It’s been far too long since UK synth maestros Hot Chip have visited our shores. Earlier this year saw the release of their wonderful, long-awaited sixth album Why Make Sense? A testament to their long-standing, well-earned reputation as the best and brightest in indie-inspired four-to-the-floor synth pop, it was a reflective and innovative release that brought their hip hop and funk roots to 2015. The group also just released a four-track EP, including a phenomenal seven minute long cover of the Bruce Springsteen classic Dancing In the Dark.
When we interviewed them earlier this year, they assured us that the five-piece would be in the country within 12 months. True to their word, a tour has now been announced for February 2016. The announcement comes today, that they will be touching down for a series of sideshows while in town to headline Melbourne’s Sugar Mountain Festival.
Sydneysiders are in for a real treat, with Hot Chip taking to the stage at the Sydney Opera House on January 22. Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth are also getting shows, with support from Touch Sensitive and Empress Of.
A pre-sale kicks off next Wednesday November 11, and tickets go on sale next Friday November 13 at 10 am (local time). For more info, click here.
TOUR DATES
Friday 22 January : Sydney Opera House, Sydney (all ages)
Sunday 24 January: 170 Russell, Melbourne (18+)
with Touch Sensitive and I OH YOU DJs
Tuesday 26 January: The Tivoli, Brisbane (18+)
with Empress Of and Touch Sensitive and DJs TBA
Friday 29 January: Fremantle Arts Centre, Perth (18+)
with Empress Of and Touch Sensitive and Pilerats DJs
What has become a somewhat staple in their recent live shows has now received some studio treatment for electro wizards Hot Chip and their rendition of Bruce Springsteen‘s Dancing In The Dark. Set to appear on the deluxe edition of their 2015 album Why Make Sense?, the cover has also received some pretty stimulating visuals, which can be seen below.
However, the good news doesn’t stop there. If you stick with the 7+ minute clip below, you’ll notice a slight segue into another classic track. Having also previously covered this one in their live shows as well, the band have included their version of LCD Soundsystem‘s All My Friends, which has been slotted in neatly around the 5 minute mark. Not to mention the remix of New Order‘s Tutti Frutti popping up online just a few days ago as well, and it’s safe to say Hot Chip have been very busy indeed lately.
Hot Chip are set to head to Australia early next year for an appearance at Sugar Mountain festival in Melbourne, alongside Dirty Three, Courtney Barnett and Kelela. It’s been a long time between drinks for the band and some Australian shows, so fans around the country are waiting with bated breath to see if they will announce any other shows. Until then, you can check our interview with the band here and our review of Why Make Sense? here. The deluxe edition of Why Make Sense? is out October 24.
Florence + the Machine‘s How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful has been out for a few months, so it’s about time we got a few remixes to make the songs we’ve had on repeat new again. Hot Chip have obviously been digging Flo and her voice of a goddess. So they took Queen of Peace and changed it up a bit.
The powerful ballad has received the pristine electronic treatment that you might expect from the synth stalwarts. The addition of a quick beat, bass guitar and extra drums gave the song a totally different atmosphere. While it softened the serious tone, the power behind Flo’s voice that still managed to transcend over the beat was still there. It’s just a different take on a beautiful song, and we love it.
So, we now have two versions of this masterpiece just for you, perfect for any mood you may be in. The remix is more for those times we need something upbeat and happy to get us pumped up for the day or if we just feel like having a bit of fun with our music choices. I see it as a good addition for your running playlist. The strong beat makes it highly motivational and will easily distract you from the throbbing pain in your ankles.
We hope Hot Chip decided to take another one of Flo’s track, because this one is a winner.
All My Friends is arguably LCD Soundsystem‘s best, most popular (if Spotify is to be believed) and most covered song. Now, electronic extraordinaires Hot Chip have just pushed it back into everyone’s collective consciousness with their stellar rendition of it at their Webster Hall show on Tuesday night as part of their world tour in support of their most recent album, the gorgeous Why Make Sense? (read out album review here)
Hot Chip surprised fans with special guests Sinkane and none other than LCD Soundsystem’s very own Nancy Whang, playing what looked like an immensely fun cover, replete with a thoroughly appreciative crowd dancing to the 2007 hit. Watch the video below and reminisce about LCD Soundsystem’s glory days, the band having parted ways in 2011. Unfortunately LCD Soundsystem’s vocalist James Murphy was absent from the show, probably stuck in a New York subway somewhere as he embarks on his new project Subway Symphony, a radical and totally unfeasible idea to add melodic tones to subway barriers and brighten up commuters’ trips.
It’s been a long while since Hot Chip visited Australia, but we can only hope that they’ll be visiting us in the near future (perhaps a late Falls Festival addition)? When we interviewed them earlier this year, they promised they’d be here within the next twelve months – tick tock, tick tock!
Hot Chip, British electro-extraordinaires, have done it again, releasing their latest idiosyncratically weird brand of music with a single called Started Right.
