In March 2020, Skye and Ross of Morcheeba were nearing the end of another long tour – they can go years without visiting the same country twice – and the diary suddenly emptied. The pair are used to spending most of each year on the road. Once, theyād only play countries where their record company had an outpost. Now, they can see from the streaming platforms where people are listening and travel there to play.
āCape Town was amazing,ā remembers Ross of their 2018 South African gig. āWe played at the beautiful Kirstenbosch Gardens in Cape Town with Table Mountain as the perfect backdrop. We had 5,000 people all singing along. North Africa, central America too. We try to get around the world as much as possible and love playing new places.ā
Tourbus parked, they began writing what became their tenth album āBlackest Blueā. By December 2020, theyād finished 10 lustrous new songs touching on disintegrating familial and romantic relationships, love and kinship, the world around and the consolations of cannabis. On tour, Morcheeba is Skye (vocals), Ross (guitar), Dom Pipkin (keys), Skyeās husband Steve Gordon (bass) and Skyeās eldest son Jaega Mckenna-Gordon (drums). In the studio itās mostly just Skye and Ross – he plays guitar, lap steel, bass, keyboards and percussion. Skye started playing the cello during lockdown, whenever she had a little time to herself. āItās an instrument Iāve always wanted to learn”. Ross encouraged her to play it on the album and she does on āFalling Skiesā.
Ross found lockdown idyllic at first. Writing on an acoustic guitar, sending ideas between his and Skyeās home studios in south London and Surrey. Spending time with his wife and kids, reading books about forests, psychedelic plants and quantum physics. āI had more time to play guitar,ā
he says happily. āIt put me back in touch with feelings I hadnāt had since I was a teenager. When I started playing as a kid, it was a solitary thing, a meditation to transcend whatever shitty time I was going throughā.
The duo let go, writing and playing what they felt like. āI had a poem Iād written about my free diving experience in Thailand,ā Skye says about lead single Sounds of Blue. āāOh Oh Yeahā is a song about getting stoned. Back in the day we didnāt think about singles and the āneed to hear the chorus in 30 secondsā. Youād have seven, eight-minute songs. So we went for it.ā
āWeāre always trying to find a sound that already should have existed but didnāt,ā explains Ross. āA song that went missing sometime in 1969, an obscure Morricone-esque soundtrack⦠Skye sounds like sweet molasses, so we wanted to mix that with a gravelly male voice as a contrast.ā
Falling for the rich, traditional yet modern quality of American folk group The Barr Brothers after seeing them live a couple of times, Ross contacted singer Brad Barr, sharing a few ideas before alighting on a sketch of a gorgeous piano ballad that became āSay Itās Overā. Brad came with the first two lines, and said ā…it is fair to say itās a breakup songā¦ā
Then Ross was listening to the radio and heard a song so good he had to pull the car over to Shazam it. āIt sounded like an old Mississippi blues record!ā It was singer-songwriter Duke Garwood. Ross enlisted him for the closing duet āThe Edge of the Worldā. āDukeās voice is very deep and rich which suited it perfectly. We wanted that kind of voodoo vibe,ā Ross enthuses. āHe makes most of his records in the Mojave Desert with Mark Lanegan but heās from Hastings.ā
āThe Moonā is a cover originally by Irena ŽiliÄ, a Croatian singer-songwriter. Ross fell in love with the song when they shared a bill in Zagreb with Irena and asked her permission to cover it. Skye added another verse to it and that is where the album title āBlackest Blueā came from.
Perhaps Skyeās gloriously unruffled vocal tone means some people donāt catch the darkness in lyrics like; āPut your knife away, Iāve already cut my heart outā, from the album opener or the despairing; āAināt gonna lie, feel like I wanna dieā, from āKilled Our Loveā. Thereās plenty of hurt that walks with the hope when Skye sings.
