LONDON IN STEREO // MS BANKS

Page 1


P R E S E N T S

01 | 03 | 18

22 | 04 | 18

ALBERT HAMMOND JR

AWOLNATION

02 | 03 | 18

JOAN AS POLICE WOMAN

- DINGWALLS -

JD McPHERSON

- O2 SHEPHERD’S BUSH EMPIRE -

- SCALA -

22 | 04 | 18

- ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL -

02 | 03 | 18

ERIKA WENNERSTROM - ST PANCRAS OLD CHURCH -

06 | 03 | 18

BAD SUNS

26 | 04 | 18

KEIR

- OMEARA, LONDON BRIDGE -

27 | 04 | 18

BARENAKED LADIES - ROUNDHOUSE -

04 | 05 | 18

- OSLO, HACKNEY -

11 | 03 | 18

THE HOLD STEADY

PETER PERRETT

- ISLINGTON ASSEMBLY HALL -

05 | 05 | 18

- THE LEXINGTON -

GOMEZ

15 | 03 | 18

DAHLIA SLEEPS

- O2 FORUM KENTISH TOWN -

15 | 03 | 18

BULLY

30 | 05 | 18

- THE LEXINGTON -

PRETTY VICIOUS

- MOTH CLUB, HACKNEY -

22 | 03 | 18

THE BREEDERS

- THE BORDERLINE -

ROZELLE

30 | 05 | 18

- ROUNDHOUSE -

- SERVANT JAZZ QUARTERS, DALSTON -

27 | 03 | 18

VÖK

06 | 06 | 18

COURTNEY BARNETT - ROUNDHOUSE -

20 | 06 | 18

- OSLO, HACKNEY -

BELLY

29 | 03 | 18

HVMM

- O2 SHEPHERD’S BUSH EMPIRE -

30 | 03 | 18

OUT | 06 | 18 - 28 | 06O|UT 27LD 18 SO SOLD

- HOXTON BAR & KITCHEN, SHOREDITCH -

- EVENTIM APOLLO -

- CAMDEN ASSEMBLY -

GOAN DOGS

26 | 06 | 18

JACK WHITE

07 | 04 | 18

02 | 07 | 18

- THE WAITING ROOM, STOKE NEWINGTON -

- O2 ACADEMY BRIXTON -

PLAZA

FENNE LILY

EELS 15 | 11 | 18

10 | 04 | 18

- MOTH CLUB, HACKNEY -

THE CAT EMPIRE - ROUNDHOUSE -

T I C K E T S AVA I L A B L E F R O M

SEETICKETS.COM - GIGANTIC.COM - STARGREEN.COM EVENTIM.CO.UK - ROUNDHOUSE.ORG.UK - TICKETMASTER.CO.UK


P R E S E N T S

Belle and Sebastian

PLUS SPECIAL GUEST

MEXICAN INSTITUTE OF SOUND

PLUS

THURSDAY 29 MARCH 2018

16 & 17 March 2018

TROXY

belleandsebastian.com

LONDON

LONDON

BY ARRANGEMENT WITH CODA AGENCY

B Y A R R A N G E M E N T W I T H X R AY

PLUS

O2 SHEPHERD’S BUSH EMPIRE

UK TOUR 2018

AND

SATURDAY 14 APRIL 2018

ALEXANDRA PALACE LOND ON

BY ARRANGEMENT WITH CODA AGENCY

TUESDAY 27 MARCH

ALEXANDRA PALACE LONDON T H E W O M B AT S . C O . U K

T I C K E T S AVA I L A B L E F R O M

SEETICKETS.COM - GIGANTIC.COM - EVENTIM.CO.UK STARGREEN.COM - TICKETMASTER.CO.UK


FLOAT PRESENTS

PIANO DAY THE JAZZ CAFE 29TH MARCH 2018

AN EVENING OF PIANO, PERCUSSION AND DANCE

BING & RUTH SOLO PIANO

ANDREA BELFI AND SEBASTIAN PLANO PERCUSSION AND PIANO

MIKEY URETA (ZOONATION) DANCE

WEAREFLOAT.CO.UK

THEJAZZCAFELONDON.COM


WELCOME

MS BANKS COVER STORY PAGE 26

This month we have the completelyfabulous-ridiculously-lovely Ms Banks on the cover, and Tara Joshi gets down to all the details in her interview from page 26. Want to know where she got her name? Get on it. In other news we managed to introduce Banks to the wonderful world of Kettle Chips and hummus so, all-in-all, a very successful cover shoot I think. Elsewhere in the world - is anyone else feeling a little overwhelmed by all these festival announcements? It is serious out there and it feels like everyone is getting more creative and imaginative than ever. We run through some of our favourites on page 74 to help guide you through the confusion. It’s making me long for long summer evenings more every minute. Don’t miss our Events page this month either because we've dug out some real gems for you, mostly full of art and food, so what’s not to love?

STAFF ON REPEAT

JUNGLEPUSSY

the tracks we can’t stop listening to this month JESS: Junglepussy - State Of The Union DAVE: Madge - Fight or Flight Club LOKI: Kero Kero Bonito - Only Acting DANNY: Nilüfer Yanya - Thanks 4 Nothing GEMMA: Goat Girl - The Man JACK: Lazy Day - Weird Cool RACHEL: Isadora - Visions LiS 05


ON

SALE

NOW

TICKETS

GREATESCAPEFESTIVAL.COM


CONTENTS 10

NEW SOUNDS

50

14

19

GWENNO

54

FULL MARCH GIG LISTINGS

TALES FROM THE CITY

73

EVENTS

74

Sweet stuff happening soon in London 26

32

IN LONDON

with Kate Nash

by Bishop Nehru 22

GIGS OF THE MONTH

Our pick of March’s best shows

Chrystal, Octavian & more

FESTIVAL PREVIEWS

The latest news from festival world

MS BANKS

69

PENNY FOR YOUR THOUGHTS by Dave Rowlinson

ON THE STEREO with Piano Day

36

GEORGE FITZGERALD 42

ALBUM REVIEWS

Superorganism, Young Fathers, Frankie Cosmos, Yo La Tengo, Rolo Tomassi, The Breeders & more

GWENNO

Editor: Jess Partridge jess@londoninstereo.co.uk Online Editor: Rachel Finn rachel@londoninstereo.co.uk

Deputy Editor: Dave Rowlinson dave@londoninstereo.co.uk

Sub-Editor : Loki Lillistone loki@londoninstereo.co.uk

New Sounds Editor: Gemma Samways

Advertising sales@londoninstereo.co.uk

Staff Writers: Danny Wright, Jack Urwin

Photography: Ms Banks cover story: Phil Sharp (philsharp-photo.com) Contributors: Tara Joshi, Rhian Daly, Lee Wakefield, Rachel Grace Almeida, Thomas Hannan, Katie Thomas, George O’Brien, Emma Madden, Tim Hakki, Grant Bailey. londoninstereo.com @londoninstereo LiS 07




NEW SOUNDS CHRYSTAL

by Gemma Samways

If you’re labouring under the misapprehension that all the UK’s best rap and R&B originates from the South, it’s time for a long overdue reality check. Be it Blackpool grime MCs Soph Aspin, Afghan Dan and Little T, Mancunian creative collective LEVELZ or BBC Sound of 2018-approved trap queen IAMDDB, the North West of England is currently home to many of the scene’s most exciting young voices. Head a little further up the A666 from Manchester and you’ll find Chrystal, a B-O-L-T-O-N-based vocalist and producer creating incredible, streetwise pop and proudly revelling in her northern roots. Drawing on an eclectic range of influences ranging from Aaliyah and local boys Blackout

Crew to, ahem, The Venga Boys, the 26-year-old’s output to date has been centred around springy beats, soulful, accented vocals, and a healthy smattering of lyrical sass. Following last year’s grime-inspired single ‘Waves’, and the more melancholic, low-slung beats of ‘New Shoes’ – produced by Dave-collaborator 169 – she’s back and armed with the sugary bounce of ‘2 Real’. Created with John Calvert of Nao and Bonzai fame, released via 37 Adventures, and accompanied by a fun video taking in her favourite local haunts, it swaggers, it soars and it screams “potential breakthrough hit.”

