The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
Moderator: mart
Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
I will be very happy if A Line in the Sand turns out to be the High Commissioner song I heard her record. It was really good and couldn't understand why she'd have left it off!
Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
http://dl-home.com/les-inrockuptibles-2 ... mars-2016/Pluton wrote:For those who read French, Les Inrockuptibles made an article about "Hope Six Demolition Project": http://special.lesinrocks.com/reader/is ... 1447522382
Rough English translation:
Spoiler! :
Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
Thanks DrDark!
Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
Record Collector Mag:


Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
I wonder if Community of Hope would have been as controversial if it had the original title- Silver Linings.
Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
Preparations for tour, or "Clothing in Progress":
https://twitter.com/NewsfromBedlam/stat ... 5612009473
https://twitter.com/NewsfromBedlam/stat ... 0569304068
https://twitter.com/NewsfromBedlam/stat ... 5612009473
https://twitter.com/NewsfromBedlam/stat ... 0569304068
Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
This won't go down well, but here goes anyway.
I'm totally unimpressed with the new album on both a musical and content level. To put that into context, I've loved everything she's ever done up until now, and I've been a fan since the very beginning. Let England Shake was one of the best albums ever written. However, she is still mostly unknown to the wider listening public and so it fell mostly on stony ground when it should have done quite the opposite. This is partly due to her unwillingness to engage with her fans/media etc. I guess this is her personal choice and I respect her for that. But when she moves from the emotional to the political then the game changes. I presume that she wishes this new album to have some kind of positive effect on political thinking, yet if LES passed by with little or no mainstream comment, then this will do likewise.
It gets worse - I think that Seamus Murphy is at best a mediocre artist in his field yet has somehow taken her under his thrall to better his own ends. His LES films were like the curate's egg, good in parts, but nothing more.
As for the music I've heard from the new album, and yes I was at Somerset House last year, I find it turgid, muddy, and unimaginative, with John Parish seemingly pushed to the background (my opinion) and basically only there because he's Polly's best friend.
I hate to write this because I love her to bits.
I'm totally unimpressed with the new album on both a musical and content level. To put that into context, I've loved everything she's ever done up until now, and I've been a fan since the very beginning. Let England Shake was one of the best albums ever written. However, she is still mostly unknown to the wider listening public and so it fell mostly on stony ground when it should have done quite the opposite. This is partly due to her unwillingness to engage with her fans/media etc. I guess this is her personal choice and I respect her for that. But when she moves from the emotional to the political then the game changes. I presume that she wishes this new album to have some kind of positive effect on political thinking, yet if LES passed by with little or no mainstream comment, then this will do likewise.
It gets worse - I think that Seamus Murphy is at best a mediocre artist in his field yet has somehow taken her under his thrall to better his own ends. His LES films were like the curate's egg, good in parts, but nothing more.
As for the music I've heard from the new album, and yes I was at Somerset House last year, I find it turgid, muddy, and unimaginative, with John Parish seemingly pushed to the background (my opinion) and basically only there because he's Polly's best friend.
I hate to write this because I love her to bits.
Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
Okay, there will always be somebody who hates even the best album. But shouldn't you wait to say you dislike the album until it comes out? Yes, we heard songs at Somerset house. But the two studio versions of the songs that were played there are very different. Community of Hope has an entirely different chords in the studio version and the wheel has way more going on in the studio version. It's no question that the rest will be different too, I suspect quite a bit. Ive seen three reviews though and all have been perfect reviews.
For what its worth, the melodies I've heard are some of her best and probably her catchiest yet.
I do wish she would be a little more open and out there though! I'm all for the artist keeping a bit of a distance, some mystery but IMO she just takes it too far. As time goes on she just gets quieter and quieter, and I think that's to her detriment.
For what its worth, the melodies I've heard are some of her best and probably her catchiest yet.
I do wish she would be a little more open and out there though! I'm all for the artist keeping a bit of a distance, some mystery but IMO she just takes it too far. As time goes on she just gets quieter and quieter, and I think that's to her detriment.
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Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
She's already shared a lot about this project and it's not even out yet. The lyrics were released a year ago, she publicly displayed her recording process, she released a book, she had key people give insightful interviews into the recording and travels, she's releasing a film about it and there's lots more to come. What else do you want from her? People have wanted her to explain her words from the start, but she's always wanted the music to speak for itself.
Also, I think she's still very much emotional. She's observing and beautifully reporting things that need to be seen rather than being political.
Also, I think she's still very much emotional. She's observing and beautifully reporting things that need to be seen rather than being political.
I'll rub it, until it...
Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
"Q Magazine" review:
A staggering, vibrant achievement centred around a critique of US government policy.
