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By Jamie Fullerton

Posted on 12/01/09 at 09:17:06 pm

So, it’s in – the first copy (it actually says “001” on it) of Pete Doherty’s (as-yet untitled) solo album - and we’ve got all the deets about one of the most eagerly-anticipated records of the year. It’s almost exciting enough to make us momentarily forget about the prospect of a Joe Lean album in 2009.

So, after releasing two albums with The Libertines and another two with Babyshambles so far, what does the next installment in Pete’s musical career sound like?

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Well, like Gorillaz. And The Coral. And The La’s. And Blur. And Bob Dylan.

The album is the most diverse album Pete has made by a long stretch. The bulk of it sees an atmospheric mix of acoustic guitar (mainly played by Graham Coxon) and strings set a keynote of tenderness and mystery – far away from the frenetic ‘Shamble-ness of ‘Fuck Forever’, ‘Pipedown’, ‘Delivery' and the like.

But there are real curveballs that may knock Pete fans sideways – most notably the Gorrilaz-esque ‘Last Of The English Roses’ and the bizarre, snaking ‘Sweet By And By’. See below for a full track-by-track guide with video clips to give a taster of the music.

Plus see nme.com/news for the nitty-gritty, release date and the like.

Pete, Graham and producer Stephen Street in the studio

Arcadie
Pitter-patter drums and folk-jaunt acoustic finger-picking from Graham Coxon on this Dylan-esque opener suggest that Pete’s album could be a ‘Freewheeling Pete Doherty’-style affair. This’ll be familiar to fans who’ve forked out for Pete’s low-key London shows over the past year.

Pete playing ‘Arcadie’ at the London Royal Albert Hall, July 12, 2008

Last Of The English Roses
‘The Freewheeling Pete Doherty’? Scrunch that idea into a ball and take aim for the wastepaper basket. This, the album’s lead single, sounds like Gorillaz. Murky bass, gloopy heartbeat drums, harmonica – without Shaun Ryder popping up halfway through and drunkenly shouting “IT’S DARE!” this couldn’t be more reminiscent of the work of Damon Albarn’s ‘nana-chomping side project. Except, of course, instead of Albarn’s nonchalant croon we’ve got Pete’s somewhat more distinctive vocal effort.

The lyrics too could only really be Doherty’s, cutting gutter’n’stars contemporary references with his romanticised view of English heritage – singing about a girl who knows her “Kappas from her Reeboks” then “her Winstons from her Enochs”. So far, so completely unlike anything Pete’s ever recorded before.

1939 Returning
An acoustic-based effort with filmic strings and an Eastern riff, apparently ‘1939 Returning’ was written with a view to getting Amy Winehouse to add some warbles to it. There’s no Wino here, no remnant of backward-looking jazz-pop, instead it's an atmospheric swirl that fits with ‘Arcadie’ as one of the more ‘bare bones’ efforts here.

An acoustic demo of ‘1939 Returning’

A Little Death Behind The Eyes
A Scott Walker-esque string duvet sweeps over this one – has Pete been listening to ‘Scott 4’… or ‘The Age Of The Understatement'? Either way, this is the song on the album most likely to ever appear in a Bond flick, and it features a line Pete has said was written by Carl Barat: “Your boyfriend’s name was Dave, I was bold and brave, and now you’re mine”. The rogue!

Salome
The downbeat death of ‘A Little Death…’ segues wonderfully into the hungover Eastern acoustic guitar riff of ‘Salome’ – a song that’s been kicking around in the Doherty solo cannon for yonks and yonks. More strings and brutal but softly-delivered imagery (“the head of John The Baptist on a plate”, anyone?), it’s about as far from ‘Fuck Forever’ as you can get without the help of a space shuttle.

An acoustic demo of ‘Salome’

Through The Looking Glass
A song originally cooked up in during Libertines songwriting sessions in France between the Libs’ two albums, ‘Through The Looking Glass’ is the song that most resembles a full band effort on the album. A bulky-based mid-pacer, here Graham Coxon’s guitars are at their most recognisable, the overall effect being a heavy Britpop strike half-way between Babyshambles and early Blur. A possible single?

