
Bellx1
After the multi-platinum success of their last album âFlockâ the Irish band Bellx1 are set to release their fourth studio album in March. Not only selling out the biggest venues in Ireland, but they have also conquered the hardest task of all in the music industry, they have broken America and have even had songs featured on hit U.S TV shows, Greys Anatomy, One Tree Hill, and the O.C.âBlue Lights On The Runwayâ is quite simply the bandâs finest statement yet. Continuing the musical evolution of its predecessor, itâs a timely release that, like The Flaming Lipsâ âSoft Bulletinâ, Mercury Revâs âDeserterâs Songs,â or Elbowâs âSeldom Seen Kid,â should finally cross Bell X1 over to a mainstream UK audience. At a first listen, both lyrics and melodies might sound deceptively simple, but pay it some attention, massage the back of its neck a little, and sonic experimentation, witty vignettes and rhythmic invention come purring through.Echoes of critically-adored previous hit âFlameâ abound in two impossibly catchy future singles, the Talking Heads-influenced âThe Ribs Of A Broken Umbrellaâ and the soaring âThe Great Defectorâ [release dates TBC]. Other highlights include âBlow Insâ, an existential gasp at transience and inconsequentiality, and the stunning âBetter Bandâ which, with its three âmovementsâ, typifies the bandâs style of insistent, multi-layered hooks and careful layering. Closing the album is âThe Curtains Are Twitchingâ, a crepuscular elegy polished by funereal brass flown over from the Big Easy herself, New Orleans. Itâs sunshine pop with a heart of darkness. Or is it, perhaps, dark pop with a hopeful heart?The band started recording âBlue Lightsâ in October 2007 in the 17th century Ballycumber House, Co Offaly, a freezing cold castle with, according to singer Paul Doonan, âwonderfully awful patterned carpet and wallpaper.â Other recording spaces included a disused factory in Inchicore, and bassist Dom's garage in Meath, Ireland.After securing a North American deal with Yep Roc, Bell X1 spent much of 2008 in the US on promotional duties, which included a showcase gig at Joe's Pub (followed by a sell-out at Bowery Ballroom) in New York, shows in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Minneapolis, San Francisco, and Toronto, Late Night with Conan O'Brien and the Late Show with David Letterman. Their music was also used on Greyâs Anatomy and One Tree Hill. Meanwhile they continued to consolidate their position in Europe with ever more successful headline shows and sold-out tours, returning to Ireland (and County Kildare) in July for a performance at Oxegen 2008, where they headlined the Green Room on the Friday night.Potted History: Having made music together in various guises since the early 90s, Kildare school friends Paul Noonan, Dave Geraghty, Dominic Phillips and Brian Crosby (who recently departed the band to pursue his passion for production work and writing soundtracks) communed under the name Bell X1 to release their debut album for Polydor Records, âNeither Am Iâ, in 2000. Three years of touring and writing, and a label move to Island Records, brought its successor, âMusic In Mouthâ, and the beginning of the bandâs inexorable rise in their home country as well as an invaluable foundation around Europe. After the widespread critical and Irish #1 album success of third album âFlockâ, in the beginning of 2007 the band parted company with Island/Universal. That summer, they went it alone with a highly successful Live CD / DVD package, Tour De Flock, on their own label, (BellyUp Records) which captured them at a pivotal point in their career.
So now itâs all to play for. With a simultaneous worldwide release in place for âBlue Lights On The Runwayâ, only one question remains: is the world finally ready for Bell X1?
www.bellx1.com