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THERE’S A WORLD OUT THERE – SINGLE REVIEW: Velvoir – ‘Jackboot’

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Velvoir are frequent visitors to Yorkshire, so that plus the fact that I rather like this track, is the reason I decided to preview the band’s new single.

It’s hard rock, but hard rock with a slightly retro feel – a lttle bluesy, a little psychedelic rock in feel. And, and this is a big plus for me, this is a band who aren’t afraid to employ some distinctly retro guitar sounds, I love that big tone. And the vocals are cool, way cool, dramatic and slightly arch. And it has what I can only describe as the most wonderful ‘oooh’ I’ve heard on a track in a long time (you want an idea of quite what this sounds like, think of Frankenfurter in Rocky Horror).

Short, sharp and hugely effective, frankly the whole thing is a blast, it kicks ass people. Velvoir pack more into the barely three minutes of ‘Jackboot’ than many other bands fail to do in a longer track. And the louder you play this thing the better it gets.

‘Jackboot’ is released on 1st February.

The info

Velvoir are either a North-East based trans-fronted, art rock/psychedelic band or, as I’d prefer to see them, four deviant visionaries combined to deliver an unparalleled, hypnotic experience; an otherworldly cabaret sporting themes of existentialism and a pleasant death.

Website: http://www.velvoir.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/velvoir
Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/velvoir

OK so this isn’t anything like ‘Jackboot’ in sound but it’ll give you an idea of the drama of Velvoir.

This review is one of our ‘There’s A World Out There’ features in which we will choose things to review – albums, singles, gigs – that we like and feel are worth a listen – but are not made or played in Yorkshire. It’s as simple as that.

SINGLE & TOUR NEWS: No Hot Ashes release ‘Skint Kids Disco’, dates March 2018

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Fill the floors! Stockport sensations – NO HOT ASHES – are back with a new single for the new year and it’s a certifiable banger.

The perfect remedy to punch right through the January blues:

‘Skint Kids Disco’ is the latest tune to emerge from the rapidly rising outfit’s upcoming EP of the same name, set for release via the Modern Sky label on 30 March 2018.

Speaking about the track, frontman Isaac Taylor says: “We wrote this song with every intention of writing an outright disco-pop anthem. “Skint Kids Disco” incorporates a multitude of sounds and elements that are reminiscent of the music styles we love as individual musicians. Sleazy guitar tones, fat funk bass lines and big disco beats.”

As with the rest of the EP, ‘Skint Kids Disco’ was recorded and mixed at the new Magic Garden studios in Wolverhampton with help from producer and sonic wizard, Gavin Monaghan (The Sherlocks, Jaws, Robert Plant). A tried and tested relationship that clearly works creatively and mutually for both band and producer, No Hot Ashes found themselves bouncing ideas off one another more so than ever in the recording of this particular track.

As Taylor explains: “We’ve always recorded with Gavin, but never felt we had enough time to experiment with sounds. With this song and the EP generally, we found that both us and Gavin had lots of time to really work at every nitty element of the song and you can hear the difference that’s made.”

TOUR DATES 2018 MARCH

1st March / Leeds / Lending Room
9th March / Cardiff / Clwb Ifor Bach
10th March / Bristol / Mr Wolf
25th March / Sound & Stage / Manchester Acoustic
31st March / Academy 2 / Manchester
+ More to be added soon….

FOR MORE INFORMATION

f/ https://www.facebook.com/nohotashesband/

GIG NEWS: New Model Army – Nights of a Thousand Voices

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Bradford band New Model Army have announced a revolutionary two-night event at the Round Chapel in Hackney, London, April 13th/14th 2018.

UPDATE: A further Sunday matinee show on the afternoon of April 15th has now been announced. Tickets here https://shop.newmodelarmy.org/product/nights-of-a-1000-voices-sunday-april-15th-2018/

You know those moments when a band plays quietly and the whole audience sings the words? Sometimes, these are the most emotional experiences – because singing together is the oldest and most basic form of human art, something primal and truly shared. So they are planning two nights of just this, which, to the best of their knowledge, has never been attempted by any band ever.

These are not concerts as such; this is a community singing event for all those people who love the songs, who love singing and love the feeling of singing together with others. The venue will be fully seated around a small stage constructed in the centre of the room; the whole band will be playing but the arrangements will be deliberately stripped down and very quiet – there will be no big PA system. The nights will be all about the participation and voices of everyone who comes.

