out for a while: Echoboy – Volume Two [Mute]

 

Artist:
Echoboy

 

Title:
Volume Two

 

Label:
Mute

 

Cat#:
STUMM192

 

Release Date:
25th September 2000

 

Format:
CD, vinyl, download & streaming

 

Tracklist:
01.
Turning On

02.
Telstar Recovery

03.
Kelly’s Truck

04.
Siobhan

05.
Make The City The Sound

06.
Schram And Sheddle 262

07.
Südwestfunk No. 5

08.
Circulation

09.
High Pitch Needs

 

Press Info:
Echoboy is set to release a brand new album “Volume 2” on Mute on the 25th of September.

“Volume 2” is the third Echoboy long player, his second for Mute and features nine new tracks including forthcoming single ‘Telstar Recovery’. The follow up to the critically acclaimed “Volume 1” long player released earlier this year sees the incredibly prolific Echoboy deliver probably his strongest set of songs to date.

Echoboy aka Richard Warren set out on his solo mission nearly three years ago after leaving the Hybirds. Retreating to a studio above his mother’s hair saloon in Nottingham with just an 8-track and a casio, he set about creating a new sound, the result was Flashlegs a single on Pointblank records in July 1998. An eponymous debut album soon followed and further singles on Earworm and Rough Trade’s singles club both confused and delighted critics who compared the Echoboy sound with acts as diverse as Bruce Springsteen, Stereolab, Kraftwerk and Faust.

Signing to Mute in March 1999, his first release for the label ‘Frances Says: The Knife Is Alive’, a four track EP that featured the stunning Bobby Gentry sampled Canada. The album “Volume 1” was released later that month and included the single ‘Kit and Holly’, it was a brilliant collection and its eight tracks confirmed Echoboy to be one of pop music’s true innovators. The last few months has seen him complete British tours with both The Doves and Elastica and he recently played a successful show at the Sonar Festival in Barcelona.

echoboy – a biography
“I want it to be pop music – but with a difference” – Richard Warren, Echoboy

The difference is clear: one man, a myriad of ideas, and a sparking new pop vision for a new era

The theory is simple: “You listen to a Bob Dylan record, listen to a Television record, listen to a Kraftwerk record, listen to a Chemical Brothers record and then put it all together. All these are the best people of their day, so if you put it together then you should have the perfect hybrid,” says Richard. Perfect pop music both captures the moment and transcends the era. Love pop music and you’ll love Echoboy.

The richness of Echoboy’s vision is Warren’s lifetime immersion in sound. As a teenager, he learned heady guitar licks from Hendrix, went on the front the power trio The Hybirds and was courted by Oasis when they found themselves suddenly guitar-less. The Sun, when they discovered he had turned them down, awarded Richard the immortal accolade: “He’s not mad for it – he’s just mad!”

Richard had already left the conventional music biz route, holed up with an 8-track and a Casio and set about creating new worlds from above his mum’s hair salon in Nottingham. Putting out his debut ‘Flashlegs’ single on Pointblank records in July 1998, shortly followed by the ‘Echoboy’ album, he set tongues wagging throughout the press. “Bruce Springsteen meets Kraftwerk” reckoned the NME. “Faust via Stereolab,” added Time Out. More singles followed: ‘Scene 30’ on Earworm, an unprecedented double 7″ ‘Pure New Wool’ for the Rough Trade Singles Club.

Richard WarrenWhile the press argued the toss between Krautrock and Primal Scream, Mute’s Daniel Miller travelled to Nottingham to hear an entire album’s worth of newly recorded material. Echoboy signed to Mute in March 1999, beginning the liaison with the stunning, backwards-masked, Bobbie Gentry-sampling ‘Canada’ from the ‘Frances Says The Knife Is Alive’ EP. His first album for Mute , ‘Volume 1’ followed, preceded by the single ‘Kit and Holly’. Taken from the album, this was a pop gem which further consolidated Echoboy’s support with the U.K. media .

“Vol. 1”, moves through a slipstream of atmospherics, grooves and warps. ‘Model 352’ mimics a production line: hissing pistons, infectious rhythms which begin at once to invade and disorientate the mind and make the body move. The inspirations: Kraftwerk and Iggy Pop. “Iggy’s first records were directly influenced by his surroundings in Detroit, he would hear the factory hammers beating at the Ford Motors plant and he wanted the Stooges to sound like the production line.”

