The New Eves at Concorde 2 gallery

Nobody could accuse the New Eves of resting on their laurels – it’s been a massively busy year for them, playing multiple gigs at the Great Escape, releasing The New Eve is Rising at the start of August, supporting Black Country New Road on their September tour, and then putting out a brand new single recorded after their album midway through their own tour. Last night though, they got to sleep in their own beds as they played a hometown show headlining Concorde 2, technically the end of the tour, but they head off to play another festival on Sunday. Support came Radio Anorak, a band inextricably linked to the New Eves way beyond Kate Mager playing bass in both bands – so much so that the each band joined the other for the closing song of their respective sets. Last time I saw the New Eves was at the Pipeline when they played Brighton Noise’s unofficial Great Escape showcase in a room that barely held fifty people. Last night they proved that they can scale things right up and sound just as good in a big space – The New Eves have Risen!

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Buy / Listen to The New Eves new single Red Brick / Whale Station here:

 

 

The New Eves – The New Eve is Rising

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

Great Escape 2025 gallery

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?)

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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

 

Brighton Music Blog End of Year review

It’s that time again where we give a shout out to the bands we’ve loved over the last year. As always it’s worth flagging that it’s a subjective thing, and also that huge swathes of music passes me by – which is to get my apology in early for anything and everything that isn’t in here. The local music scene feels like it’s in rude health at the moment, despite being knocked sideways a bit over lockdown and social media becoming less and less effective. But anyway, onto the music…

Firstly a shoutout to what I like to think of as the Old Guard. Fatboy Slim DJed at the Prince Albert when it felt like it was under threat from a planning application. The Go! Team proved they’re as sharp as ever with their album Get Up Sequences Part two, Electric Soft Parade surprised everyone with their release of Avenue Dot which nobody was expecting (and Thomas White also played his first solo gig in ten years), and Steve Mason dropped his fifth solo album Brothers & Sisters (which he showcased with a gig in Worthing last week).

There’s also a number of acts who have been in the music industry for a while but are releasing under new names. Electralane’s Verity Susman has teamed up with Wire’s Matthew Simms to form Memorials, whose double album Music for Film showed their skills to be far more expansive than either of their other bands work. It’s still not too late to catch them live this year – they’ll be playing at Lewes Con Club this coming Sunday. Penelope Trappes and Agnes Haus are/were members of on-hiatus The Golden Filter, now also putting out releases (Heavenly Spheres and Sequel respectively) the show a dimension that goes well beyond what they initially became known for. Penelope Trappes’ Heavenly Spheres was released on Nite Hives, her new experimental cassette based label run by and for women and gender nonconforming artists, who have just announced their second release. Both Penelope Trappes and Agnes Haus are on the bill for A Séance for the Solstice at the Rosehill on 22nd December, being put on by Dem Papademetrie and Saint Etienne’s Pete Wiggs who produce the weekly Séance radio show.

Brighton has long welcomed people from outside it’s borders – those who claim that you’re not a proper Brightonian if you weren’t born here could do well to remember that Brighton was just a small fishing village with a population of less than 2,000 before the Prince Regent turned up and had the Pavilion built, so very few of these people can claim to have families dating back more than a couple of generations. Which leads me to possibly Brighton’s brightest star at the moment – CMAT has just played four nights in a row in Dublin, but kicked off her tour with a hometown gig at Chalk, with banter between songs about Lewes Road, and Penelope Isles Jack Wolter / Cubzoa on guitar. Now’s also a good time to give a shout out to ĠENN (originally from Malta), Ciel (Netherlands and Spain), and Wax Machine (Brazil via Italy) who are all making the place even more special.

Lambrini Girls have had a very good year – their own EP release, a guest vocal with Iggy Pop covering Depeche Mode’s Personal Jesus for Trevor Horn’s covers album, and sticking it to TERFs in a Kerrang interview telling them to to “have fun on the wrong side of history”. In a parallel universe that only exists in my head it could easily have been the likes of CLT DRP making those comments.

At the completely opposite end of the music spectrum to Lambrini Girls, there’s a couple of ambient albums that have soothed my ears this year. Ironically, the first is from the sister of Lambrini Girls’ lead singer – Eva Lunny’s Sonics & Meditations, equal parts harp and electronica, came out in the spring on Bella Union’s Private Pressings imprint and is still on heavy rotation in these parts. There was also Guided by Horses by Sam Organ (sometimes seen as a third of Physics House Band), a lovely pastoral work inspired by the South Downs.

My current enthusiasm for the local music scene comes from by being at gigs recently and recognising so many people from other bands in the audience, seeing how they support each other – collaborating on each other’s releases, playing support slots, and just showing up to watch them play – all of which makes a big difference. Most recently, at last weekend’s Ideal Living gig at the Green Door Store I spotted members of Fliptop Head, The New Eves, Van Zon and Hutch in the crowd. There were probably more I didn’t spot too. All of these bands would be worth seeing independently, regardless of who they were friends with, but regularly spotting people supporting each other feels quite life affirming. I imagine most of them will be back at the Green Door Store this Sunday for Mumfest where a lot of other associated acts are on the bill.

I also wanted to give a shoutout to a bunch of other great bands I’ve loved this year ARXX and their album Ride or Die (who are have one last gig of the year on 15th December at Water Bear), Trip Westerns and their self titled EP (who you can catch at Acid Box’s 10th birthday celebrations this weekend), Dark Horses and their album While We Were Sleeping, Egyptian Blue who released their debut A Living Commodity this year, and Soft Walls who made a return with their first album in four years, True Love. It’s been a very good year for Brighton bands.

Last, but definitely by no means least, I wanted to call out the two  bands who I reckon will be HUGE in 2024. Lime Garden release their debut album One More Thing in February, and I can’t see how they can possibly go wrong on the basis of everything they’ve put out so far. Rest assured we’ll be in the front row for their gig at Chalk in March. Another band not putting a foot wrong in our book is Hutch. there’s no news of an album just yet, but they’re playing bigger and bigger gigs, and surely it’s only a matter of time before the rest of the world catches on.

 

 

Dark Horses supported by the New Eves at the Hope & Ruin gallery

On Saturday night Dark Horses played a launch show at the Hope & Ruin to celebrate their new album While We Were Sleeping. They were joined by album producer Bob Earland on synths, and guitarist Paul Philips also got on stage for a couple of tracks. Support came from Brighton quartet The New Eves, with a DJ turn between acts from Dark Horses long time photographer Ali Tollervey. The band are always visually arresting – this time augmented with visuals from James GM (which felt like they could have been a bit more prominent in our opinion) – so we got there early and got a good spot down the front to take some photos: