Unknown Mortal Orchestra (Cambridge Junction)

Wednesday 30 August 2023
Cambridge Junction
Unknown Mortal Orchestra announce their first tour in 4 years

Buy Tickets

Tickets are not on sale for this event yet.

In partnership with The Junction and Green Mind Promotions.

Due to unforeseen circumstances, the Unknown Mortal Orchestra performance on Wednesday 30 August will be moving to the Cambridge Junction. We apologise for any inconvenience caused. 

All tickets will remain valid for the new venue.  If you have seating or accessibility requirements, we will endeavour to accommodate them, simply contact tickets@junction.co.uk or call

01223 511511'

Unknown Mortal Orchestra announces the release of the previously-teased forthcoming double album V, due March 17th via Jagjaguwar. Conceived in Palm Springs, California between the dry freeways and the lush coastline of Hilo, Hawaii, V is led by Hawaiian-New Zealand musician Ruban Nielson and draws from the rich traditions of West Coast AOR, classic hits, weirdo pop and Hawaiian Hapa-haole music. Today UMO also share the single, “Layla,” along with an accompanying cinematic video, directed by Vira-Lata, that serves as part one of a two part series documenting the adventures of two young women, here. In October of 2022, the group set the stage for the album with the first taste of V -- "I Killed Captain Cook" -- with a video featuring Nielson's mother, Deedee Aipolani Nielson, Miss Aloha Hula 1973.

With V, UMO's first double album, Nielson reframes and enriches the road that led him to this moment. During the pandemic’s early days, Nielson’s brother Kody flew from New Zealand to Palm Springs to help him with his recordings. One of their Hawaiian uncles began displaying health issues, and Nielson realized he was facing a sharper and more acute sense of mortality. To be with him, he put aside his recordings and helped his mother and another of her brothers move from New Zealand and Portland, respectively, to Hawai'i. He reunited with his brother at his cousin's wedding in Hawai'i and together they traveled back to Palm Springs, where the fourteen singalong anthems, cinematic instrumentals, and mischievous pop songs in V were brought together with the help of his father, Chris Nielson (saxophone/flute), and longstanding UMO member Jake Portrait.

A primary goal of V for Nielson was to make music and art that transcends notions of clout and cultural currency while also aiming to inject having fun back into the process of creating music. For Nielson, V is about having fun while making music and art and by doing so, he reclaims taste as a personal part of selfhood, propelling UMO to new creative heights.

 

Event type: