Rough Trade Exclusive.
Shared Exclusive.
Limited to 300 copies.
Catalog Number: JOL4LPX
Color: Orange
Format: LP
UPC: 5070003476039
"We've been dying to meet you," Ben Woods sings on "Linoleum", the
second single from Godspeed, album number four for The Golden Dregs.
This rousing greeting doubles as a mission statement for the project.
What began as a solo endeavour by the then Cornwall-based
multi-instrumentalist and producer has grown into a six-member ensemble,
each artist deeply rooted in London's grassroots music scene. On
Godspeed, for the first time, each band member contributes individually,
but Woods' songwriting and resonant baritone remain at the core -- an
anchor welcoming listeners into the fold.
The city plays
its part here. A very close ear will pick up London's cranky ambience,
recorded on a handheld recorder by synth player Davy Roderick, then
woven into the songs. And where the previous The Golden Dregs record, On
Grace and Dignity (4AD), held up a light to and lamented a
certain kind of rural experience, Godspeed turns the contrast up three
or four notches above its predecessor, feeling cut through with the
spirit of the city because of it. The highs are higher: a wall of sound
soars more and more euphorically on penultimate track, "The Wave". The
lows are lower: "I think I've had enough to last a lifetime" announces
the chorus on "The Weight of it All", a beautifully devastating homage
to irreparable situations, sung by Issie Armstrong.
"People
have inspired this record. To be in a densely crowded space, surrounded
by strangers, and to think for a moment how every person is living out
their own stories, figuring out loss and love and frustration and all
the things that make up the human experience - I find that so curious.
It's a deeply personal record, but I like to think that it is personal
with open arms, an experience to be shared."
Indeed, The
Golden Dregs' songs have always been less about telling individual
stories and more about narrative vignettes, snippets of images that
leave the listener guessing. And although Godspeed has a clear sense of
character -- "I came here to drink on my own, I don't see the problem"
(Heron) eerie synthesisers abounding; "maybe it's time I was taken out
to pasture / since lately I've been getting it wrong" (The Company of
Strangers) -- this is not introspective music. It looks beyond its author
and his immediate situation to something more collective.
While
it continues the sonic signatures of the previous records from The
Golden Dregs, Godspeed is more immediate. The hooks are constant -- hear
"Perfume", "The Company of Strangers", Stranglers-esque cut "If You'd
Seen Him" -- but rarely resort to familiar tropes, leaving room for
unpredictable turns. This assuredness is given further weight by the
fact that Woods own label Joy of Life International, an imprint of and
collaboration with End of the Road Records will release the album: a
statement of independence and creative intent. Much like the current
incarnation of The Golden Dregs, Joy of Life International is also a
dynamic collective - January 2025 sees the label release its first
non-The Golden Dregs music: a single by Ohtis, an established
alt-country project based in Normal, Illinois, produced by Ben Woods,
with further releases in the pipeline.
"Songs are such a
precious commodity. This label has been established out of necessity,
to create a space in which these songs, and the songs of other writers
that I admire, may be platformed and encouraged and celebrated. It also
provides a release avenue for some of the artists that I produce, a sort
of farm to table approach to music making."
Last year,
in between finishing this new record and setting up Kate Bush's former
studio as a new base for solo work and Joy of Life International, the
band supported Future Islands at Crystal Palace Park, opened for Ezra
Furman at Union Chapel and sold out a series of surprise intimate gigs
to test new material. The future looks bright for these songs to find
their people. Godspeed.