
We thought we should do something positive with free time, say The Black Keys on scrapped tour as duo open up on album
BACK TO BLACK We thought we should do something positive with free time, say The Black Keys on scrapped tour as duo open up on album
BY rights, I shouldn't really be talking to The Black Keys duo, Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney.
But here they are on a Zoom call with me to discuss their thirteenth studio album, No Rain, No Flowers.
Advertisement
3
The Black Keys discuss their thirteenth studio album, No Rain, No Flowers
Credit: Supplied
3
Last September, The Black Keys were supposed to start a North American arena tour in support of their previous album
Credit: Supplied
The 11 tracks are coming kicking and screaming into the sunlight earlier than expected — and for good reason.
Last September, The Black Keys were supposed to start a North American arena tour in support of their previous album, Ohio Players, noted for songs written with Noel Gallagher and Beck.
But, to their dismay, the dates were scrapped, prompting the pair to fire their management team.
Without going into detail, Auerbach says: 'The first thing I wanted to do was kill somebody and the second thing I wanted to do was kill somebody.'
Advertisement
Carney adds: 'I don't want to get into it too much because we've gotten letters telling us not to talk about it by one of the most powerful people in the music industry.
'We got f***ed by the person who was supposed to be looking out for us.
'So, because of some bad advice, we were left with no plans for the summer. We had to take one on the chin.'
The situation was a rare mis-step in The Black Keys' upward trajectory, which stretches back nearly 25 years.
Advertisement
Starting out in a dingy basement in Akron, Ohio, childhood friends Auerbach and Carney took their exhilarating mix of bluesy garage rock to the world stage, drawing on soul, hip hop, psychedelia, you name it, along the way.
Their new album, however, is the product of unplanned time on their hands. Still smarting from losing their tour, they convened at Auerbach's Easy Eye Sound studio in his adopted hometown of Nashville — and set about turning adversity into triumph.
Scots promoter tells how an armada of Oasis fans arrived by boats and ripped up fences to attend iconic Balloch bash
'Reminder of the power of our music'
'We realised that maybe we'd better do something positive with this free time,' says the singer/guitarist.
'So we dove head first into working with people we'd never met and trying things we'd never tried before as a band. Ultimately, it really helped us.'
Advertisement
For drummer Carney, it was a natural reaction to what had happened.
'When Dan and I are not on the road, we're in the studio,' he says.
'So we thought, 'Let's just get back in there and reboot'.'
One thing that remains undiminished is the cast-iron bond between Auerbach and Carney.
Advertisement
The latter affirms: 'We've been doing this together for almost 25 years — from the struggle to the big s**t.
We got f***ed... so we thought we should do something positive
Carney
'Dealing with being broke, dealing with getting money, headlining Coachella, dealing with getting married, getting divorced, having kids, we've been through it all.
'As screwed up as last year was, it had very little to do with us so we got back on it, to prove to ourselves what we can do.'
As we speak, The Black Keys have been back on tour — on this side of the Atlantic.
Advertisement
Carney says it can be 'brutal chasing the festivals, sleeping on the bus or in hotel rooms.
'But getting out here and getting in front of these crowds has been the biggest reminder of the power of our music.
'Seeing the fans flip out has helped us to get our heads out of music-business bulls*t and back into what it's all about'.
Auerbach agrees: 'The show in London [at Alexandra Palace] was the biggest headliner we've ever played.
Advertisement
'It was great after the year we had. Whatever happens, we know the fans are still there for us.'
Another thrill was playing Manchester's Sounds Of The City festival two days before the first Oasis homecoming gig at the city's Heaton Park.
'The atmosphere was electric. Our audience was so up for it,' says Auerbach.
Noel and Liam are both incredible — we're really happy for them
Auerbach
He credits Oasis with lifting the mood. 'I feel like they've transformed the continent. We've never seen anything like it.'
Advertisement
And he couldn't resist visiting the Oasis Adidas store. 'I had one of the black soccer jerseys made — Oasis on the front and AUERBACH on the back. Had to do it, man, they're the kings.'
It was in 2023 that The Black Keys visited Toe Rag Studios in Hackney, East London, to write three songs with Noel Gallagher, who they describe as 'the chord lord'.
Auerbach says: 'It was amazing. We just sat in a circle with our instruments and we worked things up from nowhere.