An early demo version of ‘Through The Looking Glass’

Sweet By And By
Wow. Are we in some kind of 1940s upper class tea party? Not quite, actually the tinkly piano and jazz-parp trumpets suggest we’re in a jaunty illegal whiskey den in New York, 60 years back. And maybe Pete’s had a few too many tumblers of tongue-shrivelling bourbon – towards the end of this he does sound rather… merry. Yup, this album’s eclectic.

Palace Of Bone
We don’t think James Skelly is the suing type – possibly a good thing, as ‘Palace Of Bone’, or at least the intro, is pretty Coral-tastic to say the least – ‘Pass It On’ quite literally. In reality this is probably Pete’s obsession wit The La’s becoming more prominent on this understated Liverpudlian-sounding song.

‘Palace Of Bone’ live in Paris last November

Sheepskin Tearaway
Another tender acoustic’n’piano-based effort, this time a duet between Pete and singer Dot Allison, who has joined the Babyshambler to perform it live at various solo gigs over the past year. Not quite a cousin to ‘What Katy Did’ off the Libs’ second album but at least some kind of daughter of an aunt’s sister who you know you’re related to in some way. Babyshambles’ Drew McConnell’s stand-up bass and loungey piano add depth to this sweet, drifting song.

‘Sheepskin Tearaway’ live

Broken Love Song
Remember Wolfman? ‘For Lovers’, from 2004? He is credited with co-writing this. An earlier version was recorded with producer Jake Fior, but this new effort features Wolfy on guitar, building a creeping bass path to a blustering chorus – “They are the loneliest” repeated on possibly the most prominent hook on an album which, as Pete has said himself, is a rather uncommercial effort.

New Love Grows On Trees
From the blustery ‘Broken Love Song’ back to a cinematic bass-sweep’n’acoustic-tied effort. An air raid siren moans in mournfully over one of the more lyrically deft songs on the album, Pete singing, “Are you still talking to, All of those dead film stars, like you used to?/And are you still thinking of, all of those pretty rhymes/And perfect crimes, like you used to love?”. This had been kicking around the Libs and ‘Shambles canon for a while before Pete decided to use it here.

An early acoustic version of ‘New Love Grows On Trees’

Lady, Don’t Fall Backwards
An understated two-and-a-half minutes of acoustic guitar and echoing Richard Hawley-esque electric guitar meandering in the background to close the album. Here Pete gets all romantic – “Every giro day dress me like a ladyboy… if we make love in the morning I see your eyes look like two marbles in your head”. A downbeat organ, “Come on fall into my arms” repeated over the final strum, and that’s Pete’s solo album done.

