26 May 2016

"Hold On (Mirwais RMX)" promotional video released


Richard Ashcroft has released a digital EP for the latest single "Hold On," featuring remixes of the single from Mirwais and Brixton Angels.

"Hold On" is the second single from Richard Ashcroft's new album These People, out now. Stream the Hold On EP on Spotify or listen on Apple Music and/or purchase on iTunes.

Hold On EP track list:
  1. Hold On (Album Version)
  2. Hold On (Mirwais RMX)
  3. Hold On (Brixton Angels Remix)
  4. Hold On (Brixton Angels Dub)

24 May 2016

Richard Ashcroft: Interview with BBC Breakfast

Richard Ashcroft slammed by BBC Breakfast viewers for 'wearing scarf and sunglasses'


Richard Ashcroft appeared on BBC breakfast to chat about his new album and upcoming UK performances, but viewers blasted the musician for wearing an interesting choice of scarf and sunglasses in the studio.

Those watching at home were far more concerned with the Verve frontman's unusual ensemble than his announcement that he will be performing at London's 02 Arena in December.

Wearing a white blazer with thin dark stripes, a white scarf around his neck and a pair of green mirrored sunglasses, Richard opened himself up to an onslaught of abuse on social media.

One user said: "Richard Ashcroft is wearing sunglasses indoors, in the BBC Breakfast studios. Outrageous."

Another chimed in: "Richard Ashcroft. Mirrored shades. On BBC BReakfast? It's indoors you mancunian gimp. T**T. #BBCBreakfast."

"Richard Ashcroft looks ridiculous in those sunglasses on BBC BReakfast. You're INDOORS, you fool," one more barked.

Some Twitter users even suggested the odd look was a way to cover up a boozy hangover or late night.

"Richard… sunglasses and a scarf indoors isn't a good look on BBC Breakfast. Heavy night last night?", a bemused viewer questioned.

The "Bittersweet Symphony" singer took a six-year hiatus from recording after his last album RPA & The United Nations of Sound, but is back this year with a new record called These People.

And while Twitter was flooded with abuse for the singer, some took to the site to commend his appearance on the show.

"@richardashcroft enjoyed interview on BBC Breakfast, what a down to earth guy, a celeb in touch with reality and good music," a fan said.

"Great interview with @richardashcroft on BBC Breakfast. Nice to see an intelligent musician talking sense. And a United fan too, what a man," another claimed.

And one adoring user simply gushed: "Richard Ashcroft just oozes brilliance."

Richard's new album is in stores now and is currently sitting at number two in the UK hit charts.

Sending fans into a frenzy, he also announced he will be performing a couple of special concerts in London and Liverpool in December.

Richard Ashcroft wearing baller sunglasses.

Richard Ashcroft tickets: Ex-Verve singer to play O2 Arena in December

The Bittersweet Symphony singer will be touring his first album in six years

The former Verve frontman Richard Ashcroft is to get back on the road later this year, performing at London’s O2 Arena in December.

Having taken a six-year hiatus following his last album, United Nations of Sound, the singer will be touring new material following the release of his fifth solo album.

Although he is mainly remembered for fronting The Verve, Ashcroft continues to exert his familiar voice that is considered one of the best in rock.

His latest album, These People, takes a socio-political stance. Ashcroft addresses the Syrian refugee crisis, whilst also singing about the invasion of government surveillance, and their monitoring power.

Richard Ashcroft’s new material also poses similarities to some early material from The Verve, and sees him tap into a solemn sound that hasn’t been resurrected since his departure from The Verve.

21 May 2016

Review: Pitchfork weighs in on These People

The former Verve frontman returns after a hiatus with another Richard Ashcroft solo album, with all the ostentatious orchestration, bumper-sticker mantras, and cursory electro-dabbling those entail.

- 5.1

It’s been a busy month for ’90s Brit-rock icons on the comeback trail—Radiohead, Super Furry Animals, and even the Stone Roses have all recently resurfaced after prolonged periods of inactivity. But of them all, Richard Ashcroft arguably has the longest climb back up the mountain, even when you take the Roses’ DOA “All for One” single into account—after soaring to the top of the pops in 1997 with the Verve’s platinum-plated opus Urban Hymns, his stock has tumbled down unceremoniously through a series of increasingly soppy solo albums released over the course of the '00s.

