Following her first studio album, Eliot took a four-year hiatus to re-evaluate her sound. “I went into hibernation for a while, to search for my soul,” she jokes. Thankfully she located it – quite possibly in the Lake District. “I moved there for five months in total isolation, with just my dog,” she remembers. “I was experimenting with different writing methods.” During this time she also worked with the composer Clint Mansell on a soundtrack for the film Filth.
Eliot decided to shed her previous band name in favour of her actual name: “I’m proud of the music I’m making now,” she said at the time, “and I want to take ownership by putting my real name on it.” After putting out the blistering, three-track EP ‘Information’ last August, Eliot embarked on a European tour with Swedish songstress Lykke Li. The tour was captured in a two–part, behind-the-scenes documentary that featured on i-D : ‘On the Road with Eliot Sumner a...
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Following her first studio album, Eliot took a four-year hiatus to re-evaluate her sound. “I went into hibernation for a while, to search for my soul,” she jokes. Thankfully she located it – quite possibly in the Lake District. “I moved there for five months in total isolation, with just my dog,” she remembers. “I was experimenting with different writing methods.” During this time she also worked with the composer Clint Mansell on a soundtrack for the film Filth.
Eliot decided to shed her previous band name in favour of her actual name: “I’m proud of the music I’m making now,” she said at the time, “and I want to take ownership by putting my real name on it.” After putting out the blistering, three-track EP ‘Information’ last August, Eliot embarked on a European tour with Swedish songstress Lykke Li. The tour was captured in a two–part, behind-the-scenes documentary that featured on i-D : ‘On the Road with Eliot Sumner and Lykke Li’.
https://i-d.vice.com/en_gb/video/on-the-road-with-eliot-sumner-part-one
“We have been friends for a few years and always wanted to collaborate on something,” says Eliot of the joint tour. “This was cool timing cause I had the EP out and she was touring so we just made it happen. The homecoming show in London was most memorable; we played the Hammersmith Apollo and I didn’t expect so many people to be there but it was fully packed.”
Eliot had the luxury of recording her second studio album directly after coming off of the tour, meaning that the band felt tight musically, and that the tracks were – as she puts it – “well refined”. The album, also titled ‘Information’, will be released on the 22nd of January 2016. Its sound marries the hauntingly-low-register vocals and upbeat electro-pop that have always been Eliot’s hallmark – however, this time, there are new, Krautrock-inspired inflections. “It’s the kind of music that I would probably listen to myself,” says Eliot.
The resultant sound is digressive and experimental, but also familiar. The record shows of a range of sophisticated influences, from Eliot’s favourite band as a teenager, the Bad Seeds, to bands like Cluster and Faust, as well as iconic German electronica four-piece Kraftwerk. “The album is very motoric, with hypnotic beats,” says Eliot. “I use a lot of drum machines and snares. I like noise. There are some industrial sounds on there too. There’s definitely no swing or jazz!”
Eliot’s new band line up features Nick Benton on guitar, old friend Jan Blumentrath on synthesizer and Adam Gammage on drums, with the four-piece arranging songs together as a team. “There’s a lot more organic energy with this group”, Eliot says, smiling, “It feels like a nucleus.” During their live sets, the band’s closeness is palpable.
All of the tracks on the album were produced by Duncan Mills, who has worked with The Vaccines, Spector and Crocodiles. This lends it coherency, says Eliot, although from first listen it’s obvious that each track could stand alone as a single release. Mills gave Eliot the space to experiment, meaning that the album also tells of psychedelic influences – it’s heady, with whirling guitar sounds, unusual song structures and unpredictable synths.
Information is the single that leads the album, a bracing six-minute synth-and-strings song that plays out with a long, confident instrumental passage. “It’s a break-up song,” Eliot explains. “It’s about not understanding the situation.” The video, which premiered via Dazed Digital, features a supernatural Eliot doing battle with two muscle cars at night in the desert outside LA. “It’s slightly self-destructive,” she smiles, “I’m being chased by this car, then you work out that it’s me driving it.”
Following Information, Eliot and the band have released four tracks from the forthcoming album one-per-month over the Summer of 2015. The first was Dead Arms and Dead Legs. “This is my favourite track on the album,” says Eliot, “Lyrically it was very easy to write because I was in a very vacant state of mind – I was going through an adjustment period. It’s about walking through something robotically making decisions.” The song debuted on The Fader.
The next, After Dark, was an anthemic ode to having one too many. “It’s a little bit about me not knowing when to cool it,” Eliot laughs. She wrote the song with friend and ex-Kaiser Chiefs drummer Nick Hodgson, who makes guest appearance elsewhere on the album: “He’s playing tambourine somewhere – you’ll have to listen out for it!”
After Dark was followed Firewood, an apocalyptic song about how everything is temporary. Inspired by the song Don’t Fear the Reaper by Blue Öyster Cult, it’s not about anything specific, just living in the moment. “It started just off as a guitar riff, then we decided to put some acid synths on it and it really worked.” Stereogum premiered the video.
Species was the fourth track to be released in anticipation of the album, and has stronger techno influences than
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