The Manchester-based IDM producer who puts zero Faith In Strangers. New post time!

Pictured: Cover Art for “Never The Right Time” (Released on April 16th, 2021) (via Modern Love Records)
Good Morning to you – My name is Jacob Braybrooke, and it’s finally time again for me to get typing up with today’s track on the blog, as always, because it’s my day-to-day pleasure to write up about a different piece of music every day! This week’s new release schedule is a bit more subdued than usual for me, with nothing that immediately strikes a great deal of familiarity with me. Your options include the first new album from The Offspring in nearly a decade, the sixth studio album from unique Dublin-born multi-instrumentalist Imelda May, and also the tribalism-centric second studio release from the cult Michaigan band Great Van Fleet, who have drummed up some buzz overseas. However, the name that I am going to focus on today is Andy Stott, who rings a small bell with me because I enjoyed what he did with ethereal textures and haunting percussion on 2014’s ‘Faith In Strangers’. I haven’t kept tabs on him much since then, but the Manchester-based producer of Dub and Techno music has remained prolific, releasing five long-player albums on the Modern Love label. The cerebral new album was reportedly finished last year, but after dealing with a heavy set of personal issues, no doubt, worsened by the isolated nature of the Covid-19 pandemic, he decided to re-develop the record into one that he describes as a “kind of inner-world sadness trip”, and it follows up 2019’s double EP release of slow and raw ambient tunes, ‘It Should Be Us’. Check out the lead single ‘Hard To Tell’, with vocals from Stott’s Piano teacher and frequent collaborator, Alison Skidmore, below.
The Techno reformist has always been credited as a musician whose music draws from a snapshot of where he feels he stands creatively, functioning as a reflective spearhead of whatever curiosities have been nagging his mind persistently, and he says of the new release, “Definitely in the past, my productions were organic, quite dense and thick. There was something really false and thin and delicate about these new sounds”, adding, “At the same time, there was something really beautiful about it and it sparked my interest. It triggered these other things that I had heard in my mind and I realized I could get the same vibe with that sound”, to hint at the possible new music directions. Whereas ‘Faith In Strangers’ was a little more beat-oriented and strangely suited for a wind-down scene at a dark and dingy nightclub, his latest crawls towards more Dark Ambient and interior sounds. The opening feels reminiscent of a Nigerian or Taiko drum beat, building a sense of ‘Things are not as they seem’ before a polished, twangy bass guitar riff enters the scene. The vocals of “Don’t have to feel, No need to fight” are very depressive and grim, with washing waves of aching Synth melodies trickling their way into the fray. The vocals of “Sharp like a needle, This life I’ve bought” and “Street lights and cars gleam/Ferociously” sit uncomfortably and disorientingly in the mix, but the instrumental bed effects offer enough of a hint at Stott’s more melodic past work on ‘Faith In Strangers’ to feel strangely comforting at points, and act like an open acknowledgement of misery and pain, and a shoulder to cry on. We simply don’t hear a great amount of music about things like chaos and destruction these days, and ‘Hard To Tell’ also reminds me of The Future Sound Of London’s ‘Dead Cities’ from 1996 with it’s slow-building progression and it’s slightly Cinematic undertones, which makes me picture some post-apocalyptic imagery of urban decay. I think the track relies on a little co-operation from the listener to use ‘Theatre Of The Mind’ to get the strongest effect from this tune, and it’s probably not something that you would just slip on at some house party, but there’s an excellent balance of weight and light to the proceedings. If you are a listener like me who likes to just indulge in the sadness at times for melancholy therapy, however, this works pretty well for that situation. Dreary and Bleak – but in the most hauntingly solid way.

Pictured: Andy Stott at the live “Modern Love Showcase” (2014) (Photo via Detroit Metro Times)
That’s all for now – I’ll leave you to enjoy your weekend, or grieve along to this, either way, enjoy what you do. My first new Scuzz Sunday featured post in two weeks will arrive in two days’ time with style. Before then, however, I’ll be back tomorrow, for the second appearance on the blog from a slightly off-the-radar Folk multi-instrumentalist, signed to the Secretly Canadian indie label, who has released her latest single as an ode to the “Lost Musician” that is Nick Drake. If you really liked what you just read, why not follow the blog to get notified when every new daily post is up and why not like the Facebook page here?: https://www.facebook.com/OneTrackAtATime/







