VIA PRESS RELEASE | Written by PS Audio’s Paul McGowan, the all-inclusive series is a complete guide to system setup and optimization, audio technology, and more.
PS Audio announces the release of The Audiophile’s Guide, a comprehensive 10-volume series on every aspect of audio system setup, equipment selection, analog and digital technology, speaker placement, room acoustics, and other topics related to getting the most musical enjoyment from an audio system. Written by PS Audio CEO Paul McGowan, it’s the most complete body of high-end audio knowledge available anywhere.
The Audiophile’s Guide hardcover book series is filled with clear, practical wisdom and real-life examples that guide readers into getting the most from their audio systems, regardless of cost or complexity. The book includes how-to tips, step-by-step instructions, and real-world stories and examples including actual listening rooms and systems. Paul McGowan noted, “think of it as sitting down with a knowledgeable friend who’s sharing hard-won wisdom about how to make music come alive in your home.”
The 10 books in the series include:
The Stereo– learn the essential techniques that transform good systems into great ones, including speaker placement, system matching, developing critical listening skills, and more.
The Loudspeaker – even the world’s finest loudspeakers will not perform to their potential without proper setup. Master the techniques that help speakers disappear, leaving the music to float in three-dimensional space.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Charles Mingus’ thrilling, little-heard 1977 quintet finally gets its due on the revelatory In Argentina: The Buenos Aires Concerts, to be released on April 12 as a limited edition three-LP Record Store Day exclusive from Resonance Records.
The collection, which succeeds Resonance’s first Mingus release The Lost Album from Ronnie Scott’s (2022), will also be issued as a two-CD set on April 18. Like its predecessor, it is being released with the full cooperation and authorization of the Jazz Workshop, Inc. and the Charles Mingus Estate. The 180-gram vinyl set has been transferred from the original tape reels recorded by engineer Carlos Melero, mastered by Matthew Lutthans at the Mastering Lab, and pressed at Le Vinylist.
Recorded in concert at the Teatro Coliseo and the Teatro Sociedad Hebraica Argentina (SHA) on June 2-3, 1977, In Argentina affords a revealing look at the great composer-bassist’s little-documented working band of the era. He is joined by trumpeter Jack Walrath, a veteran of the storied “Changes band” of the mid-‘70s that included tenor saxophonist George Adams and pianist Don Pullen; their gifted successors, tenorist Ricky Ford and pianist Robert Neloms; and the leader’s long-tenured drummer Dannie Richmond. The shows took place only six months before Mingus was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS, or Lou Gehrig’s disease), which claimed him on Jan. 5, 1979.
Exhorted vocally by Mingus, the spirited combo bracingly essayed material ranging from classic compositions like “Goodbye Pork Pie Hat” and “Fables of Faubus” to such expansive latter-day compositions as “Duke Ellington’s Sound of Love,” “Three or Four Shades of Blue,” and the aptly Latin-infused “Cumbia and Jazz Fusion.” Mingus also stepped to the piano for a pair of short solo performances.
We are living in a golden age of reissue and archival vinyl releases. Pop, rock, jazz, R&B, and soul have been the dominant genres. Unfortunately, other than Bob Marley, reggae artists have been somewhat neglected. One recent release may remedy that.
Sufferer Sounds, a collection of music that reggae wunderkind Dennis Bovell was involved with between 1975–1980, was recently released. Bovell was a musician, an engineer, and a producer and is most known for being one of the key exponents of dub reggae, particularly his work with dub poet Linton Kwesi Johnson. He was also involved in another reggae sub-genre called lover’s rock. In addition, he produced the punk group The Slits, UK post-new wave group Orange Juice, reggae artists Steel Pulse, and African music legend Fela Kuti.
Dub was a sub-genre of reggae that ended up having a huge impact on the second wave of British punk artists, particularly on the Sandinista album and period from The Clash and John Lydon’s (Johnny Rotten) group after the Sex Pistols, Public Image Limited (P.I.L.), which on its first three albums also included Jah Wobble and Keith Levene. That trio on those first three albums was heavily influenced by dub.
The various tracks on this double album represent the many musical hats Bovell wore and how he used these various projects to work with a wide variety of musicians in many different reggae styles with dub most of the time being the primary foundation.