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56 comments

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John Bold [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 11:57
But is it any good?
anton [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 12:17
can't wait. always been a huge fan of all his solo acoustic bootlegs, it's gonna be nice to hear these songs made into full blown studio recordings.
Forza [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 13:06
Wow sounds really good. Looking forward to it.
Matavkin [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 13:24
Let's talk about the title. "The Libertine"? "Up in Albion"? No, Pete, i don't believe you. It must be "I'm nobody without Carl"
Forza [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 14:35
@ Matavkin; Have you heard the album yet then? Carl's nowhere without Pete, check the two DPT albums; utter shite.
Simon Webbon [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 14:38
A couple people I know claim to play on this album, my pal Joe Rybicki, and some moron off a messageboard called James Orman from a band called Silvery. Is there any truth in this NME? Also, do you have any info on Pete's new friend Lee Wykes? Did he write Palace Of Bone with him? Thanks x
jake [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 15:04
hope he does a decent solo tour, instead of these little solo shows here and there. cant wait for it none the less
dave [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 15:10
only worth buying for coxon really.
Honest John [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 16:20
what a crap pile of poo
Matavkin [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 16:21
Forza, The Libertines were better than DPT and Shambles, weren't they? When it suits you, you're a friend of mine
clarkey [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 16:38
why dont people just shut the fuck up until they have heard it? Judge it then!
Tessa [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 17:08
Out of their lo-fi freed-on-the-Internet demo form, these songs probably wouldn't have worked at all without a genius guitarist Graham Coxon. Or without Stephen Street, for that matter. But since we have a great guitarist and someone to ensure quality control, this album will most probably be aural heaven.
Tommy [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 18:37
anyone who says its rubbish, or that he's nothing without carl. just listen to the thing when it comes out. guaranteed better than DPT last effort, and seems he doesnt need carl as much as carl needs him
Lei [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 18:42
i love the demos, can't wait to hear the album, Pete's a great songwriter, and i'm glad he wants Paris to present it! he'll have here the support he deserves!!
anton [Visitor] //January 13 2009 at 22:25
most of these songs are already great. sweet, tender and filled with soul. and now they will probably be just as great in another form... it's hard to kill a great tune no matter how they've been recorded.
kurt [Visitor] //January 14 2009 at 01:19
joe rybicki never played on this. thats absolute bullshit
Janey [Visitor] //January 14 2009 at 01:52
What, no "Darksome Sea?" Say it isn't true, NME.
Robert Perala [Visitor] //January 14 2009 at 06:49
Hey I'm Pete's biggest fan in the USA and I say wait and hear the record and then judge for yourself. If making records was that easy everyone would be doing it! I think it will be great!
Caroline [Visitor] //January 14 2009 at 09:31
can't wait
kelly shambles [Visitor] //January 14 2009 at 10:35
pete does not need carl, i want the libs bak gether but carl is no;boy without pete thats why DPT split, pete will keep on till the end carls a quitter!!"!pete is a ledg!!
Jamie Fullerton [Visitor] //January 14 2009 at 10:50
Hi Janey, no 'Darksome Sea' - that was written by Wolfman and most of the compositions on the album are written by Pete (apart from 'Broken Love Song', a co-write with Wolf). There are great demo versions of 'Darksome Sea' recorded with Jake Fior pinging around online though.
Tarkin [Visitor] //January 14 2009 at 12:08
Is this guy out of Menswear?
mike [Visitor] //January 14 2009 at 14:28
gotta remember what happened to love you but your green though, when that was a demo it was superb but the full band version was awful. lookin forward to hearin this album though
renzo [Visitor] //January 14 2009 at 17:44
man i really was hoping to hear cuckoo 1440 on this album
Stoddy [Visitor] //January 14 2009 at 18:05
Through The Looking Glass i would love to hear this done by Pete & Carl cos it is basically a Libs song. Can't wait for the new Solo Album tho! its sounding Good!
lucy [Visitor] //January 14 2009 at 18:50
where is the whole world is our playground ? :( but then again i suppose its best left
