy of late – only last week he announced details of his Official Release Series Volume 4 box, featuring part of his run of ’80s albums.

Roxy Music announce 50th anniversary tour

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Roxy Music have announced a run of tour dates to mark the 50th anniversary of their debut album. For their first tour since 2011, Bryan Ferry, Phil Manzanera, Andy Mackay and Paul Thompson will play North America and the UK. ORDER NOW: Paul McCartney is on the cover in the latest issue of U...

Roxy Music have announced a run of tour dates to mark the 50th anniversary of their debut album.

For their first tour since 2011, Bryan Ferry, Phil Manzanera, Andy Mackay and Paul Thompson will play North America and the UK.

The tour dates are:
September 7 – Scotiabank Arena – Toronto
September 9 – Capital One Arena – Washington DC
September 12 – Madison Square Garden – New York
September 15 – Wells Fargo Center – Philadelphia
September 17 – TD Garden – Boston
September 19 – United Center – Chicago
September 21 – Moody Center – Austin
September 23 – American Airlines – Center Dallas
September 26 – Chase Center – San Francisco
September 28 – The Forum – Los Angeles
October 10 – OVO Hydro – Glasgow
October 12 – AO Arena – Manchester
October 14 – The O2 – London

Last month, the band revealed plans to reissue all eight studio albums on vinyl across 2022, beginning with their self-titled debut and its follow-up, For Your Pleasure, in April.

Meanwhile, Ferry has debuted his first new recordings to be released since 2018. The Love Letters 4-track digital EP premiers with a cover of Ketty Lester’s “Love Letters”, with three more tracks to follow in April and May 2022

Roxy fans should keep an eye out for next month’s Uncut…

Watch Genesis play last ever gig in London

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Genesis bid farewell Saturday night (March 26) with their final gig together as a group - see footage below. ORDER NOW: Paul McCartney is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide: Genesis The band - comprised of Phil Collins, Mike Rutherford and To...

Genesis bid farewell Saturday night (March 26) with their final gig together as a group – see footage below.

The band – comprised of Phil Collins, Mike Rutherford and Tony Banks, along with touring musicians Daryl Stuermer, Nic Collins, Daniel Pearce and Patrick Smyth – bowed out with a sold-out show at London’s O2 Arena.

The show marked the end of a 55-year career that sees them remembered as one of music’s most successful acts, selling over 100million albums worldwide.

The 1970s line-up featuring Collins on drums, singer Peter Gabriel and guitarist Steve Hackett is regarded one of progressive rock’s most pioneering groups.

Playing 23 tracks in total, Genesis ran through a long list of their biggest hits including “I Can’t Dance”, “Mama”, “Turn It On Again”, “No Son Of Mine” and “Invisible Touch”.

Before playing “Land Of Confusion”, Collins addressed the crowd and announced that it would be Genesis’ final show. As the crowd applauded the band, Collins sat looking pensive, seemingly taking in the fact that it was the last hoorah. He then quipped: “After tonight we’ve all gotta get real jobs.”

Among the notable guests in attendance, the band’s original frontman Peter Gabriel stopped by to see his former band’s final show. Gabriel famously departed Genesis in 1975, and hadn’t played with the band since a one-off reunion in 1982.

During the set, Collins acknowledged Gabriel’s presence in the crowd by joking that he was the one shouting that he wanted to hear “Supper’s Ready”.

Gabriel and Collins shared a photograph with one another after the show alongside the band’s longtime friend and tour manager, Richard McPhail. You can see the picture, along with footage from the show below.

Genesis played:

“Behind the Lines’ / ‘Duke’s End”
“Turn It On Again”
“Mama”
“Land Of Confusion”
“Home By The Sea”
“Second Home By The Sea”
“Fading Lights”
“The Cinema Show”
“Afterglow”

ACOUSTIC:
“That’s All”
“The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway”
“Follow You Follow Me”
“Duchess”
“No Son Of Mine”
“Firth Of Fifth”
“I Know What I Like (In Your Wardrobe)” (with “Stagnation” snippet)
“Domino”
“Throwing It All Away”
“Tonight, Tonight, Tonight”
“Invisible Touch”

ENCORE:
“I Can’t Dance”
“Dancing With The Moonlit Knight”
“The Carpet Crawlers”

Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins has died

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Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins has died, according to a statement from the band. He was 50 years old. The band announced the news in a statement on social media on March 25. "The Foo Fighters family is devastated by the tragic and untimely loss of Taylor Hawkins," it read. "His musical sp...

Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins has died, according to a statement from the band. He was 50 years old.

The band announced the news in a statement on social media on March 25. “The Foo Fighters family is devastated by the tragic and untimely loss of Taylor Hawkins,” it read.

“His musical spirit and infectious laughter will live on with all of us forever. Our hearts go out to his wife, children and family, and we ask that their privacy be treated with the utmost respect in this unimaginably difficult time.”

Born in Dallas, Texas on February 17, 1972, Taylor Hawkins played in the experimental band Sylvia before playing drums on Alanis Morissette’s Jagged Little Pill and Can’t Not tours. Hawkins officially joined the Foo Fighters in 1997, replacing their original drummer William Goldsmith.

Foo Fighters
Foo Fighters – Chris Shiflett, Taylor Hawkins and Dave Grohl – photographed in 1997. Image: Martyn Goodacre / Getty Images

Hawkins also kept busy with many side projects. He had led Taylor Hawkins & the Coattail Riders as drummer and vocalist since the 2000s and in 2014 formed the side project The Birds of Satan, which was itself a spin-off the cover band Chevy Metal.

Most recently, Hawkins teamed up with Jane’s Addiction’s Dave Navarro and Chris Chaney to form the trio NHC. Earlier this year, they released the EP Intakes & Outtakes.

