Kasabian – ‘The Alchemist’s Euphoria’ review: Leicester rockers reach infinity – and beyond!

The band’s first album with Serge Pizzorno on the mic is a space-inspired recalibration

The post Kasabian – ‘The Alchemist’s Euphoria’ review: Leicester rockers reach infinity – and beyond! appeared first on NME.

NME

There’s a track called ‘Space’ on Kasabian’s new album. Arriving halfway through the record, it’s 49 seconds of tasteful washes of synth, which ebb and flow, building and contracting in a hypnotic movement. It’s the kind of thing you might more readily expect to hear on the Calm app than on the new one from the tub-thumping lad-rockers who barreled in with the rifftastic ‘Club Foot’ back in 2004. “I’d always wanted to do something with the idea of seeing the world from outer space,” principal songwriter Serge Pizzorno has said. “How that changes astronauts’ personalities, because they see this pale blue dot…”

Pizzorno went on to explain that he saw a parallel in the “out of body experience” that Kasabian have weathered since ejecting their frontman Tom Meighan, who left the Leicester band in 2020 after assaulting his partner Vikki Ager. While Kasabian are clearly not the victims in all this, it’s also true that the four-piece – completed by bassist Chris Edwards, drummer Ian Matthews and newcomer Tim Carter on guitar and backing vocals – underwent a profound shift in light of events beyond their control.

Serge, always the chin-stroking auteur to Meighan’s endorphin-inducing rabble-rouser, had to – as he puts it on this album’s ravey ‘SCRVPTURE’ – “reach for the mic as I walk from the shadow”. Kasabian’s future seemed very much in doubt without their former frontman to sell the band’s unique brand of psychedelic party anthems. Pizzorno, though, prepared to take Meighan’s place by studying videos of Iggy Pop whipping up a crowd; think of it as a crash-course in rockstar training. The group’s resulting seventh album, ‘The Alchemist’s Euphoria’, is a whipsmart collection that pings from classic Kasabian piss-up chant-alongs (scything lead single ‘ALYGATYR’; the tellingly titled ‘ROCKET FUEL’) to starry eyed ballads – with, perhaps surprisingly, the emphasis on the latter.

Then again, it’s maybe not that surprising after all, given that Pizzorno already pushed himself forward with exploratory solo project The S.L.P. His self-titled album under that moniker, which featured rappers Little Simz and Slowthai, ached with woozy, bluesy, minimalist comedown tunes. This included one called ‘Lockdown’, which opened with the lyrics “I was on a lockdown, doin’ what I’m told” – given that the album was released in August 2019, seven months before the pandemic hit, you have to wonder if Serge is a prophet as well as an alchemist.

Because, yes, there is a concept of sorts at the heart of this album, with a Serge-like mystic travelling through the record on a voyage of self-discovery. On reflective opening track ‘ALCHEMIST’, which begins with the soothing sound of crashing waves, that figure longingly recalls “a time that we all could believe in”, but ushers in a new era with the demand: “Shut the door on your way if you’re leaving”. The fact that the track shifts from plaintive acoustic guitar to a thumping house beat and swirling synths – and all in the space of about 60 seconds – tells you everything you need to know about the Kasabian 2.0’s eagerness to explore new boundaries.

Later, on the marching ‘STRICTLY OLD SKOOL’, Serge champions those outside-the-box thinkers who can’t be contained by other people’s expectations: “You’re Dr. Dre / You’re Frida and you’re Kurt.” This is followed by a trio of space-inspired songs (introduced by that calming, aforementioned soundscape) that find our sonic alchemist gazing at the stars as he considers the limitless possibilities ahead: melodic fist-clencher ‘THE WALL’, electro doom-monger ‘T.U.E’ and the fittingly titled D’n’B-inspired jam ‘STARGAZR’. The middle tune boasts two of the best moments on the record, as a haunted beat drifts out of the melody like an emergency shuttle detaching from a space station, preceding an abrupt aural shift – into a ‘90s hip-hop-style instrumental – that would make ‘Yeezus’-era Kanye West proud.

Having seen the planet from a whole new angle, with all the realigned perceptions that come along with an out-of-body experience, our central figure arrives at the record’s end point. Folky acoustic jig ‘Letting Go’ twinkles with the magic dust we’ve come to expect from co-producer Fraser T. Smith (who’s worked with Stormzy and shared knob-twiddling duties with Pizzorno), but there’s darkness there too. “Even if your head’s not right, it’ll be alright,” Serge sings softly, “if you just start letting go”, his steely resolve revealing the sense of rebirth at the core of ‘The Alchemist’s Euphoria’.

That last word is important. Kasabian have always been about having a good fucking time, and although this is understandably their most introspective record yet, it does point to euphoria ahead. Back in May, the frontman told NME: “This album was just us saying, ‘Let’s see what we can do – let’s see where we can take this’. On the evidence of this surprising, eclectic and intimate record – which still finds time for the anthems of old – the answer is: as far as they want to.

Details

Release date: August 12

Record label: Sony Music

The post Kasabian – ‘The Alchemist’s Euphoria’ review: Leicester rockers reach infinity – and beyond! appeared first on NME.

Kasabian – ‘The Alchemist’s Euphoria’ review: Leicester rockers reach infinity – and beyond!

The band’s first album with Serge Pizzorno on the mic is a space-inspired recalibration

The post Kasabian – ‘The Alchemist’s Euphoria’ review: Leicester rockers reach infinity – and beyond! appeared first on NME.

NME

There’s a track called ‘Space’ on Kasabian’s new album. Arriving halfway through the record, it’s 49 seconds of tasteful washes of synth, which ebb and flow, building and contracting in a hypnotic movement. It’s the kind of thing you might more readily expect to hear on the Calm app than on the new one from the tub-thumping lad-rockers who barreled in with the rifftastic ‘Club Foot’ back in 2004. “I’d always wanted to do something with the idea of seeing the world from outer space,” principal songwriter Serge Pizzorno has said. “How that changes astronauts’ personalities, because they see this pale blue dot…”

Pizzorno went on to explain that he saw a parallel in the “out of body experience” that Kasabian have weathered since ejecting their frontman Tom Meighan, who left the Leicester band in 2020 after assaulting his partner Vikki Ager. While Kasabian are clearly not the victims in all this, it’s also true that the four-piece – completed by bassist Chris Edwards, drummer Ian Matthews and newcomer Tim Carter on guitar and backing vocals – underwent a profound shift in light of events beyond their control.

Serge, always the chin-stroking auteur to Meighan’s endorphin-inducing rabble-rouser, had to – as he puts it on this album’s ravey ‘SCRVPTURE’ – “reach for the mic as I walk from the shadow”. Kasabian’s future seemed very much in doubt without their former frontman to sell the band’s unique brand of psychedelic party anthems. Pizzorno, though, prepared to take Meighan’s place by studying videos of Iggy Pop whipping up a crowd; think of it as a crash-course in rockstar training. The group’s resulting seventh album, ‘The Alchemist’s Euphoria’, is a whipsmart collection that pings from classic Kasabian piss-up chant-alongs (scything lead single ‘ALYGATYR’; the tellingly titled ‘ROCKET FUEL’) to starry eyed ballads – with, perhaps surprisingly, the emphasis on the latter.

Then again, it’s maybe not that surprising after all, given that Pizzorno already pushed himself forward with exploratory solo project The S.L.P. His self-titled album under that moniker, which featured rappers Little Simz and Slowthai, ached with woozy, bluesy, minimalist comedown tunes. This included one called ‘Lockdown’, which opened with the lyrics “I was on a lockdown, doin’ what I’m told” – given that the album was released in August 2019, seven months before the pandemic hit, you have to wonder if Serge is a prophet as well as an alchemist.

