Waxahatchee: “I didn’t want ‘Saint Cloud’ to seem like a fluke”

Katie Crutchfield doesn’t want to deal in absolutes anymore. “I hate to make blanket statements because I’ve already contradicted everything I’ve ever said I’d do creatively,” the singer – who has been performing as Waxahatchee since 2010 – tells NME from a London studio ahead of the release of her new album, ‘Tiger’s Blood’. Specifically, she’s talking […]

The post Waxahatchee: “I didn’t want ‘Saint Cloud’ to seem like a fluke” appeared first on NME.

NME

Katie Crutchfield doesn’t want to deal in absolutes anymore. “I hate to make blanket statements because I’ve already contradicted everything I’ve ever said I’d do creatively,” the singer – who has been performing as Waxahatchee since 2010 – tells NME from a London studio ahead of the release of her new album, ‘Tiger’s Blood’.

Specifically, she’s talking about how she feels tempted to divide her career into two parts, the time before her breakout 2020 album ‘Saint Cloud’ and the years after. Crutchfield’s first record as Waxahatchee, 2012’s ‘American Weekend’, arrived after the breakup of her rock band P.S. Eliot and presented a deeply vulnerable and diaristic form of storytelling set over spare instrumentation and endearingly lo-fi production. The albums that followed (2013’s ‘Cerulean Salt’ and 2017’s ‘Out In The Storm’) beefed up the sonics of Waxahatchee but kept her firmly in the indie-rock lane.

‘Saint Cloud’, which arrived in the infamous month of March 2020, featured not only Crutchfield’s best songwriting yet but also ushered in a new, breezy sound that took her back to the country music of her childhood in Alabama. Sonically, its story of getting sober and slowing down in life also struck an immediate chord in a quarantined world and took Waxahatchee to her biggest audiences yet. “I felt pretty strongly when I was making ‘Saint Cloud’ that this was my best record,” she says.

The album saw Crutchfield work with producer Brad Cook (Bon Iver, Snail Mail) for the first time, who she now calls “the important collaborator of my life”. She adds: “I never had the type of sounding board that he provides before. Being an artist, there’s an ego that comes with it where you want the final say on everything. There’s elements of that which are healthy, but what I’ve really learned is that I have a certain skill set that I bring to the table, but putting that into place has not always been my strong suit. Brad does all the things that I don’t do in such a smart and tasteful way.

Waxahatchee CREDIT: Molly Matalon

“Brad and I, in our own individual ways, really didn’t want ‘Saint Cloud’ to seem like a fluke to anybody,” Crutchfield reflects on her mindset when work on ‘Tiger’s Blood’ began. “We didn’t want people to think, ‘Oh, they made one good record!’ We both felt a certain amount of responsibility, even to each other, to really bring it for the next one.”

“There’s a weird pressure to reinvent yourself with every record, but I’m just trying to elevate the songs the best I can”

As is often the case when following up a record deemed both by the artist and audience as their best, Crutchfield and Cook’s first instinct was to veer in a completely different direction and considered making a shiny, synth-heavy pop record. “The moment we started, we both had complete breakdowns,” Crutchfield laughs. They were working on ‘Right Back To It’, the track that ended up becoming ‘Tiger’s Blood’’s first single, and were trying to programme beats into it and “basically make it a pop song”.

“I was checked out because I knew I didn’t like it,” she remembers of the day, “and I noticed Brad was telling everyone to go home. We went outside to his backyard, and both just melted down.” She told Cook: “‘I hate this! That sucks! I don’t wanna make a record like that!’ and he agreed. We were in tears, having a big moment.”

The ‘Tiger’s Blood’ that we hear now features none of this crisis of confidence or sonic handbrake turns; it’s a refining and an elevation of Crutchfield’s songwriting in every way. The album doesn’t feel bound to the template set by ‘Saint Cloud’ but doesn’t resort to rash reinvention for reinvention’s sake, either. ‘Evil Spawn’, one of its standout tracks, is the most potent form of Waxahatchee music yet while retaining subtlety and charm. On ‘Bored’, the music returns some way towards her crunchier mid-2010s albums, but there’s a consistently airy and warm quality to its production.

