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KNEECAP

FENIAN

    KNEECAP return to bend genre, language, and rules. The most talked about artists in the world are turning the page. A new chapter, new sounds, new manifestos. A blistering album that revels in darkness while bursting through the void with illuminated revery. This is 'FENIAN'.

    Produced by Dan Carey (Fontaines D.C., Kae Tempest, Wet Leg), 'FENIAN' upends expectations with an expansive sonic palate, traversing acid house, trip-hop, dubstep, and more - Masters of rave and rap theatre, 'FENIAN' represents Kneecap’s most sophisticated exploration of language and sounds.

    More darkness. More confrontation. More craic. More energy. More solidarity. More absolute bangers. And more fuel for the unrelenting engine that powers this unstoppable force. For their remarkable second album, Kneecap have come out fighting.

    Throughout, the sirens and alarms ring, and the chorus’s blast. Revolutionary and rebellious, confrontational and impossibly catchy, inescapably intelligent and brilliantly rendered, 'FENIAN' doesn’t just represent the next phase in Kneecap’s trajectory but stands as a remarkable record that thrills as much as it surprises. The mayhem of their breakout year is a memory now. But Kneecap are neither dwelling on that nor merely persevering through it. In 'FENIAN' they excel, reaching a new peak that is undeniable in its mastery.

    Pressure makes diamonds, and 'FENIAN' glistens with Kneecap’s uncut gems.


    TRACK LISTING

    1. Éire Go Deo
    2. Smugglers & Scholars
    3. Carnival
    4. Palestine (feat. Fawzi)
    5. Liars Tale
    6. FENIAN
    7. Big Bad Mo
    8. Headcase
    9. An Ra
    10. Cold At The Top
    11. Occupied 6
    12. Gael Phonics
    13. Cocaine Hill (feat. Radie Peat)
    14. Irish Goodbye (feat. Kae Tempest)

    The Orielles

    Only You Left

      “You’ve got to die and be reborn between albums,” begins Henry Wade, guitarist for The Orielles, describing the foundations of the band’s fourth studio album, Only You Left. “It comes naturally,” adds singer and bassist Esmé Hand-Halford, “it’s not something we consciously do.”

      Through this process of creative renewal, the Manchester-based trio – completed by drummer Sidonie Hand-Halford – have managed to weather a pandemic, defy the fickleness of a trend-led music industry, and emerge, phoenix-like, with something familiarly Orielles, yet altogether different. Recorded in two locations – Hydra and Hamburg – over the summer of 2024, the 11 tracks of Only You Left sees the band consolidate the bold experimentation of their previous LP, Tableau (2022), with a return to the more stripped-back, song-led approach of their early origins.

      “There’s nothing more trad than a three-piece,” quips Henry, in reference to the band’s decision to return to their roots as a trio. Originally from Halifax, the Orielles first came to recognition in 2018 with their debut album, the indie-rock Silver Dollar Moment, which is approaching its eighth birthday in February 2026. “These things come in like seven year cycles. So we've come in like a full circle back to a familiar place, just as different people.”

      By exploring binaries and contrasts, the Orielles are finding shapes in the chaos and confusion of the world around us – it’s an undertaking that benefits from more than 15 years of close collaboration, driven by friendship and the artistic compulsion to find meaning in music.


      TRACK LISTING

      Side A
      Three Halves
      Shadow Of You Appears
      Tears Are
      Embers
      Tiny Beads Reflecting Light

      Side B
      The Woodland Has Returned
      All In Metal
      You Are Eating A Part Of Yourself
      Whenever (I May Not Feel So Close)
      Wasp
      To Undo The World Itself

      The Orielles

      Only You Left - Instore Ticket Bundle

        “You’ve got to die and be reborn between albums,” begins Henry Wade, guitarist for The Orielles, describing the foundations of the band’s fourth studio album, Only You Left. “It comes naturally,” adds singer and bassist Esmé Hand-Halford, “it’s not something we consciously do.”

        Through this process of creative renewal, the Manchester-based trio – completed by drummer Sidonie Hand-Halford – have managed to weather a pandemic, defy the fickleness of a trend-led music industry, and emerge, phoenix-like, with something familiarly Orielles, yet altogether different. Recorded in two locations – Hydra and Hamburg – over the summer of 2024, the 11 tracks of Only You Left sees the band consolidate the bold experimentation of their previous LP, Tableau (2022), with a return to the more stripped-back, song-led approach of their early origins.

        “There’s nothing more trad than a three-piece,” quips Henry, in reference to the band’s decision to return to their roots as a trio. Originally from Halifax, the Orielles first came to recognition in 2018 with their debut album, the indie-rock Silver Dollar Moment, which is approaching its eighth birthday in February 2026. “These things come in like seven year cycles. So we've come in like a full circle back to a familiar place, just as different people.”

        By exploring binaries and contrasts, the Orielles are finding shapes in the chaos and confusion of the world around us – it’s an undertaking that benefits from more than 15 years of close collaboration, driven by friendship and the artistic compulsion to find meaning in music.

        TRACK LISTING

        Side A
        Three Halves
        Shadow Of You Appears
        Tears Are
        Embers
        Tiny Beads Reflecting Light

        Side B
        The Woodland Has Returned
        All In Metal
        You Are Eating A Part Of Yourself
        Whenever (I May Not Feel So Close)
        Wasp
        To Undo The World Itself

        Joshua Idehen

        I Know You’re Hurting, Everyone Is Hurting, Everyone Is Trying, You Have Got To Try

          Lately, it feels like the world is one endless bad news cycle. Joshua Idehen isn’t here to pretend otherwise – but on the spoken word artist’s new album, I Know You’re Hurting, Everyone Is Hurting, Everyone Is Trying, You Have Got To Try, he provides a phenomenal sonic, poetic space. Made with his creative partner, musician Ludvig Parment, the album is an urgent but transcendent collection that holds you through it all, filled with grief, euphoria and hope.

          I Know You’re Hurting… comes after the virality of Idehen’s track Mum Does The Washing, a wry and whipsmart poem examining how the world works (which started life as a Twitter thread), set to Parment’s spacious beats. The song has seen the pair propelled beyond Idehen’s wildest dreams this past year, with support from the likes of Jamz Supernova and Huw Stephens leading to sold-out shows and packed out festival performances including rammed crowds at Glastonbury and Green Man, an appearance on Later with Jools, and a support slot on Baxter Dury’s European tour this winter. For Idehen, this is all so special because it marked a new era of his career after around two decades of writing poetry. “In a nutshell, the song has changed my life,” he says.

          Across the album, that means uplifting choirs, cozy samples and exuberant, sometimes house-tinged beats. “I am personally drawn to music that transports you to a place, or scene or mindset,” says Parment. This is topped with ruminative musings on morality and human connection; about the longer loves in life – like friendships, family – that sustain us. These come from Idehen and Parment, along with a host of friends and collaborators, including writers Leone Ross and Charlotte Manning, and vocalist Amanda Bergman, to help expand on the topics of the record without sounding preachy. Similarly, there are musical guests including saxophonist Pete Fraser and Shabaka Hutchings on flute, each helping to imbue the album with a rich warmth.

          From the opening track You Wanna Dance Or What?, there are poignant stories about the possibilities of human connection – here, a memory of a stranger approaching Joshua when he was feeling low at a club in Leicester Square – set against Parment’s freeing beats. There are memories of sunrises on Hampstead Heath (It Always Was), celebrations of the liturgic power of the club (This Is The Place), affirmations that kept Idehen afloat in a particularly dark time (Brother), all dotted with his observations and notes from past conversations with people from all walks of life. On Choose Yourself, Idehen is not so interested in the hokey bath bomb self-care that has dominated discourse the past few years, but in reinforcing self-belief and self-worth – all while never getting too mawkish (see: lines like “Choose a balanced diet/Eat the rich!”). Everything Everywhere All At Once is a stunning exploration of the sliding doors moments of our lives, contemplating all the universes that exist within his daughter, followed by a choral reprise, singing a melody composed by Idehen. “I’m not confident with singing or songwriting, so when the choir sang something I had made and brought it back to me, I had proper tears.”

          After years of honing his craft, I Know You’re Hurting, Everyone Is Hurting, Everyone Is Trying, You Have Got To Try finds Joshua Idehen’s pen reaching the next level. This is work that is truly arresting – but simultaneously, thanks to Parment’s soundscapes, it often makes you want to wave your arms in the air and dance. In these bleak times that try to push us all further apart, it’s a beautiful, powerful manifesto for hope and collectivism. As Joshua puts it: “There's a likelihood that we might be planting seeds that we won't get to see harvested…but the planting is good. The planting is just as important as the watering and the tending and the harvesting. We all have to play a part so that we can have some redemption.”


          TRACK LISTING

          1 A You Wanna Dance Or What?
          2 A Interlude – It Won’t Always Be Like This
          3 A It Always Was
          4 A This Is The Place
          5 A Interlude – What You Need To Hear
          6 A Could Be Forever
          7 A Mum Does The Washing
          8 A Don’t Let It Get You Down
          9 A My Love
          10 B Interlude – How I Found Forgiveness
          11 B Brother
          12 B Whatever Comes
          13 B Choose Yourself
          14 B Everything Everywhere All At Once
          15 B Everything Everywhere All At Once Reprise
          16 B Tourn It Around
          17 B What Is Redemption 

          Heavenly

          Highway To Heavenly

            Heavenly return! As fiercely independent as any punk band, but as sweetly melodic as any chart-topping act, Heavenly combine sharp-edged lyrics with shamelessly joyful pop music.

            ‘Highway To Heavenly’ shares this musical recipe with the band’s first four albums, all of which were released in the 1990s at a time when sensitive indie types in the UK were sheltering from the prevailing macho-rock storm under the Sarah Records umbrella, and when women in the US were starting to find their Riot Grrrl voices in the small town of Olympia, where labels like K and Kill Rock Stars were designing a new creative space.

            Heavenly were on Sarah Records in the UK and on K in the US - and maybe this is a useful shorthand for understanding the band’s ability to meld the attitude of American Riot Grrrl bands with the pop charms of the English indie scene. In terms of style, Heavenly presented an androgynous look – short hair and pinafores for Amelia and Cathy - while Peter Rob and Mathew determinedly avoided the theatrics of male rock. Heavenly did not want to fit in with the hyper-gendered corporate music scene of the 1990s, and the band have stayed determinedly independent ever since (this new album is released on Rob and Amelia’s Skep Wax label). The new songs are full of anger, of grief, of empathy, of love, and set themselves in opposition to the resurgence of the cold ‘masculine energy’ that is making the world a miserable, aggressive place today.

            Heavenly have recently enjoyed a huge resurgence of interest from a younger generation of fans, who have cottoned on to Heavenly’s music, but also embraced the band’s inclusive version of feminism. 'Portland Town' is a joyful celebration of a place where diversity is welcomed. 'Press Return' is a demolition of those men who think technology and wealth make them winners rather than sad losers. 'Excuse Me' is an outburst of punk energy, as effervescent as a song on the first Undertones album, gleefully celebrating a teenage romance with the nerdiest boy in school. 'A Different Beat' tells the entire story of a doomed relationship, its heroine falling for and then escaping from an oppressive man, before heading for the metaphorical disco of freedom. Heavenly have clearly been to a disco or two lately: opening track 'Scene Stealing' feels like a distant cousin of Blondie’s ‘Heart Of Glass’ and tells the story of self-obsessed YouTube influencers who don’t know how to treat women with respect. By contrast, album closer 'That Last Day' may be most poignant song about bereavement you will hear all year, certainly the only one you’ll want to sing along to. It’s all pop here, but 'Highway To Heavenly' has a huge range of tones and moods.

            The band comprises original members Amelia Fletcher, Peter Momtchiloff, Cathy Rogers and Rob Pursey, who are now joined on drums by Ian Button. (An important element of the Heavenly story was the loss of Mathew Fletcher, who took his own life just before the fourth album was released. It took Amelia, Peter, Cathy and Rob a long time to get over the loss; maybe it took even longer to find a drummer as good as Ian.) The new Heavenly have played a number of sell-out shows in the past couple of years, where older fans have mingled with new devotees. 

            'Highway To Heavenly' was recorded at Rumbaba (Deptford, London) and at The Sunday School (Kent). It was produced by Toby Burroughs.

            TRACK LISTING

            1. Scene Stealing
            2. Portland Town
            3. Press Return
            4. Skep Wax
            5. Deflicted
            6. Excuse Me
            7. A Different Beat
            8. Good Times
            9. The Neverseen
            10. She Is The One
            11. That Last Day

            The Five Techniques Feat. Roisin El Cherif & Paul Weller

            Resistance In The Dark

              The Five Techniques, a music project created by Belfast DJ & producer David Holmes, are a collective of artists who believe music, art & humanity can be acts of resistance. The trio first connected at Gig For Gaza - curated by Weller himself - and have come together again for a vital cause.

              All proceeds will be donated to Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP).


              TRACK LISTING

              1. Resistance In The Dark
              2. Resistance In The Dark (Instrumental)

              Kneecap

              No Comment

                Riding a hefty drop down bass riff courtesy of the track’s producer, acclaimed DJ/artist, Sub Focus, the Belfast / Derry trio, KNEECAP, have focused on the British states abuse of power and intimidation following their failed pursuit at charging Mo Chara with terrorism offences. ‘No Comment’ hits back hard, another massive track that will bounce off the walls of clubs and arenas. The Artwork features Banksy’s now infamous 'Royal Courts of Justice’ mural - used with kind permission from the artist. ‘No Comment’ follows recent massive collaborations with Mozey on 'The Recap' and Paul Hartnoll of Orbital on ‘Sayōnara’ and 2024's critically acclaimed album 'Fine Art.' 

                TRACK LISTING

                1. No Comment
                2. Get Your Brits Out

                Nalbandian The Ethiopian & Either / Orchestra

                Nalbandian The Ethiopian (Ethiopiques)

                The Éthiopiques series returns! Essential archive recordings from an extremely fruitful period in Ethiopian music.

                Before “Swinging Addis” took over the world, there was Moussié Nerses Nalbandian — the Armenian-born composer who shaped modern Ethiopian music. Mentor, arranger, and pioneer, he laid the foundations of Ethio-jazz.

                This Éthiopiques volume revives his forgotten legacy, recorded live by Either/ Orchestra First issue ever with new exclusive photos and in depth liner 8-page insert.

                “Ethiopian jazzmen are the best musicians that we have seen so far in Africa.
                They really are promising handlers of jazz instruments.”

                Wilbur De Paris
                (1959, after a concert in Addis Ababa)

                አዲስ፡ዘመን። *Addis zèmèn* **A new era.**
                The time is the mid-1950s and early 1960s, just before "Swinging Addis" bloomed – or rather boomed – onto the scene. Brass instruments are still dominant, but the advent of the electric guitar, and the very first electronic organs, are just around the corner. Rock’n'Roll, R’n’B, Soul and the Twist have not yet barged their way in. Addis Ababa is steeped in the big band atmosphere of the post-war era, with Glenn Miller's *In the* *Mood* as its world-wide theme song, neck and neck with the Latin craze that was in vogue at the same period. Life has become enjoyable once again, with the return of peace after the terrible Italian Fascist invasion of Ethiopia (1935-1941). The redeployment of modern music is part and parcel of the postwar reconstruction. *Addis zèmèn* – a new era – is the watchword of the postwar period, just as it was all across war-torn Europe.
                The generation who were the young parents of baby boomers** were the first to enjoy this musical renaissance, before the baby boomers themselves took over and forever super-charged the soundtrack of the final days of imperial reign. Music is Ethiopia's most popular art form, and very often serves as the best barometer for the upsurge of energy that is critical for reconstruction. Whether it be jazz in Saint-Germain-des-Prés or the *zazous* who revolutionised both jazz and French *chanson* after the *Libération*, be it Madrid's post-Franco Movida, or Dada, the Surrealists and *les années folles* that followed World War I, the periods just after mourning and hardship always give rise to brighter and more tuneful tomorrows. Addis Ababa, as the country's capital, and the epicentre of change, was no exception to this vital rule.

                **Two generations of Nalbandian musicians**
                Nersès Nalbandian belonged to a family of Armenian exiles, who had moved to Ethiopia in the mid-1920s. The uncle Kevork arrived along with the fabled "*Arba Lidjotch*", the** "*40 Kids*", young Armenian orphans and musicians that the Ras Tafari had recruited when he visited Jerusalem in 1924, intending to turn their brass band into the official imperial band. If Kevork Nalbandian was the one who first opened the way of modernism, pushing innovation so far as to invent musical theatre, it was his nephew Nersès who would go on to become, from the 1940s and until his death in 1977, a pivotal figure of modern Ethiopian music and of the heights it. Going all the way back to the 1950s. Nothing less. And it is Nersès who is largely to thank for the brassy colours that so greatly contributed to the international renown of Ethiopian groove. While the younger generations today venture timidly into the genealogy of their country's modern music, often losing their way amidst a distinctly xenophobic historiographical complacency, many survivors of the imperial period are still around to bear witness and pay tribute to the essential role that "Moussié Nersès" played in the rise of Abyssinia's musical modernity.
                Given the year of his birth (15 March 1915), no one knows for sure if Nersès Nalbandian was born in Aintab, today Gaziantep (Turkiye/former Ottoman Empire) or on the other side of the border in Alep, Syria... What is certain is that his family, like the entire Armenian community, was amongst the victims of the genocide perpetrated by the Turks. Alep, the place of safety – today in ruins.
                Before Nersès then, there was uncle Kevork (1887-1963). For a quarter of a century, he was a whirlwind of activity in music teaching and theatrical innovation. *Guèbrè Mariam le Gondaré* (የጎንደሬ ገብረ ማርያም አጥቶ ማግኘት, 1926 EC=1934) is his most famous creation. This play included "ten Ethiopian songs" — a totally innovative approach. According to his autobiographical notes, preserved by the Nalbandian family, Kevork indicates that he composed some 50 such pieces over the course of his career. This shows just how much he understood, very early on, the critical importance of song as Ethiopia's crowning artistic form. Indeed, for Ethiopian listeners, the most important thing is the lyrics, with all their multifarious mischief, far more than a strong melody, sophisticated arrangements or even an exceptional voice. (This is also why Ethiopians by and large, and beginning with the artists and producers themselves, believed for a long time — and wrongly — that their music could not possibly be exported, and could never win over audiences abroad, who did not speak the country's languages).

                Last but not least, one of Kevork's major contributions remains composing Ethiopia's first national anthem – with lyrics by Yoftahé Negussié.
                Nersès Nalbandian moved to Ethiopia at the end of the 1930s, at the behest of his ground-breaking uncle. Proficient in many instruments (pretty much everything but the drums), conductor, choir director, composer, arranger, adapter, creator, piano tuner, purveyor of rented pianos,... he was above all an energetic and influential teacher. From 1946 onwards, thanks to Kevork's connexion, Nersès was appointed musical director of the Addis Ababa Municipality Band. In just a few years, Nersès transformed it into the first truly modern ensemble, thanks to the quality of his teaching, his choice of repertoire, and the sophistication of his arrangements. It was this group that would go on to become the orchestra of the Haile Selassie Theatre shortly after its inauguration in 1955, which was a major celebration of the Emperor's jubilee, marking the 25th anniversary of his on-again-off-again reign.

                At some point or other in his long career, Nersès Nalbandian had a hand in the creation of just about every institutional band (Municipality Band, Police Orchestra, Imperial Bodyguard Band, Army Band, Yared Music School…), but it was with the Haile Selassie Theatre – today the National Theatre – that his abilities were most on display, up until his death in 1977. To this must be added the development of choral singing in Ethiopia, hitherto unknown, and a sort of secret garden dedicated to the memory of Armenian sacred music, and brought together in two thick, unpublished volumes. Shortly before his death (November 13, 1977), he was appointed to lead the impressive Ethiopian delegation at Festac in Lagos, Nigeria (January-February 1977).

                His status as a stateless foreigner regularly excluded him from the most senior positions, in spite of the respect he commanded (and commands to this day) from the musicians of his era. Naturally gifted and largely self-taught, Nerses was tirelessly curious about new musical developments, drawing inspiration from the very first imported records, and especially from listening intensely to the musical programmes broadcast over short-wave radio – BBC *First*. A prolific composer and arranger, he was constantly mindful of formalising and integrating Ethiopian parameters (specific “musical modes”, pentatonic scale, and the dominance of ternary rhythms) into his “modernisation” of the musical culture, rather than trying to over-westernise it. It even seems very probable that *Moussié* Nerses made a decisive contribution to the development of tighter music-teaching methods, in order to revitalise musical education during this period of prodigious cultural ferment. Flying in the face of all the historiographical and musicological evidence, it is taken as sacrosanct dogma that the four musical modes or chords officially recognised today, the *qǝñǝt* or *qiñit* (ቅኝት), are every bit as millennial as Ethiopia itself. It would appear however that some streamlining of these chords actually took place in around 1960. It was only from this time onward that music teaching was structured around these four fundamental musical modes and chords: *Ambassel*, *Bati*, *Tezeta* and *Antchi Hoyé*. A historical and musical “details” that is, apparently, difficult to swallow, especially if that should honour a *foreigner*. Modern Ethiopian music has Nersès to thank for many of its standards and, to this day, it is not unusual for the National Radio to broadcast thunderous oldies that bear unmistakable traces of his outrageously groovy touch.

                STAFF COMMENTS

                Matt says: Wow. A real treasure for fans of Ethiopian jazz which was already some of the most striking and memorable music of the jazz cannon. This release takes the scene right back to source - documented in the detailed notes above. Jazz fans you simply have to check this!

                TRACK LISTING

                Amara Rumba
                Mot Lèhulum Ekul Nèw
                Yèné Hassab
                Ambassel
                Lebé Men Atèfa
                Enegènagnalèn
                Eyéyé
                Hulèt Wèdo Ayhonem
                Qèlèméwa
                Tebèb Nèw Tèqami
                Afriqa
                Yètezeta Roro
                Mambo No. 1 (Aznalèhu Selantè)
                Adèrètch Arada

                King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard

                Gumboot Soup - Eco Vinyl Edition

                  A ‘collection of songs’ is the most accurate description for this album. Unlike most of King Gizz's releases, 'Gumboot Soup' isn’t held together by any semblance of a concept, leading many to dub it a sequel to their 2014 hotchpotch 'Oddments'. Still, there is one relatively consistent element: 'Gumboot Soup' is Gizz’s most thorough embrace of melody ever, with the band going all in on infectious psych-pop tunes. 'Beginner’s Luck' – not just because of its gambling-based lyrics – does this particularly well, sprinkled with Beatles influence and topped off with an exhilaratingly erratic wah-wah guitar solo. The penultimate track 'I’m Sleepin’ In commits to this idea even further, with a beat so catchy it practically begs to be clapped along to.

                  Elsewhere, the band blend this direction with the jazz-prog rhythms of the previous two records 'Polygondwanaland' and 'Sketches of Brunswick East'. 'Barefoot Desert' and 'The Last Oasis' – both fronted by harmonica player Ambrose Kenny-Smith – achieve this in two distinct ways. The former’s tight groove and yelpy vocals give it a slight Talking Heads vibe, whilst the latter’s heavenly vocals and lush instrumentation sound like a hypnagogic re-imagining of a 'SoBE' track. 'Muddy Water' – as well as being the third Gizz song named after a description of water – is an enthralling prog folk flurry that wouldn’t sound out of place on a Jethro Tull album, elaborately intertwining acoustic guitar, bass and drum rhythms. Later on, Cook Craig fronts 'Down the Sink', a delectable slice of funk rock unlike anything else the group have done before.

                  TRACK LISTING

                  1. Beginner's Luck
                  2. Greenhouse Heat Death
                  3. Barefoot Desert
                  4. Muddy Water
                  5. Superposition
                  6. Down The Sink
                  7. The Great Chain Of Being
                  8. The Last Oasis
                  9. All Is Known
                  10. I'm Sleepin' In
                  11. The Wheel

                  King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard

                  I’m In Your Mind Fuzz - Eco Vinyl Edition

                    Eco-repress of King Gizzard's beast of an album 'I'm In Your Mind Fuzz'. Four clicks and we're off, galloping through realms on a phase-shifted, hydra-headed, many-armed and muscular monster. This Australian beast of a band with a bear of a name and a thick herd of members delivers many things on this warped song-cycle: a skeleton of propulsive kraut-beat fleshed out with a liberal dose of citric sweetness; flutes and harmonicas bleeding through the mix often and welcomingly; an early-'80s heavy metal / fantasy vibe; and many lovely left turns into psychedelic mellowing, both groovily and sometimes with just a dash of DMT dread. The whole thing is just gooey with tape manipulations, saturations and wah pedal, yet many tasty tidbits bubble to the top. The resulting noise is like Foxygen on a week-long mushroom bender with Pond.

                    TRACK LISTING

                    1. I’m In Your Mind
                    2. I’m Not In Your Mind
                    3. Cellophane
                    4. I’m In Your Mind Fuzz
                    5. Empty
                    6. Hot Water
                    7. Am I In Heaven
                    8. Slow Jam 1
                    9. Satan Speeds Up
                    10. Her And I (Slow Jam 2)

                    King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard

                    Paper Mâché Dream Balloon - Eco Vinyl Edition

                      Starting out in 2010 as a solid garage rock group, King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard followed their collective muse wherever it chose to lead them. For their latest opus, 'Paper Mache Dream Balloon', they initially thought it was going to be filled with the darker, heavier material that the band has been playing live of late. But frontman Stu Mackenzie soon decided that it was time to put aside the longer, more conceptual pieces and go in a completely new direction. On previous records King Gizzard has channeled many different sounds: From heavily distorted, kraut-driven rock on their 2014 album 'I'm In Your Mind Fuzz' to expansive, almost jazzy, Dead-like head trips on 'Quarters!' Or as Mackenzie puts it, "I always wanted to be a band where you would expect the unexpected each time, with each album being treated like a different phase." Hence, the band's seventh album was recorded using nothing but acoustic instruments. Mackenzie elaborated on this with: "Acoustic guitars, flute, double bass, fiddle, harmonica, drum kit, clarinet. Whatever we could find really." The result is a lovely, lilting pop masterpiece that still evokes the same intoxicating exuberance as King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard's most recent work, but with a more pastoral, communal feel to it.

                      TRACK LISTING

                      1. Sense
                      2. Bone
                      3. Dirt
                      4. Paper Mâché Dream Balloon
                      5. Trapdoor
                      6. Cold Cadaver
                      7. The Bitter Boogie
                      8. N.G.R.I (Bloodstain)
                      9. Time=Fate
                      10. Time=$$$
                      11. Most Of What I Like
                      12. Paper Mâché

                      King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard

                      Sketches Of Brunswick East - Eco Vinyl Edition

                        'Sketches Of Brunswick East' is King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard 3rd album of five in 2017 and a collaboration with LA’s Mild High Club. Just when you think you have King Gizzard and The Lizard Wizard sussed they throw a curveball - in the wake of two albums released in 2017 already, including most recently the dystopian end-times concept album 'Murder Of The Universe', which tackled in no uncertain terms the rise of robots and the downfall of mankind, comes 'Sketches Of Brunswick East', an entirely altered beast.

                        Australia’s finest and most productive rock band have done this before, of course: while the world was still reeling from their 2014 breakthrough psych-punk masterpiece 'I'm In Your Mind Fuzz' (2014) they casually released 2015’s expectation-confounding 'Paper Mache Dream Balloon' (2015), a pastoral, sun-drenched acid-folk album. 'Sketches Of Brunswick East' is a collaboration between King Gizzard and Mild High Club, the Los Angeles based tripster troupe signed to Stones Throw Records and led by Alex Brettin – the two bands formed a strong friendship touring together throughout the USA, Europe, and Australia. Recorded at the band’s own Flightless HQ in East Brunswick, Melbourne Australia earlier this year and mixed at Stones Throw studios in L.A. it’s the third of five projected albums to be released in 2017.

                        TRACK LISTING

                        1. Sketches Of Brunswick East I
                        2. Countdown
                        3. D-Day
                        4. Tezeta
                        5. Cranes Planes Migraines
                        6. The Spider And Me
                        7. Sketches Of Brunswick East II
                        8. Dawn To Dusk On Lygon Street
                        9. The Book
                        10. A Journey To (S)Hell
                        11. Rolling Stoned
                        12. You Can Be Your Silhouette
                        13. Sketches Of Brunswick East III

                        Kneecap

                        Sayõnara / THE RECAP

                          When it came to following up 'sound of the summer so far' single 'THE RECAP' Ft. Mozey, Kneecap had it in their heads that they wanted to make a proper 100% rave festival banger. A few days in the studio with one of the masters of that art form - Orbital's Paul Hartnoll - and the Belfast (and Derry) three piece emerge with an absolute classic of the genre - a mind pounding, drum heavy, relentless club monster of a single.

                          "Having worked on the Orbital track Belfast for the fantastic Kneecap film, I was delighted to be asked by the lads to help them make a rave festival banger. They loved the track and did it proud with their lyrics - it was all so easy and natural, just as a good collaboration should be. Hopefully, you’ll be lucky enough to be in a field this summer and hear it in its natural habitat , big , loud, and unashamed!" - Paul Hartnoll

                          As for 'THE RECAP', an astonishingly instant summer-smash in waiting, the West Belfast trio collaborated with drum & bass producer Mozey on the Kemi Badenoch baiting track which received its live debut at their momentous headline appearance at this year’s Wide Awake Festival in Brockwell Park, London. (Mozey appears courtesy of Rinse.)

                          Riding in on a punchy bassline and a drum track that effortlessly shifts from post punk rumble to drum and bass explosion, ‘THE RECAP’ is a massive statement of intent from the most talked about band in the world and is a guaranteed rallying cry at festivals across the country all summer.


                          TRACK LISTING

                          1. Sayõnara – KNEECAP And Paul Hartnoll
                          2. THE RECAP – KNEECAP Ft MOZEY
                          3. Sayõnara – KNEECAP And Paul Hartnoll (Instrumental)
                          4. THE RECAP – KNEECAP Ft MOZEY (Instrumental)

                          Baxter Dury

                          Allbarone

                            It was Sunday June 28th, 2024 and Baxter had just stopped from a rapturously received set on The Park Stage at Glastonbury festival. After towelling himself down, a familiar figure approached him backstage. It was Paul Epworth, the lauded producer / songwriter whose creations have draped themselves across the airwaves of the 21st Century more successfully than other Briton.

                            They agreed to meet back in Epworth’s North London Church Studios in late November, not long after Baxter had finished touring his last album. Their first day in the studio working on this new eighth solo Baxter Dury album was an eye-opener for Baxter, though, and not just because of the comfortable surroundings of The Church which has hosted the likes of Frank Ocean and Adele (“incredible place, all this glistening fruit and catered sushi, I felt like the bloke from Trading Places, stuffing it down my sleeves.”).

                            Together they dreamt up 'Allbarone’s nine-track tour-de-force, stripping everything away and building Baxter’s most melodically direct, futuristic collection in intense three-hour daily shifts throughout December and January.

                            “It’s kind of a character arc that goes through the whole thing, two personalities,” he explains. “It’s very critical of people, this album, whoever they are, maybe some bloke with a moustache and sockless loafers in Shoreditch or a fat old Chiswick gangster lording it up in a really comfortable middle class part of London”

                            “I don’t want to say it’s contemporary,” he summarises. “Because I sound like a cunt using that word. But it does sound really contemporary. It doesn’t sound like a Harrods hamper band made it. It doesn’t sound like a band made it all. Which is what I wanted most of all. It’s just something that’s brand new for me. It’s quite exciting, really.”

