New album – Life Is Sweet! Nice To Meet You – 1st February 2010

We are very excited to announce that Lightspeed Champion has returned with his second album, Life is Sweet! Nice To Meet You. The follow-up to 2008’s Falling Off The Lavender Bridge is an epic collection of twelve pop songs, two instrumental intermissions and one piano étude, set for release on 1st February 2010.

Lightspeed’s early leaning towards American country dressings is traded here for a palette that draws on classical music and even musical theatre. Producer and mixer Ben Allen (Animal Collective, Gnarls Barkley) assembles the eclectic grab-bag of influences: joltingly ‘70s guitar and synth sounds, classical piano, Greek choruses shouting reprisals, and at least one ukelele-driven moment.

All tracks on Life is Sweet! Nice To Meet You were written and arranged by Dev Hynes.

Watch a sneak preview of the video for forthcoming single Marlene (25th January 2010) here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWHUHxKbTEU

Life Is Sweet! Nice To Meet You will be available on CD (WIGCD235), vinyl (WIGLP235) and via digital download (WIG235D). The tracklisting is as follows:

1 – Dead Head Blues               
2 – Marlene                   
3 – There’s Nothing Underwater       
4 – Intermission               
5 – Faculty Of Fears                
6 – The Big Guns Of Highsmith       
7 – Romart                   
8 – I Don’t Want To Wake Up Alone
9 – Madame Van Damme
10 – Smooth Day (At The Library)
11 – Intermission 2
12 – Sweetheart
13 – Etude Op.3 ‘Goodnight Michalek’
14 – Middle Of The Dark
15 – A Bridge And A Goodbye

Life Is Sweet! Nice to Meet You, the second Lightspeed Champion long player, is an unassumingly epic collection of 12 pop songs, two instrumental intermissions, and one piano étude, bound together by a sense of longing so piquant that the listener, after listening, can’t easily stifle the sense that he himself is on the verge of some major transition, for better or worse (though for all its self-consciousness, there’s something fundamentally optimistic – even eager – about Lightspeed Champion’s anxiety over change). The record is bristling with pleas & temporary resignations & oaths of loyalty & promises to improve, all of which are built so consistently into the lyrics & melodies &  rhythms that one is utterly convinced of their sincerity, utterly convinced that one has been given an unfiltered look at the mental, even logistical state of the composer during the album’s construction. (‘Filtered through art’, you might suggest, but I’d say ‘clarified’.)

Here is an album that fairly brandishes musical ambition and emotional earnestness.

It also represents a definitive shift in style. If Falling Off the Lavender Bridge was Dev writing intimate songs for male/female duet with arrangements that drew on Americana, then Life Is Sweet! recasts him in the mould of the great ‘70s solo artists – Rundgren, Gainsbourg, Hazlewood, Nilsson, Bowie. Dev told me, “I wanted to make an over-the-top huge backing of music behind the vocals. Regal sounding, though, taking musically from classical, ‘70s rock, and French standards.” He succeeds handsomely. The songs are epic, with headlong melodies and expansive arrangements, but the grandness is frequently allowed to loom rather than thunder, yielding to passages of repose in which the lyrics give unadorned expression to the album’s thematic hunger. “I’m ready to give up on you now / I’m waiting till the sun has gone down / I’m waiting for a strand of your golden locks to sew my stomach shut,” Dev sings in Marlene, the album’s lead single, and later, in Sweetheart, “I’ll give you all / I’ll burn my books on love, and play it dumb / Be mine / I won’t act shy – I’m over that stage of my life.”

And the music... ah, the music. Huge! Where Lavender Bridge was conversational and sounded like it was composed on an acoustic guitar, Life Is Sweet! is gigantic, and definitively of the piano. Piano and synth form the album’s backbone (other instruments are handled – expertly – by the Brooklyn band Spacecamp, who have toured as Adam Green’s band and recently with Lightspeed), and the compositions reflect that starting point – Lightspeed’s early bent for American country dressings is traded here for a palette that draws on classical music and even musical theater. (When I asked whether he’d prefer that his career resemble that of Bowie, Dylan, Bon Jovi, Andrew Lloyd Weber, or “other”, he said Andrew Lloyd Weber. “Funny, I really want to write a song for Eurovision someday!”) Producer/mixer Ben Allen (Gnarls Barkley, Animal Collective) does a fantastic job of assembling the eclectic grab-bag of influences: joltingly ‘70s guitar and synth sounds, a classical piano that recalls at times the British composer Michael Nyman, Greek choruses shouting reprisals, and at least one ukelele-driven moment that is mysteriously (and gratifyingly) Steve Martin-esque.

