Volk Soup - "Friends"

Photo by Tom White

Leeds based post-punk/free jazz band Volk Soup are releasing their new album Friday, but we have one last single to share before then. "Friends" starts out more on the jazz end, and kind of reminds me of a laid back version of James Chance and The Contortions. And then it just erupts before going back to the chill if slightly off jazz style, giving new meaning to the whole loud/quiet/loud thing. Jazz doesn't usually rock as hard as it does in "Friends," but that's why we love Volk Soup. I can't think of any other band that combines free jazz and post punk in any way, let alone as well as it's combined here. 

Harry Jones (vocals/guitar) says of the band's latest single:

"A song written in a time between friendship. A time when I had drifted from the friends of my youth and had yet to meet the people I call my friends today. It was a bitter and resentful time. A time when a kindred spirit was hitherto unseen. These were the lonely years when I had few to share ideas with. Now I have too many and the song rings slightly false.

"The opening verse possesses some paraphrasing from a quote in Jacques Tourneur 1946 film Canyon Passage. The misanthropy and pessimism with which the quote is laced really chimed with me at the time. I think I’m a little less doom-laden now than I was then. That said, I do still feel that it is of some importance to surround yourself with people whose faces you’d like to see when the ship goes down. Perhaps the sexiest song on the record?"

You can listen to "Friends" here. 10p Jazz is due out October 3 on Dipterid Records and Cruel Nature. For more on Volk Soup, check out the band on Instagram and Facebook.

On Repeat...

The New Limits - "Normal Day"

The Beths - "Mother, Pray for Me"

Brennen Leigh - "Dumpster Diving"