                            Which in Baxter Dury-speak is as good as proclaiming “I’m top of the world!” 


                            STAFF COMMENTS

                            Barry says: Oooof, a slew of absolute bangers here from Baxter Dury channelling the spirit of the club, and resulting in something that's instantly recognisable as his but with a rich heart of percussion and throbbing bass. A wonderfully new twist on Dury's already unique sound.

                            TRACK LISTING

                            1. Allbarone
                            2. Schadenfreude
                            3. Kubla Kahn
                            4. Alpha Dog
                            5. The Other Me
                            6. Hapsburg
                            7. Return Of The Sharp Heads
                            8. Mockingjay
                            9. Mr W4

                            Saint Etienne

                            International

                              Saint Etienne’s new album, 'International', is their final album-length statement, after the group’s 35-year excursion through pop. A dreamlike drift with friends and collaborators, International features cameos from the higher echelons of pop - 80s chart heroes, electro, acid house and all points in-between, from Vince Clarke to Nick Heyward, Confidence Man to Erol Alkan, Chemical Brothers, Orbital, Doves and Xenomania, through to the lesser known, but equally exhilarating Bradfordians Augustin Bousfield and Flash Cassette (an artist described as “sitting somewhere between Funkadelic and a SEGA Mega Drive”). Saint Etienne are the 90s band who never left us, never imploded, and never adhered to clichéd excess. They are a testament to getting along, getting on with creating something new and, of course, getting away with it. 

                              STAFF COMMENTS

                              Barry says: Sain Etienne return for their latest, nay final LP, the brilliant 'International' for Heavenly. We get their trademark melodic turns and soaring vocals riding atop crisp percussion and dance adjacent, electronic momentum. It's classic Saint Etienne, and a great note to end an illustrious career on.

                              TRACK LISTING

                              1. Glad
                              2. Dancing Heart
                              3. The Go Betweens
                              4. Sweet Melodies
                              5. Save It For A Rainy Day
                              6. Fade
                              7. Brand New Me
                              8. Take Me To The Pilot
                              9. Two Lovers
                              10. Why Are You Calling
                              11. He’s Gone
                              12. The Last Time 

                              Various Artists

                              Colleen 'Cosmo' Murphy Presents Balearic Breakfast Volumes 3 & 4

                                Following on from Vol. 1 & 2, Colleen 'Cosmo' Murphy is back with the CD release of 2024's volume 3 and this year's volume 4 of her ever popular Balearic Breakfast series - don't sleep!

                                TRACK LISTING

                                1.Jonathan Wilson - Desert Raven
                                2. Jacob Gurevitsch - Elevation In Minor (Cosmodelica Remix)
                                3. Shawn Lee’s Ping Pong Orchestra - San Diego (Tour Werks After Hours Mix)
                                4. Quintus Project - Night Flight (Original)
                                5. Pigeon - Infinity (Josh’s Extended Disco Mix)
                                6. Shunt Voltage - Generator
                                7. Mildlife - Return To Centaurus (Prins Thomas Diskomiks)
                                8. David Holmes Featuring Raven Violet - Stop Apologising (Cosmodelica Instrumental)
                                9. Zero 7 - On My Own (12" Version)
                                10. Primal Scream - Uptown (Andrew Weatherall Remix)
                                11. Paz - Kandeen Love Song
                                12. Santino Surfers - Freedom Surfers
                                13. Saint Etienne - Alone Together (Cosmodelica Remix)
                                14. Paqua - Akaliko
                                15. Tar Blanche - Iguana
                                16. Bryony Jarman-Pinto - Moving Forward (Cosmodelica Remix)
                                17. Troy Kingi - Chronophobic Disco
                                18. Ilya Santana - Cosmovision (Disco Version)
                                19. Gloria Ann Taylor - Love Is A Hurtin' Thing (12" Version)

                                Djingo Typical Band

                                Vini Quais - Inc. Art Of Tones Remix

                                Guts unearthed this Afro-Caribbean gem "Vini Ouais" by Djingo Typical Band for his "Straight From The Decks" compilation. Inspired, Art of Tones created an unofficial remix - a heartfelt tribute to this French Guiana treasure. It quickly lit up dancefloors, shared among DJs like GUTS, Antal, Radio Meuh... and many more...

                                Heavenly Sweetness do the right thing and issue the original track alongside AOT's remix. While the original comfortably sits in a half-tempo groove, percussion heavy and giving the vocal chorus center stage; AOT adds electronic b-line, galloping 4/4 drums and uplifting party energy, effortlessly taking it to the club. 

                                Limited copies. 

                                STAFF COMMENTS

                                Matt says: Art Of Tones transforms this Afro-Caribbean township vibe into a charged, uplifting and highly colourful tropical-house banger. See out the last of the summer's festivals in style with this big top banger.

                                TRACK LISTING

                                Vini Ouais
                                Vini Ouais (Art Of Tones Remix)

                                Heavenly

                                Operation Heavenly - 2025 Reissue

                                  For most members of the band it’s the best album. But, tragically, the release of 'Operation Heavenly' in 1996 was overshadowed by the sudden death of drummer Mathew Fletcher. The promotional tour was cancelled, the surviving members of the band went into emotional hibernation and no-one could bring themselves to celebrate these vibrant, upbeat songs.

                                  So, this release by Skep Wax Records, nearly thirty years on, is more like an album launch than a re-issue. Time has healed most wounds, and the songs on 'Operation Heavenly' feel like they can finally emerge onto the stage, with Mathew’s spirit very much alive: his effervescent witty drumming sounding as fresh now as it did then. These tracks are gleeful, melodic, sophisticated and knowing. The tough riot grrrl edge that Heavenly had developed a year before with seminal singles 'P.U.N.K. Girl' and 'Atta Girl', has been blended with a deliberate quantity of Britpop styling. Heavenly were clearly listening to what was going on, liked the energy, but didn’t necessarily feel the need to join in. Some of the tracks (eg Ben Sherman) are as jaunty as early Blur, but the lyrics, mocking a narcissistic boyfriend for his obsession with hair, clothes and his own erections, show that Heavenly didn’t need or want to be part of the la - or even ladette – herd.

                                  'Operation Heavenly' was the band’s first release on a label other than Sarah Records. Matt Haynes and Clare Wadd had brought that exceptional label to a deliberate and dramatic end. The liaison with US punk label K Records continued – as did the duets with Calvin Johnson: 'Pet Monkey' is a moving duet between a growling Calvin Johnson and a sweet-voiced Cathy Rogers, as they dramatize another complex, maybe doomed relationship, with another self-centred boy finding himself frustrated by a girl who won’t take any shit. But in the UK, Heavenly needed to find a new home - and Wiija Records were welcoming hosts, ushering the band into a brasher, less cloistered world: the production on this album is brighter than before, the artwork is colourful and upbeat. With tracks as catchy and as complete as 'Fat Lenny', 'Trophy Girlfriend' and 'Space Manatee' there was an expectation that Heavenly might finally emerge from the indiepop shadows and trouble the charts. And who knows if this might have happened. Mathew was lost before the album was released, and the band had no choice but to bring things to an end.

                                  This reissue also contains two tracks that appeared on the B side of the 7” single of 'Space Manatee'. They are both cover versions, and along with Serge Gainsbourg’s 'Nous Ne Sommes Pas Des Anges' on the main album, these vivacious assaults on 'Art School' by The Jam and 'You Tore Me Down' by The Flamin’ Groovies show that the band, briefly in its prime, could happily embrace any variant of pop music and make it something Heavenly.

                                  TRACK LISTING

                                  1. Trophy Girlfriend
                                  2. K-Klass Kisschase
                                  3. Space Manatee
                                  4. Ben Sherman
                                  5. By The Way
                                  6. Cut Off
                                  7. Nous Ne Sommes Pas Des Anges
                                  8. Mark Angel
                                  9. Fat Lenny
                                  10. Snail Trail
                                  11. Pet Monkey
                                  12. Art School
                                  13. You Tore Me Down

                                  Heavenly

                                  Portland Town

                                    'Portland Town' is as effervescent a pop song as any of Heavenly’s past recordings, with duelling vocals from Amelia and Cathy; looping, twanging, ‘how-did-he-do-that’ guitar escapades from Peter, and a super-catchy melody. As so often with Heavenly, though, the lyrics have real bite.

                                    The song embraces those who find themselves on the margins of a hostile world where maleness, straightness and conformity are in the ascendant. So why Portland? It has always been a sanctuary – one of those places where difference is celebrated, a place where, as the song puts it, anyone can fit in.

                                    The B side is a cover version of a much-loved Only Ones song, ‘Someone Who Cares’.

                                    TRACK LISTING

                                    1. Portland Town
                                    2. Someone Who Cares

                                    Gwenno

                                    Utopia

                                      Having released three albums in Welsh and Cornish, 'Utopia' is Gwenno Saunders’ first album recorded predominantly in English, and presents a very different side to her life and songwriting.

                                      Forty-three years into her life, Saunders has been many people. The disaffected Cardiff schoolgirl; the teenage Las Vegas dancer; the singer in indie pop group The Pipettes. There was a turn in a Bollywood film, a nightclub tour, a stint cleaning floors in an East London pub. Long before she would become an acclaimed solo songwriter in both Welsh and Cornish, a winner of the Welsh Music Prize, a nominee for the Mercury, a Bard of the Cornish Gorsedh, there were the days of Nevada, London, Brighton; of Irish dancing, techno clubs, messiness and chaos.

                                      'Utopia', Saunders’ fourth solo album, is an extraordinary exploration of all of these selves. If the singer regards her first three solo records — 2014’s Y Dydd Olaf, 2018’s Le Kov and 2022’s Tresor as “childhood records”, rooted in her upbringing, her parents, her formative identity, then Utopia captures a time of self-determination and experimentation. These are songs of discovery, of the years between being someone’s daughter and becoming someone’s wife and someone’s mother. They range from floor-fillers to piano ballads, via contributions from Cate Le Bon and H. Hawkline, and encompass William Blake, a favourite Edrica Huws poem, and the Number 73 bus. It is her finest work to date.


                                      STAFF COMMENTS

                                      Barry says: The brilliant Gwenno returns for her latest LP, this time sees the multilinguist rendering her experiences in Vegas in English, and with it moving more towards her wistful 80's influenced indie sound we've not heard so much in the past few albums. Regardless of the language in which she writes, Gwenno's music is always endlessly evocative and beautifully conceived. It's stunning, a perfect development of her sound.

                                      TRACK LISTING

                                      1 London 1757
                                      2 Dancing On Volcanoes
                                      3 Utopia
                                      4 Y Gath
                                      5 War
                                      6 73
                                      7 The Devil
                                      8 Ghost Of You
                                      9 St Ives New School
                                      10 Hireth

                                      Pan Amsterdam

                                      Confines

                                        Pan Amsterdam blends experimental hip-hop, jazz, funk, and electronic influences, resulting in shapeshifting, genre-defying tracks. His forthcoming album 'Confines' exemplifies his improvisational style, mixing calculated ideas with spontaneous creativity. He describes his approach as organic, reflecting life’s unpredictable nature, and likens his sound to a fusion of George Clinton and Bootsy Collins.

                                        'Confines' explores diverse themes, from racial politics and identity to pop culture references. With a stream-of-consciousness style, Pan Amsterdam raps about everything from cultural observations to food. This mix of humour, social commentary, and introspection is an exploration of the world through a childlike, almost alien perspective and his background in gospel, jazz, hip hop, and even the Grateful Dead shapes this eclectic sound.

                                        The album title reflects Pan Amsterdam’s refusal to be confined by genre. The music channels influences from hip hop’s golden age, alongside nods to artists like Kool Keith, Busta Rhymes, and MF Doom.


                                        STAFF COMMENTS

                                        Barry says: Skittering, syncopated percussion and woozy synth stabs forge their way through churns of bass and reverb, providing the perfect backdrop for those trademark avant hip-hop vocals. Wonderfully weird, endlessly inventive and enjoyable.

                                        TRACK LISTING

                                        1. Day Out
                                        2. Evening Drive
                                        3. NYC Town
                                        4. White Ninja
                                        5. Venus Fly Trap
                                        6. Plus One (ft Iggy Pop)
                                        7. Meeshy J
                                        8. Fashion Week
                                        9. Pai Mei
                                        10. Sure
                                        11. Children Of Bear Creek
                                        12. Confines 

                                        Originally released in 1979, "Spiritual Sound" lives up to its name, a soaring, triumphant album, six tracks of spirit magic from Guadeloupe.

                                        Telluric, intense, terribly alive, the gwoka drums of Guadeloupe carry the identity of a painful and fervent island. Marked forever by the crime of slavery, Guadeloupe's créolité cherishes the ka drums and their natural environment: the low-pitched boula drum with male goatskin, the high-pitched soloist makè drum with female goatskin, the chacha, ti bwa, triangle, calabash and other percussion instruments that surround them, and the voices - the fiery, proud, timbred, urgent voices of the gwoka.

                                        This album is also a legend for its voices: in his then dazzling youth, singer Lukuber Séjor was one of the first gwoka artists to largely feminize the chorus of répondè, who converse with his text delivered in a straight and powerful voice.

                                        And everything here sets new standards. In 1979, Mizik Filamonik - Spiritual Sound proclaimed a spiritual patriotism of ferocious intensity. The album by Lukuber Séjor - whose spelling alone is a battle - sets out to give Guadeloupe the intangible weapons of self-respect and self-knowledge, through a singular practice of traditional music.

                                        The genesis of gwoka music is less straightforward than one might imagine... The drums performed the servile task of accompanying the work of slaves in the fields and during the “corvées” imposed by the administration, before being freely practiced by the common people after the abolition of 1848. At the heart of the conviviality of the Guadeloupeans furthest from the cities - geographically and socially - the gwoka drums come out for carnival, funeral wakes and neighborhood celebrations, but also during strikes, fits of anger and armed vigils of the riots and revolts that have punctuated the island's history. For generations, governors of the colony and then the prefects of the overseas department of Guadeloupe have been viewing the gwoka as a potential for turbulence and a threat to public order.

                                        But as the Beatlesmania, “chanson engagée” and rock revolutions unfolded in Europe, young people turned to the drums of mizik a vié nèg (“bad negro music”, in Creole), which Guadeloupeans had learned to despise by following the “assimilation” process advocated by the school system and most of the political class. At the end of the sixties, in a Guadeloupe mourning the deadly repression of the May 1967 social movement, they played traditional music, refusing to wrap it up in tourist prettiness and madras folk costumes. Instinctively, they played a rough and contemporary gwoka, led by the incendiary Guy Konkèt. This was the era of decisive 45 rpm records such as Robert Loyson's Kann a la richès, which brought to light the fieriest words of union rallies.

                                        At his home in Sainte-Anne, Lukuber Séjor played with flautist Olivier Vamur and his brother Claude Vamur, who cobbled together a drum kit from tin crockery and became, a few years later, the most influential drummer in Kassav'.

                                        These were the years of the Bumidom program, when young Guadeloupeans were encouraged to emigrate to mainland France. At the age of twenty, Lukuber Séjor embarked on the liner Irpinia, disembarking at Le Havre and taking the train to the Gare Saint-Lazare - the route taken by thousands of young West Indians who went on to study or looked for work, all the while trying to maintain a link with their homeland. In this case, it's at the Antony university residence, where Lukuber played the drum and participated in a thousand gwoka updates and aggiornamentos, while exile reinforced the need for a spiritual link with the native land.

                                        In 1978, Guy Konkèt played at the Salle Wagram, a historic event for West Indian music. After serving as répondè - i.e. backing vocalist - on one of his home-recorded albums, Lukuber joined his live band. Little by little, he became one of the key artists on a circuit parallel to French show business. At a student party in Caen, he met a young woman from Martinique who, at the time, was more motivated by her ambitions as a visual artist than by her vocation as a musician. Her name was Jocelyne Béroard and, a few years before she plunged into the Kassav' adventure and became the greatest West Indian singer of her generation, she designed the cover of Lukuber Séjor's LP.

                                        This ambition was obvious and imposed its will. A more or less regular band was formed, with Roger Raspail, Rudy Mompière and Éric Danquin on ka drums, Claude Vamur on ti bwa, Olivier Vamur and Françoise Lancréot on flutes and Annick Noël on keyboards. Lukuber Séjor is set on wanting to extend the gwoka palette to other instruments, as the jazz-rock revolution opens a thousand new doors. Annick Noël will play a wide range of timbres and textures on electric piano and synthesizer. Another novelty: the répondè are two men and two women, Roger Raspail, Olivier Vamur, Françoise Lancréot and Maryann Mathéus ...

                                        Mizik Filamonik - Spiritual Sound is a self-production in which the singer and leader sank all his savings, allowing him no more than a single day in the studio. The first side is more of a musical manifesto, with the first two tracks, Éritage and Penn é plézi, being instrumentals. The third, Son, forcefully celebrates the need for Guadeloupeans to connect with the gwoka. In fact, Jocelyne Béroard's cover shows a tambouyé in the shadow of a cloudy sky, against which a radiant sun is rising and whose light will soon flood the entire landscape. The silhouette and face of this man strongly evoke the immense Vélo, master of the ka, rejected at the time on the fringes of society.

                                        The second side of the LP is surprising. Formally, three tracks are explicitly linked like the three parts of a triptych. Primyé voyaj evokes the appalling tribulation of Africans deported as slaves to Guadeloupe; dézyèm voyaj speaks of the Bumidom program and the economic, political and social forces driving young Guadeloupeans towards the mirage of prosperity in France; twazyèm voyaj closes the cycle with the emigrants' return from Europe after years away from their island...

                                        This gwoka, obsessed with the need to save Guadeloupe spiritually, appeals far beyond the politicized audience. Mizik Filamonik - Spiritual Sound instantly became a classic, although Lukuber Séjor never really made a career for himself as a musician.

                                        After all, the album was released in 1980, with no promotional resources in France or Guadeloupe - and therefore no concerts. The thirty-two-year-old author, composer and performer made his own third trip back to Guadeloupe. He set up a small woodworking business, which he lost in Hurricane Hugo in 1989. His other activity, teaching in a medical-educational institute, became the core of his professional life. He continued to be an active campaigner - a campaigner for the Creole language, a campaigner for the reawakening of identity, a campaigner for special education, a campaigner for a thousand causes that he ignited with his generous and perceptive enthusiasm, such as the defense of breadfruit fries...

                                        The echoes of his 1979 album have not died down. Of course, the use of Penn é plézi as the theme tune for Radio Guadeloupe's funeral notices from 1980 to 1992 kept him in the collective memory, but he continues to sing and compose sporadically, as with his all-female

                                        vocal group Vwapoulouéka... Still convinced that music is a means of liberating the spirit, he continues the journey of a young man eager to deploy the power of Creole music and language.

                                        Bertrand Dicale 

                                        STAFF COMMENTS

                                        Matt says: Brilliant for lovers of percussion or interesting outernational sound. I only recently learned about gwoka (thanks Lena C!) - a highly intriguing musical style from Guadeloupe.

                                        TRACK LISTING

                                        Eritage
                                        Pein' E Plezi
                                        Son
                                        Premie Vouwayage
                                        Desyem Vouwayage
                                        Twasyem Vouwayage

                                        Various Artists

                                        Kneecap (Original Soundtrack)

                                          With a string of glowing reviews and handful of awards already behind it, the Irish-language semi-biopic award-winning film is one of the most-acclaimed movie releases of the year playing in over 500 cinemas across the U.K and Ireland. The film was recently selected by the Irish Film & Television Academy (IFTA) to represent Ireland in the Oscar International Feature Film category having previously scooped the ‘Next Audience Award’ at this year’s Sundance Film Festival and the ‘Audience Award’ at the Galway Film Fleadh in July.

                                          Kneecap (Original Soundtrack) features tracks from the trio themselves alongside Bicep, Fontaines DC, Orbital plus the film’s incidental music composed by Michael ‘Mikey J’ Asante MBE interspersed with snippets of the film’s dialogue. The physical edition is available on double LP (featuring gatefold sleeve and colour vinyl) and CD.

                                          STAFF COMMENTS

                                          Barry says: There are few bands that have made as much of an impact as Kneecap have, with their debut album hitting our end of year charts pretty heavily. Here we get the soundtrack to the film, following Kneecap around their scene and their peers and contemporaries. Including Kneecap (obv), Fontaines DC, Bicep and loads more.

                                          TRACK LISTING

                                          1. 'Every Fucking Story About Belfast Starts Like This' – Liam Óg Ó Hannaidh
                                          2. Parful – KNEECAP
                                          3. ITS BEEN AGES – KNEECAP
                                          4. Run – Mikey J
                                          5. ‘Nothing But A H.O.O.D’ – Marty Maguire & Liam Óg Ó Hannaidh
                                          6. Civil Rights – Mikey J
                                          7. ‘A Wee Operation’ – Michael Fassbender & Cillian Kernan & Aidan McCaughey
                                          8. Dad's Gone – Mikey J
                                          9. Amach Anocht – KNEECAP
                                          10. ‘You Bring A Stolen Car Here’ – Michael Fassbender & Naoise O Caireallain      
                                          11. Ceasefire Babies – Mikey J
                                          12. Guilty Conscience – KNEECAP
                                          13. ‘Love Affair With The Shniff’ – Liam Óg Ó Hannaidh
                                          14. C.E.A.R.T.A – KNEECAP
                                          15. Arrested – Mikey J
                                          16. 80% – Dirty Faces
                                          17. 3CAG (ft. Radie Peat) – KNEECAP
                                          18. The A Minor Set – The Bonny Men
                                          19. ‘No Need To Panic’ – Naoise O Caireallain & Gerry Adams      
                                          20. Thart Agus Thart – KNEECAP
                                          21. ‘What The Fuck Was That?!’ – Liam Óg Ó Hannaidh & Jessica Reynolds
                                          22. Glue – Bicep
                                          23. Sick In The Head – KNEECAP
                                          24. Liberty Belle – Fontaines D.C.
                                          25. ‘Special Delivery’ – Liam Óg Ó Hannaidh & Naoise O Caireallain & Adam Best & Cathal Mercer 
                                          26. Phone Booth – Mikey J, Gemma Doherty And Simone Kirby
                                          27. Ash Plant – Absolute Lilt
                                          28. Belfast (Fuck The Fuck Off) – Liam Óg Ó Hannaidh & Kerri Quinn & Orbital
                                          29. Better Way To Live (ft. Grian Chatten) – KNEECAP
                                          30. Kneecapped – Mikey J
                                          31. Fall In Love Again – Alanna Royale
                                          32. Is A Bullet – Mikey J, Gemma Doherty And Simone Kirby
                                          33. ‘The Irish For The End Is...’ – Liam Óg Ó Hannaidh        
                                          34. H.O.O.D – KNEECAP

                                          King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard

                                          Flying Microtonal Banana - Eco Vinyl Edition

                                            Talking about the making of Flying Microtonal Banana, Eric Moore of the band said: “Earlier this year we started experimenting with a custom microtonal guitar our friend Zak made for Stu. The guitar was modified to play in 24- TET tuning and could only be played with other microtonal instruments. We ended up giving everyone a budget of $200 to buy instruments and turn them microtonal. The record features the modified electric guitars, basses, keyboards and harmonica as well as a Turkish horn called a Zurna.”

                                            Shimmering, hypnotic and propulsive and powered along, as ever, by the metronomic beat of two drummers, ‘Flying Microtonal Banana’ takes a subtle musical shift away from the frazzled freak-beat of its predecessor, ‘Nonagon Infinity’. Trance like, in parts clipped and concise yet deeply psychedelic, it reveals yet another musical side to a band seemingly in perpetual motion.

                                            TRACK LISTING

                                            Rattlesnake
                                            Melting
                                            Open Water
                                            Sleep Drifter
                                            Billabong Valley
                                            Anoxia
                                            Doom City
                                            Nuclear Fusion
                                            Flying Microtonal Banana

                                            King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard

                                            Nonagon Infinity - Eco Vinyl Edition

                                              After the acid-flecked cosmic jazz of Quarters and the hazy, pastoral, acoustic bliss of Paper Mache Dream Balloon, with Nonagon Infinity the Gizzard once again dive head-long into the gonzo freak-beat frenzy that mark both their Heavenly debut I’m In Your Mind Fuzz, and their perpetually in motion, double-drummer propelled live show.

                                              Recorded by Wayne Gordon, Paul Maybury, Michael Badger and Stu Mackenzie at Daptone Studios in Brooklyn, in keeping with their indefatigable spirit the 9 track album may be the world's first infinitely looping LP. Each of the nine, complex, blistering tracks on Nonagon Infinity seamlessly flows into the next, with the final song linking straight back into the top of the opener like a sonic mobius strip.

                                              TRACK LISTING

                                              1. Robot Stop
                                              2. Big Fig Wasp
                                              3. Gamma Knife
                                              4. People-Vultures
                                              5. Mr. Beat
                                              6. Evil Death Roll
                                              7. Invisible Face
                                              8. Wah Wah
                                              9. Road Train

                                              Anthony Joseph

                                              Rowing Up River To Get Our Names Back

                                              Poet, novelist, musician and academic, Anthony Joseph teams up with legendary UK producer Dave Okumu for ‘Rowing Up River To Get Our Names Back’

                                              Anthony and Dave first came across each other when working with Shabaka Hutchings during Covid broadcasts, and then after Anthony performed some poems on Dave’s 2023 album ‘I Came From Love’, the seeds of collaboration were sown.

                                              Early writing sessions for this record took place in 2022, around Mount Blanc in France. Anthony was away touring with long-time collaborator, Jason Yarde. Ideas were a little thin and they found themselves somewhat repeating previous work resulting in Anthony rethinking things a little, and so entered Dave Okumu.

                                              LP opener ‘Satellite’ is a fine example of how this new partnership pans out. New musicians have been enlisted; Dan See (Drums), Aviram Barath (Synths), Nick Ramm on Fender Rhodes and Byron Wallen (Trumpet). Add to that the mighty vocal power house of Eska and we have a whole new dimension of soul and depth, to carry Anthony’s statements. “You build a wall, we go under, you build it higher, we go higher, like a satellite” .

                                              On the album's second single, ‘Tony’ - there’s a nod to all drummers and creators of African rhythms, from the point of view of Afrobeat legend Tony Allen. Highlighting this is drummer’s drummer Richard Spaven as Dave’s choice of skin beater. He successfully reminds us that Tony was someone who understood the real power of rhythm and how it is used to unite people.

                                              As well as the new musicians on this LP, Dave Okumu played all the guitars and used the studio as his tool. On ‘A Juba for Janet’ - a poem to Joseph’s mother, and a track so bass heavy that it feels as though it could sit in a deep dubstep set in Plastic People days, - Anthony’s voice reaches straight down your ear canals next to dark drums, huge synths and delayed saxophone stabs from Colin Webster. Slightly more introspective verses on ‘An Afrofuturist Poem’ see Dave’s beats show off the real future sound of this record, kalimba, moog bass and guitars all played by the man himself.

                                              Mellower and deeper moments are also present, Anthony’s cryptic yet informative storytelling is at its absolute best on ‘Churches Of Sound (The Benetiz-Rojo)’ - Caribbean and Windrush history reeled off alongside a linear musical timeline of Black music in the diaspora.

                                              A reminder that this body of work is first of 2 volumes, ‘Rowing Up River To Get Our Names Back’ is not a follow up to Anthony’s previous album, but more a development of his 2006 novel, ‘The African Origins of UFOs’ a book where experimental elements of afro-futurism, metafiction, science fiction, surrealism, mythology are rewritten in Anthony’s innovative language. Look out for Volume 2 also coming in 2025.

                                              Vocals - Anthony Joseph
                                              Additional vocals, vocal arrangements - Eska Mtungwazi
                                              Producer - Guitars, Bass, Moog, Synthesisers, Programming, Percussion - Dave Okumu
                                              Drums - Dan See
                                              Drums on ‘Tony’ - Richard Spaven
                                              Synthesiser - Aviram Barath
                                              Fender Rhodes, Synthesisers, Nick Ramm
                                              Trumpet - Byron Wallen
                                              Saxophones - Colin Webster
                                              Trombones - James Wade Sired

                                              TRACK LISTING

                                              Satellite Ft. Eska
                                              Black History
                                              Tony
                                              A Juba For Janet
                                              Churches Of Sound The Benitez-rojo
                                              An Afrofuturist Poem
                                              Milwaukee Ashland

                                              Delivery

                                              Force Majeure

                                                Without doubt one of the most exciting bands in Australia right now, Delivery present their second album titled 'Force Majeure' – a vital and concise record which thrills with its direct simplicity and excitement, recalling the likes of Parquet Courts or early Modern Lovers.

                                                The twelve-track battering ram of an album, from Melbourne’s effortlessly cool five-piece garage punk heroes, builds hugely on the promise that their 2022 lockdown-born debut album 'Forever Giving Handshakes' showed. Already with an enviable pedigree, their debut attracted fans from Henry Rollins (who has played almost the whole catalogue on his KCRW show) to Rolling Stone Australia (Top 10 albums 2022) through old school DIY word of mouth; Delivery are that rare thing, a true band’s band and a fan’s band simultaneously.

                                                'Force Majure' is Delivery’s first album for Heavenly Recordings, a label with a long history of championing young Australian bands, from The Vines to King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard and Confidence Man.

                                                Across the whole record four voices sing, walls of guitars bite and scratch, the rhythm section locks behind them in perfect time while the listener grabs on for dear life and just tries to keep hold.


                                                STAFF COMMENTS

                                                Barry says: Stabs of distorted guitar, athletic chord changes and beautifully produced, crisp melodies throughout on this superb mix of classic punk rock and modern, roaring indie. Another superb Heavenly release.

                                                TRACK LISTING

                                                1. Digging The Hole
                                                2. Like A Million Bucks
                                                3. Operating At A Loss
                                                4. What For?
                                                5. Stuck In The Game
                                                6. The New Alphabet
                                                7. Deadlines
                                                8. Focus, Right
                                                9. What Else?
                                                10. Only A Fool
                                                11. Put Your Back Into It
                                                12. Exacto

                                                OneDa

                                                Formula OneDa

                                                  "OneDa's story is so clearly mirrored in her music: a sprightly flow preaching a message of empowerment, enveloped in a dark, raucous soundscape…interlacing vibrant, punchy lyrics with that classic drum & bass sound has given OneDa a new lease of life."

                                                  "An artist who refuses to be boxed in, OneDa’s music speaks for itself. Always beginning with her own intrepid demeanour and dexterous wordplay, her tracks incorporate elements from the hip-hop and drum and bass scenes of her home city of Manchester before adding an eclectic mix of afro-trap and tinges of afrobeats that lean into her Nigerian heritage.Oneda's expertise transcends mere lyrical skill; it involves effortlessly merging her chicaning poetic verses with the ever-changing rhythm of shifting beats. Her boundless linguistic talent distinguishes her as a unique force of nature and a master craftswoman. Named by The Face as one of the key MC’s at the forefront of the eh renaissance, OneDa is a multihyphenate who has long focused on empowering others. Now, she is speeding off the starting grid on her own with her self-produced debut album, ‘Formula OneDa’, released on Heavenly Recordings." - DJ Magazine

                                                  STAFF COMMENTS

                                                  Barry says: A blistering debut from Heavenly's newest signing, Manchester's OneDa. Perfectly toeing the line between super modern glitchy trap and classic drum & bass, with OneDa's athletic vocals over the top. Instantly addictive beats, and great wordplay to boot.

