Milk & Biscuits – Hairstyles

It’s not out for another six and a half weeks, but Milk and Biscuits today released the video for their new single Hairstyles. The video is filmed around the streets, shops and parks of Brighton, so chances are you’ll spot somewhere you know.

Hairstyles isn’t a million miles away from last year’s epic single White Noise, although it’s a bit more radio friendly clocking in around three and a half minutes. It’s a very British pop song, not dissimilar to Belle & Sebastian, breezy, carefree and homespun. The single precedes the upcoming album Spirit Nap.

Had the video been up at the weekend, I could have told you about the band’s support slots on tour with British Sea Power this week, but they’re playing their last joint date tonight in Norwich. Tomorrow night Rachel and Eleanor play the Brunswick with their own band Do You Feel What I Feel Deer? supporting Crayola Lectern who’s launching his album.

The Beautiful Word – May Not Be Love

BW

 

We posted up the hand made stop motion video for May Not Be Love by The Beautiful Word when it surfaced a few weeks back. The breezy summery pop track gets a proper release as a single today, available through the group’s bandcamp page, so we thought it was time to give you the full details. May Not Be Love is the first track from their first full studio sessions, funded by an appearance at T in the Park last year. The band are now looking for a label to put out the whole album recorded at the time.

Black Black Hills – Red Cabin

Black Black Hills are back, this time with a fantastic slice of reverb drenched rock’n’roll, and a crazy, crazy backwards video:

If this doesn’t get your hips swaying then maybe it’s time to visit the doctor to see if you’re ok. If it does however, click on the soundcloud link below for a free download:

Pere Ubu played the Haunt

Pere Ubu kicked off their latest tour with a home town gig here in Brighton at the Haunt on Saturday. That’s a bit of an odd statement but it seems David Thomas left Cleveland for our little south coast town a while ago, and although he proceeded to disparage the soft southcoast underbelly from the stage he did it with a little twinkle in his eye.

Brighton Music Blog was there to watch him and the current line up of his influential band.

David Thomas (Pere Ubu)

Pere Ubu played a set heavily laden with tracks from their new album Lady From Shanghai interspersed with some classics, like Misery Goats and the Modern Dance (which had the audience singing along eventhough there were probably more people in the venue tonight than had originally bought the single that many years ago). Thomas seemed to be enjoying himself, dealing with pauses between songs by telling fantastical tales of an alternative universe where Pere Ubu were bigger than the Rolling Stones and Madonna was still chasing fame on a small indie club circuit.

Pere Ubu the band rocked, even when Thomas was reading lyrics, sitting down with a glass of wine or at one point pulling off his shoe to scratch an itch in his sock. Idiosyncratic and brilliant, the rhythm section of Steve Mehlman on drums and Michele Temple on bass were particularly stunning, and Robert Wheeler on various synthesisers and melotrons which at one point he seemed to be playing with a toy laser gun,

Photographs below are by Jon Southcoasting.

David Thomas reading to the front row at the Pere Ubu homecoming concert

Pere Ubu

David Thomas (Pere Ubu)

David Thomas (Pere Ubu)

Pere Ubu

David Thomas (Pere Ubu)

Tigercub – Little Rope

Tigercub have given us a heads up of their new video for Little Rope. Probably not one for the epileptics, the video is rammed with effects. They call their sound post-grunge, but there’s definitely a hint of glam stomp in there.

There’s a distinct lack of release info around Little Rope, and a bit of digging tells us that’s because it’s already out – it featured on the Sea Monsters 3 compilation put out by One Inch Badge earlier this year to go with the festival.

Weekend gig picks

We missed a round of gig picks last week because of holidays (ours, not bands playing in Brighton), but we’re back this week. The weather is getting warm enough that you can’t use it as an excuse for not leaving the house any more, so here’s what we recommend when you do get out.

On Thursday night Amy Hill – who hosts the long running Brighton Folk night – launches her album Place of Mind at the Brunswick. Support comes from Jacko Hooper, which should be good.

Friday night see’s the latest Brighton Rocks night at Sticky Mike’s headlined by Devil in Detail. We’re going to be heading out of Brighton to the Con Club in Lewes where Clowns are playing.

Saturday night’s big gig is Pere Ubu at the Haunt, put on by Melting Vinyl. While they might not be thought of as a local band, their legendary lynchpin David Thomas is a Brightonian these days, so the date on their tour to support new album The Lady From Shanghai is something of a homecoming.

The Physics House Band EP streaming in-full

This is Fake DIY have the new Physics House Band EP ‘Horizons/Rapture’ streaming in-full right now. If you haven’t heard it go listen because it’s brilliant. The page also lists the upcoming UK tour details, including the Brighton gig on 28th April at the Green Door Store which will be another excellent show.

