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The Delines – The Sea Drift

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When Willy Vlautin told Amy Boone about his new batch of songs set on the Gulf Coast, the singer wasn’t quite sure whether he was referring to The Delines’ next record or a screenplay in progress. Her confusion is understandable: when he was at the helm of Richmond Fontaine, Vlautin wrote strong...

When Willy Vlautin told Amy Boone about his new batch of songs set on the Gulf Coast, the singer wasn’t quite sure whether he was referring to The Delines’ next record or a screenplay in progress. Her confusion is understandable: when he was at the helm of Richmond Fontaine, Vlautin wrote strong, deceptively simple narratives about the lonely and dislocated, the dispossessed and the perennially let-down, and he carried this literary style over into The Delines. There he developed richer, more soulful songs with Boone’s knockout voice in mind – equal parts Bobbie Gentry and Chrissie Hynde, it became the carrier of his songs’ blue-collar melancholy.

The Sea Drift is the band’s third album and, like their debut Colfax and several Richmond Fontaine records before that, it occupies a specific geographical location. Boone lived in Austin for years and it seems that when the pair got to discussing their shared love of Texas and the Gulf Coast in the run up to the record, they talked about Tony Joe White too. Boone asked the guitarist to write her a “Rainy Night In Georgia†and so The Sea Drift represents him trying to do just that.

Clearly, it’s much more than a shot at imitation across a full album: here are 11 songs of a romantic, Southern country-soul bent, as economical and well-judged in arrangements and execution as they are in their lyrical content, which is both painfully poignant and utterly unsentimental. Vlautin describes the record as “cinematic†and it’s hard to disagree, but it’s also small, in the best sense of the word – a series of intimate vignettes, rather than panoramic vistas. The band, which includes RF veterans Sean Oldham (drums) and Freddy Trujillo (bass), with defining keys and trumpet work from Cory Gray, play with warm, melodious restraint, though there’s grain and ache along with their languid swing.

The album’s opening line sets the listener straight down in Vlautin’s chosen locale, in the middle of an unexplained scene: “Little Earl is driving down the Gulf Coast/ Sitting on a pillow so he can see the roadâ€. His typically unfussy prose is again its own kind of poetry, here in a dreamy, mid-paced setting in which liquid keyboard runs and softly swelling horns are the foil for Boone’s divinely weary voice. Two lines later, “Little Earl’s brother is bleeding in the back seat/It’s been 20 miles and he can’t stop cryingâ€. Disaster waits just outside the song’s frame but this is a short story without an ending. It’s also the track “that helped create the sound and feel of the entire recordâ€, as Vlautin told Uncut, since he wanted to make maximum use of Gray’s string-and horn-arranging skills.

Its narrative sets the tone of small-life struggle, too, concerning as it does “two brothers who get into a shoplifting-gone-wrong incident at a mini-mart outside of Port Arthur, Texasâ€. It’s not the first song Vlautin wrote for the album, though – that’s the heartbreaking “All Along The Rideâ€, which was recorded live and conjures the disintegration of a couple’s relationship while they’re driving back to Seadrift from Corpus Christi. In the strictest sense it’s a road song – and a car, that most familiar of songwriting signifiers, figures in four of the seven vocal tracks – but there’s no thrill of the open highway, no renegade romance. Rather, it’s a utilitarian symbol of the shiftlessness, both literal and existential, summed up in the album’s title.

The first of two brief instrumentals written by Gray follows “All Along The Rideâ€. Titled “Lynette’s Lament†by Vlautin after the main character in his latest novel, it’s a brooding, small-hours trumpet piece cast along “Almost Blue†lines, with keyboard countermelodies running beneath it. The other, “The Gulf Drift Lamentâ€, is similarly lonesome but its midpoint swell carries it to a brighter, more resolute note on which to close the set. In between sit “Hold Me Slow†and “This Ain’t No Getawayâ€: the former moves to a warm and sensual, slow-mo swing, as you’d expect of a song whose protagonist commands, “Open up a bottle and I’ll close the shades/Put on something that sways and kiss my neck that wayâ€; the latter depicts a woman returning to her volatile boyfriend’s house to pick up the last of her boxes so she can leave him for good, on her own terms: “I hear footsteps walking but I don’t run away/’cause this ain’t no escape, this ain’t no getawayâ€. You’d call them characters if these women didn’t seem so real.

The Sea Drift owes something to the classic sounds of Kristofferson, Gentry, Chips Moman/Dan Penn and Glen Campbell, but there’s no throwback nostalgia here. The Delines’ way with romance is all their own, and for 41 sweet, orchestral minutes, time is somehow suspended while we watch with our ears. The writer of “Rainy Night In Georgia†would almost certainly approve.

Thomas Leer And Robert Rental – The Bridge

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The year 1979 was when synth-pop went overground. In May, Tubeway Army released their final single “Are ‘Friends’ Electricâ€, a Moog-powered track that propelled the band – and their pale cyborg of a lead singer Gary Numan – to the top of the charts and onto Top Of The Pops. That same mon...

The year 1979 was when synth-pop went overground. In May, Tubeway Army released their final single “Are ‘Friends’ Electricâ€, a Moog-powered track that propelled the band – and their pale cyborg of a lead singer Gary Numan – to the top of the charts and onto Top Of The Pops. That same month, another seminal synth-powered record hit shelves. That The Bridge is seeing its first vinyl reissue since 1979 would seem to indicate it’s more of a footnote in the history of electronic music than a foundation stone. But a listen from the vantage point of 2022 reveals it to be as striking as Numan’s music of the era. Eerie and unsettling, rough in a DIY way but buzzing with ambition, it’s imbued with the spirit of punk but pointing somewhere new.

The Bridge is the sole album by Thomas Leer and Robert Rental – real names Thomas Wishart and Robert Donnachie, a pair of DIY electronic musicians from Port Glasgow. By the late ’70s, they had found their way to London, where their experiments with some rudimentary electronic equipment – Stylophone keyboard, homemade effects units – had won them some early acclaim. Leer’s single “Private Plane†had been an NME Single Of The Week, while communication with another group at the electronic vanguard, Throbbing Gristle, led to an invitation to record an album for their label Industrial Records.