                                                  TRACK LISTING

                                                  Let Me In
                                                  Major Pay
                                                  The Formula
                                                  Raised
                                                  Over My Dead Body
                                                  Pull Up
                                                  Sometimes
                                                  The Plug
                                                  Leader
                                                  The Western Way
                                                  Superwoman
                                                  Set It Off 

                                                  Katy J Pearson

                                                  Someday, Now

                                                    Following 2020’s 'Return' and 2022’s 'Sound of the Morning', 'Someday, Now' sees Katy J Pearson’s signature acoustic-led, sweetly-voiced singer-songwriter fare transmuted through the desk of electronic producer Nathan Jenkins, aka Bullion. After a period of burnout, self-enforced exile from music-making, and solo travel, Pearson came back to her practice with clarity of mind and vision. “I knew exactly who I wanted to work with, I knew exactly who my session band were going to be, I knew where I wanted to record. It felt like I was finally calling the shots for myself, and that was so empowering”, she reflects.

                                                    Where previous Katy J Pearson records were made with a slower, more piecemeal approach, 'Someday, Now' was rigorously written and rehearsed ahead of time, and laid down efficiently over a couple of weeks at Rockfield Studios in Monmouthshire, with a band composed of Heavenly label-mates Huw Evans [H. Hawkline, Aldous Harding, Cate Le Bon, and Pearson’s Sound of the Morning and The Wicker Man EP] and Davey Newington [Boy Azooga], along with fellow Broadside Hacks collaborator Joel Burton. It was engineered by Joe Jones [Aldous Harding, Dry Cleaning, Jane Weaver].


                                                    STAFF COMMENTS

                                                    Barry says: I've always been a fan of Katy J Pearson's music, so while her sound is as familiar as her voice, 'Someday, Now' feels like a much more dynamic, textured affair than her already meticulously crafted back catalogue. Bright, shimmering basslines and gorgeous vocal melodies that stray into folk and country, but keep a resolutely modern pop sensibility.

                                                    TRACK LISTING

                                                    1. Those Goodbyes
                                                    2. Save Me
                                                    3. It's Mine Now
                                                    4. Maybe
                                                    5. Grand Final
                                                    6. Long Range Driver
                                                    7. Constant
                                                    8. Someday
                                                    9. Siren Song
                                                    10. Sky

                                                    2024 edition - 180 Gram, Tip On Sleeve . One of the rarer records of the mythical Strata East.

                                                    The recording of Earth Blossom, the John Betsch Society's one and only album, seems something of an enigma nowadays. For even though Nashville is clearly one of the towns in the US with the highest number of recording studios, who would have thought that the capital of country music would give birth to one of the forgotten masterpieces of 1970s spiritual jazz. The path leading to the album starts in 1963 when John Betsch, originally from Jacksonville in Florida, arrives in Nashville to study at Frisk University. He is a young drummer and joins Bob Holmes trio. Holmes is one of the towns major jazz organists and pianists; he becomes Betschs mentor and, over the space of two years, John will play alternately with him and with the trumpeter Louis Smiths group. However, in 1965, John leaves town to go to the prestigious Berkeley University in Boston and do a two-year course along with his fellow debutants with names like John Abercrombie, Ernie Watts and Alan Broadbent. Two years later, he is invited by a pianist friend, Billy Chilf, to join the legendary singer/songwriter Tim Hardins group. Just after Woodstock, John Betsch and Tim record a psychedelic album Columbia will never release together with the members of the future group Oregon: Colin Walcott, Glen Moore, Paul McCandles and his friend Billy Chilf. But he soon leaves this group to return to Nashville where he hooks up again with his friend Bob Holmes. Two years later, he is accepted on Archie Shepp and Max Roachs famous course at the University of Massachusetts Amherst (UMASS) and for the next four years he participates in this collective of intellectuals and musicians under the aegis of the two masters.

                                                    During this period he returns to Nashville to form his Society whose music is obviously influenced by the Afrocentric ideas of the UMASS student and political movement. However, the album, recorded in one day and in one take, also bears the hallmark of their generations psychedelic experiences, and in the themes and playing of the musicians we can hear a less violent form of music than the radical free jazz of New York or Chicago. Nature and environmental themes are the inspiration behind tracks touched by the spirit of Coltrane but also of Flower Power.

                                                    After Amherst, John Betsch joins Marion Browns group in 1976, leaves Tennessee for good and makes his home in New York over the next ten years or so. He plays and records with Dollar Brand, Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre and many others, before heading off to France. He has lived in Paris for the last twenty years and played in Steve Lacy, Mal Waldron and Archie Shepp bands, as well as forming groups of his own. He now lives in Paris and plays with many musicians/bands.

                                                    TRACK LISTING

                                                    Ode To Ethiopia
                                                    Earth Blossom
                                                    Open Pastures
                                                    Song For An Untidy Lady
                                                    Ra
                                                    Darling Doria
                                                    Get Up And Go

                                                    Kneecap

                                                    Fine Art

                                                      When Mo Chara, Moglaí Bap and DJ Provaí - aka Belfast’s finest Kneecap - entered the studio with producer Toddla T in the summer of 2023, they quickly decided to scrap everything they had already prepared for the album they were about to record. Instead, they decided to build a pub together.

                                                      Built on a West Belfast side street, The Rutz is a community boozer, in that the entire community uses it. All human life is inside, either thriving, striving or skiving. There’s people just trying to get served at the bar or up on the stage performing; others are slumped in darkened corners or emerging bleary eyed and coke smeared from the toilets. Religious affiliations are irrelevant and the chatter is a intoxicating blur of English and Irish.

                                                      Although the pub is currently just a figment of the band’s imagination, all of the action on Kneecap’s exhilarating first album - Fine Art - takes place in The Rutz. Like the band themselves, Fine Art is fiercely intelligent, consistently hilarious and genuinely thought provoking. It’s genius is to immerse you in a world thus far unrepresented in modern music.

                                                      Across the record’s twelve tracks and the interconnecting moments between them (recorded by the band and friends including DJ Annie Mac), the pub comes to life vividly, providing the perfect backdrop for the cast of characters that join the dots throughout the album. From the moment the idea was born back in Toddla T’s studio, it was the obvious location to base the world of Kneecap in.


                                                      STAFF COMMENTS

                                                      Millie says: The curveball, not-what-you’d-expect from a Piccadilly Records chart, Kneecap. Belfast’s newest rising stars that made an absolutely belting debut album ‘Fine Art’. If you’re not already acquainted with the trio, Kneecap have taken the world by storm with their Irish Hip Hop. Recognisable from their iconic Irish flag adorned bally, streetwear, and hoodies. In fact, it’s not too dissimilar to Andy’s Manchester weather appropriate cycling-gear, for those who haven’t had the pleasure - it consists of a bucket hat, waterproofs and plastic shop bags over his shoes tucked into trousers. Anyway, back on track, Kneecap have a strong look and an impactful sound, their music is political and rife with anarchy.

                                                      Fine Art is bursting with quick wit, the peppered language interchangeable lyrics between English and Gaeilge is what makes this album come alive. The standout track for me has to be ‘Parful’, they touch on how rave culture goes beyond the divide of communities within Ireland, showing how music in general goes beyond sectarian divide. And also getting on it with your mates of course, the bass hits hard on this one taking it to euphoric levels.

                                                      Also to note, the album is set in a fictional pub, my favourite interlude being ‘Last Orders’ is the epitome of pub atmosphere at the end of a long night, this then segues into ‘Way Too Much’ which I’d argue is the gateway into becoming a fully fledged Kneecap fan, it’s the summertime anthem that you least expected. It’s probably time you entered the Kneecap hype if you weren’t already.

                                                      TRACK LISTING

                                                      1. 3CAG Feat. Radie Peat
                                                      2. Fine Art
                                                      3. I BhFiacha Linne
                                                      4. I'm Flush
                                                      5. Better Way To Live Feat. Grian Chatten
                                                      6. Sick In The Head
                                                      7. Love Making
                                                      8. Drug Dealin Pagans
                                                      9. Harrow Road Feat. JELANI BLACKMAN
                                                      10. Parful
                                                      11. Rhino Ket
                                                      12. Way Too Much 

                                                      David Holmes Featuring Raven Violet

                                                      Yeah X 3 - Sonic Boom And Panda Bear / The Vendetta Suite Remixes

                                                        Yeah x 3 - Sonic Boom and Panda Bear Reset Remix & Instrumental Remix:
                                                        Two masters of modern day psychedelia fire the original into outer space to create a head spinning, foot stomping analogue space walk of a track.

                                                        Yeah x 3 - The Vendetta Suite:
                                                        On the Reason to Live mix, Belfast’s Balearic producer The Vendetta Suite turns back time and turns Yeah x 3 into a brilliantly shimmering ’80s pop anthem from an alternate universe.
                                                        Elsewhere, the Reason to Drift version is a gorgeous beatless ambient track that sounds like first light through stained glass windows.

                                                        TRACK LISTING

                                                        A1/ Yeah X 3 - Sonic Boom & Panda Bear Reset Remix
                                                        A2/ Yeah X 3 - Sonic Boom & Panda Bear Reset Instrumental
                                                        B1/ Yeah X 3 - The Vendetta Suite Reason To Drift Mix
                                                        B2/ Yeah X 3 - The Vendetta Suite Reason To Live Mix

                                                        David Holmes Featuring Raven Violet

                                                        Yeah X 3 - X-Press 2 / Rich Lane Remixes

                                                          Yeah x3 - X-Press 2 Remix & Dub
                                                          Rocky and Diesel’s remix is a deep techno stomp that flickers with the occasional celestial vocal sample, before slowly opening out into a hypnotic middle section that’s guaranteed to make people lose themselves on the dance floor.

                                                          Yeah x3 - Rich Lane Remix & Dub
                                                          Producer Rich Lane gives Yeah x 3 a hefty chugging bassline and a simple, irresistible acid loop for a mix that builds towards a massive hands in the air ambient breakdown before returning with more chug and more acid.

                                                          TRACK LISTING

                                                          A1/ Yeah X 3 - X-Press 2 Remix
                                                          A2/ Yeah X 3 - X-Press 2 Remix Dub
                                                          B1/ Yeah X 3 - Rich Lane Remix
                                                          B2/ Yeah X 3 - Rich Lane Remix Dub

                                                          Temples

                                                          Sun Structures (RSD24 EDITION)

                                                            THIS IS A RECORD STORE DAY 2024 EXCLUSIVE AND WILL BE AVAILABLE INSTORE ON SATURDAY APRIL 20TH ON A FIRST COME FIRST SERVED BASIS, LIMITED TO ONE PER PERSON.

                                                            IF THERE ARE ANY REMAINING COPIES THEY WILL BE MADE AVAILABLE ONLINE AT 8PM ON MONDAY APRIL 22ND.






                                                            Lynks

                                                            Abomination

                                                              The time has come. After three EPs, sell-out UK tours, and a rapidly developing cult-leader status, the unapologetically uncategorisable Lynks - now signed to the renowned Heavenly Recordings - is ready to unveil their debut album Abomination. Ricocheting between visceral, abject shame and giddy, hedonistic delight, throughout the album Lynks takes us on a dizzying tour of modern queer culture via casual sex, references to Sean Cody, and a one-sided love affair with a straight tennis coach.

                                                              With their inspirations pinballing from Peaches to M.I.A, Courtney Barnett to Janelle Monae, and more, Lynks’ sound is something akin to a club night being thrown in a blender. Each genre touchstone here is hyphenated, and every endlessly quotable couplet takes a surprising turn. Self-written, self-produced, self-effacing and self-aggrandising, the album brings together half a decade’s worth of artistic and personal progression in under 40 minutes.

                                                              STAFF COMMENTS

                                                              Barry says: Bonkers, hi-nrg synth-pop from Lynks for their debut LP for Heavenly Recordings, brimming with snapping disco and scuzzy distorted beats, all with the almost robotic vocals smeared over the top. Brilliantly mad, but undeniably catchy and full of groove.

                                                              TRACK LISTING

                                                              1. USE IT OR LOSE IT
                                                              2. NEW BOYFRIEND
                                                              3. CPR
                                                              4. (WHAT DID YOU EXPECT FROM) SEX WITH A STRANGER
                                                              5. TENNIS SONG
                                                              6. I FEEL LIKE SHIT
                                                              7. ROOM 116
                                                              8. LEVITICUS 18
                                                              9. ABOMINATION
                                                              10. LUCKY
                                                              11. SMALLTALK
                                                              12. LYNKS THINKS
                                                              13. FLASH IN THE PAN

                                                              Halo Maud

                                                              Celebrate

                                                                For multi-instrumentalist, singer and producer Halo Maud (previously known as Maud Nadal), the title of both song and album reflect from her natural reactions to the creation of the music itself.

                                                                "For me, music contains what words cannot. It is its power to shape these things, and it’s what I hope to find while taking random bits, here and there, from the pitch of each note, their texture, their timbres, massaging and mixing them together until the sound resembles what is inside me. When everything fits together well the words settle in with the music to spread their clues. That’s when the song is ready. I called the album ‘Celebrate' because I danced a lot while creating it. I now feel that I can release it into the air. I hope that it will alight in your hands and ears, keep you company and resonate within you through multiple waves.”

                                                                Those multiple waves are Celebrate’s twelve tracks. Collectively, they offer a seamless mix of French and English; analogue electronics, scratchy guitars and tumbling drums; dream pop, woozy Yé-Yé and 1960s and 2020s psychedelia.


                                                                STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                Barry says: I was a big fan of Halo Maud's brilliant Je Suis Une île all the way back in 2018, so it was with some joy that I saw her on the new release schedule, and Celebrate has all of the wispy pop charm of that brilliant outing but with more of a focus on grand, orchestral jubilance and airy major-key crescendos. It's a lovely experience, and further cements my love of Maud's work.

                                                                TRACK LISTING

                                                                1. Celebrate
                                                                2. Terres Infinies
                                                                3. My Desire Is Pure
                                                                4. Last Day Song
                                                                5. Slowly Surely
                                                                6. Catch The Wave
                                                                7. Le Ciel Est Grand
                                                                8. You Float
                                                                9. À Te Voir
                                                                10. Iceberg
                                                                11. Pesnopoïka
                                                                12. Entends-Tu Ma Voix

                                                                Mildlife

                                                                Chorus

                                                                  Two-time ARIA Award-winning Naarm/Melbourne-based psychedelic jazz outfit Mildlife present their much-anticipated third studio album, Chorus. Following 2020’s Automatic and 2017’s Phase, Chorus arrives as Mildlife’s most optimistic record, serving as a sonic testament to the band’s unwavering adoration for the beguiling realms of 70s psychedelic and cosmic sounds.

                                                                  “Chorus is about a coming together of disparate elements. Not in some sort of utopian aesthetic where everything works perfectly, but in the natural flow and state of things,” shares the band’s Jim Rindfleish. “It’s about cosmic compatibility and chemistry: what makes things work? Not just what makes the band work, but what makes good music, art or love? It’s the rhythm of nature”. 


                                                                  STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                  Barry says: Mildlife in 'Ridiculously Smooth Psych-jazz Shocker'. If you haven't heard this Melbourne band's previous studio LP's or the brilliant Live In Pompeii reminiscent 'Live From south Channel Island', then now is a perfect time to hear the zenith of their creativity and songwriting capabilities. 'Chorus' is the perfect distillation of the band at their silken best.

                                                                  TRACK LISTING

                                                                  1. Forever
                                                                  2. Yourself
                                                                  3. Sunrise
                                                                  4. Musica
                                                                  5. Chorus
                                                                  6. Future Life
                                                                  7. Return To Centaurus

                                                                  Revival Season

                                                                  Golden Age Of Self Snitching

                                                                    Foreseen by oracles and foretold by angels, the coming together of rapper Brandon “BEZ” (B Easy) Evans and beatmaker/producer Jonah Swilley was, by their own admission, a divine appointment. Both halves musically and spiritually forged in the twin flames of Georgia׳s Pentecostal churches and grassroots hip-hop scene, Revival Season tell straight-shooting tales of our golden age — chop, cops, badass bitches, self-snitches; drug-dealing and revolution — chronicling and critiquing the culture over baselines and beats that kick squarely in the teeth with a platform boot.

                                                                    Much in the spirit of Swilley’s teenage bedroom beatmaking, their debut album Golden Age Of Self Snitching was pieced together largely self-sufficiently, written both remotely and in person, and recorded between a temporary studio space in a health centre and an ad-hoc setup in Swilley’s dining room. A skeleton team of outside musicians contributed additional parts — with Jordan Manly [Mattiel] and Rupert Brown [Roy Ayres, Raf Rundell] on drums, Shaheed Goodie on guest MC vocals for the jagged, spiralling ‘Pump’, and Raf Rundell [The 2 Bears], with whom Revival Season had previously made the Outernational mixtape (“equal parts Prince Paul and King Tubby”) on hand as “vibe consultant”, bringing additional production to a handful of tracks.


                                                                    STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                    Barry says: We noted the similarities in beatmaking here to the recent collaboration between Earl Sweatshirt & The Alchemist, but with the pristine beat-locked percussive flow of B Easy. It's a brilliantly dynamic, scathing bite of old-school hip-hop met with new-school production. Ace.

                                                                    TRACK LISTING

                                                                    1. Look Out Below
                                                                    2. Barry White
                                                                    3. The Path
                                                                    4. Message In A Bottle
                                                                    5. Last Dance
                                                                    6. Boomerang
                                                                    7. Golden Silverware
                                                                    8. Chop
                                                                    9. Propaganda
                                                                    10. Stars
                                                                    11. Pump
                                                                    12. Everybody
                                                                    13. Eyes Open
                                                                    14. Love To See It 

                                                                    Heavenly

                                                                    The Decline And Fall Of Heavenly - 2024 Reissue

                                                                      The Atta Girl and P.U.N.K. Girl singles were released in 1993; album The Decline and Fall of Heavenly came soon after in 1994: collectively they show a band that is rapidly expanding its scope. The album veers confidently from high speed indiepunk (Me And My Madness) to cool surf instrumental (Sacramento) and back again to the sweetest indiepop (Itchy Chin). Meanwhile, the singles, which include the band’s most celebrated tune - P.U.N.K Girl – demonstrates how much confidence Heavenly were deriving from their involvement in the nascent Riot Grrrl scene. All the anger is there, the politics are direct and crystal clear – yet the whole thing is still delivered with the sweetest pop melodies. It’s like being punched and kissed at the same time.

                                                                      The three releases also show how Heavenly had come to feel equally at home in the UK and in the US. The album maybe feels more British, as demonstrated by the Old World irony of the ‘Decline and Fall’ title. At Heavenly gigs in the UK, often playing with other bands on the increasingly influential Sarah Records, audiences were getting bigger, while the bands were finding a sweet spot where anti-corporate understatement and a dismissive attitude to an increasingly misogynist UK Press was no barrier to success. P.U.N.K Girl and Atta Girl on the other hand, are more gleeful, more headlong, and somehow feel more American: they are carried along by the excitement and adrenaline of having found another spiritual home - the indiepunk Riot Grrrl scene that was focussed on Olympia, WA, the HQ of Heavenly’s US label K Records. (K released P.U.N.K Girl and Atta Girl together on one 10” EP.)

                                                                      Amelia Fletcher and Cathy Rogers were now confidently sharing vocals, sometimes harmonising, sometimes taking it in turns, sometimes singing over each other. Peter (guitar) Mathew (drums) and Rob (bass) had become adept at changing gear from ornate pop to full-on punk, unafraid of genre rules and increasingly happy to make up their own version of what pop music should sound like.

                                                                      TRACK LISTING

                                                                      1. Me And My Madness
                                                                      2. Modestic
                                                                      3. Skipjack
                                                                      4. Itchy Chin
                                                                      5. Sacramento
                                                                      6. Three Star Compartment
                                                                      7. Sperm Meets Egg, So What?
                                                                      8. She And Me
                                                                      9. P.U.N.K. Girl
                                                                      10. Hearts And Crosses
                                                                      11. Attagirl
                                                                      12. Dig Your Own Grave
                                                                      13. So?

                                                                      After releasing numerous and now collectable standalone singles, plus some now famous collaborations with Dimitri from Paris, 2019 saw Parisian based 8 piece, Cotonete release their first long player in 15 years! Under the guidance of Melik Bencheikh from Paris’ rare record emporium, Heart Beat Vinyl. The dark moody mover "Super-Vilains" came out to great success on Heavenly Sweetness.

                                                                      After playing some packed live shows around France and the UK, including the acclaimed Sunday at Dingwalls in Camden, hosted by Gilles Peterson and Patrick Forge. Somewhere along this part of the journey, they came across the Brazilian music legend and vocal powerhouse, Di Melo. He softened their souls, and from this love affair came the album "Atemporal". Released on Favourite Recordings, this 8 track album would end up being sampled by Canadian superstar Drake, for his 2023 album "For All the Dogs Scary Hours Edition".

                                                                      So now into 2024, and we have Cotonete's full length number two. They’ve enlisted the producer Guts to guide them towards sunshine, groove, warmth and all the colours in his rainbow. With their tongues firmly in their cheeks, the album is titled "Victoire de la Musique" - a dig at the annual French music award ceremony. Taking the band deep, producer Guts showed them new and exciting rhythms from all corners of the world. The record’s first example of this is "Venezuela", a track directly inspired by the jazz funk from the great Caribbean nation.

                                                                      Other key musical exploration on the record can be attributed to the late composer Francis Lai. On "Cinq Pour L'aventure" - an almost 15 minute epic monster showcasing the band’s love for 70's French movies soundtracks. “L’aventure c’est l’aventure”, was a movie by one of the most famous French directors Claude Lelouch The single from the soundtrack was sung by French music superstar Johnny Halliday.

                                                                      Guests are scattered very tastefully across the album, on the only cover version of the record, the Brazilian master Jorge Ben’s ‘Bebete Vãobora’, Sabrina Malheiros was invited to lend her lungs. The daughter of Azymuth’s Alex Malheiros helps join perfectly the dots from a band that are without a doubt Cotonete’s biggest influence. Brazilian jazz funk, now with an added French touch.

                                                                      On "Day in Day Out" a powerful performance is given from Leron Thomas on vocals and trumpet. Perhaps also known for his role as the musical director for Iggy Pop and touring member of his band. This track is an already tried and tested dance floor filler, emphasizing just how tight the band really can play - the track even found its way into BBC Music’s Craig Charles’ ‘Track Of The Year’ selection.

                                                                      No record so soulful would be complete without a trip to the UK. Omar, London’s Godfather of new soul pops in. Having recorded with artists like; Courtney Pine, Level 42 & Erykah Badu, in his distinctive smooth style, he blesses the track "What Did Run You For?" The final vocal visitor is Gystere Peskine, a Parisian based musical hero, who shows off his retro future funk feels on "O Ceu es Preto" - which literally translates as ‘the sky is black’ - although given the hugely uplifting and almost gospel soul of this Russian / Brazilian singer, he has us seeing things far brighter.


                                                                      TRACK LISTING

                                                                      Odyssee
                                                                      Venuzuela
                                                                      Bebete Vaobora Feat. Sabrina Malheiros
                                                                      Day In Day Out Feat. Leron Thomas
                                                                      La Derniere Guitare
                                                                      Satori
                                                                      What Did You Run For Feat Omar
                                                                      O Ceu E Preto Feat. Gystere
                                                                      Cinq Pour Laventure

                                                                      Tapir!

                                                                      The Pilgrim, Their God And The King Of My Decrepit Mountain

                                                                        South London six-piece Tapir! serves as a ‘boiling together’ of different mediums: at once musical, theatrical, mythological, artistic, collaborative, narrative-led and, above all, something to be enjoyed and shared.

                                                                        With their debut album, “The Pilgrim, Their God and the King of My Decrepit Mountain”, Tapir! have proven they are more than technically adept at transporting the listener to another realm. You could read the whole album as being an escape from the trappings of the modern material world, a sidestep into a pre-industrial, pre-internet wonderland where creativity and community reign supreme. The narrator of ‘My God’ might suggest to us ‘Maybe it was Maybelline that put you at a loss/That’s my God’, but for Tapir! it is imagination itself that is king.


                                                                        STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                        Barry says: Though the striking minimalism of the cover might carry through to some of the more relaxing pieces on Tapir's debut album, the depth of compositional skill and scope of the album as a whole is breathtaking. Brittle folky guitars and soaring vocals, conceptually rich pieces imbued with intrigue and heart. Stunning.

                                                                        TRACK LISTING

                                                                        Side A
                                                                        Act 1 (The Pilgrim)
                                                                        On A Grassy Knoll (We'll Bow Together)
                                                                        Swallow
                                                                        The Nether (Face To Face)
                                                                        Act 2 (Their God)
                                                                        Broken Ark
                                                                        Side B
                                                                        Gymnopédie
                                                                        Eidolon
                                                                        Act 3 (The King Of My Decrepit Mountain)
                                                                        Untitled
                                                                        My God
                                                                        Mountain Song

                                                                        Saint Etienne

                                                                        So Tough - 30th Anniversary Edition

                                                                          To mark its 30th anniversary, Saint Etienne release a very special box set of their classic second album, ‘So Tough’.

                                                                          This lavish set follows previous anniversary releases of ‘Foxbase Alpha’ and ‘Tiger Bay’ and includes: a vinyl version of the original album in a gatefold sleeve cut at 45 RPM over two discs in a gatefold sleeve; ‘So Tough - Remains Of The Day’, a 10 track vinyl companion album of rarities and demos, featuring previously unreleased material; ‘Hobart Paving’, a bonus 7’’ single cut at 45RPM; a 28-page booklet featuring new essays and never seen before photos; a poster; and a reproduction of the original press release from 1993.

                                                                          Rigid box with lift off lid (matt lamination with anti scratch).


                                                                          TRACK LISTING

                                                                          ‘So Tough’ 2LP
                                                                          1. Mario’s Café
                                                                          2. Railway Jam
                                                                          3. Date With Spelman
                                                                          4. Calico
                                                                          5. Avenue
                                                                          6. You’re In A Bad Way
                                                                          7. Memo To Pricey
                                                                          8. Hobart Paving
                                                                          9. Leafhound
                                                                          10. Clock Milk
                                                                          11. Conchita Martinez
                                                                          12. No Rainbows For Me
                                                                          13. Here Come Clown Feet
                                                                          14. Junk The Morgue
                                                                          15. Chicken Soup

                                                                          'So Tough - Remains Of The Day’ 1LP
                                                                          1. Everything Flows
                                                                          2. Orpington Blues
                                                                          3. Rainy Day Women
                                                                          4. Everlasting
                                                                          5. Johnny In The Echo Café
                                                                          6. Paper (demo)
                                                                          7. Last Thing On My Mind
                                                                          8. Biker Of The Strange
                                                                          9. You’re In A Bad Way (first Run Through)
                                                                          10. Castlemaine Avenue

                                                                          ‘Hobart Paving’ 7”
                                                                          1. Hobart Paving (Alan Tarney Mix)
                                                                          2. Hobart Paving (Van Dyke Parks Arrangement)

                                                                          David Holmes Feat. Raven Violet

                                                                          Blind On A Galloping Horse

                                                                            Blind On A Galloping Horse serves as David Holmes’ first solo album since 2008’s The Holy Pictures.

                                                                            A 14-track interrogation of the last decade, time spent watching a decaying, fraying Britain visibly buckling in real time while tending to his own battles with mental health. Holmes’ soundtrack to this inquiry is at times claustrophobic, often euphoric, driven by the rattle and snap of analogue drum machines, wild oscillations of droning analogue synths and the voice of Raven Violet which beguiles and commands in a way that could part oceans.

                                                                            On this record, there are songs of hope for an age of uncertainty; love songs to leap the barricades to and, on ‘Necessary Genius’, a comprehensive roll call of the great and good - those ‘dreamers, misfits, radicals, outcasts’ that we’ve lost and just a few who’ve managed to cling on in the churn of the 21st century. And there are elegiac electronics evocative of an endless Europe where pulsating, crackling rhythm tracks fuse with dreamlike textures and the underground pulse of psychedelic therapy to form something unique that feels nothing less than radical. 


                                                                            STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                            Barry says: It's no wonder we (the shop) or we (Manchester) have taken to David Holmes, with the snappy post-industrial synth-gloom of 'Necessary Genius' referencing Tony Wilson by name and by design. It's yet another bit of evidence that Holmes' musical skills know no bounds. Rich, evocative works throughout and produced as you'd expect, perfectly.

                                                                            TRACK LISTING

                                                                            1. When People Are Occupied Resistance Is Justified
                                                                            2. It's Over, If We Run Out Of Love
                                                                            3. Emotionally Clear
                                                                            4. Hope Is The Last Thing To Die
                                                                            5. You Will Know Me By The Smell Of Onions
                                                                            6. Necessary Genius
                                                                            7. Yeah X 3
                                                                            8. I Laugh Myself To Sleep
                                                                            9. Too Muchroom
                                                                            10. Agitprop 13
                                                                            11. Stop Apologising
                                                                            12. Tyranny Of The Talentless
                                                                            13. Love In The Upside Down
                                                                            14. Blind On A Galloping Horse 

                                                                            Various Artists

                                                                            Straight From The Decks Vol.3 - Guts Finest Selections From His Famous DJ Sets

                                                                              Musical discoveries from all over the world. Different genres, different cultures. GUTS invites you to follow him on his musical journey from your living room or your local club!

                                                                              "All DJs have their own way of building their set. Some pick records entirely on the spur of the moment and trust their instincts, others write down a precise list on a piece of paper and never stray from it; the set is a kitchen where the DJ is the Chef. It doesn't matter how it's done, as long as it's done properly and enjoyed by everyone, that's what matters the most...

                                                                              The beginning of the set is always the same. Welcoming the dancers gently. Letting them take their marks with a musical aperitif of tracks at 80/90 BPM, something that many DJs don't do or no longer do.

                                                                              The end is always the same. Parting with the dancers gently. Letting them go down peacefully. Their evening with me is over, but it is perhaps another one, more intimate, that will be starting for them.

                                                                              In between these two moments, it's all about the story itself, with its cumbia, reggae, hip hop, lusophone music, funk, soul-jazz twists... A rich story which tells itself in the mood of the moment and back on the dance floor. Depending on the general atmosphere, the rise in musical power can start after an hour and thirty minutes of preliminaries, or it can happen only after 45 minutes. The climax is reached with the Afro- house part, a furious passage that makes overexcited music from Zimbabwe and punk music from South Africa confront each other along a total experimentation with tracks so disturbing that they put the dancers' legs out of sync. This represents a moment of rupture in the narrative, its only purpose being to help reconnect with the dance floor as soon as it is over and to re-launch the story with even greater interest.

                                                                              Those who have already come to see my DJ set know this: each of my stories is unique. I hope you'll enjoy the one I'm telling you in this third volume." - Guts

                                                                              TRACK LISTING

                                                                              Aida Bossa - Azuca/ El Loro Y La Lora
                                                                              Lagos Thugs - Innocent Blood
                                                                              Djingo Typical Band - Vini Ouais
                                                                              Lindigo - Domoun
                                                                              Lass - Senegal 
                                                                              Joojo Addison - Guy Man
                                                                              La Boa - Vuelo Antillano
                                                                              Voilaaa - Water No Get Enemy
                                                                              Umalali - Merua
                                                                              Luizga & Izem - Yemamaya
                                                                              Blue Bird - Foefoeroemang
                                                                              Poirier - Pourquoi Faire Aujourd'hui
                                                                              Kaleta & Super Yamba Band - Jibiti (Bosq RMX)
                                                                              Ezra Collective - Lady
                                                                              Joskar & Flamzy - Faroter
                                                                              Dowdelin - I Like To Move It

                                                                              Leon Phal

                                                                              Stress Killer

                                                                                With his state-of-the-art quintet, saxophonist Leon Phal revisits soul and electronica in an enthusiastic jam, bringing a French touch to his brand of jazz, on his second full length album and his first for Heavenly Sweetness. Picking up from his last album 'Dust to Stars' (Kyudo Records, 2021), 'Stress Killer' delves even deeper into the area between nightclub and jazz club culture.

