James Blake's last album, Overgrown, was released over three years ago. Now, the musician appears to have hinted at the potential title and artwork for a new project. Today, Blake retweeted several photos of a four-panel London mural featuring the phrase "The Colour in Anything." The mural was painted by Sir Quentin Blake, who's best known for illustrating the work of beloved children's author Roald Dahl (Matilda, James and the Giant Peach. A spokesperson for Blake declined to comment, but one of the musician's associates, 1-800 Dinosaur Crew's Dan Foat, favorited a fan tweet speculating on a possible connection to the musician's new LP. (Blake tentatively titled the album Radio Silence last year.) The Facebook page for 1-800-Dinosaur also posted the image. Check out images of the mysterious mural below.
Blake's released several new songs over the past few months. The musician unveiled "Modern Soul" on BBC Radio 1 back in February, followed by "RPG" with UK rapper Trim. Earlier this month, he shared the new track "Timeless."
This just in: mysterious Quentin Blake billboards going up in Great Eastern St, London EC2...! http://pic.twitter.com/a3rGDPnFcG
— Sir Quentin Blake HQ (@QuentinBlakeHQ) April 28, 2016
Read Pitchfork's interview with James Blake.
Watch James Blake perform at Pitchfork Music Festival Paris 2014:
via Zoe Camp
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