The Heavy North release World Class second album ‘Delta Shakedown’
Liverpool’s finest The Heavy North have just released one of the best albums of 2023 and it’s called ‘Delta Shakedown’. In fact that’s a bit of an understatement! They’ve just released one of the best albums of the past decade! Possibly even the past thirty years? All in good time this will tell I’m sure.
I first heard of The Heavy North when their debut album ‘Electric Soul Machine’ Dropped last year and I was instantly sucked into their riffed up blues rock world. I’m a sucker for great music! What they created on that record was brilliant. On their latest offering they have just gone and created a monster! The best kind of monster ever imaginable! This is one of the best records I’ve heard in my entire life let alone the past decade! It’s a big statement I know, but it is what it is. This record is something special.
From the very first riff of the opening track ‘Delta Shakedown’ I’m instantly transported back into The Heavy North world I love so much! I’m back travelling with them on this laid back, groovy journey in my car! There are so many great influences shining through on this record! The Doors, Thirteen Floor Elevators, The Black Angels, The Eagles, Cream, The list goes on! Its truer to blues as it could possibly be.
With all these great influences shining through they still manage to create something completely original that sounds how only The Heavy North can sound. This is a master craft of songwriting and a band at the very top of their game. It oozes class and experience.
This isn’t a record a young band in their twenties can just make off the cuff! This takes years of crafting your art over time. This isn’t a band making singles for Spotify! This is a band who really understand and appreciate the art of making a real record together! An art that’s lost on 99% of young band these days! I really hope some younger bands use this to educate themselves and one day we get that back!
If I had to pick one album to take with me to the desert today it would be ‘Delta Shakedown’. This is my number one contender for album of the year by far.
As strong as the singles ‘Where Are You Now’ and ‘Round Again’ are you really have to listen to the list the way it’s supposed to be listened to! As a record in full from beginning to end. Then you will truly understand just how great this band are!
Jose Ibanez has proven he’s one of the best producers in the business. The production is world class. In 30 years time we will be all able to look back and realise just how great this record is.
‘Delta Shakedown’ is OUT NOW on 12” gatefold colour vinyl, CD and all download and streaming platforms. Visit www.theheavynorth.com for more information.
Tickets for The Heavy North’s Camp and Furnace show on Friday 1st December are ON SALE NOW. Visit www.theheavynorth.com for more information.
Scott Marsden #MusicSceneWales @MusicSceneWales musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com
In the second of an exciting new series for Music Scene Wales, ThisIsTheMusicrecommends six must listen to tracks from September 2023
September was a fantastic month for the release of new music for the British guitar scene and really showcased the quality of bands and solo artists on show! It was a tough choice, but here are my six recommendations from September.
The Heavy North – Give A Little Love
A surprise release from the Liverpool 6 piece and what a great surprise it was!! The bands 3rd single from their forthcoming second album “Delta Shakedown”, is Melodic and majestic, with an anthemic chorus that’s full of positivity. Roll on album number 2!!
Northern Hospitality- Runaway Like Me
Scintillating second single from Hartlepool that well and truly knocks the door off of its hinges. The opening guitar riff is full of intent, that screams attitude and is packed full of energy. The snarling vocal has a hint of Liam Gallagher about. In just two singles Northern Hospitality have shown they are the real deal.
Subterrania- Shine
Hailing from South Wales, Subterrania have established themselves as one of the most exciting bands around. Shine is an effortless anthem, that most bands long to write, full of swagger and soaring stadium ready guitar solos. With a battle of the bands semi final (11 October at Bunkhouse) incoming, Subterrania are a band set to be on everyone’s lips
Maystones- High Society
Hertfordshire 5-piece Maystones have thrown everything into their first single of 2023. From huge synths to chugging bass lines and melodic guitars, Maystones have well and truly taken things up and notch with their sound. Supporting The Kairos at London’s iconic Water Rats on October 6th
Shambolics – Never Be Mine
2023 has been a great year for Shambolics. They’ve released their debut EP U Serious Boi, played their biggest headline gig to data at Glasgow Garage and supported The View on a string of dates becoming their new favourite band in the process. Never Be Mine is a high-octane foot stomper of a track and features the bands trademark vocal harmonies. With their debut album set for release in next year, their time is now… Mon the shams!!
Come At The King – Old Town Fighter
If garage rock is your thing, then look no further than Come At The King who released their riotous and instantly addictive rocknroll debut album Overgrown,which is an album of the year contender.Old Town Fighter is a foot stomping anthem packed full of drive, swagger and is sure to be stuck in your head.
The Heavy North reveal ‘surprise’ new single Give A Little Love ahead of second album release
Liverpool-based blues rock band The Heavy North have released their latest single ‘Give A Little Love’ on all download and streaming platforms.
‘Give A Little Love’ is the third single taken from The Heavy North’s much-anticipated second album ‘Delta Shakedown’ expected next month and follows the band’s earlier releases ‘Where Are You Now?’ and ‘Round Again’.
Earlier this year the scouse six-piece embarked on a UK headline tour before traveling to Spain and Gibraltar for their first overseas shows of the year.
More recently, the band appeared at Kendal Calling Festival in the Lake District and have picked up consecutive radio plays on BBC Radio 2’s Rock Show, Radio X, BBC Introducing and Amazing Radio.
Discussing the meaning behind the band’s new single, The Heavy North lead singer Kenny Stuart said, “Give A Little Love is a song about finding the positives in life and not focusing on the negatives all of the time”.
“It’s a song for anyone who’s feeling bogged down and needs reminding of the good things, even when they’re difficult to find” added Kenny. “I suppose the message behind ‘Give A Little Love’ is to pick yourself up, dust yourself off and go again.”
