Single: Jalapeños
KITTEN PYRAMID PRESENT NEW TRACK JALAPENOS out JULY 15 2022 via Flip Flop Records
The Vegan Army try to save the world in Kitten Pyramid’s new clip
Experimental UK pop-proggers Kitten Pyramid follow up their recent single Road Hog, with new track Jalapeños, taken from the Burton-Upon-Trent band’s upcoming album and short film KIDDO, due this year. Written by Milligan, Jalapeños is a punky number augmented by a rich, filmic, orchestral arrangement featuring a children’s choir (Kidz R Us choir, Tredegar). It imagines a future (2050) in which the last remaining meat-eaters are forced underground, to defend themselves from hails of jalapeno bullets from The Vegan Army. As emotions and the imagination run wild, it’s a plea for calmness and rationalism.
KIDDO is also a short film about animal rights, written by Kitten Pyramid mainman Scott Milligan and produced by Static Flow Productions and Directed by Brett Chapman and will be released October 1st, 2022.
The work has caught the attention of The Vegetarian Society who celebrate their 175th birthday this September and have invited Kitten Pyramid to join in their celebrations.
“Zigging and Zagging through the windmills, running like clowns across a minefield”
Jalapeños was co-produced with Nick Brine (Oasis, Stone Roses, Ash, Teenage Fanclub, The Darkness) and Scott Milligan. Original band member Chris Baldwin (also in Paddy Considine’s band Riding the Low) plays guitar on the track alongside long-time Kitten Pyramid collaborator Andrew Griffiths of AGM Productions for orchestration.
Find out more at www.kittenpyramid.co.uk
Bio: Kitten Pyramid began as a collective in 2010, the brainchild of singer-songwriter Scott Milligan and initially ranged from two to 20 members. In 2013 they released their debut album Uh-Oh!, followed by the EP High Five Scuba Dive, with Procol Harum’s late guitarist Dave Ball featuring on both releases (and as the Grim Reaper in the video for English Rosa). In 2015 they caught the ear of 6Music presenter and performer Tom Robinson, who took them out on his UK tour. Kitten Pyramid launched Uh-Oh! with a tour of psychiatric hospitals and have featured in MOJO ★ ★ ★ ★, Classic Rock ★ ★ ★ ★ and Prog magazines, been Sunday Brunch’s Single Of The Week on Channel 4 and were termed “fittingly barking” and “Hunky Dory with a dash of Syd” for their marvellously left-of-field progressive pop. Second album KOOZY!! was released in April 2021 recorded in Konk and Rockfield Studios. The band featured members of The Leisure Society. It garnered similar acclaim to the debut.
“A beautiful album.” Classic Rock ★ ★ ★ ★
“Hyper intelligent, brilliant references, frantic time signatures, fabulous tunes, well-crafted concepts.” Record Collector ★ ★ ★ ★
“A surfeit of nagging hooks, arresting musical quirks and WTF lyrics ensures KOOZY!! is an album that keeps demanding attention.” Prog Magazine“An XTC-Beatles-Beefheart hybrid one minute, a moodily blue Pink Floyd the next” Prog“If British psychedelia is your bag, this is your new favourite band” The Independent“Picasso could have been at the controls” The Guardian
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KITTEN PYRAMID, THE STORY SO FAR - BY DAVID STUBBS
Scott Milligan conceived Kitten Pyramid with friend Tom Goodwin out of a sense of frustration with the limits of music in this world, prompted by some tipsy punter giving an unsolicited rendering of Oasis’ ‘Don’t Look Back In Anger’ in the Malt Cross pub in Nottingham. Why did albums run out of steam after three tracks? Why did artists plough such linear furrows, looking down, not up, or from side to side? He imagined a music that ran the full gamut of colours, styles, emotions, from pop to prog, from the Earth to the sky.
“I’d always fancied the idea of a Polyphonic Spree-type choir with a Prince-like, anything goes, creative approach,” says Milligan, quickly adding, “with Beatles hooks and a licence to press Metallica or Joni Mitchell buttons if we fancied.” Feeling that ingredients were still a little lacking in his proposition, he further added Björk, Frank Zappa and Super Furry Animals.
The name “Kitten Pyramid”, meanwhile, was the germ of an idea just now coming to fruition. A lifelong meat eater, albeit one toying with vegetarianism, Milligan was nonetheless struck by the arbitrariness of human carnivores – to eat a cow was fine but to eat a cat, your nan’s cat, was an act of monstrous cruelty. He saw a “meat pyramid” featured on a mixed grill menu. Suppose that meat were cat meat? A Kitten Pyramid, indeed? What was really the difference?
Formed in 2010, Kitten Pyramid were a volatile, messy proposition, seeking to take (mis)shape, featuring anything from two to 20 members, with Milligan the only constant. Their first album was ‘Uh Oh!’ and with its meticulous arrangements and neo-psychedelic stylings, it caught the ear of Tom Robinson in 2015 who invited them to tour with him. They also took the album on a tour of psychiatric hospitals - the album had been dedicated to Milligan’s uncle, a lifelong sufferer from mental illness. This attracted the attention of The Guardian, who followed them and wrote up a feature. The tour, as well as being a fine gesture, was an apt metaphor for Kitten Pyramid – a group taking pop music to places to which it ought to go but far too infrequently does.
An early recording, ‘7 Day Duvet’, eventually found its place on 2021’s album ‘Koozy!!’. It’s an apt starting point for newcomers - solipsism to share, threatening to burst in all directions. Inward and into the sky with diamonds, Koozy!!, despite its exclamation marks, was dedicated to Milligan’s mother, an emotional powerhouse, a rock of strength, who succumbed to COVID, her immune system fatally weakened by MS. Described by this writer in Classic Rock as “joyful and sombre, playful and solemn”, with time and speed changes signifying its swift changes of mood, it reminded of Van Dyke Parks one moment, Wire the next, but reminded ultimately of Kitten Pyramid.
2022 and the story continues. Back to that rumination on vegetarianism. Triggered by driving past a livestock lorry, Milligan considered exploring the topic in greater depth – a film, an album. Vegetarianism was an answer for experts in climate change but, for Milligan, only yielded further questions to ponder.
“What about plant-based foods? There are so many now, and what will happen to the animals if we stop breeding them? Is it just their farts that are wrecking the ozone? What happens to the livestock farmers? Where will we get the manure from? What about the rest of the world where meat is their only form of protein?”
By June of 2022, Milligan had a film script, director, producer and full crew in place. The film seeks not to tub-thump or virtue-signal but look at the issue from all sides, generating enough material and substance from which to draw a possible conclusion.
‘Road hog’ was the first single from the upcoming album KIDDO, released in May and featuring Pigcasso, the painting pig and viral art sensation, marking a participation in the first ever human/non-human art collaboration. Milligan always said that where music ultimately failed to stimulate him, fell aesthetically short, he would turn to film for inspiration. Now he has turned to film as a medium. Kitten Pyramid are more, much more, than the standard issue vague, strumming introverts. They are music-plus.
David Stubbs, London, June 2022