Author: electricityclub (Page 172 of 420)

“I don’t like country & western, I don’t like rock music… I don’t like rockabilly! I don’t like much really do I? But what I do like, I love passionately!!”: CHRIS LOWE

“Good taste is exclusive”: NICK RHODES

SPRAY Interview

‘Failure Is Inevitable’ is the fifth album from mischievous indiesynth duo SPRAY.

Ricardo Autobahn and Jenny McLaren first came to wider attention as THE CUBAN BOYS and went head-to-head with Sir Cliff Richard in the Christmas Chart Battle of 1999 where their single ‘Cognoscenti Vs Intelligentsia’ (aka ‘Hamsterdance’) reached No. 4 in the UK single charts and got them on ‘Top of the Pops’. The sibling pair later formed SPRAY, releasing their debut album ‘Living In Neon’ in 2002 on the noted American independent label Ninthwave Records.

SPRAY were also co-conspirators in ‘Teenage Life’, the UK’s 2006 Eurovision song for Daz Sampson. More recently, they have been recording music with anarchic CBBC star Hacker T Dog. Celebrating everything that is great about pop while tinged with cynicism, despair and ironic humour, SPRAY often offer social commentary with their upbeat electronica.

They kindly chatted about their new album and gave some interesting thoughts from 20 years of experience within the music industry.

For those who don’t know SPRAY, the two of you have interesting chequered pasts, so what are your CVs?

We are brother and sister, so as youngsters in the mid-late 90s, we experimented with a four track tape machine, some primitive sampling technology and Jenny’s angelic singing voice. After investing in a CD burner, we found a fan in John Peel which somehow led to us topping the charts and winning the nation’s hearts as THE CUBAN BOYS and our ‘Hamsterdance’ hit ‘Cognoscenti Vs Intelligentsia’.

Our entire history was documented, incidentally, on the SPRAY song ‘The Ballad Of Xmas ’99’ which was part of Cherryade’s ‘A Very Cherry Christmas Vol 13’ compilation CD last year. Since then we’ve been involved with assorted crackpot schemes, often with our friend Daz Sampson. You can hear Jenny on Daz’s pan-European hit ‘The Woah Song’ for example, and his Eurovision song ‘Teenage Life’ was co-written with me – the kids chorus is essentially SPRAY singing through a pitch-shifter.

Your last album ‘Enforced Fun’ in 2016 featured a political observation called ‘It’s The Night Of The Long Knives, Charlie Brown’ and three years on, things are even worse now…

Yes, that was a wacky sideways glance at the buffoonish clownery of political celebrities, done with our typical light-hearted tongue in cheek attitude. I suspect if we wrote that now it might be a bit more directly harsh as we don’t find them so funny anymore.

It’s appropriate that the new album is called ‘Failure Is Inevitable’…

Well, we aren’t necessarily a political band but the whole album *was* written and recorded whilst absorbing world events, so the album is coloured and tinted by the state of things. It struck us that people still have optimism for the future despite the evidence of the past, and we feel it’s our duty to add a bit of balance and realism.

But the album begins with those dreaded words ‘Here’s One From The New Album’, so how much new stuff should an artist perform at gigs or should it all be about nostalgia?

SPRAY have recently entered the live arena after being a studio band for many years. As we don’t really have any hits we can play – other than ‘Hamsterdance’ which we’ve managed to shoehorn in – we’ve had this complicated decision as to work out how to keep a crowd engaged.

We’ve decided that entertaining a passive audience *has* to be key, rather than promoting new material, and built a set around that. It is purely coincidental we’ve discovered one of our new songs is a terrific live set opener. As gig-goers, we prefer to hear the hits as well. You should have seen the queues at the bar whenever PET SHOP BOYS played tracks from ‘Elysium’ on their 2013 tour. Maybe you did!

What was ‘Anthologised By Cherry Red’ particularly inspired by, and do you like personally like their cult album reissues and boxed sets?

Specifically it was inspired by a chat I had with Luke Haines at a festival in Spain we were both playing – I also play live synths with indie-punk poppers Helen Love. He actually said “I’m being anthologised by Cherry Red” and I stored it away cos it’s a great title.

We didn’t want it to become a critique of Cherry Red as they’re responsible for some truly superb releases, so I hope it came across as affectionate. Seeing Peter Schilling’s ‘Error In The System’ get an expanded UK CD release a couple of years ago was completely unexpected and fantastic and their work on THE RESIDENTS catalogue is nothing short of wonderful.

We’re truly living in a golden age for archive stuff. You can remember growing up in the 90s when sometimes the best you could get for older bands were hopeless petrol station compilation cassettes. And nowadays you can’t move for A-HA demos and unreleased tracks by THE ART OF NOISE. But ‘Anthologised’ is more about questioning what will happen when the archive runs dry?