Taylor Hawkins playing Bottlerock Napa Valley 2019 in Chevy Metal
Taylor Hawkins playing Bottlerock Napa Valley in 2019 in the cover band Chevy Metal. Image: Jim Bennett / Getty Images

The Foo Fighters were on tour in South America at the time of Hawkins’ death. The drummer’s final show with the band was the headlining slot at Lollapalooza Argentina in Buenos Aires on March 20.

Hawkins died before Foo Fighters could perform at Festival Estero Picnic in Bogotá, Colombia on March 25. Lit candles were placed on the festival’s stage in his honour:

A preliminary “forensic medical study” released by the Colombia’s Attorney General’s Office said that 10 substances were found in Hawkins’ body, including THC, tricyclic antidepressants, benzodiazepines and opioids, CNN reported.

The report continued: “The National Institute of Forensic Medicine continues the medical studies to achieve total clarification of the events that led to the death of Taylor Hawkins” and that attorney general’s office would continue to investigate the cause of Hawkins’ death in a “timely manner.”

Tributes have flowed in for Hawkins. Rage Against The Machine’s Tom Morello shared a photo of himself, Hawkins and Jane’s Addiction’s Perry Farrell, writing: “God bless you Taylor Hawkins. I loved your spirit and your unstoppable rock power. Rest In Peace my friend.”

Queen guitarist Brian May expressed his disbelief at Hawkins’ passing: “No. It cannot be. Heartbroken. Taylor, you were family to us. Our friend, our brother, our beloved child. Bless you. We will miss you so bad.”

Ozzy Osbourne also shared a tribute for the “amazing musician”.

Sam Fender, who was playing a show in Glasgow on March 26, took to Twitter to announce that the show would be dedicated to the drummer. “Glasgow tonight. This one’s for Taylor‘, he wrote, sharing an image of his drummer sat behind a kit emblazoned with Hawkins’ name.

Read more tributes to Hawkins below.

 

Shocked & devastated to hear the news about Taylor this morning. We were fortunate enough to watch him shred every night…

Posted by Royal Blood on Saturday, March 26, 2022

Listen to two live Rolling Stones tracks from 1977

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The Rolling Stones have announced details of a new album, Live At The El Mocambo. Recorded during two secret concerts at the 300-capacity Toronto club in March 1977, when the Stones played under their occasional alias the Cockroaches, Live At The El Mocambo is now being released in full for the f...

The Rolling Stones have announced details of a new album, Live At The El Mocambo.

Recorded during two secret concerts at the 300-capacity Toronto club in March 1977, when the Stones played under their occasional alias the Cockroaches, Live At The El Mocambo is now being released in full for the first time on Friday, May 13 via UMe. The album will be available on double CD, 4 LP black vinyl, 4 LP neon vinyl and digitally.

You can hear “It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll” and “Rip This Joint” below:

The full album is available for pre-order by clicking here.

The tracklisting for Live At The El Mocambo is:

Honky Tonk Women (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
All Down The Line (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Hand Of Fate (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Route 66 (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Fool To Cry (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Crazy Mama (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Mannish Boy (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Crackin’ Up (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Dance Little Sister (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Around And Around (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Tumbling Dice (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Hot Stuff (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Star Star (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Let’s Spend The Night Together (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Worried Life Blues (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Little Red Rooster (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
It’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll (But I Like It) (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Rip This Joint (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Brown Sugar (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Jumpin’ Jack Flash (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Melody (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Luxury (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)
Worried About You (Live at the El Mocambo 1977)

Prince fans can walk through “Purple Rain” artwork at new “immersive” exhibit

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Prince fans will be able to walk through the late artist's iconic "Purple Rain" artwork as part of a new interactive exhibition. ORDER NOW: Paul McCartney is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Inside the vault: Prince’s legendary lost albums As Rolling Stone reports, ...

Prince fans will be able to walk through the late artist’s iconic “Purple Rain” artwork as part of a new interactive exhibition.

As Rolling Stone reports, Prince: The Immersive Experience will be held at the Shops At North Bridge retail-entertainment district in Chicago, Illinois from June 9 until October 9, 2022. Tickets go on sale at 10am CT next Thursday (March 31) – buy yours here.

Created by Superfly in partnership with the Prince Estate, the exhibition is described as “an interactive trip through the music and life of Prince” while showcasing the musician’s various musical eras and creative evolution.

In one room, attendees can interact with the cover art for Prince’s 1984 sixth studio album. “You’re going to be able to step in in a “Purple Rain” album cover,” Superfly co-founder Kerry Black told Rolling Stone.

“Where you can get your photo up on the motorcycle. But we’re also doing a full buildout of the entire street scene, right? So there’s going to be the First Avenue club and a bunch of the stores.”

Elsewhere, the exhibit will boast a recreation of Paisley Park’s Studio A, “which was [Prince’s] studio where he created all his music from about 1990 on,” Black explained. “And in there, people are going to be able to go and sort of play producer and mix stems from “Let’s Go Crazy”.”

Additionally, Prince’s former lighting designer Roy Bennett collaborated with the creators to produce an audio-visual dance space. Fans can enjoy displays of pieces from the star’s original wardrobe as well as his instruments, alongside replicas and various photographs.

The Prince Estate and Superfly are said to have been working on Prince: The Immersive Experience for the last few years.

“They really kind of brought us into his world,” Black said. “They’ve connected us with a lot of important people that he worked with. And so we can really make sure that it’s authentic.”

Superfly – who co-founded Bonnaroo and co-produced Outside Lands festivals – has previously produced intellectual property “experiences” based on popular TV shows, including The Friends Experience and The Office Experience.

Meanwhile, Prince’s estate is currently locked in a legal battle with an Ohio winery that is selling a “Purple Rain Concord” wine.

Unearthed Lou Reed and John Cale Songs For Drella concert film coming to streaming

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A "lost" concert film by director/cinematographer Ed Lachman of Lou Reed and John Cale's Songs For Drella album has been found – and it's coming to streaming. ORDER NOW: Paul McCartney is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Introducing the Ultimate Music Guide to The Vel...