                                                                                As a graduate of Lausanne's Haute Ecole de Musique, he's a key artist within the much spoken about French new jazz scene. He's joined by his faithful quintet of Arthur Alard (drums), Remi Bouyssiere (double bass), Gauthier Toux (keyboards) and Zacharie Ksyk (trumpet).

                                                                                Embracing the desire to make people dance by approaching jazz as club music, "F*ck Yeah" highlights that goal perfectly. With its nods to the techno pioneers of Detroit and the deep house of Chicago. On the J Dilla inspired "Idylla", we have the first feature on the album, coming in from Heavenly Sweetness / Pura Vida label mate, K.O.G. A behind the beat groove allows K.O.G's spoken word to sit over Gauthier's keys, intertwining beautifully together with the rest of the track.

                                                                                More mellow and reflective moments are to be found courtesy of "Balanced Action", showing just how great Leon's sax lines sound doubled with Zacharie's trumpet.

                                                                                TRACK LISTING

                                                                                Side 1
                                                                                1. Vibing In Ay
                                                                                2. Fuck Yeah
                                                                                3. Idylla Feat. K.O.G
                                                                                4. Balanced Action
                                                                                5. Something Inside Feat. Lorine Chia

                                                                                Side 2
                                                                                1. Stress Killer
                                                                                2. Bongo 113
                                                                                3. Naima
                                                                                4. Same Human
                                                                                5. Clarity

                                                                                Pip Blom

                                                                                Bobbie

                                                                                  For her third album, ‘Bobbie’, Dutch singer-songwriter Pip Blom decided to rip it up and start again. After making her name as one of the brightest indie rock singers around through two albums – 2019 debut ‘Boat’ and 2021 follow-up ‘Welcome Break’ – and a lauded live show honed over gruelling years of touring, the new album sees her take a delightful left turn into thumping, carefree synth pop. This 12-track collection features collaborations with Personal Trainer and Alex Kapranos.


                                                                                  STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                  Barry says: Ooof, what a lovely change of direction for Amsterdam's Pip Blom, brimming with the sort of instrumental loveliness they've done so well in the past but lighetened with a lean towards more carefree synth-pop grooves. It's brilliantly fresh, but without sacrificing anything that made the band so beloved.

                                                                                  TRACK LISTING

                                                                                  1. Not Tonight
                                                                                  2. Tiger
                                                                                  3. Red
                                                                                  4. Kiss Me By The Candlelightfeat. Personal Trainer
                                                                                  5. I Can Be Your Man
                                                                                  6. Where'd You Get My Number?
                                                                                  7. Brand New Car
                                                                                  8. Is This Love?feat. Alex Kapranos
                                                                                  9. Fantasies
                                                                                  10. Again
                                                                                  11. Get Back
                                                                                  12. 7 Weeks 

                                                                                  Various Artists

                                                                                  Heavenly Remixes Volume 7 & 8

                                                                                    Heavenly Remixes 7 & 8 sees the label going back into the archive as well as picking off some more recent remixes and both albums primarily feature either previously unreleased versions or re-workings available for the first time on vinyl & CD.

                                                                                    Heavenly Remixes Volume 7 heads to Belfast, where David Holmes - a producer who first appeared on Heavenly in 1994 amping up the acid on Saint Etienne’s Like A Motorway - appears as solo artist and as one third of Unloved, who get a lift right to the heart of a Vauxhall sweatbox by Horse Meat Disco. It draws a line between Amsterdam and Frankfurt as Ludwig A.F. amps up the electronics on Pip Blom’s Keep It Together. It stops off in a south London studio where super producer Dan Carey plays the desk with Toy, then relocates L.A. psych rock band Fever The Ghost to an Ibizan shoreline as the sun sets on the horizon. It cements Sheffield’s reputation as the home of modern British techno with the return of true originators Forgemasters. And it pitches up in front of a renegade soundsystem late night at Glastonbury as Erol Alkan’s mighty rework of Con Man gets its third rewind of the night.

                                                                                    Heavenly Remixes Volume 8 opens with Space Afrika’s lush, ambient reimagining of the Orielles’ BEAM/S before Justin Robertson stretches Amber Arcades’ Turning Light into eight minutes of electronic dub. Elsewhere, Baxter Dury’s peerless Miami becomes a string-laden electro skank in the hands of French producer Pilooski; Edinburgh’s bedroom techno genius Eyes of Others’ Safehouse turns into an East End bathhouse courtesy of disco deviants Decius; Ashley Beedle’s Black Science Orchestra turns Unloved’s heart worn torch song into seven minutes of glimmering dreamlike percussive house and Katy J. Pearson’s freak flag is flown high thanks to The Umlauts’ throbbing filtered electro mix. It ends similarly to how it began as TONE takes Fran Lobo’s All I Want on a gorgeous slow motion spacewalk. 


                                                                                    TRACK LISTING

                                                                                    VOLUME 7
                                                                                    1. DAVID HOLMES & RAVEN VIOLET – It’s Over If We Run Out Of Love (Hardway Bros Live At The SSL Dub) *
                                                                                    2. UNLOVED – Mother’s Been A Bad Girl (Horse Meat Disco Remix) *
                                                                                    3. PIP BLOM – Keep It Together (Ludwig A.F. Under Pressure Mix) *
                                                                                    4. CONFIDENCE MAN – Holiday (Erol Alkan OOO Remix) *
                                                                                    5. TOY – You Won’t Be The Same (Dan Carey Dub)
                                                                                    6. AUDIOBOOKS – The Doll (Bruise Remix) *
                                                                                    7. THE ORIELLES – The Room (Shy One Remix) *
                                                                                    8. EYES OF OTHERS – Once Twice Thrice (The Orielles Remix) *
                                                                                    9. FEVER THE GHOST – Source (Leo Zero Dub) %
                                                                                    10. WORKING MEN’S CLUB – The Last One (Foregmasters Remix)

                                                                                    VOLUME 8
                                                                                    1. THE ORIELLES – Beam/s (Space Afrika Remix) *
                                                                                    2. AMBER ARCADES – Turning Light (Justin Robertson’s Deadstock 33’s Meditation) %
                                                                                    3. UNLOVED – Number In My Phone (Black Science Orchestra Dub) *
                                                                                    4. CONFIDENCE MAN – Toy Boy (Raw Silk Instrumental Remix) *
                                                                                    5. DAVID HOLMES & RAVEN VIOLET – It’s Over If We Run Out Of Love (Lovefingers & Heidi Lawden Low Tide Mix) *
                                                                                    6. BAXTER DURY – Miami (Pilooski Instrumental Dub) %
                                                                                    7. OUT COLD – Loving Arms (Hardway Brothers Remix) *
                                                                                    8. WORKING MEN’S CLUB – Cut (Mella Dee Spangled On The Terrace Dub) %
                                                                                    9. EYES OF OTHERS – Safehouse (Decius Remix) *
                                                                                    10. KATY J PEARSON – Howl (Umlauts Remix) %
                                                                                    11. FRAN LOBO – All I Want (Tone Remix) *


                                                                                    * First Time On Vinyl
                                                                                    % Previously Unreleased

                                                                                    Various Artists

                                                                                    Heavenly Remixes Volume 7

                                                                                      Heavenly Remixes 7 & 8 sees the label going back into the archive as well as picking off some more recent remixes and both albums primarily feature either previously unreleased versions or re-workings available for the first time on vinyl & CD.

                                                                                      Heavenly Remixes Volume 7 heads to Belfast, where David Holmes - a producer who first appeared on Heavenly in 1994 amping up the acid on Saint Etienne’s Like A Motorway - appears as solo artist and as one third of Unloved, who get a lift right to the heart of a Vauxhall sweatbox by Horse Meat Disco. It draws a line between Amsterdam and Frankfurt as Ludwig A.F. amps up the electronics on Pip Blom’s Keep It Together. It stops off in a south London studio where super producer Dan Carey plays the desk with Toy, then relocates L.A. psych rock band Fever The Ghost to an Ibizan shoreline as the sun sets on the horizon. It cements Sheffield’s reputation as the home of modern British techno with the return of true originators Forgemasters. And it pitches up in front of a renegade soundsystem late night at Glastonbury as Erol Alkan’s mighty rework of Con Man gets its third rewind of the night.

                                                                                      TRACK LISTING

                                                                                      1. DAVID HOLMES & RAVEN VIOLET – It’s Over If We Run Out Of Love (Hardway Bros Live At The SSL Dub) *
                                                                                      2. UNLOVED – Mother’s Been A Bad Girl (Horse Meat Disco Remix) *
                                                                                      3. PIP BLOM – Keep It Together (Ludwig A.F. Under Pressure Mix) *
                                                                                      4. CONFIDENCE MAN – Holiday (Erol Alkan OOO Remix) *
                                                                                      5. TOY – You Won’t Be The Same (Dan Carey Dub)
                                                                                      6. AUDIOBOOKS – The Doll (Bruise Remix) *
                                                                                      7. THE ORIELLES – The Room (Shy One Remix) *
                                                                                      8. EYES OF OTHERS – Once Twice Thrice (The Orielles Remix) *
                                                                                      9. FEVER THE GHOST – Source (Leo Zero Dub) %
                                                                                      10. WORKING MEN’S CLUB – The Last One (Foregmasters Remix)

                                                                                      * First Time On Vinyl
                                                                                      % Previously Unreleased

                                                                                      Various Artists

                                                                                      Heavenly Remixes Volume 8

                                                                                        Heavenly Remixes 7 & 8 sees the label going back into the archive as well as picking off some more recent remixes and both albums primarily feature either previously unreleased versions or re-workings available for the first time on vinyl & CD.

                                                                                        Heavenly Remixes Volume 8 opens with Space Afrika’s lush, ambient reimagining of the Orielles’ BEAM/S before Justin Robertson stretches Amber Arcades’ Turning Light into eight minutes of electronic dub. Elsewhere, Baxter Dury’s peerless Miami becomes a string-laden electro skank in the hands of French producer Pilooski; Edinburgh’s bedroom techno genius Eyes of Others’ Safehouse turns into an East End bathhouse courtesy of disco deviants Decius; Ashley Beedle’s Black Science Orchestra turns Unloved’s heart worn torch song into seven minutes of glimmering dreamlike percussive house and Katy J. Pearson’s freak flag is flown high thanks to The Umlauts’ throbbing filtered electro mix. It ends similarly to how it began as TONE takes Fran Lobo’s All I Want on a gorgeous slow motion spacewalk. 

                                                                                        TRACK LISTING

                                                                                        1. THE ORIELLES – Beam/s (Space Afrika Remix) *
                                                                                        2. AMBER ARCADES – Turning Light (Justin Robertson’s Deadstock 33’s Meditation) %
                                                                                        3. UNLOVED – Number In My Phone (Black Science Orchestra Dub) *
                                                                                        4. CONFIDENCE MAN – Toy Boy (Raw Silk Instrumental Remix) *
                                                                                        5. DAVID HOLMES & RAVEN VIOLET – It’s Over If We Run Out Of Love (Lovefingers & Heidi Lawden Low Tide Mix) *
                                                                                        6. BAXTER DURY – Miami (Pilooski Instrumental Dub) %
                                                                                        7. OUT COLD – Loving Arms (Hardway Brothers Remix) *
                                                                                        8. WORKING MEN’S CLUB – Cut (Mella Dee Spangled On The Terrace Dub) %
                                                                                        9. EYES OF OTHERS – Safehouse (Decius Remix) *
                                                                                        10. KATY J PEARSON – Howl (Umlauts Remix) %
                                                                                        11. FRAN LOBO – All I Want (Tone Remix) *


                                                                                        * First Time On Vinyl
                                                                                        % Previously Unreleased

                                                                                        Fran Lobo

                                                                                        Burning It Feels Like

                                                                                          North-East London singer, songwriter and producer Fran Lobo presents her long-awaited debut album Burning It Feels Like. The record was written and produced by Lobo, engineered by Andy Ramsay of Stereolab and mixing was completed by regular studio partner Jimmy Robertson.

                                                                                          Of Goan and Maharashtrian descent, Fran spent a lot of her childhood absorbing the sounds around her: her mum’s pop, Bollywood and R&B obsessions, her dad’s love of rock and country, her brother’s metal and nu-metal, alongside her own adoration for Spice Girls and TV shows like Girls Aloud-spawning Popstars: The Rivals. The result is that Fran’s own work is collagist and kaleidoscopic in nature, often taking unexpected twists into unfamiliar places, with songs sometimes imploding in on themselves. “Within every track, it became a theme of turning everything on its head; having an outro you wouldn’t expect, flipping the words a bit – this cut-paste collage where nothing is safe,” she explains. In part, this is rooted in a desire to convey the feelings of being deep in someone’s mind, jumping around unpredictably in feelings and overthinking and anxiety.

                                                                                          This style is enhanced by Fran’s collaborative approach to her work; she is part of Deep Throat Choir, has worked as a choral conductor, and many of her good friends like Lucinda Chua, Sam Beste, CJ Calderwood, Jemma Freeman, Laura Misch and Coby Sey appear on the album, building up an array of sounds with them.

                                                                                          Visceral, beguiling and dense with yearning, sometimes she glimmers like flames and sometimes she lets us fester in the ashes with her. An unflinching debut, Fran Lobo will have you feeling that burning too.


                                                                                          TRACK LISTING

                                                                                          1 Burning It Feels Like
                                                                                          2 Armour
                                                                                          3 See Again
                                                                                          4 Slowly
                                                                                          5 Acid Dream.
                                                                                          1 Push And Pull
                                                                                          2 All I Want
                                                                                          3 The Arp Song
                                                                                          4 Why You Came
                                                                                          5 Tricks

                                                                                          Working Men's Club

                                                                                          Minsky Rock Megamix II

                                                                                            ‘Minsky Rock Megamix II’ takes its own fearless journey through the heart of the ‘Fear Fear’ album; on its way, it samples snatches from each of the album’s tracks and places them into glimmering new musical surroundings, all pinned to a constant metronomic beat that turns the whole thing inside out to create one streamlined, super-heavy whole.

                                                                                            Over twenty-three (cosmic) minutes, the track finds the pulse of ‘Fear Fear’ and follows it onto the dancefloor. Within this new mix, fragments of familiar tracks are twisted out of shape before being reborn with pounding Nu Beat basslines, Blackburn rave stabs and tweaking acid riffs that curl around minimal electro rhythms in a seamless mix.

                                                                                            Vocals are taken out of their original context and cut & pasted into a new stream of consciousness, forming their own manic hallucinations.

                                                                                            The result is an utterly mesmerising trip that feels like stumbling across a 21st century Detroit pirate radio station in full joyous flow.

                                                                                            ‘Minsky Rock’ is the brainchild of Working Men’s Club frontman Syd Minsky-Sargeant and producer Ross Orton (Arctic Monkeys / M.I.A.). They previously remixed the band’s self-titled debut album.

                                                                                            12” vinyl with etching on Side B.

                                                                                            TRACK LISTING

                                                                                            Minsky Rock Megamix II

                                                                                            Gwenno

                                                                                            Y Dydd Olaf - 2023 Reissue

                                                                                              Y Dydd Olaf', which is sung entirely in Welsh apart from one song penned in Cornish, draws inspiration from Owain Owain's 1976 novel of the same name. The book is set in a dystopian future where robots enslave the human race through the use of medication, while Gwenno's LP covers such themes as patriarchal society, government-funded media propaganda, cultural control, technology, isolation and the importance of minority languages.

                                                                                              TRACK LISTING

                                                                                              1 Chwyldro
                                                                                              2 Patriarchaeth
                                                                                              3 Calon Peiriant
                                                                                              4 Sisial Y Môr
                                                                                              5 Dawns Y BlanedDirion
                                                                                              6 GolauArall
                                                                                              7 Stwff
                                                                                              8 Y Dydd Olaf
                                                                                              9 FratolishHiangPerpeshki
                                                                                              10 Amser

                                                                                              Confidence Man

                                                                                              Tilt

                                                                                                In this world, nothing is certain except taxes, death and Confidence Man. They are unstoppable, unquenchable, undeniable, and if you get in their way, you’re gonna get hurt. Not even a global pandemic could stop Janet, Sugar, Reggie and Clarence from producing an album so fierce, flirty and full of anthems that you might need to sit down before you hit play. Welcome to Tilt, Confidence Man’s second album released on Friday April 1st 2022 on Heavenly Recordings.

                                                                                                Holiday, the first track to be lifted from the album and today premiered with an as you’d expect technicolour video, was an epiphany. All of a sudden it was there and somehow complete from the get go. Conceived in just a 6 hour session and born from a warped mashup of Underworld and MIA, it’s a child so wrong it’s simply perfect. If life gives you lemonade, drink it.

                                                                                                Confidence Man’s debut, Confident Music For Confident People, was one of the joys of 2018, laced with savage lyrics and rapturous melodies; a north star of euphoria in an increasingly joyless world. Since then they’ve teased us with the occasional dance-floor snack, but with their follow up album Tilt they are finally serving us the main meal.

                                                                                                “We’ve been trying for the most epic, hands up, euphoric anthem for a while and this is the first time we’ve come close… Turns out it’s pretty difficult, but nothing’s too hard for con man.” Sugar Bones circa 2021

                                                                                                “No one tells Confidence Man what to do. Who said a Holiday can’t last forever? Spend big and live free, that’s our motto. And it can be yours too. A vacation is just sunburn at premium prices but a holiday is a state of mind.” Janet Planet circa 2021

                                                                                                STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                Barry says: As we see from Confidence Man's newest outing, they've not calmed down any and are still bringing the same level of unfettered optimism and inimitable party spirit. Swimming with influence from dance music over the ages but coming together like a seamless entity in it's own right this is a rightful follow up to one of the best LP's of '18.

                                                                                                TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                1. Woman
                                                                                                2. Feels Like A Different Thing
                                                                                                3. What I Like
                                                                                                4. Toy Boy
                                                                                                5. Luvin U Is Easy
                                                                                                6. Holiday
                                                                                                7. Trumpet Song
                                                                                                8. Angry Girl
                                                                                                9. Push It Up
                                                                                                10. Kiss N Tell
                                                                                                11. Break It Bought It
                                                                                                12. Relieve The Pressure

                                                                                                Baxter Dury

                                                                                                I Thought I Was Better Than You

                                                                                                  Musician, writer and Renaissance man Baxter Dury returns with a brand new album, 'I Thought I Was Better Than You,' his seventh studio album.

                                                                                                  I Thought I Was Better Than You marks a new era for Baxter, and with this new era comes a new character. “Faux-confrontational,” Baxter calls him. Here, not only is he recounting his childhood, but he’s also reckoning with it. Instead of just swinging at his past blindfolded with a baseball bat, he talks openly about the toxic cocktail of being born into unfortunately fortunate circumstances, with a persuasive surname but no structure or sense of responsibility with which reap the rewards of it. “Really, it’s about being trapped in an awkward place between something you’re actually quite good at, and somebody else’s success.” That ‘somebody else’ being his dad, Ian Dury. As one of the album centrepieces – Shadow – agonisingly puts it: “But no one will get over that you’re someone’s son/Even though you want to be like Frank Ocean/But you don’t sound like him, you sound just like Ian.”

                                                                                                  The record also serves as a kind of extension to Baxter’s 2021 book, Chaise Lounge, in which he winningly recounted the story of his unique childhood. Not only does he expand the language of the book, using words to paint disconnected images rather than to string sentences (a kind of cockney hieroglyphics), but he often revisits moments within the book. Characters like ‘Tricksy’ re-appear in ‘Aylesbury Boy’ and ‘Pale White Nissan’, for example, but mainly it’s the abstracted tales of a young Baxter, troubled and in trouble, a victim of circumstance, straddling between a world of ‘Fuck you Leon…/ You stole the sunglasses and I got busted’ and a desire for ‘Porridge in the morning and be normal’.


                                                                                                  STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                  Barry says: I've always had a bit of a soft spot for Baxter Dury, and 'I Thought I Was Better Than You' is a perfect illustration of the off-kilter slam poetry vocals / hazy swimming electronica combo that Dury does so well. Brilliantly inventive and constantly moving forwards, Dury is at the peak of his creativity.

                                                                                                  TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                  1 So Much Money
                                                                                                  2 Aylesbury Boy
                                                                                                  3 Celebrate Me
                                                                                                  4 Leon
                                                                                                  5 Crashes
                                                                                                  6 Sincere
                                                                                                  7 Pale White Nissan
                                                                                                  8 Shadow
                                                                                                  9 Crowded Rooms
                                                                                                  10 Glows

                                                                                                  The Orielles

                                                                                                  The Goyt Method

                                                                                                    The Orielles on The Goyt Method: Our concept for The Goyt Method was birthed from our interest in cybernetics, improvisation and experimental electronic music. We wanted to zoom out of ‘Tableau’ (the band’s third album released in 2022) and disconnect all the pieces, rearranging them in new ways to create variations of songs, which encapsulate the whole record. We left this part of the process completely down to chance, adopting an online roulette wheel to choose our stems. This way of creating music was familiar to us from spending a lot of time remixing and record collecting, gaining an invested interest in deep listening and avant-garde electronic music.

                                                                                                    The name itself comes from the initial location in which we remixed with Joel Patchett, a wintery and freezing cold Goyt Mill. From here, we coined the term ‘Goytism’ or ‘to Goyt’ which was basically our way of describing the process of repurposing and resampling acoustic sounds through digital production, making them unrecognisable from their original source.

                                                                                                    The photograph on the sleeve was taken in winter 2020, our first visit to the Mill studio, our first Goyt session. 


                                                                                                    TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                    Side A:
                                                                                                    1. Tableau 001
                                                                                                    2. Tableau 002
                                                                                                    3. Improvisation 002
                                                                                                    Side B:
                                                                                                    1. Tableau 003
                                                                                                    2. Tableau 004 

                                                                                                    Eyes Of Others

                                                                                                    Eyes Of Others

                                                                                                      Eyes of Others is the studio alias of Edinburgh based John Bryden, a self-christened ‘post-pub couldn’t get in the club’ producer.

                                                                                                      Having announced their signing to Heavenly Recordings last November with the release of a 10” vinyl-only 6-track EP, Bewitched By The Flames, which sold out immediately through independent shops and mail order, Eyes Of Others is now set to present their debut, self-titled album.

                                                                                                      Marrying the anything-goes, freestyle magpie tendencies of Beck and The Beta Band to the electronic stylings of primetime 80s New Order by way of the spacious moods conjured by King Tubby, Eyes of Others debut’s whimsical demeanour is the perfect sonic balm to the utter confusion of the outside world. As is its sense of almost Balearic musical freedom. Such a mindset is fundamental to the music according to Bryden.

                                                                                                      “I was thinking where’s my spot?” Bryden reflects about the pick & mix quality of the album. “The music is later than a gig but it’s not full-on early morning club fare. It’s the in-between space where I was imagining where my music works.”

                                                                                                      But his beguiling tunes are perfect for the music soundtracking the afters too. As the dawn breaks and the sun begins to rise. “Maybe there aren’t enough venues opening at 7am!” he laughs, before quickly adding: “I don’t think it will catch on unfortunately.”

                                                                                                      STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                      Andy says: Eyes of Others is, basically, the musical alias for Edinburgh based artist, John Bryden. Even though it’s on the mighty Heavenly Records, this summer release has remained pretty much under the radar. But, not in our shop it hasn’t! This is a dreamy whimsical, electronic pop record that floats around and drifts all over the musical landscape. Heavenly describe it themselves as “Pure musical freedom” and if you could imagine a sound palette which includes dub, synth, techno and folk then you’d be halfway there. It’s delightfully elusive but Bryden depicts his sound as kind of “later than a gig, but not full-on early morning club fare. It’s the inbetween space.” I’m gonna say, it sounds like the Beta Band jamming with Peaking Lights over The Stone Roses’ “Something’s Burning” around at Arthur Russell’s flat. Have some of that!

                                                                                                      TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                      Once, Twice, Thrice
                                                                                                      Safehouse
                                                                                                      Escalation
                                                                                                      At Home I Am A Leader
                                                                                                      New Hair New Me
                                                                                                      Ego Hit
                                                                                                      Mother Father
                                                                                                      Jargon Jones And Jones
                                                                                                      Come Inside
                                                                                                      Big Companies, Large Tentacles 

                                                                                                      Confidence Man

                                                                                                      RE-TILT EP (RSD23 EDITION)

                                                                                                        THIS IS A RECORD STORE DAY 2023 EXCLUSIVE, LIMITED TO ONE PER PERSON.

                                                                                                        A 7-track digital EP released in the back-end of 2022 is released on a 12" for the first time. Featuring 'TILT' reworks from Tame Impala, CC:DISCO!, X-COAST, Daniel Avery, CHAI and Erol Alkan. 'TILT' is the much-loved and acclaimed second album from Confidence Man which came out on Heavenly Recordings in April 2022. Written and self-produced by the band and mixed by Ewan Pearson (Metronomy, Jagwar Ma, Pet Shop Boys, Jessie Ware), the release of 'RE-TILT' follows the band's sold out 2022 headline tour. Starts and lands in time for the summer festival season. 

                                                                                                        TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                        1.1 Holiday (Tame Impala Remix)
                                                                                                        1.2 Luvin U Is Easy (Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs Remix)
                                                                                                        1.3 Relieve The Pressure (X-COAST Remix)
                                                                                                        1.4 Angry Girl (CHAI Version)
                                                                                                        2.1 Break It Bought It (CC:DISCO! Dub Mix)
                                                                                                        2.2 Feels Like A Different Thing (Daniel Avery Remix)
                                                                                                        2.3 Holiday (Erol Alkan OOO Rework)

                                                                                                        Working Men's Club

                                                                                                        Steel City (EP)

                                                                                                          Working Men’s Club present their Steel City EP, a 5-track release featuring remixes of tracks from their second album, Fear Fear by some of Sheffield’s most innovative producers: Toddla T, Charla Green, Ross Orton, Diessa and Warp originals, Forgemasters.

                                                                                                          Fear Fear was released in July 2022 on Heavenly Recordings, reached #11 in the UK album chart upon release, and saw glowing reviews across Europe and the U.S.

                                                                                                          The EP was previously only available on CD which came exclusively with purchases of the album via Bear Tree record shop in Sheffield. Before the end of 2022, these remixes were made available digitally as part of a deluxe edition of Fear Fear and now, this will be the first time the remixed tracks will be widely available on LP. 


                                                                                                          TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                          Side 1:
                                                                                                          1. Money Is Mine (Toddla T Home Sick Remix)
                                                                                                          2. Fear Fear (Charla Green Remix)
                                                                                                          3. Ploys (Ross Orton Remix)
                                                                                                          Side 2:
                                                                                                          1. Rapture (Diessa Remix)
                                                                                                          2. The Last One (Forgemasters Remix) 

                                                                                                          H. Hawkline

                                                                                                          Milk For Flowers

                                                                                                            Following the 2017 album I Romanticize and 2015's In The Pink of Condition, the album was produced and features musical contributions from long-time collaborator and celebrated solo artist Cate Le Bon. Artwork is designed by H.Hawkline.

                                                                                                            Recorded at Rockfield Studios in Monmouthshire, the album features a host of musical collaborators – Davey Newington [Boy Azooga] on drums, Paul Jones [Group Listening] on piano, Tim Presley [White Fence, DRINKS, The Fall] on guitar, Stephen Black [Sweet Baboo] and Euan Hinshelwood [Younghusband, Cate Le Bon] on sax, Harry Bohay [Aldous Harding] on pedal steel and John Parish [PJ Harvey, Aldous Harding] on infrequent bongo. The record was then engineered by Joe Jones [Aldous Harding, Parquet Courts] and mixed, after an unlikely and fortuitous crossing of paths, by the Grammy-nominated Patrik Berger [Charli XCX, Robyn, Lana Del Rey], and mastered by Heba Kadry [Deerhunter, Cass McCombs, Cate Le Bon].

                                                                                                            Milk for Flowers is at once visceral and enlightened, its soundscapes verdant yet delicately rendered, and with this latest, most intimate work, H. Hawkline beautifully bares his blood, bones and soul. And quietly, along with the entrails and rubble held in Milk For Flowers’ reliquary, there hides a small, green kernel of life; hope, perhaps, that today’s decay might nourish tomorrow’s blooms.

                                                                                                            STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                            Barry says: I lived in Cardiff for some time, and there's something intangible there that makes people *really* good at writing this sort of 60's psych influenced athletic indie-pop, and Huw really makes some of the best out there. It shines with influence from classic rock to lounge and garage and psychedelia influences oozing out of every pore. Loads of melody and groove, but with an indescribable wooze and syncopation to the songwriting, without ever feeling strained. A triumph once again from H. Hawkline.

                                                                                                            TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                            Milk For Flowers
                                                                                                            Plastic Man
                                                                                                            Suppression Street
                                                                                                            I Need Him
                                                                                                            Denver
                                                                                                            Athens At Night
                                                                                                            Like You Do
                                                                                                            It's A Living
                                                                                                            Mostly
                                                                                                            Empty Room

                                                                                                            Unloved

                                                                                                            Polychrome (The Pink Album Postlude)

                                                                                                              Following the release of The Pink Album last Autumn, Unloved return with Polychrome (The Pink Album Postlude). The record starts with a murmur of percussion and a metallic grind, as if the in-house band on a space station were warming up for the last show of the night. As phased vocals zoom through the heart of the track, Polychrome builds and builds to create a swooning hypnosis that’s part Tropicalia, part BBC Radiophonic Workshop and part psilocybin swoosh. Disorientating, strange, compelling, Polychrome is the opener and title track of Unloved’s first album of 2023.

                                                                                                              Over the last few years, Unloved have developed their own uniquely cine literate sound that draws a straight line from the moody, doom obsessed girl group records of the early 1960s to the sonic experiments of electronic pioneers like Delia Derbyshire and Silver Apples via the darkest corners of David Lynch films and the crisp, mono beauty of the French New Wave. Polychrome sees the band take a deeper dive into their world, with eight new tracks recorded at the same time at the band’s recently released third long player, The Pink Album, along with a welcome reappearance of Far From Here, a glorious widescreen tower of sound originally recorded and released as part of the band’s first EP, 2015’s Guilty of Love. 


                                                                                                              TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                              Polychrome
                                                                                                              Thrill Me.
                                                                                                              I Did It.
                                                                                                              Thank You For Being That Friend, You Know, The One You Never Want To Say Goodbye To.
                                                                                                              I Just Stop
                                                                                                              It's Hard To Hold You Close When The World Keeps Turning.
                                                                                                              Only For You.
                                                                                                              Far From Here
                                                                                                              Rain On My Parade 

                                                                                                              Saint Etienne

                                                                                                              Good Humor - 25th Anniversary Edition

                                                                                                                Marking the 25th Anniversary of ‘Good Humor’, Saint Etienne present a special splatter vinyl reissue edition of the eleven-track collection.