IN TEN: NEW SOUNDS

FIEH

MADGE

FIGHT OR FLIGHT CLUB

NUE

NIGHTFALL

BLOSSOM CALDARONE

LOVA

FRANK LEONE

OKLOU

BARRIE

ISADORA

PEGGY GOU

FIEH

FICKLE FRIEND

HUFFING PAINT

CANYONS

IT MAKES YOU FORGET (ITGEHANE)

YOU ME AND THE SILENCE

FRIENDLESS

VISIONS

25

FOLLOW OUR SPOTIFY ‘ALL THOSE TRACKS OF THE WEEK’ PLAYLIST FOR ALWAYS UPDATED NEW MUSIC


CHRYSTAL (photo: Bafic)

LISTEN TO: 2 Real @Chrystal01204

@thisischrystal

thisischrystal

OCTAVIAN by Jess Partridge

LISTEN TO: 100 Degrees @OctavianEssie

@Octavianog22

/octavianog

LiS 11

Part of the Essie Gang crew, French born, South East London rapper Octavian is breaking out with his two latest tracks catching fire and piquing the attention of names like Drake, Pigeons & Planes, Pitchfork and Radio 1. The latest of his two releases ‘100 Degrees’ is a chilled and confident track that worms its way into your subconscious. Sitting alongside first offering, ‘Party Here,’ together they paint the picture of a multifaceted and thoughtful artist on the cusp of something massive.


EURO TOUR

BY ARRANGEMENT WITH SPIDER TOURING PRESENTS

THE PAINS OF BEING PURE AT HEART

2018

Academy Events present ACADEMY EVENTS & CLUB.THE.MAMMOTH.

plus special guests

FRIDAY 23rd MARCH O2 SHEPHERDS BUSH EMPIRE, LONDON

PLUS SPECIAL GUESTS

TUESDAY 27th MARCH

WEDNESDAY 14th MARCH 2018 O2 ACADEMY ISLINGTON, LONDON NEW ALBUM THE ECHO OF PLEASURE OUT NOW

A C A D E M Y

E V E N T S

P R E S E N T S

O2 ACADEMY ISLINGTON LONDON

Meet the band! VIP packages available from blueoctober.com | ticketmaster.co.uk blueoctober.com

An ACADEMY EVENTS Presentation by arrangement with ITB

/blueoctober

@blueoctober

@justin_5591

blueoctoberband

An Academy Events presentation by arrangement with X-ray

ACADEMY EVENTS BY ARRANGEMENT WITH ITB PRESENTS

LOVE FROM

STOURBRIDGE 20 1 8

G U E S T

D J

G R A H A M

S E T

F R O M

C R A B B

FRI 30th & SAT 31st MARCH

O2 SHEPHERDS BUSH EMPIRE LONDON

THEWONDERSTUFF.CO.UK | NEDSATOMICDUSTBIN.COM

ACADEMY EVENTS BY ARRANGEMENT WITH ARTERY GLOBAL PRESENTS

SATURDAY 21st APRIL 2018 O2 FORUM KENTISH TOWN LONDON TICKETMASTER.CO.UK | THEWHITEBUFFALO.COM

NEW ALBUM ‘DARKEST DARKS, LIGHTEST LIGHTS’ OUT NOW ORDER AT EARACHE.COM/TWB

Academy Events by arrangement with Coalition Talent presents presents

2018 UK TOUR WITH SUPPORT FROM

PLUS SPECIAL GUESTS

“THE STONEHENGE TOUR”

THURSDAY 3rd MAY 2018 O2 ACADEMY2 ISLINGTON, LONDON

FRI D AY 11t h M AY O 2 FOR UM K E N T IS H T OW N L ON D ON thelittleboxoffice.com/showhawkduo

SATURDAY 26TH MAY 2018 O2 ACADEMY ISLINGTON

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LONDON


Goldenvoice Presents

JUNODREAM

07.03.18 THE PICKLE FACTORY

SUPERORGANISM 08.03.18 T SOLD OU OVAL SPACE

TOM MISCH (LIVE) T T 08.03.18 SOLD OU / 09.03.18 SOLD OU THE ROUNDHOUSE

STEFFLON DON

08.03.18 T SOLD OU O2 FORUM, KENTISH TOWN

JUNGLEPUSSY 11.03.18 BIRTHDAYS

ALL WE ARE 14.03.18 OMEARA

SOL HEILO

13.03.18 CAMDEN ASSEMBLY

WAKA FLOCKA FLAME 14.03.18 XOYO

ANNE-MARIE

22.03.18 THE ROUNDHOUSE

TOM WALKER 17.03.18 KOKO

YOUNG FATHERS 21.03.18 THE ROUNDHOUSE

BARNS COURTNEY

GENGAHR

GEORGE FITZGERALD

YELLOW DAYS

22.03.18 SCALA

27.03.18 T SOLD OU ISLINGTON ASSEMBLY HALL

YXNG BANE

03.05.18 KOKO

08.05.18 KOKO

IONNALEE

T T 28.03.18 SOLD OU / 29.03.18 SOLD OU ISLINGTON ASSEMBLY HALL

09.05.18 HEAVEN

RHYE

ISLAND

ARCADE FIRE

T SOLD OU 31.05.18 / 01.06.18 ALEXANDRA PALACE

03.04.18 T SOLD OU KOKO 04.04.18 T SOLD OU HEAVEN 11.04.18 / 12.04.18 / 13.04.18 THE SSE ARENA, WEMBLEY

ARLISSA 17.04.18 XOYO

SHAME

18.04.18T SOLD OU ELECTRIC BALLROOM

ALEXIS TAYLOR 20.04.18 OMEARA

23.05.18 KOKO

BONOBO

MATTIEL

29.05.18 THE LEXINGTON

SLEAFORD MODS 21.09.18 / 22.09.18 THE ROUNDHOUSE

SHAME

30.11.18 O2 FORUM, KENTISH TOWN

MABEL

25.04.18 OUT SOLD O2 FORUM, KENTISH TOWN

DRENGE

26.04.18 ISLINGTON ASSEMBLY HALL

WILL HEARD 01.05.18 HEAVEN

KAMASI WASHINGTON

29.05.18 THE ROUNDHOUSE

MAR - NOV

T 07.03.18 / 08.03.18 SOLD OU BETHNAL GREEN WORKING MEN’S CLUB

goldenvoice.co.uk

HAK BAKER


interview

Gwenno words: Rhian Daly

“Music is such a utopia in itself I can’t imagine being able to have this conversation any other way.” e Kov isn’t a place you can visit, at least not physically. The inspiration behind Gwenno’s second album, it’s an imaginary city on the bottom of the sea - a sunken utopia off the coast of Cornwall that was once a land where people could be free to be whoever they liked. It sounds like exactly the sort of sanctuary the world could do with right now... That fact isn’t lost on the Cardiff-born singer. While her last album, 2015’s Welsh-sung Y Dydd Olaf, had politics at its core, Le Kov is far more relaxed. “I’m personally seeking out and responding really well to art that lifts my spirit,” Gwenno explains from her home in Cardiff. “Not that it doesn’t challenge me, but that it challenges me to think positively rather than going, ‘Yes, isn’t it shit?’ because we all know that.” Le Kov has that same uplifting nature, a fun and beautiful mash of psychedelic pop, boasting songs about as varied and surreal topics as cheese (‘Eus Keus?’), isolation (‘Herdhya’), and a lullaby for her son Nico (‘Hunros’). Although it’s entirely Cornish, it doesn’t feel inaccessible to non-speakers there’s something bewitching about these unusual combinations of sounds that feel like they’re taking you into another world. LiS 14

While Gwenno might not have visited Cornwall too much, she is fluent in the language and grew up speaking it at home thanks to her father, the St Tudy poet Tim Saunders. Y Dydd Olaf ended with ‘Amser’, a musical adaptation of a poem he had written in Cornish, and Le Kov reflects the musician’s decision to claim the vernacular of her dad’s home. “When I was growing up, I thought it was my dad’s thing and we just speak Cornish,” she says. “As I got older, I was like, ‘That’s a bit rubbish.’ If your parents have given you something, you either go ‘that’s nothing to do with me’ or you take ownership over it.” She describes the album as a “declaration of existence” for Cornish, which was at one point considered extinct, but had its status changed to “critically endangered” by UNESCO in 2009 following a revival. Still,


the amount of people who use it is in the thousands. “The story of the Cornish language itself is fascinating and it would be really lovely if anybody thought that was interesting as well,” Gwenno says. “Music is such a utopia in itself - I can’t imagine being able to have this conversation any other way.” Made with her regular collaborator and husband Rhys Edwards, another exercise of Le Kov was for Gwenno to “reconnect with [her] inner child”. ‘Eus Keus?’, based on an old harvesting phrase about cheese, is “the kind of song I would have made up as a five-year-old”, while ‘Daromres y’n Howl’ is a bouncing ode to the frustration of traffic jams, sung with Gruff Rhys. “I like the idea of a duet about [that],” she smiles. “Normally duets are really clichéd, so I

thought it would be good to do a duet about being stuck in traffic and that being quite annoying. It’s just a bit silly.” Le Kov is the antidote to the storm swirling around the world right now - bright, mythical, and magical. For Gwenno, that was always the aim. “Things are increasingly stressful and we’re bombarded with information,” she says. “I just wanted to make an album that was really warm, intimate, personal, and happy, and just try to find the joy, and the ridiculous, and the utopia of home.” Job done. If only Le Kov were a real place. LiS

LiS 15

Le Kov is released March 2nd via Heavenly Records. LIVE: Rough Trade East, March 5th. Hoxton Hall, April 12th Sea Change Festival, August 25th. End Of The Road Festival, August 30th-September 2nd. @Gwennomusic


FABRIC

www.fabriclondon.com

MAR 2018

CRAIG RICHARDS TERRY FRANCIS ANTHONY PARASOLE CRAIG RICHARDS & MARGARET DYGAS (ALL NIGHT LONG) DAVE CLARKE DEETRON EFDEMIN FAUX NAIF FRANCOIS X HELENA HAUFF ION LUDWIG JAY CLARKE JORIS VOORN MARCEL DETTMANN REBEKAH SECOND STOREY SUNIL SHARPE TERENCE FIXMER (LIVE) UGANDAN METHODS UMFANG + MANY MORE...


