Текст
                    “It sounds
unbelievable!”

The secret
history of

Ziggy
Stardust

ESSENTIAL

REVIEWS!
MICK HEAD!

VAMPIRE WEEKEND!
ALICE COLTRANE!
BROADCAST!
+ MORE!

THE BLACK KEYS
MEET BECK
ST VINCENT
RICHARD
THOMPSON
LOU REED BY
ROSANNE CASH
VINI REILLY
KAMASI
WASHINGTON

PLUS! BRETT ANDERSON + IRON & WINE + RADIOHEAD



“Snake it, take it/Panther princess you must stay” •M YRIA M GENDRON • AIR HO • EC HE &T BU AS AM •K I W AS HI NG TO N U N NY M EN • TE BU TRI M PS O N MAY 2024 S JE PR AT T •B ED EC KM E E TS RE R ET T A NDERSON • LOU INC THE BLACK KEYS • ST V T EN •W AH !•B SI C A TAKE 325 •A LIC ER O WIE ANDAL L • DAVID BO NE of my favourite moments of the new David Bowie boxset, covering the birth of Ziggy Stardust, is the demo of “Soul Love” recorded at Haddon Hall in November 1971. This has evidently been made for Mick Ronson and, after playing the song through, Bowie leaves a message for his co-conspirator. “I think we should work on that as a single, Mick,” he begins, going on to list ideas for arrangements he has in mind for the song, based around a “heavy, warm sax lineup”. Bowie’s ideas are clear, precise and detailed, revealing a lot about his ability to imagine how a finished song might sound. After this, there’s a pause, then Bowie signs off in the kind of cute parentese he might have used with his then-six-month-old son, Zowie. “Oo-kay? Right ’den.” In the space of just a few moments, we have heard from several different David Bowies: the performer, the composer, the friend. Three months after this charming, intimate recording, Ziggy Stardust made his earthly debut on stage at the Toby Jug, a pub off the A3. A lot has already been written about Bowie’s stellar trajectory during 1971/1972. But for our cover story, Peter Watts has unearthed what feels • RD HA RIC O TH On the cover: David Bowie © The David Bowie Archive, photograph by Brian Ward like a genuinely fresh tale, full of alternate versions, discarded recordings, different tracklistings and paths not taken. You might wonder, then, what might have been had Bowie ended up playing slide guitar on “Starman” – and how that might have looked during that July 6, 1972 Top Of The Pops performance… There’s plenty more besides, of course. We bring you a hook-up between The Black Keys and Beck, St Vincent, Kamasi Washington, Richard Thompson, a rare encounter with Vini Reilly and I’m honoured to bring you the first major UK music magazine interview with Myriam Gendron, whose beautiful and impeccable songs have a calm, wise grasp of folk traditions. I’m sure you’ll find a ton of other interesting things squirrelled away inside this month’s issue. So dig in and enjoy. And, as Bowie once said, keep it cool and easy. Michael Bonner, Editor. Follow me on Twitter @michaelbonner CONTENTS 4 Instant Karma! Radiohead, Lou Reed, Brett Anderson, Caroline Coon, Alice Randall, Mint Mile discusses her new record – a powerful reckoning with loss and grief 66 Iron & Wine 18 The Durutti Column 94 David Bowie As a new boxset digs deep into Ziggy Stardust, we map the 1972 masterpiece’s secret history with the aid of key players Album By Album with Sam Beam 106 Lives Air, Echo & The Bunnymen An Audience With Vini Reilly 70 Kamasi Washington 24 New Albums The reigning king of jazz saxophone: still on a mission to soothe the soul Including: Jessica Pratt, Michael Head, Ian Hunter, Vampire Weekend, Pearl Jam 110 Screen The Origin Of Evil and more 112 Screen Extra Microdisney 76 Wah! 42 The Archive The Making Of “The Story Of The Blues” Including: Broadcast, AC/DC, Alice Coltrane, Sister Rosetta Tharpe 80 Richard Thompson The magic of Big Pink, adventures in the Sahara and imaginary conversations with Sandy Denny 116 HiFi Pick of the latest speakers 86 Beck and The Black Keys 120 Letters Plus the Uncut crossword Two decades after they first met, ‘the Beck Keys’ finally get it together in the studio 122 My Life In Music Neil Finn 54 St Vincent Annie Clark squares up to her demons on her sublime seventh LP 60 Myriam Gendron The enigmatic French-Canadian 114 Books Skip Spence, Phil Manzanera and Arthur Russell 118 Not Fade Away Obituaries SUBSCRIBE TODAY AND SAVE £26.33!* Online at shop.kelsey.co.uk/UCP524 Call 01959 543 747** and quote ref: UCP524 *UK Direct Debit offer only. Terms and Conditions apply. ** Lines open Mon-Fri 08.30-17.30; calls charged at your standard network rate. 0$<Ǵ Ǵ3
THIS MONTH’S REVELATIONS FROM THE WORLD OF WITH... Lou Reed | Brett Anderson | Alice Randall | Sex Pistols Camera Police! Tom Sheehan reveals what it’s like to shoot notoriously reluctant superstars, Radiohead © TOM SHEEHAN MARCH 2024 R ADIOHEAD have always been a band apart. When Tom Sheehan first went to take their picture for Melody Maker, before “Creep” became a transatlantic smash, he arranged to meet them at Oxford’s Jericho Tavern. But rather than linger for a pint, they took him straight to the Pitt Rivers Museum. “Ed kindly dropped me back at the station, and he was questioning me about my work. Lovely chaps.” Post-“Creep”, Radiohead got better at pretending to be rockstars. “Thom’s very good in front of the camera, I think he learned a few tips off his mate Stipey, but it’s not his favourite pastime.” Sheehan reckons he only got the picture opposite, of Yorke doing a Marilyn on the roof of LA’s Capitol Records Building, because the band had just finished a gruelling day of US press downstairs and couldn’t be persuaded to wander any further afield. By the time they reconvened in Tokyo in 1997, where Sheehan had been tasked with obtaining press shots for the OK Computer campaign, Yorke was trying to disappear completely. “They had this idea where they wanted to be seen as part of the landscape. I thought, ‘Fuck this, no bugger is gonna run a picture unless they can see who’s in it!’ I’ve got these shots where Thom’s about 300 yards from me. ‘Mate! Closer, closer…’ He even started wearing a facemask. Suffice to say, none of those pictures got selected.” Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 Sheehan’s new photobook, Climbing Up The Walls, contains further unseen outtakes from all those encounters, as well as several other Radiohead assignments. “It’s nice to have been a small cog in the wheel,” he reflects. “They’re all genuinely really nice people, and funny as fuck. Come back from a trip with The Charlatans or Oasis and you’d need a week off. But Radiohead are relaxing to be with – always interesting, always enlightening. They work on a different level.” SAM RICHARDS Radiohead: Climbing Up The Walls is published by Welbeck on June 6 “They wanted to be seen as part of the landscape”: Radiohead fail to blend in, Tokyo, April 1997
Blond faith: Thom Yorke, Capitol Records Tower, LA, April 1993 0$<Ǵ Ǵ5
INSTANT KARMA Lou Reed: “a feminine appreciation” Rickie Lee Jones: on a “beautiful sonic voyage” 7,027+<*5((1),(/'ǫ6$1'(56*(77<,0$*(6 “He was like a sun” Rosanne Cash and Rickie Lee Jones acknowledge the all-powerful influence of Lou Reed W HEN Rosanne Cash moved to New York in the early 1990s, it was inevitable that she’d run into Lou Reed. Reed dominated New York much as Cash’s father ruled Nashville, and it wasn’t long before Cash and Reed were performing together at a songwriter showcase at The Bottom Line. The next time they met, backstage at a Bob Dylan tribute concert at Madison Square Garden, Reed asked for her number. “He was angling for a date, but I laughed and told him it wouldn’t be a good idea,” says Cash. “I was very wary because his reputation was brutal, but he was always so kind and respectful to me. We became friends, and when I was editing a book of songwriter prose, I asked him to write a piece based on one of his songs. It was beautifully written, but there were a couple of scenes that bordered on porn. My dad was going to be in the book, so I called Lou and said I couldn’t include it because it would make my dad so uncomfortable. Lou was very sweet and understanding.” Cash has now contributed a version of “Magician” to a forthcoming Lou Reed tribute album, The Power Of The Heart. It includes Keith Richards’ cover of “I’m Waiting For The Man”, as well as solo Reed songs by Angel Olsen, Joan Jett, Rufus Wainwright, The Afghan Whigs, Rickie Lee Jones, Lucinda Williams and Mary Gauthier. The collection was helmed by Bill Bentley, who first met Reed in 1988 when hired to PR the New York album. “I was in LA, and usually they divided publicity between East and West Coast,” says Bentley. “But Lou had stepped on a few toes in New York, so I did the whole thing. You had to go with the Lou rules. He wanted people to be loyal “His reputation was brutal, but he was always so kind and respectful to me” ROSANNE CASH to who he was and represent that in how you dealt with his music. We put out New York and it grew from there. It was glorious watching him flower again, as he’d been taken for granted.” When compiling The Power Of The Heart, Bentley was keen to highlight songs from Reed’s solo career. He found that female singers, including several from the Americana tradition, were particularly eager to contribute. “Lou would have loved that, as he had very strong relationships with women throughout his life,” says Bentley. “He had a feminine appreciation that turned women onto his music. Women were able to tap into his emotions because he wore them on his sleeve – he was very direct, and that also speaks to the country tradition, where there’s no hiding.” Cash decided to sing “Magician” having seen Reed perform the entire Magic And Loss album at Radio City in 1992. “That blew me away because it was a very artful, dark record,” she says. “It gave me courage to perform an album of my own in sequence, which I did with Black Cadillac. My version of ‘Magician’ really pulls out the dreamy, druggy elements. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that there are so many female Americana artists on this record. Lou really liked roots music, he was open to all of it, so the presence of all the Americana artists makes sense to me. His chord progressions and harmonies are not that complex, so the delivery can be easily adapted.” This is evidenced by Rickie Lee Jones’s new version of “Walk On The Wild Side”, which draws out the jazzy feel and beat phrasing of the original. “‘Walk On The Wild Side’ remains one of the most fascinating, wonderfully beautiful sonic voyages of vocal music,” says Jones, noting that Lou Reed’s influence on songwriters of all stripes is stronger than ever. “People have grown in the direction of Lou’s music, not just this song. He was like a sun.” PETER WATTS The Power Of The Heart: A Tribute To Lou Reed is released by Light In The Attic on April 20

INSTANT KARMA Adrian Utley and Charles Hazlewood with (below) guest vocalists Nadine Shah and Gwenno Black thoughts: Brett Anderson Death and the Suede man Brett Anderson teams up with Charles Hazlewood and Paraorchestra to breathe new life into songs about dying KIRSTEN McTERNAN; TIM TOPPLE “I HATE jolly music,” says Brett Anderson, an avid plunderer of the pale rider’s record collection. “I find happy music depressing. All the best songs are about the murkier sides of life.” He makes a natural frontman, then, for Death Songbook, an orchestral covers project focusing on the “morbidly beautiful and poignantly sombre”, instigated by renowned conductor Charles Hazlewood. Around the start of lockdown 2020, inspired by his former wife’s Festival Of Death And Dying in Somerset – an arts weekend intended to “up the debate on the last great taboo” – Hazlewood began looking for answers in the great beyond. “For such a universal theme, it’s something we’re so loath to talk about,” he says of death and all its dark tributaries. “We find it deeply uncomfortable, and yet the great irony is that, especially in music, melancholy and themes of loss and heartbreak and anxiety are the octane that fuels most of the greatest art that’s ever been created.” Imagining an album of “delicate Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 reclothings” of rock’s darkest materials, Hazlewood’s first thought for collaborators were Paraorchestra, a pioneering ensemble of up to 50 players both disabled and non-disabled, who push the boundaries of the traditional orchestra using a combination of traditional, electric and electronic instrumentation. “Bleakness is in the DNA of all the music I have ever loved” BRETT ANDERSON “We’re talking about vulnerability,” he says, “and if there’s one community in our society that deals on a daily, hourly, minute-byminute basis with vulnerability, it’s the disabled community.” Hazlewood’s next call was to neighbour and friend Anderson, “a dark melancholic just like me”. He didn’t take much persuading. “I thought it was a fantastic premise,” Anderson confirms. “Bleakness and disintegration is in the DNA of all the music I have ever loved, so when Charles suggested it to me, I was immediately sold. I loved the idea of curating a suite of songs, culling some of my favourite music from my youth and giving it a new twist.” The songs they chose to rework, says Hazlewood, “landed like freefalling angels out of the mist” – mainstays of their melancholy youths by the likes of Echo & The Bunnymen, Depeche Mode and Japan. Recording much of the album in one afternoon at the Wales Millennium Centre in Cardiff, the Paraorchestra were augmented by Portishead’s Adrian Utley, Polar Bear’s Seb Rochford and guest vocalist Nadine Shah, bringing a tensile menace and unsentimental grace to the likes of “The Killing Moon”, Skeeter Davis’s sublime “The End Of The World” and – somewhat surprisingly – Black’s “Wonderful Life”. “That was an interesting choice,” Anderson says, “because on the surface you would assume the song was simple and positive, but I’ve always found it brilliantly and bleakly ironic.” Anderson and Hazlewood worked up a new song for the record too – a chilling portrait of domestic violence called “Brutal Lover” – while Anderson reinterprets four of his own compositions, including Suede’s “The Next Life” and 2022 single “She Still Leads Me On”, written for his late mother. “Death is the ultimate fear,” he says. “The thought of it is sometimes too overwhelming to properly entertain, so I think as artists we try to find ways of making beauty from it as a way to stare it in the face.” Completed with three tracks recorded at the project’s live premiere at the Millennium Centre in October 2022 – where Gwenno provided guest vocals on a febrile, jazzy “Enjoy The Silence” – Death Songbook is intended as an entreaty to not fear the reaper. “It’s about reacquainting oneself with the fundamental truth that melancholy or darkness, these are the main pillars of great art,” says Hazlewood. “And far from that being depressing and making you feel even more desperate, it has the opposite effect.” MARK BEAUMONT Death Songbook is released by World Circuit/BMG on April 15; the album will be performed live at The Roundhouse, London (April 24) and Manchester’s Aviva Studios (April 26)
the marble index desertshore Reissues of the long out-of-print classic albums from 1968 and 1970 Featuring audio mastered from the original tapes Including previously unreleased photos by Guy Webster The Marble Index - Domino Mart Edition features a limited edition 7” of two tracks, “Roses in the Snow” & “Nibelungen”, both previously unavailable on vinyl LP / CD 29.03.24 • dominomusic.com
INSTANT KARMA Revolution rock How punk chronicler Caroline Coon captured a “fracture in the zeitgeist” Sex Pistols and friends at Les Deux Magots, Paris, September 1976 Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 ÿÈÆ×ÔÑÎÓÊÈÔÔÓ²ÈÆÒÊׯÕ×ÊØØ “A S soon as I heard about the Sex Pistols, I immediately intuited from the name of the band that this could be a significant change of language which will inform the next street uprising. I went to their second gig, at St Martins. Malcolm McLaren began talking to me, then Bernie Rhodes came running up saying, ‘I’ve got a band too…’ I sensed something big was happening, so I bought a camera and decided to follow it for myself. It was obvious that there was this real fracture in the zeitgeist. “Malcolm was taking the Sex Pistols to Paris for a concert over two days. I’m a decade older than them, I’d read Simone de Beauvoir, so I suggested meeting up at Les Deux Magots. We had the wonderful feeling of this new generation sitting in the same place where the great philosophers that I’d loved in my teenage years had sat and drank coffee. A group of fans, The Bromley Contingent, were right there from the beginning, expressing their new ethos by dressing in a completely different way to the hippies: hard, plastic, no velvet. Billy Idol’s there, Siouxsie’s there… they hadn’t been on a stage yet, but they were marking out what they wanted to do. Paris had the blousons noir and the beatniks, so this was the new generation of youth to shock the world.”
Members of The Clash, Steel Pulse and The Rich Kids protest outside the National Front HQ in Teddington, March 1978 “Rock Against Racism was a reaction to the rise of the National Front. I decided to go and interview their leader, Martin Webster, who named all the musicians he thought should be deported. So I organised for all of us to come the next day with our placards and demonstrate outside his house, the fascist headquarters. It was extraordinary to have this unicultural demonstration, black and white, in the middle of Teddington. We felt we were making a mark in history, that we weren’t going to allow this racism to persist. It’s still going on, but it was a lot worse in the ’70s, and all the people in these pictures made a concerted effort to successfully effect change. Their joyous music smuggled in such a tough message. But if you’re going to make change, it’s great to have music to dance to!” Buzzcocks in Manchester, September 1977 Poly Styrene at the Rock Against Racism concert in Victoria Park, London, April 1978 “A lot was happening that day, it was a hugely political event. Poly Styrene had appeared on-stage in a turban. When she came off-stage, she took her turban off and it was a shock, because she had shaved her head – before that, she’d had a mop of curls. She’s smiling at me, but in retrospect I think that when a youth shaves their hair like that, it’s an indication of emotional stress. Appearing in the media spotlight can put a lot of pressure on a young person, and she also was dealing with misogyny, racism. It got really tough for her, and she did have a nervous breakdown. When I rediscovered this photo a few months ago, it brought tears to my eyes. She was such an important artist because of her courage and what she was expressing about misogyny in her lyrics. But as a woman writer, I knew what happened when you confronted the establishment.” INTERVIEW BY SAM RICHARDS Caroline Coon’s Nothing To Lose: Punk 1970s is out now on Café Royal Books ÿÈÆ×ÔÑÎÓÊÈÔÔÓ²ÈÆÒÊׯÕ×ÊØØ I wanted to record how the movement was spreading out of London. A different kind of music was coming out of Manchester. People have come to think of punk as monolithic, but there are many different narratives within it. The way that Buzzcocks were expressing the new energy I thought was very interesting – the pop melodies and the satire of the song “Boredom”. They were more into irony than anything flamboyant, but that was good too.
INSTANT KARMA Moving trauma to transcendence: Alice Randall Black country, new road Nashville hitmaker Alice Randall on recovering the “erased histories” of country music KEREN TREVINO; EBRU YILDIZ A LICE Randall has some very strict rules for what makes a country song. “Life is hard, that’s the big one,” says the songwriter, who has been penning hits for more than 40 years. “God is real. The road and family are significant compensations for hardship, and the past is better than the present.” That last one requires a caveat: “Of course, for many white country fans, the past is a lost mythological Dixie. For many black country fans, the past is a lost Africa.” Randall explores the genre’s black foundations and her own experiences with the music in her new book My Black Country. It’s accompanied by a tribute album of the same title, featuring the likes of Rhiannon Giddens, Sunny War, Allison Russell, Rissi Palmer and others covering her songs. Both the book and the album argue that country music “requires significant Celtic and African strains”. This point is crucial for a black songwriter who found herself Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 brushed to the margins of Nashville, despite penning material for Johnny Cash, Glen Campbell and Reba McEntire. In 1994, she became the first black woman to write a No 1 country hit – “XXX’s And OOO’s (An American Girl)”, recorded by Trisha Yearwood. “Alice is a beautifully observational writer,” says Giddens. “She’s able to tap into things in a way that really speaks to people. She understands that country music is about reaching into the past and bringing things forward. Black people have been making country music for a long time, and Alice is connecting that to what we’re doing now.” Interpreting Randall: Rhiannon Giddens Despite her success on the country charts, Randall began to feel like her songs didn’t truly represent her perspective and didn’t fulfill her intentions – that some essential aspect of her identity had been stripped away. This feeling inspired her to write My Black Country, which extols the contributions of Lil Hardin, Charley Pride and harmonica virtuoso DeFord Bailey. “Part of the work of this book is recovering those erased histories. And what I’ve tried to do for them, these women on the album have done for me.” Giddens sings “The Ballad Of Sally Anne”, which recounts a story of true love thwarted by racial violence. The first recording was by renowned fiddler Mark O’Connor, which Randall describes as “an extraordinary version with extraordinary vocals. But it added distance to the reality of the song. It became a song about a white observer noting the drama that’s occurring. Perhaps it’s even one of the people at the lynching.” Working with producer Ebonie Smith, Giddens devised a new version that conveys the full horror of the incident. “I knew I needed to go in a different direction with my version,” says Giddens. “I took it into a minor key and changed a lot about the melody, which is what folk musicians do.” Randall was moved to tears when she first heard it: “Rhiannon centres the song in Sally “Alice is able to tap into things in a way that really speaks to people” RHIANNON GIDDENS Anne’s love for Johnny rather than in the murder or in her victimisation. That’s another thing about country music: it moves a lot of trauma to transcendence.” For Randall, My Black Country feels like the culmination of her long career in Nashville, with both the book and the album securing her own place in the history of country music. “These artists have lifted up my legacy,” she says. “They have reframed it and brought me into a Juneteenth moment: good news at long last.” STEPHEN DEUSNER My Black Country is published by Atria/Black Privilege on May 9; the accompanying tribute album is out on April 12 via Oh Boy Records A Quick One It’s time the tale were told… 40 years on from their debut album, we present the 172-page Definitive Edition of our Ultimate Music Guide to The Smiths. Every album reviewed – including all of Morrissey and Marr’s solo efforts – classic interviews rediscovered, plus an eight-page foldout timeline featuring a Smiths UK tour map! It’s in shops now, and also available as a limited edition hardback from our online store: shop. kelsey.co.uk/uncut… Available in the same places from April 1 is The Greatest 500 Albums Of The 1990s… Ranked! The best of Britpop, trip-hop, grunge, shoegaze, alt. country, electronica and more, as voted for by the Uncut team… This year’s Somerset House Summer Series in London includes a show by the Patti Smith Quartet on July 21, with Smith backed by her son Jackson on guitar, Tony Shanahan on keys and Seb Rochford on drums. The quartet will also play Brighton Dome (June 25) and Dublin’s Vicar Street (June 27, 28) as well as dates across Europe… Jimmy Page, Tony Iommi and Brian May have cut the ribbon on Gibson’s new guitar shop and venue on London’s Eastcastle St. The Gibson Garage will host weekly live gigs, showcases and signings, and is currently displaying a collection of iconic rock portraits by Gered Mankowitz…
CARGO COLLECTIVE Scan To Listen JANE WEAVER STILL CORNERS THE REDS, PINKS AND PURPLES LOVE IN CONSTANT SPECTACLE DREAM TALK UNWISHING WELL MICHEL MOERS As Is FIRE RECORDS LP / CD WRECKING LIGHT RECORDS LP / CD TOUGH LOVE LP / CD FREAKSVILLE LP / CD Jane Weaver returns with her most open-hearted, direct & intimate collection of material yet. Produced by John Parish, Love In Constant Spectacle is a heartfelt manifesto from an artist that continues to boundlessly evolve. “An artist at the top of her game” NPR Dive into the lush, seductive world of Still Corners new album Dream Talk, ten immaculately crafted and subtle songs, with crystal tone guitar, elegant vocals, and a wash of congas and synthesizers. Spanning 10 gem-like tunes, Unwishing Well is another exhibition of Reds, Pinks & Purples flawless mastery of intimate - yet expansive - downcast pop. Legendary Telex artist 2nd solo album in 33 years. Reminiscent of diary entries and influenced by Erik Satie. A testament to Moers’ enduring creativity and relevance in the contemporary music scene. THE BABY SEALS VARIOUS ARTISTS REAL FARMER HOUSE OF ALL CHAOS UNDER THE BRIDGE 2 COMPARE WHAT’S THERE CONTINUUM TRAPPED ANIMAL LP / CD SKEP WAX RECORDS LP / CD STRAP ORIGINALS LP TINY GLOBAL PRODUCTIONS LP / CD An exploration of heavy guitars and beautiful harmonies. Featuring such hits as ‘Vibrator’. ‘My Labia is Lopsided, But I Don’t Mind’ and ‘Mild Misogynist’, Chaos is here to level the field. A second compilation of new music by songwriters and bands who once recorded for Sarah Records. Still idealistic, still pure, still in love with independent pop music. Active members of the vibrant local music scene of Groningen with their wonderfully infectious punk noise, concocting fast-paced, driving songs with wiry riffs, propelling drums, and winding melodies. HOUSE OF ALL’s surprise debut took the underground by storm. Now Bramah, Greenway, Hanley, Hanley & Wolstencroft back with a follow-up that expands their scope, vision and energy. PLAYHOUSE DRIFT THEE SINSEERS DYNAMO 11 POINTS IN TIME SINSEERLY YOURS JAMES ELKINGTON AND NATHAN SALSBURG GOD UNKNOWN RECORDS LP GOD UNKNOWN RECORDS LP COLEMINE RECORDS LP / CD ALL GIST Liverpool’s long lost 90’s Indie Rock noisemakers. Compiling 3 singles and unreleased tracks. “If these guys were American they’d have a massive following” Stevie Chick. Includes a cover of Sebadoh’s “It’s So Hard To Fall In Love” Index For Working Musik’s Nathalia Bruno delivers her 2nd album recalling this likes of Chris & Cosey / early Cabaret Voltaire. Lyrically it is a noirish unpacking of a decades-old disappearance of Rosa Crucci. Sinseerly, Soulfully, Sweet. Quinones and his crew have created a distinctive vibe that explores all aspects of a timeless genre, bringing together their interpretation of music through an unmistakable modern lens. PARADISE OF BACHELORS LP / CD Guitar instrumentals pushing their sinuous compositions into labyrinthine new shapes, interlocking & interlocutory. Among the dazzling originals are fascinating covers, including Neneh Cherry’s “Buffalo Stance.” ROSALI REYNA TROPICAL CHASTITY BELT SHOVEL DANCE COLLECTIVE BITE DOWN MALEGRÍA LIVE LAUGH LOVE MERGE RECORDS LP / CD PSYCHIC HOTLINE LP / CD SUICIDE SQUEEZE LP / CD THE WATER IS THE SHOVEL OF THE SHORE “A tender yet commanding set of folk, country, and atmospheric rock done up in blaze orange and shadow blue.” – UNCUT Malegría, is for diasporic belonging, queer love, feminine sensuality, & a relationship with the land. Vibrant beats mix with bandleader Fabi Reyna’s guitar riffs to create songs that call you into action, into your own power, & into moving your body to the beat. Live Laugh Love finds Chastity Belt in their prime as musicians. It’s never been more apparent that they are creative siblings, cut from the same belt. CARGO COLLECTIVE: AN AMALGAMATION OF RECORD SHOPS AND LABELS DEDICATED TO MEMORIALS OF DISTINCTION / DOUBLE DARE 2LP Revolutionary takes on traditional folk, spliced with music concrète and field recordings taken along the Thames. This highly acclaimed (Pitchfork, Quietus, Wire, Songlines, Tradfolk, etc.) album is like no other. 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INSTANT KARMA Uncut Playlist On the stereo this month... MDOU MOCTAR Funeral For Justice MATADOR Tuareg guitar-slinger makes good on those Hendrix comparisons with DƮHU\H[FRULDWLRQRIWKH YDULRXVIRUFHVRSSUHVVLQJKLVSHRSOH ,QYLJRUDWLQJDQGLQVSLULQJ NICK CAVE & THE BAD SEEDS “Wild God” BAD SEED “It was rape and pillage/In the retirement village…” He’s back alright, with another raucous parable suggesting that our FKRVHQGHLWLHVPD\QRWKDYHRXUEHVW LQWHUHVWVDWKHDUW WE’RE NEW HERE OREN AMBARCHI/JOHAN BERTHLING/ANDREAS WERLIIN Ghosted II DRAG CITY Mint Mile The Silkworm has turned! Indie-rock lifer ploughs a fruitful new furrow Roughrider, then, feels like the long-awaited culmination of something. Songs like “Brigadier” and “I Hope It’s Different” – the latter a raw country-blues sung beautifully by Nina Nastasia – deal with change, mortality and the ageing process. The album also finds Mint IM Midyett is one of the most undersung Mile expanding their palette, adding lap steel, voices in American indie rock. Formerly strings, trumpet and sax. “Silkworm was a the frontman of Silkworm, now at the helm of Chicago’s Mint Mile, Midyett has presided Creedence, Minutemen, Husker Dü-type group, where you’ve got your band and that’s it,” says over four decades of music while never quite Midyett. With Mint Mile, though, bringing in breaking out of the category of cult concern. orchestration felt right. “There’s the danger you’re What’s important, though, is that Mint Mile’s new overly decorating it. But Susan [Voelz, violin] and album Roughrider is up there with his best: an Alison [Chesley, cello] are pros. They understand emotionally resonant rock record that sets his rock music. When they play, it just works.” rich, ruminative baritone front and centre. “It Midyett has no shortage of admirers from comes out of the same working method that any his years in the indie-rock trenches. The 2013 of my bands have ever had, which is do what documentary Couldn’t You Wait? The Story Of comes naturally and don’t overthink,” says Silkworm featured Stephen Malkmus, Jeff Tweedy Midyett. “We hardly ever talk about anything and long-time friend and sometime engineer conceptual – it’s all feel.” Steve Albini testifying to their love of the band. After releasing 11 albums through underground More recently, John Darnielle has invited Mint institutions like Matador and Touch And Go, Mile to play with The Mountain Goats, while Silkworm splintered in 2005 following the death an old friend, Greg Anderson, asked Midyett to of drummer Michael Dalhquist, killed when his contribute bass to Sunn O)))’s 2019 album Life stationary car was struck by a suicidal driver. “It Metal, later enlisting him in their touring band. was this dual tragedy,” says Midyett. “Obviously “I keep hoping that I’ll get the call to pack my the worst thing was losing Michael as a human in robe and my Travis Bean bass and get to play in our lives, but also the band died. There was no that environment again,” he says. “It’s a very way to replace him as a drummer.” Midyett and immersive experience.” fellow Silkworm founder Andy Cohen Will Roughrider be the record formed a new group, Bottomless Pit. I’M YOUR FAN that introduces Midyett’s music to a “We made a bunch of records. But wider audience? Recognition is long it was born out of that tragedy of overdue. But if it doesn’t come, he’s Michael dying. Anything focused on hardly bothered. “My prescription something particular like that, it’s for doing this has always been I’m probably gonna run its course.” gonna do what makes sense to me. Mint Mile came into being a decade I don’t think about who’s listening at ago, when Midyett reached out to Jeff all. All the people I admire, from Neil Panall, who, as the drummer for Jason “Musically, Young to Kim Deal to Nina Nastasia Molina’s band Songs: Ohia, had his sonically, tonally, – they just do their stuff. It seems to own experience with personal Mint Mile is the always work out great creatively if tragedy. They honed their sound over complete picture – as distinct a you do that.” LOUIS PATTISON a series of EPs, but debut album band as you’ll find Ambertron had no option but to be a anywhere” John slow burner, released as it was in the Mint Mile’s Roughrider is out now Darnielle, The pandemic month of March 2020. on Comedy Minus One Mountain Goats T Ò×ÐÎÓÌÉÆÛÎÉÆØÒÎÙͲÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ Just doing their stuff: Mint Mile with Tim Midyett (right) Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 7KHVHTXHOWRoVLQVSLUHG6\GQH\ 6WRFNKROPV\PSRVLXPPLJKWEHHYHQ EHWWHUZLWK%HUWKOLQJoVIXQN\XSULJKW basslines anchoring the shimmering, /HVOLHVSHDNHUHGEOLVV FOUR TET Three TEXT Sometime superstar DJ makes a welcome return to the GHZ\IRONWURQLFSDVWXUHVRI Pause and Rounds, with bonus &RFWHDXVDPELHQFH BONNIE “PRINCE” BILLY, NATHAN SALSBURG & TYLER TROTTER Hear The Children Sing The Evidence NO QUARTER 5RFNDE\H%LOO\7ZRH[WHQGHG/XQJƮVK FRYHUVRULJLQDWLQJDVOXOODELHVIRU 6DOVEXUJoVEDE\GDXJKWHU JORGA MESFIN The Kindest One MUZIKAWI +HDG\DQGP\VWHULRXVQH[WJHQ(WKLR MD]]IURPDVD[SOD\LQJSURWÆJÆRIWKH JUHDW0XODWX$VWDWNH MULTIPLES Two Hours Or Something STOOR *UL]]OHGWHFKQRYHWV6SHHG\-DQG 6XUJHRQORFNKRUQVLQp5DWWHUGDPq$PLG WKHKLJKVSHFHOHFWURQLFZDUIDUHVRPH VXUSULVLQJO\WHQGHUPRPHQWV ADULT JAZZ So Sorry So Slow SPARE THOUGHT $PHUHHLJKW\HDUVLQWKHPDNLQJWKH art-pop quartet’s third album asks more TXHVWLRQVWKDQLWDQVZHUV6XFKDVZKDW LI$UWKXU5XVVHOOKDGOLYHGWRMRLQIRUFHV ZLWK'LUW\3URMHFWRUVDQG%MÓUN" EZRA FEINBERG Soft Power TONAL UNION *RUJHRXVO\XQREWUXVLYH FRVPLFVRXƲHIURPWKHIRUPHU &LWD\PDQ0DU\/DWWLPRUH 'DYLG0RRUHDQG-HIUH&DQWX /HGHVPDRƬHUGLVFUHHWDVVLVWDQFH ERIC CHENAUX TRIO Delights Of My Life &2167(//$7,21Ǭ MURAILLES MUSIC 'UHDP\MD]]EDOODGVVSURXWLQJVWUDQJH ƮEURXVJURZWKV)RUDQ\RQHZKRoVHYHU GUHDPWRID&KHW%DNHU1HOV&OLQH0RXVH 2Q0DUVVXSHUJURXS

INSTANT KARMA THIS MONTH’S FREE CD Total Blam-blam! 15 tracks of the month’s best music Michael Head 1 MINT MILE Sunbreaking 2 JESSICA PRATT World On A String Silkworm’s Tim Midyett returns with the second Mint Mile album, Roughrider, mixing up the sounds of his old band with the ragged swing of Pavement and Crazy Horse, plus some gorgeous chamber accompaniment. Read more from Tim on page 14. Here In The Pitch, the longawaited follow-up to 2019’s Quiet Signs, is our Album Of The Month on page 24. Here’s a highlight of this seductive, velveteen folk record, with Pratt’s strummed nylon-string acoustic and echoing voice gradually joined by a haze of Mellotron synths, keys and sparse drums. Truly magical. 8 ARAB STRAP You’re Not There 9 BIG|BRAVE Canon In Canon 10 ARTHUR MELO Saídas Aidan Moffat and Malcolm Middleton return, reassuringly, as bitter and scathing as ever on their new album I’m Totally Fine With It Don’t Give A Fuck Anymore . Building on 2021’s As Days Get Dark, it’s a brilliant amalgam of dark electronica, raging postrock and wickedly funny spoken word. Check out the full review on page 36. It’s hard to believe this Quebec trio started as a folk group, such is the ferocious noise they create now. On their seventh album, A Chaos Of Flowers, their sound is closest to latterday Low, crushing distortion mingling with minimalist, hushed melodies. They talk about the new record on page 31. Though still in his twenties, this singer, guitarist and songwriter from the Brazilian city of Belo Horizonte looks back to his country’s pop music of the ’70s. This track, a highlight of his latest album Mirantes Emocionais, pays tribute to his hero Caetano Veloso with a swooning ballad that wouldn’t have been out of place on 1972’s Transa. Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 JOHN JOHNSON; KAT GOLLOCK; GETTY IMAGES Arab Strap
3 MICHAEL HEAD & THE RED ELASTIC BAND Ambrosia Another masterclass in songwriting from Michael Head, and a highlight of his new LP Loophole, produced by Bill Ryder-Jones. Following 2017’s Adiós Señor Pussycat and 2022’s Dear Scott, he’s on a roll, and has even found time to pen a memoir, Ciao Ciao Bambino. Read our lead review of Loophole on page 28. 11 IRON & WINE All In Good Time (feat Fiona Apple) Sam Beam is back, and this time he’s brought Fiona Apple along to help. This cut comes from his new album Light Verse, the latest in his impressive catalogue. Beam talks Uncut through his records in our Album By Album feature on page 66. Big|Brave 4 KHRUANGBIN Pon Pón 5 GOSPELBEACH Nothin’ But A Fool Laura Lee, Mark Speer and DJ Johnson have distilled their potent sound down to its essence on their new album A La Sala. It’s a retro-tinged exploration of the globe’s most funkily psychedelic sounds, with the result going down as smoothly as a sunset cocktail. Brent Rademaker is well known for his work with the brilliant Beachwood Sparks, but for the last decade he’s led this artful Californian troupe. New LP Wiggle Your Fingers is touted as the band’s final album, so best get onto their classic Paisley Underground sounds before it’s too late. 12 JAMES ELKINGTON & NATHAN SALSBURG Death Wishes To Kill The two guitarists are often found working together, but their new album All Gist marks their first duo record since 2015’s Ambsace. It’s an entrancing, varied record, their interlocking picking occasionally joined by additional textures, such as the strings and percussion that surface here. 6 SCOTT H BIRAM Death Don’t Have No Mercy 7 PYE CORNER AUDIO Counting The Hours ‘The Dirty Old One Man Band’ from Texas has been making roots records a little under the radar for a while now – but with The One & Only Scott H Biram he deserves to be far better known. Here he is weaving a bluesy spell with just an old classical guitar. Martin Jenkins releases a host of records on different labels, and his albums on Ghost Box always seem to be his strangest and most conceptual: The Endless Echo, then, examines the nature of time in ominous, claustrophobic style, drum machines, drone clusters and synth arpeggios painting a widescreen, dystopian picture. 13 POKEY LAFARGE Sister André 14 AMEN DUNES Boys The artist born Andrew Heissler has been spreading his old-time good news for almost 20 years now, and this fine track from his new LP Rhumba Country is another example of his way with updating the sounds of yesteryear: ragtime, gospel, blues, country and rock’n’roll. Now resident in Woodstock, New York, Damon McMahon has expanded his outsider folk sound with harsh electronics and some avant-rock grit on Death Jokes. Check out the end of “Boys” and you’ll hear manipulated samples taken from all manner of sources, a consistent feature of the album. 15 CAMERA OBSCURA We’re Going To Make It In A Man’s World It’s been over a decade since Tracyanne Campbell and co last released an album, but Look To The East, Look To The West is a fitting return. The Glaswegians don’t mess with the formula too much, and the result is an autumnal, bittersweet blast of melody, with heartbreak and disappointment not far behind. 0$<Ǵ Ǵ17 BIG|BRAVE Khruangbin
INSTANT KARMA MICHAEL STEFF “Guitars are like sculptures to me” Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024
P ROPPED up against a wall of his living room in Didsbury, where most people would have a yucca plant or a prized ornament, Vini Reilly has a Fender Custom Shop Stratocaster in birdseye maple, bought for him at some point in the 1980s by Tony Wilson. “Guitars are kind of like sculptures to me,” he says, poignantly. “I don’t try to play it any more because it just does my head in.” Reilly has recovered most of his coordination since suffering a series of strokes in 2010, a fact he demonstrates by giving Uncut an impromptu performance on his cuatro, a four-string guitar made by a luthier in Lewes. “But the biggest problem is that there are no tunes happening in my head. There’s nothing of substance coming through. What used to happen is I’d just start playing without really thinking about it. It’s like you become very suggestible – there’s no cerebral activity going on, you’re just feeling. I never knew what key it would be in or how long it would last, it just… occurred. And now it doesn’t.” But if that sounds sad, he is quick to put things in perspective. “I had very serious memory damage, which was the biggest cause of what became a mental illness. I was delusional, and then I became hallucinatory and they had to section me. It was pretty horrible, but I’m very stable now.” Reilly looks frail but still cool, in hiking trainers with the laces undone, brightly coloured plaid shirt and that familiar mop of hair. He says knowing that people still care about his music, to the point where they’ve submitted questions for this feature, is a source of great comfort and pride. “I owe it to them, definitely, so thank you. It’s great, it’s magic.” The Durutti Column’s reclusive guitar genius on Tony Wilson, Morrissey and kickabouts with Pat Nevin Interview by SAM RICHARDS Your playing has been described as gossamer-like, dreamy, ethereal and kaleidoscopic. How did growing up in Manchester influence your sound? Josh M Slifkin, Pittsburgh, USA Well I think everything influences you, if you’re a musician. But for a start, you don’t call yourself a musician – that’s for other people to decide, because art only exists when someone else is looking at or listening to it. It’s a two-way process. So Josh, by his listening, he can define it and call it music; I can’t. But you can be influenced by a mood. You can be influenced by someone you’ve just had a row with. Everything is an input. Reilly in Brussels, January 1982; (top) sandpapercovered debut LP The Return Of The Durutti Column and its Australiaonly single Where did your love of classical music come from? Chris Thompson, Carlisle I had years of classical piano training with a professional musician from the Royal Northern College Of Music, she got me through all the grades. But I got kicked off my O-level music class because an idiot teacher gave me a very low mark for a piece of four-part harmony. I asked why and he said, “Consecutive fourths and fifths, Reilly!” So I went to Manchester Central Library with a book of manuscript paper and I copied five or six examples of composers using consecutive fourths and fifths: Berlioz, Tchaikovsky even. He was really angry and kicked me out. Apparently I was a disturbing influence on the class, which was hilarious. Did it irritate you that, while the first LP [with the sandpaper sleeve] was a brilliant piece of disruptive situationist intervention, it made listening to it a physical problem? Marc Beattie, via email No, I thought it was absolutely great! I love anarchy – as opposed to oligarchy, or monarchy, hierarchy, whatever. What is your abiding memory of Tony Wilson? Martha Pugh, Canterbury He had a genius of recognising when to let someone do their thing. We became very good mates – I used to babysit and change his son’s nappy! He had a well-devised smokescreen where he’d breeze through everything, but he was actually very sensitive. He was juggling so many plates as well as holding down his day job, and the pressure on him was incredible. We would wind each other up and it could get very niggly, to the point where people in the office became very uneasy – which was funny, because neither of us would harm a fly. It would erupt into this real shouting match. At one point, Tony had this very expensive chair, which he kicked over. But he was getting rid of 0$<Ǵ Ǵ19 ÉÆÛÎÉÈÔ×ÎÔ²×ÊÉËÊ×ÓØ AN AUDIENCE WITH... INSTANT KARMA
nowhere and they’d be perfect, it was such a buzz. We had a fantastic time [making that album], we were laughing all the time. Morrissey’s an incredibly funny, brilliant bloke. He’s very misunderstood by lots of people. One day he pulled up at my house with a little 1960s saloon car full of eco-friendly cleaning products. He took me for a drive – he was a terrible driver, worse than me – and when he spotted a pony on its own in a field, he had to get out of the car and call it over to pet it. But that’s what he was like, so oversensitive in a way, but just lovely. Can you tell us about the time you and Pat Nevin were invited to Morrissey’s house, circa 1988, where Morrissey produced a grand piano which he had bought for you to play? Killian Laher, via email [Laughs] He didn’t buy it for me! It was a full-sized grand, which was mad as he never played it – he just liked the fact that he had a piano. Another room was a very state-of-the-art gymnasium for one person, but Morrissey denied that he worked out, which Pat thought was hilarious, because you could see his body [on the records]. Pat always had this little ball of compacted straw in the boot of his car, and a couple of times we had a kickabout in Fog Lane Park. He told me I could have been a footballer because I had the skills, I was nimble like him. “He’s amazing”: Bruce Mitchell (centre) and Vini Reilly (right) on The Tube with The Durutti Column, 1985 the stress, and so was I. Every time, we’d end up laughing our heads off. He was like my older brother. ÎÙÛ²ØÍÚÙÙÊרÙÔÈÐÏÔÓØÚÕÊײ×ÊÉËÊ×ÓØÊÉÉÎÊØÆÓÉÊרÔÓ²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ Where did you get the inspiration for “Sketch For Summer?” Steve MacKenzie, via email I had a depressive illness, which I’m still medicated for. It made me do the most stupid things because it was impossible to deal with. You don’t feel anything, it’s like you’re not even alive or something. My girlfriend had to physically get me out of bed, even though I knew I was [meant to be] in the studio. I got into Martin [Hannett]’s car and he drove me to the studio in Rochdale. He started unpacking all these boxes of amazing equipment while I was getting more and more introverted, just messing around on my guitar. Then at one point, Martin turned his head and said, “Play that again, Vini.” He had a little click-track thing going, so I played to that, just off the cuff. Then at some point I had a massive row with Martin and stormed out, because that’s what I was like. But what Martin had done [with the music] was incredible. “Sketch For Summer” I’d say is attributable to Martin, because I’d never heard a guitar sound like that. How important was teaming up with Bruce Mitchell, both for The Durutti Column and for you personally? AJ, via email Bruce always just got it. The first rehearsal we had – the first time we played together – was at a gig. We did stuff I hadn’t played before, and he certainly hadn’t heard. But people liked it, and I think the next day we were in Finland at a massive festival. But that’s what Bruce is like, he’s amazing. The reissues, I don’t do any of that stuff, Bruce does it. He’s magic. Your guitar-playing on the live version of John Cooper Clarke’s “Beasley Street” works perfectly. Might you have done more together? Kate Furnish, Worcester We almost did. He drafted me in to do an Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 album with Martin [Hannett]. I think Pete Shelley arrived at one point. He was lovely, Pete Shelley – we used to go and have these special little cakes at this patisserie in Manchester. It was an interesting group of people, apart from the drummer Karl Burns, who I disliked intensely because he was crude. John was in a very fragile state because he was trying to get off heroin. So that kind of got in the way, and we never finished it. But we were always close. I love the guy, he never changes. In your collaboration with Morrissey for Viva Hate, which song do you feel was your strongest contribution? Andrea Peviani, Lodi, Italy I like “Late Night, Maudlin Street”. Morrissey constructed the songs based on some basic chord patterns laid down by Steve Street, which meant there was loads of room for me to put stuff in. Morrissey had done a guide vocal with these lyrics that had a very sad atmosphere, so I came up with this riff that just worked. Then Morrissey would come in and rephrase his lyrics, and put the chorus where the verse was. He was incredibly original. Sometimes these things would come out of Tony Wilson: “very sensitive” “My Country”, the closing track on the Vini Reilly album, is a song about poverty, discrimination and an absent state. Thirty-five years on, do you consider that England has changed at all? Emi Herrera, via email It’s got a lot worse – far, far worse. Do songs like that have the power to change things? I think if people can connect with a sentiment or agree with what I was… I won’t use the word singing because I couldn’t sing! But [if they can connect with] those words, then that’s nice, because I think I was right. Although we also need opposing opinions. You need to hear ideas that are different to yours, otherwise how can you form your own opinion? Gym bunny: Morrissey in LA, 1992 “Morrissey’s an incredibly funny, brilliant bloke. He’s very misunderstood by lots of people” If there is one other singer you’d like to work with, who would you pick? Matthieu Clervoy, via email It would be a woman who’s no longer with us, a singer called Reshma from a small village in India. I bought loads of her stuff on cassette from a shop on the curry mile in Rusholme, which used to sell Bollywood soundtracks. She sings ghazals and her voice is like nothing else I’ve ever heard. Her music’s addictive, transcendental, so affecting and so powerful. I can’t live without it. The Durutti Column’s Vini Reilly will be reissued as a five-disc box set by London Records on April 19
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“Time is time and time and time again” MAY 2024 TAKE 325 1 MICHAEL HEAD (P28) 2 VAMPIRE WEEKEND (P33) 3 ARAB STRAP (P36) 4 PEARL JAM (P40) THE UNCUT GUIDE TO THIS MONTH’S KEY RELEASES JESSICA PRATT Here In The Pitch CITY SLANG SAMUEL HESS A cursed City of Angels inspires a soft-sung stylist to new creative heights. By Laura Barton 24 • • MAY 2024 Since her self-titled 2012 debut, Pratt N 1979, Joan Didion published ALBUM has established herself as a near-mystical The White Album, a selection OF THE figure. Her records are intimate and of essays that captured MONTH bewitching, but there is something halfCalifornia on the brink of the 1970s, its counterculture dream 9/10 glimpsed about her music, as if she and her songs are absorbed in their own intricate beginning to curdle. “A demented reverie. This is not a bad thing. Indeed it is a and seductive vortical tension was quality that only encourages audiences to lean building in the community,” as she described it. in closer. Live shows inspire a kind of pin-drop “The jitters were setting in. I recall a time when reverence; as if one false move in the crowd might the dogs barked every night and the moon was startle the singer from the clearing. always full.” Pratt’s first two albums were recorded in rudimentary There is something of Didion’s description in fashion – her debut featured analogue recordings set Jessica Pratt’s fourth album, Here In The Pitch. down in 2007, although they could reasonably have The singer draws on the seedy history of her Los belonged to some earlier age. Tim Presley, who began a Angeles home, that peculiarly West Coast sense record label specifically to release the record, described of an American utopia on the turn, to create her it as “Stevie Nicks singing over David Crosby demos, finest set of songs to date. Tales of sins and crimes with the intimacy of a Sibylle Baier.” and “evil innocence” lie beneath a musical palette Its successor, 2015’s On Your of bossanova and orchestral Own Love Again, was no less ’60s pop. Melancholy moves primitive: a lo-fi, four-tracked below lustre. Sweetness and finger-picked affair made buries the gloom. Even the in her own apartment. Only in album’s title suggests some 2019, for her ‘breakthrough’ latent malevolence. The record, Quiet Signs, did Pratt “pitch” in question refers relocate to a formal studio both to absolute darkness and setting and work with a to bitumen; that oily black producer; her ambition to make substance that forms, oozing something more cohesive and and ominous, somewhere deliberate. Bigger, in a warm beneath the earth, and kind of fashion. bubbles to the surface in For Here In The Pitch, Pratt places like LA’s La Brea headed back to the same Tar Pits.