                                                                                                                TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                Wood Cabin
                                                                                                                Sylvie
                                                                                                                Split Screen
                                                                                                                Mr. Donut
                                                                                                                Goodnight Jack
                                                                                                                Lose That Girl
                                                                                                                The Bad Photographer
                                                                                                                Been So Long
                                                                                                                Postman
                                                                                                                Erica America
                                                                                                                Dutch TV

                                                                                                                Guts

                                                                                                                Estrellas

                                                                                                                  Under the leadership of acclaimed French beat digger and producer Guts, Dakar became the creative centre of an exceptional encounter between "All Stars" musicians from Cuba, Africa and France: the 'Estrellas' A tribute to Afro-Cuban culture, between new versions of fnely selected songs and original compositions.

                                                                                                                  TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                  1.  El Retorno 
                                                                                                                  2.  Última Llamada Feat. Kumar Sublevao-Beat 
                                                                                                                  3.  San Lázaro Feat. Akemis 
                                                                                                                  4.  Yebo Edi Pachanga Feat. José Padilla 
                                                                                                                  5.  Déjame En Paz Feat. Brenda Navarrete 
                                                                                                                  6.  Oda Feat. Al Quetz 
                                                                                                                  7.  Adduna Jarul Naawo Feat. Alpha Dieng & Assane Mboup 
                                                                                                                  8.  Medewui Feat. Pat Kalla & Assane Mboup 
                                                                                                                  9.  Dakar De Noche Feat. Iss 814, Samba Peuzzi, El Tipo Este & Kumar Sublevao-Beat 
                                                                                                                  10.  Nunca Pierdo Feat. Assane Mboup, Alpha Dieng, Akemis, Pat Kalla & David Walters 
                                                                                                                  11.  Nunca Pierdo Feat. Assane Mboup, Alpha Dieng, Akemis, Pat Kalla & David Walters 
                                                                                                                  12.  Por Qué Ou Ka Fè Sa Feat. Brenda Navarrete & David Walters 
                                                                                                                  13.  Sin Pantallas Feat. Cyril Atef & El Tipo Este 
                                                                                                                  14.  Barrio Feat. Iss 814, Samba Peuzzi, El Tipo Este & Kumar Sublevao-Beat  15.  Dansons Cadencés Feat. Annas G, DjeuhDjoah & Lieutenant Nicholson 
                                                                                                                  16.  Il N'est Jamais Trop Tard Feat. El Gato Negro 
                                                                                                                  17.  Estrellas Feat. Florian Pellissier

                                                                                                                  Various Artists

                                                                                                                  Heavenly Remixes 5&6

                                                                                                                    This compilation follows ‘Heavenly remixes 1 & 2’ and ‘Heavenly remixes 3 & 4 - Andrew Weatherall volume 1&2’.

                                                                                                                    There’s been a lot written about how the Heavenly office is almost a living thing. Time and legend have anthropomorphised it into a towering character in the label’s rich history. Although the five-days-a-week workspace is ostensibly just four sturdy walls, a bunch of furniture, a vivid explosion of framed artwork charting a unique and particular journey through the history of music, multiple stacks of records, a bulging fridge and an overworked stereo, the Heavenly office has ended up becoming less a someplace and almost a someone.

                                                                                                                    The spirit of the office is a restless beast, yet it’s been loyal enough to have faithfully moved (almost) every time the label has relocated. And it’s a spirit that’s been emboldened whenever it has been based in Soho. Whatever the ley lines are that run under that square mile of central London, they seem to electrify the Heavenly office like a National Grid of vibes and volume; strange attractors to the ghosts of Soho’s rock & rollers, ravers, reprobates and roués alike who add a spectral joie de vivre to proceedings.

                                                                                                                    While the Heavenly office itself might be notorious, it’s the music that fills it up in the afterhours that truly gives the place life. While the open door has long offered something akin to a welcoming hug for both regular and first time visitors, it’s the always cranked up sound system that’s the equivalent of a mate leaning into you, guiding you through the peaks and troughs of the music.

                                                                                                                    As with any good party, the office soundtrack evolves track by track like selections from an overheating rebellious jukebox. Any average Monday night (the weekend always starts on Monday, right?) might take in music from the label’s artists that’s just pinged the inbox, freshly minted demos that have piqued curiosity, dusty old 7”s by long gone heroes or white label 12”s with minimal info scratched onto them in felt tip pen. And playing between those tracks, a bunch of secret sounds from the Heavenly vaults; remixes that write a rich, alternate history of Heavenly Recordings.

                                                                                                                    Since the first Heavenly recording, there have been striking remixes that reframe the original track. These remakes offer a parallel reading of the last four decades of releases; they take the music to places where genres can be pulled inside out before being reassembled for different dancefloors, or for a different state of mind.

                                                                                                                    It’s a selection of those secret sounds that make up the latest in this series of flawless compilations. Each presents a parallel reading of the Heavenly Recordings story, a version that’s best heard as the light fades and the furniture gets shoved to one side of the room in decent work places the world over.

                                                                                                                    TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                    Heavenly Remixes 5
                                                                                                                    Holiday (Bruise Remix) - Confidence Man
                                                                                                                    Bobbi’s Second World (Confidence Man Remix) - The Orielles
                                                                                                                    All I Want (Ewan Pearson Dub Remix) - Out Cold
                                                                                                                    Iron Warrior (Raf Rundell Dubwise) - Revival Season
                                                                                                                    The Doll (LCY Remix) - Audiobooks
                                                                                                                    You Don't Get Me (Urban Takeover Remix) - Espiritu 
                                                                                                                    Automatic (Psychemagik Dub Mix) - Mildlife
                                                                                                                    Luxury (Trevor Jackson Reproduction Instrumental) - Raf Rundell Feat. Man & The Echo
                                                                                                                    Teeth (Anthony Naples Remix) - Working Men's Club
                                                                                                                    Chilli (Flying Mojito Bros Refrito Edit) - 77:78
                                                                                                                    Hope Is The Last Thing To Die (Daniel Avery Remix) - David Holmes Feat. Raven Violet
                                                                                                                    Like A Motorway (Chemical Brothers Chekhov Warp Vocal Mix) - Saint Etienne
                                                                                                                    It’s Over If We Run Out Of Love (Darren Emerson Huffa Remix) - David Holmes Feat. Raven Violet

                                                                                                                    Heavenly Remixes 6
                                                                                                                    It’s Too Late To Go To Bed (Confidence Man Remix) - The Parrots
                                                                                                                    Ploys (Erol Alkan Rework) - Working Men’s Club
                                                                                                                    Blow The Whole Joint Up (Let’s Slash The Beats Mix) - Monkey Mafia
                                                                                                                    Cultural Criminal (Raf Rundell’s Salty Man Dub) - Mattiel Feat. Raf Rundell
                                                                                                                    Baby I Wanna Live (Monkey Mafia’s Terminal Mix) - Espiritu
                                                                                                                    LaLaLa It's The Good Life (Herbert’s Vaccine Dub) - audiobooks
                                                                                                                    Luvin U Is Easy (Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs Remix) - Confidence Man
                                                                                                                    Weatherall’s Weekender (Audrey Is A Little Bit Partial Mix) - Flowered Up

                                                                                                                    Various Artists

                                                                                                                    Heavenly Remixes 6

                                                                                                                      There’s been a lot written about how the Heavenly office is almost a living thing. Time and legend have anthropomorphised it into a towering character in the label’s rich history. Although the five-days-a-week workspace is ostensibly just four sturdy walls, a bunch of furniture, a vivid explosion of framed artwork charting a unique and particular journey through the history of music, multiple stacks of records, a bulging fridge and an overworked stereo, the Heavenly office has ended up becoming less a someplace and almost a someone.

                                                                                                                      The spirit of the office is a restless beast, yet it’s been loyal enough to have faithfully moved (almost) every time the label has relocated. And it’s a spirit that’s been emboldened whenever it has been based in Soho. Whatever the ley lines are that run under that square mile of central London, they seem to electrify the Heavenly office like a National Grid of vibes and volume; strange attractors to the ghosts of Soho’s rock & rollers, ravers, reprobates and roués alike who add a spectral joie de vivre to proceedings.

                                                                                                                      While the Heavenly office itself might be notorious, it’s the music that fills it up in the afterhours that truly gives the place life. While the open door has long offered something akin to a welcoming hug for both regular and first time visitors, it’s the always cranked up sound system that’s the equivalent of a mate leaning into you, guiding you through the peaks and troughs of the music.

                                                                                                                      As with any good party, the office soundtrack evolves track by track like selections from an overheating rebellious jukebox. Any average Monday night (the weekend always starts on Monday, right?) might take in music from the label’s artists that’s just pinged the inbox, freshly minted demos that have piqued curiosity, dusty old 7”s by long gone heroes or white label 12”s with minimal info scratched onto them in felt tip pen. And playing between those tracks, a bunch of secret sounds from the Heavenly vaults; remixes that write a rich, alternate history of Heavenly Recordings.

                                                                                                                      Since the first Heavenly recording, there have been striking remixes that reframe the original track. These remakes offer a parallel reading of the last four decades of releases; they take the music to places where genres can be pulled inside out before being reassembled for different dancefloors, or for a different state of mind.

                                                                                                                      It’s a selection of those secret sounds that make up the latest in this series of flawless compilations. Each presents a parallel reading of the Heavenly Recordings story, a version that’s best heard as the light fades and the furniture gets shoved to one side of the room in decent work places the world over.

                                                                                                                      TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                      It’s Too Late To Go To Bed (Confidence Man Remix) - The Parrots
                                                                                                                      Ploys (Erol Alkan Rework) - Working Men’s Club
                                                                                                                      Blow The Whole Joint Up (Let’s Slash The Beats Mix) - Monkey Mafia
                                                                                                                      Cultural Criminal (Raf Rundell’s Salty Man Dub) - Mattiel Feat. Raf Rundell
                                                                                                                      Baby I Wanna Live (Monkey Mafia’s Terminal Mix) - Espiritu
                                                                                                                      LaLaLa It's The Good Life (Herbert’s Vaccine Dub) - Audiobooks
                                                                                                                      Luvin U Is Easy (Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs Remix) - Confidence Man
                                                                                                                      Weatherall’s Weekender (Audrey Is A Little Bit Partial Mix) - Flowered Up

                                                                                                                      Various Artists

                                                                                                                      Heavenly Remixes 5

                                                                                                                        There’s been a lot written about how the Heavenly office is almost a living thing. Time and legend have anthropomorphised it into a towering character in the label’s rich history. Although the five-days-a-week workspace is ostensibly just four sturdy walls, a bunch of furniture, a vivid explosion of framed artwork charting a unique and particular journey through the history of music, multiple stacks of records, a bulging fridge and an overworked stereo, the Heavenly office has ended up becoming less a someplace and almost a someone.

                                                                                                                        The spirit of the office is a restless beast, yet it’s been loyal enough to have faithfully moved (almost) every time the label has relocated. And it’s a spirit that’s been emboldened whenever it has been based in Soho. Whatever the ley lines are that run under that square mile of central London, they seem to electrify the Heavenly office like a National Grid of vibes and volume; strange attractors to the ghosts of Soho’s rock & rollers, ravers, reprobates and roués alike who add a spectral joie de vivre to proceedings.

                                                                                                                        While the Heavenly office itself might be notorious, it’s the music that fills it up in the afterhours that truly gives the place life. While the open door has long offered something akin to a welcoming hug for both regular and first time visitors, it’s the always cranked up sound system that’s the equivalent of a mate leaning into you, guiding you through the peaks and troughs of the music.

                                                                                                                        As with any good party, the office soundtrack evolves track by track like selections from an overheating rebellious jukebox. Any average Monday night (the weekend always starts on Monday, right?) might take in music from the label’s artists that’s just pinged the inbox, freshly minted demos that have piqued curiosity, dusty old 7”s by long gone heroes or white label 12”s with minimal info scratched onto them in felt tip pen. And playing between those tracks, a bunch of secret sounds from the Heavenly vaults; remixes that write a rich, alternate history of Heavenly Recordings.

                                                                                                                        Since the first Heavenly recording, there have been striking remixes that reframe the original track. These remakes offer a parallel reading of the last four decades of releases; they take the music to places where genres can be pulled inside out before being reassembled for different dancefloors, or for a different state of mind.

                                                                                                                        It’s a selection of those secret sounds that make up the latest in this series of flawless compilations. Each presents a parallel reading of the Heavenly Recordings story, a version that’s best heard as the light fades and the furniture gets shoved to one side of the room in decent work places the world over.

                                                                                                                        TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                        Holiday (Bruise Remix) - Confidence Man
                                                                                                                        Bobbi’s Second World (Confidence Man Remix) - The Orielles
                                                                                                                        All I Want (Ewan Pearson Dub Remix) - Out Cold
                                                                                                                        Iron Warrior (Raf Rundell Dubwise) - Revival Season 
                                                                                                                        The Doll (LCY Remix) - Audiobooks
                                                                                                                        You Don't Get Me (Urban Takeover Remix) - Espiritu
                                                                                                                        Automatic (Psychemagik Dub Mix) - Mildlife
                                                                                                                        Luxury (Trevor Jackson Reproduction Instrumental) - Raf Rundell Feat. Man & The Echo
                                                                                                                        Teeth (Anthony Naples Remix) - Working Men's Club
                                                                                                                        Chilli (Flying Mojito Bros Refrito Edit) - 77:78
                                                                                                                        Hope Is The Last Thing To Die (Daniel Avery Remix) - David Holmes Feat. Raven Violet
                                                                                                                        Like A Motorway (Chemical Brothers Chekhov Warp Vocal Mix) - Saint Etienne
                                                                                                                        It’s Over If We Run Out Of Love (Darren Emerson Huffa Remix) - David Holmes Feat. Raven Violet

                                                                                                                        "The Pink Album", is dawn and dusk, the epic and the intimate. This 22-track double album, its title inspired by the artwork of Julian House, features collaborations with Jarvis Cocker, Étienne Daho, Raven Violet and Jon Spencer. It has its modulations: shocking at times but signifying also tenderness, intimacy, the carnal. It knows the shades of love, its nuances, and how it can be delicious - and frightening. Marvellous - and aching. Rather than be the silver lining to the cloud, "The Pink Album" mines deeper, to a precious ore, dark and glittering.

                                                                                                                        Unloved: Jade Vincent, Keefus Ciancia, David Holmes. In Los Angeles, Ciancia - producer, keyboardist & creator of soundtracks - met David Holmes, the innovative, inquisitive and ingenious Belfast DJ who recast himself as master of song and image for film and television. Ciancia invited Holmes to the Rotary Room in Los Feliz, where the extraordinary Jade Vincent was singing.

                                                                                                                        Tuesday nights in the Rotary Room in Los Feliz: a place of thrilling sonic alchemy, where musicians could experiment and collaborate at Ciancia and Vincent’s long-running salon. Holmes was asked to DJ and then to curate another night – and then another.

                                                                                                                        Nights bled into later nights. Conversation spun into collaboration. These three artists, kindred spirits, sonic familiars, spoke the same language, one whose lexicon included Jack Nitzsche, Morricone, Nino Rota, the electronic sounds of Raymond Scott, the vocabulary of vocal instrumentalists and fearless raconteurs, Edda Dell’Orso, Ruth White, Françoise Hardy, Connie Francis, Brigitte Fontaine, Jacques Brel, Elvis and Lee Hazlewood. Finding sound and programmed beats, Keefus and David excavated and innovated, experimented and re-interpreted, creating a landscape for Jade’s melodies and lyrics, for sublime songs of lament and confession. The legendary Hollywood Vox Studios was where the Unloved trio formally came together as a band, in a studio almost original to its 1936 incarnation.

                                                                                                                        Unloved’s immersive power and playful menace has fitted the slippery thriller series Killing Eve like a velvet glove, the thread to the needle. The music and sound of Unloved plays an integral role as their music is the soundtrack, the score, one of the core characters unseen.

                                                                                                                        And now, in 2022, it’s the magnificent, metaphysical "The Pink Album". Be seduced by the whispered, languorous, bluesy, not so sweet nothings of “Love Experiment” and the lippy insouciance of “Turn Of The Screw”. Thrill to the infinite variety: “Mother’s Been A Bad Girl” is brazen, and “I Don’t Like You Anymore” gloriously sultry. “Foolin’”, where languid, world-weary jazz sounds are skewed by a phantasmagoric organ from a funfair hallucinated, and there’s the sparkling fury and celestial chorus of “Rainbrose”, as though some flower-festooned goddess is emerging.

                                                                                                                        Go from the jaunty keyboards and hey! hey! hey! of “WTC” to the melancholic poise of “Ever”, the jittery electropop of “Girl Can’t Help It”, to the spacious Morricone-tinged “Lucky”. Be reminded that the past is a snare, the future doesn’t care. All we have is Now. There is psychedelic world-warping sound, but also times when reality is acutely, achingly, present. “Number In My Phone” is a beautiful, wistful paean to those no longer here. Jade’s remarkable voice - whispering, icy, lush, wounded, smoky - unifies the album with its striking diversity.

                                                                                                                        Unvarnished, unabashed, unbridled, uncensored: rising from the ashes, this is raw emotion transmogrified. This is experimental free-flow form, from instrumental arrangement to voice. It’s Man, Woman, Human, Love and Death.

                                                                                                                        TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                        01. Rainbrose
                                                                                                                        02. Waiting For Tomorrow
                                                                                                                        03. Now
                                                                                                                        04. Girl Can't Help It
                                                                                                                        05. I Don’t Like You Anymore
                                                                                                                        06. Foolin'
                                                                                                                        07. Mother’s Been A Bad Girl
                                                                                                                        08. Boowaah
                                                                                                                        09. Lucky
                                                                                                                        10. WTC
                                                                                                                        11. Sorry, Baby
                                                                                                                        12. Number In My Phone
                                                                                                                        13. Call Me When You Have A Clue
                                                                                                                        14. No Substance
                                                                                                                        15. Love Experiment
                                                                                                                        16. Turn Of The Screw
                                                                                                                        17. To The Day I Die
                                                                                                                        18. Walk On, Yeah
                                                                                                                        19. Accountable
                                                                                                                        20. There’s No Way
                                                                                                                        21. Ever
                                                                                                                        22. Thinkin' About Her

                                                                                                                        Eyes Of Others

                                                                                                                        Bewitched By The Flames - Blue Ink Edition

                                                                                                                          Eyes of Others - have been described as making ‘post-pub couldn’t get in the club music’. Really though, you’ll recognise it as the sound of the small hours.

                                                                                                                          It’s The Blue Nile lost on the dancefloor at an Optimo night; John Martyn working magic with drum loops and Logic; a copy of the first Suicide LP washed up on the shores of Portobello Beach. It’s drawn curtains and an overheating stereo in your friend’s living room after the rest of town has called it a night, it’s hours spent watching the windows before sunrise in a slumbering city.

                                                                                                                          Bewitched by the Flames is a very limited vinyl only EP of home recordings. The songs are intimate, compelling and strange - electronic yet completely human, stories of everyday life set to woozy, lolloping rhythm tracks.

                                                                                                                          STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                          Laura says: Dreamy hypnotic grooves - like a slow-mo Beta Band or early Panda Bear - perfect late night / early hours listening. We really love this here at Piccadilly!

                                                                                                                          TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                          1. Once, Twice, Thrice
                                                                                                                          2. Escalation
                                                                                                                          3. Well-thumbed Letters
                                                                                                                          4. Jargon Jones And Jones
                                                                                                                          5. Granny
                                                                                                                          6. Mother Father

                                                                                                                          The Orielles

                                                                                                                          Tableau

                                                                                                                            The Orielles have created their first genuinely contemporary record – an experimental double album self-produced in collaboration with producer Joel Anthony Patchett (King Krule, Tim Burgess). In doing so, the Orielles have utilised holistic jazz practices, oblique 21st century electronica, experimental 1960s tape loop methods, otherworldly AutoTuned vocal sounds, the downer dub of Burial, Sonic Youth’s focus on improvisation and feedback, and Brian Eno’s legendary Oblique Strategy cards.

                                                                                                                            TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                            Chromo I
                                                                                                                            Chromo II
                                                                                                                            Airtight
                                                                                                                            The Instrument
                                                                                                                            The Improvisation 001
                                                                                                                            Television
                                                                                                                            Some Day Later
                                                                                                                            Darkened Corners
                                                                                                                            Honfleur Remembered
                                                                                                                            Beam/s
                                                                                                                            To Offer, To Erase
                                                                                                                            The Room
                                                                                                                            By Its Light
                                                                                                                            Transmission
                                                                                                                            Drawn And Defined
                                                                                                                            Stones

                                                                                                                            Nada Surf

                                                                                                                            Let Go - 20th Anniversary Edition

                                                                                                                              Heavenly Recordings release a 20th anniversary vinyl of Nada Surf’s classic album Let Go. This is the first time Let Go has appeared on Heavenly vinyl.

                                                                                                                              Let Go was the third album by the New York trio Nada Surf (Matthew Caws, Daniel Lorca, Ira Eliot). By the time it was released on Heavenly in the summer of 2002, the band had already witnessed a good deal of the highs and lows of the music industry, having had a breakout MTV hit before being dropped by their US label and having to go back to 9 to 5 jobs. Sessions were entirely self-funded, with the band paying the producers in dollar bills earned from the merch table at their shows.

                                                                                                                              When a cassette of the album initially arrived at Heavenly, it was with no preconceptions, just a “you’ll like this” nod from a mutual friend. And they were right. Let Go is a power pop masterpiece - all soaring melody and closing time melancholy. It quickly became the soundtrack to day and night in the office and on release picked up glowing reviews from Q (“melodic… mature… intelligent… wistful” 4*), Rolling Stone ("Nada Surf show enough smarts and panache to leave most of their Nineties-rock peers eating hot dust” 4*) and Entertainment Weekly (“a comeback effort that grows more popular with each spin”).

                                                                                                                              Twenty years on, Let Go is getting its first ever vinyl release on Heavenly. This new cut reinstates the UK tracklisting over four sides of vinyl (previous pressings were over three sides with one side left blank - us neither).

                                                                                                                              TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                              A1 Blizzard Of ’77
                                                                                                                              A2 The Way You Wear Your Head
                                                                                                                              A3 Fruit Fly
                                                                                                                              B1 Blonde On Blonde
                                                                                                                              B2 Inside Of Love
                                                                                                                              B3 Hi-Speed Soul
                                                                                                                              C1 No Quick Fix
                                                                                                                              C2 Killian’s Red
                                                                                                                              C3 Là Pour Ça
                                                                                                                              D1 Happy Kid
                                                                                                                              D2 Treading Water
                                                                                                                              D3 Paper Boats 

                                                                                                                              Cherry Ghost

                                                                                                                              Thirst For Romance - 2022 Reissue

                                                                                                                                Heavenly Recordings release a vinyl repressing of Cherry Ghost’s classic debut Thirst For Romance. This is the first time this album has been pressed on vinyl since its release fifteen years ago when a very small number of double vinyl sets were manufactured.

                                                                                                                                When Thirst For Romance (Simon Aldred’s debut album as Cherry Ghost) arrived in July 2007, it sounded out of step with so much of its musical surroundings - a world of X Factor winners and Favourite Worst Nightmares; Umbrellas and In Rainbows.

                                                                                                                                Simon’s album came from a different place to everything else - it was a soul record, in so much as it was from the soul, and about the human soul. And it was a proudly Northern record - a fact celebrated in the sound of Simon’s voice and the people and places that populated his songs. While the music might have evoked glorious vistas and wide open spaces, the view here was very much the post-industrial North. Fifteen years after its release, Thirst For Romance musically sounds out of time, while Simon’s lyrics resonate more deeply now more than ever.

                                                                                                                                Thirst For Romance was co-produced by Simon Aldred and Dan Austin. The album’s glorious breakout track People Help The People - a prescient call for hope and empathy - gained a second life when covered by the artist Birdy. Doves frontman Jimi Goodwin plays drums on Mathematics and People Help The People.

                                                                                                                                Jeff Barrett on Cherry Ghost: “I saw Simon playing live and I loved it. I really loved it. It pushed all my Southern Soul buttons but it was coming via Bolton. He was singing blue collar love songs really in a similar way to how someone like Dan Penn sang them about the south. He was just singing about the north of England and painting these great pictures of Northern working class life and delivering them with this brilliant voice. After the show I hogged him, I didn’t want to let him out of my sight.”

                                                                                                                                Simon Aldred on Thirst For Romance: When I was writing the songs that became Thirst For Romance, I was very introspective, and finding Manchester claustrophobic. The light, the slate grey skies… it felt like there was a lid on it. And on me. The scope of the music I was writing made it easier for me to breathe. It allowed me to stretch my imagination and reach for something more.

                                                                                                                                TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                A1 Thirst For Romance
                                                                                                                                A2 4am
                                                                                                                                A3 Mountain Bird
                                                                                                                                B1 People Help The People
                                                                                                                                B2 Roses
                                                                                                                                B3 Dead Man’s Suit
                                                                                                                                C1 Alfred The Great
                                                                                                                                C2 Here Come The Romans
                                                                                                                                C3 False Alarm
                                                                                                                                D1 Mary On The Mend
                                                                                                                                D2 Mathematics

                                                                                                                                Working Men's Club

                                                                                                                                Fear Fear

                                                                                                                                  Songs created in the shadow of terror and loss, but that crackle and pop with defiance Fear Fear is a record made for agitating and dancing, for heart and soul, for here, now and tomorrow. It’s a record that explores juxtaposition; that of life and death, acceptance and isolation, environment and humanity, hope and despair, the real world and the digital world. That top to bottom rigour, the complete vision is what makes the second album from Working Men’s Club such a stunning and unique achievement.

                                                                                                                                  Their critically acclaimed self-titled debut album, released in summer 2020, was the sound of singer and songwriter Syd Minsky-Sargeant processing a teenage life in Todmorden in the Upper Calder Valley. He was 16 when he wrote some of those songs, now 20, he had to get up and out of the Valley. “The first album was mostly a personal documentation lyrically, this is a blur between personal and a third-person perspective of what was going on.” Fear Fear documents the last two years. Yes, there is bleakness – but there is also hope and empathy. “I like the contrast of it being happy, uplifting music and really dark lyrics. It’s not a minimal record, certainly compared to the first one. That’s because there’s been a lot more going on that needed to be said.”

                                                                                                                                  Making the busy feel finessed and the dreadful feel magical – Fear Fear manages those feats, and then some. Or, as Syd Minksy-Sargeant puts it: “We just set out to make the best-sounding album we could.”

                                                                                                                                  Fear Fear was produced by Ross Orton (Arctic Monkeys, MIA, Tricky) and recorded at Orton’s studio in Sheffield.

                                                                                                                                  STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                  Barry says: Working Men's Club return for one of the most anticipated follow-up LP's around. This time sees them treading similar ground to the post-punk indebted debut debut, but imbued with a more dancefloor friendly groove. It's a heady mix, and one that stands as the perfect follow-up for a band at the peak of their game.

                                                                                                                                  TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                  1 19
                                                                                                                                  2 Fear Fear
                                                                                                                                  3 Widow
                                                                                                                                  4 Ploys
                                                                                                                                  5 Cut
                                                                                                                                  6 Rapture
                                                                                                                                  7 Circumference
                                                                                                                                  8 Heart Attack
                                                                                                                                  9 Money Is Mine
                                                                                                                                  10 The Last One


                                                                                                                                  Katy J Pearson

                                                                                                                                  Sound Of The Morning

                                                                                                                                    Katy J Pearson would like you to know that she is not a country singer. Sure, there was an influence of the genre to the now - 26 - year - old’s celebrated debut ‘Return’ - an album that saw Pearson snowball from Bristolian newcomer to a critically - acclaimed bre akthrough star, selling out shows up and down the UK - but there’s also much, much more to her magnetic blend of soaring, widescreen melodies and warm, intimate storytelling than just three chords and the truth.

                                                                                                                                    “There was one music video [for ‘Tonight’] that I did in the beginning where I line - danced and was wearing rhinestones, and from there it just turned it into this real thing,” she laughs. “Every review would be ‘country - tinged’ whereas actually, there was literally one country song on the record re ally. But I think that’s what’s good about the new record, that I think it’s not what people will expect from me. When people ask me what the new album sounds like, it’s just... a bit different?!”

                                                                                                                                    Happy to wax lyrical about the relative merits of Townes Van Zandt, Elton John and Fugazi within the same breath, there’s always been a lot going on in Pearson’s musical palette (FYI she’d call her debut more of a folk - rock LP, if anything). But though the critics might have skewed the specifics of ‘Return’ - relea sed via Heavenly Records in November 2020 - the acclaim for the album still came pouring in. Having had a previous taste of the industry via a major label project that quickly turned sour, the difference this time around was tangible: praised for “ the arre sting quality of [her] Kate Bush - meets - Dolly Parton vocal delivery” by The Times, labelled as “finding humanity in every moment” by DIY and with lead single ‘Take Back The Radio’ described as “a whoop of pure joy” in the Guardian, amidst the bleak toll of lockdown, something about this curiously optimistic album began to really resonate. “ It was terrifying getting to the point of releasing a debut after making music for eight years, like woah!” she says with an exaggerated grimace (random noises and excita ble gestures are par - for - the - course in a Pearson anecdote).

                                                                                                                                    “But weirdly it feels like it couldn’t have come out at any other time. It felt like everything people were saying to me [during lockdown] was everything that I’d been feeling when I wrote that al bum; it was a very personal album for me, and it was released at a time when a lot of people were in their house, feeling isolated. It was the antidote to a lot of peoples’ lives.” It feels fitting then that, having provided an aural balm at just the righ t moment with her first album, its follow - up should reflect a world brimming with curiosity, back in action and wanting to expand its horizons.

                                                                                                                                    If Pearson’s extracurricular activities in recent months have shown that she can dip a toe into a multitude of g enres - providing guest vocals on Orlando Weeks’ recent album ‘Hop Up’; popping up with Yard Act for a collaboration at End of the Road festival; singing on trad - folk collective Broadside Hacks’ 2021 project ‘Songs Without Authors’ - then forthcoming secon d album ‘Sound of the Morning’ takes that spirit and runs with it. It’s still Katy J Pearson (read: effortlessly charming, full of heart and helmed by that inimitable vocal), but it’s Katy J Pearson pushing herself musically and lyrically into new waters. Written and recorded in late 2021 after a self - prescribed period of down time spent walking, going on daily cold water swims and “just chillaxing massively”, even the credits on ‘Sound of the Morning’ profess a new thirst for experimentation from the sin ger. Joining ‘Return’ producer Ali Chant on desk duties this time was Speedy Wunderground head honcho Dan Carey, who worked with Pearson on some of the album’s grittier tracks. “Dan got a completely different structural, songwriting style out of me which i s what I wanted: something a bit more confident and in your face,” she nods. “He could see that there was a part of me that wanted to branch out, I just didn’t know where and how far to push it, but it was exactly the kind of progression I was looking for. ”

                                                                                                                                    STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                    Barry says: While Pearson's voice may draw comparisons to much beloved country singers (understandably), it's in her clever songwriting that her latest outing really shines. There are more woozy, airy moments of jangling indie amongst the heavier progressions and orchestrally intricate compositions, lurching between ideas seamlessly and without losing the melodic thread. Another brilliant success for Katy J Pearson.