The Bridge was recorded in two weeks in Rental’s Battersea flat, the pair working on borrowed and hired equipment. This urgency can work in its favour. The opening “Attack Decay†has a frantic improvisatory energy, its cascading synths feeling a hair’s breadth from spinning out of control. Following on its heels, though, there are crafted songs, like the guitar-augmented “Monochrome Days†and “Day Breaks, Night Heals†– a nocturnal lurk that sounds like a punkier cousin to John Foxx’s “Underpassâ€.

A Bowie influence is discernible too as, in the spirit of Low, this is an LP of two distinct sides – songs on Side 1, ambience on Side 2. “Interferon†kicks off the latter, eight minutes of glimmering electronics and tape trickery that feels like the kosmische of Cluster and Tangerine Dream transported to a mildewed bedsit. “Six AM†and “Perpetualâ€, meanwhile, have a sense of foggy drift and invasive sounds of dubious provenance. Listening, you’re reminded of a note on the sleeve: “All blips clicks and unseemly noises were generated by refrigerators and other domestic appliances and are intrinsic to the music.â€

This was the end of Leer and Rental’s creative partnership. Leer was not keen on touring, but continued to record, working with Art Of Noise and The The. Rental recorded and played live with Daniel Miller, founder of Mute Records, but not long after retired from music; he died of cancer in 2000. More than a footnote, The Bridge sounds like, well, a bridge: a step on the road to the bold and strange electronic music of the ’80s.

Big Mama Thornton – Sassy Mama: Live At The Rising Sun Celebrity Jazz Club

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When Big Mama Thornton took the stage in 1977, she was struggling. Despite pioneering rock, blues and R&B in the 1950s, she’d been largely forgotten except as someone whose songs were covered and whose style was copped by Elvis and Janis Joplin, among others. Influence, however, doesn’t pay ...

When Big Mama Thornton took the stage in 1977, she was struggling. Despite pioneering rock, blues and R&B in the 1950s, she’d been largely forgotten except as someone whose songs were covered and whose style was copped by Elvis and Janis Joplin, among others. Influence, however, doesn’t pay the bills. She toured continuously to survive, despite being so physically weak that she had to be helped onstage. Alcoholism hastened her decline and ravaged her voice, so that it was barely a squeak compared with the hurricane it had once been.

And yet, she gives one hell of a performance. What she lacked in physical power she more than made up for in sheer charisma, as though she’d learnt a whole new bag of tricks in order to sell these old songs to a new audience. Holding court in a folding chair and fronting a five-piece band, she pares down her once-blustery songs so that they’re quieter, weirder, spookier even. There’s a lot of space and silence in these numbers. Her band occasionally bows out for several measures, leaving Thornton to holler and howl in the void: declarations of determination, shouts of survival. Listen to the timing of her exclamations at the end of “Summertimeâ€, how she puts an extra beat or two between her exclamations: “Your mama!/And daddy!/They may be standing over there!†It’s
a sly way to pull you into the song even as it’s ending, pointing to some comfort and security just nearby. “Said you don’t have to worry!â€

Small yet intimate, renowned for its attentive and appreciative audiences, the Rising Sun Celebrity Jazz Club in Montreal was an ideal venue for Thornton at this point in her life. It hosted a steady series of old and neglected blues and R&B legends, including Lightnin’ Hopkins and Muddy Waters, and owner Rouè-Doudou Boicel recorded most of their sets. Sassy Mama was originally released in 1994 and again in 2005, but this version marks the first time it’s appeared on vinyl, appended with a vestigial remix of “Hound Dogâ€.

“Hound Dog†– also included here in a medley with Rufus Thomas’s “Walkin’ The Dog†– was crucial to her career and to her legacy. After touring the South as a drummer, singer and harmonica player in the 1940s, Thornton signed as a solo artist with the Houston-based Peacock Records. That she was openly and unapologetically gay alienated some of her peers, but her booming voice and mastery of so many instruments made her a popular attraction even before “Hound Dog†sold two million copies in 1951. Three years later, a white kid from Memphis mimicked her performance and outsold her five times over.

In the 1960s, Thornton relocated to San Francisco and played nightclubs up and down the West Coast. Joplin caught one of those shows and was mesmerised by the performance, in particular “Ball And Chainâ€. Thornton’s original barely beat Joplin’s cover to market, yet the latter was such a hit that the song was popularly associated with the white interpreter rather than the black originator. Like many of her peers, Thornton saw very little money from her own recordings, even less from other artists’ covers. Despite their intentions to honour her, Presley and Joplin were hindrances instead of boons, stalling whatever professional momentum Thornton had.

So they both become just names to drop in song introductions, as when she declares that she’s going to play “Ball And Chain†“the way I wrote it. [Janis] might’ve made some changes… I don’t know.â€

Thornton instructs her band to play it like BB King, with a minimum of notes telegraphing a dark mood. “I didn’t say get ugly with it, I just said play it!†she says after a pretty gnarly guitar lick. At the end she deconstructs the song, wringing out every drop of meaning from each syllable.

Whether it’s a fast jam or a lowdown lament, Thornton had a way of crawling inside these songs and inhabiting them with force and humour. Sometimes that even means ignoring the song altogether. Just a few measures into “Watermelon Man†she starts in on an extended one-sided conversation with a producer vendor, using every trick to get herself free fruit. It’s like hearing one side of a phone conversation that escalates in completely unexpected ways: “You might not even know the kinda police I’m gonna call!â€
she exclaims at one point.

