On the back of Field Music’s latest release Commontime (their first since 2012’s Plumb), Sunderland siblings Peter and Davis Brewis return to the live arena, with a gig at Manchester’s Band on the Wall.
Written and recorded in spontaneous bursts over six months in their Wearside studio, Commontime is built around the brothers playing, writing and singing together again after four years of solo works, collaborations and soundtracks. However, the album also features a wider array of players, including original Field Music keyboardist Andrew Moore, Peter’s wife Jennie Brewis and new member of the live band Liz Corney on vocals, along with a panoply of strings and brass.
Whilst Plumb took in wider political themes, Commontime sees a shift in focus. Real life conversations are replayed, acquaintances come and go, hard won friendships are left to drift, families grow and diffuse snap shots of the everyday are pulled together over the fourteen songs; vignettes of North East lives set to an ever shifting backdrop of anxious funk, sumptuous strings and intricate rock that is always unmistakably Brewis-esque.
The sense of bubbling political frustration in the lyrics is expressed this time through close-ups rather than Plumb’s broad sweep. Peter and David continue to mine that inexhaustible seam wondering how on earth we ended up here, in this situation, as these people. “It does feel like a conversational record. There’s a lot of dialogue in the lyrics” reveals David.
Perhaps the overwhelming influence on the brother’s recent song writing, intentionally or not, is fatherhood. Both have become dads since the release of previous album Plumb. “I’ve had a few shifts in perspective – I can’t help but write about family things now” Peter discloses. David’s album closer Stay Awake is an apology to his wife for grumpy days following baby induced sleepless nights whilst The Morning Is Waiting For You is Peter’s song for his young son, one of Field Music’s most tender moments.
Field Music have always been a unique proposition; a band that stand apart from tired rockist, and rock and roll tropes, who consistently question what it is to be a band, who plough a furrow that, since their 2005 debut has been theirs and theirs alone. Now more than ever, with conversations and choruses, family and friendship at the heart of Commontime, Field Music are something to be truly treasured.
Field Music perform at Manchester’s Band on the Wall on 11 March.