Albert Road

Album: This Could Be Texas (2024)
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Songfacts®:

  • Albert Road, the titular setting of this song, is a real street in Colne, Lancashire - the hometown of English Teacher frontwoman Lily Fontaine. She details fragmented childhood anecdotes, the sting of prejudice, and the strange, bittersweet feeling of not entirely belonging to the place you've called home.

    "When people ask where I'm from, I usually say I'm mixed race: half Yorkshire, half Lancashire," Fontaine quipped. "It lets me sidestep the potential connotations of that question, which vary wildly depending on who's asking."

    Colne, she said, feels like a microcosm of contradiction. "One end of Albert Road is cold, underfunded, and uninspiring; the other is warm at night, alive with music. That pretty much sums up how I look back on the place I lived for 19 years."
  • The song balances sharp social critique with surprising tenderness, offering a compassionate lens on small-town bigotry.

    "For me, Colne is everything, simply because it's the place I've lived the longest," Fontaine told Mojo magazine. "It's a stereotypical ex-mill town, very white. My brother and I were some of the only non-white kids at school. Even if it wasn't outright offensive language, people would say stupid things. I wrote 'Albert Road' around the time we had to move because our neighbors were giving us trouble - because of the color of our skin."
  • "Albert Road" was written by English Teacher and produced by Marta Salogni, known for her work with artists like Björk, Bon Iver, and M.I.A.
  • Sarah Oglesby and the band's own Douglas Frost directed the music video. We see Fontaine roam through a pub, brushed aside by unfriendly patrons as the atmosphere shifts from stark reality to something eerily ghostly.

    Near the end, Fontaine watches a TV screen showing her teenage self in a school performance. She smiles and cries at the same time - encapsulating the song's bittersweet tone, caught between love and alienation for the town that shaped her.

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