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8 August 2012

Bellowhead announce new album - Broadside

Bellowhead

Bellowhead announce new album - Broadside


Bellowhead – Broadside

15th October 2012

Navigator Records via Proper Records 


Bigger, bolder, brassier and more brazen than ever, Bellowhead blaze back with their mighty new album, Broadside. 

While all things Bellowhead tend to be an event, Broadside is a positive spectacular, taking some of the wildest, most joyous and iconic songs in the richly colourful canon of the folk song tradition… and turning them upside down and inside out with the unique sense of drama and theatre, instrumental virtuosity, verve, humour and blind cheek that has seen them spearhead the new folk boom. 

Their third album Hedonism was the highest-selling independently released traditional folk album of all time, yet the new one Broadside (a title that rather cunningly melds an early form of printed song sharing with an appropriate nautical reference to firepower) is surely set to eclipse it with its thrilling arrangements and non-stop party spirit. 

Like Hedonism, Broadside is produced by the great John Leckie, who has previously done wonderful things with the Stone Roses and Radiohead; and he’s now effectively captured all the explosiveness that has established Bellowhead’s undisputed reputation as one of the planet’s most exciting live bands and replicated it in the studio. In this case that studio is Rockfield, where Freddie Mercury once held court. Indeed, at one point the massed vocals even evoke Bohemian Rhapsody and Freddie would surely have identified with the electrifying dynamism and sense of fun conjured up by this very special band. 

A couple of the tracks are based on songs that initially found common currency in the form of those printed broadsides – the gruesome romp Black Beetle Pies for one and the spooky ballad The Wife Of Usher’s Well - all death, ghosts and “earthly flesh and blood” – for another. 

Weirdness also abounds with Betsy Baker, a vigorous tale of unrequited love, while some of the most venerated songs of the folk revival – Northumbrian mining song Byker Hill, the Copper Family classic Thousands Or More, the rocking sea shanty Go My Way and The Old Dun Cow - the knockabout tale of being trapped inside a burning pub – are revived in startling ways. They may be familiar, but they’ve never sounded like this before. There’s even an irresistibly bonkers take on Lillibulero, a satirical song set to a tune attributed to Henry Purcell, on which the band flex their considerable muscles and gleefully explore their seemingly bottomless box of magic tricks, emerging with storming vocals, blitzing percussion, rampaging strings and mad, bad brass. 

Broadside, their fourth album, writes another extraordinary chapter in the story of Bellowhead, which began in 2004 when a disparate group of characters who initially knew one another from informal pub sessions thought it might be a good wheeze to pool their widely varied backgrounds, influences and talents and form a big band… just to see what happened. Even they couldn’t have imagined the results as their funny little enterprise -incorporating top-notch jazz, world, folk and classical musicians in a swathe of brass, strings, squeezebox, percussion and anything else that seemed like a good idea at the time - swiftly expanded into a gung-ho 11-piece line-up. Four albums, a glut of awards, sell-out tours and a long trail of thunderous festival appearances down the line, they’ve transported folk music into hitherto unknown territory, introducing a whole new audience to it with them.


“The greatest live act in Britain,” says BBC Radio 2’s Simon Mayo. “One of the best live bands in the UK…or anywhere,” says Jeremy Vine. And the hordes of dancing fans grinning and singing along and treating every gig as a party clearly agree. 

That party gains even more momentum with Broadside for, while some of the songs may appear graphic and brutal, this is above all, an album driven by a lust for life. And that’s a subject close to the heart of Bellowhead. 

The album will be accompanied by the band's biggest ever UK tour (6th - 24th Nov). The 19 dates include Bellowhead's first show at Roundhouse, Camden's world-renowned venue (7th Nov). 

Bellowhead’s Broadside Tour November 2012  

Tue     6th       Nov    Wolverhampton, Wulfrun Hall

Wed   7th       Nov    London, Roundhouse

Thur   8th       Nov    St Albans, Arena

Fri      9th       Nov    Norwich, Open

Sat      10th     Nov    Cambridge, Corn Exchange

Sun     11th      Nov    Southampton, Guildhall

Mon   12th     Nov    Cardiff, Coal Exchange

Tue     13th     Nov    Brighton, Dome

Wed   14th     Nov    Reading, The Hexagon

Thur   15th     Nov    Leamington, The Assembly

Fri      16th     Nov    York, Barbican

Sat      17th      Nov    Bristol, Colston Hall

Sun     18th     Nov    Salford, The Lowry

Mon   19th     Nov    Gateshead, The Sage

Tue     20th    Nov    Inverness, The Ironworks

Wed   21st      Nov    Edinburgh, The Queen’s Hall

Thu     22nd    Nov    Bradford, St George’s Hall

Fri      23rd     Nov    Lincoln, Engine Shed

Sat      24th     Nov    Derby, Assembly Rooms 

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