The recently reunited Razorlight have confirmed that they’re currently in the studio working on a new album.
Last April, the band confirmed that their original line-up of Johnny Borrell, Andy Burrows, Björn à gren and Carl Dalemo were reuniting after a 10-year hiatus for a livestreamed show that summer.
Borrell, Ă gren and Dalemo first formed the band in 2002, with Andy Burrows joining in 2004. Together, the quartet released three studio albums (2004 debut âUp All Nightâ, 2006âs self-titled follow-up and 2008âs âSlipway Firesâ).
To start 2022, the band have now confirmed that new music is on the way, with the band hard at work at a Gloucestershire studio.
“Greetings from 2022, here we are in Gloucestershire working hard on Razor album 5,” the band tweeted alongside a pair of photos taken outside the studio.
See the update below:
Greetings from 2022, here we are in Gloucestershire working hard on Razor album 5 x by the one and only Roger Morton pic.twitter.com/nRVcbhmApP
— Razorlight (@Razorlight) January 14, 2022
Speaking about the reunion last year, Burrows said: âIt feels incredible. Weâve spent the past week or two rehearsing. Playing these songs has been an absolute joy. The emotions that were going through me when we started playing âAmericaâ, I forgot to play the first half of the song â it was totally nuts. Itâs been amazing. Itâs so powerful playing these old tunes. Itâs very very special.â
Borrell added: âIâm really enjoying reconnecting with Andy and Carl, itâs like getting to know people again. Iâm enjoying it because you never want to lose friends. Itâs a horrible thing to think. It doesnât really make sense. It definitely feels good to me on a personal level.
âOn a creative level â amazing. Weâve been in the studio rehearsing and recording. As soon as the four of us are in the room, it just sounds amazing, straight away.â
Ahead of the full reunion, guitarist à gren rejoined Razorlight last year alongside Borrell, while the bandâs last full-length album came in the form of 2018âs âOlympus Sleepingâ.
Reviewing that album upon its release, NME wrote: âRazorlight are not here to save rock â they never were, and theyâre more than aware of it. Theyâre not reinventing the wheel, but pulling the Harley out of the ditch.â
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