The band saw intense protesting up close in Chile, first stop on their 2019 south American tour. Skye and Steve were sightseeing in Santiago on the afternoon of the gig, moving through the estallido social, a noisy but good-natured demonstration against social inequality. As day dimmed into night, the protest darkened into rioting. Peaceful banging of pots and pans became soldiers firing rubber bullets and tear gas at protestors. There were already too many fans queuing at the venue to cancel the gig. And no way to get there but on foot, through the fires and riot police, past the burned-out buses blocking the roads, even though Skyeās son was recovering from a broken ankle. Weeks later, heād get stopped by security at Gatwick when they found traces of explosives from the riot on his crutches. āI walked with my dress over my face,ā Skye says; āour local rep was obviously panicked, which made me even more nervous. My heart was racing, my eyes sore from the tear gas.ā
Despite the chaos, the gig went well, charged by a strange and surreal energy. By the end, all the roads around the venue were shut and filled with armoured vehicles, so the band played on, taking requests from the fans, then everyone hung out until it was safe to leave. It reminded them that, whatever happens in the world outside, thereās nothing like the healing power of music to bring us all together.
When Skye was writing lyrics for āFalling Skiesā, she was thinking about her family, Black Lives Matter and the very white village theyāve made a home in. āI donāt know if it was paranoia,ā she says; ābut I looked at people and wondered, do you hate black people? It made me a lot more aware of where I was living. Having chats with the other black family in
the village, wondering if we should move somewhere that had more diversity.ā
Skye was brought up by white parents in East London, supposedly temporarily, but she was never able to go back to her biological mum. āI was six weeks old when I came to my foster parents.ā Skye had a happy childhood, although growing up in a white family made her aware of race in a way that most children never are. āI always felt like apologising for being black,ā she remembers. āWanting not to alienate white people. I was a quiet child growing up. Studying fashion helped to bring me out of myself.ā
It was 1994 when Ross met east Londoner Skye at a party, she ended up dating his mate who mentioned that Skye could sing. Skye was not happy about it. āWhy did you tell them I could sing?!ā Her only experience was a local singing class, some backing vocals in a funk band, and one try at busking in Covent Garden. She wasnāt ready to sing into a microphone, or in front of people – but it was a chance remark that changed their lives. Ross and his brother Paul wrote and recorded their debut single āTrigger Hippieā with Skye which effectively started the group Morcheeba as a trio and got them an indie record deal. They released the acclaimed debut album āWho Can You Trust?ā in 1996 and inevitably started playing live with a first gig at The Jazz Cafe in London.
Over the next few years the band went global with āBig Calmā (1998), āFragments of Freedomā (2000) and āCharangoā (2002) and the brilliance of signature songs āThe Seaā and āRome Wasnāt Built In A Dayā. They produced an album for Talking Heads legend David Byrne, got film soundtrack work from Morcheeba fan and Oscar-winning director Steven Soderbergh and in 2003 were the first western band to do a full tour of China. But Skye was ousted from the band that year when Rossā brother DJ/producer Paul wanted to change direction, and she didnāt feature on āThe Antidoteā (2005) or āDive Deepā (2008).
Meanwhile, Ross moved to LA in 2006 and built a studio in the Hollywood Hills for recording with Morcheeba and soundtrack productions. āI spent a lot of time out in the desert taking psychedelics and living out some acid rock fantasy,ā he concedes. After releasing two solo albums āMind How You Goā and āKeeping Secretsā, Skye agreed to return to Morcheeba in 2009. The albums āBlood Like Lemonadeā (2010) and āHead Up Highā (2013) followed. Paul then left in 2015 turning the band into a duo.
Since then the pair have become closer and they got back to work, first making an album as Skye & Ross, then āBlaze Awayā (2018) as Morcheeba. āThe connection we have now is great,ā Skye reveals. āWe understand each other, and weāre both hard working. Our agent might say, āoh itās a gruelling schedule, sometimes five gigs in a rowā¦ā and weāll both immediately say YES!ā
Ultimately, “Blackest Blue is about finding a way through the darkest of times and emerging the other side changed but intact.”
Morcheeba Ontario Dates
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2022
PHOENIX CONCERT THEATRE – TORONTO, ON
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
ALGONQUIN COMMONS THEATRE – OTTAWA, ON