‘Right Back To It’, the album’s first single and best song, also served as the turning point for the record’s creation. The day before Crutchfield and Cook’s tête-à-tête in the garden, they had invited songwriter and Wednesday guitarist MJ Lenderman to the studio to track vocals for the song. Before he hit the booth, Crutchfield talked the enigmatic and fast-rising singer over what she wanted from his backing vocals in the track’s chorus.

A few minutes later, he went in and largely did the complete opposite. “He was super polite and listened to everything I asked him to do, but just went in and did his own thing,” Crutchfield smiles. “It was amazing.” The off-kilter duet that became ‘Right Back To It’ now oozes charm and chemistry as Lenderman’s voice slides down unique tangents away from Crutchfield’s intended melody line.

The pair then knew Lenderman had to stay for the whole album’s recording, with drummer Spencer Tweedy (son and collaborator of Wilco’s Jeff) also brought in. The trio, along with Cook and his brother Phil, then developed their chemistry by playing ‘Tiger’s Blood’ in its entirety at a secret show in Durham, North Carolina, as a full live band before heading down to Texas’ Sonic Ranch Studios, the same place ‘Saint Cloud’ was laid down.

As well as being a sonic refinement and slow expansion of the Waxahatchee sound, ‘Tiger’s Blood’ represents a subtle shift in her lyric writing. For Crutchfield – and listeners – ‘Saint Cloud’ came with a clear narrative of sobriety and reflection, beckoning in a new era of life. While the singer says it’s “a complicated record about a lot of things”, she admits it was “really easy to say [to press] that it’s a record about getting sober”.

She adds: “With ‘Tiger’s Blood’, I was just doing really well. I’m in my mid-thirties and things are just quite peaceful right now. So it was really hard for me when I didn’t have that clean narrative of what to write about.”

“I’m at an age now where my life is less dramatic”

While an album about personal breakthroughs and earth-shifting moments is easier to latch onto, ‘Tiger’s Blood’ excels in sifting through the aftermath of these seismic shifts and examining the things that continue to slowly change even when your life stands somewhat still. On the record, she sings of “the 11th hour of a long friendship,” settling into a long romantic relationship (Crutchfield lives in Kansas City with her partner, songwriter Kevin Morby), familial relationships, culture at large and more.

“I think what I was scared of was it being boring or mundane,” she reflects. “I’m at an age now where my life is less dramatic. When you’re in your twenties, it’s all chaos and melodrama, which is gorgeous fodder for songwriting. Now, it would feel really inauthentic for me to write about that type of thing. That’s just not really what my day-to-day life is like anymore.”

Waxahatchee CREDIT: Molly Matalon

Instead, Crutchfield continues to write about what she knows and what her life looks like at this moment. Though a radical reinvention crossed her mind for a second, ‘Tiger’s Blood’ continues the gorgeous and tasteful evolution of Waxahatchee. It takes her further towards timelessness, a word she thought about a lot while making the new album.

“I’m in this phase where it’s deeply on my mind,” she says of her past and future, name-checking her heroes – Tom Petty, Lucinda Williams – and the admiration she has for the legacies they built over decades. “How is this going to sound in 10 years? How about 20?” she thought to herself when making ‘Tiger’s Blood’. “I wanted to commit to making something that’s going to stay.”

‘Tiger’s Blood’ is released March 22 via ANTI-.

The post Waxahatchee: “I didn’t want ‘Saint Cloud’ to seem like a fluke” appeared first on NME.

Master Peace: “I wanted to make an album that’s a cultural reset for Gen Z”

‘How To Make A Master Peace’ is as ambitious a debut album as its title suggests, with Peace Okezie fighting through illness and doubters to make an indie smash for the 2020s

The post Master Peace: “I wanted to make an album that’s a cultural reset for Gen Z” appeared first on NME.

NME

You wouldn’t know it from listening, but Master Peace’s debut album was created under a cloud of chronic illness and doubt. At the time he was making the raucous, ambitious ‘How To Make A Master Peace’, Peace Okezie was just learning that he suffers from peripheral neuropathy, a condition that causes nerve pain and frailty and numbness in his limbs. Team that with a romantic break-up and fighting against a career of being pushed into boxes he didn’t fit in, and he knew he needed to come out swinging.

“I was kind of going through the thick of it,” he tells NME from Los Angeles, where he’s working on new tracks for a deluxe edition of the LP. “I was dealing with all this while also being a young person still trying to live my life. The only way I could ever get out of it was through the songs.”