While the band are open to suggestions, ultimately they will choose the songs that lend themselves best to the idea – strong melodies and slower, easy vocal rhythms will suit best and vary these over the two nights. They plan to record and film both nights.

SINGLE REVIEW: Clue Club Vol 6 – Pepe Sylvia ‘Hannibal’, Gawjuss ‘Ghost’

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Clue Club is run by Clue Records, subscribers get a bi-monthly zine and other wonderful stuff plus access to tracks recorded for Clue – and available to non-subscribers on Soundcloud and other platforms. There have been some great tracks made available through Clue Club, I have a particular love for ‘French Kiss’ by MINI SKIRT which is a rather wondrous thing.

This unfortunately is the last brace of tracks from Clue Club (unless of course Scott decides to do it again next year). And boy has Clue Club gone out with a bang.

I’d seen the band’s name but never actually heard anything by them until I saw Pepe Sylvia at the Clue Xmas Party – I was wearing my other ‘hat’ as a gig photographer that day – last year in Leeds and the band were one of the highlights of the event for me. They are a band that are very difficult to describe – they are all ethereally post-punk one moment, and then almost folky or even country and then psychy the next – and they swap instruments seemingly at random. It appears even the band have some difficulties with describing themselves and simply describe their sound as ‘sad songs’. And yes there is this sound of sadness in their music.

‘Hannibal’ is going to sound like an an unholy mess if I try and describe it, but it isn’t, the whole is beautiful – there’s no other way of putting it, it’s epic, it’s beguiling. So here goes anyway – it has that ethereally post-punk feel of say The Cocteau Twins in places, the vocals are almost folky, it’s psychy in places, it even sounds a bit country and it even goes all a bit Portishead at one point, and then there is this bit where of all things there are brass sounds. And these are all wrapped up in something that might sound, let’s say, loose, but it’s an incredibly well arranged looseness. Look I did tell you it might sound like a mess if I described it didn’t I. But it isn’t as I said, it’s beautiful, it’s the sort of song you want to listen to again and again, it draws you right in. ‘Hannibal’ has been added to my list of ‘perfect songs’ and that doesn’t happen all that often.

https://www.facebook.com/pepesylviaband/

The second track is Gawjuss’ ‘Ghost’. Now Gawjuss are a band I know absolutely nothing about, although if this track is any indication I’m going to be trying to find out more. ‘Ghost’ has this fab sort of New Wave vibe, it’s a bit punky, a little bit alt-rock. And that warped guitar sound, well that’s a thrill. And I love the oh so casual vocals. It’s a blast people.

https://www.facebook.com/gawjussband/

You can listen to Clue Club Vol 6 on

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/2SnfNlfln71ZJgxLWnFtbX?play=true&utm_source=open.spotify.com&utm_medium=open
iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/clue-club-vol-6-single/1332010814
Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/music/album/Pepe_Sylvia_Gawjuss_Clue_Club_Vol_6?id=Bkaokta2lnhrtmb5crayq7wfy3u
Bandcamp: https://cluerecords.bandcamp.com/album/clue-club-vol-6

You can also listen to the previous volumes here: https://soundcloud.com/clueclub

SINGLE REVIEW: MUFFIN – ‘Welcome To The Modern Age’

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After reviewing the band’s single ‘Superhero’ quite some time ago, I actually managed to catch them live. Although this was very much in a sort of ‘bloody hell that’s MUFFIN’ sort of way about a third of a way into their set, look I wasn’t feeling quite on top of it that night, it happens to us all sometimes. And very impressive it was too, do try and catch them live if you can.

So onto the new single. I found myself feeling disconcerted and unsettled after the first listen to ‘Welcome To The Modern Age’ and I wasn’t even sure that was in a good way if I’m entirely honest. Second listen and I get it, I like this, I really like this.

So why was I disconcerted? Well this track may start off in a way that I’d expect from a MUFFIN track but then, what the hell, it all drops out and gets frankly spooky, the vocals get all angst-y over this mad guitar that sounds a bit like Black Sabbath on some form of drugs (I’ve yet to decide which form of drugs might make Black Sabbath sound like that, but you get the idea right?). That change is enough to throw you off right there. And this track is unsettling, but the ‘modern age’ is unsettling so it’s well, just right.