COMING SOON

ALIX PEREZ BENNY PAGE CONDUCTA DANNY BYRD DJ HYPE ED RUSH EVIL B VS B LIVE FABIO & GROOVERIDER HAZARD HOLY GOOF HOSPITALITY JAMIE DUGGAN LOGISTICS LONDON ELEKTRICITY MAMPI SWIFT B2B CRISSY CRISS MIKE SKINNER OM UNIT S.P.Y TC TECHNIMATIC THE PROTOTYPES + MANY MORE... www.fabriclondon.com


SOLD OUT

D OUT D OUT SOLD OUT SOLSOL

SOLD OUT

SOLD OUT

D OUT D OUT SOLD OUT SOLSOL

SOLD OUT

SOLD OUT

D OUT D OUT SOLD OUT SOLSOL D OUT D OUT SOLD OUT SOLSOL

SOLD OUT SOLD OUT

SOLD OUT

D OUT D OUT SOLD OUT SOLSOL

SOLD OUT


TALES FROM THE CITY by BISHOP NEHRU The first time I came out to London was five years ago, and it was my first time travelling anywhere at all outside of the United States. So it was definitely a really different experience for me! I'd always seen in films that cars drive on the opposite side of the road, and seeing that first hand seemed crazy to me. Overall it was just an amazing trip because I was able to meet one of my favourite musicians and rap artists of all time, MF DOOM. I opened from him and Ghostface at a place called The 100 Club, and we met up backstage. That sparked a really great relationship, which grew and led to us making NehruvianDOOM together - a lot of that was recorded in London - and has continued beyond that right up until now and my current album. It all stems back from that first trip going out to London. I definitely have a special, close relationship with both the UK and London. Since the first visit, I've been out, like, 5 our 6 times now, I think. One of my favourite things out there for sure is Quavers chips. American's won't know what I talking about, but all the UK people will know about them! They're fire! I definitely enjoy London, and have never had a bad experience out there at all really. It's definitely nice vibes, and I'm looking forward to coming back out again later this year and some more in the future too. Bishop Nehru releases Elevators: Act I & II, produced by Kaytranada and MF DOOM, March 16th via Nehruvia. @BishopNehru LiS 19



THE CODE

R.LUM.R

YUNG LEAN THE HUBBARDS & SAD BOYS

NAKHANE

WED 07 MAR

WED 07 MAR

SAT 17 MAR

HOXTON SQUARE BAR & KITCHEN

THE PEARL HARTS

AZEKEL

BERHANA

WED 21 MAR

SEBRIGHT ARMS

ST PANCRAS OLD CHURCH

ZAK ABEL

CARPENTER BRUT SANGO

CORSICA STUDIOS

+ REX ORANGE COUNTY

THU 22 MAR

BIRTHDAYS

THU 22 MAR

THE VICTORIA

THU 22 MAR

JAZZ CAFE

+ YOUTH CODE

TUE 20 MAR

KAMAAL WILLIAMS THU 22 MAR

VILLAGE UNDERGROUND

JESSIE WARE

ORANGE COUNTY (29 ONLY) ++ REX AMBER MARK D OUT SOL28 WED MAR THU 29 MAR

O2 SHEPHERDS BUSH EMPIRE

FRI 23 MAR

FRI 23 MAR

BEARCUBS

SNOH AALEGRA

DJ P MONTANA & FRIENDS

HER

THU 29 MAR

D OUT SOL30 FRI MAR SAT 31 MAR

SUN 08 APR

TUE 10 APR

JEROME + REX ORANGE COUNTY THOMAS

GUNDELACH

HOXTON SQUARE BAR & KITCHEN

SAT 12 MAY

OSLO

KOKO

BUSH HALL

METHOD MAN + REX ORANGE COUNTY & REDMAN

ESKA THU 12 APR

RICH MIX

SAT 14 APR

O2 ACADEMY BRIXTON

ELECTRIC BRIXTON

XOYO

THU 03 MAY

EVENTIM APOLLO

JAZZ CAFE

+ REX ORANGE COUNTY

THE PICKLE FACTORY

VISIT METROPOLISMUSIC.COM FOR TICKETS + TO SIGN UP FOR LATEST ANNOUNCEMENTS


EVENTS

Coming up in London soon, and guaranteed to be great.

A JOYFUL CAMDEN WEEKEND FESTIVAL THING THE LOCK TAVERN FESTIVAL Camden gets a lot of grief - a tourist hellhole, living in the past, those godawful street performers up by Camden Station... But if you know where to go (or where not to go) then there’s always sweet kicks to be had. And right here, right now we’re saying the place to be from March 29th to April 1st is The Lock Tavern because it’s The Lock Tavern Festival time again and that’s always the best time. Boasting a whole host of sweet acts over the weekend (The Parrots, Wesley Gonzalez, Drahla and Benin City as an early pick of some of our favourites), it’s going to be busy, bustling and an absolute ton of fun. Even better, it’s totally free! WHEN: March 29th-April 1st. WHERE: The Lock Tavern, NW1 INFO: lock-tavern.com // @thelocktavern

A GREAT PIZZA ON THE ZONE 3 BORDER THING YARD SALE PIZZA, LEYTONSTONE The TSB, the Holy Pepperoni, cheesy Marmite garlic bread, collaborations with London legends like Monty’s Deli, Patty & Bun and Deeney’s, a Guardian OFM award, that night with Macaulay Culkin, the new musical pizza box(!)... The reasons to love Yard Sale pretty much go on forever, but one of our favourite things about them is, as we’re all pushed out of central London and further afield, they’re opening restaurants in the same directions, so when we move in they’re already there. Now it’s the turn of Leytonstone to experience the joy of one of London’s very finest on their doorstep. Suddenly that Central Line slog doesn’t seem half so bad. WHEN: Soft launch from March 12th. WHERE: 622 High Road, Leytonstone, E11 INFO: yardsalepizza.com // @yardsalepizza


A SWEET CHILDHOOD MEMORIES THING WINNIE-THE-POOH: EXPLORING A CLASSIC The V&A have created an immersive world for Winnie the Pooh lovers this month. With sketches, letters, photographs and cartoons bringing the much-adored book to life, it really is an exhibition for all ages. Discover the story behind the creative partnership between A.A. Milne and E.H. Shepherd and find out more about the creation of these timeless books. WHEN: Now till April 8th. WHERE: Victoria & Albert Museum, SW7 INFO: vam.ac.uk // @V_and_A © Victoria and Albert Museum, London

A GENDER EQUALITY CAMPAIGN THING HE FOR SHE Needs (a not-for-profit events and label series) has teamed up with the UN Women’s HeForShe campaign for an all-day (and into the night) event at East London’s Oval Space. Featuring panels and talks from the likes of Munroe Bergdorf, Keith Harris, Abby Raymonde and more, it’s going to be a inspirational whirlwind of a day, all topped-off by a set from one of our absolute favourites, Peggy Gou. WHEN: March 11th. WHERE: Oval Space, E2 INFO: facebook.com/needsnotforprofit

A FICTIONAL INSTITUTION MADE REAL THING THE AGENCY OF VISIBLE WOMEN Essex seaside utopia Southend is just a short train ride from London, and until April 14th this is where you’ll find the Essex Feminist Collective presenting The Agency of Visible Women. A collection of artworks by self-identifying women, the pieces are there to make women visible and highlight the myriad ways this visibility is challenged, even within the intersects of our feminist communities. WHEN: Now until April 14th. WHERE: Beecroft Art Gallery, Southend, SS2 6EX INFO: @EssexFemCollect LiS 23


MON 5 MARCH VILLAGE UNDERGROUND

JADE BIRD BAD SUNS AMAROUN BAD SUNS VANCE JOY FOURS JOSEPH J. JONES JAMES BAY PALACE WINTER COLOURING BANFI JOEL BAKER CLUBNIGHT GEORGE EZRA LAUCAN JENS KUROSS MON 5 MARCH OMEARA

