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Lusitanian Ghosts release “Exotic Quixotic” Nov. 19th

Lusitanian Ghosts’ second album, recorded at Clouds Hill in January 2020, is finally set for a digital release Nov. 19th, to be followed by the vinyl LP at a date yet to be announced.

The release will be preceded, this October 15th, by the latest single “Never Less Than Lonely”, which vocalist Neil Leyton recalls “was the first song written for the new album, we actually pondered playing it live back in 2019 before the pandemic hit.”

Lusitanian Ghosts will celebrate the release of “Exotic Quixotic” with a live-streamed concert from Forum Luisa Todi in Setubal “which is like our second home, Vasco (aka OMIRI) and Joana Negrão from Seiva live there, as do my half-brother and sister” explains Leyton. More details regarding the live-streamed concert will be announced soon.

Meanwhile you can pre-save the single and album, pre-following Lusitanian Ghosts on the following links on the platform of your choice. The “Never Less Than Lonely” single also groups the “Exotic Quixotic” singles released up to the moment, so as to make an EP or playlist of the songs released this far, heralding the new album in November.

https://lnk.to/neverless

https://lnk.to/exoticquixotic

Exotic Quixotic cover art by Johan Lindberg Brusewitz.

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Lusitanian Ghosts release “Soul Deranium” single!

International collective Lusitanian Ghosts step out of the shadows with new single ‘Soul Deranium’, an instant summer anthem intended as a “protest song for the ages”.

The chiming, finger-clicking single comes ahead of new album Exotic Quixotic (out September 10) and follows the April release of the LP’s title track; a rallying song for artists marking the anniversary of Portugal’s non-violent uprising against dictatorship in 1974.

Central to ‘Soul Deranium’ are resonating chordophones – ancient Portuguese instruments the Ghosts resurrect as the basis of their melodic, seductive 21st century rock n roll.

Set to breezy rhythms, this apparently blithe clap-along evokes classic Marc Bolan and T.Rex tracks, complete with ambiguous, sometimes unsettling lyrics which offer much to reflect on; gun violence, gender stereotypes and the hangover trauma of the Trump presidency.

“We’re fully aware ‘deranium’ is not a real word,” says Lisbon-born, Canada-raised musician Neil Leyton, who takes lead vocals on the track, written by Swedish multi-instrumentalist Micke Ghost. “Micke’s English is a lot better than he makes it out to be but he has a knack for making up pseudo-English words in a really funny way.”

Ghost says: “I was singing ’21st century boy’ and ‘soul deranium’ or something like that on the demo that I sent Neil but never intended it to be a part of the lyrics. Then I got the finished song back, Neil was singing ‘deranium’. That’s when I asked if it was an actual word.”

“I often write lyrics based on the sounds of Micke’s Swedish humming on our demos,” rejoins Leyton. “’Deranium’ came from there and to me it sounds like it could be a condition, a sort of uranium poisoning leading to deranged, enlightened, ultra-inspired and potentially psychotic behaviour.”

“Not that any of our songs compare, but if Marc Bolan can sing about Telegram Sams and Cosmic Dancers,” says Leyton, “I wanted to open our new album with a song about someone engaging in ludicrous amounts of Clockwork Orange X-rated self-indulgence, all for the toppermost possible good of humanity – all entirely made up, of course. But still, in its own way: a protest song for the ages. You are invited!”

Listen here: lnk.to/deranium

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Lusitanian Ghosts release new single, “Exotic Quixotic”, celebrating creativity and humanism on the eve of the anniversary of the Portuguese Carnation Revolution, 25th of April 1974:

Lusitanian Ghosts issue ‘Exotic Quixotic’, a rallying anthem for artists and dreamers to “fight the good fight” in the face of rising populism.

The international collective release the defiant, uplifting track to mark the 47th anniversary of the  Portuguese Carnation Revolution when civilians took to the streets against the fascist regime which had held the country in an iron grip for almost half a century.

Just as the revolution was first signaled by a radio broadcast of the now-iconic Grandola, Vila Morena by the banned folk musician José Afonso, ‘Exotic Quixotic’ celebrates the value of artists, musicians and creativity at a time when concert halls, theatres, nightclubs and bars have been silent for many months.