'Not too long after that we played a song with Liam [in Milan] and hung out with him afterwards. He gave us some really good advice about our setlist.
Advertisement
'Noel and Liam are both incredible — we're really happy for them.'
'We'd never written with a piano player'
We return to the subject of their new album, No Rain, No Flowers, which involved a new approach for The Black Keys.
Instead of big-name guests like Noel and Beck and, before them, ZZ Top's Billy Gibbons, they turned to acclaimed songwriters — the unsung heroes — for their collaborative process.
They welcomed into their world Rick Nowels (Madonna, Stevie Nicks, Lana Del Rey), Scott Storch (Dr Dre, Nas) and Daniel Tashian (Kacey Musgraves).
Advertisement
Auerbach had encountered Nowels while producing Lana Del Rey's 2014 third album Ultraviolence and had long been impressed with his keyboard skills.
He says: 'We'd never written with a piano player before. After 20-plus years in the band, it was cool to try something new in the studio.'
Carney adds: 'The way we worked with each one of these people was completely different.
'With Daniel, for instance, we'd start with a jam session. With Rick, it was all about getting the title of the song.'
Advertisement
And Auerbach again: 'Scott's all about instrumentation. He didn't want to think about the words. He just lets you do that stuff afterwards.'
One of the co-writes with Nowels is the life-affirming title track which begins the album.
With lines like, 'Baby, the damage is done/It won't be long 'til we're back in the sun', you could be forgiven for thinking it reflects on the band's recent woes.
Auerbach says it does, but only up to a point. 'It started with the title and we built it from there.
Advertisement
'We tend to shy away from diary-type songs. It gives us 'the ick' when it sounds like somebody's reading from their diary.
'But there's a lot of truth in the song. It's us trying to be positive, which maybe wasn't how we were feeling.
'It was a nice thought to write a positive anthem but still have blood in the eye.'
If The Black Keys' go-to sound has been the blues, this album is remarkable for its funky, airy and soulful vibe.
Advertisement
Auerbach says: 'We were heavily influenced by soul growing up, maybe more than anything, and it really shows.
'With us, it's all about the feel. When we started out, we didn't know what the hell we were doing, but we knew when it felt right.'
Another strong touchstone has been hip-hop, which is why Auerbach and Carney are thrilled to have worked with Scott Storch, another dazzling keyboard player, who started out in the Roots and went on to work with Dr Dre, 50 Cent, Beyonce and Nas.
'We are a product of where we were raised,' affirms Auerbach. 'We grew up in the golden age of hip- hop. That's what pop music was for us.
Advertisement
'The first time I heard the Geto Boys was at the middle- school dance and it affected us.
That's the s**t on those blues records I love so much. You hear Son House grunting when he's playing slide guitar
Auerbach
'But then my mom's family played bluegrass — I would listen to my uncles sing. And when The Stanley Brothers sing, it's white soul music. I love it all.'
As for Storch, Auerbach continues: 'We've obsessed over videos of him since we were in high school. Seeing him play all the parts of his hits makes our jaws hit the floor.
'You can hear Scott physically grunting'
'The idea of getting him in the studio seemed crazy because he seemed like a larger-than-life figure.'
Advertisement
Auerbach was mesmerised by Storch when he arrived at Easy Eye Sound.
He says: 'Scott's a real player, an absolute musical savant. As a hip-hop producer, he tends to spend 99.9 per cent of the time in the control room.
'But we have all these acoustic pianos, harpsichords and analogue synthesisers. He was in heaven, and so were we watching him go from keyboard to keyboard.
'On Babygirl, he's on an acoustic piano with microphones and you can hear him physically grunting in time with his playing. That's got to be a first for Scott Storch on record.
Advertisement
'That's the s**t on those blues records I love so much. You hear Son House grunting when he's playing slide guitar.'
The No Rain, No Flowers album is loaded with hook-laden songs — the exhilarating rocker Man On A Mission, the psychedelic Southern rock swirl of A Little Too High.
One explanation for their eclectic approach is The Black Keys' regular Record Hang in Nashville, which involves Auerbach and Carney hosting all-vinyl DJ dance parties.
For these, they scour online marketplaces and record shops for obscure but revelatory old 45s.
Advertisement
Carney explains: 'We end up exposing ourselves to thousands of songs that somehow we've never heard.