Like many rock ‘n’ rollers saddled with wild-child reputations, Ashcroft has been accused of going soft in his middle age. The truth is, Ashcroft was flashing his sensitive side way back when the Verve was doing pretty acoustic versions of “Make It Till Monday” on the promo circuit for their 1993 debut, A Storm in Heaven. However, his solo work has too often highlighted the big difference tenderness and mush, blowing out the resolution of simplistic songs like someone trying to project an iPhone home movie onto an IMAX screen.

In a way, the appearance of the first Richard Ashcroft album in six years is more unlikely than the Roses’ return after 21. After all, in this current gig economy, it’s expected that our favorite groups will reunite for the plum festival guarantees, no matter how acrimonious the initial split. And, having already played the Verve comeback card in 2008, followed by an aborted attempt at rebranding, it seemed like Mad Richard was content to just carry on as Dad Richard. But if the emergence of These People is something of a surprise, its contents are anything but. (Well, other than the fact it took a preaching populist like Ashcroft this long to title a song “Hold On”). The extended layoff has only further entrenched Richard Ashcroft’s desire to make Richard Ashcroft albums, with all the ostentatious orchestration, resurrection rhetoric, bumper-sticker mantras, clunky metaphors, and cursory electro-dabbling those entail.

In hindsight, the early Verve were essentially the missing link between Spiritualized and Oasis, but with Urban Hymns, they anticipated the post-Britpop soft-rock that Coldplay would use to fill stadiums. And though Ashcroft is loathe to own that legacy, he and Chris Martin ultimately share similar goals—namely, to retrofit classic, Glastonbury-sized balladry to contemporary Top 40 standards, and sell it to the masses with life-affirming, one-size-fits all-lyrics. Ashcroft still possesses one of rock’s great voices, his singular balance of grit and gravitas undisturbed by the passage of time. But unlike Martin, there’s an inherent weariness to Ashcroft’s singing that meshes awkwardly with his forays into upbeat dance-pop.

The most thrilling moments in Ashcroft’s discography have come when it sounds like he’s getting lost inside his own music, with the surging sonics and multi-tracked vocals pushing him toward rapture. But here, he’s merely singing about going “Out of My Body” over pro-forma disco-house presets rather than actually doing it. That fish-out-of-water feeling only amplifies his lazier lyrics, whether he’s dropping musty Watergate metaphors on that track, or deploying tired heroine-as-heroin cliches about a woman who goes “straight for my veins” on the arms-aloft anthem “This Is How It Feels.”

These People supposedly addresses socio-political hot topics like Syria’s refugee crisis and government surveillance, but those inspirations yield precious little insight—as per his solo m.o., Ashcroft transforms real-life tumult into nondescript, placeholder lyrics. And while “Everybody Needs Somebody to Hurt” and “Hold On” respectively recycle the “life’s a !@#$%^&*” sentiments of “Bitter Sweet Symphony” atop neon-flickered electro-pop and sunrise-rave sonics, their pat advice (e.g., “So hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on/You know there ain’t a lot time, but I know that we can make it!”) doesn’t exactly instill you with the !@#$%^&*-it-all swagger that prompts one to plow into grannies on your morning stroll.

Ashcroft always fares best when he sounds like he’s addressing another person in an intimate exchange rather than megaphoning the entire human race, and there are moments on These People where he reconnects with the steely-eyed conviction and restlessness that fueled his best songs. His reunion with the Verve’s go-to string arranger Wil Malone pays immediate dividends on “They Don’t Own Me,” which plays like a sequel to “Lucky Man,” albeit with the sense of fire-wielding wonderment replaced by hardened resilience. Even better is the atmospheric, dead-of-night rumination “Picture of You,” which mines a haunted melancholy that Ashcroft hasn’t really tapped since “Sonnet” and “The Drugs Don’t Work,” while “Black Lines” yields his most rousing performance in ages. Sure, it doesn’t tell you anything we haven’t heard before: “It’s real life/Sometimes it gets so hard.” But more than just remind us once again about the inevitability of debt and death, the song’s ascendant, string-swept chorus shows Ashcroft still has the ability to make us momentarily forget about it.