                                                                                                                                    TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                    1. Sound Of The Morning
                                                                                                                                    2. Talk Over Town
                                                                                                                                    3. Riverbed
                                                                                                                                    4. Howl
                                                                                                                                    5. Confession
                                                                                                                                    6. The Hour
                                                                                                                                    7. Float
                                                                                                                                    8. Alligator
                                                                                                                                    9. Game Of Cards
                                                                                                                                    10. Storm To Pass
                                                                                                                                    11. Willow’s Song

                                                                                                                                    Gwenno

                                                                                                                                    Tresor

                                                                                                                                      Tresor (Treasure) is Gwenno Saunders’ third full length solo album and the second almost entirely in Cornish (Kernewek). Written in St. Ives, Cornwall, just prior to the Covid lockdowns of 2020 and completed at home in Cardiff during the pandemic along with her co-producer and musical collaborator, Rhys Edwards, Tresor reveals an introspective focus on home and self, a prescient work echoing the isolation and retreat that has been a central, global shared experience over the past two years.

                                                                                                                                      Tresor diverges from the stark themes of technological alienation in Y Dydd Olaf (The Final Day) and the meditations on the idea of the homeland on the slyly infectious Le Kov (The Place of Memory). Accessible and international in outlook, peppered with moments of offbeat humour, Le Kov presented Cornish to the world. The impact of Le Kov was resounding, providing for the Cornish language an unprecedented international platform that saw Gwenno touring and headlining in Europe and Australia, and supporting acts such as Suede and the Manic Street Preachers. Her performance of ‘Tir ha Mor’ on Later with Jools Hollandwas a triumph, and the album prompted wider conversations on the state of the Cornish language with Michael Portillo, Jon Snow, and Nina Nannar. After Le Kov, interest in learning Cornish hit an all-time high, and the cultural role of the language was firmly in the spotlight.

                                                                                                                                      On Tresor, Gwenno shifts focus from the external to the internal, and onto the journey of rediscovering oneself after the life-changing experience of becoming a mother. It is an exploration of desire, of reclaiming one's body after childbirth, of working out how to exist as yourself as well as caring first and foremost for somebody else. Inspired by powerful woman writers and artists such as Ithell Colquhoun, the Cornish language poet Phoebe Proctor, Maya Deren and Monica Sjöö, Tresor is an intimate view of the feminine interior experience, of domesticity and desire, a rare glimmer of life lived in and expressed through Cornish. Tresor evokes the waters that shape the Cornish experience, whilst being musically far reaching with influences spanning from Ryuichi Sakamoto to Eden Ahbez and William Basinski. As psychedelically tinged as her previous work, Tresor embeds found sounds ranging from Venice to Vienna, layering cultural and historical atmospheres, decoupling the use of Cornish from any geographic determinism, allowing for an expression of imaginative spaces that are truly free.

                                                                                                                                      It recalls the waters of the unconscious, the undulating elemental tides suggesting emotion, intuition, those features long associated with the archetypal anima. In “Anima” Gwenno asks how do we fully inhabit different parts of the self, acknowledging convergent cultural and personal histories, embracing the shadow. She explores how the power of the feminine voice inspired by the Cornish landscape asserts itself in presenting a richly melodic counterpoint to a place and people known for rugged survival and jagged edges. The title track “Tresor” (Treasure) confronts the contradictions that come with visibility as a woman and the challenges of wielding women’s power. “Tonnow” (Waves) shows the watery depths of woman’s desire and knowing, an invitation to liberation. The Welsh language track, “NY.C.A.W.” (Nid yw Cymru ar Werth - Wales is not for Sale) widens the frame outward from the personal to the collective, condemning our neoliberalist thinking and our growing passiveness to late capitalism. The album also includes the track “Kan Me” (May Song), written for “Bait” director Mark Jenkin’s new film “Enys Men”, which is scheduled for release this summer.

                                                                                                                                      Tresor the film, is inspired by surrealist filmmakers such as Sergei Parajanov, Agnes Varda, and Alejandro Jodorowsky, and reflects Gwenno’s growing interest in film and the intersection of music with visual components. Filmed in Wales and Cornwall, Tresor evokes a dreamworld from another time, surreal, and sensual, saturated with light and colour.

                                                                                                                                      Although Tresor is a project birthed from introspection and intimacy, the implications of the messages are much broader. Ultimately Gwenno is asking what are other ways of understanding and being in relation to one's self and to one another? What are our roles in both shaping and being shaped by the cultures we move in, in a world that is ever changing, and where we all have a place? Tresor does not provide easy answers, for Gwenno shows us that we exist in paradox, our threads of place and story entwined like knotwork, our many selves shining as beautiful entanglements.

                                                                                                                                      STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                      Andy says: Gwenno's third album and second sung entirely in Cornish is her most mesmerising and hypnotic offering yet. Almost glacial and thoroughly other-worldly, this LP casts its magic spell from the first track to the last. It's so beautiful.

                                                                                                                                      TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                      1. An Stevel Nowydh
                                                                                                                                      2. Anima
                                                                                                                                      3. Tresor
                                                                                                                                      4. N.Y.C.A.W
                                                                                                                                      5. Men An Toll
                                                                                                                                      6. Ardamm
                                                                                                                                      7. Kan Me
                                                                                                                                      8. Keltek
                                                                                                                                      9. Tonnow
                                                                                                                                      10. Porth La

                                                                                                                                      The Sand Band

                                                                                                                                      All Through The Night - Love Record Stores 2021 Edition

                                                                                                                                        Love Record Stores Edition, limited to one per person.


                                                                                                                                        Heavenly Recordings reissue of this hidden gem from Liverpool duo The Sand Band. Originally released in 2011 on Deltasonic, it's a collection of beautifully textured home studio recordings. Wonderful, warm, melodic songs for fans of Michael Head, Shack, The Coral.

                                                                                                                                        Rolling in on an unbreakable motorik groove, The Parrots second album - Dos - starts very much on the front foot. You Work All Day And Then You Die is a bold statement of intent, a signpost at the side of the road that tells you straight about the futility of our modern lives spent chained to the work station. As the chant-along chorus goes, “It’s hard to find some peace of mind” - a line that feels like a reaction to the last year and half on planet Earth.

                                                                                                                                        From You Work All Day And Then You Die’s relentless pulse to closer Romance’s end of the night celebration of friendship and survival, Dos is an all consuming, life-affirming joyous noise. Where The Parrots debut - Los Niños Sin Miedo - howled and rattled like the garage bands that had inspired them in their formative years in Madrid, Dos was conceived by Diego Garcia (guitar, vocals) and Alex de Lucas (bass) as a chance to showcase their wider ambitions. That desire to expand the band’s sound led them to working with producer Tom Furse from The Horrors.

                                                                                                                                        Fans of The Parrots previous records and their life-enhancing live shows needn’t worry that things have changed too much. Dos is still very much a garage rock record, only one now painted in brighter, bolder, more psychedelic colours. Just Hold On is a summery late ’60s West Coast stomp while Nadie Dijo Que Fuera Fácil (translation - Nobody Said It Would Be Easy) and Amigos recall modern psychedelic voyagers such as Spacemen 3 and Super Furry Animals - bands who effortlessly combined drones with celestial melody. Elsewhere, It’s Too Late To Go To Bed sounds like something released on Ze Records in the early ’80s. When you spend some time with Dos - the riotous and addictive second Parrots album - you’ll realise it’d be wise not to wear your best clothes the next time they roll in to town as you’ll invariably be going home drenched, ecstatic and covered in footprints. Bring it on.

                                                                                                                                        The Parrots talk about the new record by saying: “Most of the album was recorded in Wilton Way Studios in Hackney in periods between summer 2019 and the start of 2020. Because of lockdown, it ended up getting finished in Madrid with Harto Rodriguez. Recording at home was really nice because it meant we could call on some of our very talented friends to join us in the studio. Most of the record was written before the lockdown but that unexpected pause in all of our lives made us rethink some of it and finish bits off in a different way. Also, when we knew we couldn’t go back to London to finish it, we decided to invite a lot of our friends back home to the studio. That made recording feel almost like a celebration. Everyone we knew was fine; even with the global pause we could still find the bright spots and stay together.”

                                                                                                                                        “Even though garage rock is kind of the core of all our influences, in the last few years we’ve been listening to lots of stuff that we’d kind of relegated to a second position. We rediscovered a lot of artists that we listened back when we first fell in love with music - bands like LCD Soundsystem and Gang of Four, lots of mutant disco. Tom really helped us there, he made sense out of the chaotic mashup of influences that we brought into the studio. And because we’ve always loved hip hop, we followed a different approach to putting songs together, using samples and sampling ourselves a lot. Beastie Boys, ESG, Devo, Los Zombies (the Spanish band) were all a very big influence on the tone of the record. Also the Spanish music scene has been changing a lot in the last years and listening to a lot of new Spanish artists has helped us break down some walls and made us create music in a more free way.”

                                                                                                                                        ‘Dos’ is the follow up to the Madrid duo’s (Diego García & Alex de Lucas) acclaimed 2016 debut ‘Los Niños Sin Miedo’ and shows the band taking an evolutionary step that finds them sounding stronger and more realized than ever before, from their original characteristics of stripped-down melodic garage rock to a fresh sonic perspective. Produced by Tom Furse (The Horrors) and mixed by Claudius Mittendorfer (Parquet Courts, Weezer, Panic! At The Disco, Temples), the Parrots find themselves experimenting with more modern production soundscapes and electronic grooves.


                                                                                                                                        STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                        Barry says: Undeniably a garage record, but imbued with the spirit of myriad influences including synth, disco and good ol' psych The Parrots' new record is both wonderfully effervescent and surprisingly jubilant. Lurching from droning, muddy groove to razor-sharp melodicism in the blink of an eye.

                                                                                                                                        TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                        1. You Work All Day And Then You Die
                                                                                                                                        2. Just Hold On
                                                                                                                                        3. Maldito (feat C. Tangana)
                                                                                                                                        4. Lo Dejaría Todo
                                                                                                                                        5. Don’t Cry
                                                                                                                                        6. It's Too Late To Go To Bed
                                                                                                                                        7. Nadie Dijo Que Fuera Fácil
                                                                                                                                        8. Fuego
                                                                                                                                        9. Amigos
                                                                                                                                        10. How Not To Be Seen
                                                                                                                                        11. Romance (feat Los Nastys)

                                                                                                                                        Baxter Dury

                                                                                                                                        Mr Maserati - Best Of Baxter Dury 2001 - 2021

                                                                                                                                        Mr Maserati showcases two decades of Baxter Dury’s idiosyncratically louche music, a universe of late-night London meet-ups, shuffling basslines and comedown disco tunes, all run through with a wry bleakness and sweet love of humanity. Mr Maserati collects tracks from across Dury’s six albums, plus a new song D.O.A.

                                                                                                                                        Baxter Dury on new track: “It’s a kind of provincial nod to the music I got into during lockdown because my son Kosmo was playing it – Frank Ocean, Tyler the Creator and Kendrick Lamar. I became obsessed. They’re embracing everything – sexuality, politics, all of it – and I find that inspiring”

                                                                                                                                        STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                        Barry says: Not a week goes by where we don't get asked for a Baxter Dury record so it's with some relief that I see this collection is finally hitting the shelves. Some of the greatest riffs, most distinctive vocals and beautifully rich songwriting make Dury and this collection in particular a no-brainer.

                                                                                                                                        TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                        Side A:
                                                                                                                                        1 Miami
                                                                                                                                        2 I'm Not Your Dog
                                                                                                                                        3 Leak At The Disco
                                                                                                                                        4 Cocaine Man
                                                                                                                                        5 Palm Trees
                                                                                                                                        6 Oi
                                                                                                                                        Side B:
                                                                                                                                        1 Oscar Brown
                                                                                                                                        2 Claire
                                                                                                                                        3 Other Men's Girls
                                                                                                                                        4 Carla's Got A Boyfriend
                                                                                                                                        5 Prince Of Tears
                                                                                                                                        6 D.O.A.

                                                                                                                                        Katy J Pearson

                                                                                                                                        Waiting For The Day (RSD22 EDITION)

                                                                                                                                          THIS IS A RECORD STORE DAY 2022 EXCLUSIVE, LIMITED TO ONE PER PERSON.

                                                                                                                                          Over lockdown I was trying to figure out something I could do music-wise that would be fun and interesting. My friend Joe Jones who is a recording engineer has an amazing tape recording machine called a Nagra, which we used to record one of the songs on Return, called Waiting For The Day. The best thing about the Nagra is that itís portable, meaning we could record anywhere we liked. So I got in touch with Joe and chose some beautiful, rural locations around Bristol (Goat Gully, Leigh Woods, and my old local The Old England) to record songs from the album as well as a few new songs. It was such a fun couple of days. HVNLP195 Waiting For The Day (A collection of field recordings) 12" reverse board sleeve - die cut rectangle on sleeve Eco-vinyl Printed inner

                                                                                                                                          Mattiel

                                                                                                                                          Georgia Gothic

                                                                                                                                            Georgia Gothic, a magic third in Mattiel’s run of full-length albums, was shaped in the quiet seclusion of a woodland cabin in the north of the Atlanta duo’s mother-state; “Some faraway place that just Jonah and I could go where there would be no distractions, nothing else going on, and we could turn everything off and only focus on writing songs”, reflects Brown. Where 2017’s self-titled debut and its 2019 follow-up Satis Factory were written with what Swilley refers to as a “hands-off” approach — he arranging the music and Brown the lyrics and vocals, the two working largely separately — the making of Georgia Gothic was, for the first time, a truly collaborative undertaking. “This was the first time we made a point to just be together and work out ideas in the same room. That was the initial intention ... it was about learning what each other wanted to accomplish on a sonic level, and then just trying different things out” Swilley continues. “Everything happened backwards. Normally, you’d have friends that make a band ... with us, we started making music from the jump, and then became homies.”

                                                                                                                                            Cultivated by time spent together on the road touring the first two albums, it is this newfound sense of intimacy between Mattiel’s members that enabled the writing of Georgia Gothic not as two separate musicians, but rather as one creative entity. The album remained within the four walls of Brown and Swilley’s private world for much of its evolution — with recording taking place in a simple studio set up by the pair in the borrowed room of a dialysis centre, Swilley in the producer’s seat — until, nearing completion, it was transferred into the trusted hands of the Grammy-award-winning John Congleton (whose extensive list of credits includes artists as diverse as Angel Olsen, Earl Sweatshirt, Erykah Badu and Sleater Kinney) for mixing.

                                                                                                                                            Not only does the affinity between its creators translate into an electric synergy between Georgia Gothic’s words and music — the brine-shock of Brown’s taut lyricism cut against the bourbon-smoothness of Swilley’s instrumentation — but here too are the palpable spoils of experimentation, each party trustful enough of the other to trial and error their practices into new geometries. Swilley puts this wide palate, in part, down to the place they call home. “I definitely feel like being from Georgia allows us to have a certain way of approaching music”. Brown chimes in: “We haven’t really highlighted where we’re from in the past two records, even though those were also written in Georgia. There’s so much great art and great music that’s come from Georgia, from all different types of genres and all over the state — but take R. E. M. and OutKast: there’s this weirdness that I can’t really put my finger on.” Swilley concurs: “It’s the same with the B-52s, the Black Lips ... it doesn’t feel like L.A., it doesn’t feel like New York, it feels like another planet. We’re not really in a ‘scene’ here in the same way. You have to make your own sound, create your own identity.”

                                                                                                                                            And it is precisely the forging of Mattiel’s distinct musical identity that Georgia Gothic signals; its members guiding each other ever-homewards not just in a geographical or sonic sense, but spiritually, too.

                                                                                                                                            STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                            Barry says: Hefty fuzz, wonderfully harmonised vocals and unbeatable groove are the cornerstones of the Mattiel sound, but it's on 'Georgia Gothic' we really get to see this sound honed perfectly. Possibly due to their more intimate working conditions or through the benefits of a more intuitive working relationship, the music shines through as a lot clearer resulting in their most concise and rewarding offering to date.

                                                                                                                                            TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                            1. Jeff Goldblum
                                                                                                                                            2. On The Run
                                                                                                                                            3. Lighthouse
                                                                                                                                            4. Wheels Fall Off
                                                                                                                                            5. Subterranean Shut In Blues
                                                                                                                                            6. Blood In The Yolk
                                                                                                                                            7. Cultural Criminal
                                                                                                                                            8. You Can Have It All
                                                                                                                                            9. Other Plans
                                                                                                                                            10. Boomerang
                                                                                                                                            11. How It Ends

                                                                                                                                            Various Artists

                                                                                                                                            Heavenly Remixes 3 & 4 - Andrew Weatherall Volumes 1 & 2

                                                                                                                                              Andrew Weatherall was Heavenly’s first true friend. By the time the label was born in the spring of 1990, he was already an inspirational sounding board, as well as a fellow traveller on the bright new road that stretched out ahead thanks to the massive cultural liberation of acid house. Back then, every energised meeting could be turned into a fortuitous opportunity in this burgeoning new underground economy. Bored of your job? Start playing records out! Start a club night! Get in the studio! Start a label! Just don’t stand still. Andrew would follow two of those commandments for the rest of his life, and he’d have a hand in the others at various points as well.

                                                                                                                                              At the start of things, Andrew was a regular visitor to Capersville — the pre-Heavenly press office run by friend and label founder Jeff Barrett (soon to become Andrew’s manager). It was there that he famously picked up a copy of Primal Scream’s unloved second album and singled out a track that would later become Loaded, after being given an instruction to ‘fucking destroy’ it by the band’s Andrew Innes; it was there too that the idea to remix the first Heavenly release came about.

                                                                                                                                              Andrew’s mix of that first Heavenly record is very much a product of its time. The World According To Sly and Lovechild is a swirling bass punch topped with a hypnotic marimba line and the kind of ecstatic diva vocal that you’d hear coming out of the speakers all night at post-Shoom clubs like Yellow Book. His take on the label’s next release — Saint Etienne’s Only Love Can Break Your Heart (A Mix of Two Halves) — would set the template for his next three decades of audio exploration. A drawn-out imperial dub, the track builds and builds with a moody intensity (partly down to the melodica played by Weather Prophets legend Pete Astor) that’s far more Kingston JA at dusk than Kingston-upon-Thames at kicking out time. It’s both a dancefloor record to get lost in and headphone psychedelia of the highest order — a perfect example of what he did better than anyone else.

                                                                                                                                              Between 1990 and his untimely death in 2020, Andrew fed more Heavenly bands through the mixing desk than those of any other label. Consistently, he returned visionary music to the office, often in person for (at least) one ceremonial playback — a ritual that would involve the volume cranked up high and Andrew rocking back on his heels, eyes closed, lost in the alchemy of it all.

                                                                                                                                              Each time, he would warp and twist originals into beautiful new shapes — elasticated club records that might evoke Detroit techno one second and Throbbing Gristle the next, before wheel-spinning into something akin to The Fall produced by King Tubby.

                                                                                                                                              Andrew’s studio adventures would always be guided by that early advice to fucking destroy the source material. It’s why he was the first name that came up when remixes were discussed; the first number on the speed dial. Listening back to these remixes now — to thirty years of glorious outsider sounds — it’s more obvious than ever that Heavenly was blessed to have a friend like Andrew Weatherall. 


                                                                                                                                              TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                              Sly & Lovechild - The World According To Sly & Lovechild (Soul Of Europe Mix)
                                                                                                                                              Mark Lanegan - Beehive (Andrew Weatherall Dub)
                                                                                                                                              Flowered Up - Weekender (Audrey Is A Little Bit More Partial Mix)
                                                                                                                                              Gwenno - Chwyldro (Andrew Weatherall Remix)
                                                                                                                                              Saint Etienne - Only Love Can Break Your Heart (A Mix Of Two Halves)
                                                                                                                                              Confidence Man - Bubblegum (Andrew Weatherall Remix)
                                                                                                                                              Espiritu - Conquistador (Sabres Of Paradise No. 3 Mix)
                                                                                                                                              The Orielles - Sugar Tastes Like Salt (Andrew Weatherall Tastes Like Dub Mix Pt.1 - Live Bass)
                                                                                                                                              Audiobooks Feat. Andrew Weatherall - Dance Your Life Away (Andrew Weatherall Remix)
                                                                                                                                              Saint Etienne - Heart Failed (In The Back Of A Taxi) (Two Lone Swordsmen Dub)
                                                                                                                                              Doves - Compulsion (Andrew Weatherall Remix)
                                                                                                                                              TOY - Dead & Gone (Andrew Weatherall Remix)
                                                                                                                                              Confidence Man & Andrew Weatherall - Out The Window (Andrew Weatherall Remix)
                                                                                                                                              LCMDF - Gandhi (Andy Weatherall Remix II)
                                                                                                                                              Espiritu - Bonita Mañana (Sabres Of Paradise Remix)
                                                                                                                                              Unloved - Devils Angels (Andrew Weatherall Remix)

                                                                                                                                              Pip Blom

                                                                                                                                              Welcome Break

                                                                                                                                                There are approximately a great deal and very many ‘Welcome Breaks’ scattered throughout the sprawling motorways of the UK.

                                                                                                                                                Now, regardless of whether that statement’s true or not… when life’s become a series of long-stretches and welcomed breaks, it’s to no avail that sometimes all it takes to alleviate spirits is the simplest, of experiential indulgences.

                                                                                                                                                Be it the buzz of an overly exhausted tour van, or the green light and smell of sausage rolls in the near Beaconsfield distance... inspiration can be found in the funniest corners of this place we call home; and it’s in the heart of day-to-day simplicities and sprawling services, that we gladly receive Amsterdam’s beamy-grinned, indie-pop powerhouse Pip Blom, back into lives.

                                                                                                                                                Following an extensive touring schedule which saw the Dutch 4-piece roam over field, oceans, and Glastonbury’s John Peel stage following the release of their debut record ‘Boat’, any such cool-cat would be forgiven for wanting to kick back, and indulge in some very appreciated, time off.
                                                                                                                                                As is often the way, such timely-abandon cannot be said for Pip Blom however, who immediately began to gather up all her soaked-up inspirations taken from the road, and manifest a re-energised sense of self, and ritualistic songwriting.

                                                                                                                                                Cosying down in a room of her parents’ house (which she shares with her brother and fellow bandmate Tender Blom), Pip, a self-confessed “fan of deadlines”, set aside three months to write twenty songs- sixteen of which
                                                                                                                                                were to become demos for the band to structure and flesh out, once in the studio together.

                                                                                                                                                It’s at this stage in our indie-fairy-tale that things start to get ever so 2020. Whilst the world was suddenly put on hold as a result of Covid-19, Pip Blom, who’d made plans to return to their favourite ‘Big Jelly Studios’ in Ramsgate, England, were suddenly faced with a very sticky, kind of dilemma. “We’d scheduled to go into the studio in September but summer started moving and there were a couple of countries not allowed to go to the UK anymore... a week before we had to go, the Netherlands was one of those countries”- notes Pip.

                                                                                                                                                Sentimentalities, and pre-established friendships (by way of Grammy award-winning engineer Caesar Edmunds) took president, and the decision was made to pack up their gear and a variety of board games and exercise equipment, all in preparation of a fourteen-day quarantine faced upon arrival in the UK.

                                                                                                                                                In total, three weeks were spent recording what would become the groups sophomore release; a Al Harle engineered love-affair which was self produced entirely by the band and culminated in a legally intimate, fully seated album play-back, to six, of Ramsgate’s most chorus-savvy and ‘in the-know’ residents.

                                                                                                                                                Getting out of their hometown and into an environment which removed all notions of “normality” or personal space, was an atmospheric godsend in terms of motivation; an act which encouraged Pip Blom to re-adjust and buckle down as a unit again, after spending so long in mandatory isolation.
                                                                                                                                                Much like the danceable-realism of Pip’s beloved Parquet Courts, the key to an album well done, is the balancing act of fine-production, and capturing that core live-essence we all miss. “We always play one live track three times and after we then build that track in the studio” says Pip, assembling together amalgamated “live-energies” in order to produce a capsule of environmental-satisfaction, that can be appreciated during any time of day, or life’s little moments.

                                                                                                                                                Actively seeking out moments of creative-authenticity, be it via a slightly out-of-tune guitar or proudly-fuzzed vocals, Pip Blom take us back full circle and introduce us to their ‘Welcome Break’- an eleven-track release which resonates with about as much decisive allure as it’s ‘Boat’ precursor, but this time with a bit more contemporary chaos to boot.

                                                                                                                                                Where ‘Boat’ reckoned as a fresh-faced, yet gloriously fearless game changer, ‘Welcome Break’ is the self-assured older sibling who, with an additional year or two behind themselves, isn’t afraid to speak out, take lead, and instigate a liberated revolution-come-bliss-out.

                                                                                                                                                Lead single’s ‘Keep It Together’ and ‘You Don’t Want This’ are glistening masterclasses in feel-good chorus- the very kind of coming-of-age relatability where a soul would want to let down their hair, stick their arm out the window of their best friends car and roll with the motions in a rapture of soundtracked euphoria, and jangled adventure.

                                                                                                                                                Unhinging genre in our instant-access era of musical snoot, no-one does an enthused-chorus quite like Pip Blom yet much can be said for this gang being far from one-trick-ponies.

                                                                                                                                                Anthemic drifters ‘Different Tune’ and ‘It Should Have Been Fun’ are slow building, amplified highlights. Carrying all the weight of convicted fearlessness on their shoulders, Pip Blom unhinge pre-disposed expectations of crafted alternative like graduates straight outta Kim Deal’s school of rock, whilst closing number ‘Trouble In Paradise’, sets the tone for what will only be the ultimate, set-list once gigs resume again.

                                                                                                                                                With Pip Blom, no mood is untouched nor sense of renewal left behind. The trick to it all? As Pip reveals: “I just really like catchy songs and I feel like that’s something we try to do. I’d classify it as being sentimental – it’s not sugar-happy Pop.... more like ‘Titanic’ pop songs...”

                                                                                                                                                For those of us missing the buzzed adrenaline of communal music exploration, the idea of escapism in cramped and sweaty crevices can seem quite lifeless. If it's a sense of community you’re after then look no further than ‘Pip Blom Backstage’.

                                                                                                                                                Streaming goodness 24/7 as a fan-centric loyalty app, ‘Pip Blom Backstage’ gives access to exclusive news, premium content, and, a chat box for the Pip Blom Backstage community; further cementing Pip Blom as undeniable pals for life as fan-clips, spotify playlists and even a cooking lesson from bassist Darek Mercks, are all made available from the VIP lounge of your own back-pocket.

                                                                                                                                                In conclusion, there're actually thirty-five ‘Welcome Break’ pit stops a weary traveller can make in a lifetime spent on the M1, and it’s associates. Whilst the road’s presently a little less travelled, Pip Blom’s ‘Welcome Break’ is adamantly nothing to do with the present state of affairs. In fact, it doesn’t have anything to do with much at all and that’s the way they like it.
                                                                                                                                                ‘Welcome Break’ is but two nouns of which when placed together in context, ring confidently with prowess, intent, and a radiant true-spirit - much like Pip Blom herself. 


                                                                                                                                                STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                                Barry says: Both thoroughly melodic and swimming with that airy haze we've come to expect from this Dutch outfit, but with moments of distorted heft and crashing post-punk groove, the new one from Pip Blom is every bit the essential purchase. Ram-packed with hooks and brilliantly produced, it's definitely their most accomplished work to date.

                                                                                                                                                TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                1 You Don't Want This
                                                                                                                                                2 12
                                                                                                                                                3 It Should Have Been Fun
                                                                                                                                                4 Keep It Together
                                                                                                                                                5 Different Tune
                                                                                                                                                6 I Know I’m Not Easy To Like
                                                                                                                                                7 Faces
                                                                                                                                                8 I Love The City
                                                                                                                                                9 Easy
                                                                                                                                                10 Holiday
                                                                                                                                                11 Trouble In Paradise

                                                                                                                                                Various Artists

                                                                                                                                                Heavenly Remixes 2

                                                                                                                                                  Heavenly was all but founded on the art of the remix; the label’s sadly departed friend Andrew Weatherall remixed the first ever release, and the label has built up an immense catalogue in the intervening years that demonstrates all that is good about the art form and on Friday 10th December 2021 the label release Heavenly Remixes Vol 1 & 2, a brace of albums documenting this long history.

                                                                                                                                                  A label forged in the white-hot heat of post-acid house Britain, these Heavenly remixes are perfectly weighted with respect and irreverence, the remixer in each case carefully chosen to add heft to the song - the tracks across the 2 albums are curated, remixed and delivered with love (and a teensy bit of impertinence) and are a glimpse into the catalogue of one the UK’s finest independent labels.

                                                                                                                                                  There may well be no rhyme, nor reason, to how these compilations have been put together, beyond the fact that they are assembled with love, an innate understanding of the power of great pop music, and a skilled marriage of song and remixer.

                                                                                                                                                  Though not purposely themed, beyond being judiciously chosen as the catalogue’s finest gems, there’s a tiny hint of psychedelia about Volume 2 that is hard to ignore. Firstly, there are the acid contributions from Gabe Gurnsey, who knows his way around a coruscating bassline, and from Graham Massey, whose impeccable credentials in 808 State are brought to bear on ‘Valleys’, by young turks Working Men’s Club (acid house being modern psychedelia, whether the rock press approves or not).

                                                                                                                                                  Jono Ma, meanwhile, flips Night Beats’ amazing ‘Sunday Mourning’ into ‘Warm Leatherette’ on benzos, creating a disorienting glimpse of a dystopian Sunday that most definitely doesn’t include a genteel read of the papers and a nice cup of tea. On the other side of the miasma is Beyond The Wizard’s Sleeve’s redemptive re-interpretation of M. Craft’s ‘Chemical Trails’, which, alongside Boy Azooga’s ‘Face Behind Her Cigarette’ (Mikey Young remix), Gwenno’s ‘Chwlydro’ (R. Seiliog remix) and and Katy J. Pearson’s ‘Take Back The Radio’ (Flying Mojito Bros Refrito Dub), is issued on vinyl for the very first time.



                                                                                                                                                  TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                  1. Halo Maud – Des Bras (Andy Votel Remix)
                                                                                                                                                  2. Boy Azooga – Face Behind Her Cigarette (Mikey Young Remix)
                                                                                                                                                  3. Doves – Jetstream (Lindstrom Remix)
                                                                                                                                                  4. The Orielles – It Makes You Forget (Dicky Trisco & Pete Herbert Remix)
                                                                                                                                                  5. Katy J Pearson – Take Back The Radio (Flying Mojito Bros Mojito Refrito)
                                                                                                                                                  6. Confidence Man – First Class Bitch (Raf Rundell’s Party Nails Remix)
                                                                                                                                                  7. Audiobooks – Friends In The Bubble Bath (Gabe Gurnsey Gamma Ray Remix)
                                                                                                                                                  8. Gwenno – Chwlydro (R.Seilog Remix)
                                                                                                                                                  9. Working Men’s Club – Valleys (Graham Massey Acid Mix)
                                                                                                                                                  10. Saint Etienne – Filthy (Monkey Mafia Mix)
                                                                                                                                                  11. Night Beats – Sunday Morning (Jono Ma Remix)
                                                                                                                                                  12. M Craft – Chemical Trails (Beyond The Wizards Sleeve Re-animation)

                                                                                                                                                  Saint Etienne

                                                                                                                                                  Her Winter Coat

                                                                                                                                                    Talking about the single, Bob Stanley said:

                                                                                                                                                    We love Christmas, as you probably know, and it feels like it's been a while since our last really Christmassy Christmas record. But I think Pete has done a properly beautiful, icy, frosted, festive job on 'Her Winter Coat’. Alasdair's film for it is the icing on the yule log. I hope you love it as much as I do. We're really looking forward to playing it live!