It’s a fantastic and eccentric reimagining of a well-known standard that shows how Thornton could sing the blues without wilting under the weight of her own troubles or the troubles in the song. Instead, this Rising Sun set is more about shedding that burden: playing the blues to exorcise your demons. With every yelp, whoop and holler she’s staking out her place in the world, even if that place is neither as big nor as prominent as it should have been. “I ain’t goin’ nowhereâ€, she exclaims at the end of “Ball And Chainâ€. “I’m still sittin’ in this chair!â€

Ian McDonald, King Crimson and Foreigner co-founder, dead at 75

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Multi-instrumentalist Ian McDonald, who co-founded the highly influential prog outfit King Crimson along with hard rock titans Foreigner, has died at the age of 75. According to a representative, McDonald "passed away peacefully on February 9, 2022 in his home in New York City, surrounded by his ...

Multi-instrumentalist Ian McDonald, who co-founded the highly influential prog outfit King Crimson along with hard rock titans Foreigner, has died at the age of 75.

According to a representative, McDonald “passed away peacefully on February 9, 2022 in his home in New York City, surrounded by his family”. No cause of death has been officially provided.

McDonald was recruited into King Crimson by Robert Fripp, along with Michael and Peter Giles, in 1968. Though he only appeared on the band’s debut album – 1969’s In The Court Of The Crimson King – he was instrumental in defining the band’s lasting prog-rock sound.

McDonald co-wrote and co-produced every song on the band’s debut. He also played a wide array of instruments on it, including brass, woodwinds and keyboards – particularly the Mellotron. He left the band the same year the album was released, alongside drummer Michael Giles, briefly forming the spinoff act McDonald and Giles.

“Someone asked me, ‘Are you surprised people still talking about this record 50 years later?’ I said, ‘Well, yes. But on the other hand, not really,'” McDonald said of King Crimson’s debut during a 2019 interview with Ultimate Classic Rock.

“When we made it… I wanted to make sure if I could deliver everything that went into the record would bear repeated listening and hopefully stand the test of time. And so in that regard, I’m not surprised. I’m very pleased and honored, and it’s amazing that it has been 50 years.”

In 1976, McDonald co-founded the British-American rock act Foreigner, playing guitar, keyboards, saxophone and more on hits like “Feels Like The First Time”, “Cold As Ice”, “Hot Blooded” and “Double Vision”.

He played on the band’s first three albums – their self-titled 1977 debut, 1978’s Double Vision and 1979’s Head Games – before being dismissed in 1980 by frontman Mick Jones.

Between 2002 and 2004, McDonald toured as part of the 21st Century Schizoid Band, performing early King Crimson material alongside other former members Mel Collins and the Giles brothers.

Elsewhere, McDonald made numerous guest appearances, like on T. Rex’s classic “Get It On” (for which he played saxophone). In recent years, he played as part of New York band Honey West, releasing one album – 2017’s Bad Old World.

Jack White shares the title track from forthcoming album Fear Of The Dawn

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Jack White has shared the title track from his forthcoming album Fear Of The Dawn, one of two records he'll release this year, alongside Entering Heaven Alive. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut Following on from the similarly blistering "Taking Me Back", Whi...

Jack White has shared the title track from his forthcoming album Fear Of The Dawn, one of two records he’ll release this year, alongside Entering Heaven Alive.

Following on from the similarly blistering “Taking Me Back”, White’s latest track is a freewheeling, fuzzed-out rocker that clocks in at just over two minutes, with the former White Stripes frontman howling over heavily distorted guitars.

Listen to “Fear Of The Dawn” below:

White announced both Fear Of The Dawn and Entering Heaven Alive back in November of last year. The former – White’s first solo album since 2018’s Boarding House Reach – is set to arrive first on April 8, with its follow-up set for release on July 22. Both will be released via White’s own label, Third Man Records.

At the time of the announcement, a press release said White’s creative process over the past few years had resulted in “two entirely different albums” which are “each defined by different inspirations, different themes [and] different moods”.

Last month, White shared new single “Love Is Selfish”, a far more sparse and gentle acoustic ballad lifted from Entering Heaven Alive. The same month, he shared a live performance video for “Taking Me Back” that sees him and his band playing the song in the Blue Room at Third Man Records‘ headquarters.

Following the release of Fear Of The Dawn in April, White will embark on an extensive headline tour with stops in North America, Europe and the UK.

“I’m doing songs from everything I’ve ever done in my life. Everything that I was the main songwriter or main singer, then that’s kind of in our bag of tricks,” White said of the upcoming tour in an interview with Alt 98.7. “I think we ended up having over 80 the last time I went on the road.”

Last year, White played a surprise set on a rooftop in London to celebrate the grand opening of a new Third Man Records store in the city. The shop is the label’s third physical outlet, joining existing buildings in Nashville, Tennessee and Detroit, Michigan.

Pixies’ Frank Black on his relationship with Kim Deal: “We’re always friends. You don’t be in a band together and not be friendsâ€

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Pixies frontman and songwriter Frank Black has spoken about his relationship with former bassist-singer Kim Deal in a new interview, saying that despite not speaking often, the two remain friends. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Pixies on Surfer...

Pixies frontman and songwriter Frank Black has spoken about his relationship with former bassist-singer Kim Deal in a new interview, saying that despite not speaking often, the two remain friends.

Black was answering fan questions for The Guardian ahead of the release of Live In Brixton, an expansive eight-disc release documenting the Pixies’ sold out reunion shows in 2004.

When asked whether he and Deal were on friendly terms, Black said: “I mean, we’re always friends. You don’t be in a band together and not be friends.â€

“I don’t recall when I last spoke to her, and I’m not very good at Christmas cards,†he continued. “We did a lot of tours together, we wrote together and we made all those records together… but nothing is forever.â€

Black also gave his thoughts on Kim Deal rejoining his musical endeavours, saying he felt it was a “damned if you do and damned if you don’t†situation.

“If you don’t get back together, people say: ‘Oh, that’s a bit sad. What are your memories? What are your regrets?’ ,†he explained. “And if you don’t break up and stay together, everyone says: ‘Oh, are you guys still together, doing that same old shtick?’â€

Deal, who left the Pixies in 1993 and then again in 2013, has been the guitarist and singer The Breeders, a band she formed with her twin sister, Kelley Deal. Last year, the band dropped their first single in three years: a cover of The Dirt Eaters from His Name Is Alive for the 4AD covers compilation Bills and Aches and Blues.

