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: Simon Joyner... Jim Moray... Josh Rouse... John Craigie... Julian Taylor... Emily Barker... Gratis: Sophie Jamieson... Anna B Savage... C Duncan... Dustin O’Halloran... Chuck Prophet... The Ocelots... Sean Rowe... Jim Ghedi... Fionn Regan... The Weather Station... Beans on Toast... Joshua Burnside... The Loft... Martin Kohlstedt... Nadia Reid... Danny & the Champions of the World... The Delines... Helena Deland... Chris Brain... Heather Nova... Mark Eitzel... Jeffrey Martin... Federico Albanese... Amelia Coburn... Hayden Thorpe & Propellor Ensemble... Jerron Paxton... Throwing Muses... Lael Neale...

When: 7.30pm on Thursday 29 October 2020
Where: Soup Kitchen, 31-33 Spear Street, Manchester M1 1DF

PLEASE NOTE: This show has been postponed. Ticket outlets will be in touch with ticket-buyers with details of the new date as soon as it is confirmed.

We’re excited to be welcoming Leif Vollebekk back to Manchester!

New Ways is a new album by Montreal’s Leif Vollebekk, his hotly anticipated follow-up to the Polaris Prize finalist Twin Solitude. It’s a record that lives between the kick and the snare, in that instant of feeling before the backbeat.

‘The way that it was is the way it should be,’ Vollebekk sings on Phaedrus – a line that’s a memory and a wish. New Ways is that too: the sound of desire in its unfolding. Two years ago, things were changing so fast, and the songwriter didn’t want to forget. ‘I often think of Leonard Cohen’s line, “I hope you’re keeping some kind of record,”‘ he says. ‘So I did.’ It was like he was pretending you can compose a soundtrack to your own life (which perhaps you can).

In the end, New Ways is a document of everything Vollebekk felt, the way each moment arrived and moved through him. Whereas Twin Solitude was about self-reflection, New Ways is about engaging and changing, touching and being touched. It’s a physical record, with louder and tighter grooves, and the rawest lyrics the musician has ever recorded. A portrait of beauty, desire, longing, risk, remembrance – without an instant of regret. ‘She’s my woman and she loved me so fine,’ goes the chorus to one tune. ‘She’ll never be back.’

‘Anything that I wouldn’t ever want to tell anyone – I just put it on the record,’ Vollebekk says: tenderness and violence, sex and rebirth, Plato and Julie Delpy. A story told through details – ‘the sun through my eyelids,’ ‘a sign on the highway covered in rain’. The songs came fast – recorded a week here, a week there, initially just Leif and a drummer. ‘After each take, we’d go into the control room and listen back and see how it felt,’ he says. ‘If it didn’t feel right we’d do it again, or switch from piano to guitar, or change the drum sound, or the microphones.’ Once they got it, he’d move on. Never at rest, always in movement: 10 different tracks for 10 states of motion – each with its own pulse, drawing the listener in.

There’s the heat of the night and the cool blue of morning, hints of Prince and Bill Withers, the limbo of a lover’s transatlantic flight. Hot Tears is all hot-blooded memory. Apalachee Plain is a clamorous goodbye. I’m Not Your Lover would be a perfect love-song were it not for its chorus – a song that lets two opposites be true at once. ‘That last record I made for me,’ Vollebekk admits. ‘This one is for someone else.’

Imagine the singer at the end of last September, performing at midnight in one of Montreal’s rarest and most intimate venues – a century-old porno theatre called Cinema L’Amour, a temple to the true and the carnal. He was sitting at a piano. The chords were moving like shadows on a wall. ‘She’s my woman and she loved me so fine!’ Leif cried, singing to the rafters. ‘She’ll never be back.’

When everything was finally over – when the mixes were perfect and the masters cued up – Leif says listening to the album was like re-watching a film. ‘Now I knew what was going to happen,’ he remembers. ‘Now the moments didn’t feel fleeting – they felt eternal, almost fated. The songs spoke to me differently, but they hadn’t changed. I just heard them in New Ways.’

This show is a co-promotion with One Inch Badge.

Buy tickets now. Tickets are available from the bar (no booking fee), Vinyl Exchange, WeGotTickets.comTicketline.co.uk and on 0871 220 0260.

Attend on: Facebook



All shows are 18+ unless otherwise stated.