Mel. [Visitor] //January 14 2009 at 20:27
Wooo, I can't wait. Most of these tracks are already amazing. Pete is amazing!!
Teabags [Visitor] //January 14 2009 at 21:48
Throw in Darksome Sea, Ballad Of Grimaldi and The Whole World Is Our Playground and this would have been the immense Pete Doherty collection still cant wait to hear it
Pete's Dealer [Visitor] //January 15 2009 at 11:30
Smackhead.
kevin gallagher [Visitor] //January 15 2009 at 12:13
sweet!
Adam [Visitor] //January 15 2009 at 13:49
Salome - "Kicking about in the solo canon for yonks and yonks" You choose this song to attribute that statement to? This is one of the fairly recent songs included on the tracklisting, which was only really debuted mid 2007. Arcady on the other hand....
Matavkin [Visitor] //January 15 2009 at 19:26
Hey, boys and girls, my comment offended you? Let's meet here after the release: you'll be disappointed and NME won't give it more than 8 out of 10 ('cause Pete's a good boy). Don't be shy, comment on!
LML [Visitor] //January 16 2009 at 06:45
Pete is a living legend; the real deal. I'm thrilled that his new CD is soon to be released. His music makes eeryone else's music seem so paltry in comparison.
alex [Visitor] //January 16 2009 at 17:44
John Robinson from Liverpool band The Bandits co-wrote one of the tunes on this album. not sure which one though.
Julia [Visitor] //January 16 2009 at 20:29
Let' s face it, carl and pete are both geniuses....but together they're almost godlike! Hope they get it and come back together...still think they love each other like in lib-times!!!
Goldie [Visitor] //January 17 2009 at 00:32
To everyone who says DPT were terrible I totally disagree! I think Faultlines is one of the most beautiful songs out of the Libs, Babyshambles and DPT put together so I think Carl is still amazing without Pete. Of course, I wish the Libs would reform because with each other they are just unbelievable. I love Pete just as much as Carl though and I really can't wait for this! I hope it does well (and I hope the Libs reform...)
Kristina [Visitor] //January 17 2009 at 10:52
I am so exited! I want it now =D I love everything Peter does. He is fantastic!
Craig Weir [Visitor] //January 17 2009 at 14:54
Think this will be awesome cant w8 till its release. Hope he tours it extensively nd cums to dundee!!
Lora [Visitor] //January 17 2009 at 17:51
can'ttttt waittt!!!! for pete's solo album!!! <3
ronnie [Visitor] //January 17 2009 at 19:29
Come on pete!
Fergal Kinney [Visitor] //January 17 2009 at 20:10
I've got very high expectations from this album. Stephen Street and Pete Doherty is a brilliant combination, as we learnt from the much underrated Shotter's Nation, and add Coxon into the mix and I think we've a classic on our hands
Russian Girl [Visitor] //January 18 2009 at 19:10
drawing a red circle around 9/03 and life`s getting much better... i`ll love him even if he starts playing the church bells =)
rough166 [Visitor] //January 18 2009 at 19:34
These demos are the bollox! Pete is a legend,very much missunderstood.
pozzey mc d [Visitor] //January 18 2009 at 20:02
the libs r the best band in the last ten years when it comes to a raw sounding,kaotic yet melodic tgo the ears,they hav the same effect on me as the beatles..i think this album will be superb,petes such a genius when it comes to writing song..hope hes clean,it makes a difference.
not a fan [Visitor] //January 20 2009 at 17:26
He is average.
jono [Visitor] //January 20 2009 at 17:47
yawn
GO-OBAMA [Visitor] //January 21 2009 at 23:00
LOVE YOU PETE! please come to america (!!)
matt the shambolic kat! [Visitor] //January 23 2009 at 04:55
cant wait, guna be like shotters nation on speedball!
andreas [Visitor] //January 29 2009 at 19:22
looking forward to this one, pleasant reading
joe [Visitor] //January 30 2009 at 00:34
Going to see him in Birmingham in March.... please oh please let Carl be there!
Babyshamble. [Visitor] //January 30 2009 at 18:54
Absolute genius. See you Feb 24th ;):D
laura [Visitor] //February 1 2009 at 21:43
new love grows on trees is one of my favs! still i miss cuckoo 1440 and darksome sea
PeteNowherety [Visitor] //February 11 2009 at 05:57
Pete is a loser. Period.
Eh? [Visitor] //February 11 2009 at 16:45
Are there no new songs on this album? Seems like they're all only new versions of old songs. I've heard them all before.
Intr0 [Visitor] //February 15 2009 at 18:21
"We make love in the morning", probably because he's in too much of a state to do it it properly in the evening! Seriously though I'm looking forward to this. It's about time non-fans got to hear Pete's more emotional side.
John Davey [Visitor] //March 16 2009 at 12:10
its not brilliant at all, boring, sounds the same from start to end, nothing SPECIAL in the slightest... whats up with you people???

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