'It's really cool to be so deep into our career and uncovering all this incredible music. It's totally reinvigorating — particularly when one of us finds a record that the other hasn't heard and it's a banger.' So check out Carney's discovery Nobody Loves Me But My Mama by Johnny Holiday, which he describes as 'f*ing insane — psychobilly fuzz rock'.
Then there's Auerbach's fave, Yeah Yeah by Blackrock, 'a rare 45 instrumental which rearranged our minds. It still hits like crazy'.
We just fell right into it, started playing it and luckily we were recording
Auerbach
With The Black Keys, you always get a sense of passion for their craft, and for other people's.
Advertisement
Auerbach says: 'Pat and I were talking about this earlier — music can hypnotise you. You can use it for good or for evil. It's a very powerful tool.'
And Carney: 'It's my biggest passion and it has been since I was 11.
'Sensitive about what we listen to'
'I also think about the delicate balance you need when you do it for a living. You're taking the thing you love the most but you never want to ruin it for yourself.
'Dan and I are very sensitive about what we listen to. We were at a music festival in a spot in between seven stages. It sounded horrible. I said, 'This is the kind of thing that could make me hate music'.'
Advertisement
Finally, we talk about another of their own songs, the sublime, festival-primed anthem Neon Moon, which closes No Rain, No Flowers.
Written with Daniel Tashian, Auerbach modestly calls it a 'first-take jam' but that doesn't really do it justice.
'I think it just started with the 'neon moon' lyric,' he says. 'We just fell right into it, started playing it and luckily we were recording.'
As the song gets into its stride, he sings: 'Don't let yourself get down too long.'
Advertisement
It's a line that The Black Keys have taken to heart.
THE BLACK KEYS
No Rain, No Flowers
★★★★☆
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Irish Sun
an hour ago
- The Irish Sun
I was struck by collapsing metal fence at UK beach amusement park – all I could hear was children screaming
Megan Cavanagh says she heard the screams from the children on the ride THEME PARK HORROR I was struck by collapsing metal fence at UK beach amusement park – all I could hear was children screaming A MUM says she was hit by a collapsing metal fence while enjoying a day out at an amusement park with her two young children. Single mum Megan Cavanagh had taken her kids to the Coney Beach funfair in Porthcawl, Wales, on Wednesday but it ended in a terrifying ordeal. 5 Megan Cavanagh, 24, claims the fence fell straight on top of her Credit: WalesOnline/Media Wales 5 Pictures show adults helping children off the ride after it 'derailed' Credit: Wales News Service Advertisement 5 13 children and one adult sustained minor injuries in the accident Credit: Wales News Service The single mother had arrived at the seaside funfair around 5pm on August 13, hoping to enjoy the rides and attractions with her young children and some family friends. However, not long into their visit Megan had to step away from the park after her young autistic daughter became unsettled by the loud noises. After a brief time away she re-joined her group near the Wacky Worm ride – a rollercoaster described as "the perfect first thrill ride for the kids". Advertisement "I was just minding my own business," Megan said. 'I was standing with my back to the ride, talking to my friends, when it happened. It was all so sudden. 'We just heard this massive bang and children started screaming.' According to Megan the metal fence separating the ride from spectators collapsed unexpectedly – falling on top of her. Advertisement 'The fence fell straight on top of me, hitting my back,' she said. 'I managed to push my friend's pram out of the way, which was right next to me. "I pushed the fence off myself and when I looked up all I could see were kids on the ride screaming.' Terrifying moment Scots carnival ride 'flies off track' with kids inside Megan added: "Parents were jumping on trying to get their kids off – it was awful. "I'm just grateful I took my daughter away earlier because otherwise we would have been on that ride too.' Advertisement Megan said she was checked by staff and advised to attend hospital if the pain continued but chose to return home, citing a lack of childcare and describing the pain at the time as 'just aches'. South Wales Police later confirmed that 13 children and one adult sustained minor injuries, with some sent to hospital for further treatment. Megan added: 'I'm planning to go to the doctor. I struggled to sleep last night from the pain so I am going to see how I feel. 'None of this is what you'd expect from what is supposed to be a family trip out.' In a statement, Coney Beach Pleasure Park said previously it was instructed by police to clear the site after an incident on a "third-party ride" not owned by the park. Advertisement It apologised for the disruption and said it will provide refunds to affected customers as soon as possible. A statement added: "Due to an incident on a third-party ride not owned by Coney Beach, we were instructed by the police to clear the site for further investigation. "We apologise for the disruption and will be providing refunds to affected guests as soon as possible. We will be releasing instructions on refunds shortly. "We thank you for your cooperation." The Sun Online has contacted the amusement park for an update. Advertisement 5 One of the cars on the ride appeared to be suspended in the air, off the tracks Credit: Media Wales


