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Stanley Odd Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts

Stanley Odd

WHERE ARE WE NOW Festival

WELLY
105-107 Beverley Road, Hull, East Yorkshire HU3 1TS, United Kingdom

Jun 3, 2017

5:30 PM UTC
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Stanley Odd Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts
About this concert
Neu! Reekie! Present a 3-day festival of counter culture from across the UK.Saturday 3rd June is a full day dedicated the hip-hop with some of the most exciting and innovative artists from around the country. The day will include workshops, film, an afternoon hip-hop jam of all the elements of hip-hop and finishes with a live show at Welly nightclub from 5.30pm - 10.00pm featuring:Akala // The Four Owls // Stanley Odd // Eva Lazarus // Redeye, Clarksman, Fast T & Playa One // Chiedu Oraka & Deezkid // Steg G // DJ Toots & The Don
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Stanley Odd Biography

Rarely, if ever, has a Scottish hip-hop act won such a wide fan-base in such a short time as Edinburgh’s Stanley Odd. Formed just three years ago amid the Scottish capital’s close-knit, genre-blurring music scene, the six-piece have spread their inspirational brand of musical good news – matching Solareye’s brilliantly eloquent yet impish MCing with masterly musicianship and powerhouse beats – to a uniquely diverse swathe of converts, via their 2010 debut album Oddio and a hardworking schedule of incendiary live shows. They’ve opened for the likes of Arrested Development, Asian Dub Foundation, Sage Francis and Easy Star All-Stars, in amongst headline appearances including T in the Park, Edinburgh’s Hogmanay, the Insider festival, Wickerman and Celtic Connections.

Now, with their second full-length release Reject, Stanley Odd are truly hitting their stride. The wickedly incisive political and social commentary of Solareye’s lyrics, always one of the band’s best-loved hallmarks, has both expanded and deepened its reach, encompassing themes from the thorny current issues of coalition government and Scottish independence (‘Antiheroics’, ‘Marriage Counselling’) to the numbing effects of modern mental overload (‘Get Out Ma Headspace’). The new album also sees a fresh departure in the shape of more nakedly personal material (‘Carry Me Home’, ‘Going Through the Motions’), whose soul-baring honesty Solareye admits he finds “much harder and scarier than talking about current affairs,” but which renders it all the more universal.

Capitalising on the line-up’s disparate collective background – including members from Norway, Germany and sundry Scottish towns, whose past experience takes in rock, pop and indie styles – together with their shared preference for real instruments, Reject also sees Stanley Odd adapting the hip-hop template to reflect their distinctive ensemble dynamic. “Everybody chips in their own ideas or parts or riffs into a song,” explains Solareye, “we’ll go into the studio and record it, then we’ll sample it, chop it back up and rearrange it, work out how to play it again and re-record it. Going through those two stages takes it away from conventional song structures, hopefully to end up with something a bit more individual and interesting.”

Partnering Solareye’s restlessly agile flow are the commanding, soulfully burnished tones of fellow vocalist Veronika Electronika, backed by the artfully crafted soundscapes, grandly stirring melodies and irresistibly inventive grooves of Scruff Lee (guitars), T Lo (keyboards), Samson the Snake (drums/electronics) and AdMac (bass). Their mesmerising wordcraft and musical richness have already extended their following across tribes from hard-core grimesters to the folk scene, and with Reject Stanley Odd’s message of resistance, challenge, solidarity and affirmation resounds more potently than ever.
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