New Solo Album: 'This Destination’

“THIS DESTINATION” - GARY KEMP FINDS THE WAY ON HIS MOST ACCOMPLISHED BODY OF WORK TO DATE - ANNOUNCES NEW ALBUM FOR 31st JANUARY 2025 - RELEASES ANTHEMIC SINGLE ‘PUT YOUR HEAD UP’

Pre-order the album here / Listen to ‘Put Your Head Up'

Gary Kemp is set to return with his third solo album, “This Destination” out on 31st January 2025 through East West Records.

Kemp’s new body of work follows on from 2021’s INSOLO. “This Destination” is his most personal to date and sees the songwriter channel his own thoughts and feelings about the past, present, and future through the guise of uncanny storytelling and character work. The album is simultaneously semi-autobiographical and an exercise in empathetic scene-setting

The announcement comes alongside the release of the anthemic single ‘Put Your Head Up’.

“This Destination” puts on show the culmination of a lifetime dedicated to songcraft. The album features intricate and deliberate arrangements including strings by the renowned John Metcalfe (formerly of The Durutti Column and more recently string arranger to the likes of Peter Gabriel, Blur, and U2).

A special Dolby Atmos mix of the album, created by musician Steven Wilson, will be available alongside the release. Wilson uses spatial audio mixing which creates an immersive sound by placing audio elements into a three-dimensional space. The effect is a stunning recreation of how we hear sound in the real world. Wilson is the renowned master of this.

“This Destination” features keys and backing vocals by longtime collaborator Toby Chapman who co-produced the album alongside Kemp at London’s Reformation and RAK studios.

The renowned bassist, Guy Pratt - who handled rhythm section duties for Pink Floyd circa 1987 onward - was called upon to play bass on some of the songs. Pratt’s previous work includes performances and cuts for Madonna, Roxy Music, The Smiths and Womack & Womack to name a few. The album’s closer features throat-singing by the Mercury Prize-nominated Sam Lee.

Lyrically, the 11-track offering marks a journey in discovery for Kemp who, in the years following the pandemic, hit an unexpected wall of anxiety and a lapse in self-belief. ‘This Destination’ is the soundtrack to the artist navigating his way back to familiar surroundings.

The first song composed for the album was the arresting and cinematic ‘Take The Wheel’ - a piece of music that evokes the vivid imagery of a couple leaning forward against a windscreen trying to see the road through the rain.

Kemp pleads, “Is there anybody out there who can take the wheel?”. The lyric is a genuine call for somebody, anybody to step in and take over.

The symmetry in the writing process came in the form of the very last song penned for the album, its title track, ‘This Destination’. Kemp said, “It’s about my relationship with music. Whatever I’m going through, whatever conflict arises, the process of making music is my resolution. That’s my destination.”

Elsewhere on the album, Kemp reflects on his relationship with the City in which he’s spent his life. ‘Borrowed Town’ reckons with the notion that London belongs to no one. The ever-changing cultural hub is something we all inhabit but can never claim ownership over. Kemp says, “London is in constant flux. When you live here, you’re just borrowing it for a time.”

Kemp also recalls a remarkable moment in the album’s conception when a spell of writer’s block was broken by an unexpected intervention by a fellow musician. He’d been sitting by the piano for hours to avail when the phone rang:

“It was Richard Hawley. We chatted for a while and I told him I’d been going round in circles trying to write something that day. He said ‘Okay, here’s what you do. Go over to the piano and sit down’”. Kemp obliged. “‘Put your hands out over the keys. I’m going to go now, and you’re going to write a fucking brilliant song.’”

Sure enough, the encounter led to Gary producing the McCartney-esque ‘Work’ - a semi-autobiographical tune in which he celebrates the unsung heroics of a parent’s everyday life. In ‘Work’, Kemp embarks on a trip down memory lane in an evocative account of his Mum and Dad’s working life. He says, “I remember going into the factory with my Dad one morning. I have this vivid recollection of the moment he put his brown overalls on over his clothes. To me, he was Superman putting on his cape.”

The song's outro builds into an uplift of staccato strings while Kemp repeats the mantra “Got to make it work”. The statement almost takes on new meaning with each repetition - partly summarising the song’s narrative whilst also acknowledging the pressure we put on ourselves in every aspect of life; from relationships to health issues to career decisions.

It’s on the album’s final track ‘I Know Where I’m Going’ that Kemp reaches his resolution. He sings, “I know where I’m going, I plan to take a rest there”. Clearly, Kemp finds his peace of mind on the album’s full circle moment. He said, “It’s the most personal on the record… It had to go last - it just made sense”.

Through a combination of his own stories and stories imagined, Gary Kemp has certified himself as one of the country’s greatest songwriters. “This Destination” is out on 31st January 2025 on East West Records.

FORMATS
Red Gold Vinyl
Standard CD
Deluxe CD
Digital
Atmos

TRACKLISTINGS

FORMAT: Standard CD
Borrowed Town
This Destination
Put Your Head Up
Take the Wheel
Dancing in Bed
Windswept Street (1978)
Johnny’s Coming Home
At the Chateau
Work
Giving it Up
I Know Where I’m Going

FORMAT: Deluxe CD
Borrowed Town
This Destination
Put Your Head Up
Take the Wheel
Dancing in Bed
Windswept Street (1978)
Johnny’s Coming Home
At the Chateau
Work
Giving it Up
I Know Where I’m Going
Bonus tracks:
Boy
True (live acoustic version)
Through the Barricades (live acoustic version)

FORMAT: Vinyl
Side A
1. Borrowed Town
2. This Destination
3. Put Your Head Up
4. Take the Wheel
5. Dancing in Bed
6. Windswept Street (1978)
Side B
1. Johnny’s Coming Home
2. At the Chateau
3. Work
4. Giving it Up
5. I Know Where I’m Going

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Nick Weymouth