Further along the voyage, ‘Broken Hearts’ belies its ethereal electronic wash with darker, malevolent beats. “I like beautiful music,” Richard considers, “but I also like that dark side. That song could be looked at from either side. It’s like Steve Reich meets The Stone Roses’ ‘I Wanna Be Adored’.

Things get still more intense as the atmospheric ‘Constantinople’ slide into the ominous guitar-bow riffery on ‘Crocodile Milk’. Then, the tension is broken by the sublime ‘Walking’, a sparkling homage to breathy French 1960s pop.

“Volume 2”, the third Echoboy long player, his second for Mute was released only six months later than the critically acclaimed “Volume 1” and saw the incredibly prolific Echoboy deliver probably his strongest set of songs to date , including the Suicide inspired single ‘Telstar Recovery ‘.

Echoboy toured extensively last year, aided by various musicians, including members of Spiritualized and Six By Seven. In converting the best of Richard’s work to date the band delivers a truly psychedelic experience that has enthralled audiences across Europe whilst supporting Add N To (X) and in Britain where they’ve toured alongside Doves and Elastica amongst a string of successful headline shows .

“It’s not been like, the pop thing’s finished, I’m going experimental now,” Richard declares. “It’s just that I’m signed to a label now that allows me to do experimental music. I don’t want to get caught up in some little bedroom scene; I want to sell records. I try to be really honest with my music and if there’s a surprise element to the album, where people don’t know where it’s going next, then that’s good.

“I want people who like Echoboy to be curious,” he concludes, “and discerning, too. They don’t have to like everything – cos then you don’t have to work to a blueprint, or define your style. I want to leave the doors open, so I can go in any direction.”

Prepare to be infected.

 

Snippets:

 

Special:
“Fuse FM Acoustic Session Feb 2003”

 

Recommendations:
Echoboy’s “Volume One” on Mute
all stuff on Mute & sublabels we featured

 

Buy CD:
iMusic
originally released in 2000

 

Buy Vinyl:
originally released in 2000

 

Buy Download:
Qobuz
Boomkat
Bleep
iTunes
more soon

 

Commercial Streaming Services:
Tidal
Qobuz
Spotify
Apple Music
Deezer
Youtube Music
more soon

 

Websites:
Echoboy
Mute
Mute Deutschland

 

out for a while: Luke Slater – Wireless [NovaMute]

 

Artist:
Luke Slater

 

Title:
Wireless

 

Label:
NovaMute

 

Cat#:
NOMU70

 

Release Date:
04th October 1999 (original release date for physical items)
2012 (digital re-release)

 

Format:
CD, vinyl, download & streaming

 

Tracklist:
A1.
In The Pocket

A2.
Sum Ton Tin

A3.
Hard Silence (Part One)

A4.
Sheer Five Five

A5.
Let Eat All Vanbrook

B1.
Body Freefall, Electronic Inform

B2.
You Butterfly

B3.
Hard Knock Rock

C1.
All Exhale

C2.
Bolt Up

D1.
I Thought I Knew You

D2.
Weave Your Web

D3.
Out The Pocket

 

Press Info:
Luke Slater releases his second long-player ‘Wireless’ for NovaMute on 4th October. A startling testament that continues from where 97’s universally acclaimed electronic opus, ‘Freek Funk’ left off. Self produced, ‘Wireless’ is a glorious piece of work marked by its rhythm, electronic squalls and explosions of spine – tingling sonics. Highly emotive, the album showcases Slater’s creative rise from his early adventures in the field of electronic music. ‘Wireless’ is the clearest sign yet of a musical shift in Slater’s career.

Having developed an embryonic understanding of the finer points of electronic music via his father’s antiquated tape to tape machinery and a love of rhythmic dissonance thanks to a pre-pubescent stint as a drummer, Slater’s latent talents were activated by a love of early electro and a precocious residency at premier acid house London club Troll playing the early sounds from Chicago and Detroit. From these roots Slater has established a reputation as one of the UK electronic music scene’s most consistent, creative and internationally respected DJ, producer, and musician recording under a variety of nom-de- plumes including Clementine, 7th Plain, Planetary Assault Systems.

