âItâs bonkers â itâs off the wallsâ
Confidence Man have confirmed details of their third album â3AM (LA LA LA)â with electrifying lead single âI CAN’T LOSE YOU’. Check it out below along with our interview with the Australian duo.
Set for release on October 18, the album leans heavily on dance music influences, bottling the energy of the UK rave scene that has gripped Confidence Man, following their move to London last year.
Speaking exclusively to NME, Janet Planet and Sugar Bones described how the pathway to this new album presented itself clearly. âIt just made sense to hone in on these â90s rave sounds and put pop vocals over the top, which isn’t really something that’s happened in the past, I guess,” said Janet.
âEverything started hereâ, she continued, speaking about how their move to the capital got the ball rolling last spring. âThe whole album is very London-inspired, the sounds and the lyrics. Itâs [about] a group of friends moving over to London and not knowing what the fuck is going on â just the general excitement of being in a new place.â
Somewhat of a mission statement for the album, âI CAN’T LOSE YOU’ sees Confidence Man embark into new sonic territory, dictated by a pulsating, underlying house beat. âThat song started happening at 3am, after hours and hours of nonsense,” Sugar explained.
“We had this great system going where we’d have a big party night, just the three of us in the studioâ, he explained, referring to veiled member and producer Reggie Goodchild. âWeâd get wasted, stay up late for 12 hours straight and just jam â throw everything at the wallâ.
Janet and Sugar spoke to NME about the inception of the record, its late-night approach and plans for their Glastonbury return, ahead of their set on The Other Stage.
NME: Hello Janet and Sugar. Howâs London life been treating you?
Sugar Bones: âWe live together. Somehow, we don’t all hate each other yet, but we’re all in Dalston, in a nice little flat.â
Janet Planet: âWe figured out how to use the London Underground, which was a big move on Sugarâs behalf â heâs not much of a public [transport] guy. And Londonâs closer to Ibiza!â
Have you been able to find some sort of work-life balance in the flat?
Sugar:Â âItâs [been] quite useful because Janet’s constantly writing some kind of melody. âDoo doo doo doo dooâ â you could have put this on that beat, Reggie!â, sheâll scream at him.â
Janet: âMost of the time, weâve been working from the studio, but we spent a lot of time around this bloody coffee table. Our neighbours have put up with some absolute shit â I feel quite bad.â
Sugar: âThe neighbours always hate us by the end.â
Did you find that the London energy found its way into the album?
Janet: âI feel like the people here are just perfectly cooked.â
Sugar: âKind of like us.â
Janet: âI love the Brits, theyâre really gritty people. I love the music scene over here, the queer scene in particular.â
Sugar: âWe’ve come from the furthest place in the world from everything. The thought of being in the middle of it â where people are coming to town and hitting us up out of the blue â that’s quite new for us.â
Janet: âItâs pretty clear where we spend most of our time, in the song âWHO KNOWS WHAT YOU’LL FINDâ we sing, ‘Meet me on the corner of Mare Street and Ridley Roadâ. They were the only two streets in London that I knew [when we moved]! I was wasted when I did that vocal.â
How did your new single âI CAN’T LOSE YOU’ come together?
Janet: âReggie was sitting downstairs, going through a whole bunch of beats â it would have been like, 3am or something. I remember coming down the stairs from the bathroom, [with] this melody to the beat that he was playing. The other day, he was in a hotel room with SG Lewis in Budapest, playing with a whole bunch of beats â [he said] maybe itâs one of his?
âWe sent SG Lewis a video, ‘Wwe have like this sick top line for your song blah, blah, blah’. He came back and said, âThatâs not my beat’. Reggie then realised, âOh, it must be a really old one of mine!â Then we had to explain to SG that actually it wasnât his. It was so awkward.â
Thereâs some pretty futuristic vocal production on that track tooâ¦
Janet: âSugarâs gonna have to get in-ear [monitors] for this album because he’s actually singing.â
Sugar: âIt’s been seven years that I’ve got away with it, just yelling here and there. On this album, I’m like, âFuck, I’m gonna have to actually sing that.ââ
Janet: âAw, you poor thing!â
Does that song epitomise the inspiration behind the album title â3AM (LA LA LA)â?
Janet: âMost of what we wrote that was good, 3am was our sweet spot. Usually past 3am, it would start going downhill from there.â
Sugar: âGenerally, that was the peak. We also love The KLF, they’ve got a great track called â3am Eternalâ. Itâs a tipping of the hat to them, I guess.â
Things must have got really wild in those late-night sessionsâ¦
Sugar: âIt felt like the deepest weâve ever gone. Pushing yourself right to the edge of that crazy point where you completely lose your mind, and you might ruin your life. That’s the sweet spot.â
The album is packed with â90s rave influences, where did those come from?