‘Give A Little Love’ was recorded, mixed, and produced by Jose Ibanez at 3rd Planet Recording Studio, Liverpool and mastered by Martin Kuchta at Roughgrain Mastering.
To coincide with the upcoming album release in October the band have announced two intimate in-store album shows at Wax and Beans Records in Bury, Greater Manchester (Fri 20th) and Jacaranda Records in Liverpool (Sun 22nd).
The Heavy North are also gearing up for their biggest headline show to date at Liverpool’s Camp and Furnace on Friday 1st December where they will be performing as a 12-piece band, plus special guest singer-songwriter and guitarist Jay Lewis (Cast, The Zutons, The La’s, Cracatila).
‘Give A Little Love’ is OUT NOW on all download and streaming platforms.
The Heavy North’s second album ‘Delta Shakedown’ is out Friday 20th October. Visit www.theheavynorth.com for more information.
Is it even possible for a band to keep getting better with each release? For The Heavy North it is! If these two singles are anything to go by then we’re in for a treat. A sign of exciting things to come.
Six-piece rock band The Heavy North have announce their next single ‘Round Again’ is out now ahead of the band’s second album ‘Delta Shakedown’ expected later this year.
‘Round Again’ marks the second single from The Heavy North’s upcoming album following the release of ‘Where Are You Now?’ back in March which was featured on BBC Radio 2’s The Rock Show with legendary Johnnie Walker as well as BBC Introducing and Radio X.
Discussing the meaning behind the new single ‘Round Again’ The Heavy North frontman Kenny Stuart said “It’s a song about being complacent with day-to-day routines whilst longing for a wilder, more carefree time”.
“Round Again is also a response to our last single ‘Where Are You Now?’ which was about wondering what people from our past are up to now, but with this time we’re reflecting on our own circumstances and situations”.
The band have just played their first overseas show before returning to the UK to play the band’s first major festival show at Kendal Calling Festival on Saturday 29th July.
Earlier this year the band also announced their biggest headline show to date at Liverpool’s Camp and Furnace on Friday 1st December 2023. The huge hometown show follows The Heavy North’s sold out 500-capacity Arts Club show last year where the band performed their debut album Electric Soul Machine from start to finish, accompanied by a 12-piece band featuring a string quartet, a brass section and backing vocalists.
The Heavy North’s brand new single ‘Round Again’ is available on all download and streaming platforms now.
Delta Shakedown is available to pre-order now on 12” gatefold vinyl (blue or red colour disc) exclusively from Wax and Beans Records in Bury.
Holy Coves’ Welsh, singer songwriter Scott Marsden sits down with some of his favourite bands and artists on the independent music scene to discuss their story and how they got started, the independent music scene in general and their future plans, for the Music Scene Wales’ independent music series. So far the series has included conversations with Welsh band The Now, English bands Skylights, The Shed Project and The Heavy North and Scottish band Dictator. You can read each conversation below.
Holy Coves singer-songwriter Scott Marsden sits down with Kenny Stuart from The Heavy North to talk about how they got started, the new single and the independent music scene.
Kenny – Hi Scott, I’m Kenny, the lead singer from The Heavy North.
Scott – Hi Kenny, I hear you have a new single out.
Kenny – Yeah, ‘Where Are You Now’ is available now on all streaming platforms.
Scott – Are you planning a new record, is this single to lead on to a new record?
Kenny – This is the first single from our second album that we’re looking to release later this year and it’s accompanied by a music video.
Scott – The single is great, the music video too.
Kenny – We’re hoping to release the album later on in the year, around December time.
Scott – Cool, it sounds like a new direction.
Kenny – It’s a bit different from the album to be honest. the way I describe the song is it’s the Cream of the Stoneage Because it’s got elements of Eric Clapton’s The Cream Of Clapton and Queens Of The Stoneage kind of vibe.
Scott – That’s a good explanation. I’m a huge Queens Of The Stoneage fan. You can’t go wrong with everything he’s done from Kyuss to everything he’s ever done hooking up with other artists.
Kenny – Well I particularly like the stuff he did with Iggy Pop. The album before last, he had the drummer from the Arctic Monkeys, a bit of a super group, really good.
Scott – I was following him from his Kyuss days and onto Queens Of The Stoneage and everything he’s done with all these other artists. He does a lot of producing as well, produced a lot of records. Yeah you can’t go wrong, Queens Of The Stoneage are great. I’m trying to think now….The Heavy North, I was aware of you guys just before you released your record. I came back to music and I was checking out the independent scene, I was connecting and reconnecting with people and your record jumped out to me straight away, as soon as I heard your music I thought I really dig these. I was trying to work out what era your from, I’ve just turned forty, I think your a few years younger than me, am I right?
Kenny – yeah, your right.
Scott – I was playing a lot in Liverpool from 2005 onwards. Were you in any other bands before The Heavy North?
Kenny – Yeah we played with you.
Scott – I was thinking the same.
Kenny – I had a group called Jacobi
Scott – You know what? We have played gigs with you.
Kenny – In the Liverpool Uni or somewhere like that?
Scott – We played in the Carling Academy, it was called at the time, Liverpool Uni and the Olympia, we played most of the places in Liverpool and I remember your band. Was there any other members from The Heavy North in Jacobi or was it just you?
Kenny – Yeah Jose and Jack.
Scott – Oh wow, Do you still have music online from Jacobi?
Kenny – Yeah if you go on Youtube you’ll probably find a couple of bits. You’ll find an earlier version of ‘To The Wind I Go’ and I’ve got short hair!