1997 saw Slater release what is generally viewed as his most ambitious project to date. ‘Freek Funk’ united the critics, proclaimed as one of the albums of the year in the international dance press (album of the month in Muzik, Mixmag, Jockey Slut) its power lay in its ability to transcend the confines of its mother genre and re-appropriate sounds, twisting them into distinct sonic experiments in Slater’s own inimitable style. Ranging from dub, house, electro and tuff techno to moments of beautiful electronic melancholy the album was diverse as it was visceral. A defining moment.

‘Wireless’ is no less stunning than its predecessor. Predominantly an album concerned with “breaks”, Slater has still managed to instil enough of his own character into the proceedings to elevate it beyond a generic piece of work. Transforming the sometimes functional electronic sound into moments of sheer beauty or brutality the album is a staggeringly powerful testament. ‘Body Freefall, Electronic Inform’ articulates a sense of aggression through a tsunami of random beats, while ‘Weave Your Web’ caresses with its ambrosial freeform washes. The forthcoming single, ‘All Exhale’ utilises the funked-up beats of electro with the addition of nagging analogue vocal hooks while ‘Bolt-Up’ pulls on the leash like a rabid dog. Equally as ecstatic is the freestyle drum attack of ‘Let Eat All Vanbrook’ which charges along in a dangerously random manner. More cohesive, direct and mightily accurate than its predecessor, its full-on funk assault is a challenging lesson in modern music. Still as crucial and essential as ever, Slater still is THE teacher and one of the UK’s few world class electronic artists.

‘Wireless’ is released on CD (NOMU70CD) and double vinyl (NOMU70LP) on 4th October.

 

Snippets:

 

Full Track Streaming:
“Body Freefall, Electronic Inform”

“Sum Tom Tin”

 

Special:
“1997-2001 Special // 27-12-2013”

 

Recommendations:
Luke Slater’s “Freek Funk” on NovaMute
all stuff by Luke Slater and his aliases
all stuff on Mute & sublabels

 

Buy CD:
Juno
originally released in 1999

 

Buy Vinyl:
Juno
originally released in 1999

 

Buy Download:
Qobuz
JunoDownload
iTunes
Bleep
Boomkat
Clone Digital
Beatport
more soon

 

Commercial Streaming Services:
Tidal
Spotify
Anghami
Apple Music
Deezer
Youtube Music

 

Booking:
Luke Slater

 

Websites:
Luke Slater
Luke Slater @ Facebook
NovaMute
NovaMute Germany
Mute
Mute Germany

 

© Photo By Paul Krause
Luke Slater

Luke Slater looks satisfied. Leaning back in the functional surroundings of his West London record label, drawing on a prison thickness roll up and sporting a fine pair of two-tone bowling shoes(!), Slater reflects on the last couple of years. It’s not been a bad end to the century for the Sussex lad who started out as a teenage drummer eventually to end up as one of the UK’s leading exponents of what could loosely be called dance music. In 1997 a wildly eclectic and much praised album, ‘Freek Funk’ saw Slater eventually reap the rewards of a decade of hard work touring the country DJ’ing and promoting a string of underground releases.. Slater’s the real deal, a true believer, someone with a clarity of vision and passion for his trade. Someone who’s never compromised, someone who’s never given up on the feeling that inspired him all those years back on hearing the embryonic sounds of electro. And so to 1999 and the return of the boy wonder armed with a devastating album, the potent ‘Wireless’, that side-steps what we have come to expect and takes us further into uncharted territory. This is the story so far.

Born in Reading, Slater eventually ended up in the suburban surrounding of Horley, a sleepy commuter town to the south of London. Music was always around, the house resonated to the sound of his father’s big band 78’s while Luke persevered unsuccessfully with piano lessons. Tired of the limitations of playing other people’s musical creations, Luke’s attention soon moved on to a tiny drum set that had sat un-played for some time. Bashing out primitive rhythms Slater felt he had found his vocation. At the age of 12 he found himself teaming up with a gang of local teenagers in a less than successful rock outfit. Yet the dead end nature of his efforts were not to deter the young Slater in his quest for his own musical nirvana.