Livestream announced to celebrate late Metallica bassist Cliff Burton’s 60th birthday

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The annual commemoration of late Metallica bassist Cliff Burton will be celebrated this year via livestream on what would have been the metal icon’s 60th birthday. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Metallica: “We were not very open to having a...

The annual commemoration of late Metallica bassist Cliff Burton will be celebrated this year via livestream on what would have been the metal icon’s 60th birthday.

Set to take place on Thursday (February 10) at 7pm PT, the ‘Cliff Burton Day’ celebrations will feature a host of big names from the metal world and Metallica associates who will share their memories of Burton. Nicholas Gomez will host the stream.

Some of the names due to take part include: Exodus guitarist Gary Holt, Anthrax drummer Charlie Benante, Faith No More drummer Mike Bordin, Big Mick, Metal Joe, Dan Riley, Brian Lew, Dean Delray, Brian Slagel, Canada Dave, and Connie Burton.

The event was announced on Facebook on Monday (February 7) by Burton’s family. They also unveiled some ‘Cliff Burton Day’ merchandise, including t-shirts and an action figure; all proceeds will go towards ‘The Cliff Burton Music Scholarship Fund’. You can pre-order the items here.

February 10th Cliff would have been 60 years old Please come celebrate his life on http://YouTube.com/c/gomezgrip@ 7 PM PSTThank you to our host Nicholas @gomezgrip and all of our guests who were interviewed! More info to come…….??#cliffburton #cliffburtonday #castrovalley

Posted by Cliff Burton Family on Sunday, February 6, 2022

You don’t want to miss this show! Tune in on February 10 @7 PM PST JOIN US ON WWW.YOUTUBE.COM/GOMEZGRIP ??#cliffburtonday

Posted by Cliff Burton Family on Monday, February 7, 2022

Burton died on September 27, 1986, when Metallica’s tour bus crashed while the band were on tour in Sweden as part of the European leg of their ‘Damage, Inc.’ tour. He played bass on the band’s first three albums: Kill ‘Em All, Ride The Lightning, and Master Of Puppets.

Jason Newsted took over from Burton with the blessing of Burton’s family.

US cult funk icon Betty Davis has died aged 77

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Betty Davis, the 1960s and '70s cult funk hero, has died aged 77, it has been confirmed. Davis, who was married to jazz legend Miles Davis for a year in 1968, died February 9 of natural causes, close friend Danielle Maggio confirmed to Rolling Stone. Davis' self-titled debut album arrived in 1...

Betty Davis, the 1960s and ’70s cult funk hero, has died aged 77, it has been confirmed.

Davis, who was married to jazz legend Miles Davis for a year in 1968, died February 9 of natural causes, close friend Danielle Maggio confirmed to Rolling Stone.

Davis’ self-titled debut album arrived in 1973, which she then followed up the following year with They Say I’m Different. Her third and final studio album, Nasty Gal, was released in 1975.

Though not commercially successful at their time of release, Davis’ music has gone on to be hugely influential in funk circles in the decades to follow.

Born Betty Mabry, she appeared on the cover of Miles Davis’ 1968 album Filles de Kilimanjaro, and was the inspiration behind his song “Mademoiselle Mabry”.

“RIP Betty Davis, the original (and only) nasty gal, famed for being one of music’s greatest muses, but more importantly, one of the funkiest to ever do it,” journalist and author Jeff Weiss wrote in tribute to Davis.

“Her first 3 solo records are sleazy, soulful and raw. Filthy ’70s trash talking of the best kind,” he added.

Other tributes pouring in online in wake of the news include one from American poet Hanif Abdurraqib, who wrote: “Was waiting to get confirmation before sharing anything, but this is sad news. Thankful for Betty Davis, though.

“The reach of her influence & sonic lineage is immense. You’ve heard her, even if you think you’ve never heard her. I’m glad we got her at all.”

See a host of other tributes to Davis from fans and musicians, who have shared photographs of the singer, footage of her performances and more.

Davis returned in 2019 with her final piece of music, “A Little Bit Hot Tonight”, which was written, produced and arranged by Davis and sung by Danielle Maggio. Betty: They Say I’m Different, a documentary based on her life, was released in 2017.

Blur will “always be capable” of reforming, says Graham Coxon

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Graham Coxon has spoken about Blur's various reunions since their initial 2003 split, and says that the band will "always be capable" of reforming. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Graham Coxon on Blur and pop: “It’s a strange, limiting formâ...

Graham Coxon has spoken about Blur’s various reunions since their initial 2003 split, and says that the band will “always be capable” of reforming.

Speaking on the Rockonteurs podcast, Coxon discussed the freedom he felt during the band’s first return in 2009, that included a headline performance at Glastonbury.

“It was great because i played [the songs] in a completely different way, I felt more grateful for the situation,” he said. ” I became a little more grateful for what we’d always had.

“I reckon a lot of bands would get that if they had a chance to do that again. It’s why I almost get annoyed with other bands who have been squabbling and not really got it together to have another go. I think it’s kind of sad to hang on to resentments.”

Asked whether Blur was now in “the rear view mirror” after their most recent outing, Coxon joked: “Alex James is in the passenger seat, prodding me all the time! They’re not in the rear view mirror at all! They’re all sitting in the car with me still, [saying] ‘Shall we do some more?'”

A newly-reformed Blur performing at Glastonbury in 2009
A newly-reformed Blur performing at Glastonbury in 2009. Image: Brian Rasic / Getty Images

On the prospect of reuniting with his old bandmates again in the future, he added: “I actually think that Blur will always be capable of that, and when the time comes around and the stars are aligned, we’ll always be capable of doing something interesting.”

Meanwhile, Jesus Jones – former labelmates with Blur on the indie imprint Food Records – have invited them to reunite in tribute to the late label head Andy Ross.

Ross, known for signing Blur as well as Idlewild, Dubstar and more, died last month at the age of 66.