California dreamer: Jessica Pratt MAY 2024 • • 25
NEW ALBUMS Hate”, for instance, the music pitterpatters and sha-la-las, curlicued and 1 Life Is sweet, but squint and you might see the 2 Better Hate honeyed vengeance of its lines: “Just a 3 World On sad case, I’m nobody’s fool”, she sings, A String 4 Get Your as if asking the way to San Jose. “And Head Out you’ve won it all, but your smile’ll be 5 By Hook Or gone/When you’re yesterday’s news”. By Crook Across these nine songs, the lyrics 6 Nowhere It Was cast a world in which the light is low 7 Empires and the sun is dipping, autumn lies Never Know just round the corner. Its characters 8 Glances are trapped and untrusting. There 9 The Last Year are beggars and thieves, curfews Produced by: and curses, lives “sunk in the middle” Jessica Pratt and “dreams of highways out”. Pratt’s and Al Carlson Recorded at: songwriting may draw on dreamy Gary’s Electric ambiguity, but the themes on Here Studio, Brooklyn, In The Pitch feel familiar; a kind of NY, additional modernist Springsteen, pressed up recording in Los Angeles, CA against the Pacific. Personnel: This is a short album that was a long Jessica Pratt time coming, as all of Pratt’s records (vocals, guitar, have been. But with each release the drums), Al Carlson (bass, sense is never of a musician struggling Mellotron, for ideas, rather of an artist who is a trumpet, strings, master of distillation. “I was just trying glockenspiel), to get the right feeling,” she has said of Matt McDermott (Mellotron, this record’s slow journey to release. acoustic It’s a testament to her talent that in the runs lower and more weary – on guitar, horns), pursuit of that feeling, Pratt questioned “Empires Never Know” almost touching Peter Mudge so much of what had worked for her late Marianne Faithfull. This shift was (Mellotron, acoustic guitar), in the past, reconfiguring her sound, a deliberate move; Pratt seeking a more Ryley Walker her band, her own much-loved voice. physical mode of singing for this record. (guitar), Alex By Here In The Pitch’s close, she seems The result is a greater sense of range Goldberg even to be having fresh thoughts about and a deeper kind of darkness. (drums), Mauro Refosco what led her here in the first place. Pet Sounds wasn’t the only inspiration (percussion) The album’s sole instrumental, for Here In The Pitch. Opening track “Glances”, arrives as a soft-lapping “Life Is” strides in like a Phil Spector fingerpicked motif, surges with brass, number, or The Walker Brothers’ then retreats. This wordless interlude cleanses “The Sun Ain’t Gonna Shine Anymore”. There the palate before album closer “The Last Year”, a are horns and strings and Mellotron, a guest track that proves unexpectedly hopeful, in a dark guitar turn from Ryley Walker, as Pratt sings of kind of way. “I think it’s gonna be fine, I think we’re insecurity and half-cornered frustration, chasing gonna be together”, Pratt sings buoyantly. “And the circularity of her own thoughts as she notes the storyline goes forever”. how, “Time is time and time With these two tracks, that and time again”. ‘demented and seductive Oftentimes these vortical tension’ tracks work this way, gives way. The jitters performing a kind of abate and the dogs songwriting sleight lie quiet, and even of hand: the music the moon begins to moving brightly one wane. We are out of way, while the lyrics the pitch, they seem draw in the opposite to say, let us move direction – small, tight, toward the light. imagistic. On “Better SLEEVE NOTES Pratt: dreaming of “big panoramic sounds” setting – Gary’s Electric Studios in Brooklyn, calling once again on multi-instrumentalist and engineer Al Carlson, and keyboardist Matt McDermott. This time, she also added Spencer Zahn on bass and percussionist Mauro Refosco (David Byrne, Atoms For Peace). Rather than overwhelm Pratt’s distinctive sound, these layers of instrumentation – flute and saxophone, glockenspiel and timpani, alongside her laminated vocals – work to swell the songs seemingly from the inside out. The effect is a cresting, rolling record of complexity and depth. Pratt has spoken of how when she conceived of these songs she dreamed of “big panoramic sounds that make you think of the ocean and California’’. Her touchstone, naturally, was Pet Sounds, but she sought that album’s moments of quiet as much as its baroque shimmer; the points at which you can hear the studio’s stillness; the feeling that “you could reach out and touch the texture of the sound in the air”. The texture of sound is an intriguing thought in relation to Pratt. Her voice has always held its own extraordinary composition: sour, grained, sweet and reedy; as if in strange correspondence with the air around it. On early recordings, it bent towards Karen Dalton or Joanna Newsom, something high and lonesome. Here, her vocal RECOMMENDED QUIET EVOLUTIONS SAMUEL HESS The songwriter’s mighty, sparse discography so far Jessica Pratt On Your Own Love Again Quiet Signs BIRTH, 2012 DRAG CITY, 2015 MEXICAN SUMMER/ CITY SLANG, 2019 Pratt seemed to emerge out of the ether with this record, a collection of analogue recordings made several years earlier and grounded in a ’60s folk lineage. A little worldweary, a little wondrous, her songs RƬHUHGDVHULHVRILPDJHVsRIURDGVDQGELJ rivers and lost loves. 8/10 26 • • MAY 2024 Made at home in Pratt’s apartment, her second outing was slightly more artful than its predecessor. Tape-hissed SV\FKHGHOLDDQGJDX]\ƮQJHUSLFNLQJKHOSHG WRFDSWXUHWKHLVRODWLRQRIDQHZOLIHLQDELJFLW\ IROORZLQJERWKWKHHQGRIDUHODWLRQVKLSDQGWKH loss of her mother. 8/10 5HFRUGLQJLQDVWXGLRIRUWKHƮUVW WLPHZDVGDXQWLQJIRU3UDWWEXW it helped to grow her sound and WKHFRQƮGHQFHRIKHUPXVLF-XVWDVUDGLDQW and intuitive as her previous records, its new assuredness and her increasing skill as a live SHUIRUPHUDOVRH[SDQGHGKHUIDQEDVH 8/10
NEW ALBUMS Q&A Jessica Pratt: “There is a tinge of darkness” Where did the idea of ‘pitch’ come from? With the title, I wasn’t really drawing on the conceptual side of the record, I was trying to be intuitive about it. But it actually came from a poem I wrote that was related to some of the lyrical content on the record. I like when titles feel somewhat vague and ominous. And for me it struck that kind of territory – the idea of elemental shifting and this very ancient substance that comes from the earth. How did the augmented band change the sound of these songs? It was the same crew as the previous record when it came to co-producing and engineering the record – Al Carlson, and Matt McDermott, who is my husband, but also my collaborator. But we were fortunate enough to be put in touch with some very skilled musicians – the rhythm section, Mauro Refosco, a Brazilian percussionist, and the bassist Spencer Zahn. It really helped solidify things, and then Al and Matt and I were really careful in how we approached even the smallest sounds on the record. Even the way that the percussion was directed and treated, we were just trying to hone a very specific atmospheric sound. We wanted to retain the intimacy of the previous record, and I guess my whole body In search of an “ancient substance”: Jessica Pratt “Brian Wilson’s production style is always a North Star for me” of work, we didn’t want it to be a really jarring jump to a whole other sonic territory that felt unnatural. We were just trying to incorporate new sounds in a way that felt commensurate with the sort of sound that I’ve been working toward over the last 10 years. “Life Is” immediately strikes a different tone. It was an interesting one. Usually when I write something that sticks I know for a fact that it’ll stick. But this one, the mood of the song felt a little malleable – like, the style that the song would be performed in. It took a second to gel. And actually it was a bit of a thorn in our side, but I kept coming back and reworking it, and eventually in the studio we were able to spend some time and concentrate it. audience silence. But I think when I’m playing live I’m less aware of what’s going on around me. What was it that led you back to Pet Sounds as an inspiration? Pet Sounds, and Brian Wilson’s production style, I guess that’s always a North Star for me. It’s a cliché about using the studio as an instrument, but that’s truly what he did. So to even take the smallest crumb of inspiration from that and have it reflected in the work was the goal. When I was young I thought it was so exciting just to hear the sound of the studio, like the room was alive. So we tried to tap into some of that. It’s like the space around the sounds that you’re hearing. Even just listening to the sound of silence in a room can be beautiful. Los Angeles seems to be all over the record – what’s your relationship like with the city? Well, it’s a strange time in general and I think that is influencing everywhere around us, regardless of where you are. But I feel like Los Angeles is home – I just hit the 10year mark, and I feel like a decade in a place is pretty significant. I’ve become very interested in the history of this city and I feel more connected to it through that. I think a lot of people move here and leave within a couple of years. It isn’t a city that necessarily envelops you when you arrive. It doesn’t push you out either, but it’s just sort of indifferent to your suffering, maybe. I guess there’s kind of a desolate feeling if you aren’t connected to the right people or don’t have anything established. And I guess I’ve been here long enough that that has changed a lot. But it’s a place where there is a tinge of darkness. I don’t know whether you can have any kind of culturally significant city that doesn’t have that shadow layer. INTERVIEW: LAURA BARTON Does the quiet of your live audiences find its way back into your music? I feel like I think of the two as pretty separate, but the kind of music I play is dependent on having open space for it to breathe, and so yes, I think there’s a correlation between the studio silence and the hushed MAY 2024 • • 27 -25',9,'$/Ǭ5(')(516 It’s been five years since your last record, and it took you three years to make the new one. What does this longer stretch of time give you? I think honestly it just comes down to the fact I need to stew in things for a while. It’s not necessarily a matter of putting the work in, because we were working pretty steadily in that time. You may write three to five songs in a given timeframe but they might not necessarily have the correct feeling. I wasn’t obsessed with trying to make something cohesive, it’s more that when you know, you know. It’s either right or it’s not. And I think that that process of honing in on things tends to elongate the process.
NEW ALBUMS MICHAEL HEAD & THE RED ELASTIC BAND Loophole MODERN SKY 9/10 Fine dream-state return, with added ghosts. By Pete Paphides JOHN JOHNSON R ACK up a few turntable miles with the new album by Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band and it’s tempting to suppose that you’re privy to a period of unprecedented calm in the life of its creator. The truth is slightly more complicated. Calmness is one of Head’s defining characteristics, but the extremes to which he’s gone in order to protect the fertile dreamscape of his creativity have long since become the stuff of myth, in particular, his 1998 album The Magical World Of The Strands. His method-style attempt to see the world as Coleridge, Coltrane and The Velvet Underground saw it yielded a masterpiece, but within a few years, the compulsion to score saw him busking in Liverpool City Centre, playing “Scarborough Fair” to quizzical shoppers. For his loved ones, it must have been a nightmare. Perhaps that’s how it felt for Head too, but curiously – with the possible exception of “Streets Of Kenny” from HMS Fable, the 1999 opus he made with Shack – he has yet to share any songs that suggest that was the case. Even when pondering the sudden absence of 28 • • MAY 2024 his furniture on “X Marks The Spot” from that aforementioned Strands album, what you were hearing amounted to little short of a cosmic shrug. On “Kismet”, taken from his 2022 album Dear Scott, Head recounted another escapade which saw him stranded in the Welsh countryside without any cash or a bed for the night, only to be taken in and fed by a kindly landlord. If the swiftness of Head’s return to action with Loophole – once again with Bill Ryder-Jones at the console – suggests there’s plenty of yarns where that came from, confirmation comes not just with its constituent songs but an autobiography. Announced alongside a new song, the Toxteth Tijuana pop of “Ciao, Ciao Bambino”, the book with which it shares its name is due in August. Indeed, you suspect that this album exists as a necessary counterbalance. With the latter a repository for the linear storytelling of a memoir, much of Loophole feels its dream-state counterpart, a place where floating fragments of memory can be fast-fossilised into music. Dear Scott was an album that ended not with a full stop, but an ellipsis, a pretty piano instrumental called “Shirl’s Ghost”. It’s that same song that opens Loophole, albeit now fully realised as a dawn sunburst of hazy reminiscences, the eponymous star of the song evicted from the flat where the hoarded mementos of her time as a professional dancer cover the floor. As Head’s voice rides the rising wave of strings and trumpets to the outermost point of his register, he beseeches you to believe the paranormal encounter he’s here to report: “Shirl’s ghost/She played for us that day”. Other ghosts make equally memorable cameos on Loophole. With a woody, autumnal arrangement that wouldn’t sound out of place on The Holdovers’ soundtrack, “Connemara” is another indisputable highlight, Head plucking a path of pure magic through a story that sits somewhere between To Sir, With Love and The Graduate, an obsessive liaison between a lecturer and her ex-student which intensifies with the both physical and temporal distance. He writes about his Paleys-era touring escapades as though they were a past life. “Ambrosia” is to Loophole as Van Morrison’s “And It Stoned Me” is to Moondance, floating on a mercury bed of half-memories: “Bombin’ down Tottenham Court Road in the morning/Our J lost his shoe on the way”.
NEW ALBUMS Head’s let his imagination run free all over these songs On “Coda”, Head’s late bassist and confidante Chris “Biff ” McCaffrey gets a namecheck as the singer intones “We played this riff in ’93/At the end of Comedy”, but McCaffrey’s shadow also extends across “You Smiled At Me”, the latter’s strolling insouciance dating back to when the pair first saw Roddy Frame playing “Just Like Gold” and neither could figure out what the hell he was playing. Its bones are old then, but Head’s delivery on this unlikely tribute to the Rush-Hour crush section of commuter freesheet Metro sees him sounding almost reborn, transmitting from a rarefied plane where a single sniff on the ozone of adoration takes you beyond the physical realm. That’s also where you’ll find him on “Tout Suite”, perhaps his most unguarded love song since “Something Like You”, to which this acts as a perfect companion piece. Somewhat tougher to decode are the lyrical smoke rings of free-associative whimsy that, line by line, billow blissfully out of “Merry-Go-Round”. “Somebody told me Shakespeare was a fraud/I didn’t know Will Sergeant loves The Doors”, sings Head (the local in-joke presumably being that everyone knows the Bunnymen guitarist loves The Doors). And if “Merry-GoRound” is Nick Drake’s “Hazey Jane I” by way of Roger McGough, “You’re A Long Time Dead” constitutes perhaps the one musical curveball of Loophole. A sketchy shaggy dog tale set to a Dixieland parp concerning a dispute between a tenant, their butcher landlord and a pet-sitting arrangement gone south. No sense in craving more detail. He’s let his imagination run free all over these songs, and the act of listening will almost certainly do the same to yours. Loophole is the thorough vindication of Michael Head’s belief that no escapade is completely wasted and that no caper is truly futile if it results in a song. And if it results in not just one, but 12 that fizz with this sort of low-key joie de vivre, then so much the better. Survivors’ gilt, you might call it. SLEEVE NOTES 1 Shirl’s Ghost 2 Ambrosia 3 Ciao Ciao Bambino 4 Tout Suite! 5 The Human Race 6 You Smiled At Me 7 A Ricochet Moment 8 Connemara 9 Merry-GoRound 10 You’re A Long Time Dead 11 Naturally It’s You 12 Coda Produced by: Bill Ryder-Jones Recorded ÝðYAWN Studios, West Kirby Personnel includes: Michael Head (lead vocals, guitars), Phil Murphy (drums), Tom Powell (bass), Nathaniel Cummings (guitars, backing vocals), Martin Smith (trumpet) Less than two years have elapsed since Dear Scott – a pretty swift return by Michael Head standards… 7KHZULWLQJFRQWLQXHGWRưRZ,OLNHWKHIDFWWKDW WKHDOEXPoVERRNHQGHGE\WZRVRQJVWKDWJUHZ RXWRIROGHUVRQJVp6KLUOoV*KRVWqJUHZRXWRIWKH LQVWUXPHQWDOYHUVLRQDWWKHHQGRIWKHODVWUHFRUG DQGp&RGDqGDWHVEDFNWRWKHULƬDWWKHHQG RI>oV@p&RPHG\q3HRSOHXVHGWR FRPHXSDQGVD\p:KDWZDVWKDWWKLQJ WKDW\RXSOD\HGDWWKHHQG"qsDQG,oGEH OLNHp,GRQoWIXFNLQJNQRZq%XWƮQDOO\ VRPHFKRUGVDWWDFKHGWKHPVHOYHVWRLW DQGWKHO\ULFODQGHGp0HUU\*R5RXQGqLV LQVSLUHGE\DSHULRGZKHQ,ZDVVWD\LQJZLWK 3HWH>:LONLQVRQIURP6KDFN@GHWR[LQJ,ZDV HDWLQJ0DUPLWHRQWRDVW5REELH)RZOHU{KDG MXVWVLJQHGEDFNWR/LYHUSRROIURP0DQ&LW\DQG WKHUHZDV3HWHSOD\LQJWKLVEHDXWLIXOULƬ “You Smiled At Me” is partly inspired by the ‘Rush-Hour Crush’ section in This month… P30 P32 P33 P34 P35 P36 P38 P40 IAN HUNTER FAT WHITE FAMILY VAMPIRE WEEKEND HAWKWIND IRON & WINE ARAB STRAP MELVINS PEARL JAM A CERTAIN RATIO It All Comes Down To This MUTE 7/10 Former Factory workers still finding fresh flavours of modernist funk-punk Enjoying a fertile late-career creative streak despite backstage health issues, former Factory Records stalwarts ACR are stripped down to just the core remaining co-founder trio of Jez Kerr, Donald Johnson and Martin Moscrop here. The band’s first full-length project with prolific writer-producer Dan Carey (Kylie, Kae Tempest, Wet Leg) mostly stays within familiar punk-funk parameters, but is generally an infectiously kinetic, richly detailed, timeless affair. “Estate Kings” pays affectionate spoken-word tribute to the M23 postcode, notably the grand social housing schemes of Wythenshawe, while sunny groove-pop reverie “God Knows” could almost be some great lost collaboration between Haircut 100 and Neu!. Still sounding fresh, almost 50 years later. STEPHEN DALTON AMEN DUNES Death Jokes Q&A Michael Head “This feeling that shoots up from your toes” AtoZ SUB POP the Metro newspaper. It’s funny to think of you mixing it with the commuters at that time of day. :HOO,ZDVOLYLQJLQWKHQRUWKHQG>RI/LYHUSRRO@ ZLWKP\VRQVDQGP\ZLIHOLYHVLQWKHVRXWKHQG ,QLWLDOO\,WUDYHOIURPRQHWRWKHRWKHURQP\ELNH EXWZKHQ,KLW,JRWP\EXVSDVVDQG,ZDVXVLQJ SXEOLFWUDQVSRUW,oGJHWPHSDSHUDQGWKDWZDVWKH ƮUVWWKLQJ,oGUHDFKIRU,WoVDOOVWXƬOLNHp<RXZRUHD JHQLHKDWDQG\RXZHUHZHDULQJSXUSOHFRUGVDQG \RXVPLOHGDWPHq$QGUHDOO\WKDWoVDOOLWLVsKRZD VPLOHIURPVRPHRQHFDQVWDUWWKLVIHHOLQJWKDW VKRRWVXSIURP\RXUWRHVDQGSDVVHVULJKW WKURXJK\RXOLNHDQHOHFWULFFXUUHQW ÃêàõëñĊòáïåãêáàëĞðäáñìßëéåêã memoir. Exciting times. <HDKLWZRXOGQoWKDYHRFFXUUHGWRPHKDG VRPHRQHQRWVXJJHVWHGLW%XW,WKRXJKW WRP\VHOIp,IDQ\RQHoVJRQQDWHOO WKHVHVWRULHVWKH\VKRXOG EHZULWWHQGRZQWKHZD\ ,WROGWKHPq6R Commuter WKDWoVZKDWLWLV love: Michael Head INTERVIEW: PETE PAPHIDES 7/10 Overstimulating opus from New York psych-folk auteur Densely layered with samples and cryptic thoughts about life and loss, Death Jokes is a complex record from an artist who’s always had a slippery relationship with pop music. With a braying, often indecipherable vocal delivery best suited for wordless chants, Damon McMahon hit a pop breakthrough on 2018’s Freedom, where glittery electronic production showcased his strong melodies and latent dance influence. On his longawaited follow-up, he pushes himself to channel that same momentum alongside his most psychedelic compositions yet. At its best, like the gorgeous, nine-minute “Round The World”, his bittersweet sound feels like the work of an art-music auteur. SAM SODOMSKY MAY 2024 • • 29
NEW ALBUMS SLEEVE NOTES 1 2 3 4 People Fiction The Third Rail This Ain’t Rock’n’Roll 5 Precious 6 Weed 7 Kettle Of Fish 8 What Would I Do 9 Everybody’s Crazy But Me 10Hope Ian Hunter: three chords, famous friends and the truth IAN HUNTER Defiance Part 2: Fiction SUN 7/10 RYAN SEBASTYAN Elder statesman puts the world to rights again, in esteemed company. By Peter Watts FEWsongwriters have written as many songs about rock’n’roll as Ian Hunter. With Mott The Hoople there were “All The Way From Memphis”, “One Of The Boys”, “Ballad Of Mott The Hoople” and “Saturday Gigs”, and the habit continued when he left the band in 1974. Drop into almost any Hunter solo albums and there seems to be a song about music, from “I Get So Excited” on Ian Hunter to “Still Love Rock And Roll” on 2001’s Rant. That’s true right up to the present day when partway through excellent new album Defiance Part 2: Fiction, Hunter, now 84, declares “This Ain’t Rock And Roll”. The song is a whistlestop tour of musical history, set to a Bo Diddley beat, that ends with a lament more resigned than bitter. Music, or rock’n’roll, might not be quite the same, but it’s a world that has served Hunter well. Defiance: Part 1 came out exactly a year ago, and the two albums are the result of a fruitful writing splurge during Covid. Hunter generally writes at home in Connecticut on piano or guitar, then hands the songs to Andy York for further development. The tracks are then pinged around the planet to Hunter’s peers: on Defiance Part 2 there are contributions from Lucinda Williams, Joe Elliott, Taylor Hawkins, Jeff Beck, Johnny Depp and Brian May, plus members of Cheap Trick and Stone Temple Pilots. Yet nobody overshadows Hunter. His voice might not be as powerful as it was – 30 • • MAY 2024 “This Ain’t Rock And Roll” sees him push it to the throaty limit – but it still has range, control and versatility, while his phrasing is consistently imaginative. He is at his most Dylanesque on “What Would I Do Without You”, a love song that encourages Heartbreaker Benmont Tench to play an Al Kooper-style organ part. This more laidback voice is perfect for the gentle waltz of “The Third Rail”, one of the last songs that Jeff Beck recorded before his death. Johnny Depp also plays guitar on the song, and painted the picture on the cover. One reason Hunter wanted Defiance Part 2: Fiction to come out so soon after its predecessor was the presence of a few political songs on the album. With America facing an angry, potentially calamitous Produced by: Andy York and Ian Hunter Recorded at: The Guitar Hangar Studios, Çñîîêĥäëã Connecticut Personnel: Ian Hunter (vocals, piano, guitar), Andy York (guitar, 12-string, slide, bass, backing vocal), Lucinda Williams (vocals), Joe Elliott, Phil Collen, Dennis DiBrizzi, Billy Bob Thornton (backing õîâàëòŸÏäĤÇäâê Johnny Depp, Rick Nielsen, Mark Bosch, Waddy Wachtel, Dean DeLeo, JD Andrew (guitar), Brian May (guitar, bass), Robin Zander (keyboard, backing vocals), Morgan Fisher, Andy Burton (organ, piano), Tommy Mandel, Benmont Tench (organ), Tom Petersson, Tony Shanahan, Robert De Leo, Paul Page (bass), Dane Clark, Eric Kretz (drums), Taylor Hawkins (drums, bass), Steve Holley (percussion), ÉàõèãÒàíòĥäëã (strings), James Mastro (sax, guitar) election, Hunter felt songs like “Fiction” and “People” needed to come out before the fact. “People”, with Joe Elliott on backing vocals and Mott’s Morgan Fisher on organ, takes aim at the power of the media – “the gospel according to whatever channel you are listening to” – while the title track similarly attacks those who present fiction as fact. It’s a fabulous song, with Dylan collaborator David Mansfield contributing a superb string arrangement that, not coincidentally surely, nods at the Succession theme. Hunter is angry but generous. He does not target individuals – politicians, media moguls, voters – as much as a system that has failed. He keeps his humour intact most notably on the best of the political songs, “Weed”, a swinging shanty featuring Robert and Dean DeLeo of Stone Temple Pilots. It’s a pro-marijuana anthem that argues that seeing as the odds are stacked against us, legalise it. “We’ve got all the AI we’ll ever need,” begs Hunter, “we’re fresh out of cake, but still got the seed/So let ’em smoke weed”. Taylor Hawkins plays on four songs including the catchy “Precious”, which has great lead guitar by Brian May, and the penultimate rager “Everybody’s Crazy But Me”, which boasts a notable guitar solo from session man Waddy Wachtel. “I’m the last man standing”, sings Hunter. “No more ‘we the people’, no more Mott The Hoople”. On “Kettle Of Fish”, Hawkins set the tone with an ominous beat. It’s the slowest, moodiest track on the album, with a lot of New Orleans swamp in the mix. Rick Nielsen and Tom Petersson of Cheap Trick play guitar and bass, while Wings’ Steve Holley beats a tambourine with relish. The Record Store Day release contains three additional songs – “Normal Service Will Be Resumed As Soon As Possible” and “How’d Ya Like To Meet Henry”, as well as “Needle Park” with Mott fans Chris and Rich Robinson. Otherwise, the album ends with “Hope”, a deliberately uplifting closer. It’s another stellar lineup: Taylor Hawkins on drum and bass, and Benmont Tench on synth, while Lucinda Williams and Billy Bob Thornton take backing vocals – but Hunter remains the heart and soul, six decades of experience and wisdom as the spirit of rock’n’roll. Q&A Ian Hunter: “Working with all these people is inspiring” ÛëñÝîáåêßîáàåÞèõìîëèåğßîåãäðêëó ,WoVZKDWNHHSVPHJRLQJ:ULWLQJKDVDPLQGRILWV RZQEXWVRPHWLPHV\RXJHWDUXQDQGZRUNLQJZLWK DOOWKHVHSHRSOHLVLQVSLULQJ,JRGRZQVWDLUVSOD\ WKHSLDQRGRWKHYRFDODQGSXWDEDVLFGUXPWUDFN GRZQ:HWKHQVHQGLWRXW,WoVDOOGRQHEDFNWRIURQW EXWEHFDXVHWKHYRFDOVJRRQƮUVWSHRSOHNQRZ ZKDWLWoVDERXWDQGWKDWFDQKHOSZKHQWKH\oUHGRLQJ WKHLUSDUWV Do you tell the contributors what to play? 7KH\JHWWRWDOIUHHGRP,KDYHWRRPXFKUHVSHFW IRUWKHVHSHRSOHWRWHOOWKHPZKDWWRGR<RXWU\ WRJHWWKHULJKWVRQJIRUWKHULJKWSHUVRQEXWRQ WKHRGGRFFDVLRQLWGRHVQoWZRUNVR\RXKDYHWR FDPRXưDJHLW-HƬ%HFNUHFRUGHGKLVSDUWVKRUWO\ EHIRUHKHGLHG,PHW-HƬRQFHLQ1HZ<RUNZLWK 0LFN5RQVRQ\HDUVDJR+HZDVJRLQJWRZRUNZLWK 5RG6WHZDUWDQGKHWKRXJKWWKH\ZRXOGEHSDUWQHUV EXWWKHQLWWXUQHGRXW5RGMXVWZDQWHGKLPLQWKH EDQGVRKHGLGD8WXUQDQGFDPHKRPHDJDLQ /XFLQGD:LOOLDPVFDPHWRDJLJLQ1DVKYLOOHDQGZH JRWRQZHOO6KHVDQJERWKWUDFNVDOOWKHZD\WKURXJK DQGWKHQZHXVHGWKHELWVZHZDQWHG$OORIWKHPVD\ pXVHDVPXFKRUOLWWOHDV\RXOLNHq This album has a few political songs, how would you describe your approach? 3HUKDSVDOLWWOHMDXQGLFHG,WU\DQGNHHSLWOLJKWEXW LWoVGLƱFXOW7KH\KDYHJRWWKHPVHOYHVLQDUHDOO\ VHULRXVVLWXDWLRQKHUH,GRQoWUHPHPEHULWEHLQJWKLV VHULRXVHYHUEHIRUHDQG,UHPHPEHU9LHWQDPDQG 1L[RQ%XW,GRQoWZDQWWRKLWLWULJKWRQWKHKHDG ,ZDQWWREHDPELJXRXV INTERVIEW: PETER WATTS
NEW ALBUMS KEE AVIL Spine BIG|BRAVE A Chaos Of Flowers CONSTELLATION THRILL JOCKEY 7/10 “Raw and bony” art-rock from Montreal underground auteur Kee Avil describes the sounds we hear on Spine as folk music, which very much makes you wonder what kind of folk she’s hanging out with. Her second album, following close on the heels of 2022’s Crease, is simultaneously deeply intimate and intensely unsettling. Right up front is Avil’s voice, quiet and hushed like a soft whisper in your ear. But the music she brings to bear on “Felt” and “Fading” is visceral and deconstructed: a tangle of brittle guitar, creaking electronics and shrill strokes of violin that altogether has a somewhat biological quality, like an alien lifeform flexing its mandibles. 9/10 Montreal experimental rock three-piece continue to maximise their impact While Montreal’s Big|Brave have amassed a formidably dense and sometimes ferocious back catalogue over the last decade for Southern Lord and Thrill Jockey, their more recent albums highlight quieter means of making an impact. Bearing more of the Appalachian folk influence that came to the form on 2023’s Nature Morte, the band’s seventh album attains a spellbinding balance of heavy and light, the songs’ bruising elements of drone and doom metal continually ceding space to Robin Wattie’s keening voice and expressions of resilience and defiance. Like Low at their most expansive, the music here swells, surges and rages without ever losing the vulnerability at its core. LOUIS PATTISON BAB L’BLUZ Swaken REAL WORLD 7/10 Franco-Moroccan quartet’s fiery and exultant second The title refers to possession by a spirit or transcendence in Darija, the Moroccan-Arabic dialect of singer Yousra Mansour. It’s an apt summary of Bab L’Bluz’s sound, which fuses traditional Moroccan folk music with a strong, rhythmic drive – that of the Amazigh, Gnawa, Hassani and Houara peoples – to psych-blues, rock and funk in songs that address local socio-political issues. Swaken is heavier than their 2020 debut and sees all four playing a vast array of instruments, from the bendir (percussion) to zorna (woodwind); it’s also more varied, as standouts “AmmA”, whose whirling intensity Jaz Coleman might well applaud, the sweetly twangling, gently hypnotic “Hezalli” and punchy desert-blues of “Li Maana” attest. SHARON O’CONNELL Bodega: hooks galore JASON ANDERSON BLITZEN TRAPPER 100s Of 1000s, Millions Of Billions YEP ROC 7/10 Further trippy sunshine from Oregonian country-rockers It has been historically prudent to be wary of groups from the West Coast of the US expounding on their explorations of eastern philosophy. Blitzen Trapper songwriter Eric Earley’s enthusiasm for Buddhism is an underpinning of 100s Of 1000s… (and perhaps appropriately, past lives figured in the writing inasmuch as Earley sought inspiration in long-lost demos of songs he’d written as much a younger man). However, Blitzen Trapper are as adept as ever with their characteristic deadpan lyrical warmth and casually ecstatic harmonies: on REVELATIONS BIG|BRAVE Robin Wattie: “We wanted to explore something softer” B ,*_%5$9(o6VL[WKDOEXP VLQFHIRUPLQJLQ0RQWUHDO LQA Chaos Of FlowersKDVHQRXJKUXPEOH DQGIRUFHWRVDWLVI\DQ\GHYRWHH RIGURQHDQGGRRP<HWWKHUHoV DOVRURRPIRUWKHEDQGoVJHQWOHU TXDOLWLHVWRFRPHPRUHVWURQJO\ WRWKHIRUHp:HDSSURDFKHGWKLV DOEXPZLWKWKHGHVLUHWRZULWH VRPHWKLQJPRUHVXEGXHGDQG nTXLHWoqVLQJHUDQGJXLWDULVW 5RELQ:DWWLHWHOOVUncutEHIRUH DGGLQJWKDWLWLVpQRWTXLHW DWDOOq1HYHUWKHOHVVWKHVH EUXLVLQJDQGEURRGLQJVRQJV VWLOOFRQVWLWXWHIXUWKHUVWHSVLQ DQHZGLUHFWLRQp:HZDQWHGWR SDUHGRZQWRH[SORUHVRPHWKLQJ VRIWHUVRWRVSHDNq TKDWVKLIWDOVRJLYHV:DWWLH DJUHDWHUFKDQFHWRH[SORUH WKHSURSHUWLHVRIKHUYRLFHWKH VLQJHUXVLQJTXLHWHUEXWHTXDOO\ FRPSHOOLQJPHDQVRIH[SUHVVLRQ WKDQWKHDQJXLVKHGKRZOVWKDW ƮOOWKHEDQGoVPRUHWXPXOWXRXV UHFRUGLQJVp$V,oPQRWDIRUPDOO\ WUDLQHGVLQJHU,oYHQRW KDGWKH FKDQFHWRIXOO\H[SORUHZKDW,FDQ GRYRFDOO\qVD\V:DWWLHp$QG EHFDXVHWKHPXVLFKDVEHHQ TXLWHORXGVRIDUWKHRQO\NLQGRI YRFDOVWKDWSDLUHGZHOOZLWKWKH VRQJVZKLOHDGGLQJWH[WXUHDQG QDUUDWLYHZRXOGXVXDOO\EHWKH VW\OHZKHUH,oGKDYHWRSURMHFW XVLQJP\IXOOERG\q %XWZKHQ ZULWLQJDQGUHFRUGLQJODVW\HDUoV Nature MorteVKHVD\VWKHEDQG pIHOWOLNHLWZDVWLPHWRDSSURDFK RXURULJLQDOFRQFHSWVLQD GLƬHUHQWOLJKWq:LWKA Chaos Of FlowersWKDWGLƬHUHQFHLVHYHQ PRUHSURQRXQFHGp6R\HVq VD\V:DWWLHpWKHHQWLUHW\RIRXU VRXQGKDVFRQWLQXHGWRFKDQJHq JASON ANDERSON the likes of “Ain’t Got Time To Fight” and “Planetarium”, they’re like a significantly less unbearable Eagles. T BONE BURNETT The Other Side ANDREW MUELLER 9/10 Roots-music guru and Dylan wingman corrals friends and crafts his own folky gem T Bone Burnett, now aged 76, has distinguished history as a producer (Elvis Costello and Gillian Welch, Alison Krauss & Robert Plant), sideman (Rolling Thunder Revue) and film music curator (O Brother, Where Art Thou?). His solo catalogue, 50 years wide, is eclectic, often spiky. But The Other Side is supremely inviting, warm and ruefully radiant, his best since his self-titled 1986 longplayer. The 12 mostly acoustic originals suggest lost standards; they’re burnished by an A-team of session wizards, with empyrean harmonies from Rosanne Cash, Lucius and Natalie ‘Weyes Blood’ Mering. A crown on a career still going strong. BODEGA Our Brand Could Be Yr Life CHYSALIS 7/10 New York outfit rework old tracks on album of catchy indie-rock Reconnecting with a bunch of lo-fi tracks written eight years ago, Bodega were smitten with the charm and naivety of these anti-consumerism songs and decided to brush them up and bring them back to life. The result is a richly produced album of breezy, melodic and infectious indie-rock with hooks galore. “Tarkovski” is a delectable piece of pop-heavy alt.rock with call-and-response vocals pinballing back and forth over REM-esque guitar licks; while tracks like “ATM” hit home the band’s knack for crafting tracks that contain as much spike as they do melodic flair. DANIEL DYLAN WRAY VERVE FORECAST WILL HERMES MAY 2024 • • 31
NEW ALBUMS REVELATIONS CAMERA OBSCURA Tracyanne Campbell: “I didn’t realise what I’d been missing” F ROBERT PERRY; JACK TENNANT 25PRVWRIWKHV 7UDF\DQQH&DPSEHOO GLGQoWNQRZLIKHU EDQG&DPHUD2EVFXUDZRXOG PDNHPXVLFDJDLQ7KH\ZHUH PRXUQLQJWKHGHDWKRIWKHLU NH\ERDUGLVW&DUH\/DQGHUD SURIRXQGORVVEXWHVSHFLDOO\IRU DEDQGWKDW&DPSEHOOGHVFULEHV DVDpZHLUGIDPLO\q6KHDQG /DQGHUZHUHFORVHp:HMRNHG WKDWZHZHUHOLNH%HWWH'DYLVDQG -RDQ&UDZIRUG:HZHUHJRLQJ WREHPDGROGJUDQQLHV:KHQ VKHGLHGWKHFLW\ZDVQoWWKH VDPH,VWUXJJOHGZLWKZKR,ZDV LQWKHZRUOGq&DPHUD2EVFXUD ZHQWRQXQRƱFLDOKLDWXVZLWK HYHU\RQHIHHOLQJDGULIW7KHQ %HOOH 6HEDVWLDQLQYLWHGWKHPWR SOD\WKH%RDW\:HHNHQGHU IHVWZKLFKSURPSWHGWKHEDQG WRUHKHDUVHDQGZULWHQHZVRQJV TKHLUFRPHEDFN Look To The East, Look To The WestSLFNV XSZKHUHWKH\OHIWRƬsLWoVIXOO RIFDWFK\ORYHVRQJVWRWKHLU IDYRXULWHORYHVRQJVsDQG LQFOXGHVDSURIRXQGPHGLWDWLRQ RQJULHIZULWWHQLQWKHZDNHRI /DQGHUoVGHDWKp,ZDVYHU\ VFDUHGWREHKRQHVWDQGOHW SHRSOHKHDUn6XJDU$OPRQGo ,WoVTXLWHEUXWDO%XWZHZHUH DEOHWRJHWDOLWWOHFORVXUHZLWK WKLVDOEXP,GLGQoWUHDOLVHZKDW ,oGEHHQPLVVLQJRUZKDWWKLVDOO PHDQWWRPHq STEPHEN DEUSNER CAMERA OBSCURA Look To The East, Look To The West CHASTITY BELT Live Laugh Love MERGE 6/10 Seattle indie-rockers deliver their dreamiest album yet Recorded in three sessions over 2020 to 2022, Chastity Belt’s fifth album exudes the cosy feel of friends finding joy and solace in each other’s company. It also marks a further shift away from the band’s scrappier sensibility in the days when they were still writing songs with titles like “Giant Vagina”. Nowadays, singerguitarist Julia Shapiro trades more in the gently off-kilter indie-rock and hazy dream-pop of opener “Hollow”, while with its hushed vocals and frayed guitar lines, “Kool-Aid” evokes Bilinda Butcher’s softest songs for My Bloody Valentine. While Live Laugh Love could benefit from more of the tension that builds in “Tethered” lest it all start seem too comfortably slack, Chastity Belt’s blend of blissed-out effervescence and sly wit remains very appealing. JASON ANDERSON 8/10 Glaswegians return with longawaited sixth album It’s no criticism to suggest that Camera Obscura’s new album could have followed right on the heels of 2013’s Desire Lines rather than a decade later. Tracyanne Campbell still writes exquisite songs that don’t sacrifice melancholy for cleverness, and the band still provide smart arrangements that nod to country, Motown, Brill Building pop and other distinctly American sounds. They’re still obsessed with broken and healing hearts, but most of all they’re all music fans: “Pop Goes Pop” sounds like a girl group singing about their favourite girl groups. “Hearts like ours get us in trouble”, Campbell muses, summing up the band’s timeless mission. STEPHEN DEUSNER 32 • • MAY 2024 SUICIDE SQUEEZE BRIAN ENO ENO OST UMR 8/10 Soundtrack with unreleased songs A rare pause of reflection for the forward-looking Eno, this soundtrack to Gary Hustwit’s upcoming documentary is an effective careerprimer, which leans heavily on Eno’s collaborations (Cluster, Cale, Lanois, Byrne… Fred Again) and his vocal work (“Third Uncle”, “Sky Saw”, “Stiff”), which has been resurgent since 2016’s The Ship. The set also comes with three unreleased songs – an exquisite version of “By This River” recorded at the Acropolis in 2021 with brother Roger on piano, a jittery instrumental “Lighthouse #429” taken from Eno’s Sonos radio station The Lighthouse and “All I Remember”. Written for the film, the latter finds Eno referencing his childhood on the Suffolk coast; formative influences Ketty Lester, Dee Clark, Bobby Vee; “the flurry of gnats in a meadow, sunset 1963”. Evidently taking instruction from an Oblique Strategies card – “Retrace your steps” – it’s a moving meditation on the elusiveness of memory – “just solitary firework flashes over a fathomless sea”. MICHAEL BONNER FAT WHITE FAMILY Forgiveness Is Yours DOMINO 7/10 London provocateurs revel in seedy glamour on second for Domino Amid the London miscreants’ first wave of provocations over a decade ago, few could’ve anticipated some of the places that Fat White Family arrive on their fourth album. (It’s also their first without co-founder Saul Adamczewski, who departed during yet another acrimonious creative process.) Whether it’s with the Eurodisco sleaze of “Bullet Of Dignity”, the gnarled bossa nova of “Visions Of Pain” or the jazz skronk underbelly for “Today You Become Man”, the band find fresh and largely effective means of complementing Lias Saoudi’s lascivious croon and acerbic musings on the end of all things. Like past albums, Forgiveness Is Yours sometimes becomes too diffuse, hampered by a surplus of bold ideas that do not get all the necessary follow-through. But it abounds with queasy pleasures all the same. JASON ANDERSON FLOWERS OF INDULGENCE Dylan’s Lost Songs Vol 1 TBS 7/10 Rare Basement Tapes songs buffed up and reimagined Taking their name from a line in “Every Grain Of Sand”, the identity of these indulgent Flowers is a mystery as they hide behind such pseudonyms as ‘Tiny Montgomery’ and ‘T-Bone Frank’ while taking the deepest of deep dives into a dozen covers of the most obscure songs from The Basement Tapes Complete. The likes of “Next Time On The Highway”, “One Man’s Loss” and “She’s On My Mind”, originally heard in roughhewn, homemade demo form, are worked up into rich, artisanal roots-rock versions just as you could imagine Bob and The Band might’ve presented them had they bothered. It’s actually terrific and the enigma only enhances the appeal. NIGEL WILLIAMSON BILL FRISELL Orchestras BLUE NOTE 6/10 A tale of two city orchestras An avant-garde/jazz guitarist who has backed Elvis Costello, Tom Waits and Rickie Lee Jones, among others, Bill Frisell worked with two very different groups for a very different kind of double album. On the first LP, the 60-piece Brussels Philharmonic adds topheavy accompaniment to his melodic playing on “Rag” and Sweet Rain”, as though they’ve been jammed into the arrangements slightly akimbo. On the second LP, however, the 11-member Umbria Jazz Orchestra sounds simultaneously nimbler and heavier, settling in with the rhythm section to add a rainswept moodiness to Frisell’s original “Lookout For Hope” and the stirring “We Shall Overcome”. STEPHEN DEUSNER DANA GAVANSKI Late Slap FULL TIME HOBBY 7/10 Canadian émigrée’s charming, experi-pop third Singer-songwriter Gavanski’s fulllength debut was a psych-folk set with Vashti Bunyan overtones, bent her own way via lonesome country guitar and synth accents. Four years on, the streak of eccentric pop also apparent then shapes 10 songs in which folk is only a very occasional dusting; ’80s synth-pop, new wave and C86 indie also have their moments. Cate Le Bon, whose light, swooping voice Gavanski’s heavily recalls, is clearly a kindred spirit, but Late Slap is in no way a hash: it’s a beguilingly nimble, sophisticated naïf of a record, full of pleasing concords and contrasts, in which the eccentric “Ears Were Growing” and the dreamy chug of “Ribbon” are highlights. SHARON O’CONNELL Dana Gavanski: pleasing contrasts
NEW ALBUMS VAMPIRE WEEKEND COLUMBIA 9/10 Indie-rock over-achievers re-emerge with an anxiety-exorcising masterpiece. By Will Hermes CLEVERNESS gets you only so far in life, and its limits become clearer with age. Vampire Weekend’s first album in roughly five years deals with that kind of reckoning. Its opening line: “Fuck the world” – spoken in context of a lovers’ sparring match, a geopolitical negotiation, maybe both. Ezra Koenig’s vocals are dirty with distortion, draped in coiled feedback, and they build to a panic attack of galloping drums, presto orchestral strings and guitar squeals amid talk of soldiers, police, war and weaponised language. The song, “Ice Cream Piano” (note the “I scream” homophone), is bunker-mentality neorealism, and quite a way from the scenes of privileged youth “in the colours of Benetton” on the band’s 2008 debut, blithely spilling kefir on an accessorising keffiyeh and second-guessing last night’s hookup en route to class. Fair enough: Vampire Weekend are nearly 20 years in, and these are dark times. Gone too is the wistfully upbeat jam-band vibe of 2019’s Father Of The Bride, an impressive pivot after the departure of co-founder Rostam Batmanglij, long on laidback guitar spirals, pedal steel sparkles, Danielle Haim vocals and their trademark boutique internationalism. By comparison, Only God Was Above Us is off its meds – grimier, sonically and spiritually; more compressed, more stressed. Lyrically, conflict is everywhere, and nothing is stable. Of course, anxiety, true perhaps to the band’s New York City roots, suits them nicely. Indeed, Big Apple nostalgia infuses Only God Was Above Us, though it’s not especially comforting. The packaging signals it straightaway with surreal, late-’80s images (by noted urban street photographer Steven Siegel) of wrecked SLEEVE NOTES 1 Ice Cream Õèàíî 2 Èëàòòèâàë 3 Èàïñèâîñí 4 Connect 5 Prep-School Ìàíæòóäñò 6 The Surfer 7 Gen-X Cops 8 Mary Boone 9 Õñàõãà 10 Íîïä Produced by: Ezra Koenig and Ariel Rechtshaid (plus Rostam on “The Surfer”, and Chris Tomson on “Gen-X Cops”) Recorded at: ÊħäØóñääó Studios, Los Angeles; Sony Music Studios, Tokyo; Heavy Duty Studio A, Burbank; Promised Land Studios, London; The Mews, New York; Eastwest Studios, Hollywood, Tarbox Road, Cassadaga, NY Personnel: Ezra Koenig (vocals, guitar, keys, synth), Chris Baio (bass), Chris Tomson (drums), Ariel Rechtshaid (drum prog, drums, guitar, synth, keyboards), Dev Hynes (drums) train cars in a subway graveyard. The LP title comes from a 1988 tabloid headline in the cover image, teasing a story about a mid-flight airline explosion. In another image, a magazine cover trumpets a story on “prep school gangsters”, which here titles a song that seems less about junior hooligans than the full-grown ones who fail upwards into staterooms. “Call it business/Call it war/Cutting class through revolving doors”, Koenig sings sweetly over staccato bass and guitar suggesting early New Order, as Dev “Blood Orange” Hynes bashes out abstracted new wave drumbeats. Flashbacks get conjured everywhere, quite cannily. Koenig has cited admiration for the late-’80s/early-’90s masters of sample surgery, particularly those with NYC pedigrees: RZA’s early Wu-Tang work, Paul’s Boutique-era Beastie Boys. Here, abetted by producer and de Q&A Ezra Koenig: “It’s uncharted territory for us” ÖäáéëëàäáîáåïàåĞáîáêððëFather Of The Bride, which was pretty sunny. ,oPVRLQWKHZHHGVRQWKHDOEXPV,GRQoW VHHDKXJHVKLIWIURPRQHWRWKHQH[W%XW GHƮQLWHO\WKHPRRGERDUGRIWKLVDOEXP KDVPRUHGLVWRUWLRQDQGKHDYLQHVV7KDW SOD\VDODUJHUUROHWKDQRQDQ\RIRXU DOEXPV6RWKDWoVXQFKDUWHGWHUULWRU\IRU 9DPSLUH:HHNHQG There are a lot of late-20th-century New York City references on the album. WKFHQWXU\1HZ<RUN ZLOODOZD\VIXQFWLRQDVDNLQGRID SV\FKRORJLFDOKRPHEDVHIRUPH,WoV WKHSODFHDQGWKHFXOWXUHWKDWP\IDPLO\ LVIURP,oPVXUHVRPHWKLQJKDVWRGR ZLWKJHWWLQJROGHUDQGZDWFKLQJWKH QHZJHQHUDWLRQVFRPHDQGWKHROG JHQHUDWLRQVJRWKDWSUREDEO\SXWPH LQDUHưHFWLYHPRRG$OVRWKHODVWƮYH \HDUVPHDQGP\IDPLO\VSHQWDORWRI WLPHOLYLQJLQGLƬHUHQWSODFHV:KHQ \RXVKDNHWKLQJVXS\RXFDQWKLQNPRUH FOHDUO\DERXWWKHSDVWDQGWKHSODFHV WKDWDUHPHDQLQJIXOWR\RX You’ve talked about how oldschool sample-based music was a touchstone. 7KHUHoVUHDOO\RQO\RQH VDPSOHRQWKHDOEXP%XWHYHQZKHQ WKHUHDUHQRVDPSOHVWKHUHoVVHOI VDPSOLQJDQGOD\HULQJGLƬHUHQWW\SHV RIUHFRUGLQJWHFKQRORJ\RQHDFKRWKHU $ORWRIXVOHDUQHGWKDWIURPSHRSOHOLNH WKH5=$\RXNQRZ"*URZLQJXSLQWKH oVWKHVRXQGRI:X7DQJ&\SUHVV+LOO DQG%HDVWLH%R\VUHFRUGVLVZKDWJRW XVH[FLWHGDERXWPDNLQJPXVLFLQWKH ƮUVWSODFH:KHQ,VDZ>RXU@DOEXPFRYHU SKRWR,GHVFULEHGLWDVORRNLQJOLNH3LQN )OR\GPHHWVWKH%HDVWLH%R\V$QGWKDW ZDVVRPHWKLQJ,UHSHDWHGLQWKHVWXGLR p/HWoVPDNHVXUHWKHPXVLFOLYHVXSWRLWq INTERVIEW: WILL HERMES MAY 2024 • • 33 MICHAEL SCHMELLING Only God Was Above Us facto fourth member Ariel Rechtshaid (Haim, Charli XCX, Cass McCombs), the band fold old-school allusions into a sort of OCD indie-rock hyper-pop. “Classical” opens on breakbeats like a vintage Coldcut remix, flanking cartoon electric guitar graffiti, Johnny Marr-ish acoustic strums and a sax solo that conjures a train station busker. “The Surfer”, a holdover co-written with Batmanglij, is a dubby mash-up of David Axelrod orchestral hallucinations, vintage George Martin gestures and King Tubby-ish drum fills. This approach reaches its peak on “Mary Boone”, cheekily named for the NYC gallery owner who helped make downtown artists like Jean-Michel Basquiat and Julian Schnabel superstars in the ’80s. Koenig sketches a bridgeand-tunnel wannabe watching from the sidelines as art-scene money gets printed, while the arrangement samples Soul II Soul’s indelibly elegant “Back To Life” groove, adding a “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” choir just for the hell of it. It would all be so much showing-off if the narrative ache Koenig displays wasn’t so palpable, and the craft wasn’t so meticulous. These guys listen hard, sometimes applying different processing effects on each word, even syllable. It’s clear why they’ve begun taking roughly five years between albums. Of course, busy work can help rein in bleak thoughts about the state of things, a dynamic that plays out across Only God Was Above Us. “Blacken the sky and sharpen the axe/Forever cursed to live unrelaxed”, Koenig croons over crisp punk drumming on “Gen-X Cops”, whose title nods to the comic Hong Kong action film franchise, while its lyrics suggest how subsequent generations kick social crises down the years, disastrously. The album ends on a hopeful note, rather self-awarely titled “Hope”. It’s a folksy invocation proposing that the only way forward is to, well, move forward. It may be realistically cold comfort, but it’s comfort nonetheless.
NEW ALBUMS AMERICANA Album of the month SCOTT H BIRAM The One & Only Scott H Biram BLOODSHOT 8/10 Boisterous Texan in reassuringly rude health on 13th album BIRAM has made a career from his pugnacious take on beat-up blues, punk, bluegrass and outlaw country, barking out songs with an urgency that suggests every living moment counts. “I view my albums as collages,” he explains. “They reflect the diverse aspects of life – it’s not a concept but an expression.” There have been plenty of them too, from the early holler of 2000’s This Is Kingsbury? to the gnarly terrain of Graveyard Shift (2006) and, more recently, 2020’s Fever Dreams, on which he ran the full gamut of guitars, keyboards and shakers’n’bells percussion. Nearly a quarter of a century since his solo debut, Biram sounds no less immediate on The One & Only…. These are mainly portraits of people caught in the crosshairs of fate, at the mercy of isolation, bad luck and addiction. Bottlecaps tumble from the narrator of “Inside A Bar”, a country-blues set in a cheerless dive on a particularly slow night. It’s a Willie Nelson-ish ballad with a big, sad guitar solo, its narrator “feelin’ guilty for all the drinkin’/I just get so tired of being lonely as you are”. The song finds a counterpart in “High & Dry”. Again viewed from the vantage of a drunken stage performer, it bemoans a life spied from the bottom of a cup, the world “kickin’ shit in your eye”. These may be standard country tropes – as are the troubled blues references that stalk “No Man’s Land” – but Biram renders them convincing through sheer force of will. Similarly, Lead Belly’s “Easy Rider” becomes a tent revival celebration, drawing its goodtime vibe from handclaps, harmonica and massed voices. There are highly emotive moments too. Informed by Trump’s Capitol riots, the fearsome “Sinner’s Dinner” rebukes “sore losers with weak little minds”, while conjuring a Biblical gale as either deliverance or damnation. The altogether more wistful “I’ll Still Miss Ruby” finds Biram on acoustic guitar, pitting childhood recollections against the roll of the years, a hymn to a time when there was still “forever left to go”. ROB HUGHES AMERICANA ROUND-UP EARLY summer releases are already piling up. The redoubtable Kim Richey LVVXHVKHUƮUVWDOEXP for four years in late May. Every New Beginning YEP ROC features 10 songs that range from fresh compositions to “decade-old puzzle pieces”, some co-written with Brian Wright and Nashville neighbour, Aaron Lee Tasjan. Following 2021’s bigselling 29: Written In Stone, Carly Pearce returns in mid-June with Hummingbird BIG MACHINE . The album, which marks the Grammy-winner’s debut as co-producer, is an expression of Pearce’s “openness to keep growing” and includes the Chris Stapleton duet “We Don’t Fight Anymore”. Still in Nashville, Ecuadorian-Swiss siblings Estevan and Alejandro Gutiérrez – aka Hermanos Gutiérrez – unveil Sonido Cósmico EASY EYE SOUND. Like its 2022 34 • • MAY 2024 predecessor, the album – translation: ‘cosmic sound’ - is produced by label owner and “third brother” Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys, and aims to conjure “the unknowable expansiveness of outer space and a world beyond our own”. It also ƮQGVWKHEURWKHUVH[SDQGLQJWKHLUSDOHWWHWDNLQJ cues from cumbia and salsa. Back on solid ground, and closer to home, Liverpool’s Robert Vincent issues Barriers THIRTY TIGERS in late June. The follow-up to 2020’s AMA-winning In This Town You’re Owned promises a broader and more ambitious sound, inspired by personal experience. And on the live front, April sees a career retrospective UK tour by the erudite Mary Gauthier, beginning in Belfast and winding down at London’s Kings Place. ROB HUGHES GOSPELBEACH Wiggle Your Fingers CURATION 8/10 Veteran musician rolls with the punches on his band’s elegiac swansong GospelbeacH ringleader Brent Rademaker is haunted by memories on what’s billed as the 10-year-old band’s final LP. The Florida-born, LA-based musician enumerates the regrets he’s accumulated and the losses he’s experienced during four decades of struggle on the margins of indielevel success in bands including Beachwood Sparks and The Tyde. “Livin’ on my dreams”, he sings on soulful opener “Nothin’ But A Fool”. “It’s the only thing/That keeps the music playin’”. Rademaker’s hero Gram Parsons continues to inspire him in the pedal-steel peals of the country waltz “I’ll Close My Eyes”, while he wrestles with the death of bandmate Neal Casal on the devastating “Hang Thyme”. Throughout, Rademaker’s tremulous vocals and endearing slacker persona imbue his songs with a heart-tugging humanity. BUD SCOPPA HAWKWIND Stories From Time And Space CHERRY RED 8/10 Brock contemplates the universal on Hawkwind’s 36th album Hawkwind have never been frightened of big ideas, and Stories From Time And Space begins with a suitably epic, philosophical inquest into existence. “Our Lives Can’t Last Forever” has Dave Brock raging at the dying of the light, something that has resonance given his age and the fact that, in Hawkwind terms, he’s the last man standing. Thematically and musically, this is classic Hawkwind – epic space-rock with science-fiction lyrics – resulting in a double album crammed with songs like “The Tracker” or “Traveller Of Time And Space” that could have been written at any time since 1970 and therefore fit seamlessly into one of rock’s great canons. PETER WATTS HOUSE OF ALL Continuum TINY GLOBAL PRODUCTIONS 8/10 Sometime Fall alumni keep the engine stoked Refusing to hang about, Martin Bramah’s band of fellow ex-Fall players – rhythm section Steve and Paul Hanley, guitarist Peter Greenway and second drummer
NEW ALBUMS Simon Wolstencroft – build on last summer’s studio debut with a similarly striking follow-up. These songs, conceived very much in their old band’s instinctive spirit, are suitably bracing and visceral, scattergunned with dry lyrical wit. Bramah borrows a line from Scottish folk tune “Mairi’s Wedding” for the dynamic “Aim Higher”; “Gaudy Pop Scramble” bolts together numerous critical snippets in spectacular style; “Letter To A Young Poet” dispenses only sound advice: “Tackle the man, not the ball”. REVELATIONS ROB HUGHES IRON & WINE Light Verse SUB POP 8/10 Southern songwriter revels in the detail on long-awaited seventh outing The biggest misdirection of Iron & Wine’s seventh album comes at the midpoint: “I don’t get taken by surprise any more”, Sam Beam sings, lovelorn and world-weary, over gentle calypso guitar. It’s an outlier in a collection of songs – Beam’s first full-length of new material since 2017’s Beast Epic – bursting with surprises, reflecting the optimism of the album’s title and a songwriter rejuvenated. Light Verse rejoices in its playful details: the creak of a barn door, a lyrical pledge to “kiss a little harder on the lips”, a mattress full of cash kept by the warring couple in “All In Good Time”, a stately piano bar duet with Fiona Apple which swells to movie-like proportions when the luscious string section kicks in. KHRUANGBIN Laura Lee returns to the source HEY stopped short of following Joni’s “back to the garden” directive, but with their new LP, Khruangbin have in some sense returned to the source. “In 2010 when we ƮUVWVWDUWHGSOD\LQJWRJHWKHUZH were making music in a barn to a bunch of cows,” says bassist and vocalist Laura Lee. “We never knew we’d get a record deal, tour the world and get messages from listeners on how we’ve impacted them. Over the past decade, it’s continued to grow: the stages got bigger, our team expanded, our catalogue no longer consists of a couple of handfuls of songs. None of that IHHOVRƬFRXUVHEXWFUHDWLYHO\ T we felt it was important to remind ourselves of that simpler time.” A La Sala, then, sees the trio’s familiar dreamy lushness manifesting as something more intimate and soulful, which Lee credits to their recording 02p7KLVZDVWKHƮUVWUHFRUG that we didn’t have any guests ZKDWVRHYHU,WZDVDOVRWKHƮUVW UHFRUGZHZURWHVWDUWWRƮQLVK at [Houston studio] Terminal C, which feels like a familial living room to us.” Hence the title (“to the lounge room”), as Lee H[SODLQVp,WoVGLƬHUHQWIURPDQ\ other room in the house. It’s a place where you love, cry, laugh, play, sing, argue, cuddle and relax. This record was us coming back to that space, like a family reunion. We hadn’t had one in a while.” SHARON O’CONNELL COLEMINE 7/10 Cinematic soul, funk and cop-show cool: Aussie quartet rides out Struttin’ straight out of Melbourne’s funk underground come Karate Boogaloo – aka the KBs – with a holistic, headnodding collection of instrumental soul. Drawing on impeccable references – blaxploitation soundtracks, Barry White breakbeats and Grant Green-y guitar – they’ve created a laidback, likeable album with a great sense of space, control House Of All: after The Fall and continuity. You can hear the confidence of 15 years together, and a jam-led, “no overdubs” policy, lends an airy, funky DIY feel. The basslines pop throughout, with Henry Jenkins’ low-end theories excelling on “PS Emmylou” and “Eyes On The Prize”, which comes over like a lost Lalo Schifrin theme for a particularly gritty episode of Columbo. MARK BENTLEY KHRUANGBIN A La Sala DEAD OCEANS 7/10 Archived song notes produce style with emotion Making (mostly) instrumental music that’s languidly atmospheric, yet not so easy on the ear it struggles to support a personality, is this Texan trio’s trick. On occasion their blend of psychedelic rock, Thai funk and vaguely nostalgic pop plays as background music, but the irresistible grooves of their beachified sonic Esperanto win out. Their fourth album sees them on more soulful, though no less seductive ground, having worked up old song ideas into 12 new, mid-tempo tracks which are CAPTURED TRACKS 9/10 Time-travelling siblings touch down in the Swinging ’60s After making their most beautiful album to date with 2023’s ballad-dominated Everything Harmony, Brian and Michael D’Addario decided to reimagine the 45s loaded into a mid-’60s jukebox. The dozen cuts on A Dream Is All We Know range from fey confections like “Sweet Vibration” to British Invasion rock (“Peppermint Roses”), and Wrecking Crew wizardry (“How Can I Love Her More”) on these selfperformed and -produced analogue recordings. The LP opens with “My Golden Years”, a delectable mélange of Harrisonian 12-string riffs, Wilsonian harmonies and layer-cake hooks, and reaches its apex with the glorious Beach Boys homage “In The Eyes Of The Girl”, with Sean Ono Lennon coproducing and playing bass. They’ve dubbed this newly minted hybrid ‘Merseybeach’, of course. BUD SCOPPA LYNKS Abomination HEAVENLY SHARON O’CONNELL 7/10 High-camp hi-jinks from new pop provocateur Lynks makes raucous queer electro-punk while dressed in the sort of elaborate drag get-up that would make Leigh Bowery gasp. The predominant flavour here is a sort of manic hedonism, but scratch the sequinned surface and you find some witty social commentary and a seam of vulnerability. “(What Did You Expect) Sex With A Stranger” rides that ouroboros of excitement and shame that comes with the one-night stand, while “Tennis Song” is a welldrawn tale of falling for your straight tennis instructor. Abomination is all about the drama, but Lynks will show you a good time. LOUIS PATTISON POKEY LAFARGE Rhumba Country LEYLA McCALLA Sun Without The Heat ANTI- NEW WEST 8/10 Uplifting and empowering fifth from New York songwriter Following the success of 2022’s Breaking The Thermometer, McCalla’s latest album resounds with the liberated feeling of an artist who not only has something to say but an audience to say it to. The title track is a case in point, derived from a speech by Frederick Douglass to abolitionists in 1857 but wearing its commentary lightly. McCalla plays cello, guitar and banjo and the album rejoices in her musical heritage – her family are Haitian – with calypso and afrobeat present on tracks like “Take Me Away” and “Love We Had”, although the highlight is the majestic “Tower”, with magnificent throaty guitar. LISA-MARIE FERLA KARATE BOOGALOO Hold Your Horses THE LEMON TWIGS A Dream Is All We Know compositionally and emotionally diverse. Particularly alluring are “Farolim De Felgueiras”, a beats-free piece cast along classical Spanish guitar lines, and the unabashedly romantic, Mexican cowboy styling of “Three From Two”. 7/10 Accurately titled album by sharp-dressed songwriter Rhumba Country is partially a product of one of the less likely career detours in the recent history of popular song: LaFarge worked a spell on a farm in Maine, putting in 12-hour shifts in the paddocks, hopefully after changing out of his trademark dapper clobber. As LaFarge tells it, Rhumba Country is partly the tunes he hummed to himself while reaping and sowing. Fine tunes they are as well, notably the slinky boogie of “It’s Not Over” and the pretty day-seizing meditation “Sister André”, which gives us an idea of what might have occurred had Smokey Robinson duetted with Aztec Camera. ANDREW MUELLER PETER WATTS MAY 2024 • • 35
NEW ALBUMS grumbling electro-folk, delicate piano flourishes and pointedly ignored voicemail messages, the lugubrious narrator of “Summer Season” hankers wistfully for the enforced solitude of the pandemic: “Sun is shining, let’s pretend/My lockdown didn’t end”. Shifting from tragicomic to purely tragic, “Safe & Well” is a finger-picking acoustic ballad narrated by a ghost. The heart-tugging lyric was inspired 1 Allatonceness by the real case of a woman who died 2 Bliss alone during the pandemic, her body 3 Sociometer rotting away for months, forgotten by Blues 4 Hide Your Fires friends and family. 5 Summer Arab Strap songs mostly have a Season strong, vinegary flavour, and this is 6 Molehills a bracingly sour album over the long 7 Strawberry Moon haul. The relentless misanthropic 8 You’re Not grind can drag in places. But as ever, Still bracingly There sour: Malcolm Moffat’s withering scorn is sweetened 9 Haven’t You Middleton and Heard Aidan Moffat by beautiful poetry, tender emotion 10 Safe & Well and self-aware, bruise-black humour. 11 Dreg Queen There are lines here worthy of Philip 12 ÙôñíÔĤÙçä Light Larkin or Leonard Cohen (“a hundred billion neurons making it up as they Produced by: go along”), plus gently crafted Arab Strap and Paul Savage electro-acoustic lullabies full of Recorded at: aching affection, notably “Haven’t ROCK ACTION Chem19 Studios, You Heard”. Behind their bitterness Glasgow Personnel and bile, Arab Strap still believe in includes: Malcolm love as a healing balm in a cruel Middleton (guitar, Scottish duo’s second post-reunion album offers world. A cynic is just a disappointed bass, piano, rich ruminations on midlife angst and online rage. keyboards), romantic, after all. ÆèãàíÒîĤàó By Stephen Dalton But Moffat returns to the poisonous (voice, drums, swamp of online culture with the keyboards, programming) gloomy finale “Turn Off The Light”, shitshow, a slave to the algorithm, just DEEP into a second-act a thunderous post-rock number comeback that began in 2016, like millions of us. full of wheezing fanfares and The bristling, percussive funk-rock Falkirk’s poet laureates of downward doom spirals. The song’s timid, belter “Sociometer Blues” casts a caustic eye on sweary filth are now 50-yeargullible narrator appears to have been suckered our love-hate relationship with social media, old family men and prolific, into a sinister-sounding internet cult. Andrew imagined here in sentient terms as a soul-sucking prize-winning, kelpie-sized Tate and his monetised manosphere hellscape emotional vampire: “You take all my time, you fixtures on the Scottish springs to mind, though the details are left vague: take all my strength, you steal my love/You are cultural landscape. Indeed, Aidan Moffat and “Who needs family?/Who needs friends?/Why be the worst friend I ever had”. Meanwhile, internet Malcolm Middleton are in danger of becoming compliant and weak?/I’ve found my people demons of a different sort haunt the album’s national treasures, albeit national treasures now...” The album ends as it begins, with the ironically upbeat lead-off single “Bliss”, whose who write hilariously bleak confessionals sampled screech of a dial-up modem, already female protagonist is bullied online by a shadow about outsized cocks, sordid carnal obsessions, army of “cowards under camouflage”. A gleaming, an eerie hauntological relic of a recent but apocalyptic hangovers, degrading online strangely remote past. rave-adjacent, electro-pop banger with the dark porn and the inevitable decay that consumes While most bands lose their creative bite heart of a serial killer, this is Arab Strap at their all human flesh. Thankfully, middle age has in middle age, getting older really suits the most nuanced and novelistic. not mellowed the duo too much, just lent an whiskery despair and bleakly absurdist comedy Another key lyrical theme here is the postextra world-weary wisdom to Moffat’s selfof Arab Strap 2.0. Like fine cheese, they just Covid emotional landscape, with Moffat lacerating, brutally honest lyrics and Middleton’s become richer, more flavoursome, and more musing ambiguously on lost connections, increasingly rich, eclectic compositions. deliciously mouldy with each new album. faded friendships and the grim obligation of It may be flippantly titled after a text sent by Long may they rot. renewed social contact. Over a soundbed of the duo’s live drummer, but I’m Totally Fine With It Don’t Give A Fuck Any More is a serious and complex album, with lyrics that dig deep into toxic masculinity and the unkindness of Arab Strap: logging on, going left… problem, because I engage in it. You perpetuate strangers. Billed as an angrier record than these things. So I suppose a lot of it was about As Days Get Dark from 2021, it is certainly not me trying to get away from that, but I can’t. I think Most men either mellow into midlife short on inflammatory subject matter. A key we’re all programmed now to be addicted to contentment or become angry, bitter and target of Moffat’s rage here is the horrorshow of these things. more right-wing. How is middle age shaping online discourse, particularly the misogynistic up for Arab Strap? trolls and hate-driven edgelords who lurk in the This album and the last are very musically AIDAN MOFFAT: I’m angry and bitter, but I’m digital darklands. àåòáîïáÆåàõëñéÝàáÝßëêïßåëñïáĞëîð getting more left-wing. Every day I seem to get to expand your sound after reforming angry about the imbalance in society. So I’m glad This rich theme kicks off the album with Arab Strap? to say, so far, the right-wing thing hasn’t come to “Allatonceness”, a hairy-knuckled beast of a tune MALCOLM MIDDLETON: I think so. You get me. I think I’ll be a Marxist in a couple of years. full of clobbering drums and burly, snarly guitar. bored with yourself, you need to keep trying new Here Moffat slips easily into visceral disgust things, keep yourself engaged with the music. You’re mostly angry about toxic internet mode, railing against the groomers, grifters and That was part of the thing when we reformed, culture on the new album, right? entitled fanboys who have all “done their own we wanted to try and avoid anything that MOFFAT: Yeah, like everybody in the past few research” while “Nazis and rapists sell merch”. years, I’ve become less and less in love with being sounded like the old Arab Strap. But obviously The sting in this grim fairy tale comes when it’s going to sound like Arab Strap anyway, online. The pandemic was really fertile ground Moffat’s semi-autobiographical narrator reveals because that’s who we are. IRUWKDWVRUWRIVWXƬHYHU\RQHGLGVHHPWRJHW nastier and angrier. And I was as much part of the INTERVIEW: STEPHEN DALTON that he too is addicted to this online gladiatorial SLEEVE NOTES ARAB STRAP I’m Totally Fine With It A Fuck Anymore Don’t Give 8/10 KAT GOLLOCK Q&A 36 • • MAY 2024
LOW TICKETS SOLD OUT SOLD OUT SOLD OUT SOLD OUT LOW TICKETS SOLD OUT SOLD OUT LOW TICKETS SOLD OUT SOLD OUT SOLD OUT SOLD OUT SOLD OUT SOLD OUT ࡟DATES ADDED IN AUTUMN ࡟ SOLD OUT SOLD OUT ǭCROSSTOWN_LIVE ǬCROSSTOWNCONCERTS ǭCROSSTOWNCONCERTS
NEW ALBUMS ARTHUR MELO Mirantes Emocionais WONDERFULSOUND 7/10 Fourth album from Melo, full of Brazilian avant-pop poetics If there’s a new wave of Brazilian artists taking the lessons of Tropicália to heart – as musicians like Arthur Melo and compilations like Hidden Waters would suggest – they’ve found interesting ways to integrate that genre’s expansive experimentalism, its aesthetic voraciousness, into their music. On Mirantes Emocionais, Melo calls on the production services of Kassin to slightly gloss these simple, lovely songs. They’re understated at first blush, but then your ears catch on their weird contours – the unexpected incidents through “Zói Fundo”; the submerged, tape-wobble psychedelia of “Principios Organizadores”. It’s lovely stuff: 21st-century bossa, scribbling in the margins. JON DALE MELVINS Tarantula Heart EBRU YILDIZ IPECAC 8/10 Eccentric, hard-rocking return to form from Aberdeen, WA grunge merchants The Melvins’ tireless productivity and bewildering swerve through sounds and styles means that their career isn’t so much something you follow as cling to for dear life. Over 40 years of activity they’ve chalked up about as many misses as hits, but Tarantula Heart is one of the latter: a squealing noise-rock juggernaut that balances gruff anthemicism with a certain improvisatory élan. Built around Dale Crover and Roy Mayorga’s doubledrum parts, “Working The Ditch” and the sprawling, 19-minute “Pain Equals Funny” rock as hard as most anything Melvins bring the noise in the Melvins catalogue. The deeply peculiar “She’s Got Weird Arms”, meanwhile, offers a rare glimpse of the Melvins’ pop side: strangely catchy, wilfully absurd. LOUIS PATTISON METZ Up On Gravity Hill is a love song wrapped up in the metaphor of a military campaign, while “I Hope It’s Different” passes the mic to Nina Nastasia for a country tearjerker that advocates a cleaning of the slate: “Scrub off your history,” she sings. “Don’t learn/Don’t remember anything…” LOUIS PATTISON SUB POP 7/10 Toronto trio’s fury keeps mounting on vital fifth album Do not mistake the rose on the cover for a peace offering, nor Owen Pallett and Black Mountain’s Amber Webber’s presence for a softening of intent. Metz’s latest combines the Jesus Lizard’s Goat-era aggression with PiL’s Album-era rigour, opener “No Reservation/Love Comes Crashing” kicking like a mule just as their 2012 eponymous debut’s opening track “Headache” once did. Alex Edkins’ angular guitar lines are also as inventive as Matt Sweeney’s in his Chavez days, though “99” boasts Gang Of Four post-punk stylings and regular bursts of woozy MBV guitars – as on “Superior” – add a welcome textural complexity. WYNDHAM WALLACE MINT MILE Roughrider MDOU MOCTAR Funeral For Justice MATADOR 8/10 Impassioned psych-rock and political cries from Niger outfit The politics of this album, rooted in the plight of Niger and the Tuareg people, may be lost via a language barrier, but the intensity that drives it speaks loud and clear. From the opening title track, ferocious guitar and polyrhythmic drumming explode, almost recalling a math rock band in full swing. From here, Moctar and his group blaze their way through an album of emphatic psych-rock. However, despite remarkable playing and energy that charges through much of this record, it’s also contemplative, varied and tender at times, with the gentle sway of tracks like “Takoba” hitting as hard as the noise and fury of “Sousoume Tamachek”. DANIEL DYLAN WRAY COMEDY MINUS ONE 8/10 Chicago indie lifer stages a late-career comeback Tim Midyett spent 18 years at the helm of Seattle indie-rock group Silkworm, but his songwriting always had more in common with anthemic everyman rockers like Neil Young than his grungier peers. His second album fronting Mint Mile leans even further into rock classicism, its hearty ruminations on life’s twists and turns augmented by pedal steel, saxophone and strings. “Brigadier” MICHELLE MOELLER Late Morning AKP 7/10 Slyly effervescent debut from Oakland, CA-based electroacoustic composer Michelle Moeller’s debut is an experimental gem in the lineage of Harold Budd, Laurie Spiegel and Zeena Parkins. Her training in classical piano and interest in the playful experimentalism of synthesis and electroacoustic exploration give this album its arresting push and pull. The resulting music is a captivating mix of prepared piano, atmospheric ambient and scintillating electronic movements, created from live signals, custom effects and computer synthesis. “Corridor” is one of the best examples of both modes in action, a sprightly form of avant-garde that is as inviting as it is exploratory. ANA GAVRILOVSKA DAVID MURPHY Cuimhne Ghlinn: Explorations In Irish Music For Pedal Steel Guitar ROLLERCOASTER 8/10 Evocative reinventions of ancient Irish tunes Without its academic title, one might initially mistake Arborist associate David Murphy’s debut as the work of ambient Americana protagonists like SUSS, Luke Schneider or even Stars 38 • • MAY 2024 Mdou Moctar: clear intensity Of The Lid. Still, “Aisling Gheal” is an Irish traditional rendered ghostly by washes of pedal steel and almost subliminal piano chords, while “An Draigheann”’s another, this time lifted by gently rippling harp. Both would complement the quieter moments of Mark Knopfler’s Local Hero OST, but “Cuimhne Ghlinn”’s more widescreen and structured, like an early, Celtic Ólafur Arnalds, while occasional Waterboy Steve Wickham adds fiddle to the increasingly sentimental “Bridget Cruise”. WYNDHAM WALLACE TARA JANE O’NEIL The Cool Cloud Of Okayness ORINDAL 7/10 Expansive indie-folk-pop, taming turbulent times It’s been seven years since Tara Jane O’Neil’s previous solo album of songs, 2017’s lovely self-titled effort. The Cool Cloud Of Okayness seems to capture much of the mood of the disrupted intervening years – O’Neil lost a house to wildfire, something hinted at by songs like “Two Stones”, though her writing is typically elliptical and open, with each song offering the listener myriad interpretation. Her fellow musicians here – members of Alvvays and Hand Habits; guitarist Marisa Anderson – shade the album carefully, giving O’Neil’s frail melodies ground to blossom. And her voice is at its unearthly, yet intimate best. JON DALE ROBERT POSS Drones, Songs And Fairy Dust TRACE ELEMENTS 8/10 Rich, blissed-out guitar hypnotism from a master of the form Robert Poss first came to wider attention with Band Of Susans, the group he co-helmed with Susan Stenger across the ’80s and ’90s. Working a heady mixture of guitar drones and elemental rock songs, they were loosely aligned with groups like My Bloody Valentine. Now working solo,
NEW ALBUMS JON DALE PYE CORNER AUDIO The Endless Echo GHOST BOX 9/10 New set of haunted audio from prolific sci-fi synthesist Few can conjure up a mood of teethchattering dread quite so effectively as Martin Jenkins, the so-called “Head Technician” behind Pye Corner Audio. A synth tinkerer with his roots in the cobwebbed archives of vintage film music, Jenkins approaches his records with the conceptual approach of a B-movie auteur – take The Endless Echo, which draws inspiration from science and science-fictional notions that time might be an illusion. “On The Clock” and “Chronos” coil sinister melodies around pulsating metronomic rhythms that feel deliberately shaped to soundtrack some sort of on-screen peril. Just as effective here are the album’s moments of lull, with drumless tracks like “Vault” exploring a kind of dreamy, frozen stasis; a slip out of time itself. LOUIS PATTISON NIAMH REGAN Come As You Are FACTION 8/10 Second album from fast-rising Irish singer-songwriter Irish music is having a purple patch right now, with Lankum topping Uncut’s 2023 albums list and Lisa O’Neill also in our Top 20. To the rollcall we can now add Regan, a Galway girl with a degree in music from Limerick University. There’s a touch of Laura Marling in her voice, something of John Martyn in her intonation and Nick Drake in her guitar picking, the influence of everyone from Jeff Tweedy to Josh Ritter in her crafted storytelling – and yes, Lankum in her use of drones on songs such as “Madonna” and “Mortgage”. NIGEL WILLIAMSON JESS RIBEIRO Summer Of Love LABELMAN 7/10 Australian’s brittle fourth calls on renewable energy and inner strength Ribeiro’s conversational, sometimes deadpan tone throughout much of this sparse, more morose follow-up to 2019’s Love Hate can be unsettling. Demoed in a solar-powered shack, its acoustics influencing subsequent production choices, it finds her wearily completing the half-heartedly self-motivational “Maybe If I Wore Sunglasses Inside”’s title – “I won’t feel tired” – before drawling sleepily, even resigned, on “Airbourne”’s early Calexico-style Americana. She coos, too, like Polly Harvey on “Helicopter”, while a skeletal, skittish “Everything Is Now” recalls Cat Power’s muted vulnerability, but “The Tress And Me” best illustrates the record’s slowly unfurling beauty. WYNDHAM WALLACE LAWRENCE ROTHMAN The Plow That Broke The Plains KRO Pye Corner Audio: haunted SERPENTWITHFEET Grip Floating Points’ Samuel Shepherd on twinkling Rhodes. SECRETLY CANADIAN LOUIS PATTISON 7/10 Gender-fluid musician-producer leans into country on emotive third outing With its unflinching lyrics exploring the writer’s experience of hate crimes, addiction, body dysmorphia and a near-fatal eating disorder, Lawrence Rothman’s third album called for a pivot away from their more experimental pop flourishes to the folk and country sounds of their Missouri upbringing. Rothman’s confessionals, delivered in expressive baritone, lose none of their power for the shift: “Poster Child”, written with and featuring Jason Isbell on guitar, is a belligerent Southern rock song, its caustic “can we use that” refrain spinning the use of personal trauma as marketing copy on its head, while stripped-back piano ballads like “Yesterday Tomorrow” and “Don’t Hang Up On Me” call to mind a less fussy Rufus Wainwright. 7/10 Brooklyn experimental R&B maverick lets lust in Compared to 2021’s airy and joyful Deacon, the opening moments of Grip sees the Brooklyn artist known more prosaically as Josiah Wise head in a more visceral direction, as befits this music’s recent role in a touring dance theatre production that pays tribute to the vital queer spaces provided by nightclubs. Featuring additional vocals by Ty Dolla $ign and Yanga YaYa, “Damn Gloves” juices up Serpentwithfeet’s spacey brand of modern R&B with elements of trap and afrobeats. Though less overtly dancefloor-oriented, the sultrier “Deep End” and “Hummin’” have a simmering intensity that belies his rep for beatific expressions of love and longing. For all of the album’s lushness, Grip may be most defined by its unabashed lustfulness. LISA-MARIE FERLA JASON ANDERSON CLAIRE ROUSAY Sentiment SHABAKA Perceive Its Beauty, Acknowledge Its Grace THRILL JOCKEY 8/10 Experimental ambient meets emotional spoken-word on latest from unique LA artist Combining field recordings and intimate recorded conversations with diary entry-like revelations – along with subtle drones and immersive atmospherics – has made Rousay a distinctive voice in the world of ambient music. Both experimental and sincere, her latest is a moving album that delivers bare and emotional pop through that both is introspective and intimate. Tracks like “Head”, with slowly unfurling guitar lines and processed vocals which Rousay’s voice leans into beautifully, or “Sycamore Skyline’’, with its tender piano and hypnotic field recordings, capture the tone of a record that is quietly powerful in its delicate yet emotional execution. DANIEL DYLAN WRAY IMPULSE 8/10 Serene, cosmically centred flute explorations from London jazz composer The news that saxophone wizard Shabaka Hutchings was hanging up his horn was initially a cause for deep concern. Fortunately, Hutchings’ debut solo album proper indicates that what at first looked like retirement was simply a change of mode. On Perceive Its Beauty… we hear Hutchings reaching for a variety of esoteric flutes – the shakuhachi, svirel and bamboo flute – backed by harp, strings and a small cadre of vocalists (Saul Williams on “Managing My Breath, What Fear Had Become”, Moses Sumney on the gorgeous “Insecurities”). The highlight is “I’ll Do Whatever You Want”, a gentle nimbus of melody featuring fellow flute convert André 3000 and MARTIN SIMPSON Skydancers TOPIC 7/10 Two discs of acoustic fingerpicking magic from veteran English folkie Long a deathless interpreter of traditional song, it was not until halfway through his 50-year career that Simpson belatedly turned into a compellingly original storyteller in his own right. Here we get the best of both. The title track – written at the request of naturalist/activist Chris Packham – is a glorious celebration of the endangered Hen Harrier, while “Billy Waters” recounts the true tale of a black, peg-legged London busker in the early 18th century. Elsewhere there are Broadside ballads, Appalachian dance tunes and songs by Woody Guthrie and June Tabor, all picked peerlessly on guitar or banjo and with a second live disc as a bonus. NIGEL WILLIAMSON SINKANE We Belong CITY SLANG 7/10 Positivity abounds on New Yorker’s seventh Sinkane’s soulful music has always been about identity. His last album Dépaysé explored his rootlessness as a Sudanese American in typically upbeat fashion. Five years on, We Belong is Ahmed Gallab’s “love letter to black music” for which he corralled a squad in New York that included Money Mark, Bilal, Hollie Cook and lyricist Amanda Khiri, and also took a masters in composition, which loosened his approach. This communal effort results in a joyous, full-bodied set of songs, pumping new life into disco clichés for the euphoric “Come Together” and “How Sweet Is Your Love” and generally expanding Sinkane’s feelgood sound. PIERS MARTIN MAY 2024 • • 39 MARTIN JENKINS Poss has dug deeper still, and more exactingly, into the guitar; this new album feels like a loving paean to his chosen instrument. You can also hear the implication of his long association with the late composer Phill Niblock in the thickness of the drones here, their refined yet psychoactive properties.
NEW ALBUMS PEARL JAM Dark Matter MONKEYWRENCH/REPUBLIC 8/10 DANNY CLINCH Commendably restless 12th from Seattle survivors. By Andrew Mueller WHERE Pearl Jam albums are concerned, there is very often a clue in the name. Pearl Jam’s second, 1993’s Vs, was the sound of a suddenly immensely successful yet bewildered and furious young band demanding of the world what it thought it was staring at. 1996’s No Code was a rejection and subversion of most of what might be expected of a heavy rock group, a fitful meander through previously unexplored musical realms. 1998’s Yield could be heard as a resignation to the idea that Pearl Jam were actually, on mature reflection, a pretty good heavy rock group, and there might not be anything much wrong with that. 2020’s Gigaton was more or less self-explanatory. The title of Dark Matter is a partial guide to its contents. This is a fretful and ferocious record, lyrically much preoccupied with things having ended or appearing about to end, but musically much more blaze of glory than any kind of funeral pyre. The title track, by way of representative sample, finds Eddie Vedder assuming the form of an older but angrier version of the precocious young demon-tamer who announced himself on Ten, 33 years ago. He steams straight in with “steal the light from your eyes/Drain the blood from our hearts”, before urging the band through a thunderous, Sabbath-ish protest song against nothing in particular but everything in general, during which Vedder manages to find some solicitous 40 • • MAY 2024 SLEEVE NOTES 1 Scared Of Fear 2 React, Respond 3 Wreckage 4 Dark Matter 5 Won’t Tell 6 Upper Hand 7 Waiting For Stevie 8 Running 9 Something Special 10Got To Give 11Setting Sun Produced by: Andrew Watt Recorded at: Shangri-La Studios, Malibu; GT Studios, Seattle; Henson Studios, Los Angeles; Jump Site Studios, Seattle Personnel: Eddie Vedder (vocals, guitar, piano), Mike McCready (guitar, piano), Stone Gossard (guitar), ÏäĤÆìäíó (bass, baritone guitar), Matt Cameron (drums, percussion), ÏîòçÐëèíæçîĤäñ (piano, keyboards, guitar), Andrew Watt (guitar, piano, keyboards) words for the Fourth Estate (“Once heard it said/And it stuck in my head/Arrested the press/No-one knows what happened next”). If there is a dominant tenor of Dark Matter, this is broadly it: Vedder declaiming like a man barking orders under fire while Pearl Jam’s formidable sonic artillery roars behind him. The opening two tracks are very much of this ilk. “Scared Of Fear” lurches in on a clattering, Who-like staccato riff, escalates into one of those ecstatic, soaring choruses in which Hüsker Dü once specialised, crests on a pleasingly unreconstructed foot-on-thefoldback guitar solo, and breaks down for a contemplative breath before gathering itself for a climactic bolt to the finish. The lyric seems not the oblique homage to Franklin D Roosevelt’s famous exhortation about fear itself that it may appear: Vedder is preoccupied on this occasion with the personal rather than the political (“I think you’re hurting yourself/Just to hurt me”). “React, Respond” is a frenetic, urgent call to action set to a herky-jerky post-punk riff, haunted by portentous, ghostly backing vocals and sounds, as a whole, splendidly like Led Zeppelin’s unlikely comeback as a Public Image Ltd covers band. The bombardment is maintained by the likes of “Running”, a punchy thrash with a shout-along yob-rock chorus and the kind of police-siren solo you teach yourself on your first guitar in some echoing parental garage; “Upper Hand”, which announces itself with a solemn organ fanfare and languid, lulling introductory verses before shifting subtly, gradually up through the gears and just about daring itself to go full “Free Bird” towards the end; and “Won’t Tell”, a deftly judged balance of Pearl Jam’s occasional inclinations towards the U2-ish epic with their grunge origins. For all that Dark Matter sounds like the kind of proper rock album with which a proper rock band might equip themselves before embarking on a long tour of large venues – and Pearl Jam will be spending much of 2024 doing exactly that – its highlights are arguably those which least resemble the Pearl Jam of circa three decades ago. “Wreckage” is one of the outright prettiest things they’ve ever recorded, a gentle indie-rock jangle against which Vedder is offering a fatalistic goodbye to someone or something (“I’ve only ever wanted/For it not to be this way”): even the guitar solos are sufficiently abashed that this could almost be mistaken for a Go-Betweens tune. “Something Special” verges on downright Crosby, Stills & Nash, all jaunty swing, sweet harmonies and vaguely hippyish positivity; it reads as a boldly guileless memo to Vedder’s daughters (“I work for free/Because you are both special”). The closing, appropriately elegiac “Setting Sun” cracks out an acoustic guitar, and sounds in its early stages like it might have been sung from a rocking chair on a rickety porch. It kicks up several notches before closing the album on both a plea and a pledge: “Let us not fade”. On the considerable strength of Dark Matter, there’s little danger of that. Q&A Jeff Ament: “We have an incredible band family” The title track appeared spontaneously – how was that? It was pretty instant. Matt played that intro drum pattern, we looped it and Stone and I combined a couple of ideas, 0LNHJDYHXVWKHEULGJHULƬDQG(G wrote the words on the spot. Andrew [Watt, producer] waving his arms, hollering out ideas all the while. It’s the most fun way for us to write. What is your sense of the important lyrical themes on the album? (GZURWHDOOWKHZRUGVRQWKHVSRWDV we were playing and arranging. It’s cool to be in the same space, drinking WKHVDPHFRƬHHZKHQWKHZKROHVRQJ goes down. For me, the overall vibe mostly feels like, ‘Here we are at the endgame, in this beautiful world, with all the technology and intelligence… what are we gonna do about it? Are we JRQQDƮJKWHDFKRWKHUWRWKHGHDWKWR extinction, or can we come together and save what we have?’ It’s hopeful. We’re hopeful. Is being in Pearl Jam more fun now than it was 30 years ago? It is as it should be. We all have more tools. The hang is great. We have an incredible EDQGIDPLO\2XUIDQV0DNLQJVWXƬ together is the highest level of creativity I’ve been around. It’s really something special, again, when we’re all engaged and hitting on all cylinders. Not many groups manage to keep a lineup solid for 30 years: what have ÒáÝîèÌÝéğãñîáàëñðÝÞëñððäÝð Reading the room. Shut up. Listen. Speak up. Laugh. Get mad. Be grateful. ,QVSLUH6KDUH3OD\\RXUDVVRƬ$OO of it. And still, it’s a fucking miracle. INTERVIEW: ANDREW MUELLER
NEW ALBUMS SIX ORGANS OF ADMITTANCE Time Is Glass DRAG CITY 8/10 Ben Chasny returns to his Redwoods roots for one of his most entrancing efforts Recorded in between outings to walk his dog while living back home in northern California, Ben Chasny’s 21st album under his ever-flexible Six Organs Of Admittance moniker has an appropriately rustic appeal. Largely consisting of Chasny’s soft, multitracked vocals, a little bit of piano and a gentler variety of strumming than he often applies, captivating songs like “Slip Away” and “Theophany Song” evoke Neil Young’s On The Beach as filtered through Richard Youngs. Though Chasny’s folkier inclinations generally prevail over Six Organs’ equal affection for psych explosions, it’s still thrilling to hear him set the controls for the big red sun in the final minutes of “Summer’s Last Rays”. JASON ANDERSON CHRIS SMITHER All About The Bones SIGNATURE SOUNDS 7/10 A haunted and tender set from the ’70s blues veteran Even when he was young, Chris Smither had a voice that sounded weathered and broken, like a weary traveler searching for a place to rest. He uses this quality to great effect here on his latest album, blending his trademark downer folk and New Orleans blues with flourishes of saxophone and a cheerful Tom Petty cover. For the most part, his subject matter is grim and stark as ever, but he imbues it with newfound tenderness. In “Still Believe In You”, one of his finest songs to date, he sums up his journey with a simple pledge: “I will not grow old without a hand to hold”. SAM SODOMSKY THE SOCIETY OF ROCKETS Tough Trip Through Paradise UNDERPOP 7/10 Bay Area veterans deliver multi-layered eighth Formed in the late ’90s as the Shimmer Kids Underpop Association, The Society Of Rockets have undergone a number of stylistic makeovers since, ROB HUGHES SQUAREPUSHER Dostrotime WARP 8/10 Full-on hard-hitters from rave maestro Tom Jenkinson’s 16th Squarepusher album is another baffling but brilliant demonstration of how this singular talent seems quite content chasing his tail as he plays around with the same ingredients and expects – or rather, we expect – different results. Conceived during lockdown, Dostrotime is still a formidable experience: bookended by serpentine bass-guitar fugues, the bulk of it is a virtuosic hellscape of dystopian hardstep (“Wendorlan”) and steroid-ravaged videogame jungle (“Domelash”) that leaves you breathless. His supreme jazz chops are all over “Stromcor” and “Akkranen”; the programming is extraordinary. He is his own genre and, at this point, no-one does it better. PIERS MARTIN TEXAS & SPOONER OLDHAM The Muscle Shoals Sessions PIAS 6/10 Deep soul overhauls, courtesy of an old master Sharleen Spiteri follows 2023’s career overview with a trip to Alabama to revisit a dozen of those hits with a living legend. Oldham strips the material of its familiar AOR sheen to reveal hidden depths, his electric piano the driving force on the Aretha-like “Mr Haze” and a tender “Black Eyed Boy”. The sparse arrangements favour the more intimate soulfulness of Spiteri’s voice, occasionally embellished by subtle orchestrations, never more so than on a cover of Charles & Eddie’s “Would I Lie To You?” and the hymnal retread of the band’s late-’80s calling card “I Don’t Want A Lover”. TERRY STAUNTON THE WANDERING HEARTS Mother CHRYSALIS 7/10 Lush, harmony-rich third outing from homegrown Americana trio The Wandering Hearts occupy a fairly well-trodden space between folk, country and classic Californian pop, but the joy lies in the manner in which they go about their business. The burnished harmonies of Tara Wilcox and Francesca ‘Chess’ Whiffin are central to their bittersweet sound, augmented by AJ Dean’s deft acoustic fingerpicking. The melodic sensibilities of Simon & Garfunkel weave through “About America” and “Waiting”, while “Not Misunderstood” is perfumed by mid-’70s Fleetwood Mac. The addition of the trio’s live band is a boon too, especially on the vigorous country-rock coda of “River To Cry”. ROB HUGHES KAMASI WASHINGTON Fearless Movement XL 7/10 Jazz bandleader integrates rap, funk and soul on “elastic” fifth album Across a string of increasingly sprawling records, Kamasi Washington has laid out an expansive vision of modern jazz. But he’s long cultivated links with Los Angeles’ beats and hip-hop scene too, and it’s this side of his art that comes more into focus on Fearless Movement. Jazz remains the root of his sound, with Washington’s saxophone as bold and vibrant as ever. But the grand orchestral sweep of albums past is pared back, replaced by a deeper engagement with hip-hop, funk and soul. “Get Lit” is an update of ’70s P-Funk with the rising Death Row rapper D Smoke and George Clinton himself in the mix, while André 3000 brings his flute to the sultry rare groove of “Dream State”. LOUIS PATTISON Formidable: Tom Jenkinson is Squarepusher NEIL YOUNG WITH CRAZY HORSE Fu##in Up REPRISE 8/10 Record Store Day LP gets wider release While Young’s contrarian streak hasn’t mellowed much over the years, he’s been on a fairly steady Crazy Horse trip since 2018, reactivating his dormant backing band with Nils Lofgren replacing stalwart guitarist Frank ‘Poncho’ Sampedro. Since then, the Horse have galloped through Young’s schedules, as a trio of new studio albums – Colorado, Barn and World Record – have vied with vintage, Poncho-era releases, including ‘lost’ album Toast and Dume, a radical expansion of Zuma. Fu##in Up, meanwhile, is something slightly different: both new and archival, it finds a five-piece Horse, with Micah Nelson on guitar, performing Ragged Glory in full during a private concert in Toronto last November. Played almost entirely straight, Fu##in Up captures Young and the Horse on blazing form. Nelson makes a capable duelling partner for Young, working intuitively alongside Old Black’s grizzled solos, while Lofgren’s honky-tonk piano lends a shimmying quality to these craggy, elemental songs. The churn is relentless, though, climaxing with a defiant and momentous “Love And Only Love” (rechristened “A Chance On Love”: all the song titles have been changed for no obvious reason). Fifteen minutes in and you sense they could keep going: Young is even still shouting the chorus over a squall of feedback at the song’s close, not ready to quit just yet. MICHAEL BONNER ZOMBI Direct Inject RELAPSE 7/10 Pittsburgh synth explorers stage a stirring seventh LP When Zombi started out way back at the dawn of the new century, their faithful take on the pulsating synthscapes of Goblin, John Carpenter et al made them something of an oddity on alternative rock bills. A couple of decades in, the world has turned and the duo’s dramatic, filmic instrumentals are bang on trend. Direct Inject isn’t mere atmosphere, though: “The PostAtomic Horror” and “Bodies In The Flotsam” have a lumbering metal quality, propelled forth on AE Paterra’s pneumatic drumming. An unexpected curveball comes in the shape of “Sessuale II”, a sultry saxophone and bass jam that stands out like a sex scene in the midst of a slasher flick. KAMI CHASNY; CASPAR STEVENS Top dog Ben Chasny assimilating psychedelia, garagerock, Tropicália and more. At heart they’re an unfailingly melodic pop band, employing horns, strings, mandolin, lap steel and Hammond organ to realise frontman Joshua Babcock’s dreamy Elysian visions. The ringing “Doors Are Opening” could be Teenage Fanclub at their most bucolic; “Don’t Be Afraid” recalls The Pernice Brothers; “Golden State” aligns itself to early ’70s glam. They sign off in irreverent style with “Gettin’ Along”, a radiant folk shanty with heavenly choir. LOUIS PATTISON MAY 2024 • • 41
“The trees full of new leaves offering green tears to the earth” MAY 2024 TAKE 325 1 AC/DC (P46) 2 ALICE COLTRANE (P48) 3 SISTER ROSETTA THARPE (P50) 4 SANULLIM (P52) REISSUES | COMPS | BOXSETS | LOST RECORDINGS BROADCAST Spell Blanket: Collected Demos 2006–2009 WARP JAMES CARGILL Intriguing lost tracks from the Midlands soundscapers’ archive. By Piers Martin of a tour of Australia. By that point, Broadcast ROADCAST always ARCHIVE had become the kind of cult act they once attracted plenty of LP OF THE looked up to in the mid-’90s – radical psych speculation and intrigue MONTH explorers like The United States Of America or when they were active, but White Noise – peddling esoteric sound collages since the death of singer 9/10 drawn from a very British palette of trippy Trish Keenan at the age of Hammer films, the smoke and mirrors FX of the 42 in January 2011, the band’s BBC Radiophonic Workshop and the sinister air of enigma – and reputation – has only grown. Eleven arcane 1970s kids’ TV shows like Children Of The Stones years after their final album – an eccentric soundtrack and The Owl Service that, looking back, seemed entirely to Peter Strickland’s Berberian Sound Studio, completed unsuitable for the intended audience. by remaining member James Cargill – Broadcast are This is best expressed on their final release as a duo, more popular than ever. Their 750,000 monthly listeners …Investigate Witch Cults Of The Radio Age, a 2009 on Spotify hammer the Birmingham group’s first collaboration with The Focus Group – the electronic three long-players – The Noise Made By People, Haha project of their long-time graphic designer and Ghost Sound and Tender Buttons – which Warp have kept Box label co-founder Julian House – in which Cargill and repressing since 2015 to meet demand. Walk into any Keenan conjure lurid pastorals coffee shop in Brooklyn, anecdotal and anxious freakbeat full of evidence suggests, and there’s tumbling jazzy drum fills and an 85 per cent chance they’ll be babbling circuitry, a cursed playing Broadcast. library disc of bad vibes and There’s a sense today that auditory hallucinations. The Broadcast were on the cusp of pair appeared quite content to further greatness at the time of keep exploring this obscure Keenan’s passing, though it’s hauntological world from their easy, with hindsight, to ascribe home in Hungerford – live footage momentum to a career cut short. from late 2010 shows them In fact, back then the group were playing versions of tracks from deep in the midst of their most that record in Australia – but, experimental phase when Keenan compellingly weird as it is, what’s died from pneumonia after absent from this period is contracting swine flu at the end 42 • • MAY 2024
Trish Keenan: bringing the human touch to Broadcast MAY 2024 • • 43
ARCHIVE SLEEVE NOTES 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 Keenan: trying a variety of styles and textures with partner James Cargill the warmth and emotion, the human touch, that Keenan brings. For Broadcast, her presence is the strange attractor. Perhaps that’s why their last commercially inclined album, 2005’s Tender Buttons, has come to be regarded as their definitive release. This is the last collection of conventional songs composed by Cargill and Keenan, who, working as a duo after losing their drummer, stripped their sound back to rhythm boxes and electronics in a bid to move away from the ’60s chanson style that characterised their earlier work. Keenan’s pop instinct propels “Tears In The Typing Pool” and “America’s Boy” to great heights, but the music is colder, more primitive, the mood mysterious and restless. Coolly received at the time, you can hear its influence on Thom Yorke’s solo work, the sci-fi imperative of Flying Lotus and the LA beat scene, and even Paul Weller, whose love of Broadcast led to him releasing an EP of spooked exotica, “In Another Room”, on Ghost Box a few years ago. Appropriately for a band whose enchanting music evokes memories that are at once familiar yet unknowable, Spell Blanket: Collected Demos 2006–2009 upturns everything we thought we knew about Broadcast during that final period. The Song Before The Song Comes Out March Of The Fleas Greater Than Joy Mother Plays Games My Marble Eye Roses Red Hip Bone to Hip Bone Running Back To Me I Blink You Blink Infant Girl I Run In Reams Luminous Image A Little Light Hairpin Memories My Body Follow The Light Tunnel View Where Are You? Singing Game I Want To Be Fine The Games You Play Grey Grey Skies Puzzle The Clock Is On Fire Petal Alphabet Tell Table Fatherly Veil Dream Power Heartbeat Call Sign Crone Motion Sleeping Bed Join In Together Colour In The Numbers I Am The Bridge Spirit House It fills in gaps we didn’t know were there, offers 35 tantalising clues to their 36 unfinished fifth album, and somehow ends up enhancing their mystique, despite laying all the cards on the table. Like opening a treasure chest and basking in the golden glow, Spell Blanket collects 36 demos and sketches from Keenan’s extensive archive of fourtrack tapes and MiniDiscs, recorded in the years after Tender Buttons, and which it’s assumed would have shaped the sound of their next record – all while they focused, as if in a parallel world, on the folk-horror experiments. It’s the first of two Broadcast archival releases this year by Warp; the second, Distant Call, due in the autumn, rounds up early demos of songs from the first three albums and will be the group’s final release. Readers of Broadcast’s Future Crayon blog will know that, each September 28, Cargill posts a birthday tribute to Keenan, who was his partner. On a few of these occasions, he’s posted an unreleased Broadcast demo or audio clip, something that Keenan made. The first one he posted, in 2012, the year after her death, was a 40-second recording she made of herself, walking outside, cheerfully singing a verse called “The Song Before The Song Comes Out”, almost making it up as she goes. It’s intimate and unaffected, presumably never intended for wider circulation, and it opens this collection, setting the tone for a wealth of material that sheds new light on Broadcast’s songwriting process and Keenan’s approach to lyrics, providing insight into her state of mind through the words she wrote. What strikes you is the sheer variety of styles and textures that Keenan and Cargill were playing around with. It’s a shimmering patchwork of ideas and moments, some more realised than others, some beautiful, some stark, and in this sense, Spell Blanket follows on quite naturally from Berberian Sound Studio, itself a series of short film cues. Ranging in length from 30 seconds to close to four minutes, there’s enough potential material here for three or four albums, if only the demos could be worked on and completed – but that will never happen and, in any case, there’s a certain charm to the brevity and roughness of these recordings that fits Broadcast’s aesthetic. In just the first eight tracks, there’s spectral hymnal drone (“March Of The Fleas”), choral loops (“Greater Than Joy”) and flute-laced witch-folk (“Mother Plays Games”), followed by the fuzzy soft-focus psych of “Roses Red”, an irresistible minute of “Hip Bone To Hip Bone” and the heavy ritual groove of “Running Back To Me”. Elsewhere, we hear Keenan trying a technique on “Singing Game”, there’s a lush synth surge called “Dream Power”, and a killer cut titled “The Games You Play”. The whole thing is an abundance of riches that illustrates how versatile and special Broadcast could be. Keenan’s poetic lyrics touch on memories of childhood, the natural and supernatural world, her body and her dreams, seeking comfort in the domestic – familiar subjects for her, but here, presented in a beautifully designed booklet by House, it all represents something quite moving and substantial, a testament to her unique vision. Phrases stand out: “Hairpin memories loose in wish water”; “Mondrian child let loose with the pen”; “One by one the clocks fall asleep”; “The trees full of new leaves offering green tears to the earth”; “Drink up your water, Mother, watch your daughter growing tall”. This is where the heart is, in these first takes and early demos, when the sentiment is true and the feeling is pure. Of course, it’s all we’ve got at this point, all that’s left at the end of the story. Spell Blanket is a glimpse at what might have been. A memory of the future. RECOMMENDED COME ON LET’S GO Weaving the Spell Blanket BROADCAST BROADCAST BROADCAST WARP, 2005 WARP, 2009 WARP, 2013 TRISH KEENAN Tender Buttons Operating as the duo of Cargill and Keenan, Broadcast’s third and last conventional album LVDFROGZDYHFODVVLFWKDWUHưHFWVWKHLUSDUHG down practice. Curdled synths and skittering drum machines frame Keenan’s lyrics, drawn from Gertrude Stein poetry and hospice visits to her ailing father, but their pop impulse, on “Corporeal” and “Black Cat” especially, shines through the haze. 9/10 44 • • MAY 2024 Mother Is The Milky Way 5HLVVXHGLQWKLVIDU RXWWRXURQO\PLQLDOEXPsD companion to their record with Julian House’s The Focus Group, …Investigate Witch Cults Of The Radio AgesFKDUWVWKHSDLUoV 'DGDLVWGHVFHQWLQWR+DPPHUKRUURUFXWXSV $YLOODJHJUHHQVÆDQFHLQYROYLQJ.XUW6FKZLWWHUV GHFD\LQJELUGVRQJDQGPLVUHPHPEHUHGIUHDN folk, these queasy reveries reveal another, more LQZDUGORRNLQJDVSHFWWR%URDGFDVW8/10 Berberian Sound Studio Arriving two years after Keenan’s death, Broadcast’s swan song is the score to Peter 6WULFNODQGoVƮOPZLWKLQDƮOPBerberian Sound Studio, in which an uptight English foley artist is consumed by an Italian giallo i n the 1970s. .HHQDQoVYRLFHDSSHDUVưHHWLQJO\LQ&DUJLOOoV FODXVWURSKRELFOLEUDU\PLQLDWXUHVsDZKLPVLFDO ƮQDOHWKDWKLQWVDWZKDWPLJKWKDYHEHHQ 7/10
