Young Fathers have announced details of their second studio album, White Men Are Black Men Too.
Just four months ago, the Scottish band were awarded the prestigious Mercury Prize for their debut album, Dead.
Watch the video for 'I Heard' below
As The Guardian reports, they started recording their second LP during their 2014 world tour - in a hotel room in Illinois, a rehearsal space in Melbourne, a cellar in Berlin and their "normal hole in the ground basement" in Edinburgh.
Anticipating controversy over the album's name, the band released an email between the group and their management - which seems to be a response to management's attempts to change the name: "We are trying to cater to what other people might think, as if it’s a negative thing, which it’s not. We came at it from a different angle, a positive angle. it’s got issues of race and so what?
"Why should alarm bells start ringing, even though in general conversations race, politics, sex and religion are always the subject matter? Why should it be discussed behind closed doors and never confronted head on?"
White Men Are Black Men Too is scheduled for release on 6 April via Big Dada. Read the full email on the album's title below.
"I still prefer the first title by far and stand by it.
I’m aware of the points we’ve discussed but all that sounds like to me is, we are trying to cater to what other people might think, as if it’s a negative thing, which it’s not. We came at it from a different angle, a positive angle. it’s got issues of race and so what? Why should alarm bells start ringing, even though in general conversations race, politics, sex and religion are always the subject matter? Why should it be discussed behind closed doors and never confronted head on?
How do we help tackle one of the biggest hinderances in people’s lives and the world… by not putting the question forward and not letting people debate positively or negatively about the statement?
Motown music helped change the world, made it acceptable for blacks to be on radio and seen on TV, MJ did it too. Martin Luther King wanted equality and achieved it to some degree. But, after all that, are things equal in this world? FUCK NO. I still want to ask for it (equality) backed with the best music we’ve ever recorded. A pop album, our interpretation of what a pop album should be.
Weight with words, which is the title plus the pop sensibility of the songs (respectively).
I wanna stand for something which I helped make. Folk will complain about absolutely anything… Even if it’s it from the purest of intentions you just can’t win. We don’t make music to please other people or write certain lyrics to do so, either. Why start now?
When the title was first put forward everybody was excited and 100% there was no fear. That same commitment needs be carried on to make it work despite worries after it’s been digested."