Okezie’s way out of it, as demonstrated on the fantastic debut album, was through unfiltered energy and the channeling of his indie heroes. Early Master Peace performances on 2018 debut single ‘Buck Me’ and his appearance on Tim & Barry TV earned the descriptor as a “punk rapper” by NME in 2019, but pointed to the future with the quote: “I’m what a rock star looks like.”

“I was just too busy doing what everybody else wanted me to do,” he reflects now of his past work. “It definitely stunted my growth. I’ve always wanted to be an indie artist, but there was always someone in my ear saying, ‘No, don’t do that. That ain’t cool’. Even friends of mine, who I love to death, would say, ‘Nah, bro, they will only push a certain demographic of people. They ain’t gonna push a black artist doing this type of music’. It got to a point where I believed it.”

In the end, it was unwavering self-confidence that brought Master Peace back to the music of his youth, and to a debut album that marks him out as an indie star for a new generation. As all the biggest stars of the genre past and present do, he’s got the ambition and the quotes to back it up. “I remember when Arctic Monkeys’ first album came out. It was a real moment in time, and was a cultural reset,” he says. “I wanted to make an album that’s a cultural reset for Gen Z kids of the current day and age. I want them to say, ‘When this album came out, it changed the way we all thought.’”

Fortunately, ‘How To Make A Master Peace’ has the hits to back up the bravado. From the moment ‘Los Narcos’ rushes out of the gate like an eager greyhound, the giddy energy and intensity never lets up. ‘Lodge’ is a swaggering high point, while ‘I Might Be Fake’ – assisted by Georgia – is blistering nu-rave revivalism with all of the attitude and sweat of its pioneers. ‘GET NAUGHTY!’, which justifies both its all-caps title and exclamation mark, is another sleazy triumph.

Peace recently toured with The Streets, and has ambitions of becoming the same type of unhinged, chaos-creating live performer as Mike Skinner, who has also become somewhat of a mentor. “I played him a bit of my album and asked what he thought,” he says. “[Skinner] was like, ‘Don’t worry about what I think, and don’t worry about what everyone else thinks’ Worry about what you think. I asked him how [‘Original Pirate Material’] managed to stand the test of time,” Peace adds. “He’s like, ‘Because I didn’t care what people thought when I first made it, I just made it because I like that type of music. I wasn’t trying to get a hit, I was just trying to make good music that people will resonate with that will then change my life, which it did’.

“You’re just making music that you like, and that you’re into,” Skinner told Okezie. “People will gravitate to it if you believe that they will.”

In making the album and undergoing this sonic shift, Okezie felt he was deliberately going against the zeitgeist, making music he was told by others was outdated and unfashionable. Since then though, indie sleaze has become a buzzword again and the chaotic, sex-fuelled songs of The Dare are making headlines and filling rooms. After the album was finished, more sets of ears gravitated towards the classics of ‘00s indie, with the soundtrack to Emerald Fennell’s Saltburn turning younger listeners onto Bloc Party and MGMT, as well as Sophie Ellis Bextor. “It’s one of those happy accidents,” Okezie grins.

Credit: Press

Growing up in rural Surrey after moving from South East London as a child, Okezie was torn between the indie staples he was hungrily consuming and his childhood interest in the UK rap scene. ‘Shangaladang’, a loose and languid highlight from the album, quotes Skepta and reflects on his early days in London, which stood in stark contrast to the suburbia where he ended up spending most of his childhood.

“I’ve never really spoken about my childhood,” he says, “but I grew up around people that were involved in crime. That song is about people that I used to be friends with that were about that life. There’s people that rap about it, and there’s people that live it. Those people live it, they live that life through and through. People would say that I’m a sweet boy from Surrey who ain’t going through nothing. But I’ve seen some shit that makes you question whether I’m doing the right thing, if I’m even supposed to be a musician.”

‘How To Make A Master Peace’ is an escape, then, from things past and present that have held Okezie back. It’s also an early contender for the best British debut album of 2024, an album of rare energy and charisma that wants to change the world, and could conceivably do so for a small corner of it.

