Earth will be released on April 17 and will feature contributions from Nathan East, Colin Greenwood, Glenn Kotche, Omar Hakim, and more.
(February 6, 2020) -- Ed O’Brien of Radiohead has unveiled, among other details, the title, track listing, release date, and cover art of Earth, his first album under the moniker of EOB. Earth will be released April 17 on Capitol Records and consists of the following nine songs:
- Shangri-La
- Brasil
- Deep Days
- Long Time Coming
- Mass
- Banksters
- Sail On
- Olympik
- Cloak of the Night
EOB’s first official single “Shangri-La” is now available. The song’s release was preceded by the non-album track “Santa Teresa” and the “shapeshifting epic” (Stereogum) “Brasil,” along with its accompanying sci-fi epic short film. As a special surprise for fans: Those who have ordered the “Brasil” 12” will find “Shangri-La” as an unmarked hidden track.
Composed by O’Brien and produced by Flood (with the exception of “Olympik” which is co-produced by Flood and Catherine Marks), Earth features Ed on vocals, guitar, bass, keyboards, percussion and programming. Ed’s songs were brought to life on Earth by a diverse and stellar array of musicians including an appearance by O’Brien’s Radiohead bandmate Colin Greenwood, Portishead guitarist Adrian Utley, Wilco drummer Glenn Kotche, drum legend Omar Hakim, masterful bass player Nathan East, Laura Marling, David Okumu of The Invisible, Adam ‘Cecil‘ Bartlett, Richie Kennedy, Marcelo S. Silva, Flood and Catherine Marks.
Physical configurations of Earth are available here: https://EOB.lnk.to/storePR and the store is the only place to buy the exclusive transparent red vinyl and other merchandise + album bundles. Additionally the store will feature the standard 12” vinyl LP and CD versions of the album. Digital pre-order and as pre-saves are also possible now, and fans who do so will instantly receive “Brasil” and “Shangri-La."
Dates and locations of EOB’s first full scale North American tour will be announced shortly. The proper tour will follow a series of four intimate shows in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Toronto in February 2020. These exclusive events and the upcoming tour will see Ed joined by a band comprised of Hinako Omori, Ross Chapman, Dishan Abrahams and Alvin Ford, Jr.
Ed O' Brien Tour Dates
- 02/07/20 — Toronto, ON — Great Hall
- 02/08/20 — Chicago, IL — Lincoln Hall
- 02/10/20 — New York, NY — Le Poisson Rouge
- 02/13/20 — Los Angeles, CA — Masonic Lodge at Hollywood Forever
- 03/07/20 — London, UK — BBC Festival 6
- 06/13/20 — Manchester, TN – Bonnaroo Music Festival
- 07/24/20 — Luzern, CH — Blue Balls Festival
- 07/31/20 — Newport, RI — Newport Folk Festival
For more information:
EOB
The nine-minute track features drummer Omar Hakim and Radiohead bandmate Colin Greenwood.
New York, NY (December 5, 2019) -- Following the non-LP teaser "Santa Teresa”—hailed as “beautifully ambient” by NPR—Ed O’Brien of Radiohead has unveiled the first impression of his debut album under the moniker of EOB.
Written by O’Brien, “Brasil” is a near 9-minute epic that begins life as a plaintive ballad built on the bare bones of O’Brien’s voice and acoustic guitar before blooming into a grandiose motorik rave-up anchored by the rock solid drumming of Omar Hakim and a hypnotic bassline from O’Brien’s Radiohead bandmate Colin Greenwood. Produced by Flood (who also contributes System 700 synth) and mixed by Alan Moulder, the dimensions of “Brasil” are further expanded by engineer Adam “Cecil” Bartlett's programming, David Okumu's guitar playing, and recording engineer Richie Kennedy's sampler programming.
Director Andrew Donoho’s take on “Brasil” translates the song’s otherworldly feel into a global narrative exploration of the human condition. “‘Brasil' was one of those tracks just dripping with magic from the very beginning,” Donoho recalls. "Everything started clicking very quickly. Empathy, togetherness, wonder, spirituality, and exploration resonated from the song and the references, and I wanted to write a large scope, otherworldly concept weighted in humanity. Ed and I both shared a love of space and the abstract concepts surrounding time, so I started building a narrative around transcending the physical barriers of our bodies and the temporal barriers of linear experience."
In O’Brien's words, “Brasil is a state of mind, not a place or time,” making the song a natural soundscape for a re-imagination of human experience balancing the terror of the elimination of the individual with the beauty of a universal oneness. "H.P. Lovecraft, Kubrick, and Junji Ito have created some of my favorite sci-fi narratives,” he says. “But I’ve always wanted to reinterpret their horrific premises into a more poetic and optimistic notion. What if an alien or higher being were to come to earth to help us achieve a greater existence, and not to destroy us? What would it look like if everyone on earth shared thoughts, experiences, and actions? The theory that humans, as a species, actually represent one large, singular organism has always fascinated me, and I wanted to explore that concept visually through a variety of different character perspectives, mediums, and impressionistic visual effects. All these layers and ideas culminated into our narrative for ‘Brasil.’"
The early 2020 release date of the first EOB album will be revealed shortly, as will the album’s title. The recording of the album began in the fall of 2017 and concluded in early 2019. In addition to the aforementioned production and mixing by Flood and Moulder and contributions from Omar Hakim, Colin Greenwood, Adam “Cecil” Bartlett, David Okumu and Richie Kennedy, EOB’s debut album features Laura Marling, Adrian Utley, Nathan East and Glenn Kotche.
