El Magnifico Ed Harcourt

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2023

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
29.03.2024

Label: Deathless Recordings

Genre: Songwriter

Subgenre: Contemporary

Interpret: Ed Harcourt

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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Formate & Preise

Format Preis Im Warenkorb Kaufen
FLAC 48 $ 13,20
  • 1 1987 04:23
  • 2 Into the Loving Arms of Your Enemy 04:04
  • 3 Broken Keys 04:20
  • 4 Strange Beauty 04:36
  • 5 The Violence of the Rose 04:29
  • 6 Ghost Ship 04:28
  • 7 Deathless 04:13
  • 8 Anvils & Hammers 03:53
  • 9 My Heart Can't Keep Up With My Mind 04:11
  • 10 At the Dead End of the World 04:10
  • 11 Seraphina 05:30
  • 12 El Magnifico 04:45
  • Total Runtime 53:02

Info zu El Magnifico

Ed Harcourt releases his new album, El Magnifico via own imprint, Deathless Recordings. The self-produced album was recorded at his own Wolf Cabin studios with finishing touches made with assistance from producer Dave Izumi Lynch at Eastbourne’s Echo Zoo Studio.

Making his debut with the Mercury Prize-nominated Here Be Monsters in 2001, Harcourt has released music under his own name that blends raw emotions, impeccable songwriting and visionary flights of imagination. A succession of ten rich, enthralling albums have followed that first spark of his, including the intoxicating addictive Strangers in 2004; 2013’s breathless Back Into The Woods which was recorded in just eight hours; and Furnaces which compellingly and entreatingly envisioned family ties confronted by the small matter of the apocalypse. After that LP in 2016, Harcourt then moved to explore the instrumental sphere with recent soundscape albums Beyond The End and Monochrome To Colour.

While recognisably bearing all the hallmarks that have made him such an admired and prolific songwriter, one of Britain’s most cherished yet inventive music creators, Ed’s new record, El Magnifico, also finds him striving for something new. It is an Ed Harcourt record, but one with a desire to seek fresh reward.

“I think as a songwriter you do get to a point where you're aware of your past and what you’ve done,” suggests Harcourt of El Magnifico’s mixture of assuredness and aspiration. “It’s knowing what your strengths are, what your weaknesses are, but also knowing how to better yourself by doing things you haven't done before.”

“I find that I’m always learning,” Harcourt adds. “When I’m writing with someone else it’s always a total blank canvas so you have to be open to trying new things. It means with every record I do myself it’s got to have something different in it. Every album is always a reaction to the last thing I did. After the Furnaces, which was quite heavy and experimental, I felt it was time I went back to the source a bit. So maybe there is a sense here of drawing on what people perhaps know me for, but there is also a big step forward.”

The album’s first four songs – which span his autobiographical ode to life in the face dodging death, 1987; the golden pop of Into The Loving Arms Of Your Enemy; Broken Keys,’ which features Afghan Whigs’ Greg Dulli and folk singer Kathryn Williams; and Strange Beauty – set a blistering emotional pace. Though it is testament to Harcourt’s abilities as a songwriter, that when he shifts from this opening salvo into the gentle fragility of The Violence Of The Rose, it is immediately clear it is all part of the same, wonderful journey.

“There’s definitely a thread running through the album,” confirms Harcourt of the record he produced in his studio at the bottom of his garden, while also making use of the natural resonance of his local church to capture the album's array of string parts.

With songs like Ghost Ship and Anvils and Hammers (the latter inspired by daydreaming a sudden, muddy descent into the centre of the earth via the puddles on his lawn) finding Harcourt pouring his out his experiences through the simple honesty of one man sitting at a piano, there is a moving rawness to El Magnifico’s tenderest moments. These contrast beautifully with the twinkling musical gems that adorn the record’s bigger expressions, like Deathless, My Heart Can't Keep Up With My Mind and The Dead Of The World, the latter featuring singer Stevie Parker whom Harcourt has written with. These bolder moments find Harcourt pushing musically and lyrically as it takes an atmosphere somewhat reminiscent of his first album yet there is added depth and fresh perspectives as he presents a widescreen view of his musical universe.