Lifted from their newly released album Why Make Sense?, the single is a slow, drawn back amalgamation of off-key vocals and sounds, sounding like something akin to a drunken medley of Mario video music. But the chorus does something unusual: it melds into a seventies-esque funk-jam, sound similar to the trumpet chorus in Kanye’s Touch The Sky.
But the song never strays into territory that’s too serious, always maintaining that light-hearted, slightly warbled distorted cadence from the beginning.
To catch more Hot Chip, keep your ears tuned to Double J: They’ll be featuring in their FILES series on June 25.
Why make sense? Why indeed. Our interview with Hot Chip poses that very question. Perhaps hearing Started Right below will help clear up some of that confusion.
Check it out below:
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kdkV1pNT24M&w=560&h=315]
Hot Chip are back, having never really left after fifteen years of playing together, with their sixth album, Why Make Sense? Full of the muted groove and understated pop that is both immediately recognisable and instantly distinctive, Hot Chip is as always uniform in sound and iconoclastic in scope. In the world of electronic, Hot Chip are singular and unflinching, sophisticated groove in a sea of throb and punch. Bringing their live show collaborators onto the recording has added some easily transferable oomph to what Felix Martin has described as their “best album yet.” Why Make Sense? is a good time album, a soundtrack to warped city visions and moody dancefloors, and fans of Hot Chip el classico will be well satiated.
Clever kids Alexis Taylor and Joe Goddard first got together in the year 2000, confusing the indie and electronic worlds with a blend of both that created instant buzz. The five-piece kept pumping out their particular brand of complexity disguised as minimalism, remaining one of the most reliable dance floor fillers for DJs worldwide and a consistently delivering fan favourite. In an interview this month, Taylor stated Why Make Sense? came from his “absurd approach to life…the lyrics are free to abandon the need to make logical sense or have a narrative or one fixed subject matter… We took that title because we felt like that’s the attitude of Hot Chip. We don’t need to conform to things that people expect of us, we’ve spent long enough with people being confused – why stop now? People always ask why and that’s the hardest question to answer in music.”
Album opener Huarache Lights is named after retro-resurgence sneakers, and on first listen the revival theme is clear. With a simple drum beat opening a la 2006 hit Over and Over, Huarache Lights builds into a deep pulse, with catch cry falsettos evening the frequencies and smoothing the five minute track out into a growing, incessant ear worm. This is what we’ve been missing, the clear cut mechanical machinations of a group of electronic perfectionists. Love is the Future is much funkier, an invitation to a party you want to be at. Taylor and Goddard still like to spike the punch, with De La Soul’s Posdnuos dropping a verse just to confuse the shit out of you and remind you that Hot Chip were teenagers of the nineties. Likewise, Started Right is at first surely some kind of joke with a super cheesy midi-inspired keyboard melody that is, nonetheless, infectious and spreads into something you can’t really help but bop to.
The whole album is jittery and buzzing, even the ballad White Wine and Fried Chicken a dampened slow dance that refuses to tail off when you expect it to. As discussed in our interview, it’s the mix of emotional connection with synth magic that set Hot Chip apart from the rest of the electro-pop dance crowd. This album is no different, and while there will be few surprises for fans that already know the Hot Chip sound it is still that solid consistency and that emotional connection that will continue to keep Hot Chip at the top of the electronic food chain.
Fresh out of the fryer, Hot Chip’s latest album Why Make Sense? is available for streaming!
(Apologies for the awful metaphor, I couldn’t resist).
When we interviewed Hot Chip’s Felix Martin earlier this year, he said he thought that this was the best album they’ve ever done. Finally, after many months of waiting, the world is able to hear the whole thing.
Their unique sound manages to blend precise electronica with real, deep emotion in a way that nobody else can parallel. In our interview, Felix noted that “Everything has been considered, every sound has been thought about,” and that the album was “equally new and nostalgic.” He also claimed that they weren’t that technically geeky, but it’s hard to listen to this music without completely losing yourself in the mix of both real beauty and technical brilliance of each layer and each phrase.
Why Make Sense? features their latest track, which lends its name to the title, along with Haurache Nights, Need You Now, and Burning Up. The album is a collection of the deceptively complex, unique electronic tunes that have made Hot Chip the revered and internationally successful group they are today, and this album in particular seems to be almost an amalgamation of every style and form they’ve experimented with throughout their career. A fluid blend of gorgeous melodies, honeyed vocals and a myriad dense and intricate beats and rhythms, this is easily one of the best dance music albums of 2015 so far, and certainly one of Hot Chip’s best albums yet.
In the lead up to the album finally being released today, they’ve created their own website specifically to stream the album, which you can check out here.
Well, this is awesome.
British electro-pop legends Hot Chip (who I was so honoured to interview recently) are gearing up to drop a brand new album next month, and they’ve just released the second single from their forthcoming release.
The first single they released off their sixth studio relese Why Make Sense? was the wonderful Huarache Lights, and, similarly, Need You Now has been released with its very own video clip fresh off the bat.