With My Own Dead Love, the Milwaukee, WI-based outfit Sleepersound has just self-released their third full length album, a nine-song set that’s available on translucent green vinyl and digital. The music deftly encompasses elements of post-rock, shoegaze, indie rock, slow-core, dream-pop, and even a few touches of prog along the way. As on their previous efforts, Sleepersound can roll for significant stretches as a fully developed instrumental combo sans vocals, but when the singing does come in, the addition never connects as tacked on, instead adding an extra dimension to an already robust whole.
For this new LP, Sleepersound consist of guitarist-vocalist-keyboardists Dave D’Antonio and Kenny Buesing, bassist-keyboardist Mike Campise, and drummer Dan Niedziejko. So it has been since the beginning, with In Medias Res the band’s 2018 debut and Idle Voices its 2021 follow-up. From 2019–2021 Stephen Vincent Anderson provided a visual component, consisting of original and found footage, to the band’s live performances. Buesing exited the band in 2024, but not before the completion of My Own Dead Love.
On the post-rock side of the spectrum, Sleepersound have on more than one occasion been compared to Godspeed! You Black Emperor, and that’s a fair assessment to make, but it’s also important to pinpoint a lack of severity in their approach, and this is where the dream-pop and shoegaze sensibilities impact the sound and give their records a subtle Anglo feel, like they could’ve been signed to 4AD during that label’s heyday, or for that matter, right now.
For those hearing Sleepersound for the first time with My Own Dead Love, opener “Let’s Play Wolves” could give an initial false impression as it radiates moody indie folk vibes with mild inflections of Radiohead. But then “Tread Down” kicks the record into full-band gear, with chiming guitars, sturdy drumming and soaring vocals. There’s an atmospheric mid-section and then a slow build back up to full energy. It’s the kind of number that’ll go over huge during a live set.
Cashmere, WA | ‘There’s no bad genres:’ Cashmere Records to open at Side Street on April 12. Cashmere Records will officially open its doors at 111 Railroad Ave. at 11 a.m. on April 12 for all of the music enthusiasts of the area. “It was something that the Thomases were wanting to have at Side Street and had been talking about trying to get someone to come in,” store owner John Mainord said, referring to Side Street owners Andy and Lana Thomas. “It was suggested that I would be a good person to do it for quite a long time. Eventually, I just kind of came around to the idea, but it started with Side Street already having the idea for getting a record store in this building on the project. I’m at home with my records anyways, you know?” Mainord says the store will offer a wide array of vinyl records, cassette tapes and CDs. He also plans to sell record players so that customers can leave the store with everything they could need.
UK | Two Scottish record shops crowned among ‘greatest in the world:’ Music fans will likely know the spots that made the prestigious list. Two Scottish music shops have been named among the “greatest in the world.” The Financial Times recently published a list of “the world’s greatest record stores”. The global list was put together by writers and editors from the newspaper, who shared their top picks for vinyl, CD, and cassette shops. Among the dozens of music stores across the globe featured on the list are two popular Scots venues. Thorne Records in Edinburgh and Assai Records in Dundee are both included in the prestigious list. Thorne Records is located in the trendy Bruntsfield neighbourhood of the Scottish capital. The family-run business, which opened its doors in 2022, is owned by Mark Thorne and specialises in new vinyl from all eras and genres.
New York, NY | Rough Trade’s free music festival iNDIEPLAZA is coming back for Record Store Day: The concert will include live performances and DJ sets. Rough Trade is arguably the best loved record store in all of New York, in large part because they don’t just sell music. Over the past few years, the iconic business has invited dozens of artists and hosted community parties for music lovers, but their crown jewel is their Indie music festival, iNDIEPLAZA, which is coming back for its fourth installment on Saturday, April 12. The free festival includes a pretty stunning lineup this year and will be headlined by Swedish rock group The Hives, with other live performances by the hardrock punk band Scowl, experimental hip-hop group Clipping, raggae artist Pachyman and many others.
San Francisco, CA | The stoner story behind today’s most recognizable record store logo: My son and I are both lifelong vinyl collectors. Living in the San Francisco Bay Area, we’ve always noticed that if you spot someone carrying around one of Amoeba Music’s bright yellow shopping bags, they usually have a smile and spring in their step. Makes sense as they have just visited one of the world’s great record stores and on their way to hear some new tunes! According to Marc Weinstein, who co-founded the shop in 1990, the three locations of Amoeba—San Francisco, Berkeley, and Los Angeles—go through 1,500 to 2,000 bags each day. (Yes, that is a lot of plastic but the bags are apparently made from “recycled” materials and don’t violate the state’s ban on plastic bags.) Today’s SFGate tells the story of these ubiquitous bags and the Amoeba logo that’s emblazoned on them…
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Domino have today announced details of the re-release of Pete Shelley’s first two solo albums, Homosapien and XL-1—the first time both albums have been reissued individually as standalone releases since they were included as part of a box set by Genetic Records in 2018.
