Don't Forget to Look up (Abbey Road 90th Anniversary Sessions) Maverick Sabre

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2022

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
15.07.2022

Label: FAMM

Genre: R&B

Subgenre: Soul

Interpret: Maverick Sabre

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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Formate & Preise

FormatPreisIm WarenkorbKaufen
FLAC 44.1 $ 6,60
  • 1Can't Be Wrong (Abbey Road Sessions)04:51
  • 2Good Man (Abbey Road Sessions)03:16
  • 3Like This (Abbey Road Sessions)03:27
  • 4Not Easy Love (Abbey Road Sessions)03:21
  • 5Something Special (Abbey Road Sessions)04:05
  • 6Time Away (Abbey Road Sessions)02:55
  • 7Place and Time (Abbey Road Sessions)02:29
  • Total Runtime24:24

Info zu Don't Forget to Look up (Abbey Road 90th Anniversary Sessions)

As part of the ongoing partnership between Abbey Road Studios and BBC Music Introducing, we are delighted to be returning to Tobacco Dock with the Abbey Road Production Hub at this year's BBC Music Introducing Live. Returning with our world-class recording and mastering engineers, we will also be leading a discussion on the art of songwriting, sharing invaluable advice and insights for the next generation of musical talent. The panel will be moderated by Abbey Road's Jack Lintorn who will be joined by Maverick Sabre, Grime artist Novelist and British songwriter Rachel Furner. The audience will also have the opportunity to ask the panel their questions.

Maverick Sabre releases his much-anticipated fourth LP Don't Forget To Look Up via FAMM. The follow up to 2019's When I Wake Up, the introspective 12-track release was conceived in lockdown and sees Maverick examine and unpick love in its various iterations. Traversing recollections of previous relationships, to examining the societal pressures placed on couples, Don't Forget To Look Up is both intimate and inquisitive at the same time. From the brooding vulnerability of opener ‘Falling', to his recent Demae collaboration ‘Not Easy Love' (which saw support from the likes of Crack, Complex, District, Trench, TLOBF and more), this sublime body of work places Maverick's sultry tones in centre stage. Calling on the legendary Nile Rogers to provide the guitar on the shimmering, disco cut ‘Get Down' and the vocal acrobatics of Sasha Keable for the evocative ‘Middle of Eden' - Maverick carefully weaves collaborators through the project.

A truly multifaceted artist, Don't Forget To Look Up sees Maverick step up on production duties - producing half the tracks on the album. Maverick today shares the second release from the project, ‘Walk These Days'. Pairing a hypnotic half-sung half-rapped chorus with ethereal instrumentation, the single marks a divine taste of what's to come from the album.

Maverick Sabre




Maverick Sabre
In the front room of his top floor flat in North London, Maverick Sabre (aka Michael Stafford) sits at his laptop, flicking through the clips of movies, music videos and short films that have inspired his new record. There’s a full length keyboard on the floor, a mic stand set up in the corner, a fretless bass leaning against his stereo, two copies of the same Noam Chomsky book, and on the sofa by his side is a Aria jazz guitar that most of his new music was written on. Mav is a visual person. All the music he makes must have a visual reference, even if it’s just a 30 second clip of an ocean’s surface shimmering under sunlight. He draws sentiment and atmosphere from things he sees and the world around him, and then tries to turn them into pieces of music. For this specific record, he’s drawn inspiration as varied as the '90s French social realism of La Haine to the hip-hop cinematography of Kahlil Joseph. And around 90% of the music was written in this very flat, on this very sofa, as the clouds passed and the faint British sunshine gleamed through two massive French windows.

It’s been seven years since he first arrived on the UK scene as a fresh-faced Irish (but London born) rapper with a brassy singing voice. Championed by Plan B, his music drew a line between the Irish, American and UK rap scenes he grew up on and the timeless blues and trad Irish music of his family’s heritage. His debut album, Lonely Are The Brave, was a roaring success. Arriving at #2 on the UK album charts and going on to sell over 250,000 copies, it was the pure and unapologetic sound of young man seething with thoughts. His follow up, Innerstanding, was a mature and exploratory collection of songs that tried to capture a dark period in his life in which it felt like everything around him was in a state of flux. He followed it with a tour around the world in which he stripped it all back to just him and either a guitar or DJ. This year he has released his third album When I Wake Up, where he poignantly lends his soulful voice to a record that tells untold stories of the world around him.

Mav was born to Irish parents in East London, but grew up in a small town of around 8000 people called New Ross in County Wexford, Ireland. His dad was a musician, and there was always blues, soul and traditional Irish music playing in the house. As a wide eyed kid, he would often be taken along to band rehearsals. He learned guitar at the age of eight, but things changed when he found Tupac in his early teens. He taught himself to MC and spent his adolescent years relentlessly gigging on the Irish hip-hop scene. One night in Dublin, he supported Plan B, who gave him some stirring words of advice. Mav listened; at the age of 17 he dropped everything, moved to London (where he lived off his Aunt’s sofa) and pushed music as far as it could go. By 20, he was performing live on Chris Moyles’ BBC Radio One show to over three million people.



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