Little Barrie

Little Barrie are back, and they’ve brought the much-missed spirit of real rock ‘n’ roll with them. Nearly four years on, the English trio are totally match-fit and ready to return with a new drummer and a strikingly unusual record deal — but the same unshakeable passion for music that got them noticed in the first place. Since we last heard them, they’ve also honed their reputations among the most in-demand musicians in the business, playing live with Primal Scream, Edwyn Collins & Silver Machine, on Paul Weller’s 22 Dreams & Wake Up the Nation albums, Edwyn Collins’ recent Losing Sleep album as well as appearances on Spiritualized and Chemical Bros albums, even with French Polynesian actress-singer Mareva Galanter. Barrie has long been the guitarist to call, and not many have had that request from both Morrissey and Johnny Marr.

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Very appropriately for a band of such renown as a live act, Little Barrie’s new album King Of The Waves will be released in the UK on their own label Non Delux in conjunction with Bumpman, the indie label founded by Alan Day, co-owner of the Hawley Arms, the famous live venue in Camden, north London. And if the eternal quest for any band is to generate the electricity of their explosive live performances in the studio, then Little Barrie have caught lightning in a bottle. King of the Waves is an album that fans of undiluted rocking soul will be ravenous for. It sounds like Link Wray meeting The Creation in Detroit with the MC5 and Motown both in residence, but with an uninhibited explosive fieriness that’s completely Little Barrie’s own. The album also sees them renewing their working relationship with the mighty Edwyn Collins, who co-produced all but two tracks with the band, just as he did their first, 2005’s We Are Little Barrie, again with engineer Sebastian Lewsley, at Edwyn’s West Heath Studios in north London. Collins also sings backing vocals on ‘Money In Paper.’

Waves is the much-anticipated evidence of the brilliant new combination the band have been working up, both in the studio and on stage, since guitarist and frontman Barrie Cadogan and bassist/vocalist Lewis Wharton were joined on drums and vocals by Virgil Howe in 2008. The son of Yes guitar giant Steve Howe, Virgil’s distinguished and varied background includes live and studio dates for Amorphous Androgynous, Bryan Ferry and plenty of dance-friendly work including an underground club identity as Sparo. He also contributes organ, synth, Minimoog and Mellotron to the new album, and Barrie can even be heard at the Wurlitzer.

While other complete careers have risen, fallen and faded away in the time since we last heard Little Barrie, the band have kept their counsel, stayed true to themselves, dodged the meddlesome hands of corporate intervention and reminded everyone that good things don’t come quickly. “We’ve basically just been doing different things,” says Barrie modestly. “A bit of it’s been about a matter of personal survival, and also getting to the stage of finding somewhere we could work.” Happily, that led them all back to Edwyn’s. “When we did the first album, working at Edwyn’s was such an amazing experience,” Barrie continues. “Our first time doing an album, and to go to one of the best studios in Britain. Doing anything after that, it makes you realise how lucky you were. We wouldn’t have got this far if it wasn’t for Edwyn Collins. He’s almost like a patron of music.”

Even by then, Little Barrie’s name had been on many a tastemaker’s lips for years. Formed in Nottingham, they released their first single ‘Shrug Off Love’ for the world renowned Stark Reality label (an imprint of the Jazzman label) in 2000. At the time Barrie and original drummer Wayne Fullwood moved to London where Lewis Wharton (also recently moved from Portsmouth) was listening, so intently and enthusiastically that he talked his way into the band. We Are Little Barrie, which produced the chart single ‘Free Salute’, received rave reviews for its passionate mixture of rock and old-school rhythm and blues elements. By early 2007, it had led to Stand Your Ground, a second album which the band now see as an important stepping stone, but not entirely in the right direction. All the same, Stand Your Ground proved to be an appropriate title. “Some of the second album was good, but in hindsight we probably would have found a different way of doing it,” says Barrie. “But hindsight’s a wonderful thing. You can’t have any regrets. I just think we like the idea of constantly doing different things.” So, it turns out, a band that’s in it for the long haul and the right reasons wins the race against the 15-minute fashionistas. “We probably thought we were paddling upstream, with all the hype for other bands,” says Lewis. “We didn’t know it at the time, but it’s worked in our favour.” Now, they’re completely in control of their own destiny, and not about to let anyone impose a sound or stick a label on them. “The only effect any of our experiences has had on us,” Barrie goes on, “is knowing not to do what people tell you, you should do, and do what you want to do.”

Past Shows


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2012
Fine Line
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2012
Fine Line

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