20 May 2016

Richard Ashcroft says he couldn't work with Noel Gallagher because it would 'upset' Liam

Verve frontman previously said that he wants to make a musical with Oasis

Richard Ashcroft has said that he couldn't record an album with Noel Gallagher because it would cause a rift with Gallagher's brother and former Oasis bandmate Liam.

Ashcroft previously spoke of the possibility of working with Noel Gallagher to NME, saying: "In the future who knows what might happen. I wish things like this would’ve happened years ago." He later claimed that he wants to make a musical with Oasis.

Last year, Noel Gallagher said he’d be interested in making an album with Ashcroft. Now, Ashcroft has denied the prospect in an interview with BBC Radio 5 Live, saying that although he does think it would be a "sensational record", he has a "deep respect and love for his brother" and thinks that the collaboration would "upset" Liam Gallagher.

Ashcroft went on to explain: "[Brotherly love] is like a mafia thing, do you think I would [get in between] those two with a Noel/Ashcroft album and think of Liam festering, listening to it on the radio. I don't think so. I'd be really excited helping Liam… I think he should do his first solo album".
  • Source: NME, by Luke Morgan Britton

19 May 2016

Richard Ashcroft - 'These People' Review

A satisfying return to Verve form that’s also a churning maelstrom of death, riots, revolution, terrorism and two-faced politicians

On the surface, this will thrill cagoule-clad lovers of lush, strumming acoustic rock romance everywhere. Below the surface, it’s a churning maelstrom of death, riots, revolution, terrorism, two-faced politicians and the media surreptitiously manipulating the masses. In such say-nothing times, it’s a huge relief to welcome back a brooding, babbling quote-machine such as Richard Ashcroft. He’s slid back into the left-leaning folk rock world with this fifth solo album after six years cut off from the modern world of demanding smartphones and innocuous timeline fillers. Sat in his basement studio, he’s been watching the decade’s global brutality unfold and formulating his deceptively seditious new comfort listening.

Photo by Dean Chalkley

So opener "Out Of My Body" may be a plush electro-pop groover, but the synthetic sound of falling bombs points to its true meaning. “Don’t go looking for your Watergate,” Richard snarls, decrying the mainstream media’s complicity in distracting the public from their leaders’ plain-sight corruptions before widening the net: “Who employs you? Baby, they’ll exploit you… free of control, the way I like it”. "Hold On" is undoubtedly the first freeway electro-rock song about tear gas and pepper spray being lobbed around at the Arab Spring protest and riots. The "Sonnet"-esque title track tackles the inherent human compulsion to put others down that’s turned the internet into such a turbulent troll nest, while "Black Lines" – this album’s "The Drugs Don’t Work," inspired by the death of a close friend – faces the depressive’s struggle to make it through the long, hopeless nights until dawn. Rarely is a record as melodically sumptuous as a folk-rock Proms and as packed with substance as a Wikileak.

Although "Ain’t The Future So Bright" touches on the vocoder rap inflections of 2010’s United Nations Of Sound, These People is the solo record most aligned to Ashcroft’s Verve peak, right down to employing the same string arranger and bunging on one gigantic romance anthem, "This is How It Feels." It’s both a grandmaster lesson and an antidote to the current crop of insipid singer-songwriter mulch, the sound of Ashcroft charging into the acoustic rock youth centre and showing them how it’s done. “I’m feeling like a number one again”, he sings; it’s a better bet than Leicester winning the league.
  • Source: NME, by Mark Beaumont

17 May 2016

Richard Ashcroft showcases five new songs and performs Verve classics at London comeback gig

Singer's new album 'These People' is out on May 20

Richard Ashcroft showcased five new songs from his forthcoming album These People in London last night (May 16).

The former Verve frontman performed an hour and 50 minute set at his comeback show at the Camden Roundhouse which also saw him throw in classic hits by his former band including "Sonnet," "Lucky Man," "The Drugs Don't Work" and "Bitter Sweet Symphony."