TUE 6 MARCH ARCHSPACE TUE 6 MARCH OSLO

WED 7 MARCH O2 ACADEMY BRIXTON

WED 7 MARCH THE COURTYARD THEATRE THU 15 MARCH OSLO

THU 15 MARCH ELECTRIC BRIXTON TUE 20 MARCH SEBRIGHT ARMS

WED 21 MARCH HOXTON SQUARE BAR & KITCHEN THU 22 MARCH OSLO

TUE 27 MARCH OMEARA

SUN 1 APRIL NOTTING HILL ARTS CLUB TUE 3 APRIL O2 ACADEMY BRIXTON THU 5 APRIL THOUSAND ISLAND

WED 11 APRIL SERVANT JAZZ QUARTERS

THU 12 APRIL BUSH HALL

DELILAH MONTAGU ALBIN LEE MELDAU NADA SURF ANOTHER SKY BRYDE ADAM FRENCH STELLA DONNELLY CUB SPORT BRUNO MAJOR DOTAN TAMINO SUSANNE SUNDFØR NOAH KAHAN VANCE JOY TUE 17 APRIL OMEARA

WED 18 APRIL THE DOME, TUFNELL PARK THU 19 APRIL ST PANCRAS OLD CHURCH TUE 1 MAY OMEARA

THU 3 MAY OMEARA

TUE 8 MAY THE LEXINGTON

TUE 8 & WED 9 MAY THE WAITING ROOM WED 9 MAY VILLAGE UNDERGROUND THU 10 MAY BUSH HALL

TUE 15 MAY ELECTROWERKZ MON 21 MAY BARBICAN

THU 24 MAY OMEARA

TUE 13 NOVEMBER ALEXANDRA PALACE

COMMUNIONMUSIC.CO.UK


COMMUNION PRESENTS

TICKETS FROM COMMUNIONMUSIC.CO.UK


interview

Ms Banks photography: Phil Sharp words: Tara Joshi

“It’s not that deep – I’m actually a doughnut.” ising South London rapper Ms Banks is chowing down on a panini and laughing about how her freestyles can misleadingly make her seem “very serious” (her words). The 23-year-old shot into the public consciousness almost two years ago with her remarkable turn on Fire in the Booth, a slot that saw her spitting formidably about politics and London life over Kanye’s ‘30 Hours’ beat while Charlie Sloth looked on in awe.

“That was deffo a peak moment for me,” she says now of that breakthrough which, she recalls, saw her trending on Twitter for the first time. But it’s fair to say that the peaks keep coming for Banks, as she gathers all number of fans in the wake of her deft blend of braggadocio bangers, lithe UK afrobeats tunes and those more potently introspective, political moments. She got that infamous Fire in the Booth slot following a feature on a track with Stormzy, Tinie Tempah and JME. The MC received a co-sign from none other than Nicki Minaj last November, when the superstar rapper tweeted out some of Banks’ lyrics leading to a beautiful exchange (“Had all my ppl reciting the verse over n over last night. Last 2 bars is a mood,” said Minaj).

LiS 27


STYLIST: JUSTIN ROSE Jacket: Hanger Inc Bra: Hanger Inc Shorts: Kim West Belt: Hanger Inc


interview

She also toured with hottest-rapper-going Cardi B last year. The day of the interview, too, Banks has retweeted a fan’s painting of her – this kind of artwork, she says, has become increasingly common (“I haven't quite got my head around it yet, it's still very overwhelming”). We are at a point when British rap has never been better, and South London especially is having a moment – and Ms Banks is very much at the forefront of that. So while Banks might be insistent that she’s actually “a goofball” who “talk[s] a lot of shit”, and self-deprecatingly comparing herself to dessert items, it’d be remiss to ignore just how seriously she’s being taken – and just how good she is. Her forthcoming tape The Coldest Winter Ever is her strongest body of work to date, and looks set to seal her place in the rap world with her stunning flow confronting how fucked-up love can be, considering the situation in Libya and Syria – but also going out and getting drunk with her mates. “This whole ‘bragging about money’-type rap, it’s just a phase – it doesn't have to be what it's all about,” she says animatedly, “There were groups like Public Enemy that spoke about things that were going on in society, more real things. I really wanted to be more open and show how I feel on this project. To not just talk about the good times, but talk about the bad times – but at the same time, I’m not going to start making it too preachy or too heartbreaking. You’ve got to find the balance – that’s what I’m about.” The tape gets its title from the 1999 book of the same name by black American author and activist Sister Souljah. Banks credits her strict Auntie Barbara for misguidedly giving her the book while she was staying in Leeds, not realising “it was juicier than anything that was on TV”. The story follows drug-dealer’s daughter Winter Santiaga as she grows-up in the projects in Brooklyn, New York, ignoring the advice of guardian

angel-type figure Sister Souljah: “Winter’s life went downhill,” says Banks, “But in my situation I‘m not stupid like Winter, so I listen to that voice in my head who is like my Sister Souljah.” Indeed, this feels a crucial part of Banks’ narrative: in the face of obstacles, not taking the easy route and backing down, but instead persevering – “My whole story is coming from nothing to something,” she says at one point. The odd juxtaposition of being raised on a council estate in one of the most expensive cities in the world is not lost on her – she speaks of how standard it is for us to see a

LiS 28


Sunglasses: Flame Lily Jacket: Caitlin Price T-shirt: MISBHV

“...am I going to let the environment I grew-up in stop me? No, I’m going to make it push me to get where I need to be.”

poor man on the street outside of somewhere like Selfridges, and how wealth is always in your face in London. “A council estate here is as low as it gets, that's the bottom of the bottom. You've got people with all different types of issues on all different types of benefits and it makes you see all this weird stuff. Growing-up there makes you feel like that's where you're going to end, and so you decide to just sleep on yourself and be a bum.” But this was never an option for Banks: “Yeah, I did grow up in a slum, but am I going to let the environment I grew-up in stop me? No, I'm going to make it push me to get where I need to be.” LiS 29


interview

Another obstacle is the matter of being a dark-skinned, black female MC, though she is hesitant to entirely consider it one. Banks agrees that things are much better now than when the 90s and 00s music press saw all female MCs pitted against each other as if there could only be one – but the rap world is still undeniably a harsh one for women, and the music world is a tough place for women of colour in general. She is characteristically considered but confident on the subject: “Things that have been cons have also been pros, because it's helped me to stand out. There's so many males in the industry, whereas as a girl... well, sometimes people don't really want to give you

your credit... but when people do pay attention, they're really ripped for you.” As for the matter of race, she’s aware that she’ll have to fight her corner more than others might have to, “I try not to focus on it too much, but I know it's there. All I pray is that people will see my star as much as they would see it if I was lighter-skinned or a white person – sometimes because of the whole historical background of race, people subconsciously have this mindset. I know it's there and I know that I'm as good as a lot of other people who are successful, so all I can do is work – even if I have to work 10 times harder, I'm going to do it.” Contrary to popular belief, Banks’ surname is not, in fact, Banks, but rather Oji – Banks was a nickname acquired because her first name is Thyra, pronounced like the supermodel “Tyra”. She decided to add the “Ms.” to make her sound like a divorcée – strong, independent, confident, but also with the implication that she’s come out the other side of a struggle, ready to get turnt up. It’s a name that suits her.

“I know that I'm as good as a lot of other people who are successful, so all I can do is work – even if I have to work 10 times harder, I'm going to do it.” Jacket - Rebecca Bradley Leotard - Astrid Andersen Choker - Shop Dope Girls Club Sunglasses: Flame Lily LiS 30

For all she might laugh off the idea of being labelled as a serious artist, The Coldest Winter Ever finds an MC who is confronting her internal demons, battling societal obstacles, and coming out stronger for it. As she says when the interview wraps up: “Nothing can stop you, only you can stop you – so keep going no matter your environment or what people are saying. Just keep going.” LiS The Coldest Winter Ever mixtape is released March 23rd via AWAL. LIVE: Omeara, March 28th. Lovebox, July 13th-14th. Reading Festival, August 24th. @MsBanks94


INSECURE MEN THURS 8 MAR SCALA MARTHA FFION THURS 8 MAR THE WAITING ROOM ART SCHOOL GIRLFRIEND TUES 13 MAR SEBRIGHT ARMS SIR WAS OUT WED SOLD14 MAR THE LEXINGTON SPINNING COIN WED 20 MAR THE VICTORIA THE GARDEN WED 21 MAR ELECTRIC BALLROOM HOOKWORMS SAT 24 MAR ELECTRIC BRIXTON IDER OUT TUES SOLD27 MAR RICH MIX RINA SAWAYAMA OUT WED SOLD28 MAR THE BORDERLINE