Scott – I was saying this in another interview, when I’ve reconnected with the music scene I found that I usually know them or I’ve played gigs with them before. And when I’ve seen you in your videos and what your doing with The Heavy North I recognised you. So Jacobi has moved on to The Heavy North. How did The Heavy North come about?
Kenny – The thing is you probably know yourself from being in a band a long time, musicians are a funny bunch, you get a lot of people letting you down and it’s really hard when your in a band you become best friends with everyone and you expect everyone to be as committed as you are and when people take the piss or can’t commit as much as you want them to you just get a bit fed up, and I think with Jacobi it was like a revolving doorway we’d had that many members come and go, always fucking bass players.
Scott – Ha! Yes, bass players and drummers we always found that with.
Kenny – Yeah so we had that many people coming and going we thought lets just have a fresh start, me and Jose we just knew we had each others backs, we always knew we could rely on each other to get a new project started and especially with Jose being a producer, he’s got his own studio, we always were able to do something musically. I bumped into Steve the keys player, I was in my first ever band when I was like 18 and I was always trying to get him back in the fold because he was reliable, that’s the kind of people you want around you. Literally every couple of months when we lost a member it would be ‘Ste, what are you upto? Any chance you want to come for a jam’ I was probably like a horrible ex bird! ‘Ste, where are you? I miss you!’ So I was at my friends wedding at the time I knew Ste had been in a band called The Wicked Whispers and they were doing really well they’d been on tour with The Lightening Seeds and maybe even Space, you know been all over the place, had quite a good reputation. I got talking to him at my friends wedding and it was around three in the morning and everyone was pretty drunk and I was like ‘I’ve been trying to get you to have a jam with me for ages, where have you been?’ Kind of thing and he was like ‘Well you know what I’m actually up for it because I’ve just left my band.’
Scott – Timing! Timing is everything.
Kenny – So I was explaining to him about the studio with Jose and stuff and he said it was sound and to just text him in a couple of days, so I sent him a message and got him down. Jose knew Mark from session working in the studio which was great. If you spoke to Mark he’s quite unassuming, he is the funniest person you will ever meet, he just says stuff quietly and subtly, hes absolutely hilarious.
Scott – Sometimes that’s what you need, not someone full on and in your face, someone subtle and clever especially when your on tour.
Kenny – Definitely. When we were on tour I found myself tearing up with anything he would be coming back with.
Scott – So there’s six members in your band.
Kenny – Yeah there is now, Jack joined last January so basically we knew Jack from our Jacobi days and what happened with Jack was he had kids, he had a family and he started going back to college or uni so it was difficult for him to be able to commit, so we had a chat and what come about was when your in a position to play again there will always be a spot here with us. It was great that we could have those chats because it was a bit of a wrench for him to go from Jacobi but it wasn’t fair on him and it wasn’t fair on us either, so yeah it’s great that he’s with us now. There’s the bass player Andy, so me and Andy used to work together and he had been in a couple of previous bands and he was a fan of Jacobi, he was a good lad, a guitarist and seemed up for it. So we give him a crack and he took it and ran with it, so yeah we couldn’t be happier.
Scott – I can relate to that, it’s a difficult situation to put someone in sometimes if your asking a guitarist to come in and play bass, they might feel like fuck you i’m a lead guitarist or a frontman so it’s good you could do that. I do remember Jacobi. I’m definitely sure we’ve played together, I was in a band called The Lizzies and then Holy Coves after that and I do remember playing something in the Uni but I also remember playing something in the 02 or it might have even been The Carling Academy at the time. Even a festival in the Emporium.
Kenny – There was lots of gigs!
Scott – There was, but I vaguely remember half of it because it was a bit of a mad time for me then. Must be difficult to be in a band with six members for time commitments, it’s hard enough having four, working everything around eachother.
Kenny – Well we’re really lucky because Ste our keys player as well as being our keys player he’s really organised and he’s one of the main reasons why we’re doing so well because he’s the person behind all our social media and always making sure we’ve got content, he organises us really well. We’ve got a band calendar, if one of us can’t make it we all know well in advance. Were also at the point now where we all know what were doing, it’s not like if we miss a rehearsal it’s the end of the world. For example this album we’re working on at the minute, we’re only in the studio one day a week and we’ve been recording for about three or four months and that’s without actually being in the live room jamming, that’s just from us bouncing ideas off eachother, so we’re very efficient. When songs are done we get in the studio and blast them out. Prior to our January gig we had four months off and maybe two rehearsals and we were just back on it.
Scott – It’s all about being professional, your obviously all professional musicians and that helps. When people leave your band it’s like when a relationship ends, it’s like your missus has left you, it hurts that much and there’s only so much you can take of that so it’s good when your all professional. I loved your last record Electric Soul Machine, but did you do an EP aswell before that? Was that released or was it just as an EP to sell?
Kenny – We released that aswell. It’s probably got my favourite Heavy North song on it, Lying To Yourself. As a writer I feel that it’s pretty accomplished, one of those where you just wouldn’t change anything about it. You probably know yourself when you’ve written a song and its been out for a while and you hear it over and over again you can think I’d probably do that a bit different. But Lying To Yourself has never made me think twice about anything.
Scott – Yeah I know exactly what you mean. So your all from Liverpool? Except Jose, He’s from Granada isn’t he?
Kenny – To be fair he’s practically a Scouser, he’s lived here for such a long time. He calls himself a Spouser, half Spanish, half Scouse!
Scott – And Jose has got the studio you all record at, so he produces all your music?