“I feel like I’m a dark horse,” he concludes of his place in the industry. “Everybody knows the bands that the industry is putting to the forefront, and I don’t need to name names. Then I’m here like, come and join this train!’” Falling – with his infectious and ever-present enthusiasm – into a football analogy, he adds: “Sometimes I feel like I’m sitting on a bench waiting to get put on in the 90th minute. I’m like, ‘Nah, man, I want to play the full game’. I’m gonna get that first team play, man, I can feel it.”

Master Peace’s debut album ‘How To Make A Master Peace’ is out now

The post Master Peace: “I wanted to make an album that’s a cultural reset for Gen Z” appeared first on NME.

UK government announces Industry Transparency Code on Music Streaming

The new code is committed to increasing transparency around streaming practices

The post UK government announces Industry Transparency Code on Music Streaming appeared first on NME.

NME

The UK government has today announced a new Industry Transparency Code on Music Streaming, committed to increasing transparency around streaming practices.

The code was facilitated by the Intellectual Property Office and developed by a series of industry experts. It will come into force from July 31 this year.

Viscount Camrose, the Minister for AI and Intellectual Property, said:  “From The Beatles and The Rolling Stones to Dua Lipa and Little Mix, the UK music scene is the envy of the world. In the last decade, the way that we consume our music has changed markedly, and that’s why we’re taking steps to help ensure artists get the royalties and protections they deserve when their music is played on streaming platforms.

“This pioneering code, designed by the music industry with government backing, has trust at its core. I’m delighted to see the UK leading the charge to ensure our peerless creative minds get the protections they deserve, as the way we listen to our favourite tracks continues to evolve.”

Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer added: “For decades the UK music industry has projected our soft power to the world. Our home-grown artists make awe-inspiring music that brings in billions of pounds to the economy.

“As technology continues to transform the industry, musicians must be entitled to a clear and simple way of understanding what they can expect to be paid from streaming royalties.
Frazer added: “I welcome the music industry working together on this, and look forward to this code being put into practice.”

(CREDIT: Stephen Frost / Alamy Stock Photo)

One industry body involved with the creation of the code was the Association Of Independent Music (AIM), whose COO Gee Davy said: “The Transparency Code is a milestone, with participants across the music sector uniting to improve trust and understanding of the streaming ecosystem through transparency. We welcome the participating streaming platforms’ commitment to aid wider understanding of their models and payments.

“As well as providing clarity on expected standards for more established players, we expect the Code to prove vital for those starting out and growing their business to ensure they are set on the right path from day one. By consulting across the broad independent sector, AIM has ensured that the Code should be achievable for all, no matter their scale. We will be collaborating with other trade body signatories over the coming months to offer guidance and support for independents to ensure all can uphold the highest standards possible.”

The Council of Music Makers, a joint campaigning voice of the Ivors Academy, FAC, MMF, MPG and the MU, added: “The Council Of Music Makers welcomes the Transparency Code that has been agreed by the UK music industry today. Although the commitments in the code are modest, it provides a framework that can be used to start tackling the “systemic lack of transparency” in music streaming that was identified by the Culture, Media & Sport Select Committee in 2021.

“Since then, the lack of transparency in streaming has increased, with individual streaming services announcing new business models, such as payment thresholds and spatial audio uplifts, developed without consultation with music-makers or their representatives, making it even harder to understand how they are paying through.

“We now need everyone working in the industry to fully embrace the code, and to go above and beyond in providing music-makers with the information they need to properly manage, understand and audit the digital side of their individual music-maker businesses.”

CREDIT: Didem Mente/Anadolu via Getty Images

The news of the new code comes after the European Union recently called for changes to the music streaming business, including fairer royalty distributions and increasing payments to artists.

This month, the EU adopted a resolution to address the imbalance of revenue allocation in music streaming, including creating a new legal framework for streaming. There are currently no EU rules that apply to the sector.

The proposal follows Spotify’s confirmation that all songs on the platform must have a minimum of 1,000 streams before they can earn any royalties. The policy changed was slammed by independent artists such as Damon & Naomi, who claimed it would “move an estimated $40-$46 million annually from artists like Damon & Naomi to artists like Ed Sheeran.”

It was also recently revealed that roughly a quarter of music on streaming services didn’t get played at all in 2023.

In 2021, MPs called for a “complete reset” to address the “pitiful returns” musicians receive from streaming, as laid out in a report from the government’s Economics Of Music Streaming inquiry/

The post UK government announces Industry Transparency Code on Music Streaming appeared first on NME.

