ARCHIVE OF 2012 EVENTS2012 ARCHIVE  

SPECTOR

LULS + SPLASHH + SWIM DEEP
O2 Shepherds Bush Empire
Saturday 10 November 2012

£12.50 ADV

We are pleased to present Spector at Shepherds Bush Empire as part of their UK tour.

Played and approved by the airwaves’ finest, as well as many a kind word from critics, the London 5-piece’s debut release saw them pack out a sweaty and excitable single launch on their doorstep in Dalston to a crowd of indie luminaries including Florence Welch, The xx and Tom Vek.

At just 23, Fred Macpherson is already something of a veteran. He’s fronted two of the most infamous underground bands to have emerged from London in the last decade: the legendarily rowdy upstarts Les Incompetents, and the doomy experimentalists Ox.Eagle.Lion.Man. For Spector, Fred enlisted friends Christopher Burman (guitar), Thomas Shickle (bass), Jed Cullen (synth and guitar) and Danny Blandy (drums), and together they make a heady mix of the electronic and the nostalgic which sounds totally new and yet weirdly, intoxicatingly familiar. Between them, they’ve cooked-up a new kind of peculiarly English pop; pitched somewhere between Roxy Music and The Strokes, The Killers and Kanye, Sinitta and Sinatra.



SPECTOR

Mark Kozelek

SPECIAL GUESTS
St Giles Church
Saturday 10 November 2012

£20 IN ADVANCE

Due to high demand MARK KOZELEK (SUN KIL MOON) has added a second show, at the intimate St Giles in the Fields church.

‘Among The Leaves’ is the 5th full length album by Mark Kozelek under the Sun Kil Moon moniker. Played almost entirely on nylon string guitar, this 17-song all original album was recorded between October 2011 and January 2012 in San Francisco. Among The Leaves – words which caught Mark’s attention from a John Connolly novel – finds Mark relaxed, singing playfully about his life as a musician while retaining the melancholic spirit of his 20 year catalog. Mark’s love for San Francisco and Northern California are at the heart of this new album. “My first album (Down Colorful Hill) was released in 1992” says Kozelek, “but creatively, I feel like I’m just beginning. The new album was written and recorded impulsively, without second guessing. I didn’t have that kind of confidence in the past.” Unlike Red House Painters’ epic Rollercoaster, described by Rolling Stone as “the slowest and mopiest self revelations ever put to tape” or Sun Kil Moon’s Ghosts of the Great Highway, which Billboard Magazine called “heartbreaking,” Among The Leaves displays a more raw and humorous side of Mark’s songwriting. Aaron Prellwitz, recording engineer of Red House Painters and all 5 Sun Kil Moon albums describes the latest effort as “wonderfully direct.” Kozelek curiously ties together legends Joe Frazier, Bobby Fischer and Ed Gein in ‘The Winery’, ‘‘Song for Richard Collopy’ is a touching tribute to the late San Francisco guitar repairman, and ‘Sunshine In Chicago’ – written just before taking the stage at a Chicago venue last year – is a funny, self deprecating poke at life on the road. Though Among The Leaves is mostly in the solo, nylon string style of Admiral Fell Promises, a new ensemble of players joined Mark for a portion of the record, recalling the same spirit as April and Tiny Cities, but with a fresh, new sound.

‘Among the Leaves’ is available from 29th May on Caldo Verde Records.



Mark Kozelek

Darkstar

PATTEN
Electrowerkz
Friday 9 November 2012

£8.50

Due to unforseen circumstances we’ve now moved the show to the Electrowerkz original tickets for the Nave remain valid.

Support from PATTEN

“’Timeaway’ feels like a good starting point to releasing music again, it’s very much us looking forward. It’s off-kilter, processed and bubbles and moves right through”
–    Darkstar

An arcing evolution of Darkstar’s sound, it stands uniquely as a brilliant culmination of the band’s history to this point as well as a significant vault ahead. Taking in their new approach to writing and arranging as a trio, their formidable experiences in London’s mid-2000’s grime and dubstep scene and the experimental approach to recording of album producer Richard Formby.

After touring North across the globe, James Buttery, James Young and Aiden Whalley decamped to a house in the countryside of West Yorkshire, secluding themselves from the distractions of London and writing as a trio for the first time.  Their upcoming Warp debut is a reflection of the time the spent together there. Says Young, “Every place warrants a story. No matter where it is, how quiet, remote or disconnected. There are moments in people’s everyday lives, no matter how subtle, that can be documented and talked about in great detail. The instances spiral and ascend and take on their own course, altering the perception of how even the slightest change in a day can be felt deeply.”

