The Sun (San Bernardino)

Cruel World

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Tim Butler (bass) spent most of the ’90s on hiatus making music as Love Spit Love, they resurrecte­d their original group in 2001. When asked why it took so long for the band to record its eighth studio effort, younger sibling Tim offered a rather straightfo­rward answer.

“When we got back together, we were talking about doing a new album, but we were a bit gun-shy about coming up with an album that could stand up alongside ‘Forever Now’ or ‘Talk Talk Talk,’ ” Tim Butler said, referencin­g the group’s 1982 and 1981 albums, respective­ly. The band is also part of the Cruel World festival alongside Morrissey, Bauhaus, Blondie, Devo, Echo & The Bunnymen and many more at Brookside at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena on Saturday and Sunday.

“We had what we considered good songs and had a band that was really playing well together,” he continued. “We figured the time was right — and it was.”

The two-week recording session ran from after Christmas 2019 into January-February 2020. And then the pandemic hit, forcing the Furs to shut down like the rest of the world. For the bass-playing British expat, it meant heading home to his family in Kentucky, despite plans for hitting the road for an extended jaunt.

“When the new album came out, we’d planned to do a big tour with new material, and everyone was gearing up for that,” Tim Butler said. “And then the whole world shut down and it was a big disappoint­ment. It was supposed to be released early last year because we thought COVID-19 was going to be under control, which of course it wasn’t. It was a day-to-day sort of thing. You weren’t sure what was going to be shut down next. It was pretty nerve-wracking to watch the news and see how many people it got that day. It was probably a bad thing to watch the news every day glued to the governor’s 4 o’clock news conference. So the tour came down to in 2022, having not played for around two years. We’re really excited to go out and play the new album.”

The waiting paid off. “Made of Rain” (produced by Richard Fortus, formerly of Love Spit Love and currently part of Guns N’ Roses) seamlessly slides in alongside the likes of “Forever

Now” (1982) and “Mirror Moves” (1984). Richard Butler’s measured baritone sets the tone in nuggets ranging from the irresistib­le baroque new wave ear worm “Hide the Medicine” and melancholy swooning of “Stars” to hypnotical­ly surreal opener “The Boy

That Invented Rock & Roll” and the sinewy “Come All Ye Faithful,” both paced by longtime saxophonis­t Mars Williams.

It’s a long way from when the Butler brothers formed a band after seeing the Sex Pistols play London’s famed 100 Club on Oxford Street.

“We were so blown away by that Sex Pistols show that Richard and I were talking one night about if we had a band, what it would be like,” Tim Butler recalled. “So then he said we should form a band and I told him I couldn’t play anything. He asked what I wanted to play and since I had recently been blown away seeing John Burnel play with The Stranglers, I said bass. So he said I should save up for a bass and we would form a band. And the psychedeli­c part of it was because

CRUEL WORLD

With: Morrissey, Bauhaus, Blondie, Devo, Echo & the Bunnymen, The Psychedeli­c Furs, Violent Femmes, English Beat, The Damned, Blaqk Audio and more

Noon-11 p.m. Saturday, noon-10:45 p.m. Sunday

Where: Brookside at the Rose Bowl, 1001 Rose Bowl Drive, Pasadena

$159-$179 general admission, $349 VIP, $549-$799 Clubhouse, $25-$75 parking. All passes available at cruelworld­fest.com. at that time, there were bands with names like the Sex Pistols, Venus and the Razor Blades and The Clash. They were all putting down the psychedeli­c bands and we wanted a name that showed more of our influences. Also, people would see our name on a marquee and wonder what the hell a psychedeli­c fur was and would want to check it out.”

After the Psychedeli­c Furs released their selftitled debut in 1980, it wouldn’t be long before their art rock sensibilit­ies found them at the forefront of the emerging new wave movement alongside peers like Echo & the Bunnymen, The Cure and Siouxsie and The Banshees. A healthy presence on MTV and filmmaker John Hughes’ decision to use the band’s 1981 UK hit “Pretty In Pink” for his 1986 film of the same name helped bolster the band’s popularity. It continued achieving mainstream success in Britain with hits like “The Ghost in You,” “Heaven” and “Love My Way.”

Fast forward to the present, and with former David Bowie/Bruce Springstee­n drummer Zach Alford onboard, Tim Butler is eager to bring his band’s recent material to the masses.

“We’re all very excited to play for people, so expect a very excited band,” he said with a laugh. “With the final release of an album that sounds current, despite not having done a record since 1991’s ‘World Outside,’ shows we still have something to say musically.

“It’s really exciting to finally be getting out there playing new songs — not just for us, but for the audience, who have loyally been coming out to see us since we got back together. Now we’ve got a new album to play for them.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY BILL ALKOFER — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Richard Butler sings during a Psychedeli­c Furs show. The band will draw on its ’80s and ’90s hits as well as music from a new album at the Cruel World festival this weekend.
PHOTOS BY BILL ALKOFER — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Richard Butler sings during a Psychedeli­c Furs show. The band will draw on its ’80s and ’90s hits as well as music from a new album at the Cruel World festival this weekend.
 ?? ?? Saxophonis­t Mars Williams sets the tone on several songs from “Made of Rain,” the latest Psychedeli­c Furs album, including “The Boy That Invented Rock & Roll” and the sinewy “Come All Ye Faithful.”
When:
Tickets:
Saxophonis­t Mars Williams sets the tone on several songs from “Made of Rain,” the latest Psychedeli­c Furs album, including “The Boy That Invented Rock & Roll” and the sinewy “Come All Ye Faithful.” When: Tickets:
 ?? ?? The Psychedeli­c Furs made their mark in the ’80s with art-inflected hits on heavy rotation on MTV.
The Psychedeli­c Furs made their mark in the ’80s with art-inflected hits on heavy rotation on MTV.

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