AURORA and Gabriels added to BRITs Week 2024 gig week for War Child

They join the likes of The Last Dinner Party and Sleaford Mods at the annual charity gig series

The post AURORA and Gabriels added to BRITs Week 2024 gig week for War Child appeared first on NME.

NME

AURORA and Gabriels have been added to the line-up for this year’s BRITs Week for War Child.

The gig series, which has been running since 2009, will see artists perform one-off show in intimate surroundings around the UK. Since its inception, the event has raised £7million for War Child, to help children whose lives have been devastated by war.

The initial line-up announcement for 2024 revealed that The Last Dinner PartySleaford Mods and Keane were all set to perform, as well as Baby QueenYou Me At SixAitchPendulumCMAT and more.

Now, it’s been confirmed that AURORA will play at Lafayette in London on February 26, with Gabriels hitting the stage at Ronnie Scott’s the following night.

Of her gig, AURORA said: “As you all may know. Now more than ever, children deserve to be protected from the flaws of our ways. I still cannot believe we still cannot agree completely on this one simple thing – our children needs to be protected. No matter where they are from. Or what land they live on. Or what god they believe in. Every child deserves safety. They are all that we have. Our future. Our promise. That what is good with human kind may live on.

“So it is indeed an honour, to be raising money for such an important cause. Because it helps everything else.. feel less meaningless. Doing something to help, no matter how small a gesture, always brings you closer to the very essence of life.”

See the full list of BRITs Week gigs so far below.

FEBRUARY
19 – Cian Ducrot – Union Chapel, London
19 – You Me At Six – Concorde 2, Brighton
20 – Keane – O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire, London
21 – Ash – The 100 Club, London
21 – Baby Queen – Lafayette, London
21 – Aitch – O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire, London
23 – Pendulum – HERE at Outernet, London
26 – AURORA – Lafayette, London

27 – Gabriels – Ronnie Scott’s, London
28 – Sleaford Mods – Scala, London

MARCH
1 – CMAT – Bush Hall, London
1 – Venbee – Omeara, London
4 – The Last Dinner Party – The Trades Club, Hebden Bridge

Clare Sanders Wright, Senior Music Manager at War Child, said of the event: “I am so excited to announce the lineup for BRITs Week 2024 and thankful to all of the brilliant artists donating their time to raise vital funds in aid of War Child. The past year is one that we will never, ever forget. Children have paid with their homes and their lives for wars they didn’t start.

“And then, there are the children who don’t make the headlines – children who might be completely forgotten. But there is hope. War Child help children put the pieces back together. The money raised from BRITs Week 2024 will help War Child keep children safe. Whether it’s mental health first aid, food, or shelter, War Child work in the hardest-to-reach places to ensure that children and their families have hope for a brighter future. We are so grateful to the artists and our partners for supporting BRITs Week 24. Thank you.”

To enter the prize draw and win tickets to see the artist of their choice, fans can make a £7 donation for one entry, a £15 donation for three entries, or a £30 donation for 15 entries, to War Child. To maximise the chance of winning, fans can enter as many times as they like. Click here for the prize draw which is open now.

The post AURORA and Gabriels added to BRITs Week 2024 gig week for War Child appeared first on NME.

Camera Obscura share new single ‘Big Love’ and announce details of first album in 10 years

‘Look To The East, Look To The West’ will be taken on a UK headline tour later this year

The post Camera Obscura share new single ‘Big Love’ and announce details of first album in 10 years appeared first on NME.

NME

Camera Obscura have announced details of their first new album in over 10 years and shared new single ‘Big Love’.

‘Look To The East, Look To The West’ is the Scottish band’s first album since 2013’s ‘Desire’ Lines’ and will be released on May 3 via Merge Records.

Discussing the album’s first single, which you can listen to below, vocalist Tracyanne Campbell said: “’Big Love’ is our tribute to Waylon Jennings, with a nod to Sandy Denny and prog rock band Scope. It’s a song about not looking back, having faith in the present and future.”

Camera Obscura are also set to take ‘Look To The East, Look To The West’ on a UK headline tour later this year, including a London show at KOKO. Find any remaining tickets here.

Listen to ‘Big Love’ and see the tour dates below, alongside the artwork and tracklist for ‘Look To The East, Look To The West’.