Timeaway is released on 12” vinyl with 10 locked-groove loops “News #1-10” on 12th November 2012 on Warp Records.

Listen to ‘Timeaway’ here



Darkstar

Mark Kozelek

Union Chapel
Friday 9 November 2012
Sold Out

£20

We are very pleased to present Mark Kozelek playing a very special show at the Union Chapel this autumn.

‘Among The Leaves’ is the 5th full length album by Mark Kozelek under the Sun Kil Moon moniker. Played almost entirely on nylon string guitar, this 17-song all original album was recorded between October 2011 and January 2012 in San Francisco. Among The Leaves – words which caught Mark’s attention from a John Connolly novel – finds Mark relaxed, singing playfully about his life as a musician while retaining the melancholic spirit of his 20 year catalog. Mark’s love for San Francisco and Northern California are at the heart of this new album. “My first album (Down Colorful Hill) was released in 1992” says Kozelek, “but creatively, I feel like I’m just beginning. The new album was written and recorded impulsively, without second guessing. I didn’t have that kind of confidence in the past.” Unlike Red House Painters’ epic Rollercoaster, described by Rolling Stone as “the slowest and mopiest self revelations ever put to tape” or Sun Kil Moon’s Ghosts of the Great Highway, which Billboard Magazine called “heartbreaking,” Among The Leaves displays a more raw and humorous side of Mark’s songwriting. Aaron Prellwitz, recording engineer of Red House Painters and all 5 Sun Kil Moon albums describes the latest effort as “wonderfully direct.” Kozelek curiously ties together legends Joe Frazier, Bobby Fischer and Ed Gein in ‘The Winery’, ‘‘Song for Richard Collopy’ is a touching tribute to the late San Francisco guitar repairman, and ‘Sunshine In Chicago’ – written just before taking the stage at a Chicago venue last year – is a funny, self deprecating poke at life on the road. Though Among The Leaves is mostly in the solo, nylon string style of Admiral Fell Promises, a new ensemble of players joined Mark for a portion of the record, recalling the same spirit as April and Tiny Cities, but with a fresh, new sound.

‘Among the Leaves’ is available from 29th May on Caldo Verde Records.



Mark Kozelek

ANDREW BIRD

MICAH P HINSON
Roundhouse
Thursday 8 November 2012

£22.50 ADV

Chicago-based multi-instrumentalist and lyricist ANDREW BIRD picked up his first violin at the age of 4 and spent his formative years soaking up classical repertoire completely by ear.  When it came time for a restless teenager to make his own way, it wasn’t such a giant leap to Hungarian Gypsy music, early jazz, country blues, south Indian etc. It’s fitting that now, though classically trained, he has opted to play his violin in a most unconventional manner, accompanying himself on glockenspiel and guitar, adding singing and whistling to the equation, and becoming a pop songwriter in the process.



ANDREW BIRD

CLOCK OPERA

NZCA/LINES
BRIGHT LIGHT BRIGHT LIGHT
Heaven
Thursday 8 November 2012

£10 ADV

We are extremely excited to announce that the brilliant Clock Opera will be headlining Heaven this November.

Support from NZCA/LINES and BRIGHT LIGHT BRIGHT LIGHT

‘Clock Opera, I remember thinking, have this wonderful tendency to sound like their music combines real memories and made up memories, strong memories and shredded memories, and some sense of the mental and physical reality of a classic surprising pop song. They begin a piece of music with exquisite care and end it, just like that, with battle commencing in between, and a dynamic round the bend sense of time. Sound like a group I never remember hearing who decided to imagine what would happen if they sounded like an original pop group whose members consisted of Steve Reich, Scott Walker, Peter Gabriel, Flo and Eddie and To Rococo Rot. That good.

Fragmented and splintered samples, glowing edits, colliding rhythms, forgotten dreams, digital collage, disintegrating intervals, merging tenses and cut up words. The album is full of romance and recollections, re-enactments and speculations, memory and mystery, machine generated mood and human thought. They make a pop music that suggests at the same time that when it comes to pop music we’ve heard it all before and yet, quite simply, because of various machines, random inventions, social pressures, cultural urges, creative surges, networking ease and personal, shared and electronic memory connected with a continuing sense of anticipation, we ain’t heard nothing yet.

