London duo Niall The Urchin have released their debut single ‘Temping Bowling’. Consisting of Niall and his mysterious bandmate MTB, the duo formed after Niall spotted a bass guitar in the window of his local Cash Converters and starting making loops to accompany his spiky and street-smart poetry. The fantastically titled ‘Temping Bowling’ is their debut single proper, after they announced their existence to the world last month with the brutal ‘Bleak Street’. Recorded by the band and mixed by Señor Al Funklinos (King Krule, Baba Ali, Ghostpoet), the single is an angry sideswipe at the pettiness, mundanity and ultimate futility of work under the twin shadows of Covid and Brexit.
‘Temping Bowling’ sees Niall The Urchin travel down a hypnotic rabbit hole of eclectic rock. The song pivots around a deep bass groove that relentlessly drives the track forward while snappy drums fill out the buoyant backdrop. Sharp guitars add a retro 60’s vibe to the track’s vibrant soundscape enhanced by nonchalant vocals that ooze an angsty punk-esque undertone. The track is a joy to listen to and is an exciting debut from the duo.
Boasting a catchy melody and witty songwriting, ‘Temping Bowling’ is a thrilling new single from Niall The Urchin that is ready for repeat listens. Enjoy.
About the track, Niall said: “‘Temping Bowling’ was written about the monotony of a previous job. I think a lot of the time people think hard work and rewards go hand in hand, but quite often that’s not the case. I was playing in bands, working from nine to six and had a pretty dismal boss. I started as a temp and, before I knew it, I’d been there for over a year. Ultimately most employers look at their staff as expendable and that was evident to me when Covid hit. I wrote this song to poke fun at the hierarchical systems people try to exist within. In a job full of daft training sessions, false promises and countless egos it’s hard not to go full Bukowski, ‘Post Office’-style.”
Columbia Mills have released their new single ‘Heart of a Nation’. ‘Heart of a Nation’ is the title track and first single from the band’s third album scheduled for release in September this year. Described by John Kennedy (Radio X) as Ireland’s answer to The National, Columbia Mills are regulars at festivals such as Indiependence, Longitude, and Electric Picnic and have supported world-class acts like Ride, Public Service Broadcasting, and Palace. On top of this, they have also toured Ireland & the UK with a string of headline shows at venues such as Whelans, King Tuts, and Sebright Arms.
‘Heart of a Nation’ is a thrilling new song from Columbia Mills. Dealing with dark themes, in particular Ireland’s housing crisis the band highlight failures in our society. Fiachra Treacy’s vocals croon moving lyrics and drive home the songs stark lyrical content “A mother in a hotel raising her kids she’s not on holiday how did it end up this way …….sleeping in a Garda station, living in the heart of a first world nation”.
‘Heart of a Nation’ is a wonderfully expressive piece of music. The band create a soundscape filled with lush instrumentation, dark undertones and dazzling moments of evocative musicianship through the use of chiming guitars, bass rumbles and beautiful key arrangements that deftly convey coiling emotion, innocence, and anger.
The enthralling sound of Columbia Mills is one to be admired. Each of the band’s releases are a joy to listen to again and again. ‘Heart of a Nation’ is an excellent display of Columbia Mills’ masterful use of instrumentation, sonic finesse and eloquent songwriting.
Speaking about ‘Heart of a Nation’ lead singer Fiachra Treacy said: “Heart of a Nation” documents the housing crisis in Ireland, with each verse tackling a different aspect of the problem. From a mother sleeping with her children in a Garda station to the crooked businessmen and politicians that have caused the housing crisis in Ireland. Heart of a Nation peels back the political rhetoric and looks at the real people affected when the ruling class looks out for themselves.”
Irish noise-pop / alt-rock sextet THUMPER’s hotly-anticipated debut LP ‘Delusions of Grandeur’ is set for release on the 18th March. Over the last two years, the Dublin six-piece have been developing their sound and building an increasingly passionate fanbase. With a lineup of two drummers and three guitarists, THUMPER’s maximalist wall of sound has long since set them apart in the booming Dublin music scene.
I caught up with Oisín Leahy Furlong to talk about the band’s debut album, expectations placed on the band as well as touring and getting comfortable with his voice.
“Well, I suppose that’s how we listen to music by LPs, and THUMPER sort of started and stopped and started and stopped. We had lineup changes, changes in direction and the normal teething problems that bands have. Once we solidified the lineup and the intent it was the next logical step to record that album for now and make our stamp”
THUMPER are perfecting their craft, dropping alternative rock gems with each release. Each member of the band is very talented and the album is a confident display of their musical prowess. I wondered if there were any moments of anxiety and doubt while creating the album.
