OUT NOW: LYR's 'The Ultraviolet Age' with Hockney-inspired track
Tales of clandestine cosmetic experimentation open routes back to one of British art’s greatest names as LYR celebrate their second album release with…
Hockney Red
- A ‘red touch paper’ lit by David Hockney leads LYR – made up of Simon Armitage, Richard Walters and Patrick J Pearson – into an expansive sonic celebration of colour
- With their second album, The Ultraviolet Age OUT TODAY, LYR look ahead to playing their newest songs live across nine UK Tour dates this September and October
LYR – The Ultraviolet Age
OUT NOW on Clue Records / EMI North
UK Tour On General Sale Now
Information and Ticket Links: www.lyrband.com
“Impressively rich both sonically and emotionally” - Uncut, 8/10
“A record that perfectly sums up the time in which it was created” – MOJO - ★★★★
VIDEO / FULL ALBUM STREAM
Providing an era-defining document of an intense period of human existence and offering wryly celebratory pen pictures of shared experience and moments of curios found along the way, Simon Armitage, Richard Walters and Patrick J Pearson’s LYR release their second album, The Ultraviolet Age today. Finally revealing all ten-tracks of the striding, complex and genre-fluid follow up to their 2020 debut album, Call In The Crash Team, LYR draw attention to Hockney Red on release day, a prime, sample-rich example of their borderless experimentation with the human voice, lyrical formulae and curated electronics.
LYR’s coherence as a band with live experience and a deeper, collective commitment to seeking out exquisite sound, while probing what the possibilities might be for a band that combines the spoken, the sung, the played and the programmed, provides key points of difference between the collective’s charming debut and pristine follow-up. With moments of serendipity as welcome as moments of purpose, Hockney Red’s vibrant celebration of vivid colour and naive teen experimentation was inspired by a momentary encounter with the work of the renowned British artist referenced in the song’s title.
Spooling out from a simple, open question - to respond to one of David Hockney’s shades of red – the track becomes an equally poignant and subtly-humorous celebration of the devilish hue and stolen moments alone with a mother’s open make-up box.
Armitage says: “A few years ago we were invited to choose from a range of colours selected by David Hockney and use the shade as the inspiration for a song. The song had to be no more than a minute long. We picked a lush red. I wrote from the point of view of an adolescent boy sneaking into his mother's bedroom to experiment with her nail polish - come on, guys, we've all done it!
“We made the track, handed it in, and that was the last we heard of it. The song sat in a computer file for several months until Pat put it through the magic LYR mixing machine. “I’m Not Really A Waitress” is a nail lacquer colour by OPI.I thought it would make a daring title for the album but was rightly voted down.”
The issue of humanity’s essential pause for the pandemic to pass, and what has come next, provided LYR with ample inspiration in creating The Ultraviolet Age, from the populist politics decried in the pen picture of megalomaniacal leadership in Presidentially Yours to the equally heartbreaking and life-affirming, from-beyond-the-hospital-doors Covid hymn, The Song Thrush and The Mountain Ash. Forced back to normal following trauma, loss or just intense boredom, dependent on any one person’s pandemic experience, the title of the album reflects on a new era of overexposure as the world lurches from stasis to one major event after the next, a world where aggressive commerce reigns, climate change bares its teeth and digitisation consumes all.
Having explored the initial potential of LYR remotely, sharing the ideas and contributions eventually collated as Call In The Crash Team, the band’s time on the road and resultant friendships found the trio recording in a convivial, creative atmosphere, in-person at Pearson’s South Devon studio. Effectively ‘instrumentalising’ Armitage’s spoken word delivery, cutting his contributions with the Walters’ affecting, sung verses, Pearson’s production introduced both cut-and-paste modernity, as heard on opener, Paradise Lost and the glitchy Fishing Flies, while protecting the more traditional songcraft evident on tracks like the low-lit folk of Seasons Out Of Phase and the drifting piano lullaby of Heart For Sale.