The Black Dog
The Grey Album
Dust Science Limited
/
2023
CD
13.99
dustcd113
2LP
36.99
dustv113
Incl. VAT plus shipping / Orders from outside the EU are exempt from VAT
Tracklist
1Let's All Make Brutalism
2You've Heard This One Before
3This Is Phil Talking
4Ghosts Of Decay
5Open Your Head
6Harder Times
7Let Me Dada
8Borstal Communications
998 Russell Street
10Thee Difference Ov Girls
11Empire Statement Humanoid
12(We Never Needed This) Fascist Groove Thang
13Owls In Tesco Bags
14I Dare You
15Sound Ov Thee Crowd
16Circus Ov Daath
17We Never Wanted You

Following »The White EP« (2023) and »The Black EP« (2022), The Black Dog now present »The Grey Album«.

»Sometimes, things just happen. For months, we’d been working away on various projects and then, without really thinking about it, »The Black EP« just happened. It seemingly appeared from nowhere.

We’d been talking about the old days; making music with friends and dodgy kit, renting small practice rooms and using makeshift recording studios. It was such a common thing back then, you could pick a dusty space in a half-derelict building for as little as £25 a month. In those days, the Cabs and Human League had studios with posh-sounding names, but in reality, they were the same old workspaces long abandoned by the industries they were built for. Nevertheless, the grand names made them sound magical.

Sheffield had thousands of these spaces, and some still exist today, but their abundance and low-cost made Sheffield a very active place. Someone was always doing something. They’d exploded onto the scene in a flurry of excitement before disappearing just as quickly.

There’s something about these little mesters (workshops) that we believe lives in the very consciousness of Sheffield. It’s one of the reasons we never really had big scenes like Manchester or Leeds. The Hacienda would've never been built here.

Once we had the first two tracks of »The Black EP«, we set off to see Jon at Do It Theesen, where he manually cut the tracks to an extremely limited set of 7" singles using a vinyl lathe. It just felt right to go back to the old ways; a small gang creating something special in workshops and sheds. There’s something very satisfying about it, a perfect circle, if you will.

We pushed further by adopting old practices, working with one synth per person and limiting the use of our computers. We only stopped short of putting everything on beer crates. It seems like madness these days, but there is raw creativity within these confines. Pretty much every band started this way. Depeche Mode travelled to the studio on the London Underground for their first appearance on Top Of The Pops, all lugging a synth each. That's how we approached the creation of this album; stripped back, raw and minimal - it just felt so right.

And then there’s the competitive element that was influenced when the original Human League split and became Human League MK II and Heaven 17. Both continued to use the same studio to write what became the albums "Dare" and "Penthouse and Pavement". There is something about that drive that is very Sheffield, just making stuff and hoping everything falls into place.

In Sheffield, we do things differently, because that’s how we are built.«