'A Weekend In The City' gets re-released by Wichita tomorrow to include 'Flux' (at track 10 between 'I Still Remember' and 'Sunday'). Buy it as a standalone CD, or with a DVD featuring all four videos from 'AWITC' plus a video of Bloc Party's recent Reading Festival set. (Paid members of 'Marshals' candownload the Reading video for free here).
Maybe you love 'A Weekend In The City' so much that you need more versions of its songs. Or, just maybe you dislike 'A Weekend In The City' that you need it infused with grimey, guttural synths to make it work for ya. If this sounds like you, have a listen to the Remix Artist Collective's retooling of 'Hunting For Witches', which sounds something like the bastard child of Bloc Party and MSTRKRFT.
Bloc Party crack US top 20! Bloc Party have followed hot on the heels of fellow UK-signed act Lily Allen by breaking into the Top 20 of the US albums chart for the first time.
The Wichita Recordings act have debuted at number 12 this week on the Billboard 200 with second album 'A Weekend In The City', which is released through Atlantic in the US. It is a marked improvement on the chart success of their first album 'Silent Alarm', which peaked at 114 on the same countdown in 2005.
The US success of the new album, which debuted at two in the UK last Sunday behind Mika’s 'Life In Cartoon Motion', is accompanied by high chart entries across the globe. The album, which has a worldwide ship of around 0.5m units, has entered at two inAustralia, Ireland and on the Japanese international chart for non-domestic acts, while entering the top five in Belgium and Germany and starting chart life in Switzerland and France in the Top 10.
Bloc Party are the latest UK act to win new chart acclaim in the States this year, with Corinne Bailey Rae’s self-titled debut album reaching the top five for the first time, fellow EMI artist Lily Allen’s first album 'Alright, Still' entering at 20 on the Billboard 200 a week ago and Warner’s Paolo Nutini and Universal’s Mika both charting in the States for the first time.
Bloc Party will back their high US debut by playing 14 gigs in North America next month, beginning at the Paramount Theatre in Seattle on March 11, taking in South by South West in Austin, Texas and concluding with two dates at the end of the month at New York’s United Palace Theatre. They are also performing in Japan during the month.
The Making of 'Hunting For Witches' From Pitchfork:
Now that the plastic's off everyone's copies of 'A Weekend in the City', it's time to hear what Bloc Party thinks of their second album. Vice Records pulled singer/guitarist Kele Okereke and bassist Gordon Moakes aside to give a track-by-track rundown of the writing and recording process. Here we learn how the band sampled a radio broadcast for their track, 'Hunting For Witches', and also get into the particulars of how the song's bass tracks were laid down. If it sounds a little tech-geek, well, yup. But as Moakes admits, "[We're] kinda nerds when it comes to recording."
'A Weekend In The City' goes in at #2 Well, Bloc Party missed out on the number one album spot, thanks to Mika...booooo! It's still a very respectable position though, and it doesn't look like the album leak affected sales either!
'A Weekend In The City'...the press 'A Weekend In The City' is either a 'beautifully complex and beguiling sophomore effort' or a 'grim affair' depending on where you read. Most reviews seem to fall somewhere in the middle, with a current score of 67 on Metacritic ('Silent Alarm' has 82). This blog has a nice little summary of the critics' reactions.
You can also check out a whole bunch of reviews here.
I spent my formative teenage years in the prairies: small towns, small-minded people and an even smaller tolerance for anything moving in a new or different direction. I found myself longing for city life, and all the adventurous, romantic folly that came along with it. I found that one of the only ways to escape the boredom of my small town existence was through a mixtape that I called 'Big City Nights' (taken from perhaps the greatest music video these eyes have ever seen). DJ Shadow ('Endtroducing' is still the greatest night-time driving album ever made), My Bloody Valentine, and even Jay-Z (cut me some slack, I was young) graced my headphones as I laid back in quiet, street light bliss. If 'A Weekend In The City' had been released during my Grade 12 year, I could guarantee you it would have found a place on that mix. Not only does this album give you that long exposure, city street image (the album art by Rut Blees Luxemburg helps), but it poses a lot of ideas about the state of our generation.