PJ Harvey has always operated on a political frequency, it’s just those politics have tended towards the personal or sexual (most obviously in the reworked feminism of her first two albums, Dry and Rid Of Me). Over the past five years though, as she’s entered her 40s, that focus has suddenly widened and she’s begun instead to engage with more global concerns.
Following Let England Shake’s exploration of World War I and its legacy, Harvey’s ninth studio album again uses military conflict as its starting point before then panning out to tackle a whole swathe of contemporary woes both political and social. For Let England Shake, Harvey travelled to Gallipoli. Here the inspiration arrived via trips to Kosovo, Afghanistan and Washington DC.
The Hope Six Demolition Project is certainly Harvey’s most ambitious album to date. On it, she attempts a wide-ranging analysis of the effects of Western decision-making on disparate lives around the world, in the process offering vivid individual snapshots alongside a more general commentary about the failures of, specifically, US policy. Harvey is also trying to convey these ideas in a palatable way. That’s to say, by making a record you might actually want to listen to.
That she triumphs at both is a testament to just what a uniquely substantial artist she’s become. Produced by her usual lieutenants, John Parish and Flood, this is a record as rich and diverse as any in her career, a fact somewhat aided by the unusual conditions in which it was made. The LP was partly recorded during a residency at a purpose-built studio in Somerset House, a kind of art installation where members of the public could watch the sessions unfold via a one-way mirror.
Not that this led to any selfconsciousness from those involved. Instead, the record is consistently confident, varied and inventive. It’s interspersed with guests (Jamaican poet Linton Kwesi Johnson crops up on The Ministry Of Defence), static snatches of field recordings made by Harvey’s visual collaborator, war photographer Seamus Murphy, and the odd unexpected sample (The Ministry Of Social Affairs starts with a snatch of "That’s What They Want" by ’50s blues musician Jerry “Boogie” McCain).
Musically, the default setting here recalls her 1995 album To Bring You My Love – a kind of Bad Seeds rattle that blends spirituals and the blues and is particularly potent on the chain gang choirs of River Anacostia and Chain Of Keys. It’s often given additional power by brass or dips into something approaching dub. That’s not to say that the record is difficult, it’s highly melodic and has moments of genuine brightness (the comparatively jaunty Near The Memorials To Vietnam And Lincoln, for instance, or the ethereal drone that underpins the closer, Dollar, Dollar).
That variation and accessibility helps leaven the consistently weighty subject matter. The album title refers to the much criticised HOPE VI initiative in the US that aims to revitalise the worst housing projects but often ends up simply displacing the residents. It’s dealt with witheringly on the opening track The Community Of Hope (“OK now, this is just drug town/Just zombies/But that’s just life… They’re going to put Walmart here”). River Anacostia, meanwhile, deals with the highly polluted waterway that runs into Washington DC (“flowing with the poisons/From the naval yards”).
The thrust seems to be that the US is gradually destroying itself and the world around it. Much of the rest of the album is scattered with vivid portraits of the suffering that’s entailed. “I saw a displaced family eat out of a horse’s hoof” (A Line In The Sand); “an amputee and a pregnant hound / Sit by the young men with withered arms” (The Ministry Of Social Affairs); “a face pock-marked and hollow / He’s saying dollar, dollar” (Dollar, Dollar).
Those images keep on coming and the cumulative effect is almost overwhelming. Harvey’s greatest achievement here though is to stay on her feet and steer a course through the misfortune. What could have been hectoring is instead illuminating and involving. The end result is a heavyweight tour de force, and Polly Harvey’s most fully-realised album to
date.
★★★★
JAMES OLDHAM
Download: River Anacostia | Dollar,
Dollar | The Ministry Of Social Affairs
“Consistently confident,
varied and inventive”:
PJ Harvey hits peak form.
A staggering, vibrant achievement centred around a critique of US government policy.
PJ Harvey has always operated on a political frequency, it’s just those politics have tended towards the personal or sexual (most obviously in the reworked feminism of her first two albums, Dry and Rid Of Me). Over the past five years though, as she’s entered her 40s, that focus has suddenly widened and she’s begun instead to engage with more global concerns.
Following Let England Shake’s exploration of World War I and its legacy, Harvey’s ninth studio album again uses military conflict as its starting point before then panning out to tackle a whole swathe of contemporary woes both political and social. For Let England Shake, Harvey travelled to Gallipoli. Here the inspiration arrived via trips to Kosovo, Afghanistan and Washington DC.
The Hope Six Demolition Project is certainly Harvey’s most ambitious album to date. On it, she attempts a wide-ranging analysis of the effects of Western decision-making on disparate lives around the world, in the process offering vivid individual snapshots alongside a more general commentary about the failures of, specifically, US policy. Harvey is also trying to convey these ideas in a palatable way. That’s to say, by making a record you might actually want to listen to.
