Classic Rock

Ferris & Sylvester

Sublime psychedeli­c soul meets “Johnny Cash and June Carter, with balls”.

-

Considerin­g they have a young, excitable son, Lucky, married duo

Issy Ferris and Archie Sylvester are bright-eyed for our morning chat, brimming with cheer when asked about their success at the UK Americana Awards, where they were nominated in three categories, and won Best Album for their 2022 debut Superhuman.

They’re also excited about their new album Otherness. Comprising 14 tracks of what Ferris terms “folk-blues rock’n’roll”, it’s the result of “years of writing what’s best for the song, and also what holds an audience’s attention when they might be chatting”.

The pair met in 2016 through playing at respective live music nights at the (sadly now defunct) Spiritual Bar in north London. London-based Sylvester was rocking out at the blues night, while Midlands-born Ferris played the midweek folk spot. Pairing up romantical­ly and musically has led to a stunning line in Led Zepish guitar whoopee tempered by elements of Joni Mitchell and Laura Marling.

They caught the ear of Robert Plant, who they played with in 2018. Among other supporters including ‘Whispering’ Bob Harris and Joe Bonamassa, a more left-field champion from early on has been Martin Glover, aka Youth, Killing Joke bassisttur­ned-producer and label owner/publisher.

“I was invited to play some songs to him,” says Sylvester. “I was very nervous, and he told me they were terrible [laughs]. But he sent me away with constructi­ve criticism.

“Then Issy and I met and started to write together,” Sylvester continues. “I told Youth: ‘It’s like Johnny Cash and June Carter, with balls.’ When he heard what we’d done, he loved it. He signed us and recorded our first EP, The Yellow Line.”

The duo now have their own label, Archtop, and have relocated from London to live in Wiltshire, where Otherness was rehearsed (at Peter Gabriel’s Real World studios) and recorded (at home).

“When we started writing, we realised that the songs were about being outsiders, being ‘othered’,” Ferris says. “But the title track is a love song – having ‘otherness’ with another human.”

As new parents, the track Mother is significan­t. Lucky was born two months prematurel­y while the couple were on a US tour, and Ferris says the experience was “scary and life-changing”. The track is a sublime slice of psychedeli­c soul with sweeping string touches.

“It’s about a child dreaming of a better life; looking through other families’ windows, watching other kids in safe, happy homes,” Ferris says of Mother. “We realised this was also about us, after the last eighteen months. We’d been treading a difficult path and we needed to belong again. Back at home with Lucky we’re getting there.” JK

“Alabama Shakes, Brittany Howard and the production style have been huge influences on us.”

Otherness is out on now via Archtop Records.

Phil Ehart has stepped away from live performanc­e with Kansas as he recovers from a major heart attack. An original member of the band, Ehart is also their manager. Drum tech Eric Holmquist, who has stepped in in previous similar circumstan­ces, is filling in as the band continue their 50th-anniversar­y tour.

London’s Brixton Academy reopens on April 19, 16 months after the crush there that killed a security guard and a fan. .

Steve Harris says he would love to write a book at some point. “It’s just a question of time, because there’s so many other things that I do when I’m not on tour,” the Iron Maiden bassist tells broadcaste­r Eddie Trunk. “I probably would write a book just about the early days, really.”

The Doobie Brothers are adding the final touches to a new studio album that features their former vocalist Michael McDonald. Expected in the summer, it’s the first full-length release made by both parties since One Step Closer in 1980.

Addressing the issues surroundin­g his singing voice, Jon Bon Jovi (pictured) has revealed that he underwent “major reconstruc­tive surgery” on his vocal cords, one of which was “literally atrophied” and replaced by a plastic implant two years ago. “I’ve been in rehab, getting things back together, and I’m getting very close [to normal],” says the 62-year-old.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom