Monday 15 August 2011

Butcher Boy - new album and single on Damaged Goods


HELPING HANDS (CD/LP) - 29 August
IMPERIAL (7"/digital single) - 22 August
Damaged Goods Records

Short video for title track "Helping Hands" here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F0yxAOcYvWc


New Damaged Goods signings Butcher Boy release their third album Helping Hands, with this single "Imperial" out a week before on 7” (a limited edition of 500 copies) and digital. The Glasgow-based 7-piece have produced yet another momentous album, weaving rich storytelling and exquisite arrangements, allowing the strength of their songwriting to shine through.

Creating poetic, delightful indie-pop tinged folk, Helping Hands leans towards well crafted melodies and allows the music to convey the emotion rather than simply relying on John Blain Hunt's tenderly delivered off-kilter poetry. Drawing inspiration from their native Glasgow, the album follows the previous two records Profit in Your Poetry and React or Die as the completion of a trilogy of sorts. Where the first two focused on childhood and growing up, Helping Hands is more about moving out and moving onwards. Using a lush mélange of strings, guitars and piano arrangements, they have also incorporated electronica on this record, with Moog synthesizers lacing the cello on “Whistle And I’ll Come To You” and a classic Roland CR-78 drum machine introducing “Imperial”.

Beginning in its current form in 2005, Butcher Boy released Profit in Your Poetry in 2007 to a flurry of press activity, including a First Sight Feature in The Guardian and a 4/5 review in Uncut. Second release React Or Die (2009) made even more of an impact, The Times’ Peter Paphides intimating that the album was as important as any of those released by The Smiths or Belle and Sebastian in his 5/5 review. The album also received a 5/5 review from The Sunday Telegraph and scores of 9/10 from Drowned in Sound and 8/10 in the NME. The amount of critical acclaim garnered for their first two albums were surely heralding in a significant band for our time - but no-one was more shocked than the band themselves when React Or Die was voted one of The Times’ top 100 albums of the 2000s.

So how then, did a band declared one of the best in Britain, end up without a label? They had completed Helping Hands by late 2010 and suddenly found themselves without anyone to put it out. Their previous label How Does It Feel To Be Loved had moved away from releasing records to focus on club nights and events, so the band had to shop the record around. In a stroke of luck, they were picked up by the iconic Damaged Goods label (home to Billy Childish, Holly Golightly, Piney Gir).


PRESS QUOTES

“Like those of Tindersticks and The Chameleons, Hunt's intelligent, unshowy songs are often so intimate you feel privileged simply to be listening to them.” METRO

“Regret, giro-funded couplets, sensual ambiguity – it’s all here, resurrecting a great British genre” UNCUT

“studded with literate, finely etched pop moments that could easily fill Belle & Sebastian's collective shoes” Q

“unabashed west-end indie - romantic, delicate, literate and sweetly melodic”
THE SCOTSMAN


http://www.butcher-boy.co.uk/
http://damagedgoods.co.uk/band/?c=Butcher-Boy

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