If THE HUMAN LEAGUE had roots in being a folk band, it would sound like ‘Futuristic’…

That’s a very strong and kind observation actually and we thank you for it. THE HUMAN LEAGUE’s sci-fi pop cinematic melodrama is always something we’ve appreciated and occasionally tried to emulate. We did record an authentic acoustic version of ‘Futuristic’ to appeal to muso snobs, but because we hate authentic acoustic versions of things, we’ll probably never release it.

What do you think of INTERNATIONAL TEACHERS OF POP who appear to be kindred spirits?

We love them, they’re right in our wheelhouse and got into them because of umpteen people saying “you’d like them”. We’re also jealous of their popularity so don’t like to mention them too much.

On ‘Astronomical’, you’ve gone all ‘Top Gun’?

The full tilt, full fat, everything-louder-than-everything-else vibe is much under-used these days. Synths and guitars. We rock out a bit on this album which wasn’t really intentional – to counteract it there are a lot of thunderclaps and Fairlight orch hits. But there’s glamour in drama we think. Oh that’s a good song title.

Is ‘Chump (For My Love)’ written from personal experience?

No. Ron Mael from SPARKS once said if you have to write songs from personal experience, it shows a remarkable lack of imagination, and we broadly stick to that protocol.

‘You Had Me At Easily Pleased’, is that a reflection of our “AWESOME” society???

The title came first and yeah the idea was to do a p*ss-take of how everybody is so over-emotional and euphoric and SO INTENSE in pop songs nowadays. They take everything so seriously these pop stars, they’re going to give themselves heartburn.

‘Big Karma’ is like a modern Eurovision anthem…

It was internally referred to as “The ERASURE Song” for ages. It’s another “state of the world” song, borderline-topical. “Why aren’t people nice to each other anymore? Well, this is why”. That kind of thing.

But that’s a nice observation, we are keen to have another tilt at Eurovision. We reckon SPRAY can survive the humiliation and it’ll be nice night out. Funnily enough, our colleague and associate Daz Sampson is annoyed with us at the minute cos he reckons ‘You Had Me At Easily Pleased’ is a Eurovision smash and we should have given it to him first before we released it.

ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK was once sent a pitch by a quintet and didn’t bother even listening to the music after seeing their photo which had them ALL with beards! So what is ‘We All Gotta Get Haircuts’ about?

The basic premise is that music, essentially, never changes down the ages but people’s visual perception of it does. It’s like those berries that trick your tastebuds into thinking you’re eating a peach when it’s actually an onion. A good haircut can trick the listener into thinking they’re listening to something cutting edge and not just a glam rock rip off with a drum machine.

BBC Radio 1 will *still* play tracks based on the age / haircut / sex appeal of the performer. Somehow THE FOO FIGHTERS have passed by the tastemakers and still get played but there’s still that very ‘Logan’s Run’ feel to the playlist.

I think it was hearing a HAIM song once and, not knowing who it was, thinking “it’s unusual for Radio 1 to be playing Sheryl Crow” that started our train of thought on this one. Having said that, and this is SPRAY’s hypocrisy in full flow, we fully agree with ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK’s stance on beards. One or two in a band or unshaven stubble is fine – but a full band of beards? It’s a boon and a timesaver because I know I won’t like them.

You really have seen it all, so any thoughts on the current state of independent electronic music in the UK with event promoters who think “ticket touts are free enterprise”, bedroom internet radio DJs with more sinister intentions and media platforms with veiled extreme right wing affiliations?

The level playing field that should have been brought in by the digital revolution has levelled everything too much – everybody thinks they’re good at everything, and there aren’t enough gatekeepers any more to tell them they’re not.

In the past, by way of an example, if you had some opinion you wanted to get to the public you’d either have to physically write to The Times, or publish your own fanzine. Or become an authority on a subject. Or buy ad space. If you had an ambition you’d have to work at it – to get to a conclusion you’d have to put some sort of reasonable effort in and everybody else could then be satisfied you were an expert and knew what you were doing. But without any real application, anybody reading this right now could decide to be say, a promoter. Now this is the punk spirit and I think it’s broadly fantastic most of the time.

But it’s never been easier to cover up incompetence or worse, ulterior motives than under the respectability of being a “professional”. Incompetence is always eventually found out of course, but the damage has often been done to those who put trust in apparent experts.

What’s next for you both?

Now we’ve got a taste for the stage, SPRAY intend to agree to play every gig we’re asked to and have plans for two albums in 2020. One will be our ‘Introspective’ with six long dance songs and absolutely no guitars, and the other will be lots of short songs in the semi-fictitious genre of “Zolo”.