Janet: âThereâs definitely been a stronger dance influence on this record. Weâve also just been finding more dance music as we’ve gotten older, as well. The dance scene in Australia doesn’t feel as strong as it does here. We’ve been really influenced by all the sounds out of the UK, and the UK rave scene.”
Sugar: âOur lives have just become more ravey, somehow.â
Janet: âSomehow, in our old age.â
Sugar: âDonât try this at home.â
Are there any collaborations on the album? Youâve been busy dropping bangers with Daniel Avery, DJ Seinfeld and DJ Boring over the past yearâ¦
Janet: âThe first Con Man single since âTILTâ [2022], I wanted it to be a big moment, and be completely Con Man â a new phase. The whole album is our production, our everything. I like collaborating, but I donât like other people touching my shit!â
Sugar: âWe are quite obsessive, and we go in pretty deep. We just want time to go nuts.â
Janet: âWhen we do collaborate, we like to run [everyone] through the 3am music process.â
Has anyone managed to survive that process?
Sugar: âNormally they leave [the studio] â looking quite dishevelled â before the three of us go home.â
Janet: âThe person who did the best is Eliza Rose, she survived till 3am. Everyone else tapped out early.â
Sugar: âElizaâs still holding the title of best partygoer.â
Whatâs your favourite song on the album?
Sugar: ââ3AM (LA LA LA)â, the title track. Itâs a journey track.â
Janet: ââREAL MOVE TOUCHâ feels like the most quintessentially Con Man song. It represents the album â itâs bonkers, itâs off the walls, and it doesn’t have the normal structure that a pop song should have. It makes its own rules.â
There are less lyrics on this album â more time for dancing?
Sugar: âI think weâve distilled it a little bit, and done a little less-â
Janet: âRambling! With a pop song, repetition is key. We don’t want to push the envelope too far. We like our little pop moments to be pop moments â we love a ‘La la la’ and a ‘Na na na‘.”
The album is out in October â is there less focus on the summer bangers this time?
Janet: âThis album feels a bit wintery to me, quite metallic and night-timey. It’s a lot darker than âTILTâ, but thereâs elements on it that are summer bangers. The way that we wrote it is probably the best way to listen to it â around the table, cooked with your mates.â
Sugar: âTry and enter that state of mind. Itâs definitely a night time album, for the wee hours of the morning.â
How are plans for the new live show coming along â anything special in mind for your Glastonbury return?
Janet: âAll the shit we’re planning for Glastonbury is going to be next level, I canât wait to blow peopleâs minds. We’ve just been fucking upskilling, doing swing classes and heâs learned how to flip me. We’re constantly walking around with a bruised leg. Weâve got a few tricks up our sleeve.â
Sugar: âWe canât say too much. Think ‘live animals’.â
Janet: âIâm obsessed with pigeons at the moment. I donât know, theyâre kind of glamorous air rats. I feel like that’s my vibe. I managed to get pigeons on the album cover.â
Thereâs a lot going on in the artwork, isnât thereâ¦
Janet: âIt feels like a comic book, or kind of like a detective novel. Dali-esque.â
Sugar: âThe London nighttime industrial cityscape.â
Janet: âFor the âI CAN’T LOSE YOU’ visuals, we were flying naked over London in a helicopter. Itâs us as pigeons, pretty much! It felt pretty dangerous⦠I canât imagine what the people on The Shard were thinking.
Sugar: â[The pigeons] just flocked behind us, and formed a flying V.â
â3AM (LA LA LA)â is due for release October 18 via CHAOS. Check out album tracklist, plus Confidence Manâs 2024 UK tour dates below. V
1.â â ’WHO KNOWS WHAT YOU’LL FIND?’
2.â â âI CAN’T LOSE YOU’
3.â â ’CONTROL’
4.â ‘ SO WHATâ ’
5.â â ’BREAKBEAT’
6.â â ’SICKO’
7.â â ’REAL MOVE TOUCH’ (feat. Sweetie Irie)
8.â â ’FAR OUT’
9.â ‘JANE’
10.â â â ’SO TRU’
11.â â ’WRONG IDEA’
12.â â â3AM (LA LA LA)â
Tour dates:
JUNE
26-30 â Glastonbury Festival, Pilton
AUGUST
24 â Reading Festival, Richfield Avenue
25 â Leeds Festival, Bramham Park
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