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ARCHIVE Boogie men: (l–r) Cliff Williams, Phil Rudd, Angus Young, Brian Johnson and Stevie Young AC/DC High Voltage/Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap/ Powerage/Highway To Hell /Back In Black/For Those About To Rock (We Salute You)/The Razor’s Edge/ Live/Who Made Who High Voltage 8/10 Highway To Hell 9/10 The Razor’s Edge 7/10 COLUMBIA/SONY LEGACY LUCY DURÁN Simply the best: 50th-anniversary reissues from hard rock’s masters of minimalism. By Paul Moody W HERE would we be without AC/ DC? Their libidinous bar-room blues might seem – at the very least – anachronistic in 2024, but the thirst for their primal boogie remains unquenchable: 2020’s Power Up debuted at No 1 in 21 countries. 46 • • MAY 2024 Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap7/10 Back In Black 9/10 Powerage 10/10 For Those About To Rock 7/10 Live 7/10 Who Made Who 5/10
ARCHIVE world-weary shrug on “Gone Shootin’”, the tale of a hopelessly drug-addicted girlfriend, while a brooding “Sin City” finds the singer using Las Vegas as a metaphor for the miserable lot of the working man in a world where the loaded dice of life are always rigged against him, dreams of “Lamborghinis, caviar, dry martinis” eternally out of reach. It’s also on Powerage where the difference between ’DC and (most of) their late ’70s peers is most stark, their musical know-how never more evident than on “Riff Raff ”. The song’s lyrical message (“Ain’t done nothin’ wrong/I’m just having fun”) might mirror, say, Jimmy Pursey of Sham 69’s happy-go-lucky worldview, but musically it’s in a different league, Scott’s sandpaper drawl set against an electrifying, five-minute fusion of prog-rock dexterity and punk fury, Angus’s molten solos a reminder that a scorched-earth policy always works best when you’re wearing devil’s horns. These musical chops were, of course, utilised to their full potential on 1979’s imperious Highway To Hell. Scott would be dead just eight months after its release (official cause: acute alcohol poisoning after a visit to Camden club The Music Machine, now Koko), and 45 years on, its cheerful celebration of deviance, immorality and plain bad behaviour sounds as exhilarating as ever thanks to Mutt Lange’s super-slick production. For most bands, the loss of a charismatic frontman invariably sounds the death-knell for their career. But by doubling down on their core values and recruiting affable former Geordie frontman Brian Johnson, the ultimate team player, for 1980’s epochal Back In Black, ’DC defied the odds once more, channelling their grief into the biggest-selling hardrock album of all time. Recorded sightings of this diabolic alchemy at full power have been all too rare since the brutalist bombast of 1981’s For Those About To Rock (We Salute You) – their third, and last, collaboration with Lange – and it doesn’t feel coincidental that these reissues skip over the creative trough beginning with 1983’s self-produced Flick Of The Switch and including 1985’s Fly On The Wall and 1988’s Blow Up Your Video. It was by getting back to basics and allowing überproducer Brice Fairburn to helm 1990’s The Razor’s Edge that ’DC struck gold once more, the numbskull nirvana of “Thunderstruck” re-establishing them as global big-hitters, as illustrated on the following year’s Live double album, recorded at shows in the UK, Canada and Russia. Rock’n’roll damnation? Far from it. Almost 25 years on, the same songs remain the bedrock of their live performances, and these albums are the gold standard for all those who dare follow them. By continually honing this base metal formula, AC/DC have achieved sonic gold: a sound uniquely their own The touring lineup for their latest stadium jaunt may boast only the indefatigable Angus – 68 years, erm, Young – from the lineup for their first-ever gig at Sydney’s Chequers nightclub on December 31, 1973, but 200 million album sales later, their gonzo appeal is if anything stronger than ever – a red-blooded, twofingered raspberry in the face of an unblinking AI. Accordingly, while not all of these gold vinyl reissues can be described as essential – only completists, you imagine, will be rushing to revisit Who Made Who, the soundtrack for Stephen King’s flop 1986 horror movie Maximum Overdrive – as a whole they provide a fascinating insight into the working practices of a band whose gristle-free formula and ego-free approach have seen them negotiate everything from punk to pandemics en route to global domination. Many might scoff at a 50-year back catalogue where continual reworkings of the same threechord trick come allied to lyrics which, as Angus once described, rarely move beyond the (un)holy trinity of “cars, girls and party time”. Yet, much like the Stones, by continually honing this base metal formula, AC/DC have achieved sonic gold: a sound uniquely their own. The earliest experiments are invariably the most thrilling. High Voltage is the aural equivalent of being wired into the mains, the band’s tough-astungsten mindset spelt out in defiant opener “It’s A Long Way To The Top (If You Wanna Rock ’n’ Roll)”, Bon Scott bawling, “Gettin’ old/Gettin’ grey/ Gettin’ ripped off/ Underpaid” amid the howl of screaming bagpipes. If the following year’s Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap — the title an homage to a character in kids’ cartoon show Beany And Cecil — practically invents Beavis And Butt-Head, it’s 1978’s Powerage that best exemplifies their less-is-more approach. The purist’s ’DC album of choice, and tellingly Keith Richards’ favourite, it’s stripped to the bone sonically, Cliff Williams’ pumpaction basslines the springboard for a tripwiretaut 40 minutes featuring some of their funkiest, and grimiest, grooves. If the hardwire-riffing is every bit as thrilling as the Chuck Berry records that inspired the Young brothers in the first place, Scott’s low-life snapshots of the drug-addicted and debt-ridden are as spiky as anything by the Sex Pistols or The Stranglers. “Stirred the coffee with the same spoon”, laments the singer with a AtoZ This month… P48 P48 P49 P49 P50 ALICE COLTRANE DEEP PURPLE FLOWERED UP HARMONIA SISTER ROSETTA THARPE P52 PORTISHEAD P53 SPARKS ABBA Waterloo (reissue, 1974) POLAR MUSIC INTERNATIONAL 6/10 Plenty of promise, but the Swedes’ second album is patchy at best When Abba arrived on stage for the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest, it changed the quartet’s lives, but it couldn’t change their second album, already out in their native Sweden (and now half-speed mastered). Fifty years later, its weakest points sound even weaker, notably “King Kong Song”’s novelty glam and stalker anthem “Watch Out”, not to mention “What About Livingstone”’s saccharine schlager and “Hasta Manana”, which predicts Brotherhood Of Man’s “Save All Your Kisses For Me”, if rewritten for Vera Lynn. Fortunately, if “Honey Honey” is a little too sweet, the title track remains thrilling, and the deliciously understated “My Mama Said” hints at disco to come, while “Suzy-Hang-Around” is a surprisingly baroque slice of harpsichord pop and “Dance (While The Music Still Goes On)” brings out the men’s inner BeeGee. Extras 7/10: Coloured vinyl singles boxset and 10” single of “Waterloo” in four languages. WYNDHAM WALLACE DAVID BOWIE Waiting In The Sky PARLOPHONE 7/10 Record Store Day release of an alternative Ziggy, on half-speed-cut vinyl Towards the middle of December 1971, David Bowie had spent a month in Trident and emerged with what he thought could be the follow-up to Hunky Dory. After finalising the tracklist he sent the tapes to the label and – in this alternative timeline – they agreed to put it out. This is a universe in which Waiting In The Sky is released instead of Ziggy Stardust, which means no “Suffragette City”, “Starman” or “Rock’n’Roll Suicide”, all three of which were written after RCA suggested Bowie come up with extra songs. The alternative Ziggy instead includes “Round And Round”, “Amsterdam”, “Holy Holy” and “Velvet Goldmine”, and for all the merits of those four songs, it goes without saying that it is an inferior record to the one Bowie MAY 2024 • • 47
ARCHIVE eventually released in summer 1972. An interesting academic exercise that shows occasionally record labels do know what they are talking about. REDISCOVERED Coltrane: cosmic spirals captured live PETER WATTS ANNE BRIGGS Anne Briggs (reissue, 1971) TOPIC 9/10 Vinyl reissue from toweringly influential folk legend, with previously unheard extras Briggs’ remarkable debut only seems to grow more luminous in time. Whether singing a cappella or accompanying herself on acoustic guitar, she brings new meaning to these mostly traditional folk songs, her voice cutting through the air with purity and candour. Her version of “Blackwater Side” (previously taught to ex-lover Bert Jansch for 1966’s Jack Orion) is exquisite. Jansch co-write “Go Your Way” remains a transportive study of romantic anguish, while Briggs’ own “Living By The Water”, written in isolation on a beach in Ireland, suggests that her own company was always the preferred option. Extras 8/10: Rediscovered in the Topic archives only last year, ‘The Lost Tape’ is a bonus single containing four unreleased tracks from the 1971 sessions. Versions of “Sovay”, “Bruton Town” and “Three Maidens A-Milking Did Go” are riveting, though a particularly wonderful “The Cruel Mother” makes off with the spoils. ROB HUGHES ALICE COLTRANE The Carnegie Hall Concert IMPULSE! 9/10 Electrifying and transcendent, this previously unreleased set captures the legendary harpist at a pivotal point in her career (&+2(6Ǭ5(')(516 THE John & Alice Coltrane Home, Impulse! and Verve Label Group are calling 2024 the Year Of Alice, but for a growing contingent of jazz fans, it’s been her year for some time now. The stature of Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda, harpist, pianist, composer, spiritual leader and wife of John, has only increased after her death in 2007 at the age of 69. Her career as a jazz pianist began in her hometown of Detroit in the 1950s, but her life was forever changed when she met Coltrane in 1963. Two years later, they were married and the following year, she replaced McCoy Tyner in his classic quartet. She recorded, performed, started a family, and walked the spiritual path with John until his untimely death in 1967. Her first album as leader, A Monastic Trio, arrived in December 1968, a post-bop spiritual gem that marked the first appearance of her harp and contained the seeds of the devotional music that would come later. Her work began to reflect a burgeoning interest in Hinduism and Indian music, first on Ptah, The El Daoud and taken even further on Journey In Satchidananda with the addition of tanpura and oud. A string of increasingly more meditative albums would follow, with her final studio album Translinear Light arriving in 2004. As interest in the music of both Coltranes continues to grow, more of it 48 • • MAY 2024 finds its way out of the vaults. The Carnegie Hall Concert is the latest, marking Alice’s first appearance there as bandleader. It was 1971 and she had just released Journey…. For this set, an augmented ensemble was assembled: saxophonists Pharoah Sanders and Archie Shepp, bassists Jimmy Garrison and Cecil McBee, drummers Ed Blackwell and Clifford Jarvis, and Kumar Kramer and Tulsi Reynolds on harmonium and tamboura respectively. Impulse! commissioned the original multi-track recording but didn’t release it at the time. Parts of this set have since been bootlegged but this official version offers a marked improvement in quality. It opens with the titular track from Journey…, Alice’s harp as intimate as it is transcendental, waves of cascading sound that pile on top of each other in a cosmic spiral. Her equally entrancing composition “Shiva-Loka” is next, followed by two of John’s: “Africa” from Africa/Brass and “Leo” from Interstellar Space. All four are tremendous, but this version of “Africa” is pure cosmic fire. Stretching out to nearly half an hour, Shepp and Sanders spare no energy as they trade exhilarating solos. Throughout, the music contracts in on itself, seeming to defy physics. It’s like this on the studio albums but one has the sense that it always went even further live. This set is a confirmation and welcome addition to the catalogue of recorded Alice Coltrane music and spiritual jazz. ANA GAVRILOVSKA GENE CLARK The Lost Studio Sessions: 1964–1982 (reissue, 2016) LIBERATION HALL 8/10 Ex-Byrd’s neglected gems get another airing Initially released on the Sierra label in 2016, having thoroughly plundered the Clark vaults, this fascinating set effectively provides a throughline from his pre-Byrds days to an often brilliant solo career and on to Nyteflyte, an aborted ’80s supergroup that includes ex-bandmates Chris Hillman and Michael Clarke. An opening handful of unremarkable 1964 tracks posit Clark as an acoustic balladeer, but the collection really draws heat with 1967’s “Don’t Let It Fall Through”, punctuated by Hugh Masekela’s horns. Clark settles into his early -’70s peak years with White Light-prefiguring treasures like “The Lighthouse” and “The Awakening Within”. Flying Burritos Hillman and Gram Parsons raise the temperature with a terrific “She Darked The Sun”, before a whole host of guests – Clarence White, Spooner Oldham, Sneaky Pete Kleinow among them – bring countryrock chops to 1972’s “Roll In My Sweet Baby’s Arms” and more. ROB HUGHES DEEP PURPLE Machine Head: Super Deluxe Edition UNIVERSAL 9/10 Purple reign: remastered multiformat reissue of hard rock legends’ finest
ARCHIVE True, their loping beat patterns and frontman Liam Maher’s sprechgesang echoed their Manchester peers, but stylistically the quintet were all over the shop, “scrambling around trying to learn how to write”, as their occasional lyric writer and manager had it. Hence the melting pot of their first and only album: piano house mixes with Van Halen guitar vamps, organ-powered psychedelic soul, Floydian interstellar disco, brassblasted ’80s pop and more. This remastered reissue on two discs is both a vivid snapshot of the countercultural time and a reminder that the band cast their own eccentric shadow. Extras 7/10: The epic “Weekender”, their 1992 Top 20 single, is added to the original album, along with a remix of same by Beyond The Wizards Sleeve. The second disc features 12 previously unreleased tracks (pimp-rolling novelty “I’ll Be Your Dog” stands out) and remixes. SHARON O’CONNELL LONDON 9/10 Factory’s in-house mascot shines on expanded late-’80s masterpiece Tony Wilson protégé, Factory’s first album artist, guitarist’s guitar hero, emaciated martyr to mental health: Vini Reilly’s legend has often overshadowed his work’s sheer beauty. Fortunately, his eponymous seventh album redirects the spotlight onto his unique, classically influenced style, often pairing it with a riveting use of samples, not least Otis Redding and Tracy Chapman on “Otis” and an operatic soprano on the Mediterranean-flavoured opener “Love No More”. The propulsive “People’s Pleasure Park” confirms this isn’t only about fragile filigrees, however, while Wilson’s timeless query from 2010’s A Paean To Wilson – “Is this an art form or are you just a technician” – is firmly settled by “Requiem Again”’s poignant grace. Extras 8/10: 5CD set adds 1989’s rare Sporadic Recordings album, a murky but enlightening live DVD, demos and live tracks (but only four previously unreleased), plus infamous Morrissey collaboration “I Know Very Well How I Got My Note Wrong”. WYNDHAM WALLACE FLOWERED UP A Life With Brian (reissue, 1991) LONDON 7/10 First reissue of their idiosyncratic debut, expanded Though there’s some truth in the popular epithet, Flowered Up were more than just London’s answer to Happy Mondays. NIGEL WILLIAMSON FUMIO ITABASHI Watarase (reissue, 1982) HARMONIA Musik Von Harmonia (reissue, 1974) THE DURUTTI COLUMN Vini Reilly (reissue, 1989) was Hicks, who traded in the psychrock of his work with Haight-Ashbury pioneers the Charlatans for an acoustic but expansive mix of retro swing, Dixieland tropes, lounge music, gypsy jazz and anything else that took his revivalist fancy. The first eight tracks here were recorded with the original Hot Licks lineup, including sensational fiddle player Sid Page and the Lickettes, Naomi Eisenberg and Maryann Price, deliciously trading call-and-response vocals with the laconic Hicks on classics such as “How Can I Miss You When You Won’t Go Away” and “My Old Timey Baby”. They’re augmented by nine tracks recorded in 2009 with a different lineup, still swinging and with such additional fun attractions as Hicks’ Satchmo impersonations. GRÖNLAND 9/10 A beautiful, inspired krautrock gem, playful and luscious When he visited Cluster’s rural studio in Forst, Germany, Michael Rother thought he was trying to conscript Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Dieter Moebius as Neu!’s backing musicians. Instead, after jamming with the duo, he relocated to Forst and the trio formed Harmonia. Brian Eno once called them “the most important rock band in the world”, quite possibly because they weren’t really a rock band at all; they felt more like a studio experiment, a curio, a playful and light-hearted exploration. Lest this sound dismissive, Musik Von Harmonia is one of the finest albums in the krautrock canon, and certainly one of the most approachably, warmly experimental. Rhythm boxes chug to toy-like melodies (“Watussi”); heartbeats thunder under swarms of synth-tone (“Sehr Kosmisch”); ever-cycling guitar reels split the sky (“Dino”). It’s heavenly music. Extras 7/10: A second album of remixes by the likes of Matthew Herbert, James Holden, David Pajo, even Rother himself. WEWANTSOUNDS 8/10 A welcome reissue of an obscure Japanese post-bop piano gem Jazz pianist and composer Fumio Itabashi worked with several prominent Japanese jazz musicians in the 1970s and toured as a sideman with the legendary drummer Elvin Jones in the 1980s. Watarase is his second studio album, cut in just two days in 1981 and released in Japan the following year. Little heard outside of Japan beyond a limited-edition release in 2018, this reissue is a satisfying introduction to a lesserknown figure. Itabashi’s rhythmic, sinuous playing is thoroughly engaging across all seven songs, beginning with a lovely rendition of the pop standard “Someday My Prince Will Come” (made jazz famous by the 1961 Miles Davis version). Itabashi gets even more spirited on his originals, the last four tracks: “Tone” is powerful and rich, alive with melodies that build in intensity as the song marches toward its conclusion, while the title track is pitch-perfect post-bop that brings to mind the great McCoy Tyner. ANA GAVRILOVSKA PETE JOLLY Seasons (reissue, 1970) FUTURE DAYS 7/10 Cratedigger, easy-breezy jazz, brought back to life A multiinstrumentalist of no small repute – he played on scores for the likes of M*A*S*H and Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid – Pete Jolly came through at the same time as the rise of studio musician collectives like the Wrecking Crew. Immersed in jazz, he was taken under the wing of Herb Alpert and ended producing three solo albums with the music industry figure. Seasons is the best, and best known, of the three. There’s a breeziness here that belies the LP’s realisation through improv – most of the music here is firsttake stuff, with minimal overdubbing – and a fluency of playing that betrays its creation at the hands of industry masters. The opening “Leaves” would later be sampled by De La Soul and Cypress Hill. A playful swoon. Extras 6/10: New liners. JON DALE THE MAGNETIC FIELDS 69 Love Songs (reissue, 1999) MERGE 9/10 One of the finest triple albums in history turns 25 69 Love Songs was originally going to be 100 Love Songs, but triple digits was too daunting, so Stephin Merritt subtracted 31 and got a good laugh out of it, too. Still, 69 is a lot of love songs, and what’s remarkable 25 years later is how few of them – almost none, actually – sound like they were written just to reach that total. Each one recounts a good story (“The Book Of Love”) or explains a complicated feeling (“Papa Was A Rodeo”) or tells a funny joke (“Let’s Pretend We’re Bunny Rabbits”). The music ranges from country to synthpop to showtune to whatever “Punk Love” is, which is a feat in itself. But what matters here is the sheer bulk of them, the stunt of writing so many good ones, which makes listening to all 69 at once as thrilling as watching someone go over Niagara Falls in a barrel. STEPHEN DEUSNER Piling ’em high: The Magnetic Fields’ Stephin Merritt JON DALE DAN HICKS & HIS HOT LICKS Live In LA 1973 FLOATING WORLD 7/10 Nostalgic fun from idiosyncratic San Franciscans The western swing revival that emerged as a thriving offshoot of the cosmic country breakout in the early 1970s gave us Commander Cody and Asleep At The Wheel – but the wittiest, most inventive of the latter-day swingers MAY 2024 • • 49 MARCELO KRASILCIC Sabbath might have been heavier and Zeppelin more flash, but Purple always had the groove – and never more so than on their 1972 magnum opus, a UK chart-topper which also breached the US Top 10. Incendiary live sets from London’s Paris Theatre in 1972 and Switzerland in 1971 (the latter previously unreleased) crackle with energy, the group’s versatility never more apparent than on an MC5-esque nine-minute demolition of “Speed King”, Jon Lord and Ritchie Blackmore trading solos amid Ian Gillan’s soulful shrieks. A remix of the original album by überfan Dweezil Zappa, meanwhile, brings it full circle: it was during a performance by his father Frank in Montreux in 1971 that the fire broke out which inspired the album’s guitar-shop perennial, “Smoke On The Water”. Extras 9/10: Live sets, remastered album, new stereo and Dolby Atmos mixes. PAUL MOODY
ARCHIVE the first release on his own label, Deep Digs. It’s just her and her guitar and the audience, and that’s all she needs for a 65-minute recital of 21 songs, including some of those with which she had become most closely associated and which she popularised. On the likes of “This Train”, Washington Phillips’s “Denomination Blues”, JW Alexander’s “Jesus Met The Woman At The Well” and such standards as “The 1 This Train Saints” and “Joshua 2 When My Life Fought The Battle Work Is Ended 3 Didn’t It Rain Of Jericho”, her 4 Mother’s singing is bold and Prayer engaging. You can 5 Up Above My imagine Bob Dylan Head, I Hear Music In The listening to her Air speeded-up version 6 Moonshine of the Swan Silvertones’ “Go Ahead” York in 1938 she appeared at Carnegie 7 Sit Down and picking up tips on phrasing. And Hall in the first of John Hammond’s two 8 Down By The Riverside she’s never po-faced: voicing her historic “From Spirituals to Swing” 9 When The disapproval of bootleg whisky in a concerts, subtitled “An Evening of Saints Go song of her own called “Moonshine”, African American Negro Music”, Marching In representing sacred music alongside 10 Joshua Fought occasionally she slips into a tipsy slur: The Battle Of “I don’t like it, no, I don’t like it, no-nosuch secular performers as the pianist Jericho no, I don’t like it…” James P Johnson and the Count Basie 11 Jesus Met The There’s a reminder of her renown Orchestra. At the start of the 1940s Woman At among the young musicians of the she moved temporarily to the secular The Well 12 Two Little British R&B boom in the performance side and sang with Lucky Millinder’s Fishes, Five of “Up Above My Head, I Hear Music big band, whose R&B foreshadowed Loaves Of In The Air”, a gospel shout-up which rock’n’roll. Bread she had recorded with Marie Knight in Returning to her gospel roots, she 13 Traveling Shoes 1947. In 1964 it was borrowed by Long switched to the electric guitar, which 14 Beams Of John Baldry for a duet with the 19-yearcut through better when she performed Heaven old studio debutant Rod Stewart with church choirs. In 1951 she was 15 That’s All/ featured on the B-side of “You’ll Be married (to her third husband) during Denomination Blues Mine”, Baldry’s first single. This is a show in a Washington DC baseball 16 Going Home the one song here on which Tharpe stadium, in front of 25,000 people. And 17 Go Ahead abandons her guitar for the piano, in 1957, at the behest of Chris Barber, 18 Bring Back very effectively. she arrived in Europe, encountering Those Happy Days But it’s the guitar that grabs the audiences whose enthusiasm would 19 Give Me That attention, time and again. With a lure her back many times before a Old Time slightly dirtied-up sound and just as stroke forced her into retirement in 1970, Religion much technique as she needs to do followed by her death three years later. 20 If Anybody Above Me the job, she strums and fingerpicks Those European tours centred on 21 Nobody’s Fault and fills the spaces with bluesy fills France, where the warmth of the But Mine and jazzy runs. Her sense of swing is welcome offered to African American relentless, stemming not just from the artists ensured that she could fill halls hand-clapping congregations in the not just in Paris but in medium-sized sanctified churches of her childhood but from her towns across the country. Limoges, famous for its experience with Millinder and others in the world porcelain, was a place she visited three times, in of dancehall R&B. 1958, 1964 and 1966, and on the last occasion her Was she indeed the godmother of rock’n’roll, performance at the Grand Theatre was recorded as some now claim? As the tributaries of gospel, by ORTF, the French broadcasting network. The blues, jazz and country music converged to form long-buried tapes were found in 2017 by Zev one great river in the middle of the 1950s, she was Feldman, the American producer responsible in certainly an important presence. But her artistry recent years for the meticulously curated release was also highly individual and personal. You on the Resonance label of previously unheard can’t miss that here, on an album that makes you sessions by such jazz luminaries as the pianist Bill feel as though you’re sitting at her feet, or at least Evans and the guitarists Wes Montgomery and just across the tracks. Grant Green. Sister Rosetta’s Limoges concert is SLEEVE NOTES SISTER ROSETTA THARPE Live In France: The 1966 Concert In Limoges DEEP DIGS/ELEMENTAL MUSIC 9/10 HANS HARZHEIM Long-buried tapes of a gospel great. By Richard Williams STANDING on the platform of a disused railway station in south Manchester one cold and damp day in the spring of 1964, wearing a voluminous winter coat, a curly blonde wig and a white Gibson SG guitar, Sister Rosetta Tharpe attempted to repel the elements by delivering a rousing version of the gospel song “Didn’t It Rain” to an audience of young white people seated, appropriately enough, on the other side of the tracks. The presence of a Granada TV crew, for whom her performance in the American Folk Blues Festival – along with those of Muddy Waters and the Reverend Gary Davis – was mounted, provides later generations with a lasting record of how Tharpe, born in Cotton Plant, Arkansas in 1915 and raised in the Church of God in Christ, could make the most of any environment. Aged six, she had performed gospel songs to an audience of hundreds, and soon she was learning how to accompany herself on the guitar. In New 50 • • MAY 2024
30TH ANNIVERSARY TOUR Plus Special Guests GARY NUMAN S J M C O N C E R T S B Y A R R A N G E M E N T W I T H WA S S E R M A N THE PLEASURE PRINCIPLE / REPLICAS 4 5 TH A N N I V E R S A R Y NOVEMBER ;O\  :OLɉ LSK6J[HNVU -YP  *HYKPɈ<UP.YLH[/HSS :H[  3P]LYWVVS<UP4V\U[MVYK/HSS 4VU /HSPMH_=PJ[VYPH;OLH[YL ;\L   /\SS*P[`/HSS ;O\  (ILYKLLU4\ZPJ/HSS -YP  .SHZNV^62(JHKLT` :H[  ,KPUI\YNO62(JHKLT` 4VU 3LPJLZ[LY62(JHKLT` ;\L  4HYNH[L+YLHTSHUK ;O\  )YPZ[VS62(JHKLT` -YP   5L^JHZ[SL62*P[`/HSS :H[  3LLKZ62(JHKLT` DECEMBER 4VU 6_MVYK62(JHKLT` ;\L  3PUJVSU,UNPUL:OLK ;O\  :[VJR[VU.SVIL Fri 06 Manchester   62=PJ[VYPH>HYLOV\ZL :H[  )PYTPUNOHT62(JHKLT` Mon 09 Norwich   ;OL5PJR9H`UZ3*9<,( ;\L  *HTIYPKNL*VYU,_JOHUNL ;O\  )V\YULTV\[O62(JHKLT` Fri 13 Nottingham Rock City :H[  3VUKVU62(JHKLT`)YP_[VU GIGSANDTOURS.COM | TICKETMASTER.CO.UK | SHEDSEVEN.COM SJM Concerts by arrangement with 13 artists THE NUMBER ONE ALBUM ‘A MATTER OF TIME’ OUT NOW GIGSANDTOURS.COM TICKETMASTER.CO.UK GARYNUMAN.COM MAY 2024 01 LEEDS O2 ACADEMY 03 MANCHESTER O2 RITZ 04 BRISTOL MARBLE FACTORY 05 BOURNEMOUTH O2 ACADEMY
ARCHIVE THE SPECIALIST PORTISHEAD Roseland NYC Live (25th Anniversary Edition) (reissue, 1998) ISLAND MERCURY Brother act: longstanding brilliance SANULLIM Vol 1: Already Now/Vol 2: Spread Silk On My Heart/Vol 3: My Heart (My Soul Is A Wasteland) (reissues, 1977, ’78, ’78) + Evening Breeze GUERSSEN 8/10, 9/10, 9/10, 8/10 Sublime Korean psych-pop reissued on vinyl JEFF PITCHER THE story of Korean pop group Sanullim is a curious one. Formed in 1976 by the Kim brothers – Chang-wan, Chang-hoon and Chang-ik – they seemed to stumble upon both their sound, and their fame, as if by accident. With no plan to become professional musicians, the early Sanullim story – documented by these reissues of their first three albums, and Evening Breeze, a judiciously selected compilation from their next five albums – is one of teenage energy turning, slowly but surely, into a long-standing career: the group would last until 2008, when brother Changik passed away, and release 17 albums, including several children’s albums. They’ve long been held in high esteem within the underground outside of Korea: Tori Kudo of Maher Shalal Hash Baz covered a song of theirs on his recent The Last Song Of My Life album; Khruangbin included a Sanullim song on their Late Night Tales mix disc. But these three reissues are the first time their music’s been available on vinyl in the West, and it’s a welcome development, particularly given the sometimes lopsided focus on particular parts of East Asia when it comes to music and reissue culture. There’s admittedly something periodpiece about aspects of all four Sanullim albums, though in some ways, they’re disconnected from their immediate moment. Recorded in the late 1970s, the first three Sanullim albums have more in common with late-’60s and early-’70s pop and psychedelia, the diffracting lens of 52 • • MAY 2024 time and the abstractions of cross-cultural adaptation making this music feel both slightly dislocated and somehow distilled, as though the brothers have boiled down everything great about psychedelic pop and extracted its essence. There are hints on Already Now of an expansiveness that stretches beyond the simplicity of these garage-pop songs – fuzz guitars burbling away in the background, chintzy organs that hum and purr through the songs. But things really take off on 1978’s Spread Silk On My Heart: “Let’s Sing” is submerged by an oil slick of swirling, distorted buzzsaw guitar; “A Flower Blooming In The Haze” is quietly epic, its filigree guitar figures making way, in the midst of the song, for a guitar solo that sounds as though it’s being squeezed, dirty and slicked with sweat, out of the amplifier. Things intensify further on the same year’s My Heart (My Soul Is A Wasteland), where the voices get gruffer, the songs get more expansive, and the side-long “You Are Already Me” is a mammoth psych-rock construction that feels like it fell off the back of a Kissing Spell reissue. But this intensive focus on the more psychedelic aspects of Sanullim also subtly betrays the reality of their Korean fanbase, who tend to embrace their more melancholic, ballad-like side, of which there are also plenty of lovely examples here; Sanullim knew how to pull four chords together, let them glimmer in fragile light, and dose their songs with just the right amount of sadness. Either way, the music is sublime. Extras 7/10: Liner notes from Hugh Dellar. JON DALE 8/10 Landmark performance from the Bristol trio remains otherworldly, orchestral heaven In the summer of 1997, one of the defining bands of its era had a radical idea to debut material from its latest album. Building on the meticulous, mechanical dreamland of their 1994 debut, Dummy, Portishead decided to launch their self-titled follow-up with a one-night-only live performance with a full orchestra. It was a powerful, spellbinding set that put into focus the dramatic arrangements that made their work stand apart from the pack, as well as the extraordinary vocals of Beth Gibbons, who gives some of her defining performances across these songs: eyes closed in deep concentration, hanging on the mic stand, cigarette in hand. On a new reissue, the band releases the setlist in its entirety, giving proper context for highlights like “Cowboys” and “Only You”. Decades later, the mood they captured on that smoky, sepia-toned stage feels like a transmission from another world. SAM SODOMSKY THE RAIN PARADE Emergency Third Rail Power Trip (reissue, 1983) LABEL 51 8/10 Dreamy debut still impresses The first flowering of David Roback’s creative brilliance showcased a love of chiming, West Coast guitars and dreamy, lysergic textures; more Byrds than Doors. You will hear a sitar and song titles include “Talking In My Sleep” and “What She’s Done To Your Mind”, while the work done here by the band’s three songwriters (a very CSN/Springfield configuration) of Roback, Matt Piucci and Steven Roback proved to be smart, respectful and hugely influential. For David Roback admirers, the key work is the acoustic, reverb-heavy ballad “Carolyn’s Song”, a solo composition that suggests the darker work he’d later pursue with Opal and Mazzy Star. Extras 7/10: A contemporaneous miscellany of live cuts, demos and four-track recordings, it captures where the band were in 1982/3. Catnip for the Paisley Undergrounders include a game live cover of Syd’s “No Good Trying”, Roback’s surf-punk instrumental “Speedway” (later recorded by The Bangles as “Bitchen Summer”) and a rough live version of “Unexpected”, an unrecorded Roback/Piucci co-write that sounds like the missing link between The Byrds and The Jesus And Mary Chain. MICHAEL BONNER
ARCHIVE Portishead: ðîÝêïéåïïåëêï âîëéÝêëðäáî world TONY RICE Church Street Blues SPARKS No 1 In Heaven (reissue, 1983) CRAFT RECORDINGS (reissue, 1979) LIL’ BEETHOVEN 9/10 Landmark electro-pop record gets anniversary reissue By the late 1970s, Sparks’ brand of idiosyncratic theatrical pop was feeling a little out of step. As punk exploded, the band of brothers felt somewhat unsure of themselves and their music. Rather than jump on the bandwagon, howeever, they teamed up with master producer Giorgio Moroder to create an album of bold, futuristic and visionary electronic pop music. Forty-five years on, the six-track album still remains a fresh, punchy and potent collection. From the opening “Tryouts For The Human Race”, with its ceaselessly pulsing and propulsive groove, to the euphoric closing track “The Number One Song In Heaven”, the album is a joyous explosion of sparkling synths, disco rhythms and inimitable songcraft, all coupled with Russel Mael’s endlessly agile and soaring voice. This all coalesces to form the complete opposite of what could have been an identity crisis: a stone-cold classic. Extras 9/10: Alternate versions, bonus tracks. DANIEL DYLAN WRAY 8/10 Melancholy solo album from a newgrass pioneer After honing his chops with Clarence White in the late 1960s, guitarist Tony Rice spent the next decade playing with some of the biggest names in progressive bluegrass, including JD Crowe’s New South and The Dave Grisman Quintet. On his solo albums, Rice still sounds like he’s playing in a band, as he picks rhythm and lead simultaneously to give the impression of three or four guitarists rather than one. Church Street Blues is one of his best, toggling gracefully between barrelling instrumentals and eloquent ballads. Nimble but never ostentatious, Rice plays to emphasise the ache and longing in these songs about leavetaking and lonely wanderings. His take on the title track (penned by Norman Blake) is subtle and witty, as though shirking away his troubles, but he makes Bob Dylan’s “One More Night” sound like an old cowboy song. STEPHEN DEUSNER SMOKEY ROBINSON & THE MIRACLES What Love Has Joined Together/A Pocket Full Of Miracles/One Dozen Roses/Flying High Together SOULMUSIC SUN RA Inside The Light World: Sun Ra Meets The OVC STRUT 7/10 Motown legend’s final outings with his old band Smokey Robinson’s fingerprints are all over the Motown catalogue, penning hits for numerous Hitsville pals, but What Love Has Joined Together opts for a suite of ballads by The Beatles, Bacharach and fellow travellers Marvin Gaye and Stevie Wonder. Its lush song-cycle suggests a pivot to the more concept-driven work of those labelmates, but Pocket... saw the Miracles return to the punchy, self-contained pop of their early days. …Roses, their third collection of 1970, revisits former glories while adding the sublime disco-lite “I Don’t Blame You At All” and a finger-popping shuffle through Simon & Garfunkel’s “Cecilia”. Smokey left for solo work after the last of the four LPs on this two-disc set, a patchy affair but distinguished by Johnny Bristol’s anthem-like title track and the groovy strut of Ashford & Simpson’s “You Ain’t Livin’ Till You’re Lovin’”. Extras 6/10: Two bonus tracks. 7/10 Long-lost ’80s session from cosmic-jazz bandleader Sun Ra may have been, by his own description, an alien from the planet Saturn, but he had a knack for hunting out fellow travellers here on Earth. One such figure was Bill Sebastian, a rocket scientist and inventor of the Outer Space Visual Communicator – a gigantic “light colour organ” played with hands and feet, which Sebastian used to create impressive kalaeidoscopic light shows. Sebastian was in Sun Ra’s orbit for some years, and in 1986 they and the Arkestra entered Mission Control Studios in Westford, Massachusetts for a spontaneous live session accompanied by the OVC, its presence propelling the Arkestra through a decent set of Sun Ra hits. The tinny digital synth Sun Ra was using in this period is an acquired taste, but the band strike the right balance between cosmic investigation and swing, and a 22-minute take on “Discipline 27-II” is a joy. Extras 8/10: Sleeve notes, photos, in-depth interview with Bill Sebastian. TERRY STAUNTON LOUIS PATTISON VARIOUS ARTISTS Congo Funk!: Sound Madness From The Shores Of The Mighty Congo River (Kinshasa/ Brazzaville 1969-1982) ANALOG AFRICA 9/10 What happened after James Brown came to Zaire It’s hard to reconcile the exuberance that pours out of this revelatory comp of Congolese music (mostly) recorded in the ’70s with the often painful history of Central Africa, especially during the ruptures of decolonisation. One such rupture was President Mobutu’s founding of Zaire, his name for the Democratic Republic of Congo after wresting power in the early ’60s. The dictator made a more positive kind of impact when he invited James Brown to perform in Kinshasa for a music festival coinciding with Muhammad Ali’s Rumble In The Jungle in 1974. Local players’ eagerness to merge the Godfather of Soul’s full-force funk with the Congolese rumba yielded an extraordinary bounty. Ranging from explosive Afro-funk workouts by Petelo Vicka et Son Nzazi and Les Bantous de la Capitale to more psychinfluenced stunners by Abeti et Les Redoutables and Zaiko Langa Langa, these rediscoveries are thrilling enough for Congo Funk! to deserve a place next to African Scream Contest among Analog Africa’s most indispensable collections. Extras 8/10: Extensive booklet and poster, and special double-LP edition includes tote bag. JASON ANDERSON VARIOUS ARTISTS Niney The Observer Presents Jah Fire: The Observer 7” Singles Collection 1976-1977 DOCTOR BIRD 8/10 More killer finds from an undersung reggae great The third in Doctor Bird’s ace series of compilations drawn from the ’70s output of the Kingston singer and producer known COMING NEXT MONTH... IN the next Uncut we’ll be taking a look at a host of promising new releases: Beth Gibbons, Les Savy Fav, Bat For Lashes and ÄñĞÝèëÖëé return after a long pause, while Richard Hawley, Keeley Forsyth, Old 97’s, Bill MacKay, St Vincent, Eels and La Luz continue strong runs. Meanwhile, the Archive section will include Ôåßäéëêà Fontaine, ÃêåéÝèÅëèèáßðåòá, ÔëÞåêÖîëóáî, Brian Eno live with ÊëèãáîÅöñçÝõ, and many others. EMAIL TOM.PINNOCK@KELSEY.CO.UK to his mother as Winston Holness, Jah Fire ought to earn its subject more of the reverence typically accorded to Lee “Scratch” Perry, the pal turned rival he replaced as Joe Gibbs’ chief engineer. Likewise, a good many of the 50 tracks here – originally released on singles on Niney’s Observer imprint – deserve spots in the canon alongside any better-celebrated classics of the rootsreggae era. Niney’s flexibility behind the board emerges more clearly as a strong suit too, the producer applying the same flair and finesse to his eminently smooth settings for Horace Andy and Junior Delgado as he does to dubbier productions for deejays like I Roy. A 1977 track for Dillinger, “Nebuchadnezzer” is a particularly heady example of Niney’s forte for elasticised riddims that somehow complement the songs’ more melodic properties. Extras 7/10: Booklet with photos and notes by Tony Rounce. JASON ANDERSON GREAT SAVINGS SUBSCRIBE TODAY AND SAVE £26.33!* Online at shop.kelsey. co.uk/UCP524 Call 01959 543 747** and quote ref: UCP524 *UK Direct Debit offer only. Terms and Conditions apply. ** Lines open Mon-Fri 08.30-17.30; calls charged at your standard network rate. MAY 2024 • • 53
Desk Clark: “All we have is love,” says Annie, aka St Vincent Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024
ST VINCENT THE WHO FELL TO Two decades into a singular career as ST VINCENT, Annie Clark squares up to her demons and endures a season in hell on her sublime seventh album, All Born Screaming. She tells Stephen Troussé how she went back to basics and learned from Dave Grohl, David Bowie and John Coltrane how to “wield music like a god” Photo by ALEX DA CORTE ECLINING on the sofa in her grand Edwardian hotel suite, Annie Clark seems immaculately composed as she recalls the first strange stirrings of her seventh album. “I had a sense that I wanted to be pummelled by music,” she says matter-of-factly, holding Uncut’s gaze. “Who knows if I was reacting to things I’ve done in the past, or things that are around in the culture, but I wanted to be just pummelled. Shaken like a rag doll.” She pauses for a moment, maybe for effect, maybe considering her words carefully, possibly pondering Brian Eno’s maxim that art is a safe space for violent experiment, a plane you can crash then walk away from. “I really wanted to explore that feeling of digging your fingernails into your thigh,” she concludes. “You know, just so that it bleeds a little…” She looks like she means business. At various times over the past two decades under her nom de guerre St Vincent, she has manifested in strange guises, like some renegade Timelord or Thomas Pynchon’s elusive, apocalyptic world-spirit, V. One moment Bride of Frankenstein cult leader, the next cosmetically disfigured American gothic schoolmarm. From pill-popping suburban housewife via glamazon dominatrix to louche ’70s hot mess… Today on a drizzly spring evening in Holborn, her dark hair is neatly parted and pulled back into a simple bun. Her white blouse and long black leather coat are offset by girlish white socks and black heels. She is, however, as sweet as Texan apple pie. “Making journalists crawl was as masochistic as it was sadistic,” she says with a smile and a shake of the head, recalling her youthful attempts to “deconstruct the promotional interview” (installing interviewers in escape rooms; recording stock responses on a dictaphone). “I ended up spending 12-hour 0$<Ǵ Ǵ55
ST VINCENT days in paint fume rooms. Nowadays I’m like, ‘Nah, don’t reinvent the wheel – let’s just have a chat…’” There’s much to discuss: the shapeshifting mischief of her muse and her uncanny ability to flit from the margins to the mainstream and back again; her restless, maverick ambition as a musician, schooled as a guitar prodigy at Berklee, still spurred by the example of everyone from Kate Bush to John Coltrane; and her sublime seventh album, All Born Screaming, which sees her finally release the monstrous, infernal gothic rock record she was honour-bound to make, ever since the moment in 2006 when she plucked her stage name from a Nick Cave song. Eighteen years since she became St Vincent, it feels like her defining record, a paring back to basics, a reckoning with fundamental facts of life. “I think we’ve all been through quite a bit of loss,” she says of the season in hell the album recounts. “You know, with worldwide collective plague and all. One of the things that loss like that does, it acts as a clarifying force. Because it forces you to decide, well this matters and this doesn’t fucking matter. So let’s look at what matters and let’s go the long way through hell. You come around to the realisation that we’ve only got one life, so we better really live it and not take anything for granted. All we have is love and all we have is the people we love. So let’s hold hands and walk through the fire together.” Windows of her mind: St Vincent in 2023 “MAKING RECORDS NEVER GETS EASIER” ST VINCENT ALEX DA CORTE; GETTY IMAGES I N a time that prefers its artists to be safely tamed and labelled, there’s a stray, truant spirit to St Vincent that refuses to be pinned down. She fled Berklee music school in 2004 to see the world with The Polyphonic Spree. Later she escaped the hipster compound of noughties Brooklyn and made it all the way to the Oscars and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. She is comfortable collaborating with everyone from Glenn Branca (she performed in his Erstwhile orchestra of 100 collaborators: (from top) guitars) to Taylor Michael Gira, Swift (she co-wrote the Cate Le Bon, Taylor Swift billion-streaming Eras anthem “Cruel Summer”), recording with artists from Michael Gira to Cate Le Bon: “Annie and I have been Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 buddies since we toured together 10 years ago,” remembers Le Bon. “She blew me away, she was like an uncaged animal.” There can be few artists who feel equally comfortable touring with Roxy Music and Red Hot Chili Peppers. She’s even become a mentor of a kind to Olivia Rodrigo (which she’s flattered by while joking, “I can’t be an elder statesman because I’m only 23. I’d prefer to say fun auntie.”) She occupies an exclusive, intersectional niche of one. It’s often seemed like a charmed career, of the kind they don’t make any more. The deaths of David Bowie and Prince a few months apart in 2016 felt like one grand goodnight to the rock’n’roll era. Many artists were stricken and some were inspired, but only Annie Clark seems to have been truly emboldened and liberated by the example they set, the space their passing left. On St Vincent (2014) and Masseduction (2017) she seems to have sensed her moment, claimed a baton and bolted through a closing door. While so many of her peers from the mid-noughties Brooklyn scene – Grizzly Bear, Dirty Projectors, TV On The Radio – now feel like wistful ghosts of the first Obama administration, she alone seems to have endured, becoming a stranger, wilder creature in a stranger, darker country. “Making records never gets easier,” she tells us, considering what she’s learned thus far. “It’s a miracle to be on my seventh. There’s a certain level of handwringing and pearl-clutching and self-doubt that I certainly had on my first few records, because that’s the stage of life you’re at – you’re just figuring certain things out about yourself. But every time you make a new record you set a new bar for yourself. I look at my heroes and I go, ‘Does my work stand up to theirs?’ I have my own internal calculus of what I think is
THE ROAD TO ALL BORN SCREAMING STRANGE MERCY (4AD, 2011) Though she was covering Big Black’s “Kerosene” in her live set, there was as yet little of that energy in Annie Clark’s recordings. But her songs were growing darker and more direct – notably on “Cruel”, the video. ST VINCENT (LOMA VISTA, 2014) On her breakthrough album, Annie goes big, goes bold and brings a new pop ambition (“I want all of your mind”, she sings on “Digital Witness”) to her troubled funk workouts. MASSEDUCTION (LOMA VISTA, 2017) excellent and what’s not good enough. Those bars are always changing or getting higher. Who are those heroes? Oh you know, the obvious – Bowie in terms of so many things… being one of those artists who puts out one of his absolutely greatest records as his last record.” At this point in his career, 17 years after his debut record, David Bowie was approaching his absolute nadir – releasing the anodyne Tonight and about to record “Dancing in the Street” with Mick Jagger. “How much cocaine do you think was involved in the making of that video?!” she hoots. “Mountains!” It’s only recently that Clark has made her own first missteps. The Nowhere Inn (2020) was a curious, wilfully indulgent pseudo-psychodocumentary – co-written with Sleater-Kinney’s Carrie Brownstein – that struggled in vain to anatomise the demented heart of 21st century celebrity, partly inspired by Annie’s own escapade into the hall of mirrors while dating Cara Delevingne. “We definitely took meta down the rabbit hole with that one,” she concludes today. “I’m glad we made it while there were still budgets for projects like that available.” It was followed in 2021 by Daddy’s Home – on the face of it a slinky, seductive homage to the sophistication of early-’70s soft rock and psychedelic soul, the moment where Annie might have been measuring herself up against Bowie’s Young Americans, and a loosening of the hyperpop corset she strapped herself into for Masseduction. Although it was artfully conceived and generally warmly received, there was the sense for the first time of an artist making her designs all too plain. The album was styled and seasoned to choking point with references to everyone from John Cassavetes to Joan Didion and Candy Darling, culminating in “The Melting Of The Sun”, which hymned, in turn, a holy trinity of Joni Mitchell, Tori Amos and Nina Simone. Some suggested that the album was tactless, using her father’s release from jail for stock fraud as an excuse for a little jailbird cosplay, at a time when American cities were aflame with the call for police abolition. But maybe this wouldn’t have felt so problematic if the record hadn’t seemed like a project conceived as an exquisite moodboard rather than a bleeding, breathing document of Annie Clark’s ongoing creative soulstorm. B ACK in February a short video clip appeared on the St Vincent Instagram account, showing the tousled blonde Angie Dickinson wig Annie wore throughout the Daddy’s Home campaign being decisively placed back on a mannequin head and filed away in storage (presumably to reappear when the “St Vincent Is…” installation tour opens at the V&A in 2044). “That wig served me well,” smiles Clark fondly. “She was a lady, she had pizzazz, a little razzle, a little dazzle. She was sweaty and dirty. I had two wigs originally, but one of them got stolen at a Gucci show where I was DJing.” If there’s a diligent curatorial relish to the marking the end of the previous persona, this time round her intentions remain less schematic, more somatic. It’s a record you feel deep in your sternum before you even begin to think, as the astonishing depth charge of lead single “Broken Man” knocks you off your feet. “Everything on this record needed to be about electricity, circuitry and harnessing chaos,” says Clark, warming to the theme. “Everything had to be touched and felt, and if I ran something through a tape machine, I needed to be able to put my fingers on it to slow it down. I wanted real tape warble! If you start with something that’s alive, you only want to build more alive things on top of that. If there are drum machines, then they’re played, or manipulated. “I’m obsessed with King Tubby and we had King Tubby on repeat on the turntable in the studio. You hear the rattle of the studio on his records. That’s what I wanted. It just had to feel like it’s alive. If there’s reverb it’s because I put it through an EMT plate. It’s the sound of air moving.” Annie was child of the grunge age, turning nine the same week that Nevermind was released. “That was the first music that felt like mine,” remembers Clark, still thrilled at the memories. “My dad would play his music on car 0$<Ǵ Ǵ57 ÉÆÓÎÊÑÉÔÕÊ×ÆÑØÐÎ²ÛÆ×ÎÊÙÞ²ÕÊÓØÐÊÒÊÉÎÆÛÎÆÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ “We took meta down a rabbit hole”: with Carrie Brownstein promoting The Nowhere Inn, January 10, 2020 Annie hits her imperial peak on this matchless collection of neurotic electropop (“Los Ageless”, “Young Lover”) and bilious late-night-bar ballads (“New York”).
ÐÊÛÎÓÒÆßÚײÜÎ×ÊÎÒÆÌÊÈÍ×ÎØÒcÐÆÞ²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ ST VINCENT “I’m so happy…”: trips and I loved it with Nirvana at the so much. But Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame Induction, New Nirvana, Pearl Jam, York, April 10, 2014 Soundgarden – that was music that my best friend’s older brother played on the boombox while we skated on the half pipe. That was our music – it wasn’t music from a different generation.” Later, as a student at the exclusive Berklee College of Music in Boston, she joined a local noise band rejoicing in the name Skullfuckers. “That was my first foray into playing noise music. I guess they all liked Polvo, Sonic Youth and being like, ‘Oh, this guitar, it just needs to make as much caustic noise as possible.’ This was the antidote to anything Berklee. You could put the guitar through a fuzz pedal, scratch the strings, play behind the bridge, play behind the neck. The skronkier the better!” Having fronted Nirvana on a ferocious performance of “Lithium” in 2014 when they were inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame, Annie knew just who to call to help her capture the seismic rhythms she needed. “Dave Grohl is just the coolest hang,” she laughs. “I sent him one song, ‘Flea’, because it has kind of prog turnarounds on and I figured he might be into it. Sure enough, he drives over in his truck and he’s drinking coffee and smoking Parliaments and telling some of the best war stories you ever heard. So we’re just hanging and having a laugh and after a while he says, ‘OK, I’m ready.’ He sits down at the kit and just absolutely blows your mind because he sounds JUST LIKE DAVE GROHL ON THE DRUMS.” As producer are you tempted to ask him to go through a few additional takes? Once more with feeling? “Dave is not a man you ever need to tell to drum with more feeling. My God, when he drums mountains would move!” It feels like a sign of Annie Clark’s polymorphous perversity that it’s taken so long for her to make a record that plays to her evident strengths as stupendous rock guitarist. Part of the album was recorded at Steve Albini’s Electric Audio studio in Chicago, and on “Broken Man” and “Flea” there’s something of the ferocious, 50-foot spirit of PJ Harvey’s Rid Of Me. It feels intuitive to think of raw, riotous blues rock as a starting place, but Annie’s first record was the exquisite, baroque Marry Me (2007), which featured bassoon, dulcimer, vibraphone and an inspired piano instrumental played by Mike Garson. “I met Annie back in 2003 or 2004 in Minneapolis,” Garson remembers. “We were both Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 doing an album with The Polyphonic Spree in Minneapolis and there were 15-20 musicians all lived together in one house. We would sit around the piano and she knew so much about David Bowie, she wanted to hear my take on many things, which I gladly shared. “I would go into living room late at night sometimes and I’d see her there with a computer “SHE WANTED TO TAKE ON SO MANY THINGS” MIKE GARSON and a little keyboard. Taking some silly sounds from Garageband but writing songs, and they were sounding quirky and unique and I liked them, but it was hard to believe she was doing them on a little computer with drum loops. She knew how to manipulate it. Her creativity sits above her understanding, compositional knowledge and technique on guitar. She does have that, but the uniqueness is who she is.” “Why did it take me so long to make a big raucous rock record?” Clark wonders. “I don’t really know. I think you have to Sharing some Spree earn every scar or every time: Mike Garson bruise. There’s some kind of lesson I needed to figure out. You wouldn’t have everything you have now without what you went through together. There is no short cut, there’s no sense of regretting or rueing anything. Which is my long way around saying, I don’t know. It was just time for me.” T HE sleeve of All Born Screaming depicts Clark bent double, her arms in flames, like Icarus in anklesocks. The image was inspired by a visit with the artist and director Alex Da Corte (“a genius, a dear friend and a legitimately decent person – that’s not always the package you get”) to the Prado Museum in Madrid. “We walked into the Goya room, with Goya’s ‘black paintings’. And we were both like… ‘Yeaaaaah. This. Is. It. This is some burned witch shit.’” Annie was particularly struck by the utterly deranged Saturn Devouring His Son. “What does it mean that Goya was living with that on his wall? I always wonder – that crazed look, was that the first son, the fifth? At what point does that expression happen?!” But maybe Bosch’s Garden Of Earthly Delights, also in the Prado is a better analogue for All Born Screaming, “Ever since my great aunt had a print of it I’ve been obsessed with it,” says Clark. It’s a record that begins in Hell and travels through fire, pestilence and plague, but on the second side, on “Sweetest Fruit” – written in tribute to hyperpop producer SOPHIE who died in 2021 while trying to take a photo of a full moon from an Athens rooftop – and the wonky ska of “So May Planets”, it offers some hope of transcendence, creation and rebirth.