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to SPRAY

‘Failure Is Inevitable’ is released by AnalogueTrash as a CD and download, available from http://spray.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/spraynet/

https://twitter.com/spraypopmusic

https://www.instagram.com/spraypopmusic/


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
31st May 2019

GARY DALY Interview

Gary Daly is best known as the lead vocalist and synth player of CHINA CRISIS. For the Kirkby lad, it was the ideal vehicle to creatively channel his love of Brian Eno, David Byrne and Howard Devoto.

Together with bandmate Eddie Lundon, the pair have released seven acclaimed albums in a recording career that began in 1982. At their commercial peak, they netted four Top20 singles ‘Christian’, ‘Wishful Thinking’, ‘Black Man Ray’ and ‘King In A Catholic Style’.

While CHINA CRISIS continue to tour regularly and issued their most recent long player ‘Autumn In The Neighbourhood’ in 2015, Daly has taken the plunge with a full length solo record entitled ‘Gone From Here’.

The 12 track offering is an intriguing atmospheric mix of acoustic and electronic palettes straddling pop, folk, jazz and classical with The Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra and harpist Tom Moth among the many guests on the record.

Also featuring is John Campbell of IT’S IMMATERIAL who reprises his spoken mannerisms from ‘Driving Away From Home’ on ‘Carousel Of Stars’ over a drum machine backbone and some beautiful synth ‘n’ sax. Not on the album but appearing in spirit, the artist formally known as Antony Hegarty is paid a touching tribute by Daly in a ballad called ‘Antony’.

The wonderful first single ‘I Work Alone’ acts as a statement of intent as well as an affirmation in self-belief, while the wistfulness of ‘Write Your Wrongs’ and the uptempo Scouse Soul of ‘Time It Takes’ both offer familiar aesthetics that will satisfy fans of classic CHINA CRISIS.

As reflected by ‘In The Cloudy Domain’, ‘Dead Of Night’ and the closing title song, the album sensitively deals with the themes of pain and loss as a melancholic audio diary of midlife. Richly melodic with dreamy synths and Daly’s distinctive afflicted voice taking centre stage, there is however a hopeful optimism for what remains.

While on a UK tour with Howard Jones, the CHINA CRISIS frontman kindly talked about his continuing artistic motivations, digging out his old synths and much more…

You had two solo mini-album releases before with ‘The Visionary Mindset Experience’ in 2007 and ‘How To Live & Love Your Life’ in 2008, so what inspired you to do a full-length record?

Basically I had been in the middle of making my debut solo long player when I realised there was way too much interest for a new CHINA CRISIS album for me to even consider finishing my solo album. I had recordings which featured both Kevin Wilkinson and Gazza Johnson… so it was just a matter of getting Eddie involved and then Brian McNeil… and I was of a mind, well, that’s the classic Chinas line up right there…

I’m very pleased with the way ‘Autumn In The Neighbourhood’ turned out… and most importantly the fans loved hearing us together again… so it was all worth it in the end… and it allowed me to get back to finishing my solo album. . .which I have now done and yikes! No turning back now, arrrgghh!!

How do you look back on ‘Autumn In The Neighbourhood’?

Making ‘Autumn…’ involved a great many people, all determined to make the very best record we could… I think everything about it works well… from the title to the artwork to the music it contains. The fact the fans likened it to some of our very best recordings, well, that was just marvellous…

It was hard work at times and a huge learning curve, everything from the new technologies to managing budgets. It really did empower us as artists, taking control of every element of the process, very liberating… we are now, truly, indie!

So apart from the obvious, how does your solo venture differ conceptually and musically to CHINA CRISIS?

Well, it’s a very very personal record and I really don’t understand how it differs, other than when I listen back to it. I am completely connected to every single line being sung and know what exactly what I’m singing about… and the feel of every song has emanated from me. I don’t question the arrival of songs, I just go with the process and sometimes that process can last a long time and the song / idea can change / mutate as I go along. But you learn to be patient and delight in the process. Musically, I’d say it’s very much more early Chinas than it is late Chinas…

‘Gone From Here’ seems to have a more distinctly English feel than ‘Autumn In The Neighbourhood’?

Yeah, I love that fact I seem to have found my “Northern Englishness” again… when I listen to the ‘Fire & Steel’ or ‘Difficult Shapes’ albums, that music could not have been written anywhere other than the northwest of England and I love that sound soooo much.

The fact my new album is resonating the same kind of sound / feel, that’s deffo something to do with me getting back to my synth / songwriting roots. With ‘Autumn’, I still think it’s very English sounding but I think maybe there’s a polish, a sheen there that gives it an overall AOR feel… which is no bad thing… but not really something that interests me much…

The opening song ‘Write Your Wrongs’ appears to hark back to the earlier period of CHINA CRISIS?