Undeterred and with an ever increasing interest in the possibilities of music, Luke’s attention switched towards the creation of synthesised sounds. Experimenting with sound textures and abstract noises on his father’s antiquated 1957 Garrard Hi-Fi and a less than mint condition reel-to-reel, Slater soon discovered that a world of sci-fi sounds existed beyond the constraints of the organic instruments he had previously tinkered with. Intrigued by the sound of a stylophone it was the lending of a Roland 808 that eventually sparked a latent interest in the perfect beat. Even during these formative years the young Slater’s restless and inquiring mind drove him on questioning the constraints and boundaries of the music he was making. Never content with his creations, a trait that still remains as a driving force today, and inspired by the other worldly possibilities of sci-fi films such as Stanley Kubrick’s epic, ‘2001 – A Space Odyssey’ he soon developed a wider overview of the music he was creating.

Yet by the early eighties a potent musical force had entered Slater’s world. Electro had developed out of the electronic sounds of artists such as Kraftwerk and Cabaret Voltaire and had been mutated into a funked up hybrid more tailored for dance floor consumption. Slater was transfixed. His musical vision and expectations had left him feeling isolated, yet the synthesised assault of electro provided him with an ally, a sound with which he could identify, after all Slater had been dreaming of such music for some time. Inspired and energised by these early polyrhythmic grumblings of electro, Slater set out to define his own musical vision armed only with a handful of scratch records, a battered Roland 808 and the help of a friend’s percussive skills. A journey had begun that would eventually see Slater championed as one of the UK’s most dynamic, risk taking electronic producers.

By 1988 Slater had already been DJ’ing at Troll in London, a defining club in the history of acid house, for over a year. Playing a mix of electro and early jack tracks that had begun to find their way over from Chicago and Detroit, Slater found himself at the centre of the musical revolution that was exploding at the time. Yet by 1989 Luke had found himself back in his native Sussex after a year or so of excess in London’s clubs and warehouse parties. Teaming up with an old friend Al Sage, Luke became involved with the running of a Brighton record shop, Jelly Jam which was soon to spurn a similarly monikered label. Recording in his spare time with Sage, a primitive track titled ‘Freebase’ became the pairs first vinyl outing.

Becoming further immersed in the sounds coming out of the Motor City at the time, Luke went further into his own musical journey teaming up with the legendary Dutch label Djax to produce a crop of incendiary tracks under the guise of Clementine. Always restless, Luke continued to craft tracks that exhibited an alarming diversity and focus. Swapping labels to the wildly eclectic Irdial, Luke created slices of shimmering electronica under the guise of Morganistic while a transfer to the fledgling Peacefrog label saw Slater mould a series of space-funk classics as Planetary Assault Systems. Further changes in identity saw Slater tinker with ambience under the 7th Plain moniker and mount an all out sonic assault with his X-Tront project. By the mid ’90’s Slater had firmly established himself as a true musical maverick, an innovator capable of moments of breathtaking beauty and power that wooed critics and fans alike. Yet his best was yet to come.

By 1997 Slater was beginning to feel the constraints of the music he was creating. Tired of being labelled in a particular way he felt the critics and public’s musical expectations weighing heavily around his neck. Wanting to instil a degree of clarity and focus to his work he dropped the monikers that had for so long defined each style and adopted his own name in a focused attempt to clear the decks and start again with musical forms he felt comfortable with. The result was astonishing.

1997 saw the release of the landmark ‘Freek Funk’ album on London based NovaMute, a piece of music that ripped up the rule book with its fevered diversity and brazen disregard of the public’s perception of Luke Slater. This was Luke as he wanted to sound at the time. Spontaneous and covering much musical ground, the album effortlessly hopped between rabid techno barrages and moments of lush orchestration that dripped a fragile beauty. He had wanted to create a multi-purpose album that could be interpreted on a myriad of levels. What he ended up spawning was something that went far beyond his vision, an album that intrigued and wooed fans and critics alike. Muzik, Mixmag and Jockey Slut pronounced it album of the month as praise came in from all quarters. Slater had produced an album that distilled everything that mattered in his musical world. Compressing his own unique musical journey into an hours worth of sonic alchemy, ‘Freek Funk’ stands as a near perfect summation of all that’s been excellent in electronic music in the last ten years. Innovative, informative and down right funky, ‘Freek Funk’ saw Slater well and truly come of age.

