Album artwork for Black Rainbow Sound by Menace Beach

Leeds-based Menace Beach return with their third album Black Rainbow Sound, via Memphis Industries. New album Black Rainbow Sound is the band's first new material since early 2017’s Lemon Memory, and after a self-imposed break from tour duties, the album exhibits a profound shift in their sound, whilst still mainlining the blasts of noise, visceral power, and timeless pop songsmithery of their previous releases. Unlike the bands previous records, Black Rainbow Sound came to life in the bands studio, where Liza Violet and Ryan Needham built dense late-night orchestrations from drum machines, synthesizers, loops and guitar noise, before being ripped apart and reimagined by the full Menace Beach cast at The Nave studio in Leeds with co-producer Matt Peel (Eagulls). Never ones to shy away from an intriguing collaboration, Black Rainbow Sound contains songs featuring Brix Smith of The Fall, and Brix and the Extricated. On Black Rainbow Sound, Menace Beach continue to explore their own unique aesthetic, venturing much further into a colourful world of bizzaro no-wave analogue synths and static drenched electronic euphoria, which they have been circling for some time. Lustrous, dizzying, and bursting with cacophonous vintage electronics - the sounds on Black Rainbow Sound act as an otherworldly backdrop for the album's enigmatic lyrics to play out. Celestial conversations, night terrors, love, anti- love, good vs evil, light vs dark, friendly crows, death, depression, and teenage tongues and are all here to absorb; the more introspective topics often hidden in plain sight atop celebratory choruses, and melodic hooks.

Menace Beach

Black Rainbow Sound

Memphis Industries
Album artwork for Black Rainbow Sound by Menace Beach
CD

£5.99

Released 07/09/2018Catalogue Number

mi0508cd

Learn more
Album artwork for Black Rainbow Sound by Menace Beach
LP +

£19.99

White
Includes download code
Released 16/04/2020Catalogue Number

MI0508LPX

Learn more
Album artwork for Black Rainbow Sound by Menace Beach
LP

£18.99

Black
Includes download code
Released 16/04/2020Catalogue Number

mi0508lp

Learn more
Menace Beach

Black Rainbow Sound

Memphis Industries
Album artwork for Black Rainbow Sound by Menace Beach
CD

£5.99

Released 07/09/2018Catalogue Number

mi0508cd

Learn more
Album artwork for Black Rainbow Sound by Menace Beach
LP +

£19.99

White
Includes download code
Released 16/04/2020Catalogue Number

MI0508LPX

Learn more
Album artwork for Black Rainbow Sound by Menace Beach
LP

£18.99

Black
Includes download code
Released 16/04/2020Catalogue Number

mi0508lp

Learn more

Leeds-based Menace Beach return with their third album Black Rainbow Sound, via Memphis Industries. New album Black Rainbow Sound is the band's first new material since early 2017’s Lemon Memory, and after a self-imposed break from tour duties, the album exhibits a profound shift in their sound, whilst still mainlining the blasts of noise, visceral power, and timeless pop songsmithery of their previous releases. Unlike the bands previous records, Black Rainbow Sound came to life in the bands studio, where Liza Violet and Ryan Needham built dense late-night orchestrations from drum machines, synthesizers, loops and guitar noise, before being ripped apart and reimagined by the full Menace Beach cast at The Nave studio in Leeds with co-producer Matt Peel (Eagulls). Never ones to shy away from an intriguing collaboration, Black Rainbow Sound contains songs featuring Brix Smith of The Fall, and Brix and the Extricated. On Black Rainbow Sound, Menace Beach continue to explore their own unique aesthetic, venturing much further into a colourful world of bizzaro no-wave analogue synths and static drenched electronic euphoria, which they have been circling for some time. Lustrous, dizzying, and bursting with cacophonous vintage electronics - the sounds on Black Rainbow Sound act as an otherworldly backdrop for the album's enigmatic lyrics to play out. Celestial conversations, night terrors, love, anti- love, good vs evil, light vs dark, friendly crows, death, depression, and teenage tongues and are all here to absorb; the more introspective topics often hidden in plain sight atop celebratory choruses, and melodic hooks.