That she triumphs at both is a testament to just what a uniquely substantial artist she’s become. Produced by her usual lieutenants, John Parish and Flood, this is a record as rich and diverse as any in her career, a fact somewhat aided by the unusual conditions in which it was made. The LP was partly recorded during a residency at a purpose-built studio in Somerset House, a kind of art installation where members of the public could watch the sessions unfold via a one-way mirror.
Not that this led to any selfconsciousness from those involved. Instead, the record is consistently confident, varied and inventive. It’s interspersed with guests (Jamaican poet Linton Kwesi Johnson crops up on The Ministry Of Defence), static snatches of field recordings made by Harvey’s visual collaborator, war photographer Seamus Murphy, and the odd unexpected sample (The Ministry Of Social Affairs starts with a snatch of "That’s What They Want" by ’50s blues musician Jerry “Boogie” McCain).
Musically, the default setting here recalls her 1995 album To Bring You My Love – a kind of Bad Seeds rattle that blends spirituals and the blues and is particularly potent on the chain gang choirs of River Anacostia and Chain Of Keys. It’s often given additional power by brass or dips into something approaching dub. That’s not to say that the record is difficult, it’s highly melodic and has moments of genuine brightness (the comparatively jaunty Near The Memorials To Vietnam And Lincoln, for instance, or the ethereal drone that underpins the closer, Dollar, Dollar).
That variation and accessibility helps leaven the consistently weighty subject matter. The album title refers to the much criticised HOPE VI initiative in the US that aims to revitalise the worst housing projects but often ends up simply displacing the residents. It’s dealt with witheringly on the opening track The Community Of Hope (“OK now, this is just drug town/Just zombies/But that’s just life… They’re going to put Walmart here”). River Anacostia, meanwhile, deals with the highly polluted waterway that runs into Washington DC (“flowing with the poisons/From the naval yards”).
The thrust seems to be that the US is gradually destroying itself and the world around it. Much of the rest of the album is scattered with vivid portraits of the suffering that’s entailed. “I saw a displaced family eat out of a horse’s hoof” (A Line In The Sand); “an amputee and a pregnant hound / Sit by the young men with withered arms” (The Ministry Of Social Affairs); “a face pock-marked and hollow / He’s saying dollar, dollar” (Dollar, Dollar).
Those images keep on coming and the cumulative effect is almost overwhelming. Harvey’s greatest achievement here though is to stay on her feet and steer a course through the misfortune. What could have been hectoring is instead illuminating and involving. The end result is a heavyweight tour de force, and Polly Harvey’s most fully-realised album to
date.
★★★★
JAMES OLDHAM
Download: River Anacostia | Dollar,
Dollar | The Ministry Of Social Affairs
“Consistently confident,
varied and inventive”:
PJ Harvey hits peak form.
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Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
That's absolutely Right! BRight! I second That!Shadowboxer wrote:She's already shared a lot about this project and it's not even out yet. The lyrics were released a year ago, she publicly displayed her recording process, she released a book, she had key people give insightful interviews into the recording and travels, she's releasing a film about it and there's lots more to come. What else do you want from her? People have wanted her to explain her words from the start, but she's always wanted the music to speak for itself.
Also, I think she's still very much emotional. She's observing and beautifully reporting things that need to be seen rather than being political.
Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
I normally pay no mind to reviews but it is nice she's getting the recognition she deserves.
Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
The Q review is great, but it's the second (I think) piece I've read that mentions only Flood and John Parish as producers. Surely Polly's a producer on it too, right? Why leave her out?
Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
Tend to agree with most of this.keith wrote: I'm totally unimpressed with the new album on both a musical and content level. To put that into context, I've loved everything she's ever done up until now, and I've been a fan since the very beginning. Let England Shake was one of the best albums ever written. However, she is still mostly unknown to the wider listening public and so it fell mostly on stony ground when it should have done quite the opposite. This is partly due to her unwillingness to engage with her fans/media etc. I guess this is her personal choice and I respect her for that. But when she moves from the emotional to the political then the game changes. I presume that she wishes this new album to have some kind of positive effect on political thinking, yet if LES passed by with little or no mainstream comment, then this will do likewise.
It gets worse - I think that Seamus Murphy is at best a mediocre artist in his field yet has somehow taken her under his thrall to better his own ends. His LES films were like the curate's egg, good in parts, but nothing more.
As for the music I've heard from the new album, and yes I was at Somerset House last year, I find it turgid, muddy, and unimaginative, with John Parish seemingly pushed to the background (my opinion) and basically only there because he's Polly's best friend.
Re: The Hope Six Demolition Project new album info
The reviews are confirming what I thought, this would rank with her best. The "something approaching dub" caught my eye!