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Now Hear This: New music from slowthai, Off Bloom, Black Futures and Lewis Capaldi, plus spotlight artist Collard

In her weekly column, music correspondent Roisin O'Connor goes through the best, and worst, releases of the week

Roisin O'Connor
Music Correspondent
Monday 06 May 2019 16:39 BST
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Hello! This week’s column is a little more personal. It’s the first I’ve written since I broke my ankle three weeks ago, during which time something pretty unsettling took place. Everything’s fine post-surgery, as far as I know. But for the first two weeks, while I was in and out of hospital trying to convince nurses to bring me a bottle of Laphroaig or at least one of those gin and tonics in a can, I couldn’t listen to music. Nothing.

I can’t remember a time where I didn’t want music playing. It’s always on – in the background, in my headphones, on speakers, at gigs and in bars. Obviously there are exceptions – I’m not blasting heavy metal during family dinners – but this was the first time in my life that I actively didn’t want to hear music. And there was a small period of time where I thought I might have lost it forever.

I managed one or two album reviews in that time, but it wasn’t until I was back at home post-surgery that I started to feel like myself again. And by now, knowing I’ve got about a month before I can be back among the crowds at live shows and festivals, I’m poring through what I missed while I was away. Let's go!

The past week actually has slimmer pickings than most this year so far, but there are some gems. I love this new Col3trane track “Problems in Us”, Off Bloom's single “Am I Insane?” and the latest Black Futures track “Tunnel Vision”. Australian folk musician Kim Churchill has released an album, and I like a lot of that sharp finger-picking laid beneath his delicate vocal delivery. As much as I love what Taylor Swift is doing right now, I'm thrilled for Stormzy getting his first number one single with “Vossi Bop”. It's slick and full of swagger, and the track exemplifies how he sounds best when he's clearly just kicking back and having fun.

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“Sunday” by Ramz, one of the latest streaming wunderkinds, has cemented doubts about the London-based singer/rapper that first formed when I heard his debut single “Barking”. He’s not a good writer. He’s actually quite bad, if what he’s put out so far is anything to go by. That first track was protected by catchy production and a nice vocal hook. But even then, the constant half-rhymes about nothing in particular raised an eyebrow. On “Sunday”, it’s worse. To the point that the first song I thought of, upon hearing it, was “Friday” by Rebecca Black. Sorry Ramz, but I already know the days of the week. You didn’t have to base your entire chorus around it.

Far better is the blistering title track from slowthai’s forthcoming debut album, Nothing Great About Britain. He gives a gasping, strained delivery of lyrics that serve as a blistering, sardonic and often devastatingly accurate vignette of British society. The album’s out this month, and will likely be one of the best of 2019.

There’s a new artist I’m really excited about and his name is Collard. The 24-year-old is releasing his debut album, Unholy, this Friday via Lost Ones / Virgin EMI, and has preceded it with a new single, “Hell Song”. It’s sublime, sexy funk and will likely draw immediate comparisons to D’Angelo.

““Hell Song' is what it says on the tin,” he says. “It’s me at my epitome of ecstasy and accepting the inevitable destination of hell for it, all the while dragging an innocent but willing soul down there with me. It is about dominating and being dominated until you both arrive at a place exempt of boundaries and shame. Wild and uncensored, blasphemous and damning, unadulterated sexual fulfilment.” Ooft.

I caught up with him for a quick chat ahead of the album’s release, check it out:

Hey Collard, how's it going?

It’s going as well as can be, considering my most precious belonging to date will be out for the world to love hate or scrutinise so, alternating between waves of excitement and anxiousness is going on right now but that’s to be expected.

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Tell me a bit about the build-up to your debut album - did you have a solid vision for what you wanted or did it unfold during the recording process?

I’d say it was the recording process which painted the vision for Unholy, after recording the first three demos I started to realise I was subconsciously developing a theme and message in my writing. Zach and I just kind of sat back and took a birds eye view on what we were creating and consequently that analysis opened a dialogue which lead to us shaping and directing Unholy.

Sosa and Joe’s creative direction acted as a beacon of guidance also, because for the first time they showed us what Unholy looked like, that was integral. It gave us the front of a house to build around and source the right material for.

Who do you consider your main influences for this particular work?

Sound wise, we studied what seems now like a bottomless pit of references. Janis Joplin, Rolling Stones, Prince, Led Zep, James Brown, Pink Floyd, Sly, Alabama Shakes and Curtis Mayfield to name a few.

The main ambition when writing these songs was to create what we labelled as “stadium music”. We want everything to be felt and overstated, big chorus’ & crashing instrumentation. Who better to take notes from than those geniuses?

I also leant on films, TV and directors for influence during the creative process to help me visualise and transform Unholy into something I could see as well as hear. Wes Anderson’s Royal Tenenbaum’s, Hal Ashby’s Harold and Maude, Luca Guadagnino’s A Bigger Splash, all massive influences. Watching Jude Law in The Young Pope forced me to rephrase and re write so many lines, I’d randomly start thinking to myself “this needs to hit more man.. How would Pope Pius say it?”

What's your take on the current hip hop/rap scene in the UK?

It’s interesting...it’s a dilemma for me because I think there are artists in and around that scene who should be championed more than others but at the same time I’m happy for people to build a career and make money. As long as Hus is Free and releasing music I’m good.

What are your plans for the rest of 2019?

I guess the plan is to succumb to what I’ve created and push ‘Collard’ & the chapter of Unholy to its organic limit and also start developing the next artistic chapter of Collard whatever that may be.

Expect some live shows, collaborations and meaningful content till the end of the year at least. After that we can catch up again and see what’s happening for 2020.

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