‘Look To The East, Look To The West’ tracklist:

1. ‘Liberty Print’
2. ‘We’re Going To Make It In A Man’s World’
3. ‘Big Love’
4. ‘Only A Dream’
5. ‘The Light Nights’
6. ‘Sleepwalking’
7. ‘Baby Huey (Hard Times)’
8. ‘Denon’
9. ‘Pop Goes Pop’
10. ‘Sugar Almond’
11. ‘Look To The East, Look To The West’

Camera Obscura 2024 UK tour dates:

MAY 2024
2 – Hebden Bridge, The Trades Club

3 – London, Rough Trade East
4 – Leeds, Stylus
6 – Manchester, Academy 2
7 – London, KOKO
9 – Brighton, Concorde 2
10 – Birmingham, O2 Academy2
11 – Glasgow, Barrowland Ballroom

2024 will also see the band playing Belle & Sebastian‘s new festival ‘The Glasgow Weekender’ alongside CMAT, The Joy Hotel, and Bis.

The festival is part of the Scottish band’s ‘Bowlie’ Weekenders, with the first Bowlie staged in 1999 at Pontins, Camber Sands. They returned to Camber Sands in 2010 for ‘Bowlie 2’, and announced 2019’s ‘Boaty Weekender‘ which took place on a cruise ship in the Mediterranean Sea.

The post Camera Obscura share new single ‘Big Love’ and announce details of first album in 10 years appeared first on NME.

Pet Shop Boys announce new album ‘Nonetheless’ with single ‘Loneliness’

The duo will also play five special shows at London’s Royal Opera House this summer

The post Pet Shop Boys announce new album ‘Nonetheless’ with single ‘Loneliness’ appeared first on NME.

NME

Pet Shop Boys have announced details of a new album called ‘Nonetheless’ – listen to its first single, ‘Loneliness’, below.

Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe will release their new album on April 26, the first since 2020’s ‘Hotspot’. It sees them work with James Ford on production for the first time.

“We wanted this album to be a celebration of the unique and diverse emotions that make us human,” they said in a statement. “From the more dance-orientated tracks to the raw poignancy of the introspective ballads, with their beautiful string arrangements, each track tells a story and contributes to the overall narrative of the album.”

The band added: “We’re very excited to release this new album. Its 10 tracks are the strongest indicators of where we are today. Like much of our music it’s very reflective. It was great to work with James Ford, who we think has brought new elements to our music.

“Our demos are sometimes quite complicated, and James has dared to make us a bit more minimal at times – but also, the string arrangements are very beautiful. Some of the record is quite heart-breaking, but we hope a lot of it is also uplifting. It’s a record we’re very proud of.”

Watch the video for ‘Loneliness’ below.

‘Nonetheless’ tracklist:

1. ‘Loneliness’
2. ‘Feel’
3. ‘Why Am I Dancing?’
4. ‘New London Boy’
5. ‘Dancing Star’
6. ‘A New Bohemia’
7. ‘The Schlager Hit Parade’
8. ‘The Secret Of Happiness’
9. ‘Bullet For Narcissus’
10. ‘Love Is The Law’

To celebrate the album, Pet Shop Boys will play five special gigs at London’s Royal Opera House this July. The gigs come in addition to the band’s 2024  ‘Dreamworld’ Greatest Hits tour dates.

Find tickets here and see the full list of dates below. Pre-order ‘Nonetheless’ here to access pre-sale tickets for the Royal Opera House gigs.

JUNE 2024
04 – OVO Hydro, Glasgow
06 – Motorpoint Arena, Nottingham
08 – Utilita Arena, Birmingham 
09 – Co-op Live, Manchester 
11 – SSE Arena, Belfast
22 – Isle of Wight Festival 2024, Newport 

JULY 2024
23 – London, Royal Opera House
24 – London, Royal Opera House
25 – London, Royal Opera House
26 – London, Royal Opera House
27 – London, Royal Opera House

The post Pet Shop Boys announce new album ‘Nonetheless’ with single ‘Loneliness’ appeared first on NME.

Pet Shop Boys announce new album ‘Nonetheless’ with single ‘Loneliness’

The duo will also play five special shows at London’s Royal Opera House this summer

The post Pet Shop Boys announce new album ‘Nonetheless’ with single ‘Loneliness’ appeared first on NME.