I must admit, I’m hearing that from lots of people, and I’ve not really the foggiest what that means…. is it the drum machine, is it the vocal? I‘ll tell yer what though, the second verse has a lyric “say what you want, but just don’t be a c**t , no don’t be that way”, I like that lots, especially in these testing times… Brexit, Trump, rise of the right etc etc… I do love ‘Write Your Wrongs’, if anything it reminds me of the band AIR which I’m very pleased about…

‘I Work Alone’ is a lovely whimsical piece of Casiotone folktronica, how did that come together?

Ha Ha! Believe it or not, I started at the piano and immediately thought “OOOOOooo lovely I’ve got a Philip Glass thing on the go”! Then of course I started singing along… then, when I got into the studio, I needed a “click” to play and sing along to and BOOM! It suddenly became a bit KRAFTWERK, it’s very much ‘Neon Lights’ meets ‘Autobahn’ and one of my very fave tracks on the album… quite simply, it’s all a bit perfect pop… I never tire of hearing it.

‘Carousel Of Stars’ is available as a free download and sees John Campbell of IT’S IMMATERIAL doing a monologue in the introduction?

I had the song all finished with myself doing lead vocals and didn’t like it! So I made up an instrumental version and started to mimic John talking over it, then had the idea to actually ask John… he’s a bit of a neighbour of mine, so that’s what I did. John went away to his studio and wrote this beautiful spoken word song, I then added the chorus and yeah, it’s a beautiful thing with a lovely back story… but I’ll let John reveal that when he gets his IT’S IMMATERIAL album out which he is busy sorting at the moment.

The album features a prominent use of synths, did you dust off your Jupiter 8? Do you consider it as classic vintage instrument as a Hammond Organ, Fender Stratocaster or a Gibson Les Paul?

Absolutely my fave synth of all time bar none… I got my original JP8 just before the making of the ‘Fire & Steel’ and it was such an incredibly user friendly synth, knobs and faders , that’s what I like… we used a great many what would be called classic synths, the Juno 60, DX7 and producer David Berger had his Korg Poly Six, a Chinas classic… I’d used the Korg Poly Six on everything from ‘Christian’ to ‘Wishful Thinking’, so it was magical having all these synths back in the studio… absolute heaven and I’m hoping people will hear them and love hearing them again.

You started with a Yamaha CS10, Roland SH2 and Octave Cat, how do you view synthesizer technology now and what do you think of VSTs?

The Yamaha CS10 we got from Eddie’s mum’s catalogue and it was a revelation… add some reverb / echo delay and it sounded amazing. I’m not mad keen on the new synths, I’ve no real interest… I write at the piano, sometimes a guitar and then in the studio, get everything together I love working with. A pal even brought along a Yamaha SPX 90 effects unit, Eddie and myself both had one of these back in the day and they are wonderful, we had so much fun applying the effects. So for me now , it’s all about the song and not the soundscape… the soundscape is something that happens naturally along the way. So I keep the design of the song very simple, voice / instrument… then, once in the studio, it all becomes alchemy… MAGIC so to say!

The more acoustic ‘Of Make Do & Mend’ hints at THE ART OF NOISE ‘Moments In Love’ in its intro…

Ha Ha! Yes it does a little… but you would have to ask Tom Moth, harpist with FLORENCE & THE MACHINE about that, he played those notes , not me… ahaaa! I think the song is actually one of the most romantic songs I’ve ever written and if you replaced my vocal with Kate Bush, it could easily be off her ‘Lionheart’ album… I do like early Kate…

The reflective closing title song is very poignant, is it about any people in particular?

Very much so… firstly, it’s all about Mrs Weir and myself and us growing up together… and then there’s all the people I have called friends, family and they are gone… for all manner of reasons they are gone, gone from here… and I find it one of the saddest things we learn to endure… I love the middle 8 of this song and how it’s incredibly positive… like yeah, it’s sad but there’s hope, always hope… onwards, upwards…

You put a 15 minute ‘Ambient Musics’ teaser on YouTube “from and / or inspired by the album” which recalls the brilliant CHINA CRISIS instrumental B-sides like ‘Watching Over Burning Fields’ and ‘Dockland’, would you like to explore this area again as a future project?

That’s very kind of you to say… I have indeed got an album of ‘Ambient Musics’ ready for release, it’s called ‘Luna Landings’, a little nod there to Brian Eno’s ‘Apollo: Atmospheres & Soundtracks’. I will be giving it away as a free download… it’s soooo lovely, all my little recordings from the 80s. I love it sooo much and can’t wait for people to hear it .

‘Gone From Here’ has been mixed by Mark Pythian who you have worked with on your last three albums, was it important to have a familiar face for this?

