FFS – the collaboration between Glasgow-based quartet Franz Ferdinand and seminal Los Angeles duo Sparks - have announced details of the release of their self-titled album on June 9 on Domino.
The first proper single will be released in April, with details coming soon. In the meantime, FFS are slaking fans’ thirst by previewing the album’s closing track "Piss Off," fittingly the first song written for the album, and the first song now to be heard in its entirety.
PRESS HERE to listen.
FFS
is available in digital and CD formats, and also as 16-track double
vinyl + limited edition double color vinyl special edition & deluxe
CD editions featuring the extra tracks "So Many Bridges," "King Of The
Song," "Look At Me" and "A Violent Death." Pre-order FFS via DomMart and iTunes.
The
seed of FFS was sown around the time of Franz’s debut album when word
got back to the Mael brothers that the band were big Sparks fans. “We
thought ‘Take Me Out’ was very cool, and wouldn’t it be nice to say
hello when they came to Los Angeles?” recalls Russell Mael. “We met and
decided then it would be great to do something together. We put forward a
couple demos, one was "Piss Off." But they got swept up by everything,
and it didn’t happen at that time.”
Fast-forward to 2013
when both Sparks and Franz Ferdinand appeared at Coachella. On the day
of Sparks’ warm-up show in San Francisco, Kapranos was in the city
trying to locate a dentist when he heard a voice behind him: “’Alex, is
that you?’ It was Ron and Russell. They invited us down to see them play
that night. We said hello after, and everyone agreed that the 10-year
gestation period for this idea was long enough------- we should try and
make it happen now.”
FFS was recorded during an intense
15-day period in late 2014. “We approached it the way bands do with
their first record,” says Kapranos. “We had the songs first, rehearsed
them and then recorded it all together, in a room. So no hanging around
or fannying about.”
Very much a "new" project, FFS
doesn’t truly sound like either band, but a striking and fascinating
mutation. “The real motivation was to make something new, not ‘Franz
featuring Russell Mael’, or ‘Sparks with Franz Ferdinand backing them,”
says Alex Kapranos.
“You can’t chart what is Sparks and
what is Franz Ferdinand,” suggests Ron Mael. “I think each band
unconsciously relinquished a little of who they were in order to enter
new territory.”
Track listing:
1. Johnny Delusional
2. Call Girl
3. Dictator’s Son
4. Little Guy From The Suburbs
5. Police Encounters
6. Save Me From Myself
7. So Desu Ne
8. The Man Without A Tan
9. Things I Won’t Get
10. The Power Couple
11. Collaborations Don’t Work
12. Piss Off
FFS Tour Dates
Tuesday June 16 || Arts School || Glasgow, UK
Monday June 29 || The Troxy || London, UK
Monday August 24 || Festival Theatre || Edinburgh, UK
Tuesday August 25 || Albert Hall || Manchester, UK
1. Johnny Delusional
2. Call Girl
3. Dictator’s Son
4. Little Guy From The Suburbs
5. Police Encounters
6. Save Me From Myself
7. So Desu Ne
8. The Man Without A Tan
9. Things I Won’t Get
10. The Power Couple
11. Collaborations Don’t Work
12. Piss Off
FFS Tour Dates
Tuesday June 16 || Arts School || Glasgow, UK
Monday June 29 || The Troxy || London, UK
Monday August 24 || Festival Theatre || Edinburgh, UK
Tuesday August 25 || Albert Hall || Manchester, UK
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