Band Of Skulls' Marsden & Richardson today release self-titled debut album, showcasing new lead single 'Mama'

BUY / STREAM ALBUM HERE

LISTEN TO ‘MAMA’ HERE

WATCH THE STUNNING LIVE VIDEO FOR MAMA HERE


SECOND LONDON SHOW AT ST PANCRAS OLD CHURCH, FEB 3RD ON SALE NOW


After captivating us with a string of enchanting offerings throughout the last few months, which have included ‘Outsider’, ‘Oh Forgiveness’ and ‘Beautiful Love’, Band Of Skulls duo Marsden & Richardson have now unveiled their highly-anticipated eponymous debut album alongside the heartfelt new lead single ‘Mama’.


Originally emerging back in July, the Marsden & Richardson project was originally conceived as a contrast to their work with Band Of Skulls, opting for a more laid-back aesthetic. Admitting this new venture has been a dream for the duo ever since they first formed, the new self-titled album highlights the pair’s more heartfelt and lovelorn songwriting, creating a breadth of warm and alluring songs that give off a heightened and more atmospheric feel.


Speaking about the new full-length, they said, "Tales of many experiences and emotions. Never before explored sonic landscapes  and hidden corners. Sometimes raw and equally luxurious. Of being a songwriter and of being alive. Love and heartbreak, glory and failure, always hoping for forgiveness."


Showcased by the new offering ‘Mama’, this new cut perfectly encapsulates the sweet and enticing tones this new collection looks to present. With a simple yet euphoric string-focused production guiding their broad and soaring vocals throughout, their latest single immaculately rounds off their run of form to date, and highlights the very best in their songwriting on this new release.


Adding about ‘Mama’, Russell said, “MAMA - Is a very personal song about the strength of women. After my wife and I lost a child due to miscarriage I tried to find some comfort and solace by paying tribute to the strength of our mothers. It’s about the bravery of women going through all stages of motherhood whilst also imagining the future of the child we never got to meet."


Having sold out their show at London’s St. Pancras Old Church on February 2nd, they have a second date for February 3rd on sale now. The shows will be their first back in front of a live audience since the start of the pandemic. Buy tickets HERE.


Russell Marsden and Emma Richardson first started writing songs together in their teens after meeting at school in their Southampton hometown. Forming Band of Skulls 17 years ago with drummer Matt Hayward, they went on to make five acclaimed studio albums together. Now, the pair have temporarily stepped away from Band of Skulls to focus on a new musical project they’ve been dreaming about since their earliest songwriting days.


“The idea has been ruminating for years,” Russell explains of their new project as duo Marsden & Richardson. “We’ve both been wanting to make this record for a long time and it’s been in the back of our minds for a while,” Emma adds. “Now felt like the perfect moment to really focus on our songwriting as a duo. We’ve written together for five albums, but never solely as a duo, never this intensely. It felt like it was a good moment to finally make this record and in the best way possible.’”


Emma says writing more personal songs suited the new musical direction – a style influenced by acclaimed songwriting partnerships like The Walker Brothers, Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra, The Mamas & the Papas, Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin. The lyrics on the bitter-sweet orchestral, ‘Beautiful Love’ illustrate the more candid lyricism the duo have employed on their new eponymous, twelve track album: “You are just a memory you were in my dream / Everything you said to me little did it mean / If you catch me reminiscing longing for that time / I’d be lying if I said I was fine”, Russell sings over soaring strings and hopeful melodies as the song’s protagonist compares what a relationship once was, with what it has now become.


The album covers the full breadth of human emotions, mining deeply into songs about human connection, vulnerability, loss, change, love, identity and forgiveness – as well as the future and hope. It’s vast in scope, something magnified by its grandiose cinematic feel that leans towards the soaring jazz arrangements of the 40s and 50s. The album’s strings were scored and directed by Tom Edwards, who had worked with Band of Skulls previously when he’d reimagined several of their songs. “When Tom sent back the first song, ‘Outsider’, it was a jaw-dropping moment for us to see what he’d done with it,” Emma says. “We challenged him to take inspiration from the incredible composers and arrangers from the 40s and 50s jazz era such as Nelson Riddle and Gordon Jenkins. Russell and I have always loved those records and the string arrangements from that time always stagger us and Tom got this entirely. What he did with the strings, time and time again blew us away.”


Nostalgia is another theme running throughout the album. The pair sight a Portuguese word  ‘Saudade’ which refers to the nostalgic feeling of longing for something that’s passed and is no longer around, but also looks forward with hope to the possibilities of the future. “This concept played on our minds,” Emma says, thinking the idea could be the thread which ties the album’s songs together. It’s seen well on ‘Mama’, which sees a character singing with nostalgia about memories from childhood and realising the love they had then will shape their own future. ‘Oh Forgiveness’ looks back on a difficult past but finds catharsis in looking forward and ‘That’s What Other People Do’ sees a couple finding a connection by revisiting memories from the past.



The album began to be put together just prior to lockdown; it was written and recorded in a new, home studio built in Russell’s basement. The studio was named Snook after John Snook who built the house in 1838. With the two playing almost all the instruments between them for the very first time. 


The Snook studio freed the pair from time constraints and enabled them to perfect their songcraft and production. For the first time, Russell produced the album. “It was something that I always really had an interest in and always wanted to do,” Russell explains. “The situation kind of forced me to just do it – there was no way of meeting up with anybody or working with anyone else. We’d worked with some amazing producers in the past – Richard X, Gil Norton, Nick Launay and Ian Davenport. I’m grateful for the time I got to spend working alongside such talented people, yet it felt like I had them looking over my shoulder when I started work on my debut production. I spoke to Ian during the process, and I confessed, ‘I’m going to take on the role of producer “and he was like, ‘Oh, I always thought you’d do that Russell,’ which was actually very reassuring.”


Whilst this project is very much separate from Band of Skulls, it is still very much “running alongside” what the duo are doing now, according to Emma. “We wanted to look back to those records which have always inspired us, records with a strong songwriting duo like Nancy and Lee, Simon and Garfunkel. They created their own self-titled, self-contained sonic world and we wanted to do that with this album.


“We also wanted to celebrate our own songwriting partnership. We’re very proud of these songs and we hope they stand up for us forever. If someone wants to know what we can really do when writing a song, this album should be the place to look. We’re so proud of everything we’ve achieved.”


Marsden & Richardson tracklisting

Outsider

One More Question

Beautiful Love

Closer Together

Lonely Hearts

Mama

Oh Forgiveness

Sideways

That’s What Other People Do

Water

There Goes The Moon

Why Do You Have To Be So Beautiful



DISCOVER MARSDEN & RICHARDSON


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lorraine long