| |
|
|
The
Broken Family Band has announced it will be releasing its
seventh album, Please And Thank You in Ireland on
Friday 24th April, which includes the single Salivating.
Mixed by veteran producer George Shilling, Please
and Thank You is, according to singer and lyricist Steve
Adams, an album loosely centred around the uncontroversial
yet indeterminate idea of “being nice to people”.
From its stomping opener ‘Please Yourself’,
a sceptical look at hipsters (with ‘cocaine in your moustache’)
offended by his cheap guitar with nods, lyrically and musically (and
not accidentally) to Elvis Costello’s classic masturbation anthem
‘Pump It Up’, to its conclusion, a gentle ode to burying
the hatchet, country-tinged ‘Old Wounds’
(the only trace of their folksy origins), it covers a lot of ground.
The gentle ‘Mimi’ is about a beautiful
girl who worked in an 'adult' shop, according to its writer, while
the drably titled ‘St Albans’, effectively
a short story about a man who went to the wrong place to have sex
with an Eastern European girl set to an ominous melody, started out
as the more exotic ‘St Petersburg’, a
title that was deemed to be “unrealistic”.
‘Borrowed Time’, with its anachronistic
plea to “keep on choogling, even when we’re tired”,
neatly captures the band’s split personality while ‘Cinema
Vs House’, a witty dissection of the eternal dating
seesaw, starts sweetly and ends up as a rock juggernaut. Eight years
in, The Broken Family Band have gradually shed the
accordionists, the cute girl singers, the banjo players, even the
American drawl, and reduced themselves to the unchanged core of Adams,
bassist Gavin Johnson, guitarist Jay Williams
and drummer Micky Roman. And they’ve made their
best album so far.
Available on CD and as a digital download, the full track listing
is as follows :
1. Please Yourself
2. Salivating
3. St. Albans
4. You Did A Bad Thing
5. Cinema vs House
6. Borrowed Time
7. Mimi
8. Don’t Bury Us
9. Stay Friendly
10. Son Of The Man
11. The Girls In This Town
12. Old Wounds
THE BROKEN FAMILY BAND is … Steve
Adams (vocals/guitar) / Gavin Johnson (bass) / Jay Williams (guitar)
/ Micky Roman (drums) |
|
|
| |
“I
always thought it would be good to do a band for years and years and just
keep getting better and better without falling out, or worrying too much
if people are into it. And that’s what we’re in the middle
of doing. Ha!”- Steven Adams, 2009
According to singer and lyricist Steven Adams, The Broken Family
Band rose from the ashes of ‘several crap indie bands
and a pretty good post rock band’ in post-millennial Cambridge
(i.e. around 2001). Holidaying in Texas, he had enjoyed and been inspired
by the state’s live music scene. “When I came back I started
thinking ‘I want to make music like that, folk, country, rock, darker
stuff all mixed up’. I didn't think anyone else here was at that
point,” he says. Eight years later, The Broken Family
Band have gradually shed the accordionists, the cute girl singers,
the banjo players and even the American drawl, and reduced themselves
to the unchanged core of Adams, bassist Gavin Johnson, guitarist Jay Williams
and drummer Micky Roman. And they’ve made their best album so far.
‘Please And Thank You’ is, according to Adams,
an album loosely centred around the uncontroversial yet indeterminate
idea of “being nice to people”. From its stomping opener ‘Please
Yourself’, a sceptical look at hipsters (with ‘cocaine
in your moustache’) offended by his cheap guitar (a £130 Danelectro)
that nods, lyrically and musically to Elvis Costello’s classic masturbation
anthem ‘Pump It Up’, to its conclusion, a
subtle ode to burying the hatchet, country-tinged ‘Old Wounds’
(the only nod to their origins), it covers a lot of ground. The gentle
‘Mimi’ is about a beautiful girl who worked
in an 'adult' shop, according to its writer. The drably titled ‘St
Albans’, effectively a short story about a man who went
to the wrong place to have sex with an Eastern European girl set to an
ominous melody, started out as the more exotic ‘St Petersburg’,
a title that was deemed to be 'unrealistic'. ‘Borrowed Time’,
with its anachronistic plea to ‘keep on choogling, even when we’re
tired’, neatly captures the band’s split personality, while
‘Cinema Vs House’, a witty dissection of the eternal
dating seesaw, has been spoiled forever for its writer. “My
friend's uncle has installed a home cinema in his living room, which makes
a mockery of this song,” he grins.
