O. Release Debut Album 'WeirdOs' via Speedy Wunderground — Prescription Music PR (2024)

“none of O.’s predecessors come close to the guttural, visceral sounds uttered by theNME100 alumni.” – NME ****

“one of the finest debut albums I’ve heard in a LONG time.” – CLASH ****

“this album drips with irresistible swagger” – DIY ****

“An urgent debut perfect for anyone grieving The Comet Is Coming’s demise” – MOJO ****

“a world where genres blend, emotions run high, and music knows no bounds” – Dork

“at their headbanging best” – London Evening Standard

“O wow, O yes, O my god, O my word.” –Loud & Quiet

“Though played on acoustic instruments, O.’s music has the heft of the most potent club records. Watch them fly.” -DJ

“A stomping, skronking sound.” –Stereogum

“an incredibly polished, yet spontaneous sound, the likes of which you might expect from a band with years of experience in the game.” – Far Out ****

“As debuts go, this places them firmly amongst the vanguard of ultra modern British psych jazz”- NARC ****

Today, O. – the London-based duo of baritone saxophonist Joe Henwood and drummer Tash Keary – have released their long awaite debut album ‘WeirdOs’ via Speedy Wunderground. To mark the release, the band have also shared a new track from the album titled ‘TV Dinners’. Full of breakneck rhythms and groove-heavy, distorted sax riffing, the track perfectly encapsulates everything fans have come to love about their inimitable sound.

Honing their fearless sound through a residency at Brixton’s iconic venue The Windmill, as well as on support slots across the UK and Europe with fellow heavyweights black midi and Gilla Band, O. have now distilled their unique live energy into their debut album, ‘WeirdOs’. Coming hot on the heels of last November’s debut EP “SLICE” – which won enthusiastic support from DIY, Dork, NME, Louder, and Rough Trade - and once again featuring production from Dan Carey, ‘WeirdOs’ is Tash and Joe at their most raucous and free. Across 10 tracks of high-octane instrumentals recorded live to tape, the duo encompasses everything from cathartic dancefloor drops, to intricate jazz lines, and sludgy, menacing doom metal.

Speaking on the album, the band say: “Our debut album is a tribute to the joys of being weird. Titled after someone at one of our first shows enthusiastically told us that we make 'music for weirdos', this is a culmination of our first few years as a band making odd music with odd instrumentation. WeirdOs, we feel, describes the collection of tunes, us as people, and the people who enjoy our music. Long live the strange.”

The album arrives as a highly praised snapshot of a band that show no signs of slowing. They’ve had extensive BBC Radio 6 Music support, and praise from the likes of MOJO, Uncut, DIY, CRACK, Notion, whynow, CLASH, NME, Loud & Quiet, So Young, and more. The album also comes ahead of a recently announced run of EU / UK live dates. The dates come on the heels of the band’s successful first US shows and include appearances at WOMAD Festival, The Great Escape Festival, Deer Shed Festival, Manchester and Edinburgh Psych Festivals, and more. The band will also play an in-store gig and signing at Rough Trade East on 24th June – tickets are available HERE.

Full dates are as follows:

14/07 Valkhof Festival, Nijmegen
18/07 Dour Festival, Dour
26/07 Cornish Bank Summer Camp, Falmouth
27/07 WOMAD Festival, Malmesbury
28/07 Deer Shed Festival, Topcliffe
08/08 Winterthurer Musikfestwochen, Winterthur
29/08 Into the Great Wide Open, Vlieland
31/08 Manchester Psych Fest, Manchester
01/09 Edinburgh Psych Fest, Edinburgh
02/09 The Rum Shack, Glasgow
04/09 Rich Mix, London
05/09 Where Else?, Margate
06/09 Rough Trade, Bristol
17/09 Aeronef, Lille
18/09 Point Ephemere, Paris
20/09 Reeperbahn, Hamburg
21/09 Schokoladen, Berlin
24/09 Doka, Amsterdam
25/09 Botanique, Brussels

Tickets are on sale HERE.

Few things compare to the experience of watching O. live. Featuring the immense, vibrational bass-weight of Joe Henwood’s baritone saxophone played through his array of dub and distortion pedals, as well as the blisteringly precise yet expressively fierce drumming of Tash Keary, the South London duo’s shows are an assault of sound. With only two instruments, O. encompass everything from the euphoria of the club to the earworming hooks of memorable melodies. Theirs is an infectious, irrepressible music.

“We’re just two people making a big sound, unafraid to give it our all when we play,” Joe says. “We’re interested in taking it to the limit –it’s something that comes naturally to us.”

