Uncut is your essential guide to the month’s best music. Every issue, our comprehensive and trustworthy reviews section showcases the best new releases and reissues, while our in-depth features section includes interviews with the greatest names in music from the past five decades as well as the classic artists of tomorrow. For over 20 years, this iconic magazine has been the authority on all things music, featuring exclusive interviews with some of the world's biggest stars, stunning photography from on and off the stage, and unparalleled album reviews from the people who really know. You can be sure that the music fanatics behind Uncut magazine will always strive to bring you the best features, interviews, and reviews. Each issue also brings you an in-depth article on a music icon, from past or present, giving you inside access you won't find anywhere else. Uncut is insightful, informative, and passionate about music.
UNCUT
Prove it all night • Lynn Goldsmith’s previously unseen pictures of Bruce Springsteen capture a diligent idol-in-waiting
Ladies of the Roundhouse • Ahead of an 80th-birthday tribute in London, Vashti Bunyan and Lail Arad tell Uncut about the life-changing impact of Joni Mitchell
A Quick One
Stunner of 69 • The Magnetic Fields’ Stephin Merritt on returning to his fin de siècle triumph, 69 Love Songs
“I had an epiphany” • The Replacements’ first manager Peter Jesperson on taking the wheel for the wayward rockers
Jeffrey Alexander • Psychedelic underground stalwart veers towards ‘ringwear rock’
Uncut Playlist • On the stereo this month…
Come On! • 15 tracks of the month’s best music
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KURT VILE • The hard-working slacker talks sativa, forklifts, being mistaken for Kurt Weill and joining Neil Young in outer space
TY SEGALL • California’s garage-rock wunderkind grows up, spectacularly.
DOUBLE FANTASIES • Segall’s adventures in the epic
Q&A • Ty Segall: “I feel like it’s the deepest and farthest I’ve gone”
GRUFF RHYS • A rich harvest of succour awaits on Super Furry veteran’s euphonious almanac of sorrows.
Q&A • Gruff Rhys on moving house with a wheelbarrow, and Kevin Ayers
AtoZ
FUTURE ISLANDS • Spacious-sounding seventh from Baltimore’s heart-on-sleeve synth-pop quartet.
Q&A • Why Samuel T Herring felt he could “go deeper” this time
THE FALLEN LEAVES • Guitarist Rob Symmons flicks the switch…
THANDI NTULI WITH CARLOS NIÑO • Expressive and experimental South African jazz piano.
Q&A • Thandi Ntuli on drawing inspiration from nature and the wholeness of Rainbow Revisited
JOHNNY DOWD • Veteran singer-songwriter’s 19th effort draws deep from Memphis
AMERICANA ROUND-UP
NAILAH HUNTER • “True mastery of the harp requires you go on a never-ending quest”
BROWN HORSE • Country rock from East Anglia, haunted by disquiet.
Q&A • Patrick Turner and Rowan Braham: “We try to invest equally in each other’s songs”
NEWDAD • Julie Dawson: “I tried to be brutally honest”
JERRY DAVID DECICCA • A country-folk auteur embraces synthesisers and sequencers.
Q&A • Jerry David DeCicca: “This felt more lonely”
MOTT THE HOOPLE • A deep dive into Mott’s transformative 1972, when everything changed thanks to a gift from above.
WHEN WE WERE YOUNG • The pick of Mott… before and after Bowie
Q&A • Ian Hunter: “He said, ‘Let me sort something out’”
COCTEAU TWINS • Goodbye 4AD, hello break-up angst, but the melodic majesty endures.
Q&A • Robin Guthrie: “I’m suprised how timeless they sound”
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THE LONG...