Because, yes, there is a concept of sorts at the heart of this album, with a Serge-like mystic travelling through the record on a voyage of self-discovery. On reflective opening track ‘ALCHEMIST’, which begins with the soothing sound of crashing waves, that figure longingly recalls “a time that we all could believe in”, but ushers in a new era with the demand: “Shut the door on your way if you’re leaving”. The fact that the track shifts from plaintive acoustic guitar to a thumping house beat and swirling synths – and all in the space of about 60 seconds – tells you everything you need to know about the Kasabian 2.0’s eagerness to explore new boundaries.

Later, on the marching ‘STRICTLY OLD SKOOL’, Serge champions those outside-the-box thinkers who can’t be contained by other people’s expectations: “You’re Dr. Dre / You’re Frida and you’re Kurt.” This is followed by a trio of space-inspired songs (introduced by that calming, aforementioned soundscape) that find our sonic alchemist gazing at the stars as he considers the limitless possibilities ahead: melodic fist-clencher ‘THE WALL’, electro doom-monger ‘T.U.E’ and the fittingly titled D’n’B-inspired jam ‘STARGAZR’. The middle tune boasts two of the best moments on the record, as a haunted beat drifts out of the melody like an emergency shuttle detaching from a space station, preceding an abrupt aural shift – into a ‘90s hip-hop-style instrumental – that would make ‘Yeezus’-era Kanye West proud.

Having seen the planet from a whole new angle, with all the realigned perceptions that come along with an out-of-body experience, our central figure arrives at the record’s end point. Folky acoustic jig ‘Letting Go’ twinkles with the magic dust we’ve come to expect from co-producer Fraser T. Smith (who’s worked with Stormzy and shared knob-twiddling duties with Pizzorno), but there’s darkness there too. “Even if your head’s not right, it’ll be alright,” Serge sings softly, “if you just start letting go”, his steely resolve revealing the sense of rebirth at the core of ‘The Alchemist’s Euphoria’.

That last word is important. Kasabian have always been about having a good fucking time, and although this is understandably their most introspective record yet, it does point to euphoria ahead. Back in May, the frontman told NME: “This album was just us saying, ‘Let’s see what we can do – let’s see where we can take this’. On the evidence of this surprising, eclectic and intimate record – which still finds time for the anthems of old – the answer is: as far as they want to.

Details

Release date: August 12

Record label: Sony Music

The post Kasabian – ‘The Alchemist’s Euphoria’ review: Leicester rockers reach infinity – and beyond! appeared first on NME.

‘Dragon Ball FighterZ’ to get current-gen release and rollback netcode

‘Samurai Shodown’ is also getting rollback netcode

The post ‘Dragon Ball FighterZ’ to get current-gen release and rollback netcode appeared first on NME.

NME

Bandai Namco has announced that Dragon Ball FighterZ will be coming to PS5 and Xbox Series X|S consoles alongside a rollback netcode update.

Announced during the annual fighting game tournament Evo 2022 (August 5 to 7), it was confirmed that alongside a current-gen release which is now in development, Dragon Ball FighterZ, as well as Samurai Shodown, will be getting rollback netcode.

Rollback netcode is pretty important in online fighting games and is a frequently requested feature to be added. Most fighting games feature delay-based netcode, meaning when players hit buttons they aren’t acted on or seen immediately by either player. This results in input lag, which isn’t ideal for competitive fighting.

With rollback netcode, players will be able to see their actions straight away, making for a smoother experience. The rollback netcode functionality in Dragon Ball FighterZ will only be available through PC, PS5 and Xbox Series X|S.

Dragon Ball FighterZ producer Tomoko Hiroki came on stage during the game’s grand final to announce that “we have decided to implement rollback netcode to Dragon Ball FighterZ.” (via PC Gamer).

Hiroki confirmed that PS4 and Xbox One owners will be able to upgrade to the PS5 and Xbox Series versions for free when they become available. A release date has yet to be announced. The producer also noted that there are no new plans to add new fighters or balance changes to the game.

During the tournament, Bandai Namco also shared a teaser trailer for a new Tekken game. The clip shown didn’t confirm the long-awaited Tekken 8, nor was the game named, but it did showcase the infamous cutscene of Kazuya launching Heihachi from a clifftop, which was originally from the 1994 PlayStation game.

