Classic Rock

Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats

After six years without a new record, they return with one inspired by 70s Italian murdermyst­ery cinema.

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Inspired by 70s Italian slasher horror and crime flicks, Cambridge-based psychedeli­c doomsters Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats return with an imaginary soundtrack, Nell’ Ora Blu (The Blue Hour), for their sixth album. It’s a bit of a change from their usual busy schedule of touring with the likes of Black Sabbath, King Diamond and Ghost, says founder and frontman Kevin Starrs.

It’s been a while since the last Uncle Acid album, 2018’s Wasteland. You were quite busy, weren’t you?

Touring, yes! We went out with King Diamond in Europe, then went to Australia, New Zealand and Japan… We were one of the last bands out and playing until lockdown in 2020.

The King Diamond shows must have been a blast.

We were his personal choice to support, and he was really friendly to us, although he never saw us play as he had to do fan meet-and-greets while we were on stage. I like a lot of his work, and [his former band] Mercyful Fate. He’s got a great voice and puts on such a good show.

You’re back with Nell’ Ora Blu. Fill us in.

This is what I was up to during lockdown. It’s inspired by seventies Italian murdermyst­ery cinema, the giallo genre [which comes from pulp paperbacks]. Years ago I got into forties and fifties film noir and somehow moved on to the Italian stuff, which is quite wild, sexual and horrific, and features a lot of detective work and shadowy figures. It was a psychedeli­c version of film noir. I’d always wanted to do a soundtrack sort of thing, but expand on the idea, so writing a script, recording dialogue and having sound effects included. This was my opportunit­y.

You brought in two classic actors for this. Tell us about them.

Frank Nero is known for being quite overthe-top, and I wanted that for his role, Scarano – someone unhinged! Edwige Fenech has one of the most distinctiv­e voices in giallo. She’s a screen legend, and even though she couldn’t communicat­e in English with me she delivered perfectly recorded parts straight away.

Did you learn Italian in order to write the script?

I tried to [laughs], but I had to use a translator. And there was a lot of back-and-forth with the actors – this was a totally new experience for all of us. I also had to focus on learning new instrument­s, such as keyboards, which

I can’t play too well and I had to try to get tunes out of them. A lot of it was improvised: hit ‘record’, play the dialogue and start creating something on the keyboard.

“I tried to learn Italian, but I had to use a translator.”

You use a lot of synths on this.

It was important to use a lot of old analogue synths as well, because they just sound better when you record them. And a lot of the effects that we used were analogue. One of my favourites was a Crumar Stringman, a vintage Italian synthesise­r, which Neil Young used on Like A Hurricane.

The record’s quite proggy, with a Tangerine Dream/John Carpenter feel.

I love that stuff, and I actually used a unit that Tangerine Dream used a lot, Compact Phasing. It’s got a great, eerie filter sweep. It was so much fun to try out all this stuff. The next record might be krautrock! JK

Nell’ Ora Blu is out now via Rise Above.

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