Kenny – Yeah, between us all we work through everything, he also does mixes. He’s really good, well that’s his job aswell, he’s a Pharmacist and a Record Producer!
Scott – Bit of a Breaking Bad element there with blues and rock and roll, that’s great!
Kenny – He’s far too straight for any of that!
Scott – Brilliant! So what’s the name of the studio?
Kenny – Third Planet.
Scott – And this is where you make all your music?
Kenny – Yeah it’s on the Liverpool Dock road, it’s where we do all our recording. It’s great, couldn’t be luckier really.
Scott – I wouldn’t mind checking that studio out. Because it’s a part of his job does he record other bands?
Kenny – Yeah he does.
Scott – So what you been upto with gigs recently? You’ve played a few gigs this year already.
Kenny – Yeah we’ve done London, Shoreditch, Blackpool and Liverpool. We got back out there for Independent Venue Week. It was really good.
Scott – It’s a good time to get out and support it aswell. There’s not many people with money to spare these days, it’s a difficult time.
Kenny – I find it really humbling especially when you’ve got that many people spending the money to come see you, especially buying t-shirts and CDs. The fact that they’re even taking the time to listen to you, I still find it baffling.
Scott – It’s amazing when you think about it, you record some music and you want people to listen to your music and then they’re buying your records and buying your merch, buying tickets to watch your gigs, it’s a really nice position to be in, really humbling like you said. Makes you feel proud of how well the records done.
Kenny – So much, it’s strange, I still try to get my head around it at times. having played in bands for such a long time this has by far been the most successful. It seems like we’ve got a little community of people who are really into us and it’s so great because you see them then at your gigs and go have a bevvy with them and a chat. Alot of them are like our friends now.
Scott – I think that’s important, I remember touring years ago I would never really get to speak to anyone, would speak to the other bands, have a laugh with them, few beers and that. But the interaction thing now with social media, you’ve got to interact with your fans these days, I think there’s no excuse for bands especially in independent music, get to know your fans especially when they’ve spent money and made the effort to come and see you. Things have changed, I feel like independent music is thriving at the moment.
Kenny – Definitely, it’s just about having manners as far as I’m concerned. They’re spending their money and making time to come see you, the least you can do is say hello. Anyone can come and approach me.
Scott – Years ago I never did the social media thing I used to stay away from all that, but when I came back to music a few years ago I thought I’d do things on my terms, my way, I’m going to start my own label, I’m going to get a decent team around us, people who believe in the music but also I’m going to interact and do social media, get to know people, things that I didn’t do before. The tools are there to be used. There’s a huge underground independent scene especially on Twitter there is so much going there. Your manager Dan, he does alot for independent music. You guys pretty much do everything on your own terms aswell, that’s what I like about you, I could tell just by listening to your music. Real music for real people.
Kenny – That’s what we try to do, it’s nice to be able to put what you want on and luckily for us we’ve never fallen short in terms of songs. The way we work it’s a constant stream.
Scott – You can see your consistent with your writing.
Kenny – It’s got to the point where we’ve got to this second album and we will have to work out what were going to put on it because we’ve got too many tunes. There’s going to be some absolute stormers on the new album. Really good ones.
Scott – That’s good, you should believe in that. You guys have been doing it for a long time so you get to the point where you get some success, you’ve had decent radio, alot of these bands don’t get even the BBC, You’ve had some decent radio. Massive support from the independent scene. Massive tour success. Your killing it in Liverpool.
Kenny – Played the main room in the Barfly, the Theatre room.
Scott – That was an important venue. It’s closed now. Venues are struggling. The Councils coming up and closing them for noise pollution.
Kenny – I don’t understand it, even in Liverpool alot of the venues are being closed to build student accommodation, well what are students going to do when there is no night life to enjoy?! Students are a massive part of the music scene.
Scott – My brother was a student in Liverpool and that’s where he was put onto some of the music he’s into, watching gigs almost every single night at all different venues. It’s such an important place for music.
Kenny – We’re really lucky being from here, there’s so much talent. It’s such a vibrant city with loads going on.
Scott – Venues closing left, right and centre, it’s bullshit. Councils closing venues down, always a hidden agenda. Camp and Furnace, You’ve put that on for the end of the year, that’s a hell of a jump up from the last gig.
Kenny – I think it’s doubled the capacity. This ones a 1200 cap. Fingers crossed, see how it goes!
Scott – You’ve got great support, it’ll be one of those gigs where it won’t just be fans from Liverpool, it’ll be fans from all over because it will be momentus, its a massive occasion. And if your a Heavy North fan then you need to be there.
Kenny – It’s going to be great, we’re going to have the orchestra with us again and the brass section and these amazing backing singers. It’s a huge live production. It doesn’t half bring alot to it. Last time I was completely blown away by it, it was like every song was a Bond theme!
Scott – Ha That’s great. It must be one hell of an experience to get to do that, not many people get to play the venues your playing. When you talk about these huge productions and the extras in it, it’s special. I’m hoping me and my wife can come to that one. Liverpool isn’t too far from us at all. Was it Swansea you played last in Wales?
Kenny – Newport, Le Pub. One of our favourite places to play. They really look after us. They even gave us trolleys to load our gear in. We were just blown away.
Scott – We’re doing all over Wales with Holy Coves. I think we’re going to Le Pub but later on in the year. I noticed you did a music video in Portmeirion, one of my favourtie places. have you got a connection to North Wales?
