
Rialto Neon & Ghosts Signs Vinyl LP White Colour 2025
Tracklist:
1. No One Leaves This Discotheque Alive
2. I Want You
3. Neon And Ghost Signs
4. Taking The Edge Off Me
5. Remembering to Forget
6. Car That Never Comes
7. Sandpaper Kisses
8. Cherry
9. Put You On Hold
10. Gone
Rialto release their first new album in 24 years, Neon and Ghost Signs via Fierce Panda Records. In this sordid clubland mode, Neon and Ghost Signs opens with āNo One Leaves This Discoteque Aliveā. Eliot casting himself as āthe hound of London town, where the sheets are stained with goldā in a lascivious Brel growl, out to ālose my headā and find love āin a perfect stormā. Itās a nocturnal party prowl that the album pursues with a passion.
Theirs is a reunion spurred on not so much by a longing for the past as an urgency to grab the best of life while they can. Six years ago, while holidaying in Spain, singer and song-writer Louis Eliot was rushed to hospital for extreme emergency surgery, mere hours from death. His full recovery was an epiphany. āWhat you might think is if you have a very close to death experience you want to start looking after yourself,ā he says. āI just went chasing full speed after my youth. I was just like, fuck it, I might not be here next week, I'm just going to dive in.ā
Part of Eliotās rebirth involved leaving behind a long-term relationship to immerse himself once more in Londonās late-night party scene. Part of it was the romance and anguish he found there. And part of it was realising that the songs that were emerging from this period ā songs of love and loss, hedonism and regret, set in wistful witching hours ā were a call from the past.
Rialto were a chart-topping, double-Platinum success in SE Asia and a highly acclaimed cult concern in the UK, but undoubtedly a band ahead of their aesthetic time. Following a second album Night on Earth in 2001 the band split and Eliot spread his wings. He became a regular collaborator with Grace Jones and Supergrassās Danny Goffey; as a songwriter his credits included the Ivor Novello winning āLeave Right Nowā for Will Young; he released a 2004 solo album and āa very rural sounding recordā as Louis Eliot And The Embers in 2010, and developed the 8,000 capacity Port Eliot Festival in Cornwall.
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Description
Tracklist:
1. No One Leaves This Discotheque Alive
2. I Want You
3. Neon And Ghost Signs
4. Taking The Edge Off Me
5. Remembering to Forget
6. Car That Never Comes
7. Sandpaper Kisses
8. Cherry
9. Put You On Hold
10. Gone
Rialto release their first new album in 24 years, Neon and Ghost Signs via Fierce Panda Records. In this sordid clubland mode, Neon and Ghost Signs opens with āNo One Leaves This Discoteque Aliveā. Eliot casting himself as āthe hound of London town, where the sheets are stained with goldā in a lascivious Brel growl, out to ālose my headā and find love āin a perfect stormā. Itās a nocturnal party prowl that the album pursues with a passion.
Theirs is a reunion spurred on not so much by a longing for the past as an urgency to grab the best of life while they can. Six years ago, while holidaying in Spain, singer and song-writer Louis Eliot was rushed to hospital for extreme emergency surgery, mere hours from death. His full recovery was an epiphany. āWhat you might think is if you have a very close to death experience you want to start looking after yourself,ā he says. āI just went chasing full speed after my youth. I was just like, fuck it, I might not be here next week, I'm just going to dive in.ā
Part of Eliotās rebirth involved leaving behind a long-term relationship to immerse himself once more in Londonās late-night party scene. Part of it was the romance and anguish he found there. And part of it was realising that the songs that were emerging from this period ā songs of love and loss, hedonism and regret, set in wistful witching hours ā were a call from the past.
Rialto were a chart-topping, double-Platinum success in SE Asia and a highly acclaimed cult concern in the UK, but undoubtedly a band ahead of their aesthetic time. Following a second album Night on Earth in 2001 the band split and Eliot spread his wings. He became a regular collaborator with Grace Jones and Supergrassās Danny Goffey; as a songwriter his credits included the Ivor Novello winning āLeave Right Nowā for Will Young; he released a 2004 solo album and āa very rural sounding recordā as Louis Eliot And The Embers in 2010, and developed the 8,000 capacity Port Eliot Festival in Cornwall.