By late 1998 Slater was back in his Crawley based studio, Space Station ø, impatient and restless and ready to go further out beyond the boundaries laid out by ‘Freek Funk’. The autumn of that year saw Slater and erstwhile partner in crime Al Sage, holed up in deepest Sussex plotting the next move. Things had moved on, Slater had become a father for the second time, he had developed an interest in roller-skating, he hadn’t stopped thinking about his next creation and he had been once again listening to the brutal sounds of the electro beat. A plan was devised and Slater set about the casting of what was to become his latest offering, ‘Wireless’ in late 1998.

His mind had been made up. He yearned to craft an album of sharp focus that possessed a crystal clear clarity of style. Stripping away the superfluous, Slater was determined to produce an album that almost went back to basics, an album that utilised the sounds of his youth and pushed them into the future. Inspired by industrial electronic rock, Slater drafted in live percussion and guitar to add muscle to his sounds. The results are astonishing.

‘Wireless’, to released in September 1999, is testament to Slater’s ever developing musical mind. Not content with remaining static and trading on the success of ‘Freek Funk’ Slater has once again swerved violently to confound any pre-conceived expectations. Essentially an electro-breaks based sound, ‘Wireless’ is brutal in it’s lack of restraint. ‘Body Freefall Electronic Inform’ sounds dark and menacing thanks to its freeform rhythmic ferocity, while opening single ‘All Exhale’ motors along courtesy of a rabid electro beat and fazed vocal stabs. Opening track ‘In The Pocket’ and the ambient beauty of ‘Weave Your Web’ show that Slater has not fully disassociated himself from the weirded-out funk of yesteryear. Yet throughout proceedings are powered by the snarl of the kick drum and cymbal with a healthy dose of Slater’s wildly unique sound. Part Sun Ra part Mantronix and part Underground Resistance, ‘Wireless’ is another massive leap for Slater. An album that will astound as much as confound from an artist who refuses to sit still and do as he is told. Give praise to the lord and all hail the return of Luke Slater. You’ve been missed.

out for a while: Martin L. Gore – Counterfeit² [Mute | Reprise Records | Sony Music]

 

Artist:
Martin L. Gore

 

Title:
Counterfeit²

 

Label:
Mute | Reprise Records | Sony Music

 

Cat#:
STUMM214 | 48469-2 | tba

 

Release Date:
28th March 2003 (original release date)
later (re-releases)

 

Format:
CD, vinyl, cassette, download & streaming

 

Tracklist:
01.
In My Time Of Dying

02.
Stardust

03.
I Cast A Lonesome Shadow

04.
In My Other World

05.
Loverman

06.
By This River

07.
Lost In The Stars

08.
Das Lied Vom Einsamen Mädchen

09.
Oh My Love

10.
Tiny Girls

11.
Candy Says

 

Press Info:
Martin L. Gore, songwriter and one of the founder members of Depeche Mode, is set to release his new album entitled “Counterfeit2” in April 2003. The album is the second in his counterfeit cover-version series. Classic tunes by Lou Reed, Iggy Pop, Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds, Kurt Weill, David Essex and John Lennon are among the album’s eleven radically reworked homages to musical heroes old and new.

As Depeche Mode took time out following their monstrously successful “Exciter” album and world tour, Martin could easily have spent the last 18 months lying on a beach, listening to disco music. But instead he knuckled down at his home studio in California, revisiting and reinventing songs which have touched him deeply over the years.

The tracks on “Counterfeit2” range from sultry 21st Century blues to achingly lovely sci-fi lullabies, sublime alt-country crooners to engrossing electronic torch songs. A glittering haul of buried treasure, their only guiding spirit being the visceral emotional attachment felt by Martin towards them.

“I really wanted to get across a fan’s perspective,” says Martin. “There is something about the songs I like that somehow gives the album a thread. Deep emotions, I suppose. There has to be a personal connection.”

Even casual Depeche Mode fans will recognise the aching vulnerability and lustful longing in these songs of faith and devotion. But the track listing on “Counterfeit2” goes deeper than mere influence; it goes right to the roots of why Martin became a musician in the first place. “Without some of the artists I’ve covered here, I wouldn’t be writing the way I do.”