A “lost” concert film by director/cinematographer Ed Lachman of Lou Reed and John Cale’s Songs For Drella album has been found – and it’s coming to streaming.

Lachman believed that the original negatives were long lost until he unearthed them while researching Todd Haynes‘ 2021 documentary film The Velvet Underground.

Now, Songs For Drella will be available to stream exclusively on MUBI in the UK and Ireland from April 17. The concert film shows former The Velvet Underground bandmates Reed and Cale perform songs from their song cycle tribute album to their former manager, Andy Warhol, who died three years prior to the joint album’s release in 1990.

Lachman – known for his chief photography roles on several of Haynes’ films including Far From Heaven and Carol as well his own directorial work (Ken Park, In The Hearts Of Africa) – is noted in press material as producing an “intimate” and “minimalist” film portrait.

Lachman’s camerawork reflects the elemental, stripped-down qualities of the album, with close-ups beautifully conveying the deep, fractious history between Reed and Cale,” reads part of the concert film’s description.

“Drella’” was a nickname used for legendary pop artist Warhol by Reed and Cale (the name is a synthesis of Dracula and Cinderella). The Velvet Underground were managed by Warhol from 1966-67 and also served as the in-house band for his art collective known as The Factory as well as Warhol’s traveling multimedia show, the Exploding Plastic Inevitable.

Meanwhile, Cale has announced that he’ll be heading to the UK this summer for his first full run of tour dates in almost a decade.

The last time the Welsh multi-instrumentalist hit the road this side of the pond was for his Shifty Adventures In Nookie Wood European tour back in October 2012.

Kurt Vile undergoes some deep reflection in video for new single “Mount Airy Hill (Way Gone)”

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Kurt Vile has dropped a pensive new single, "Mount Airy Hill (Way Gone)", which sees the indie artist deliver a reflective croon over whispering guitars. ORDER NOW: Paul McCartney is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Kurt Vile: “It’s finally accepted that I can just s...

Kurt Vile has dropped a pensive new single, “Mount Airy Hill (Way Gone)”, which sees the indie artist deliver a reflective croon over whispering guitars.

Released overnight (March 24), Vile comes to grips with himself in the track’s accompanying music video, as, through the course of the laid-back groove, he skateboards through the titular town’s streets, experiencing some intense hallucinations in nearby woods

Watch the scenic video – directed by Drew Saracco – below:

From the forthcoming album (watch my moves), the Philadelphia-based singer, multi-instrumentalist and producer has dropped two other singles – “Hey Like A Child” which was released earlier this month and “Like Exploding Stones” which dropped in February, coinciding with the album’s announcement.

The ninth studio effort – and follow-up to 2018’s Bottle It In – is set for release on April 15 via Verve Records, marking the artist’s debut with the label. Recorded largely at OKV Central, Vile’s home studio in the Mount Airy suburb of Philadelphia, he said in a statement of the self-produced record: “When Waylon Jennings became an outlaw country artist, he liked to record at Hillbilly Central, which was Tompall Glaser’s studio. OKV Central is my version of that in Mount Airy.

“I’ve come into my own here, and at the same time I’m getting back to my home-recording roots.”

This August will see Vile undertake an extensive tour across the UK and Ireland in support of ‘(watch my moves)’, kicking off at London’s All Points East festival on Friday, August 26 and concluding at End Of The Road festival in Dorset in early September.

Aldous Harding – Warm Chris

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No stranger to the incomprehensible visual metaphor, Aldous Harding is wearing a blonde wig and a lizard’s tail in the video for “Lawn”, the skittish beach samba released to herald the arrival of her fourth album. “Can you imagine me just being out and free?” the 31-year-old asks. “Doors...

No stranger to the incomprehensible visual metaphor, Aldous Harding is wearing a blonde wig and a lizard’s tail in the video for “Lawn”, the skittish beach samba released to herald the arrival of her fourth album. “Can you imagine me just being out and free?” the 31-year-old asks. “Doors are the way you leave/Open it up to me”.

Listening to the defiantly peculiar Warm Chris, it’s not easy to imagine how much more untethered the artist born Hannah Topp can get. The cryptic crossword lyrics and séance medium voices that defined 2019’s Art Deco-toned Designer are even more apparent on a record that welds the shape-shifting artistry of Cindy Sherman to the musical surrealism of Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci, with an unsettling bossa nova undertow. Determinedly following a logic of its own, it feels like John Cale’s baroque costume party Paris 1919, scripted by The Day Today’s Collaterlie Sisters. Idiosyncratic has been Harding’s modus operandi ever since her mid-twenties when she reneged on her plan to become a vet, having been wary of following her folkie parents into a life on the margins. Born and raised in Lyttleton, New Zealand, she first appeared on record as a teenager, guesting on her mother Lorina’s 2004 album, Clean Break, but struck out on her own musically with her self-titled 2014 album, choosing Aldous Harding as a singing pseudonym, apparently because “Aldous” sounded like “a manly Alice”.

The through-the-looking-glass quality of those early songs won acclaim from pixie folk extremists, with 4AD picking her up for 2017’s Party. Her woman-possessed live performances and pleasingly strange videos have helped to bring Harding a considerable audience since, despite her unwillingness to explain exactly what she is singing about. True to form, Warm Chris comes with no relatable back story, while her Q&A session with Uncut boils down to a good-natured but resolute “go away”. Venture into her total immersion world and one must accept that there is no map.

For all that, some of the topographical details of Warm Chris are familiar, but while it was recorded at the same studio as Designer (Rockfield), with Harding’s regular producer John Parish and a similar ensemble of players, it delights in subtle deviation from an already Samuel Beckett-worthy script. If its predecessors had a stylish monochrome palette, Warm Chris has unexpected flashes of ’70s living room colour; the porcelain shirehorse rhythms of opener “Ennui”, the bolts of garish electric guitar that explode into the Bambi-legged title track, the ITV sitcom melodies of “Tick Tock”.

