Crows – return with new single ‘Bored’ announce new album ‘Reason Enough’ + Tour dates

A much loved act in the UK scene, Crows return with new single ‘Bored’ as well as announcing new album Reason Enough out 27th September 2024 via Bad Vibrations, and a UK/EU tour this October/November.

In their almost decade as a band, they’ve seen support from KEXP, The Line Of Best Fit, NME, BBC 6 Music, HUCK, CLASH, Loud & Quiet, The Observer, I Paper, CRACK, Kerrang, Rough Trade, The Independent, BBC Radio 1. and have supported Wolf Alice in the states. Singer James Cox has also recently fronted band Humanist which have supported Depeche Mode on their arena tours as well as Jane’s Addiction.

Singer James Cox says on the new track, “Like so many musicians today, being off album cycle means no touring, which in turn means looking for more day-to-day work options to make ends meet. We wrote ‘Reason Enough’ in a period like this when we were all simultaneously working day jobs to pay the bills. And when we’re not touring, I become way more aware of, and susceptible to, the news cycle. Being bombarded by constant doom and gloom can create a real despondent maelstrom. With what seemed like no hope for respite, or any change to my routine whatsoever, the song ‘Bored’ came out of that cycle of waking up and not being able to shake the feeling of wanting to bang your forehead against a brick wall.”

The video directed by Manoela Chiabai (Tove Lo, SG Lewis, FLO, Depeche Mode, IDLES, Future Islands) gives a  big nod to Jim Jarmusch’s Paterson, to B movies of the likes of John Carpenter, to Camberwell and Freud’s The Uncanny.

To celebrate the release of ‘Bored’, Crows will perform a special intimate show at London’s Third Man Records this Thursday 4th July – on sale now here.

Reason Enough is their third album, and is the one the band have taken the longest to write – partly because they had to fit the exercise around working full-time jobs, but also because of the freedom that was afforded to them around this specific project, which takes the post-punk four piece’s historically adrenaline-fuelled sound into fresh territory.

For the occasion, James Cox (vocals), Steve Goddard (guitar), Jith Amarasinghe (bass) and Sam Lister (drums), swapped their usual rehearsal space, a small studio in Homerton, East London, for the cavernous walls of a “weird little studio” – as Goddard puts it – in Stroud, Gloucestershire. More specifically, a former Catholic church and convent. The band parked themselves up in the church’s crypt, which was more conducive to inspiring the foundations for Reason Enough. Armed with dozens of ideas, they returned to London in a bid to finesse them all.

The result: a concise, 10-track album which goes a long way to show Crows’ sonic versatility. Their 2019 debut Silver Tongues put them firmly on the map as a punk band with an indomitable spirit and a penchant for abrasion, which they performed across the UK in support of IDLES on their sold-out tour. 2022’s follow-up Beware Believers, built on this mood and then some, as Crows fleshed out their high octane sound and laced it with sharp, political lyricism.

Tracklist
01. Reason Enough
02. Bored
03. Is It Better
04. Vision Of Me
05. Land Of The Rose
06. Every Day Of The Year
07. Lie To Me
08. Living On My Knees
09. Silhouettes
10. D-Gent

Reason Enough out 27th September 2024 via Bad Vibrations

Pre-order HERE

On Reason Enough, the band’s punk spirit remains intact. Sonically, though, they’re more refined and cohesive than ever; it’s the most mature Crows have ever sounded – it’s more melodic work than what Crows have previously done. The band worked with Mercury Prize-winning producer Andy Savours, who’s previously collaborated with the likes of Black Country, New Road and My Bloody Valentine, on the project. A master of the polished indie record, Savours put a glossy sheen onto Reason Enough, without compromising the record’s intrinsic grit.

While political threads have long run through Crows’ music, this feels like an eruption, a logical conclusion to the band’s take on the state of the UK – lyrically, Cox drew heavily from a difficult year, both personally and in terms of facing up to a heavygoing news cycle, and a general sense of malaise, isolation, unease and a desire for growth in spite of it all permeate Reason Enough – an album which strikes a satisfying balance between existentialism, soul-searching, and a discerning brand of indie-rock.

“We’re doing the same thing, but a lot better,” Cox says. “This is Crows in high definition.”


Tickets available HERE

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