Mark, in my humble opinion, is one of the most gifted people I’ve worked with, we go way back and yeah, it was always gonna be Mark mixing ‘GFH’, his ears are Grammy Award winning lug holes. We first met in ’83, when he was getting some work experience at Amazon Studios working on our ‘Fire & Steel’ sessions. It’s been so lovely handing over the tracks to Mark and seeing him take his time delivering his audio-vision of what my songs should sound like. I must admit, I’ve been in total agreement with every mix he’s done on the album… amazing man.

CHINA CRISIS have worked with a diverse portfolio of producers like Gil Norton, Peter Walsh, Mike Howlett and Walter Becker, do you have any particular memories or fun stories from working with them?

Crikey! That’s way too much question, right there… how could I possibly convey what it’s been like to work with all those great people? I will say this though, I have very very lovely memories of working with every one of them and the way they were so kind and generous to Eddie and myself and the band… every one of them. It’s usually the case, well, in my experience, that the most gifted people are usually the most generous with their time and talent… and everyone you’ve mentioned was certainly that… and if I could meet them all again, I would most deffo shake their hands and say a big big “thank you”.

‘Autumn In The Neighbourhood’ used Pledge Music to fund its recording; with the well-documented problems of Pledge Music, how did you support the recording of ‘Gone From Here’, especially as there are quite a lot of musicians involved including The Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra?

There’s a song on there you mentioned earlier, ‘Of Make Do & Mend’ and that’s exactly what I did… a favour here, a little session there, all the time believing I was asking the right people, at the right time, to do the right thing and get involved. If you’re lucky , you learn very early on there’s people in it for all the right reasons… and the best you can do, is to aspire to be one of those people… and when that happens, you really can “make things happen“ monies or no monies…

How do you find the today’s music business landscape? What are the various advantages and disadvantages for you as an independent artist?

I don’t really understand the business now, but I never really have had much understanding of “business” full stop. And why would I? Sure CHINA CRISIS would have done a lot better had we had more knowledge of the business and Eddie teaches kids in Macca’s fame school, the pitfalls etc etc.

But really, I’m more about the art of just keeping on, keeping on… and to continue enjoying it. And I must admit the indie aspect of us releasing our own records… well, that’s a little like how we started and I absolutely love it. What’s not to like, in charge of everything, from the first note recorded to the finished record posted and delivered… now that, in my book, is taking care of business.

You once described ‘African & White’ as your ‘X-Factor’ moment and here you are, still making music and touring?

Yes, please make it stop! Ahaaaa! Only messing! Well, I am in the best band to come out of Kirkby, East Lancs, Liverpool. And the writing, every step I take is a song. Music is in my head almost all of the time, I’ve written a song about it…”God knows how it works, it’s a blessing and it’s a curse, only messing, it’s much worse…”

Touring with the Chinas now is way more enjoyable than back in the day… then it sort of all got consumed with having to promote the single or album, now it’s all about us trying our best to just enjoy the concert and night, each and every place we visit.

The first three CHINA CRISIS albums ‘Difficult Shapes & Passive Rhythms’, ’Working With Fire & Steel’ and ‘Flaunt The Imperfection’ were given the deluxe reissue treatment in 2017, how do you look back at that period on how the band developed from post-punk to getting ‘Smash Hits’ front covers?

The first three albums or as I like to call them “The Trilogy” are my fave China albums and in that order, ‘Shapes’, ‘Fire &Steel’ and ‘Flaunt’… we were so fearless and got to work with some amazing people and chime with the times, that just doesn’t happen every day. I’m not too keen on living in the past, so don’t really pay it much mind.

I would like to think we made each and every transition, musically, because we made the right choices and worked with the right people and really made the most of every opportunity. After all, when we worked in places like the Manor Recording Studio in Oxford, all the time I’d be thinking “Crikey! ‘Tubular Bells’, ‘Rubycon’! We are here in the most magical of music making places…”

Which CHINA CRISIS album means the most to you and why?

‘Difficult Shapes’… I love all the songs, I love the way Ed and me from the off were not a “band” and we made the most of every musician who contributed to our songs. And just everything about the making of that record was a bit mental, we kept firing producers, top flight people. But like I said, we was fearless and trying to make a record as great as the ones we loved, we failed but we certainly tried…

Have you been surprised about the musical impact that CHINA CRISIS have had in modern electronic pop acts like MIRRORS and VILLA NAH?

MMmmmm! Well, yes… I liked a quote I once heard that said if there was no CHINA CRISIS, there would be no BELLE & SEBASTIAN… I think that’s fair to say… as for “impact”, I’m not sure that’s the right word.

1994’s ‘Warped By Success’ was an excellent CHINA CRISIS album that is under rated and kind of got lost, will that ever hit the public domain again?

Yes, I hope so… Eddie and myself demo’d that album with Mark Phythian… I should imagine we’ll release that version, it’s well better than the actual record that was put out.

The CHINA CRISIS ‘Synthpop Quartet Fun & Laughter Show’ continues at selected venues this Autumn, so for those who are not aware, what is the format?