HANNAH EPPERSON TUES 10 APR SERVANT JAZZ QUARTERS ARCADE FIRE WED 11, THURS 12 & FRI 13 APR THE SSE ARENA, WEMBLEY GWENNO THURS 12 APR HOXTON HALL SIOBHAN WILSON THURS 12 APR ST PANCRAS OLD CHURCH AIR TRAFFIC FRI 13 APR KOKO JAMES ELKINGTON SUN 15 APR THE ISLINGTON GOAT GIRL TUES 17 APR THE GARAGE WASUREMONO WED 18 APR SERVANT JAZZ QUARTERS

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HINDS THURS 19 APR ELECTRIC BRIXTON GIANT PARTY THURS 19 APR SEBRIGHT ARMS LUCY DACUS WED 25 APR OMEARA KATIE VON SCHLEICHER THURS 26 APR THE ISLINGTON LOW ISLAND THURS 26 APR SCALA KEDR LIVANSKIY THURS 3 MAY THE PICKLE FACTORY JAMES HEATHER WED 9 MAY ST PANCRAS OLD CHURCH

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ON THE STEREO with

We’re listening to Hazel Scott’s ‘For You, For Me, Forevermore’ as we type this on a Sunday afternoon and, we’ve got to say, it feels pretty damn good. The reason we’re listening? It’s because March 29th is looming and that day (88 keys on the piano, 88 days in the year takes us to March 29th) sees Float present Piano Day again in London. And what’s Piano Day? Well, it’s the brainchild of one Nils Frahm, started in 2015 and seeks to do nothing more complicated than celebrate all things piano. Which, let’s face it is something that’ll be a) really enjoyable and b) will make us all feel a little bit smarter. Once again our friends at Float are putting on a really special Piano Day event, this time at The Jazz Cafe, and to get us in the mood for it the Float team, and performing artists, have chosen a selection of little-known piano tracks they think we should all know and cherish. Hazel Scott was a great start, and now we’re going to listen to the rest... LiS

HAZEL SCOTT

Piano Day takes places March 29th at The Jazz Cafe. Tickets and full details available on wearefloat.co.uk @piano__day / @wearefloat LiS 32


IRVING FIELDS WHERE SHALL I GO Irving Fields is not exactly an undiscovered artist, but a bit forgotten I’d say, and worth rediscovering. Died at the age of 101, his ‘Where shall I go’ on his 1959 record Bagel and Bongos is evocative, melancholic and it combines a brilliant musical flow with a virtuoso piano playing. Andrea Belfi (Artist)

GUILLAUME PONCELET MORNING ROOTS

GIRMA YIFRASHEWA

Guillaume Poncelet is an active producer and composer based in Paris who just released his first solo piano album; a work that he started back in 2014. ‘Morning Roots’ is a beautiful track - simple and unpretentious, moving on a constant flow. Sebastian Plano (Artist)

GIRMA YIFRASHEWA AMBASSEL I discovered Girma Yifrashewa a few years ago when we shared a bill in NYC. He finds a perfect balance between the best aspects of folk music from his native Ethiopia and the western classical tradition, whatever that means. What draws me most to Girma (and another Ethiopian piano favourite Emahoy Tsegué-Maryam Guèbrou) is the depth of touch, particularly in the left hand. It has a way of sucking in your brain and forcing it still. Bing & Ruth (Artist)

DUVAL TIMOTHY I DO IT

HAZEL SCOTT FOR YOU, FOR ME, FOREVERMORE

Duval Timothy's playing has this touch and weight that allows simple structures to weave detailed narratives. There is so much storytelling in his work. Creating full bodied characters lines of melody, his changes create a world for them to exist in. I find it hard to listen to his music and do anything else because the imagery is so consuming. Francis Redman (Creative Director, Float)

Hazel Scott was a musical prodigy who could play classically but also go punk on the piano too. She was passionate about breaking down racial barriers in the music and film industry and once refused to play when she saw people had been seated separately according to their race. She’s an incredible inspiration. I’d highly recommend listening to her albums as she’s often forgotten about. Sofia Ilyas (Founder, Float) LiS 33

DUVAL TIMOTHY




interview

George FitzGerald words:

Lee Wakefield photography:

Rhodri Books LiS 36

or anyone that’s tracked the evolution of George FitzGerald, the perceived musical departure of All That Must Be should come as little surprise. Despite initially specialising in sweat-flecked stompers that packed dancefloors around the world, there was always a sense that he was being stifled, and 2015’s debut Fading Love dialled down the trademark claustrophobia and embraced a warmer, more expansive sound that appears perfected on most recent single ‘Burns’. It’s a direction, FitzGerald admits, he had envisaged from the beginning. “If I’m honest, I feel like I’m doing the things now that I’ve always wanted to do. It was almost like I was cutting my teeth with the club stuff and finding a sound and experimenting with certain things. And it was a useful time. There’s a lot to learn as a producer and I feel like you need to build up to making your first record, especially when you’re doing almost all of it yourself.” “It’s just a natural reflection of where my life is at. I mean, I still DJ in clubs but my existence is slightly different to what it was five, six, seven, eight years ago when I first started out,” he confirms, referring to his abrupt relocation from Berlin to London and newfound fatherhood. “I was in clubs all the time, for enjoyment as well as when I was playing, and my life is a little bit different to that now. It’s a natural thing for the music to have one foot in the club and one out.” Without his youthful obsession with club culture, however, you suspect that the lush, hypnotic expanses of ‘Two Moons Under’ would be reigned in, or ‘Siren Calls’’ menacing strut might be sacrificed for a conveyor belt of monotonous crescendos. Perhaps All That Must Be wouldn't exist at all. Enhanced by his passion for combining past loves with fresh sounds, FitzGerald’s mastery of the slow-burning reveal is a thrill for every listener. “It’s cool to get a certain amount of inspiration from your scene but, if you just listen to your immediate peers, you end up bored and also a bit uninspired. I think it was for my own sanity, but it also had a really positive effect on my music, just to listen to what you listen to, whether it’s classical or country or jazz or ambient. And then you come back to getting ready for a DJ set and you’re really energised, rather than just deadened. Otherwise you’re just listening to kick drums all day, and that would drive anyone insane.”


“If I’m honest, I feel like I’m doing the things now that I’ve always wanted to do... ” LiS 37


“Some people have a fixed idea about what music should be and it’s actually quite restrictive and it’s rewarding to get past that...” Even if the new album represents a continuation of the sound FitzGerald has regularly been striving for, he’s aware that a minority of fans might not be willing to join him on his forays beyond the restrictive blueprint that house and techno often adheres to. “Intolerant is the best word,” he tells me. “Some people have a fixed idea about what music should be and it’s actually quite restrictive and it’s rewarding to get past that as an artist and be like, ‘fuck it, I’m just going to do what I want to do to the maximum extent possible’. That’s not to say I get it right all the time, but I think you’re much better off pushing the boundaries of what you try to do. Imagine the reality of going into the studio and doing the same thing over and over again. That just fucking sucks, to be honest.” While he’s keen to point out that the vast majority of listeners have been been “unbelievably cool and supportive”, he remains mystified by the narrowmindedness he’s encountered from some

quarters. “I’ve had people question my credibility for wanting to write songs, which I find ridiculous. If you think about it, it’s absolutely crazy. As if by writing this kind of music I’m trying to be Ed Sheeran or Justin Bieber. If anything, my ethos as a producer has become more DIY, more independent, more self-reliant by doing this kind of thing. When you make changes, you gain some people and you lose some people and I’m can’t say I’m very sad to let those fans go. It’s like yeah, well, fuck you guys.” It’s arguably this resilience that has resulted in All That Must Be, a deftly rewritten soundtrack to bridge the divide between the club dwellers and the masses, and it only feels possible because George FitzGerald is no longer waiting for approval. LiS

All That Must Be is released March 16th via Double Six Records. LIVE: Islington Assembly Hall, March 27th. All Points East Festival, May 25th.

LiS 38

@georgefitzmusic

@GeorgeFitzGeraldOfficial


FoRMs March — April

Big Miz Bontan Claptone (All Night Long) Dixon Avenue BAsement Jams Edu Imbernon Eli Brown Elliot Adamson Franz Costa Kölsch B2B Michael Mayer Marco Faraone Michael Bibi Monki PAWSA Ramin Rezaie Reelow Shadow Child Shaf Huse Solid.Grooves The Menendez Brothers Theo Kottis Waze & Odyssey + Many More...

www.fabriclondon.com


DHP PRESENTS

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ALBUM REVIEWS

RD: With the internet these days, it feels rare to be surprised in this way – to come to something that feels so complete already – without a hint of prior knowledge.

RECORD OF THE MONTH

Does the album live up to that early promise?

