Description
Vinyl Records London are on cloud nine, we are now spinning in a brand new copy in LP Vinyl from Lucky Soul Lucky Soul are back today with stunning new single No Ti Amo the first from their forthcoming third record, entitled Hard Lines, which will see a release on August 11th on Crystal Paris Records. The band have also been confirmed for a main stage slot at this years Indietracks Festival, with news of further live plans and headline shows having previously sold out London039s Lexington, Bush Hall, 100 Club and more expected in the coming weeks. No Ti Amo is an unexpected but effortlessly assured return for Lucky Soul unfurling slowly over seven, sunkissed minutes, its as much a loveletter to Tango In The Night, Nile Rogers or Italo disco 12s as it is rooted in the lessexotic realities of modern South London life in which the record was meticulously selfproduced. From its pizzicato strings to looped synth riff, No Ti Amo is a perfect reintroduction to a band who seem intent on trying something new, and also something wholly for themselves the results feel escapist, romantic, and creatively rejuvenated. Its been seven long years since Lucky Souls critically acclaimed second album, A Coming Of Age, and a time personally, musically, culturally of oftenextreme change. The initial catalyst for the bands hiatus came when playing Glastonbury, where singer Ali Howard stoically battled the early stages of morning sickness for the daughter she would go on to have with the bands lead songwriter, Andrew Laidlaw. Taking time out to focus on their families, the band would reunite occasionally in the studio, setting no deadlines or expectations but indulging in the sheer treat of making music again which, this time, quickly moved away from the Motown meets Morrissey template of their earlier records for a vintage but contemporary mix of disco, protestsoul and electronica from Larry Levan and early Madonna to Marvin Gaye, The Bee Gees, Altered Images and Daft Punk. Disco is night music, but even the days are dark now, writes Andrew. I think were going through the same loss of optimism as in the 70s, so it feels natural to react against the coldness of the times with the warmth of disco. Whilst the surfaces may shimmer, at its heart Hard Lines is a record of frustration, anger, and through it all hope, written in response to a world which your new family must attempt to navigate. Soaring torchsong Hurts Like A Bee Sting, for instance, was composed shortly after the Tories got back into power in 2010, and completed to the backdrop of Brexit in 2016 the tougher, afrobeatfunk of Livin On a Question Mark, meanwhile, began life as the riot police marched through Camberwell in 2011, and discusses a timeless sense of disillusionment. Yet here are songs, too, of staying together, and pulling the people that matter close to you see the sultry, progressivelystormy soundscapes of One Touch, or the bittersweet pop rush of Too Much. Its slowbuild conception may have led many to assume that Lucky Soul had gone their separate ways, but the steely determination, hardwon patience and selfdescribed obsession of Laidlaws to get the band together again enriches the textured but instantlyinfectious feel to Hard Lines. Seeing the conkers fall every year, he says now, I said to myself this needs to finish. In the end it took me to some really dark places of creative psychosis and I had to be threatened to finish it But the last line on the record is keep it together, so there is hope too and a belief that love can save us. I guess becoming a parent also makes you think harder about the future. Quite what that future holds for any of us may still be uncertain, but Hard Lines suggests that its one with Lucky Soul back in it, right where they belong.