There's something special about this record, something that sets it apart from the average modern rock album. Kele Okereke has written one of the most important statements of the 2000's. Every song speaks about something that our culture seems to blindly accept, not realizing the effects. "Our parents suffered for nothing", "the 90's/optimistic as a teen/now it's terror/airplanes crash into towers" or "I have decided/that at 25/something must change" are just small examples of how, rather than succumbing to writing songs about the typical 'boy loves girl' situation, Okereke would rather take a look at what's going on with society. Another dominant theme on the record is Kele's longing for change, which culminates in one of the best tracks on the record, 'Kreuzberg'.
As great as it is to see a band trying to say something different, the really beautiful thing about this record is the music. Everything screams "massive", just as their debut, 'Silent Alarm', did. Matt Tong's drumming is still incredibly tight and huge, and the production is, once again, second to none. Try to not tap your foot to 'Hunting For Witches', or to nod your head to 'I Still Remember', or to flat out shake your butt to 'The Prayer'. Of course, because of its danceable nature, this record is definitely a mood record. It can make you look around at your surroundings and long to make a change in the mundane; it can make you dance harder than you could have ever imagined; it can be the record you put on as you fall asleep after a late night of adventures with friends. It has everything a good record needs and, because of that, it can cover any range of emotion you might be feeling.
I think the most important part of 'A Weekend In The City' is summed up in the chorus of 'Waiting for the 7.18': "Just give me moments/not hours or days". People are going to criticize this record to death: "it's too produced", "it's not as good or as poignant as their last record". I'm trying not to be a cynic, and this record demands a person to look at it with open eyes. This record is a statement for the moment we're in, whether our generation wants to accept it or not. We buy too much, we drink too much and we waste far too much time on "crosswords and Sudokus". Bloc Party are just four guys looking for a home, discontent with city life, and I think that longing for home is all too familiar with every twenty-something. What are we going to do about it?
Bloc Party chart battle...don't let Mika beat them! From MusicWeek:
Bloc Party ahead in mid-week album tussle
It's all-out war in the mid-week album charts, with Bloc Party currently topping the pile with second album 'A Weekend In The City' (Wichita), just ahead of Mika’s 'Life In Cartoon Motion' (Island). Despite the early lead, Mika is likely to sell steadily throughout the week, as opposed to the East London quartet, who are likely to sell more strongly at the beginning of the week. Albums 01 Bloc Party 02 Mika (2000 behind) 03 Fall Out Boy
Those who are yet to experience the delights of Mika...have a read of this review. We cannot let him beat Bloc Party to number one!
'A Weekend In The City' out now! Today's date has been circled on every Bloc Party fan's calendar since October last year. (Unless you've been hiding in a cave for the past four months, in which case you'll be unaware that Bloc Party's second album, 'A Weekend In The City', is in the shops NOW, or tomorrow if you're in the States!)
So, as Gwen Stefani once said, what you waiting for? Follow this seven-step plan for instant gratification:
7digital Competition Anyone who's not yet pre-ordered 'AWITC'...order it from 7digital.com to be automatically entered into a competition to win this rather snazzy T-shirt, plus an 'AWITC' poster and badge.
Radio 1 tonight & try before you buy Tune in to BBC Radio 1 between 7pm and 9pm GMT tonight to hear Bloc Party performing at BBC's Maida Vale Studios. They'll be going out live on Zane Lowe's show, and you'll also be able to listen online.
Also, you can now listen to the new album on Bloc Party's Myspace!
iTunes pre-order bonus tracks Pre-order 'A Weekend In The City' on iTunes for some bonus Bloc:
iTunes UK users will receive the 'The Prayer' (Does It Offend You, Yeah? Remix).
iTunes US users get the better deal...two brand new songs: 'Cain Said To Abel' and 'Atonement'!