Kenny – We were looking for somewhere to record our music video for a week and I came up with the idea. It’s about being a prisoner so I was trying to tie it to the fact that that’s where The Prisoner was filmed, in Portmeirion. We were still in Lockdown, the back end of it, I’d go to a caravan park on the Peninsula. I said to the lads let’s go camp in Nefyn and we will do the music video. I think it was in April and the April before had been glorious. We had been on the ale, and the campsite is right on the coast so it’s even colder, we we’re sitting there round this fire, drinking all night until about 3am and everybody just started sloping off to their tents and I was sitting there with the fire literally in between my legs leaning over it, it was that cold. Basically none of us had any sleep it was about two degrees. Absolutley freezing! So I think we were all awake around 5.30am and then had to go do that music video, thank God for the sunglasses!
Scott – Sunglasses work everytime!
Kenny – Also the toilets were closed, some people had to have a shit in a box!
Scott – Ha yes! that’s brilliant! Portmeirion is such a beautiful location, amazing place to film a video. Nicer in the height of summer. It’s like a little Italian village in some parts.
Kenny – I had been there a couple of times. We were really lucky with the weather the next day when we were shooting the video. It was quite nice the next day. And you could get a pint there at that point aswell.
Scott – My wife and I go there, it’s a beautiful location. So what gigs have you got coming up?
Kenny – We have got the Water Rats in London in May.
Scott – We’re playing Water Rats too in May, think it’s after you.
Kenny – I’ll leave you a little doodle on the wall where you can write a message! We’re in Glasgow, Sheffield and Live Rooms in Chester.
Scott – I was going to ask, any plans for a North Wales gig? Maybe a Wrexham gig? There’s lots of things happening with North Wales with Wrexham and the football. Chesters not too far from there, neither is Liverpool. It’s a good location. Definitely worth considering playing a gig in Wrexham.
Kenny – Well we’re open to most things, if there’s a calling for it then we will be there.
Scott – I know more than a few people who would want to come and watch you. There’s loads of great venues and loads of great things happening in Wrexham. So Dan Potters your Manager, so how did you guys meet?
Kenny – He checked us out, he was a big fan of the Lying to Yourself track and it just stemmed from there . I’m sure you know yourself he is a top bloke. He was doing a lot for us, just being a sound guy because he was really into our tunes and then he started doing some bookings for us.
Scott – I’m happy for you, a manager is an important piece in the jigsaw if you get the right person for that, it makes things alot easier and I’m sure there is plenty more to come from you guys. Have you got a title for your new album?
Kenny – Ooh I’m probably not allowed to tell you that!
Scott – Of course, it has to be campaigned properly. Well I appreciate your time today Kenny, thank you.
Liverpool blues rock band The Heavy North return with a brand new single and music video for ‘Where Are You Now.’ The single is a high energy rock anthem with brilliant guitar riffs and is full of serious attitude and swagger. The lyrics are relatable as the song is about people who have come and gone in your life and wondering what they are doing now, are they still the same person or has life changed them. This song shows The Heavy North are at the top of their game with a new album in the works and a huge hometown gig at the end of the year. 2023 is already looking great for The Heavy North.
Discussing the meaning behind the new single, The Heavy North frontman Kenny Stuart said “Where Are You Now? is about remembering people who come and go in your life, and wondering whether they’re still the same person they once were and thinking about what they’re up to”.
“The lyrics explore whether those people we used to know are still the same as how we remembered them, or have their circumstances or situations changed for better or worse”.
‘Where Are You Now?’ marks the first glimpse of new music from Liverpool six-piece The Heavy North since the release of their critically-acclaimed debut album Electric Soul Machine on Record Store Day in April 2022.
Following a successful year which saw the band embark on their first 10-date UK headline tour as well as performing alongside fellow Merseyside artists The Zutons, Cast, The Boo Radleys and Red Rum Club, The Heavy North ended a landmark year with a with a sold out show at the Arts Club Theatre in Liverpool.
The band’s debut album Electric Soul Machine was heavily featured in some of 2022’s end-of-year round-ups (“the perfect encapsulation of this band’s musical talents” – Northern Chorus’s Top 10 Albums of 2022) as well as being the subject of a Tim’s Twitter Listening Party with Tim Burgess (The Charlatans) last year.
To coincide with the release of new music and the much-anticipated second album later this year, The Heavy North have announced a handful of headline shows in May which will see the blues-rock six-piece return to Scotland to headline Glasgow’s Audio (19th) followed by new Sheffield venue Network (20th), The Live Rooms in Chester (25th) and the legendary Water Rats in Kings Cross, London (26th).
The Heavy North have also announced their biggest hometown headline show to date at Liverpool’s Camp and Furnace on Friday 1st December 2023.
The huge Liverpool show follows The Heavy North’s sold out 500-capacity Arts Club show last year where the band performed their debut album Electric Soul Machine from start to finish, accompanied by a 12-piece band featuring strings, a brass section and backing vocalists.
Speaking about the band’s end-of-year show, Kenny said “We’re made up to reveal our next big Liverpool show at the Camp and Furnace courtesy of our friends at EVOL, and we’re looking forward to performing a set of brand new tracks taken from our upcoming second album.
“After the success of our Arts Club show last year, we’ll also be inviting some guest musicians to perform with us again, so we look forward to seeing everyone in December for a special night in an incredible venue”
Tickets for this unmissable hometown headline show are available from 10am on Friday 24th February 2023.
The Heavy North’s brand new single ‘Where Are You Now?’ is available on all download and streaming platforms now.