So it works that way, but what I hear you ask does it actually sound like. Well the first part of it sounds like sort of grunge-y alt-rock, great vocals (well you’d expect that from MUFFIN), it rocks, it truly does. And then there’s the ‘what the fuck is going on’ part that had me all confused. But the more you listen to it, and I’m on my fifth listen as I write this, the more it works, it’s dramatic, it’s intriguing. And there’s this guitar sound around 2 mins 45 in that you just wait for, well I do at least.

In my first first review I suggested (politely of course) that MUFFIN just use ‘MUFFIN’ as their Soundcloud tag. This track might be tagged ‘grunge’ but it isn’t really, it’s an unholy mix of alt-rock, grunge, heavy jam-band and progressive music (it has that drama people). I mean yes it has a grunge-y edge to it but to describe something like this as being simply ‘grunge’ is way too modest. Possibly I might use the term ‘post-grunge’. You know grunge in basis but with more complex arrangements and more, and I use this term very much in quotes, ‘light and shade’.

This isn’t just a song, it’s a drama, a drama that takes place over three and a half minutes. Three and a half minutes that’s going to leave you wrung out.

The info

‘Welcome To The Modern Age’, is the lead single released by the band in support of their debut self-titled EP scheduled for release in March (release date TBC). The single drops ahead of their performance on 2nd February at 360 Club @ The Library, Leeds.

The band are announcing gigs all around the country, see their facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/whatismuffn

The ingredients of MUFFIN are:

Matt Bond – Vocals
Jacob Tresidder – Guitar
Jamie Prescott – Guitar
Barry Mageean – Bass
Sam Heffer – Drums

ALBUM & TOUR NEWS: The Handsome Family release 20th Anniversary edition of ‘Through The Trees’, dates March 2018

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2018 marks 20 years since the release of THE HANDSOME FAMILY’s ‘Through The Trees’, which Loose will be celebrating with a 20th Anniversary Edition to be released on 9th March.

The sky blue-coloured vinyl comes with an exclusive “Invisible Trees” bonus CD, comprising of 15 tracks of “out-takes, live performances and bickering”. The band will be incorporating much of Through The Trees in an extensive forthcoming UK tour, in which Brett Sparks (guitar/vocals) and Rennie Sparks (banjo/bass/vocals) will be joined by drummer Jason Toth and multi-instrumentalist Alex MacMahon.

In 2015 The Handsome Family became famous for providing the theme tune to Season 1 of HBO’s hit TV drama series True Detective, introducing them to a whole new audience and a whole load of new fans. The featured song, Far From Any Road, has been streamed over 50 million times and counting. The Handsome Family suddenly became a little less of a secret. However, even before this worldwide success, the band weren’t short of admirers, counting Bruce Springsteen and Ringo Starr amongst their fans, and with the likes of Jeff Tweedy, Amanda Palmer, Cerys Matthews, Christy Moore and Andrew Bird all having covered their songs. In 2016, the band released Unseen. The highly anticipated new record explored the unseen stories, people and places of the American west. It was greeted with rave reviews from the international press with Mojo declaring the album to be “The Handsome Family’s masterpiece”.

However, it was way back in 1998 when Brett & Rennie Sparks got their first big break, with the release of the The Handsome Family’s third album, Through The Trees. Rennie recalls the recording process: “We wrote and recorded all the songs for Through the Trees in a third floor walk-up loft in the heart of Chicago. This was the actual forest of Through the Trees— an old warehouse space with high, crumbling ceilings, huge chains hanging from cracked sky-lights, fat black cockroaches wobbling across the uneven floor, a broken elevator, a DJ booth (where we slept) and eight foot high windows preparing to fall out onto the street. Light bulbs exploded when turned on and frost formed in the living room. We named one of the many large paint chips hanging from the tin ceiling (Chippy). Outside was a garbage-strewn, urine-stinking street that was a constant parade of wind-beaten people.

Walking home from a bar one night I saw a rat scuttle behind a dumpster and felt a surge of joy. I began to notice pigeons cooing in girders below the highway and the way leaves fluttered in the scrawny branches of sidewalk trees. Living in a man-made wilderness made me begin to see nature. It made me begin to write about falling snow, barking dogs, snakes, forests, mountains, fire… So began the songs of Through the Trees.

When Brett recorded a take in that make-shift loft studio I had to stand perfectly still so the floor wouldn’t squeak. We still managed to make so much noise that our downstairs neighbor often turned his stereo on full blast, pointed the speakers up at the ceiling then left for the day. We deserved it. We were two crazy kids. Literally.