Well, it’s a four piece, Jack Hymers on keys, programming and vocals, Eric Animan on sax and percussion, Eddie and myself… and we like to have a bit of a fun time on stage which helps make every gig a bit of a one off…

I can’t really describe it other than you’d have to bop along and check it out… it’s quite electronic, so we get to play lots of our early electronic tracks which we don’t really get the chance to perform with the full band.

What’s next and will there be solo dates to go with ‘Gone From Here’?

Touring with the Chinas a lot and I mean a lot… and no, no solo shows… I’m not keen!


ELECTRICITYCLUB.CO.UK gives its warmest thanks to Gary Daly

Special thanks to Julie Eagleton

‘Gone From Here’ is released on 31st May 2019 in CD and vinyl LP formats, available direct from https://www.musicglue.com/gary-daly where there is also a link for a free download of ‘Carousel Of Stars’

The CHINA CRISIS ‘Synthpop Quartet Fun & Laughter Show’ 2019 dates include:

The Picturedrome (12th July), Darwen Library Theatre (20th July), Wigan The Old Courts (6th September), Reading SUB89 (13th September), Leamington Spa Zephyr Lounge (20th September), Southampton Engine Rooms (27th September), Worcester Huntingdon Hall (3rd October), Torrington Plough Arts Centre (10th October), Portishead Somerset Hall (11th October), Birmingham PizzaExpressLive (18th October), Cardiff Acapela (19th October), York Fibbers (2nd November), London Holborn PizzaExpressLive (8th November), St Neots Town FC (9th November), Tunbridge Wells Forum (16th November), Wolverhampton Robin 2 (17th November), Derby The Flowerpot (30th November), Kinross Backstage (7th December), Dundee Clarks (8th December), Liverpool Cavern (13th December), Glasgow Oran Mor (14th December), New Brighton Floral Pavilion (21st December)

https://www.facebook.com/chinacrisisofficial/

https://www.instagram.com/garydalymusic/


Text and Interview by Chi Ming Lai
30th May 2019

US First Contact


Let’s talk about US.

The number of Scottish connected indie personalities who have gone electronic can literally be counted on one hand. Lloyd Cole took the plunge and started twiddling with modulars after the first decade of the 21st Century, collaborating with German legend Hans-Joachim Roedelius of CLUSTER along the way.

Now Andrew Montgomery, former vocalist of GENEVA who scored hits with ‘Into The Blue’, ‘Tranquilizer’ and ‘Best Regrets’ in 1997, has teamed up with Leo Josefsson of Stockholm trio LOWE to form US. Label mates of SUEDE, GENEVA were characterised by Montgomery’s passionate vocals not far from a doomed romantic version of James Dean Bradfield. But despite their jangling guitars, their string assisted backing gave them a sublime cinematic quality.

That voice is carried over into US and combined with LOWE’s electronic Nordic noir, this unusual hybrid has been described as “a soundtrack for your dreams”. Now if Jeff Buckley had dumped his Fender Telecaster for a Korg MS20, then that is the dark anthemic sound of US.

The pair started writing together in 2015, with Josefsson stepping back to a musician role having been the front man of LOWE; “It took us four years to put together this album” said Montgomery, “but it’s been an absolute blast. I feel as if Leo’s synths and my vocals are a match made in musical heaven”.

‘First Contact’ is a curious mix of GENEVA and LOWE, with ‘Till the Dying of the Light’ their haunting debut offering. Released in 2017, it signalled US’ artistic intentions, exploiting the spirited choir boy range of Montgomery within an elegiac electronic soundscape; it recalled the anguished qualities of Jay-Jay Johanson who notably collaborated with THE KNIFE on ‘Marble House’.

But ‘First Contact’ begins with ‘Mute’, a track which starts in neo-acapella fashion before Josefsson constructs a cinematic percussive lattice around Montgomery’s distinctive melancholic tones, climaxing into something more militaristic. The lyrical couplet of “I will be mute, only silence speaks the truth” adds tension to the drama.

Meanwhile, ‘Voyager’ goes all spacey avant trance in a wonderful cross-pollination of styles that comes over something like MUSE at Gatecrasher. The glorious ‘The Stars That Arc Across the Sky’ will appeal to GENEVA fans, although its building metronomic beat might confuse those more used to hearing a full drum kit. While the guitar work of Mats Jönsson isn’t that far off classic U2, it’s a great song all the same.

The rousing poignancy of ‘In Denial’ is cut from a similar cloth. Interestingly, GENEVA’s second album ‘Weather Underground’ was half produced by Howie B who worked on the Irish quartet’s polarising ‘Pop’ long player. The Schaffel laden ‘Technicolor’ also provides some more indie colours albeit with pulsing bass synths, but ‘Never Get Over’ brings back the Nordic moodiness before the intensity rises with a cacophony of guitars and live drums.

