out now: Cold Specks – I Predict A Graceful Expulsion [Mute]

Artist:
Cold Specks

Title:
I Predict A Graceful Expulsion

Label:
Mute

Cat#:
STUMM342

Release Date:
21th May 2012

Format:
CD, vinyl+CD & digital

Tracklist:
01)
The Mark

02)
Heavy Hands

03)
Winter Solstice

04)
When The City Lights Dim

05)
Hector

06)
Holland

07)
Elephant Head

08)
Send Your Youth

09)
Blank Maps

10)
Steady

11)
Lay Me Down

Info:
Cold Specks is songwriter and vocalist Al Spx from Etobicoke, Canada, who now lives in London. The band’s name is taken from a line in James Joyce’s ‘Ulysses’:

“Born all in the dark wormy earth, cold specks of fire, evil, lights shining in the darkness”.

Describing her sound as ‘Doom Soul’, Cold Specks’ music is steeped in the musical traditions of the Deep South. No wonder then that Al cites the Lomax Field Recordings and James Carr as influences along with Bill Callahan and Tom Waits. With a voice that evokes the ‘spirit feel’ of Mahalia Jackson and the visceral tones of Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Cold Specks’ sparse arrangements and chain-gang rhythms stop you dead in your tracks.

“My little brother, who was spending his summers with our mother in Toronto, had always told me of this girl he was friends with that had this amazing voice,” recalls Cold Specks’ manager, Jim Anderson. “As a producer I’d heard that so often that I didn’t take too much notice. Then I came in one night to find him and a few friends drinking in the flat and playing a CD of her demos. I was completely transfixed and just kept pressing repeat. I knew I had to work with her. I eventually persuaded her to come over. At that point she had never played with another musician and was completely self-taught with her own unique tuning and timings, which we had to decipher.”

“Jim convinced me to fly out and work on the record for a few months,” explains Al Spx. “That was a year and a half ago. I guess I’m permanently based here now. I didn’t know anyone when I moved here. We needed musicians and Jim knew a bunch. Rob Ellis (PJ Harvey’s regular collaborator) has been helping out with some arrangements and percussion and Jim’s old friends Pete Roberts (guitar), Thomas Greene (piano) and Tom Havelock (cello) also play on the record.”

Listen:
all tracks in full streaming here

Videos:
“Holland”

“Blank Maps”

“Winter Solstice”

“Lay Me Down (The Line of Best Fit Live Session)”

“When The City Lights Dim”

“Elephant Head (LIVE bei FluxFM)”

Buy:
MuteBank (CD)
MuteBank (vinyl)
Rough Trade (CD)
Rough Trade (vinyl)
HMV (CD)
HMV (vinyl)
WOM (CD)
WOM (vinyl)
Amazon GER (CD)
Amazon GER (vinyl)
Amazon UK (CD)
Amazon UK (vinyl)
more soon

Websites:
Cold Specks
Mute

out now: Soulsavers feat. Dave Gahan – The Light The Dead See [V2 | Mute]

 

Artist:
Soulsavers featuring Dave Gahan

 

Title:
The Light The Dead See

 

Label:
V2 (Europe) | Mute (US)

 

Cat#:
tba

 

Release Date:
22th May 2012

 

Format:
CD, vinyl+CD & digital

 

Tracklist:
01)
La Ribera

02)
In The Morning

03)
Longest Day

04)
Presence Of God

05)
Just Try

06)
Gone Too Far

07)
Point Sur Pt. 1

08)
Take Me Back Home

09)
Bitterman

10)
I Can’t Stay

11)
Take

12)
Tonight

 

Info:
“THERE was no real script,” says the laconic Rich Machin of SOULSAVERS’ extraordinary fourth album THE LIGHT THE DEAD SEE, a set of songs of majesty and momentum. “It just rolled and rolled; it was effortless.” Yet the writing was on the wall from the moment Dave Gahan stepped in to tackle vocal duties that this was going to be something very special. “We realised we were coming from the same place in so many ways,” adds Machin. “He’s really laid himself bare on this record, his performances are astonishing: he really is a terrific singer.” Says Gahan, “Everything about it was relatively unplanned, surprising: a magical thing. We were a perfect match and I’m very, very excited about this record.”

