Working Men's Club review

(Heavenly)
The West Yorkshire band take the stark electronics of the post-punk scene and warm them with Detroit techno and Italian house – while addressing Andrew Neil with mischievous one-liners

The Golden Lion pub in Todmorden gives locals the chance to meet and talk about the high number of UFO sightings in the isolated West Yorkshire town. It’s also the centre of a thriving music scene, where 18-year-old Sydney Minsky-Sargeant’s band have undergone lineup changes to evolve from a guitar band into a New Order-type rock-electronic hybrid.

Working Men’s Club: Working Men’s Club album art work
Working Men’s Club: Working Men’s Club album art work Photograph: Publicity image

Working Men’s Club’s outstanding self-titled debut brings a mixtape feel to songs, as various sounds and styles are hurled in with gleeful eclecticism. A well of early synthpop, from Daniel Miller’s proto-synth act the Normal to post-punk era Simple Minds, early Human League and Pulp, informs everything. Stark electronics are undercut with funkier elements of Detroit techno, acid house squiggles and Italian house pianos to create a danceable sound that’s simultaneously austere and uplifting.

Valleys hosts a rave in rural isolation; Outside is blissfully bittersweet pop; a song titled John Cooper Clarke eulogises the Bard of Salford with synth bleeps, melodious guitars and a pop chorus.

The various elements are glued together by Minsky-Sargeant’s striking vocals. He doesn’t so much sing the songs as impose a persona on them in the manner of Jarvis Cocker, Grace Jones or Mark E Smith. The latter would surely approve of Cook a Coffee, which addresses BBC host and Spectator chairman Andrew Neil with mischievous one-liners such as “Tune into the BBC and watch me … defecate”.

Contributor

Dave Simpson

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Panda Bear: Buoys review – indie experimenter finds the slow lane
The Animal Collective man’s sixth solo album is full of trademark quirks and it’s undeniably clever, if slightly monotonous

Kate Hutchinson

08, Feb, 2019 @10:30 AM

Article image
HMLTD: West of Eden review – riotous rock and grand guignol glam
The London band throw together glam, goth, electro, Kurt Weill … and have even added conventional pop to the mix

Michael Hann

07, Feb, 2020 @10:30 AM

Article image
Let’s Eat Grandma: Two Ribbons review | Alexis Petridis's album of the week
Written amid grief and separation, the duo’s third album uses beautiful melodies and Top 40 choruses to consider their evolving bond

Alexis Petridis

28, Apr, 2022 @1:00 PM

Article image
WH Lung: Incidental Music review – dynamic synth-pop hums with life
Manchester trio’s debut morphs insistent rhythmic themes, building and releasing tension in nervy ecstasy - it’s modern psychedelia maximised

Michael Hann

05, Apr, 2019 @9:30 AM

Article image
Tegan and Sara: Hey, I'm Just Like You review
(Warner Records)
Reworked songs of teenage travails from the Quin twins, who go back to their youth in slick, pulsating pop

Rachel Aroesti

27, Sep, 2019 @8:30 AM

Article image
Sharon Van Etten: Remind Me Tomorrow review – assured, gorgeous electro-tinged progression
Van Etten’s decision to shift to electronic instruments only adds to the thrill on this arresting album

Rachel Aroesti

11, Jan, 2019 @9:00 AM

Article image
Big Red Machine: How Long Do You Think It’s Gonna Last? review | Alexis Petridis's album of the week
Aaron Dessner and Justin ‘Bon Iver’ Vernon recruit Taylor Swift, Fleet Foxes and more for this album full of misty autumnal beauty – and a quiet punch

Alexis Petridis

26, Aug, 2021 @10:30 AM

Article image
Irish drill, jazz violin and supermarket musicals: 30 new artists for 2021
From the ferocious hardcore punk of Nicolas Cage Fighter to the ultra-meditative ambient of KMRU, discover new music from right across the pop spectrum

Ben Beaumont-Thomas and Laura Snapes

01, Jan, 2021 @6:00 AM

Article image
The 100 best albums of the 21st century
We polled 45 music writers to rank the definitive LPs of the 21st century so far. Read our countdown of passionate pop, electrifying rock and anthemic rap – and see if you agree

Ben Beaumont-Thomas (1-50); Laura Snapes and April Curtin (51-100)

13, Sep, 2019 @8:00 AM

Article image
‘It feels like a fresh start’: why Everything Everything turned to AI to write their new album
Tired of writing pop dystopias, the art-rockers approached their new album by ‘abandoning the human brain’ and feeding Confucius and Beowulf into a bot they named Kevin

Dave Simpson

18, Feb, 2022 @1:40 PM