                                                                                                                                                    Pete Wiggs added:

                                                                                                                                                    To complement 'Her Winter Coat', Sarah and Gus Bousfield have come up with the incredibly catchy 'A Kiss Like This', laden with swirling hibernal synths, and for a touch of Cold War frost we have the brooding melancholy instrumental 'Lillehammer' to complete the package. Hope you love 'em all!

                                                                                                                                                    TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                    1. Her Winter Coat (edit)
                                                                                                                                                    2. Lillehammer
                                                                                                                                                    3. A Kiss Like This
                                                                                                                                                    4. Her Winter Coat 

                                                                                                                                                    Various Artists

                                                                                                                                                    Heavenly Remixes 1

                                                                                                                                                      Heavenly was all but founded on the art of the remix; the label’s sadly departed friend Andrew Weatherall remixed the first ever release, and the label has built up an immense catalogue in the intervening years that demonstrates all that is good about the art form and on Friday 10th December 2021 the label release Heavenly Remixes Vol 1 & 2, a brace of albums documenting this long history.

                                                                                                                                                      A label forged in the white-hot heat of post-acid house Britain, these Heavenly remixes are perfectly weighted with respect and irreverence, the remixer in each case carefully chosen to add heft to the song - the tracks across the 2 albums are curated, remixed and delivered with love (and a teensy bit of impertinence) and are a glimpse into the catalogue of one the UK’s finest independent labels.

                                                                                                                                                      There may well be no rhyme, nor reason, to how these compilations have been put together, beyond the fact that they are assembled with love, an innate understanding of the power of great pop music, and a skilled marriage of song and remixer.

                                                                                                                                                      There is no sense of order to Volume 1. You’ll find a smattering of older tracks: album openers Saint Etienne are taken on a Poseidon Adventure with Underworld, who inject ‘Cool Kids of Death’ with typically manic energy. Elsewhere, ’90s Brum duo Mother add dancefloor pzazz to Espiritu’s innate glamour on an all-funked-up reworking of ‘Los Americanos’, and Mark Lusardi’s remix of Moonflowers’ ‘Get Higher’ is an early Heavenly classic.

                                                                                                                                                      On ‘Terracotta Warrior’, a perfect, psyched-out, Mancunian union is created betwixt Jimi Goodwin and Andy Votel, whilst Goodwin cohort Simon Aldred, in his Cherry Ghost guise, receives a proper Tamla-Motowning from Richard Norris (aka Time & Space Machine) on an inspired cover of Cece Peniston’s glam-house hit, ‘Finally’.

                                                                                                                                                      There are several of Heavenly’s current darlings there too. One of the most exciting young British prospects, Yorkshire’s Working Men’s Club, effectively remix themselves, as Minsky Rock — WMC’s Syd Minsky-Sargeant and producer Ross Orton — cleave ‘X’ into a riotous industrial racket. Jagwar Ma’s Jono Ma takes the Kraftwerkian leitmotif on ‘Automatic’ and drives the Australian jazz-funkers Mildlife down an electro-convulsive psychedelic tunnel (thankfully no-one was harmed during the making of this remix); Sheffield’s DJ Parrot and Jarvis Cocker deliver one of the outstanding remixes of 2018, turning Baxter Dury’s ‘Miami’ into a lovelorn minor opera; and, making its first appearance on vinyl, David Holmes’ Unloved project is taken on a panoramic Welsh waltz thanks to Gwenno.



                                                                                                                                                      STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                                      Barry says: The first volume of the wonderful Heavenly Remixes selection, featuring a number of classics like Baxter Dury's 'Miami' and Mattiel's brilliant 'Guns Of Brixton' getting the rework treatment from some of the dance community's hottest talent.

                                                                                                                                                      TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                      1. Saint Etienne – Cool Kids Of Death (Underworld Mix)
                                                                                                                                                      2. Unloved – Why Not (Gwenno Remix)
                                                                                                                                                      3. Nots – Reactor (Mikey Remix)
                                                                                                                                                      4. Mildlife – Automatic (Jono Ma Ascend Mix)
                                                                                                                                                      5. Espiritu – Los Americanos (Mother Mix)
                                                                                                                                                      6. Confidence Man – Out The Window (Greg & Che Wilson Mix)
                                                                                                                                                      7. Mattiel – Guns Of Brixton (Rub-A-Dub Style Pt.2)
                                                                                                                                                      8. Baxter Dury – Miami (Parrot And Cocker Too Remix)
                                                                                                                                                      9. Jimi Goodwin – Terracotta Warrior (Andy Votel’s Spazio 1975 De-mix)
                                                                                                                                                      10. Working Mens Club – X (Minsky Rock Remix)
                                                                                                                                                      11. Moonflowers – Get Higher (Get Dubber Mix)
                                                                                                                                                      12. Raf Rundell – Monsterpiece (Harvey Sutherland Remix)
                                                                                                                                                      13. Cherry Ghost – Finally (Time & Space Machine Edit)

                                                                                                                                                      Various Artists

                                                                                                                                                      Heavenly Remixes 1 & 2

                                                                                                                                                        Heavenly Recordings announce ‘Heavenly remixes Vol 1 & 2’, a pair of albums documenting some of the label’s finest remixes over their 30+ year history.

                                                                                                                                                        Heavenly was all but founded on the art of the remix; the label’s sadly departed friend Andrew Weatherall remixed the first ever release, and the label has built up an immense catalogue in the intervening years that demonstrates all that is good about the art form. ‘Heavenly remixes 1 & 2’ document this long history.

                                                                                                                                                        A label forged in the white-hot heat of post-acid house Britain, these Heavenly remixes are perfectly weighted with respect and irreverence, the remixer in each case carefully chosen to add heft to the song - the tracks across the two albums are curated, remixed and delivered with love (and a teensy bit of impertinence) and are a glimpse into the catalogue of one the UK’s finest independent labels.

                                                                                                                                                        There may well be no rhyme, nor reason, to how these compilations have been put together, beyond the fact that they are assembled with love, an innate understanding of the power of great pop music, and a skilled marriage of song and remixer.

                                                                                                                                                        There is no sense of order to volume 1. You’ll find a smattering of older tracks: album openers Saint Etienne are taken on a Poseidon Adventure with Underworld, who inject ‘Cool Kids of Death’ with typically manic energy. Elsewhere, 1990s Brum duo Mother add dancefloor pzazz to Espiritu’s innate glamour on an allfunked- up reworking of ‘Los Americanos’, and Mark Lusardi’s remix of Moonflowers’ ‘Get Higher’ is an early Heavenly classic.

                                                                                                                                                        On ‘Terracotta Warrior’, a perfect, psyched-out, Mancunian union is created betwixt Jimi Goodwin and Andy Votel, whilst Goodwin cohort Simon Aldred, in his Cherry Ghost guise, receives a proper Tamla-Motowning from Richard Norris (aka Time & Space Machine) on an inspired cover of Cece Peniston’s glam-house hit, ‘Finally’.

                                                                                                                                                        There are several of Heavenly’s current darlings there too. One of the most exciting young British prospects, Yorkshire’s Working Men’s Club, effectively remix themselves, as Minsky Rock - WMC’s Syd Minsky- Sargeant and producer Ross Orton - cleave ‘X’ into a riotous industrial racket. Jagwar Ma’s Jono Ma takes the Kraftwerkian leitmotif on ‘Automatic’ and drives the Australian jazz-funkers Mildlife down an electroconvulsive psychedelic tunnel; Sheffield’s DJ Parrot and Jarvis Cocker deliver one of the outstanding remixes of 2018, turning Baxter Dury’s ‘Miami’ into a lovelorn minor opera; and, making its first appearance on vinyl, David Holmes’ Unloved project is taken on a panoramic Welsh waltz thanks to Gwenno.

                                                                                                                                                        Though not purposely themed, beyond being judiciously chosen as the catalogue’s finest gems, there’s a tiny hint of psychedelia about volume 2 that is hard to ignore. Firstly, there are the acid contributions from Gabe Gurnsey, who knows his way around a coruscating bassline, and from Graham Massey, whose impeccable credentials in 808 State are brought to bear on ‘Valleys’, by Working Men’s Club (acid house being modern psychedelia, whether the rock press approves or not).

                                                                                                                                                        Jono Ma, meanwhile, flips Night Beats’ amazing ‘Sunday Mourning’ into ‘Warm Leatherette’ on benzos, creating a disorienting glimpse of a dystopian Sunday that most definitely doesn’t include a genteel read of the papers and a nice cup of tea. On the other side of the miasma is Beyond The Wizard’s Sleeve’s redemptive re-interpretation of M. Craft’s ‘Chemical Trails’, which, alongside Boy Azooga’s ‘Face Behind Her Cigarette’ (Mikey Young remix), Gwenno’s ‘Chwlydro’ (R. Seiliog remix) and and Katy J. Pearson’s ‘Take Back The Radio’ (Flying Mojito Bros Refrito Dub), is issued on vinyl for the very first time.

                                                                                                                                                        STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                                        Barry says: this CD version of Heavenly's remixes includes both volumes of this stylistically diverse and brilliantly inventive selection of remixes from talented folk inc. Gwenno, Votel, Lindstrom and Gabe Gurnsey. What a collection.

                                                                                                                                                        TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                        Heavenly Remixes 1
                                                                                                                                                        Saint Etienne - Cool Kids Of Death (Underworld Mix)
                                                                                                                                                        Unloved - Why Not (Gwenno Remix)
                                                                                                                                                        Nots - Reactor (Mikey Remix)
                                                                                                                                                        Mildlife - Automatic (Jono Ma Ascend Mix)
                                                                                                                                                        Espiritu - Los Americanos (Mother Mix)
                                                                                                                                                        Confidence Man - Out The Window (Greg & Che Wilson Mix)
                                                                                                                                                        Mattiel - Guns Of Brixton (Rub-A-Dub Style Pt.2)
                                                                                                                                                        Baxter Dury - Miami (Parrot And Cocker Too Remix)
                                                                                                                                                        Jimi Goodwin - Terracotta Warrior (Andy Votel’s Spazio 1975 De-mix)
                                                                                                                                                        Working Mens Club - X (Minsky Rock Remix)
                                                                                                                                                        Moonflowers - Get Higher (Get Dubber Mix)
                                                                                                                                                        Raf Rundell - Monsterpiece (Harvey Sutherland Remix)
                                                                                                                                                        Cherry Ghost - Finally (Time & Space Machine Edit)

                                                                                                                                                        Heavenly Remixes 2
                                                                                                                                                        Halo Maud - Des Bras (Andy Votel Remix)
                                                                                                                                                        Boy Azooga - Face Behind Her Cigarette (Mikey Young Remix)
                                                                                                                                                        Doves - Jetstream (Lindstrom Remix)
                                                                                                                                                        The Orielles - It Makes You Forget (Dicky Trisco & Pete Herbert Remix)
                                                                                                                                                        Katy J Pearson - Take Back The Radio (Flying Mojito Bros Mojito Refrito)
                                                                                                                                                        Confidence Man - First Class Bitch (Raf Rundell’s Party Nails Remix)
                                                                                                                                                        Audiobooks - Friends In The Bubble Bath (Gabe Gurnsey Gamma Ray Remix)
                                                                                                                                                        Gwenno - Chwlydro (R.Seilog Remix)
                                                                                                                                                        Working Men’s Club - Valleys (Graham Massey Acid Mix)
                                                                                                                                                        Saint Etienne - Filthy (Monkey Mafia Mix)
                                                                                                                                                        Night Beats - Sunday Morning (Jono Ma Remix)
                                                                                                                                                        M Craft - Chemical Trails (Beyond The Wizards Sleeve Re-animation)

                                                                                                                                                        Working Men's Club

                                                                                                                                                        X - Remixes (Paranoid London And Minsky Rock)

                                                                                                                                                          Following the recent release of 'X', the first new music from Working Men’s Club since their acclaimed self-titled debut was released in the autumn of 2020, the band share remixes from Paranoid London and Minsky Rock.

                                                                                                                                                          A side project of Syd from the band and producer Ross Orton, the Minsky Rock remix channels the energy of the primetime Detroit electro of Aux 88 or Cybertron while Paranoid London, the duo made up of Quinn Whalley and Gerardo Delgardo, turn in a bubbling 303 drenched acid workout.

                                                                                                                                                          TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                          A1. X Paranoid London Remix
                                                                                                                                                          A2. X Minsky Rock Remix

                                                                                                                                                          B1. X Paranoid London Remix (Instrumental)
                                                                                                                                                          B2. X Minsky Rock Remix (Instrumental)

                                                                                                                                                          Working Men's Club

                                                                                                                                                          X

                                                                                                                                                            X is the first new music from Working Men’s Club since their acclaimed self-titled debut was released in the autumn of 2020, the album was the band’s perfect statement of intent, X is the delivery, the message, the action.

                                                                                                                                                            X rides on a sustained attack and gives way to a glorious synth heavy release of a chorus that’s just biding its time for a summer of discontent and dancing. This is the sound of your new favourite band hitting their stride. Count the days ’til you can see them in a field or in a club again.

                                                                                                                                                            Self-produced by Syd Minsky and once again mixed by Ross Orton, Y? is a synth heavy assault which picks up where X left off before venturing off into deeper acid-laced territory.

                                                                                                                                                            TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                            A.X
                                                                                                                                                            B.Y

                                                                                                                                                            Audiobooks

                                                                                                                                                            Astro Tough

                                                                                                                                                              As audiobooks were making the final adjustments to their new record, the world around them was getting grimmer by the day. As a result, a darker side to their sound began to bubble to the surface – a newfound heaviness that’s apparent on the eery and driving ‘He Called Me Bambi’, for example, or the whirling ‘Trouble In Business Class’. “We would have got there anyway,” Wrench points out; this is not a ‘lockdown record’, “but being in that frame of mind did make it easier to see how we needed to tweak things. There are light moments of this record, but in general the lyrics are definitely darker.”

                                                                                                                                                              On Astro Tough audiobooks are completely sincere. They’re also completely joyous, wild, angry, powerful, hilarious, vicious, vulnerable and intense, and most of all completely brilliant. It’s the sound of David Wrench and Evangeline Ling reaching new peaks of creativity, more confident than ever before in their abilities to forge something focussed, singular and unique out of the explosive combination of their talents.

                                                                                                                                                              Endlessly forward-thinking, it says a lot that they’re already fixated on what’s next. “The conversation never stops,” says Wrench. “Even earlier today we were talking about ideas, a whole list of new things to try in the creative process. We’ve already got more songs that aren’t quite finished, but are really strong.”

                                                                                                                                                              “I’m just dying to get back into the studio,” adds Ling

                                                                                                                                                              STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                                              Barry says: Along a similar stylistic thread to the bonkers neon synthopo of the International Teachers Of Pop, Audiobooks mix bouncing throbby synths with off-piste lyrics and wildly inventive electro/disco backdrop. It's a heady and intoxicating combo, and all great fun.

                                                                                                                                                              TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                              01. The Doll
                                                                                                                                                              02. LaLaLa It's The Good Life
                                                                                                                                                              03. The English Manipulator
                                                                                                                                                              04. He Called Me Bambi
                                                                                                                                                              05. Blue Tits
                                                                                                                                                              06. First Move
                                                                                                                                                              07. Driven By Beef
                                                                                                                                                              08. Trouble In Business Class
                                                                                                                                                              09. Black Lipstick
                                                                                                                                                              10. Farmer

                                                                                                                                                              Saint Etienne

                                                                                                                                                              I've Been Trying To Tell You

                                                                                                                                                                Can it be that it was all so simple then? Or has time rewritten every line?
                                                                                                                                                                Marvin Hamlisch was not yet 30 when he wrote those words for the mouth of Barbra Streisand. Even then, Hamlisch was acutely aware that as a narrator of our own stories, the human memory is at best unreliable and at worst mendacious. That same awareness resonates through every bar, beat and breath of I've Been Trying To Tell You, the tenth studio album by Saint Etienne.

                                                                                                                                                                The album is made largely from samples and sounds drawn from the turn of the new century, a period that was topped and tailed by Labour's election victory and the terrorist attack on the Twin Towers. “It's about memory,” Bob explains, “and how it can fog and play tricks on you. Specifically, it's about the late Nineties, and current nostalgia for the Nineties.”

                                                                                                                                                                Formed in Croydon in 1990 by music journalist Bob Stanley with childhood friend Pete Wiggs, and soon joined by singer Sarah Cracknell, Saint Etienne arose within the context of the indie- dance movement of that era but created a unique sound which – albeit accidentally – paved the way for what would later become known as Britpop.

                                                                                                                                                                Their earliest albums – 1991 debut Foxbase Alpha and its 1993 successor So Tough – tapped into the collective consciousness by using an accretion of disparate elements - Long Wave football commentary, a snatch of Four Tops vocals or a sample of Dusty Springfield strings, some dialogue from Billy Liar, a melody from a long-forgotten perfume ad – to create a richly evocative memory-world which was specifically British, even when the component parts themselves were not.

                                                                                                                                                                The resulting emotion, of course, is bittersweet. Saint Etienne's music has always captured the feeling that the Portuguese call saudade, the Welsh call hiraeth and the Germans call sehnsucht: a combination of homesickness and longing, a melancholy yearning for a time, a place, a person or a mood that can never be revisited.

                                                                                                                                                                It's what the Scottish comedian Brian Limond was driving at with the heartbreaking Limmy's Show sketch in which he visits a travel agent and shows them a blurred colour photograph of himself and his friends on a teenage holiday in the Ayrshire resort of Millport. “Can you tell me how I get there?”, Limmy asks the confused agent, who initially tries to sell him a ticket to Millport. “No, not the place,” Limmy replies. “The feeling.” Saint Etienne's 2002 single “Action” expresses a similar desire: “Cos I've been searching for all the people I used to turn to, and all the people who knew the answer... Let's get the feeling again...”

                                                                                                                                                                Another constant in Saint Etienne's music has been their understanding of the power of dreams. There's a strand of pop which stretches from The Beach Boys' SMiLE through Saint Etienne to The Avalanches' Since I Left You and beyond which defies the reductive term 'dreampop', and instead evokes the genuine sensation of dreaming: blissful, yes, but also unsettling and disorienting. Saint Etienne's early career masterpiece “Avenue” conjured that realm for seven minutes, and I've Been Trying To Tell You inhabits it entirely. The album ties together these two Saint Etienne threads – memory and dreams – and tells us directly something which has always been implicit in Bob, Pete and Sarah's work: that memory is a dream.

                                                                                                                                                                “I spent a lot of last year thinking about optimism for the future,” says Bob, “and the almost total lack of it at the moment. That got me thinking about the last time there was a general optimism in the country and I thought about May 1997, the window between then and September 2001, which it's easy to look back on as some kind of innocent golden age, even if it didn't feel like one at the time. In reality, of course, there was good and there was bad.... Primary schools and art galleries and hospitals were built versus we bombed Belgrade and introduced PFI!”

                                                                                                                                                                Reflecting upon that era, and upon the collective (mis)remembrance of it, led to this new Saint Etienne album. “We thought, if you used samples from the late Nineties - the supposedly promising bit between Labour winning the election and September 11th - what would the music be and what could you do with it? Modern nostalgia culture often draws on corporate American Nineties mall culture, but what about British BBC radio culture? Could those sources be used to actually sound like the era, but through the fog of memory?”

                                                                                                                                                                Two decades on, a combination of False Memory Syndrome and collective amnesia has grown up around those early New Labour years. The first Blair administration is nowadays viewed variously as a lost golden age, or a period of naïvete, delusion and folly, and a million different shades in between. “YouTube has so many nostalgic clips of slowed-down grainy footage of shopping malls,” says Bob, “often tagged 'liminal spaces' or something like that, post-Burial, post-Mark Fisher, with vaporwave-like music made by people younger than me who see the Eighties and Nineties as a simpler time. I find this fascinating. What you choose to remember or choose to forget... ASBOs and paediatricians getting death threats in Wales... those bits get forgotten.”

                                                                                                                                                                Even at the time, a complacent illusion about the Nineties had taken hold, filtered down from Francis Fukuyama's The End Of History, that benign liberal democracy had triumphed forever and there were no struggles left to be fought. And, even at the time, an equal and opposite sense of disillusion had taken hold of Bob Stanley. On the first anniversary of Blair's election victory, Bob went to the Granita restaurant in Islington, where Blair and Brown had famously struck their power-sharing deal, and felt a sense of emptiness which he later described in the first verse of “Heart Failed In The Back Of A Taxi”: “Took a trip down Granita way/Had to go on the 1st of May/Didn't have much to celebrate...”

                                                                                                                                                                Saint Etienne have always understood that pop music is the nearest thing we have to time travel, the closest we can get to breathing the air of a different time. On this album, they take that theory to its logical conclusion. I've Been Trying To Tell You uses sounds and samples from 1997 to 2001, evoking the folk memory of the period by using and twisting recordings from the time, re- working them into new songs. “They're all by people you'd have heard on daytime Radio 1 or 2 at the time,” Bob clarifies, “not Boards of Canada or anything.” Opening track “Music Again”, for example, begins with some gorgeously poignant electric harpsichord from a long-forgotten R&B hit.

                                                                                                                                                                For the first time, Saint Etienne didn't record together in a studio. The album was completed remotely, in Hove (Pete), Oxford (Sarah) and Bradford (Bob, in collaboration with film and TV composer Gus Bousfield, who contributes to a number of tracks). Communication was handled via Zoom meetings and emails. “We had the idea for the album before the pandemic, and it was surprisingly straightforward.” The results are exceptional. “I'm really excited about the way the album has turned out,” says Bob. “It feels like something brand new.”

                                                                                                                                                                I've Been Trying To Tell You has an internal unity, its heartbeat always at the low end of mid- tempo/high end of downtempo, landing at the approximate pace of Tricky's Pre-Millennium Tension (an album released on the very cusp of the era in question). This helps sustain the dream-state.

                                                                                                                                                                That hypnagogic sensation is enhanced here and there by the eerie sound of seagulls and garden birds. It's like falling asleep listening to Minnie Riperton's “Lovin' You” and coming a- dreamwake in Kew. This, it turns out, is another turn-of-the-millennium reference. “In the early series of Big Brother,” Bob explains, “when Channel 4 used to broadcast live from the house in the daytime, they'd dip out the sound whenever the housemates talked about real life people, or swore or whatever, and they'd replace the sound with quite avant-sounding field recordings of birdsong.”

                                                                                                                                                                The lyrics, too, obey the fractured logic of dreams. Sarah Cracknell sings in short phrases - “here it comes again”, “never had a way to go”, “ruby dust”, “a love like this again” - looped and repeated, rather than a traditional verse-chorus-verse structure. “They are all snatched phrases that could have been used at the time,” Bob explains, “from news items, or songs, or magazines.” The album's centrepiece is arguably “Little K”, the fourth track of eight, a six-minute oneiric ocean which ends with the sound of lazily lapping waves. The words that filter through the haze are ones which define the album: “No reason to pretend. In my reverie, the mind will carry me...”

                                                                                                                                                                The reverie has interludes with no words at all, at least not sung. “Blue Kite”, made from backwards strings and synths and bassy beats from the room next door, is entirely instrumental, as is “I Remember It Well” apart from snatches of mysterious voices which evoke childhood holidays. Some tracks, like some dreams, are simply too strange for analysis: the inscrutably- titled “Penlop” (a Tibetan term which translates loosely as 'governor') has a refrain which appears to run “I don't really know you/But I'd like to show you/Chester town/We went all around...”

                                                                                                                                                                The accompanying film, which premieres at the NFT in the first week of September and will also be available as a DVD with the album, came about when Bob Stanley contacted Alasdair McLellan after the latter had used Saint Etienne's “Nothing Can Stop Us” in a Marc Jacobs commercial. They met a few times, pre-pandemic, in a cafe under Shipley clocktower. “Alasdair understood the album straight off,” says Bob. “We talked about youth, and the A1, and British identity, and memories of the recent past. He's really made a beautiful film, and it perfectly complements the album. Alasdair's film also taps in to the way we think of our youth, and sense of place, and where we come from.”

                                                                                                                                                                McLellan's film – a still from which adorns the album sleeve - is a slow-motion travelogue that takes in “a lifetime's worth” of locations, including Felixstowe, Blackpool, Portmeirion, Avebury, Southampton, Doncaster, Grangemouth, as well as London. It its vignettes, we see a couple breaking up on a Westminster bench, a man skimming stones across the water from an oil terminal, a ballet dancer rehearsing, a raver dancing in the headlights of a Ford Cortina, youths playing in a Yorkshire waterfall, teams meeting in caffs. The album dovetails immaculately with the visuals. When we do hear anyone speak, it's only to recite lyrics from classic Saint Etienne songs, all taken from the Nineties.

                                                                                                                                                                The dreamlike mood of the album, and the film, is a statement in itself: namely that memory is a largely fictionalised product of the human mind, rather than a reliable record. I've Been Trying To Tell You – the album, and the film – sifts through those Hamlischian misty watercolour memories of the way we were, and poses the question: was it all just a dream? Saint Etienne have always known the answer. They've been trying to tell you.

                                                                                                                                                                Simon Price, 2021

                                                                                                                                                                STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                                                Barry says: While Saint Etienne are well known for pulling together a host of influences into their own particular clever brand of indie, their latest outing is perhaps the most confidently nostalgic tribute yet, crafted from found sounds and snippets of samples from the early 00's, leading to an evocative and wonderfully realised triumph.

                                                                                                                                                                TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                                1. Music Again
                                                                                                                                                                2. Pond House
                                                                                                                                                                3. Fonteyn
                                                                                                                                                                4. Little K
                                                                                                                                                                5. Blue Kite
                                                                                                                                                                6. I Remember It Well
                                                                                                                                                                7. Penlop
                                                                                                                                                                8. Broad River

                                                                                                                                                                Acclaimed Bay Area multi-instrumentalist, producer, and composer Doug Stu grew up outside of Chicago and his early education began in jazz clubs and festivals as a teenager - frequenting sessions with Jeff Parker, Fred Anderson, Nicole Mitchell, and other members of the AACM. Left exceedingly inspired, he continued on to the University of Michigan, studying bass under Detroit jazz royalty, Robert Hurst and Geri Allen, where he deepened his practice in Jazz and Contemplative Studies.

                                                                                                                                                                Now, based out of Oakland and Los Angeles, Stuart collaborates within many Jazz, Hip-Hop, and Experimental music scenes. His works include compositions for the NPR podcast Snap Judgement, along with co-writes and production with various groups including: Brijean, Bells Atlas, Meernaa, Luke Temple, Jay Stone. Dougie Stu’s Familiar Future is a uniquely jazz-attuned album that is soulful and ethereal. It draws inspiration from artists and producers like Lonnie Liston Smith, Charles Stepney, David Axelrod, and Alice Coltrane. Stuart has arrived at a sound that harkens back to the golden era of soul jazz and R&B, while still sounding contemporary.

                                                                                                                                                                The band features the immediately recognizable guitar stylings of Jeff Parker (Tortoise) who was one of Stuart’s biggest influences growing up in Chicago, Maya Kronfeld (Georgia Anne Muldrow, NYEUSI) on Fender Rhodes, Steve Blum (Bells Atlas) on synthesizer, percussionists Brijean Murphy (Toro Y Moi, Poolside), John Santos (Tito Puente, Dizzy Gillespie), and drummer Hamir Atwal (tune-yards). Special guests include Marcus Stephans on Flute, Shaina Evoniuk on Violin, and Crystal Pascucci on Cello. The album was engineered and mixed by Rob Shelton at Tiny Telephone, and he also appears on synthesizer on one song.


                                                                                                                                                                STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                                                Barry says: 'Familiar Future' takes the loose, languid vibes of jazz music and effortlessly transposes it into the drifting world of psychedelia via instrumental funk. Impeccably composed and brilliantly fluid compositions slowly change and morph from loungy relaxation to head-bobbing groove.

                                                                                                                                                                TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                                1. Welcome
                                                                                                                                                                2. Familiar Future
                                                                                                                                                                3. Wind Chaser
                                                                                                                                                                4. Henny
                                                                                                                                                                5. Another One For Slug
                                                                                                                                                                6. Nostalgia
                                                                                                                                                                7. BB’s Birthday
                                                                                                                                                                8. Scooter Bistro Number
                                                                                                                                                                9. Joy Ride
                                                                                                                                                                10. Free Their Ghosts

                                                                                                                                                                Raf Rundell

                                                                                                                                                                O.M. Days

                                                                                                                                                                  Last seen a couple of years back on his debut long-player Stop Lying, Raf has today also shared Ample Change (feat. Lias Saoudi), the second track to be taken off the album following Monsterpiece on which he roped in the legendary Chas Jankel to provide his distinctive touch.

                                                                                                                                                                  Featuring on the cover a striking Keith Haring meets the Green Man image from acclaimed artist and long-time collaborator Ben Edge, the picture was inspired by the folk tale of the giant of Dawson, who is both male & female, human and vegetation and lived in the imagination of Dawson’s Hill, a stretch of South London parkland a stones throw away from Dawson’s Heights, the flats featured on the cover of Raf’s debut Stop Lying.

                                                                                                                                                                  Edge and Rundell, for reasons they can’t entirely comprehend, concocted a rite which took place the first full moon after this year’s summer solstice (the results of which can be seen in the short film trailer for the album). This involved the giant – also known as Tommy Hill Figure - being created on Dawson’s Hill. “Ben’s been digging deeper and deeper into ancient myths, the green man, all the stuff that’s been co-opted by organised religion,” Rundell explains. All this chimed with him because he is a magnet for signs and symbols. He has been ever since his Mod-loving parents named him after the RAF roundel symbol.

                                                                                                                                                                  “We’d been talking about this sort of stuff a lot,” Rundell continues. “The rite was about the birth of the new and using the coronavirus as a catalyst for that change, like a full stop to the way things were before. The corona was called the spark in the ceremony, although we’re not being too specific about the virus because this is a thing we hope to do annually.”

                                                                                                                                                                  This is the backdrop to the album, a record far larger and more confident than its creator could ever have imagined. Unlike his itinerantly created previous records, O.M. Days was entirely recorded in the same Forest Hill studio, with the aforementioned collaborators. “I love collaborating with people – like Lias Saoudi or Andy Jenkins, who are both on this record – that’s where it’s at for me,” Rundell says. “I worked really hard on this one. And although I had no plan about where it was going, I always have a notion about how I want things to sound. I had a particular idea about that.”


                                                                                                                                                                  STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                                                  Barry says: There's always a considerable amount of rhythmic shuffling when Rundell comes on the stereo (I would obviously dance but am pretty terrible at it, so results in said shuffle). 'O. M. Days' has all of the latent melodicism we've come to expect from Rundell, but with an uplifting, post-pandemic groove sure to get the newly opened clubs moving It's a brilliantly produced and intensely enjoyable listen.

