When I first saw The New Eves back in 2023, I knew instantly that they were something special. The first sign was the hushed reading of their manifesto, read out by Nina Winder-Lind to a rapt audience (which has been recorded for the album as opener The New Eve). There was the fact that they played rock’n’roll but rejected the traditional guitar bass and drums format. And it was because as well as playing rock and roll they switched effortlessly to earthy, visceral folk music. There was also the way they mixed up the instruments they played throughout the set – Nina Winder-Lind on both cello and guitar, Ella Oona Russell on drums and flute, Kate Mager on bass and the biggest harmonica you’ve ever seen, and Violet Farrer on guitar, violin and interpretive dance. All the old rules were out of the window. Their name and their lyrics are steeped in literature and poetry, but rather than being a haughty intellectual pursuit the band translates this into something very accessible.
And tomorrow their album, The New Eve is Rising is released. Featuring all Highway Man, Cow Song and Astrolabe, which have all been singles, as well as the aforementioned The New Eve, and a handful of other tracks, the New Eves are not just rising is not just rising, but have very much arrived.
The New Eves are playing a host of instores over the next few weeks, including Resident on 8th August, and are hitting the road in September for a bigger tour in September, stopping off at Concorde 2 on 9th October. The New Eve is Rising is released on Transgressive Records on 1st August
On Thursday, Big Long Sun release their second album whatever (whatever) on Miohmi records, and heading out on tour starting with a hometown gig at Alphabet, supported by Lemonsuckr and the Kitchen Sink Band. Three singles from the album have been released so far – a casual dance between friends, when the mood’s right and fast like I like my money, all of which have garnered attention beyond Brighton’s borders and had national radio airplay. After a bit of small talk covering specialist coffee and old cameras, I sat down with Jamie Broughton to chew the fat about the album, what’s next, and the other projects he’s involved with.
Brighton Music Blog: How would you describe whatever (whatever)? Jamie Broughton: I’d call it Future Bedroom Rock Pop. It’s more gentrified than the first album – it feels like I’ve levelled up.
BMB: The first album was called big long sun : speaking. Was there a temptation to call it big long sun colon something else? JB: No. Well, maybe I thought about it, but I thought it’d be too conceptual. And the first album just gave me the name for the project because I was just releasing under my own name before. I’ve never liked it when people do series of albums where they’re the same name, the title changed slightly.
BMB: Where did the title whatever (whatever) come from? JB: There’s a few times in the album that I say the word whatever, and there’s especially one where I say whatever, whatever. It’s hard to explain how I say it until you hear it, but it just kept coming up, It’s like a repeated motif. And I like brackets.
So it’s whatever brackets whatever. BMB: More interesting punctuation in in your titles, like the colon in big long sun : speaking JB: Yeah. I like I like syntax, and I also like poetry. I like playing around with that. Even though it’s harder to look up, I just prefer how it looks.
BMB: The album has come really soon after the “I can hardly see a thing” EP which was released in March, and you’ve mentioned to me that the third album is almost ready too. Do you have a large amount of accumulated material that you’ve been sitting on or are you writing very quickly? JB: Album three is in the final mixing and mastering stages – but to answer the question, I’m writing very quickly.
BMB: Let’s move on to the live shows. Last time I saw you there were seven, eight of you on stage? JB: There will still be eight of us. And then maybe for a casual dance, we might get one or two or three more people on stage to play percussion just because it’s such a dense dance track. There aren’t enough members to do it the way it is when we’re recording.
BMB: Who is Big Long Sun at the moment? Obviously, the writing and recording is just you, there’s eight of you on stage, and I saw a promo photo that had just four of you in it.
JB: That was kind of an accident. There was just there was a photo taken of that four of us, and they wanted more press pics for the PR stuff. I liked that photo, so I sent it off and they used it for a lot of stuff. I guess Big Long sun is a name I gave to an art project, and the band and the music I’ve made for the band to play as the art project. So it’s kind of not a person as much as a concept. But I guess I’m the closest to being Big Long Sun.
BMB: “We’re big long sun and we play music for…” is something you say between songs in your live sets. Where did where did that come?
JB: It came from listening to French radio when I was in France last, and they had this line where they said “music pour tout le famille”, which is music for all the family. So I thought maybe I could go on at a gig and say “nous sommes big long sun, et nous jours musique pour tout le famille” – we’re big long sun, and we play music for all the family. And then it made me laugh, and I thought, what else do we make music for? So I made this huge list, and I got a couple of the other band members to add lines where they thought it was appropriate. I started saying it at shows, and then we got a great response. So I just printed it out and started giving it out to people, And then realized it was a sort of manifesto. And, and now with the merch that we’ve made for this tour, it’s we’ve screen printed it on loads of shirts.