NME

Pet Shop Boys have announced details of a new album called ‘Nonetheless’ – listen to its first single, ‘Loneliness’, below.

Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe will release their new album on April 26, the first since 2020’s ‘Hotspot’. It sees them work with James Ford on production for the first time.

“We wanted this album to be a celebration of the unique and diverse emotions that make us human,” they said in a statement. “From the more dance-orientated tracks to the raw poignancy of the introspective ballads, with their beautiful string arrangements, each track tells a story and contributes to the overall narrative of the album.”

The band added: “We’re very excited to release this new album. Its 10 tracks are the strongest indicators of where we are today. Like much of our music it’s very reflective. It was great to work with James Ford, who we think has brought new elements to our music.

“Our demos are sometimes quite complicated, and James has dared to make us a bit more minimal at times – but also, the string arrangements are very beautiful. Some of the record is quite heart-breaking, but we hope a lot of it is also uplifting. It’s a record we’re very proud of.”

Watch the video for ‘Loneliness’ below.

‘Nonetheless’ tracklist:

1. ‘Loneliness’
2. ‘Feel’
3. ‘Why Am I Dancing?’
4. ‘New London Boy’
5. ‘Dancing Star’
6. ‘A New Bohemia’
7. ‘The Schlager Hit Parade’
8. ‘The Secret Of Happiness’
9. ‘Bullet For Narcissus’
10. ‘Love Is The Law’

To celebrate the album, Pet Shop Boys will play five special gigs at London’s Royal Opera House this July. The gigs come in addition to the band’s 2024  ‘Dreamworld’ Greatest Hits tour dates.

Find tickets here and see the full list of dates below. Pre-order ‘Nonetheless’ here to access pre-sale tickets for the Royal Opera House gigs.

JUNE 2024
04 – OVO Hydro, Glasgow
06 – Motorpoint Arena, Nottingham
08 – Utilita Arena, Birmingham 
09 – Co-op Live, Manchester 
11 – SSE Arena, Belfast
22 – Isle of Wight Festival 2024, Newport 

JULY 2024
23 – London, Royal Opera House
24 – London, Royal Opera House
25 – London, Royal Opera House
26 – London, Royal Opera House
27 – London, Royal Opera House

The post Pet Shop Boys announce new album ‘Nonetheless’ with single ‘Loneliness’ appeared first on NME.

Robbie Williams reportedly attempting to buy Port Vale Football Club and make TV show

The singer attended the team’s home game against Portsmouth at the weekend

The post Robbie Williams reportedly attempting to buy Port Vale Football Club and make TV show appeared first on NME.

NME

Robbie Williams is reportedly attempting to buy his hometown football club Port Vale and make a TV show about the experience.

Williams grew up in Stoke-on-Trent and has been a longtime Port Vale fan, and a new report from The Sun suggests that he could table a formal bid for control of the club.

A source said: “It’s really early days, but Robbie’s been formally approached to see if he’s interested in fronting a bid. Port Vale remains one of his greatest loves, and it’s always been a dream to be more involved.

“He’s had a couple of meetings, and his backers are incredibly excited. They feel Rob would add the star quality, and make Port Vale a major player. Seeing what Ryan and Rob have done with Wrexham — the increased footfall, merchandise sales and general profile build — is inspiring. Port Vale fans love Robbie and, on paper, it’s a match made in heaven.”

Robbie Williams. Credit: Lionel Hahn/Getty Images

If he were to make the purchase, Williams would follow in the footsteps of Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney, who purchased Wrexham AFC and made the hugely successful and ongoing TV series Welcome To Wrexham out of the experience.

Elsewhere, in November Williams paid tribute to a fan who died after a fall during his concert in Sydney. Robyn Hall died on November 20 after falling down six rows of seats at the Allianz Stadium.

Before he performed 1997 hit single ‘Angels’ he told the crowd: “I heard the news, the tragic news this week that a fan died in an accident after the show in Sydney and I feel after all the years that I am you and you are me and we are each other when we come together.

“So when something happens like this it breaks my heart. I’ve been thinking about it an awful lot, and I thought about it all the way through the show tonight. I just want to give a big shout-out and lots of love from me and my band to Robyn and Robyn’s family. Let’s all sing up, she was somebody just like you that came to the gig just like you did tonight. And I think she deserves a big song and tonight this is for her.”

