• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • RSS
June 7, Sunday, 2026
  • Login
CELEBRITY LAND!
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Celebrity Land
No Result
View All Result
Home Music

My New Band Believe review – beautiful ideas burst from ex-Black Midi man’s lovable debut album | Pop and rock

Story Center by Story Center
April 9, 2026
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0
My New Band Believe review – beautiful ideas burst from ex-Black Midi man’s lovable debut album | Pop and rock

In the middle of Hellfire, the final album by British art-rockers Black Midi, lurked a song called Still. It was easy to overlook. As you may recall, Hellfire was a rock opera that – even by the standards of rock operas, seldom the first place to look for a linear, elevator-pitch-friendly plot – made no sense whatsoever: there was some business about a boxing match, an actor who exploded on stage, and a set of army recruits with names such as Tristan Bongo and Mrs Gonorrhoea. It was admittedly difficult to pay attention to the narrative, distracted as one was by the sound of Black Midi continually doing their nut in their traditionally maximalist style: scrabbly riffs, jagged chords, free-blowing sax, bursts of noise, cocktail jazz interludes, Beefheartian rhythms, bursts of accordion, the sound of the kitchen sink being dragged into the studio etc. Amid all that, what price a sweetly lambent acoustic track, with a little country and a dab of bucolic Canterbury prog in its DNA, sung not by frontman Geordie Greep in one of his apparently fathomless array of funny voices, but by bassist Cameron Picton, a man possessed of an understated, guileless vocal style?

RELATED POSTS

Trump posts video of AI-generated characters from around the world chanting, ‘They love Donald Trump’

Muse’s new song revives a feeling longtime fans have missed

Public Opinion release new music video for ‘When Kevin Gets Free

Cover art for My New Band Believe. Photograph: Rough Trade Records

It’s hard not to think of Still when considering Picton’s first post-Black Midi album as My New Band Believe, recorded with a host of left-field and improv-friendly musicians, among them veteran drummer Steve Noble, once of skronky 80s post-punk hellraisers Rip Rig + Panic. While Greep’s 2024 solo debut The New Sound offered the full sonic smorgasbord familiar to Black Midi fans – all the sudden leaps from samba to heavy riffing and Zappa-ish jazz-rock your heart might desire – My New Band Believe’s eponymous debut could be read as an album that takes Still as its starting point.

Its sound is entirely acoustic, the live-sounding recordings of fingerpicked guitar, double bass, piano and percussion augmented by string arrangements. Its lyrics largely abandon the flights of fancy that characterised his old band’s oeuvre in favour of a more direct approach. There’s definitely a hint of Black Midi’s penchant for the grotesque in the revenge fantasy of opener Target Practice – “If we see you on a spike with holes for your eyes / we’ll just keep practising our aim” – but more often they alight on more prosaic topics. Love Story conjures up an apparently earnest vision of lost domestic contentment – a now-split couple humming along to the radio while cooking dinner, conjured with the aid of sound effects – while Opposite Teacher ruminates on fatherhood.

Even so, from the moment that the arrangement turns dissonant on second track In the Blink of an Eye, you’re reminded that understated is very much a relative term. If My New Band Believe take a more subtle tack – and seem noticeably more concerned with melodies – than Black Midi, they still deal in songs that are episodic and strange.

It feels telling that Picton initially approached Van Dyke Parks to orchestrate them, even if the co-author of the Beach Boys’ legendary Smile proved sadly out of his price range: if My New Band Believe is less kaleidoscopic in stylistic range, there’s something of the fidgety restlessness of Parks’s lauded 1967 album Song Cycle in the songs’ unexpected key changes and shifts in mood and pace.

Over the course of its eight minutes, Heart of Darkness moves between a Pentangle-esque blend of folky guitar and jazzy drums, a kind of breezy acoustic soft rock and a sparse, ominous and seemingly improvised coda of guitar harmonics and a disconcerting sound that could be feedback or strings. Actress is filled with sweet melodies, again in a folk/jazz vein, but it’s also full of pregnant pauses, tempo changes and surges in volume: it doesn’t so much end as peter out, as if everyone concerned has exhausted themselves in the process of performing it.