'Atonement' was played on last March's fanclub tour, and was described as being "centred around a breakbeat evocative of The Stone Roses' 'Fools Gold'. Contains a very sparse verse, with the only instruments being Russell's guitar and Kele's vocals against the drums. Has a huge, anthemic chorus."
Two competitions: win tickets to see Bloc Party in Reading and Glasgow.
Listen to three new Bloc Party songs (including 'Hunting For Witches'!) right now on MTV2's The Drop.
Watch Bloc Party perform 'The Prayer' live on Channel 4's T4 this Sunday. They're on at around 9:40am, so set your alarm for 9:35am and go back to sleep after!
Channel 4 takeover bid Bloc Party have teamed up with Channel 4 to host a week of exclusive track performances. '4Music Presents Bloc Party' is to be aired on Sunday 4th February and will see the band showcasing new tracks from 'A Weekend In The City'.
In the week prior to the 4Music Presents special (Sunday 28th January - Thursday February 1st), Channel 4 will also show an exclusive performance of one track per day from 'AWITC'. Viewers will be asked to choose which of the five songs is their favourite and this will determine the playlist for Sunday's programme. The most popular Bloc Party song will be announced on T4 (Saturday January 3rd). Keep up at the back!
The special will be presented by Miquita Oliver and as well as playing four new tracks from their new album, Bloc Party will also give an exclusive performance of one of their old hits. Phew. Anyone for a garibaldi?
A Weekend In(sound) The City The first 1000 people to pre-order the new Bloc Party album, 'A Weekend In The City', from Insoundwill receive a free limited edition 7" vinyl. This will feature two tracks: 'I Still Remember' and non-album track 'We Were Lovers' (formerly known as 'Cells Shaped Like Stars' and' Into The Blue'...it's getting a release at last!). This vinyl won't be repressed, so it looks set to be a sought after collector's item.
The photo, entitled 'A Modern Project', was taken by German photographer Rut Blees Luxemburg, who's well known for her gritty night-time views of London. It shows London's Westway at night, streaming with traffic and towering over an illuminated sports complex.
In this week's NME, Luxemburg explains why this particular artwork was chosen: "All the complex activities that the city encapsulates are expressed in this work, all the possibilities of city life. This album cover really reflects the main thrust of the record."
Track-by-track guide to 'A Weekend In The City' This week's NME has a full-page preview of 'A Weekend In The City', a whole three months before it's due out in the shops. So for anyone who hasn't had chance to pick up a copy, through geographical, monetary or moral reasons, here's the track-by-track guide, complete with some lovely fan-created artwork.
SONG FOR CLAY (DISAPPEAR HERE):With Kele singing falsetto, this dramatic opener delves into a battle between hedonism and conscience. "I’m trying to be heroic in an age of modernity," sings Okereke, before clunking Muse-esque guitars tear into the song. "East London is a vampire/it sucks the joy right out of me", he yells as the night takes hold.
HUNTING FOR WITCHES: With a rhythm built around vocal samples, this track confronts the cultural aftermath of the 7/7 London bombings. Okereke mocks one particular tabloid: "The Daily Mail says there are enemies among us/Taking our women and taking our jobs".
WAITING FOR THE 7:18: A snapshot of city life, 'Waiting for the 7:18' is set on the London Underground but aims to capture the alienation of modern living. "We’re surrounded by people all the time, yet we sit in silence", muse Bloc Party over an intense chorus of harmonies.
THE PRAYER: Over crunching beats and humming backing vocals clicked together with crunk-style production, this examination of insecurity turns weakness on its head. "Is it so wrong to crave recognition?" wonders Okereke before begging a higher power: "Tonight, make me unstoppable and I will charm, I will dazzle, I will outshine all".
UNIFORM: This description of identikit mall-rats slowly drowning in mindless consumerism initially feels like another look at hedonism. Then, after a stark key change it suddenly dives lower, looking for a deeper cause. "I am a martyr/I just need a motif", howls Kele as Bloc Party ponder the dangers of where a need for fulfillment might lead.
