“A drugged out Fleetwood Mac, Pink Floyd..s meddle, the full 70..s Santana, Arthur Russell, Laurel Canyon, Air..s Moon Safari, JJ Cale wandering around Glastonbury at 5am, Talk Talk, Madchester, The Verve..s Northern Soul. This is the only way of desribing the step up that A Mountain Of One have taken...”
Rough Trade (UK)
“The New Epicentre of Psychedelic Rock Music...."
The Guardian (UK)
"Statuesque and epic- Big things to come... The sound of England dreaming”
ID Magazine (UK)
“I was totally transfixed when i first heard A Mountain Of One – dropping everything and demanding to know what it was – timeless beautiful music”
Rob Da Bank (BBC Radio1/UK)
“AMO1 have built their own stairway to heaven”
Time Out (UK)
“AMO1, in the footsteps of Fleetwood Mac, Pink Floyd - Roxy Music for the 21st century”
Knaack Magazine (Belgium)
“London's most exciting band for ages”
Spex (Germany)
“A Mountain Of One have already been compared to Arthur Lee, Santana & Pink Floyd. “Which is nice in one respect, but also kind of ludicrous... and yet understandable.”
Fact Magazine (UK)
“One of the best and most individualistic British debut albums in ages”
The Sunday Times (UK)
“Fantastic Record – already an Album Of The Year”
Groove Magazine (Germany)
"Institute Of Joy" looks set to be “One Of The Albums Of The Year” and a bona fide modern day classic. Album Of The Week!
Piccadilly Records (UK)
"Institute Of Joy" full of hypnotizing emotion, driving drums, pastoral folk, gospel choirs and voodoo healings for the soul - Album Of The Week!
Rough Trade Records (UK)
“Lie Awake - Psych Summer Anthem”
NME (UK)
INSTITUTE OF JOY
Release Date : UK sep 07, World sep 14
A MOUNTAIN OF ONE
BIOGRAPHY
Ask yourself, what is it you want from music? If you want your favourite artists to
provoke comforting feelings of familiarity; to construct sounds that are commonplace and
rooted in the everyday or to make music that is as disposable as a Chicken Tikka ready
meal for one, then you might as well stop reading now.
If, however, you want music that takes you out of yourself; that inspires you; that is bold,
heroic and epic and, especially in these troubled times, allows you to escape the fraught
reality of the everyday, then allow us to introduce you to the epoch-defining sounds of A
Mountain Of One, and their monumental album, the aptly-titled Institute Of Joy.
The incredible work of two London-based musicians and producers, Zeben Jameson and
Mo Morris, A Mountain Of One aren’t interested in making music that is easily listened
to and easily forgotten. Rather, their ambitious and transcendental sonics are designed for
ultimate excitement and maximum fulfilment.
And it’s this belief in the restorative properties of music that is etched into every groove,
every beat, every vocal turn, every nuance of their mood altering and mood enhancing
album. Although Mo and Zeb’s musical paths first crossed a decade ago, it wasn’t until
2006 that A Mountain Of One (“It’s about inner belief and inner strength,” explains Mo,
“It’s about empowering you by listening to the music. It sounds a bit wanky, but that’s
what it is really”) came into existence. And really it’s a union made in musical heaven,
Zeb’s astounding musical talents (a multi-instrumentalist, he’s toured the world with the
likes of Oasis, Tricky and The Pretenders) coalescing perfectly with Mo’s inventive
widescreen vision.
“I think we were both in a similar headspace,” says Zeb. “We were desperate to get out of
the situation we were in and determined to prove to ourselves that we could be the men
we wanted to be.” Harnessing this frustration and this desire to create rich emotional
music dripping with experience, the duo immediately set to work on what would be a
remarkable opening salvo of EPs. Their first release, EP1, commonly referred to as Silver
(which now goes for silly money on those internet auction sites) had the music press
doing cartwheels in an effort to rain down critical hosannas on the band, while Rough
Trade captured their exquisite timelessness when they said: ‘A drugged out Fleetwood
Mac… Pink Floyd’s Meddle… the full 70s Santana… Arthur Russell… Laurel Canyon…
Air’s Moon Safari… JJ Cale… Talk Talk… Madchester… the first Beta Band EP… The
Verve’s A Northern Soul.’
Their second EP, EP2 or Gold, released in 2007 was no less lauded (and will also set you
back a pretty penny). By now the duo had consolidated their live set, thus dispelling any
lingering doubts that A Mountain Of One were nothing less than an all encompassing 21st
Century psychedelic rock band. Due to the scarcity of these first two EPs they were
bought together under the banner Collected Works, which despite not being an album
proper shot to number 12 in Rough Trade’s Albums of the Year.
That said, Institute Of Joy will still knock you sideways when you hear it blasting from
your speakers for the first time. A bona fide modern day classic its vast scope, its
unapologetic vaulting ambition and the rich grandeur is undeniable. Taking in hypnotic
rock, pastoral folk, Krautrock, gospel and life-affirming soul this is a record aiming
straight for the heart.
“We had to be as ambitious as possible,” admits Mo. “It wouldn’t have made sense
otherwise – there wouldn’t have been any point being broke for four years and being
forced to rob pasties from supermarkets.” “It is,” says Zeb with stunning simplicity,
“nothing less than a crusade.”
And like an episode of The Simpsons, it’s multi-dimensional, working on numerous
layers. On one level it demands your attention, its musical tapestry urging you to engage.
And yet, it’s beautiful musicality, its otherworldly melodies are the perfect sonic tonic for
educated escapism.
“Zeb’s wife goes running to it,” says Mo. “And my mum listens to it in the car. And she
likes Will Young. Let’s put it like this, it’s not an album just for musos.” Indeed it’s not.
Mixed by Danton Supple (Coldplay) and Guy Massey (Spiritualized) and produced by
Mo and Zeb this is music that is as accessible as it is adventurous. Years of craftsmanship,
of learning and of experience have gone into making it, which makes sense when you
cock your ear to its hard won optimism and celebratory collectivism. For those that think
it’s inevitable that we’re all going to hell in a hand cart, listen up, A Mountain Of One
have delivered the perfect antidote. An Institute Of Joy indeed.
hello Zeb and Mo, thanks so much for getting in touch. nice to meet you. love your music! just my cup of tea. the clips on your page are amazing. thanks so much for sharing. i wish you lots of success! hugs from Munich, Matti Mental