Harding, meanwhile, takes her voice to even more unusual places; a wobbly high-pitched whine on “Warm Chris”, a Southern belle drawl on “She’ll Be Coming Round The Mountain”, a German hausfrau bark on “Passion Babe”, and what seems like a Stars In Their Eyes Patti Smith on her glowering closer “Leathery Whip”. It is an expression, perhaps, of a reluctance to settle in one position – perhaps significantly, she has returned to New Zealand in recent months following a spell living in Cardiff. As she sings on her Syd Barrett samba, “Staring At The Henry Moore”: “I need the liberty”.

However, Warm Chris sparkles thanks to her willingness to make seemingly wilful decisions. “If you’re not for me, guess I am not for you”, she sings on “Lawn”, bridling – not for the first time – against the burden of other people’s expectations. With upright piano and horn parts straight off an early-1970s Kevin Ayers record, opener “Ennui” feels like a rolly-eyed look at the clichés of artistic angst, with a sharp-elbowed dig at Instagram conformity (“No ‘one look’ and a canny fucking fill, don’t lie to me”), while the clip-clop paced “Tick Tock” is a more determined stretch for breathing space. Possessed of a very Welsh kind of saudade, Harding yearns to put several miles between herself and the outside world. “Party people they all want to start at me”, she sighs, Mark E Smith-ishly. “All I want is an office in the country”.

The routines of personal relationships are no less oppressive. Harding mimics some kind of burned-out fast-setter on dessicated Shangri-Las shuffle “Fever”, as she watches the inferno of an affair cooling down to an ember. “I still stare at you in the dark/Looking for that thrill in the nothing”, she sings between some wake-up horn blasts. “You know my favourite place is the start”.

That desire to press the eject or rewind buttons is similarly strong on situation comedy “Passion Babe”, Harding’s stentorian narrator prefacing her curious tilt for sensual freedom with the words: “Well you know I’m married/And I was bored out of my mind”. There’s a marriage in cinematic lament “She’ll Be Coming Round The Mountain” too, Harding’s crestfallen Blanche Dubois finding herself short-changed at the altar as she laments: “When I started out I had much more than I have now”. However, if familiarity tends to breed contempt in the world of Warm Chris, solitude comes with its own issues, Harding’s broken Broadway lament “Bubbles” striving to put a brave face on the quiet indignity of loneliness (“I’ll be fine, I’m a winner”).

Warm Chris is a record that searches for exits and plots escape routes, but malevolent kiss-off “Leathery Whip” is a dread acknowledgement familiar to the newly 30 that contact with the filthy world of death and taxes may not be avoidable. Cowering under an elemental organ, it comes on like a statement of independence, a rejection of conventional goals. “I’m a little bit older but I remain unchanged”, Harding repeats. “And the folks who want me don’t have the things I’m chasing”. Sleaford Mods barker Jason Williamson then joins in on backing vocals as Harding’s memento mori mantra kicks in: “Here comes life with his leathery whip/Here comes life with his leathery whip”.

Gravity gets us all in the end, then, but Warm Chris is a testament to messy, creative life, close-miking and cinema-vérité production showcasing all of the deliberate wobbly edges in Harding’s songs. As with the PJ Harvey of White Chalk, Harding goes wherever her voice takes her, and like fellow apostate traditionalist Richard Dawson, she is comfortable picking for shiny scraps of melody on the hard shoulder. As a consequence, these songs command close attention but – like the messy universe around them – do not necessarily beg to be decoded.

“I wanna play with something that wants to play back,” Harding told The Irish Times in 2019, doing her best to explain her relationship with her work. “I don’t wanna play with something that’s dead.” Slippery and engaging, sure-footed in its ungainliness, Warm Chris meets that challenge. There’s no redemptive story arc, no hard-earned wisdom, just the sense of artist as escapologist, Harding wriggling to get out of whatever bag she finds herself in. Difficult fun is hard to come by, as The Slits sang way back when, but Harding has so much of it. Given her evolution from record to record, she may not be lingering in this spot for long. Where “out and free” will take her next is a tantalising question. The half-woman, half-lizard of the “Lawn” video is just another skin to be sloughed off. The doors swing off their hinges and through she goes.

Tinariwen – The Radio Tisdas Sessions

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The first ever review of Tinariwen in the UK media came 21 years ago in the March 2001 issue of Uncut, when this intrepid critic travelled to see them play at “the world’s remotest music festival” in the southern Sahara in Mali. It was not a journey for the faint-hearted, involving a six-hour ...

The first ever review of Tinariwen in the UK media came 21 years ago in the March 2001 issue of Uncut, when this intrepid critic travelled to see them play at “the world’s remotest music festival” in the southern Sahara in Mali. It was not a journey for the faint-hearted, involving a six-hour flight from Paris to Gao on the River Niger, followed by a long day’s 4×4 drive across the desert to Kidal, Tinariwen’s base. From there it was a further day’s drive deep into the Adrar des Ifoghas, an isolated region of rocks and more sand, nestling the borders with Algeria and Niger, and regarded by the Tuaregs as part of their ancestral nomadic lands.

It was a hard and unforgiving site for a festival, baking hot by day and freezing by night, yet not without a stark exhilarating beauty. There, to a crowd of sword-wielding Tuareg warriors on camels and a handful of curious Westerners, Tinariwen played under a total eclipse of the moon, delivering what Uncut described as a “raw and earthy” set of “gutsy rebel songs” fronted by “four fearsome-looking turbaned Tuaregs all playing brilliant electric guitar”.

