wire 10:20 album

Wire share "Small Black Reptile" from RSD20 LP, on tour now (NYC this week)

Wire
photo: Giuliana Covella

Wire are releasing a new album, 10:20, as a Record Store Day exclusive featuring rare, unreleased and reworked tracks. Here’s the official word:

’10:20 is a glimpse into the working practice of the band and may perhaps give clues as to why Wire has retained such a singular identity through the years. The album divides in to two halves – the 2010 side & the 2020 side – hence the title. When Wire plays live there are, in the main, three classes of piece: new songs, old songs and ‘new old’ songs. The latter often involves taking something that existed on a previous release and re-working it, very often evolving a stage highlight from it. There also pieces that have never seen a major release but for some reason never fitted on an album. The best of these ideas have been recorded in two sessions – one relating to Red Barked Tree but recorded in 2010 and another relating to Mind Hive and released in 2020.

The band also note the record also celebrates the decade guitarist Matt Simms has been part of the group. They’ve shared “Small Black Reptile,” a song that originally appeared on 1990’s Manscape but this version comes from the 2020 side. “Of all the reimagined songs on 10:20, this is the one that has travelled the furthest,” say the band’s notes for the album. “Whereas the original was a skeletal and arch computer-driven pop song, this new version sees the composition retooled as a piece of melodic rock.” You can listen to that (and the original version), and check out the annotated tracklist for 10:20 below.

Wire are currently in NYC for two shows at Music Hall of Williamsburg tonight and Thursday and members of the band will DJ as an opening set. Tickets are still available. The band’s 2020 North American tour in support of new album Mind Hive was to have included the now-canceled SXSW festival, but Wire are still playing Austin on March 18 at Barracuda. All tour dates are listed below.

wire 10.20

WIRE – 10:20 TRACKLIST AND NOTES:

1. “Boiling Boy” first appeared on 1988’s A Bell is a Cup… Until it is Struck. The original studio outing had a smooth sheen that only hinted at the jagged joys to come. “Boiling Boy” has gone on to become perhaps the most played Wire song ever. Throughout the ’00s, it became one of the acknowledged highlights of Wire’s live sets. Here, that arrangement can be heard in all its studio finery. Grey’s precise motorik drumming and Lewis’s muscular bass line create a machine with an unstoppable momentum, while Newman, Simms and Fielder weave a thick web of guitar textures.

2. “German Shepherds” is another late ’80s Wire song that has developed a second life on stage. One of Lewis’s most immediate yet most enigmatic lyrics is set in a sparkling up- tempo arrangement that exploits the possibilities of the rhythm guitar. The recording is also notable in that it includes vocal contributions from Newman, Lewis and Fielder. “German Shepherds” represents Wire at their most optimistic and summery. And yet, even here there is a slanted strangeness at the heart of their sound.

3. “He Knows” was developed back in 2000 when Bruce Gilbert was still with the band. It emerged in a reinvigorated form in 2008 when it became a staple of Wire’s live show. This is the only studio recording to have surfaced. A Wire song with an atypical structure, “He Knows” is a slow-paced piece built around tension and release. Newman’s vocal is cool and restrained until the keening chorus, which blossoms with its repeated refrain of “We’re hypnotised…” Here, as elsewhere, Wire prove that their particular brand of art-rock is also rich in emotion.

4. “Underwater Experiences” was demoed for the band’s sophomore album Chairs Missing, but in the end was omitted. Having lay dormant for a couple of years, the song later appeared in two fast, abrasive, contrasting versions on Wire’s notoriously confrontational live album Document And Eyewitness, and a fifth iteration surfaced on 2013’s Change Becomes Us. However, the song has never sounded quite as it does here. With its hectic but precise pell-mell of scything guitars and kick drum, ‘Underwater Experiences’ is ’10:20’s most intense entry.

Tracks 5 to 8 were recorded more recently with the long-established line up of Newman, Lewis, Grey and Simms.

5. “The Art of Persistence” arrived fully formed when Wire reconvened in 2000. But it was previously only available as a rehearsal room run-through on long deleted EP The Third Day or as a live version on Legal Bootleg album Recycling Sherwood Forest. Here, the song receives the full studio treatment as the group transforms it into a piece of spacious guitar pop with an edge of unease. Grey’s drumming is crisp and urgent, and Newman’s calm, confident vocal belies the lyric’s nervous uncertainty. What emerges is a song that wouldn’t have sounded out of place on 1979’s 154.

6. “Small Black Reptile: originally appeared on the band’s 1990 album Manscape. Of all the reimagined songs on 10:20, this is the one that has travelled the furthest. Whereas the original was a skeletal and arch computer-driven pop song, this new version sees the composition retooled as a piece of melodic rock. Here, Wire sound like a smart psychedelic beat group with Matt Simms’ guitar essaying a cocksure swagger.

7. “Wolf Collides,” with its warm synth tones and spindly lead lines, sounds as if it deserves to be sitting regally on side two of 1978’s Chairs Missing. In actual fact, it was written in 2015 and became a stalwart of that year’s live set. This version was recorded for inclusion on 2017’s Silver/Lead but was omitted due to lack of space. Here, another witty off-centre Lewis lyric is threaded through a soundscape where mystery and enigma mutate into a becalmed haze. It may just be 10:20’s finest moment.

8. “Over Theirs “is the climax of the continuing reassessment of Wire’s 1980s output. Although the song appeared on The Ideal Copy and has been an intermittent component of the group’s live shows since 1985, its true power had never been properly harnessed in the studio – until now. If this near nine-minute sonic behemoth is defined by its dense guitars and strict drum pattern, then the rich, languorous mesh of drones that rounds off both the song and album proves once again how adept Wire are at discovering beauty in unexpected places.

WIRE – 2020 TOUR DATES
03.11 – Brooklyn, NY @ Music Hall of Williamsburg
03.12 – Brooklyn, NY @ Music Hall of Williamsburg
03.13 – Boston, MA @ Sinclair
03.14 – Ottawa, ON @ Bronson Centre
03.16 – Toronto, ON @ Great Hall
03.18 – Austin, TX @ Barracuda
03.21 – London, UK @ Islington Assembly Hall
10.08 – Victoria, BC @ Capital Ballroom
10.09 – Vancouver, BC @ Imperial
10.10 – Seattle, WA @ The Crocodile
10.11 – Portland, OR @ Star Theater
10.13 – San Francisco, CA @ The Independent
10.15 – Solana Beach, CA @ Belly Up
10.16 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Regent
10.17 – Phoenix, AZ @ The Crescent Ballroom
10.18 – Tucson, AZ @ 191 Toole