Out on June 6 2025, both albums come housed in gatefold sleeves featuring the original fully restored artwork, include an extra disc featuring B-sides, dubs, and extended mixes and contain inserts featuring new photos and imagery and extensive sleeve notes from the acclaimed writer Clinton Heylin. Both will also be available on CD for the first time since 2006.
Recorded in close collaboration with renowned producer Martin Rushent, both albums saw Shelley embrace a wider musical palate post-Buzzcocks and work with electronic instrumentation and synthesizers—Homosapien is seen as a massively influential and pioneering record and widely regarded as a musical signpost for the work Rushent did with The Human League on Dare a few months later.
Banned for homophobic reasons at the time by BBC radio, “Homosapiens” would become a gay club anthem and the queer element a hugely important part of both Pete’s personal and musical life, as showcased in both these albums.
Pete Shelley’s solo debut, Homosapien, released on January 15, 1982, was a long time in the making, drawing on ideas from before his time with Buzzcocks. Many of the songs, including the title track, were written as early as 1973, when Pete first began experimenting with home recording.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Hey, hard rock and metal fans—ready for another classic, early ‘90s album that never before made it to vinyl here in the States? Did we hear you say “Yeah!?” Then may we present Tyketto’s Don’t Come Easy.
This is another great, rockin’ record that got lost in the grunge craze that swept the music industry, and, just like our recent reissue of Wildside’s Under the Influence, it’s the debut release from a band that should have blown up much bigger than they did. You no doubt remember their single “Forever Young,” but the rest of the album offers melodic hard rock of the highest order, especially on tracks like “Burning Down Inside” and the power ballad “Standing Alone.”
Excellent vocal work from former Waysted frontman Danny Vaughn, too. Remastered for vinyl by Mike Milchner at Sonic Vision—teal with white swirl vinyl, complete with printed inner sleeve.
“Ridicule,” said Oscar Wilde, “is the tribute paid to genius by mediocrities.” Such would seem to be the case with one Sir Elton Hercules John. Esteemed critic Robert Christgau once wrote him off as a “puling phony,” while Charles Shaar Murray dismissed him as “Elton Schmelton.” Even John understood he lacked respect, and jokingly told Murray, “I’m gonna become a rock’n’roll suicide, take my nasty out and piddle all over the front row, just to get rid of my staid old image.”
Elton never carried through on his threat, probably because he was too busy writing brilliant songs, more than I can count on my six hands even. Besides, who needs critical respect after scoring seven consecutive No. 1 albums in the U.S. between 1972 and 1975—a feat not even the Fab Four could beat? During those golden years, which extended from Honky Chateau to Rock of the Westies, John (in collaboration with lyricist Bernie Taupin) churned out hits like a one-man Brill Building, and many of them will still be around long after mankind is gone, leaving our groovy ape successors to do the Crocodile Rock.
John’s high-water mark as a songwriter was 1973’s Goodbye Yellow Brick Road. I consider it Elton’s masterpiece, even if The Evil One, Robert Christgau, dismissed it as “one more double album that would make a nifty single.” A concept album of sorts, Goodbye Yellow Brick Road takes a bittersweet look at a lost past, from its film stars to its dance crazes to its bovver boys in their braces and boots looking to mix it up on Saturday night.
Perhaps the most astounding thing about John’s unprecedented success is that he achieved it with Bernie Taupin—a mediocre lyricist at best, and the fourth place finisher in a 3rd grade poetry competition at worst—as a collaborator. Not only is Taupin the mook who wrote “Mars ain’t the kind of place to raise your kids/In fact it’s cold as hell/And there’s no one there to raise them/If you did,” it’s his lyrical DNA police found all over Starship’s “We Built This City,” a song so unfathomably dumb it makes Jon Anderson’s “A seasoned witch could call you from the depths of your disgrace/And rearrange your liver to the solid mental grace” sound like Shakespeare. That said, his lyrics on Goodbye Yellow Brick Road are shockingly unterrible, and a few of them are actually quite good.
Australian newcomers Folk Bitch Trio are definitely ones to watch, even if it’s purely for the sake of their intriguingly titled band name.
Their latest single, “God’s A Different Sword” is a wonderfully poignant indie-folk track that features the trio’s gorgeously in sync harmonies at the forefront. Gentle instrumentation weaves into the melancholic lyrics, which explore themes of self-reflection and improvement—the band have been praised for their pensive lyricism which is perfectly demonstrated on this release.
Folk Bitch Trio are a band born out of a mutual love for songwriting, rocking, and the truth. Known for enrapturing audiences around their home city of Naarm/Melbourne, Australia with sensitive and thoughtful arrangements of three part harmony, what begun as an unserious collaboration between three friends has led the trio to share stages throughout the country with acts such as King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard, Julia Jacklin, and Courtney Barnett to name a few.
Making their way back over to the UK later this year, the trio are already confirmed to play festivals such as The Great Escape and Green Man. Keep your ears and eyes peeled for what else Folk Bitch Trio get up to next…
Pianist Sylvie Courvoisier and guitarist Mary Halvorson are well-versed as collaborators. Bone Bells, newly released by Pyroclastic Records, is their third recording as a duo. The often stunning set builds upon the fertile dialogue between the Switzerland native and longtime New York City resident Courvoisier’s deft intermingling of chamber music roots and boundary stretching jazz verve and Massachusetts-born and NYC-based Halvorson’s ceaselessly fresh and instantly recognizable approach to the electric jazz guitar. Available on compact disc in a 6-panel gatefold wallet featuring artwork by Joskin Siljan, Bone Bells offers eight pieces and an even compositional split.
With Bone Bells, Mary Halvorson gets the odd numbered tracks and Courvoisier the evens, but it’s striking how seamlessly they fit together. Better said, there is a flow to the set that, when listening blind, essentially undercuts any easy indicators into who wrote what. And once cognizant of the credits, the album’s engaging progression, and indeed Courvoisier’s playing, simultaneously chamber-inclined and jazz-inflected in the opening title track, suggests the two principals were writing with each other in mind, though without explicit detail into the process, this is a speculative observation.
What’s not a hypothetical is the communicative heights Courvoisier and Halvorson attain across Bone Bells. As a recording rooted in composition, the dialogue is more about tone, balance, and the ebb and flow of intensity, rather than the now well-established model of free-from duo exchange, though there are certainly moments, e.g. “Esmeralda” and “Beclouded,” where they do let it fly improvisationally.
But Bone Bells isn’t an abstract bruiser, instead offering beauty moves like the crisp and again very chamber-like “Nags Head Valse” (track four, one of Courvoisier’s). Overall, the set is appealingly relaxing yet consistently assertive and secure in its position at the forefront of contemporary jazz. Of course, the music doesn’t fall back on standard swing notions, so some will question the jazz connection, but those who value the Downtown New York scene’s contribution to jazz’s eternal discourse will understand; both Courvoisier and Halvorson have records in John Zorn’s Book of Angels series.
Valdosta, GA | Hole in the Wall Records sustains Valdosta’s vinyl revolution: For years, Red Door Records was a beloved spot in Valdosta’s music community for vinyl collectors, music lovers, and locals to connect. When Red Door Records announced its closure, Bryan Gay knew he had to do something to keep the store’s legacy going. …Determined to keep the music playing, Gay transformed a room inside Ashley Street Station, his longtime bar and music venue, into a small record shop. The space was modest—just a “hole in the wall,” as he put it—but it offered vinyl lovers a place to browse and buy records without leaving town. For three years, Hole in the Wall Records operated from within the bar, catering to collectors and casual listeners alike. However, as the vinyl resurgence continued, so did the need for a bigger, more accessible space.
Courtenay, BC | Record store gives back with community music fund: “With music, your curiosity is never over because there’s always something else to check out. So it’s a way of traveling the world in a way, through different cultures, through their music,” said Kip Luce. Kip and Karen, spouses and co-owners of Bop City Records Bop City Records in Courtenay, are launching a brand new community music fund to support the local music scene. Bop City Records sells new and used CDs, records and cassettes, and sometimes when patrons bring in collections to sell, they opt not to take the cash or store credit offered in exchange. Co-owner Kip Luce explained how as a for-profit business, it felt important to find a way to give that back to the community. “I always feel a bit weird about taking tips or freebies and I explain, ‘well, we’re a business so we want to pay you out.’ And then we realized, well, maybe we can just turn that money that people don’t want into something good,” he said.