The track is the lead single from Lusitanian Ghosts’ forthcoming album Exotic Quixotic, which is set for release in September 2021. Recorded at Clouds Hill Studios in Hamburg with Sebastian Muxfeldt, it follows Lusitanian Ghosts’ 2019 self-titled debut LP, a “must-listen”, according to No Depression, for fans of “provocative, intellectually stimulating rock music”.

This autumn’s LP will see the collective, which hinges around Lisbon-born singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Neil Leyton and his Swedish counterpart Micke Ghost, journey deeper into their recasting of forgotten traditional chordophones as the basis for literate, 21st century indie rock.

For now, Ghost takes lead vocals on ‘Exotic Quixotic’, the springtime anthem also featuring the voices of Sasa Vipotnik from Slovenia’s AKA Neomi, Finnish author-musician Petri Leppanen and Joana Negrão from Portugal’s Seiva.

Lusitanian Ghosts collective members Vasco Casais, Claudia Teles and João Sousa shot the footage for the lyric video in their respective regions of Torres Vedras and Setúbal as they could not travel beyond their municipality due to pandemic restrictions. Watch it HERE.

“I don’t speak Slovenian or Finnish, so I can’t tell you what Sasa and Petri are saying,” says Leyton, who wrote Exotic Quixotic’s lyrics, “but what Joana is saying is that, even though it’s hard to be an artist day-in, day-out, she is fighting the good fight and she’s proud of that.”

He continues: “Exotic Quixotic is an ode to being an artist in a digital century threatened once again by the rise of social-media powered populism. We chose to release it close to the 25th April, the date of the Carnation Revolution in Portugal. I was just three years old when the Portuguese army hit the streets, on cue, triggered by a José Afonso song. Not that any of our songs compare, but we hope it will send vibes of strength and courage to every artist currently enduring this pandemic.”

lnk.to/quixotic

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Lusitanian Ghosts issue a passionate political statement with their latest single ‘For the Wicked’, out 13th November 2020

Lusitanian Ghosts return with their latest single ‘For The Wicked’, following the recent release of uplifting ode to life and love ‘All the Sounds’. The international collective is led by singer-songwriter and producer Neil Leyton and Swedish guitarist, singer and multi-instrumentalist Micke Ghost, with a cast of musical associates, including João Sousa, Janne Olsson, Vasco Ribeiro Casais (aka OMIRI) and Abel Beja of Primitive Reason.

This time Lusitanian Ghosts switch gears, moving in a more wistful direction while still making innovative use of their trademark Portuguese chordophone instruments. ‘For The Wicked’ is an ardent political address that speaks to a lost and apathetic society, accompanied by Lusitanian Ghosts’ masterful backdrop of ancient strings: the viola Amarantina, viola Braguesa, viola Campaniça (on loan from O Gajo) and viola Terceira.

It is a melodically vivid and passionate reckoning of those with self-righteous beliefs that sanctimoniously disregard the welfare of humanity, believing only in their own worth. It’s tinged with hostility and resentment, while also providing a strangely celebratory sense of melancholia as the track builds gradually to its anthemic finale. 

Speaking of the single’s focal point, Neil Leyton says; “I shouldn’t have to spell it out, but like the Manics’ “Design for Life”, I am not singing the chorus in my own voice but rather I’m taking on the role of those high-and-mighty power-hungry populists, the ruling elites or even religious zealots who believe bad things will never happen to them because they’re closer to god – or in some cases just lawyers, money or power”.

Lilting yet sharp in its lyricism, the track switches seamlessly from a repetitive staccato to a euphoric flood of sound, drawing out the song’s themes and commentary. As Neil sums up, “This one is an open critique against religious or political extremism, populism, or any other kind of anti-humanist behaviour. To the Wicked we say: good riddance!” 

‘For The Wicked’ is out on 13th November 2020 via European Phonographic: lnk.to/FortheWicked

For all media enquiries contact
Anastasia Connor (UK) – anastasia@noiseunit.co
Jeroen Siebens (European radio) – jeroen@radioplugging.eu