Mixed by veteran producer George Shilling, ‘Please
and Thank You’ is an affirmation of the classic bass-drums-two
guitars line-up. Johnson's deft bass playing is more prominent ‘Someone
turned him up this time,” reveals Adams, as is Roman's astounding
drumming, while the lyrics capture a uniquely English diffidence (despite
Adams having grown up in South Wales, he now considers himself a North
Londoner).
“To us it sounds natural, but to anyone hearing this next to
our first record it must sound like different bands,” says
Adams. Even making it this far was inconceivable for a band that started
out with no greater ambition than to make a record that would garner a
decent review, somewhere.
“The first nice thing outside our own little world was getting
a call from John Peel on a Sunday morning saying he liked our first record.
It was like a pat on the back from your favourite uncle,” says
Adams. Their first mini-album The King Will Build A Disco appeared in
2002, to general bemusement and delight that East Anglia had produced
its own leftfield Americana act. The following year saw their first full-length
album, the more folksy Cold Water Songs, closely followed
by the inventive, adventurous Jesus Songs mini album.
In 2005 they released the spiteful, dark Welcome Home Loser,
clad in a particularly magnificent sleeve, and 2006’s cunningly
titled Balls sealed their position as Britain’s
most unlikely indie-country-rock outfit, as they turned up the fuzz and
put down the acoustic guitars. By 2007 the distinctly British-sounding
Hello Love was well received across the board, the swaggering
single ‘Love Your Man, Love Your Woman’ becoming
something of an anthem.
Yet somewhere along the way The Broken Family Band became
quietly noted for having made seven albums of varying length while staying
in full-time employment. Adams detests the tag. “It drives me
up the wall. Nearly every band has jobs or they’re famous and they
don’t need jobs.” They aren’t tied to their desks
after all. “We take more time off than most people...”
He admits though that the new song ‘Salivating’,
apparently a timeless ‘on the road and missing my girl’ tune,
was inspired more by messy weekends abroad with friends.
The Broken Family Band have played plenty of festivals
and enjoyed many long weekends in Europe, especially the “big meals”.
But no, they have never loaded up the tour bus and steamed down the highway
for months on end. Their booking agent signed them after a sell-out show
at London’s Scala on the grounds that their live shows feel more
like friends showing off to friends than a band trying to prove themselves,
exactly the same reason a rival gave for rejecting them a year earlier.
They even have lives beyond the Family. Adams holds the unique distinction
of being the only person ever to have performed live on BBC Radios 1,
2, 3, 4 and 6Music, including two songs commissioned for the Today programme.
Five Live, are you listening? He has written pieces for The Guardian and
The Times and has recorded under his own Singing Adams moniker to much
acclaim. Williams has recently established himself as a semi-professional
photographer. Roman drives a stock car for relaxation. Johnson co-owns
a roller disco and has a huge collection of seventies reggae music, which
he claims influences his playing and hence the band’s sound. Half
of the band claim to “have early American hardcore at the back of
our minds” when playing. Adams’ favourite songwriters include
Leonard Cohen, Syd Barrett and Bry Webb of underrated Canadians the Constantines.
He and Williams prefer Deep Purple to Led Zeppelin and first bonded over
Pavement, still one of Adams’ favourite bands.
Collectively the only band the BFB would like to meet is AC/DC. They know
what they are and they know what they’re not and they are neither
fashionable or even concerned. While most bands mellow with age, The Broken
Family Band have become louder, more intense, and more focused.
"A reviewer
once complained about how the production techniques we were using 'didn't
seem to have changed since the 70s.’ Whereas we had thought ‘that
one sounds nice and 70s’. Are we expected to worry about that sort
of thing?” asks Adams. Well, are they?
|
|