Pop Mutations & Freakender present: Modern Nature + Special Guests Monday 29th September The Old Hairdresser's 18+
Pop Mutations & Freakender present:
Modern Nature
When Modern Nature toured their last album, 2023’s
No Fixed Point In Space
, it became apparent to Jack Cooper
–
the band’s main creative force
–
ended approach they
had spent five years working
towards; almost as if the music had become so abstract and elasticated, it now had
to snap back towards something more structured. As they found themselves naturally locking into more fixed
grooves, he realised a new direction had been set. Their new album
–
The Heat Warps
–
is the triumphant
manifestation of where that new direction took them.
In the aftermath, Cooper’s songwriting, which had become increasingly impressionistic, found a new focus and
the idea of making an album that followed a similar pat
h to the last two increasingly seemed obtuse. The purpose
was to forge a radical change. The core trio of him, Jim Wallis (drums) and Jeff Tobias (bass guitar) were
augmented by a new guitarist
–
Tara Cunningham.
Modern Nature’s recent records have refle
cted an insular life. Cooper had moved out to the countryside in 2021
and had, in his words, been “hibernating” while he started a family. He felt this new band was a symbol for his
reawakening and the perfect vessel for him to continue to explore themes t
hat he’s sung about with Modern
Nature
–
collectivism, our relationship with the natural world, the weight of consciousness
–
but with more
directness and purpose. The key was the new dual guitar sound.
“I’ve always been drawn to bands where two guitarist
s work as a unit to move around and colour the rhythm
section,” explains Cooper. “I’d been listening to the demos Television did with Brian Eno in the day and then that
night I played with Tara for the first time at an improvised music show. We have a very
similar approach to the
guitar and that extends to the way we sing, so it gives the music an interesting balance.
“What we do is mirrored; a symmetry on either side of what Jim and Jeff are doing in the rhythm section. We’ve
played with lots of amazing m
usicians who continue to orbit around what we do, but Tara joining the band felt
like finding the other side to the square. Previous records have been performed by upwards of fifteen people but it
was apparent the four of us could achieve something more po
werful and more direct.”
In the time Modern Nature has been a band, the world has undoubtedly changed. The words Cooper had been
writing previously were somewhat ambiguous but it had started to feel like he was sitting on the fence and that
was something
he needed to address.
“Every day we’re confronted with a confusing and scary world,” he says. “Making music and creating things can
feel flippant or unnecessary, but my own world view was defined and influenced by art and artists who weren’t
afraid to hig
hlight and offer solutions: Public Enemy, The Smiths or a wider American counterculture.”
“The community we’ve built our life around
–
artists, musicians and the people who gravitate to these things as
way of communicating
–
are struggling to reconcile ho
w they fit into an increasingly cruel world. This album, the
themes and the lyrics are directed towards them because I think there are still reasons to be optimistic. There are
amazing things happening all around us and it’s up to communities like ours to
double down on the things we
believe in. It feels as if being part of a group like Modern Nature and making an album that’s open, optimistic and
ambitious is in itself part of the solution.”
As the new band started to play together more, the energy, excit
ement and telepathy between them gained
momentum and it became clear they needed to make a record that captured that. They locked into a process
analogue Gizzard
Rec
ording in east London). They’d spend two weeks living in each other’s pockets
–
a very condensed rush of
creativity.
“It’s rare to hear a recording of a band playing in a room together,” adds Cooper. “And that interaction, the
discrepancies in timing, syn
ergy, in pitch, that’s where the magic really is, I think, and that’s what we wanted to
capture.”
Modern Nature - bio.docx
One additional (and slightly unlikely) influence on the record was Andrew Weatherall. Before he passed away,
he’d played Modern Nature on his NTS show and Co
oper was thrilled that he liked them. He made it an aim to
make a record Weatherall might have played to his friends late at night. His motto “Fail we may, sail we must” is
esque track
Pharaoh
is about.
“It’s difficult to stay aware of the w
orld around you without becoming despondent,” says Cooper. “
Pharoah
makes
the case for finding a personal philosophy and trying to live a life that might inspire others or at the very least not
hurt them.”
Elsewhere,
Radio
touches on the contempt capitali
sm has for the natural world. The line “there’s a fire all around”
offers a kind of gallows humour. Cooper adds that recently they played the songs on a day that the news was
showing footage of the Los Angeles fires. It occurred to him that it was perhaps
an insensitive subject to be
singing about but there again
–
in his words
–
he feels it’s “important not to turn away from these things.” The
same desire not to shy away might also be attributed to
Source,
which touches on the recent riots in the UK
direct
ed towards asylum seekers, inspired by misinformation spread online.
For all this wrestling with the grimmer realities of 2025,
The Heat Warps
is ultimately not a record entirely
consumed by anxieties. Its frequently beautiful sounds offer consolation and
eyed optimism amid all the
upheaval. Nowhere is that more apparent than on the transcendent album closer,
Totality
. As Cooper explains: “It
was fascinating spending time in America as the country geared up for the 2024 solar eclipse. The news stati
ons
covered the event in the same way they’d cover a big football game or the Oscars. Everywhere I went, people
were talking about the eclipse and for a few days it really seemed to capture the public’s imagination.
“My friend’s dad had organised a huge
party and had obviously done his homework. When he was running us
through his preparation and how the day was going to go down, he said, ‘We’re hoping for totality,’ and it blew
my mind.
“The day of the eclipse I was driving through New Mexico and we stop
ped by the side of the road with hundreds of
other people gazing up to the heavens. It felt exciting to be part of something that clearly resonated with people
on such a profound level. It’s a fitting album closer and somewhere in there is a philosophy; a
romantic nihilism.”
And at its heart, right there is the core of Modern Nature’s appeal. Never more so than on this new record.