Head girl: with David Byrne, 2012 MASSEDUCTION The collaborations that put St Vincent on the map With MIKE GARSON on played some bass, which is my favourite thing to do. We laughed a lot on tough days when nothing makes sense. We said ‘cunt’ a lot. The album credits may differ.” The collaboration can be heard on the title track, the final song on the album. Though the title might make you imagine some caustic black metal threnody, the song is a kind of transcendent cosmic rave-up with something of the heedless optimism of Talking Heads’ “Road To Nowhere”, rising up above powerlines, mountains, abattoirs and karaoke bars, to offer a wordless, wailing, ecstatic prayer to the empty sky. “Music is a lot of things,” says Clark, wondering whether she has creative ambitions left unfulfilled. “You have to bow down before it. You have to wield it like a god. I’ll be the first to admit, it’s not the sanest thing to think: I’ve got this song inside of me and everyone needs to hear. But if you’re a musician, if you’re an artist, you can’t listen to A Love Supreme by John Coltrane and ever be satisfied again, you know? “I remember the feeling of listening to that record and going – there are depths to the human experience that are simultaneously so full of pain and so transcendent. As an artist you know that that exists, so you can never stop or be satisfied, because you know what great work is. You try to contribute in what little way you can. But you know what GREAT is, so you can’t ever rest.” All Born Screaming is released by Fiction on April 26 MARRY ME (BEGGARS BANQUET, 2007) Meeting via The Polyphonic Spree, the earnest young Bowiephile and jazz guitarist hooked up with the Dame’s peerless pianist to record “We Put A Pearl In The Ground”, a featherlight instrumental worthy of Bill Evans. With DAVID BYRNE on LOVE THIS GIANT (4AD, 2012) A remarkably successful collection of arthouse big band that revived both David Byrne’s live set and gave Annie the impetus to move towards the dancefloor on 2014’s St Vincent. With SWANS on TO BE KIND (MUTE, 2014) When Michael Gira approached John Congleton to produce Swans’ uncompromising 13th album, Annie was able to tag along, contributing backing vocals to the scabrous “Kirsten Supine”. With SHERYL CROW on THREADS (BIG MACHINE, 2019) Appearing alongside a stellar lineup, including Stevie Nicks, Bonnie Raitt and Neil Young, Annie got her classic rock on, on the slinky “Wouldn’t Want To Be Like You”. With GORILLAZ on SONG MACHINE SEASON ONE (PARLOPHONE, 2020) “I wanna get drunk /I wanna get stoned/I wanna give up”, sang Annie, bringing the ennui to Damon Albarn’s fizzing synthpop lockdown project. 0$<Ǵ Ǵ59 ÕÎÊÙÊ×ÒÛÆÓÍÆÙÙÊÒ Cate Le Bon, the Welsh avant-pop auteur, rapidly shaping up, after production work with John Grant and Wilco, to be a kind of 21st-century John Cale, seems to have been crucial in helping find a way out of the labyrinth. “I’ve produced all my records but this is the first one that I needed to start solo,” says Clark. “I needed to make the inside of my head audible. There are certain songs I sang 100 times. I would never make an engineer sit through that. But if I’m alone at Electric Lady recording my own vocals, trying this, trying that, screaming this, whispering that and finding it. There are just places you will only go on your own. Without thinking, ‘Oh, there’s another ear in the room.’” But at a certain point she needed to call Le Bon. “I was at pivotal point in the record and I was absolutely petulant,” she remembers. “I was sick of it all and sick of myself. Cate came in and held my hand through the trying times. She was a really good person to have in the room. The way she thinks about music is almost architectural!” Le Bon, meanwhile, tends to downplay her own contribution while remaining in awe of her friend. “I know how much the music she makes matters to her, and so the greatest way to show her love and respect is to tell her honestly what I think. It goes both ways. It’s a really enjoyable and nourishing process,” says Le Bon. “My role was a little bit of everything. Support animal. Sounding board. Suggestion giver. I
Spellbinding: Myriam Gendron, November 2023 Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024
MYRIAM GENDRON MYRIAM GENDRON has been quietly transforming folk songs and Dorothy Parker poems with intense, delicate results. But for the enigmatic French-Canadian, a new album of her own compositions proves to be a powerful reckoning with loss and grief. “We’ll see where it leads me,” she tells Laura Barton Photo by JUSTINE LATOUR N the wall of the music room in her Montreal home, Myriam Gendron has hung several posters: one from a party to celebrate the poetry publishing house run by her partner; another from a Michael Hurley show at La Vitrola, where Gendron played support; and a billing for Pour La Suite Du Monde, a documentary set in the fishing community of a small island on the St Lawrence River. There too, is an enlarged print of a photograph the singer took of a studio house on Villa Seurat in Paris. “Henry Miller used to live there,” she says. “I was a huge fan of his when I was a teenager, so I went to visit where he lived.” The picture she took to commemorate that day did not turn out as planned; a problem with the camera film distorted the image of the street. She gestures to the white flare that blooms across the photograph. “But I thought it was beautiful,” she says. “I’ve always had it.” It is simplistic to suggest that this collection of artworks fully encapsulates Gendron, yet there is something in their marriage of literature, music, tradition that seems to carry her essence. It is there even in that unanticipated flash of beauty of the Miller picture – a kind of illuminating effect between expectation and actuality. Over the past decade, Gendron has established herself as an artist of immense craft and interpretive instinct. Her first album, 2014’s Not So Deep As A Well, set the poetry of Dorothy Parker to music and became a quiet cult hit. Her second, 2021’s Ma Délire – Songs Of Love, Lost And Found, saw her 0$<Ǵ Ǵ61
COLIN MEDLEY; ELSA HANSEN OLDHAM MYRIAM GENDRON reinterpret and explore traditional material from Canadian folk tunes such as “Au Coeur De Ma Délire” and “Le Tueur De Femmes” to more familiar and long-storied songs such as “Go Away From My Window” and “Shenandoah” – alongside a couple of her own compositions. Her voice is a curious thing, capable of moving from dark siltiness to startling clarity across a single line, giving the impression of something forever being heaved up from depth to light. Her musical approach is a similar dance of structure and dissemblage. “She’s spellbinding,” says Will Oldham, who took Gendron on tour last autumn. “I started listening to Ma Délire over and over and over again, then got Not So Deep As A Well. That was during a time when I had a group of songs that I was trying to polish with the intention of making Keeping Secrets Will Destroy You. I found that Myriam’s two records were things that I returned to for inspiration. For a powerful distilled intentional presentation of superficially simple arrangements of complex pieces of music. I can listen to her records all day, every day.” In conversation, Gendron is a measured presence. She speaks in English, with the occasional Québécois twist to her sentences and when she touches on certain subjects her guarded air gives way suddenly — her face lighting up as she discusses the favourite of her seven guitars, say, or the freedom she finds in writing instrumental music “because words lock up meaning”. For a couple of years, Gendron has spent the bulk of her days in her music room, slowly shifting from reinterpreting the compositions of others into the new terrain of her own songwriting. It has proved a strange, sometimes mystical process. “Sometimes I feel more like a witness to what I do,” she says. “It’s like you’re channeling something, you don’t really know what’s happening, and there it is.” G In this way, Gendron crafted the songs that make up her third album, Mayday. It is a stunning record, encompassing the loss of her mother amid a broader and more intangible sense of grief that she struggles now to articulate. “It was not only my mother, it was trying to be open to a more general sense of loss that anyone can relate to,” she says. “Everyone’s lost something; I think we all have this within ourselves. It’s like an original lost paradise story. The oldest story in the world. We all miss something, maybe it’s been there ever since we were born.” As she speaks, my eye is drawn back to the posters on her wall, and one by Catherine Ocelot, who Gendron commissioned to work on the merchandise for her new album. Gendron turns and looks for a moment. “It’s a beautiful drawing,” she says. “I just got it. It’s a woman crying into her plant. And the plant is huge.” “It was a crazy year”: Gendron in 2022 Artistic community: Will Oldham and (above) Catherine Ocelet’s Mayday merchandise Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 ENDRON never intended to be a singer, although music was woven in and around her early years. She was born in Ottawa and spent her childhood in Gatineau, Quebec, attending a neighbourhood school where music happened to be a specialism and allowed her to begin learning the violin at the age of five, followed by piano, recorder, percussion, xylophone and choir. “So we sang a lot when I was a kid. Then we moved and that stopped.” She was 10 when the family relocated to Washington, DC and later to Paris. Along the way, she picked up the guitar and taught herself how to play. “Then I started singing again, mostly just in my bedroom,” she recalls. “But when I lived in Paris, I started singing in the Metro stations.” The teenage Gendron drew up a setlist of French and English material, including Jacques Brel’s “Amsterdam” and Leonard Cohen’s “Famous Blue Raincoat”, and favoured the station at Opéra, close to the tourist draws of the Galeries Lafayette and Galerie Vivienne. “It was a nice spot,” she says. “A lot of people coming by, I made good money. That’s where I learned to sing in public.” She regards this time of Miller and Brel and Baudelaire as formative, with Cohen as her greatest musical mentor. “He really taught me to sing,” she says. “He said somewhere, you have to sing like you’re talking. It has to be as natural as that.” In other ways, Cohen, her fellow Québécois, has perhaps provided a blueprint for Gendron’s mingling of poetry and music. Live, she has often covered “Queen Victoria”, the poem he wrote and set to music but never recorded. At university she wrote a paper on his version of “Un Canadien Errant”, a track she also reinterpreted on Ma Délire, marrying it to another traditional, “Poor Boy A Long Ways From Home”, to make a contemporary rumination of identity politics and our need for otherness named “Poor Girl Blues”. When she returned to Canada in her teens, this time to Montreal, she
abandoned her Metro-playing. “You needed a permit, a licence that was kind of expensive,” she explains. “But I continued to play and sing in my bedroom every day.” She still had no dreams of being a professional musician. “That never even crossed my mind. I think music to me was just pleasure, it wasn’t work. It was kind of mostly just a meditation.” Instead Gendron studied literature. When she graduated, she took a job at a bookstore. “That became my life,” she says. “I’ve never really been interested in building a career, it’s the same in music. It just happened.” When Gendron released Not So Deep As A Well, she was seven months pregnant and still working as a bookseller. She began the album “not really knowing I was working on a record”, sitting alone in her apartment with some kind of impetus to find music to match the Dorothy Parker poems she had stumbled upon in a bookstore. It was a clever exercise, but more than this, it was a record that cleaved the heart, revealing Parker’s lonesomeness as much as her fabled wit. Unfamiliar with the techniques of studio recording, Gendron’s takes seemed as if they belonged to another era; like some unearthed treasure from a long-ago decade. The record’s success came as something of a curveball, something to relish briefly before her life changed course into motherhood. “It was like something was happening to somebody else,” she remembers. “I was really focused on this baby, and then seeing all this press and all these people raving about the record I was like, that’s cool, but…” F Local boy made good: Leonard Cohen OR seven years, Gendron’s attention rested on raising her two children, her relationship with her partner and her job at the bookstore. But a desire to return to music never quite disappeared, rising up ˩Cˬ­%ʺ_%­%ƒʺ%%_ʺ INTERESTED IN šCTC_8ʺʺƒ%%ƒʺ C_ʺ]šŠCʼʺC“ʺPšŠ“ʺ HAPPENED” wherever time and space allowed. In 2016, she took a residency at The Old Mill in Le Bic and recorded a song in its boat repair shop that she had discovered via the poet and broadcaster Benoît Chaput. “Au Coeur De Ma Délire” was a traditional tune that appeared on a 1971 album by Dominique Tremblay and Philippe Gagnon, sparking a new direction for Gendron: the evolution of Québécois folk music after the end of Catholic dominance, the story of its persistent state of romantic yearning. Progress was hard to combine with her other commitments, so she secured a grant from the Conseil des Arts et des Lettres du Québec to take several months away from her day job and focus on recording. “The first day of my grant was a Monday morning,” she says. “I brought the kids to school and came back home and started working.” Time was pressing, and there was much to say. She took traditional songs apart, re-wrote sections, sang in English and in French. “When I think back, it’s like so much had to come out,” she says. “It had been seven years, I was more than ready.” She wrote the record in three months, finishing a song per week. When she looks back, it is with the memory of how quickly those months passed. “But I also know there were some days where I didn’t have any ideas and I felt like I would never be able to make it.” When she discovered that the completed album hung between a single vinyl pressing and a double album, she doubled down and began writing songs based on traditional motifs. “… and I found I really liked doing that.” For Ma Délire, Gendron also enlisted several collaborators, among them the guitarist and Kim Gordon collaborator Bill Nace, who appears on the track “C’est Dans Les Vieux Pays”. Nace was already a fan of Not So Deep As A Well, gifting copies to many of his friends. “I can’t totally say why it hit me so immediately, but I loved how stripped down and raw and bare and minimal it was,” he says. “I just kept returning to it over and over. It has a real spareness to it that reminded me of Leonard Cohen, Shirley Collins, Vashti Bunyan, but of course it’s something that’s all its own, all her own, which I think is very difficult to do with just guitar and voice.” 0$<Ǵ Ǵ63 ÏÔÈÊÑÞÓÇÔÚÑÆÎØÌÎÏØÇÊ×ÙÍÆÓÊÐ×ÔÔÙ²×ÊÉËÊ×ÓØ Quebec in black: supporting Dinosaur Jr at Le National in Montreal, May 12, 2022
ÏÚØÙÎÓÊÑÆÙÔÚ×ÇÚׯÐÈÎÓÌβ×ÊÉËÊ×ÓØÛÎÆÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ MYRIAM GENDRON Nace had been struck, too, by the character of her live performance. “There’s always a real kind of power and stillness to her when I see her play,” he says. “Like I’m watching something grow in both directions – rooted down into the ground and reaching upward.” The pair moved in similar circles and when Gendron invited him to play on the record, he accepted without hesitation. The song arrived in French, a language Nace does not speak. “So I just kind of responded to the feeling and mood,” he says. “I kept having a recurring sense of water and of being at sea, so I tried to make my guitar sound and tone reflect that a bit.” It is, he feels, a distinctively Gendron song and he tried to work with the current of that structure. “As always, there’s this great patient building of tension that I thought a little release of at the end would be powerful,” he says. “But not fully, nothing to dispel the tension. Something to let it out a bit, but to also kind of add to it there at the end.” He was pleased with the result and with where it sat on an album that he describes as “no fat, really close to the bone, always in service to the song as much as the emotion. I think she’s a master.” G ENDRON quit her job at the bookstore in the two weeks between a tour of America and a new leg in Europe. “I had so much work piled up on my desk,” she says. “I was just trying to do it all before I left, knowing that when I would come back there Bill Nace: “I would be another pile responded to the feeling” of stuff that no-one took care of during my absence.” Her mother had also passed away quite suddenly and Gendron found the world a lot to handle. “It was a crazy year, 2022, completely crazy on all sorts of ˩“>%ƒ%ˬŠʺʺRC_ OF POWER AND Š“CTT_%ŠŠʺ“hʺ>%ƒʺ ®>%_ʺŠ>%ʺ€T´Š˪ BILL NACE levels,” she realises now. “So I kind of just said, ‘Guys, I can’t. I will not be back.’” She worked as a bookseller for 14 years, latterly sitting from 9am until 4pm in front of a computer in the shop’s back office. “It was a bit boring compared to making music,” she concedes. Still, when she returned from Europe it was to a daunting future: “No job, no nothing. That’s when I had to sit down and look at the void and try to build some meaning. It was a process. Then I started working on Mayday and it helped me a lot.” This new record is a wholly different prospect than its predecessors. She had made Not So Deep As A Well “just for the fun of it” and with Ma Délire she had “a concept, I had a lot of energy, it was very passionate”. But this time, the motivation had shifted. “Mayday was a sad thing, it was more intimate and it’s more of me also. It’s hard to talk about it. I haven’t talked about it a lot.” She knew that for her third record she wanted to continue in certain directions: “to keep blending French and English, electric and acoustic, lullabies and storms”. She thought about this last idea a lot, how she had soothed her children through many storms by singing lullabies to them, and how now she was doing much the same for herself during a difficult time. They are songs, she says, that tell her “it’s OK, breathe, I can do this”. Again, she called on Nace and a clutch of other musicians she admired, including Jim White and Marisa Anderson. Gendron and White had first met backstage at Woodsist Festival in New York and he had gone to catch her set. “I really liked it,”
Muse of the word: Dorothy Parker circa 1948 he says. “It’s just a feeling. It’s her voice, that lowcalm-and-something-else voice. The time moves in a particular way, stationary and forwards at the same time.” This last fact intrigued him particularly. “Later when we were in the studio, I saw her settle herself before she sang one time,” he says. He came to think maybe this was the root of it. “Maybe it’s a thing like when I want to be behind and confront the beat, I shrug my left shoulder into a spot. Then I’m more there.” After that first encounter, he often found himself listening to Gendron’s music, particularly to the track “Go Away From My Window”, and he invited her to join her on a bill for another show. He had already suggested to Anderson that they might collaborate with Gendron, when the singer herself approached them about playing on her new record. The pair headed to Montreal to play on three tracks, including the monumental “Long Way Home”. “I knew that I wanted something very free in the background,” she says. “It’s another lullaby in a storm and I couldn’t build a storm on my own.” She pictured free drums and a kind of loose guitar playing that Anderson and White, already collaborators, had developed as a duo. “Jim’s drum solo in between the two verses made me cry instantly. I was like, this is exactly what I wanted.” I T is of course a long way from singing the poems of Dorothy Parker to writing about the death of a parent. It has been almost two years since Gendron’s mother passed, quite young and quite suddenly. Diagnosed with lung cancer, she stopped treatment in early May 2022 and within three weeks she was gone. “It was all a bit crazy,” Gendron says. “She died very, very fast and she wasn’t ready at all. So it was hard, it was very, very hard.” At the time, the singer was in the middle of a run of shows and festivals. She tried to take care of her mother alongside looking after her children and holding down her day job. “So the month of May was very, very challenging and the title Mayday is in reference to that. But it’s also a beautiful month. My daughter was born in May, it’s a month of joy, rebirth and then there was all that happening. So the record is also about this contrast that I was going through.” Asked what her mother gave her, Gendron Mayday is released by Thrill Jockey & Feeding Tube on May 10 FOLK HEROES Five figures who influenced Myriam Gendron DOROTHY PARKER Parker’s poetry supplied the lyrics for Gendron’s first album and she reappears now on her third – her poem “Theory” sitting behind the Franco-English “Dorothy’s Blues”. JOHN JACOB NILES Two of the Kentuckyborn folklorist’s compositions appear on Gendron’s second album, and it was Niles who led her to the melody and lyrics for Mayday’s version of “Look Down That Lonesome Road”. JOHN FAHEY Gendron taught herself to fingerpick by listening to Fahey, and he shows his face here again, both in the title and playing style of opener “There Is No East Or West”. CHARLES BAUDELAIRE Establishing her songwriting voice, Gendron revisited the traditions of the romantic poets she had loved as a teenager in Paris. ALAN LOMAX A lullaby compilation project with the Alan Lomax Foundation led Gendron to examine her relationship with the form and to album closer, “Berceuse”. 0$<Ǵ Ǵ65 ANNA WHITE; GETTY IMAGES Friendly voices: Marisa Anderson and Jim White thinks for a while, and later doubles back, re-steers herself. “Wow, that’s hard,” she says. “I actually got to know my mother during those last three weeks. She gave me a lot at the very end. I got to see the real her.” Her mother was a language teacher, but rather than a love of words and literature, she gave her daughter skills and grammar. She thinks some more. “She was a very light person, like she was good in parties, she was good at smiling, she was good at having fun or pretending to have fun, I don’t know.” As a teenager, reading Henry Miller, responding to the idea of truthfulness and what she describes as “no bullshit” Gendron wondered whether her mother might be a little superficial. “But during those last weeks I kind of realised it was just her way of dealing with stuff. It was just a superior form of depth in a way and I learned a lot from that. I still want to speak the truth, but it’s OK to be a little bit fake at times to make things easier. It’s hard for everybody and we just have to make things smooth.” They were hard emotions to encounter and to process, and even more to put into song. “They’re my emotions so it’s weird to say that I’m a witness but the way that they come out is not something I fully control,” Gendron says. “There was a lot of crying involved. But only after you decide if it’s good or not.” Safe to say, these songs are not just good, they are the best of Gendron’s career. Whether or not they will sustain a life in music, she is unsure. “Can I make enough money with music? I’m not sure it’s going to work,” she says. “It’s very hard, because I can’t be touring all the time — I have a family and the kids are still young. Maybe after this album cycle I’m going to get another job.” She pauses just long enough to let the possibility of a musical life slip through. “I don’t know if I’m going to do this for a long time,” she says, and then her face lightens: “But we’ll see where it leads me.”
ALBUM BY ALBUM The man behind the stage name, South Carolina songwriter Sam Beam, reviews his back catalogue “F OR me, diving into a song is a way to explore something where you don’t know how you feel,” explains Sam Beam. “Or how to communicate different kinds of images or paint different pictures inside of a song. How you can tell a story. That’s what I’m most interested in.” As alter ego Iron & Wine (named after a protein supplement he chanced upon in a Georgian gas station), Beam has made a career of such painterly explorations, his richly allegorical and allusive songs feeding into an intuitive sense of melody and rhythm. The native South Carolinian made his start with 2002’s hushed, folkish The Creek Drank The Cradle, going on to release six more solo albums, numerous EPs and a trio of collaborative efforts with Jesca Hoop, Calexico and Band Of Horses’ Ben Bridwell. His latest is Light Verse, a gorgeous set of songs recorded in LA with various players and, on four tracks, a 24-piece orchestra. Its arrival coincides with a new documentary, Who Can See Forever, which serves as both concert film and a wider study of its often-elusive subject. Two decades on from his debut, and despite various stylistic turns, Beam feels that his approach to songwriting is essentially the same. “I like songs that talk about what we want, whether it’s a romance or some existential answer,” he says, locating a through line. “But they also need to place us in the world. The songs show our desires in a frame. I just like making the portrait.” ROB HUGHES THE CREEK DRANK THE CRADLE KIM BLACK SUB POP, 2002 Beam’s rustic debut is a bewitching batch of home demos, softly burnished with acoustic guitar, slide and banjo. Good friend Ben Bridwell (pre-Band Of Horses) helped broker the Sub Pop deal I’d done a lot of other creative pursuits – filmmaking, art-making and so on – and none of them were really giving me the positive feedback that music was. I approached songwriting in a similar way to those other endeavours, being open to experimentation, but also refining the thing, sticking with it until it’s how you want it to be. The songs had this intimate quality, they were recorded at my house, with a microphone in my bedroom. Serendipitously, the type of material that I was singing about didn’t really demand to be screamed. So it all kind of worked together – the style of recording, where it was happening and how it was happening. And just the natural quality of my voice. I hadn’t really been in a situation to test how I could project. I’d never been in Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 a band, never played a concert, I was just doing it for fun. The idea of getting a record deal was all a dream. I was like, ‘Wouldn’t it be great to be doing music as a living?’ without having any idea what the practical reality of that would involve. It was just a case of putting one foot in front of the other. I’d bought the latest Passman book about the music business, but that was as far as I’d gotten. So I’ll always be eternally in Ben Bridwell’s debt. OUR ENDLESS NUMBERED DAYS SUB POP, 2004 With expanded personnel and Brian Deck as producer, Beam truly finds his métier. Includes beauties like “Naked As We Came” and “Passing Afternoon” I’d already written the majority of these songs, mostly in the backyard of the house we were renting in Miami, by the time the first record came out. It was still in the same vein, but I was definitely getting more serious about it, learning what I could do with a song and where I could experiment. To me, the difference between this one and the first record was really the All-round creative: Sam Beam in 2001 sound. My first tour was opening up for Isaac Brock’s Ugly Casanova project, where Brian Deck was the drummer. I was already a big fan of Red Red Meat and Califone. Going into the studio with Brian was a whole new learning process, because I’d become very accustomed to my home recordings. I was also very conscientious about creating a sound. And I felt like there were rules about what UNCUT would work and what CLASSIC “Flightless Bird, wouldn’t, so I was really excited and nervous about it. American Mouth” I didn’t know anything. Also, I made the “Woman King” I came from a punk rock EP [2005], which had a lot more background, whereas Brian came percussion. I’d also made a record from more of a jazz background, with Calexico [“In The Reins”]. That which is a different approach. You record showed me how to expand have a lot more freedom. So he was the palette in a way that was really trying to free me, but I was very exciting. I’d invested in a home resistant! I’d been touring with the studio. I treated The Shepherd’s Dog band and I wanted to bring them like making a painting, which onto the recordings. Also my sister included under-painting and was there and a lot of friends from making sketches, going over them, back home. It was a great experience. scrapping it all and starting again. For better or worse, it took me a long time, but I feel like I learned a lot. THE SHEPHERD’S DOG One of the fun things about being SUB POP, 2007 in a band is we hip each other to Beam’s fabulously imagistic records and whatnot. That record in songwriting hits an early high, particular was me trying to include framed by daring, percussive all types of music that I knew about arrangements. Highlights: the but hadn’t been able to put into sumptuous “Carousel”, “House By The Sea” and Twilight favourite practice yet. I was really into the
Stirring strands of American music together: Beam in 2007 was supposed to be corralling them. Except the dog on the cover looks totally insane. KISS EACH OTHER CLEAN 4AD, 2011 Four years after The Shepherd’s Dog, Beam returns with a more sophisticated, multi-layered set, somewhere between classic pop and funky blues-jazz I’d been listening to a lot of music from the late ’60s and early ’70s, stuff with acoustic bass, strings and horns. I wasn’t trying to make a pop record, just more of a glossy version of the last one. It’s like the difference between Tom Waits’ Swordfishtrombones and Rain Dogs. In the second one, there’s a sort of streamlining of all the hairy ideas from the first. That’s what I felt I was doing. So the ideas from The Shepherd’s Dog that would seem crazy became more normalised in context on Kiss Each Other Clean. The more styles I could throw into one soup bowl, the happier I was. “Your Fake Name Is Good Enough For Me” started off as a little guitar riff that turned into this dance between blues and African music. The outro was supposed to be a Crazy Horse kind of apocalypse, but [multi-instrumentalist] Joe Adamik came up with the horn line, which sounds like time-crazy Zappa/ Beefheart. I felt very frustrated at the time with being pigeonholed as the quiet bedroom guy who only whispers about teardrops and flowers and shit. I felt like the writing style didn’t really change, but my approach to realising the sound of the song was changing a lot. It turned a lot of people off. There’s no proper way to navigate those things. I was just doing what I felt was important. The more styles I could throw into one soup bowl, the happier I was GHOST ON GHOST 4AD, 2013 Beam’s fifth album, gilded with horns and ambitious string arrangements, features some stellar players, among them Dylan bassist Tony Garnier and jazz drummer Brian Blade It felt like this was the slickest record of them all. I’d been meeting all these really great musicians and feeling very inadequate around them. I knew my guitar-playing gave the songs a unique personality, but there were also things that I wanted to put on record that I couldn’t play myself. So I didn’t actually play a whole lot on this one, which made it a different thing. I got to sing my ass off instead, which is usually hard because I’m thinking about where my fingers go on the guitar. I found it very liberating. I’d also been playing with a lot of jazz folks and absorbing a lot of jazz. The version of “Lovers’ Revolution” is a straight-up Mingus street fight kind of song. I considered the sequence of these records and was trying to pivot or develop. I couldn’t get any quieter than the first record, so I had to go louder and larger. On Ghost On Ghost, I went as far as I was willing to go. There’s 0$<Ǵ Ǵ67 EMILY WILSON idea of how much blues and jazz – what we consider as the American baseline of music – comes straight from African music and all those different connections. “House By The Sea”, for example, came about because I’d been listening to a lot of highlife. I feel like America is like a big hodgepodge of culture. Obviously there’s a big WASP majority, but I also feel like the joy of American culture comes from stuff from the edges all being stirred together. So I was trying to include as much music from my record collection and also from my utopian vision of America. The sound of that would be pretty weird. Thematically, I felt like I was popping myself into some American city that I didn’t know, that I felt like a stranger to. The Iraq war was definitely in the air, it was really large in my mind at the time. Whenever I’m working on a cycle of songs, certain images keep coming up. It’s an easy way to tie songs together, unconsciously, when you’re writing. Then when you start deciding which songs will work together, these repeating images help. For some reason there’s a lot of dogs in this one. It felt like the whole idea of the record was a culture or community going off the rails, and the shepherd’s dog was the one who
ALBUM BY ALBUM the calendar.” And Years To Burn was the first time that they weren’t only backing me, but we were also supporting each other, trying to bring their sound and approach to making records into it. As an artist, I feel that I grow more when I’m put in a collaborative situation, so I’ll probably be doing more of that. I like making Iron & Wine records, but I get excited about those other records. There’s just something about the unknown quality of it. I put an email out to Explosions In The Sky recently, but they haven’t answered me yet! When I used to live in Texas, we used to talk about working together. So we’ll see what happens, it should be fun. LIGHT VERSE SUB POP, 2024 Reuniting with Calexico’s Joey Burns (left) and John Convertino, 2019 a homespun quality to the first record that’s totally absent from Ghost On Ghost, the sound is about as far from the first record as you could get. So after that, it was fun to turn around and start going back to making smaller-sounding records. But I’m so happy I made Ghost On Ghost, I loved making it. PIPER FERGUSON SAM BEAM & JESCA HOOP LOVE LETTER FOR FIRE was a big learning experience, but also a rewarding one. The narrative is expanded, you’re not just doing diary entries, you’re having a conversation in song. So it was very freeing and exciting. It just sort of immediately presented itself as this new way of communicating, a new stage to put your familiar dramas on. I found that the more I left myself open, the more she took it in directions I didn’t expect. SUB POP, 2016 BEAST EPIC Following 2015’s all-covers Sing Into My Mouth, recorded with Ben Bridwell, Beam goes one step further with another collaborator, singer-songwriter Jesca Hoop I loved how freewheeling Sing Into My Mouth had been. The covers idea with Ben happened because, as kids, our friendship was born of sharing and enjoying other people’s music. But with Love Letter For Fire I wanted to write with someone else, just to give it a shot. I’d never really tried that head on before. I’ve always loved the drama of duets – Kenny and Dolly, George and Tammy, whatever – and wanted to make a collection with somebody. I approached St Vincent and she really seemed into the idea, but then I turned around and she and David Byrne were doing something together. That’s when I just happened upon Jesca’s music. It took us a couple of months of sort of dancing around each other, being too nice, before we really got into it. I think we have a simpático way of working, we’re pursuing similar things. Co-writing for the first time BLACK CRICKET RECORDING Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 COMPANY/SUB POP, 2017 Back on solo terrain, Beam dials down recent excesses to create an altogether more intimate affair, themed around the onset of middle age I wanted to come back to something more folkoriented, but sort of loose, like electric folk-jazz. Beast Epic is almost like contemporary chamber folk. I feel like the violins and the cello play a huge part. It’s similar to the way Joni or Van Morrison were making great records in the early ’70s, where there’s a familiar acoustic bass to it, but also some improvisational players who bring this new, almost orchestral sensibility, playing emotional changes rather than just chord changes. So it has a certain vibrancy and life to it. It was a very immediate form of recording, too. Whereas my other records were labours of love, this one was pretty off the cuff. We’d get at least two songs a day and it was tracked live for the most part. Lyrically, it was definitely a midlife crisis kind of breakdown record. That moment where you’ve been running towards the horizon, but when you get there you realise there’s more horizon. And you’re tired, so you slow down. I feel like this record is really a beautiful breakdown, which is echoed in a lot of the dissonance and feedback. That’s thematic to what the songs are about. “Call It Dreaming” is saying that, even though the world is fucked up, let’s just imagine that everything we want comes true. But it only works because you’re saying that the world’s not really made that way. CALEXICO/ IRON & WINE YEARS TO BURN SUB POP, 2019 Beam reunites with Calexico in the studio for an overdue successor to 2005 EP “In The Reins”. “The Bitter Suite” forms the epic centrepiece I’d really enjoyed those collaborative records with Bridwell and Hoop and I was happy to get right back into that kind of situation. The first time I recorded with Calexico was mostly with them as my backing band, which was something brought up when the first record came out. Instead of releasing those home demos, we’d batted around the idea of going into the studio with me and Joey [Burns] and John [Convertino]. So we’d been sort of circling each other for a long time. We’d talked off and on about doing something together again, but it kept getting kicked down the road. Finally we just said, “Let’s put it on Seven years after Beast Epic, Beam overcomes pandemicinduced writer’s block to fashion a playfully emotive set, recorded in Laurel Canyon. Includes wondrous Fiona Apple duet “All In Good Time” I really admire people like Paul Simon, Harry Nilsson and Randy Newman, who seem to be able to find a balance between sombreness and something lighter. Lately I’ve been trying to bring that into my own songs. And it just so happened that writing them also coincided with a time where I was trying desperately to get away from this relentless heavy feeling, or tension, that we were all going through during the pandemic. So it was a way to bring light to the situation. I remember fooling around with “You Never Know” on the Calexico tour and “Cutting It Close” on the Beast Epic tour. But it wasn’t until “You Never Know” started to take shape that I had a sense of what the album would sound like. I’ve been meeting a lot of amazing LA musicians over the last couple of years, so I flew out there to record with them. Sebastian Steinberg [bass] and David Garza [guitar] are both in Fiona Apple’s band as well as mine, so that’s how “All In Good Time” came about. And the connection with her producer, Dave Way. During the pandemic I just couldn’t finish things. But when I started tying up the loose ends and putting the bow on Light Verse, I ended up recording a lot of songs. So there’ll be another record pretty soon. It really feels like the wheels are turning again. Light Verse is released by Sub Pop on April 26

KAMASI WASHINGTON Following his lavish cosmic explorations, KAMASI WASHINGTON comes back down to Earth with an album inspired by new life and the need to overcome old divisions. But the reigning king of jazz saxophone is still cleaving close to his radical mission to soothe the soul and inspire the mind. “Music cleanses us,” he tells Sam Richards Photo by B+ Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024
Beads here now: Kamasi Washington in 2024 at the cover shoot for Fearless Movement 0$<Ǵ Ǵ71
KAMASI WASHINGTON ÌׯÓÙÑÆÒÔØÎÛ²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ Sax and the city: Washington in New York, August 2015 ROUND midnight most evenings, Kamasi Washington will sit down at the piano in the living room of his home in Inglewood, Los Angeles, and begin to compose. Despite being synonymous with the saxophone, he only ever writes on piano, which goes some way towards explaining the harmonic richness of his music. “The piano is so much more versatile as far as being able to play the different parts and hear the song in its entirety,” he explains. “I played piano before I played saxophone, so it was always the logical choice. The saxophone is the racehorse, but the piano is the workhorse.” He never tends to get much written during the day. “When the world gets quieter, it’s easier to focus. There’s rarely something I have to do at one in the morning.” But there’s another reason for his nocturnal schedule: lately his piano has been monopolised by a different, smaller pair of hands. Born during lockdown in 2020, his daughter has already shown aptitude for the family business, even writing one of the songs on his new album, Fearless Movement. “She’s very musical,” beams Washington. “She would get up every morning and go play piano. Sometimes she wouldn’t let me get on! Normally she’d play a bit more random, but one time she was playing this melody over Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 and over again. Luckily, technology’s cool – pulled my phone out and recorded it. Then I started messin’ around with it, slowed it down, added some chords to it. And it made the record!” The simple, rousing chorus of “Asha The First” – along with some funkier rhythms and a clutch of star cameos – helps to make Kamasi Washington’s fifth solo album his most accessible to date. But it’s still a lavish and expansive piece “HE’S ONE OF THE FUNNIEST PEOPLE I KNOW” BRANDON COLEMAN of work. Washington hasn’t become the most celebrated saxophonist of his generation by crossing over, dumbing down or condensing his vision into Spotify-sized snippets. Instead, he’s flourished as a radical maximalist, making music that’s vast in sound and scope, without losing sight of where he’s from. Indeed, at the heart of each record is the same tight-knit core of musicians, most of whom have been together since their teens, jamming in the garage between bouts of Street Fighter. “I feel like his music reflects his personality,” says keyboardist Brandon Coleman, who first knew Washington as the linchpin of South Central LA’s formidable multi-school jazz band, “comprised of all the baddest musicians in innercity schools”. Later they roomed together as students, playing church gigs on the weekend. “Kamasi’s one of the funniest people I know. He can talk to anybody about anything. He’s a genuine person, just a sincere individual. [With the music] his intentions are to create something magical, something unique. And he always stays true to that, even in moments where everyone else is trying to project another idea. He has a very clear stance on what he wants.” “We end up having these very ethereal conversations,” adds long-serving bassist Miles Mosley, another alumnus of the multi-school band. “Sometimes there are very high-level theory discussions about chord structures and harmonies. We will have a lunchbreak-length conversation about E flat minor 13 with the sharp 11! But generally speaking we’re looking for a feeling, and he’s looking for the sandbox to be right. We’ve been making music together for a long time and he composes his music knowing the arsenal of players he’s going to have at his behest. So he derives a lot of joy from just seeing what happens.”
FAMILY AFFAIR Showcasing the creativity of the wider Washington clan T E VEN on a Zoom call at 11am on a Monday morning, Kamasi Washington looks as majestic as his music sounds. He’s dressed in a green striped dashiki, accessorised with a large, bell-like Indian necklace that could double as a percussion instrument. On his hands he sports a number of supersized rings, including an impressive topaz-coloured design in the shape of a Mayan pyramid. Behind him on the wall, above a vase filled with wildflowers, is a vibrant yellow abstract painting. Washington has been surrounded by art for as long as he can remember. Not only is his father Rickey a jazz musician, but he grew up in Leimert Park, which he describes as “the hub for African-American art in Los Angeles”. It was not uncommon to spot members of alternative hip-hop mainstays The Pharcyde and Freestyle Fellowship rubbing shoulders with free jazz legends like Billy Higgins and Horace Tapscott. “It was definitely a very artistically nutritious place. Not just musicians – there were visual artists, dancers, poets, people making clothes, scholars walking around who’d drop some historic knowledge on you. Everything was there.” Picking up his dad’s saxophone at the age of 13, Washington was soon muscling his way into jam sessions at local hotspots The World Stage (founded by Higgins and performance poet Kamau Daáood) and 5th Street Dicks. “The jam session at The World Stage started at around 8.30 or something. And then you had 5th Street Dicks that started at 2! So that’s where it got kinda heavy.” Were the regulars always welcoming of precocious young upstarts? “Oh yeah, it was like they were so happy to see that we existed. You’d hear stories and they would explain things, not just about music but also about life. It was a great ground for us. And we were learning from each other as well.” Washington ran with a crew of talented young players – among them Coleman and Mosley, pianist Cameron Graves, trombonist Ryan Porter and drummers Tony Austin and Ronald Bruner Jr – who still form the backbone of his band to this day. The local scene was so vibrant and inspiring that even when they started to pick up paid gigs with major artists, they’d always come straight back to Leimert to jam. “We would go on tour with Snoop and be playing stadiums with 60-70,000 people. And then, soon as we got off the plane, go directly to 5th Street Dicks and play for eight people – and put more energy into that!” Washington talks of Leimert Park almost as a selfcontained musical oasis in a wider culture that didn’t really care about jazz. In many ways, he sees that as a positive: it meant that he and his friends weren’t motivated or corrupted by success, because breaking out of Leimert with their own music never seemed like an option. “There is a common Leimert Park sound and approach to music that is very honest, very individualised. You can hear it in people like Thundercat, Terrace [Martin] and myself, all the way back to Horace Tapscott and Gerald Wilson, everyone has this [attitude], like, ‘I’m gonna make the music that is coming from me.’ Because the world isn’t really looking at this anyway, so why not just make the music that you really love?” Back at the turn of the millennium, jazz had “a bad reputation. You’d hear stuff like, ‘Jazz is the least popular music in the world and nobody likes it!’ The general sentiment was that jazz was either old or corny, that it was functional music. We were notorious for destroying those types of scenarios. Someone would want a band to play for their cocktail hour and we’d bust into some Ornette Coleman.” “By the time I got into jazz, it had been fairly well established as a museum artform,” says Mosley, who credits Washington with having the vision to see a bright future for jazz beyond the “conservationist phase” of the 1990s and 2000s. “Out of everybody in the clique, Kamasi is the one who thought that there were the least amount of rules, that everything always goes together as long as you mean it. I think we all recognised that jazz and blues and hip-hop and R&B – and Brazilian music, and music from the Caribbean – that’s all one thing. We put it together in some funky ways initially, but pretty soon we realised that there is no limit. If you can hear it, you can play it.” 0$<Ǵ Ǵ73 ÉÆÛÊØÎÒÕØÔÓ²ÜÎ×ÊÎÒÆÌÊ “His music reflects his personality”: on stage with Miles Mosley and Ryan Porter in Auckland, New Zealand, October 10, 2019 HERE are at least six Washingtons involved in the creation of Fearless Movement. Kamasi’s dad Rickey plays flute on the album, while his infant daughter contributes the melody to “Asha The First”. She also appears on the album’s cover, a blur of excitable motion at Kamasi’s feet as he stands, imperious, in front of a huge Basquiat-inspired modernist painting by his sister Amani, in an outfit designed by his niece Korynn (in collaboration with Ramiro Perez). His brother Sol was involved with editing the photo. “It’s meant to be like a space suit and a straitjacket, to represent Fearless Movement,” he explains of his impressive get-up. “To be fearless, you gotta almost seem a bit insane. And who moves more than an astronaut?” Fearless Movement is the second of Kamasi’s sleeves to feature his sister Amani Washington’s paintings, following their collaboration for 2017’s “Harmony Of Difference” EP. “Amani’s work blows me away,” he enthuses. “I wish I could just imagine some amazing thing and bring it to life like that. Artists see the world in a different way than the rest of us do – they have an infinite number of perspectives.”