In other news, Street Fighter 6 has revealed new fighter Kimberly, as Capcom revealed that Juri will also return for the sequel.

The post ‘Dragon Ball FighterZ’ to get current-gen release and rollback netcode appeared first on NME.

‘Dragon Ball FighterZ’ to get current-gen release and rollback netcode

‘Samurai Shodown’ is also getting rollback netcode

The post ‘Dragon Ball FighterZ’ to get current-gen release and rollback netcode appeared first on NME.

NME

Bandai Namco has announced that Dragon Ball FighterZ will be coming to PS5 and Xbox Series X|S consoles alongside a rollback netcode update.

Announced during the annual fighting game tournament Evo 2022 (August 5 to 7), it was confirmed that alongside a current-gen release which is now in development, Dragon Ball FighterZ, as well as Samurai Shodown, will be getting rollback netcode.

Rollback netcode is pretty important in online fighting games and is a frequently requested feature to be added. Most fighting games feature delay-based netcode, meaning when players hit buttons they aren’t acted on or seen immediately by either player. This results in input lag, which isn’t ideal for competitive fighting.

With rollback netcode, players will be able to see their actions straight away, making for a smoother experience. The rollback netcode functionality in Dragon Ball FighterZ will only be available through PC, PS5 and Xbox Series X|S.

Dragon Ball FighterZ producer Tomoko Hiroki came on stage during the game’s grand final to announce that “we have decided to implement rollback netcode to Dragon Ball FighterZ.” (via PC Gamer).

Hiroki confirmed that PS4 and Xbox One owners will be able to upgrade to the PS5 and Xbox Series versions for free when they become available. A release date has yet to be announced. The producer also noted that there are no new plans to add new fighters or balance changes to the game.

During the tournament, Bandai Namco also shared a teaser trailer for a new Tekken game. The clip shown didn’t confirm the long-awaited Tekken 8, nor was the game named, but it did showcase the infamous cutscene of Kazuya launching Heihachi from a clifftop, which was originally from the 1994 PlayStation game.

In other news, Street Fighter 6 has revealed new fighter Kimberly, as Capcom revealed that Juri will also return for the sequel.

The post ‘Dragon Ball FighterZ’ to get current-gen release and rollback netcode appeared first on NME.

Tom Waits Announces Alice and Blood Money 20th Anniversary Vinyl Reissues

Ahead of their release, the singer-songwriter is also sharing previously unreleased live versions of the album’s songs.

Tom Waits Announces Alice and Blood Money 20th Anniversary Vinyl Reissues
Carys Anderson

Consequence

It’s been 20 years since Tom Waits released his concept albums Alice and Blood Money, and he’s marking the anniversary by reissuing each LP on vinyl. What’s more, leading up to the projects’ October 7th re-release, the singer-songwriter is sharing previously unreleased live cuts of songs from the albums. To kick things off, Waits…

Please click the link below to read the full article.

Tom Waits Announces Alice and Blood Money 20th Anniversary Vinyl Reissues
Carys Anderson

Megan Thee Stallion’s Cutthroat Alter-Ego Tina Snow Debuts Original Song on ‘P-Valley’

The rapper took the stage at the fictional strip club Pynk to perform alongside by J. Alphonse Nicholson’s character Lil Murda

Music – Rolling Stone

The rapper took the stage at the fictional strip club Pynk to perform alongside by J. Alphonse Nicholson’s character Lil Murda

WACKEN OPEN AIR 2023: 80,000 Tickets Sold In Six Hours; Fastest Sellout In Festival History

The 2022 edition of Wacken Open Air just less than two days ago and the promoters are already able to confirm that next year’s installment of the annual metal festival has sold out. Within six hours, 80,000 tickets to the 2023 Wacken Open Air were sold…

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The 2022 edition of Wacken Open Air just less than two days ago and the promoters are already able to confirm that next year's installment of the annual metal festival has sold out. Within six hours, 80,000 tickets to the 2023 Wacken Open Air were sold. This marks the fastest sellout in Wacken's his...