Arriving onstage dressed in the same light blue suit and shades that he wore in the video for his return single "This Is How It Feels," Ashcroft kicked off the show with opening album track "Out Of My Body" before he went on to play four further songs from his new LP including the record's title track, "They Don't Own Me" and recent singles "This Is How It Feels" and "Hold On." He was due to play another new track "Black Lines" but it was cut from the set list. You can view footage of the tracks below.

His fourth studio album These People is released this Friday (May 20).



Backed by a five-piece band, the singer also performed a series of hits from his back catalogue including 'Science Of Silence' which saw him thanking the crowd for “sticking by me”, "New York," "Break The Night With Colour" and "Music Is Power." During the latter he admitted that it was “good to be home” after six years out of the spotlight.

Later in the set, Ashcroft thanked the crowd for being patient with the new material. “Next time you hear this, there will be a room full of people singing "These People," he said after performing the title track to his new record, before he added: “But until then it is just another guy singing a new song.”

But there were huge cheers when he performed classic hit singles by The Verve, which at one point saw Ashcroft perform "The Drugs Don't Work" during a short acoustic section which also included his 2000 debut single "Song For The Lovers."

Wrapping up his set, he rattled off his Unkle collaboration "Lonely Soul" which featured in the movie The Beach, "Hold On" and Urban Hymns classic "Bitter Sweet Symphony." Signing off, he shouted: “Love and peace to you,” before he left the stage.

Richard Ashcroft played:
  1. Out Of My Body
  2. This Is How It Feels
  3. Science Of Silence
  4. Sonnet
  5. They Don't Own Me
  6. Music Is Power
  7. Break The Night With Colour
  8. These People
  9. New York
  10. Lucky Man
  11. The Drugs Don't Work
  12. Song For The Lovers
  13. Lonely Soul
  14. Bitter Sweet Symphony
  • Source: NME, by Damian Jones

16 May 2016

RTL2 In Session: Richard Ashcroft




I think These People is the beginning of a great creative 
period for me" - Richard Ashcroft

15 May 2016

Review: Richard Ashcroft at Manchester Albert Hall

Photo by Joel Goodman

Thomas Ingham watches as the former Verve frontman gets a hero's welcome as he returns with new material

Given the unpredicted and runaway success of 1997's Urban Hymns, Richard Ashcroft could have indulged his status as one of the greatest British songwriters with a series of headline shows at Heaton Park, but he's always been a bit more humble than that.

The unshakable assurance he has in his songwriting abilities have allowed the Wigan-born songwriter to brush off ‘mad Richard’ comments and put out a new politically-charged record, These People.

Six years on from the eclectic United Nations of Sound and the unmistakable rich timbre of his voice is supported by an altogether more electronic and breezy ensemble of instruments, offsetting his bleak outlook on international conflicts and issues surrounding freedom of speech.

Manchester’s Albert Hall is the dream venue for Ashcroft; big enough to soak up the anthems but bijou and esoteric enough to cement his position as an outlier in the music industry.

Swaggering onto the stage with arms outstretched, he’s greeted by the kind of reception usually reserved for an FA Cup final. His trademark shades are accompanied by a gas mask which he wears around his neck, mirroring his latest album cover.

Wasting no time, he blasts through new single "This is How it Feels" and Verve classic "Sonnet," pounding his chest and gesturing to the adoring crowd after every chorus.

The confidence in his new material is well placed; "Hold On" and "These People" feeling like instant classics with their infectious hooks and shimmering production.

Throughout the set Ashcroft seems vitriolic; thanking fans “one of the best nights of his life” before shouting out Mancunian icons Shaun Ryder, Stone Roses and The Smiths during "Music is Power."

The tone ranges from acoustic balladry to fuzzed-out psychedelia, a transition which highlights his abilities as a bandleader."Lucky Man" draws one of the biggest receptions of the night, with Ashcroft taking two swipes at the intro “It’s too good of a song and it’s been too long, let’s start that again”.