“It’s hard to say really, because originally we recorded the album we had been on tour in 2019. We were going to the studio just to record a single and a B side and because we’ve been so busy touring, we went in and we recorded like eight or nine songs back to back just because we knew them all back to front because 2020 was gonna be so busy for us. It was just kind of warts and all, band in a room, like an artefact of what we sounded like at that time and that was more born out of our schedule. We didn’t have time to labour over something, but then obviously 2020 came along and all of our plans were null and void at that point. So, we’re on tour when Covid really hit and we flew back to Ireland, and Alan [Dooley] went straight into the studio and started working on re- looking at what we had recorded and what state it was all in. I didn’t see him for like two or three months but I knew he was working on the record. I didn’t know what he was doing. When I finally got to see him, a couple of months had passed and he’d grown a huge beard like he was in Castaway or whatever. He had sort of retcon the whole album from being this live in a room, to something way more. So, when we decided that was the direction we want to take it we were pretty confident with it because those are the album’s that we like you know. But we spent so long on it, 2020 felt like it was about three years long because of everything that was going on and we were in the studio non-stop working on the record. You have to just trust your instinct that what you’re doing is the right thing for the music. So I’m not sure that I would say we were confident it was just sort of willful ignorance that we were doing the right thing.”
The instrumentation within the album is masterful. Each song is a glorious display of great musicianship that boasts sleek guitar moments, sweet melodies and abrasive outbursts. The album takes wild unpredictable twists throughout its blustery journey as it shifts from frenetic soundscapes to stripped back instrumental breaks before leaping into dynamic crescendos. Tracks such as ‘Overbite’ and ‘Topher Grace’ are fine examples of this. ‘Strychnine’ is also a riveting display of musicianship from the sextet. Arguably the tour de force within the album the track is mostly Oisín and an acoustic guitar with soft percussion accompaniment and electronic guitar embellishments.
“That song is, in some ways outside of our comfort zone in the way it’s structured and the way we attacked it. I actually had that in my voice memos. I was going through like I have about 500 voice memos on my phone. It breaks every two seconds. But I had that saved on my phone from like 2018 as THUMPER mid-LP song. Then I was like, yeah, that’s what that will be and then that’s just what we did. Really, again, it’s like you make the decision, you’re confident about it. Then when you have to actualize it that’s when you have to be confident or employ a sort of a weird, over the top sense of self-belief. But we’re really happy with it. It’s one of my favourite tunes on the record now.”
The instrumental track ‘The Ghost’ is an exquisite piece of music. Featuring hypnotic guitar strikes, a sweet guitar refrain and abrasive undertones the track is a mosh pit friendly frenzy that is filled with mind-melting distortion and psychedelic elements.
“Well, when I settled on the idea of calling the album Delusions of Grandeur, that was referencing lyrical themes throughout it, but also in reference to the fact that when THUMPER started, it was a solo project. It was just me bringing out tapes and making like 100 of them and giving them around Dublin, really low stakes. low fi badly recorded, just sort of not throw away but the scope of it was much smaller. When we fixed on this Delusions of Grandeur idea, I thought it’d be funny to have a three-part 20 minute long song, finish the album so obviously, ‘The Ghost’ is like the second in that whole three-part suite at the end. The tune ‘Overbite’ which comes before it was the first time that Alan had basically written all the music or the guts of it to that song and I wrote the lyrics and then I was like, Okay, what this needs is, and I sort of sang out this section that didn’t exist yet. It needs to start off with one guitar and slowly build up into this thing. Then he just randomly flicked through his other demos that he had and just clicked on one and it was exactly what I just said. He had already preempted me wanting that to happen. So that became a blueprint then for that piece of music. Again, it wasn’t some huge decision to this instrumental piece that was gonna make the whole album but it was just going with your gut. Yeah, serving the songs as best you can.”
‘Down in Heaven’ brings the album to an end. It’s a heartbreaking finale. Oisín’s earnest vocals croon very raw lyrics “I did it to myself cos I deserved it” while drums trudge through a sweet melody and piercing sting on guitars. The track is both vibrant and mournful all at once as the band’s expressive use of instrumentation and melody creates gripping heart-wrenching turmoil for listeners to experience. This moving tune is a striking end to a magnificent album and provides a moment of reflection on the album as a whole, making the listener want to experience the rollercoaster ride that is ‘Delusions of Grandeur’ again.
“Yeah, It’s funny, it’s our first album, but there’s a couple of moments on it where I really wasn’t sure. It was a creative risk, because it is quite different to what we’ve done before and the worry would be that tune would be perceived as being melodramatic, even though I was kind of aiming for something a little bit more insular. I’m glad you like it. I don’t know what to say about it. That’s probably the one song that I’m most intrigued to hear people’s reaction to because it is quite raw and it’s us trying our hardest to push past what people expect of us.”
‘Down in Heaven’ alludes to a different THUMPER. It’s a cinematic, cliffhanger moment that suggests something exciting could happen with the next release.