The Physics House Band

http://www.thisisfakediy.co.uk/articles/news/exclusive-the-physics-house-band-stream-horizons-rapture-ep-in-full/

Curxes / Further Still video

We haven’t stopped listening to the new Curxes single since we downloaded it nearly a fortnight. Now the duo have put up the accompanying video. I’ll let you watch the video to see the whole story, but the tag line put out with it reads “A lone taxidermist sets out to work on his most ambitious project yet”…

If you haven’t grabbed it yet, then you can head over to www.curxes.com for the latest download link.

Nick Hudson – Letters To The Dead

Before Christmas we caught up with Nick Hudson to talk about his new project Letters To The Dead. Unfortunately we forgot to press record, so a couple of weeks ago – coinciding with the arrival of vinyl copies of the album – we met up again to discuss what Letters To The Dead is, and this time technology didn’t get the better of us.

LTTD Front Sleeve

Letters to the Dead is a multimedia experience:
“Work on the album started out as a kernel of an idea about two years ago where having just done a fairly personal album, I wanted to write something which had very little to do with myself, directly at least, and then filter that and refract it through various different media, and release it as this big, what Wagner would call a gesamtkunstwerk. So release it on all these different media, and see how the narrative was augmented in people’s minds by having it available in different media, see how they all interact. So it was always designed as a piece of music, but I also knew I wanted to make a film, I wanted it to be a performance piece as well, I’ve been skirting around the term opera because that comes with so many connotations that I don’t necessarily want to factor. I knew I wanted to have specific audio strategies involved, i.e. only record using acoustic instruments – real piano, which required a lot of waiting time because I was blagging my way into studios, etc. – very little post production, very little compression just to give it a spacious feel. I’ve been listening to loads of later Talk Talk – The Spirit of Eden and Laughing Stock albums – and they informed the arrangements.”

Letters to the Dead is a story:
“In the prologue the mother abandons her child in the forest. She has no maternal compassion for this child, and plays a game of hide and seek and wanders off and leaves the forest. She’s at a point in life where she realises that she probably doesn’t want a child, it’s an extremely cold act, but she does it. The first act is where we see the father who is a writer who never met the child and is long estranged from the mother / wife with his writers desk moored on the rock pools. He’s writing open letters to the child, and he folds them into origami sampans, huge boats, and he sails them out to sea like a message in a bottle and they’re intercepted by three ocean dwelling sprites who are evolved forms of these babies who were abandoned in the seventies. In the film there’s a bit of news footage that details this of this cult who were formed by a bunch of radical pseudo progressive hippy fathers as a bid to combat overpopulation and they would abandon their newborns – there’s a song about this called Anchorman on the record. So these grown up undead child / adult figures intercept these letters and assume that they’re addressed to them, and get they get summoned in a séance, which is the middle act of the narrative. I figured a séance is a bit like a trial, so I have the same person in the film and the album playing the mother as we do playing the medium. These sprites are invoked by the séance, responding to these letters, and they come ashore and they writhe around. Then the father turns up and acts as the judge, and they have this huge fight which also manifests as a trial. The three ocean dwelling sprites are jurors, the judgement is passed and it is decreed that the mother should be banished into the ocean. It’s basically a story of her going mental having abandoned her child, so the final scene is of her walking to the sea gazing wistfully and mournfully out to the horizon under a slate blue sky, turns around and hallucinates the husband standing behind her looking very earnest, then walks into the sea and drowns. Or joins the undead sprites and her child, depending on your interpretation. It’s a cheery opus!”

GARY LTTD

Letters to the Dead is a collaboration:
“Across all the formats there’s around thirty or forty people involved. Just from Brighton, Ingrid Plum contributed some really nice soprano vocals, Cara Courage appeared in the film and offered huge production support in terms of applying for the Arts Council grant which we didn’t get, but her support was invaluable, Thomas White is in the choir, Stuart Warwick ex Jacob’s Stories is in the choir, Joshua Clark-Legallienne, who’s a really astonishing experimental guitarist and composer helped me enormously in producing the piano parts and generally arranging the record. It’s very much a Brighton record in so many ways.”
“It’s much more of a collaborative effort than previous releases – Most of the other musicians involved, especially those that I wouldn’t see every day, were mailed a skeletal piano or guitar part and told to do what they want, because that’s what I think collaboration’s all about – instead of imposing your strict authorship on their contribution, let them make their personal interpretation. Some tracks are collaborations with Kayo Dot http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kayo_Dot and I gave them no direction whatsoever. In some cases, I said Do the opposite of what you think I want to hear, and it worked out really well. And it also really challenged me – Toby Driver, who’s their main writer, contributed a piece that was so deliriously off kilter that I couldn’t even incorporate it into what I’d sent him, so I built a new piece around it.”