Since then, Tinariwen’s “desert blues” has become a familiar fixture. The band has toured the globe, collaborated with a host of Western rock stars and in 2010 won an Uncut Music Award for their fourth album Imidiwan: Companions. So two decades later it’s instructive to go back to the group’s debut and recall just how strange and mysterious, hypnotic and exotic Tinariwen sounded on first encounter.

Produced by Justin Adams at the same time as their appearance at the first Festival In The Desert, The Radio Tisdas Sessions was recorded at a Tamashek-language radio station in the desert outpost of Kidal, where the electricity supply only worked between 7pm and midnight, powered by solar panels but prone to regular breakdowns and failure.

Yet from drought and poverty to civil war and exile, coping with adversity is what Tuareg people have always done, and Tinariwen emerged with a resilient debut that captured the raw and unmediated sound of their live set and, indeed, includes a live track from that festival performance under the stars as one of its highlights.

Although the sound is earthily authentic, it’s also softer than the later Tinariwen style, when the guitars were cranked up and the rhythm section given additional heft, not least to meet the demands of playing to rock audiences at Glastonbury and Coachella. Indeed, tracks such as “Le Chant Des Fauves” and “Nar Djenetbouba”, both sung by Ibrahim Ag Alhabib, with their gently loping, camel-gait rhythms and fluid, crystalline guitar lines, might reasonably be termed “desert folk-rock”.

The Radio Tisdas Sessions is the only Tinariwen album to feature Kedou Ag Ossad, whose four tracks dig deepest and most fiercely into the blues, pointing the way to the group’s later, heavier sound and befitting his status as a legendary Tuareg insurgent who once attacked and captured a Malian army gun-post armed only with dagger and sword.

By the time of Tinariwen’s second album, 2004’s Amassakoul, three of the six guitarists on The Radio Tisdas Sessions had gone, leaving Ibrahim, Abdallah Ag Alhousseyni and Touhami Ag Alhassane as the core songwriters, all of whom remain mainstays of the group to this day. International touring had begun to broaden their horizons, while Robert Plant (who received a “thank you” in the album’s credits) had made the journey in the opposite direction and performed alongside them at the 2003 edition of the Festival In The Desert.

Recorded in a fully equipped studio in the Malian capital of Bamako, songs such as “Oualahila Ar Tesninan” have a more eclectic but still authentic aesthetic and a tougher edge, by far the group’s hardest rocking track by this point, and “Chatma”, with its militant, independence-demanding lyric and call for international support. Elsewhere, “Assoul” is a stripped-down choral chant accompanied only by wooden flute and didgeridoo, and “Ténéré Daféo Nikchan” is a vehicle for Ibrahim’s solo voice and guitar, sounding as deep and mysterious as any 1930s field recording from the Mississippi Delta.

Tinariwen would go on to make more accomplished albums featuring rocked-up collaborations with Kurt Vile and Mark Lanegan and members of TV On The Radio, Wilco and Red Hot Chilli Peppers, among others. But there’s a thrill in hearing them again pure and unadulterated, before they burst out of the desert to change the face of world music. Two decades on, familiarity with Tinariwen’s unique groove has not dimmed its allure.

Ornette Coleman – Genesis Of Genius

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For years, Ornette Coleman was regarded by many critics and musicians alike as something of a fraud and a trickster. Miles Davis described his music as “unlistenable”; Roy Eldridge called him a charlatan; the critic Benny Green once memorably wrote: “By mastering the useful trick of playing th...

For years, Ornette Coleman was regarded by many critics and musicians alike as something of a fraud and a trickster. Miles Davis described his music as “unlistenable”; Roy Eldridge called him a charlatan; the critic Benny Green once memorably wrote: “By mastering the useful trick of playing the entire chromatic scale at any given moment, he has absolved himself from the charge of continuously wrong notes; like a stopped clock, Coleman is right at least twice a day.” So it’s something of a shock to hear quite how orthodox Ornette Coleman’s 1958 debut, Something Else!!!!, sounds now. The freaky duets with trumpeter Don Cherry hint at what was to come, but it is a pleasant surprise to hear Ornette playing bebop-inspired tunes (like the big-swinging “The Blessing” and the Afro-Cuban-tinged “Jayne”) in a relatively disciplined setting with a pianist, something he barely did for the rest of his career (his next pianist, Geri Allen, with whom he collaborated in 1996/7, was barely six months old when Something Else!!!! was recorded).

It’s 1959’s sophomore effort, Tomorrow Is The Question!, that really sets the template for Coleman’s subsequent releases. Without a pianist, Coleman and Cherry are walking a sonic tightrope over nifty, simple tunes like “Turnaround” and “Endless”. You can hear them developing a kind of telepathy – switching between tight unison playing, free freakouts and fragmented takes on the blues. By 1959, the piano-less combo certainly wasn’t new in modern jazz. The garrulous saxophonist Sonny Rollins had pioneered the tenor sax/bass/drums trio with 1957’s Way Out West, an album that also features drummer Shelly Manne, a star of Tomorrow Is The Question!. Earlier than that, at a 1952 live date, Gerry Mulligan and Chet Baker had, inadvertently, ended up recording an unorthodox baritone sax/trumpet/bass/drums session when a pianist failed to show up. But where the Baker/Mulligan quartet recordings were clean, geometric, almost orchestrally contrapuntal affairs, Coleman and Cherry play with a recklessness and abandon that recalls earlier forms of jazz.

This two-disc package features an excellent, lengthy mini-biography and appreciation of Coleman from Ashley Kahn, best known as a biographer of John Coltrane, although oddly he doesn’t mention Coleman’s close friendship with Coltrane around this time. Several tracks on this package were covered by Coltrane on The Avant-Garde, an album he recorded with Don Cherry and other Coleman sidekicks in 1960 (although it wasn’t released until 1966). Coltrane, a more famous and much better established player, was such a dutiful disciple of Coleman’s wayward approaches to improvisation that he tried to rigorously copy them, and ended up sounding a little stiff and mathematical. Ornette’s original recordings, however, breathe and swing with an infectious energy that can put a smile on your face.

