
The Yummy Fur Everybody Talks About The Weather Vinyl LP Due Out 25/09/26
The Yummy Fur - Everybody Talks About The Weather
Please note this is a pre-order item due for release 25th September, 2026
Tracklist:
1. Cogs
2. Unity Over Europe
3. Wanda
4. Semolina Ballerina
5. Blue Sunshine
6. Everybody Talks About The Weather
7. My Lasagne
8. Headphones
9. King of Nothing
10. Say Hello
The Yummy Furâs first album of new material in over 25 years is seductive and ambiguous; a fast-paced flip through scenes from art, myth, life and fantasy; a witty whole made from glittering scraps. The bandâs original incarnation â fronted by singer, songwriter and guitarist John McKeown from 1992 to 1999 â morphed from making quick-hit cartoon-art songs to Eno and Cale-influenced creepers, populated by characters from McKeownâs life in Glasgow and the films, books and poetry that he lived a parallel life through. Everybody Talks About The Weather delights in using every past iteration of the band as potent collage material: a melee of sounds and ideas existing at once, revealing themselves then dipping back into hiding. Recorded by the original core trio of McKeown, Brian MacDougall (guitar) and Paul Thomson(drums), Everybody Talks About The Weather comes 17 years after the band reformed for sporadic live shows, and seven years after the release of their sorta-greatest hits compilation Piggy Wings (Rock Action). Ten tracks long with nothing to spare, it is as condensed and vital as their best songs, with a new clarity of sound that allows their ambiguities to come into the light. The album begins with âCogsâ, a taunting inquisition from within. As McKeown stages a fight between his id and ego, the tension heats up between conversational guitar lines and minimalist repetition; threatening sing-song melody and real, palpable menace. The bandmembers are forced in tandem only to break apart, sustaining a genuine sense of just-hidden danger throughout the whole record â except, arguably, âHeadphonesâ, a looser moment which sees McKeown make an existential something out of nothing while waiting for someone in the car (âI should have brought a book.../My ears are bleeding from the compression on your albumâ)The songs are riots of reference: âUnity Over Europeâ is a slyly complex two act play about the Mitford sisters â Diana, Unity, and Nancy, in a wink to the YF canon â smashing tragic biographical detail together with allusions to Thomas Pynchon and Francis Bacon. Pynchon is also lifted to serve âBlue Sunshineâ, a collision of school shooters, serial killers and fictional fuck-ups (âFast forward to Compton/Fast forward to Pynchon/Fast forward to Columbine'â) whose buzzy guitar lines are taunting and confrontational like a smarmy teenager. The innocuous title of âMy Lasagneâ belies a song that exists in several time periods at once: a visit to see Guernica, 50 people with their backs to the portrait of DoraMaar; the time that Picasso painted from; the Reina Sofia and the dirty streets of the Malasaña; myth-making musicians and the myths theyâre riffing off overlapping and leering at each other. All this could be laboured in lesser hands, but cultural verbosity is second nature to The Yummy Fur, who transform all this source material into songs that are weird, sexy, funny and absurd. Meaning is not happily understood or flattened. Susan Sontag's essay Against Interpretation accompanied McKeown as he wrote this album, and sheâs paraphrased in âSemolina Ballerinaâ, the albumâs justification of artistic ambiguity. Thomsonâs motorik beat leads a gathering of back-and-forth instrumental phrases â including a wiry contribution on saxophone â embodying the futility of trying to parse something definitive from repeated action. âListen to the very first thing thatâs in your head,â Sontag-via-McKeown commands directly, then slinks sideways: âInterpretation is a conversation in an unmade bedâ The album features two more focused portraits, or at least The Yummy Furâs version of such a thing. âWandaâ merges the life of filmmaker Barbara Loden and the title character of her semi-autobiographical 1970 feature film, with Lodenâs then-husband Elia Kazan joining the fray of no-good men in her film. Itâs a mix of adaptation and avant-criticism, with McKeownâ swordplay and mannered pronunciation mirroring the way that non-fiction and fiction twist around each other in the song. The title track is a series of vignettes and impressions from the lives of the bandâs â90s inner circle, positing painter Mac McNaughton as a kind of Falstaffian ringleader. As with Piggy Wings and the recent single âNew T-Shirtâ, McNaughton painted the cover of Everybody Talks About The Weather â like the albumâs music, the image of a coy girl in a white dress is an uncanny amalgamation of styles, suggestions and references just out of reach, as though seen in an art museum in a dream. The album ends with two reads of the same frustration. âKing of Nothingâ is the closest The Yummy Fur will ever get to sludge-rock: the band melts together into a dusty, dreary haze as McKeown drowns in a drudgery of personal struggle (âTwo jumpers on in Babylon/And onlycats to talk toâ) and the rhythmic toppling of heroes (Rowlands, Duvall, Munro). The majority of visible dirt is cleaned off for âSay Helloâ, an uncharacteristic depiction of throwing the windows open after a dark night of the soul. Here, the situation is still cold and hard (âWhen the sun burns gold, but the heat never reaches your fingertipsâ) but it feels surmountable. Everybody Talks About The Weather is an unpredictable album from an unpredictable group, but ending on a moment of almost uncomplicated light is maybe its biggest surprise. - Claire Biddles (2026)