“We’re heartbroken at the loss of Andy Ross, one half of the mighty Food Records,†Jesus Jones wrote on Twitter. “Without him, we’d have never been able to do what we did. We’ll always be grateful, and we’ll always miss him. Goodbye boss xxx.â€

Fleet Foxes announce new UK dates as part of 2022 world tour

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Fleet Foxes have announced details of a 2022 world tour, which includes new UK dates – see the band's full schedule below. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Fleet Foxes – Shore review The band's new run of shows, which take them from late J...

Fleet Foxes have announced details of a 2022 world tour, which includes new UK dates – see the band’s full schedule below.

The band’s new run of shows, which take them from late June until September, come on the back of their 2020 album Shore.

The shows begin in Salt Lake City on June 27, with North American dates running until mid-August, where they play the Forest Hills Stadium in New York.

Robin Pecknold and co. then travel to London for a show at All Points East in support of The National before they play four more UK shows in Glasgow, Edinburgh, Manchester and as a headliner of End Of The Road.

The tour then heads to mainland Europe, wrapping up with a Berlin show on September 11.

Watch a trailer for the tour and see the full schedule below. Get ticket information for individual shows and sign up for an artist presale here.

JUNE 2022
27 – Salt Lake City, Sandy Amphitheater
28 – Denver, Mission Ballroom

JULY 2022
1 – Dallas, The Factory in Deep Ellum
2 – Houston, 713 Music Hall
3 – Austin, Moody Amphitheater
5 – Phoenix, Arizona Federal Theatre
6 – San Diego, Cal Coast Credit Union Amphitheater
8 – Los Angeles, Greek Theatre
9 – Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara Bowl
10 – Berkeley, Greek Theatre
12 – Portland, McMenamins Edgefield Amphitheater
15 – Seattle, King County’s Marymoor Park
29 – Raleigh, Red Hat Amphitheater
30 – Atlanta, Coca-Cola Roxy
31 – Pelham, The Caverns

AUGUST 2022
2 – Minneapolis, Surly Brewing Festival Field
3 – Chicago, The Salt Shed
5 – Detroit, Masonic Temple Theatre
6 – Toronto, Massey Hall
9 – Columbia, Merriweather Post Pavilion
10 – Boston, Leader Bank Pavilion
12 – Philadelphia, The Mann Center
13 – New York, Forest Hills Stadium
26 – London, All Points East
28 – Dublin, National Museum of Ireland, Collins Barracks
30 – Edinburgh, Usher Hall
31 – Glasgow, O2 Academy

SEPTEMBER 2022
2 – Dorset, End Of The Road
3 – Manchester, O2 Apollo
5 – Paris, Salle Pleyel
6 – Antwerp, De Roma
7 – Brussels, Ancienne Belgique
9 – Amsterdam, Paradiso
10 – Utrecht, Tivoli Vredenburg (Ronda)
11 – Berlin, Columbiahalle

Last December, Fleet Foxes released a new live album called A Very Lonely Solstice, a recording taken from a livestream concert at St. Ann & The Holy Trinity Church in Brooklyn, New York last year.

Send us your questions for Low

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We're delighted to announce that the latest band to sign up for a gentle grilling from you, the Uncut readers, are Low – Duluth, Minnesota's greatest musical export (apart from maybe that Dylan guy). Low have been releasing starkly beautiful albums for almost 30 years now, but they've hit a re...

We’re delighted to announce that the latest band to sign up for a gentle grilling from you, the Uncut readers, are Low – Duluth, Minnesota’s greatest musical export (apart from maybe that Dylan guy).

Low have been releasing starkly beautiful albums for almost 30 years now, but they’ve hit a real purple patch on their last two: 2018’s angry, static-saturated Double Negative and last year’s ‘extreme pop’ follow-up Hey What.

Parker and Sparhawk have also become unlikely heroes of the pandemic, broadcasting regular livestreams from their home and providing an ongoing Twitter surgery for touring bands on how best to pack their van.

So, what do you want to ask Low? Send us your questions to audiencewith@www.uncut.co.uk and Alan and Mimi will answer the best ones in a future issue of Uncut.

Hurray For The Riff Raff’s Alynda Segarra seeks solace in the natural world for new album, Life On Earth

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In August 2017, Alynda Segarra and her band Hurray For The Riff Raff found themselves on the bill at a corporate festival. It was not the most auspicious setting for an artist whose then-current album, The Navigator, dealt in themes of identity, assimilation and colonialisation. As the sun set above...

In August 2017, Alynda Segarra and her band Hurray For The Riff Raff found themselves on the bill at a corporate festival. It was not the most auspicious setting for an artist whose then-current album, The Navigator, dealt in themes of identity, assimilation and colonialisation. As the sun set above a hillside in southern England, Segarra found herself ignoring the indifferent audience and singing instead to a copse of trees and wondering where she might go next.

“I was already thinking about the next project – I always begin making demos right after an album is released because I get really lonely when an album is done. It feels like my friends have all left town,†Segarra says with a small, almost apologetic smile. She’s speaking on Zoom from her brick-lined office/think tank in an airy corner of her impeccably neat shotgun house in New Orleans’ 7th Ward, surrounded by some of her arcana: a tarot deck, salt lamps, stacks of art books, poetry books and history books, a few on gardening, a bubbling blue lava lamp and three unruly plants that snake towards the camera.

“We were supposed to be performing for thousands of people,†she explains, still a little bemused, running her tattooed fingers through her short choppy shag. “It turned out all those thousands of people were desperately hung over from the party that they had all gone to the night before on this huge compound, so we probably played to eight people. Most of them were laying on their backs or their stomachs, looking like they were going be sick.

“I told myself, ‘I can look at these humans who are making me have an existential crisis, or I can look out into the horizon.’ I saw this line of trees far off in the distance. I noticed how they were swaying in the breeze, the way the light was hitting them and I started playing these songs for these trees. It just struck me – why haven’t I ever thought that trees deserved songs too?â€

Iggy Pop to receive this year’s Polar Music Prize: “I’m honouredâ€

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Iggy Pop has been announced as the recipient of this year's Polar Music Prize. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Iggy Pop – Free review The former Stooges frontman and solo icon will pick up the award at a ceremony in Stockholm in Sweden on M...