“I think so, I think you’re right. This album is a good few years in the making. We started making some of these songs when I was in my early to mid-20s and now I’m early 30s. So, you change as a person, your tastes change and what you find interesting and what you find uninteresting changes. So yeah, I think the last thing we’ll ever want to do is retread old ground just for the sake of it. So hopefully it is a sign that we can expand our palette beyond what people want and, really treat it like more than just something that’s set in stone.”
Throughout the album, Oisín’s vocals anchor the listener within the soundscape of the tracks while at the same time evoking images of live crowds chanting back the lyrics. Oisín has the ability to spark these live sing-alongs when the band perform. He conveys immense emotion and angst through his vocals.
“The vocals, that’s probably the thing that I’ve struggled the most with. I made no bones in the early days about the fact that I wasn’t, totally comfortable on stage that’s why the band is so big. Within that you’d say, well, why are you doing it to begin with? I don’t really know the answer to that question. But, the vocal yeah, it’s the element that I have the least control over but it’s the part that I worked the hardest on. I think part of the reason our songs are so melodic is so that I can kind of learn them like a nursery rhyme. I don’t know something happens in the process of translating that nursery rhyme where it ends with me rolling around and yelping. But yeah, I love singing because it’s a tender transition between writing something in your room and seeing how it ends up on stage and especially hearing people singing back is very strange”
“ I think the tension though of where you’re trying to work with your body to make this thing and you’re not quite sure whether it’s going to happen, I don’t know it’s kind of alluring. Maybe I’m a glutton for punishment or something, but I like not being sure that I’m gonna be able to pull it off”
THUMPER are a one of a kind must-see live act. The band have London and Dublin launch shows this week to coincide with the album release and we discussed the shows and the possibility of a tour.
“Oh, yeah, I’m supposed to be in Europe right now. It got postponed because of Covid, hopefully for the last time.We’ll be doing these shows. We wanted to purposefully keep it really small, so it was like returning to how we started off upstairs in Whelan’s, we probably played there 20 times. So, cramming 100 people in there seemed like a really, fitting way to kick start this next chapter. Then yeah, we’ll be announcing a full Big Boy tour later in the year. We’ll be doing all the festivals and all that stuff as well. “
THUMPER have created a phenomenal album with ‘Delusions of Grandeur’. Musically the band treat our ears to a plethora of shoegaze, psychedelia and alternative rock with speckles of pop embellished throughout while earnest lyrics venture into dark territory and explore the struggle of self-image, internal and external. It’s a wonderful album that provides an exciting glimpse into the many facets of THUMPER.
‘Delusionsof Grandeur’ is set for release on Friday the 18th of March.
Until then you can watch the video for THUMPER’s latest single ‘Fear of Art’ below
‘Who Loves It’ is the triumphant seventh single from Scunthorpe Indie rockers The Waah-Kin Tribe. The Waah-Kin Tribe are an energetic Alt/Indie Rock three-piece. After releasing and debuting their first single ‘Holding Up The Mirror’ in Paris, the lads have continued to gig far and wide bringing their punk-influenced experience to centre stage. With support from BBC Introducing, the trio have been electrifying audiences with their songs and are looking forward to bringing back their notorious live performances.
Filled with infectious riffs and driving melodies ‘Who Loves It’ is a mighty new tune from The Waah-Kin Tribe. This song is a witty example of The Waah-Kin Tribe’s refined musicianship. Light guitar twinkles atop brawny riffs while a buoyant beat and rampant bassline fill out the energetic wall of sound. Boasting a sing-along chorus and quirky organ-esque interlude ‘Who Loves It’ is a dynamic tune sure to be epic live.
Ben Lazarus has released his new single, ‘Outrun The Truth’, telling the story of a person unable to take accountability for their actions. Ben Lazarus witnessed this first hand whilst working on a reality TV show, which is what eventually inspired him to write the song.
Surging with grunge tones ‘Outrun The Truth’ is a catchy new single from Ben Lazarus. The song blends soft twinkling melodies with heavy riffage and pounding drums to create elements of mosh-ready mania between tender shoegaze moments. Striking lyrical content is enhanced by dynamic musicianship as Lazarus croons “There’s no victims here, only volunteers” over a brooding instrumental backdrop. Showcasing a powerful crescendo and infectious chorus, ‘Outrun The Truth’ is an energetic new single from Ben Lazarus.
Australian indie-rock band James Hooker & The Hallows have released their debut single ‘Don’t Slow Me Down’, from their second studio album. Recorded at ‘Head Gap’ recording studio in Melbourne, the punchy track demonstrates ‘not allowing yourself to be held back by anyone or anything, being true to yourself’.
Filled with light guitar and hazy indie rock soundscapes ‘Don’t Slow Me Down’, is an infectious new single from James Hooker & The Hallows. Warm tones on guitar chime through an energetic wall of sound to create a bright and easy-listening experience for listeners to enjoy as the band display their expressive songwriting and evocative music through this charming song. ‘Don’t Slow Me Down’ is a catchy and invigorating tune to indulge in again and again.