Five things we learned from our In Conversation video chat with Bartees Strange

The Ipswich-born, Oklahoma-raised US artist discusses his new album ‘Farm To Table’, his love of The National and “finding joy in the small moments”

The post Five things we learned from our In Conversation video chat with Bartees Strange appeared first on NME.

NME

NME meets Bartees Cox Jr – AKA Bartees Strange – at Third Man Records London just as the US artist is in town to promote his second album, ‘Farm To Table’ (out now via 4AD). But, as one of his fans literally pointed out in Manchester the night before we meet, Cox’s relationship with this country runs deep – and can in fact be traced all the way to East Anglia.

“This guy was pointing at his shirt, and it was an Ipswich Town shirt!” he tells NME about the Manchester fan who was pointedly representing Cox’s birthplace during the latter’s gig. The son of an air force engineer, Cox was born in Ipswich, near to where his dad was stationed at RAF Bentwaters, before a peripatetic upbringing followed across Europe and the US (his family eventually settled in Mustang, Oklahoma when he was 12).

But back to his unlikely connection to the Tractor Boys. “This [Ipswich fan] totally claims me like we’re neighbours”, Cox laughs. “And it’s so cool that people have that connection with me… I definitely feel it here in London, too.”

Cox’s strong relationship with his fans has only been enhanced with the release of ‘Farm to Table’, which has also caught the attention of the likes of Hayley Williams and Phoebe Bridgers. While his music has both an urgency and sense of tenderness, Cox also has a keen ear for experimenting with multiple sounds. ‘Mulholland Dr.’ will appeal to emo and indie fans alike (serving as a nod to Paramore’s later work and Bloc Party’s early material) while ‘Hennessey’ uses call and response and syncopated clapping to magically transport you back to church. There are subtle nods on the album to Frank Ocean too, and at some points he sounds like Justin Vernon at his most soulful and affecting.

Cox has just extended his deal with 4AD (home to The National and Future Islands) to release another Bartees Strange album on the label, which, he tells us, is shaping up to be “fucking sick” already. Based on his previous work, we’re more than happy to take his word for it at this stage.

For the latest instalment in NME’s In Conversation series, Cox ran us through the story of his music career to date, how he created his stellar second record and his future plans. Here’s what we learned.

“Finding joy in the small moments” can give you the energy to fight against oppression

As a Black, queer man, Cox is at the centre of some of the most violent forms of oppression in society. “Systems are at the root in all the things that we’re fighting against, whether it’s abortion bans, climate change, police brutality, the murder of trans people, the repealed LGBTQ rights,” he says. While he’s acutely aware that fighting against such systems is incredibly important, it can also be difficult, draining and saddening. “We all want to change [systems] and eliminate them, but you can’t do it if you’re exhausted. You can’t do it if you’re miserable,” he adds. “Celebration, joy, communion, coming together is how you refuel.”

While ‘Farm To Table’ deals with some important topics (‘Hold The Line’ is about George Floyd’s daughter Gianna), it’s also about the importance of embracing the small joys in life. “Finding joy in small moments is how you can have energy to fight,” Cox states.

‘Farm To Table’ pays tribute to both his past and present

The album title speaks to the journey Cox has taken to get to this point in his career. From “painting fences at this big hog and cow farm in Oklahoma” to now sitting comfortably at the “table” with some of indie music’s biggest stars, Cox says that when creating the album, he was “reflecting on my life, and was like, ‘I used to live in a place where people don’t get to do this kind of thing’”.

“And now I’m at the table with Phoebe Bridgers and The National: all these people I’ve watched and listened to for so many years from my office desk,” he continues. “[‘Farm To Table] is [me] reflecting on my life at this period in time before I go deeper.” He now feels at home in the scene, with no sense of imposter syndrome. “I feel like I’ve proved it to myself, I know what I’m doing and I deserve to be here.”