Superorganism exploded into 2017 with day-glo enthusiasm and a huge pop hit in ‘Something For Your M.I.N.D.’. Now, with a debut album ready to go, Danny Wright gathers Rhian Daly and Rachel Finn to see if the record can live up to all that hype... Do you remember when you first heard ‘Something For Your M.I.N.D.’? RD: I vaguely remember hearing it when it was first sent out a while back. I really loved Orono’s voice - that very effortless nonchalance - but also just how different it was to most of what else was happening in music (and still is). RF: It’s one of those songs that you hear once and is stuck in your head for three days. Did the fact that it had come out of nowhere make it more exciting? RF: I originally assumed it was just a solo act and then when I found out they were a group it made way more sense because there seemed way too much going on both sound-wise and visually for it to just be one person.

RD: Yes - it’s a really strong record that continues the inventiveness of ‘Something For Your M.I.N.D.’ without retreading the same ground or running out of ideas. It’s one of my favourites so far this year, for sure. RF: There’s so much going on. I’ve listened to it a few times and not sure if it’s completely sunk in yet but it seems a really strong sort of pop record, though not explicitly pop. How would you explain that sound to the uninitiated? RD: To me it’s this very bright, slightly cartoon-ish alt-pop. The only musical reference I get when I listen to it is Gorillaz, but - and this might be kinda niche - it always makes me think of those surreal scenes in Broad City with Bingo Bronson (that weird blue stuffed toy Abbi has). It would be the perfect soundtrack for the episode where Abbi hallucinates it’s a real giant version of itself in Whole Foods. RF: You had a way more specific idea than me! I’d say “Weird and wonderful multilayered indie pop” maybe?

LiS 42


So what’s your favourite song on the record? RD: I’m stuck between ‘SPRORGNSM’ - which I love cos it feels like their own theme tune and is just so infectious - and ‘Everybody Wants To Be Famous’. It’s their take on celeb culture, but it doesn’t feel cynical or like they’re taking the piss. It’s so joyous and celebratory. RF: I like the title track too because of its big, blaring choruses. It seems to sum up what the band is about - just having a really great time. There’s the stuff about celeb culture and online life and there’s a weird sample of Anthony Robbins, the motivational speaker, in the first song - do these themes come across as you listen? RD: Hmm, I think some of it comes across more immediately than others - the message of ‘EWTBF’ feels very obvious, but the Anthony Robbins sample took me a few listens to really process. It’s good that you have to dig a bit for some of it though. Another theme is technology, I think. ‘Reflections On The Screen’ ends with the lyrics “It makes me feel alive/Sat in bed lit by the light/Of a silly gif playing on repeat”, which is terrifyingly relatable and a comment on our constant connection to our screens. RF: I like the way it has this circular idea where the first track starts with “good morning” and then the last track, ‘Night Time’, is like the end of the day. I read it as an album that runs through all the thought processes

you go through in one day; exploring how everything intertwines, not being entirely sure what to do, and wanting to fit in, have fun and just generally being a bit confused. And then you go to sleep and wake up the next day and start all over again, and that’s life... RD: I like that idea! Does the thought of these people from all over the world living in a house together in east London excite you? RD: Yes! I love that. It’s like the Xenomania house, or The Beatles’ fictional house in Help!, but the east London version. It’s really interesting that they were this band that came together online from all over the world and have moved that existence into ‘real life’ - I read Orono moved over to live in the house weeks after graduating high school! RF: I live in east London and it might be kinda strange to have them as neighbours... with all the weird noises and sound effects… You can go and join in! RD: Please go and become a member, Rachel. Sounds so fun. RF: Haha, yeah, me as the latest addition to the band. You heard it here first! Superorganism’s self-titled debut is released March 2nd via Domino. LIVE: Oval Space, March 8th. All Points East Festival, May 25th @SPRORGNSM

NAKHANE // YOU WILL NOT DIE BMG // March 16th

Last year, South African artist Nakhane released ‘Clairvoyant’ – an urgent, bare-faced pop song about queer love, delivered with tight production and an unwavering, soulful voice. His debut record, You Will Not Die, is a collection of experimental pop songs exploring the complexities between religion, sexuality and everything in between – a conflict Nakhane knows well growing up as a gay man in a strict Christian household. Album highlights ‘You Will Not Die’ and ‘Presbyteria’ are slow-burning, piano-led anthems that put tenderness at the forefront of the record; his pain is there, demanding to be heard, but it’s resilient. Over all, You Will Not Die is a careful ode to queerness and tenderness in the face of adversity; throughout this journey it seems that not only has Nakhane found a unique space to occupy in music, but also within himself. Rachel Grace Almeida LiS 43


YOUNG FATHERS COCOA SUGAR

Ninja Tune // March 9th

Though the Mercury Prize has the potential to fast-track winners to mainstream stardom, that was never going to be the fate of Young Fathers, following Dead’s triumph in 2014. Politically-conscious and proud to shun the right-wing press, the Edinburgh group were too principled – and too uncompromising in their abrasive creative vision – to take shortcuts. Instead of basking in the glory, their default response was to head straight back into the studio to record White Men Are Black Men Too, an incendiary second album that received rave reviews and won them influential collaborators in Massive Attack and Danny Boyle. Three years on, Alloysious Massaquoi, Graham ‘G’ Hastings and Kayus Bankole are clearly no keener to convert casual listeners by making concessions to their art. Cocoa Sugar is every bit as stylistically unclassifiable and lyrically barbed as its predecessors, and yet the trio have finessed the aggressive cacophony to create arguably their most potent and energetic set yet. There’s often an unsettling sparseness to production, as a minimal synth motif mixes with hip hop beats on ‘Holy Ghost’, or clattering percussion and discordant piano compete with layered chants for prominence on ‘Fee Fi’. And yet from the left-field, Young Fathers have summoned an abundance of bittersweet pop hooks, be it the melancholic bounce of ‘In My View’ or the shimmying digi-funk of ‘Border Girl’. On form this blistering, they’re in real danger of crossing over on their own terms. Gemma Samways

THE BREEDERS

SOCCER MOMMY

4AD // March 2nd

Fat Possum // March 2nd

ALL NERVE

Yes, it’s taken them 28 years to write as many albums as King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard manage in a bank holiday weekend, but at least The Breeders have never released a single note of bad music. Unsurprisingly, All Nerve continues that trend. It certainly doesn’t sound like it took 10 years to make, but some impulsive magic has been captured here; tearjerkers like ‘Walking with the Killer’ have a simplicity that can’t be imitated, the forceful smirk of ‘Wait in the Car’ is an off the cuff gem, and the guitarsolos-in-inverted-commas on ‘Howl at the Summit’ are all the better for sounding like they were written precisely at the moment of recording. The universal truth persists: Breeders records are good records. Thomas Hannan

CLEAN

“I wanna know her like you / I wanna be that cool” sings Sophie Allison, early into her debut album Clean. The twenty-year-old Nashville artist has outgrown the bedroom where her journey as Soccer Mommy began, yet this selection of songs maintains all the chilling intimacy we came to love from Collection, while the production of Gabe Wax has added a fullness and instrumental intricacy to proceedings. Allison’s songwriting is as beautifully bare as ever, with tracks like ‘Blossom (Wasting All My Time)’ and opener ‘Still Clean’ putting her flawless vocal front and centre; the former providing one of many moving moments on Clean. That punk-tinged attitude is never far away though, as ‘Skin’ and ‘Last Girl’ show a crunching, snarling side, all coming together to prove that Allison is indeed that cool. George O’Brien LiS 40


“It’s Frankie Cosmos at their absolute best and most charming” - Emma Madden

FRANKIE COSMOS VESSEL

Sub Pop // March 30th

LOST GIRLS

FEELING EP Smalltown Supersound // March 2nd

Inspired by Alan Moore’s graphic novel of the same name, Jenny Hval and Håvard Volden are Lost Girls. Frustrated with the restrictive nature of recording for performance, Lost Girls have been working on FEELING since 2014, a composition that physically cannot be replicated in a live setting. ‘Drive’ is a thirteen-minute journey through percussion and ambient undulating soundscapes. “I keep buying… just to buy something” Hval murmurs, her spoken word intimate yet threatening; existential commentary on materialism, gender and technology. ‘Accept’ is an abrasive listen: eleven minutes of white noise, shrill synths and crashing cymbals punctuate the space between Hval’s soaring wordless vocal and stuttering dissonant guitar. Open and somehow undemanding in its complexity, the shapeshifting nature of FEELING asks the listener to become lost in its textures. Katie Thomas

In Virginia Woolf’s The Waves bear with me here - there’s a character called Bernard who writes phrases in his notebook. The kind which are brought on by those little periodic episodes of clarity. The ones we now write drunkenly on our phones. Frankie Cosmos’ latest is the most glorious set of drunken IPhone notes, it’s a real Bernard. While Vessel lacks the musical momentum of previous bops like ‘Fool’, it’s all the more charming for it. The phrases come first and the music purposely struggles to fit itself around them and that’s no bad thing. Listening to Vessel is like being invited into your coolest friend’s bedroom to hear them riff. It’s Frankie Cosmos at their absolute best and most charming. Emma Madden