BMB: As well as two big long sun albums and an EP in the space of a year, you’ve also put an album out as between the air. What distinguishes between the air’s music from big long sun’s? JB: It’s a matter of branding, really. If you go back a year or so, everything I was putting out was being released as Jamie Broughton. I figured if I’m gonna try and get this to a bigger audience and actually develop a fan base I can’t really have such wildly different sounds. It deserved its own project name, and it frees me up creatively because it means I can do a dubstep album and stick it out under between the air. Not that I want to, but I could. And maybe I will. It’s nice to have two very opposite accounts where I can put stuff.
BMB: So is it just two identities or are there more waiting to be released? JB: Well, I’m interested in having an account that’s just for my singer songwriter material that a lot a lot of people know me for. I used to do a lot more shows as a solo performer where I’d sing my kind of Nick Drake, Elliott Smith style music, which I feel wouldn’t really sit very well in the big, long sun or between the air identities. But I haven’t got time for that at the moment. There’s so many sides to the music that I want to make, some of them are gonna have to be prioritized.
BMB: You’re also involved with Radio Anorak JB: I was I wasn’t involved from the beginning, but I was in the small number of people that were aware it was happening, and I was played all the early demos. I’d listen to what they were working on and say, keep doing this. It’s great. And then when they started getting ready to play shows they brought me in as an extra drummer, and then I stuck around on the guitar because I play so well with Ollie (big long sun’s guitarist who also plays with Radio Anorak). We’re kind of musical soulmates. There’s lots of music in the works for that project, driven by Toma and Hugo collaborating.
Toma being a very experienced musician and Hugo being a very experienced thinker and creative – they realized that when they put the two together, they had something really interesting, And they were interested in expanding that to a band and seeing what happened. I guess we’re seeing what’s happening – That’s exciting. I was trying to leave all my bands, I’ve stopped playing with Ideal Living now. And then Radio Anorak came along and I just couldn’t say no. So it was kind of like a Mission Impossible situation. I was broke in and now I love it. So I’m sticking around.
BMB: You’ve played in a lot bands over the years. Was that about deliberately trying to get experience of different things, or was it you trying to find what your thing was? Or was it that people could see that you’re more capable on in just picking up an instrument then going with it? JB: I think the experience thing maybe was the subconscious intention. But it really just came down to the fact that I’m very social. I really like friends and making friends. And being a musician, the greatest privilege we have is getting to do what we love with friends. It’s a very social art form. It’s unlike being an artist or a poet or a photographer, all of which I think are lonely. I just love making music with friends, and if I had more time, if I had an extra two days a week, I’d stay in all these bands.
whatever (whatever) is available to pre-order on bandcamp. The band play at Alphabet on 24th July. Tickets available here
As of last night, Brighton has a new venue! Exciting news, but let’s cut quickly to what often gets quietly glossed over when a “new” pub or venue opens up in Brighton – more often than not, it’s an old pub or venue that’s reopened. As you may have already guessed from its name and our accompanying photo, WaterBear Music Bar – the second venue in town opened by WaterBear Music College – is what most people probably know as Latest Music Bar. It’s actually been Manchester Street Arts Centre since early last year, and people with longer memories might remember it as the original home of the Komedia, Akademia (a bar / venue owned by Brighton uni), or Joogleberry. It’s actually been an entertainment venue of sorts ever since it was first built over 200 years ago as Kentfield Billiard Rooms. (If you want to pick up some interesting Brighton trivia, look up Edwin Kentfield)
The launch night hosted sets from Congratulations, Sametime, Dirtsharks and Tia Ice, the latter three acts being Waterbear Alumni. The venue plans to host bands as well as events linked to Waterbear’s educational programs – we’ll update this post with some listings as and when we receive them.
Around a month ago, Van Zon released their debut EP “All Things, All One Aglow“, and a couple of weeks later, Glasshouse Red Spider Mite released their EP “What Do You Mean The Monster?… Hahaha“, and last night the bands played a double headline launch gig at Alphabet, supported by London band Catbandcat. We went along with our camera to capture things for posterity:
It feels like an age ago now, but I’ve finally got my photos band and edited from Great Escape weekend. I did my best to try and see a lot of Brighton bands at both official and unoffial gigs – in the end I caught multiple sets from a few bands from some of my favourites, because why not? Anyway, here’s one photo from each set by a Brighton band I went to where I could get close enough to the front, and where the light was good enough to shoot on film (on which note, please could someone have a word with Pink Moon and ask them to buy some lights?)