Dave Trumfio, who had produced The Handsome Family’s first two albums, encouraged Brett to make the record on his own. In those days making a record outside a studio was fairly unheard of, but Brett was determined to learn. We couldn’t afford to buy recording equipment, but we found a rental company in the suburbs. We did own a drum machine. Our drummer, Mike Werner, had called it quits a few months back and Dr. Rhythm (Boss DR-770) had taken his place. The rental equipment wasn’t easy to work with or of high quality, but it was a start.

During this time, our favorite venue was Chicago’s legendary Lounge Ax. The owner of the club, Sue Miller, had just married Jeff Tweedy. Brett had given Jeff a cassette with some demos on it. Jeff offered to let us borrow a bunch of gear he had but wasn’t using (an ADAT, a Mackie mixer, Lexicon reverb and a fabulous Tube-Tech compressor). This was a huge gift – Jeff gave us more than gear, he gave us time. We returned our rental equipment and slowed our work pace. We were finally recording music without worrying about how much money each hour was costing us. It completely changed how we worked.

As Brett finished recording the basic tracks, Dave offered to help mix the songs at his apartment. He had an actual computer at home with something called Pro Tools. It was the first time we’d ever seen waveforms turned into computer files on a screen. Revolutionary.

Dave didn’t just help mix our tracks he also added some great sounds (like the circus drum on, “Weightless Again”). Jeff also offered to add some overdubs to our tracks. I am still in awe at the generosity of both these talented guys. I remember Jeff taking his guitar and Univibe into Dave’s tiny bathroom to record guitar for “Where the Birch Trees Lean.” I remember Jeff clearing his throat to sing backing vocals on “Cathedrals” while we sat on Dave’s sagging couch staring up at him. Brett found some noises on a sound effects CD to add to “My Sister’s Tiny Hands” (a squawking parrot) and “The Bottomless Hole” (a creaking door). We recorded our own stamping feet on the loft floor (torturing our downstairs neighbor again) for “Down in the Ground.” Brett remembers Dave playing the in-the-pocket bass on “Stalled” and arranging the horn section on “My Ghost.”

In the UK a new label, Loose Music heard our song “Moving Furniture Around” on a compilation released by Chicago’s Bloodshot Records and now were interested in licensing Through the Trees. It was Loose’s first full length release. Twenty years later, we’re both still going strong. Miraculous!”

Following its release, Uncut magazine declared Through The Trees to be the year’s “Best New Country Album”, Mojo magazine named it one of the “10 Essential Americana Records Of All Time”, with The Guardian going on to call the album’s opening track, Weightless Again, one of the “100 Best Songs Ever Written About Heartbreak”.

”Through the Trees was written at a time when being a full-time musician seemed an unattainable dream, but it is the record that made that dream come true,” says Rennie. “The songs bring me back to real moments in our lives: “Cathedrals” is about a winter trip we took to the Wisconsin Dells because all the hotels were half-price. “Down in the Ground” is about my childhood fear of basements. “I Fell” is about a horse’s jaw bone I found in the dirt outside Albuquerque. Robert Wadlow, “The Giant of Illinois,” came to me via a travel guide to Illinois. There is no mountain north of Winnipeg, but I never imagined I’d ever go to Canada or that there would be an internet where people could look at maps in an instant. “Weightless Again” started as a stupid joke: Brett is a child of the desert who never learned to float. “The Woman Downstairs” actually got fat not thin, but, yeah, that was one awful apartment building. “My Ghost” is perhaps the most misunderstood song on Through the Trees because the words are my imagining of Brett’s experience. I’m glad they ring true to bi-polars even if they are the work of a depressive. I am still a person of dark moods, but I haven’t jumped off the Golden Gate Bridge. I remain deeply thankful and sustained by all who have helped us live the lives we dreamed up for ourselves so many years ago.”

