Description
Host - IX
The origins of Host, the new project featuring Paradise Lost vocalist Nick Holmes and guitarist Greg Mackintosh, do not trace back to their 1999 album bearing the same name but instead to the West Yorkshire music clubs of the mid-to-late 1980s. While Holmes and Mackintosh were already certified heavy metal fanatics (“metal thrashing mad” as Holmes equates), they were equally drawn to the New Wave and Goth music scenes. The pounding rhythms, sublime melodies and undercurrent of darkness drew them in, creating immediate earworms and a desire to delve further. Holmes and
design with the moods and atmosphere of 1980s dance-pop and Goth. The project was originally a solo pursuit until he asked Holmes, his longtime Paradise Lost songwriting partner, to join. “Host” was selected as the name as a tip of the hat to the aforementioned album that found Paradise Lost in an unprecedented period of experimentation that eschewed their metal roots and also challenged their fanbase in ways like never before.
with orchestration and textures. Complemented by carefully placed guitar lines, the album is yet another realization of Mackintosh’s songwriting intuitiveness and restless creative spirit. To create the songs on IX, Mackintosh relied on the approach of starting with a piano line. His self-described “simple” chord sequences or piano lines were then volleyed to Holmes for vocal ideas. Once the pair found a direction, Mackintosh embellished each song with lavish but haunting soundscapes — often blurring the distinction between guitar and keyboards.
“In 1999, the technology wasn’t easily afforded to do something like sound design,” he says. “You could do synthy stuff, but not like you could now. I was reasonably accomplished by the time we did the album Host, but it was a totally different
game with Akai samplers and two megabytes of memory. I’ve been into sound design for the last ten or fifteen years. My son did sound design at university. I helped him with a project where he was asked to create music for a film where you’re sailing on a boat down the river. It opens into the sea, you see a lighthouse, travel past it and go down the coast. He had to paint the picture using sound. Those same principles are part of this Host project.”
The IX running order concludes with a cover of A Flock of Seagulls’ seminal 1982 hit, “I Ran.” The Host version, of course, flips the original on its head and transforms it into a dark, restless number that feels cold and barren. Holmes came up with the idea — Mackintosh admits to not hearing the song since the ’80s despite its popularity. He then cut the tempo in half, dropped in new guitar lines and added some synth flourishes, thus transforming one of the most identifiable New Wave songs. “I finally listened to the song and thought we could do something really good to it,” says Mackintosh. “I
wanted to make it more cinematic and darken it up.”
“I always thought ‘I Ran’ was great but never admitted it,” laughs Holmes. “I think I was playing the Grand Theft Auto: Vice City video game and heard it. I was being bombarded with ’80s songs while playing the game and thought, ‘Fuck, I remember this!’ It’s always last minute when we do covers in PL and it’s usually something from that decade. They send me back to being a kid.”
The Host project is emblematic of the enduring songwriting partnership between Holmes and Mackintosh. (“There are no rules when we write,” quips Holmes. “We’re very different in many ways, but we have a real thing where we click with certain music.”) Their shape-shifting career in Paradise Lost has unearthed countless groundbreaking moments that lesser bands have failed to duplicate. It was only natural, then, that the pair explored new territory by paying homage to a time that shaped them as musicians — and people.
1.Wretched Soul
2.Tomorrow’s Sky
3.Divine Emotion
4.Hiding From Tomorrow
5.A Troubled Mind
6.My Only Escape
7.Years Of Suspicion
8.Inquisition
9.Instinct
10.I Ran
11.Hiding From Tomorrow (Lustmord Remix
12.Tomorrow’s Sky (GosT Remix)
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