(click to view large)
Wednesday
goodbye / Green Door Store
Big Long Sun / Green Door Store
Big Long Sun/ Pipeline
Hutch / Green Door Store
ELLiS·D / Green Door Store
Thursday
Opal Mag / Unbarred
Trip Westerns / Bella Union Shop
The New Eves / Pipeline
George Bloomfield / One Church
Van Zon / One Church
Friday
Ladylike / TGE Beach – The Jetty
Coco & The Lost / Molly Malones
Jock / Queens Hotel
Ideal Living / Horatios
Hutch / St Nicholas Church
Saturday
ladylike / Horatios
Ruunes / Jules Emporium
Hutch / Molly Malones
Rose io / Manchester Street Arts Club
Van Zon / Folklore Rooms
Big Long Sun / Prince Albert
Hutch / Folklore Rooms
Trip Westerns / St Nicholas Church
goodbye / Prince Albert
Earlier this week, Maximilian released his new single Long Time Gone on Crafting Room Records, and we were invited down to his launch gig at the Green Door Store. Accompanied by a full band (although one not quite as expansive as at the launch of his album Surrender last year) they dropped the new single towards the end of the set, starting off acoustic and building up textures from different members of the band as the song goes on. Having not played at last weekend’s Great Escape Festival or any of the associated unofficial gigs (as far as we could tell, at least), It was good to see him back on stage again.
Support at the gig came from Cordelia Gartside and Big Hands And All Gristly.
As hard as I try to support and promote all the local bands, by far and away the most popular post on the blog every year is my round of up of the unofficial Alt Escape gigs. I’ve been keeping my ear to the ground over the last month or so and pulled together almost every Brighton gig over Escape which weekend which isn’t part of the Official Great Escape bill (excluding Gary Barlow at the Brighton Centre on Thursday night. Sorry Gary). It feels like there’s even more than ever this year, so if you haven’t got a ticket, or there’s gaps in your schedule that need filling, or like me, you recognise that there’s unofficial stuff taking place that’s every bit as good as the official line up, then read on. Bear in mind that this is a moving target – check socials behind the links for line ups and timings, which will all be subject to change. Any more I hear about between now and next week I’ll try and add in. And if I’ve missed anything, please drop me a line!
On Thursday, Penelope Trappes played a hometown gig at Alphabet, concluding the tour of her latest release A Requiem. The album is a powerful work, perfectly encapsulating the grief that overshadows it’s ten tracks. For the live performance Penelope was joined Klara Schumann on cello and Kat Pihl on keyboards to recreate the imposing visceral sound of the recordings, and Alphabet was probably the best venue in town to do justice to this. There was a strong visual dimension too, with lighting designed by Agnes Haus (which at some points was nothing more than just a handheld industrial lamp) and headwear inspired by the organic form of branches of a tree. The arpeggiated synth lines of one of the albums more electronic moments, Red Dove, provides some light towards the end of the performance, and the night closes serenely with Thou Art Mortal, the last track on the album, with waves of sound washing over us to send us on our way.
Support on the evening came from Zac Clowes and Jonah Wardle, who played and continuous thirty minute cinematic ambient set
A Requiem by Penelope Trappes is out now on One Little Indie:
Last Week Big Long Sun released their new EP I Can Hardly See A Thing, relatively hot on the heels of last year’s Big Long Sun : Speaking album. More lo-fi in nature and bringing in an even wider array of influences than before it feel’s like the sky’s the limit for Jamie Broughton and his band. With Preston Park in full bloom, we skipped taking photos down at the beach (has anyone other than me and the people in the photos noticed that the rest of the Brighton Rocks series photos are at the beach?) and took advantage of nature’s spring display to catch up and get the low down on Brighton.
Best thing about Brighton?
Brighton feels as though it’s in its own vacuum. This is what I love about it. A space in which to consider and bide time, disconnected from London and all its overwhelming aspects. I like that there is an air of acceptance and individuality. The music scene is one symptom of this phenomenon. But there are many others. I just wish we had an actual good venue open after midnight and not just the abysmal ‘dead wax’.
Favourite local bands?
I like Nina Winderland and her band a lot, and I love Woody Green, especially when he plays with a band behind him. Both of those artists are great songwriters and (more importantly) really inspired poets.
Check out their poems.
Both are making books I believe.
I’m not crazy on all the bands, I think my taste would be more at home in a slightly more diverse musical landscape but…
Billy marsh, what a front man…
Great artists are also at work in this city –
Bill Redshaw, Darling vinciguerra, Hugo Winderlind.
Also as a final note, we got no jazz in Brighton really, but hill collective are dope – check out their stuff.
Best venue?
Alphabet. A lot of the other ones I have become tired of.
Best rehearsal space / studio?
I like rehearsing in basements and bedrooms and other amateur locations. The time pressure and protocol of rehearsal spaces is not conducive to creativity.
