The Magic Numbers release new album Outsiders and UK tour

The Magic Numbers release new album Outsiders and UK tour

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The Magic Numbers release new album Outsiders and UK tour

London quartet The Magic Numbers are set to return following a four-year hiatus with the release of their new album Outsiders, available through the band’s own label Role Play Records on May 11, 2018.

Capturing The Magic Numbers with a renewed sense of purpose following several successful side and solo projects, Outsiders will be supported by a twenty-five-date tour of the UK through May and June 2018, commencing at Cardiff’s Globe on May 10 and including London’s ULU on May 17. New single, ‘Sweet Divide’, featuring a nascent grittier sensibility for the band whilst losing none of their beloved melodic flair, can be heard here: http://bit.ly/2Eq0zQ1.

“Outsiders is how we’ve always felt,” says Romeo Stodart, explaining the thinking behind the title of The Magic Numbers’ fifth album. “As a band, and as people. We’ve never really fit in. Even when things escalated quickly for the band, and we were at some awards ceremony, we always felt like we stuck out. It was the time of skinny indie boys – The Strokes, The Libertines – and then there we stood.”

That sensation of not quite belonging, is one which band members and siblings Michelle and Romeo Stodart are already familiar with. Born and raised in Trinidad, the Stodarts’ first experience of feeling like a fish out of water came at an early age, when their family moved to New York. Then, in their teens, the Stodart’s relocated again, this time to Hanwell, a suburb on the westernmost edge of London. When Romeo befriended one of the locals, Sean Gannon, London-born but of Irish descent, and the pair recruited their younger sisters, Michele Stodart on bass and Angela Gannon on keyboards in 2004, The Magic Numbers were born.

Shooting to media attention after selling out London’s 2000-capacity Kentish Town Forum solely on the strength of their ever-growing loyal following, even before their first proper single ‘Forever Lost’ was released, their Mercury Prize nominated self-titled debut The MagicNumbers (2005) entered the Top 10 and reached double-Platinum sales. Further hit singles, “Love Me Like You”, “Love’s A Game” and “I See You, You See Me” followed, along with world-wide tours with the likes of Brian Wilson, Neil Young & Crazy Horse, The Flaming Lips and Sonic Youth. They were even the first artists to walk of Top of The Pops, refusing to play after a presenter’s uncivil introduction.

Second album Those The Brokes reached No.11 in 2006, earning Gold status. There then followed a four-year interval till the third, 2010’sThe Runaway, which featured the last ever orchestrations bythe late Robert Kirby, and another four-year interval until releasing their fourth album Alias on Caroline in 2014. These delays, partly down to Romeo and Michele both becoming parents for the first time, also allowed them to explore life outside the band. Michele releasing two acclaimed solo albums, Wide-Eyed Crossing(2012) and Pieces (2016), and Romeo gigging with the likes of Damon Albarn’s Africa Express and Jimmy Webb, appearing on the most recent Spiritualized album, and producing other acts, including Ren Harvieu and Kathryn Williams.

Co-produced by Dave Lynch in Lynch’s own Echo Zoo studio in Eastbourne, work began on Outsiders in early 2017. The album, though instantly recognisable as a Magic Numbers record in its melodies, begins with a more raucous punch sonically. Theconfidence is more evident than ever before, noticeable immediately in the more bluesy, gnarly guitar sound. Songs like ‘TheKeeper’, even having a distinct T. Rex feel. I’ve been revisiting lots of early rock’n’roll and blues records, Bo Diddley, Howlin’ Wolf,” Stodart explains. “I’ve fallen madly in love with the electric guitar again for sure. I love T. Rex, and Bowie. The silver lining of thesadness of losing David Bowie was that you go back and become obsessed again. Even the way he left us was a work of art.’’

There’s also been a subtle but significant shift in Stodart’s lyrical themes. “It wasn’t a conscious decision to refrain from looking inward, but I did feel a shift creatively with the things I wanted to say and share this time around. It’s allowed me the opportunity to play with characters like Michele & I have done on “Ride Against The Wind,” which we based upon a fictitious motorcycle girl gang who’ve grown tired of conforming and toeing the line in their everyday lives.” This sense of fun is also reflected in the occasional references Romeo throws in of other people’s songs, such as name checking Kate Bush’s “Hounds Of Love”, and “Everybody’s Talkin’” by Fred Neil. “I enjoy throwing in those things in a way to see if people notice, it makes songwriting more playful.”

The lead single is the epic Neil Young meets Fleetwood Mac, “Sweet Divide”. “The couplet: “Maybe there’s no grand design/What if this is all we find?” hints at a humanist, even atheist interpretation. “No-one knows what’s to come,” says Romeo. “We’re all just fumbling in the dark, searching, sometimes it can be comforting to acknowledge that. The expansive, extraordinary “Runaways” is one of thealbum’s standout moments. “It’s a love song for the misfits in society” Romeo explains, ‘It’s saying we’re ‘scorned lovers’ ‘damaged goods’ but let’s stick together and embrace it, I think there’s a beauty in that’’

“To us, music is everything,” says Romeo. “’Rebel songs’ are about conviction, not wanting to just fall in line, putting your heart and soul into something that you believe in. I think it’s what the people colouring life outside of the lines tend to do which is how we came up with the title Outsiders. Because now is the time for people to be themselves more, and not think so much about fitting into boxes. That’s why the lyrics have a ‘together’ feel: we’re all beautiful fucked-up losers trying to make sense of it all. We’ve always been Outsiders.”

UK & Ireland Tour Dates
May 10 | Globe, Cardiff
May 12 | Wedgewood Rooms, Portsmouth
May 13 | Thekla, Bristol
May 14 | Regal Theatre, Redruth
May 16 | The Old Market, Brighton
May 17 | ULU, London
May 18 | Esquires, Bedford
May 19 | The Scholar, Leicester
May 21 | The Bullingdon, Oxford
May 22 | Colchester Arts Centre, Colchester
May 23 | West End Arts Centre, Aldershot
May 28 | Hare & Hounds, Birmingham
May 29 | Brudenell Social Club, Leeds
May 30 | Arts Centre, Pocklington
May 31 | The Trades Club, Hebden Bridge
June 2 | The Cluny, Newcastle
June 3 | The Caves, Edinburgh
June 4 | The Old Fire Station, Carlisle
June 5 | The Georgian Theatre, Stockton
June 7 | Empire, Belfast
June 8 | Cyprus Avenue, Cork, IRE
June 9 | Roisin Dubh, Galway, IRE
June 10 | Whelans, Dublin, IRE
June 12 | Arts Club, Liverpool
June 13 | Norwich Arts Centre, Norwich
June 16 | Labour Live, White Hart Lane, London

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheMagicNumbers
Twitter: https://twitter.com/themagicnumbers
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/themagicnumbers


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