Tracks Of The Week #5

NEWS: Insecure Men announce self-titled debut album & ‘Teenage Toy’ Video

Insecure Men, the band led by the songwriter and musician Saul Adamczewski and his schoolmate and Childhood main-man, Ben Romans-Hopcraft, have announced details of the release of their self-titled debut album released on Friday 23rd February 2018 on Fat Possum. They’ve just unveiled the video to ‘Teenage Toy’(a previous Track of the Week) which is directed by London-based independent production team Sharp Payne. Watch it here: https://www.vevo.com/watch/insecure-men/teenage-toy-(official-video)/USFP71764720

The track listing of the 11-track album is as follows:

1. Subaru Nights

2. Teenage Toy

3. All Women Love Me

4. Mekong Glitter

5. Heathrow

6. I Don’t Wanna Dance (With My Baby)

7. The Saddest Man In Penge

8. Ulster

9. Cliff Has Left The Building

10. Whitney Houston And I

11. Buried In The Bleak

The album is available to pre-order on the following link: https://InsecureMen.lnk.to/InsecureMen

The album was recorded onto an ancient Tascam at Sean Lennon’s studio in upstate New York while Saul was working on the Moonlandingz album. It was subsequently produced by Sean and mixed by Marta Salogni.

Taking inspiration from the exotica of Arthur Lyman, the early electronic pop of Perrey and Kingsley, the supreme smoothness of The Carpenters, the songwriting chops of Harry Nilsson and the hypnagogic uncanniness conjured up by David Lynch it’s outwardly a charming exercise in timeless pop, exotica and easy listening however, there lurks a darker heart beneath the surface. As Saul says it’s “pretty music with a dark underbelly to it”.

The subject matter is just as weird, surreal and dark as you would expect. Cliff Has Left The Building is about “Operation Yew Tree’s greatest urban myth”; Whitney Houston & I (which features pre-teen pop singers the Honey Hahs) is about the similar ways in which the tragic mother and daughter, Bobbi, died (“It is a provocative song but I genuinely found the story unbearably sad”); while unashamed banger Mekong Glitter is about the now disgraced Gary Glitter (“I don’t think he should be let off the hook, I just want to ask why?” says Saul referring to the double standards applied to a lot of musicians who rose to fame and fortune during the 1970s.)

The band head out on a U.K headline tour in March, including a show at the Scala in London.

The touring line up features up to 11 musicians on stage having settled down into a stable (but large) line-up centred round Saul (vocals/guitar), Ben (bass/backing vocals), Marley Mackey (Dirty Harrys) on lap steel, Victor Jakeman (Claw Marks) on organ, Joe Isherwood (We Smoke Fags) on keyboard, saxophonist Alex White and mysterious South London music teacher known only as Steely Dan on vibraphone and steel drums.

The full list of dates is as follows:

MARCH

08 – London, Scala

09 – Bristol, Thekla

10 – Nottingham, Bodega

11 – Glasgow, Broadcast

13 – Newcastle, Think Tank

14 – Manchester, The Soup Kitchen

15 – Birmingham, Hare & Hounds

16 – Brighton, Patterns

God is in the TV is an online music and culture fanzine founded in Cardiff by the editor Bill Cummings in 2003. GIITTV Bill has developed the site with the aid of a team of sub-editors and writers from across Britain, covering a wide range of music from unsigned and independent artists to major releases.