Tash first took to the drums as a shy nine-year-old, channelling its monolithic sound as a means of self-expression. As the only musician in the family, music never seemed like anything other than a hobby, but after joining grassroots music organisation Tomorrow’s Warriors in 2018 and becoming part of their Female Frontline band, she found herself embedded in London’s burgeoning jazz scene. At the same time, Joe was building his reputation as a key player in the capital, after spending a decade with afro-jazz outfit Nubiyan Twist.

Manoeuvring around similar scenes, the pair finally met after being hired for the same gig in 2019 and noticed an immediate chemistry. “I felt a real connection playing with Tash,” Joe says. “We shared the same mentality of telling a musical story, rather than just shredding technical ideas.”

They resolved to keep jamming together and once the Covid lockdowns hit in 2020 and all gigs were pulled, they finally found the time. “We joined up as a ‘bubble’ and spent pretty much every day improvising with each other for months,” Tash says. “We would play along to tracks we liked and talk about our influences, from Deftones to A Tribe Called Quest, Radiohead and Floating Points. We became really excited about introducing each other to music and rekindling our love of finding new music as kids.”

Harnessing that childlike enthusiasm allowed the duo to move away from the jazz music they had been playing and to reconnect with their first loves of heavier, noisier sounds. For Joe, that meant revisiting his first experience of seeing legendary experimental British saxophonist Pete Wareham play with his Acoustic Ladyland band as a teenager and witnessing the electronic wizardry that could emerge from processing a horn through a pedal board. While for Tash, it meant smashing through the backbeat of rock tracks, letting her hands fly over the drum kit and cymbals.

Settling on the initial band name Toe – as an elision of their names – before changing to O. to avoid confusion with the Japanese post-rock group Toe, Tash and Joe began playing their first shows, which were restricted to pandemic livestreams. “We tested our neighbours’ patience,” Tash says. “Until our third show got booked, which was at The Windmill.”

Transforming seamlessly from living room jams into the sweaty, packed confines of The Windmill, the band soon caught the attention of venue booker Tim Perry, who was taken by their capacity to produce such an intense flow with so few instruments. “We call him our Fairy Godfather because he gave us a residency at a venue where we could really hone our sound to a live audience,” Joe says. “Then he asked if we wanted to go on tour with black midi.”

Following the experimental trio on 25 dates across the UK and Europe in 2021 and 2022, it was here that O. drilled down to the essence of their onstage presence. “We were so inspired by the playfulness black midi shared onstage and it gave us confidence to get darker and heavier in our sound,” Tash says. “We also really built our stamina to be able to play fast and hard with just the two of us for a full hour.”

Flexing those live muscles further on tour with Irish post-punk group Gilla Band, O. were then introduced to black midi’s producer Dan Carey and quickly began work on what would become their debut EP, ‘SLICE’. “Dan had been to see us play a lot and he just wanted us to recreate the raw energy of being on stage in the studio,” Joe says. “It’s such a full, bassy sound and Dan simply allows us to play the music.”

Finding freedom in Carey’s intuitive, analogue process, 2023’s SLICE produced five tracks of propulsive instrumentals, from the endless crescendo of ‘Moon’ to the synth pedal distortions of ‘Grouchy’ and jump-up blasts of ‘ATM’. “Slice is a snapshot of different sides of the band, it’s a playful taster,” Tash says. “Whereas with the album, we’re getting louder and more intense, experimenting with noise and our metal influences. It’s a full, freeing force.”

Indeed, ‘WeirdOs’ is O. fully embracing all aspects of their newfound expression. Their songs are honed through sprawling, improvised jams but this isn’t jazz –instead, it’s finely-crafted music channelling massive energy to make listeners feel everything from the moshpit chaos of an electronic drop to the languorous sway of dub dilations. With their first trip to the US completed for SXSW and their largest UK tour on the horizon, O.’s unstoppable live sound will soon be coming to a speaker stack or live stage near you. “It’s total freedom,” Joe says. “Two people taking every risk.” Listen and revel in the madness.

‘WeirdOs’ is out now via Speedy Wunderground here

Tracklisting:
1. Intro
2. 176
3. TV Dinners
4. Wheezy
5. Micro
6. Cosmo
7. Green Shirt
8. Whammy
9. Sugarfish
10. Slap Juice

Follow O.: Facebook | Instagram | Website | YouTube

O. Release Debut Album 'WeirdOs' via Speedy Wunderground  — Prescription Music PR (2024)
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