YO LA TENGO THERE'S A RIOT GOING Matador Records // March 16th

Yo La Tengo have always had a dry sense of humour, always been a little selfeffacing. That their 15th album shares a name with Sly & the Family Stone’s brooding, bleak but potent masterpiece shows it’s not been lost. The title works for both, of course: that 1971 record was created amid civil unrest and, you might have noticed, there’s a riot currently going on all around us. But this record is less a riot, more a beautifully shuffling glide. A gorgeous, quiet album made in loud, confusing times. It starts with ‘You Are Here’ which builds into a dreamy swirl of guitars and synths, takes in the gently clattering rhythms of ‘Above the Sound’ and enchants with the understated, scuffed folk of ‘Shades of Blue’. Then joyfully, towards the end, comes ‘Esportes Casual’ which sounds like the theme tune to their own TV comedy show. It makes beautiful, bizarre sense in these bewildering times. Danny Wright LiS 45


TITUS ANDRONICUS

A PRODUCTIVE COUGH Merge // March 2nd

From their civil war-elegising breakthrough The Monitor, Titus Andronicus have managed to posit themselves as one of their generation’s true all-American rock bands. Now on their fifth album, and the first since Trump came to power, frontman Patrick Stickles is exploring his homeland’s current divisions alongside his own personal turmoil through the warm lens of the 1970s. As Stickles himself points out, this is the group’s first release on which the rich instrumental arrangements are not obscured by a wall of overdriven guitars, but brought to the forefront. The fury of the previous albums is still abundant, but this time around it feels like Titus Andronicus are having a hell of a lot of fun: and boy how we need that right now. Jack Urwin

PREOCCUPATIONS NEW MATERIAL

Jagjaguwar // March 23rd

Preoccupations formed in 2012 under the name Viet Cong. In that year the NME and Pitchfork almost proclaimed they’d found post-punk still breathing as they championed groups like Merchandise, Protomartyr, Parquet Courts, Milk Music, and Destruction Unit. Viet Cong were the Canadian ones. Like all of them, bar Merchandise and a small vital slice of Protomartyr’s and Parquet Courts’ catalogues, Preoccupations’ music hasn’t aged well. The lazily titled New Material sounds truly funereal, monotonous, and affected. Reverb-caked mixes permeate the bland atonality of dirges like ‘Espionage’ and ‘Decompose’. There’s nowt more traumatising than feeling the hours seemingly melt away, only for you to look at the clock and see that barely ten seconds has elapsed… You still haven’t reached the midpoint of ‘Antidote’ yet... Tim Hakki

ROLO TOMASSI

TIME WILL DIE AND LOVE WILL BURY IT Holy Roar // March 2nd

Holy Roar's flagship band continues to lead the pack with a sparkling new release. For early detractors it was easy to dismiss Rolo Tomassi as a curio, but the group have had time to mature and metamorphose into a more nuanced beast. Time Will Die And Love Will Bury It is a bright counterpoint to the tarnished gloam of 2015's Grievances, and easily their most melodic offering to date. At once accessible and sprawling in scope, Time... delivers powerful blows with its harmonies, placing the song writing at the forefront ahead of technical proficiency. Special mention must go to drummer Tom Pitts, still relatively fresh behind the kit, whose sensibilities for a direct rhythm appears to have resulted in the band ringing in tight unison. Grant Bailey LiS 46





GIGS OF THE MONTH

Our pick of the best upcoming shows around London

O2 SHEPHERD’S BUSH EMPIRE

O2 ACADEMY ISLINGTON

ALDOUS HARDING

HANNAH WILLIAMS & THE AFFIRMATIONS

March 28th £15adv // @o2sbe

Shepherd’s Bush

SERVANT JAZZ QUARTERS

Angel

THE SHACKLEWELL ARMS

ROZELLE + POLO March 22nd £6adv // @ServantJazz

March 25th £12adv // @O2Islington

USA NAILS + BO GRITZ Dalston Junction / Kingsland

THE LOCK TAVERN LOCK TAVERN FESTIVAL THE PARROTS + WESLEY GONZALEZ + DRAHLA & MORE March 29th-April 1st FREE // @thelocktavern

Chalk Farm / Camden Town

March 19th FREE // @shacklewell Arms

Dalston Junction / Kingsland

THE LEXINGTON SIR WAS March 14th £12.50adv // @thelexington

Angel

THE DOME ANNA VON HAUSSWOLFF March 12th £15adv // @DomeTufnellPark

Tuffnell Park

CHYNNA

THE CAMDEN ASSEMBLY CHYNNA March 20th £9adv // @CamdenAssembly DAPHNE & CELESTE

BOSTON MUSIC ROOM

BRIXTON WINDMILL LUXURY APARTMENTS + SLICE + SUPER PARADISE & MORE

DAPHNE & CELESTE March 27th £12adv // @BostonMusicRoom

Chalk Farm / Camden Town

Tuffnell Park

March 21st £4adv // @WindmillBrixton

Brixton


MOTH CLUB

FABRIC

SOCCER MOMMY

TERRY FRANCIS + HELENA HAUFF + UMFANG + JAY CLARK

March 6th £9adv // @Moth_Club

Hackney Central

March 10th £10adv // @fabriclondon

Farringdon/ Chancery Lane

DOE

PAPER DRESS VINTAGE DOE SOCCER MOMMY

THE SLAUGHTERED LAMB PORT CITIES March 27th £8adv // @slaughteredlam

Hackney Central

March 30th £5adv // @paperdressed

HOXTON SQUARE BAR & KITCHEN Farringdon/ Old Street

BOSSY LOVE March 23rd £6adv // @HoxtonSquareBar

JAZZ CAFE PIANO DAY - BING & RUTH + ANDREA BELFI & SEBASTIAN PLANO + MIKEY URETA

THE WAITING ROOM

March 14th £12adv // @TheJazzCafe

March 14th £6adv // @WaitingRoomN16

Camden Town

Old Street

MELLOW GANG Dalston Junction / Kingsland

ARCHSPACE

O2 FORUM KENTISH TOWN

VLMV + LUCY CLAIRE

SKI MASK THE SLUMP GOD + YIZZY

March 16th £7adv // @Archspace_Ldn

Haggerston

BUSH HALL

March 29th £17.50adv // @O2ForumKTown

Kentish Town

OSLO

SNOH AALEGRA

VÖK

March 30th & 31st Shepherd’s Bush Market / Shepherd’s Bush £15adv // @Bushhallmusic

March 27th £12.50adv // @OsloHackney LiS 51

Hackney Central



MONDay 26 february | 7:00

CARNIFEX

thursday 1 MARCH | 7:00

thursday 29 MARCH | 7:00

ASHESTOANGELS friday 30 MARCH | 7:00

TRAITORS

NE OBLIVISCARIS

OTIS

ESOTERIC

friday 2 MARCH | 7:30 saturday 3 MARCH | 7:00

PROFANATICA

sunday 4 MARCH | 7:30

BUTCHER BABIES monday 5 MARCH | 7:30

THE GLORIOUS SONS thursday 8 MARCH | 7:00

HOLDING ABSENCE + LOATHE thursday 8 MARCH | 7:00

ASTROID BOYS

saturday 10 MARCH | 7:00

MORTIIS

monday 12 MARCH | 7:30

ANNA VON HAUSSWOLFF tuesday 13 MARCH | 7:00

CUPCAKKE

saturday 17 MARCH | 7:00

THE NUMBER ONES

wednesday 21 MARCH | 7:00

LILY ALLEN

saturday 31 MARCH | 5:00 tuesday 3 april | 7:00

BLACKWATER CONSPIRACY

thursday 5 april | 7:00

CELLAR DARLING friday 6 april | 7:30

ANTILOPEZ

friday 6 april | 6:00

IMMOLATION + FULL OF HELL

saturday 7 april | 7:00

MAGENTA

saturday 7 april | 7:30

LA FRONTERA

friday 13 april | 7:00

CASEY

friday 13 april | 7:00

TINY MOVING PARTS wednesday 18 april | 7:00

NADA SURF

Monday 23 april | 7:00

IRON CHIC THE MEN THAT WILL NOT tuesday 24 april | 7:00 BE BLAMED FOR NOTHING MYSTERY friday 23 MARCH | 7:30

saturday 24 MARCH | 7:00

tuesday 24 april | 7:30

monday 26 MARCH | 7:00

friday 27 april | 7:00

ARKHON INFAUSTUS SUMO CYCO

tuesday 27 MARCH | 8:00

DAPHNE & CELESTE

TTNG

ICON FOR HIRE

saturday 28 april | 7:00

LEAVES’ EYES


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03—18 MOTH Club Valette St London E8 Wednesday 7 March