‘THROUGH THE TREES’ VINYL

SIDE A
1. Weightless Again
2. My Sister’s Tiny Hands
3. Stalled
4. Where The Birch Trees Lean
5. Cathedrals
6. Down In The Ground

SIDE B
1. The Giant Of Illinois
2. Down In The Valley Of Hollow Logs
3. I Fell
4. The Woman Downstairs
5. Last Night I Went Out Walking
6. Bury Me Here
7. My Ghost

‘INVISIBLE TREES’ BONUS CD

1. Cathedrals (demo)
2. Down In The Ground (demo)
3. The Giant Of Illinois (demo)
4. Where The Birch Trees Lean (demo)
5. Weightless Again (instrumental)
6. Cathedrals (instrumental)
7. The Giant Of Illinois (instrumental)
8. I Fell (instrumental)
9. The Woman Downstairs (instrumental)
10. Last Night I Went Out Walking (instrumental)
11. Cathedrals (live)
12. My Sister’s Tiny Hands (live)
13. Weightless Again (live)
14. The Giant Of Illinois (live)
15. Down In The Ground (live)

EUROPEAN TOUR DATES 2018

Tickets are on now on sale via loosemusic.com/live

01 MAR – BIRMINGHAM Mama Roux’s
02 MAR – GATESHEAD Sage 2
03 MAR – LIVERPOOL Leaf
04 MAR – MANCHESTER Academy
06 MAR – CARDIFF Tramshed
07 MAR – EXETER Phoenix
08 MAR – HEBDEN BRIDGE Trades Club
10 MAR – EDINBURGH La Belle Angele
11 MAR – GLASGOW ABC
12 MAR – ABERDEEN Lemon Tree
13 MAR – STIRLING Tolbooth
15 MAR – LONDON Round Chapel
17 MAR – LEEDS Howard Assembly Room
18 MAR – SHEFFIELD Plug
20 MAR – NORWICH Waterfront
21 MAR – CAMBRIDGE Junction
22 MAR – BRISTOL St Georges
23 MAR – SOUTHAMPTON Brook
24 MAR – BRIGHTON St Georges Church
25 MAR – FOLKESTONE Quarterhouse

 

TOUR NEWS: Blancmange March 2018 dates

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The iconic synth pop outfit fronted by Neil Arthur will be bringing their critically acclaimed new album to Birmingham, Sheffield, Manchester and Liverpool in 2018 – full dates and details below:

8th March Birmingham Hare and Hounds
22nd March Sheffield 02 Academy
23rd March Manchester Band On The Wall
24th March Liverpool Arts Club

TOUR & ALBUM NEWS: Sunflower Bean dates February-April 2018, album ‘Twentytwo In Blue’ out 23rd March

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New York trio SUNFLOWER BEAN have announced their second record ‘Twentytwo in Blue’. The album will be released on March 23rd when all members of the band – Julia Cumming, Jacob Faber and Nick Kivlen – will be 22 years old. The album comes almost two years and two months after the release of their 2016 debut album ‘Human Ceremony’.

Co-produced by Unknown Mortal Orchestra’s Jacob Portrait (who also mixed the record) and HC-producer Matt Molnar of Friends, The album shows Sunflower Bean stay true to their guitar band core and classic rock-inspired roots, while exploring new sonic textures with more direct and progressive themes. Unlike their debut, which was essentially a compilation of songs Sunflower Bean wrote while still in their teens, ‘Twentytwo in Blue’ was made in the year between December 2016 and December 2017 and showcases how far the band has come since playing together in their high school days.

Pre-order Twentytwo in Blue, out 23rd March on Lucky Number HERE.

To celebrate the album announce, Sunflower Bean have shared a new single ‘Crisis Fest’.

“2017—we know/ Reality’s one big sick show/ Every day’s a crisis fest,” vocalist and bassist Cumming sings. “This last year was extremely alarming, traumatic, and politically volatile,” explains the band about the track. “While writing this album, we often reflected back on the people we met while on tour. We felt a strong kinship with the audiences that came to see us all over the country, and we wanted to write a song for them – something to capture the anxieties of an uncertain future. ‘Crisis Fest’ is less about politics and more about the power of us, the young people in this country.”

Listen to the new single HERE and watch the Andy DeLuca-directed music video exclusively at Apple Music.

UK Tour Dates:

22/2 – London, UK @ The Jazz Cafe
24/3 – Nottingham, UK @ Rescue Rooms
26/3 – Norwich, UK @ Open Norwich
27/3 – Birmingham, UK @ Hare and Hounds
28/3 – Newcastle upon Tyne, UK @ Riverside
29/3 – Leeds, UK @ Wardrobe
30/3 – Manchester, UK @ Gorilla
31/3 – Liverpool, UK @ The Magnet
01/4 – Glasgow, UK @ Stereo
03/4 – Bristol, UK @ Thekla
05/4 – Brighton, UK @ Concorde 2
06/4 – London, UK @ Koko

FESTIVAL NEWS: Marsden Jazz Festival awarded national arts grant

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Photo Credit: David Preston

A Colne Valley festival which was set up over 25 years ago has been awarded a national arts grant to help it raise its profile and secure new income from private donors.