But what about the man behind the Lightspeed Champion moniker? Who is he? Where did he come from? How much free time does he have? Working backwards: very little. Dev Hynes is a man who doesn’t like to sit around waiting for results; by the time the results are in, he’s on to bigger and better, or at the very least worse but different. A selected history of Dev rather breathlessly testifies to as much:

He began piano at age 7 (and yet he doesn’t hate it today). Next came cello, then the double bass, drums in high school, all the while teaching himself guitar. Early Dev Hynes band history involves several shitty punk bands whose names, according to him, “involved a celebrity’s name of some sort, either exactly copied, or made into some sort of irrelevant pun.” (No examples were provided, but one assumes that ‘Meg Ryan’ and ‘Crispin, Her Fingers Are Blue, Glover’ can’t be far from the mark.) Dev’s shitty punk band run culminated in Test Icicles, a shitty punk band that was actually pretty good, taking a skewed approach to shitty punk that telegraphed an intelligence not always present in the genre (‘Test Icicles’ is an anagram for ‘Eel Tics Tics’ (probably).

Test Icicles were picked up by Domino, and when, in the spring of 2006, the bandmates parted ways, Dev started the Lightspeed Champion project on Domino. In early 2007, he flew to Omaha and recorded with Mike Mogis and other Saddle Creek illuminati, and soon after began playing shows. He spent the next two years on the road playing everywhere in the world except for Europe, North America, and the Pacific Rim (my notes here are smudged; please forgive minor inaccuracies). A week after the Lavender Bridge tour reached its terminus at the 2008 Reading & Leeds Festival, Dev bought a plane ticket to New York and changed the end of his email address from “.co.uk” to “.com”.

The extensive touring had ravaged his throat, and in December he underwent surgery that left him unable to speak for weeks, incapable of anything but whispers and scowls for a good while after that. So he scorned the world, holed up in his apartment, and began writing Life Is Sweet! Nice to Meet You. It was finished by March.

He also blogged profusely, wrote short stories, and began work on a comic book with his girlfriend, graphic designer Nicole Michalek. The blog has been read by over 300 million people (guesstimate – official numbers unavailable); the stories will be made available by Domino in late 2009 as a collection called Bad Era of Me (an anagram of ‘Boa: Mad, Free’, perhaps coincidentally); and the comic book, Juice This!, will be released as part of CTRL ALT SHIFT’s campaign exploring corruption in November. That’s just the non-musical stuff, of course. New paragraph!

Dev’s musical drive – his need to remain musically active – is more apparent than the hat on his head. He’s often not wearing a hat, for one thing – he is always, always making music. During the last year alone, Dev:
- performed Cat Stevens’s soundtrack for Harold & Maude at a special screening by the British Film Institute.
- sang songs from Moondog’s Sax Pax for a Sax with the London Saxophonic at London’s Barbican Centre on the 10th anniversary of the composer’s death.
- arranged for and sang with The Britten Sinfonia orchestra, conducted by André De Ridder and Andi Toma.
- co-wrote with legendary composer and arranger Van Dyke Parks, the fruits of which will see release in the near future.
- wrote and recorded with Basement Jaxx (see My Turns, the new single from their recent record).
- wrote and recorded with Solange (sister of Beyoncé, a well known R&B performer).

He also covered, this year, something like thirty records in their entirety – recorded them and everything – while sitting around his apartment (his latest, as of this writing, is Todd Rundgren’s A Wizard A True Star). These covers are rarely heard by another soul, although in 2007 Dev put his Nimrod take on Myspace (Green Day continue to nurse their cover of Falling off the Lavender Bridge). He also started a new solo project called Blood Orange (a “slightly disco Chris Isaak Oriental thing”). He also scored an album for two cellos, which he aims to release in 2010.

Dev Hynes is 23. You will not be surprised when I tell you that he sleeps, on average, less than three hours a night.

CHRIS CAIN