Their name fits. It juxtaposes one thing with another, just like their music and their lyrics, which lead to all sorts of sonic, literal and conceptual reverberations.

Clock, because of the way their music follows strict inescapable patterns on the outside and inside of time, moves clockwise, and sometimes anti-clockwise, tick tocks from second to second, leaps from minute to minute, with minutes to go, always there, mysterious, persistent, biological, atomic, body, face, alarm, the circular band ever present in between the past and future.  Analogue and digital.

Opera, because of the grand drama, the fearless theatre, the epic, crushing sparkle, the crazy scenery, the concrete stylistic niceties, the way their songs tell their stories, which go all the way from foamy soap to fierce teeming space.

Clock : duration, organic precision, cutting the day up into small portions.

Opera : elaborate structures, no half measures, divorced from but dependent on reality, featuring emotional fanatics and representing passions and emotions as morally significant.

Clock Opera: Machine and human, time and intensity, menace and opulence, real and unreal, fixed in flux.  Wound up, rewinding, fast forwarding, and compelling people to fall in love with the colour of life.

I remember writing about Clock Opera and ending the piece by noting how Clock Opera seem determined in their own special cut-up way to remind listeners even in a world over- filled with too much cynical, contrived and complacent pop music how positively amazing pop music can be, as an entertainment that can actively change perceptions. I remember thinking, I wonder if it is ok to describe them as an eclectic four piece avant pop group.  I remember deciding it was a good place to start.’



Kindness

Four Tet all-nighter

SPECIAL GUESTS
O2 Academy Brixton
Friday 2 November 2012
Sold Out

£5

Four Tet curated Brixton all-nighter featuring DJ sets from Four Tet & Caribou (B2B DJ set) + Ben UFO + Floating Points + James Holden + Pangaea + Pearson Sound

Tickets SOLD OUT in 11minutes!



Four Tet all-nighter

Twin Shadow

BROLIN
Electric Brixton
Thursday 1 November 2012

TWIN SHADOW plays Electric Brixton after the sellout success of Dingwalls.

The name might as well be a movie title: Twin Shadow in … Forget. Only it’s not a movie; it’s a panoramic LP that introduces us to the twilight zone tale of George Lewis Jr.

The troubled son of a hairdresser and a “teacher who lived many lives” (semi-pro football, massage therapy, film maker and other things we’ll tell you about when you’re older), George was born in the Dominican Republic and spent his formative years in Florida. Not in a happening spot like Miami, though. Try an island that happened to be the winter home base of the Ringling Brothers’ Circus and palm tree-flanked old people.

If you think that’s strange? You don’t know the half of it. And neither does George, although he’s trying to remember; trying to piece the sepia-toned scenes together along with a debut album that’s all about letting go. Or is it? Like an art-house double feature that leaves you wondering what the hell just happened in the best way possible, Forget tells a spellbinding story without spelling everything out.

Forget isn’t tethered to any trends or specific genre, either. Instead, it seems almost to be hovering above the landscape of decades gone past; checking in at rest stops with it’s wheels pointed directly toward the future. So don’t be surprised to hear things abruptly shift from synth-swept soundscapes (“I Can’t Wait,” “Castles In the Snow”) to glimmers of gossamer dance music (“For Now,” “Shooting Holes At the Moon”) or full-on power balladry (“Slow”).

And who is that sitting next to George’s director’s chair? Chris Taylor of Grizzly Bear in the role of producer, working closely with Twin Shadow, fine-tuning Forget’s special effects while maintaining the memory-wracked mood that George spent months perfecting in his Brooklyn apartment. Brooklyn based label Terrible Records will be taking Twin Shadow’s Forget on as their very first LP release.

“It’s bedroom recorded music, but it’s been done with the same attention as many classic B-movies,” he says. “It’s not like a slapdash home video, though; it’s someone operating with very little at 100-percent of their ability.”

In other words, Forget is like The Seventh Seal filtered through the drive-in feel of Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!. Meaning: lots of tight shots, careful lighting, and a lingering sense that something’s not quite right—a film adaptation of George’s life that’s essentially a 40-minute waking dream.