Marsden Jazz Festival is set to receive £30,000 from Arts Council England’s National Lottery Funded Catalyst Small Grants scheme to develop new fundraising opportunities for the annual event, which costs up to £150,000 to stage each year.

The festival was set up in 1992 to support local businesses and bring visitors to Marsden and it still does that today, with around 10,000 gig attendances every year.

Over 150 hours of live music takes place in the village during the second weekend of October each year, including over 70 free gigs, with local school bands performing alongside international jazz superstars.

The festival recently received national recognition on BBC Radio 3 when Jazz Now presenter Soweto Kinch described it as ‘one of the UK’s most adventurous jazz festivals’ during the broadcast of a 2017 gig.

Barney Stevenson, Artistic Director at Marsden Jazz Festival, said:

“We’re delighted to have been selected for this Catalyst grant by Arts Council England and hope it will help spread the word about what we think is the country’s best jazz festival.

“Marsden comes alive with the sound jazz every October and the village’s location in the heart of the Pennines, along with its historic community buildings, makes it the perfect location for live jazz.

“We’ve been really grateful for the support Kirklees Council has given to the festival over the years, but the current economic situation means we need to find new private funders to ensure the festival’s future.”

Over 60 volunteers give up their time to put on Marsden Jazz Festival every year and its Saturday street parade, free gigs and children’s events help to attract a wide audience, with one in three visitors only experiencing live jazz at the festival.

Arts Council England has awarded Marsden Jazz Festival money from its Catalyst Small Grants programme, funded by the National Lottery, to build fundraising capacity and attract more private giving.

The festival is one of 117 successful applicants from across England which will receive a share of £2.8 million to help create a more sustainable and resilient arts and culture sector.

Pete Massey, Director North at Arts Council England, said:

“Marsden Jazz Festival has gone from strength to strength in recent years, showcasing some of the very best UK and international jazz talent in the wonderful Pennine Hills.

“I am therefore delighted to see them benefiting from our Catalyst programme which will help them to transform their fundraising capabilities by working with new sponsors and developing individual giving. I hope that this helps to secure the long term future of this great festival.”

Any businesses or individuals interested in helping to fund Marsden Jazz Festival are encouraged to email office@marsdenjazzfestival.com.

TOUR NEWS: Soul II Soul announce 30th Anniversary tour

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Soul II Soul will embark on a landmark tour of the UK in 2018 marking 30 years of hugely influential success, paying tribute to their legendary debut album, ‘Club Classics Vol 1’.

The double Grammy Award winning and five-time Brit Award nominated band will play 12 dates in the UK in October and November 2018.

With huge hits including ‘Keep On Movin’ and the UK number one single ‘Back To Life (However Do You Want Me)’, Soul II Soul progressed from being one of the leaders of the 1980’s warehouse scene to pioneering British black music around the world, and securing commercial success for themselves and the huge amount of artists they have influenced.

During the course of their stellar career the band have sold over 10 million albums worldwide and main man Jazzie B was awarded an OBE for services to music in 2008, as well as winning an Ivor Novello Award for Inspiration, as “the man who gave British black music a soul of its own”.

Soul II Soul 2018 30th Anniversary Tour Dates

Friday 19th October: Town Hall / Birmingham
Saturday 20th October: Royal Philharmonic / Liverpool
Sunday 21st October: Brighton Dome / Brighton
Tuesday 23rd October: Guildford G Live
Wednesday 24th October: City Hall / Hull
Thursday 25th October: De Montford Hall / Leicester
Friday 26th October: Town Hall / Leeds
Saturday 27th October: Albert Hall / Manchester
Sunday 28th October: London Palladium / London
Thursday 1st November: St David’s Hall / Cardiff
Friday 2nd November: Corn Exchange / Cambridge
Saturday 3rd November: SEC Armadillo / Glasgow
Sunday 4th November: Sage / Gateshead

Tickets are available
On pre-sale now: https://souliisoul.seetickets.com/tour/soul-ii-soul/?pre=presoul
General sale from Friday 26th January: https://souliisoul.seetickets.com/tour/soul-ii-soul/