‘Life Without Colour’ is the debut EP release from 20-year-old artist Maikoh Webbe. Written as an expression of his journey with mental health issues, bullying, loneliness and addiction, ‘Life Without Colour’ is a powerful portrayal of real-life experiences. This four-track EP was written, recorded, mixed and mastered from Maikoh Webbe’s bedroom.
‘Life Without Colour’ is a poignant collection of tracks that blends grunge vibes with earnest songwriting to create a wholly consuming listening experience. Heavy guitar and pounding drums provide a powerful foundation for strikingly mournful vocals in ‘Suffer In Silence’ while ‘How Does It Feel?’ flows with bittersweet emotion and heartbreaking lyrical content as Webbe’s sombre vocals croon “tell me how it feels to be loved, to be wanted, to be anything but haunted” over a building backdrop of biting guitars. Webbe balances heavy lyrical content with lighter tones and glimmers of hope throughout the EP. This is especially noteworthy within ‘Everyone Dies In The End’ and showcases the artist’s honest vulnerability and deft musical prowess. ‘Life Without Colour’ is a heartfelt body of work from Maikoh Webbe.
Irish born singer-songwriter Megan O’Neill has recently released her highly anticipated new single ‘Wildfire’. Megan O’Neill’s songs have received great attention over the past year – including her recent single ‘Ireland’, which hit over 400,000 views on social media during release month. The video was also picked up and shared by none other than Olivia Newton-John as well as being added to the RTE Radio 1 playlist for three weeks running. Megan O’Neill released her second full-length studio album last year (March 12th, 2021) – titled ‘Getting Comfortable with Uncertainty’. This much-anticipated album follows her last release, ‘Ghost of You’ (June 2018) which hit #1 on the iTunes singer/songwriter charts in the UK and Ireland, and two EP’s previous to this (‘Coming Home’, 2015 and ‘Stories to Tell’, 2017).
I caught up with the singer-songwriter to discuss her new single, what we can expect from her upcoming EP, ‘Time (Thought You Were On My Side)’ and, the excitement and anxiety surrounding the return of live shows.
‘Wildfire’ marks a shift in O’Neill’s sound. It’s a cinematic, powerful song that ventures from folk to indie and electronic to create a wholly consuming and hair raising anthem for listeners to enjoy. We discussed what sparked this musical change in direction.
“I guess for me it was a lot of time spent over the course of the last two years exploring different sounds and styles that I liked. I think with music, we’re all so busy, whether it’s gigging or preparing the next record or collaborating, that there isn’t a lot of time to just sit and explore. So having that time throughout the pandemic led me to try writing in different styles, with different sounds and collaborating with new people and then eventually discovering this new sound and style that I loved. So that’s where Wildfire was born from.”
The track is a passionate and heartfelt tune filled with uplifting tones and beautiful imagery as O’Neill croons, “ We got that love that lets you burn it down, So you can re-grow, When the summer’s gone Like a wildfire, like a wildfire “ over a building backdrop of soft keys, pulsing beats and suspenseful electronics. O’Neill explained to me what inspired the lyrics.
“So it was actually an idea around prescribed burns, which is when farmers set fire to their agricultural land in order for it to become healthier and grow better crops the year after. I thought that was such an amazing visual of actually setting fire to something in order to promote healthier growth. So, when I heard that idea of prescribed burns, I was like, oh, that’s cool. I really want to try and make that into a song somehow. So myself and Richey McCourt, who I co-wrote this with, we were exploring ideas and I brought this up and we compared that to life rather than agriculture land and used that visual of sometimes [you] need to burn down parts of life whether that’s relationships or ties or where we’re based or any of these things with the human experience in order to grow from there.”
O’Neill recently released a touching video for the song that depicts the moving relationship between a grandfather and grandson. This uplifting story adds a new facet to the meaning behind the song.
“This is always the funny thing about when somebody else hears your songs, they can interpret it in a completely different way. Lucas [Mac Diarmada], who was the director for the video, and produced the video with me, he had this totally different idea when he heard the song of what it was about and that’s it, you’re always listening to something from your own perspective and your own life experience and then gathering from it what you will – what it means to you. So he got this idea that it’s all about picking each other up to a certain extent, which he wanted to visualize with this Grandfather/Grandson relationship. I just loved that idea that it was not an entirely different thing than what I wrote about but a different relationship than what I wrote about, but still human to human and somebody close to you in your life that was trying to help you out of a situation and so it was a collaborative molding of both of our ideas.”
‘Wildfire’ is the first glimpse of O’Neill’s upcoming EP ‘Time (Thought You Were On My Side)’ which is set for release on the 8th of April. The singer-songwriter told me what can we expect from the EP.
“The EP takes on that style of Wildfire. Wildfire is the introduction to the new sound, I suppose what feels like a new era for me as a songwriter and an artist. Stories for me will always be the focus of my songs and my songwriting. I have to tell a story. So all the songs are still based around stories, that will come across lyrically, but with more pop elements in the production. It’s five tracks, one of which you’ve already heard with Wildfire, and they were all recorded and written during the course of the pandemic. We recorded them last summer. I’m really excited about the songs. It’s very different than anything I’ve ever done before. So it does feel like a new beginning. But I’m really really proud of the sound and the style and I think it’s a left turn for sure from what I’ve done before but the response so far has been great.”
‘Time (Thought You Were On My Side)’ is a great name for an EP. It provides food for thought while remaining relatable as it alludes to many types of scenarios as well as the inevitable concept of ageing and how we all at times feel as if time is running out in our lives. However, this EP takes its name from elements within the collection of songs.
“One of the tracks is called Time. Another lyric in the song is “thought you were on my side”. I just came up with a name for the EP after we recorded everything. I was listening through all the master tracks and I already knew what the messages were but I suppose I was listening to all the messages collectively and what they could say. That song is really personal to me. It’s probably the one that was the hardest to write and record. So I “thought you were on my side” can be referred to a lot of different themes in the song. It can be referred to people, can be referred to obviously time, as a concept. It can be referred to people in your life or your career or just all these things where you’re thinking that you have time or you have this person with you or you have these opportunities or any of those things and then you’re thinking that these things are on your side, that these things are with you and then they’re taken away. I think that was a big theme with the pandemic for an awful lot of people, we all thought we had loads of time, be that in relation to anything whether that’s getting older or time with people or time to travel or time to work. So I suppose it was a running theme in the songs. But it’s also a thought directed at multiple themes.”
O’Neill is a professional artist who provides a first-rate standard across all she does. This applies to her poetic songwriting, rich musicianship, beautiful visuals and artwork. The cover of ‘Time (Thought You Were On My Side)’ is the perfect example of this. We discussed how difficult it is to choose artwork that does justice to a collection of songs
“I always find that part so hard. A lot of visual things will come up for me when I’m writing and recording and working on the songs but picking one visual for every song that’s got to cover all bases is really hard. But we worked through abunch of different ideas and you can also get lost in that regard and spend, you know, a year trying to decide on the right cover. Eventually you just have to say, Okay, that one fits and just have to go with that. Because you could overthink it forever. It is a really hard thing, though, to pick one that will cover all bases.”
Like all musicians of this generation, O’Neill has the influence of streaming platforms that give artists huge exposure however they do not generate a lot of revenue for musicians. We discussed this paradox.
“Oh, yeah. So overwhelming and really frustrating because making records isvery expensive and everything that goes into them. That’s not even talking about when you start preparing for live shows and you’re buying instrumentation and with this next level for me, which is this new sound, it requires new instrumentation when you’re playing live so everything is expensive. When you’re putting it out and not really seeing a lot of return because of streaming platforms, it is hard. It’s also really hard to get recognized on those streaming platforms, getting selected for the right playlists and getting the right attention. You’re directing all of your traffic towards Spotify, and then it’s kind of a one-sided relationship. So yeah, it’s incredibly frustrating and it’s overwhelming and life, in general, is overwhelming at the moment. You’re trying to navigate all these different streaming platforms, constant influx of information from every source you look at. Then knowing what the right next step is in terms of releasing and how to release and where to release and where to put your money and where to direct your traffic. It’s just endless options, really. So I think the whole world at the moment feels a bit overwhelming to navigate, when it comes to online and releasing music.”
O’Neill was able to tour Ireland and the UK last October/November. She explained to me how exciting it is to be able to plan for shows again as well as her plans for the rest of the year.
“Oh, definitely. I think that’s something that we were all really missing throughout the last two years is being able to plan something and get excited about it. That excitement was gone, because even if you were planning to go and see a friend and travel, there was no real guarantee that was going to happen. So it’s a great thing for all of us to have back. In terms of shows this year, it’s still a little bit hit and miss because an awful lot of shows are rescheduled from last year. All of the festivals will kind of be rescheduled acts from last year in Ireland anyway. So there’s still a little bit of a backlog to get through. But in general, yeah it’s fantastic. We’ve got a show coming up next week in London and then a couple of bits in the summer and some touring which has yet to be announced. But all of that is great, to actually be able to plan for it. Also, there’s so many things I now have to think about. I’ve gotten used to being in my studio just creating songs for the last two years. Now there’s, a whole world out there that I need to open up to. So it’s really exciting. It’s also a little bit scary.”
“It’s very overwhelming and also very overwhelming on my bank account. But yeah, re-entering the world … I think that’s gonna take some adjusting as well. I have always really loved playing live. It’s always been a huge part of my career and then that was gone the last two years. There’s a part of me now that’s anxious around live gigs and anxious around touring. I did a tour in October, November last year of the UK and Ireland, which was amazing, but there was a ton of anxiety around that whole experience because it was just all of a sudden foreign and there was so much to plan and if anybody got covid then the whole thing was pulled last minute. There was a lot of money on the line and planning and people depending on it, and all of a sudden that comes back as pressure, you know, so re-entering that whole world is a little bit uncomfortable. I think it’s that for a lot of people because it’s all of a sudden the unknown, whereas two years ago, obviously, Covid was the unknown. So it’s weird what we’ve kind of all adjusted to.”
“So, the EP is out on the eighth of April, very exciting. Then we’re just gonna do singles after that. So a single every two months, and they’re all in the works at the moment. So I don’t know if they will form a second EP or if it’ll just be standalone tracks, that’s yet to be decided. But yeah, this year, will be predominantly focused on releases. There will be shows dotted around but the shows are actually not the focus of this year more of the focus is the recording and the writing and getting the songs out there. Also, there are some exciting shows that I have yet to announce and some exciting projects as well that I’m working on at the moment that I’ve yet to announce, but in general, it’s gonna be a lot of songs this year. Yeah, very excited.”
Megan O’Neill is an exciting and diverse artist who captures heartfelt emotion through passionate and evocative musicianship. Looking forward to hearing much more from this songwriting treasure.
‘Better Light’ is the new single from Manchester-based Indie songwriter Louis Cross. Written as an expression of the effect that his disability has had on his life, ‘Better Light’ reminds us to be mindful of invisible disabilities. ‘Better Light’ is the first single to be released from his upcoming EP, a project which will discuss his experience in various situations and the role that his disability played in these experiences. ‘Better Light’ was recorded at EVE Studios in Stockport with Tom Welsh (Bass), Simon Gibson (Lead Guitar), and Ageliki Georga (Backing Vocals).
‘Better Light’ is a fine display of musicianship from Louis Cross. Surging with jangly guitar moments and buoyant beats Cross creates an expressive soundscape that boasts bright indie elements, warm vocals and sweet melodies throughout. The song is a charming display of Cross’ eloquent lyrics and energetic musicianship.
Rory & The Island is set to release his new album ‘Centre Falls Apart’ on March 11 on new Irish indie label Voices of the Sea. This is his fourth studio album since going solo in 2008. I caught up with Rory Gallagher to discuss the album in-depth as well as touring and his plans for the year.
Rory recently released his new single ‘Call My Name’ which was taken from ‘Centre Falls Apart’.The song features beautiful string elements that are a refreshing addition to the song and elevate the soundscape while adding a traditional undertone.
“ I had released it two years ago but because of the pandemic, and it was before I even started doing Facebook live gigs, it was one of those that got lost in the mix. I didn’t properly send it out to radio or press or anything and it just did nothing and maybe didn’t sound as good as it should. So I just did a revamp and a remaster. The strings we recorded in Abbey Road, believe it or not two years ago [ with ] Sean Magee from Fermanagh who was gigging with me at the time, a brilliant Irish trad player. He did the violin part and the cello was done by a guy who was a resident musician in Abbey Road in London called Ian Foster. We basically, figured it out within an hour and I had the melody roughly in my head. We just gave it a little bit of a traditional Irish lilt and Ian Foster on the cello was delighted because he got to play up the neck of the cello a little bit and imitate what Sean was playing with that more Irish fiddle lilt on the actual notes. So he enjoyed the project and we actually got it done in maybe 40 minutes, which is amazing for a string piece. So I decided to turn that up in the new mix. It’s one of those songs that, you play it and everybody sings along, but just to make it more sonically interesting it did need little things, not just strings – there’s background guitar, there’s a low drone, a lot of reverb, a distant kick drum and little things just to add production value, as they call it.”
‘Call My Name’ is a celebration of the few people in life who you can call at 1 am on a rainy night if you are in trouble. This appreciation of the special people around you is a running theme on the album. We discussed how Rory wrote some of these songs in lockdown where he experienced deep moments of contemplation and missing friends and family.
“ I think apart from ‘Call My Name’ and ‘Little Fire’, they were all written in the last year. I wrote about 35 songs during the lockdown and these are the ones that, apart from ‘Donna Don’t Take My Summer’, I decided to put right bang in the middle of this album a little bit of levity because even though it’s a quite melodious album, a lot of the lyrics are quite deep. It’s a bittersweet album and a lot of it has to do with the anxiety that everybody was feeling during lockdown. I tried to write the lyrics in a way that even really obvious lockdown songs like ‘Miss This’, you could listen to it in 10 years, [ and ] it still might make sense that it’s like part of your life that’s gone.”
“I try my hardest to make it timeless [ lyrics ]. Apart from ‘Donna Don’t Take My Summer’ which is like a little breath of fresh air in the middle where it’s just like a homage to late 70s, early 80s Pop Music. I like the way that the likesof The Beatles used to do that on albums where, you would have a really deep album like ‘Revolver’, but right in the middle of it, they throw in something like ‘Good Day Sunshine’ or ‘Got to Get You Into My Life’. So just as it’s getting a little bit too John Lennon deep, this little jokey ray of sunshine comes into it. So that’s what I did.”