‘Flow My Tears’ also ventures into more indie rock territory and while it cannot be denied that Montgomery is a master of the uplifting topline, this track may be the one that will alienate regular enthusiasts of Swedish synth music the most. An epic diversion is provided on ‘As a Child’ with the utilisation of a string section and again, Montgomery’s emotive high register expression is impressive.

Without the aid of a safety net and Josefsson providing only subtle but widescreen backing for the first two thirds, the downtempo ‘My Heart’s Desire’ is all Montgomery and verging on operatic before the album closes with the brooding Celtic blues of ‘The Healer’ where the electronically treated vocals generate an even greater bleakness to taunt the soul.

An album of two halves with much promise, ‘First Contact’ is a well-crafted debut record, expressing broken dreams and midlife sorrows. The template of contrast might confuse some, but indie and electronic can mix effectively and the results certainly have more melodic accessibility than say, a modern day RADIOHEAD or DEPECHE MODE long player. It really is all about US.


‘First Contact’ is available as a CD or download album direct from https://usmusicspace.bandcamp.com/

http//www.unifyseparate.com

https://www.facebook.com/usmusicspace

https://twitter.com/andrewmonty

https://twitter.com/lazyeyesthlm

https://www.instagram.com/usmusicspace/

https://open.spotify.com/album/6TJVcOONy9LHAm9ceMbZ0I


Text by Chi Ming Lai
29th May 2019

HOWARD JONES + CHINA CRISIS Live at The London Palladium

The Grade II listed London Palladium saw the double-bill of Howard Jones and CHINA CRISIS reunited after the two acts shared the same bill over twenty five years ago, albeit reversed.

CHINA CRISIS were one of the bands, along with OMD, that helped give Jones exposure when the artist was first starting out, so it was fitting that the two acts should again share the same stage.

Because of the requirements of the headline stage set, CHINA CRISIS performed in front of the Palladium’s curtains with a streamlined set-up, their normal seven piece line-up condensed down to four with Gary Daly and Eddie Lundon flanked on either side by synth player Jack Hymers and saxophonist Eric Animan.

The band opened with ‘Black Man Ray’ from 1985’s Walter Becker produced ‘Flaunt The Imperfection’ and the eight song performance featured early singles ‘Christian’ and ‘African & White’. Alongside them were ‘Fool’ from the Pledge Music funded ‘Autumn In The Neighbourhood’ and the superb ‘Arizona Sky’ from ‘What Price Paradise’, a single that deserved to be a bigger hit than its No48 UK chart position suggested.

‘King In A Catholic Style’ added some audience participation and with the exception of the Kenny G-style sax which nearly threatened to spoil ‘Wishful Thinking’, it was an engaging set with Daly’s amusing between song banter keeping the audience entertained throughout. It was a pity that the band were only allocated 30 minutes; another 10 would have surely allowed tracks such as ‘Tragedy & Mystery’ and ‘Hanna Hanna’ to get an airing.

Howard Jones took to the stage solo, sat at the grand piano and kicked off his set with the song that he played at Live Aid, ‘Hide & Seek’; although renowned for his usage of electronics, it is easy to forget what a gifted pianist he is too and the inclusion of this ‘Human’s Lib’ track prompted an early sing-a-along in the Palladium crowd.

Backed by the ever faithful Robbie Bronnimann on synths and Robin Boult on guitar, there was new band addition in youngster Dan Burton on synths and electronic percussion who looked like he probably might have still been a baby even when the ‘Revolution Of The Heart’ album came out in 2005!

For those in the audience expecting a perfunctory run through of his greatest hits, tonight would have provided a bit of surprise with the majority of Jones’ new album ‘Transform’ being given the lion’s share of his set with 8 tracks in total. This included the recent single ‘Hero in Your Eyes’ with a back projection of Jones’ beloved Roland Jupiter 8 and Moog Prodigy from the track’s promo video.

Unsurprisingly the three BT collaborations were also played with Jones strapping on his keytar and coming to the front of stage for some of the material. Worthy of a big mention was the staging and lighting throughout; where many electronic acts skimp on budget and imagination when it comes to their backdrops, Jones’ staging was absolutely superb throughout.

There were recognisable nods to NINE INCH NAILS with some of the lighting design, but it was refreshing to see an artist treat the presentation of their material as a spectacle and not just trot out generic back projections with little or no thought and imagination. There are many acts from Jones’ era that should take note!

At one point, Jones’ iconic dancer Jed Hoile appeared on the back projections during a powerful rendition of ‘Equality’. Eventually a patient Palladium audience got the hits that they wanted in the form of ‘What is Love?’, ‘New Song’, ‘Like To Get to Know You Well’ and ‘Life in One Day’. A short encore break saw Jones and his band come back on for the anthemic ‘Things Can Only Get Better’ and funky ‘Transform’ track ‘Stay With Me’.

