
Editors - EBM
2 LP Limited Edition Orange 2LP with Side D EBM etching. Housed in a single sleeve with spot-uv logo, with printed inner sleeves and printed on-body labels. Side A 1. Heart Attack 2. Picturesque 3. Karma Climb Side B 1. Kiss 2. Silence 3. Strawberry Lemonade Side C 1. Vibe 2. Educate 3. Strange Intimacy Side D (EBM logo Etching) Editors have never been a band who do whatâs expected. When they emerged in the early 2000s, university friends from Birmingham, they were swept into a wave of indie groups with whom they had little in common beyond playing guitars. Then, after their 2005 Mercury Prize-shortlisted debut The Back Room and 2007 #1 follow-up An End Has A Start, they switched up their sound for synths. That was their first act of bravery, says frontman Tom Smith, and theyâve been taking risks ever since. âWeâre quite used to that feeling of scaring our audience with new material,â he says with a smile. âIt seems to happen with every album,â agrees guitarist Justin Lockey. âWeâll do something that everyone really likes, and then weâll go and do something else.â That âsomething elseâ is a breathlessly heavy step up, with their seventh album, EBM. Itâs Editorsâ most leftfield material yet â a thrilling, unrelenting thrust of full-bodied electro-industrial rock. Another new dawn: Benjamin John Power â aka Blanck Mass â has co-produced the album and come aboard as an official member. To outside ears, it might seem like an unusual pairing: an anthemic rock band whoâve headlined Wembley Arena and an Ivor Novello-winning composer who is best known for his abrasive noise projects. Even Benjamin himself admits it was a âleap of faithâ. But Editorsâ evolution makes perfect sense. Theyâve toured with The Cure, of whom they are all huge fans, and are used to playing European festivals where theyâre billed alongside harder acts. In Germany, for example, âwere not seen as some melodic indie band,â says Justin, âweâre seen as super goth.â He adds: âWe talked about Rammstein quite a lot when were making this record.â Benjaminâs journey to joining Editors was a surprisingly organic one. He had worked on the bandâs last album, 2018âs Violence, giving some songs a more brutal, industrial edge, the full realisations of which came out as 2019âs The Blanck Mass Sessions. That same year, Editors were asked to both headline a festival in Belgium and create a bespoke set for later on in the night. They approached Benjamin to see whether heâd be up for helping to retool their songs in a dancier direction. But with the pandemic underway, the festival never happened and Editors were left with a bunch of new ideas during the ensuing lockdowns that were designed for â as Benjamin puts it â a âdirty rave tentâ. They continued swapping ideas anyway, and the band began buzzing about where this music was headed: shadowier, beefier, exploring their shared love of synth-pop, industrial and alt-rock, it started to feel like a new chapter â the bandâs third act. For the first time, the song structures werenât coming from Tom and he says it was a novel but exciting exercise to receive the files and tinker with them, with Justin, Elliott Williams (keyboards/guitars), drummer Ed Lay and bassist Russell Leetch fleshing out their parts in the studio when they eventually regrouped. âBen has certainly been a shot of adrenaline in our creative process,â says Tom. âThe songs are so immediate, and in your face.â Making EBM was âa lifelineâ during the pandemic, says Elliott, âsomething to totally get lost in.â Indeed, theyâve created a world brimming with drama and intensity, which is exhilarating after the past few years of collective listlessness. âThe songs feel like an escape,â nods Tom. The album title is an acronym of Editors and Blanck Mass but also a knowing reference to Electronic Body Music, the potent sound that originated in the 1980s and which has hugely influenced Editorsâ new material, where the synths of bands like Nitzer Ebb, Front 242 , DAF and Skinny Puppy hammer darkly. Think smoke machines, strobe lights and the smell of leather. The band has taken those influences in a distinctly Editors direction: see the soaring falsetto of standout âKissâ, their disco-infused âcrying on the dancefloorâ banger, says Tom, which Benjamin adds âcould almost be a Donna Summer songâ if it wasnât so heavy. Or the punchy chorus of âKarma Climbâ, a stomping single that pairs ghostly atmospherics with stadium-level anthemia. On âVibeâ, which is the closest thing to what you could call a âfeelgoodâ Editors track, Tom wanted to put a âsummertime sheenâ on âa song for disconnected youthâ. Itâs Editors at their most super goth, sure â but also their most pop. For Benjamin, it was an opportunity to flex his melodic muscles. In fact, says Tom, it was the avant-garde producer who brought the poppiest ideas to the table. âI was quite blown away by how accessible they were,â he says. âIt was like ABBA or something.