Iggy Pop has been announced as the recipient of this year’s Polar Music Prize.

The former Stooges frontman and solo icon will pick up the award at a ceremony in Stockholm in Sweden on May 24.

In an official video announcing the winner, the Polar Music Prize hailed Pop as a “one-of-a-kind” artist. “And with his poetic lyrics and provocative stage presence, he is considered the godfather of punk music,” a voiceover added.

Pop said: “I was aware of the very fine range of people that have gotten the Polar Music Prize. Patti Smith… also Metallica, a really great band. And Steve Reich […] and so many others.

“So yeah, it’s a nice step for me. I respect it and I’m honoured by it. I’m looking forward to coming to Stockholm in May to receive the Polar Music Prize.â€

Pop was also praised by the Polar Music Prize organisers for paving the way for significant punk and post-punk acts such as Sex Pistols, Ramones, Blondie, Siouxsie And The Banshees, Joy Division and Nick Cave.

You can watch the announcement video in full above.

Launched in 1992, the annual Polar Music Prize honours two Laureates each year. The classical music honouree for 2022 is Ensemble Intercontemporain, a French contemporary ensemble.

“We are delighted to return in 2022, after a two-year absence due to the pandemic, with two incredibly worthy Laureates,†Marie Ledin, managing director of the Polar Music Prize, said. “Iggy Pop is unique, there is no one else quite like him.â€

Other previous recipients include the likes of Paul McCartney, Elton John, Bruce Springsteen, Joni Mitchell, Led Zeppelin and Björk.

Paul McCartney’s “Hey Jude” notes sold as an NFT for over $76,000

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An NFT of Paul McCartney's handwritten notes for "Hey Jude" has sold for over $76,000 (£56,136). ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: A Long Rewinding Road – 10 Highlights From The Beatles: Get Back Documentary Last month, John Lennon's eldest ...

An NFT of Paul McCartney’s handwritten notes for “Hey Jude” has sold for over $76,000 (£56,136).

Last month, John Lennon’s eldest son Julian launched a special range of non-fungible tokens (NFTs) containing digitised pieces of Lennon and Beatles memorabilia from his personal collection.

Fans were given the chance to “own a piece of music history†through an online auction that took place on Julien’s Auctions earlier this week (February 7).

According to Rolling Stone, the six available NFTs sold for a combined $158,720 (£117,236) with McCartney’s personal “Hey Jude” notes coming in as the biggest-seller at $76,800 (£56,727).

It was estimated that this individual NFT would fetch between $50,000 to $70,000 (£36,932 and £51,704).

The Beatles’ “Hey Jude” arrived as a standalone single in August 1968 ahead of the group releasing their classic White Album later that year. The track remains a staple of McCartney’s solo concerts.

Elsewhere, an NFT of John Lennon’s Help! cape brought in $12,800 (£9,455) while the NFT of the Afghan coat he wore in the Magical Mystery Tour film sold for $22,400 (£16,545). An NFT of a 1959 Gibson guitar that Lennon gave to his son as a gift was also snapped up for $22,400.

john lennon beatles
John Lennon of the Beatles, tuning his guitar (Gibson J160E acoustic) during the filming of “A Hard Day’s Night” at the Scala Theatre. Image: Max Scheler – K & K / Redferns

Each item in the auction was presented as an audio-visual collectible, with Julian Lennon also providing narration as well as accompanying imagery of the item in question.

A portion of the proceeds from sales of the Beatles and Lennon NFT collection will go towards Julian’s White Feather Foundation.

“I’ve been collecting these personal items for about 30 years, and I was getting a bit fed up with them being locked away in a vault, where I’ve had to keep them because I didn’t want them to get damaged,†Lennon previously told Variety about the venture.

“We did a few exhibitions in Europe with the items, and my intention was to take the collection and tour it, and I still hope to at some point in time, but obviously the last few years have not been helpful.”

He continued: “I actually felt very bad about keeping all that stuff locked away, and I just felt that this was a unique way to continue dad’s legacy and to show people the collections I have, and with the videos and narration, to give people a little more than they would normally get and hear some stories that they haven’t heard before in a new art form and a different medium.”

In other news, The Beatles’ legendary 1969 rooftop performance from Get Back has been released as a live album on major streaming platforms for the first time.

Sharon Van Etten shares her new single “Porta” and announces UK tour

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Sharon Van Etten has shared her new single "Porta" and announced a set of UK tour dates – you can check out both below. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut The track is Van Etten's first new music release of 2022, and it follows on from her May 2021 team-up ...

Sharon Van Etten has shared her new single “Porta” and announced a set of UK tour dates – you can check out both below.

The track is Van Etten’s first new music release of 2022, and it follows on from her May 2021 team-up with Angel Olsen on “Like I Used To”.

Produced by Van Etten (vocals, synths, drum machines) and Daniel Knowles (synths), and backed by her live band of Jorge Balbi (drums), Charley Damski (guitars) and Devin Hoff (bass), “Porta” was written in 2020, Van Etten says, “at one of my lowest lows”.

“For most of my adult life I have struggled with bouts of depression and anxiety and coping mechanisms, and I sometimes let those dark moments get the best of me,” she explained in a statement. “During this time I felt very dissociated. Not connected to my body and I felt out of control.â€

Van Etten said that she then reached out to her friend Stella Cook, who runs Base Pilates in North Carolina.

“I was seeking a friend, someone to talk to who understands what finding the core means but also knows what my weaknesses are and can help me work around them and find my other strengths,” she continued. “I knew I was entering a no judgment zone and I needed to be held accountable for my actions and Stella helped me step up.