Winnipeg, CA | Appetite for ‘authentic sound’ pumps up demand for vinyl records, Winnipeg shop owners say: For the past 20 years, Mark Cardy has been buying vinyl records seeking the “real, authentic sound” he can’t find on CDs or streaming services. “[With] a lot of this digital stuff, you lose a lot of the soul that’s involved with all the music,” he said. “I just appreciate how authentic a record can really make you feel.” As a “flower child” son of hippie parents, Cardy grew up watching his relatives collect records. “Once you start collecting one, it’s hard not to collect more,” he said. “It makes you feel like something that your parents did and your grandparents did, and it’s kind of neat to see how they felt when they did it.” Cardy is also part of a shift that in recent years has reshaped the content at some Winnipeg music stores.
Toronto, CA | Futhark Records: Toronto’s Destination for Metal Vinyl: We spoke with Futhark Records owner, Claus Nader, about opening Toronto’s only metal-dedicated record shop and label. In East York, Toronto, Futhark Records is the city’s only dedicated Metal record shop. Claus Nader, the store’s owner and the founder of a budding record label, has built a space dedicated to the overlooked and underappreciated sounds of the global underground metal scene. Nader has always wanted a record shop. His fascination with record stores began in his late teens, where he spent time immersed in music culture but never had the chance to work in one. Years later, after extensive research and exploration of Toronto’s record store landscape, he realized something was missing. While a handful of stores carried Metal sections, none dedicated themselves exclusively to the genre. Given Toronto’s status as North America’s fifth-largest city, Nader saw an opportunity and took the leap.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | To commemorate the 20th anniversary of De La Soul’s seventh studio album, The Grind Date, today the group releases a special package of the original album on vinyl and CD including bonus tracks and instrumental versions via BMG.
The Grind Date, originally released in 2004, showcases the platinum-selling, GRAMMY Award-winning groups signature blend of clever lyrics, innovative production, and a mix of playful and introspective themes including a plethora of featured artists such as the late MF Doom, Ghostface Killah, Carl Thomas, and Common. CD/LP packages are available here for purchase.
The limited edition 140g splatter double vinyl includes the original album bolstered with four instrumental versions of the leading tracks. Meanwhile the CD, in addition to the instrumentals, also includes two never before released tracks, “Bigger” and “Respect,” both of which were recorded during the same sessions as The Grind Date.
“With the 20th Anniversary of Grind Date we just feel blessed in knowing that we put together this album that, right now, with its re-release feels fresh, it doesn’t feel outdated, the lyrics feel relevant,” says Posdnuos (Pos). “It really feels good to know that with the re-release of this album it takes myself and Mase back to knowing that this album was the first album done outside of our Tommy Boy relationship and it stands the test of time alongside that catalog, so yeah it’s a blessing.”
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Singer, composer, producer, and actor Isaac Hayes was a pivotal figure in soul and R&B, whose innovative work in front of the microphone, as well as behind the scenes, forever shaped the musical landscape. Now, Stax Records and Craft Recordings reflects on Hayes’ most prolific period as a solo artist with a brand-new compilation, The Best Of Isaac Hayes.
Set for release on June 6th, the ten-track album introduces the artist through the single versions of his biggest hits of the late ’60s and ’70s, including the GRAMMY- and Academy Award-winning “Theme From Shaft,” “Walk on By,” and “Never Can Say Goodbye.” Featuring newly remastered audio by GRAMMY-winning engineer Paul Blakemore, The Best Of Isaac Hayes will be available on 1-LP, standard digital, hi-res digital, and Dolby Atmos®.
This marks the first time that Hayes’ music will be available on Dolby Atmos®, giving fans a new opportunity to listen to his groundbreaking orchestrations in superb spatial audio. Fans can also find a limited-edition pressing on “Red Smoke” vinyl exclusively via the Stax Records store and a limited-edition pressing on “Electric Smoke” vinyl exclusively at Target.