Williams is also the subject of a new Netflix documentary which was released late last year.

The post Robbie Williams reportedly attempting to buy Port Vale Football Club and make TV show appeared first on NME.

Listen to Paramore’s return with cover of Talking Heads’ ‘Burning Down The House’

The announcement of the single came after the band were rumoured to be breaking up

The post Listen to Paramore’s return with cover of Talking Heads’ ‘Burning Down The House’ appeared first on NME.

NME

Paramore have made their high-profile return with a cover of Talking Heads classic ‘Burning Down The House’ – check it out below.

The track looks set to appear on an upcoming tribute album around the band’s iconic Stop Making Sense concert film, which was recently reissued for its 40th anniversary.

In the teaser clip for the cover, vocalist Hayley Williams collects a package that was delivered to her house. Upon opening it, she finds Talking Heads frontman David Byrne‘s iconic oversized suit which he famously wore in Stop Making Sense.

The cover is a largely faithful recreation of one of the band’s biggest hits, and you can listen to it below.

‘A Stop Making Sense: A Tribute Album’ is set to see 16 artists cover one of the 16 songs on the live album.

Last month, fans shared their worries that Paramore were set to break up after they took down all posts and images from social media pages, while their official website displayed a 404 error message. This came after the band voiced a “level of uncertainty” about their future, following the completion of their ‘This Is Why’ tour and recently-fulfilled obligations to their label.

Further speculation about the band came later, when it was announced that they would be pulling out of their headline performance at the ALTer Ego Festival, before it was reported that Paramore are gearing up for a new era and a fresh record deal.

They have also pulled out of Latin American festival dates, with Kings Of Leon replacing them.

Last year, Talking Heads’ 1983 ‘Stop Making Sense’ concert film was remastered in 4k through A24 in celebration of its 40th anniversary. The new wave legends also reunited for a Q&A back in September at the Toronto International Film Festival, marking their first public appearance in over 20 years.

This week, it was revealed that Talking Heads reportedly turned down $80million for a reunion tour from Coachella and Live Nation.

The post Listen to Paramore’s return with cover of Talking Heads’ ‘Burning Down The House’ appeared first on NME.

BMG reportedly splitting from Roger Waters following Israel comments

Waters has repeatedly been accused of antisemitism and is the subject of a recent documentary on the topic

The post BMG reportedly splitting from Roger Waters following Israel comments appeared first on NME.

NME

Roger Waters is reportedly set to be dropped by his label BMG over his recent and high-profile comments on Israel.

The outspoken former Pink Floyd member has been in the news recently for his comments on the conflict in Palestine and accusations of antisemitism.

Waters has repeatedly denied all accusations of antisemitism and explained that his disdain is towards Israel, not Judaism. He also accused Israel of “abusing the term antisemitism to intimidate people like me into silence”.

According to a new Variety report, sources from the label say that they are planning to separate from Waters, though didn’t respond to requests for comment on the new story.

Roger Waters CREDIT: Jim Dyson/Getty Images

Waters was recently the subject of a documentaryThe Dark Side Of Roger Waters, which was produced by the Campaign Against Antisemitism and collates various incidents of alleged antisemitism perpetrated by the musician.

Rogers has spoken out against the documentary with a post to his official websitedismissing the project as “a flimsy, unapologetic piece of propaganda”. He also claimed that it “indiscriminately mixes things I’m alleged to have said or done at different times and in different contexts, in an effort to portray me as an antisemite, without any foundation in fact”.

The documentary highlights a controversial concert in Germany back in May, which was criticised by the US State Department who described it as “deeply offensive to Jewish people”.

The comments came after the musician appeared on stage at his show wearing a black trench coat with a swastika-like emblem. At the time the musician defended the choice, claiming that the segment was a statement against fascism, injustice and bigotry and called criticism of it “disingenuous and politically motivated”.

In April, Waters won a legal battle to play a concert in Frankfurt after it was initially cancelled over claims of antisemitism.

He had been scheduled to play at the publicly owned Festhalle on May 28, but Frankfurt City Council called off the performance over the musician’s views on Israel. They later described him as “one of the world’s most widely-known antisemites”.

The post BMG reportedly splitting from Roger Waters following Israel comments appeared first on NME.

Exit mobile version