Soulsavers – the music and production team of Rich Machin and Ian Glover – have been a growing force since 2003’s debut Tough Guys Don’t Dance. 2007’s It’s Not How Far You Fall, It’s The Way You Land brought their dark flair to a wider audience. The inimitable Mark Lanegan served as primary singer, though there were also vocal contributions from Will Oldham and Jimi Goodwin. Tracks such as “Revival” and “Kingdoms Of Rain” revealed a broodier outlook, with a slow-burning, gospel tinge. In 2009, third album Broken confirmed that Soulsavers were moving away from early electronica to earthier guitars, use of space and what Machin described as “a soulful twist”. Lanegan again led the vocals on stand-outs such as “You Will Miss Me When I Burn” and “All The Way Down”, with other guest vocalists including Oldham again, Jason Pierce, Richard Hawley, Mike Patton and Gibby Haynes. Clearly there was no shortage of acclaimed singers ready to lend their lungs to Soulsavers’ stirring, seductive, soothing or startling creations.

Soulsavers, venturing out from the studio to the road, were invited to support Depeche Mode on the European leg of their vast and eventful 2009-10 Tour Of The Universe, during which tour Dave Gahan bounced back from more than his fair share of illness and injury. Here, the seeds of The Light The Dead See were sewn. “We got to know each other,” says Machin. “I really warmed to him, thought he was a particularly nice guy. Dave said he was a fan of our previous albums, and watched us almost every night, and, as you do, we said: Hey, we should work on something, at some point in time…”

“The tour together was great,” recalls Gahan enthusiastically. “I love Soulsavers and I’ve also been a Lanegan junkie for years. Rich mentioned doing some writing, and I told him to send over any pieces he liked, however minimal. About eighteen months ago he sent the first. I was taking a break, with my band having finished the long tour. So I said: let me sit with this, see what happens. And it was right up my street. What Rich does – big grinding bluesy organs, gospel choirs – somehow that touches something in me. I don’t know what it is. Maybe it’s all those years of being forced to go to Sunday School! He sent me more and just left it open, stuff I could get into, no pressure; perfectly atmospheric pieces that inspired me. Three songs in, I was hooked – keep ‘em coming! It was an experiment, and both of us weren’t sure what would happen, but now I’m so pleased with this, over the moon with it.”

With Gahan penning lyrics for the music and recording his own vocals in New York, then Machin building up the results into fully-formed and arranged epics, the international project was a case of “chemistry working”. “Nothing he did, did I need to alter,” says Rich. “Everything he did just felt right. We both took an opportunity to step away from electronica – which we both love – and do something warmer, to go for full-takes, to not Pro-Tools the life out of it. There’s a human element. It doesn’t need to be “perfect”; it needs to just feel really good, to have room to breathe. We both enjoyed just going where the moods took us.”

Although creatively the pair gelled instantly and consistently – “Hearing the album, I’m almost going: how did that happen? I’ve surprised myself!” laughs Gahan – the “human element” did throw up a couple of testing obstacles. Gahan was recovering from well-documented illness when the project began. “I’m very good now,” he says. “I still have my hospital visits now and again, but fingers crossed I’m in good health.” Then, just as the pair got settled into a rhythm, Machin acquired a “horrendous” ear/hearing problem. “I woke up in the middle of the night in agony; it was like someone was drilling into my ear.” He lost his hearing in one ear for around nine months, and is still learning to manage tinnitus. It’s not music-related either. “Ironically,” he says, “they told me my hearing in my bad ear is better than in my good ear. It was stressful. I thought: am I done? Is that it? You do begin to wonder. I put everything on hold for a while, then decided I’d better stop feeling sorry for myself and just get on with it, at least when I had good days. When it began to clear up, I was half-expecting we’d have to re-do everything, but it sounded great, so we pushed on. The train hadn’t come off the tracks.”

“At one point,” says Dave, “we both realised: oh, we’re making a whole album here!” Both were keen that it played with a “clearly defined” Side One and Side Two, and didn’t “overwhelm” the listener with excessive length. “There’s no filler,” says Rich. “We wanted it intense, not drifting like so many albums do.” “It’s a real album-lover’s album,” concurs Dave. “I was listening to Bowie’s “Ziggy Stardust” a lot, always one of my favourites. It still gives me goose-bumps on my arm. And I wanted to achieve that kind of level: I’d think: is this moving me? If it’s moving me, I’m pretty sure it’s going to move other people.” As you can hear in the surges of “Presence Of God”, the epic scale of “Gone Too Far”, the yearning of “Take Me Back Home” or “I Can’t Stay” or the snag and snarl of “Bitter Man”, it will.