After a long encore, he ditches the waistcoat and comes out in more traditional 90’s Brit-pop regalia, performing a solo rendition of "The Drugs Don’t Work" and bringing a tear to the eye of many as he dedicates it “to those who can’t be with us tonight”.

His natural gift for coupling depressingly frank lyrics with uplifting and euphoric music is demonstrated perfectly by the majestic set closer "Bitter Sweet Symphony."

Being the seldom-seen rockstar that he is, the night seems equally as overwhelming for Ashcroft as it is for the fans. The conviction with which he delivers this career-spanning set couldn’t be sustained over a more extensive UK tour, and nor should it be.

As much as he adores the crowd and performs a large chunk from Urban Hymns, this is ultimately catharsis for a true musical enigma and British master - a fleeting glimpse of his genius.

Setlist:
Out Of My Body
This Is How It feels
Science of Silence
Sonnet
They Don’t Own Me
Music Is Power
Break The Night With Colour
These People
New York
Lucky Man
Black Lines
The Drugs Don’t Work
Space And Time
Lonely Soul
Hold On
Bitter Sweet Symphony

Review: Richard Ashcroft at Manchester Albert Hall

Thomas Ingham watches as the former Verve frontman gets a hero's welcome as he returns with new material

Given the unpredicted and runaway success of 1997's Urban Hymns, Richard Ashcroft could have indulged his status as one of the greatest British songwriters with a series of headline shows at Heaton Park, but he's always been a bit more humble than that.

The unshakable assurance he has in his songwriting abilities have allowed the Wigan-born songwriter to brush off ‘mad Richard’ comments and put out a new politically-charged record, These People.

Six years on from the eclectic United Nations of Sound and the unmistakable rich timbre of his voice is supported by an altogether more electronic and breezy ensemble of instruments, offsetting his bleak outlook on international conflicts and issues surrounding freedom of speech.

Manchester’s Albert Hall is the dream venue for Ashcroft; big enough to soak up the anthems but bijou and esoteric enough to cement his position as an outlier in the music industry.

Swaggering onto the stage with arms outstretched, he’s greeted by the kind of reception usually reserved for an FA Cup final. His trademark shades are accompanied by a gas mask which he wears around his neck, mirroring his latest album cover.

Wasting no time, he blasts through new single "This is How it Feels" and Verve classic "Sonnet," pounding his chest and gesturing to the adoring crowd after every chorus.

The confidence in his new material is well placed; "Hold On" and "These People" feeling like instant classics with their infectious hooks and shimmering production.

Throughout the set Ashcroft seems vitriolic; thanking fans “one of the best nights of his life” before shouting out Mancunian icons Shaun Ryder, Stone Roses and The Smiths during "Music is Power."

The tone ranges from acoustic balladry to fuzzed-out psychedelia, a transition which highlights his abilities as a bandleader. "Lucky Man" draws one of the biggest receptions of the night, with Ashcroft taking two swipes at the intro “It’s too good of a song and it’s been too long, let’s start that again”.

After a long encore, he ditches the waistcoat and comes out in more traditional 90’s Brit-pop regalia, performing a solo rendition of "The Drugs Don’t Work" and bringing a tear to the eye of many as he dedicates it “to those who can’t be with us tonight”.

His natural gift for coupling depressingly frank lyrics with uplifting and euphoric music is demonstrated perfectly by the majestic set closer "Bitter Sweet Symphony."

Being the seldom-seen rockstar that he is, the night seems equally as overwhelming for Ashcroft as it is for the fans. The conviction with which he delivers this career-spanning set couldn’t be sustained over a more extensive UK tour, and nor should it be.

As much as he adores the crowd and performs a large chunk from Urban Hymns, this is ultimately catharsis for a true musical enigma and British master - a fleeting glimpse of his genius.

Setlist:
  1. Out Of My Body
  2. This Is How It feels
  3. Science of Silence
  4. Sonnet
  5. They Don’t Own Me
  6. Music Is Power
  7. Break The Night With Colour
  8. These People
  9. New York
  10. Lucky Man
  11. Black Lines
  12. The Drugs Don’t Work
  13. Space And Time
  14. Lonely Soul
  15. Hold On
  16. Bitter Sweet Symphony