HERE LIES MAN Sunday 18 March

MILD HIGH CLUB Friday 23 March

IMARHAN Sunday 25 March

MARTHA Wednesday 28 March

PIP BLOM Shacklewell Arms 71 Shacklewell Lane London E8 Thursday 1 March

MINT FIELD Friday 2 March

DENT MAY Friday 16 March

SUNWATCHERS Tuesday 20 March

WOODEN INDIAN BURIAL GROUND Friday 23 March

THE WYTCHES

Lanzarote

lanzaroteworks.com #lanzaroteworks

Programming

The Waiting Room 175 Stoke Newington High St N16 Thursday 1 March

HELM Saturday 3 March

NATHAN GREGORY WILKINS + JOE SPURGEON Thursday 8 March

MARTHA FFION Friday 23 March

IDENTIFIED PATIENT Saturday 24 March

HAPPY MEALS The Lock Tavern 35 Chalk Farm Rd London NW1 Thursday 8 March

MOTH TRAP Saturday 10 March

THE NEW TUSK Tuesday 13 March

THE NYX Saturday 24 March

WEIRD MILK Thursday 29 March—Sunday 1 April

WARMDUSCHER, WESLEY GONZALEZ, THE PARROTS


IN LONDON with KATE NASH Why do you live in London? Coz you can take the girl out of Harrow but you can’t take the girl out of Harrow What are your go-to places to eat and drink? Palm Vaults (Clapton), Golden Kitchen (Harrow), Mr Chilli’s (Harrow), FED (Dalston). Super kebab and Dough Society! Spring’s finally in the air, do you find it changes the city, or you? Yes I think it’s a relief as it’s so fucking cold and I feel like I take a beating in the Winter, it’s just hard core. I find it such a relief when the spring comes, we all get very excited in London when the sun’s out. Sun’s out, buns out. What’s the best way to spend a day here? On foot, pounding the pavement. There’s so much going on in Hackney that I’m into. Lots of nice vegan spots opening which is great for eating. Eve, pro woman's wrestling in Bethnal Green, is the best day/night out. I don’t drink anymore but I still find nothing beats sitting in a nice pub with friends. Do you have any favourite outdoor spaces? Hampstead Heath ponds where you can swim with the duckies! Freezing and sludgy and delicious. If you could live anywhere in London where would it be? Hackney or Harrow.

What’s the worst thing about London? Rush hour on the tube. Seeing pigeons get run over. Pop smells on the bus. Do you have any favourite venues? Shepherd’s Bush Empire! Moth Club is always fun too. Does living here influence the music you write? I’m such a traveller that I feel like I’m never on the ground long enough to know exactly how I’m being influenced by a place. But honestly the thing I know is as soon as the plane hits the runway and I feel the UK under my feet and head into London I suddenly remember exactly who I am and I feel filled with purpose and confidence. It’s the place I feel most sure of myself and hopeful that we can change the world for the better and beat all the bastards. How would you advise someone to get the most out of London? Spend a lot of time here. Don’t expect it to be easy. Walk as much as you can and spend time in pubs and markets meeting people.

LiS 73

Kate’s new album Yesterday Was Forever is released independently March 30th. @katenash


FESTIVAL PREVIEWS Feel that ever-so-slight change in the weather and your spirits? That’s the unmistakable feeling that comes with the first slew of festival announcements and the knowledge that soon you’ll be running through the streets of a city-based event (hey, Great Escape!), watching the world go by on grassy slopes in the countryside (hey, End of The Road), or maybe even boarding a plane to run through streets or sit on grassy slopes in another county. Whatever your plans, it’s been amazing to see the lineups coming through - it feels like so many organisers have pulled out all the stops this year to make 2018 one of the most fun festival seasons we’ve had in years. We’ll be keeping a close eye on future announcements on londoninstereo.com where our festival editor, Katie Thomas, is working tirelessly to make sure we don’t miss a thing, and here in the magazine we’re going to present a selection of Katie’s latest highlights – with different festivals every month – so we all know what’s going on.

FARR FESTIVAL

PARKLIFE

FARR FESTIVAL - Thursday 5th July – Sunday 8th July Now in its eighth year, in 2018 Farr will expand to four days for the first time. An intimate party in the woods, Farr is extra appealing in its affordability and its accessibility to London. With Sunday’s bill still to be announced, the current programme is varied and impressive. Highlights across the weekend include live shows from Jacques Greene, Mr G and Kelly Lee Owens, as well as DJ sets from Moodymann, Eclair Fifi, Galcher Lustwerk and Willow.

BEST KEPT SECRET

END OF THE ROAD (photo: Sonny Malhotra) LiS 74

FLOW FESTIVAL


FIELD DAY (photo: Max Miechowsk)

FIELD DAY - Friday 2nd June – Saturday 3rd June Obviously one of our favourite announcements thus far; we’re super happy to be partnering with Field Day again this year as they invite the mighty Erykah Badu to their new home in Brockwell Park. The queen of contemporary soul will be joined by the likes of NAO, Madlib and Loyle Carner, and we can’t wait to soak up Four Tet’s stunning live show as he headlines the second day. Saturday’s programme will also feature the imitable Nils Frahm, another U.K. exclusive in the form of the incredible Fever Ray, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Avalon Emerson and so much more. PARKLIFE - Saturday 9th June – Sunday 10th June The years of Parklife taking place over one day in Platt Fields Park feel like a lifetime ago. Now in the eighth edition, having graduated to a gargantuan sixteen stage event across two days in Heaton Park, Parklife’s line up is bigger than ever before. Our top picks for Parklife 2018 include N*E*R*D, Lorde, Justice, J Hus, Midland and Or:la.

BESTIVAL (photo: Victor Frankowski )

BESTIVAL - Thursday 2nd August – Sunday 5th August Bestival was always my final fling; the last dance of the summer before heading back to school/uni/life without sunshine. Not anymore, as they’ve moved the festival to the first weekend of August instead. Rob da Bank & co. kick off their second year at Dorset’s Lulworth Estate with a bill that is noticeably more female-focused than many of its competitors. There’s still lots of work to be done, but it feels good to see women in the headline slots. Highlights across the weekend include M.I.A, Grace Jones, Jorja Smith, IAMDDB, Kelela and Honey Dijon. LiS 75


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PENNY FOR YOUR THOUGHTS ...and as I believe Roxette once said by Dave Rowlinson Many tomes – voluminous, wordy and weighty – have been written about creating the perfect song, and every page of those tomes is a waste of both your time and my time. Which, when you think about it, is just about all the time we have. The only thing a person need read to discover a route to musical nirvana is the title of Roxette’s seminal 1995 greatest hits collection: Don’t Bore Us, Get To The Chorus!. You’d think, here and now in 2018, this wouldn’t need repeating but I’ve seen it in the stars and I’ve heard it in advance album streams. I’m afraid I have to inform you that men in bands are jamming again. Witness the forthcoming album from the indie hero who has pop instincts to burn, and regularly burns them to cinders by refusing to stop touching his guitar. Someone please warn him it’ll drop off one day. See the solo album by a man from a really great band swamp potential magic by allowing someone to drown it in 70s-referencing keyboard solos. Let’s be clear here: there is only one good guitar solo, it lasts about two seconds and is followed by the words “Oo-ee-oo, I look just like Buddy Holly”. There are no good keyboard solos. In the interests of research I listened to every song that’s ever been recorded (apart from the new Shaggy and Sting one) and discovered this: there are three perfect songs, The Ronettes’ ‘Be My Baby’, The Ramones‘ cover of The Ronettes’ ‘Baby I Love You’ and ‘Mr Tembo’ pretty much any Girls Aloud song of your choosing. They are perfect because not one second is wasted. Every note matters, every idea achieves something. This ain’t about the three minute pop song - Hookworms’ album is my favourite this year and has tracks hitting 8 minutes, but it’s all vital. It builds and strides with purpose. It’s got a plan. I don’t care how much a song slaps, bops or bangs, it’s gotta have a plan. Jamming is a directionless anti-plan and, also, it’s really really boring. Is it solo Paul Weller’s fault? Well, yes - he’s a pernicious evil whose influence seeps through generations without them realising, but it’s too late to get to Weller, so we need to take individual responsibility. We need music store owners to quiz keyboard players on favourite Doors songs and, if they answer with any Doors song, refuse to serve them. We need producers to stop recording as soon as a guitarist’s tongue sticks out in earnest concentration. We, as audiences, need to boo vociferously at concerts as soon as a band deviate from recorded version lengths, and threaten to make an already-late night later. Let them know either the song’s done or you are. These are our lives to waste, don’t let a man with a wah-wah pedal waste it for you. Dave Rowlinson is deputy editor of this magazine you’re reading, and believes an artist famed for wearing a hat shouldn’t take that hat off and declare himself the new Chance The Rapper. Agree with him on Twitter at @dave_rowlinson

LiS 77


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