ׯÕÍÆÊÑÉÎÆØ²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØÒÎÐÊÜÎÓÉÑʲÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØËÔ×ÈÔÆÈÍÊÑÑÆ KAMASI WASHINGTON Washington always felt their fresh, omnivorous, 21st-century take on jazz had the potential to reach a wider audience. Now calling themselves the West Coast Get Down, the group began to score gigs all across LA, from Venice to Hollywood. “We’d play anywhere, we had this feeling that our music was completely universal,” he says. “We started a residency at this place called the Piano Bar, which was more like a rock club. We played a gothic club called Bar Sinister, where people were walking around with vampire teeth. We were playing in places like Low End Theory, which was just DJs. The stage was so small that our drummers had to share their drums.” It was at Low End Theory where Washington first met Flying Lotus, who eventually proposed releasing an album on his influential Brainfeeder label. Washington had already made a couple of self-released albums in his dad’s garage, burning the CD-Rs himself, but this time he wanted to do it properly. “The Shack’s cool, but you could hear airplanes flying over and neighbours’ dogs barking and stuff like that.” So he and the rest of the West Coast Get Down decided to pool the money they’d saved from touring and session work and block-book a month at Kingsize Soundlabs in Echo Park. They recorded for up to 18 hours a day, sometimes even sleeping in the studio, amassing “a ridiculous amount of music, 200 songs or something like that”. Even after divvying them up between their various projects, Washington ended up with an 17-track album of almost three hours in length. “I had a recurring dream where all the songs were the soundtrack to the dream, so I took that as a sign that I’m not supposed to cut this record down. I went back to Lotus and was like, ‘Man, I wanna put this whole thing up.’ He was like, ‘That’s crazy…’ We went back and forth a little bit on it, but in the end he said, ‘Alright, cool, let’s do it.’” Released to global acclaim in 2015, The Epic became a testament to Washington’s ambition and abundant creativity, revitalising the entire jazz scene in the process. His appearance around the same time on Kendrick Lamar’s epochal To Pimp A Butterfly (alongside many of the West Coast Get Down crew) helped cement his status as the standard-bearer of a new jazz revolution. 2018 follow-up Heaven & Earth was even more opulent, making use of an orchestra and 13-piece choir. It couldn’t even be contained on eight sides of vinyl; breaking open the packaging revealed a whole additional disc of music, including wonderfully Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 Ready to blow: in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil , March 23, 2019 languorous versions of “Ooh Child” and “Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow”. N EW album Fearless Movement is what Washington previously described to Uncut as a more “grounded” effort – although at 90 minutes long, it’s still a rich and detailed listen, with each track allowed to unfurl at its own stately pace, carving out a deep, contemplative space away from the incessant jabber of the online world. “I didn’t mean grounded as in simple,” he clarifies. “I meant grounded in the physical world. The Epic was very much inspired by imaginary places that exist in my mind, and this is definitely inspired by the world and life and reality.” As a result, the horns are earthier, the drums livelier. “Rhythm was leading the way, where normally harmony would. Probably the biggest technical difference for me on this record was that I was hearing rhythms first, and then writing songs – or choosing songs, because I didn’t write all the songs. That was another big part of it. On my other records, I wrote all the songs, and this one is more collaborative: Ryan Porter wrote a song, Brandon Coleman wrote a song, Ronald Bruner Jr wrote a song. And so I was more open in that sense, too.” While West Coast Get Down singer Patrice Quinn remains a vital presence, Fearless Movement’s convivial spirit has drawn in a number of guest vocalists, including Taj and Ras Austin – sons of veteran South Bay rapper Ras Kass – whose playful rhymes are a callback to the jazzy ’90s hip-hop of Washington’s youth. There is a cover of Zapp’s “Computer Love”, discovered when tracing the roots of the West Coast G-funk sound. And all-time hero George Clinton even turns up on “Get Lit”, duelling with local Inglewood rapper D Smoke. Vital presence: “I have my West Coast Get Down singer daughter now, and Patrice Quinn I’m playing her all the music that I loved,” Washington explains. “It’s like I got a new perspective on it, because it’s brand new for her – it brought back the joy of that music. So for me, this record
“WHOLE ROOM’S GOT FUNKY!” Kamasi Washington on how George Clinton helped him “Get Lit” Upping the funk: George Clinton at his art exhibition in Miami, Florida, December 6, 2023 wasn’t only grounded, it was light. The sense of joy was the part of it that made me almost fearless about change.” He draws a parallel between artistic development and the rapid adjustments you need to make to your life as a new parent. “It seems scary at first, but then you grow and become a more complete person. I had the idea that this record is kind of like navigating the maze of our minds, being comfortable with finding new spaces and not being afraid to move into uncharted waters.” It doesn’t take much for Washington to get philosophical, and Fearless Movement perfectly mirrors this aspect of his personality. Just as it threatens to become a full-on party record with the appearance halfway through of Clinton and D Smoke, it veers back towards the long, blissful ruminations where Washington clearly feels most at ease. A key song on the album’s more introspective second disc is “Lines In The Sand”, whose lyrics are a rousing plea for togetherness (“Lines in the sand/Keep us so far from the dream”). Initially it was prompted by an argument within his family over Covid restrictions, which forced him to reflect more deeply on the madness of our increasingly partisan culture. “I was just like, ‘What is going on in the world that we’re just so divided?’ Everything is about choosing a side: I’m on this side, and you’re on that side, which means I’m supposed to hate you, and you’re supposed to hate me. I’m supposed to think that everything you say is a lie, and everything you do is wrong, and you’re supposed to think the same thing about me. That’s a ridiculous, impossible place to exist in, you know?” Which is all admirably utopian, but does this magnanimity extend to MAGA loudmouths, who seem to view any vibrant celebration of black culture as a threat? “My answer is yes. Just because someone has been persuaded by a certain ideology that I don’t agree with, doesn’t make them hopeless, doesn’t make them a lost cause. The reality is, if they’re a lost cause, then the world is a lost cause. So I have to feel like I can communicate with some Trump supporter. If my reality makes more sense than theirs, then I should be able to use my words to explain it to them.” “MUSIC CLEANSES US, BREAKS DOWN DEFENCES” KAMASI WASHINGTON LA… and he showed up! “It was a surreal moment, man. Whole room’s got funky, I’m tellin’ ya! When he walked in the room, before he even recorded it, I feel like the song got better. It was already a real funky track and just having his voice on there immediately upped the funkiness of it five, six notches. He’s definitely a very special human being with a deep connection to music that’s as profound as anyone who’s listened to his music may imagine it to be. “I listened to so much Parliament growing up, it was such a huge honour, and I was so blown away by how generous he was to come and make music with us. And he had fun! I didn’t wanna impose, but we should’ve recorded eight, nine songs…” Or your music… “Absolutely. Music is a sleeper, it speaks to you in a way that you don’t know you’re being spoken to. I feel like, if I can get you to listen to John Coltrane’s music and to fall in love with it, without telling you anything about what he thought about the world… I never met someone that loves John Coltrane’s music that has a hateful, bitter, bigoted spirit. I think that music cleanses us, it breaks down our defences and gives you a piece of who that musician is. And once you know someone, once you connect with them, it’s a little harder to hate them. That’s what that song is about, it’s about breaking down those lines, because they just serve to alienate us, and I don’t think that’s good for anyone.” Mosley recounts an incident, midway through a long European tour, when Rickey Washington was pushed to the ground by a (white) bouncer who refused to believe he was part of the band. With tensions running high backstage, Kamasi convened a band meeting to agree on a way forward. Rather than escalate the violence or cancel the show completely, they all decided to take the stage and play just the one long song, “Truth”, with all the frustration and anger and forgiveness they could muster. “To me, that was a moment that showed the character that Kamasi brings to his music,” says Mosley. “Sometimes the most beautiful things have to come out of disagreement. And that’s OK, you find you learn something about yourself, you learn something about the situation. Getting on that stage and being able to plug into that emotion, that’s what Kamasi is looking for all the time.” Cool genes: trading solos with his father Rickey Washington in San Sebastian, Spain , July 2017 Fearless Movement is due out on May 3 via Young 0$<Ǵ Ǵ75 ØÊÆÓ߯ÓÓÎ²ÕÆÙ×ÎÈÐÒÈÒÚÑÑÆÓÛÎÆÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØÌÆ×ÎÌÆ×ÆÎÆÑÉʲ×ÊÉËÊ×ÓØ “M E and my sister went to his art show and we ended up hanging out. He knew who I was, so that was very humbling. He’s totally in the know. I’m always amazed how my heroes have got their ear pretty low to the ground, they know what’s up. “I had this song that Ronald Bruner Jr wrote [“Get Lit”], and I’d always thought that George would be amazing on it. I said, ‘Hey man, I got this song…’ And he was like, ‘Yeah, let’s make some music!’ So we exchanged numbers. It’s one of those things where you don’t wanna jinx it so you don’t even let the thought that it is or isn’t gonna happen enter your mind. We just booked a studio for when he was in
THE MAKING OF... by Wah! KEY PLAYERS STEVE RAPPORT; PAUL RIPLEY; JACK HOULTON How Pete Wylie’s “drinking song” developed into a huge anthem: “When I have an idea, I have it in Cinemascope!” A SONG with a title like “The Story Of The Blues” demands ambition, and Pete Wylie was just the man to provide it. The bullish Liverpudlian songwriter had come through the Eric’s scene as part of the short-lived Crucial Three with Julian Cope and Ian McCulloch, but his own band – initially named Wah! Heat – failed to match the success of the Teardrops and Bunnymen. By the time Wylie wrote “The Story Of The Blues” in 1982, Wah! Heat consisted of just Wylie and bassist Carl Washington. “The Story Of The Blues”, which appears on the upcoming Pete Wyle & Wah! compilation Teach Yself Wah!, started life as a “drinking song” but soon developed into something more, inspired by Wylie’s reading of Toffler’s Future Shock and The Third Wave, and a desire to move beyond a guitar-bass-drums format. Wylie developed the song with producer Mike Hedges at Playground, the Camden studio where Hedges had worked with the Associates and Siouxsie & The Banshees. Pete Wylie in 1982: challenging himself “Mike spoils you,” says Wylie. “He does things that make you think all producers are like that. He had the knowledge, training and experience to get the right sounds.” They used the studio to its full effect, introducing strings and backing vocalists – including future Spitting Image voice artist Kate Robbins – and doing whatever was required to match the song’s over-the-top emotions with a suitably epic sound. Over a few frantic days, the song developed into a hope-filled anthem with huge chorus and relentless refrain. Recording took place during the 1982 World Cup, and Wylie recalls watching Scotland’s 4-1 loss to Brazil at the studio in the company of Billy Mackenzie, Alan Rankine and “the most alcohol I have ever seen in one wheelbarrow”. Later, Wylie recorded a spoken-word section – “Talkin’ Blue (The Story Of The Blues: Part Two)” – where, breaking the fourth wall, he explored the theme of the record, delivering a message of empowerment inspired by his personal politics, his Liverpool upbringing and the social-realist dramas of Alan Bleasdale. “It wears its heart on its sleeve,” says Wylie. “I don’t worry about sentimentality, as long as it is sincere. When you do something without sincerity it can hit the right notes but it won’t have the intrinsic authentic soul. That’s not what I do. On ‘The Story Of The Blues’ I wanted to push beyond the key I was most comfortable in – that was the working method.” Pete Wylie (Singer, writer) Mike Hedges (Producer) Kosmo Vinyl (Clash roadie) Anne Stephenson (Violin) Kate Robbins (Backing vocals) PETER WATTS PETE WYLIE: “The Story Of The Blues” came from a conversation with Kosmo Vinyl, the fifth member of The Clash. He said I should write a drinking song, something like “One For The Road”. That’s why on the sleeve I am the degenerate at the bar and Carl [Washington] was the cool barman listening to my crap. Yousef Sheikh (Bass)
KOSMO VINYL: Wylie was at the piano playing something from Blood On The Tracks. I said that nobody wrote drinking songs any more and then bent Pete’s ear that rather than play Bob Dylan, he should write a drinking song. WYLIE: The first demo was written in Liverpool on a wonky out-of-tune upright piano. It then changed as my energy and personality came into it. I wanted to work with Mike because I liked what he did with Billy Mackenzie. He’s this huge manmountain of wisdom and charm. MIKE HEDGES: Pete came to the studio and played a few songs. One of them was “The Story of The Blues”, which was very basic but sounded great. WYLIE: We were in his studio, Playground. The floor had this delicious smell and was sprung like a dancefloor. HEDGES: The floor was maple. I used to be a squash coach and squash courts are incredibly live. So when I designed the studio we had squash court floor made from sprung maple and special plaster on the walls that is also used in squash. It meant that everything that came out the studio sounded bright. It was probably the most live studio in Britain. “It wears its heart on its sleeve. I don’t worry about sentimentality, as long as it is sincere” PETE WYLIE WYLIE: I began to think about all the things I could do with the song. We started building. When I have an idea, I have it in Cinemascope, I see and hear it but need to find all the pieces to bring it together. Carl came in and played bass. We’d been a rowdy independent guitar group, but I was tired of that world. I set myself challenges to make things harder for myself. HEDGES: We could work fast because there wasn’t a band to rehearse. We used a very early Linn drum machine that was practically handmade. Neither of us knew how it worked. We knew the bass and snare pattern we wanted but in attempting to get that right we had this ghost conga pattern that we couldn’t work out how to delete, so it stayed all the way through. WYLIE: I programmed the violins on a Synclavier. I found the old tape recently and it’s amazing how me playing that refrain with my three fingers worked. But Mike said we should bring in people who could play. I didn’t really know you could hire musicians for a session. I would have taught myself to play violin. HEDGES: Today, synthesisers sound very realistic but back then they sounded artificial. I thought we needed real strings. My reasoning was that Pete’s vocal was so spontaneous and full of excitement, the backing track needed to match. It needed to be euphoric. ANNE STEPHENSON: We called ourselves Humoresque. I dressed as a bumblebee and Caroline Lavelle would play a mad jig on the cello before doing the splits. Gini [wife of Soft Cell’s Dave Ball] played second violin. Mike saw us busking at Covent Garden. We worked with him on other tracks, including the Banshees, but I had never heard of Pete Wylie. He’s the funniest guy I ever met and told one story about wearing this protective shell and falling on his back when he was drunk and lying there like a beetle for hours. HEDGES: We were going for a punk Spector sound. I loved Spector but he could afford four pianos playing at the same time. We did a lot of multitracking to get a similar effect. STEPHENSON: Mike wanted us to sound like an orchestra, so we did layer after layer to make it sound like more people. I thought it was great, it’s very unusual, there’s still nothing quite like it. It was so big and grand I thought it might be a hit. WYLIE: I did a vocal and my voice became something else because it was a different type of song. We changed the key a couple of times. I wanted to get it to the extreme of my range and then I wanted to go a couple of notes above that, to get real drama and intensity. KATE ROBBINS: I was sent to the studio with Doreen Chanter. We were told to sing the chorus, and it sounded soul-y and very gospel, which is what Pete wanted. It 0$<Ǵ Ǵ77
was a guide, but Mike said we should use that first take. HEDGES: I love the fact the song is social commentary without ramming it down your throat. It’s quite subtle but it is inspiring. Those were shitty times, it was grim, the news was always shit. Pete as a Liverpudlian really felt that. WYLIE: Mike was doing great things in the mix but one moment went beyond magic. It came to the first chorus and Mike pulled a switch that made the choruses even bigger – he knew those choruses had to be big and everything we’d done had been working towards that end. HEDGES: I overloaded the input to the console so the acoustic guitar was totally distorted and then put it through full reverb to create this messy but exciting wall of sound. Technically it is very bad, but I’d done this sort of thing with the Associates. WYLIE: Mixing was down to Mike. I tend to treat it like a sculpture, but from the Tony Hancock school where I throw it all in and then start knocking bits out. Mike could deal with that. Nothing phased him. He was working on me all the time, psychologically. He was steering me, encouraging me, asking questions and making me think. The crucial Pete in “The Story Of The Blues” video, January 1983 had a great vibe, but I told Doreen as we left the studio there was no chance it would be a hit. STEPHENSON: One thing that pissed us off is that they didn’t give us a proper credit. They just put “some girls” for us and backing vocals. It was probably the label but when I saw that I thought I’d kick his arse when I saw Pete next. But I wouldn’t have kicked it that badly because he’d have been making me laugh. WYLIE: I saw a timpani drum – that’s in the chorus. I saw a marimba which I loved, those two-note harmonies, so we used that on the second verse. I played 12-string acoustic guitar on it because I didn’t want electric. HEDGES: The spoken-word section for the B-side was Pete at his most spontaneous. He was an amazing performer and would bounce off the walls with ideas. WYLIE: I knew all along that I wanted a talking part. I love talking on records, you can convey your emotions more directly. I made these notes of things I wanted to reference – the Situationists, Kerouac, Boys From The Blackstuff. Mike said I should just go into the studio to give him an idea of what I wanted to do. I sat on a stool and spoke with that Liverpool intensity about the message I wanted to get across. I did it on the fly. I thought it FACT FILE Label: Eternal/WEA Written by: Pete Wylie Producer: Mike Hedges Recorded at: Playground Studios, London Personnel: Pete Wylie (vocals, guitars, synths, percussion), Carl Washington (bass), Gini Ball, Anne Stephenson, Caroline Lavelle (strings), Kate Robbins, Doreen Chanter (backing vocals) Released: November 1982 Highest chart position: UK 3; US - “Everybody wants a No 1… If I had got one I’d have been unbearable” PETE WYLIE YOUSEF SHEIKH: A while ago Pete sent me the multi-tracks, so I thought I’d try and remix it, but it was incomprehensible. It was like trying to do a jigsaw through a kaleidoscope. Even when you know what it is meant to sound like, listening to the individual tracks I could not understand how they put together the finished song. HEDGES: The track is not one of my proudest moments. It’s one of my favourites as a piece of music but as a production it is chaotic. We did it very fast. It’s about capturing the excitement of the song rather than trying to polish it. WYLIE: The single came out in November and the label thought it would be a big hit. It got loads of play but didn’t catch fire. Then we did a TV show on Granada, Pop Goes Christmas. I was fitted out in a tux with white shirt and huge quiff. Bet Lynch walked in and said, “Ooh, I haven’t seen one that big for years!” After that, it started to sell. HEDGES: It started to creep up the charts. WYLIE: They played the video on Top Of The Pops and it went to No 6. Then we went on Top Of The Pops and it went to No 3. ROBBINS: I was watching Top Of The Pops and the song came on with our vocals but two younger girls miming. Doreen called me and complained they had these two younger girls who looked a lot cooler than us miming to our voices. I begged her not to, but she called the Musicians’ Union and they blacklisted the song. It was heading to No 1 but he wasn’t allowed to do Top Of The Pops and it totally fucked it up. I felt so embarrassed, but I’m sure Doreen felt it was the right thing. WYLIE: We were outselling Phil Collins and Men At Work, heading for No 1, but we were banned and Wham! got their chance instead. I hope if Andrew [Ridgeley] is reading this he appreciates it. It really was aggravating. We were riding a wave and everybody wants a No 1. Although if I had got one, I’d have been unbearable. ROBBINS: Pete was very kind years later when I messaged him. I told him I was still embarrassed, and it wasn’t me who reported him. WYLIE: At first when we played it live, we did it as an upbeat Stax version, then I didn’t play live for five years and then I broke my back and nearly died. I didn’t play for another five years, so it’s never got old for me. I used to improvise the spokenword part, but it would end up going on for 28 minutes, so now we play the original tape as we leave the stage. SHEIKH: It’s such a rich arrangement and huge song. When we are performing we can see that every song has its own little fanbase, but when we do “The Story Of The Blues” it’s for everybody. Other songs capture Pete’s anger, or hope, or vulnerability, or politics, and they might do those individual qualities better, but “The Story Of The Blues” is the one that pulls it all into focus. WYLIE: I love that it still gets a reaction. I meet people every day who say that the song kept them going during a hard time. When I play it now, I do it as the last song and tell the audience I am finally about to do the only song they came to hear. But I am a cult figure, and all my heroes were cult figures, so I have no objection. I’ve had lots of good luck and lots of bad luck, but I am still as passionate as ever about the politics and the music. Especially the music, as I can see how valuable it is to so many people. Teach Yself Wah! is released by Chrysalis on April 5 STEVE RAPPORT TIME LINE Spring 1982 Pete Wylie begins to develop “The Story Of The Blues” the song with Mike Hedges at Playground in Camden. It is released in November 1982 June 1982 Wylie works on December 1982 With the Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 single stalling, Wah! perform “The Story Of The Blues” on Pop Goes Christmas! alongside David Essex, Toyah, Shakin’ Stevens and Dexys Midnight Runners. The exposure pushes the single higher in the charts January 1983 “The Story Of The Blues” peaks at No 3 but Wylie falls foul of Musicians’ Union rules, leading to a ban on further Top Of The Pops appearances
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RICHARD THOMPSON Reassuringly, RICHARD THOMPSON is showing no signs of slowing down. With a brilliant new album almost upon us, he reveals all about the magic of Big Pink, adventures in the Sahara, imaginary conversations with Sandy Denny… and how he feels about his approaching 75th birthday. “I’ve still got the same mindset as I always had,” he tells Tom Pinnock. “I’m always trying to write a good song or play a good solo. That hasn’t changed since I was 18.” Photo by DAVID KAPTEIN NCONSPICUOUS in a black leather coat and cap, Richard Thompson remains undisturbed as he windowshops on London’s Denmark Street. For one of Britain’s most revered guitarists and songwriters, though, this particular road holds temptations and regrets at every turn. “Roger McGuinn left his Rickenbacker behind in the UK, because the neck was broken,” he says, eyeing a 12-string in one shop window. “Somebody fixed it and I bought it. I’m divorced from it now, but it was good while it lasted. Now I’ve got a Telecaster 12-string, which is great – Jeff Tweedy has three!” Further along the street, past a display fortuitously presenting two models from his past – a Gibson ES-175 and a vintage sunburst Stratocaster – he pauses to peer into the industrial interior of a chic steak restaurant. Thompson used to come here in the ’60s, back when this was La Giaconda coffee bar and he was just 12 or 13 years old. “You used to see all kinds of people in there,” he recalls. “The Shadows, the Small Faces, anybody. My friends and I used to come down Saturday morning, ogle the guitars and have a cup of tea.” Only a few years later, Thompson and his pals formed Fairport Convention, and soon went to pioneer an electrifying strand of British folk. By 1971, he’d left the band to go solo and, barring a decade-long partnership with his first wife Linda, that’s where he’s been ever since. While consistency is Thompson’s forte, his last few albums have been some of his strongest: 2013’s Electric and 2015’s Still were excellent, but 2018’s 13 Rivers and his upcoming new album, Ship To Shore, are even better. “As a batsman I’d like to not be the guy who’s out for a duck or scores a hundred,” he says. “I’d like to be the guy who scores 33 every time, just reliable. It could be a fantastic, elegant, inspirational, artistic 33…” Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024
Guitar man: Richard Thompson, October 2023 0$<Ǵ Ǵ81
RICHARD THOMPSON He turns 75 in April, but to many Thompson remains the gangly teenager of Fairport fame, a prodigy whose first song was, quite bafflingly, the immortal “Meet On The Ledge”. For his part, he seems happy to be forever associated with the group he left over 50 years ago: next year he’ll quite literally be unable to escape his past when he co-headlines a week-long Adriatic cruise with the current lineup of Fairport [see panel]. Strolling down Charing Cross Road, we stop by Watkins of Cecil Court, long-time purveyors of arcane and antiquarian books. It was here that Thompson started the spiritual journey that led him to embrace the mystical form of Islam known as Sufism. “I was working my way through the bookshelf from A for anthroposophy and B for Blavatsky, all the way to Z for zen,” he says inside the hushed shop, placing a book of English folktales back on the shelf. “But I stopped at the Sufis. I thought they were my sort of thing, a philosophical, spiritual path – they seemed to be people who had the knowledge, now. As I formed that thought they arrived on my doorstep, there was a meeting a few hundred yards from my house in Belsize Park. I’ve been there ever since.” We reach our destination, a Covent Garden bistro blasting out a variety of retro tunes that please Thompson no end, including Peggy Lee’s “I’m A Woman” and a version of Earl Hagen’s “Harlem Nocturne”. With his cup of sencha tea steaming, he takes Uncut through his new album, detours into his many adventures and reflects on his next, significant trip round the sun. “I’ve still got the same mindset as I always had,” he explains. “I’m always trying to write a good song or play a good solo. That hasn’t changed since I was 18.” ËÎÓÈÔØÙÊÑÑÔ²×ÊÉËÊ×ÓØ²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ UNCUT: You recorded Ship To Shore while you were living in Woodstock. How did you find it up there? RICHARD THOMPSON: I think we missed the vibe by 60 years. It’s a bit touristy now, every other shop has a case of crystals. I wanted to get out of New Jersey because it was a bit dull. I didn’t want to go back to the West Coast because New Jersey’s so convenient for popping over to Europe. I thought of Woodstock, because there’s a musical community up there. It’s beautiful up there in the Catskills, really lovely. We visited the basement at Big Pink – there’s an energy there, definitely, the sound molecules have altered the room somehow. How was the recording itself? We did it at a studio called Applehead. It’s an old barn, lots of air, a Neve desk. What really swung it for me were the goats – you could go and feed them just to clear your head. I like most animals, but baby goats just break my heart, they’re fantastic. Like 13 Rivers it’s mostly live, vocals, everything, for better and worse. You’ll always think, ‘Oh shit, I wish I’d done that again…’ But you can spend too much time, especially mixing. You can get everything perfect and it just sounds boring. In the old days if you were doing things on an eighttrack, you’d have to put, say, the hi-hat with a Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 Farewell, farewell: with Fairport Convention in 1970, shortly before quitting the band rhythm guitar, so that relationship isn’t going to change. Things stick out here and there, and that’s fine – on “Green Onions”, the guitar comes in way too loud and you can hear the engineer dialling it back and then bringing it back a bit, or the horns on “When A Man Loves A Woman”, they come blaring in and you can hear them trying to control them. Talking of Woodstock, weren’t you asked to join The Band once? Twice! I think when Robbie left I got asked, and then again in the ’80s just before the Cate brothers joined. At that point they were really dysfunctional as human beings, “There’s an energy at Big Pink. The sound molecules have altered the room” Rick and Richard were serious partygoers; I wouldn’t have fitted in and it would have been a hobby rather than my musical goal. Once you get to call the shots, you kind of get used to it. You’re back in New Jersey now… It’s a funny place, but it’s convenient and I’ve got good friends there. Half an hour to New York City, 20 minutes to Newark airport and you’ve got the Mafia down the road, which is handy. You see Sopranos locations all over New Jersey, except in the town of Bloomfield which is just down the road from us, which is where the Mafia actually live. The Mafia would get in touch with the show when they were making it, saying, “You made a mistake in the last episode… you showed a barbecue in someone’s backyard and everyone’s wearing shorts. Well, we never wear shorts.” Anyway, that’s why I live in New Jersey – you wouldn’t want them taking an interest in your musical career, though. But I’ve been here in London for a few months. Your son Jack lives in London, doesn’t he? He grew up in California, but for some reason he likes really shitty weather. It’s funny, all his old highschool friends who dispersed after school and went around the world all came back to California
The man who sailed the world: Thompson in 2023 SHIP-SHAPE It’s not quite death metal, but Ship To Shore has got faster tempos than much of your old stuff. Well, it takes a lot to keep me awake. 13 Rivers was more up-tempo and since then I’ve been putting slower acoustic songs on those two EPs I did during lockdown. But I like it that way, I don’t like having to accommodate a huge range of tempos, unless it feels like they belong together. So Ship To Shore and 13 Rivers are a lot more up-tempo than stuff I was doing in the ’70s. The band are playing on every track too, which gives it a bit of continuity. On some songs I was thinking of The Beatles or Abba – someone said in every four bars of a Beatles song something different happens. I’m just trying to live up to the moptops. They leave a long shadow. If you’re making some of your best work over the past decade, you’re not alone – Bob Dylan, Paul Simon and more are on top form recently. I’m interested to hear the Paul Simon record, it sounds like divine inspiration the way he described it, like it came from outside of him. Dylan’s made some amazing records lately. It’s totally uncharted territory. As a folkie – I’ll call myself that for temporary convenience – you’re more used to going to a folk festival and them digging out some old fisherman or farmer, but in pop music you’re supposed to have gone by 25. What they call rock music is weird in that way, Richard Thompson’s life on the high seas “T HIS cruise with Fairport in August 2025 will be fun. It’s the biggest sailing ship in the world, and we’re just cruising the Adriatic. We’ll go to Venice, Croatia and Montenegro. I’m sure there’ll be lots of collaborations with Fairport. I’ve done about six of the Cayamo cruises out of Miami, so you’ll have John Prine, Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle, American songwriters like that, but that’s a big ship, around 3,000 people. The rolling buffet’s always good! You get to spend time with your friends, your fellow musicians – otherwise you never see them. Something else I’ve done the last couple of years are river cruises: we’ve done two Rhine cruises and a Danube cruise. That’s my favourite thing – you roll down the Rhine at eight miles an hour and stop every day in these lovely little towns. I never take holidays – after a tour the last thing you want to do is go somewhere – but I love doing these.” that boomer musicians found they still had an audience so they kept going, for better, for worse. I prefer the parallels with someone like David Hockney or my favourite artist Gillian Ayres, she was working every day in the studio in her eighties – perhaps those should be the role models for the ageing boomer musicians? How are you writing your songs these days? I like to be disciplined. When I first started writing, I’d start at about 3am and then I’d be tired by 4am, so it was a very short window, which was why I didn’t have a great output at that point. I wanted to be disciplined and it took me a long time before my body would let me wake up early in the morning. It probably wasn’t until I was 40 that I could get up about 6.30 or 7am and put a few hours of writing behind me before breakfast. Beethoven would get up at dawn, make probably the strongest cup of coffee any human has ever drank – he’d count out 70 beans – then he’d write until noon and knock off for the day. I don’t like to wait for inspiration, I like to meet it halfway. You’re in the strange position of still pushing forward creatively, but also being constantly reminded of your past. Sometimes that’s self-inflicted, as with your Beeswing memoir… It’s particularly a singersongwriter thing, where you do a performance that includes your new stuff as well as stuff from 10 years ago, 20 years ago, 50 years ago, every night. So you’ve got this reminder all the time of your musical progress. That’s kind of unique, you don’t get that in other artforms. How to deal with it? It doesn’t bother me particularly, I see the songs as my songs, I don’t even think, ‘This song’s 50 years old, my God…’ I’m just happy to play it. You make a good album, you make a bad album… sometimes you make a great record but nobody likes it, because maybe not everything translates to other people. Which of your albums fit into that category? Well, I always liked Mock 0$<Ǵ Ǵ83 ÉÆÛÎÉÐÆÕÙÊÎÓ – it’s seductive, the weather’s good, it’s an easy place to be. But Jack really likes it in London. He’s an interior designer these days and also plays in this death metal band – they’ve just toured in the States, which amazed me. It’s expressive music… music of existential crisis. It’s like an art statement, and it’s relentless too.
conversations sometimes go, “Well, you can keep the lyrics at that pace, just double the tempo of the track.” And in my imagination she’d say, “Oh yeah, that’s interesting.” That’s how “Trust” started, with the fast beat and the vocals going slowly over the top. I wish I had Sandy sing something like that back in the day, back in the ’70s, that would have been interesting. With Zara Phillips in Badalona, Spain, April 23, 2022; (right) Tchad Blake ÏÔ×ÉÎÛÎÉÆÑ²×ÊÉËÊ×ÓØÊØÙÆÙÊÔËÐÊÎÙÍÒÔ××ÎØ²×ÊÉËÊ×ÓØÇÔÇÇÞÇÆÓвÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ Tudor and I think people are now coming round to that. …Bright Lights, I thought was a really good record, but it took a long time for people to latch onto it. Your wife Zara Phillips is singing with you on almost every song on Ship To Shore; in that respect, it feels like a return to a sound we haven’t heard from you since Shoot Out The Lights. Yeah, Zara’s a really good harmony singer. In the ’80s she was singing with all these bands, synth-pop and punk bands, and I like working with family. It’s a nice thing. The “disco queen” in “Maybe”, who “digs old Bowie and Kate’s a hero”, is that Zara? Exactly, it’s a portrait of Zara in many ways. It’s totally my reality and her reality. Whereas on “Life’s A Bloody Show” I was thinking more of a type than an actual person – the world is full of selfish cunts [laughs], egotistical, greedy alpha males, in many cases. Trumpian, that’s the word that fits a lot of those characteristics. I wasn’t thinking specifically of him but I just started writing and it wrote itself. Maybe it leans more to Donald than I was hoping. Sandy Denny, 1972: “I feel responsible for two albums of hers” “Trust” does that skilful Smiths-y thing of fast music and slow vocals. Sometimes I have imaginary conversations with dead people. I think everybody does when they get to a certain age. Sometimes they’re with Sandy [Denny] – I suppose I feel responsible for two albums of hers that I co-produced, and I think, ‘What could I have done differently?’ Her albums tended to be very one-paced, everything was 4/4 or 3/4 and pretty slow. We were all aware of this, so they’d throw in a cover, a Brenda Lee song or something, just for the sake of a change of tempo. So my imaginary “I’m too fucking old, I should have it all figured out by now” “The Fear Never Leaves You” seems to hark back to your ’90s work with Tchad Blake, with all those experimental textures. I loved working with Tchad, he’s such an interesting engineer, an interesting guy. He’s such a fan of sound. Back then he came back from a trip to India with an Indian PA system that has this echo on it, but it doesn’t sound like anything else, it’s unique to the sound of Indian music. I don’t know how it works but it sounds like nothing else. We’d use that sometimes, put the voice or guitar through it. Sometimes he’d put a mic down the end of a didgeridoo and point it at the drums, so you get this interesting phasing sound, and then you mix that in with the drums. On “The Fear Never Leaves You”, the guitar is going straight through the mixing console so it’s got a really pure, strange sound to it with unusual reverb on it. You’re dealing with dreams, or more accurately, nightmares on that song. I’m a bit of a war buff. I saw something very moving about the Falklands War, which I don’t really think about as even being particularly confrontational, but a lot of those guys were really traumatised by their experiences. That inspired the song. I’m often sympathetic to the soldiers’ experience – screw the generals and the politicians, but the soldiers, they go through hell. “Freeze” isn’t unlike the desert blues of Tinariwen, who are fellow Sufis too… It just came out that way. It started out from me just humming the tune as I was walking down the street, which is the best way to start a song, I always think. If you get the lyrics to the first verse as well, you’re doing great. I tried to have a Sufi conversation with Tinariwen once, and I think they just found me amusing, they didn’t take me seriously at all. I was saying, “Honestly, honestly, I’ve been to Algeria, I’ve been to Morocco… I’ve been to your town!” Oh well, anyway… my French isn’t good enough. You were in the desert for a while, then? In the ’70s I went to various places in North Africa, mainly visiting Sufis. Some of the time there was a war on, the Polisario Front, so some places were closed off. You’d hear gunshots and you’d think, ‘Shit, I think I’ll drive in the other direction.’ I went to Mauritania, Spanish Sahara, Algeria,
SPACEPORT CONVENTION RT’s new millennium on record COOKING VINYL, 2003 Thompson started off the century with one of his best, a stripped-back set led by bittersweet opener “Gethsemane”. Underpromoted at the time, and still underrated. 8/10 FRONT PARLOUR BALLADS COOKING VINYL, 2005 Richard Thompson, October 2023 Morocco, Senegal, just driving around the desert. I wouldn’t do it now, it’d be too dangerous. Even then, in Morocco you were supposed to check in with the police every time you arrived in a town, and again when you left, and fill in forms in triplicate. On one three-month trip around North Africa, I discovered that the police were a day behind me – and some of the people I stayed with might have got in trouble for not reporting me. Often I’d get to a roadblock and I’d think, ‘Now I’m for it, they’re going to stick me in prison…’ You’d pull slowly forward, the guy would lean in the window and then someone would call to him and he’d wave you on… it was like divine intervention. It was called the Land Of The Saints, and certainly in the ’70s you could visit some amazing people. That might not be true now. You don’t fancy another visit to Mecca like you describe in your book? For what must have been an incredibly spiritual experience, it sounds pretty grim. The Hajj is spiritual but it’s dangerous sometimes. You’ve got potentially a million people trying to go round the Kaaba and people get trampled to death, especially old people. It’s scary. You come across pools of blood or a body lying on the floor and you think, ‘Shit…’ I’m reluctant to go back to Mecca, just because they’ve torn down the old Turkish buildings [notably the Ajyad Fortress] that were around the Kaaba. I know they hated the Turks, but they’ve flattened all that and put up something that looks like a mall. There’s now this huge clock tower leaning over the holy place [in Saudi Arabia]. I don’t know… it’s too much money. To the paranoid, “We Roll” might suggest you’re quitting touring or music itself – “Thank you all for your love down the years… It’s near the end now, when the curtain’s coming down…” I’ve already written the next album – I’ve got too much time on my hands. “We Roll” might come across as a bit world-weary, but I like the touring lifestyle. I love being on a bus, it’s fabulous. There’s a nice rhythm to touring on a bus, you’ve got your bunk, your escape, you’ve got all your stuff on there. Once you get into the rhythm, you can really sleep deeply. It’s fun. After about six weeks you’re ready to kill everybody, but apart from that it’s fine. How are you feeling as you approach 75? It’s ridiculous, I can’t believe I’m that old. It’s weird, it doesn’t make sense. Every landmark age, it’s all disbelief. In my mind I’m 22, but now I can’t be forgiven for my naivety because I’m too old for that now. I realise there’s no excuses any more. I’m too fucking old, I should have it all figured out by now. But the truth is you’re always learning, you’re always making mistakes. That’s just part of life, it’s part of music. Ship To Shore is released by New West on May 31 The Telecaster on the cover is a misdirection, for this might be Thompson’s most acoustic album. Recorded in his LA garage, it sports a simple, unfussy sound that suits these carefully crafted songs. 7/10 GRIZZLY MAN COOKING VINYL, 2005 [REISSUED ON NO QUARTER, 2022] Recorded for Werner Herzog’s harrowing documentary, here’s an instrumental triumph that finds Thompson experimenting alongside the likes of Henry Kaiser and Jim O’Rourke. The title track’s shimmering cloudburst is especially sublime. 8/10 SWEET WARRIOR PROPER/ SHOUT!, 2007 In many ways the start of a new era, with Thompson confidently rocking out on the likes of “Needle And Thread” and the superb “Dad’s Gonna Kill Me” (now a ‘thing’ thanks to Sons Of Anarchy). At 68 minutes, though, it could do with a trim. 8/10 DREAM ATTIC PROPER/ SHOUT!, 2010 Thirteen new songs recorded live on stage, Dream Attic might not contain many Thompson standards but it does boast some of his most electrifying guitar solos, such as the country-picking storm of “Haul Me Up”. 7/10 ELECTRIC PROPER/ NEW WEST, 2013 With Buddy Miller producing, Thompson creates a bona fide classic, from the wonderfully galumphing blues-rock stomp of “Stony Ground” to the acoustic country-folk of closer “Saving The Good Stuff For You”. 9/10 ACOUSTIC CLASSICS PROPER/ BEESWING, 2014 An attempt to document the material he plays at his solo shows, this newly recorded 14-track ‘best of’ was an embarrassment of riches: “I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight”, “1952 Vincent Black Lightning”, “Beeswing” and more. 8/10 STILL PROPER/ FANTASY, 2015 Jeff Tweedy takes over production duties: little wonder, then, that an RT album has rarely sounded this subtle and layered. The mood is elegiac and mature, but there’s still room for lighter fare on the closing “Guitar Heroes”. 7/10 13 RIVERS PROPER/ NEW WEST, 2018 A top-tier Thompson LP, this finds him and his live band concentrating on darker, heavier material with stunning results. “The Rattle Within” and “Her Love Was Meant For Me” are especially raging. 9/10 SHIP TO SHORE PROPER/ NEW WEST, 2024 A selfproduced counterpart to 13 Rivers, just as strong but a little lighter on its feet. “Freeze” is a clattering, thrilling opener, “The Old Pack Mule”’s mix of the ’60s and the 1600s is a revelation, and “Trust” shows Thompson’s gift for pop melody is still strong. 9/10 0$<Ǵ Ǵ85 ÉÆÛÎÉÐÆÕÙÊÎÓ THE OLD KIT BAG
THE BLACK KEYS & BECK Let’s rock: Patrick Carney (left), Dan Auerbach and the “most critical” collaborator” on their new Black Keys album, Beck (right) Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024
Twenty years after they first met, THE BLACK KEYS and BECK have finally got it together in the studio for Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney’s explosive new album, Ohio Players. In this exclusive interview, Beck, Auberbach and Carney – let’s call them The Beck Keys – talk early encounters, blues legends, Memphis rappers, random ’90s festival bills and more… “We’re three old friends getting together to make stuff and we were having a good time,” hears Stephen Deusner Photos by LARRY NIEHUES & MIKAI KARL 0$<Ǵ Ǵ87
THE BLACK KEYS & BECK ÒÆ×ÙÞÓÌÔÔÉÆÈ×ʲÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ “W HEN you’re having a picnic lunch, that’s when shit gets real,” says Dan Auerbach with a laugh. The Black Keys singer and guitarist is recounting the lengthy sessions for the band’s 12th album, Ohio Players, which the duo partly recorded with Beck, acting as an unofficial third ’Key. Whenever spirits or energy levels flagged, they’d order out from Zankou Chicken, a popular LA restaurant, and then spread everything out in the control room buffet-style. “You’ve got to have patience because this stuff takes time. Food helps.” That’s a picnic lunch 20 years in the making. The two acts have been circling each other for decades, bound by their shared love of blues, funk and soul. After touring together in 2003, the three musicians often talked about jamming, recording or just hanging out together, but their plans only finally came to fruition in 2022, when Beck stopped by Auerbach’s Easy Eye Sound Studio in Nashville and the trio raced through a handful of songs in an afternoon. “When you’re working on a record and the songs are coming together, whatever the energy and the vibe, it just goes into the music,” says Beck. Such energies are evident on the lively Ohio Players, which combines the thickfreak attack of The Black Keys with Beck’s bottles-andcans-and-just-clap-yourhands aesthetic. Of the album’s 14 tracks, Beck co-wrote seven and played on several others, injecting them with lively rhythms and flourishes of funk, R&B and even country. “That’s the whole draw of music,” says Carney. “It’s an art form that’s very collaborative. It’s one of the few forms where you create something from nothing.” In addition to being one of The Black Keys’ liveliest and fullest albums, Ohio Players is also their most populated. Joining the core duo are musicians from a range of scenes and genres: Alice Cooper, Noel Gallagher, Dan The Automator, Daptone impresario/Arcs guitarist Leon Michels and Memphis rap legends Lil Noid and Juicy J. Beck, confirms Auerbach, was “definitely the most critical collaborator here”, and the vibe they established during the album’s initial sessions carried over into every facet of Ohio Players. To celebrate their fruitful work together, The Black Keys and Beck – let’s just call them The Beck Keys – sat down with Uncut for an exclusive joint interview. To be discussed: their first hookups, the brilliance of Memphis rap, a stray Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarist and more. “I think we all have a similar philosophy – that it’s all about the song,” says Beck, as he considers the qualities they all have in common. “What’s Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 Beck in Amsterdam, 1996, touring Odelay; (inset) sleeves for Sea Change and Thickfreakness best for the song? What does it tell you?” PATRICK CARNEY: You might not remember this, but I met you on the Odelay tour. I was about 16 and my uncle Ralph arranged through Smokey Hormel [Beck’s guitarist] to get me a backstage pass. It was the first time I went backstage at a show. That was one of my first concerts and it totally blew my mind. I was a huge fan and still am. I think we talked about The Shaggs for a while. BECK HANSEN: I remember hanging with you… “I WANTED TO HAVE THESE GUYS OUT ON MY TOUR” BECK It must have been ’96 or something? We were playing in Ohio. I don’t remember the place, but I remember we talked for a long time. Your uncle Ralph had auditioned for the band and was a friend of Smokey’s. I knew about him because he had played with Tom Waits. I remember he showed up at rehearsal with a Chinese nose flute! He had all these weird flugelhorns, which didn’t really go with the songs we were playing at the time. I was like, ‘Damn, I wish I had the right album for this guy…’ CARNEY: I came to two shows: you played Akron and the following spring you were headlining with The Roots and Atari Teenage Riot. Then we met again at a Saturday Night Live afterparty in 2003. Our friends in Sleater-Kinney got us in. I gave you a promo of Thickfreakness on CD. A couple of weeks later we learned through our agent that you had offered us a spot on his summer tour. That was huge for us. We jumped at the opportunity. BECK: I remember meeting you guys that night! It was a huge blizzard and we were stuck in New York. I thought you had snuck into the party. DAN AUERBACH: We did! We weren’t supposed to be there. But here’s our CD – you’re going to love it!
Danger Mouse, 2004 CHOP AND CHANGE Your guide to collaborations with Beck and The Black Keys THE BLACK KEYS & DANGER MOUSE ATTACK & RELEASE NONESUCH, 2008 BECK: People would give me CDs all the time, but I remember listening to your album and thinking, ‘Shit, this is really good.’ Then you played at this place down the street from my house called Spaceland. I think you were opening for a band called Jet. I walked down there just to see y’all. I brought this producer friend along with me. There were probably less than 10 people there. Both our jaws were on the floor. I felt like we were at the Forum watching this band play their greatest hits set when they’re 50. CARNEY: We didn’t know you were in the audience that night. That’s when we were touring in a Buick Century, just the two of us in a car. There was so much gear that we couldn’t even recline the passenger seat. The night before, we had played Bottom Of The Hill in San Francisco, then we had to drive all night to have a meeting at 10 in the morning in LA. We were completely zoned… BECK: But you played an amazing show. It was just so formed, the songs were all good. When you would play a song, it was like, ‘Oh man, they’re playing this one!’ Which is wild for a fairly new band. It was undeniable. That’s when I told my manager I wanted to have these guys out on my tour. It was a big tour. All of North America. I think it started in Boston. It was good to reconnect with you. AUERBACH: It was a bus tour, which meant it was a lot of driving. We did the whole country. There were some long drives. I remember we played Delray Beach, Florida and my grandma made her way through the most pit to the front rail. BECK: That was a crazy show. For part of the tour we had Dashboard Confessional on the bill. You guys came out and played your blistering blues/ garage rock, then Dashboard came out and it was all teenager girls singing the lyrics at the top of their lungs. CARNEY: That was such an odd juxtaposition. BECK: I have this other weird memory of that Florida show. For some reason [Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarist] John Frusciante was just hanging out on the tour, but I never spoke to him. He was just backstage, I guess because he was friends with my guitar player. I only found out after a couple of cities. AUERBACH: The musicians you surrounded yourself with were the absolute best. We met so many people on that tour. You had Greg Kurstin playing keyboards, and he’s on Ohio Players. It’s full circle. BECK: I was trying to put together a new band after my original band went their separate ways, and they were killers. CARNEY: I have a memory of going record shopping with Josh Klinghoffer, who was playing guitar for you, and he would buy 80 CDs at a time. I only had money for two or three, but he would pick out $900 worth of CDs. I thought that was what real tour money could get you. AUERBACH: That tour was huge for us. We were introduced to all these big stages and all these fans we never could have had otherwise. These big amphitheatres and this beautiful sound. When you were playing songs from Sea Change, they just sounded so beautiful in these big rooms. We’d done a couple of big shows before, but I remember being excited to get out there and play in front of that many people. CARNEY: It was definitely the biggest rooms we’d played in up until that point, but we didn’t change anything that we’d done. We still set up exactly the same distance from each other as we did on the little stages. It was the first time we ever saw Red Rocks, which was amazing. BECK & CHARLOTTE GAINSBOURG IRM BECAUSE MUSIC, 2009 Shortly after a nearfatal skiing accident, Gainsbourg wrote and recorded an intimate, inventive set of songs with Beck at his home in LA. He played most of the instruments and duets on the single “Heaven Can Wait”. 8/10 THE BLACK KEYS & DAMON DASH BLAKROC BLAKROC, 2009 Auerbach and Carney worked with Roc-A-Fella Records co-founder Dash for this hip-hop album featuring verses by Mos Def, Q-Tip, Ludacris, and members of Wu-Tang Clan. It’s a surprisingly breezy affair that draws straight thematic and rhythmic lines between blues and rap. 7/10 BECK & THURSTON MOORE DEMOLISHED THOUGHTS MATADOR, 2011 More than 15 years after their infamous 120 Minutes interview, Beck and the Sonic Youth frontman reunited for Moore’s third album, which is largely acoustic. The standout is “Circulation”, a sound collage of needle drops and disembodied conversations. 8/10 Charlotte Gainsbourg and Beck, 2009 ØÈÔÙÙÌ×ÎÊØ²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØÒÞÚÓÌÏÈÍÚÓ²ÑÔØÆÓÌÊÑÊØÙÎÒÊØÛÎÆÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ “We met so many people”: Dan Auerbach on tour with Beck at the Wiltern Theatre, LA, October 5, 2003 For the first 10 years, The Black Keys featured only Auerbach and Carney, but their fifth album opened things up. In addition to guitarwork by Marc Ribot and vocals by Jessica Lea Mayfield, the album features production work by Danger Mouse, fresh off The Grey Album. 8/10
THE BLACK KEYS & BECK BECK: I remember you got a standing ovation at that Red Rocks show, which I had never seen for an opening band that people didn’t know. You guys had a certain finesse and experience back then. Sometimes it takes bands a long time to find themselves. But you had the DNA right there from the beginning. It was cool to see, because I had come out in the beginning playing a lot of blues stuff. It was so misunderstood. Back then I think most people saw blues as background music for a Michelob commercial. AUERBACH: I think they were pretty uninformed. I don’t think they had been exposed at all to the delta blues musicians or Chicago blues or any of the original stuff from the 1920s through the ’50s. CARNEY: Dan, you drove down to Mississippi and went looking for Junior Kimbrough. How old were you? 18? AUERBACH: I met some of those blues musicians early on. They were all really hospitable and welcoming. They loved the attention. I went down to Mississippi and that was when I ended up meeting T-Model Ford. I loved his record, Pee-Wee Get My Gun, which is so fucking good. I went down to Greenville and he pulls up in his big Lincoln. He was pulling a plywood trailer that he had spraypainted. He just told me to follow him back to his house. I stayed there for a couple days and hung out and played music with him. Ì×ÊÌÔ×ÞÇÔÏÔ×ÖÚÊß²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØÕÆÚÑÓÆÙÐÎÓ²ÜÎ×ÊÎÒÆÌÊ CARNEY: Did you ever get to meet any of those guys? BECK: I was playing a blues festival in Mississippi with Bob Dylan, Joan Baez and Percy Sledge. I don’t remember where we were, but we went and hung out with RL Burnside. It was a Sunday, but he opened up his juke joint for us and we just hung out with him all day. He played for us for a while and it was like this portal had opened up to this world that I didn’t know still existed. I thought it was long gone. I’d heard the records, but to be up close to that world and that culture was really formative. AUERBACH: I snuck backstage at an X show when I was 15. I remember Dave Alvin was playing guitar for them, filling in for Billy Zoom. He gave me some shit, but in a friendly, goodnatured way. I remember he said, “You look a lot like me when I was your age.” I was like, ‘Damn, I’m in!’ Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 The Black Keys in 2003, the year they toured with Beck (inset); (left) blues legend John Lee Hooker in 1998 CARNEY: I met Lou Reed once and it was the exact opposite of that. It fucking sucked. But it’s fitting. You wouldn’t want it any other way. BECK: I met John Lee Hooker one time. It was me, Björk, Smashing Pumpkins and John Lee Hooker on a crazy bill. Only in the ’90s. His people brought me back to shake his hand, and he had this pretty young woman sitting next to him on the couch. It seemed like we were interrupting him, to be honest. AUERBACH: Oh, his people set you up. a photo of us. But when they tried to get the woman off the couch so I could sit next to him, he wasn’t having any of it. He said, “Get this fool out of here.” CARNEY: You were cock-blocking John Lee Hooker! BECK: I was lucky to catch some of the greats while they were still around. It felt like the music had gotten a little too slick in the ’80s, so it was very cool to see this whole wave of musicians coming along and bringing back this unpretentious, dirty blues stuff. That’s what I leaned toward and when I listened to Thickfreakness, I could tell you guys had spent time with that stuff, too. BECK: Yeah. They said they were going to take “I WAS LUCKY TO CATCH SOME OF THE GREATS” BECK AUERBACH: We both had One Foot In The Grave, so we felt you were showing us the way. CARNEY: That record was transformative for us as teenagers. We weren’t really sure how you made it, but it sounded so organic and cool and homemade, so we thought maybe it’s possible for us to make our own recordings in our basement. BECK: Well, that record was made in a basement. It was a very basic set-up, with
The Black Keys and Beck with producer Dan The Automator at Sunset Sound, LA, spring 2023 I think we all felt like there was a lot more left to do. AUERBACH: That’s the way we did Thickfreakness, right down to the Radio Shack mics. Everything still felt mysterious back then. Nobody had the money to pay $2,000 a day for a studio, so you had to figure out how to do it yourself. I think it was for the best. When we could finally afford a studio, it always sounded so bad. CARNEY: We did some work with Greg Kurstin, which was cool because we met him through you and now he’s this super producer who works with Adele and Foo Fighters and Paul McCartney. BECK: The same thing happened with my second album, Stereopathetic Soulmanure. I went in and recorded stuff in a real studio and it sounded really dead. AUERBACH: It’s like we finally had access to all this old, expensive gear we’d been lusting after… and it sounded like shit. That’s when we realised it’s not about the gear. It’s the people in the room, the people running that gear. BECK: During that tour I remember we talked a lot about jamming, but I don’t know why we never did. You know how tours are. We’ve jammed and some over the years. Pat, you and I have been texting on and off for, God, 10 or 15 years about doing something together. CARNEY: When we found out you were going to be in Nashville for a few days, right before Dropout Boogie even came out in 2022, we put together a couple of ideas. You popped into Easy Eye Sound and we wrote some lyrics and came up with these melodies. Before I knew it, we had three songs. AUERBACH: But then we all had to go tour. AUERBACH: We really liked that Liam Gallagher song Greg did, “Everything’s Electric”. I MR NICE GUY Dan and Pat on another of Ohio Players’ cast of thousands… Alice Cooper. “M Y neighbour was Alice Cooper’s agent for a long time, and every time he’s in town we squeeze in a round of golf,” says Carney. “We were out on the course, so I asked him, ‘Do you wanna pop in the studio and get on this song we have?’ He came in the next day.” “He came in in full regalia, too; he had all the makeup on,” says Auerbach. “The song’s called ‘Stay In Your Grave’, we wrote it with Greg Cartwright, and there’s a character in it that has a couple of lines… He’s essentially the devil. When Pat mentioned that Alice was in town, I figured who better to play the devil than Alice Cooper? He nailed it instantly, he knew exactly what to do. It was perfect – perfectly gruesome!” BECK: It was working right from the beginning. When I came to Nashville, we did four or five songs that first week together. The first one we did was “This Is Nowhere”, and I think we did “Paper Crown” next. Then every time you’d come to LA, we’d do a couple more. A lot of it wasn’t even planned. I’d just drop in and we’d put something together. Of all the songs we attempted in Nashville and LA, I think there were only two that he put away and never finished. That’s a pretty high ratio. “Paper Crown” reminds me of that record you did with a bunch of hip-hop artists. AUERBACH: BlakRoc. That was a big shift for us. BECK: Yeah, you guys came back with a new angle. CARNEY: It helped us unlock the next level. We were looking for the magic combo, kind of like, ‘OK, we’re going to need to put this together with this…’ With Little Noid and Juicy J on this new record, it’s coming full circle. AUERBACH: We’d been listening to Memphis rap the whole year we were making this album. That Little Noid mixtape, Paranoid Funk and some stuff by Tommy Wright III. They were touchstones for this record. CARNEY: We were driving around LA listening to DJ Screw and thought, ‘Why don’t we try to do something like this, something kinda chopped and screwed?’ We went back and tracked down Little Noid through his Instagram. He came to Nashville the next weekend and wrote his verse in 30 minutes. It was all clearly working. AUERBACH: But you can’t just do that one time on the album or it’s going to feel weird. 0$<Ǵ Ǵ91 ÑÆ××ÞÓÎÊÍÚÊØÌׯÓÙÑÆÒÔØÎÛ²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ quarter-inch or maybe half-inch tape and a few Radio Shack microphones. heard it and thought, ‘Who wrote this song? Oh, it’s Greg.’ That felt like a good sign. We asked about working with Noel in October 2022, but we were told he doesn’t really do that. But we found out he had some time in January, so we went and did part of the record with him in London. Then we came back and did some work in LA. At some point we brought Dan The Automator in. But you are definitely the most critical collaborator here. We wrote most of these songs with you.