Support from Brolin



Twin Shadow

Kate Nash

SPECIAL GUESTS
Shacklewell Arms
Thursday 1 November 2012
Sold Out

£10

Kate Nash has today announced two low key London dates to perform tracks from her eagerly awaited third studio album.

Coming in the wake of ‘‘Under Estimate The Girl’’ which garnered widespread coverage, the 25 year old from Harrow is currently putting the finishing touches to the follow up to her critically acclaimed 2010 album ‘’My Best Friend is You’’

Produced by Grammy award-winning producer Tom Biller, the new album fuses elements of punk, rock and shoe-gaze to create a distinctive and unique soundscape

Starting her career in 2005, Kate garnered widespread critical acclaim and a loyal live following in the wake of the release of debut album ‘’Made Of Bricks’’ which featured international hit single ‘‘Foundations’’.

The short UK run begins with a Halloween Party show on October 31st at Hackney Attic and then onto the Shacklewell Arms on November 1st, proceeds from which will be donated to Michael Sobell House hospice. Kate then heads to Europe for further throughout that month.



Kate Nash

Kate Nash

SPECIAL GUESTS
Hackney Attic
Wednesday 31 October 2012
Sold Out

£15

Kate Nash has today announced two low key London dates to perform tracks from her eagerly awaited third studio album.

Coming in the wake of ‘‘Under Estimate The Girl’’ which garnered widespread coverage, the 25 year old from Harrow is currently putting the finishing touches to the follow up to her critically acclaimed 2010 album ‘’My Best Friend is You’’

Produced by Grammy award-winning producer Tom Biller, the new album fuses elements of punk, rock and shoe-gaze to create a distinctive and unique soundscape

Starting her career in 2005, Kate garnered widespread critical acclaim and a loyal live following in the wake of the release of debut album ‘’Made Of Bricks’’ which featured international hit single ‘‘Foundations’’.

The short UK run begins with a Halloween Party show on October 31st at Hackney Attic and then onto the Shacklewell Arms on November 1st, proceeds from which will be donated to Michael Sobell House hospice. Kate then heads to Europe for further throughout that month.



Kate Nash

Duologue

CLOUD BOAT + BEARSKIN
The Lexington
Wednesday 31 October 2012

£6 ADVANCE

In today’s fast-paced world time is precious. Some bands deserve your time, and this is one of them. Duologue are the antithesis of pop music’s current disposable cultural impasse. Their debut album is an immersive experience intended to be absorbed and cherished with repeated listens, not to be heard once on laptop speakers and disregarded. Much like a great novel, this one is hard to put down and will stay with you forever.

The London five-piece are a product of the modern world and its easy access to music. Bonding over a mixture of the best in electronica and guitar-based music, they’ve fused this eclecticism into a truly inimitable sound of their own. “You could pick some songs and we’d be likened to a folk act, another few and we’d be called dubstep,” explains front man Tim Digby-Bell. How many bands can you say that about? Their cerebral experimentation may not be mainstream, but it’s fast becoming a favourite among the cognoscenti.

The journey began with two original members – Tim Digby-Bell and Toby Leeming (vocals/live programming and beats) – producing on a computer whilst at Edinburgh University. Both realised what they were creating was too big for just a couple of people to play. Seb Dilleyston was brought in to add emotive atmospheres on violin having previously trained with world renowned violinist Maria Eitler. Toby Lee was next on guitar, and then bassist Ross Stone completed the line-up.

Early gigs in their nascent career were explosive in more ways than one. Aside from gaining a scintillating live reputation they were also becoming known for having things blow up onstage. A show at London’s Shepherd’s Bush saw the lights shatter above their heads as soon as the set began, and at The Barfly in Camden Town there was an electrical fire halfway through their performance. Whether or not the crowd thought these mishaps were all part of a unique live show will remain a mystery but one thing is for certain, their status on the road grew exponentially and support slots for everyone from Matthew Dear to Clock Opera have followed.

What makes the band so compelling is that they are just that, a band. Refusing to rely too heavily on programmed elements, each layer comes to life in the live arena. “We wanted to have moments where we can strip it down to the bare essentials, really intimate moments, and then to build up to these epic electronic parts too. It needs to feel like a real journey,” says Tim.

