[ he/him ]
city: EdinburghSupport for Hamish Hawk's "Angel Numbers":
"An album of remarkable scope and vivid, romantic lyricism."
***** - The Skinny
"Restless but never overwrought, flamboyant but without a trace of flippancy, Hawk is a welcome antidote for the mundanity of modern living."
9/10 - The Line Of Best Fit
"All human life is here."
**** - Mojo
"A shimmering curtain of prime pop jangle."
8/10 - Uncut
"Come for the triumphant arena anthems and stay for the mouth-wateringly arch lyricism. His star will undoubtedly only rise from here."
**** - Record Collector
"Hawk's new album is his best yet."
Breaking Act - The Sunday Times
Edinburgh's Hamish Hawk returned in April with the welcome news that a new album "A Firmer Hand" is to land August 16th on So Recordings.
Following the BBC 6 Music playlisted "Big Cat Tattoos", a rapturously-received solo tour with Villagers and its follow-up "Nancy Dearest" in June, today Hamish shares a third track from the album in the form of the robust and anthemic "Men Like Wire".
Hamish had the following to say about the latest song to land from "A Firmer Hand":
"In "Bakerloo, Unbecoming", I wrote “essentially it comes down [again] to the limitless mysteries of other men”. "Men Like Wire" is a deeper excavation of that idea. In short, it’s about men. Men I have and haven’t known, men I’ve seen, heard, loved and lost. Men I’ve been seated next to at weddings, bus stops and dinner parties, on trains, beds and park benches. They’re all in there, for better, for worse."
The song is paired to a video directed by Andrew Pearson, the guitarist in Hamish's live band and co-songwriter. Containing all manner of besuited men, some like wire, some arguably less so, it's a tailor-fitted companion to the ruminations of the song itself.
Hawk's new album follows 2021's breakthrough LP "Heavy Elevator" and 2023's critically-acclaimed "Angel Numbers", both sublime and literate records that saw significant plaudits at both press and radio, including - no mean feat for an artist previously self-releasing in the current climate - six singles playlisted at BBC 6 Music. "Big Cat Tattoos", the first to land from "A Firmer Hand" followed suit making that number now seven.
Of his new album, Hamish says: “Writing this album, I opened up my closet, and a skeleton came out. The thing that links all of the songs is a sense of the unsaid, whether out of guilt, shame, repression, embarrassment, coyness, whatever it might have been. I realised: I am going to say these things, and not all of them are going to make me look good. The album made so many demands, and I just gave myself over to it.”
"Once I'd given myself over to the idea, I thought, I have to stick to this. I can’t hide anything from it. I can’t clean it all up for consumption. It felt uncomfortable for me – and that’s exactly how it should feel. That’s a really strong position.”
Through the writing of "Machiavelli’s Room", followed by the arrival of songs such as "Milk an Ending" and "Juliet as Epithet", "A Firmer Hand" came into focus as an album directed towards Hawk’s relationships with men: friends, lovers, family, colleagues.
“I thought, this is the body of the record. The fact that it makes me nervous tells me it was the right thing to do.”
It takes only a couple of listens to be sure that it was a risk worth taking. And just a couple more to determine that "A Firmer Hand" is the best and boldest record Hamish Hawk has delivered to date. “It’s a bit of a coming of age record,” he says. And a record for the ages.
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Rich of voice and even richer of imagination, Hawk creates musical pen-portraits, chamber pop songs that have swallowed both a dictionary and a compendium of modern urban (and island) fairy tales. And Hawk does all this with considerable wit, inspired by artists like Leonard Cohen, Jarvis Cocker, Randy Newman and Stephin Merritt of Magnetic Fields.
Hamish Hawk will be playing a number of dates across the year in support of the new record including a recently announced support for Elbow in the summer and dates in support of Travis in December.
He will also be playing an extensive set of instore and outstore performances in the run-up to release.
out on August 16, 2024
via So Recordings
out on June 13, 2024
via So Recordings
out on April 29, 2024
via So Recordings
out on February 03, 2023
via Post Electric
out on December 05, 2022
via Post Electric
out on September 14, 2022
via Post Electric