                                                                                                                                                                  TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                                  1. More U Know
                                                                                                                                                                  2. Down
                                                                                                                                                                  3. Monsterpiece
                                                                                                                                                                  4. Ample Change (feat. Lias Saoudi)
                                                                                                                                                                  5. Always Fly (feat. Terri Walker)
                                                                                                                                                                  6. Luxury (feat. Man & The Echo)
                                                                                                                                                                  7. Miracle
                                                                                                                                                                  8. The Ides Of Albion
                                                                                                                                                                  9. Turning Tides
                                                                                                                                                                  10. Butter Gold (feat. Andy Jenkins)

                                                                                                                                                                  On La Vita Olistica (their second-and-a-half album!?), The Orielles take last year’s stellar Disco Volador and bring it back down to earth, reimagining it as a soundtrack which draws as much from la nouvelle vague as New York’s new wave music scene. Full of instrumental detours, maverick synth-led twists, and more pop hooks than you can shake a disco stick at, it’s a less “produced” affair than its shimmering predecessor - those virtuosic guitars, drums à la Can school of jazz-punk-groove, dream-laden vocals, and understated bass gymnastics are all still here though, just clearer and tighter than ever before. There’s something so classic and charismatic about the way they write songs too, calling to mind - but never imitating - the greats of indie songwriting: Edwyn Collins, Laetitia Sadier, Bradford Cox, et al. La Vita Olistica shows the mighty O’s at their most inspired yet - and it’s a beautiful thing to watch.

                                                                                                                                                                  STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                                                  Barry says: Eschewing the more dancefloor-ready elements of last years' 'Disco Volador', the Orielles return with the lysergic smudged atmospheres and hazy psychedelic groove of 'La Vita Olistica'. A brilliantly immersive and impeccably performed outing from a band showing their wide range of influence, as well as their deftness crafting those influences into something new and exciting.

                                                                                                                                                                  One of the most highly-regarded modern Brazilian jazz trios, Caixa Cubo have announced details of the release of Angela, their latest album, and first to be licensed for European release by Heavenly Recordings.

                                                                                                                                                                  Recorded in December 2018, the album features the singer Zé Leônidas on Palavras, and includes arrangements of songs like Baião Malandro by Egberto Gismonti and Dark Prince by Geri Allen, in addition to the group's original compositions.

                                                                                                                                                                  Made up of Henrique Gomide (keys), João Fideles (drums) and Noa Stroeter (bass) the trio have split their time between Brazil and Europe in recent years, having been awarded scholarships to study at the Royal Conservatory of The Hague, Netherlands.

                                                                                                                                                                  They have performed at many respected European venues and festivals including Jazz à Vienne Festival (France), Anton Philip Hall (The Hague), A-Trane (Berlin), Riverboat Festival (Denmark) and others in Paris, Brussels, London, Birmingham, Lisbon, Rotterdam. They also performed in Maputo, Mozambique, as well as renowned venues in Brazil, mainly in Sao Paulo (Auditório Ibirapuera, SESC Consolação, Museu da Casa Brasileira).

                                                                                                                                                                  Talking about Caixa Cubo and the album, the British DJ, broadcaster, producer, writer and jazz lover, Patrick Forge said:

                                                                                                                                                                  It used to be the case that young Brazilians were either oblivious to or disdainful of their musical heritage, such was the omnipotence of “baile funk” and the influence of foreign music. (Heavy Metal acts that could barely get a booking in the U.K. selling out stadiums?!). A perplexing conundrum for those like myself who’ve found so much to treasure in those traditions, particularly from the 60s and 70s when Brazilian music culture reached an apotheosis of creativity.

                                                                                                                                                                  It’s been so gratifying in recent years to witness a renaissance of those musical values, as a young generation of players more connected to worldwide trends have also sought to reconnect with their own lineage. Brazilian musicians have a unique feel, perhaps samba has literally infused their DNA, no matter what style or approach they take there is always that indigenous quality to the music.

                                                                                                                                                                  Caixa Cubo are a jazz-fusion trio who plug in to a current of Brazilian music that was exemplified by Azymuth in the 70s; though these three players have their own twist. A touch darker and less obviously Brazilian, there is something so fundamental and pure about their sound, the interaction sounds fresh and spontaneous, intimate and real.

                                                                                                                                                                  This is a record that will continue to delight with repeated listening such is the quality and grace of the playing. The sole vocal track Palavras (featuring Ze Leonidas) is a beguiling beauty evocative of Milton Nascimento and the best of Brazil’s melodic and harmonic traditions. Their version of Egbert Gismonti’s Baiao Malandro spins the off the wall funk of one of Brazil’s greatest composers into a more digestible contemporary form without losing any of its madcap brilliance. A triumph that will translate as well to fans of Yussef Kamaal and the younger generation of jazz converts as to seasoned old heads like myself.

                                                                                                                                                                  STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                                                  Matt says: Laid back, rich jazz beaming with Brazilian elegance, a true feast for the ears whilst hammocking in the sunshine.

                                                                                                                                                                  TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                                  1 Angela
                                                                                                                                                                  2 Khanimambo
                                                                                                                                                                  3 Palavras
                                                                                                                                                                  4 Lua Nova
                                                                                                                                                                  5 Dark Prince
                                                                                                                                                                  6 Acalanto
                                                                                                                                                                  7 Baião Malandro

                                                                                                                                                                  Written entirely in Cornish, Le Kov is exploration of the individual and collective subconscious, the myths and drolls of Cornwall, and the survival of Britain’s lesser known Brythonic language. As one of the language’s few fluent speakers, Gwenno felt a duty to make her second album entirely in Cornish: to create a document of a living language, explore her identity and the endless creative possibilities of a tongue that has a very small surviving artistic output, despite having been around for at least 15 centuries.
                                                                                                                                                                  She dove deep into research, learning about attempts to protect and progress the language and the role of women throughout Cornish history. When Gwenno considered the legends of sunken Brythonic cities Cantre’r Gwaelod, Kêr-Is, Langarrow and Lyonesse, she knew she had her starting point. These cities evoked her idea of language as its own form of psychological territory, a concept perfectly distilled by the Cornish title for the album, Le Kov – the place of memory.

                                                                                                                                                                  But Le Kov isn’t really a concept album—the city doesn’t loom that large through these 10 songs, and you don’t need the translation sheet to appreciate the gorgeous, sea-warped psychedelia that Gwenno has created alongside long-term collaborator and producer Rhys Edwards. Evoking the music of her childhood – Brenda Wootton, Alan Stivell, BUCCA – along with Broadcast, The United States of America, White Noise and Serge Gainsbourg, Le Kov is shimmering and tarnished, rust mingled with barnacles, moss entwined with weathered rope. It’s a huge step up from her debut album, Y Dydd Olaf, featuring forlorn piano, crisp drums, and searching synth lines that seem to reach across the horizon. The sounds of the language are similarly gorgeous: “Dha wolow jy yw splann” (“your light is bright”), Gwenno marvels on Hi A Skoellyas Liv A Dhagrow (She Shed A Flood Of Tears).

                                                                                                                                                                  Sharp-eyed observers will note that that’s also a song from Aphex Twin’s 2001 album Drukqs. “I imagined Richard D. James coming across this ‘long lost Cornish 70s folk rock song’ on vinyl in a charity shop in the city of Le Kov, and stealing the title,” says Gwenno. It’s one of just two songs where she references the city directly. The next is Herdhya (Pushing), a hypnotic song “about the feeling of isolation after the Brexit vote, and realising that you’re stuck on an island—Britain—with perhaps many people who are trying to push society back to a regressive idea of the middle ages that has never existed, and imposing that on everyone else,” says Gwenno. By contrast, Le Kov is “dhyn ni oll” (for us all), a sanctuary city and analogue for the importance of understanding that diverse identities are the foundation of any place.
                                                                                                                                                                  There’s darkness on Le Kov, but beauty, too. Tir Ha Mor (Land And Sea) is a tribute to Peter Lanyon, the St. Ives school painter who learned to fly a glider plane in order to “get a more complete knowledge of the landscape” where he lived, and died after crashing his aircraft in August 1964. “Marghek an Gwyns was his Bardic name,” says Gwenno. “Rider of the Winds.”
                                                                                                                                                                  And Gwenno’s playful side shines through, too. Daromres Y’n Howl (Traffic In The Sun) is a low, groovy tribute to Cornwall’s clogged roads in the summertime, featuring Gruff Rhys rapping amid dissonant brass that evoke the angry horns of tourists on the A30. And Gwenno’s favourite song is Eus Keus? (Is There Cheese?). It comes from one of the oldest surviving Cornish phrases: “Is there cheese? Is there or isn’t there? If there’s cheese, bring cheese, and if there isn’t cheese, bring what there is!”

                                                                                                                                                                  Over the course of making Le Kov, Gwenno reconciled her anxiety over her right to make a Cornish-language pop record, and realised that, in the age of Brexit, isolationism and hostility towards the rich cultures that make modern Britain, it had a wider resonance, too. “This album is a combination of accepting the culture which your parents have valued enough to want to pass on to you, regardless how small, and utilising it in a positive way to try and make sense of the world around you, it’s also about having to accept and respect the nuances that make us all different and discovering that all of our stories share the same truth.”

                                                                                                                                                                  STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                                                  Barry says: Never one to shy away from walking the roads-less-travelled when it comes to language use (being fluent in both Welsh and Cornish), Gwenno is flying the flag for regional language pride, as well as dominating players around the globe when she puts out a new one. 'Le Kov' is no different, perfectly produced and brilliantly enjoyable.

                                                                                                                                                                  TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                                  1. Hi A Skoellyas Liv A Dhagrow
                                                                                                                                                                  2. Tir Ha Mor
                                                                                                                                                                  3. Herdhya
                                                                                                                                                                  4. Eus Keus?
                                                                                                                                                                  5. Jynn-amontya
                                                                                                                                                                  6. Den Heb Taves
                                                                                                                                                                  7. Daromres Y'n Howl
                                                                                                                                                                  8. Aremorika
                                                                                                                                                                  9. Hunros
                                                                                                                                                                  10. Koweth Ker

                                                                                                                                                                  Cherry Ghost

                                                                                                                                                                  Beneath This Burning Shoreline

                                                                                                                                                                    Following a two year hiatus, the Ivor Novello award winning songwriters Cherry Ghost have regrouped and with the help of Dan Austin (Doves, Massive Attack) they have recorded one of the most hopeful, beguiling, theatrical, and ultimately captivating albums of the year. With an eclectic repertoire of songs that go way beyond simplistic melodies and rousing choruses, Cherry Ghost create a musical world of their own that’s as strong and as all-encompassing as a fictional voice. Songs are sung about and from the perspective of a variety of characters (young and old / male and female / rich and poor), while themes such as loss, revenge, regret, blasphemy and disillusionment wrestle with romance, hope, optimism all wrapped within a wickedly dark humour; "Beneath This Burning Shoreline" unravels like a fine southern gothic novel. The album opens with "We Sleep On Stones". The malevolent locomotive rhythm of the track signals a move away from the idea of Cherry Ghost as a solo project, showcasing a more refined and assured sounding band. With Krautrock flourishes this murderous ballad illustrates both lyrically and sonically the Cherry Ghost sound in 2010.

                                                                                                                                                                    Running the gamut of human emotion, the album moves quixotically from track to track, exploring new narratives in each one, take "The Night They Buried Sadie Clay", a funeral march that celebrates the life of a dying woman that never gave in or gave up hope, or "Only A Mother", a tale of domestic abuse and promises unrealised that’s straight out of Morrissey book of poetic social commentary. Meanwhile, recorded live and in one take, the blasphemous ballad "My God Betrays" sees Cherry Ghost collectively bestow one of the most sorrowful and contemplative tracks in annals of contemporary music.

                                                                                                                                                                    Euphoria is never far away and with new lead single, "Kissing Strangers" it is there in abundance. The dusty crooned vocals of Simon Aldred are wrapped around psychedelic lullabies, Glen Campbell guitars and stately drumming. It’s an ode to wayward souls trawling the night skies "Kissing Strangers" is a 21st century song for swinging lovers: young hearts on the chase and well groomed weekend brutes. Further jubilation comes in the form of "BlackFang", a 4 minute romp that revives the spirit of The Velvet Underground and "Luddite" eschews progress in favour of a skiffle-beat lament to the emotionally stunted.

                                                                                                                                                                    TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                                    1. We Sleep On Stones
                                                                                                                                                                    2. A Month Of Mornings
                                                                                                                                                                    3. Kissing Strangers
                                                                                                                                                                    4. Conquered Part 1
                                                                                                                                                                    5. Only A Mother
                                                                                                                                                                    6. The Night The Buried Sadie Clay
                                                                                                                                                                    7. My God Betrays
                                                                                                                                                                    8. Barberini Square
                                                                                                                                                                    9. Conquered Part 2
                                                                                                                                                                    10. BlackFang
                                                                                                                                                                    11. Luddite
                                                                                                                                                                    12. Diamond In The Grind
                                                                                                                                                                    13. Strays

                                                                                                                                                                    Katy J Pearson

                                                                                                                                                                    Return

                                                                                                                                                                      Return symbolises the re-entry of Pearson into music-making after a previous, collaborative project with her brother fell foul of the pressures of a major label record deal and over the course of two-and-a-half years, between her parents’ house in Gloucestershire, her Bristol bedroom, and nearby community arts space The Island, Pearson honed her craft as a solo artist, learning to rely on her creative instincts, and bringing forth an album just as shaped by the South-West of England as the rich musical history of America’s Southern States.

                                                                                                                                                                      The songs were strengthened and evolved in a live setting — including in support of Olden Yolk and Cass McCombs on their respective UK and European tours — before being taken to the studio of producer Ali Chant (PJ Harvey, M. Ward, Perfume Genius, Gruff Rhys), where they were captured in their final form. The result is a jewel in the dirt by the side of the highway; ten songs which slide effortlessly between lovelorn country, lo-fi folk and glistening, unforgettable pop.

                                                                                                                                                                      Having completed a European tour alongside Cass McCombs at the end of last year and appeared at both the End of the Road Christmas party and the Line of Best Fit’s ‘Five Day Forecast’, she returns later in the year for a couple of shows at Sound City in Liverpool and Live at Leeds and a run of headline shows in early 2021.


                                                                                                                                                                      STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                                                      Barry says: Return is a beatifully upbeat, superbly crafted suite of country-tinged Indie-pop stormers. Some veer a little more towards the introspective, trad country vibes but imbued with a lightness and optimism you rarely hear. Beautiful stuff.

                                                                                                                                                                      TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                                      1. Tonight
                                                                                                                                                                      2. Beautiful Soul
                                                                                                                                                                      3. Return
                                                                                                                                                                      4. Something Real
                                                                                                                                                                      5. Fix Me Up
                                                                                                                                                                      6. Hey You
                                                                                                                                                                      7. Miracle
                                                                                                                                                                      8. Take Back The Radio
                                                                                                                                                                      9. On The Road
                                                                                                                                                                      10. Waiting For The Day

                                                                                                                                                                      Working Men's Club

                                                                                                                                                                      Working Men's Club

                                                                                                                                                                        A rumble on the horizon. Gritted teeth, nuclear fizz and fissured rock. A dab of pill dust from a linty pocket before it hits: the atom split, pool table overturned, pint glass smashed — valley fever breaking with the clouds as the inertia of small town life is well and truly disrupted. Here to bust out of Doledrum, clad in a t-shirt that screams SOCIALISM and armed with drum machine, synth, pedal and icy stare are Working Men’s Club, and their self-titled debut album.

                                                                                                                                                                        It’s hard to believe that the three fresh-faced music college kids who bounced out of nowhere and onto the 6 Music playlist with the sweet-but-potent, twangy guitar-led ‘Bad Blood’ (Melodic Records) in 2019 are the same band who clattered back there with maddening techno-cowbellpuncher ‘Teeth’ less than half a year later — and that’s because for the most part, they’re not. Having signed to Heavenly and with the hype around them building, underlying tensions came to a boil a mere five days before the band’s all-important first London headline show, and wunderkind frontman Syd Minsky-Sargeant was left high and dry; guitarist Giulia Bonometti had decided to focus on her blossoming solo career, and drummer Jake Bogacki was against the new electronic direction Minsky-Sargeant saw Working Men’s Club taking. (“I guess WMC started off as a bit more guitar-based, tryna copy stuff in our own way, like the Velvets and stuff like that, but I didn’t want it to be that anymore. It became dancier and dancier as I tried to experiment”, he explains.) All that remained of the outfit was Minsky-Sargeant himself, recently recruited bassist Liam Ogburn, and — given the band’s indebtment to wood panelled, community-run venues for an early leg-up — a rather pertinent name. But with staunch determination burning in his belly, Minsky-Sargeant quickly assembled a lineup consisting of himself, Ogburn, and Mairead O'Connor (The Moonlandingz) and Rob Graham (Drenge, Baba Naga) — both of whom he had met at the Sheffield studio of producer Ross Orton (The Fall, M.I.A., Arctic Monkeys) — replaced the live drums with a drum machine, and rush-rehearsed the new setup before going ahead with the show. “If it wasn’t for Sheffield then we probably wouldn’t have played that gig” he says. “I was shitting myself, because I didn’t know what would work or not.” Luckily, something stuck: “After about three gigs with that lineup it was already way better than what we’d had before.” Two original members lighter and three new ones the richer, Working Men’s Club took on a new hard-edge permutation, their shows becoming ever more sweaty, pulsating and rammed to the rafters; their energy raw; their vigour renewed; their interplay as musicians growing ever-more intuitive and elastic. Their eponymous collection of songs is equal parts Calder Valley restlessness and raw Sheffield steel; guitars locking horns with floor-filling beats, synths masquerading as drums and Minsky-Sargeant’s scratchy, electrifying bedroom demos brought to their full potential by Orton’s blade-sharp yet sensitive production.

                                                                                                                                                                        It was at home in the town of Todmorden in the Calder Valley, West Yorkshire, feeling hemmed in, that 18-year-old Syd Minsky-Sargeant first began assembling these 10 songs. “There’s not much going on, not much stuff to do as a teenager” he says. “It’s quite isolated. And it can get quite depressing being in a town where in the winter it gets light at nine in the morning and dark at four”. It is this sense of cabin fever, of “thinking that you will never escape a small town in the middle of nowhere” on which the album opens, with the boredom-lamenting and rave-reminiscent ‘Valleys’. In a post-punk talk-sing over an old-skool beat, Minsky-Sargeant begins:

                                                                                                                                                                        Trapped, inside a town, inside my mind

                                                                                                                                                                        Stuck with no ideas, I’m running out of time

                                                                                                                                                                        There’s no quick escape, so many mistakes, I’ll play the long game

                                                                                                                                                                        This winter is a curse

                                                                                                                                                                        And the valley is my hearse, when will it take me to the grave?

                                                                                                                                                                        Fortunately for Syd and a thousand other bored-shitless, dark-dwelling teenagers, the Calder Valley boasts a burgeoning grassroots music scene, chiefly centred around The Golden Lion in Todmorden, and the Trades Club in Hebden Bridge — both of which were instrumental in the early life of the band. “Without those venues we probably wouldn’t have been able to get into playing live music”, Minsky-Sargeant reflects. Working Men’s Club’s first ever gig, at The Golden Lion, was self-booked and self-promoted, landlord Waka having allowed the band to use the 100-capacity room above the pub for free. Even before booking himself onto the stage though, Minsky-Sargeant regularly snuck into the venue to watch the internationally renowned DJs, like Justin Robertson and Luke Unabomber, who passed through its doors. This, combined with the discovery of 808 State, his stepdad’s extensive afrobeat record collection, YouTube videos of Jeff Mills making beats on a Roland TR-909, and a chance festival encounter with Soulwax, provided sustenance and inspiration for Working Men’s Club’s developing sound. Though it is songs almost entirely written and sung by Minsky-Sargeant that appear on the record, he is quick to point out the influence of the other members of his band on the record too; that “everyone that’s been involved in this band, from the old lineup to the new lineup, played on the record, contributed and shaped it in some way, through the phases”, wheedling in and around Minsky-Sargeant’s songs, embellishing them with their own bass, guitar, key or backing vocal parts. And without Orton, “it wouldn’t have been half as good a record.” Working with the producer radically changed MinskySargeant’s songwriting practice — “I tried to replicate what he was doing in his studio in my bedroom, and think more about drum sounds and making them more complicated and messing around with synths and stuff like that. It made me think about more components than just a guitar.”

                                                                                                                                                                        The songs following ‘Valleys’ come fast and relentless — momentum ever increasing, mission well and truly stated as the frenetic, pew-pewing ‘A.A.A.A’ speeds through to nonchalant existential groove ‘John Cooper Clarke’ — centred around the realisation that yes, even the luckiest guy alive, the Bard of Salford himself, will someday die.

                                                                                                                                                                        Hard holds hands with soft, and rough with smooth. On washily-vocalled, Orange Juicily-guitared ‘White Rooms and People’, there are simultaneously beautifully blooming flowers and ‘people talking shit about you’, and the hazy, ricocheting ‘Outside’, the gentlest track on the album, flips straight into the tough-as-shit, industrially-geared ‘Be My Guest’, which opens the second half of the record with markedly E. Smithian brio. The opening bars of ‘Cook A Coffee’ are momentarily reminiscent of ‘Bad Blood’, but spiral into direct and uncomfortable eye contact in song-form; a lost Joy Division number from an alternate universe, about taking a dump live on the telly. ‘Tomorrow’ glitches and glimmers, whilst outro track ‘Angel’ moves between psychedelic languidity and hardcore thrash, the album playing itself out on a 12-and-a-half-minute noodle.

                                                                                                                                                                        It is with war, free-fall, and re-birth already behind them that Working Men’s Club emerge, resilient; inspiration from across breadth of eras, genres and tour-mates merely strata in their very own indie-cum-dance-cum-techno niche in the crag.

                                                                                                                                                                        Diva Harris, February 2020

                                                                                                                                                                        STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                                                        Laura says: It's perhaps unsurprising that a band from the Calder Valley on the edge of the Pennines draws on influences from both sides of the hills. Todmorden’s WMC have done just that, splicing the synth led sounds of 80s Sheffield with doomy Mancunian post punk stylings to create a forward thinking monster of a debut album. The acidic synths and pulsing beat of album opener “Valleys” encapsulate the claustrophobia of growing up in a small town and the smothering intensity is maintained through the industrial clatter of “A.A.A.A.”. With its funk fuelled grooves, nonchalant vocals and bitter sweet chorus, “John Cooper Clarke” could easily be an undiscovered classic from early Factory days. As side one draws to a close, the mood is lifted with the choppy guitar groove of “White Rooms and People”, and on “Outside”, it feels like they’ve escaped the town for sun kissed wide open spaces. Side two reverts to pounding industrial grooves and distorted guitars on “Be My Guest”. “Tomorrow” marries monotone vocals with a super catchy chorus while “Cook a Coffee” takes a cheeky snipe at a certain TV presenter. “Teeth” is aimed squarely at the dancefloor with its relentless synth stabs interwoven with doomy guitar riffs and “Angel” brings the album to a triumphant close: Jangling guitars and crashing cymbals over a driving rhythm that morphs into a sprawling psychedelic wig-out.

                                                                                                                                                                        They set out to make a dance record that wouldn’t be pigeonholed as a dance record. I think they’ve nailed it.

                                                                                                                                                                        TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                                        1 Valleys
                                                                                                                                                                        2 A.A.A.A.
                                                                                                                                                                        3 John Cooper Clarke
                                                                                                                                                                        4 White Rooms And People
                                                                                                                                                                        5 Outside
                                                                                                                                                                        6 Be My Guest
                                                                                                                                                                        7 Tomorrow
                                                                                                                                                                        8 Cook A Coffee
                                                                                                                                                                        9 Teeth
                                                                                                                                                                        10 Angel

                                                                                                                                                                        When Mildlife’s debut album, Phase, was released in 2018 it didn’t so much explode on to the scene as ooze. Their mellifluous mix of jazz, krautrock and, perhaps more pertinently, demon grooves, was the word of mouth sensation of that year among open-minded DJs and diggers searching for the perfect beat.

                                                                                                                                                                        Their emergence was backed up by European tours that demonstrated a riotously loose-limbed ap-proach to performance that was every bit as thrilling as Phase’s tantalising promise. What was more impressive was how lightly they wore influences that took in Can, Patrick Adams and Jan Hammer Group, while primarily sounding precisely like Mildlife.

                                                                                                                                                                        By the end of 2018 they’d been nominees for Best Album at the Worldwide FM Awards (World-wide’s Gilles Peterson was a notable champion) and won Best Electronic Act at The Age Music Victoria Awards back home in Melbourne. Their progress post-Phase was cemented with a UK deal with Jeff Barrett’s Heavenly, who released How Long Does It Take? replete with Cosmic doyen Baldelli and Dionigi remixes, while last year they were officially anointed by DJ Harvey when he included The Magnificent Moon on his Pikes compilation Mercury Rising Vol II.

                                                                                                                                                                        With Automatic, the band have made a step-change from their debut. It’s more disciplined, direc-tional and arguably more danceable. As on Phase, they are unafraid to let a track luxuriate in length without ever succumbing to self-indulgence. The arrangements, tightly structured thanks to Tom Shanahan (bass) and Jim Rindfleish’s fatback drumming, permit space for the others to add spice to the stew, topped off with Kevin McDowell’s ethereal vocals as Mildlife effortlessly glide between live performance and studio songwriting. “The recorded songs kind of become the new reference point for playing the songs live,’ says Kevin. “They both have different outcomes and we make our decisions for each based on that, but they’re symbiotic and they both influence each other. It’s usually a fairly natural flow from live to recorded back to live.”

                                                                                                                                                                        With the current climate as it is, opportunities to take this album out into the live arena where the band truly come alive, might well be scant, but they are working on ways around this. “We were hoping to visit new places with this album but that’s required a bit of rethink. We have a lot more videos planned for this year and we’ll be doing shows in Australia when things re-open but it’s still all just wait and see for now.” One thing’s for sure, post-lockdown will be one hell of a party.

                                                                                                                                                                        The centrepiece of Automatic is the title track where the band sound like Kraftwerk and Herbie Hancock on quarantined lockdown in Bob Moog’s Trumansburg workshop. It’s both a departure and quintessentially Mildlife. This is music you can dance to rather than ‘dance music’ and it’s all the better for it.

                                                                                                                                                                        - Bill Brewster

                                                                                                                                                                        STAFF COMMENTS

                                                                                                                                                                        Patrick says: Mildlife's first LP 'Phase' wowed us all at Picc HQ and their subsequent live shows sent all and sundry into utter rapture. Their second LP takes a little side step away from the more cosmic moments of their debut, leaning into a more sleek and streamlined discoid style which could elicit a wiggle from even the most ardent wallflower.

                                                                                                                                                                        TRACK LISTING

                                                                                                                                                                        1 Rare Air
                                                                                                                                                                        2 Vapour
                                                                                                                                                                        3 Downstream
                                                                                                                                                                        4 Citations
                                                                                                                                                                        5 Memory Palace
                                                                                                                                                                        6 Automatic

                                                                                                                                                                        Cherry Ghost

                                                                                                                                                                        Live At The Trades Club, Hebden Bridge - January 25 2015.

                                                                                                                                                                          As the final act before their hiatus ñ coming after three critically praised albums in a decade - 'Live at the Trades Club Hebden Bridge' is Cherry Ghost performing an intimate, starkly arranged set at the 2015 Heavenly Weekender.Released now for the first time ñ on double vinyl and download ñ this is perhaps the best realised collection of songs from Cherry Ghost, the alias of the Ivor Novello award-winning songwriter Simon Aldred. The instrumentation ñ Aldred is joined on keyboards and light percussion by Christian Madden and Grenville Harrop ñ brings to the fore Aldred's peerless songwriting, his oak-aged, prematurely wisened baritone.'History' wrote the Quietus in 2014, 'will be kind to Aldred', and this collection proves exactly that ñ with a bit of time and distance, the songs presented here show a highly singular, highly accomplished songwriter, aspiring to the pop classicism of Glen Campbell or Bill Callahan. All of human life is here ñ tracking a drizzly Northern gothic of last bus loneliness, late-night Spars, solitary drinkers, factory floors and Gods that betray.And yet, there's more than meets the eye.There's magnetic renderings of his best known songs - '4AM', 'People Help the People', the soaring 'Mathematics' - but surprises reveal themselves.'All I Want' and 'Herd Runners' candidly examine Aldred's sexuality, whilst the seldom heard b-side 'Bad Crowd' reveals Aldred to be a much funnier songwriter than remembered. What runs right through Aldred's work, however, is a yearning ñ a much tested faith in romance ñ so no wonder that the album ends on its most optimistic notes, at the darkest point of winter nestled in the West Yorkshire valleys, promising clear skies ever closer.

                                                                                                                                                                          Working Men's Club

                                                                                                                                                                          Megamix

                                                                                                                                                                            THIS IS A RECORD STORE DAY 2020 RELEASE AVAILABLE ONLINE ONLY AS PART OF THE AUGUST 29TH DROP DAY AT 6PM.
                                                                                                                                                                            LIMITED TO ONE PER PERSON.


                                                                                                                                                                            Working Menís Club hotly anticipated, self-titled debut album was due to drop this June, now, for reasons obvious to most of us, it is due October. Looking at the blank space left by the postponement, 18 year old wonderkid frontman Syd Minsky-Sargeant decided to utilise his free time, in lockdown, and capitalise on the creative momentum the band has garnered. The result is a 21-minute continuous ëMEGAMIXí that simultaneously acts as a taster and a condensed electronic reworking of parts of the album. ìOur album would have been released today but we had to push the release back due to Covid. It doesnít feel like a particularly apt time to be self promoting anything at all however we wanted to give something to the people who pre-ordered the album on what would of the original release date,î says Minsky-Sargeant. ìInitially it seemed a bit of a crazy idea to go and remix an album we've just made that isn't even out yet. But once we got into it we were like, ëlet's fucking go for ití. One could of course argue that crazy ideas are whatís needed in such crazy times but, in reality, what has been produced is less of a chaotic and scatterbrain idea and more a coherent artistic statement in line with the bandís perpetual forward momentum. Minsky-Sargeant teamed up with the bandís producer Ross Orton - under the moniker ëMinsky Rockí, a recently started project under which they recently completed a Jarvis Cocker remix - and the pair worked remotely to create the unique reimagining. ìRoss has a studio in Sheffield and I have a bit of one at home. So I would play a synth part and then send him the file over and he'd put it into his computer and then bring it up on a shared screen. I could see his interface and we'd mix it like that. It was like being in the same room.î The result is a ìreinterpretation rather than a remixî says Minsky-Sargeant. Over its seamlessly flowing duration, as it unfurls in hypnotic and infectious grooves - teasing snippets of songs as they weave in and out - the mix plays out like a classic 12î extended mix. Albeit one that takes on different forms and explores new terrain altogether. ìIt takes a number of parts of the album but different versions [and edits] of the songs,î he says. ìI've played new parts on more or less everything. Some tracks I've taken out the guitar parts and re-done them with synths or replaced bass lines with synths.î Thereís something of a northern lineage that can be traced here too, in that the 12î band remixes were something of a mainstay of Manchester bands like New Order and A Certain Ratio, and in a similar spirit, WMC are a new young band pushing, and crossing, the boundaries of where guitar and electronic music can interlink and overlap. ìIt's free flowing and electronic, rather than sounding like a band,î Minsky-Sargeant says of the mix. ìIt gives an insight into what the record is like, as well as the future of the band, but itís also something totally exclusive. It's very much its own thing.î

                                                                                                                                                                            Saint Etienne

                                                                                                                                                                            Words & Music (Love Record Stores Edition)

                                                                                                                                                                              Love Record Stores Edition available from 9am on Saturday June 20th.
                                                                                                                                                                              Limited to one per person.

                                                                                                                                                                              White Vinyl with yellow, Green and Black splatter LP.




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