Martin’s teenage tastes clearly ranged freely, as “Counterfeit2” demonstrates. Here a woozy electro-glide through the strangely soothing alienation of Brian Eno’s ‘By This River’ rubs shoulders with a techno-glam overhaul of post-fame burnout anthem ‘Stardust’, the weirdest David Essex tune ever to grace the Top 10. Martin is, after all, pop’s original Essex boy.

A compelling post-lounge twist on Iggy Pop’s ‘Tiny Girls’ gives way to a streamlined, softly oscillating version of John Lennon’s ‘Oh My Love’. And a sleek, German-language version of Nico’s Teutonic torchlight serenade ‘Das Lied Vom Einsamen Madchen’ (The Song of The Lonely Girl), contrasts sharply with a reading of The Velvet Underground’s ‘Candy Says’, which Martin fatefully describes as “more drugged out than the original”.

In choosing the tracks for “Counterfeit2”, Martin has also dug deep into musical history, adding a sensual electronic sheen to the vintage country-blues tunes ‘I Cast A Lonesome Shadow’ and ‘In My Time Of Dying’. But the album’s most straightforward and traditionally romantic number finds Martin crooning desolately over piano and strings on Kurt Weill’s deceptively jaunty hymn to a godless universe, ‘Lost In The Stars’.

As well as nodding to the past, “Counterfeit2” also acknowledges some of Martin’s left-field pop peers. Labelmate Nick Cave And The Bad Seeds’ lusty blues howler ‘Lover Man’ is reborn as a sexually charged trip-hop juggernaut of manicured malevolence. But the album’s beatific peak is ‘In My Other Word’, Julee Cruise’s fragrant, David Lynchian fable about a parallel universe where cover versions of ourselves are enjoying perfect lives.

So what is the counterfeit Martin L. Gore doing, right now, in this magical world just beyond our reach? “He’s probably on the beach,” grins Martin, “listening to disco music.”

Counterfeit. Borrowed songs, real passions. Accept no substitute.

 

Snippets:

 

Special:
“CLR Podcast 147”

 

Recommendations:
MG’s “The Third Chimpanzee (Remixed)” on Mute
MG’s “The Third Chimpanzee EP” on Mute
MG’s “Remixes” on Mute
MG’s “MG” on Mute
“SSSS” by VCMG aka Vince Clarke & Martin Gore on Mute
VCMG’s “EP 3 / Aftermaths” on Mute
VCMG’s “EP 2 / Single Blip” on Mute
VCMG’s “EP 1 / Spock” on Mute
“Subterraneans” by Alva Noto feat. M.L. Gore & Willian Basinski on Noton
“Man Made Machine” by Motor feat. Martin L. Gore on CLRX
Diamond Version’s “EP1-5” w/ Martin L. Gore remix on Mute
all stuff of Depeche Mode and related artists we featured
all stuff on Mute & sublabels we featured

 

Buy CD:
WOM
Juno
originally released in 2003

 

Buy Vinyl:
Juno
originally released in 2003

 

Buy Download:
Qobuz
iTunes
7Digital
more soon

 

Commercial Streaming Services:
Tidal
Qobuz
Spotify
Apple Music
Deezer
Anghami
Youtube Music

 

Websites:
Martin L. Gore
Martin L. Gore (fanpage)
MG (fanpage)
VCMG (fanpage)
Mute
Mute Deutschland
Reprise Records
Sony Music

 

© Photo By Anton Corbijn

out for a while: Echoboy – Volume One [Mute]

 

Artist:
Echoboy

 

Title:
Volume One

 

Label:
Mute

 

Cat#:
STUMM180

 

Release Date:
20th March 2000

 

Format:
CD, vinyl, download & streaming

 

Tracklist:
01.
55

02.
Kit And Holly

03.
Model 352

04.
Broken Hearts

05.
Constantinople

06.
Crocodile Milk

07.
Walking

08.
Contact

 

Press Info:
Vol. 1

One man, a myriad of ideas, a sparking new pop vision for a new era. Richard Warren is at the controls of Echoboy’s sonic groove factory, and Vol. 1 is your introduction to his workshop of sound. The follow up to his eponymous debut album, released on his own Point Blank imprint last year, Vol. 1 moves through a slipstream of atmospherics, warps and grooves, refreshingly rich in its diversity. The album is released on 20 March on CD & LP.

