Marcel Wave share 'Peg', final single from debut album 'Something Looming' (14th June on Upset The Rhythm)

Marcel Wave


Share new single + video, "Peg"

Debut album Something Looming
Due out 14th June on Upset The Rhythm


UK tour dates including London headline show at Moth Club on 14th June

Ahead of their debut album, Something Looming - set for release on 14th June via Upset The Rhythm (and on Feel It Records in the US) - Marcel Wave share "Peg", the third and final single from the record.

Speaking on the track, the DIY punk five-piece - which features members of  Sauna Youth and Cold Pumas - say: "Peg" is an elegy for Peg Entwistle, the actress who threw herself from the H of the Hollywood sign in 1932 at the age of 24. Crystallised in time as a tragic tale of Hollywood’s Golden Age, yet regurgitated most famously in typically salacious style by Kenneth Anger in his book 'Hollywood Babylon'."

The single also comes accompanied by a music video conceived, filmed and edited by the band's own Patrick Fisher and Maike Hale-Jones; "the song’s accompanying video is both a Technicolor tribute to Anger’s own cinema and to the voiceless memory of Entwistle herself", they add.

Watch/listen to "Peg"
https://youtu.be/qEB57Ia2L6w

Live:
Friday 14th June - Moth Club, London
- Album Launch w/ The Pheromoans + The Plan
Friday 28th June - The Moon, Cardiff
Saturday 29th June - Blitz, Preston
Friday 5th July - The Glad Cafe, Glasgow
Saturday 6th July - Henrykk, Manchester

Friday 19th July – Delicious Clam, Sheffield w/ Dearthworms

Wednesday 14th August - Cafe Oto, London - Upset The Rhythm label party
Saturday 2nd November - Old Cold Store, Nottingham - JT Soar 15th birthday

Marcel Wave write eulogies for tragic actresses, ancient riverbeds and concrete obscenity. Their inaugural sonic instalment ‘Something Looming’ is part trades club symphony, part itchy serenade, and part wistful lament. As their heady concoction of ‘Meades meets Pat-E-Smith meets Kirklees Borough Council’ gets prepped to be formally baptised on a dank stage near you, Upset the Rhythm and Feel It Records have dutifully stepped in to deliver its songbook to the masses on both sides of the pond.

Formed when Lindsay Corstorphine and Christopher Murphy of Sauna Youth and brethren Oliver and Patrick Fisher of Cold Pumas were summoned by northern ink-slinger Maike Hale-Jones, Marcel Wave’s debut offering is a walk through a smoke-filled pub with yellowing wallpaper and all eyes on you. It’s a chronicle of the death of the docklands, the decline of industry, of the high street, of civic pride, of civilisations, of hopes and dreams. As Hale-Jones delivers the bad news in her low West Yorkshire brogue, Corstorphine adds the bells and whistles via the frantic pulsations of a wheezing Hohner organ in tandem with Fisher O’s rasping guitar. MW are completed by the throbbing basslines of Murphy and Fisher P’s fervent rhythms.

The title itself sets the tone for the listener. There’s a sense of foreboding in Hale-Jones’ lyrics which sit at the quintet’s core—elegiac, sardonic and piquant in equal measure. A mixture of narrative epilogues and inward paeans, her words weave tales across a broad thematic church. Crooked tales of urban renewal and the voices left behind are probed in ‘Barrow Boys’ and ‘Stop/Continue’ and are at the fore in ‘Where There’s Muck There’s Brass’ with its refrain lamenting ‘Concrete and slate shine in the rain, cities destroyed, nothing to gain’. In these lyrics, tower blocks loom over terraced houses with the same shadows that the Hollywood sign casts over Peg Entwistle before she takes her tragic leap. ‘Peg’ and ‘Elsie’ are both meditations on two different actresses with different fates crushed by the cut-throat trappings of showbusiness: ‘The mad hopes break, fragile as glass. She traded it all, for the cutting room floor.’ A snaking, existential dread also runs through the album, stated more obliquely in the otherwise poppier interludes of the title track ‘Something Looming’ and album opener ‘Bent Out of Shape’, and present too on the comparatively ramshackle ‘Discount Centre’, where Hale-Jones reports ‘On a mini bus on the outskirts of Enfield, I’m losing all of my spark’. On the album closing weeper ‘Linoleum Floor’, it is laid barer still—a keyboard-led reflection on the deflating nights out of our early-twenties.

Marcel Wave invites the listener to dance to society’s decline, and then to later weep into its lukewarm pint.

Pre-order the album

Tracklisting:

1. Bent Out of Shape

2. Barrow Boys

3. Something Looming

4. Peg

5. Mudlarks

6.Where There's Muck There's Brass

7. Discount Centre

8. Great British High St.

9. Elsie

10. Ides of March

11. Stop:Continue

12. Linoleum Floor
 

Connect with Marcel Wave

Instagram | Bandcamp

 

Connect with Upset The Rhythm

Instagram | Twitter | Bandcamp | Website

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