As the album reaches its conclusion, Harcourt’s focus adjusts once more. The passing of a close friend part inspired the tale of a wrathful angel at the centre of inverted hymn Seraphina {“I've always been interested in the whole dichotomy as well of human beings being creators and destroyers,” he notes), before the album ends with its yearning yet hopeful title track, its muted Spanish trumpet peering hopefully towards the sun.

The album was completed with the input of friend and producer Dave Izumi Lynch at Eastbourne’s Echo Zoo studio (“I played him a bunch of tracks, he went ‘yes, yes, no, no’ and we ended up with 12 songs,” recalls Harcourt, “then we worked on finishing and mixing them.”) though El Magnifico’s spirit owes much to Harcourt’s initial writing and recording approach, an experience that saw him revel in creative freedom as he indulged his impulses and tried not to outthink instincts.

“One of the important things with the record for me is that it feels like a combination of everything that I've done, yet it’s also opened up so many new possibilities,” Harcourt suggests. “I met Randy Newman at the Ivor Novello Awards once and I asked him ‘What is the secret of a great song?’ And he just said, ‘I don’t know, you just have to sit around and wait for it to come along.’ I guess that is true. He just does what he does, and I realised, I just have to do what I do.” Though its title was coined in jest, as his new album attests what Ed Harcourt does is proving to be fittingly magnificent.

Ed Harcourt




Ed Harcourt
Depending on who you speak to, you will hear that Ed Harcourt was raised by wolves, he grew up in a Russian orphanage or discover that he was once part of a travelling circus, which perhaps explains his Coulrophobia. Truth is, he was born in the seventies (“the year punk broke, days before The King was dead”), and lived with his parents in East Sussex. Over the years, he has become a well-read, well-dressed, well-travelled English gent and a songwriter of some repute. Of his six albums to date, one was Mercury nominated and the rest have picked up an array of blush-inducing plaudits from the music press. He’s composed film scores, toured with the likes of REM, Wilco and Snow Patrol, performed with everyone from Patti Smith to Nick Cave, and his CV is littered with co-writing credits that include the likes of Paloma Faith and Lisa-Marie Presley. Most recently, he spent his 2014 working with Beth Ditto, Marianne Faithfull, Kathryn Williams and Ren Harvieu, played some piano for Lana Del Rey, as well as produced and co-written Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s new album, which was released in January 2014 and has been awarded a silver disc in the UK. Taking a break from penning songs for pop starlets and orchestrating movie soundtracks, Ed Harcourt returned to the studio this summer to begin recording a record to scorch hearts with his melancholic piano-pop (although this time with added grunt from his new custom-made Beastatone guitar). He also recently performed a smattering of gonzo-lullabies from his charmingly weathered and trunk of songs for Burberry at their grand fashion week shows in London and Shanghai. In January 2014, Harcourt released a new record entitled Time of Dust. The 28-minute long mini-album was described by one critic as “cinematic hip-hop”, by another as “post-grave”. On naming it the week’s must hear album, the Guardian’s Alexis Petridis talked of the album’s “gothic grandeur”. Elsewhere, comparisons have veered from Eels to James Blake via Elbow and that Tom Waits chap. Thirteen years ago, Harcourt’s career began with a mini-album named Maplewood, “Time of Dust feels not unlike its distant cousin,” says Ed. “I’ll soon be heading into the studio with Flood (Nine Inch Nails, PJ Harvey, etc) to work on an album of evil songs, but before I set sail for the edge of the world, I wanted to break people in gently. Think of Time of Dust as a piece of the map I’ll be using to navigate the fog and fire. Or maybe it’s the creak of the floorboard before the wolf pounces?” 2013 was a busy year for Harcourt too. From co-writing and producing a new album for Sophie Ellis-Bextor, to his own festival appearances at the likes of Glastonbury, Latitude, and a headline slot at End of the Road, his dog-eared diary has never seen so much action. Harcourt was MD for Beck’s Song Book at the Barbican; he’s composed soundtracks for three movies due in late 2014/early 2015, recorded collaborations with Rae & Christian and Nouvelle Vague’s Melanie Pain, and brewed his own beer (an ‘Edwardian Brown Ale’) with Signature Brew, which after the initial test run of 3000 bottles sold out, the production is being ramped up. 2013 also saw the release of his sixth studio album which was recorded in just six hours at Abbey Road entitled Back Into the Woods, and then there was that #WIZARDBOUNCE “album” which he gave away for April Fool’s Day...



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