‘Constantinople’ 12″ single

An extremely limited (200) 12″ only taster from Vol. 1 featuring the track ‘Constantinople’ will be released on 14th February backed by an exclusive track ‘Usherettes’, only available through Chain With No Name stores and Echoboy database subscribers.

‘Kit & Holly’ single

Echoboy will release a new single ‘Kit And Holly’ on April 24th on 7″ and CD with extra tracks comprising exclusive new Echoboy material. A video for the track has also been shot by hotly tipped young director Tom Baxendall.

echoboy – a biography

“I want it to be pop music – but with a difference” – Richard Warren, Echoboy

The difference is clear: one man, a myriad of ideas, and a sparking new pop vision for a new era

The theory is simple: “You listen to a Bob Dylan record, listen to a Television record, listen to a Kraftwerk record, listen to a Chemical Brothers record and then put it all together. All these are the best people of their day, so if you put it together then you should have the perfect hybrid,” says Richard. Perfect pop music both captures the moment and transcends the era. Love pop music and you’ll love Echoboy.

The richness of Echoboy’s vision is Warren’s lifetime immersion in sound. As a teenager, he learned heady guitar licks from Hendrix, went on the front the power trio The Hybirds and was courted by Oasis when they found themselves suddenly guitar-less. The Sun, when they discovered he had turned them down, awarded Richard the immortal accolade: “He’s not mad for it – he’s just mad!”

Richard had already left the conventional music biz route, holed up with an 8-track and a Casio and set about creating new worlds from above his mum’s hair salon in Nottingham. Putting out his debut ‘Flashlegs’ single on Pointblank records in July 1998, shortly followed by the ‘Echoboy’ album, he set tongues wagging throughout the press. “Bruce Springsteen meets Kraftwerk” reckoned the NME. “Faust via Stereolab,” added Time Out. More singles followed: ‘Scene 30’ on Earworm, an unprecedented double 7″ ‘Pure New Wool’ for the Rough Trade Singles Club.

Richard WarrenWhile the press argued the toss between Krautrock and Primal Scream, Mute’s Daniel Miller travelled to Nottingham to hear an entire album’s worth of newly recorded material. Echoboy signed to Mute in March 1999, beginning the liaison with the stunning, backwards-masked, Bobbie Gentry-sampling ‘Canada’ from the ‘Frances Says The Knife Is Alive’ EP. His first album for Mute , ‘Volume 1’ followed, preceded by the single ‘Kit and Holly’. Taken from the album, this was a pop gem which further consolidated Echoboy’s support with the U.K. media .

“Vol. 1”, moves through a slipstream of atmospherics, grooves and warps. ‘Model 352’ mimics a production line: hissing pistons, infectious rhythms which begin at once to invade and disorientate the mind and make the body move. The inspirations: Kraftwerk and Iggy Pop. “Iggy’s first records were directly influenced by his surroundings in Detroit, he would hear the factory hammers beating at the Ford Motors plant and he wanted the Stooges to sound like the production line.”

Further along the voyage, ‘Broken Hearts’ belies its ethereal electronic wash with darker, malevolent beats. “I like beautiful music,” Richard considers, “but I also like that dark side. That song could be looked at from either side. It’s like Steve Reich meets The Stone Roses’ ‘I Wanna Be Adored’.

Things get still more intense as the atmospheric ‘Constantinople’ slide into the ominous guitar-bow riffery on ‘Crocodile Milk’. Then, the tension is broken by the sublime ‘Walking’, a sparkling homage to breathy French 1960s pop.

“Volume 2”, the third Echoboy long player, his second for Mute was released only six months later than the critically acclaimed “Volume 1” and saw the incredibly prolific Echoboy deliver probably his strongest set of songs to date , including the Suicide inspired single ‘Telstar Recovery ‘.

