Oddfellows Casino


Oddfellow’s Casino are an English band based in Brighton. At the helm is singer-songwriter David Bramwell plus an ensemble of long-serving band members and occasional collaborators including Fujiya & Miyagi’s Steve Lewis, former Stereolab bassist Simon John’s and Grasscut’s Andrew Philipps.

Early history

In the mid-90s Bramwell recorded his first album with the band Luminous, produced and released by Shimmy-Disc’s maverick producer Kramer, before going solo in 2000 and forming Oddfellow’s Casino. Early releases on Leicester’s Pickled Egg Records included Yellow-Bellied Wonderland and Winter Creatures, drawing comparisons with Robert Wyatt, The Beta Band, Red House Painters and late-period Talk Talk. For the band’s third album, 2012’s The Raven’s Empire, Bramwell teamed up with producer and composer Andrew Philipps to create a record that was altogether bigger, darker and more orchestrated than what had come before. Reviews acknowledged a change in direction citing 'bubbling synths and ornate productions.' and 'occult incantation' . The single, Winter in a Strange Town was picked up by BBC 6Music’s Gideon Coe, Lauren Laverne and Cerys Matthews.

Later history

By the late noughties Bramwell was also becoming established as an author and radio presenter, making programmes for BBC Radio 3 and BBC Radio 4, and specialising in the weird and bizarre.
In 2014 Oddfellow’s Casino released their fourth studio album, The Water Between Us, followed by a collection of unreleased material, Dust, through At the Helm Records and France’s Microcultures. In 2017 their sixth album, Oh, Sealand, included the voice of comic book author Alan Moore, a song written to accompany the book Watling Street by author John Higgs and an unofficial national anthem for the independent principality of Sealand, in the North Sea. It received positive reviews, making fourth place in the top ten best albums of 2017 in Switzerland's LeTemps newspaper.
The International Times described Oh, Sealand as a ‘mixtures of ghostly folk and eerily urgent song craft. The beauty and elegance of both voice, lyric and melody is exceptional. These are the kind of songs the WickerMan’s Paul Giovanni might have written if he had lived to update his own template.' The Quietus’s Ben Graham described Oh, Sealand  as ‘joining the dots between Pentangle and The Pet Shop Boys, Basil Kirchin and British Sea Power.
In 2020 Oddfellow’s Casino marked their 20th anniversary with the announcement that they’d be releasing three albums over 12 months: a new album of songs, Burning! Burning!; an album and booklet of spoken word and music based on Bramwell's solo show, The Cult of Water, in collaboration with Alan Moore, Rough Trade Books and illustrator Pete Fowler, and a retrospective album called Oddfellow’s Casino Revisited. They continue to be, ‘a band who 'specialises in a gentle, wistful blend of folk, dream pop, hauntological sounds and maybe a hint of jazz.'.