NEW ALBUM: The Rookies 'Feed The Fire'

 

The wait is finally over for The Rookies fourth studio album Feed The Fire, out Wednesday 22 March, featuring a string section of members from the Newmarket Collective alongside the talents and musical musings of the band’s five members, this album is a whole lot of jazz like you’ve never heard before. After the album's first two singles ‘Dry Bones’ and ‘On The Shoulders of Giants’, and a playful visual and live recording of the album’s closing title ‘Seed & SoilThe Rookies are are celebrating the album's release with two Victoria launch parties on Friday 21 April at Tanswells in Beechworth and Saturday 22 April at The Night Cat in Fitzroy.

Hitting all good record stores Wednesday 22 March, Feed The Fire was written collaboratively, first online bouncing ideas back and forth, and then in the rehearsal room, either at Joel’s house or at some long full days at Bakehouse studios. “We realised early on that the tunes connected seamlessly, and decided to make the album as a single piece of music - while there are six distinct pieces of music on the record, the entire record is continuous”. The Rookies don’t take releasing music lightly, with the hope of arousing listeners to inspire them to take the journey of recognition, action, and outcomes with them, as Feed The Fire explores the purpose and powers within the element of fire; destruction, regeneration, nurture, and passion. The quintet are joined by a string section made up of members of the Newmarket Collective, performing beautiful arrangements by The Rookies trumpeter Tom Sly, which can be heard on ‘Vultures’, ‘Schema I and Schema II’ and ‘Seed and Soil’.

“The record is very much a collaborative effort. Everyone wrote sections, arranged other people's ideas, and bought into the vision for this album. It feels great to be making a fourth studio album. Whereas Play Jazz felt like it needed to show our range, Feed The Fire felt like it could show us doing a consistent sound - one part of our range - but doing it to a new level, which was really exciting.” - The Rookies
 
Join The Rookies as they challenge human prejudice and societal systems, question the need to begin again and rebuild for the benefit of humanity and our world, or be whisked away for nights like no other in North Eastern Victoria on Friday 21 April at Tanswells in Beechworth or Saturday 22 April Melbourne’s iconic The Night Cat.

Feed The Fire Album Launch Shows
Friday 21 April
Tanswells - Beechworth
Doors: 8.30pm
Tickets $25+BF


Saturday 22 April
The Night Cat - Melbourne

Supports: Sampology, Nikodimos and his orchestra, Kuzco
and Ella Stoeckli
Doors: 9pm
Tickets  

 
Rooks Return - Every Wednesday
Set 1 - 8:30 - 9:30 pm
Set 2 - 10:00 - 11:00 pm
Free entry

Feed The Fire Track Listing:

1. Dry Bones

2. On the Shoulders of Giants

3. Vultures

4. Schema I

5. Schema II

6. Embers

7. Seed & Soil

Feed The Fire
out Wednesday 22 March 2023
Vinyl is available for pre-order via Bandcamp

Feed The Fire Album Credits:
Greg Sher - alto & tenor saxophone
Tom Sly - trumpet
Joel Trigg - Fender Rhodes
Oscar Neyland - double bass
Chris Cameron - drums & percussion

On 'Dry Bones':
Erica Tucceri - flute

On 'On The Shoulders Of Giants:
Eamon McNelis - trumpet
James Macaulay - trombone
Kyle Chenoweth - trombone
Brennan Hamilton-Smith - clarinet & bass clarinet
Jack Beeche - soprano saxophone & baritone saxophone

On 'Schema II'
David Van Pelt - ARP 2600 synthesizer

On 'Seed and Soil':
Alejandro Vega - congas

On 'Vultures, Schema I, Schema II, Seed and Soil'
Strings by The Newmarket Collective
Violin - Zoë Black, Jos Jonker, Sarah Curro
Viola - Ceridwen Davies, Paul McMillan
Cello - Svetlana Bogosavljevic

Engineered & mixed by Guus Hoevenaars at Newmarket Studios
Mastered by Lachlan Carrick at Moose Mastering
Artwork & photography by Hanah Wexler & Greg Sher

Chris Cameron plays Sleishman drums
Oscar Neyland plays a Benedict G Puglisi double bass

This album was created on the stolen lands of the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nation. The Rookies wish to pay their respects to Elders, past and present. Sovereignty has never been ceded, this always was and always will be Aboriginal land.

 
Sarah Guppy