Echoboy toured extensively last year, aided by various musicians, including members of Spiritualized and Six By Seven. In converting the best of Richard’s work to date the band delivers a truly psychedelic experience that has enthralled audiences across Europe whilst supporting Add N To (X) and in Britain where they’ve toured alongside Doves and Elastica amongst a string of successful headline shows .

“It’s not been like, the pop thing’s finished, I’m going experimental now,” Richard declares. “It’s just that I’m signed to a label now that allows me to do experimental music. I don’t want to get caught up in some little bedroom scene; I want to sell records. I try to be really honest with my music and if there’s a surprise element to the album, where people don’t know where it’s going next, then that’s good.

“I want people who like Echoboy to be curious,” he concludes, “and discerning, too. They don’t have to like everything – cos then you don’t have to work to a blueprint, or define your style. I want to leave the doors open, so I can go in any direction.”

Prepare to be infected.

 

Snippets:

 

Special:
“Fuse FM Acoustic Session Feb 2003”

 

Recommendations:
all stuff on Mute & sublabels we featured

 

Buy CD:
originally released in 2000

 

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originally released in 2000

 

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Websites:
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Mute
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out now: Swans – Birthing [Young God Records | Mute]

 

Artist:
Swans

 

Title:
Birthing

 

Label:
Young God Records | Mute

 

Cat#:
YG68 | STUMM516

 

Release Date:
30th May 2025

 

Format:
CD+DVD, vinyl+DVD, download & streaming

 

Tracklist:
CD1-01.
The Healers

CD1-02.
I Am A Tower

CD1-03.
Birthing

CD2-01.
Red Yellow

CD2-02.
Guardian Spirit

CD2-03.
The Merge

CD2-04.
Rope

CD2-05.
Away

 

Press Info:
SWANS have announced details of their seventeenth studio album, Birthing, due for release on Mute / Young God Records (N America) on 30 May 2025. Birthing will be released on triple vinyl (in a brown chipboard sleeve, double CD (in a brown chipboard digi-pack), and digitally. Initial pressings of the triple vinyl and CD editions will come with a bonus DVD featuring ‘Swans Live 2024 (Rope) The Beggar’, a live concert film directed by Marco Porsia from the last Swans US tour, plus Christopher Nicholson’s documentary from Michael Gira’s solo tour in 2022 entitled ‘I Wonder If I’m Singing What You’re Thinking Me To Sing’.

“The material contained in this album was largely developed over the course of a yearlong Swans tour, during 2023 – 2024 (‘The Healers’, ‘I Am a Tower’, ‘Birthing’, ‘Guardian Spirit’, ‘Rope’, and ‘Away’), then recorded and further orchestrated and rearranged in the studio. Two pieces were created and performed in the studio (‘Red Yellow’, ‘The Merge’).

In all cases the material began with me sitting in my office with an acoustic guitar, singing and dreaming about what would become of these skeletal songs. I’m blessed to have such a stellar group of musicians to work with live, and through improvisation, endless revisions and an intensity of focus in performance (not to mention endurance), over the course of time the music morphed into what you generally hear on this collection.

This album, coupled with the recent live release, Live Rope, constitutes my final foray (as producer / impresario) into the all-consuming sound worlds that have been my obsession for years. We’ll do a final tour in this mode towards the end of 2025, then that’s it.

After that, Swans will continue, so long as I’m able, but in a significantly pared down form. Hints of that direction can be found in a few moments on the current album. In the meantime, my hope is that the music provides a positive and fertile atmosphere in which to dream.” – Michael Gira / Swans

 

Snippets:

 

Full Track Streaming:
“I Am a Tower”

 

Special:
“Live @ Nox Orae 2023”

 

Recommendations:
all stuff on Mute & sublabels we featured

 

Buy CD:
MuteBank
WOM
Rough Trade
Juno
iMusic
Out Of Line Shop
Bleep
Boomkat
more soon

 

Buy Vinyl:
MuteBank
WOM
Rough Trade
OYE Records
Decks
Deejay
Juno
iMusic
Out Of Line Shop
HHV
Bleep
Boomkat
more soon

 

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Qobuz
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Boomkat
iTunes
JunoDownload
more soon

 

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more soon

 

Booking:
Swans

 

Websites:
Swans
Young God Records
Mute
Mute Deutschland

 

© Photo By Josef Puleo