Gahan’s lyrics and melodies came to him with spontaneity and passion. “About five songs in, I realised I was writing outside myself. I was having a go at myself, to be honest: my questions around faith, and God, or the lack thereof at any given moment. Sometimes I’m full of faith, but there are always questions. And I struggle with letting go of control of what’s going on around me. This album became very therapeutic. No restrictions. Coming out of getting sick myself, I found I HAD to get this stuff out of me. This music gave me the perfect palate to play with the BIG questions that we all ask when life becomes less about what can we GET, than: what can we DO? I’ve been very fortunate, and I’m privileged in my life, so I want to do things I feel really connected to now, otherwise there’s no point. Rich and I had both come out of something difficult. This is something to do with that. It was a wonderful experience.”

“People don’t make these grander-sounding records any more because of budget,” remarks Rich. “We did this on a shoestring, relatively, but I didn’t want to cut corners, so there was some begging, stealing and borrowing. We did the strings in Sunset Sound in the room where the Beach Boys did “Pet Sounds” and Led Zeppelin did some of their best-known tracks, and I love that side of things, thinking to myself: Brian Wilson sat right there. I can never quite get my head round how I ended up here, but for someone with a love of music history, it’s pretty great. So many bands are happy to make the same album three times, but I need Soulsavers to keep changing to keep me excited. The first person I played this to was Mark Lanegan, a good friend, who I trust to give me honest feedback. He doesn’t do bullshit. And he loved it. He sings a subtle cameo on “In The Morning”, and that helps the passing on of the torch…”

Says Dave Gahan, “Rich is Soulsavers, and Mark’s been part of that up to this point, and may well be again in the future, but it’s now an open door. I think this is the beginning of a very interesting friendship! Depeche Mode will get busy again soon, but I’d love for Rich and I to work together again. Look, I’ve been in a successful band for years and people have their impressions, things they like or don’t like, which is fair enough, but I don’t want that to overshadow the importance of this record. It’s a Soulsavers record, and I’m lucky just to be a part of it.”

“Soulsavers comes in waves and curves and changes,” adds Rich Machin. “It’s all about freedom, but on a record I want it to lock into a unifying feel.” With regard to the other musicians, there was a “cleaning house”: in Rich’s words, it was “time for some new blood”. Crucial to the sound were bassist Martyne LeNoble (Porno For Pyros founder member who’d played on “Broken” and on Gahan’s “Live Monsters”), drummer Kev Bales (Spiritualized, and “hands down my favourite drummer”, says Machin), guitarist Tony Foster (Spiritualized & Julian Cope) and organist/keyboardist Sean Read. “It’s an ever-rotating world of friends, which makes the whole thing more enjoyable.” Strings were arranged by Italian composer Daniele Luppi (“Broken”, Danger Mouse, David Lynch), who’s worked on many films, sharing Rich’s love of giants like Ennio Morricone and Bruno Nicolai. (although, Rich adds that the two soundtracks he’s been most into lately are the Chet Baker documentary “Let’s Get Lost” and Neil Young’s “Dead Man”).

The title “The Light The Dead See” comes from a deeply affecting work by the cult American poet Frank Stanford (1948-1978). “He was exceptional: I’m a big fan, and it fits the mood totally,” says Rich, (who’s previously acknowledged his admiration of Charles Bukowski, John Fante and William Faulkner’s Southern Gothic tales). “Yes,” says Dave, “You can walk around this planet with the blinders on, and sometimes it takes big things happening to you to shift you to a different consciousness. Let’s say I’ve had opportunities to turn this around; I’m blessed. I was out there on the edge awhile, and I saw the possibilities of what could be…things like addiction, which is just a sad old journey. But to be able to turn things around, there’s a redemption about that. So if you ask me what this album’s about, I’d say two things. One, exactly that: what IS it all about? And two: redemption.”

Chris Roberts

 

Listen:
@ Amazon

 

Video:
“Take Me Back Home”

“Take”

 

Trailer:

Interviews:
Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

 

Buy CD:
Amazon US (US)
Amazon GER (US)
WOM (EU)
Rough Trade (EU)
Recordstore (EU)
more soon

 

Buy Vinyl:
Amazon US (US)
Amazon GER (EU)
WOM (EU)
Rough Trade (EU)
Recordstore (EU)
more soon

 

Buy Digital:
Amazon
iTunes
7Digital
Google Play
more soon

 

Websites:
Soulsavers
Dave Gahan
V2
Mute

 

out now: Laibach – Iron Sky Soundtrack [Mute]

 

Artist:
Laibach

 

Title:
Iron Sky Soundtrack

 

Label:
Mute

 

Cat#:
STUMM344

 

Release Date:
06th April 2012 (digital)
27th April 2012 (CD)

 

Format:
CD & digital

 

Tracklist:
01)
B-Mashina (Iron Sky Prequel)

02)
Take Me To Heaven

03)
Problems, Big Time! / Schwarze Sonne

04)
Classroom (Where Are We from?) / Spaceship Hangar

05)
Kameraden, Wir Kehren Heim!

