HOLY Moly & The Crackers make riotous party music for the masses – and the band are bringing their latest tour to their native North-East.

Their new album, Take A Bite, comes out next months, and it has been described as a concise, passionate take on folk, blues and indie rock.

Led by the euphoric lead single, All I Got Is You, Take A Bite combines pop song craft with stomping, four to the floor backing, demonstrating the Newcastle-based sextet’s commerciality and ambition, as well as their ability to tackle personal lyrical fare, led by vocalist Ruth Patterson.

Further adorning their naturally expressive take on British folk with sizeable dollops of rock 'n' soul, sharp indie-rock, vulnerable balladeering and festival-ready psychedelic trips towards the Middle East, Take A Bite sets its stall confidently in the space between the Gossip, Arctic Monkeys, the B52s and Gogol Bordello.

Working once again with producer Matt Terry (The Prodigy/The Enemy), the band – completed by Conrad Bird on vocals/guitar/trumpet, Rosie Bristow on accordion, Nick Tyler on electric guitar, Jamie Shields on bass and Tommy Evans on drums/backing vocals – created Take A Bite at VADA Studios in Warwickshire, where the band recorded their 2017 album Salem and their breakthrough track Cold Comfort Lane (which a year later featured in the end credits of 2018 summer blockbuster movie, Oceans 8).

This time around the recording process was marked by a shift in production technique from Matt Terry, who says: “Usually, you’ll record all the drum tracks and then all the bass tracks. But this time we recorded one song at a time and completely lived it."

The band even went one step further during the recording of the Byrds-influenced, folk-rock Can’t Get Enough, with producer Matt creating an immersive 60s experience in the studio.

“Matt’s mad," says Conrad. "For that one he made us dress up in 60s clothes, bandanas, suits, flares. And it was really silly, but it really got us to live it.”

And while the violin and the accordion remain, the whole thing feels more raw, with melodic choruses more in the vein of American rockers such as The Black Keys and Jack White, than the tweed and waistcoats of traditional UK folk.

Take A Bite reflects the diverse tastes of a band, comprised of six friends with six individual music tastes, who come together to make a sound greater than the sum of its parts.

Take a Bite is out on April 5

April 5 – Newcastle, Cluny

April 6 – Stockton, Georgian Theatre

W: www.holymolyandthecrackers.com