Extra.ie
4 days ago
- Extra.ie
Oasis in '97: 'You know what Pop stands for? Paddies on the Piss'
Ahead of Oasis's sold-out Croke Park shows on August 16 & 17, we're taking a deep dive into the Hot Press archives – to hear Liam and Noel's incredible story in their own words… After topping the Irish and UK charts again in October with Be Here Now, Oasis returned to Dublin for two pre-Christmas Point Depot shows, which, much to Noel's chagrin, didn't go as planned. Indeed, I left backstage, genuinely thinking it might be curtains for the band… 'Did you hear about our kid? He's not even turning up tonight. He's got a sore throat, so the spawny cunt's going to be sat watching the telly while us fucking four idiots have to go out there and get bottled off, most probably. 'I got informed at about three o'clock. Somebody said, 'Liam's not coming so you'll have to do it.' ''Er, excuse me. I don't know if you've noticed, but I'm not the singer'. ''No, no, no, you've gotta do the gig or there'll be a riot'. 'I'll probably get away with it tonight, but I'm not as good a singer as he is. I'd much rather be stood in front of me amplifier doing the odd backing-vocal. The c**t! I tell you what I'm tempted to do – go on stage and tell the crowd his room number so they can go round the hotel and get their money back off him.' 'I'm bored and can't be bothered writing music anymore. The bigger the monster becomes, the harder it is to manoeuvre. I've started thinking that maybe it's time to scale it down – y'know, shed some of the weight or perhaps try new things altogether. I haven't been writing recently 'cos I don't on tour, but when we had time to kill beforehand, I got this awful block which I've never really had before. 'To be honest, I don't know if I can be arsed putting out another rock 'n' roll record for a couple of years. We've done three LPs in four years plus B-sides – in other words, 60 songs – which is more than some bands produce in 10 years. I just about deserve a fucking break.' The mood in the camp was altogether cheerier in July when our man Neil McCormick was privy to Oasis supporting U2 on the North American leg of the PopMart tour. 'You know what Pop stands for?' Noel joked. 'Paddies on the Piss!' Noel to Bono: 'Bands won't admit they like you, right, and you're the greatest band in the world. And the only band that will actually come out and admit that is the next greatest band in the world!' Liam: 'If me mam could see me now! She'd say: 'You done good, lad, you done good'.' Liam: 'This is the first time I've seen U2. Now I understand! It's . . . phwoarghghghgh! Fuckin' mad, man. Mad!'


RTÉ News
5 days ago
- RTÉ News
Out & Proud: Felispeaks on her love letter to the Black, Irish & queer communities
On this week's Out & Proud, poet, performer and playwright Felicia Olusanya aka Felispeaks sits down with Trevor Keegan. A self-described Black, Irish, queer culchie, Felicia's latest project, Octopus Children, is a love letter to those who sit at that intersection. The piece will debut as part of the Dublin Fringe Festival in September and is produced by This Is Pop Baby, the powerhouse collective behind WAKE, which saw Felicia hold audiences in the palm of their hand as narrator. When asked what Octopus Children is about, they say: " Octopus Children is layered for me ... it's a combination of everything that I've either lived or attempted to live. And it's a combination of memory and imagination. It's a dreamlike landscape. It's a poetic landscape, but it's a coming-of-age story, and it's a love letter to the Black, Irish and queer communities." Making sense of those labels took time: "I think I've been in a state of sorting for a lot of my life, like deciphering what each meant and what weight I decide to carry with each and then accepting it and being comfortable with it." Through their writing, they were able to make sense of it all, words provided a safe space to experiment, tease things out and offload. "Like I was writing about gender identity before I knew that I was writing about gender identity ... I didn't have those terms for a really long time ..." As their conversation continues, Trevor and Felicia talk about everything from being spiritually queer, to God's pronouns and how to push past bravado into brave. Octopus Children is at the Project Arts Centre from the 5th to the 14th of September.