Tonight’s show was superb entertainment throughout, The Palladium providing a fitting backdrop for both acts. It was a timely reminder also that HOWARD JONES remains on top of his game with his new material.

Where some bands from this era are happy to wheel out the same sets year after year, it is refreshing to witness an artist who is not afraid to take risks with both their song selection and visuals.

The ‘Transform’ tour is an extensive one and will take in US dates later on in the year and also feature a visit to Japan; so if you are able, do try and catch one of the UK’s finest synth performers, you won’t be disappointed.


With thanks to Asher Alexander at Republic Media

‘Transform’ is released by Dtox Records as a deluxe 2CD with book, standard CD, vinyl LP and download

Howard Jones 2019 35th Anniversary ‘Transform’ tour with special guests CHINA CRISIS continues:

Leicester De Montfort Hall (29th May), Manchester Bridgewater Hall (30th May), Edinburgh Queens Hall (31st May), Gateshead Sage (1st June)

Please visit http://www.howardjones.com/ for details on US and Japanese live dates

https://www.facebook.com/howardjones

https://twitter.com/howardjones

https://www.instagram.com/thehoward_jones/

https://www.facebook.com/chinacrisisofficial/

https://twitter.com/ChinaCrisisUK


Text by Paul Boddy
Photos by Chi Ming Lai
27th May 2019

FUTURE FIRE Unfollow EP

The artists behind the LA based project LOST IN STARS like to sideline with the slightly less ubiquitous FUTURE FIRE.

London boy Dylan Willoughby and his collaborator Darren Burgos are often joined in LOST IN STARS by the fabulous Elena Charbila aka KID MOXIE, as well as Alysa Lobo and Jon McCormick. Having been raised on all kinds of instruments requiring fingering and knob turning, Willoughby and his musical imagination started early. With the inclusion of classical piano training, he developed into a fully-fledged producer of stunning cinematic pieces and heart felt arrangements.

A couple of years ago, the master of filigree electronic gems said: “I lived in Toronto when I was younger, and my first instrument was the organ. This was the time of shopping malls and old men with moustaches going nuts on those souped-up organs with all the multi-coloured levers. I guess they were their own kind of rock star. As cheesy as they seemed at the time, those organs revealed that you could play the keyboard and manipulate the sounds.”

Being LA based helps matters enormously and the British boy needs no encouragement to showcase his musical talents, even though for years he’s been battling adverse health conditions and debilitating depression. Surely the output Willoughby produces is closely mirroring his mental state, making the pieces very precious and private to him. After couple of albums with LOST IN STARS and previous releases with FUTURE FIRE, the collaboration with Burgos brings us another EP, ‘Unfollow’.

The almost eponymous track covers the ups and downs of social media of today, where you don’t exist unless you’re active on various social networking platforms, and where the reality seldom meets posts / tweets / videos displayed. “Unfriend unfollow! Unfriend unfollow! I better not see you on my timeline tomorrow!” sums up the relationships of today, with the lyrics written by American vocalist Phalon, who also lends her voice here. ‘Unfriend Unfollow’ is strangely cheerful, given the lyrical content, with a funky beat and cute synth line.

‘Fireflies’ takes Willoughby down memory lane which he says “is a nostalgic song that revisits my youth in which summer dusks were filled with the pulsing lights of fireflies – as kids we would catch them and put them in jars with a hole in the top so they could breathe”. The sounds are also retro; soft synths and calming vocal, it’s a prefect synthwave ballad. Burgos’ voice takes the listener on a journey into the care free past. “The song is about the bittersweet past that we long for even though we didn’t realise at the time how special it was” says Willoughby.

‘What You Need What You Want’ utilises Oberheim SEM on all parts except drums, being a candied synthpop tune with some industrial thrown in.

It’s a luscious club number à la Detroit disco with a twist, it vibrates and arpeggios towards the sublime peak of gritty synthgasm.

A different story is portrayed on ‘I Can’t Take You Anywhere’. According to Willoughby it is “Dystopian House that bridges the debut album and the new EP”. The instrumental extravaganza of sound hits from all directions, not letting up. You could ponder this one, or just get on your feet and dance, mood permitting. Easy!

FUTURE FIRE certainly write supremely good electronic music and the fragility of Willoughby is also his strength… this is not boys with synth toys, it’s men with the big guns!


‘Unfollow’ is released on 31st May 2019, pre-save at https://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/futurefire/unfollow

https://twitter.com/futurefireband

https://www.facebook.com/futurefireff/

https://futurefireff.bandcamp.com


Text by Monika Izabela Trigwell
25th May 2019

« Older posts Newer posts »