Watch full trailer for Nick Cave and Warren Ellis’ film This Much I Know To Be True

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Nick Cave and Warren Ellis have shared a first full trailer for their upcoming film This Much I Know To Be True – check it out below. ORDER NOW: Paul McCartney is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut The film will be released in cinemas globally on May 11, with tickets now on sale...

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis have shared a first full trailer for their upcoming film This Much I Know To Be True – check it out below.

The film will be released in cinemas globally on May 11, with tickets now on sale for the screenings. Grab yours here.

The first clip from This Much I Know To Be True was revealed last month, and saw Cave discuss his own definition of his artistry.

In the full trailer, a voiceover from Cave says: “We all live our lives dangerously, in a state of jeopardy, at the edge of calamity,” as music from Ghosteen plays in the background.

Check out the full trailer below.

The film, directed by Andrew Dominik, serves as a companion piece to the 2016 music documentary One 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 features also features a special appearance by close friend and long-term collaborator, Marianne Faithfull.

Cave and Ellis are currently on a North American headline tour in support of Carnage, their first-ever US tour as a duo.

See the remaining dates below.

MARCH
24 – Brooklyn, NY, Kings Theatre
25 – Brooklyn, NY, Kings Theatre
27 – New York, NY, Beacon Theater
28 – New York, NY, Beacon Theater
31 – Toronto, Ontario, Massey Hall

APRIL
2 – Montreal, Quebec, Place des Arts
3 – Montreal, Quebec, Place des Arts

Listen to Bauhaus’ first new song in 14 years, “Drink The New Wine”

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Goth rock pioneers Bauhaus have shared their first new song in almost a decade and a half, "Drink The New Wine". ORDER NOW: Paul McCartney is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Bauhaus on "Bela Lugosi’s Dead": “It was the "Stairway To Heaven" of the 1980s” The ba...

Goth rock pioneers Bauhaus have shared their first new song in almost a decade and a half, “Drink The New Wine”.

The band recorded the new single during lockdown by sharing audio files without hearing what their bandmates had recorded, utilising the Surrealist exquisite corpse method to compose the song.

Each member was given one minute and eight tracks to record vocals and instrumentation, with an additional shared 60 seconds and four tracks to close out the song. The only common link was a pre-recorded beat by drummer Kevin Haskins, with the band saying in a statement that hearing the final version was a “synchronistic revelation”.

The song takes its title from the very first exquisite corpse artwork in 1925 – when Surrealist artists André Breton, Marcel Duchamp, Jacques Prévert and Yves Tanguy employed the method, sharing individual parts for one collaborative work.

“[It] included words which when strung together make up the sentence, ‘Le cadaver exquisite boar le vin nouveau’ (‘The exquisite corpse will drink the new wine’),” the band said. Listen below:

“Drink The New Wine” marks Bauhaus’ first new music since 2008, when they released fifth studio album Go Away White and announced their dissolution. The band reunited for a handful of shows in 2019, with dates in Mexico City and London last year.

In May, the band will embark on their first full North American tour in 16 years. The run of dates will kick off with headline appearances at the Cruel World festival in Pasadena alongside the likes of Morrissey, Blondie, Devo, Echo and the Bunnymen and more.

Kurt Vile: “It’s finally accepted that I can just space out all the time”

Saturday evening in Philadelphia, and in the basement of his house, Kurt Vile is giving a tour of the studio he built during lockdown. There are racks of guitars, an array of synths, a hulking ’60s German console desk in palest duck egg blue. “It’s like Abbey Road style,” Vile says, as we st...

Saturday evening in Philadelphia, and in the basement of his house, Kurt Vile is giving a tour of the studio he built during lockdown. There are racks of guitars, an array of synths, a hulking ’60s German console desk in palest duck egg blue. “It’s like Abbey Road style,” Vile says, as we stand and admire its wooden frame, its rows of buttons and knobs. “But it’s actual tubes, so it’s super-warm hi-fi.”

Among the musical machinery lies accumulated paraphernalia: a selection of false moustaches, a shot glass collection, homemade artworks with googly eyes, an alligator mask. There is a story attached to every object, every instrument – the red Farfisa keyboard, bought to capture the early Pink Floyd sound, was played on his 2015 track “I’m An Outlaw”. The console desk came from former REM engineer Mitch Easter. The compilation tapes with handwritten spines hail from the years Vile spent driving a forklift at the Philly Brewing Company. And the low armchair between those bootleg cassettes and his favourite synth was where he recently sought refuge during recording. “If I was feeling under the microscope, I’d just sit down right here and hide,” he says.

It has taken close to 30 years to accrue such apparatus, accoutrements, anecdotes. At the age of 42, Vile’s musical course runs back to his mid-teens, from recording joke songs and Beck wannabe tapes, to forming The War On Drugs with Adam Granduciel in 2005, and simultaneously pursuing a solo career that, since 2008, has included eight solo albums,
a collaboration with Courtney Barnett, and recordings with Dinosaur Jr, The Sadies, Steve Gunn and John Prine, among many. Along the way, he has honed a musical style that possesses a kind of laid-back prolificity; songs that at first might seem hazy and horizontal quickly draw into compelling classic rock tunes; long tracks grow mesmerising, their easy, unhurried gait studded with warm and mumbled wisdoms.

This evening, Vile moves nimbly around the studio in plaid shirt, jeans and beanie, pulling records from shelves and opening drawers to show me his journals, nodding to books he has read and loved – Nick Tosches’ Hellfire, Barney Hoskyns’ Hotel California, the unwavering majesty of Sun Ra: “I’ve been reading [John Szwed’s 2000 biography] Space Is The Place again and it’s insane,” he says. “It’s like the Bible.” He speaks with the giddy generosity of a music obsessive, darting from his love of Chastity Belt to The Fall, Terry Allen, George Jones, C+C Music Factory, Springsteen, Ween, ODB.

