Hey! Manchester promotes gigs by folk, Americana and experimental bands from around the world in Manchester, England. Read more here, see below for our latest shows, check out our previous shows, contact us, or join our mailing list, above.

Upcoming shows: Rob Heron & The Tea Pad Orchestra... Tropical Fuck Storm... Kris Drever... Erland Cooper... Pokey LaFarge... Admiral Fallow... Skinny Lister... New Starts... The Sheepdogs... The Dead Tongues... Svaneborg Kardyb... James Heather... The Unthanks in Winter... Jim Moray... Josh Rouse... John Craigie... Julian Taylor... Emily Barker... Gratis: Sophie Jamieson... C Duncan... Dustin O’Halloran... Chuck Prophet... The Ocelots... Sean Rowe... Fionn Regan... The Weather Station... Beans on Toast... Joshua Burnside... The Loft... Martin Kohlstedt... Nadia Reid... Danny & the Champions of the World... The Delines... Chris Brain... Heather Nova... Mark Eitzel... Jeffrey Martin... Hayden Thorpe & Propellor Ensemble... Jerron Paxton... Throwing Muses...

When: 7pm on Friday 14 April 2017
Where: Soup Kitchen, 31-33 Spear Street, Manchester M1 1DF

PLEASE NOTE: This show is completely sold out! Join our mailing list, above, for information about future Haley Bonar shows.

Following last visit’s sell-out show, we’re delighted to be working with Weyes Blood again – this time, at Soup Kitchen!

Weyes-Blood-Soup-Kitchen-Manchester

The first thing you notice about Weyes Blood’s new album, Front Row Seat to Earth, is its closeness. The music is immediate and warm with intimate feeling. This disarming nearness draws out emotion from the album’s sound in evocative, bold colour. The lyrics serve not to obscure and mystify, but to perform, reveal, and take the listener inside. This is the folk music of the near future.

Natalie Mering, the being behind Weyes Blood, sings sublimely on Front Row. These are her words and she means them. Between the subtle pulses of her breath, we feel the textures of her voice. Her delivery is a trained low gloss, polished with the charm of speech. Mering embeds her song in a harmonic gauze of arpeggiated piano, acoustic guitar, druggy horns, and outer space electronics. Propulsive, spare drums carry us across the album’s course.

There is a faded California beauty to Front Row. A gentle honesty that recalls the finest folk music made on the West Coast of the 1970s. The hue hangs in the sweet-spooky harmonies, the pulsing sway of the vibrato, and the ecstatic chord resolves. It is the joyful release of energy as the song delicately unfolds from intro to extrospection.

But this beauty is scratched with shadow; with dark foreboding, alienation, and acceptance of change. Love and loss balance together in suspended alchemy, as the earthiness of the singer-songwriter tradition wears digital sounds like feathers in its hair. Mering, together with co-producer Chris Cohen and some special guests, contrasts live band intimacy with the post-modern electric sheen of AM radio atmospherics. The experimental flourishes sparkle amid the succinct, thoughtful arrangements.

The closeness of this record – how personal, alone, and frank it feels – conceals its aspirations to the outside, to the ‘Earth’ of its title. Mering wants to lead us through the microcosm of the personal to the macrocosm of the transpersonal. Her witness harbours devastating weight (‘… and now you can’t stay, please baby don’t go away’) while universalising the strange ways of identity and relationships.

These are not typical love songs or protest songs; they are painful, poignant riddles that celebrate the ambiguity of love. Mering affirms the conflict of harmonious life within a disharmonic world. She illuminates and mythologises it, projecting it back over the whole of Earth. The inner ecology leads outward, bridging ‘us’ with our obscure inheritance of nature.

Active in underground music since 2006, Natalie Mering has collaborated with Jackie-O Motherfucker and Ariel Pink, and released four records as Weyes Blood. Front Row Seat to Earth is her third record for Mexican Summer.

‘It’s beautiful, unsettling and wholly compelling’ – The Guardian

‘The exceptional voice of Natalie Mering — the woman who is Weyes Blood — never ceases to sweep us off our feet, and Do You Need My Love, with its vintage, Joan Baez-meets-Nico vibe, is no exception’ – The FADER

Special guest is Drugdealer. Can this trip be real? This is the foundation for The End of Comedy, the debut album by Drugdealer, a new project conceived and conducted by Michael Collins (formerly of Run DMT, Salvia Plath), who guides a group of Angelenos through a whimsical world informed by Jean Baudrillard, social media perception, Sergio Leone’s spaghetti western vistas and Collins’s endless travels.

Opening this excellent triple bill is Jack Ladder & The Dreamlanders. Somehow managing to combine bristling rock with synth pop and warped country, Jack Ladder’s music is hard to pin down. But it’s all held together by his one of a kind baritone voice, finely honed songwriting craft, a sardonic eye and an ability to draw the listener into his narratives, holding them there to the very end. Acclaim for his albums HURTSVILLE and Playmates (which saw a US release in 2015 by Fat Possum) saw him invited to support the Australian tours for Florence & The Machine and Angel Olsen.

This show is a co-promotion with Now Wave.

PLEASE NOTE: This show is completely sold out! Join our mailing list, above, for information about future Haley Bonar shows.

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All shows are 18+ unless otherwise stated.