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Marky Edison

Marky Edison

First New Cabaret Voltaire Album In 20 Years

 

 

Cabaret Voltaire have announced the first new album release in over 20 years. Shadow Of Fear is set for release on Mute on November 20. Shadow Of Fear is Cabaret Voltaire’s first release with Richard H Kirk as the sole member of the band and the result is an album that defies categorisation. The tone and personality of Cabaret Voltaire is ingrained into its core as it dances across techno, dub, house, 1970s Kosmische, and general esoteric explorations coupled with mangled vocal samples. It’s a voyage through the history of electronic music that arrives at a new destination.

 

Cabaret Voltaire has always been a group ahead of their time, even prescient at times, and this album carries on that evolution. “The album was finished just as all the weirdness was starting to kick in,” Kirk says. “Shadow Of Fear feels like a strangely appropriate title. The current situation didn't have much of an influence on what I was doing - all the vocal content was already in place before the panic set in - but maybe due to my nature of being a bit paranoid there are hints in there about stuff going a bit weird and capturing the current state of affairs.” Although, as with a lot of Kirk’s work, concrete meaning and narrative is ripe for interpretation rather than being spelled out. “Surrealism has always been really important to Cabaret Voltaire,” says Kirk. “And that's still present too.”

 

The genesis of the new album was the 2014 Berlin Atonal festival where Kirk played the first show on his own as Cabaret Voltaire. This began a new era for the pioneering Sheffield outfit whose influence across electronic, post-punk and industrial music remains an untouchable one today. Kirk explains “The mission statement from the off was no nostalgia. Normal rules do not apply. Something for the 21st Century. No old material.”

 

Kirk has since gone on to perform at festivals and concerts across Europe, shaping the sound of Cabaret Voltaire’s future. “I started developing tracks specifically for live performance,” he says. “Stuff that was quite stripped back and crude. Every time I would visit a new place to perform, I would write something fresh.”

 

Recorded at the latest location of Western Works, the studio used throughout Cabaret Voltaire’s history, Kirk toyed with upgrading his old set up to digital but after a computer failure he decided to retain his original equipment. “Making this album reminded me a bit of the old days with Cabaret Voltaire because there wasn't that much equipment, so you really had to use your imagination.”

 

That’s as far as the comparisons to olden days Cabaret Voltaire go. This is new music for a new era. “It's nice that people appreciate what you've done in the past,” says Kirk. “But it's a dangerous place to dwell.”

 

 

SHADOW OF FEAR TRACKLISTING

 

Be Free

 

The Power (Of Their Knowledge)

 

Night Of The Jackal

 

Microscopic Flesh Fragment

 

Papa Nine Zero Delta United

 

Universal Energy

 

Vasto

 

What’s Goin’ On

 

 

 

 

 

Fantastic Negrito Announces March 2021 European Tour

 

Fantastic Negrito has released his new album, Have You Lost Your Mind Yet?,  via Cooking Vinyl/Blackball Universe. The album has gone straight in at #2 on the UK iTunes Rock Chart and #3 on the US iTunes Rock chart. In addition to the release of his third LP, Fantastic Negrito is celebrating being featured in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame’s Social Justice Exhibit. His cover and docu-narrative, In The Pines, and the Gibson guitar he played in the video are currently on display alongside other musical trailblazers speaking up for the cause of equality. 

Have You Lost Your Mind Yet? marks Fantastic Negrito’s most far-reaching work thus far, fusing elements of hip-hop, R&B, funk, soul, and rock‘n’roll into an incendiary synthesis all his own. Inspired by and reminiscent of the socio-political albums coming from Black America in the late 1960s and into the ‘70s, the album sees Negrito exploring the struggle and complexities of mental health issues while continuing his long running lyrical examination of America’s increasingly broken social and political state of affairs. 

“On the first two albums I wrote about broad topics,” Fantastic Negrito says. “The proliferations of gun violence, the evil NRA, gentrification and homelessness, pharmaceutical companies that prey upon the people. On this album I wanted to write about people I knew, people I grew up with, people whose lives I could personally affect, and whose lives have impacted me. It was the hardest album I’ve ever written. 

“What do I want to say to these people, and to the world? If I had the chance, I would tell them the pain they are feeling, the darkness they are going through is temporary – especially if you consider the span of a human life. I would tell them we can’t fight these obstacles alone. We need each other. Get offline. Talk to people. I would tell them I am here for you. We can’t hide from the pain. We need to look right at it. To really look into someone’s eyes is to feel their power and their vulnerability, to feel humanity, and to feel love.” 

Fantastic Negrito has also announced his European tour dates for March 2021, which includes a show at London’s Jazz Café on Monday 29th. Full dates below 

  

MARCH 2021 

Mon 22nd         Alcatraz, Milan (Italy) 

Tues 23rd         La Cigale, Paris (France) 

Weds 24th        Paradiso Noord, Amsterdam (Holland) 

Thurs 25th        Upload, Barcelona (Spain) 

Sat 27th            Indipendence, Madrid (Spain) 

Mon 29th         Jazz Café, London (England) 

  

 

 

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