”an awe-inspiring record full of vivid freshness” – Wales Arts Review
“Influenced by the Siberian and Mongolian wilderness, as open and vast as the limitless sky around them, ‘ETO’ perfectly captures the trio’s growing confidence with its open-hearted soaring melody’s and lyrical vulnerability.” – Music Scene Wales
2. The Heavy North – Electric Soul Machine
“Electric Soul Machine is solid proof of The Heavy North’s songwriting abilities and command of their instruments plus a good knowledge of their sound and genre with a unique touch. It has well-thought dynamics that’ll have your undivided attention right from the 1st note” – Rock Era Magazine
“This album is packed to the brim with the kind of upbeat refrains and harmonies that’ll have you dancing along (in your chair if you must) from start to finish.” – Music Scene Wales
3. Holy Coves – Druids and Bards
“Druids And Bards is a powerful album which deserves your time and attention. If there is any justice it will be up there in the next couple of months in the end-of-year ‘Best Of’ lists.”- Louder Than War
Druids and Bards is a superb, flawlessly-crafted album, as close to perfect as any I’ve heard this year. Every track is outstanding, making for a joyful listening experience from start to finish. Holy Coves are back, and then some! – Eclectic Music Lover
4. Fontaines D.C.
“The Irish band’s third album is a fierce, dirge-like thundercloud of ruination” – Independent
“Jason Pierce returns with a sonic feast. The man also known as J. Spaceman delivers a dense, orchestrated record that is as solid as it is sprawling, proving that he’s a master of sonics. – NME
“A sweet din of magnificent melodies.” – The Guardian
6. Sea Power
“One of their best works…these dynamic, grandiose anthems are worth getting to know.” – Standard
“A hopeful and defiant record that rails against ugly, insular points of view.” – NME
7. The Brian Jonestown Massacre
“Brian Jonestown Massacre is out of this world, quite literally. Highly prolific and ever-present in the alternative-indie scene.” – Clash Music
“Immersive. Beautiful. Everything you could want from a 180grm black vinyl LP.” – Music Scene Wales
8. The Black Angels – Wilderness of Mirrors
“It’s all part of an astonishing cinematic tapestry. This album will leave you so wobbly and weak-kneed, you might have to take a few days off work to recover. Headphone melter of the year so far, for sure.” – Louder Sound
“Heavy vibes. Floaty. Cinematic. Committed.” – Music Scene Wales
9. Goat – Oh Death
“Oh Death is an extremely well put together, cohesive and dynamic album. It offers trippy and wild afro-beats with jazz infused psych rock, louder and more aggressive than Goat has ever sounded.” – The Sleeping Shaman
“It’s as confusing as hell, but it’s also thrilling, occasionally daft, and deliriously, gloriously imaginative. Goat’s best album.” – Louder Sound
10. Voldo – Melting Pot
“Altogether, as an album, it works really well, with the group’s customary taste and precision balanced against a new looseness and a return to earlier, funky playing patterns. That’s more than enough to make it the best Booker T. album in some time, the Memphis Gas of the Year, and a Major Rock Event for everyone.” – Rolling Stone
“Everything here is what you want from an all time great album.” – Music Scene Wales
11. Bob Vylan – Presents The Price Of Life
“Fiercely relevant, furious punk anthems. The London duo’s alt-rock tracks about inequality will speak to a wider audience than their previous album did, but they also never soften their edges.”- NME
12. Lewca – Friday Night Rockstar
“Lewca smashes it with his release of the debut album, Friday Night Rockstar. The Brixton-born but French-living artist comes at us from Paris with love, humour, melancholy, and a bag full of drugs. This album is sexy and relentlessness.” – Up To Hear Music
13. Hippies vs Ghosts – Giamocs
“Giamocs oozes class from beginning to end.” – Music Scene Wales
14. Josienne Clarke – Now & Then
“There is heartfelt emotion laid bare on this most personal of song cycles.” – Folk Radio
15. Suede – Autofiction
“A renewed sense of urgency – and enjoyment – pulses through this punchy, passionate comeback” – The Guardian
16. Wet Leg – Wet Leg
“An instant classic debut that justifies the hype” – NME
17. The Shed Project – The Curious Mind Of A Common Man
“They’re here for a good time, they wear their influences on their sleeves and couldn’t give a fuck what anyone else thinks” – Louder Than War
18. The Shop Window – A 4 Letter Word
“A 4 Letter Word is the much anticipated follow up to their 2021 debut The State Of Being Human.” – Louder Than War
19. The Telephones – Prosaic Turbulence
“The Telephones mix and unfold in a very beautiful and successful way their influences which come from bands of the 60s such as The Byrds, Love, Pink Floyd, The Beatles, and The Doors etc.” – Gew Gaw
20. The Smile – A Light For Attracting Attention
“Attention is the brighter star in the Radiohead extended universe — maybe even the brightest — because the music balances beloved old sounds and new ideas while the lyrics speak pointedly to modern horrors.” – Vulture
21.The Battery Farm – FLIES
“FLIES is a valiant effort from The Battery Farm whose ferocious and distorted sound really feels the anguish and anger of modern-day society. The instrumentation is hard-hitting and experimental, the vocal variety matches the moods and themes of the album and shows how far the group is developing their sound from their previous EP.” – RGM
22. Florence &The Machine – Dance Fever
“Wonderful wildness from the most thrilling pop star of her generation In its commitment to euphoria, ‘Dance Fever’ is an album that looks forward to the release of all the pandemic’s pent-up energy at this summer’s festivals” – Independent
23. The Snuts – Burn The Empire
“Urgent excitement holds together the many twists.” – NME
24. Adam Walton – Afal