“We would meet once a week on Zoom, have a catch up on life over a quick coffee and then get to work. Then, a day or two later she would send another video my way so I had something to work towards the end of the week. She was encouraging, but not pushy. If life got in the way, I didn’t feel like I let her down – but I loved our sessions. I looked forward to them. I started feeling closer to her, and closer to myself, and it helped things seem hopeful. And I just wanted to share that with the world.”

Van Etten added: “Instead of the darkness. Instead of my fears. My message is to work through them. Even when it’s hard. Even when it hurts. Reach out. Reach out to that friend who helps you reach out towards yourself.â€

Van Etten has also announced a UK and European tour for this summer, which includes dates in London, Birmingham, Leeds and Glasgow.

Tickets go on sale on Friday (February 11) at 10am local time from here, and you can see Van Etten’s upcoming UK and European tour dates below.

May
31 – Aula Magna, Lisbon, Portugal

June
2 – Primavera Sound, Barcelona, Spain
5 – Muffathalle, Munich, Germany
6 – Openluchttheater Rivierenhof, Antwerp, Belgium
7 – Markthalle, Hamburg, Germany
9 – Loaded, Oslo, Norway
10 – Rosendal, Djurgarden, Stockholm, Sweden
11 – Syd For Solen, Copenhagen, Denmark
13 – Metropol, Berlin, Germany
14 – TivoliVredenberg Grote Zaal, Utrecht, Netherlands
15 – La Cigale, Paris, France
17 – O2 Brixton Academy, London
18 – O2 Institute, Birmingham
19 – O2 Academy, Leeds
21 – Barrowland, Glasgow
22 – Vicar Street, Dublin

Listen to Spoon’s stirring new single “My Babe”

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Spoon have shared their latest single "My Babe" – you can hear the new track below. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Spoon – Hot Thoughts review The song is the final preview of the band’s upcoming new album Lucifer On The Sofa, which is...

Spoon have shared their latest single “My Babe” – you can hear the new track below.

The song is the final preview of the band’s upcoming new album Lucifer On The Sofa, which is set for release on Friday (February 11) via Matador Records. It’s the follow-up to 2017’s Hot Thoughts.

“My Babe”, which was been released Tuesday afternoon (February 8), follows on from Spoon’s recent singles “The Hardest Cut” and “Wild”, which both feature on their forthcoming LP.

You can hear Spoon’s “My Babe” below.

Co-produced by Spoon and Mark Rankin, Lucifer On The Sofa also features guest contributions from Dave Fridmann and Justin Raisen.

Last month Spoon shared their cover of David Bowie‘s “I Can’t Give Everything Away” to mark Bowie’s 75th birthday.

Spoon’s Britt Daniel recently performed live with Wilco as they closed their Sky Blue Sky festival in Mexico. The frontman provided vocals and acoustic guitar during a performance of “Kamera”, taken from Wilco’s 2001 album Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, at the event.

Introducing the Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide to The Byrds

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BUY THE BYRDS ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE HERE When some years ago Roger McGuinn connected with Uncut to talk about the band’s latest box set – 2006’s There Is A Season – he was reminded of an early guest at the band’s 1965 recording sessions: Bob Dylan. Dylan – then as much songwriter se...

BUY THE BYRDS ULTIMATE MUSIC GUIDE HERE

When some years ago Roger McGuinn connected with Uncut to talk about the band’s latest box set – 2006’s There Is A Season – he was reminded of an early guest at the band’s 1965 recording sessions: Bob Dylan.

Dylan – then as much songwriter selling his wares as lightning rod for twentieth century culture – had arrived, essentially, to pitch the band his song “Mr Tambourine Manâ€. David Crosby apparently wasn’t keen on the time signature, or seemingly on much else about it – though the band were ultimately convinced by its writer to give it a shot.

Dylan hung around, and was still there when the band got the song down completely, turning it from a delicate acoustic piece into something which seemed to hover somehow, powered by its own ethereal forces of guitar and harmony, becoming the “magic swirling ship†emerging from Dylan’s tumbling words. As McGuinn recalled it, Dylan asked “What’s that?†He no longer recognised his own song.

This kind of transformative power is part of the magic of the Byrds. Folkies who had bent an ear to the Fab Four’s British invasion, the band had a revolution of their own: their electric 12 string guitars took trad arr to a new dimension; they brought John Coltrane into psychedelic pop, took hippies to the heart of Nashville, and brought post-modernism and abstract computer noises to the middle of a mainstream guitar pop album.

There’s not much to compete with joy of hearing “Wild Mountain Thymeâ€, “Eight Miles Highâ€, “So You Want To Be A Rock And Roll Star†or any other classic Byrds recording, and that’s been the inspiration behind this deluxe edition of our Ultimate Music Guide to the Byrds. Here we’ll go deep inside the albums (ideas to mull over: The Byrds could have got by without Bob Dylan, – but not without the Beatles), and pull out some memorable archive encounters from the archives of NME, Melody Maker and Uncut to help tell the band’s compelling story.

There’s plenty to enjoy in these 148 pages. Here you’ll find details of David Crosby’s epic musical journey, read Gram Parsons’ only encounter with the UK music press, and hear the tale of lesser-known Byrds like Clarence White, who left the Byrds, and this world, tragically and far too soon.

For Uncut in 2006 McGuinn succinctly reflected on the band’s magnificent legacy but also acknowledged that their first steps in the studio were faltering. It turns out that only he was allowed to play on “Mr Tambourine Manâ€, the other parts being played by Hal Blaine, Leon Russell and other members of the Wrecking Crew. When all the band did finally record together successfully for their next album, as Roger remembers, it took them 77 attempts to record a take of Pete Seeger’s “Turn! Turn! Turn!â€.

It sounds like a lot – but as you’ll probably know already, it was undoubtedly worth it.

Buy a copy of the magazine here. Missed one in the series? Bundles are available at the same location…

The Byrds – Deluxe Ultimate Music Guide

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Celebrating the enduring legacy of The Byrds, whose joyful music invented (and escaped) folk rock, and country rock, becoming along the way home to some of music’s most legendary singer-songwriters: Gene Clark, David Crosby and Gram Parsons. “A time to every purpose under heaven...†Buy a c...