â Benjamin, a Nine Inch Nails die-hard, has always been struck by the seriousness and sentimentality of Editorsâ music and was also keen to heighten the intensity after a bleak few years. âThereâs a strong physicality to this record,â he says of its muscular soundscapes, which certainly echo, in places, the claustrophobia of The Downward Spiral. âI was looking ahead to a kind of a space where itâs sweaty, and bodies are close together.â For the most part, EBM revels in maximalism. The battle cry of lead single âHeart Attackâ sets out their stall, a twinkling rock ballad with a serrated, noirish undercurrent that lets rip into gloriously metallic riffage. From there, itâs a torrid release of beats, blips and broodiness: all killer, no filler; full-on but never overloaded. âEducateâ is almost symphonic in scope, as Tom angrily intones about the uncertainty of modern times. âStrawberry Lemonadeâ, meanwhile, is an all-blooping, all-thwacking bodice-ripper, with drums that sound like they might punch out of the speakers. Album closer âStrange Intimacyâ is âthe most outrageousâ of the album, says Tom â ânot a particularly happy place to end, as itâs quite a bleak look at a relationship, but the arrangement of it gives it this theatricality.â Itâs certainly the most ambitious Editors have ever sounded, where Justinâs âpreposterousâ guitar riff gives way, he says, to a âmad eight-minute techno odysseyâ at the end. Another about-turn is the jittering crescendo of âSilenceâ â the albumâs post-rock âbreatherâ, if you can call it that. Tomâs baritone has never sounded better, recalling a young Johnny Cash covering Nine Inch Nailsâ âHurtâ. Heâs never much been one for direct lyrics. On EBM, there are undeniable references to the pandemic and a divided Britain (âcan you feel the broken nation?â he intones on âStrawberry Lemonadeâ) but these are slivers of reality among the abstract, in songs that are largely about losing yourself in the unknown. âI think itâs always better when the listener can draw their own conclusions from what I write,â he says. Justin agrees. âWe sit in quite an emotional space, so everyone always wants to know what the words are about, but the music is half the emotion and what sets the mood and the tempo. Sometimes itâs better just to give yourself over to that rather than to try and work out what something means all the time.â It comes back to this idea of letting the mood take over, of giving in, and getting lost. And itâs going to sound absolutely eviscerating live. Itâs a new world, and a new chapter for Editors â as it is for everyone. Time to move your body.
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2 LP Limited Edition Orange 2LP with Side D EBM etching. Housed in a single sleeve with spot-uv logo, with printed inner sleeves and printed on-body labels. Side A 1. Heart Attack 2. Picturesque 3. Karma Climb Side B 1. Kiss 2. Silence 3. Strawberry Lemonade Side C 1. Vibe 2. Educate 3. Strange Intimacy Side D (EBM logo Etching) Editors have never been a band who do whatâs expected. When they emerged in the early 2000s, university friends from Birmingham, they were swept into a wave of indie groups with whom they had little in common beyond playing guitars. Then, after their 2005 Mercury Prize-shortlisted debut The Back Room and 2007 #1 follow-up An End Has A Start, they switched up their sound for synths. That was their first act of bravery, says frontman Tom Smith, and theyâve been taking risks ever since. âWeâre quite used to that feeling of scaring our audience with new material,â he says with a smile. âIt seems to happen with every album,â agrees guitarist Justin Lockey. âWeâll do something that everyone really likes, and then weâll go and do something else.â That âsomething elseâ is a breathlessly heavy step up, with their seventh album, EBM. Itâs Editorsâ most leftfield material yet â a thrilling, unrelenting thrust of full-bodied electro-industrial rock. Another new dawn: Benjamin John Power â aka Blanck Mass â has co-produced the album and come aboard as an official member. To outside ears, it might seem like an unusual pairing: an anthemic rock band whoâve headlined Wembley Arena and an Ivor Novello-winning composer who is best known for his abrasive noise projects. Even Benjamin himself admits it was a âleap of faithâ. But Editorsâ evolution makes perfect sense. Theyâve toured with The Cure, of whom they are all huge fans, and are used to playing European festivals where theyâre billed alongside harder acts. In Germany, for example, âwere not seen as some melodic indie band,â says Justin, âweâre seen as super goth.â He adds: âWe talked about Rammstein quite a lot when were making this record.