“Afal is an album that gets under the skin, that lingers and whispers at you in the darkest corners of your day.” – Wales Arts Review
25. Bjork – Fossora
“One of her hardest-hitting albums.” – The Guardian
26. Nova Twins – Supernova
“If you like music with attitude, passion and ferocity then this album and Nova Twins are most definitely for you. ‘Supernova’ really is a half hour of power and it will do nothing but continue to push this incredible band on their upwards trajectory!” – Full Pelt Music
27. Gwenno – Tresor
“Keeping “the Cornish language alive and singing Written in Cornwall and sung almost entirely in the local tongue, this album is as beautiful and strange as the county itself.” – Standard
28. Warpaint – Radiant Like This
“This comeback is a tribute to what you can accomplish when creating with people you love, proving the band can’t be tied to a specific scene.” – NME
29. Bastions – Majestic Desolation
“Majestic Desolation is a brief flash of ferocity. But in spite of its shortness, it leaves a lasting impact long after the final chords have rung out.” – Kerrang
30. Buzzard Buzzard Buzzard – Backhand Deals
“An invigorating blast of 70s power-pop that just about avoids the realms of pastiche thanks to some smart observational writing and irresistible guitar hooks.” – Guitar
31. The Skinner Brothers – Soul Boy II
“The Skinners Brothers sound is expertly varied and crafted, and you cant help but get slapped with little busts of familiarity. Senses are awaken by new tunes that you will feel like you’ve moshed to before. Think of it like this, if the restaurant menu was filled with all the big indie rock acts well The Skinners Brothers latest offering would be the mixed grill. Yummy.” – All Music Magazine
32. Skylights – What You Are
“Their emotive and raucous tunes fit the live indie-rock atmosphere without a doubt.” – RGM
33. Arctic Monkeys – The Car
“The band’s musical purpose comes through crystal clear in the elegant strings and subtle riffs cleverly woven throughout album, resulting in the most mature work the band has ever released.” Rolling Stone
34. Pixy Jones – Bits n Bobs
“It’s an eclectic mix ranging from experimental and psychedelic, synth-infused pop numbers, to the known and loved 60’s Beetle’s-esk rock harmonies – as well as the odd country blues nugget thrown in which is paired with the occasional Pixy Jones twist. Talk about an album living up to its name. Consisting of 13 tracks in total, ‘Bits n Bobs’ is truly a solid launch to any solo career.” – Hive Magazine
35. Deja Vega – Personal Hell
“With a sonic bang of pure power that screams along at breakneck speed throughout, which burns but never crashes. It’s already a contender for one of the albums of the year and I swear you will play this over and over again.” – Louder Than War
36. Michael Head & The Red Elastic Band – Dear Scott
“Can music really save your mortal soul? Maybe…Maybe not… But after listening to the new Michael Head and the Red Elastic band album Dear Scott you will surely think it can.” – Louder Than War
37. Alvvays – Blue Rev
“A subtle but satisfying expansion – The Canadians’ third album is still identifiably Alvvays, but the hooks here are sweeter, the instrumentation brighter, the energy more palpable.” – NME
38. James Domestic – Carrion Repeating
“He’s put words and music to vinyl and the results make compelling listening. Carrion Repeating is an album of eleven genre-less observational tracks, documenting our pitiful existence.” – Louder Than War
39. Horace Andy – Midnight Rocker
“Over the past five decades, the legacy of Andy’s voice has reflected his music’s history. Just as the acetate of a dubplate wears with each play, giving the genre its uniquely decaying instrumental quality, so his voice has matured from the clean, high-register clarion call on breakout single Skylarking into a richer, more vulnerable tenor. His first collaboration with British dub pioneer Adrian Sherwood, Midnight Rocker is the perfect showcase for this late-career sound, revisiting a selection of Andy’s earlier material in addition to six new tracks.” – The Guardian
40. Peaness – World Full Of Worry
“Peaness have delivered the aural equivalent of a sugar rush that leaves you exhilarated but with a bit of a come down. It won’t be long before you’re listening again though, and want to take again and again. A brilliant debut from a trio I’m looking forward to catching live soon.” – Louder Than War
41. Joe Adhemar – About The Soul
“Joe Adhemar is a genuinely individual voice with a genuinely individual view of the world. Which is giving listeners the chance to appreciate someone who stands apart from the crowd.” – Subba Cultcha
42. Just Mustard – Heart Under
“Just Mustard are a band completely at one with their sound, and with Heart Under they have well and truly mastered the art of atmospheric rock.” – Loud And Quiet
43. King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard – Omnium Gatherum
“The album is a smorgasbord of delights for any and all fans. Omnium Gatherum is proof that the band are enjoying a newfound freedom of being unshackled from their own self-imposed limitations to work albums through individual styles. Everything is on the table to be devoured, a pure feast of aural pleasure.” – Louder Than War
44. Weyes Blood – And In The Darkness, Hearts Aglow
“And in the Darkness, Hearts Aglow gently bombards you with one fantastic tune after another.” – The Guardian
45. First Aid Kit – Palomino
“Palomino’ flits between the certainties and uncertainties of love with ease, strengthened by deeper musical experimentation that won’t alienate longtime fans. Another gem in First Aid Kit’s consistently good arsenal of timeless, harmony-rich roots music.” – NME
46. Jessie Buckley & Bernard Butler – For All Our Days That Tear The Heart
“The actor and the former Suede guitarist deliver a beautifully produced folk-inflected set that showcases Buckley’s magical voice.” – The Guardian
47. Foals- Life Is Yours
