Well you've all been waiting over three years for those shambling West Yorks
slouches Hood to deliver another long player & now It's here.
'Outside Closer' is the title & before you ask, we sold out of the ltd 2 CD
set in 4 hours last Friday so please don't ask us for it!!!! Big respect to the
boys & label Domino for kindly giving us the exclusive! So what does
it sound like? Well different sonic fields have been explored, a noticeable
sideways move away from the avant-hop dalliance of 'Cold House' & more
an emphasis on big, bold & kaleidoscopic production, jerky colourful pop
shades abound & charming, brittle experimentalism. There's some neo
classical touches here, some of the spaced out gentle dub flourishes of yore
& the yearning feel of Chris's vocals is intact, however with a renewed
sense of optimism replacing the listlessness & despair of previous works. So
a neat & concise 10 tracks of organic, pastoral, eclectic, percussive &
fragile music with that Talk Talk obsession still billowing out of every
orifice. Glad to have you back boys!
Love this record? Hate it? Tell us.
What their label says...
'Outside Closer' foregrounds a new directness and boldness for Hood. The Leeds 4 piece have made a bright, brave and modern record. Its full of surprise, originality, soul, and venom just like pop music should be.
"We wanted it to jump out of the speakers explains Richard Adams "and to make it emotionally draining. Anti-indie/tronic. Big rather than small. Not background music. Not necessarily nice.
"We decided to move away from the electronic side of things. The LP is song orientated and features totally different production styles to the last LP (Cold House). The tracks are all quite different as we worked on them all over a long period of time, adding to them, taking things off, putting them back on, taking them off again then putting them back on as the final step before taking them off and ending up exactly where we started."
The album was produced in Leeds with Choque Hosein (formerly of Black Star Liner) and features a no star cast of local musicians helping out. Following on from their cLOUDDEAD assisted work on Cold House Hood enjoy looking in new places for collaborators. We like using people we find in nooks and crannies, sympathisers if you will - one of the guys is an acclaimed Cuban musician, one of them is permanently arrested anti-capitalist agitator it just gets your eyes open a bit to other ways of working, explains Richard.
Though they barely sound like either, Hoods aesthetic has previously been compared to that of Underworlds Karl Hyde or The Streets Mike Skinner for the astuteness with which they evoke the minutiae of their immediate environment. Future single The Negatives would suggest that the Adams brothers find their epiphanies in lengthy winter walks rather than (or as well as?) Ecstasy or brandy: "Go to the furthest place from your house", they urge, "Stand there a while / Make sure youre broke / And watch the birds fly round!"
"Our love of the great outdoors has been well documented," reiterates Chris Adams, "Please refer to all our LPs, singles, tapes, compilation appearances, flexis, MP3s, artwork, interviews, general conversations and holiday destinations."
On an old single (The) Weight, Hood intimated that they would sabotage their local railway system so that a lover didnt have to go home. Outside Closer might reference such actions again. On the cyclical End of One Train Working, its as if the group have fulfilled this threat without actually achieving the anticipated aim: "Where is the train ride home?" they wonder, "Where is the love we had?" The Negatives seems to find them covering the train line with leaves as a means of subversion. Hood become defined by such acts of gentle insurrection.
Is the track title This Is It, Forever an allusion to the end of Hood?
"Weve probably been the only band ever to announce our split in song (Hood Is Finished) and then not split," suggests Richard, "So I dont know."
Dont be fooled, Outside Closer is a New Morning for Hood.