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Description
The Yummy Fur - Everybody Talks About The Weather
Please note this is a pre-order item due for release 25th September, 2026
Tracklist:
1. Cogs
2. Unity Over Europe
3. Wanda
4. Semolina Ballerina
5. Blue Sunshine
6. Everybody Talks About The Weather
7. My Lasagne
8. Headphones
9. King of Nothing
10. Say Hello
The Yummy Furâs first album of new material in over 25 years is seductive and ambiguous; a fast-paced flip through scenes from art, myth, life and fantasy; a witty whole made from glittering scraps. The bandâs original incarnation â fronted by singer, songwriter and guitarist John McKeown from 1992 to 1999 â morphed from making quick-hit cartoon-art songs to Eno and Cale-influenced creepers, populated by characters from McKeownâs life in Glasgow and the films, books and poetry that he lived a parallel life through. Everybody Talks About The Weather delights in using every past iteration of the band as potent collage material: a melee of sounds and ideas existing at once, revealing themselves then dipping back into hiding. Recorded by the original core trio of McKeown, Brian MacDougall (guitar) and Paul Thomson(drums), Everybody Talks About The Weather comes 17 years after the band reformed for sporadic live shows, and seven years after the release of their sorta-greatest hits compilation Piggy Wings (Rock Action). Ten tracks long with nothing to spare, it is as condensed and vital as their best songs, with a new clarity of sound that allows their ambiguities to come into the light. The album begins with âCogsâ, a taunting inquisition from within. As McKeown stages a fight between his id and ego, the tension heats up between conversational guitar lines and minimalist repetition; threatening sing-song melody and real, palpable menace. The bandmembers are forced in tandem only to break apart, sustaining a genuine sense of just-hidden danger throughout the whole record â except, arguably, âHeadphonesâ, a looser moment which sees McKeown make an existential something out of nothing while waiting for someone in the car (âI should have brought a book.../My ears are bleeding from the compression on your albumâ)The songs are riots of reference: âUnity Over Europeâ is a slyly complex two act play about the Mitford sisters â Diana, Unity, and Nancy, in a wink to the YF canon â smashing tragic biographical detail together with allusions to Thomas Pynchon and Francis Bacon. Pynchon is also lifted to serve âBlue Sunshineâ, a collision of school shooters, serial killers and fictional fuck-ups (âFast forward to Compton/Fast forward to Pynchon/Fast forward to Columbine'â) whose buzzy guitar lines are taunting and confrontational like a smarmy teenager. The innocuous title of âMy Lasagneâ belies a song that exists in several time periods at once: a visit to see Guernica, 50 people with their backs to the portrait of DoraMaar; the time that Picasso painted from; the Reina Sofia and the dirty streets of the Malasaña; myth-making musicians and the myths theyâre riffing off overlapping and leering at each other. All this could be laboured in lesser hands, but cultural verbosity is second nature to The Yummy Fur, who transform all this source material into songs that are weird, sexy, funny and absurd. Meaning is not happily understood or flattened. Susan Sontag's essay Against Interpretation accompanied McKeown as he wrote this album, and sheâs paraphrased in âSemolina Ballerinaâ, the albumâs justification of artistic ambiguity. Thomsonâs motorik beat leads a gathering of back-and-forth instrumental phrases â including a wiry contribution on saxophone â embodying the futility of trying to parse something definitive from repeated action. âListen to the very first thing thatâs in your head,â Sontag-via-McKeown commands directly, then slinks sideways: âInterpretation is a conversation in an unmade bedâ The album features two more focused portraits, or at least The Yummy Furâs version of such a thing. âWandaâ merges the life of filmmaker Barbara Loden and the title character of her semi-autobiographical 1970 feature film, with Lodenâs then-husband Elia Kazan joining the fray of no-good men in her film. Itâs a mix of adaptation and avant-criticism, with McKeownâ swordplay and mannered pronunciation mirroring the way that non-fiction and fiction twist around each other in the song. The title track is a series of vignettes and impressions from the lives of the bandâs â90s inner circle, positing painter Mac McNaughton as a kind of Falstaffian ringleader. As with Piggy Wings and the recent single âNew T-Shirtâ, McNaughton painted the cover of Everybody Talks About The Weather â like the albumâs music, the image of a coy girl in a white dress is an uncanny amalgamation of styles, suggestions and references just out of reach, as though seen in an art museum in a dream. The album ends with two reads of the same frustration. âKing of Nothingâ is the closest The Yummy Fur will ever get to sludge-rock: the band melts together into a dusty, dreary haze as McKeown drowns in a drudgery of personal struggle (âTwo jumpers on in Babylon/And onlycats to talk toâ) and the rhythmic toppling of heroes (Rowlands, Duvall, Munro). The majority of visible dirt is cleaned off for âSay Helloâ, an uncharacteristic depiction of throwing the windows open after a dark night of the soul. Here, the situation is still cold and hard (âWhen the sun burns gold, but the heat never reaches your fingertipsâ) but it feels surmountable. Everybody Talks About The Weather is an unpredictable album from an unpredictable group, but ending on a moment of almost uncomplicated light is maybe its biggest surprise. - Claire Biddles (2026)