“Foals headed into this process as a lean, mean, party-starting machine. The opening title track showcases that taut approach, warm optimism and fixed focus as Afrobeat rhythms greet Yannis comes blinking out of lockdown, rave-ready, can in hand.” – NME
48. The Myterines – Reeling
“Reeling’ is gripping throughout, and the band always seem ready to ascend to another level.” – NME
49. Columbia – Embrace The Chaos
“A life-affirming set of songs that will smash whatever stands in its way. For once, we alternative types beg the gatekeepers to put up barriers. It’ll only be that much sweeter when Columbia destroys them!” – Travellers Tunes
50. Kula Shaker – The Once and Future King
“It’s a cracking slice of psychedelic rock at it’s best and a great return from the quartet who brought us the brilliant K back in the mid nineties.” – Louder Than War
51. Wrest – End All The Days
“The act’s new collection of songs End All The Days paints pictures and creates unparalleled snapshots of days gone by, of memories not so pretty. Lyrically, the songs are poised expertly, and are poetically balanced.” – I am Tuned Up
52. Hot Chip – Freakout/Release
“One of the most consistently entertaining electro-pop outfits of their generation have released their most introspective album yet.” – NME
53. Yard Act – The Overload
“A wonderfully wacky debut…The Leeds band’s debut is a wild ride through their Yorkshire upbringing, and the curly characters they picked up along the way.” – NME
54. TVAM – High Art Lite
“Listening to TVAM’s fierce and fiery new long-player, ‘High Art Lite’, feels like a dress rehearsal for this unavoidable solar apocalypse. The album is surf garage in a furnace. A synth orgy in a barbecue pit. A blistering barrage of fervent guitars and guttural synths, washed in plastic luminosity like a nuclear spill at Wigan Pier.” – Electronic Sound
55. Mother sun – Train Of Thought
“The album includes many of Petrucci’s finest solos, but the overall impression conveyed by the record is of unstoppable, if murky, power.” – Louder Sound
56. Orange G – The Void Bereft
“Beautifuly crafted songs with outstanding vocals.” – Music Scene Wales
57. Ben Pagano – Exploring Dreams
“Ben Pagano enthralls on the rousing “Feeling Down,” navigating both spacious synth-laden soundscapes and impassioned rock with cohesive success.” – Obscure Sound
58. Mike Legere – Memory Forming Clouds
“Awonderful slice of raw emotion.” – Up To Hear
59. Shadow Bones – In Another Life
“This beautifully written album is one that tells of Lukes demons and vulnerabilities through his sweet lyrics full of emotion.” – Music Scene Wales
60. Big Thief – Dragon New Warm Mountian I Believe In You
“They are a band you absolutely want to love – female-fronted, searching and sensitive, organically grown, tackling themes like the infinite as well as confessionals about love and loss.” – The Guardian
61. Moor Mother – Jazz Codes
“A stunning continuum of Black music.” – The Guardian
62. Gabriels – Angels & Queens – Part 1
“Brooding gospel soul with a shimmy and a stomp.” – The Guardian
63. Ezra Furman – All Of Us Flames
“Returning to familiar sounds of vintage girl groups and rock’n’roll, Ezra Furman writes trans pride and existential fear into an album that reveals the full strength of her vulnerabilities.” – Pitchfork
64. The Reverse Cowgirls – Fortis et Fidus
“While never losing the cow-punk fervour of its predecessors, Fortis et Fidus is a markedly different beast, lyrically poignant and musically inventive with key tracks.” – Louder Than War
65. Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Cool It Down
“A triumphant, rewarding return.” – NME
66. Red Hot Chili Peppers – Return of the Dream Canteen
“An Overwhelming Feast.” – NME
67. Wunderhorse – Cub
“Teenage punk evolves into a rock’n’roll troubador.” – NME
68. The Lightning Seeds – See You in the Stars
“See You In The Stars` is a welcome return to Lightening Seeds and it has it`s kind of yin and yang moments throughout with some really upbeat tunes and some more reflective and thoughtful life musings.” – Maximum Volume Music
69. Pale Blue Eyes – Souvenirs
“Heartwarming optimism is what characterises their debut from the get-go. Souvenir begins with frenetic electropop opener ‘Globe’, its underpinning rich vocal and twinkly synth doubling calling to mind OMD and New Order, and the chanted “you got this” call and response oozing hope and self belief.” – Clash Magazine
70. Woodoo Man – Y Nos
“The album draws on the artist’s love of solitude. It is a celebration of the beauty of the night and its mystery as he urges us to free our minds and open our hearts to the unknown.” – Music Scene Wales
The Heavy North have been creating quite a stir inside and outside of their native Liverpool, packing in crowds, selling out venues such as the legendary Cavern Club and gaining critical acclaim since their first single release in 2018. Its safe to say that quite a few people have been waiting for this album.
This isn’t reinventing the wheel, lets get that out of the way. The Heavy North’s brand of blues rock is as familiar as it is welcoming, and by the time the wah wah trumpet kicks in on album opener “The Genie”, you’ll have kicked off your shoes and be well and truly at home.
This album is packed to the brim with the kind of upbeat refrains and harmonies that’ll have you dancing along (in your chair if you must) from start to finish. “Darkness in Your Eyes” comes along with an “Electric Worry” era Clutch vibe and the intro to “No Good” feels like a Black Keys came close to having a good time.
The common theme here is one of good music, done well. Like I said, you won’t find anything to surprise you here, but when something drives as well as this, do you need a new wheel anyway? From swirling organs, thick harmonies, blazing solos (“She Gets Me Higher”), to the Joe Cocker esque finale, “As Long as You’re Here with Me”, this album does everything it does, perfectly.
Dan Careless #MusicSceneWales @MusicSceneWales musicscenewalescymru@gmail.com