Music was a huge part of his upbringing

It seems like Cox has already lived multiple lives during his relatively short time on Earth, but how he landed on music as a career feels somehow obvious and unlikely at the same time. After growing up in the regimented environment of the military, Cox has worked “normal jobs” in politics (as a deputy press secretary in the Obama administration), environmental campaigning and publicity.

But music has always been a constant. His mum was an acclaimed opera singer (“she taught me how to use my voice”), and in his early years he grew up on a strict diet of gospel music, jazz and classical music (secular music wasn’t allowed in the house). These experiences whet his appetite for what else was out there, and, as a curious teen, Cox started to sneak in records into the family home. When his father eventually caught him, he decided it was time to expand his musical horizon. “We bonded over George Clinton and Black rock stars of the 60s and 70s,” Cox fondly recalls now.

Bartees Strange (Picture: Leon Piotrowski / Press)

The National are one of his biggest inspirations

Back in 2020 Cox released ‘Say Goodbye To Pretty Boy’, an EP full of covers of The National. The band’s music and work ethic are both huge inspirations for Cox: “For me, it’s almost half about their music and half how they live their lives in light of how their careers have gone.”

But, Cox says, the band “also represents a world of music [that], in some ways, hasn’t been all the way friendly to Black artists,” particularly in terms of “accepting the contribution that Black artists have made to the genre broadly”. He adds: “I [wanted] to reinterpret my favourite band… and I wanted to do it my way: my Black, southern country way.”

Cox is now touring North America with his heroes. “It was really cool to work with them on the release [of the EP]: their label put it out, I’m on the same label with them now, and I’m going on tour with them. It’s kind of amazing.”

The next Bartees Strange record is “the craziest shit I’ve ever made”

Although he’s keeping most of the details about his next 4AD release close to his chest, Cox does tell NME that the record will step in a different direction to his previous material and be “a reflection of myself and my little journey through life”.

Touring has certainly influenced this change, and Cox says he now understands why bands say that their records get weirder the longer they’re on the road. “When you hear it you’ll be like, ‘OK, he’s in the future!’” he jokes.

The post Five things we learned from our In Conversation video chat with Bartees Strange appeared first on NME.

‘As Dusk Falls’ studio wants to “attract more people into games”

Developer Interior/Night says it will continue to make narrative games

The post ‘As Dusk Falls’ studio wants to “attract more people into games” appeared first on NME.

NME

As Dusk Falls developer Interior/Night has talked about the recent release of its first game, and how the studio wants to continue creating narrative games that push “boundaries” in the industry.

Interior/Night CEO and creative director Caroline Marchal spoke to The Loadout last week (August 5) about how the studio wants to continue making narrative-driven games, and bringing people into the medium in general.

“We’re a narrative studio and we’re going to keep making narrative games that push the boundaries of the medium and really try to attract more people into games,” said Marchal. “We’re all storytellers in the studio, and we love what we’re making.”

That said, the studio behind As Dusk Falls isn’t afraid to innovate and experiment on from its previous work, especially if the game being made warrants new ideas. Production director Charu Desodt said, “innovating within the narrative game space is what it’s all about.”

As Dusk Falls. Credit: Interior Night.

Desodt was then asked about potentially incorporating VR (virtual reality) or AR (augmented reality) into future games, to which they replied: “We always start with the script and the story and then we create.

“And this is part of my challenge – we create around the best way to tell that story, the pipelines, and the team that we need. So yeah, depending on what Caroline [Marchal] writes, then I’m up for the challenge.”

Despite being Interior/Night’s first game, Andy Brown had a lot of positive things to say in his four-out-of-five-star NME review: “An intricately plotted story means that most decisions feel consequential, and fantastic writing ekes empathy from the unlikeliest of places. Although the story loses some steam in the latter half, getting to the end of As Dusk Falls will reward players with 100 ‘what if’s’ and an itch to race back to the beginning to do it all over again.”

In other news, the voice actor behind Red Dead Redemption’s protagonist John Marston has expressed interest in working on a remake of Rockstar’s cowboy title.

The post ‘As Dusk Falls’ studio wants to “attract more people into games” appeared first on NME.

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