Album info

Album-Release:
2015

HRA-Release:
12.09.2019

Album including Album cover

?

Formats & Prices

Format Price In Cart Buy
FLAC 44.1 $ 11.00
  • 1 Whenever You See Me 04:00
  • 2 Baby Bye Bye 05:14
  • 3 Feeling of Wonder 03:06
  • 4 No Action 04:14
  • 5 Good Looking Woman 03:08
  • 6 Turkish Delight 04:11
  • 7 It Ain't Your Business 02:26
  • 8 Ain't Always Better Your Way 03:09
  • 9 Never Get Back 04:48
  • 10 Bitchin' in the Kitchen 02:39
  • 11 Whiskey 03:41
  • 12 Developer's Disease 02:28
  • Total Runtime 43:04

Info for The Third



Having sold over a quarter of a million albums worldwide and sold out headline tours, London siblings Kitty Daisy & Lewis return with their new album, Kitty, Daisy & Lewis The Third. Produced by Mick Jones of The Clash in a new 16 track analogue studio in a derelict Indian restaurant in Camden Town, the band take their third album to another level, with the songwriting, instrumentation, styles, production and sound.

With three different writers and multi-instrumentalists in the band, their songs are an eclectic mix up of Pop, R’n'B & Blues, Psychedelic Rock, Soul, Country, Jazz and Ska. Embracing a spread of influences from blues to disco, but always sounding unmistakably Kitty Daisy & Lewis, the stories in this album resonate with moods and melodies that touch you in ways that are both uplifting and unnerving.

"The third full-length album from Kitty, Daisy & Lewis, 2015's fittingly titled The Third, showcases more of the group's rootsy yet stylistically wide-ranging mix of rockabilly, ska, vintage-style R&B, and quirky old-school pop. The album follows the group's acclaimed 2011 effort, Smoking in Heaven, and features production from the Clash's Mick Jones. Early on in Kitty, Daisy & Lewis' career, the British siblings (whose parents are noted producer/guitarist Graeme Durham and former Raincoats drummer Ingrid Weiss) exhibited a penchant for covering classic rockabilly and country songs, a talent that got them pegged as a traditionalist or even revivalist roots band. The fact that they also looked the part in vintage '50s clothes, and eked out their charming lo-fi sound with a mix of acoustic and electric instruments and tube amps, only added to the misconception. Seven years on from their full-length debut, Kitty, Daisy & Lewis appear less as a neo-retro rockabilly or country act (although they certainly touch upon those styles) and more like an astute, genre-bending post-punk band from the '70s or early '80s. Think how Talking Heads combined their love of soul and disco into their own fractured new wave sound and you'll get a good idea of where Kitty, Daisy & Lewis are coming from. Which isn't to say that they aren't still a little bit rootsy -- or that they sound anything like Talking Heads, for that matter. On the contrary, cuts like the '60s ska-sounding "Baby Bye Bye" and the vintage Chicago blues-inflected "It Ain't Your Business" are devilishly purist in their execution, but still feel markedly current. Similarly, listen to the punk-funk thump of "Bitchin' in the Kitchen" or the roiling boogie-blues of "Feeling of Wonder" and your mind begins intersecting images of a '40s juke joint with a '70s basement punk show. Perhaps the best example of the trio's decade-crossing talent is "No Action," a wicked, sinewy, piano and string-driven feature for drummer/vocalist Kitty that simultaneously calls to mind the Vaselines, Amy Winehouse, and Nile Rodgers. Which is why bringing Jones on board ends up making so much sense. From his early days in the '70s D.I.Y. scene to his early-'80s reign with the Clash to his dub, dance, and electronic-infused years during the '90s and onward with Big Audio Dynamite, Jones has forged multiple careers by fusing disparate yet compatible musical styles together to make wholly new yet comfortably recognizable pop music. Ultimately, that's exactly what Kitty, Daisy & Lewis have done here." (Matt Collar, AMG)

Kitty, Daisy & Lewis



Kitty, Daisy & Lewis
Described as “a gift to those of us who still believe in magic” (The Observer), London siblings Kitty, Daisy & Lewis Durham are awesomely talented songwriters and multi-instrumentalist musicians.

They have sold over a quarter of a million albums worldwide, sold out headline tours, played Bestival and Glastonbury numerous times, they’ve opened shows for some big names -hello Mark Ronson and Coldplay. Starting out young, they have inspired audiences and gathered an impressive fan base from Amy Winehouse and Eagles Of Death Metal to David Lynch.

Kitty, Daisy & Lewis have come a long way since they broke through in 2006 with their second single, ‘Mean Son Of A Gun’. The trio of siblings, from a musical family – dad, Graeme Durham, an engineer at London’s Exchange studio, mum, Ingrid Weiss, the former drummer in post punkers ‘The Raincoats’ – have since then cemented their reputation with three critically acclaimed albums, 2008’s self titled debut, 2011’s ‘Smoking In Heaven’ and 2015’s ‘The Third’, and their most recent fourth, ‘Superscope’, which is quite frankly their most accomplished to date.

"Superscope is an addictive album, shooting clean and pure into your veins. Add this to your party mix and just try to keep your hips from shaking." - Soundblab

Their third album Kitty Daisy & Lewis The Third is a sparkling analogue production, produced by Mick Jones of The Clash, and recorded in a derelict Indian restaurant in Camden Town.

Each rotating on different instruments with a set that includes R&B, jazz, soul, blues, ska, country, rock 'n' roll and more, Kitty, Daisy & Lewis mix up genres to perfection!

This album contains no booklet.

© 2010-2024 HIGHRESAUDIO