06)
Ein Spion Von Der Erde

07)
Sauerkraut

08)
Washington’s Escape

09)
Dr. Richter’s Laboratory

10)
Vivian’s Untergang

11)
Klaus And Renate

12)
In The Machine

13)
Renate And Washington At The Lab / Albinising Operation

14)
Nazi Expedition To Earth

15)
Renate’s Surprise

16)
Peace Lovin’ Brother Rap

17)
The Good Times for The Bad People

18)
Renate’s Message of Peace

19)
The Miracle in White House

20)
The Answer To The Question

21)
The Moon Nazis Are Coming

22)
125′ Later Ragtime

23)
A Good War Blues (Klaus And Vivian)

24)
Die Flotte Ist Bereit

25)
Der Führer’s Last Waltz

26)
Meteorblitzkrieg Begins

27)
Ready To Face The Music (Counterattack)

28)
Un Security Council Confessions

29)
Space Battle Suite

30)
James And Renate Inside The Götterdämmerung

31)
The United States of America Does Not Negotiate With Terrorists

32)
Moon Attack

33)
Götterdämmerung Muss Fliegen

34)
Feuer Frei!

35)
Fight Between Washington And Dr. Richter

36)
Klaus And Renate’s Final ‘Rendezvous’

37)
The Fall Of Götterdämmerung

38)
America

39)
Under The Iron Sky

40)
End Title (We Leave in Peace)

 

Info:
In the last moments of World War II, a secret Nazi space program evaded destruction by fleeing to the Dark Side of the Moon. During 70 years of utter secrecy, the Nazis construct a gigantic space fortress with a massive armada of flying saucers, getting ready for the invasion of Earth!

This is Iron Sky, with an epic soundtrack by Laibach.

With a theatrical trailer viewed by more than four and a half million people on YouTube and an amazing reception from the fans, the film had its successful worldwide premiere at the Berlin Film Festival on the 11 February 2012.

The film creators have collaborated actively with their audience and fans on all fronts, from publicity through content to funding. People who were interested in Iron Sky could contribute in a variety of ways: by demanding to see the film in their home city using a system called Crowd Controls (http://www.ironsky.net/demand/), by collaborating in creating the movie in the acclaimed film creation platform Wreckamovie (http://www.wreckamovie.com/iron-sky/) and by investing in the film (10% of its budget came from fans).

As The Hollywood Reporter noted, “the score by Laibach adds character, mixing pastiche pop with symphonic elements”.

“I was actually sitting in a sauna with our team when one of us, Jarmo Puskala, came up with the idea that we should do a film about Nazis on the Moon. I agreed, and my number one demand was that if so, I want Laibach to do the music”, said Iron Sky’s director Timo Vuorensola about their choice of artist.

“It was a far-fetched idea at the moment, but stuck into my head as a general style guideline not just for music, but for the general approach for the film, and finally, when I heard they would be interested after we contacted them, I was in ecstasy. Their unique sense of humor and nice and twisted approach will really light a spark in the wretched genre of film music. We’re hoping to create something like Vangelis did for Blade Runner – not just a soundtrack, but a whole new world that echoes through the music.”

 

Listen:
full stream of “Under The Iron Sky”

or all @Amazon GER

 

Video:
“Under The Iron Sky”

 

Film Trailer:

 

Buy:
MuteBank (CD)
Amazon GER (CD)
Amazon GER (digital)
Amazon UK (CD)
Amazon UK (digital)
PopOnaut (CD)
InfraRot (CD)
iTunes (digital)
7Digital (digital)
MusicLoad (digital)
more soon

 

Websites:
film page “Iron Sky”
Laibach
Mute
Mute @ Facebook
Mute Germany @ Facebook

 

[Video]: In loving memory of Fad Gadget

 

Artist:
Fad Gadget

 

Title:
In Memory of Frank Tovey

 

Label:
Mute Records

 

Note:
It was 10 years ago today, 3 April 2002, that Frank Tovey, aka Fad Gadget passed away.

He is missed dearly by family, Mute staff and his fans.

Play your favorite Fad Gadget or Frank Tovey tune really loud today.

In loving memory

 

Websites:
Fad Gadget
Mute

 

Video: