Release Rundown – Black Country, New Road, Cassels, Rolo Tomassi and Thank

Black Country, New Road – Ants From Up There
(Ninja Tune)

BCNR

At the time of writing, Isaac Wood, vocalist and guitarist in Black Country, New Road, has just announced his departure from the band, alluding to mental health reasons. Admittedly it’s come as a shock to us all, particularly with this here second album just about to land and it’s hard to imagine the band without his distinctive vocals. But with the band vowing to continue, ‘Ants From Up There‘ acts as the perfect swan song for this chapter of the collective.

After seeing the band air a lot of new material live last summer, I remember thinking there was a definite change of pace from the genre shifting drama of ace debut ‘For The First Time’. With a focus on slow burning, post-rock dynamics, ‘Ants From Up There’ swaps intensity for atmosphere, bringing in new layers of beauty and vulnerability.

The intro is a jubilant, math-y burst of staccato sax and piano stabs that towers overtop a driving, full band backing. It’s such an uplifting start that is almost over too quickly, but brilliantly leads into the sprightly, orchestral indie pop of ‘Chaos Space Marine’. It’s a head on start to the album that feels bright and elegant, but it’s when we get to shimmering indie epic ‘Concorde’ that the beauty of this record really begins to shine.

Dynamically, you can’t help but be engulfed by the songwriting here; the build in ‘Good Will Hunting’ is nothing short of heart-bursting, while the drum track on ’Snow Globes’ is incredibly encompassing. They always know how to keep you interested as a listener, but there’s a fluidity to the compositions here that feels tighter, stronger and even more engaging.

Ants From Up There’ retains the excitement and theatre of its predecessor but adds new levels of depth, warmth and even romance. Though it’s sad to think of this as Isaac’s last outing with the band, especially with him putting in such incredibly raw and emotive performances, I still feel hope gleaming through this record, particularly in the instrumentals. And with this I feel a lot of optimism and excitement going forward for this supremely talented group.

Cassels – A Gut Feeling
(God Unknown Records)

AGF

There was a point where Cassels seemed like a band that never stopped, with an arsenal of releases (including two full lengths) and countless tours across the past 7+ years. But, like the rest of us, the brothers Beck found themselves in the midst of some unexpected downtime, allowing them to work on new material at a slightly slower pace. Still keeping their noise punk credentials firmly in place, they looked at how they could evolve their two piece sound, and the result is their most assured work to date.

My first thought when hearing ‘A Gut Feeling’ was how raging it is. Huge riffs tower over crashing, muscular drums with ever eloquent yet snarling spoken word vocals. For this third album, guitarist and vocalist Jim looked into writing character based stories in which he found himself able to inject even more personal thoughts and feelings through these characters. It can go from intense to thrilling to even heart-breaking in the blink of an eye.

While the likes of ‘Mr Henderson Coughs’ and ‘Charlie Goes Skiing’ are arguably the most dramatic and gnarliest tunes they’ve penned, ‘Family Visits Relatives‘ and ‘Dog Drops Bone‘ nearly reduced me to tears with there brutal realism and stripped back arrangements. This is pretty potent stuff – at first I just wanted to be battered round the chops with noisy rock songs, but the depths this album goes to can be rather breath-taking.

A Gut Feeling‘ requires the same amount of attention that was put into it. It’s not an album that you can digest straight away. Though it has some pretty immediate moments on it, as a whole piece it’s a record that soaks into your skin more on each listen. The foundations of what makes Cassels such a great brand are still firmly in place, but with subtle sonic switch ups and a deeper understanding into composition and texture, Loz and Jim have made their best record by a country mile.

Rolo Tomassi – Where Myth Becomes Memory
(MNRK)

RT

I have a vivid memory of hearing the first Rolo Tomassi EP back in 2006 and being blown away by its mathcore madness. Forever pushing the boundaries of alternative metal, It’s been extremely interesting to see this band’s journey unfold over the years.

Here we land at their sixth album, ‘Where Myth Becomes Memory’, which comes four years on from the critically acclaimed ‘Time Will Die And Love Will Bury It’. To my mind this album feels like the third part in a trilogy of albums which started with ‘Grievances’ in 2015. Though I have a lot of positive things to say about the last two albums, I did sometimes feel that the band were still working out the kinks, heading towards their masterpiece. I think it’s fair to say that this record is definitely that.

Never have Rolo Tomassi sounded so humongous. I’ve always enjoyed their sharp dynamic twists, often going from the extremely heavy to the beautifully melodic, but on this album there is this expertly executed blend which sends the songs into the stratosphere. ‘Cloaked’, ‘Drip’ and ‘To Resist Forgetting’ are superb examples of combining ethereal yet Instant melodies over the top of bone-crushing metal-core riffs. And they sound even more powerful and fearless for it.

It’s also really great to see them push the post-rock undertones of the last two records. It’s something I’ve really wanted to hear the band move into and you could not get more gorgeously expansive than ‘Closer’ or enticingly transcendent as ‘Almost Always’.

Rolo Tomassi have done this really rare thing of trimming the fat but also knowing when to hit you at the right moment. The emotional core of this album has never felt stronger, sometimes it being the instrumentation that completely catches you off guard (the piano passage in ‘Mutual Ruin’ is quite possibly the most stop you in your tracks moment they’ve made). I know I’ve already made a pretty sweeping statement in this rundown, but it must be said that ’Where Myth Becomes Memory’ is the sound of a band at their most realised and is quite possibly their strongest and best album to date.

Thank – Thoughtless Cruelty
(Box Records)

TC

We’ve said it a few times across these pages, but there’s definitely something in the water up in that there Leeds. It’s like you know whenever you see the words ‘Leeds band‘ that you’re going to be impressed. Although, Thank frontman Freddy does state on this record that there’s never been a good band from Leeds. Or London for that matter. But he’s wrong, because Thank have been the DIY scenes best kept secret for a number of years now and we are chuffed to finally have a debut album to sink our teeth into.

Thoughtless Cruelty’ continues to expand the horizons of this brilliantly bonkers band, making obnoxious noise fuelled punk for the dance floors. Recent single ‘Good Boy’ is a gleaming example of the above statement, battering your ears with hypnotic sub bass that builds into a disco punk banger from hell, sounding like Gilla Band being possessed by old Lucifer himself.

Described by the band as a stark observation of human cruelty, this is very much an edge of your seat sort of record, often exploding into a rampage of thick bass, spiky guitars, acid dipped keys and groovy beats. On top of this we have Freddy shouting his head off with superbly executed one-liners that range from anxious and intense to sarcastic and witty. The description of viewing the house that smells like grilled sausage and old boots on the electrifying ‘Dread’ is equally hilarious and grimly relatable.

As a fan of the band’s previous releases, it’s really great to see them push the limitations of the foundations they’ve already set. They’ve gone deeper and darker into their sound – everything sounds beefed up and compositionally they really know how to draw you in, scare the shit out of you then just ascend into an utterly thrilling world of chaos. ‘Thoughtless Cruelty’ is intensely smart, beautifully detailed and totally batshit crazy. Welcome to the new norm.

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Exclusive: WATCH the resurrection of Derek Acorah in the new THANK video for ‘Dread’

Having found much acclaim for recent single ‘Good Boy‘ (including top honours in our Top 50 of 2021), Leeds noise outfit THANK are living the high life. So much so they’ve managed to resurrect former ghost botherer Derek Acorah for their latest video, showing off all the North East has to offer.

It’s all in aid of latest single ‘Dread‘, championed by a thudding bassline to rival The Fall’sBlindness‘ and a button pushing exercise in the lyrics. Vocalist Freddy Vinehill-Cliffe once upon a time got into a bit of tepid water on Twitter for claiming “There’s never been a good band from London“, as he explains below. 

This song is about living in a cursed/haunted house. People have asked me if I’m deliberately referencing the ‘Ghost Realtor’ episode of Nathan For You, and the answer is maybe! I can’t remember, it might just be a coincidence, but I do love that show. In the video Derek Acorah, Paranormal Estate Agent, gives us a tour of some properties he has available in Newcastle. He also expresses his contempt for some classic London bands.

In December 2020 I tweeted that there has never been a good band from London, and people got really mad, so I’m hoping they get mad again. Love it. Unfortunately I’ve wiped the Thank Twitter account since then so the tweet has been lost to the sands of time. Our pal Liberty made this video, cheers Liberty!

From their forthcoming debut album ‘Thoughtless Cruelty‘, recorded with Jamie Lockhart and Rob Slater at Greenmount Studios, it’s due to be released February 4th 2022 via Exploding In Sound and Box Records.

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This One Song… Thank on Good Boy

Tell you what – we love hearing from artists when things go right. We equally love hearing from artists when things go dreadfully wrong. A song that was a piece of piss, written in 20 minutes? Or years in the making and a bastard to write?

Whether it’s a song that came together through great duress or one that was smashed out in a short amount of time, we’re getting the lowdown from some of our favourites on the one song that they can’t stop thinking about – in their own words.

Off the back of announcing their debut album Thoughtless Cruelty (out February 1st 2022), Leeds pop band THANK talk us through new single ‘Good Boy‘. Take it away, Thank

Freddy Vinehill-Cliffe (vocals/guitar): “Good Boy’ was the first new song we wrote for the album, and it started with a voice note. Chris from Soft Issues had sent me some unreleased material of theirs, so I was feeling inspired to write something that matched their level of intensity. I’d also been desperate for ages to write a Thank song with the jumpstyle techno groove from ‘Jumping All Over The World’ by Scooter.

We were in the middle of recording our last EP, and one evening on my drive back from the studio I came up with a vocal hook which seemed to fit both ideas. When I got home I sat outside in the car and recorded it on my phone, and that voice note turned into the first verse. I’m sure it sounded like shit.

Lyrically, this one is a diss track of sorts. In the punk (and adjacent) music scene it often feels like there are a lot of bands who sing about radical politics, but don’t live their values at all. No-one is perfect or infallible, of course, but there’s a real hypocrisy in writing lyrics about social justice and then lashing out as soon as someone suggests you might not be entirely living those values. By extension, I think certain fans of political music tend to only listen to lyrics that reaffirm their worldview, rather than lyrics that might challenge and/or suggest how we could do better. In short, you might say some people only want to hear political songwriting that reminds them what a good boy they are. Also, ‘good boy’ is just a funny phrase innit.

Cameron Moitt (bass): “The five notes I play in this song – C, Gb, Eb, Ab, Db – were specifically chosen because they form an anagram of CADGE, which Merriam-Webster defines as a verb meaning ‘to obtain (something) for free, often by persuading or imposing on another’. In a way, we have cadged interest in our music over the years by simply refusing to stop making it. ‘Good Boy’ continues that tradition.

Freddy: “When I brought this song to the practice room it was a long, sprawling thing; there were loads of tempo changes and a false end, and the chorus almost sounded like a B-52’s song. We tried reworking it in a bunch of different ways, but nothing quite seemed to click. Then I got obsessed with Mitski’s Be The Cowboy’ and it was kind of a wakeup call. Every song on that album is exactly as long as it needs to be, and not a second longer. Proper spartan songwriting where almost none of the tracks even pass the 3 minute mark. It reminded me that writing songs is often a bit like chipping away at an ice sculpture – it’s as much about what you take out as it is about what you keep in.

We couldn’t get the chorus right, so why not just scrap the chorus? The song has four verses and a middle section, and that’s it. I think there are enough hooks to make it work, and it was fun to do something with such a linear structure.

This song felt like such a departure when we wrote it in early 2019, but by the time we’d finished putting together ‘Thoughtless Cruelty’ in mid-2021 it seemed like the most “classic Thank” sounding song on there. Perhaps that’s familiarity, or perhaps we’ve just recorded the most mind bending album ever made. Only time will tell.

Theo (Gowans, noise/electronics) also wanted me to point out that the weird squealing sound at the start of the middle section is the entire track sped up.

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