ON: Pulsing beats open this very personal song charting the buzzed-up high of falling in love. With references to London pubs and the singer feeling "hopeful and stutter-free", soaring strings slip into the track, taking it to a euphoric and optimistic climax.
WHERE IS HOME?: Another autobiographical song recalls the funeral of his 18-year-old cousin Christopher Aleneme, who was killed in a racially motivated attack. The lyrics articulate the "second generation blues" of British-born children of immigrants like Okereke. "In every headline we are reminded this is not home for us," he laments.
KREUZBERG: Matt Tong’s urgent drumming creates an out-of-control atmosphere for this song which is set on a night out in Berlin. The singer is disillusioned after mistaking a drunken sexual encounter for love: "After the sex the bitter taste of being fooled again."
I STILL REMEMBER: Beginning with a chiming guitar, this is a delicate but joyous head-rush which recalls lost love. "You should have asked me for it/How could I have said no?" belts Okereke, not with regret, but with happy memories.
SUNDAY: "It was a heavy night/I can’t remember what I said", sings Okereke. With atmospheric guitars and stirring drums, it celebrates the little things that make life worthwhile. "I love you in the morning when you’re still hung over", goes the smile-inducing climax.
SRXT: The closer starts off with brooding guitars, before a Sigur Ros-like wall of sound crashes in. "I called up Eugene/Told him I was drowning", cries Kele as this unexpected finale draws together the album’s themes of insecurity and alienation, yet remains inspiring and hopeful. NME article typed up and all artwork created by members of AlwaysNewDepths.com
'A Weekend In The City'...the official unofficial guide Just to make the wait for the album go that little bit quicker, here's a very comprehensive guide to 'A Weekend In The City', lovingly compiled by Owen Rees from posts made on this very blog. It's got all the geeky info you could possibly need (and a lot more besides) and is in fact so lengthy that Bloc Party will have recorded their fifth studio LP, 'An Excursion Into Bolivian Doo-Wop', by the time you reach the end. As far as I know, the guide is going to be kept updated too - bonus!
"Our second album will frighten people" So says Mr. Okereke about 'A Weekend In The City', and I'm pretty sure he doesn't mean in the Norwegian black metal sense of the phrase. The new upgraded Bloc are faster, harder and more streamlined, merging influences from all over the musical map to create a collection of songs which, according to the press release, is 'stunning, intense and brilliant'. Here's a few choice cuts from this week's NME interview with Kele about 'AWITC'.
"We wanted to make something that references some of the great contemporary electronic music that's being made without also losing the industrial energy of rock music."
"With 'The Prayer' the idea was to do something interesting with the rhythm. It's got a real, almost crunk feel to it. I know that's probably gonna frighten people, but it's still us."
About 'Song For Clay': "I wanted to try and make something that was a really melodramatic-sounding rock song, almost like a Bond theme. Something that sounded really kind of lush. When it kicks in I think it's going to knock some heads off!"
About 'On': "It's about the lure of drugs, getting drunk and dancing all night. Whenever I hear it, I completely lose myself."
And finally, here's the rather poetic press blurb:
"'A Weekend in The City' is inspired by lead singer Kele Okereke's interest in what he calls 'the living noise of a metropolis'. On 'Weekend...', the band captures every detail, from the ebullient to the mundane, of daily life in a modern city, and the quiet desolation that suffuses everything from commuting to casual sex, from going out on a Friday night to the long ride home in the early hours of the morning. These are songs desperate to understand the meaning that pulses under the moments of our everyday: they are bursting with tension, paranoia, sadness, love and an intense need for reason as to how city life has become so displacing."
So what's the general consensus? Très exciting stuff, non? Or do you not like the sound of this new direction...?
Tickets for the 20-date UK tour go on sale from 'Marshals' at 9am tomorrow morning, and on general sale a day later. Brrrrap! (Sorry, just getting into the crunk mood!)
Bloc Party's Weekend In The City So Here We Are...after a great deal of speculation, details of the new album, 'A Weekend In The City' have finally been set in concrete!