â Benjaminâs journey to joining Editors was a surprisingly organic one. He had worked on the bandâs last album, 2018âs Violence, giving some songs a more brutal, industrial edge, the full realisations of which came out as 2019âs The Blanck Mass Sessions. That same year, Editors were asked to both headline a festival in Belgium and create a bespoke set for later on in the night. They approached Benjamin to see whether heâd be up for helping to retool their songs in a dancier direction. But with the pandemic underway, the festival never happened and Editors were left with a bunch of new ideas during the ensuing lockdowns that were designed for â as Benjamin puts it â a âdirty rave tentâ. They continued swapping ideas anyway, and the band began buzzing about where this music was headed: shadowier, beefier, exploring their shared love of synth-pop, industrial and alt-rock, it started to feel like a new chapter â the bandâs third act. For the first time, the song structures werenât coming from Tom and he says it was a novel but exciting exercise to receive the files and tinker with them, with Justin, Elliott Williams (keyboards/guitars), drummer Ed Lay and bassist Russell Leetch fleshing out their parts in the studio when they eventually regrouped. âBen has certainly been a shot of adrenaline in our creative process,â says Tom. âThe songs are so immediate, and in your face.â Making EBM was âa lifelineâ during the pandemic, says Elliott, âsomething to totally get lost in.â Indeed, theyâve created a world brimming with drama and intensity, which is exhilarating after the past few years of collective listlessness. âThe songs feel like an escape,â nods Tom. The album title is an acronym of Editors and Blanck Mass but also a knowing reference to Electronic Body Music, the potent sound that originated in the 1980s and which has hugely influenced Editorsâ new material, where the synths of bands like Nitzer Ebb, Front 242 , DAF and Skinny Puppy hammer darkly. Think smoke machines, strobe lights and the smell of leather. The band has taken those influences in a distinctly Editors direction: see the soaring falsetto of standout âKissâ, their disco-infused âcrying on the dancefloorâ banger, says Tom, which Benjamin adds âcould almost be a Donna Summer songâ if it wasnât so heavy. Or the punchy chorus of âKarma Climbâ, a stomping single that pairs ghostly atmospherics with stadium-level anthemia. On âVibeâ, which is the closest thing to what you could call a âfeelgoodâ Editors track, Tom wanted to put a âsummertime sheenâ on âa song for disconnected youthâ. Itâs Editors at their most super goth, sure â but also their most pop. For Benjamin, it was an opportunity to flex his melodic muscles. In fact, says Tom, it was the avant-garde producer who brought the poppiest ideas to the table. âI was quite blown away by how accessible they were,â he says. âIt was like ABBA or something.â Benjamin, a Nine Inch Nails die-hard, has always been struck by the seriousness and sentimentality of Editorsâ music and was also keen to heighten the intensity after a bleak few years. âThereâs a strong physicality to this record,â he says of its muscular soundscapes, which certainly echo, in places, the claustrophobia of The Downward Spiral. âI was looking ahead to a kind of a space where itâs sweaty, and bodies are close together.â For the most part, EBM revels in maximalism. The battle cry of lead single âHeart Attackâ sets out their stall, a twinkling rock ballad with a serrated, noirish undercurrent that lets rip into gloriously metallic riffage. From there, itâs a torrid release of beats, blips and broodiness: all killer, no filler; full-on but never overloaded. âEducateâ is almost symphonic in scope, as Tom angrily intones about the uncertainty of modern times. âStrawberry Lemonadeâ, meanwhile, is an all-blooping, all-thwacking bodice-ripper, with drums that sound like they might punch out of the speakers. Album closer âStrange Intimacyâ is âthe most outrageousâ of the album, says Tom â ânot a particularly happy place to end, as itâs quite a bleak look at a relationship, but the arrangement of it gives it this theatricality.â Itâs certainly the most ambitious Editors have ever sounded, where Justinâs âpreposterousâ guitar riff gives way, he says, to a âmad eight-minute techno odysseyâ at the end. Another about-turn is the jittering crescendo of âSilenceâ â the albumâs post-rock âbreatherâ, if you can call it that. Tomâs baritone has never sounded better, recalling a young Johnny Cash covering Nine Inch Nailsâ âHurtâ. Heâs never much been one for direct lyrics. On EBM, there are undeniable references to the pandemic and a divided Britain (âcan you feel the broken nation?â he intones on âStrawberry Lemonadeâ) but these are slivers of reality among the abstract, in songs that are largely about losing yourself in the unknown. âI think itâs always better when the listener can draw their own conclusions from what I write,â he says. Justin agrees. âWe sit in quite an emotional space, so everyone always wants to know what the words are about, but the music is half the emotion and what sets the mood and the tempo. Sometimes itâs better just to give yourself over to that rather than to try and work out what something means all the time.â It comes back to this idea of letting the mood take over, of giving in, and getting lost. And itâs going to sound absolutely eviscerating live. Itâs a new world, and a new chapter for Editors â as it is for everyone. Time to move your body.













