New Song Of The Day: Stephen Fretwell, Oval

Wait long enough and something cool will come around. Today its this new track, Oval, from Stephen Fretwell.

We’re new to this Mr Fretwell, but we like the noise he makes. Here’s the Record Company Blurb with the inside scoop:

Stephen Fretwell’s long-awaited third album is set for release on Dan Carey’s Speedy Wunderground this summer. Described by Fretwell as “a song cycle of sorts,” the album examines the seasons of life, exploring fatherhood, grief and rebirth, with Fretwell’s trademark eloquence and wit.

Stephen FretwellPreceding the album’s release is a new single, ‘Oval’; a track heady with sensuous images – ‘a harvest pear in silk’ – and heavenly bodies – the moon and the sun – as well as those lying on beds. But, as in so many of the songs on his upcoming album, all is not well. There is a deep sense of unease: tropical heat at twilight. Beyond the innocent curves of ‘Oval’, images of opposites clash and collide; celebration sours to disappointment. The longed-for sun can be a thing that burns. The birthday becomes a sultry disco.

“I think it is a song about marriage, the actuality of it, the responsibility of it, and the gamble,” says Fretwell. “When my girlfriend was pregnant with our first son, we moved to a flat near the Oval in London. As our marriage fell apart a few years ago, it was this simple song that was the only thing I had to stick in the ground and push on with making some new music.

I wrote the song about watching my wife look out of the window in that flat in Oval, looking at her new life as a mother, our new life as parents, and I was trying to show that in some way the beauty that we are gifted by becoming parents is often haunted by the loss of something, too.”

Fretwell, now 39, grew up in Scunthorpe but cut his musical teeth in Manchester in the early noughties, playing in the bars and clubs of the legendary Northern Quarter. In the years before that, as a teenager, he visited his cousin who lived in Vienna. On these trips, he’d stay up late with his cousin’s wife and she would play him her record collection and talk about her interior life. This experience, witnessing music and lyrics being used to process thoughts and feelings, informed his approach to song-writing, giving his early work a maturity beyond its years.

Fretwell’s debut album Magpie, which featured the songs ‘Emily‘, and ‘New York’, both much beloved among his early fans, was released on a major record label in 2004 and sold 100,000 copies. In 2007 he released the follow-up, Man On the Roof, for which he received an Ivor Novello Award nomination.

Fretwell went on to support the likes of Travis, Elbow, Keane and Oasis, and in 2008, played bass for The Last Shadow Puppets. His first son was born in 2011. At this point Fretwell became a full-time dad, and “didn’t come up for air until my son started school, by which time we had another son. I just forgot about song-writing. I didn’t even own a guitar for five years.”

Fretwell’s best-known song is perhaps ‘Run’, which features on the credits of BBC1’s hit sitcom Gavin and Stacey. Fretwell says: “I really truly love that show – literally I love it as a comedy, but also it has been an unavoidable presence in my life – a little like a person who is always next to you at times of great need – but who is unaware of the fortunes they afford you.”

Before setting to work on his new album, Fretwell raised two young sons in Brighton, on the south coast. It meant that returning to writing and recording wasn’t easy.

“For 13 years I hadn’t walked into a professional recording studio to stand still and make a record from start to finish in one delivery – one go,” he says. “Just the terror of the tape spools beginning to turn and the red light coming on…”

Luckily, he was in safe hands. The new album was produced by Fretwell’s close friend Dan Carey, celebrated producer and boss of Speedy Wunderground. More info to follow on that soon….