THE BLACK KEYS & BECK I felt like we needed to do it on another track. “Paper Crown” seemed like the song to try that with, because it’s already got this funky feel to it. We ended up getting Juicy J from Three Six Mafia. What’s cool is that Juicy J discovered Little Noid when he was 15 years old and put him on a mixtape. I love the story it tells about Memphis rap. We are new to Memphis rap, but I’m obsessed with it. We wanted to honour them. CARNEY: That’s the whole draw of music. It’s an art form that’s very collaborative. It’s one of the few forms where you create something from nothing. The idea of being in a band has always been the coolest aspect. Beck, you’ve never really been in a band, but you’re a natural collaborator. What makes somebody a good collaborator is hearing an idea and being able to recognise the part that resonates with you. “Everyone’s feeling everyone else’s ideas”: The Black Keys and (inset) Beck each other to do better, to keep trying ’til it’s perfect. BECK: I love the collaborative process, because the majority of my records I’ve done solo or with a producer. I always wanted to be in a band and sometimes that dynamic means just being in a room with other people. BECK: You start to think, ‘OK, we can’t fumble this one. It’s too good. We can’t half-ass it. We can’t just say, it’s good enough.’ It’s easy with The Black Keys, because you have a whole body of work, a catalogue you’ve amassed over a relatively short time. So you have all these ideas to draw from. You did this thing last summer at the Paris Zénith, I was sitting in the crowd watching everybody sing along to all the songs and it hit me that the world you’ve created is very big and very inspiring. These are songs that people are going to live with. They’re going to sing along and let them be part of their lives. AUERBACH: It helps if you’re really good at something. It’s kind of insane when Beck gets going and he’s free-flowing these incredible lyrics. It’s crazy how it comes out of him. To watch that process in real time is amazing. CARNEY: When you’re working with other people, it’s good to be opinionated, but you can’t be a bummer. You can’t force it on people. You have to be supportive, but you can’t be blowing smoke. It’s a very fine line. AUERBACH: Also, you’ve got to have patience because this stuff takes time. BECK: I think I would add one other thing. We’re three old friends getting together to make stuff and we were having a good time. ÑÆ××ÞÓÎÊÍÚÊØÕÔÔÓÊÍÌÍÆÓÆ CARNEY: I feel like you can hear that in the songs. They have a good, infectious energy. I’m thinking about “Beautiful People (Stay High)” and “This Is Nowhere”. The energy in the studio was like three different parties and everyone’s feeling everyone else’s ideas. There were never any frustrations. BECK: There are a lot of songwriting analogies, but probably the classic one is when you’re fishing and the line starts to pull. “Shit, we got a live one here!” It felt like that with a lot of these songs. You feel the pull. We got a good one here. Then you go into that mode of just being focused, where it’s like, this is exactly what it’s supposed to be. Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 CARNEY: It’s all about emphasising the good ideas and helping to pull the song together. If you’re not feeling it, it’s about figuring out how to be constructive and get it to a place where you are feeling it. We’re all pushing “WE’RE NEW TO MEMPHIS RAP. I’M OBSESSED WITH IT” DAN AUERBACH CARNEY: And you’ve been there. You’ve been with us literally since the beginning. The first time Dan and I went to Paris – actually we were there for a press trip – and you were performing. We saw you play with the guys from Air. BECK: I was inspired by what you guys were doing. You were coming out of whatever you want to call it – indie rock or alternative music. Watching you guys come out of that world and then find a bigger audience was pretty amazing to watch. CARNEY: I’m sure we’ll do a lot more down the road. We’ve been talking about playing together for years and it was better than we expected. That would be the dream: do some shows together, make some more music. Ohio Players is released by Nonesuch on April 5
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DAVID BOWIE ÐÒÌØÕÍÔÙÔÌׯÕÍÞ²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ “So Long 60s”. “It’s Gonna Rain Again”. A band called Rungk. “Carmen Miranda backed by The Velvet Underground.” Foolscap notebooks. “Kellogg’s Corn Flakes packets and a wet bag of crisps.” Just how much do we really know about THE RISE AND FALL OF ZIGGY STARDUST AND THE SPIDERS FROM MARS? As a new boxset prepares to dig deep into DAVID BOWIE’s 1972 masterpiece, Peter Watts maps the Starman’s secret history – via outtakes, alternate versions, rediscovered recordings and abandoned track listings – in the company of his closest collaborators and confidants. Stand by for shocking truths about a certain doomed extraterrestrial rock star… “There was no concept!” Photo ©THE DAVID BOWIE ARCHIVE, PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRIAN WARD Ongoing kwest: a newly colourised shot from Brian Ward’s Ziggy cover session, Heddon Street, London, January 13, 1972 $35,/Ǵ Ǵ95
ÕÎÈÙÔ×ÎÆÑÕ×ÊØØÑÙɲÆÑÆÒÞØÙÔÈÐÕÍÔÙÔ T is November 2023 and Uncut is sitting in the plush confines of London’s AIR studios listening to David Bowie’s demo for “Starman”. A late addition to The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars, “Starman” was released as the album’s lead single on April 28, 1972, where it played a critical role in helping Bowie reshape the cultural landscape. But it’s unlikely that the song would have proved so vital to Bowie’s – and Ziggy’s – success if it had stayed close to its original form. Originally recorded at his home in Haddon Hall, Beckenham in January 1972, this nascent “Starman” finds Bowie exploring other directions. As well as his acoustic 12 string guitar, there is an overdubbed slide guitar, which gives the song a surprisingly bluesy quality. Bowie alters his vocal delivery, too, adopting an almost Dylan-like phrasing on lines like “Didn’t know what time it was, the lights were low”. Meanwhile, in the chorus, instead of “Let the children lose it/ Let the children use it” Bowie sings, “Feel the cosmic people/Let the astral in”, a residual echo, perhaps, of the mystical fantasies of Marc Bolan – Bowie’s greatest creative rival and, for a time, inspiration. Joining Uncut at AIR – a converted church hall in Hampstead – is Ken Scott, who worked as co-producer alongside Bowie throughout 1971 and 1972, a fertile period that yielded both the Hunky Dory and Ziggy Stardust albums. Scott has been working at AIR on remastering Ziggy, along with various outtakes and alternate versions, for Rock N Roll Star!, an expansive new boxset charting the evolution of Bowie’s doomed extra-terrestrial rocker. But Scott has not previously heard Bowie’s home demos. As “Starman” finishes, Scott laughs to himself. “I was chuckling at how strange it sounds,” he explains while remastering engineer John Webber cues up another home demo – this time of “Soul Love”. Bowie plays the song with a beautiful, aching tenderness, only breaking out of his reverie to extemporise an instrumental break at the 1:43 mark. After the song finishes, he delivers careful instructions to Mick Ronson, his musical co-conspirator, for whom this tape was originally intended more than 50 years ago. Although Ronson is a master arranger, Bowie clearly and carefully explains what he wants – “Instead of having the usual violin lineup, I would like to have saxophones. Two tenors, two altos and a baritone doing very soft and sweet background work all the way through. And I think probably I’ll play an alto solo at the Ǵ Ǵ APRIL 2024 beginning and at the middle there.” “It says something of the relationship between Mick and David,” says Scott. “It was so worked out, right down to the ‘la la’s at the end. To hear him talking like that – it’s amazing, this idea for another version that we never recorded.” These home demos are not the only evidence on Rock N Roll Star! of an alternative path for Ziggy Stardust. While songs like “So Long 60s”, “Stars” and “Hang On To Yourself” evolved into essential parts of the Ziggy story, “It’s Gonna Rain Again” “It’s amazing, this idea for another version” KEN SCOTT – heard here for the first time – never made it past a jam, while “Shadow Man”, “Velvet Goldmine” and “Sweet Head” were recorded, considered and finally discarded. Listened to now, they make you wonder how differently things might have turned out for Bowie in 1972 – how reliant the success of his sexually ambiguous, sartorially outrageous creation was on the final selection of songs Bowie chose for the album. As if to underscore the potential fragility of the Ziggy project, the first version of the album was drawn up before three key songs – “Starman”, “Suffragette City” and “Rock ’N’ Roll Suicide” – were even written. In almost every case, the decisions made by Bowie were guided by his adherence to the Ziggy Stardust character. One theme of the Rock N Roll Star! box is the way Bowie began 1971 as a songwriter for hire, but then accepted that the best person to sing his songs was himself… through the avatar of his newly fashioned alter ego. Further characters would follow – Aladdin Sane, Halloween Jack, The Thin White Duke and other nameless incarnations – but none were as extraordinary or trailblazing as Ziggy: a complete artwork that combined performance, theatre, visual art, music and storytelling. “He was inventing Ziggy,” says George Underwood, a school friend who worked
DAVID BOWIE alongside Bowie. “His mind was all over the place thinking what to write about with this person he was inventing. He found that he could write a song about anything now he had a character. Hunky Dory and Ziggy Stardust are like volume one and volume two in the life of a songwriter. The imagery was so different, but it was the same person. They both have the same signature of David.” “When we started to get Ziggy together, there was no theme as such,” says drummer Mick ‘Woody’ Woodmansey. “You took each each song as an individual piece and treated it like that. The one difference was that I had said I didn’t feel we could go on the road with a whole set like Hunky Dory. It was a bit too mellow. Then he got into writing heavier songs. I remember him telling me the title of the album. I said, ‘Fucking hell, that’s a mouthful!’” T HE Ziggy Stardust archive has been in residence at AIR Studios since 2020. While John Webber worked on the Ziggy Stardust material itself, others in the Bowie team dug out tapes and leafed through notebooks to better understand Bowie’s thought processes at the time. The Rock N Roll Star! box breaks down into five discs – one disc of demos and rehearsals and three discs of live recordings and BBC sessions, while Scott remixed a final disc of outtakes between December 2021 and April 2023. In the process, he came across several surprises. “From my point of view, it was about finding things that I thought fans might find interesting,” says Scott. “Things that have been released on bootlegs but which we can make a little more professional and finished to ensure they work. Sometimes I took guitars from alternative takes to polish them up. I am told we recorded 18 different songs. Some were more finished than others and several I had no recollection of until I began to listen to the package! It was one after the other, we worked very quickly. He wasn’t even bringing every song to the studio. I never even heard ‘All The Young Dudes’, which he gave to Mott The Hoople around this time.” The first song on Rock N Roll Star! is “So Long 60s”, recorded at The Holiday Inn in San Francisco in February 1971, during Bowie’s first promotional visit to America. While Bowie made some useful connections in the States, he was unable to perform any shows as he didn’t have the correct visa. But during one recorded interview, he pulled out his guitar and played a handful of songs which were also captured on the tape by the enterprising journalist. These songs included “Quicksand” – this version appeared on the 2022 Hunky Dory boxset, Divine Symmetry – and “So Long 60s”, revealed on Rock N Roll Star! for the first time. At this point, “So Long 60s” is just $35,/Ǵ Ǵ97 ÊÆ×ÑÑÊÆË²ÒÎÈÍÆÊÑÔÈÍØÆ×ÈÍÎÛÊØ²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ Dress to impress: at lawyer Paul Feigen’s house in LA, February 14, 1971: (opposite) Bowie’s first night in the USA, at Mercury Records publicist Ron Oberman’s family home in Silver Spring, Maryland, January 23, 1971
ÉÆÎÑÞÒÎ××ÔײÒÎ××Ô×ÕÎݲÒÎ××Ô×ÕÎÝÛÎÆÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØÙÍÈÊÓÙÚ×ÞËÔݲÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØÆÉÆÒ×ÎÙÈÍÎʲ×ÊÉËÊ×ÓØ DAVID BOWIE a fragment: a melody, a prophetic title and some semi-improvised lyrics that end in apologetic laughter. But it will shortly reappear in its more familiar guise as “Moonage Daydream”. What happened to transition the song from “So Long 60s” to “Moonage Daydream” is indicative of Bowie’s working practices at the time. Typically, Bowie returned from America with half-a-dozen ideas for songs, most of which ended up on Hunky Dory. But some – including “Lady Stardust” and “Ziggy Stardust” – found their way onto its successor. “David’s output at this time was unbelievable,” says Geoff MacCormack, whose book Rock N Roll With Me tells the story of his long friendship with Bowie. “He was bursting with energy. In a way it was a blessing he hadn’t had any success after ‘Space Oddity’, because his frustration came out in this explosion of creativity.” Another eyewitness to this prolific writing burst was Mark Pritchett, who had met Bowie at the Beckenham Arts Lab. By 1971, Pritchett lived across the road from Haddon Hall, where he often visited Bowie, sharing coffee and cigarettes in the music room recently vacated by Tony Visconti. “I was in a band called Rungk with two friends from Dulwich College,” says Pritchett. “The fact we were three public schoolboys amused David. I was on a scholarship, so wasn’t a typical Dulwich boy, but the other two were not un-moneyed. We were thrashing out covers of ‘White Light/White Heat’. David loved that. At this time, he wrote songs for his mates. It was his version of Warhol’s Factory.” As well as giving future Hunky Dory songs to Peter Noone, Dana Gillespie and George Underwood, Bowie gave away some from Ziggy Stardust. A demo of “Stars” – later tweaked to Beckenham bohemia: David and Angie with Freddie Burretti at Haddon Hall, April 20, 1971 “Star” – went to a group called Chameleon fronted by Les Payne. But Bowie had bigger plans for the Dulwich schoolboys. Changing the band’s name to The Arnold Corns, he gave them a new lead singer, Freddie Burretti – a clothes designer Bowie met at Kensington gay club El Sombrero – and “Moonage Daydream”. “Freddie was a very good-looking guy,” says Woodmansey. “We were pretty good-looking but when he walked in it was like an Adonis. You suddenly remembered you had a zit on your nose. David hadn’t quite stepped into that role of being a lead singer and was thinking of being Bowie’s Arnold Corns: “Carmen a songwriter. So he did Miranda backed by The Velvet these two Ziggy tracks Underground” with Freddie Burretti.” Bowie had it all worked out – and in Pritchett’s description you get a sense of what he later achieved with Ziggy. Burretti wore flamboyant costumes, while the three public schoolboys dressed in black. The stage resembled a boxing ring, lit by stark lighting – white, red, blue. “He talked about this at great length,” says Pritchett. “It was Carmen Miranda backed by The Velvet Underground. David was very specific. He wanted a particular drum pattern and he wanted this Kurt Weill, slightly dangerous Berlin steam-organ type feel – even though the lyrics are about mutant spacemen doing it with homo sapiens. But there was a problem. Freddie could dance, he was funny, he was star material. But he couldn’t sing. That didn’t stop David, who thought he’d grow into it.” The other song recorded by The Arnold Corns was “Hang On To Yourself”. At this stage it was a throwaway Eddie Cochran tribute about a punk kid who becomes a radio star. As Ziggy Stardust took shape, Bowie rewrote the lyrics, referencing stolen guitars and The Spiders From Mars – and suddenly a potentially disposable song had purpose. “I changed the words to fit the idea of the central character of the album, Ziggy Stardust,” Bowie later explained. “I wrote it to revolve around his group’s attitude to him, as he was becoming cited as a star and they were being left out of things.” The Arnold Corns single was released in May 1971, while a second session took
“His frustration came out in this explosion of creativity” GEOFF MacCORMACK himself. I know it sounds unbelievable, but I think that was what he was thinking, because from that moment everything was done towards an end goal. Does this make the whole thing look better or sound better? Does it make it less ordinary?” F OR a creation as otherworldly as Ziggy Stardust, he was incubated in some pretty down-to-earth locations: Beckenham, Tolworth and Aylesbury. Bowie first played the Aylesbury Friars Club in September 1971 and again in January and July 1972; the venue becoming such a critical part of Bowie’s development that the line “pushing through the market square” – from Ziggy’s apocalyptic opener “Five Years” – is largely accepted to refer to Aylesbury’s own cobbled town centre. Cueing up another previously unreleased track from Rock N Roll Star!, John Webber prepares to set the record straight. “It’s Gonna Rain Again” is a jaunty, upbeat number with echo-laden vocals on which Bowie references a “market square” in the opening verse. He sings about “cocaine”, too – his first mention of the drug in song and possibly one of the reasons that “It’s Gonna Rain Again” never made it on to Ziggy Stardust. “I’LL BE YOUR KING VOLCANO” 10 jewels from the Rock N Roll Star! boxset DISC 1 “HANG ON TO YOURSELF” [EARLY DEMO] Bowie had just met Gene Vincent when he recorded this demo at the home of an RCA executive in the US in February 1971, which might explain the retro feel of one of the Ziggy songs that took longest to get right. “SWEET HEAD” [HADDON HALL REHEARSAL] An early version of the Ziggy outtake that was probably dropped from the running order owing to the sexual references. Bowie also dropped “Velvet Goldmine” for similar reasons – and along with the use of American slang, it shows that he was actively courting the US market. DISC 2 “I’M WAITING FOR THE MAN” DISC 4 “VELVET GOLDMINE” [BBC RADIO SESSION] Bowie’s love of The Velvet Underground was profound and he regularly covered both “White Light/White Heat” and “I’m Waiting For The Man”. This outstanding version of the latter was recorded for John Peel’s Sounds Of The 70s radio show on January 11, 1972 and boasts wild Ronson guitar. [ZIGGY SESSION OUTTAKE] Bowie be-bops: Gene Vincent and The Who “FIVE YEARS” The cabaret-influenced “Velvet Goldmine” had been knocking about since the start of 1971 before it was finally dropped. The track eventually featured on the B-side of a reissue of “Space Oddity” in 1975. [BBC RADIO SESSION] Recorded for Bob Harris on Sounds Of The 70s on January 18, 1972, this was one of the first times the band had played “Five Years” outside Trident. It was broadcast on February 7, introducing Ziggy Stardust’s scene-setting opener to the wider world. DISC 3 “MOONAGE DAYDREAM” [BBC RADIO SESSION] With the band halfway through their UK tour, Bowie was flying when he recorded this excellent Sounds Of The 70s session with John Peel in May ’72. Augmented by Nicky Graham’s jabbing keyboard, it gives a sense of how powerful the band would have sounded in the small venues they were still playing. “MY DEATH” [LIVE AT MUSIC HALL BOSTON] A previously unreleased live fave of the Jacques Brel song recorded at the Music Hall in Boston in October 1972 on the Ziggy tour, exquisitely performed for a proposed live LP. Shortly after, Bowie would start to introduce songs destined for Aladdin Sane to the setlist. DISC 5 “STAR” [ZIGGY SESSION OUTTAKE] This was one of the first songs recorded at Trident studios and Bowie still hadn’t finalised the lyric, demonstrating that his editing and writing process continued until the moment he recorded the final vocal. “ROCK N ROLL SUICIDE” “I CAN’T EXPLAIN” [BBC RADIO SESSION] [TRIDENT STUDIO VERSION] This thrilling version of Ziggy Stardust’s dramatic finale was recorded at a Sounds Of The 70s session with Bob Harris on May 23. It was the last song Bowie recorded for the BBC until August 1991. Nobody is entirely sure why Bowie led the band through a rip-snorting cover of the Who classic during a recording session for “John, I’m Only Dancing”. Was he already thinking ahead to Pin Ups? $35,/Ǵ Ǵ99 ÿÙÍÊÉÆÛÎÉÇÔÜÎÊÆ×ÈÍÎÛÊÕÍÔÙÔÌׯÕÍÞÇÞØÚÐÎÙÆÒÎÈÍÆÊÑÔÈÍØÆ×ÈÍÎÛÊØ²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØÌÆÇÆ×ÈÍÎÛʲ×ÊÉËÊ×ÓØ place in June. Pritchett’s Dulwich friends were focusing on university entrance exams, so the demo was recorded with Bowie, Ronson, bassist Trevor Bolder and Woody as well as Burretti and Pritchett. They recorded “Looking For A Friend” – which is included along with The Arnold Corns’ versions of “Moonage Daydream” and “Hang On To Yourself” on Disc 1 of Rock N Roll Star! – and a song by Pritchett called “Man In The Middle”. “We recorded at Trident with Roy Thomas Baker, the resident engineer,” says Pritchett. “As we recorded ‘Man In The Middle’, David kept saying, ‘That’s the sound I want’, whereas normally he’d talk about the sound he didn’t want. Some people have suggested this might have been when he decided on the sound he’d use for Ziggy – broad, loud guitars with a steady beat, picking out countermelodies with a single guitar and quite wild solos.” For Woodmansey, the most significant outcome of the Arnold Corns sessions was the realisation that Bowie would never fashion a rock star out of Burretti. Freddie focused on designing Bowie’s outfits, while Bowie took the role of rock’n’roll star for himself, reclaiming “Moonage Daydream” and “Hang On To Yourself” in the process. “Freddie couldn’t sing a fucking note,” says Woodmansey. “So Bowie had to do it
DAVID BOWIE ÿÙÍÊÉÆÛÎÉÇÔÜÎÊÆ×ÈÍÎÛÊÕÍÔÙÔÌׯÕÍÞÇÞÇ×ÎÆÓÜÆ×É Whole hog: Bowie and the Spiders posing for the first time in full young droogs fig, January 1972 “‘It’s Gonna Rain Again’ is David Bowie does skiffle,” says Ken Scott. “It’s a bit like ‘Panic In Detroit’. I have no recollection of this from the time, but I’m told that he played this at Glastonbury in June 1971, which was three months before the first Aylesbury show.” Nonetheless, this was a formative time for the Ziggy Stardust project. Bowie had much-needed stability and financial backing after he signed to Laurence Myers’ GEM Music Group, which acted as a record label, publisher and manager for writers such as Mike Leander and Tony Macaulay – making Bowie an unlikely stablemate to Gary Glitter and The New Seekers. Myers had been alerted about Bowie’s availability by lawyer Tony Defries, who wanted to act as Bowie’s manager – financed by GEM. “I was a fan of Bowie since ‘Space Oddity’,” says Myers. “I liked songwriters and we bonded over Ǵ Ǵ APRIL 2024 our love of Tony Newley. The idea was Tony Defries would work for me and manage David. “I took a suite of offices at Arcade House,” continues Myers. “You had Mike Leander’s office with Gary Glitter, which was a very down-to-earth place where they talked about fishing. You had “We bonded over our love of Tony Newley” LAURENCE MYERS Tony Macaulay with The New Seekers, where people smiled when they were told to. And you had the Bowie office… which was full of freaks.” These freaks included visiting Americans Wayne County, Leee Childers and Cherry Vanilla, who were in London for Andy Warhol’s play Pork at the Roundhouse. The trio had gone to see Bowie at the Country Club in Hampstead. “All we knew was that he wore a dress and Leee was gaga over that,” says Vanilla, who began working for Bowie in 1972. “The show was David and Mick Ronson. Mick was more of a rocker than David at that point, and you could see that if he was going to make a band around Mick Ronson it would be more rock’n’roll, which was a good thing.” The band came together to back Bowie for the first time at Friars on Saturday, September 25, 1971. After performing four numbers with Ronson, they were joined by Woody Woodmansey and
Trevor Bolder; Bowie visibly grew in confidence, particularly on the heavier numbers that ended the set. “It changed dramatically as he adopted a persona,” says Myers. “That was what allowed him to become a star. David was never boring, but something happened when he became Ziggy.” A Redecorating Haddon Hall after recording Ziggy Stardust, May 1972; (left) co-producer Ken Scott example the solo on ‘Moonage Daydream’ was something David had an idea for from the B-side of ‘Alley Oop’ by the Hollywood Argyles, ‘Sho’ Know A Lot About Love’. There’s a line played on baritone sax that goes all the way through and we did it with a baritone and a recorder.” The first two songs they recorded, “Hang On To Yourself” and “Star” (aka “Stars”), are lyrically different from the final versions. “Star”, for instance, opens with the lines, “Someone has to blow down Wall Street/Someone has to kill the man”. Although the “Hang On To Yourself” included on Disc 5 is the band’s 12th take of the song, according to Woodmansey, anything more than four passes was considered a “dark session”, with most tracks recorded in three. “Moonage Daydream” became an early benchmark. Woody recalls heading up the stairs at Trident to the control room for the playback after Ronson had added his solo. “We heard this amazing song, incredibly loud, over these huge speakers and you’d think, ‘Fucking hell, if this doesn’t make it we have no chance,’” he says. “It meant everything had to be that good.” Vocals were invariably nailed in a single take. MacKay still gets goosebumps when he recalls the recording of “Five Years”, as Bowie broke down in the vocal booth. “He was screaming into the mic and Ronson was standing next to him looking at him in shock,” he says. “He was crying but not only was he crying – he was crying in tune. I have still never met anybody who put so much into his work.” All this makes the take of “Lady Stardust” on Rock N Roll Star! such a curiosity. Playing now over the speakers at AIR, its familiarity is suddenly upended when Bowie starts to sing – lower and slower than the album version. “I was watching to see your reaction as I knew what was coming,” says Scott. “It’s very disconcerting “I’M KNOWN TO LAY YOU, ONE AND ALL” When Bowie ‘came out’ “I ’M gay, and always have been, even when I was David Jones.” Bowie’s interview with Michael Watts in Melody Maker in January 1972 – reproduced in full in Rock N Roll Star! – directly addressed an issue that Laurence Myers had raised in one of their first meetings. “I came from a time when it was perceived that girls bought pop records and everybody was very closeted,” says Myers. “I said to David I didn’t mind what he did – but in terms of business, could it be an issue? He thought about it for a while and then said, ‘Laurence, don’t worry about it.’ So, I didn’t. He was right. Young people, even older people, thought it was good to be gay as it meant you were creative, brave and talented. You could be a leader.” Even after the interview, some of Bowie’s acquaintances question whether it was an accurate reflection of Bowie’s sexual orientation. Ziggy engineer Dennis MacKay recalls being told by Ronson that Bowie would invite young men to meet him in the dressing room just to get people talking. Mark Pritchett believes that while “David could occasionally be flirtatious with some men, serious, involved gay relationships were not something that struck me as being a part of his life. Quite the reverse…” What everybody agrees on, though, was that Bowie’s public claim of homosexuality did nothing to harm his career. “It was the right time,” says Cherry Vanilla. “He was a little early in making his sexuality clear, which was good because we don’t want to be following others. We like the avant-garde. America was opening up to LGBTQ artists, but at that moment it was intriguing and press-worthy for those with sharp ears, so the timing was perfect.” ÒÎÈÍÆÊÑÕÚÙÑÆÓɲÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØÉÎÈÐÇÆ×ÓÆÙÙ²×ÊÉËÊ×ÓØ S Woody Woodmansey remembers it, the Ziggy Stardust sessions began with a practical joke. On November 8, 1971, he walked into Trident to discover his drum kit had been replaced by a pile of cereal boxes. “I had asked Ken to get me a rockier sound,” elaborates Woodmansey. “I accused him of making the drums sound like a Yorkshire pudding and he was very insulted. I told him it sounded like I was hitting Kellogg’s Corn Flakes packets and a wet bag of crisps. Ken sent the guys out to buy boxes of Corn Flakes and mic’d it up. I walked in and he said, ‘We’re ready to get your sound now, Woody!’ I just fucking lost it. Everybody was cracking up.” The mood was buoyant. Bowie was confident he’d recorded a good album in Hunky Dory – which was still a month away from release – and felt he had enough songs for an immediate follow-up. The first time Scott and engineer Dennis MacKay heard about this came while they were still working on Hunky Dory. “He came in one weekend while we were mixing,” recalls MacKay, who worked on four Bowie albums from Hunky Dory to Pin Ups. “Bowie would sit between us in the remix room but always sitting a few feet back, holding a foolscap pad. We monitored so loud it was impossible to concentrate, but Bowie was always writing away. Eventually I asked him what he was doing, and he said he was writing lyrics for the next album. He was able to do that, listen to music and write at the same time.” The band – still unnamed; it would be not until 1972 that they began officially calling themselves The Spiders From Mars – were in good shape, too. As well as a couple of weeks spent in Greenwich’s Underhill Studios, they ran through songs in the basement at Haddon Hall – some of these rehearsals feature on Disc 1 of Rock N Roll Star!, including versions of “Star”, “Ziggy Stardust” and “Sweet Head”. The biggest difference from the summer’s Hunky Dory sessions, though, was that Rick Wakeman had joined Yes, leaving Mick Ronson to play the piano and keyboards. “The sessions were fun, and that’s one of the most important things – they had to be fun,” says Scott. “But we worked hard. We barely had time to make decisions. It was record, listen, move on, record, listen, move on. We had some conversations about arrangements, so for
ÿÙÍÊÉÆÛÎÉÇÔÜÎÊÆ×ÈÍÎÛÊ DAVID BOWIE because it starts just like the one we all know. This was an earlier take, with a guide vocal. I have no idea why he sang an octave lower, but he’s still in complete control of his voice. Generally, guide vocals are done for the other musicians, so they know where they are in the song – they aren’t usually used for experimenting with different approaches. Who knows what he was thinking?” Scott now picks out another track – a rollicking version of “Hang On To Yourself” with different lyrics and a vocal that sounds presciently like Johnny Rotten. Then comes “Shadow Man”, a song Bowie first demoed in 1970 and which was also considered for inclusion on Ziggy Stardust. “He clearly loved the song and wanted to do it,” says Scott. “The 1970 version and the 1999 Toy version have been released, but this is the first time the ’71 version has come out. People have called the 1970 version the Ziggy outtake, but it’s not. This is the Ziggy outtake and nobody has heard it before. “The problem is the vocal overloaded the guitar so there were some vocal bleeds. It’s a great little song, but it was never finished. He didn’t nail the vocal, so chose to can the whole thing and move on to the next song. The tracks that didn’t make Ziggy – the right decisions were made because we knew what we were doing.” As well as retconning the lyrics to “Hang On To Yourself” and “Star” to fit the loose plot about his doomed extraterrestrial rock star, Bowie also had an eye on America, working in references to Cadillacs and Chevrolets, ice-cream parlours and “God-given ass”. Although “ass” was deemed worth a risk, “Velvet Goldmine” and “Sweet Head” from the Ziggy sessions were both discarded, possibly because their sexually suggestive lyrics might lead to an airplay ban. On December 15, 1971, Bowie drew up a track listing. It included a re-recording of January 1971 single “Holy Holy” along with Chuck Berry’s “Round And Round”, Jacques Brel’s “Amsterdam” and his own “Velvet Goldmine” – this version of Ziggy is being released for Record Store Day as a standalone album, Waiting In The Sky. But the tracklisting was rejected by RCA, Bowie’s label, partly because they couldn’t hear a single. Bowie promptly went away and wrote “Suffragette City”, “Starman” and “Rock ’N’ Roll Suicide” – the last two of which were crucial to the album’s theme. Of the songs from the rejected December tracklisting, “Round And Round” lasted longest, remaining on the album until it was subbed out by “Starman” in February 1972. Bowie believed “Round And Round” made conceptual sense as the Chuck Berry cover “would have been the perfect kind of number that Ziggy would have done on stage”; it remained a staple of the live show right up until the Ziggy “retirement” at Hammersmith on July 3, 1973. The one surviving cover was Hunky Dory outtake “It Ain’t Easy” by Ron Davis. All the same, it’s hard to see how the December 15 version – with two covers, a re-recording of an earlier single and two defining songs absent – had much to do with the Ziggy concept. Could it even be Ziggy Stardust without “Starman”? Ǵ Ǵ APRIL 2024 Master tapes for Ziggy Stardust, minus Starman, Suffragette City and closer Rock ’N’ Roll Suicide “But that’s because there was no concept,” insists Scott. “The only thing that holds it together as a concept is ‘Starman’, which was thrown in right at the end because RCA wanted a single. If that wasn’t on there, it could never have been a concept. There is a theme and certain songs hang together as a story, but it’s ‘Starman’ that makes it work. And that was never planned.” A CROSS the five different versions of “Starman” that appear on Rock N Roll Star!, we can map the creative path taken by David Bowie through 1972. Responding to RCA’s request for a hit single, Bowie wrote and recorded “Starman” to order within a matter of weeks. Recorded at Haddon Hall in January 1972, the first version is brief – just under a minute and a half long – with lyrics that occasionally seem semi-improvised: “Some cat was laying down some ‘get it on’ rock and roll a lotta soul now”. He flies into the chorus but then comes to an abrupt halt, seemingly undecided as to where to take it next. A second version, also from January, finds Bowie trying out slide guitar. By the time Woodmansey heard the song for the first time the following month, it had evolved further into the song we know today. “Starman” was recorded on February 4 alongside “Suffragette City” and “Rock ’N’ Roll Suicide”. Not a bad day’s work. “When we did ‘Starman’, I realised that David could write a hit in any genre that he fancied,” says Woodmansey. “It was one of those knacks that he had. He had a concept for an album, a feel he wanted to put across, but he didn’t always think of a single. When he played ‘Starman’ to me and Mick, we said, ‘Fucking hell, that will do it.’” The original single mix of “Starman” on Disc 4 of Rock N Roll Star!, made on March 27, saw Scott emphasise the “morse code” section on piano and guitar, making for a punchier sound as the song headed into the chorus. The single was released in April 28, although it took several months to really take off. As “Starman” evolved, Bowie changed his appearance, slashing his hair and dying it red. Stanley Kubrick’s film of Anthony Burgess’s novel A Clockwork Orange opened in the UK in January. It was yet more creative sustenance to the omnivorous Bowie. “We all went and watched it together,” says Woodmansey. “It made sense as we wanted something solid, like a gang. We really were like that in the early days. He’d even start talking in a Yorkshire accent – and he did it quite well, to be fair. He took us on a tour of the culture. All the things he was into. He said it was no good putting a show together if we didn’t know what he was talking about, so we went to plays and ballets and talked about costume and staging and lighting.” With “Starman” in his back pocket, Bowie was ready to unleash Ziggy Stardust on the universe. But Hunky Dory was still getting great press, including a bombshell interview in Melody Maker where Bowie discussed his sexuality. He took that momentum into a series of BBC radio sessions, which are collected on the boxset. Intended to promote Hunky Dory, these are more like a preview for Ziggy Stardust as Bowie throws everything into his new project. Among the recordings are two January 1972 sessions for Sounds Of The 70s, which include a spectacular, strutting “I’m Waiting For The Man” recorded on January 18 but never broadcast. Also featured is the sound recording of Bowie’s breakthrough TV appearance, performing three tracks on The Old Grey Whistle Test. “That was a cool moment because The Old Grey Whistle Test was one of the ‘in’ things to do,” says Woodmansey. “It gave us a bit of credibility. It was seen as more serious-minded music and had a different audience. We hadn’t done much TV at all by that point.” On May 22, Bowie was at Studio 2 in Aeolian Hall, New Bond Street to record
“Ziggy wasn’t playing a stolen guitar…” ©THE DAVID BOWIE ARCHIVE, PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRIAN WARD; 0,&+$(/2&+6$5&+,9(6Ǭ*(77<,0$*(6 MARK PRITCHETT Drizzle stardust: Bowie on Heddon Street with Mark Pritchett’s Les Paul, January 13, 1972 “LAY THE REAL THING ON ME” When an Arnold Corn who lived next door lent Bowie his Gibson Les Paul M ARK Pritchett was at home in Beckenham when there was a knock at the door. It was David Bowie asking for a favour. That wasn’t too unusual, as Bowie often popped around to borrow Pritchett’s portable Revox reelto-reel recorder to listen to tapes from Trident. But this time he wanted something else. “David knew my guitars and there was one I used on the Arnold Corns session that was bright red, a Gibson Les Paul I bought in Lewisham High Street,” says Pritchett. “He said he couldn’t stop but could he borrow my red Les Paul for a photo shoot. I said he could if he looked after it. Then he disappeared into the night.” When Bowie returned the guitar the following morning, Pritchett was surprised to see the guitar was still damp. Bowie explained it had been an outdoor shoot and there had been a spot of rain, apologised and then headed home. It wasn’t until later that Pritchett realised his guitar was a cover star. “He’d been bouncing around with my guitar on Heddon Street,” he says. “Ziggy wasn’t playing a stolen guitar – it was borrowed.” Pritchett sold the Les Paul to buy the Gibson SG he later played at the Marquee for Bowie’s 1980 Floor Show. But he did keep one memento from the shoot. “When David left for America, he gave me all kinds of stuff. A Mk II Jaguar, his 12-string Hagstrom from the Free Festival… and all the contact sheets for the Ziggy cover.” Mark Pritchett (left) with Bowie in The 1980 Floor Show, October 1973
DAVID BOWIE a set of songs for Johnnie Walker’s Lunchtime Show. This included a rather raw version of “Starman” – as well as a blast through “Space Oddity”, where Bowie referenced Elton John’s “Rocket Man”, which was never broadcast. The fifth and final Rock N Roll Star! “Starman” is the recording made for the band’s legendary appearance on Top Of The Pops on July 6. TV was essential to WOODY Bowie’s success. With costumes, lighting WOODMANSEY and dramatic choreography, Ziggy Stardust had been conceived as a visual experience as much as an aural one; once Top Of The Pops’ audience of 12 million saw Ziggy and the Spiders From Mars, they would never forget them. Owing to Musicians’ Union rules, Bowie and the band had to record a completely new vocal and backing track of “Starman” for Top Of The Pops, which was done on June 29. “Generally speaking, the MU rep and the record company rep would be present at the studio and the band would start recording,” says Scott. “Then those two would go down the pub and while they were gone you’d surreptitiously do a mix of the original track. But ‘Starman’ was re-recorded. On this version there are some great parts from Ronno that weren’t on the recorded version and Bowie sings “Hey brown cow” at the start as he did on Top Of The Pops. But there are some parts that don’t make sense, so I wonder if they double tracked the vocal on TOTP. There are so many unanswered questions about Bowie and his recordings still. Like ‘John, I’m Only Dancing’ – there are three versions that are all very similar to each other and it’s very hard to work out why.” By the time “Starman” was broadcast on Top Of The Pops, Ronson, Woody and Bolder were sharing a flat in a large Edwardian house on Beckenham Road. Bolder invited Mark Pritchett round to watch the show with a few bottles of wine and a takeaway from Benjys’ Indian restaurant opposite the Odeon. “They were enamoured to see themselves on TV,” Pritchett says. “Everybody could see it worked from the moment David looked straight into the camera and sang, ‘I’ve got my eye on you’ [sic] and circled his finger. That, and his arm round beautiful Mick, who had his shirt open and all that fake tan. They were astonished that it worked so well but they also spent the entire time taking the piss out of each other. I watched history being made to a backdrop of piss-taking.” ÿÙÍÊÉÆÛÎÉÇÔÜÎÊÆ×ÈÍÎÛÊÒÎÈÍÆÊÑÕÚÙÑÆÓɲÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ “It was the girls that got it first” A FTER The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars was released on June 6, 1972, Ken Scott wasn’t aware it was on its way to becoming a hit until he was congratulated by fellow Bowie producer Gus Dudgeon in the reception at Trident. Shortly after, he visited family on the south coast and heard “Suffragette City” and “Starman” blasting from open windows. “Then you started to see all the people with orange hair,” he says. “That’s when I realised it was big.” Ǵ Ǵ APRIL 2024 Friars tonight: with Mick Ronson at the warm-up show for the Ziggy Stardust Tour, Borough Assembly Hall, Aylesbury, January 29, 1972 Following a warm-up show in Aylesbury on January 29, 1972, Ziggy Stardust had been launched at the Toby Jug – a pub on the A3 in Tolworth that’s now been demolished – on February 10. Later concerts took place in such unlikely surroundings as Wallington Town Hall and the Belfry Hotel, Sutton Coldfield. The size of these venues did not deter Bowie. Fans expecting to hear the singer-songwriter intimacy of Hunky Dory were assailed by thunderous guitars, wild costumes, dyed hair and flamboyance in excelsis. “Those shows were very theatrical compared to what else was around,” says Woodmansey. “We dressed up and were adding choreography all the time. If something worked, it stayed in. When we did the Toby Jug, we did a show that would work in a 20,000-seater… but in a pub. It was the girls that got it first. They would react, while the men were giving us angry glares.
Maker’s Michael Watts, Bowie looked ahead to Ziggy, which he had almost finished recording. “I’m going to be huge,” he told Watts. “And it’s quite frightening in a way, because I know that when I reach my peak and it’s time for me to be brought down, it will be with a bump.” He didn’t know the half of it. Fame, he later commented, puts you there where things are hollow. Becoming “the “It was very clear to me in private special man” at Santa Monica conversations that he was getting tired Civic Auditorium, October 20, 1972 of Ziggy quite early on,” says Pritchett. “It was taking over his life, the alter ego became the ego, and he was not years and it’s always the same story,” says Cherry unintelligent. He had a few demons about sanity Vanilla. “They felt like misfits and David gave in his family and his own darker tendencies. them an example by saying if you are going to be There were times he thought, ‘What on earth am I different you should embrace it. Even this doing?’ He had enough material for Aladdin Sane generation of weirdos and misfits see him as a but what next? The record label would want saviour. It feels as if that will go on for a while. I’m another album, and that would mean another not paid to be David Bowie’s press assistant any three years on tour with bright red hair faking more, but I still do it every day because so many fellatio on a nightly basis trying to come up with people want to talk about him.” more songs about being an alien. David Bowie, It’s one of his oldest friends, though, who do that? No chance.” summarises why Ziggy Stardust was so important When Bowie began to strum the chords to “So to Bowie’s life and his career. “David had waited Long 60s” in The Holiday Inn back in February so long for an opening to do what he wanted to 1971, he had no idea what he was about to do,” says Geoff MacCormack. “So when it came, unleash. “I have spoken to so many fans over the he threw everything into it. He threw his talent but also his attitude and credentials. He wasn’t just ready; he was bursting to go. Ziggy Stardust gave him a platform. Suddenly he knew he was being heard and he was going somewhere. He was no longer trying to get in. He was finally in.” Rock N Roll Star! is released by Parlophone on June 14; David Bowie: Rock ’N’ Roll With Me by Geoff MacCormack is out now, published by ACC Art Books K EN Scott still proudly wears a gold bracelet Bowie gave him in 1973. Engraved on it are the Ziggy lightning bolt and the initials KS and DB – Ken Scott and David Bowie – a priceless thank-you following an incredible run of albums. “He went down on one knee after we recorded Aladdin Sane,” says Scott. “Everybody thought he was going to propose. Then he gave me that. We only did one more album together [Pin Ups], but I’ve worn it ever since.” With the international success of Ziggy Stardust, fame had finally come to David Bowie. Not that he hadn’t expected it. In his explosive January 1972 interview with Melody “SO INVITING, SO ENTICING…” Inside the Rock N Roll Star! book B OWIE kept constant notes during recording sessions, jotting down session fees, lyrics, timings, chords and possible tracklists. The Waiting In The Sky LP reflects a tracklist drawn up by Bowie on December 15, 1971, while the hardback book accompanying the Rock N Roll Star! box contains more photos and information as Bowie realised his Ziggy vision. As well as detailed production notes for all the songs – showing where and when they were recorded, or at least as much as is known – there are contemporary press cuttings including interviews from Melody Maker and NME. Ken Scott adds additional insight and there are also interviews with Mark Pritchett and publicist Anya Wilson. One of the highlights is a letter to RCA from solicitors representing K West, the furrier whose sign features so prominently on the album cover. “Our clients are Furriers of high repute who deal with a clientele generally far removed from the pop music world. Our clients certainly have no wish to be involved with Mr Bowie or this record…” The original K West sign is now in the hands of a collector, who allowed it to be photographed for the book. ÿÙÍÊÉÆÛÎÉÇÔÜÎÊÆ×ÈÍÎÛÊ×ÎÈÍÆ×ÉÈ×ÊÆÒÊײÒÎÈÍÆÊÑÔÈÍØÆ×ÈÍÎÛÊØ²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ They felt threatened and their girlfriends loved it. Eventually the whole place would get swept up.” As “Starman” climbed the charts – although never higher than No 10 – the venues got larger. By August, Bowie was headlining two shows at the Rainbow with Roxy Music. It was happening overseas as well, as RCA poured money into promoting their unusual British star. An American tour gathered momentum, with each concert featuring a climactic performance of “Rock ’N’ Roll Suicide”. “Everybody who worked for David would go to the edge of the stage and when he sang, ‘Give me your hands’, we’d put up our hands,” says Cherry Vanilla. “We would physically give him our hands because we all loved him.” Vanilla was working out of the New York office, looking after press under the direction of Tony Defries. As the money flew in, things quickly got out of hand. “I couldn’t even control them when they were in the same office, so when they went to New York it was chaos,” says Laurence Myers. “Tony took offices and put everybody on wages. Dana Gillespie says she was given a flat, given a car, given an assistant – she didn’t know what to do with any of it.” One show from the American tour in Boston in October 1972 is captured in part on Rock N Roll Star! This was originally recorded for a proposed live album, but the five songs here don’t include any from Ziggy Stardust. As well as “The Supermen”, “Changes”, “Life On Mars?” and Jacques Brel’s “My Death” there is a version of Bowie’s new single, “John, I’m Only Dancing”, which was released in September. Within days, “The Jean Genie” joined the set. Ziggy Stardust had slipped quietly into Aladdin Sane.
L IVE Air style: (l–r) Jean-Benoît Dunckel, Louis Delorme and Nicolas Godin AIR Theater Des Westens, Berlin, March 4 BEN BAUMGARTEN A quarter of a century on, Moon Safari takes flight in glorious widescreen T HERE’S often something contradictory at the heart of Air’s music. It is as ineffably breezy as their name suggests, yet weighty enough to endure prolonged consideration, confirmed by the double-platinum Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 British success of their 1998 fulllength debut, Moon Safari. It draws frequently on once-derided 1970s instrumental easy listening, though its supplementary nods to the likes of Serge Gainsbourg and Francis Lai lend it an enviable sophistication. It’s dependent on vintage synths, too – there are various Moogs and Korgs on stage tonight, not to mention a Mellotron – but it still sounds human and strangely timeless. Moreover, it was once, and likely remains, as much a lifestyle choice as a musical one, soundtracking fashion stores and beach bars, tender make-outs and late-night, blim-holed sofa sessions alike. Nonetheless, it’s clasped tightly to this audience’s breast like the most heartfelt of comforting confessionals. This evening, Moon Safari’s 25th birthday is celebrated, albeit a year late. Rather than one arena show, Air have opted to play three nights in Berlin’s renowned, relatively intimate 1,700-capacity Theatre Of The West. Yet despite the venue’s extravagant gold-and-scarlet grandeur, they’ve essentially built their own stage within a stage: a panoramic, framed, mirror-walled box – not dissimilar to Kanye West’s at Glastonbury – whose ever-changing cinematic backdrops present Nicolas Godin and JeanBenoît Dunckel as if they’re starring in their own IMAX musical. In a further contradiction, this setting appears to be based not on the artwork for Moon Safari but the architectural masterpiece on the cover of its 2001 follow-up, 10 000 Hz Legend. Not that this matters. Even before they’ve stepped into the muted spotlight, with the audience lulled into a suitably hypnotised state by the sounds of Steve Reich’s Six Marimbas coming from the PA, it looks magnificent, the red, starry eyes of the “Kelly Watch The Stars”
L IVE during the Bob James-style keyboard strains of “Talisman”, couples nestle their heads together, bathed in a psychedelic crimson inferno. It’s quickly clear that the stage is tonight’s star, ably compensating for Air’s reticent protagonists and any musical shortcomings. Framed by white tube lighting, Godin rolls his sleeves up but never breaks a sweat as he joins Dunckel on Vocoder-ed vocals amid “Remember”’s windswept synths, its mellow Daft “Sexy Boy”. But the malfunctioning Punk mood over before it’s begun. music box weirdness of “Run” He then tentatively replaces the is gripping, its tension finally absent Beth Hirsch on a strippedreleased by sumptuous synths, and back “You Make It Easy”, the three “Surfing On A Rocket” is reduced white-clad musicians now outlined to its essence, with drums, a picked against evening stars like shepherds electric guitar and a buzzing synth bearing gifts. “Ce Matin-lá”’s co-existing with the colourful twilit glow helps underline its galaxies projected behind them. soft-focus, Emmanuel soundtrack If The Virgin Suicides’ “Highschool stylings – though these are joyfully Lover” feels slight, and “Don’t Be transformed for the prairies by Light” briefly threatens Godin’s wistful to become Pet Shop harmonica – while “Le Boys playing “The Voyage De Penelope” 1 La Femme Macarena”, a heavenly sounds like an early D’Argent “Alone In Kyoto” and Elton John introduction 2 Sexy Boy 3 All I Need a dramatic “Electronic looking for the rest of a 4 Kelly Watch Performers” bring song. Only “All I Need” The Stars things to a triumphantly escapes its shackles, 5 Talisman received conclusion. deconstructed so 6 Remember The stark contrast Hirsch’s vocals are now 7 You Make It Easy between these cut up for what might 8 Ce Matin-la two closing songs be a lush Cinematic 9 New Star In The Sky (Chanson represents another Orchestra remix. Pour Solal) crucial paradox, Naturally, the band 10Le Voyage De this time between earn two lengthy Penelope Air’s delicate touch ‘greatest hits’ encores, ENCORE 1 and their occasional with another nine songs 11 Radian prog-rock inclinations. benefiting from this 12Venus Fortunately, Dunckel lavish feast for the eyes. 13Cherry Blossom Girl and Godin somehow Sadly, there’s nothing 14Run manage to resolve these from 1997’s precious 15Highschool differences, which in Premiers Symptômes, Lover many ways can be seen and 10 000 Hz Legend’s 166XUƮQJ2Q$ as an engrossing battle “Radian” – set to an Rocket between style and Apocalypse Now sunset 17 Don’t Be Light ENCORE 2 substance. Tonight, – falls short of Moon 18Alone In Kyoto as on Moon Safari itself, Safari’s peaks, while 19Electronic Air prove it’s possible Talkie Walkie’s “Cherry Performers to have both. Blossom Girl” was always a pale shadow of WYNDHAM WALLACE Dunckel begins adding layer on layer of bubbling, wailing synths cover blinking at the crowd from behind towers of technology. Godin and Dunckel, joined by drummer Louis Delorme, arrive in pristine matching outfits. Lit by a low orange glow, Godin strikes up “La Femme D’Argent”’s familiar bassline before his colleague begins adding layer upon layer of bubbling, wailing and singing synths, first silhouetted like props in a suitably retro-futuristic Stanley Kubrick masterpiece, then slowly illuminated by a gorgeous sunrise. When the song breaks down midway through it provokes the kind of ecstatic anticipation that a drop at dawn might do in techno temple Berghain on the other side of the city, and it takes 10 blissful minutes for the slowly swelling rhythm to guide us to a glorious climax. With nary a pause, they launch into Top 20 hit “Sexy Boy”, the golden stars now hurtling towards us, perhaps helpfully distracting from Godin’s and Dunckel’s fey vocals and what sounds like a drumming stumble as they reach an almost comically whimsical chorus. In truth, this offers the first hint of yet another contradiction in the Air tonight: for all their elegant finesse, several songs run the danger of being revealed as simple constructions whose spell is easily broken. Admittedly, for the loyalists here that’s of little concern: there’s dancing in the cramped aisles during the similarly clean lines of “Kelly Watch The Stars”, complete with its Liberace-esque solo, while 0$<Ǵ Ǵ107 BEN BAUMGARTEN SETLIST
L IVE Mersey mission: Bunnymen old and new assemble ECHO & THE BUNNYMEN Beacon Theatre, Bristol, March 6 ADRIAN HEXTALL Spare us the patter! A garrulous Ian McCulloch eventually regains his swagger IKE faded aristocrats fallen on hard times, Echo & The Bunnymen can no longer muster the same levels of glamorous mystique, psychedelic alchemy and motormouth charisma they once routinely delivered live. Even so, they retain something of their old regal swagger. At 64, Ian McCulloch still cuts a convincing rock god silhouette, even if he is dressed down in dad jeans and scruffy trainers, spending most of this performance hiding under crepuscular purple stage lights. Famously unburdened by modesty, McCulloch talks the talk more than he walks the walk. Indeed, he spends far too much of this show veering off into barely coherent Partridge-esque musings about Bargain Hunt, Jan Mølby, his schooldays, fluffy towels and other seemingly random topics. He Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 rambles so much that exasperated punters eventually try to shout him down and steer him back to the music. Fortunately, the Bunnymen back catalogue contains a sufficient number of kaleidoscopic classics that remain unbreakably great. When he finally deigns to sing, McCulloch can still command that gorgeous, grainy baritone croon, investing even minor tracks like “Going Up” and “Flowers” with booming, widescreen conviction. After a choppy opening, the first reassuring glimmer of magic in this show is a hurtling, punchy “Rescue” and a sweeping, majestic “Bring On The Dancing Horses”, which closes the short preliminary set. After a 20-minute recess, the second set is longer, stronger and more anthem-heavy. “Over The Wall” seethes with jagged, crashing melodrama, while the roaring shanty “Seven Seas” triggers the first big audience singalong of the night. The Bunnymen’s mighty post- years, but Sergeant becomes split comeback single from 1997, “Nothing Lasts Forever”, still sounds noticeably more animated on a spine-tingling “The Killing Moon”, like the greatest song Oasis never layering delicious teardrop-shaped wrote. Indeed, the studio version 12-string guitar jangles over radiant actually featured Liam Gallagher autoharp strums. “The Cutter” on backing vocals. Which makes packs a real punky bite too, with sense, given that the young Mac bellowing and yelping while McCulloch was essentially Liam with a library card, sharing the same Sergeant’s vivid wall-of-sound shudders ricochet around this brittle arrogance and Beatle-sized cavernous venue. ambition. In Bristol, this Perhaps surprisingly, massive tune feels a little the two new songs in this underpowered, but still SET 1 set are both excellent. epic enough. As is now 1 Going Up First aired live two traditional, Mac switches 2 All That Jazz years ago, “Brussels Is gear midway through to 3 Flowers Haunted” oozes melodic interpolate a few lines 4 Rescue melancholia, while of Lou Reed’s “Walk On 5 Brussels Is Haunted “Unstoppable Force”, The Wild Side”, cooing: 6 Zimbo (All making its debut on “Hey Bristol, take a walk My Colours) this tour, is a wistful on the Merseyside”. 7 Never Stop romantic reverie. If these Which is slightly cringe, 8 Bring On are signposts towards a but earns a ripple of The Dancing Horses future Bunnymen album, obligatory cheers. SET 2 both suggest all is not lost Guitarist Will 9 Show Of to booze, ego, internal Sergeant, the sole other Strength friction and diminishing surviving original 10 Over The Wall powers. And a hushed member in the current 11 Seven Seas final encore of “Ocean Bunnymen lineup of 12 Nothing Lasts Rain” is a tremulous faceless new recruits, Forever 13 Unstoppable beauty, sultry and spends most of this Force luminous, hanging in the show quietly plucking 14 Bedbugs And air like heady perfume away in one corner of Ballyhoo long after the lights come the stage, virtuosic 15 The Killing up in Bristol. During but businesslike, Moon these rare moments of barely acknowledging 16 The Cutter ENCORE Merseydelic alchemy, McCulloch at all. 17 Lips Like Sugar when the old magic still Relations between 18 Ocean Rain works, it really works. the duo have been notoriously cool for STEPHEN DALTON SETLIST
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SCRE EN Skulduggery and identity theft on the Côte d’Azur; mounting tensions in a German high school; Irish folk-horror; and more… HE ORIGIN OF EVIL My predecessor on this column, Jonathan Romney, has suggested that Laure Calamy – the retroussé-nosed Noémie from Netflix’s delightful Call My Agent! – is the French Olivia Colman, a beloved TV fixture now showing her range in more expansive roles. Last year she took the lead in Éric Gravel’s Full Time as an exhausted single mum on the verge of a nervous breakdown. Now she relishes the opportunity to sink her teeth into the role of Nathalie, a fishpacker and fantasist with big plans and few qualms. The poster suggests that The Origin Of Evil is being marketed as a French twist on Knives Out: a scabrous yet picturesque portrait of a wealthy patriarch in decline, surrounded by wives, daughters, granddaughters and servants, all bleeding him dry and surreptitiously plotting his demise. But it might be more fruitful to think of it as a contribution to the Ripley extended universe – the kind of identity-theft lesbian thriller Patricia Highsmith might have written in more tolerant times. Nathalie arrives at the Côte d’Azur villa posing as long-lost daughter Stéphane, keen to reunite with the wealthy father she never knew. In fact, she’s stolen the identity of her violently obsessive girlfriend, currently banged up in prison after attacking an ex. She stealthily ingratiates herself with Serge (a magnificently monstrous Jacques Weber) and swiftly gets the lie of the land with the desperate wife, the embittered daughter and the embezzling maid, all vying for their inheritance. Though Calamy will take the plaudits, the whole nest of vipers is delectable. Director Sébastien Marnier might be guilty of overheating the finale – the perfectly chilly Highsmith would rarely veer into pure camp – but this is a rare French comedy that’s not afraid to go too far. THE TEACHERS’ LOUNGE Last month in his masterful Monster, Hirokazu Kore-eda presented a Japanese primary school as a site of raging solipsism, paranoia and hair-trigger violence that made being a teacher seem about as attractive a Riviera romp: Laure Calamy (centre) in The Origin Of Evil Calamy will take the plaudits, but the whole nest of vipers is delectable career option as, say, being a prison warden or abattoir attendant. Now German-Turkish director Ilker Çatak makes his own version of fear and loathing in an educational establishment with The Teachers’ Lounge, a brisk, furious film, which could be accurately described as Michael Haneke goes to high school. Leonie Benesch, who stars as fresh-faced Year 7 teacher Carla, is actually a Haneke graduate, having starred as Eva the nanny in the pitiless White Ribbon (2009). She has more fun here, to start with at least, engaging her class in PE and discussions of the scientific method. But following a spate of petty thefts, she begins to feel uneasy when her fellow teachers start interrogating the pupils. With scant evidence they finger one of the school’s sole Turkish kids as the likely suspect. Carla pointedly leads her class in a debate on the difference between proof and presumption. But things take a more sinister turn when Carla starts suspecting her own colleagues of being the guilty parties. One lunchtime she leaves her purse in her jacket on the back of her chair in the school staff room and sets her laptop camera to record the scene in her absence. When she returns to find her money missing, she checks the video and finds the camera has recorded an arm reaching into her jacket pocket. The arm is wearing a blouse spangled with a pattern of yellow stars – the very same design that one of the school office admin staff is wearing. Though Carla believes she’s acted with the honorable intention to defend her pupils, things go rapidly and furiously to hell, as recriminations escalate, staff are suspended and even the kids join the lynch mob. Benesch is superb throughout, a searing portrait of earnest youth being mugged by reality, her pale face floundering like a fish caught on a hook. But there’s little of the humanist tenderness that REVIEWED THIS MONTH THE ORIGIN OF EVIL BLUE FINCH FILM RELEASING Directed by Sébastien Marnier Starring Laure Calamy, Doria Tillier, Dominique Blanc Opens March 29 Cert 15 8/10 Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 THE TEACHERS’ LOUNGE Directed by Ilker Çatak Starring Leonie Benesch, Leonard Stettnisch, Eva Löbau Opens April 12 Cert 12A 8/10 ALL YOU NEED IS DEATH OPPONENT Directed by Paul Duane Starring Simone Collins, Charlie Maher, Olwen Fouéré Opens April 19 Cert 15 Directed by Milad Alami Starring Payman Maadi, Amirali Abanzad, Ahmed Abdullahi Opens April 12 Cert 15 7/10 7/10 SOMETIMES I THINK ABOUT DYING Directed by Rachel Lambert Starring Daisy Ridley, David Merheje, Dori Rath Opens April 19 Cert PG 6/10
SCRE EN offered precious respite in Kore-eda’s Monster. This is a withering, unflinching picture of a society united only in negative solidarity. ALL YOU NEED IS DEATH At the end of last year, Uncut flew to Dublin to congratulate the gothic folk quartet Lankum on having made our album of 2023. The group were happy to talk about everything from the Dublin music scene to Irish politics and doomyoga. But what really got them revved up was the prospect of creating film soundtracks. Ian Lynch of the band now gets to dip a toe into the medium, composing the score for Paul Duane’s uncanny folkhorror film All You Need Is Death. It’s a project that might have been expressly designed for the group. Anna and Aleks are a pair of young hustlers, roving west Ireland bars surreptitiously recording folk ballads for wealthy collectors. Following a tip from a rival, they discover a cracked old singer, with a song in a language older than Irish. As they start to translate the song, they discover the terrifying secret it still carries. It’s a film stronger on atmospherics than plot mechanics. The first half of the story, journeying into the Irish night (what Wittgenstein, a sometime Connemara resident, described as “one of the last pools of darkness in Europe”) is creepily engrossing. The second half, involving the singer’s puppeteer son taking Anna hostage to avenge his mother, risks bathos, as the spirit of the song’s curse is set free on the shabby streets of modern Dublin. Lankum will surely find grander visions for their soundtracks, but for a first stab, this is richly promising. SOMETIMES I THINK ABOUT DYING Daisy Ridley was one of the few signs of life in the final dregs of the final Star Wars trilogy, but even her force struggles to awaken in this shamelessly mundane depiction of small lives and quiet desperation, based on Kevin Armento’s 2013 stage play Killers. Ridley plays Fran, an office worker living in the kind of casually beautiful Oregon coastal town that might be twinned with the Forest Moon of Endor. But her mundane office job has left her blind to her surroundings, spiritually trapped amid the cubicles and water coolers. Her sole passions seems to be for cottage cheese and suicidal ideation. A new starter, the schlumpy Dave Merheje, seems like he might offer some romantic or dramatic inspiration but a date at the local cinema goes precisely nowhere, as even he struggles to connect. It’s far, far away from the Lucasfilm galaxy, and doubtless a refreshing opportunity to flex some rarely used actorly muscles. But while the diminishing worlds of office life can be a springboard for adventure for a Roy Andersson, Charlie Kaufman or Mike Judge, you can’t escape the feeling that this is a cheap holiday in other people’s misery for a slumming A-lister. STEPHEN TROUSSÉ All You Need Is Death ALSO OUT... SEIZE THEM RELEASED APRIL 5 Aimee Lou Wood (Aimee from Sex Education) stars as a deposed queen on the run from her own subjects in this Horrible Historiesstyle Dark Ages Brit-com. THE TROUBLE WITH JESSICA RELEASED APRIL 5 Rufus Sewell, Olivia Williams and Shirley Henderson star in a black comedy of middle-class manners directed by Matt Winn. EVIL DOES NOT EXIST RELEASED APRIL 5 Reviewed in our March issue but postponed until now owing to a late schedule change, Drive My Car Oscar winner Ryusuke Hamaguchi returns with a beautifully enigmatic koan of a film about a rural village imperilled by developers. CLOSE YOUR EYES RELEASED APRIL 12 Victor Erice, director of the 1973 masterpiece The Spirit Of The Beehive, returns with his first film in 30 years, about an actor who mysteriously disappears. Back To Black BACK TO BLACK RELEASED APRIL 12 Marisa Abela stars as Amy Winehouse in this biopic from the writer/director team behind 2009 John Lennon story Nowhere Boy. KIDNAPPED RELEASED APRIL 12 A Jewish boy is kidnapped and converted to Catholicism in this Palme d’Or-nominated Italian historical drama from director Marco Bellocchio. CIVIL WAR RELEASED APRIL 12 Alex Garland imagines a near-future USA on the brink of disaster, with Wagner Moura and Kirsten Dunst and a soundtrack from Beak>’s Geoff Barrow. IF ONLY I COULD HIBERNATE RELEASED APRIL 19 The first Mongolian film to be shown in Cannes’ official selection tells the story of a teenage boy in Ulaanbaatar who has to take care of his siblings when his mum leaves in the middle of the winter. 0$<Ǵ Ǵ111 BLUE FINCH FILM RELEASING OPPONENT In a more just world, Asghar Farhadi’s 2011 film A Separation would have been just the start of a glittering career for its shifty dad, Payman Maadi. As it is, he’s had a mixed career in the decade or so since, though you might recall him singlehandedly struggling in vain to redeem the trite 2014 Guantanamo drama, Camp X-Ray. Opponent is a more worthy vehicle for his glowering intensity. Maadi stars as Iman, an Iranian Olympic wrestler forced to flee the country with his family after a supposed political dispute with his teammates. They seek refuge in Sweden, but are shunted between dismal hostels while they wait for their asylum request to be processed. Iman’s wife Maryam becomes pregnant, but they’re still stuck in intolerable, freezing limbo. In a final bid to bolster their application, Iman offers to start wrestling for the Swedish national team. The director Milad Alami, is himself an Iranian who found asylum in Sweden, and the most vivid scenes lie in the authentic depiction of shattered refugees, retraumatised at every turn by indifferent bureaucrats. The more melodramatic and metaphorical flights – the real reason for Iman’s exile are revealed, he finds himself identifying with the lone wolves, soon to be shot, prowling the frozen tundra – are sometimes less convincing. But Maadi is once again a rock, slowly realising even his great strength and guile as a wrestler is unable to shift the balance of power that has him pinned down.
