Benjamin Booker
Witness
Label: Rough Trade
Genre: Rock / Pop
Availability
- CD Digi / Cardboard €13.99 Dispatched within 5-10 working days
Other Formats
Benjamin Booker has shared details for his new album ‘Witness,’ out June 2nd on Rough Trade Records (and ATO RECORDS in the US). The title track, Booker’s most profound and politically charged song to date, features a guest vocal by Mavis Staples, and is available now.
To coincide with the release of “Witness,” Booker has shared a powerful personal statement recounting the song’s origins on a writing trip he took to Mexico City, during which James Baldwin’s observation that “Once you find yourself in another civilization you are forced to examine your own,” took on the weight of experience. “Am I going to be a witness?” Booker asks in the statement (and the song). “And in today’s world, is that enough?”
Read the full statement below and feel free to post On ‘Witness,’ Booker has created his most ambitious work yet by digging deep into his passion for eccentric soul, R&B, and blues, while never straying too far from the garage-punk intensity that made his self-titled 2014 debut such a creative breakthrough. The album’s ten new, original tracks were all written by Booker, produced by Sam Cohen (Kevin Morby), mixed by Shawn Everett (Alabama Shakes), and recorded at The Isokon studio in Woodstock, NY and New York City’s Red Delicious studio. Booker will tour extensively behind ‘Witness,’ including a stop in Austin next week for SXSW, more dates and festivals to be announced soon. Booker’s self-titled 2014 album was ATO’s best-selling debut since Alabama Shakes, earning him festival appearances and tour dates supporting Jack White, performances on Jools Holland, Letterman and Conan, and features in the Sunday Times, MOJO, New York Times, Rolling Stone, NPR, GQ, and more. The Times hailed the album’s “raucous, unruly mix of punk, blues rock and soul,” and Q Magazine heralded “a rush of raw blues-rock abandon”, The Independent made it their Album Of The Week, calling it “a mainlined shot of unrefined, blues-based rock’n’roll spirit that cuts right through’, SPIN simply called it “Contender for rock record of the year.”