Colm Ó Cíosóig of My Bloody Valentine Affirms Earlier Reports of a 2018 Album

Photo Credit: Raymond Flotat

Colm Ó Cíosóig let slip in an interview concerning his other band, Hope Sandoval And The Warm Inventions, that My Bloody Valentine has another album on the grill. Their last album, m b v, came out in 2013. Kevin Shields released information about the album in the promo materials for Sigūr Rós’ music festival. The band stirred from its usual quietness when it announced the releases of vinyl editions of Loveless and Isn’t Anything. Shields released collaboration with Brian Eno that stereogum.com named its favorite song of the week. Everything came into relief when Cíosóig mentioned the album in that Hope Sandoval And The Warm Inventions interview.

When asked about the prospect of a new album, he responded, “I’ve been working on that preceding this tour, and I’m going to go back and work on that once the tour is done. It’s in the making.”

My Bloody Valentine disbanded in 1997 after switching labels and sitting on new material. Googe and Ó Cíosóig left in 1995, and the band fell apart two years later. Creation Records had to drop the group after Loveless’ expensive production costs. Critics consider the album a masterpiece and one of the best of the nineties. After switching to Island Records, the recorded lots of material that never ended up being released.

The band toured across Europe, Asia and North America in 2007 after an announcement from Shields that they’d be reuniting. m b v was long delayed in its release, and a band that’s been through as much change as My Bloody Valentine can’t always be hurried into action by their drummers’ offhand remarks, even if he is Colm Ó Cíosóig. However, it does seem like there will be an album; the question of when that will be still remains.

Photo Credit: Raymond Flotat

Conrad Brittenham: My name is Conrad. I am one year out of college and pursuing a career in writing and journalism. I studied literature at Bard College, in the Hudson Valley. My thesis focuses on the literal and figurative uses of disease in Herman Melville’s most famous works, including Moby-Dick, Benito Cereno, and Billy Budd. My literary research on the topic of disease carried over to more historical findings about how humans tend to deal with and think about the problem of virus and infectivity. I’ve worked at a newspaper and an ad agency, as well as for the past year at an after school program, called The Brooklyn Robot Foundry. All of these positions have influenced the way I approach my work, my writing, and the way I interact with others in a professional setting. I’ve lived in London and New York, and have always had a unique perspective on international cultural matters. I am an avid drawer and a guitarist, but I would like to eventually work for a major news publication as an investigative journalist.
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