SCRE EN EXTRA Hope and heartbreak: Microdisney at St Katherine's Dock, London, March 1987 THE CLOCK COMES DOWN THE STAIRS BBC IPLAYER 9/10 ÉÆÛÎÉÈÔ×ÎÔ²×ÊÉËÊ×ÓØ The story of Microdisney, the lost band by which lost bands are judged N on-screen caption early in The Clock Comes Down The Stairs starkly adumbrates the film’s essential narrative. “Microdisney,” it reads, “made some of the finest music of the ’80s. That nobody ever bought.” That both of these statements are accurate remains a damning indictment of everyone alive at the time. Julie Perkins’ tremendous documentary tells Microdisney’s story, from the initial meeting, circa 1980, of Corkonian misfits Cathal Coughlan and Sean O’Hagan. Their apparently contradictory sensibilities – Coughlan’s relish for hyper-literate lyrical violence, O’Hagan’s easy way with a lushly orchestrated melody – resulted in a sequence of still-astonishing albums which delivered Microdisney little beyond the poisoned chalice of the cult following. There is, very arguably, something about such groups which attracts a certain kind of fan: a Venn diagram of Microdisney and Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 Go-Betweens obsessives would be near enough to a circle. Microdisney folded in 1988, after two magnificent albums (Crooked Mile, 39 Minutes) for Virgin failed to trouble chart compilers. Coughlan and O’Hagan went on to further great if grievously under-rewarded things – Coughlan with The Fatima Mansions, O’Hagan with The High Llamas, both with other endeavours besides – but even as many of Microdisney’s fleetingly successful peers were forgotten, the Microdisney legend never abated, even during the lengthy period when locating their later recordings in particular was next to impossible. The Clock Comes Down The Stairs recalls Microdisney’s catalogue of mishap and frustration more or less chronologically and catches up with the group just as a happy ending looks plausible. In 2018, Microdisney reform for shows at venues they could scarcely have dreamed of filling 30 years previously: Dublin’s National Concert Hall, London’s Barbican. They – specifically their 1985 Rough Trade album which lends this film its title – are to be garlanded with the inaugural IMRO/NCH Trailblazer award, a prize celebrating crucial works by Irish artists. The shows are sold-out triumphs, as are follow-ups in Dublin and Cork in 2019. Their reunion attracts an outpouring of overdue appreciation, not least because some who adored Microdisney in their youth, despite or because of the indifference of others, are now middle-aged media gatekeepers in a position to make It would be nice to see it revolutionise the field of rock’n’roll documentary the world listen, at last and a little. Among those who appear in The Clock Comes Down The Stairs, still suffused by outraged bafflement that so many could have overlooked such obviously twinkling treasure, are Jacknife Lee, who later made two terrific albums with Cathal Coughlan as Telefís, actor Aidan Gillen (The Wire, Game Of Thrones et al), and Microdisney producers Jamie Lane and Lenny Kaye. (A declaration of interest, at this point: this reviewer was a friend of, and collaborator with, Cathal Coughlan, and also appears in the film.) The stars, inevitably and correctly, are three surviving members of Microdisney – Sean O’Hagan, Jon Fell, Tom Fenner. All have arrived, more or less, at a place of wry, philosophical accommodation regarding Microdisney’s mythical status as the lost band by which lost bands are judged. The vindication bestowed by the success of the reunion doubtless helped with this. The fact of Cathal Coughlan’s death from cancer in 2022 also, perhaps, supplanted any remaining irritation about what didn’t happen with gratitude for what did. He was 61, and reigniting himself a musician, accruing deserved acclaim with his superb 2021 solo album, Song Of Co-Aklan. The Clock Comes Down The Stairs includes interviews with Cathal recorded a few months before his passing, a valuable record not just in that it captures what he says, which was always worth listening to, but how he says it. For those who knew him, it was difficult to absorb that the legendarily intense performer on stage or record, and the shy, gentle, affably self-deprecating chap off it were even related, never mind the same person. (The omnivorous intellect and mordant wit were always very much present in both, however.) Though The Clock Comes Down The Stairs is itself a brilliantly wrought celebration of Microdisney – and of friendship forged by ambition and adversity – it would be nice to see it revolutionise the field of rock’n’roll documentary somewhat. In this realm as in most others, there is a tendency to fixate on success – and while success is doubtless tremendous fun for the successful, it is not necessarily that interesting to the observer. Hope and heartbreak are far more common, and therefore vastly more relatable. And/but, the key question asked here ends up being: what is success, anyway? To write a song anybody pays attention to at all is rare. To write dozens that are remembered, and loved, decades later, is an extraordinary accomplishment – as is this film. ANDREW MUELLER
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BOOKS ÒÎÈÍÆÊÑÔÈÍØÆ×ÈÍÎÛÊØ²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ T HERE is a legend about Skip Spence. Moby Grape biographer Cam Cobb alludes to it towards the end of Weighted Down, citing an article from the New York Times that depicted Spence’s life as “a cautionary tale of the 1960s”. As the story goes, Skip hooked up with a woman “known to be a witch” who gave him bad acid, prompting a serious deterioration in his behaviour. Faced with a choice between prison or Bellevue psychiatric hospital, he chose the latter. On release, Skip then asked his record label for a small advance and a motorcycle so he could drive to Nashville to record a solo album. That record was Oar, an aural roadmap of the singer’s mental turmoil, which failed to deliver him from obscurity. When Spence died in 1999, aged 52, his final moments were soundtracked by More Oar, the tribute album on which the likes of Robert Plant, Mark Lanegan, Tom Waits and Beck showed their appreciation by covering Skip’s songs. Whatever comfort Spence may have gleaned from this is unknowable. What remains is a profoundly sad story in which the musician’s gifts, and the accompanying myth, are overshadowed by the painful reality of his existence. The complications in Spence’s life are many and various, but the lack of recognition afforded to Moby Grape is a problem of a different order. Spence’s friends recall him as a playful, likeable character, though there were many hints of his disturbed mental state. Stylistically, Cobb distances himself from the myth-making by adopting a largely dispassionate tone. This is understandable, but it means that an appreciation of Moby Grape’s contribution to West Coast rock is derailed – as was their career – by a legal dispute with the group’s estranged manager, the capewearing Matthew Katz. Spence’s discovery of LSD around 1964-5 accelerates the tale: the singer describes it as “like heaven, a moment of God, inspiring, tragic”. Between inspiration and tragedy, there is a delicate dance in which Spence’s bandmates recall their early years as a kind of pre-echo of what is to come. Skip was “a ball of energy”, the Grape’s drummer Don Stevenson remembers: “It was hard for him to contain the energy.” There are pranks, such as the time Spence decided to ride a hotel elevator naked. There is the business with a woman called Joanna – the “witch” of this story – ending with Spence hacking at a hotel door with a hatchet. Which brings us to Bellevue: not the end of the story, but its most significant chapter. The 22-year-old Spence’s state of mind can only be guessed at. Cobb suggests he was “psychically devastated” and may have been suffering from Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 REVIEWED THIS MONTH Skip Spence recording Moby Grape’s second album in New York, November 1967 drug-induced psychosis, “but it would spiral into mental illness, followed by self-medication and addiction”. More romantically, here is former bandmate Jorma Kaukonen of Jefferson Airplane: “It became apparent… that he was inhabiting more than one universe at a time.” Skip hooked up with a “witch” who gave him bad acid PHIL Manzanera’s Revolución To Roxy is an autobiographical lockdown project, planting the musical roots of the Roxy Music guitarist in a peripatetic childhood. Manzanera’s father worked for the airline BOAC, and the family lived in prerevolution Cuba, Hawaii and Venezuela before Manzanera became a boarder at Dulwich College. There, he used a £5 postal order from his parents to buy an electric guitar on hire purchase, though it was immediately confiscated by his “peculiar” house master. Eventually he formed a band, Pooh And The Ostrich Feather, with noted Beatles author Ian MacDonald. Manzanera’s tales of Roxy and beyond are understated and light on gossip. For an early photo session, Manzanera asked his mother to sew diamanté patterns onto a white shirt. This did not impress image-maker Antony Price, who supplied him with bug-eyed diamanté wraparound sunglasses, rendering him stylish but sightless. During a lull in Roxy business, Manzanera played with Bob Dylan, a nerve-racking experience made no easier by the fact that rehearsals began and ended with an obscure request from Bob: “Do you happen to know a Tex-Mex song, I think it was written about 1948, I’m not sure what it’s called or who wrote it?” IN Travels Over Feeling, Richard King curates a creative biography of Arthur Russell from the vast archive of printed materials left behind by the enigmatic musician and composer, who died in 1992. There are flyers, notebooks, photos, letters and sheet music, plus insightful commentary from contemporaries. Peter Gordon notes how Russell’s music bridged the gap between Philip Glass and Giorgio Moroder by breaking free from the limits of song structure. Glass himself recalls how Russell adapted one of his cello compositions to the point where it was completely unrecognisable. “The incremental changes had turned it into this other thing,” he says. “I love the fact that he did that. And I love the fact that he didn’t know that he did it.” ALASTAIR McKAY WEIGHTED DOWN: THE COMPLICATED LIFE OF SKIP SPENCE CAM COBB OMNIBUS, £25 7/10 REVOLUCIÓN TO ROXY PHIL MANZANERA A WAY WITH MEDIA, £35 7/10 TRAVELS OVER FEELING: ARTHUR RUSSELL, A LIFE RICHARD KING FABER, £30 8/10
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H I - F I The Volume Dealers The pick of the latest speakers JBL L100 CLASSIC MKII £3,995 (pair)/go.stuff.tv/L100 T HE JBL L100 holds a special place in the hearts of seasoned audiophiles. Propelled to mainstream fame with a special blend of ace performance, standout looks and an appearance in a legendary Maxell cassette ad, it was one of the best-selling speakers of its era — a time that lasted from its 1970 conception all the way up to the mid-’80s. Revived in recent years as the L100 Classic, the modern version now has a MKII – and this latest successor to the waffle-foam-covered speaker that won over so many music fans still rocks. Available in a trio of panel finishes (namely orange, black and blue), the L100 Classic MKII, like the original, is a large, hulking box that makes no effort to hide. And why would it need to? Its retro aesthetic is timeless, and even with the grilles off the raw display of its components makes for a wonderfully utilitarian centrepiece. At over 28kg each these things take some shifting, but they do look their best perched atop JBL’s official floor-stands (another £300-ish). Paired with an amp that does them justice, the overall experience is wonderfully wide. Expansive. Precise. Just plain fun. The control knobs drastically change the end result, to the extent that they transform them into new speakers at a twist of your fingers. Mind, the default levels are pretty spot-on, even if we found ourselves cranking up the lows a little higher than recommended. You might be surprised, given their size, but the low end is surprisingly subtle. So BEST BUY much so that hardcore bass-heads might want to add a sub. Their basic neutrality is flecked with a dab of warmth and a sense of weight. Every genre we tried was nectar, but it’s the often tricky rendition of piano keys that sealed the deal. We could practically smell the ebony and ivory, sparking emotion that not many speakers can ignite. 10/10 Q ACOUSTICS 5010 WHARFEDALE DOVEDALE BOWERS & WILKINS 805 D4 £499/qacoustics.co.uk £5,000/wharfedale.co.uk £7,000/bowerswilkins.com Producing a punchy, weighty sound that belies their size, the 5010 bookshelf speakers are an ideal choice for those of us who’d rather not have their abode dominated by giant cabinets. The firm’s C3 Continuous Curved Cone design in the mid/bass driver means a smoother blend between high and low ends, with hermetically sealed and isolated components to reduce interference and maximise clarity. Available in black, white, rosewood and oak (with a contemporary yet considered design), this is a solid choice for most people that won’t blow their budget to smithereens. Designed, engineered and made in the UK, this modern take on the 1965 Dovedale pays homage to its past, while blessing your ears with exquisite sound in the process. Able to move more air than its ancestor due to a slightly larger build, it has midrange and bass driver units made from the same woven Kevlar material used in Wharfedale’s best. Strong and stiff to reduce warping (with extra internal isolation), it offers supreme clarity and precision – and with acoustic foam, a rear chamber and other tweaks, it certainly lives up to its heritage. The smallest model in Bowers & Wilkins’ Diamond range houses some of the company’s most advanced tech, including the iconic Solid Body Tweeter-on-Top with a diamond dome. The latter has been hailed as a marvel of engineering that combines low mass, exceptional stiffness and impeccable accuracy. We can see why they haven’t replaced it for the past 15 years, then. The speakers themselves are veritable works of art in their own right and provide a surprising amount of oomph and scale for their size. 9/10 9/10 Ǵ 9/10 Ǵ MAY 2024 IN ASSOCIATION WITH
MISSED AN ISSUE? COMPLETE YOUR COLLECTION A[RIL 2024 MARCH 2024 COVER STORY Pink Floyd INSIDE The Beach Boys • REM • Townes COVER STORY Talking Heads INSIDE Kim Gordon • The Waterboys • COVER STORY Neil Young INSIDE Shane MacGowan • The La’s • COVER STORY Keith Richards at 80 INSIDE 2024 preview • The Doors • Kurt Van Zandt • Adrianne Lenker • JAMC John Fahey • Phosphorescent • Mud Hurray For The Riff Raff • Martin Carthy Vile • The Birthday Party • Pentangle REVIEW OF THE YEAR 2023 DECEMBER 2023 FEBRUARY 2024 ORDER TODAY! JANUARY 2024 NOVEMBER 2023 OCTOBER 2023 COVER STORY Bob Dylan INSIDE The Beatles • Paul Simon COVER STORY Sly Stone INSIDE CSNY • Rolling Stones • Nirvana COVER STORY The Who INSIDE Robbie Robertson • Wilco • COVER STORY Tom Waits INSIDE Neil Young • Sinéad O’Connor • Ray Davies • Shirley Collins • PJ Harvey Jason Isbell • Talking Heads • Lankum Teenage Fanclub • Kristin Hersh • Devo Ziggy • Warren Zevon • The Breeders SEPTEMBER 2023 AUGUST 2023 JULY 2023 JUNE 2023 COVER STORY Kate Bush INSIDE Ronnie Lane • Elliott Smith • COVER STORY Bruce Springsteen INSIDE Siouxsie • Black Sabbath • Fleet COVER STORY Nick Drake INSIDE Stephen Stills • Julian Cope • COVER STORY The National INSIDE George Harrison • Mott • Blur • Moby Grape • Joan Jett • XTC Foxes • Syd Barrett • Dexys New York Dolls • Drive-By Truckers Willie Nelson • Lucinda Williams Visit shop.kelsey.co.uk/uncut-issues Call the hotline 01959 543 747* *Hotline open Mon – Fri 8.30am to 5.30pm. Calls charged at your standard network rate. While stocks last. OR SCAN ME!
OBITUARIES Not Fade Away Fondly remembered this month... KARL WALLINGER World Party supremo (1957–2024) M IKE Scott may have been the undisputed leader of The Waterboys, but Karl Wallinger’s contributions were invaluable. The Welshman joined the band in 1983 primarily as a keyboardist, following a spell with Prestatyn band Quasimodo (featuring future members of The Alarm) and musical directorship of The Rocky Horror Show. Making his mark on the ensuing A Pagan Place, where his multi-instrumental prowess was evident, Wallinger truly excelled on 1985’s This Is The Sea, layering the album with percussive flourishes and endlessly inventive synth lines. As Scott marvelled in the liner notes: “Having Karl in the studio was like having a one-man orchestra around.” He also co-wrote the majestic “Don’t Bang The Drum”, indicating a gift for songwriting that fully flourished after opting to leave The Waterboys later that year. World Party was very much a solo venture, with Wallinger pouring his love of The Beatles, Dylan, Sly Stone, The Beach Boys and more into 1987’s self-produced debut Private Revolution, which featured Sinéad O’Connor as occasional backing singer. The album spawned US Top 30 hit “Ship Of Fools”. World Party’s popularity crested with 1990’s Goodbye Jumbo – featuring fan favourites “Put The Message In The Box” and “Way Down Now” – and 1993’s more band-oriented Bang! And while a split with both his manager and label Ensign undermined the release of 1997’s Egyptology, Robbie Williams’ charttopping cover of album highlight “She’s The One” ensured that its author ERIC CARMEN Raspberries frontman (1949–2024) Carmen became synonymous with US power-pop as the singer, rhythm guitarist and chief songwriter of the Raspberries, most memorably on 1972’s million-selling “Go All The Way” and the ambitious, multilayered “Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)”. His subsequent solo career recast him as a soft-rock balladeer, scoring huge successes with “All By Myself” (1975) and “Hungry Eyes” (1987), as featured in Dirty Dancing. VINCE POWER Live music promoter ÌÎÊÐÓÆÊÕØ²ÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ (1947–2024) Waterford-born Vince Power opened The Mean Fiddler in Harlesden, London, in 1982, primarily to showcase Irish music and rising country acts. Its reputation grew swiftly, with Power (father of singer-songwriter Brigid Mae Power) expanding into the festival scene. He oversaw the rejuvenation of the Reading Festival in 1989, while other notable ventures included London Fleadh, Benicàssim and Hop Farm Music Festival. BB SEATON Reggae trailblazer (1944–2024) Rocksteady trio The Gaylads – Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 comprising Harris ‘BB’ Seaton, Winston Delano Stewart and Maurice Roberts – were one of Jamaica’s leading draws throughout the ’60s. Seaton quit to go solo in 1972, becoming the first reggae artist signed to Virgin. His prolific output invited covers by Ken Boothe, Marcia Griffiths, Dennis Brown, Maxi Priest and more. JOHN DUFF LOWE Quarrymen pianist (1942–2024) A schoolfriend of Paul McCartney’s at Liverpool Institute, John Duff Lowe was invited to play piano with pre-Beatles outfit The Quarrymen in February 1958. He duly appeared on the band’s sole recording (“That’ll Be The Day”/“In Spite Of All The Danger”), alongside McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison and drummer Colin Hanton. Lowe helped revive The Quarrymen in the ’90s. IAN AMEY Tich of Xanadu (1944–2024) Diminutive guitarist Ian ‘Tich’ Amey was a long-standing member of Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich, who enjoyed ’60s success with the likes of “Hold Tight!”, “Bend It!”, “Zabadak!” and the chart-topping “The Legend Of Xanadu”. Briefly a Like a “one-man orchestra”: Karl Wallinger, 1993 was at least financially comfortable. This proved particularly useful in the aftermath of the brain aneurysm that Wallinger suffered in February 2001. Unable to work for five years, he finally began touring again in 2006. “Travel on well my old friend,” wrote Mike Scott in tribute. “You are one of the finest musicians I’ve ever known.” member of The Troggs during the ’70s, Amey played with the reunited Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich until retiring in 2014. DEXTER ROMWEBER Rockabilly favourite (1966–2024) Singer-guitarist Dex Romweber never received the wider acclaim his incendiary music deserved, but he made a lasting impact on the likes of Neko Case, Cat Power and Jack White. He recorded alongside Chris ‘Crow’ Smith as Flat Duo Jets, then teamed up with drummer Crash LaResh (later replaced by his sister Sara) in the Dex Romweber Duo. White called him “one of my most cherished influences”. ETTERLENE DEBARGE R&B royalty (1935–2024) Matriarch of soul/R&B collectives DeBarge and Switch, Etterlene DeBarge was also a talented gospel singer in her own right. Several of her children backed her on 1991’s Back On Track, billed as the DeBarge Family, eventually following up with 2005’s A City Called Heaven. Two years later she published a memoir, Other Side Of The Pain. RANDY SPARKS New Christy Minstrel (1933–2024) Randy Sparks recorded two solo efforts for Verve prior to merging his own trio with the Fairmount Singers to form The New Christy Minstrels in 1961. As key players in the folk revival, the multi-limbed ensemble issued half a dozen albums under the singer-guitarist’s stewardship. Among Sparks’ most celebrated compositions were “Today” and “Green, Green”, the latter co-written with Barry McGuire. JOHNNY GENTLE Merseybeat singer (1936–2024) Assuming the name Johnny Gentle, Liverpool singer John Askew issued a handful of singles on the Philips label. He secured his place in music folklore when The Silver Beetles (John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, Stuart Sutcliffe and drummer Tommy Moore) backed him for a short Scottish tour in May 1960. He later signed to Parlophone and recorded as Darren Young. DAVID LIBERT The Happenings co-founder (1943–2024) As an original member of ’60s covers outfit The Happenings, David Libert
BOBBY TENCH Talented rock all-rounder (1944–2024) B Soulful vocalist and talented guitarist: Bobby Tench in October 1975 scored Billboard hits with “See You In September” and “I Got Rhythm”. He quit in 1970 to become a booking agent and road manager, his most famous client being Alice Cooper, for whom he also sang backing vocals on Billion Dollar Babies. He later represented Parliament/Funkadelic and Living Colour. as mentor to a new generation of blues players in the Texan capital, most notably Stevie Ray Vaughan, with whom he formed Triple Threat (alongside Lou Ann Barton) in 1977. Clark, whose other protégés included brothers Will and Charlie Sexton, issued eight albums under his own name. PEETAH MORGAN JIM BEARD Morgan Heritage frontman Steely Dan keyboardist (1977–2024) (1960–2024) BOB HEIL Reggae outfit Morgan Heritage were founded by five children of Jamaican artist Denroy Morgan of Black Eagles fame. Led by Peter ‘Peetah’ Morgan, they debuted with 1994’s Miracles and became a popular draw on the festival circuit, issuing a steady succession of albums that resulted in a Grammy for 2015’s Strictly Roots. Their most recent effort was 2019’s Loyalty. Jazz pianist Jim Beard began touring with John McLaughlin’s Mahavishnu Orchestra in the mid’80s, going on to enjoy a 14-year association with Wayne Shorter, as well as stints with Pat Metheny and John Scofield. In 2008 he joined Steely Dan’s live set-up, an engagement that continued through to the band’s recent tour supporting the Eagles. Beard also released seven solo albums. Live sound innovator RONI STONEMAN STEVE LAWRENCE Banjo prodigy Crooner/actor/comedian (1938–2024) (1935–2024) Roni Stoneman was still a teenager when she joined her famous father Ernest, along with various siblings, in country group the Stoneman Family. A virtuosic banjo player, Roni appeared with the Stonemans on their popular TV series during the late ’60s, going on to become a longstanding cast member of Hee Haw. Together with wife Eydie Gormé, Steve Lawrence rose to fame on The Tonight Show during the 1950s. He enjoyed solo success with hits like “Party Doll”, “Footsteps” and 1962’s million-selling “Go Away Little Girl”. Also a TV and film actor, Lawrence appeared as manager Maury Sline in 1980’s The Blues Brothers. WC CLARK FÉLIX SABALLECCO Texas blues veteran (1939–2024) In-demand drummer Known as the ‘Godfather of Austin Blues’, guitarist WC Clark served (1959–2024) Versatile Cameroonian drummer Félix Sabal-Lecco caught his first break touring with Manu Dibango, going on to play behind artists as diverse as Peter Gabriel, Herbie Hancock, Snoop Dogg, Lenny Kravitz and Salif Keita. Alongside bassist brother Armand, Sabal-Lecco appeared on Paul Simon’s The Rhythm Of The Saints (1990) and backed Prince at 2007’s SuperBowl. (1940–2024) Theatre organist and radio engineer Bob Heil crossed over into the live market after founding Heil Sound in 1966. He supplied Grateful Dead and The Who with new sound systems in the early ’70s, with Pete Townshend commissioning him to create a quadraphonic set-up for Quadrophenia. Meanwhile, the Heil Talk Box was popularised by Peter Frampton and Joe Walsh. MALCOLM HOLCOMBE Americana singer-songwriter (1955–2024) North Carolina maverick Malcolm Holcombe started out in bands with Dallas Taylor, Ray Sisk and Sam Milner, but found his true calling as a solo artist. He issued folk-country debut A Hundred Lies in 1999, followed by a series of albums that earned him cult status and drew praise from admirers like Steve Earle, Lucinda Williams and Emmylou Harris. TM STEVENS Funk-rock bassist (1951–2024) New Yorker TM Stevens became an in-demand sessioneer in the ’80s, appearing on albums by James Brown (Gravity), Joe Cocker (Unchain My Heart), Tina Turner (Foreign Affair) and more. He was briefly a member of The Pretenders and Steve Vai’s band, as well as recording several solo albums. BRIT TURNER BEN LANZARONE Blackberry Smoke drummer TV composer (1966–2024) (1938–2024) Brit Turner played with brother Brandon in local metal bands around Georgia, before both men joined Southern countryrockers Blackberry Smoke in 2000. Turner remained an essential fixture for all the band’s eight studio albums, including this year’s Be Right Here. He also played with George Jones, Billy Gibbons, Rich Robinson, Bobby Keys and Blondie Chaplin. Classically trained pianist Ben Lanzarone shifted focus to pop music in the late ’60s, arranging for Vikki Carr, Roslyn Kind and various others. He was musical director of Grease during its original Broadway run and went on to score TV episodes of Dynasty, Happy Days and The Love Boat. Lanzarone also toured with Frank Sinatra, Art Garfunkel and Petula Clark. ROB HUGHES 0$<Ǵ Ǵ119 ÒÎÈÍÆÊÑÕÚÙÑÆÓɲÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ OBBY Tench was one of the great unsung heroes of British rock. A strikingly soulful vocalist and top-drawer guitarist, he lent his talents to dozens of artists over a career that wound through five decades. Jeff Beck, Van Morrison, Humble Pie and Freddie King were among the big names to whom Tench played foil, his adaptability allowing him to switch easily between sideman and focal point. He started out in 1965 as leader of Gass, then R&B funksters Gonzalez, before being recruited in 1971 by Jeff Beck as replacement for departing singer Alex Ligertwood in the reconstituted Jeff Beck Group. He duly fronted Rough And Ready, on which he also provided rhythm guitar, as well as 1972’s self-titled send-off. It was an association that spilled over into the early days of Beck, Bogert & Appice, with Tench joining their inaugural US tour as lead singer. He quickly moved on to plan his own rock-soul hybrid, Hummingbird, while adding tasteful guitar to a couple of Freddie King albums: Burglar and Larger Than Life. Van Morrison called on Tench for 1978’s Wavelength, his lead guitar proving especially distinctive on “Natalia” and the exuberant title track. Within a couple of years, Tench was part of Steve Marriott’s reactivated Humble Pie as co-singer and guitarist, playing the States and recording On To Victory (1980) and Go For The Throat (1981). He racked up further credits over the ensuing years, finally coming back to a post-Marriott iteration of Humble Pie for 2002’s Back On Track.
Feedback Send your brickbats, bouquets, reminiscences, textual critiques, billets-doux and all forms of printable correspondence to letters@uncut.co.uk HEADS UP I loved seeing Talking Heads on your March cover [Take 323]. It brought back so many happy memories: of seeing them with my sister the last time they toured the UK in July 1982 at Wembley Arena (my first concert and what a first concert!); of lugging with my friend Dom two huge hardboard ex-display hoardings of Little Creatures to our rooms while at university; and of my daughter coming into the world to “Road To Nowhere” (anaesthetist’s choice of music, not mine!). Hoping I may finally get to see them play again, this time with my daughter, who also happens to be a huge fan! Thanks, as always, for the monthly treat Uncut always is. Tom Austin, via email ÑÚÈÎÆÓÔÛÎÙβÌÊÙÙÞÎÒÆÌÊØ SOUND AND VISION It is with great pleasure and anticipation that I consume each new issue of Uncut. I sit down to your album reviews section with notepad and pen in hand, jotting down at least 15–20 recommendations from each issue. While I usually encounter compelling music from these selections, every so often an entire album strikes a chord and I lock into the artist’s sound and vision, and for that I wish to offer my appreciation. Recent example: Laura Barton’s excellent review of Bill Ryder-Jones latest Iechyd Da. I loved what I read and ended up purchasing the vinyl, and like my younger self from 30 years ago, opened the gateway to take in the photos, read the lyrics on the inner sleeve and just experience this heartful album that Ryder-Jones has created. Without Uncut I would never have known about that record or Michael Head’s Dear Scott or Laura Marling’s Once I was An Eagle or Kevin Morby’s This Is A Photograph or even Frank Sinatra’s amazing and underheard Watertown. I would not have been so quick to check out SG Goodman, The Weather Station, Big Thief, Hurray For The Riff Raff, Dean Wareham and many more. I have been subscribing for 16-plus years. Thanks for all the great articles on music both new and old. Scott Ross, Rockville, MD KING JOHN I have been a huge fan of John Fahey’s music since the 1990s and it was great to read more about him in Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024 Happy memories: Talking Heads, Bologna, Italy, 1982 your March issue [Take 323], especially as I have just finished reading David Lowenthal’s book, Dance Of Death. I bought his debut Volume 1 Blind Joe Death way back in 1993, from a record fair at Aberdeen’s Dee Motel for £5! I had read about Fahey in Folk Roots magazine and was keen to hear what his playing sounded like. Blind Joe Death was a great starting point, a really stunning set of guitar instrumentals that really showcase his virtuosity. We have the hypnotic “Sun Gonna Shine On My Back Door Some Day Blues” (which takes it title from a line in the blues classic “Trouble In Mind”), the bluesy “Desperate Man Blues”, a variation on the folk tune “John Henry”, and “St Louis Blues” and “Poor Boy Long Ways From Home” – great cover versions from the works of WC Handy and Bukka White respectively, that show that this music works as well on an acoustic guitar as it does with a jazz combo or an electric slide guitar. This album and his America album, which is very much in the same vein, led to my amassing a huge collection of Fahey albums and CDs (32 at the last count) over the years, ranging from the earlier American Primitive acoustic guitar to the later more avant-garde music he recorded in the ’90s. His influence can be heard these days on musicians such as Gwenifer Raymond, whose You Never Were Much Of A Dancer is absolutely stunning, James Blackshaw, who I had the good fortune to see in a gig a few years ago, and the late Jack Rose, whose album Kensington Blues is also very Fahey-esque. Keep up the good work! Regards, Mark Pithie, via email …Interesting article on John Fahey in the last edition, but I do have to challenge the perceived wisdom that he was a great originator. It may be the case that no-one was playing what he was in the early ’60s, but every single lick on The Transfiguration Of Blind Joe Death can be heard on Mountain Guitar recordings from the 1920s. It wasn’t just that Fahey was influenced by this stuff – he blatantly copied it! There’s a compilation available which bears this out. Ed Robson, via email GREAT SCOTT I was delighted to read the interview with Mike Scott in Take 323 about the making of This Is The Sea. My first experience of The Waterboys was seeing them supporting U2 on their Unforgettable Fire tour at Birmingham NEC. I’d seen U2 on their War tour and found them to be an exciting live prospect – but at the NEC they came across as bloated and indulgent, Bono throwing down his mic-stand, knowing some poor roadie would have to scuttle on stage and pick it up for him. The Waterboys, by contrast, came across as genuine. I clearly remember them playing the moving “Red Army Blues”. For my money, they blew U2 off the stage. I then saw The Waterboys twice in succession at Nottingham Rock City, first playing to a half-full venue on the release of This Is The Sea and then to a sell-out show only six months or so later. At that point, I’d describe them as one of the most vital, energetic and thrilling live bands on Earth. I recall them playing six encores that night, including the as-then unrecorded “Fisherman’s Blues”, pointing in their new direction. Thank you for reviving some great memories. I’ve lost count of the times I’ve seen The Waterboys over the years. Long may they continue. Bob Hawkins, via email
WIN! Crossword One LP copy of Jessica Pratt’s Here In The Pitch IN THREE MINDS Thanks indeed for alerting me to The Third Mind, Dave Alvin’s new project with Jesse Sykes and others [Take 323]. Listened to both albums today and they’re phenomenal! I’ll be telling everyone to listen. I was fortunate to see Jesse Sykes & The Sweet Hereafter many years in a pub down on the Newcastle quayside. She’s got a couple of really good albums out too. Both these Third Mind albums are great and remind me of the Dead – in a good way – at times. Keep up the good work. Greg Johnson, Newcastle 1 2 3 9 ’CHAIN LETTER Thank you for giving the East Kilbride band The Jesus And The Mary Chain a meticulous interview, one chornicling their stormy yet bright careers. Although Jim and William Reid have had their differences, this blast of energy still refreshes the memory today. Like many others, I listened to Psychocandy with amazement. The LP, with it’s cacophonous feedback and sugar-sweet harmonies, was bound to be a winner in the end, outlasting the paper-thin synthpop and pretentious indie of the middle of the ’80s. For me, the Scottish outfit were a chemical reaction to this, especially in their live shows. So, beyond this definitive sound, William and Jim Reid, whose outbursts and punch-ups added to their legacy, created the drizzle-cool “April Skies” and the chord-striking “Reverence”, hitting the high notes. Also worth noting are “Sometimes Always”, a short but sharp song, and “I Hate Rock’n’Roll”, the adrenalinefuelled rowdy number notable for its attitude and white-hot anger. They are, by all accounts, an excellent but undervalued pair of performers. Yours sincerely, Mr P Turberville, via email 6 7 10 12 13 15 14 16 17 20 18 21 23 24 27 28 30 19 22 26 31 29 32 33 34 36 Kelsey Media, The Granary Downs Court, Yalding Hill, Yalding, Maidstone, Kent, ME18 6AL EDITORIAL 11 25 …So pleased to see J Mascis in March Uncut’s My Life In Music [Take 323] including one of my all-time favourite albums – On The Boards by Taste. It’s a brilliant record with Rory Gallagher on fire with hints of jazz, surprisingly, peeking through. It is timeless. Been playing it in the car since reading the feature. Mike Ritchie, via email 5 8 OUR LIVES IN MUSIC I bought the latest issue of your fine magazine today [Take 322]. In Italy, we find it in the newsstands some 15 days later than in the UK. The first page I usually read is My Life In Music and I found Allison Russell’s choices really moving. Thank you. Massimo Mileti, via email 4 35 37 HOW TO ENTER The letters in the shaded squares form an anagram of a song by David Bowie. When you’ve worked out what it is, email your answer to: competitions@uncut.co.uk. The first correct entry picked at random will win a prize. Closing date: Thursday, April 25, 2024. This competition is only open to European residents. CLUES ACROSS 1+23D No, I’m sorry. I can’t really do a Bruce Springsteen number. He’s the hardest one of the lot to cover (7-4-3-4) 9 “She stole my _____, oh no/Sold it to the farmer, oh no”, from The Kings Of Leon’s “Charmer” (5) 10 Their debut single in 1992 was really just “All In The Mind”(5) 11 “The _____ again, nobody understands / Walking through the long grass on your hands”, from Elbow’s “Not A Job” (5) 12 Against all possible odds, it’s Culture Club (3-1-7) 13 This wasn’t certain to be a No 1 album for Jesus Jones (5) 15 (See 37 across) 17 (See 5 down) 20+21A (See 18 down) 22 Just half a song completed on Peter Gabriel album (2) 24 Someone who enjoyed a good book in Fairground Attraction (6) 25 (See 19 down) 26 Glaswegian band _____ And Sebastian (5) 29 Queen album The _____ that just has to be played (4) 30 “Marco, Merrick, Terry Lee, Gary Tibbs and yours truly”, 1981 (3-3) 33 Got US remix for performer of ’90s hit “Disco’s Revenge” (5) 34+28D “Your pretty, pretty petticoat”, 2006 (3-2) 35 “Businessmen, they drink my ____, plowmen dig my earth”, from Bob Dylan’s “All Along The Watchtower” (4) 36+27D Drop Nineteens’ first album in 30 years. It’s not soft or heavy rock music (4-5) 37+15A What was the name of “That’s Not My Name”’ group? (4-5) CLUES DOWN 1+8D “So put me on a highway, show me a sign”, 1975 (4-2-2-3-5) 2 Revolting sound from Muse (8) 3 I made such a mess of Suede album (4-5) 4 “I was born by the _____ in a little tent”, from Sam Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come” (5) 5+17A “It’s funny how they look so good together/Wonder what is wrong with me”, 1965 (4-5-3-5) 6 “Just What I ______”, Top 20 hit for The Cars (6) 7 They were “Pretty On The Inside” with “Celebrity Skin” (4) 8 (See 1 down) 14 The Courteeners used a more superior person for this 2019 performance (6-3) 16 “Gonna use my arms, gonna use my legs/Gonna use my _____, gonna use my sidestep”, from The Pretenders’ “Brass In Pocket” (5) 18+20A+21A Eric Clapton album that certainly didn’t include “Tears In Heaven” (2-6-2-3) 19+25A Look! The Jesus And Mary Chain have moved a short distance from East Kilbride (7-4) 23 (See 1 across) 27 (See 36 across) 28 (See 34 across) 30 Band fronted by Tim Wheeler (3) 31 A crimson type album from King Crimson (3) 32 Breeders album recorded in the Hippodrome (3) ANSWERS: TAKE 323 More I Love You’s, 28 Choke 29 Art 30 Magic ACROSS DOWN 1+7A Heart-Shaped Box 9 Reality 10 Music 11 Tramp 12 Cherish 14 Elenore 16 Melcher 17 Egan 19 Ship 20 Hands 23 Earl 24 Face 26 No 1 Here Come The Nice, 2 Arabella 3+31A Twilight Sad 4 Hey There Delilah, 5 Please 6 Dimples 7 Bush 8 XTC 13 Temple 15 Ooh La 18 Airports 21 Nimrod 22 Street 24 Fay 25 Cousin 27 EPMD HIDDEN ANSWER “Life During Wartime” XWORD COMPILED BY: Trevor Hungerford Editor Michael Bonner Editor (one-shots) John Robinson Art Editor Marc Jones Reviews Editor Tom Pinnock Contributing Editor Sam Richards Senior Designer Michael Chapman Production Editor Mick Meikleham Senior Sub Editor Mike Johnson Picture Editor Phil King Editor At Large Allan Jones Contributors Jason Anderson, Laura Barton, Mark Beaumont, Mark Bentley, Leonie Cooper, Jon Dale, Stephen Dalton, Stephen Deusner, Lisa-Marie Ferla, Ana Gavrilovska, Robert Ham, Michael Hann, Nick Hasted, Rob Hughes, Trevor Hungerford, Allison Hussey, John Lewis, April Long, Damien Love, Emily Mackay, Alastair McKay, Piers Martin, Rob Mitchum, Paul Moody, Andrew Mueller, Sharon O’Connell, Michael Odell, Pete Paphides, Louis Pattison, Jonathan Romney, Bud Scoppa, Johnny Sharp, Dave Simpson, Sam Sodomsky, Neil Spencer, Terry Staunton, Graeme Thomson, Luke Torn, Stephen Troussé, Jaan Uhelszki, Wyndham Wallace, Peter Watts, Richard Williams, Nigel Williamson, Tyler Wilcox, Damon Wise, Rob Young Cover photo: © The David Bowie Archive, photography by Brian Ward Thanks to: Johnny Sharp Text and covers printed by Gibbons UK Ltd ADVERTISEMENT SALES Neil Tillott 01732 442246 neilt@talk-media.uk MANAGEMENT Publisher: Gareth Beesley DISTRIBUTION Seymour Distribution Limited 2 East Poultry Avenue London, EC1A 9PT Tel: 020 7429 4000 www.seymour.co.uk Distribution in Northern Ireland and the Republic Of Ireland Newspread Tel: +353 23 886 3850 For customer service support, please visit: https://help.kelsey.co.uk support@kelseyassist.freshdesk.com Kelsey Media 2024 © all rights reserved Subscription Basic Annual Rates: UK: £120.25 EU/NA: £146.25 ROW: £159.25 Kelsey Media is a trading name of Kelsey Publishing Ltd. 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MY LIFE IN MUSIC Neil Finn Everywhere he goes, the Crowded House chief takes these records with him: “A song doesn’t have to follow a narrative…” THE BEATLES MARVIN GAYE Let It Be APPLE, 1970 What’s Going On TAMLA, 1971 The very first record I ever owned was Let It Be. My brother bought it for me for my 12th birthday, so it had a major effect on me. In hindsight it probably isn’t their strongest record, but it’s still pretty outstanding. “Across The Universe” is a great song to put on just after New Year’s, as everybody’s hugging – I would highly recommend it for making you feel the promise of the new year. But the album has some other great moments as well. It came with a special booklet including a whole lot of surreal dialogue from the film and a naked photo of John Lennon, which was quite radical for me at the time. I didn’t expect to see a naked photo of anybody. DAVID BOWIE CAROLE KING Hunky Dory RCA, 1971 Tapestry ODE, 1971 Hunky Dory is a pretty pivotal record for me as a songwriter. Bowie’s use of chords was really sophisticated. Things like “Life On Mars” have got amazing chord ascensions and melodic structures – just brilliant. And the lyrics were very mysterious. They became a lesson for me about how a song doesn’t have to follow a narrative, it’s the way that the words react to the atmosphere and the music that initially attracts me to a song. Certain words can open doorways for the subconscious to do its own work. I have written a couple of songs that are a little more straightforward, but generally speaking they’re impressionistic, and I would give albums like Hunky Dory the credit for steering me in that direction. I was about 14 when my brother gave me that record. It was just so outstanding and beautifully arranged and the band were incredible. I had already started playing a bit of piano, but it really taught me about the different chord shapes and embellishments that she used. I kept coming back to it when I was learning how to write songs. It was a defining record of the times – it must have been quite difficult for her to follow. I bet you there’s songs she did later that were outstanding, but they didn’t end up on records that were as completely cohesive as Tapestry. “Smackwater Jack” is my least favourite song on the record, but it doesn’t let it down too bad either. And every other song is just knockout. BOB MARLEY ELTON JOHN Exodus ISLAND, 1977 17-11-70 DJM, 1971 I was living in England with Split Enz – I’d just joined the band – and Exodus and Autobahn were on high rotation in the house I shared with [percussionist] Noel Crombie, although you couldn’t get two more different records! Exodus was my first exposure to reggae and it was a total revelation, because we were a pretty British-oriented pop band, with art pretensions. Bob Marley’s music was so beautifully put together and the songwriting was incredible. Everything about it just blew my mind. There’s definitely some edge and some pain in there, which all good music should probably have, but he was a healer, a uniter. Songs like “Waiting In Vain” still conjure up that time for me so exquisitely. INTERVIEW: SAM RICHARDS On every front, it’s an amazing record: as a description of the times, an invocation of the times, a feeling of comfort that emanates from anguish. And just the arrangements and the way it’s put together – the suspended chords, the way the piano works, the orchestrations and the beautiful feels. I knew that I liked Marvin Gaye, but I had a late discovery of What’s Going On. At the time that I really became aware of it, I was just about to do my first solo album, Try Whistling This. There’s one song called “Sinner”, which I worked on with [arranger/producer] Marius De Vries. Nobody would necessarily listen to that and think ‘Marvin Gaye’, but there was definitely an atmosphere that I was secretly channelling. As a piano player, this was the other album where I learned all the songs. Actually, the first show that I ever saw was Elton John in Auckland, and he played this entire album exactly as it was on the record. There was only a three-piece band on that particular tour… Elton’s an astounding musician, an unbelievable piano player. And he was completely at the top of his game – he was a young man, his voice was incredibly strong, and he threw himself into it. And he wrote great songs throughout. I think everyone has their golden era where they just bang them out, one after the other. That was the start of Elton’s golden era. TALKING HEADS TINARIWEN Remain In Light SIRE, 1980 Amatssou WEDGE, 2023 I had the good fortune to see them play in New York. I think it was the first time the big band played together, in Central Park. They were great as a four-piece pop band, albeit a wiry, jittery version of that. But to embrace a bigger palette of sounds and grooves, like African music and funk, that was unprecedented at the time, and really inspiring. David Byrne actually got up one night and sang “Once In A Lifetime” with Crowded House, so that was hugely thrilling. He didn’t recognise his cue, so it seemed like we were playing it for five minutes – my fingers were almost cramping up. I thought, ‘He’s fucking gone home!’ But eventually he was gestured on and the audience went completely nuts. There are a number of artists from the Mali/ West Africa area that are continually amazing. Tinariwen is a beautiful soundtrack for doing things and getting creative. I think partly for me it’s not needing to understand how it was put together. When I listen to a lot of pop music, I’m aware that I’m analysing it, pulling it apart. And with Tinariwen’s music, I don’t feel compelled to do that. It’s earthy, but it’s got beauty – and even at times, seemingly, a sense of humour: everything I love about music. We were staying in the same hotel as them once, in Adelaide, and they were rehearsing on the balcony next to the swimming pool. We just sat there having breakfast while they played, it was so good. Crowded House’s new album Gravity Stairs is released by BMG on May 31 Ǵ Ǵ MAY 2024
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