ADVERTISEMENT

That the album doesn’t exhaust the listener – as Black Midi were wont to do – might be due to its constant sense of movement being contained by the instrumentation, and to the smoothness of its continual transitions. The result is an album that feels less distant, less inclined to showboating, easier to love – rather than merely admire – than Picton’s previous work, without ever feeling like it’s pandering to the listener. It’s admirably unbound by things such as standardised song structure, feels difficult to accurately pigeonhole and comes teeming with musical ideas from out of the ordinary – but it feels like it’s wearing its intelligence a little more lightly than its author once did, which might be the smartest move of all.

This week Alexis listened to

Beth Orton – The Ground Above
There’s a sense that Beth Orton is an undervalued artist, precisely because she has never let her quality control dip for thirtysomething years, a point proved by The Ground Above’s racked expansiveness.

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.theguardian.com ’

Story Center

Story Center

Related Posts

Another of the AI-generated still images President Trump shared on Truth Social on Saturday, showing a man with gold teeth spelling Trump.
Music

Trump posts video of AI-generated characters from around the world chanting, ‘They love Donald Trump’

June 7, 2026
Muse’s new song revives a feeling longtime fans have missed
Music

Muse’s new song revives a feeling longtime fans have missed

June 7, 2026
Public Opinion 2026-1
Music

Public Opinion release new music video for ‘When Kevin Gets Free

June 7, 2026
Sabina Beyli releases new music video for 'Bones'
Music

Sabina Beyli releases new music video for ‘Bones’

June 7, 2026
#CMAFest26 | Erin Kinsey talks women in country music and teaming up with Dylan Marlowe on her latest hit
Music

#CMAFest26 | Erin Kinsey talks women in country music and teaming up with Dylan Marlowe on her latest hit

June 7, 2026
Eva Under Fire release new song 'The Words You Say'
Music

Eva Under Fire release new song ‘The Words You Say’

June 7, 2026
Next Post
An extreme close-up photograph of shimmering, glittering sequins in a variety of vibrant colors, capturing the luxurious, high-fashion aesthetic of the music industry.

Top Artists Headline New Music Friday Releases on April 10

Joey Lawrence and wife Samantha welcome their second baby together.Credit: Joey Lawrence/Instagram

Joey Lawrence and Wife Samantha Cope Welcome Their Second Baby, His Fourth, Over a Year After Reconciliation

Recommended Stories

Sisters Hannah (28) and Laura Dadson (25) at home in Wellesbourne, Warwickshire

Vicky and Kai’s Taylor Swift tango brings the house down

November 8, 2025
Michael Wacha blanks A's for 6 innings in Royals' win - Field Level Media - Professional sports content solutions

Michael Wacha blanks A’s for 6 innings in Royals’ win – Field Level Media – Professional sports content solutions

September 28, 2025
Yahoo entertainment home

When Does Season 2 of ‘High Potential’ Come Out? ‘High Potential’ ABC Return Date

August 13, 2025
Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Ads

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

Celebrities You Might Not Know Are Tony Winners

Celebrities You Might Not Know Are Tony Winners

June 7, 2026
FUN 1-Year Stock Price Chart

How Six Flags’ Expanded Membership Model At Six Flags Entertainment (FUN) Has Changed Its Investment Story

June 7, 2026
Late Lunch ,Gossip With Mama Mami ☕ Mini Vlog🌸 #minivlog #youtubeshorts #family #RainyDays #explore

Late Lunch ,Gossip With Mama Mami ☕ Mini Vlog🌸 #minivlog #youtubeshorts #family #RainyDays #explore

June 7, 2026

Categories

  • Artists
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Horoscopes
  • Music
  • Royalty
  • Videos

Contact Us

  • Privacy & Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2020 Celebrity.Land

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty

© 2020 Celebrity.Land