For more information:
Ed O'Brien
Musical possibilities abound in a sustainer-equipped Stratocaster.
With his Rorschach blots of tone color and phantasmal phrasing and ambient tones, Radiohead’s Ed O’Brien can be a pretty painterly musician. And really, it’s neither an exaggeration nor a surprise to say that his new signature Stratocaster often feels like a cross between paintbrush and guitar (as well as some alien lyre). Its shape-shifting potency comes from a Fernandes Sustainer system that extends the Stratocaster’s basic sound palette dramatically. And at times, it plays and sounds like a different instrument altogether—even while feeling as comfortable, inviting, and expressive in all the ways a Stratocaster should.
But the best thing about the Ed O’Brien is the way it prompts invention and makes you rethink your own playing. Maximizing its potential takes sensitivity, an open mind, and a little practice. And occasionally you might have to bend to the instrument’s will as much as your own. But the musical payoffs for such open-mindedness can be huge. In the right hands, and with the right mindset, the Ed O’Brien Stratocaster is a very powerful musical tool.
Rules of Magnetism
The Fernandes Sustainer system is not a new invention. It’s appeared on Fernandes’ own line of sustainer guitars and is available as a kit. Like an EBow, it uses a battery-driven source of magnetic energy—in the neck pickup—to vibrate the strings from beneath.
The effect can be like amplifier feedback. In other situations it comes closer to a bowed cello or an operatic voice. The sustainer’s performance characteristics change depending on the mass of the string you pluck (higher, unwound strings tend to “sing” more readily) and how you set the sustainer’s controls.
Two of the most vital of these are the switches that reside where a Stratocaster’s input jack usually appears. One turns the sustainer effect off and on. The other switches between a “natural” setting that sustains fundamentals, a “harmonic” mode that sustains a blooming, natural 5th harmonic, and a third mode that sustains the fundamental and harmonic together (though the harmonic is much less pronounced in this mode). A sustainer intensity control takes the place of the aft-most tone control on a regular Stratocaster, and it has a useful detent at the midway point that facilitates use by feel. It’s a thoughtful touch for a control that you’ll use a lot as you get comfortable with the sustainer’s dynamic potential.
Though you can only use the bridge pickup with the sustainer on, you have the full compliment of pickups at your disposal when it’s off. The bridge pickup is a Seymour Duncan JB Jr. It’s a bit hot and mid-focused for my vintage Fender-aligned tastes, but it works well with the sustainer system. The middle pickup is a Fender Texas Special and will feel most familiar to Strat players, though the output is considerably lower than the JB Jr. The neck pickup is the Fernandes unit that comes built into the sustainer. It lacks some of the Strat neck unit’s warm, round tones, but you can approximate such sounds to some extent with deft use of the tone knob.
Ratings
Pros:Amazing expressive potential in the sustainer and related controls. Nice neck. Excellent build quality.
Cons:
Thin neck pickup tones.
Tones:
Playability:
Build/Design:
Value:
Street:
$1,099
Fender Ed O’Brien Stratocaster
fender.com
Droning On
One of the real joys of the Ed O’Brien is feeling your way into techniques that are uniquely suited to the instrument. While shredders have long exploited sustainers for flashy legato lines, the system is a natural fit for languid, lazy phrasing that allows overtones to bloom. Patient, melodic phrasing also gives you space to leverage the expressive possibilities of the sustainer controls. For example, bringing the sustainer in and out of a passage with the on/off switch yields syrupy, slo-mo variants of Pete Townshend’s Morse-code pickup switching. Switching between the natural, blend, and harmonic modes enables you to add high, fleeting bird cries while your fretting hand shifts chord shapes and melodic phrases. And you can use the very effective intensity control to bring in sustain textures gradually. When you get a feel for the full dynamic range of the controls, this Strat can start to feel as much like a synthesizer or a mixing board as a guitar.
Discussion of pedal effects merits special mention in examining the Ed O’Brien Stratocaster. Because while the Ed O’ Brien generates impressive effects and overtones with an amp alone, it becomes exponentially more expressive and colorful with effects—especially compression, reverb, and delay, which can increase control and enhance overtones. Compressors, in particular, can be real allies. They help tame volume spikes in harmonic mode—even the naturally irregular output from some strings—and add extra bloom to sustained notes. But the fact that a compressor can add so much to the Ed O’Brien experience is not a shortcoming of the guitar. Rather, these are two musical tools that go together as deliciously as a steaming bowl of cassoulet and a bottle of Bordeaux on a frosty day.
Open tunings open up other expansive dimensions. You’ll need to pay close attention to picking technique—droning doubles and octaves can turn muddy or evolve into runaway feedback if you don’t mind the sustainer intensity, volume, tone and your pick attack. Get all those variables right, though, and the Ed O’Brien dazzles with open tunings.
The Verdict
It’s hard to sum up the Ed O’Brien Stratocaster—at least in the realm of quantification and scores. While I loved the way it pushed back and beckoned down new paths, other players that had a go found it less intuitive. I gave the guitar a four-pick score for playability, but it could rate far lower for players that don’t savor the occasionally unpredictable dynamics. It would be best to spend quality time with the Ed O’ Brien at a shop and see how you relate to its bag of tricks, and how it responds to your own. Because while the Ed O’Brien Stratocaster can be a game of give and take—even a tug of war—it’s equally capable of revealing new directions and ideas, smashing any musical trap, or extracting you from any creative rut in which you might find yourself mired.
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