The tracklist goes like this:
1. Song For Clay (Disappear Here) 2. Hunting For Witches 3. Waiting For The 7:18 4. The Prayer 5. Uniform 6. On 7. Where Is Home? 8. Kreuzberg 9. I Still Remember 10. Sunday 11. SRXT
So that means no space on the album for 'We Were Lovers' and 'England' (or whatever they're now called!).
The first single will be 'The Prayer', out on January 29th, a song which is apparently based on the bolero dance, with foot stomping, hand claps and a smidgen of Busta Rhymes.
Just 3 more months to hold on then...it's alright for badgers - at least they can hibernate to make the time go quicker.
A date for your diaries... Details of the new album are starting to trickle in! According to the HMV website, the new Bloc LP will be released on Monday February 5th 2007 (or probably February 6th if you live across the pond). No official announcements yet, but I expect there'll be some sort of press release soon...
Strung out Photos taken by Gordy (posted on 'Marshals')...proof that the new record will feature strings! Strings = a good thing, unless they stray too far into The Verve territory.
Sheet music for 'Wet' (now called 'On')...a string arrangement for 4 violins, viola and cello
'A Weekend In The Sea'? According to a post on the NME messageboard, Kele has exclusively revealed to Xfm that 'A Weekend In The Sea' is the title of the forthcoming album.
This hasn't been confirmed yet, so it may well be completely inaccurate. The title might also have been misheard...'A Weekend In The City' sounds more likely to me!
edit: The title of the new album has indeed been confirmed as 'A Weekend In The City'. This is still not 100% definite though, so look out for an official announcement sometime in the future!
Fraternising with the NME There's a big news feature in this week's NME on the new album, including a first listen to four of the new tracks:
'A Prayer To The Lord': An industrial rhythm and choral sounds open this huge-sounding song, which proceeds through massed backing vocals and some highly-complicated drumming to resolve itself in a very beautiful, synth-sodden conclusion.
'Hunting For Witches': This intense song begins with the sound of someone twirling through a radio dial before Okereke announces: "I'm sitting on the roof of my home with a shotgun". The angry lyric continues: "The Daily Mail says that the enemy's among us/Stealing our women and taking our jobs".
'On': Sexy, cold and druggy, this is several steps on from 'This Modern Love', the 'Silent Alarm' song it most resembles. Okereke sings about "a certain cleanliness and clarity" before adding "you make my tongue loose" over lavish strings and feedback.
'It Started In An Afternoon': Featuring electronically treated vocals which make Okereke sound female, this song sounds as confident and epically uplifting as U2 and boasts a sparklingly catchy guitar line.
Also, in a V Festival preview article, Kele describes 'Uniform' as "huge", saying that he recorded around 100 vocals tracks for it, and that everyone else sings on it too. (Even Russell?!)
The new material is "dark, bigger and quite abrasive" with "a lot of interplay and a lot of detail"...the album is going to reward repeated listenings. The lyrical content is more personal to Kele this time around...'Where Is Home?' deals with the idea of being a second-generation black person in this country and other inspiration comes from the London bombings and the fatal stabbing of Kele's 18-year-old cousin, Christopher Alaneme, in a racist attack.
Speaking about the ambitious nature of Bloc Party's new sound, Kele says: "It's not enough for me just being a four-piece rock band. You're only limited by your imagination in this industry and when you realise that, that's when classic things can happen."
The article ends with the mention of a UK tour later this year to give people a chance to hear the new songs.
Dance Dance In recent interviews, Bloc Party have distanced themselves from the dance-punk movement which they helped to create. But...it looks like the band have re-embraced the medium of dance, albeit in a very different fashion. One of the new songs set for inclusion on album number two takes its inspiration from a dance that originated in Spain in the late 18th century...the bolero.
Originally called 'The Bolero', the title of the new song has since been changed to 'A Prayer To The Lord'. Speaking to AOL Music, Kele had this to say about the track: "It's gonna shock a lot of people. It's about dancing and passion and the main feature is stomping [and] hand claps, which is one of the signature features of the bolero dance."
