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General

Future Of The Label

9 June 2018 Collaborations, Events, General, Open Recording Sessions, Releases

When we started Debt we felt that labels were passé. The idea was to adapt to a world in flux and weather the changes creatively. Over the years we got more and more label-shaped in the classic sense but the core belief that such businesses are anachronistic has never gone away. Now with streaming comfortably ensconced as music’s primary delivery mechanism and titles like “jogging playlist”, “upbeat tunes” and “housework compilation” installing themselves as the soundtrack to most people’s activities (rather than traditional artist curated LPs) our way of operating has become as old fashioned as the companies we were railing against in the early days.

The most tempting next step for people like us is to wage war against the wrong kind of progress: double down on physical formats, resurrect defunct distribution systems under the guise of words like artisan or vintage, sell overpriced limited edition presses to a dwindling audience scrabbling for a sniff of authenticity in a rapidly fossilising market, tint the world nostalgic and say screw you to change whilst clinging to a self-awarded relevance that owes more to stubbornness than genuine cultural appetite. But of course there is no wrong kind of progress, only progress. Whether one accepts it or not is up to the individual. When we started out we were that progress, or at least a splinter of a larger movement that prized collaboration, co-operation and creative cross-polination over the traditional scorched earth marketing of yesteryear. We were fresh, energetic, irreverent and made the news more than once. But nothing ages faster than the new. The sense of narrative/context Debt was designed to provide artists with worked for a while but no longer has the impact it used to. We wanted to be part of the music landscape and we got our wish, but not in the way we imagined – not as something that blossoms and bears fruit, but rather as an embedded immovable relic gradually blending into its surroundings. Our inbox used to hum with messages from radio producers and journalists thirsty for more information, now it’s full of bottom-feeding marketing startups extending their poisoned chalices interspersed with “great exposure” offers from shortsighted underfunded showcase events, not to mention the truly depressing slew of internship requests from panicking music management graduates that almost outnumber the swarm of demos from desperate guitar bands who haven’t noticed the world has just plain moved on. The label inbox has become a grim ode to a system that must be broken into rather than broken down. It’s been like this for a while now and it really is time to take stock.

We realise Debt benefited some people more than others and no one as much as they’d hoped, but we are proud of everything we have done or attempted to do; often it has felt like a lot of push resulting in very little motion, but in this so often stagnant industry any motion is worth the effort, however small. Debt directors Biff, Dan and I (and in the early days Chris and Gemma too) have felt immensely privileged to work with all the artists on the roster (past and present) – everyone’s different approaches to creativity have remained a constant inspiration. Being a part of this label has been an ever-renewing and often thrilling learning exercise in an industry that can never make up its mind.

But when those learning curves start to feel more like straight lines it’s time to rethink your trajectory. None of us got into this business to untangle algorithms and second guess the whims of facebook, we got into this business to make music and you don’t need to be a label to do that. So we decided that’s it for being a label. No compilations, reissues, Best Ofs or retrospectives. Done.

Still, we will not be disappearing completely. Our technical division at WR Audio is going stronger than ever and the artists associated with Debt continue smouldering with undiminished genius – long may they carry on doing so. Of all the things we did over the last nine years the Open Recording Sessions persist in sizzling with an unfakeable positivity, so we’ll be keeping them going. Plus we’ve got plenty of ideas for one-off projects of varying shapes and sizes – live, visual, aural, immersive and interactive. We just won’t be releasing albums/singles etc and dreaming up evermore farfetched excuses to write press releases detailing why so-and-so is the most important thing since such-and-such. Have you seen the world recently? It definitely doesn’t need any more bullshit.

Thanks for listening, see you at the next big thing.
Louis Barabbas (co-founder)

New Band: Tunc

1 June 2018 Collaborations, General, Louis Barabbas, Releases, Roxby's Wonky Disco, Snowapple, The Bedlam Six

What do you get if you combine Laura Polence from Snowapple, Biff Roxby from Honeyfeet and Louis Barabbas from The Bedlam Six? You get Tunc! A new experimental pop supergroup stretched between Amsterdam, Salford and the Isle Of Skye.

Check out their first track “Are You Happy Now?”

Follow the band on social media at Facebook and Twitter.

www.tuncband.com

Year In Review: 2015

31 December 2015 General, Uncategorised

Honeyfeet First Chop

image © Jody Hartley

2014 was a tough act to follow. All across our roster there was national airplay, international touring and a huge amount of creative activity. But we hit the ground running.
In 2015 we got serious. Our show on Fab Radio International moved to the 7pm Monday prime-time slot in January and our technical wing over at WR Audio began work on building an ambitious studio complex. Though always a quiet month for releases, this didn’t mean our artists were laying low – indeed, you might even have seen Felix Hagan smashing up a lute on Jack Whitehall’s ITV sitcom Cockroaches.

In February the much anticipated sophomore LP by Snowapple went on general release, receiving great responses from both critics and audiences alike; the group toured the album all over the UK and mainland Europe. Meanwhile in our home town of Manchester Becca Williams collaborated with Beth Orton as part of Band On The Wall’s Artistic Directors series and Honeyfeet appeared with Billy Bragg at Manchester Academy’s Music Beats Austerity event.

March saw WR Audio team up with Kris Extance and a huge array of Manchester independent artists to film and record live sessions under the name Sessions Of March – the first of multiple archiving sessions showcasing the region’s best underground talent. Naturally many of our roster and affiliates were involved, including Walk, Honeyfeet and Louis Barabbas.

The following month Louis Barabbas lifted the veil on a few numbers from his upcoming solo album with the release of an unplugged EP as well as announcing a new musical he was working on (hopefully to be staged in 2016).

In May Ivan Campo embarked on a tour of Spain whilst the rest of our roster got together for Creative Tourist’s Manchester After Hours event. Felix and Louis co-wrote a song to mark the publication anniversary of Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway – the song was then recorded in front of a live audience at the Central Library and featured in the Telegraph’s recommended attractions of the night’s UK-wide event. Check out the result here.

That wasn’t the only Open Recording Session we did that Spring. The following month T. E. Yates and a six piece band laid down three new songs at the Eagle Inn (Salford), whetting people’s appetite for his debut LP. Further afield Louis and Felix embarked on Debt’s first House Concert tour, playing intimate shows all across the country (their tour diaries can be found here and here). June wasn’t all fun though: Alfie the dog, beloved mascot of the label from the beginning (and star of the Bedlam Six‘s Living In The Aftermath video) sadly passed away.

Over the Summer months festival season was the primary call to most of the roster, particularly the Bedlam Six who ended their hiatus to play events in Belgium, Germany and the UK. Back home Walk were the stars of a new Open Recording Session (once again at The Eagle Inn, this time also filed by Manchester documentarians Matter Of Sound for a program all about our pub studio events).

As Summer turned to Autumn attentions shifted back from the live to the recorded. Louis Barabbas’ first solo single You Did This To Me evidenced a surprising new direction while T.E. Yates chilled everyone to the bone with his new animated video for Evil Cat. Back on the live circuit, Richard Barry took a couple of weeks away from his new found parental responsibilities to tour UK houses (once again with Louis Barabbas).

The next tour was slightly more exotic – in October Snowapple headed over to Mexico, a last hurrah before a hiatus instigated by Una’s impending motherhood. Back home saw the release of Alabaster dePlume‘s long-awaited new LP Peach and a collection of stripped down Bedlam Six recordings by Louis Barabbas entitled Bedlam Solo.

November saw Felix Hagan & The Family go pop with the release of their ebullient new EP Kiss The Misfits, complete with two accompanying (and markedly different) music videos for the title track and crowd favourite Some Kind Of Hero. That month also saw the Bedlam Six dip its collective toe in the choppy waters of modern technology with their first live streamed concert. The event (which also featured Felix) was broadcast live from WR Audio’s studio to an online audience that included viewers in the USA, Australia, Central Africa, Germany, France, Spain and the UK. It was particularly memorable for the amount of times Ozzy the studio dog invaded the stage.

In December we had some wonderful non-musical news, Una Bergin from Snowapple gave birth to a baby boy (Debt’s third roster child!). The band also released a fantastic cover of Jolie Holland’s Old Fashioned Morphine which they gave away for free.

So what’s next?
The WR Audio studio is currently being expanded to include a live room the size of a semi-detached house.
Louis Barabbas is poised to release his new solo album Gentle Songs Of Ceaseless Horror.
The Bedlam Six are gearing up for a Spring tour of Europe and a new album, plus a collaboration record with poets from Salford’s prestigious Evidently spoken word night.
Honeyfeet are currently putting the final touches to their new album and it’s sounding amazing (obviously).
T. E. Yates has begun work on his first full length album Silver Coins And White Feathers, produced by Biff Roxby.
Richard Barry is about to start recording his next album (which he promises won’t take nearly as long as the last one).

And that’s just for starters…

So bring on 2016!

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