“But the rest of the album you’re right, it was actually the company Voices of the Sea, Shea McNelis said to me, why don’t you just put out a really strong body of work that’s artistically solid and has a lot of depth because you’ve got the songs there. I would have probably put 16 tracks on the album and I would have probably put in a few more joke songs and he’s like, you don’t need to do that, because that’s the kind of stuff that works well live and it’s just a bit of craic. But why not have a body of work that, in 20 years, you put it on and you go oh you know, every song was really well thought through. That’s hopefully what it is.”
Throughout the album, Rory subtly blends elements of folk, pop and indie to create an expressive soundscape that is a joy to listen to again and again. One feature that stands out within the songs is the warm guitar moments, particularly in ‘Surely There Is More To Life Than This’ and ‘It’s Been a Good Day’. The album is an excellent display of Rory’s musical prowess and eloquent songwriting.
“I think that’s probably because a lot of the vocal melodies would be quitesimilar in the style that I’ve written… I feel I do have a direct writing style now. I totally agree with you, that was my fear that it sounds too choppy, but when I did compile the songs and listen, I was like no. I reference The Beatles, you know, even though it’s so cliche, but they can go from like ‘Helter Skelter’ to ‘Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da’ and it still sounds fine on the same album you know, that’s such a tricky thing to do. I’m glad you feel that I’ve gone in the right direction, in the right ballpark.”
“ I remember [the lyric] it’s Been A Good Day for a change, I think, that was a double meaning where it’s like, this is a good day to change your life and then obviously, with depression, it’s been a good day, for a change, you know, – so that bitter sweet thing is running through it. I think I wrote that chorus on acoustic with a capo then I remember thinking, you know, I think this could be heavier. So I remember just going from acoustic to a Telecaster and plugging it into amplifier and turning the amp up and going, this is it you know, just thinking this is probably not going to work on an acoustic EP or whatever. These negative thoughts were coming in and then I was going well what the hell, it doesn’t matter people know that I was in The Revs. They know that I also do rock music. So why not? It’s that kind of thing where it’s bordering on 80s rock a little, you know, ACDC type verse, slightly Smashing Pumpkins as well. It’s got a feelgood factor to the rockyness of it”
The title track, ‘Centre Falls Apart’ is the darkest we see Rory go on the album. Featuring a piano refrain that adds a hint of jazz between the darker indie soundscape, Rory blends R&B elements into the song to give it a little extra punch. Even his vocals take a more gritty tone to the usual velvety charm we are used to.
“Yeah, I sang that one through a distorted guitar amplifier. I put the vocals through a guitar amp just to give it that kind of a White Stripes thing where it’s quite lo-fi, because when I first had it in mind, when I was writing it, I thought it would be cool to write something that has an R&B swing and I was thinking of No Diggity, Blackstreet and that heavy piano. That’s probably where I got the vibe of that one from [ I ] was thinking I would love to write something like that. But I remember when I first started listening back to the track in the studio, I was going oh my god, this is slightly moving into Maroon 5 zone, how can I de- Maroon 5 this track. So I started running things through really heavy compressors and distortion and I got it back on track to where I wanted it to be, it was kind of more like what the White Stripes would do with the James Bond track. You know like you say with elements of jazz where it would have a very distant piano. Instead of the microphone being close to the piano pull it to the other side of the room and crank up the compression a little bit so it gives it that 1950s Miles Davis type, you know, distance on the piano mics and just little things like that you have to be aware of. Even if your song is strong, if you recorded it too quickly and don’t think it through it can just end up in a horrible place that you didn’t want it to be.”
Rory has quite the reputation for flawless live performances. It’s almost guaranteed that the live version of the songs are going to be just as enjoyable if not more so than the recorded tracks. Much to my delight a live version of ‘Give Me Some Good News’ features on the album and it is simply divine.
“ I remember listening back, I had about seven tracks done and I’m starting to feel guilty about how multitrack they all were when previous EPs I’ve had out it’s just been acoustic and vocal. I was thinking, if anybody listens to this album, it’s the first thing of mine that they’ve listened to, I would like to showthem, this is where I come from. It’s just acoustic guitar, vocal and a vibe in front of a live crowd and that’s what I’ve loved doing for the past 15 years. It’s so easy these days because you have USB connections on most desks so you can actually take it out and you’ve got the multitrack and then you go back and you listen the next day and you go oh god, that’s awful. But I remember listening to that one and it’s funny because it was recorded in the middle of the pandemic in Glasgow and it was one of those gigs. Is it going to happen? Is it not? It was a sold out gig but only half of the room came in. So that’s why you can hear the crowd on the microphone, but it’s quite sparse. But it has something, just melancholy I think about the actual delivery of the song. Probably if the room was packed, it would have been a little bit too hyper. I probably would have used the kick drum more. So I think it just had a little quality to it”
“I wouldn’t be professional at recording myself, especially like an outside broadcast. So if you are doing an outside broadcast you’d probably normally put four mics in the room and pick up the crowd properly. But I think I onlyhad one microphone on stage turned around facing the audience, which is not the way to do it at all, but it’s just so that it wasn’t completely dry. Because obviously if you’ve got the mic right up to your mouth, and the guitar is going into the desk, you’re not really going to pick up anything so it was a bare minimum pick up but just enough [ that ] it seems like I’m playing in a coffee shop.”