To make things even more interesting, Kele was influenced by Busta Rhymes: "The initial idea came from watching the Busta Rhymes video for 'Touch It', where there are these young majorettes that are going through this kind of cheer pattern. I thought that was one of the most amazing things I'd heard, and I wanted to write a song that revolved around that sort of idea." Watch it here.
Whether the bolero will catch on across the nation's indie dancefloors remains to be seen. Maybe this will spark a revival of traditional dance throughout alternative music. Coming soon...the Kaiser Chiefs incorporate Russian Cossack dancing into their live show and Thom Yorke announces his profound love of the Venezuelan waltz. Get thee to the local ballroom!
Exclusive: Kele reveals the tracks on the new album Speaking exclusively to BlocParty.net, Kele has named the songs which are set to appear on the second Bloc album! The recording of the album has just been completed, with Kele writing and re-writing lyrics right up to the point of recording them. Rather than working on all the songs that they'd written, Bloc Party decided to concentrate on the select few which they were particularly confident about.
Here then are the 13 songs which have been completed and which will be gracing your CD players and iPods in the (hopefully) not too distant future:
'A Prayer To The Lord' 'England' (formerly 'Blue Moon') 'Hunting For Witches' (woop!) 'It Started In An Afternoon' 'Kreuzberg' 'On' (formerly 'Wet') 'Seroxat' 'Song For Clay (Disappear Here)' 'Sunday' 'Uniform' (the album centrepiece?) 'Waiting For The 7:18' 'We Were Lovers' (formerly 'Cells Shaped Like Stars') 'Where Is Home?' (formerly 'Perfect Teens')
Not all of these songs will appear on the album...the band will decide which ones to omit after the tracks have been mixed. Any songs left off are likely to appear as b-sides at some point in the future though. Check back for more updates!
Eggshell-thin fragility and trouser-flapping hugeness... ...can both be expected on the new album, according to a new post by Gordy on the 'Marshals' fan space, along with:
Matt and Gordy playing drums simultaneously
R'n'B-styled beats
Russell's guitar put through a 'Big Muff' pedal
The sound of a guitar amp being thrown off a first-storey balcony (!)
An unplayable guitar solo
Piano
Glockenspiel
Strings
My appetite for the new material has definitely been whetted by that news!
"We've pretty much nearly recorded all of the backing tracks" A Toronto Star article/interview with some more hints about the sound of the new album...
The main aim in writing, he says, was "to distance ourselves from the sound that people assumed we had" and he enthuses about basing songs around samples and sound effects. "That was always the intention, to be in a rock band that alluded to more than just the Velvet Underground or Led Zeppelin," he says. "For me, this band is about mixing ideas from contemporary dance music and contemporary R&B and electronica and somehow trying to find a happy medium because that really is a lot of the music that really inspires me. It's not your big rock bands. So with this record I'm trying to make that clearer because I'm not quite sure how clear that was on the first record."
It's this 1 thing that's got me trippin' A lot of names have been bandied about by Kele in recent interviews whilst talking about his influences for the second Bloc Party album. Here's a little guide to some of the more obscure references that have cropped up…
1. Philip Glass
Probably the most influential and commercially successful 'classical' composer alive today.
His music is usually described as 'minimalist' and is 'based on the extended repetition of brief, elegant melodic fragments that weave in and out of an aural tapestry.' Glass's repertoire includes music for opera, dance, theatre, chamber ensemble, orchestra, and film, such as the 'Einstein on the Beach' opera and soundtracks for 'The Truman Show' and 'The Hours'.
Booty-shaking, live-drum-sampling, indie-kid-pleasing song by the American R&B singer. 2005's 'Crazy In Love'.
In Kele's words: "One of my favourite songs of the last ten years. I was literally obsessed with that song. The thing about that song, what I find really inspiring about modern R&B, is it really sounds like it was assembled on the computer, the pickings of samples and building the song around that. There's a sense where it seems to be just stuck together, and that's something that I'm hoping we can try to somehow bring out in the record that we're making. Essentially, yeah, we're a live band, but I'd like to get some bricolage going on."