The clip stars leadman Alexis Taylor dealing with the depressing aftermath of a breakup. After a couple minutes, you realise that the breakup he’s going through is actually with… himself. And it’s a bad one. Ripped photos, broken crockery, desolate, abandoned wastelands. As the clip progresses, there’s little snippets of complete and total absurdity, like when you noticed the abandoned ships in a deserted field, when his body fades from sight or when the full scene quickly becomes drowned in literal blackness.
It’s surreal and strange and wonderful – just like the song.
God I love Hot Chip.
Why Make Sense? comes out on May 15.
Sitting in my bedroom at 9 pm, I’m on the phone to Felix Martin of Hot Chip, a band who really need no introduction. Since their inception in 2000 they’ve gone from strength to strength, quickly rising to the top of the electro-pop ranks, where they’ve remained ever since.
Showing no sign of slowing down, they’ve just announced their sixth album Why Make Sense?Why Make Sense? is both the name of the album and its final track. But… Why make sense? Have they figured out the answer yet? “I don’t think so,” Felix laughs. “It’s ambiguous enough that we can be playful with it, which I think is really nice. It gives it an open feeling – but I guess that’s also in the music.”
Over the course of five albums, the UK five-piece quickly developed an image as musical mad scientists and technical geniuses. That may well be the case – but Felix is humble about it. “It’s very flattering,” he says. “But we’re not actually that technically geeky. I mean we can get what we want out of a computer or synthesiser, but I think what appeals to people is the human side of it. There’s this idea that if you wear glasses or you look scholarly, people think you’re gonna be really clever and really good at maths and science. I mean, I was always so bad at science during school.”I can empathise – we lament over the fact that we both wear glasses and yet cannot grasp mathematics.Beyond the technicalities of their music, what I – and thousands of others – adore about Hot Chip is their ability to let feeling and human emotion shine through the crisp, clean synths. “It IS emotional!” he exclaims. “There’s relationships and life experience, and for me that’s the appeal. There’s producers like Aphex Twin that are just so brilliant at working with electronics, and taking machines to bits and putting them back together, and that’s never been what we’re about. I don’t mind if people think that, though!”
So how exactly did their sixth offering come to fruition? Impressively, after 15 years and six albums, there’s no shortage of inspiration. “It’s never hard to come up with ideas – there’s more ideas than we can use, really. What’s really hard is to refine and edit, and try to make things as good as they can be.” While the songwriting is led by Alexis Taylor and Joe Goddard, everyone chips in as the process bubbles along. “It’ll usually be Joe starting something, a rhythm or chords or a bass line, and then Alexis will have some ideas for lyrics.“They’re faithful to an initial idea, respectful to that moment of inspiration or creativity, so they’re happy to build a song around that. Like on Huarache Lights, it happened really quickly, just someone improvising and messing about. And then suddenly it was there, and we were like, ‘okay well let’s build a whole song around this.’”
Not everything works though. Every so often, Hot Chip trial something that even they cannot conquer. “There’s definitely a lot of different versions of songs, a few tracks that went through so many iterations and different grooves. But we’ve never hired a thirty piece choir and then decided not to use them, we’ve never tried to do a reggae album, haha.”
There’s so, so much to look forward to on this album. On any given record, Hot Chip are expansive and genre-spanning, blending electronic elements with pop, hip hop, rock and more. But on Why Make Sense? they’ve taken the best moments of their career, twice distilled them, and poured out something truly dazzling. “I’m really excited about it,” he says. “Within the band we feel that this is the best album we’ve done.”
I ask Felix – six albums down and a wealth of experience, what’s something new he learnt recording this album? He ponders for a while. “More than ever, I learnt about keeping things very simple in terms of arrangements and songs. Learning that sometimes it’s better to have one very strong element rather than four less good things, which means making hard decisions. There’s a few songs that are very stripped back and have a much more limited palette of sounds and that’s something that’s quite new for us. Usually we add more and more and more.
“Everything has been considered, every sound has been thought about. I hope that doesn’t mean it’s going to sound sterile! (spoiler: it doesn’t.) There’s definitely a sense of capturing fresh ideas, but the actual finished form is very worked out and considered.“
To be more specific, expect an album that’s equally new and nostalgic. “The last album was maybe a bit more rock, but this one has hip hop and R&B influences too. They were really important to Joe and Alexis when they started the band, so I guess we’ve come full circle, but we’ve picked up so much stuff along the way. A lot of people also have a fondness for The Warning, and this album has a few similarities to that.”
But don’t be alarmed. Not even slightly. This isn’t a rehash or a ‘best of.’ Early on in their career, Hot Chip showed us that they’ve found that coveted thin line between a distinct, signature sound and never sounding quite the same. That remains true to this day, and the final results are refined, slick, relatable and gorgeous.
My final question (although I had twelve more on my list) was if an Australian tour is on the cards. The answer was yes. “I’m 100% sure we’ll be there within the next twelve months. It’s always a place you look forward to coming to after loads of touring. It just feels like a really nice reward. We always have such a good time there. Australians have always been fanatical about Hot Chip – it’s not like that everywhere in the world. So I’m definitely looking forward to coming back.”
Why Make Sense? comes out on Friday May 15.