Celebrating the enduring legacy of The Byrds, whose joyful music invented (and escaped) folk rock, and country rock, becoming along the way home to some of music’s most legendary singer-songwriters: Gene Clark, David Crosby and Gram Parsons. “A time to every purpose under heaven…â€

Buy a copy here!

Arcade Fire’s Will Butler on Spotify: “I feel confident holding Joe Rogan’s dumb-assery against him”

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Arcade Fire multi-instrumentalist Will Butler has penned an op-ed piece in which he discusses the issues surrounding Spotify and its current situation with Joe Rogan. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Arcade Fire – Everything Now review In Ja...

Arcade Fire multi-instrumentalist Will Butler has penned an op-ed piece in which he discusses the issues surrounding Spotify and its current situation with Joe Rogan.

In January, hundreds of scientists and medical professionals asked Spotify to address COVID-19 misinformation on its platform, sparked by comments made on The Joe Rogan Experience. The 270-plus members of the science and medical community signed an open letter, which called Rogan’s actions “not only objectionable and offensive but also medically and culturally dangerousâ€.

Following the publishing of that letter, Neil Young demanded his music be “immediately†removed from the platform, with many high-profile artists like Joni Mitchell, David Crosby and Graham Nash following suit.

Since then, a consumer poll from Forrester Research has found that 19 per cent of the streaming service’s customers have since cancelled their subscriptions, or plan to in the near future. Although 54 per cent of responders said they have no intention of cancelling their plans, another 18.5 per cent said they would consider cancelling if more music was removed from the platform.

Spotify The Joe Rogan Experience
Image: Cindy Ord / Getty Images

In his new piece for The Atlantic, Butler discusses how little artists make from Spotify, and why their decision to back Joe Rogan has wider consequences for the entire music industry.

“When Neil Young said he’d take his music off Spotify if it kept streaming the podcaster Joe Rogan, I doubted he was trying to deplatform Rogan,” the article began. “I assumed he was just telling the company, ‘I don’t need this. I’m out of here’.

“I support Young’s stance. He has the moral right to get off Spotify, the largest music-streaming service, to protest Rogan’s comments about COVID-19 vaccines. But, notably, Young himself did not in fact have the legal right to leave. He’d signed away those rights to his label, which is part of Warner Music Group, and he had to ask Warner to let him leave Spotify as a personal favour.

He added: “Ultimately, the dispute between Young and Spotify over Rogan’s show says much more about what is happening to the music business than it does about free expression or artistic integrity.”

Later in the piece, Butler said: “From the business side, the picture looks bleak. But I can still also just listen to music and feel inspired; still sit at a piano and try to make something new; still go to a show (well, when this coronavirus wave passes) and forget myself.

“My deep dread, though, is that this ability to tune out and focus on art becomes an aristocratic luxury; that a lack of money for music means a lack of money for musicians; that new ways of doing business are destroying the possibility of a creative middle class.

“I don’t know that, if I were Rogan, I would do much different,” he added. “I feel confident holding Rogan’s dumb-assery against him, but it’s hard to turn down free money.”

Neil Young tells Spotify employees to “get out of that place before it eats up your soulâ€

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Continuing his dispute with Spotify over their alleged support of vaccine misinformation, Neil Young has encouraged workers at Spotify – as well as fellow musicians – to step away from the streaming giant. ORDER NOW: Johnny Marr is on the cover in the latest issue of Uncut READ MORE: Nei...

Continuing his dispute with Spotify over their alleged support of vaccine misinformation, Neil Young has encouraged workers at Spotify – as well as fellow musicians – to step away from the streaming giant.

“In our communication age, misinformation is the problem,†he wrote in a statement to his website yesterday (February 7). “Ditch the misinformers. Find a good clean place to support with your monthly checks. You have the real power. Use it.

“To the baby boomers, I say 70 percent of the country’s financial assets are in your hands compared with just about five percent for millennials. You and I need to lead.â€

Young went on to disparage major American banks – in particular Chase, Citi, Bank of America and Wells Fargo – for their “continued funding of the fossil fuel damage even as the global temperature keeps climbingâ€, and petitioned for his fans to follow suit in ceasing his support for such companies.

The legendary folk-rocker continued: “Join me as I move my money away from the damage causers or you will unintentionally be one of them. You have the power to change the world. We can do it together. Your grandchildren will thank you in history.

“To the musicians and creators in the world, I say this: You must be able to find a better place than Spotify to be the home of your art. To the workers at Spotify, I say Daniel Ek is your big problem – not Joe Rogan. Ek pulls the strings. Get out of that place before it eats up your soul. The only goals stated by Ek are about numbers – not art, not creativity.

“Notice that Ek never mentions the medical professionals who started this conversation. Look, one last time at the statements Ek has made. Then be free and take the good path.â€

Young’s battle with Spotify began towards the end of January, when he demanded that his music be pulled from the platform. At the time, he asserted in an open letter to his management that content like the Joe Rogan Experience podcast “spread[s] false information about vaccinesâ€. Spotify obliged, confirming on January 26 that Young’s content would indeed be removed from the platform.

After his catalogue was pulled from Spotify, Young shared a statement claiming that without his presence on the platform, he stood to lose 60 per cent of his streaming income. While he admitted it was “a huge loss†for his labels, Warner and Reprise, he thanked them for “recognizing the threat [that] the COVID misinformation on Spotify posed to the worldâ€.

Fellow artists to join Young in pulling their catalogues from Spotify include – but are not limited to – Joni Mitchell, Stewart Lee, Failure, Crazy Horse guitarist Nils Lofgren, and all three members of Crosby, Stills & Nash (with whom Young used to perform as Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young).

Rogan publicly addressed the backlash himself, sharing a video discussing “some of the controversy that’s been going on over the past few days.†He told fans on Instagram: “I don’t always get it right. I will do my best to try to balance out these more controversial viewpoints with other people perspectives so we can maybe find a better point of view.”