Description
Modern English is a paragon of consistency. Formed in Colchester, Essex, England, the band have maintained their same core lineup since 1977: vocalist Robbie Grey, guitarist Gary McDowell, bassist Mick Conroy, and keyboardist Stephen Walker. In recent years, Modern English have become widely respected as post-punk innovators, thanks to younger generations discovering their catalog and new artists citing the band as an influence. This increased popularity has translated to sold-out tours performing their early albums and a main stage appearance at the 2023 Cruel World Festival in front of more than 25,000 people.
Modern English's new album, 1 2 3 4 - produced by Mario McNulty (David Bowie, Lou Reed, Nine Inch Nails), mixed by Cenzo Townsend and mastered at Abbey Road - retains the intrinsic spirit of these early, post-punk days and is also a sterling sonic example of what Modern English have always done best. The album encompasses seething songs with punk bite ("Long in The Tooth," "Plastic"), keyboard-forward melodic rockers ("Not Fake," "Crazy Lovers") and simmering, darkwave-meets-post-punk gems ("Exploding," "Out to Lunch").
The band's keen sense of dynamics is also evident throughout 1 2 3 4. The album-closing "Voices" is particularly subdued, bolstered by echoing, Doppler-like sound effects and Grey's somber vocals; the effect falls somewhere between spacey psychedelic rock and tranquil shoegaze. "With Modern English, we start off with an idea and then we go off on slight tangents," says Conroy. "But there's always one or two songs that don't sound anything like punk rock. They sound like Modern English."
Conroy and Grey started coming up with the music for 1 2 3 4 during the spring 2020 COVID-19 pandemic lockdown, swapping ideas back and forth remotely. "We were all bored stiff, because you couldn't do anything," Grey recalls. "The music started happening really quickly." Conroy set up a temporary home studio in Suffolk, England, with gear arranged in a tiny kitchen area ("Once I'd set up, that meant you couldn't open the fridge door," he says) and found himself inspired by the first Siouxsie and the Banshees album and the David Bowie records featuring Mick Ronson.
After some time, having amassed a batch of fresh songs, restrictions loosened enough so Modern English could gather together and go over this new music. The band deliberately went for a "raw-sounding affair" that was "more energetic," Conroy says, and recorded the album in just a few takes with minimal overdubs in a residential studio in upstate New York. Adds Grey: "We wanted some edge to it-live drums and getting the feel of moving from verse to chorus with everyone playing. It sounds like a live album."
Grey also says his lyrics on 1 2 3 4 are thematically in line with other Modern English albums. "For me as a lyricist, it's always about personal journeys, or the journey of the band, or just getting pissed off with governments and politicians," he says. As an example,