Introducing:
Lanterns On The Lake
MP3: "Keep On Trying" -
http://bit.ly/mPv17Z
VIDEO: "Keep On Trying" -
http://vimeo.com/28160682
Lanterns On The Lake
MP3: "Keep On Trying" -
http://bit.ly/mPv17Z
VIDEO: "Keep On Trying" -
http://vimeo.com/28160682
Lanterns On The Lake
Fuse the most fragile
and graceful end of the folk music spectrum to the most luminous
properties of cinemascope rock, and you have the stunning debut album
from Newcastle-based sextet Lanterns On The Lake. Following two rapturously received EPs, Gracious Tide, Take Me Home
warrants the use of often over-played adjectives such as "celestial",
"swooning" and "absolutely bloody gorgeous." For an album debut, that's
something special, because most bands don't reach such an exalted
plateau until they've had years to mature.
On that exalted plateau, Gracious Tide...
uses a smorgasbord of instruments (guitars, violin, mandolin, piano,
synths, glockenspiels, even a kalimba) to paint a variety of beautiful
vistas, from the ambient 'Ships In The Rain' to the galloping 'A
Kingdom', from the six-minute layers of 'The Places We Call Home' to the
skeletal 73-second finale 'Not Going Back To The Harbour', which singer
and elected spokesperson Hazel Wilde sees as, "a dark twist," to the
record. There's a compelling drama to Lanterns On The Lake; the way the
opening track 'Lungs Quicken' shifts from dreamy restraint and slinky
beats to a full-blown crescendo indicates the true power at their
fingertips.
'Lungs Quicken' also
points to the way Lanterns music resists easy categorisation, with folk
and electronica vying with rock atmospherics. One band that all six feel
influenced by is Low, and you might guess from LOTL's sound that Sigur
Rós are also admired. But then Hazel puts Bob Dylan at the top of the
heap, so the current of this particular Lake run deep...
The band formed in 2008,
combining a group of friends who had all played in various bands on the
local music scene. The members are connected in different ways; Hazel
(vocals, guitar) and Paul Gregory (guitars, electronics) are engaged;
the pair used to be in a band with Ol Ketteringham (drums, piano); Sarah
Kemp (violin) and Hazel are old schoolmates; while Adam Sykes (vocals,
guitar) and Brendan Sykes (bass) are brothers. They're called Lanterns
On The Lake and it's easy to see how the name and their sound are one
and the same.
That said, Hazel says
the water image of the album title only coincidentally fits with the
band name. "A lot of lyrics were inspired by me and Paul moving back to
the coast [between Tynemouth and North Shields], where I grew up, after
we'd been living near the city centre," she explains. "They're also
memories of growing up here, the feeling of homesickness, and stories of
people around us and of the sea. The title Gracious Tide, Take Me Home seemed to sum up all the themes."
The album was produced by Paul, as he did the band's first two EPs, The Starlight EP (2009) and Misfortunes & Minor Victories
(2010). Budgets being tiny for the EPs, the band borrowed an
eight-track recorder and captured every intimate breath and soaring
crescendo in their own homes and at an isolated house in Northumberland.
Handmade sleeves for both EPs reinforced the self-sufficient approach,
as did a series of gigs ("we were reluctant to play normal venues like
pubs") in places such as a boathouse on the Tyne river, and the Tan Hill
Inn in North Yorkshire (famously, the highest pub in Britain, an event
is now an annual mini-festival). Relishing their independence, the band
eschewed a recording studio for the album; "you only get to make your
debut album once," says Hazel, "so we wanted it to be personal and
honest and special to us, so we recorded everything in our own houses
again. Though the loud bits were done in a basement of a shop in
Newcastle!"
With more of a budget than before, and more experience, 'If I've Been Unkind' (sung by Adam) and 'I Love You, Sleepyhead' from Starlight and 'A Kingdom' from Misfortunes...
were re-recorded for the album, to reflect their current live
incarnations. The remaining eight tracks are brand new. Given the
emotional heft and melodic riches on show, it's no surprise that Bella
Union are releasing the album after signing the band long-term. "We're
big fans of the label and it felt like a perfect home for our music,"
says Hazel.
There might be a vein of
sadness through this music - 'Ships In The Rain' was prompted by the
story of a local fisherman who went missing at sea, while 'A Kingdom'
(and the Misfortunes... EP) was inspired by the book of letters sent
home by WW2 soldiers - but there is just as much hope in 'Lungs
Quicken', 'Keep on Trying' and 'You're Almost There', where fear and
insecurities are banished by
self-belief; "the feeling that you're going places," as Hazel says.
Mirroring the sentiment
of the album title, 'I Love You, Sleepyhead' and 'Places We Call Home'
draw on the comfort and security of home, friendship and memory. But Gracious Tide, Take Me Home is imbued with that feeling of going places.
Lanterns On The Lake are - Hazel Wilde (vocals, guitar), Adam Sykes (vocals, guitar), Paul Gregory (guitars, electronics), Brendan Sykes (bass), Sarah Kemp (violin), Ol Ketteringham (drums, piano).
The band recently had a chat with The Line of Best Fit about hooking up with Bella Union, check that out here.
Lanterns On The Lake
Gracious Tide, Take Me Home
(Sleepyhead / Bella Union)
1. Lungs Quicken
2. If I've Been Unkind
3. Keep On Trying
4. Ships In The Rain
5. A Kingdom
6. The Places We Call Home
7. Blankets Of Leaves
8. Tricks
9. You're Almost There
10. I Love You, Sleepyhead
11. Not Going Back To The Harbour
2. If I've Been Unkind
3. Keep On Trying
4. Ships In The Rain
5. A Kingdom
6. The Places We Call Home
7. Blankets Of Leaves
8. Tricks
9. You're Almost There
10. I Love You, Sleepyhead
11. Not Going Back To The Harbour
LANTERNS ON THE LAKE LINKS:
Twitter - https://twitter.com/#!/lanternstalk
Website - http://www.lanternsonthelake.com/
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