Good Morning announce surprise second LP of 2024, The Accident (out Nov 29) + drop ‘Soft Rock Band’
PRAISE FOR Good Morning
GOOD MORNING
The Accident
Out Nov 29 via Good Morning Music Company Worldwide
PRE-SAVE HERE
TRACKLIST
Baby Steps
A Telephone Rings
Romance
Peaches
Thrills Of The Family Man
Perfect Fishing
The Grateful Dead
I Can’t Make It Up To You
Soft Rock Band
TOUR DATES
Dec 4 – The Corner – Naarm / Melbourne
Dec 5 – The Forum – Naarm / Melbourne
Dec 6-8 – Meredith Festival – Wadawurrung Land, Meredith
‘Soft Rock Band‘ is out now, buy/stream it here.
Good Morning today reveal details of their upcoming eighth record, The Accident, due November 29, the speedy release primed with their winding new single ‘Soft Rock Band’. LISTEN HERE + PRE-SAVE LP HERE.
The duo of Liam Parsons and Stefan Blair, Good Morning entered ‘album eight’ mode under the guise of studio time booked without pre-prepared songs, resulting in jamming together – “something that we’ve spent the better part of our adult lives avoiding,” they explain. Written and recorded wholly together in one shared space and exclusively digital thanks to a broken eight track tape machine.
Formed in the background of preparing and releasing their latest critically acclaimed album Good Morning Seven, The Accident would come to fruition in three stages: instrumentals recorded in August 2023 at The Old Carpet Factory on the Greek island of Hydra amongst 40 degree celsius weather and late morning swims; lyrics added and mixing initiated in November 2023 at Stella Mozgawa’s Sunfair Studios in Joshua Tree, post co-headline tour with Frankie Cosmos; with final touches in February 2024 at Naarm / Melbourne’s York Street Recorders, Australia’s oldest running recording studio that Stefan co-operates while they rehearsed to support Waxahatchee across the US.
Speaking to its genesis, Good Morning share, “Somehow, we broke through the barrier of being vulnerable about our creativity (again) and got into the swing of writing together in a room for the first time in a long time. During this time we’re starting all the advance rollout work on Good Morning Seven and planning our next year. We’re not really fighters, (we’re way too passive for that), but given that we’re making a new record at the same time as already getting sick of thinking about the old one, an air of burn out and band related bum out seems to find its way into much of the lyrics. For the first time in a long time, there is no new Good Morning record being worked on as this one is coming out, and no plans to tour.”
Marking the release with a sprawling eight minute single, ‘Soft Rock Band’ plays like a hopeful final chapter. An alternate narrative-led hurricane, the track springboards memories, secrets and fears of a lackadaisical character’s past. Remarking on the adage of time flying, “I might have seen it all but I know there’s still so much to go,” they lament against warm piano and slide guitar. What eventuates into a big band breakdown keeps with the nostalgic easy-listening style of Clairo. Like Truman stepping off the set of his ‘life’, ‘Soft Rock Band’ windchimes into the distance and lets the end credits roll.
With a dedicated focus to a small contingent of instruments that feature across The Accident, as with Good Morning’s wider discography, the record is abound with xylophone, slide guitar, congas, and a Melotron setting called ‘Boy’s Choir’. Hydra’s ever-present cicada population, coupled with Joshua Tree local scorpions and tarantulas, meant that “a lot of the recordings have a layer of hiss anyway.” The Accident also sees a horn and wind section return, with contributions from Stefan’s father Glenn Blair on saxophone, Nicole Thibault on trombone and Hank Clifton-Williamson on flute. Retaining their firm DIY spirit, The Accident arrives written and produced by Good Morning (pair), engineered and mixed by Stefan with mastering by Fred Kevorkian, and artwork by Liam.
Hot off Pitchfork Festival London with Drugdealer and June McDoom, Good Morning will appear at Meredith Festival this December alongside Jamie xx, Genesis Owusu, Mk.gee and Waxahatchee, with whom they will reunite at her Tigers Blood Australia Tour sideshow. See all tour routing details BELOW.
Over the past decade, Good Morning have carved out a peculiar, hard-to-define indie career for themselves, amassing a global cult fanbase and hundreds of millions of streams despite (or perhaps because of) their defiantly DIY approach. The band/duo/recording-thing from Naarm / Melbourne, Australia come together as Stefan Blair (29, brown hair, 6 foot something) plays most of the instruments and sings half the songs. Liam Parsons (30, brown hair, 6 foot on the dot) plays the rest of the instruments and sings the other half of the songs.
The band name is intentionally impossible to Google but hasn’t gotten in the way of them getting shouted out by Tyler, The Creator, sampled by A$AP Rocky, going viral on TikTok (for their 2015 track ‘Warned You’), or touring the globe (including the US, Mexico, China, Japan, Thailand, and beyond). Their 2021 album Barnyard, both thoughtful and catchy, released internationally via Polyvinyl was met with widespread acclaim from Rolling Stone, NME, Stereogum, The Line Of Best Fit, Consequence, Alt Press, Paste, DIY Magazine, Northern Transmissions, KCRW, 6Music and more, plus an appearance at Pitchfork Festival London earlier this month.
More recently the group marked ten years as a duo with Good Morning Seven, praised by The Guardian for their “wry, charismatic, self-effacing paeans to the pain and pleasure of existence,” alongside Rolling Stone, The Australian, Junkee, Bandcamp, the FADER, NPR, Stereogum, Paste, Northern Transmissions to a suite of radio playlisting across Double J, Triple R (Album of the Week), 2SER (Album of the Week), SYN (Local Feature Album), and Edge Radio (Feature Album). Released earlier this year, the homerun record was just as vehemently embraced across the live circuit, with a landmark home show at Melbourne’s Recital Hall for RISING festival praised by The Age with 5 out of 5 stars: “One of Melbourne’s most underrated bands return home and blow off the roof.” It’s all down hill from here.
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