LYR thrive on the unexpected. Comprised of musician Richard Walters, producer and multi-instrumentalist Patrick J Pearson and current UK Poet Laureate Simon Armitage, LYR is a nexus of diverse creative disciplines and one of the most thrilling musical projects to inaugurate the new decade.
LYR’s debut album Call in The Crash Team is out now
LYR – CALL IN THE CRASH TEAM
Call in the Crash Team (Mercury KX) is the perfect combination of poetic spoken passages, soaring vocal melodies and instrumentation which gleams like a rough-cut jewel. It is set to convert any previous skeptics of spoken word, thanks to Armitage’s compelling lyrics, as well as Pearson’s seductive bricolage of musical styles and Walters’ evocative vocals.
That philosophy of sonic exploration manifests in the album’s ambient post-rock passages, jazz flourishes, atonal experimentalism, as well as swoony strings and piano – and some more unusual instrument choices too, such as the kora, a West African stringed instrument.
NEVER GOOD WITH HORSES
The lead single ‘Never Good With Horses’ is an indication of the album’s ambition, scale, and lyrical prowess. The song is a keenly felt description of disappointment in a relationship, with a narrator who is resigned to stomach a partner’s “sugar cube lies”. Minimalist piano builds to soaring and wistful strings, with a sung refrain from Walters which recalls the heart-tugging power of Sigur Rós.
As with all of the tracks on Call In The Crash Team, Armitage writes from the viewpoint of a fictional character. His lyrics can bathe in the wonder of the world as well as hold up a magnifying glass to its ugliness. ‘Urban Myth #91’ builds to an onslaught of accelerated percussion and discordant piano.
On ‘Adam’s Apple’, staccato guitar chords add a lurking menace to a description of the rote fastening of a necktie, while ‘33 ⅓’ draws inspiration from a truly tragic moment in musical history – the sudden and heart-breaking passing of Joy Division lead singer, Ian Curtis.
The album’s stunning centrepiece ‘Great Coat’ combines Armitage’s charged poetic passages and Walters’ powerful vocal melodies with a driving electronic beat.
LYRICS
“A lot of the lyrics have come about from writing in a time of post-industrialisation, austerity, and the recession”, explains Armitage. “And yet, even through those years and those atmospheres, there’s still been an exuberance around, an exuberance of communication, information, language. I think a lot of the speakers in the pieces are expressing some kind of marginalisation and are doing so as if they’re almost hyperventilating”.
Richard Walters from LYR recommends his favourite listening, reading, viewing, eating, and places to visit
With this in mind, the album’s title Call In The Crash Team – a standout lyric from the desperate and haunting track ‘Zodiac T-Shirt’ – easily fell into place. “It goes back to that idea of people in crisis, and us being the crash team”, says Walters. “The emotional crash team, resuscitating”.
THE ORIGINS OF LYR
The origins of LYR stretch back to 2009 when Walters – a big fan of Armitage’s work – approached the poet’s publisher about the possibility of collaboration. Walters would go on to set Armitage’s poetry to music on his 2011 solo release ‘Redwoods’.
“Simon and I talked about the next step”, recalls Walters. “Instead of just taking words and me singing them, we had the idea of a spoken word project that had a bit more of a life around it in terms of the musical setting”. Walters thought of Pearson, who he had met in the early 2010’s, as part of a short-lived, shoegaze inspired band called Liu Bei. Pearson loved the idea, and LYR was born.
Breaking barriers and building unexpected bridges between different worlds is embedded in the core of LYR – and is a galvanising philosophy for the band as they unveil their debut album Call In The Crash Team to their world.
Follow LYR at lyrband.com
Photo credit © Steve Gullick
Left to Right: Simon Armitage, Richard Walters, Patrick J Pearson