The debut album is the culmination of a year’s preparation honing and self editing their eclectic sound and huge catalog of demos in preparation to record. Having already self-produced and released two EP’s showcasing their ability to encompass a wide range of sounds and references the final piece of the puzzle came with the introduction of producer Jim Abbiss (Adele, Arctic Monkeys, Ladytron). In March 2012 the band and Jim holed up in a Chatham studio and began work – with many of the parts already formed and recorded, Jim took on a co-production role, intuitively helping them further enhance their sonic make-up. Digital synths were replaced by richer analogue gear, real strings replaced programmed ones, and even the inclusion of a church organ. “The church was really chilled. I slightly lied. I said we’d dropped £15 in the collection box,” laughs Toby. Nonetheless they’ve been blessed with a great collection of songs from the process.

‘Push It’ is the lynchpin. A four-four dance beat gives structure to a hauntingly atmospheric six minute epic of lyrical self-doubt. Soaring strings and guitar melodies combine in the pinnacle which sees the guys playing to the limit, giving their all in a song replete with daedal rhythms. ‘Escape Artist’ shows they’re equally adept at the other end of the scale. At their most stripped back, this one is rooted in simple harmonies combining live vocals and looped brass samples, yet carries as much emotive weight as the more layered moments. ‘Gift Horse’ is a beautiful lullaby mixing swooning strings with electronic glitches in a contrasting way that will leave audiences rapt. It’s a debut showing courage, refusing to take one path or another, daring to avoid being pigeon-holed yet cohesive enough to stand firmly as an impressive body of work.

Tim’s powerful voice ties all the diversity together, a rich falsetto, he floats effortlessly amid an ever changing backdrop of beats, synths, and strings, molding his own melodies on a patchwork sound-mosaic already replete with creativity. ‘Constant’ sees his melismatic vocal style delicately accompanied by lilting guitar picking in a real highlight.

Due for release in January, this record is the culmination of a journey, yet it’s just the beginning of one too for an intelligent group of musicians intent on longevity. Such experimentation, bold self-belief, skillful songwriting, and unique fusing of musical genres are incredibly rare, and this is only the first album…



Duologue

Opossom

KEEL HER (29TH)
NED COLLETTE (30TH)
WIREWALKER (30TH)
Shacklewell Arms
Tuesday 30 October 2012
Monday 29 October 2012
Sold Out

FREE ENTRY - DOWNLOAD TICKET IN ADVANCE

We are very pleased that the hotly tipped Opossom will be playing not one, but two nights for us at the Shacklewell arms.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD YOUR FREE TICKET

The brainchild of Kody Nielson, formerly of acclaimed “trouble gum art punks” The Mint Chicks , Opossom have produced the exceptional and captivating album ‘Electric Hawaii’, which is due for release in August.

The first single from the album will be “Blue Meanies”, a synth-led, bass heavy psych odyssey with a surreal, semi-animated video shot amid beautiful woodland scenery, featuring fantastical creatures, adventurous hikers and golden Buddhas with laser beam eyes. The b-side features Kody’s slow-fi, dub remix of the track.

Watch the video HERE

Support from NED COLLETTE



Opossom

Here We Go Magic

RACE HORSES
Dingwalls
Tuesday 30 October 2012

£10.50 ADVANCE
HEREWEGOMAGICBAND.TUMBLR.COM/

‘A Different Ship’ is Here We Go Magic’s most remarkable and captivating album yet, with an emotional and musical arc that is alternately calming and anxiety-inducing, and often both at once. “I Believe In Action” and “Make Up Your Mind” sound like they’re being beamed in from outer space, while more earthbound tracks such as “Miracle of Mary,” “Over The Ocean” and “Alone But Moving” amble in a somnolent haze, with songwriter Luke Temple’s cool timbre cutting through the fog.

Despite an incubation period of nearly a year, and a writing process that spanned two continents, the nine songs of ‘A Different Ship’ carry a consistent thematic concern — what the band describes as an “unresolved tension between valuing being alone and valuing being connected.” Says Temple: “The music is beautiful, but feels like it’s brittle and about to crack. It’s always suspended in between major and minor, happy and sad, trying to find that middle ambiguous place. A lot of the endings of these songs just kind of stop, like things are left in suspended, floating in space. That’s a real characteristic of us as a band — moving forward, even when we’re sort of unsure, and knowing we’ll find happy accidents along the way.”

New album ‘A Different Ship’, was released on 7th May 2012 via Secretly Canadian.

Plus support from RACE HORSES

Watch the video for casual here

Tickets available here