Arts

On my radar: Alexis Taylor’s cultural highlights | Hot Chip

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Born in 1980, Alexis Taylor is the lead vocalist and keyboardist/guitarist of synthpop band Hot Chip. He formed the group with Joe Goddard while at school in Putney, London; he went on to study English at Cambridge. Hot Chip’s debut album was released in 2004 and its follow-up, The Warning, was shortlisted for the Mercury prize; their most recent is 2019’s critically acclaimed A Bath Full of Ecstasy. Taylor’s sixth solo album, Silence, is released on AWAL on 17 September; the album launch will be at the Rio Cinema, London, on 16 September. He lives in London with his wife and daughter.

1. Exhibition

Use Hearing Protection: The Early Years of Factory Records, Science and Industry Museum, Manchester

The Vox Phantom VI teardrop guitar owned by Joy Division’s Ian Curtis.
The Vox Phantom VI teardrop guitar owned by Ian Curtis. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian

Recently, I went to this immersive overview of the history of Factory Records and the Hacienda nightclub. It’s a deep archival dig through memorabilia, ephemera, photographs and instruments. It goes way beyond music; there’s graphic design by Peter Saville, which is bold and arresting and immediate. There are handwritten letters and the stage set-up for Joy Division. It was very interactive; I really enjoyed being able to make a new mix of Love Will Tear Us Apart using the mixing desk there and the stems of that music.

2. Poetry

Selected Poems 1923-1967 by Jorge Luis Borges

Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges in Milan, 1980.
Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges in Milan, 1980. Photograph: Dino Fracchia/Alamy

I have often read Borges’s short stories, collections such as Labyrinths, but I was unfamiliar with his poetry until recently, when I was lent this book by my mum. His essays and short stories are clever and technically brilliant and sometimes a bit magical. These poems are a bit less like that; they’re more emotionally open. He reminds me of somebody like Cavafy, the Greek poet – they seem to be able to sum up what poetry and art can mean to the person who’s making art and say it in a way that is fairly vivid and easy to understand.

3. Television

Brooklyn Nine-Nine (Netflix)

Watch a trailer for the final season of Brooklyn Nine-Nine

I’m sure lots of people will have heard of this comedy, but I only discovered it six weeks ago and I didn’t know any of the actors in it. I watch it with my wife and daughter every day. My daughter’s 12 and it doesn’t seem too adult for her, but it’s still really, really funny. I enjoy how all the characters in it are likable and make me want to see how their relationships develop, a bit like with Friends, but I never really found that very funny..

4. Podcast

Broken Record

Rick Rubin, host of Broken Record podcast.
Rick Rubin, host of Broken Record podcast. Photograph: Pushkin.fm

This is long-form interviews with musicians, hosted by producer Rick Rubin, and it takes very seriously the art of making records. It’s easy for me to focus on artists I like and know a lot about, but with this podcast I can learn about somebody such as Barry Gibb from the Bee Gees, who I’ve listened to but not in great depth. I came away from it feeling fascinated by his career and wanting to delve deeper than I’d ever done before.

5. Art

Matthew Barney: Redoubt, Hayward Gallery, London

Matthew Barney, Redoubt, 2018
Photograph: ©Matthew Barney, courtesy Gladstone Gallery, New York and Brussels, and Sadie Coles HQ, London. Photo: Hugo Glendinning

I’d been slightly starved of the art gallery experience for the past year and a half – this was the first show I went to since Covid hit. I used to watch Matthew Barney’s Cremaster Cycle films in the early 2000s and it was nice to go back to his art again after a long break. There was a very cinematic art film about people looking for a wolf in the Idaho Rockies. Around the rest of the gallery, you can look at these huge sculptures that relate to scenes from the film and they are quite alien-looking and strange. I found it amazing.

6. Food

Cocktail Beer Ramen + Bun, Manchester

Vegan ramen from Cocktail Beer Ramen + Bun.
Vegan ramen from Cocktail Beer Ramen + Bun. Photograph: Instagram/@cbrb_mcr

Two friends of mine took me here, in Manchester’s Northern Quarter, and the food was really, really good. I’m vegan, but the menu included a bit of everything and you didn’t feel like you were just having a simplified version of something. Ramen is often about the broth having a good depth to it, and I haven’t really had a good vegan one before, but their green ramen was the best I’ve ever had; it was full of green vegetables, with interesting flavours put together. Everything felt really well balanced and there was a nice spiciness to certain dishes. We were happy customers.

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