Letters to the Dead is an album, on limited vinyl and cd, and download:
“We’ve pressed up 500 cds and 300 vinyl. The DVD of the film comes with the vinyl. It’s also on bandcamp as a download. And when I can gather the funds, it’s also going to be a libretto booklet featuring loads of the artwork, plus additional new artwork, all of the lyrics and extra text as well, and some of my additional sketches as well. It’s a co-release between myself and Antithetic records who are a Florida based DIY label who put out much heavier stuff than mine. But there’s a darkness which I guess suits their aesthetic though.”

Letters to the Dead is a film:
“I’ve love film as much as I love music. I don’t work as much in film as I do music, but I am doing an MA in film making as well. Having started the MA in film making around the same time as I started working on Letters To The Dead, I was thinking a lot more cinematically. Also I get bored of just putting our records – I think there’s so much more you can do. I don’t feel constrained by being a musician at all, but I’ve always thought very visually. I’ve made a few films in the past, and this whole narrative derived from very specific and strong visual motifs and so I figured it was worth making into a film. We spent most of last summer shooting and it was some of the most exciting few weekends ever. So much fun. Everybody was in so much accord, it was a really harmonious production, given people were doing it for free essentially. Those shoots were wonderful. Many happy memories.”

beach shots scarf 2

Letters to the Dead is a performance:
“Letters to the Dead was designed as a performance piece as well – premiered it at St Mary’s Church in Kemptown. We had the film projected, we had a ritual procession for the first thirty minutes as the audience walked in, accompanied by a drone piece – a three minute piece of the record slowed down to thirty minutes. We had the three sprites dressed in silk with white face paint, proceeding around the church with these gigantic Letters To The Dead folded into origami boats as the audience enter, which really silences them as they see the performance is already happening as they walk in. It switches their mode of perception immediately. After that we walk on stage, we perform the album, and all the while there are televisions emitting static all around the church, which we filled it with candles – we did no risk assessment, obviously. We had the film projected, and we had the desk that was used in the film, which had the three boats put on it eventually. We’ve been asked to take it on tour to the US and we’re going to hopefully take a lot of that with us. We’re hopefully playing LA, San Francisco, Portland, Seattle, then shoot over and do New York, where the members of Kayo Dot that contributed on the record will hopefully be performing with us, and then to Boston and Florida where the label’s based. We’ve also been asked to present it at the Camden Roundhouse, on May 10th, which is a big thing”

Letters to the Dead is Crowd Sourced:
“We used Crowdfunder, which is a UK equivalent of Kickstarter, and if the target isn’t met you get none of the money – it’s only debited from the contributor’s account once the target is met. Really good service – I gave them a quote saying how impressed I was. We made the target and exceeded it by four hundred pounds which was wonderful – we raised sixteen hundred pounds. We gave it two months, and a week before the deadline we’d only raised about thirty percent of the target, so we were all getting quite despondent and thinking will this happen? And then over the course of the last week people just started throwing in a hundred quid, fifty quid here and there and it really mounted up really quickly. And even after we’d met the target people were still putting in big amounts.”

Letters to the Dead is fourth in a cycle of five albums:
“There are quotes littered throughout all four of the five that are completed so far which link them all. There are tracks that are re-done too. The opening track on Letters to the Dead is Bad Atoms, but it’s a setting for five part brass arrangement and choir. On the previous album, TERRitORies of disSENT, it’s a song for piano and voice. Track four on Letters To The Dead refers to “my antique son”, which is also the title of album number three. So they all intertwine, thematically and musically. It looks like album number five will be my Blood on the Tracks! It’s obviously one of the seminal breakup records – I’ve just split with my partner, which is sad, but it’s given good shape to the album cycle because the first album, Territory To Descend was a breakup album as well, so bizarrely it’s created this wonderfully elliptical coherent album cycle shape. So we’ll see how that comes out. It’s all very new at the moment, and I’m writing very quickly. I want to capture some sort of very quick lightning in a bottle energy. Letters to the Dead took absolutely ages.”

new Us Baby Bear Bones video – Mountains

About a month ago, we brought you news of the upcoming Us Baby Bear Bones EP, due on 10th of June. Today the band put up a new taster of what we’ve got to look forward to on What Starts with a U, Ends with an I. Mountains is less than three minutes of hypnotic swirling dream pop, with a video to match. We love it.

On top of that, UBBB are giving away You (which is going to be on the EP, and whose video was on our the post we mentioned earlier) as a free download. Brilliant!