‘Little Fire’ is perhaps my favourite track on the album. Rory’s warm voice coos atop a sweet melody with ukulele accompaniment and soft whistle feature. The track is beautifully arranged and beckons repeat plays.
“That one was probably before ‘Call My Name’. That’s the oldest track. I wrote it just after Aiden was born. My son and my mother wrote, a little poem called ‘Little Fire’. So I just took the title and the first line and maybe another line that she had, and I remember, because I was in the sitting room a lot and you’ve got the crib there and I had a ukulele because it’s not as loud as the guitar. I was practicing ukulele and just this little melody came into my head. Probably when I was just in the middle of the day time with Aiden when he was a tiny baby and I was just singing it. It all seemed to fall into place quite quickly, and I had been listening to a lot of ukulele performers. I don’t know, if I could play it as well now because I’d been playing so much ukulele at the time, that it just flowed so nicely but yeah, I think for a lot of people that stands out for them as a favorite, so I’m honoured. I think that was recorded in maybe two hours because it’s just ukulele and Hammond organ and a double track vocal and maybe that’s the magic of it, that it’s just so pure.”
Rory is set for an album launch in Dublin and Galway on the 11th and 12th of March. We discussed what fans can expect from the shows.
“It’s gonna be very feel good. I can’t wait to get on stage again. The last Opium gig I did there was 300 people there. I think there’s even more this time so hopefully the crowd sing as much as I do. That’s what’s been happening the last seven or eight gigs since I’ve come back and it’s amazing because people were watching me for two years, they know the songs so well. I’ll be throwing in some of the new stuff on the album. They might not know those but I think 80% of the set, the crowd will be singing, which is exactly what I’m going for. I’m gonna go for that escapism – communal crowd where the crowd sing louder than the singer. That’s what it’s gonna be hopefully.”
Like most musicians during the pandemic, Rory and the Island began live Facebook gigs every week and opted for “escapism” in his shows making them very colourful, upbeat and quirky as opposed to holding a mirror up to the depressing situation. Rory & The Island gradually built up 30,000 facebook followers with some of his shows averaging up to 50k views on FB watch playback during the week. The Facebook live gigs are still going strong.
“Yeah, I think it’s because I actually started to enjoy the format towards theend. There’s a lot of people that watch my gigs that are in different countries and a lot of people that, maybe still might have a bit of social anxiety and I’ve gotten into the habit of just having a bottle of red wine and converting the phone onto the television and having a great night. A lot of the people in the group, they got to know each other in different parts of the world during my performances so they like to catch up among themselves while I’m playing which is lovely to see that there’s like a little community there with three or four hundred people. I don’t see the need to completely stop it and to just be sitting in your spare room, doing something like that and to wake up the following morning and check and there’s a couple of hundred euro in the tip jar, it’s really nice. It’s a little bonus, and the practice and to communicate with people around the world, in New Zealand and Canada. It’s just a thing now, I suppose. Until there’s only 20 or 30 people watching I’ll keep at it.”
Rory can finally plan for future shows and we discussed the relief this brings as well as what fans can expect from Rory & The Island in the coming months
“Yeah, that’s the great thing. There’s bookings coming in already for as far ahead as October/ November. So I’m trying to not overplay, I made that mistake before where you go back to the same city, three, four months later, and it’s just too soon, so just trying to space things out, you know, seven or eight months and so far so good. There’s no cancellations and tickets are selling and everything’s good and hopefully get a couple of the summer festivals [ that] are starting to come in now. I’m going to keep the Facebook Lives going as well, because I don’t want to be a travelling musician all the time. I’ve got two little boys in the house and I want to have some Saturdays with them as well, some weekends and just who knows, maybe the fact it’s [the album Centre Falls Apart] getting a proper commercial release, this album might connect. Just see how it goes, playing it by ear.”
‘Centre Falls Apart’ is a glorious collection of songs bursting from the seams with bittersweet melodies, warm tones and comforting textures. Each track is a joy to listen to again and again and showcases Rory’s deft musical talent, beautiful songwriting and exquisite musicianship.
‘Centre Falls Apart’ is set for release on the 11th of March. For more you can follow Rory and the Island on Facebook here https://www.facebook.com/RoryandtheIsland
Author: Danu
Indie: (n) an obscure form of rock which you only learn about from someone slightly more hip than yourself.