Pre-order “Third” boxset
Mar15
You can pre-order it from the official site here
* USB features the album, and 5 films
Double vinyl album
Etched 12” vinyl of ‘Machine Gun’
Limited edition print from Nick Uff
The 5 videos are:
* ‘The Truly Spectacular Universal Conference Film’ (film)
‘The Rip at Mr Wolfe’s’ (film)
‘Ade’s House’ (film)
‘Machine Gun’ (film)
‘We Carry On’ (film)
Watch new “Machine Gun” video here (you have to sign up and login first).
Finally, the official Portishead website has been updated with videos, shop and content. Also, a new forum has been created in order to control spam messages (it was about time!), all you have to do is to sign up to the new forum.
After nearly a decade on hiatus, Portishead return this year with a new album: Third. The new collection of songs, surprisingly enough their third, hasn’t been released yet and has hardly been heard by anyone, but you can hear the seminal trip hop band perform it live in Berlin next week, courtesy of Guardian/Music.
From the official blog: “Our apologies to anybody disappointed by our recently announced tour not coming close to where you live. We know many cities are missing but we’re unable to add more shows this year due to personal reasons. Hopefully we’ll be able to get to Australia, New Zealand, the US and everywhere else we’ve missed at some point”.
also says about Coachella Festival: “They’ve been asking us for quite a few years, it seems like a good place to play, being out in the desert, and it was started by what seems to be some pretty cool people.”

The very German-sounding »We Carry On« sees Geoff Barrow and Adrian Utley clashing Joy Division with Techno beats and Blixa Bargeld guitars. Most of all, however, I detect several references to fairly cheesy Progressive Rock – as played by the likes of Nektar or Embryo in the 1970s. Here, these references actually sound more like excerpts from the soundtracks of amazing horror B-movies. One of the album’s most interesting new tracks, »Magic Doors«, reverts to the old DJ method: Portishead take a Funk beat and slow it down, pitch it right down to half-speed, then add one of Beth Gibbons mournful litanies. In this, Portishead follow the lead of Led Zeppelin who, a few decades earlier, took Blues numbers from the 1930s and slowed them down to half their speed”.