To spend time in Vile’s company is not so much to feel as if you are interviewing him, but rather as if you are inside one of his songs: the strange wiring of influences, the sinewy lope of his voice, the sense of the commonplace set beside the cosmic.

Watch Arcade Fire and David Byrne cover Plastic Ono Band’s “Give Peace A Chance” at Ukraine benefit show

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Arcade Fire and David Byrne covered Plastic Ono Band's protest song "Give Peace A Chance" at the final night of four Ukraine benefit gigs in New York City. ORDER NOW: Paul McCartney is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Arcade Fire – Everything Now review The Canadian...

Arcade Fire and David Byrne covered Plastic Ono Band’s protest song “Give Peace A Chance” at the final night of four Ukraine benefit gigs in New York City.

The Canadian band were joined by the legendary soloist and former Talking Heads frontman for the rendition of John Lennon and Plastic Ono Band’s 1969 single on March 21 at Bowery Ballroom.

The performance wrapped Arcade Fire’s stint at the NYC venue that has raised money for the Plus1 Ukraine Relief Fund. Initially, the band announced a last-minute show at the Ballroom on Friday (March 18), saying that attendees could pay what they could afford.

But more spontaneous pay-what-you-feel shows followed over the weekend into last night’s gig, at which Byrne made a special appearance as well as actor Mike Myers.

Myers made a political speech ahead of the encore, which saw Arcade Fire play “Wake Up” and the unreleased “Unconditional I (Lookout Kid)” from their forthcoming album WE.

“You can have the government you want, but once you lose democracy, you are fucked. And so, for the people of Ukraine, I just want to say keep fighting, we’ll support you. Democracy is the way to go,” he said.

“My parents fought the fascists in World War II, this is a real thing. I just want to say, we’ve all been asleep. We’ve all been in Covid hibernation. And now ladies and gentlemen – it’s time to wake up.”

As Rolling Stone reports, the 600-person capacity shows were announced just hours before door time with entry wristbands selling out in under an hour.

It added that last night’s show didn’t wrap with Myers and Byrne. Continuing what they’d done on the preceding evenings, Arcade Fire took the gig outdoors, leading fans through the Delancey Street subway station and back to the venue before wrapping up.

Meanwhile, Arcade Fire band member Will Butler has announced that he’s left the group after two decades writing and performing with them.

The band were founded by multi-instrumentalist Butler’s brother Win in Montreal in the early 2000s, with Butler joining in 2004 ahead of their debut album, Funeral.

Arcade Fire returned last week with news of their sixth album and a video for first single “The Lightning I, II”, in which Butler did not appear.

Johnny Marr and Modest Mouse have been writing new music together

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Johnny Marr and Modest Mouse have revealed they've started working on new music together, which would be their first since Marr's stint in the band from 2006-2008. ORDER NOW: Paul McCartney is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut Both Marr and Modest Mouse frontman Isaac Brock were ask...

Johnny Marr and Modest Mouse have revealed they’ve started working on new music together, which would be their first since Marr’s stint in the band from 2006-2008.

Both Marr and Modest Mouse frontman Isaac Brock were asked about the prospect of reuniting in a new feature with Spin, celebrating the 15th anniversary of 2007’s We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank.

“We’ve already started working on some stuff together,” Brock said. “We just finished a song, ‘Rivers of Rivers’ – actually I think it’s just ‘Rivers of…’ – but it’s in a pen-pal sort of way. International travel isn’t what it once was at the moment.”

Marr added: “I played on that new Modest Mouse song, and there are a couple of other things knocking around that Isaac’s writing. As Isaac said, air travel isn’t quite what it was. But hopefully when the world tilts back on its axis, I’ll be jumping on a plane, I think.”

The two have spoken in the past about the prospect of reuniting. Last year Marr responded to Brock’s claim that “the option’s available” for him to rejoin the band by calling his tenure with the US indie cult heroes “the best time of his life”, and hailed Brock as “the greatest living lyricist he’s ever worked with”.

Modest Mouse
Modest Mouse, (L-R) Johnny Marr, Jeremiah Green, Joe Plummer, Eric Judy, Tom Peloso, Isaac Brock, on 3rd November 2007 in Los Angeles, California. Image: Wendy Redfern / Redferns

The ex-Smiths guitarist left Modest Mouse in 2008 and went on to play with The Cribs from 2008 until 2011.

Last month, Marr’s two former bands announced a tour of North America together. Marr responded to the tour announcement on Twitter, calling the news “killer”.

Meanwhile, Modest Mouse have also announced details of three special UK headline shows that they’ll play in July.

The band will tour this summer in support of their seventh album The Golden Casket, which was released in June 2021.

Listen to Bright Eyes cover Elliott Smith’s “St. Ides Heaven” for reissue series

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Bright Eyes have covered Elliott Smith's "St. Ides Heaven" for their Letting Off The Happiness: A Companion special release – listen below. ORDER NOW: Paul McCartney is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut Last month the band, comprising Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis and Nate Walcot, ann...

Bright Eyes have covered Elliott Smith’s “St. Ides Heaven” for their Letting Off The Happiness: A Companion special release – listen below.

Last month the band, comprising Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis and Nate Walcot, announced they will reissue all nine of their studio albums along with a Companion EP for each LP featuring new recordings of songs from the original release. A cover version from an artist the band found particularly inspiring at the time accompanies each reissue.

Yesterday (March 22) the band shared their Smiths cover for their 1998 album’s reissue, which lands with the new release on May 27. Bright Eyes’ first three albums – A Collection Of Songs Written And Recorded 1995-1997, 1998’s Letting Off The Happiness and 2000 LP Fevers And Mirrors arrive on the same May date.

