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Pictobug

by Engineers

supported by
cintorix
cintorix thumbnail
cintorix Engineers keep getting better with age, and Pictobug continues the trend. Pure sublimity.

I couldn't pick a favourite track, just like I couldn't pick a favourite Engineers album.. They're all favourites.
Randall Marshall
Randall Marshall thumbnail
Randall Marshall sometimes I realize I miss you guys.
underneathoceans
underneathoceans thumbnail
underneathoceans A lovely experimental, ambient detour. While I long for another song-based album, these tracks are absolutely gorgeous listening. Perfect for letting the sound just wash over you. Favorite track: Mazama.
janebmarie
janebmarie thumbnail
janebmarie That beat. My god, that beat. Lulls you like riding waves in a boat. Then when you think the ride is ending around 5:26 a wave pulls you back in, smiling cause the ride is not over yet. Favorite track: Rhenium.
Eric Gedenk
Eric Gedenk thumbnail
Eric Gedenk Great to have another Engineers album after all these years. Even compared to some of the more mellow offerings before the hiatus, this takes the cake as being their most meditative, pensive, peaceful album.
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1.
Rhenium 06:58
2.
Mazama 09:52
3.
Oxisol 06:54
4.

about

In May 2019, almost 10 years after the last show they played together at Bristol’s Colston Hall, Mark Peters and Dan MacBean reconvened at a Wigan rehearsal room with no pre-written music to improvise pieces that would eventually become ‘Pictobug’. Named after the ominous, experimental piece from the band’s debut, ‘Folly’, the title references the nascent version of the band that shared an attic flat in Manchester city centre (the hedonistic sounds of a Friday night there in 2001 litter the introduction to Folly’s closing track). The elongated, ambiguous nature of this piece – the early part composed by Peters, the latter by MacBean – held qualities the pair felt they had sidelined in favour of the songwriting orientated sound they became known for three years later, so decided to redress the balance on these brand new tracks.

Chosen in favour of more upmarket urban spaces in London, they sought to harness the familiarity and reality of a space that reflected the post-industrial landscape of their early musical endeavours that led to them relocating to London and signing with the The Echo Label in 2003.

“After we created a guitar loop that really worked,” says Peters, “we’d stop and listen to it unfold as it strayed from the drum machine rhythm we played to. This created the favourable illusion that this almost generative music was growing and developing.”

“There was a conjuring, summoning nature to the sounds we were making,” notes MacBean, “as if it were harnessing an essence in the ether that existed already. It wasn’t a matter of regression – it was as if we were tapping into a state of mind as opposed to a place. Spontaneity was paramount – it was definitely a case of unfinished business.”

“Our sole aim was to finally capture the improvisational side to our nature, as during the Echo years we seldom had chance to do that, but in the years before that, there were periods where we did nothing but,” states Peters.

“Our first records came out at the end of the glory days of the record industry,” adds MacBean, “so it was more restrictive and the freeform aspect of the band was suppressed. Labels, as they had existed for years, were dying, they were becoming more controlling and there was less creative freedom.”

After selecting highlights from the first day’s session (following an enthusiastic investigation of solo pedal steel records by the likes of Buddy Emmons and Susan Alcorn) Peters approached local guitar luthier Richie Thomson to build a lap steel for MacBean that was collected on the morning of the second session. The spontaneous atmosphere of the first session continued and the slide guitar you hear on the record is MacBean playing it for the very first time.

The recordings lay dormant until March 2020, when the coronavirus lockdown began in the UK. It was obvious that the sprawling nature of these tracks suited the isolationist tone that enveloped the world at that point, so Peters began adding percussion and minimal guitar overdubs at home, remotely consulting with MacBean. A strange yet fitting genesis for what is certainly the least conformist entry in the band’s undulating discography.

Produced by Engineers
Engineered, mixed and mastered by Mark Peters
Dan Macbean: guitar, lap steel
Mark Peters: guitar, bass and percussion
Matthew Linley: piano on ‘Mazama’

credits

released September 7, 2020

Produced by Engineers
Engineered, mixed and mastered by Mark Peters
Dan Macbean: guitar, lap steel
Mark Peters: guitar, bass and percussion
Matthew Linley: piano on ‘Mazama’
Artwork concept by Engineers and Lorna Sergeant
Layout and social media artwork by Scott Robinson at Brace For Impact

Lap Steel built for Dan Macbean by Richie Tomson at Tomson Guitars

Thanks to:

Lorna Sergeant, Steph Mann at C3 imaging, Wigan Old Courts, Andy Burke, Nathaniel Cramp, Elliot Ireland.

© Copyright owned by Engineers 2020

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