GRAMMY- and Academy Award-winning singer, composer, producer, and actor Isaac Hayes (1942–2008) revolutionized soul music, breaking the mold with extended cuts, orchestration, and concept albums during the era of three-minute, radio-driven tracks. Exemplifying the American dream, Hayes was born in rural Tennessee, where he sang in his church’s choir and showed promise on a variety of instruments, including the piano and organ. As a young adult, he relocated to Memphis, where he spent his days working in meatpacking plants and his nights performing at local clubs.
Celebrating Patterson Hood, born on this day in 1964. —Ed.
Hot damn, I loves me some Drive-By Truckers. Anybody who’s ever seen ‘em knows they put on a kick-ass live show, and anybody who’s ever heard 2001’s Southern Rock Opera knows that it’s one of the most ambitious and brilliant concept albums ever recorded, period. And it includes one of the best love songs ever written to rock’n’roll, “Let There Be Rock,” which covers all the bases from Molly Hatchet to Bon Scott to Lynyrd Skynyrd and “The Boys Are Back in Town,” to say nothing of freaking out on acid at a Blue Oyster Cult concert, an event that I include on my own rock’n’roll resume.
Since then they’ve continued to release strong album after strong album, and this despite personnel changes including the defections of both the multi-talented Jason Isbell and Shonna Tucker, she of the amazing voice. And have I mentioned they have impeccable taste in covers? Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, Kiss, Tom T. Hall—why, they even cover Warren Zevon’s fiery “Play It All Night Long” and beat him, no sweat piss jizz or blood about it, at his own game.
Drive-By Truckers have always written smart songs, and many of them have been protest songs, on everything from the ruthless machinations of rapacious corporations to the murders of those four little black girls in the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing by the KKK in 1963 to the still very much alive specter of hate-monger George Wallace, but on their newly released LP American Band they go all out, tackling such hot button issues as police shootings of young black men, school massacres, and gun control in general.
Hardly what one would expect from a bunch of southern boys who sound very much like southern boys, but then again it was Lynyrd Skynyrd, those paragons of the Confederate flag-waving southland (and the chief characters in the cast of Southern Rock Opera) who had the chutzpah to condemn Saturday night specials. And who sang “Boo! Boo!” in reference to segretionist Alabama governor George Wallace while they were at it.
In a rare and intimate conversation, I had the privilege of sitting down with Andy McCluskey, the visionary frontman of Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD), ahead of their highly anticipated performance at the Cruel World Festival.
With a career spanning over four decades, McCluskey opened up about his enduring partnership with co-founder Paul Humphreys, the highs, lows, and unbreakable bond that has defined OMD’s legacy, their pioneering synth-pop roots, and the timeless allure of vinyl and how it continues to shape their artistry.
The fourth annual Cruel World Festival has an incredible lineup of iconic artists. How does it feel to be part of such an event, and what does it mean for OMD to perform alongside other legends from that incredible era?
We are really, really excited and happy to be doing this. We’ve talked to Cruel World on a couple of occasions and we’ve never managed to actually get the thing sorted out. We’re thrilled to be on the bill with such an incredible and diverse lineup.
Are there any bands on the bill you’re excited to play alongside?
We’re excited obviously to be on the same bill as our old friends New Order because we remember them as Joy Division back in 1979 when we were on Factory. I can remember seeing Devo when they played their first ever concert at Eric’s Club in Liverpool, they were amazing and I have not seem them live since. Fun fact—their first album, Q. Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!, is still one of my most played records. And the list just goes on and on and on. From our era, you’ve got Madness and you’ve got Blancmange and you’ve got Midge Ure and The Go Go’s. Unbelievable.
When preparing for a festival like Cruel World, how do you approach crafting a setlist that satisfies both lifelong fans and newer listeners who might be seeing you for the very first time?
It can be difficult, because we normally play our headlining sets for over an hour and a half. During those shows, we take the audience on a journey through our classics as well as some deep dives into our catalog—things that the hardcore fans are going to want to hear. But as you know, if you’re lucky enough to have had a handful of hits, you really need to play them. Because, when I go and see bands I like, I want to hear their hits. A few deep cuts are fine, but I am truly there to hear the hits.
So, we’ll be playing pretty much that type of set that people will know. I think when you go to a festival like Cruel World, you just get out there and basically hit people between the eyes with your best shots. And if they want to hear OMD’s deeper cuts, they’ll come and see us at one of our headlining gigs when we’ve got more time to explore that history.