Title: Hand Built By Robots
Release date: 29 April, 2008
Record label: Aware/Columbia Records
Single: Dream Catch Me
Official website: Newton Faulkner
Wikipedia: Newton Faulkner
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Hand Built By Robots, the forthcoming debut album by Newton Faulkner, is out April 29 on Aware/Columbia Records. The platinum-selling album debuted in the top five in the U.K. combined album charts, spent two weeks at Number One and secured the Number One spot on the U.K. iTunes chart for six straight weeks. Additionally, Faulkner has been honored with a 2008 Brit Award nomination in the “British Male Solo Artist” category and has earned support slots for acclaimed artists The Fray, Paolo Nutini and James Morrison plus appearences at Glastonbury, V Festival and the Cambridge Folk Festival. Faulkner is currently touring the U.S.
On Hand Built By Robots—which includes the single “Dream Catch Me”—Faulkner combines finger-picking, string-tapping and percussive drumming on the guitar’s body to generate both melody and rhythm on the same instrument. “Tapping,” explains Faulkner, “is prodding the strings really hard with your other hand, your picking hand. You can have stuff coming from both sides of the strings—you get two notes and they harmonize themselves.”
In addition to the high-profile supporting roles mentioned above, Faulkner has also headlined his own sold-out U.K. tour, progressing from smaller venues to consistently filling 2000-seat rooms in ten different cities. The 23 year-old’s approach to performing live has earned him a growing legion of passionate fans including a following amongst the surfing community. Of his love for touring, Faulkner says, “Everything makes more sense on the road…you have a clear understanding of what people like and want.”
quotes
“If Prince was an English hippie who was obsessed with Bobby McFerrin-esque percussion and had long cinnamon dreadlocks, you’d have Faulkner.”—Rollingstone.com
biography
Newton Faulkner believes in accidents. A bona fide pop star at home in his native U.K.—where radio presence, great press and a thrilling live show drove Hand Built By Robots to the top spot on the album-sales chart upon its release there last summer—this 23-year-old singer-songwriter makes music full of serendipity and happenstance, coincidence and luck. As its title suggests, Hand Built By Robots contains acoustic music for the digital age: Faulkner croons in a voice shaped by years spent listening to Joni Mitchell, Neil Young and Tom Waits and plays guitar with a distinctive tap-pick-and-strum technique that allows him to use the instrument as guitar, bass and drums all at once. Call it folk-pop for the future, and get ready to hear quite a lot of it as Faulkner goes about spreading his success to these shores.
Newton first picked up a guitar at age 13; within three years he was honing his skills at Guildford’s prestigious Academy of Contemporary Music. Studying theory and technique, though, led young Newton to a discovery: “If you’re trying to get noticed playing normal guitar, you have to be phenomenal,” Faulkner says with a self-deprecating laugh, “because that’s what everybody else is doing. To be the most amazing soloist in the world you’d have to spend four years in a cave doing nothing else.”
Generally disinclined to cave life, Faulkner hit upon a different idea. “I was just sitting around playing guitar with a friend and I did something weird, this sort of quick slap-tap-bass thing. I wouldn’t say it was good or technically impressive, but my friend said, ‘Wow, that was cool.’ I was like, ‘What? That wasn’t cool—it was just a bit weird.’ But he made me do it again, and then I was like, ‘Wow, that is cool!’” Thus was Faulkner’s inadvertent virtuosity born.
The singer voices a similarly casual attitude toward songwriting. “To be perfectly honest, when I’m writing I try to think as little as possible,” he admits. For Faulkner, the goal with any tune is to approach an uncommon subject from an uncommon angle, a trick he picked up from some of his teenage favorites, including Radiohead, Green Day and the Presidents of the United States of America. “I like something that carries a message and isn’t just talking about how hot a girl is or how depressed you are.” To that end, Hand Built contains a song about the perils of growing old with superpowers (“Ageing Superhero”) and one about the value of certain facial expressions (“People Should Smile More”).
Faulkner penned a handful of the album’s tracks with his brother Toby. “You can spot that stuff because it’s usually slightly stupid,” he says. “‘UFO,’ ‘Gone in the Morning,’ ‘She’s Got the Time’—the most ridiculous ones he had some involvement in.” (Faulkner also co-wrote for the album “with slightly more serious people,” including Crispin Hunt of the Longpigs, with whom he crafted “Dream Catch Me,” the album’s lead single and a huge hit on England’s Radio One. In addition, there’s a heart-stopping cover of Massive Attack’s “Teardrop” that may cause you to change the way you think about that song.)
For all of Hand Built’s hand-built craftiness, Faulkner says that where he feels most comfortable is onstage before an audience, playing songs, telling stories and cracking jokes. (It doesn’t take long before you realize that Faulkner particularly likes cracking jokes.) A Bobby McFerrin gig at London’s Royal Festival Hall made a huge impact. “He was basically just strolling around making noises and chatting to people,” Faulkner marvels, “and everyone sat back and sort of aid, ‘This is really nice.’”
Newton spent last year building an intensely devoted fanbase in Europe, headlining his own shows as well as opening concerts by John Mayer, Paolo Nutini and the John Butler Trio. This year he’s looking forward to following the same path in the United States. “I like to have a kind of conversation with the entire crowd,” he says. Prepare to start talking back.
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