December 22, 2024

Skylight Webzine

Online since 2000

Technology inspires on ‘Virtual Reality 123’ by Manchester’s The Speed of Sound

It has been roughly a year since brazen and quirky Manchester alternative power-pop collective The Speed Of Sound released their latest and perhaps greatest album ‘Museum Of Tomorrow’  and already now they are back with two fresh tracks in the digital extended single ‘Virtual Reality 123 / Charlotte 12″ Version. Once again they are releasing their music through California-based niche label Big Stir Records, modeled on the traditional 12” single – only digital…. After all, we are dealing with virtual reality here. 
Fans of Lene Lovich, Manic Street Preachers, Pylon, The B-52s, Blondie, Throwing Muses, Television should take note here. However, these two tracks may not be as straightforward as you might think before listening straight through. It would be fair to call this music ‘a

rt rock’ due to the fact that it reflects a challenging or avant-garde approach to rock. More so than the tracks featured on their latest album, for instance, these tracks lean more towards what we can call modernist or experimental. 
Formed in 1989 with a pre-history dating back to the day Andy Warhol died in 1987, The Speed of Sound lies deep below the ‘music industry radar’, allowing for the evolution of their own distinctive sound and live act. Their music is optimistic, but with lyrical bite, a punk-inspired DIY ethos and lust for experimentation rooted in psychedelia. Today the Speed of Sound is made up of father and son John Armstrong (guitars and vocals) and Henry Armstrong (keyboards), Ann-Marie Crowley (vocals and guitar), Kevin Roache (bass guitar) and John Broadhurst (drums). 

Throughout their 33-year history, The Speed Of Sound have always been idiosyncratic, counter-intuitive and perpetually looking for something new. These two fresh extended pieces take advantage of space that is not afforded when limited by the physical time constraints of vinyl. The result is effectively two new pieces that are epic in different and unexpected ways. Is this Progressive Pop? There is only one way to find out.

‘Virtual Reality 123’ is a dramatically beautiful, yet desolate soundscape, unfurling within the startlingly atmospheric pairing of grand piano and guitar feedback blended with the human voice. Joyous and steely resolute in its determination to create and inhabit a personal parallel universe, it constructs a separate realm for the purpose of keeping the work/life spheres completely separate. A possibility powered by enabling and running an ‘alternative-life’ programme alongside the daily grind, it steps from one to the other, closing the door between them. Replacing the drudgeries of the physical analogue personal life with a digital perfection, the virtual world becomes a refuge from actual existence and the place when life exists in a state of perpetual euphoria.

‘Charlotte 12” Version’ takes the already existing sense of anxious menace within the album version of this song, adding a ghostly and delicately layered ephemeral depth of neo-gothic proportions. Enhancing the dread within the runaway choruses, this performance leaves no need for flickering candles; true terror is within the mind.

“The song is based on actual events from the 1850’s; the first time we played Charlotte live was in Elizabeth Gaskell’s house within the actual room where Charlotte Bronte hid behind a curtain to avoid meeting an unexpected visitor while she was staying in her fellow novelist’s home,” explains John Armstrong.

“That gig was just two weeks before Charlotte’s 200th birthday. It was easy to imagine her still there and hiding from us too. Anxiety is the natural state of the modern world, but it has been around much longer. The part of Charlotte in the introduction is performed by Janet Armstrong.”

Virtual Reality 123 / Charlotte (12″ Version)’ is out now, available via Apple Music,Spotify and Bandcamp. Apart from this “virtual” digita release, the ‘Museum of Tomorrow’ album is also available on vinyl and CD from Big Stir Records and record stores.

CREDITS
John Armstrong – songwriting, guitars and vocals
Ann-Marie Crowley – vocals and guitars
Kevin Roache – bass guitar
John Broadhurst – drums
Henry Armstrong – keyboards
Engineer, mixing & mastering by Adam Crossley & Chris Guest
Artist photography by Shay Rowan

Find The Speed of Sound across the world wide web
Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Soundcloud | YouTube | Apple Music | Spotify | Press contact

Loads more from California’s Big Stir Records
Website | Bandcamp | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Mixcloud | YouTube