Best club?
Hahahahahah. none that I’ve found or feel compelled to inhabit. Another greatly lacking aspect of Brighton actually.
Best record shop?
I like across the tracks, but I don’t have spare cash anymore…
Best places to eat?
Abyssinia – amazing Ethiopian place.
Best pub?
I don’t really like pubs. I prefer houses and parks and the beach and the forest.
If I went for a drink with someone I think I’d go to alphabet. Love that place.
Favourite Brighton celebrity?
Willow Bumble. What a legend.
Last time you had any Brighton Rock?
2018 – what a disaster teeth and pain and confusion that was
I Can Hardly See A Thing by Big Long Sun is out now
Last month Helen Ganya released her second album Share Your Care, and since we’ve been covering Helen’s various projects for over ten years it was only right that we caught up to have a chat about it, and about other things she’s been up to since we last spoke.
The origin of the album came around four years ago, when Helen’s Thai grandmother – the last of her grandparents – passed away. “It made me quite emotional – Not just sad, but also really wanting to remember everything about my time as a child and spending my summers in Thailand. So it was a really nice way to like go back into childhood memories and think about those times and the sounds. And that’s kind of where I started thinking about actually incorporating Thai instruments”. Helen has never hidden her heritage – even during her days as Dog in the Snow it was always noted that her background was half Thai and half Scottish – but musically, for the most part, her Thai side hadn’t come to the fore. “this is part of my background but I thought it might be a bit fraudulent or might not be seen as authentic. But the Thai traditional sounds on Share Your Care are the sounds of some of my childhood”.
photo by Sonia Abbas
There have been a couple of songs that have been translated into Thai – a reworked version of the title track from her last album Polish the Machine appeared on 2023’s Repolish The Machine EP, and in 2020 she released ทอง, a Thai version of Gold from Vanishing Lands. “These were more of an afterthought, where the Thai words were translated to a song that was already written, as opposed to working from the ground up as I have done on Share Your Care. There’s one song on the new album that’s written in Thai, as well as having Thai instrumentation, and that was really nice to think in that way”
There isn’t a Thai musical community in Brighton, so Helen reached out to contacts she’d made through ESEA Music – the East Southeast Asian Music Collective – a group that formed in 2020 following anti-Asian backlash from Covid. Through them she was introduced to Artit Phonron at a Thai temple in Wimbledon, who took Helen’s parts written in midi and played them on ranat ek (a sort of Thai xylophone), saw duang (a bowed two string traditional instrument) and khim (a dulcimer). “He was amazing, not only was it him just learning by ear and just playing it, but also dealing with the tuning issues as well – because Thai scales are different from western musical scales – which was quite a challenge.” Anglo-Thai artist John ‘Rittpo’ Moore also contributes flutes and saxophones to the record.
photo by Sonia Abbas
The only other voice on the album is British Nigerian. Helen explained how that come about: “The last song, Myna, is about a Myna bird. My grandad used to keep a Myna bird, which is kind of like a south east Asian starling, but it’s known for mimicry, so it can parrot a lot of human voices. And after my grandad died, the myna which he had kept in a cage started sounding like him. It was quite moving but also really strange so I wrote that song thinking of having a second voice that would kind of be my grandad but almost like a third grandad rather than the real grandad. I was trying to think of a voice that I sort of someone I knew that was low and reminded me of my grandad – even though I think Tony’s probably younger than me!”
The album was produced with Rob Flynn who Helen has a long working relationship with. “It was quite funny when we first met, he was always asking whether I would consider making music utlising Thai instruments. And I shut it down all the time and was like, no, I don’t want to do that. I just want to do make contemporary Western music. So when I came to him with this idea, I felt like he was just ready for it.”
Drums on the album were played by Hilang Child, who’s worked with Helen since playing together in Simon Raymonde’s collective Lost Horizons in 2017. As well as playing drums on the record and live, Hilang Child is also one of the supports at next week’s gig, along with Alex Painter.
As well as connecting with other Thai musicians over lockdown, Mixed Tapes, her show on Slack City Radio, was born. “Slack City got in touch with me and asked if I would be up for doing a radio show? I thought, oh that could be fun, and like many people in the creative industry during lockdown, it wasn’t like I had a lot on.” The show is a platform celebrating artists and people in the music industry of mixed heritage, featuring interviews and music, but without preaching to it’s audience or being negative, which over time has grown to the extent that for the last two years the search for for artists who fit the brief has become easier as people have got in touch directly with her. Mixed Tapes goes out roughly once a month on Slack City – check their schedules for the next episode.
Share Your Care is out now on Bella Union. Helen Ganya plays at Alphabet on Wednesday 12th March