In February the band shared new recordings of “Falling Out Of Love At This Volume”, “Contrast And Compare” featuring Waxahatchee, and “Haligh, Haligh, A Lie, Haligh” with Phoebe Bridgers from the six-track Companion EPs.

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

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

The band also covered Thin Lizzy’s “Running Back” for a charity campaign in January.

Queen stream full Ukraine gig from 2008 on YouTube to raise funds

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Queen's Brian May and Roger Taylor have announced a special screening on YouTube of the band's 2008 Kharkiv concert with Paul Rodgers to raise funds for Ukraine relief. ORDER NOW: Paul McCartney is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut The band played Ukraine with Paul Rodgers during t...

Queen’s Brian May and Roger Taylor have announced a special screening on YouTube of the band’s 2008 Kharkiv concert with Paul Rodgers to raise funds for Ukraine relief.

The band played Ukraine with Paul Rodgers during the Rock the Cosmos Tour, with a live album and companion DVD of the show being released the following year.

Queen and Paul Rodgers Live in Ukraine’ was made available to watch in the UK on the band’s official YouTube channel from 5pm on March 19. Fans who stream the two hour set are being asked to donate to UNHCR – The UN Refugee Agency.

Brian May originally shared a crowd photo from the gig on his Instagram in February, writing: “So many great memories of great times in Ukraine. This picture is of our unforgettable show night in Freedom Square, Kharkiv in 2008.

“It seems unbelievable that the peaceful life of Ukraine could be so senselessly shattered in the 21st century. And it feels unbearable that the world could just watch and let it happen. We are all praying for peace for you, dear friends.”

Announcing the fundraiser, both May and Roger Taylor wrote on their respective Instagram accounts: “In September 2008 Queen + Paul Rodgers answered a call from Ukraine’s Elena Pinchuk’s ANTIAIDS Foundation to reach out to the youth of the country with the message Don’t Let AIDS Ruin Your Life by playing a free Life Must Go On AIDS awareness concert in Kharkiv’s historic Freedom Square to a live audience of more than 350,000 – and a television audience of more than 10 million.”

They continued: “The band recall that event as ‘an unforgettable experience… one of those rare things in life you know you will never forget. A meeting in music, but also a coming together to fight a common enemy…'”

“Today, with millions of Ukrainian refugees in need of urgent humanitarian relief from a different affliction, Queen is returning to its historic moment with a YouTube special screening aimed at drawing donations for UNHCR’s relief efforts.”

Listen to the moody title track from Fontaines D.C.’s new album ‘Skinty Fia’

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Fontaines D.C. have shared the brand new single and title track from their forthcoming new album Skinty Fia - listen to the track below. ORDER NOW: Paul McCartney 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 ...

Fontaines D.C. have shared the brand new single and title track from their forthcoming new album Skinty Fia – listen to the track below.

The song is the third to be lifted from the record, which is set for release on April 22 via Partisan Records, after previous singles “I Love You” and “Jackie Down The Line”.

According to a press release Skinty Fia is an Irish phrase which means “the damnation of the deer”, which is used to display disappointment or annoyance. The album’s cover art features a deer, which you can view below.

The song explores the idea through the lens of a relationship doomed by paranoia, alcohol and drugs.

The band have also announced a new UK and Ireland tour in the autumn kicking off at Hull Bonus Arena on November 7, with dates also lined up in Manchester, London, Glasgow and Dublin before the jaunt wraps up at Belfast Ulster Hall on November 27.

Fontaines D.C. - Skinty Fia

Pre-sale tickets for the shows go on sale on March 28 at 10am BST and fans can get access by purchasing the band’s new album here. A pre-sale code will be sent out at 8am on the same day.

Tickets go on general sale next Wednesday (March 30) and can be purchased here. You can view the full list of dates below.

Fontaines D.C. Tour Poster

Morrissey announces Viva Moz Vegas residency

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Morrissey has announced Viva Moz Vegas, a five-date residency taking place at Las Vegas’ Colosseum at Caesars Palace. ORDER NOW: Paul McCartney is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut According to a press release, Viva Moz Vegas “will serve as an intimate, invigorating dive into Mo...

Morrissey has announced Viva Moz Vegas, a five-date residency taking place at Las Vegas’ Colosseum at Caesars Palace.

According to a press release, Viva Moz Vegas “will serve as an intimate, invigorating dive into Morrissey’s expansive career from his early days to the new album”.

“As an artist who is always trying new things, and never wanting to repeat himself, this could be fans’ only chance to experience the provocative combination of Morrissey in Las Vegas. These shows are not to be missed,” it continued.

Elsewhere, a poster promises Morrissey will be singing “the songs that made you cry and the songs that saved your life.”

The Las Vegas residency kicks off July 1 and runs until July 9. Tickets go on sale March 25 at 10am PT and can be purchased here.

Morrissey will play:

JULY 2022
01 – The Colosseum at Caesars Palace, Las Vegas
02 – The Colosseum at Caesars Palace, Las Vegas
06 – The Colosseum at Caesars Palace, Las Vegas
08 – The Colosseum at Caesars Palace, Las Vegas
09 – The Colosseum at Caesars Palace, Las Vegas

Earlier this year, he issued a statement asking his former Smiths bandmate Johnny Marr to stop mentioning him when giving interviews.

“Would you please, instead, discuss your own career, your own unstoppable solo achievements and your own music? If you can, would you please just leave me out of it,” he wrote before going on to say “we haven’t known each other for 35 years – which is many lifetimes ago. When we met you and I were not successful. We both helped each other become whatever it is we are today.  Can you not just leave it at that.”

In response, Marr took to Twitter and directly addressed Morrissey, writing: “An ‘open letter’ hasn’t really been a thing since 1953, It’s all ‘social media’ now. Even Donald J Trump had that one down. Also, this fake news business… a bit 2021 yeah?”