Loading…

Brudenell presents...

Pale Seas

+ The Big Wheel + Crake

Tipped by many to become one of the most exciting and unique British guitar bands of the decade off the back of rapturous critical acclaim, Pale | Seas, on the eve of the release of a long-anticipated debut album, simply disappeared. No hiatus announcement, no press release, nothing.

For the following three years the band, led by enigmatic frontman Jacob Scott alongside Graham Poole (Lead Guitar), Matthew Bishop (Bass) & Andrew Richardson (Drums), emitted no signal, instead embarking upon a period of prolonged isolation, rejecting the industry and the outside world to hole themselves away inside a medieval abbey in most remote Isle of Wight. 

The decision to do so would go on to define the band’s dark, otherworldly and expansive sound. To capture it and enhance it further the band enlisted the help of producer Chris Potter (The Verve, Urban Hymns) & Paul Butler (Michael Kiwanuka, Devendra Banhart & The Bees), with whom the band had begun their journey 5 years previously.

In an industry that feeds off short-lived hype countless bands have rushed headfirst into releasing an album, only to crash and burn. Jacob Scott, intent on not joining their ranks, is now certain that their debut record; an amalgamation of nearly a decade’s worth of life experiences, will not be left to the sands of time. "I’ve listened to these tracks loud enough and long enough to know that the right things are coming across."

There’s something of the young P J Harvey in the urgent rawness of Scott’s vocals. On album opener Into The Night, the pulsing electric guitar - which builds and relents repeatedly - serves this rawness perfectly. There’s a softness bubbling beneath the surface too; on each track that follows, Scott excavates his soul in a bid to make sense of it.

Scott is influenced by Neil Young, Elliott Smith and Half Japanese (who Scott says “got me to pick up a guitar”) – but as a rule of thumb, it’s not been music that’s shaped who he is as an artist.

His mother, a painter, was a much bigger influence. “I learned more from growing up with her than I have from music. She found a way to channel her life experiences into something beautiful and real. To see that, to witness someone so close to you turning their life in to art was, to me, more powerful than hearing any band play.”

In an effort to capture the state he was in when the songs were written, 'Stargazing For Beginners' was recorded mostly at night in the ancient abbey – Scott says the feeling an artist has when they first write something “can’t be replaced, unless you get it first take.” There are many first takes on the album and many more hours between them spent waiting for the perfect moment to arrive.

On one song, Blood Return, the version that made it onto the record is the original demo. The song, he says, represents “a feeling of getting better when you’ve been strung out for so long you have forgotten what being well is. It’s like watching the colour slowly come back into your skin.”

To accompany the album the band have been working with the esoteric Russian  artist Denis Forkas who has created the album cover, London based digital artist John Karborn who has created a series of digital artworks, gifs and videos and film-maker and photographer Holly Fernando who has documented the recording in a B/W film and in a limited edition 54 page book.

Saturday 2nd September 2017

Price: Free Entry

Doors 19:30

Band Links



« Back to Previous Page

Brudenell News

  • Be Kind // Re-opening Statement

    Be Kind // Re-opening Statement

    Friday 16th July 2021

    On the whole, we want our message to convey that there is a need for a level of personal responsibility, compassion and kindness for each other that essentially helps us all. We appreciate your continued support.

    Read More

Brudenell Social

Brudenell on Spotify

Follow us on Spotify for playlists featuring upcoming gigs & music from our friends!