
The Brand New Heavies’ Andrew Levy, left, Angela Ricci and Simon Bartholomew
ACID Jazz pioneers The Brand New Heavies are marking their 35th anniversary with a 12-date tour that takes in York Barbican on March 19 as their only Yorkshire destination.
From Dream On Dreamer, Midnight At The Oasis, Back To Love and Spend Some Time to Sometimes, You Are The Universe and You’ve Got A Friend, they created a fusion of jazz, funk and hip-hop that fuelled their chart and airplay domination en route to 2.5 million album sales.
Introducing themselves with their self-titled debut in 1990, followed by fellow Top 40 album Heavy Rhyme Experience, Vol. 1 in 1992, The Brand New Heavies exploded with 1994’s Brother Sister, peaking at number four, followed by further Top Five entrant Shelter in 1997.
Now, founder members Simon Bartholomew, vocals and guitar, and Andrew Levy, bass and keyboards, will be joined on tour once more by Angela Ricci, vocalist with the Ealing band since 2018.
“We can’t wait to hit the road across the UK again!” said Simon and Andrew, when announcing the tour. “There’s nothing quite like the connection we feel when we play these songs together. Celebrating 35 years of The Brand New Heavies has been incredible, and this tour is all about sharing that joy, funk and love with everyone who’s been part of the journey – old friends and new faces alike.”
Rolling back to when school friends Simon, Andrew and Jan Kincaid formed the band, they needed a name, “In a nutshell, it was the pressure of being about to sign a record deal with Chrysalis. We were in my basement, weren’t we, in Hackney?” recalls Andrew, speaking from his kitchen near Wimbledon.
“No, I remember, actually, there was another time – I think there were a few discussions – we were parked in your Morris Minor,” says Simon. “And this guy who was in the band at the time, Lascelle Lascelles, he was a DJ, and he had this vinyl, a James Brown vinyl, and it said on the back, ‘James Brown is the minister of a super new, heavy, heavy funk’. We literally had to deliver the name the next day.
“So we sort of somehow came up with ‘The Brand New Heavies’, which, over the years, a lot of people think is a rock band – until you know – but it’s stuck, it’s quite an unusual name, and there you go. People knew our songs, but didn’t know the name of the band, but that’s sorted itself out over the years.”
As for “Acid Jazz”, “Basically Giles Peterson and Eddie Piller formed a label; Acid House had come out and so they wanted to call it ‘Acid Jazz’,” explains Simon. “So they took the logo, the smiley face logo, synonymous with Acid House, and draw a moustache on it, and glasses and stuff, and it was all very fun. Very much like the name of The Brand New Heavies, we just were having a laugh.
“And then Chris Bangs was DJing at the Watermans Arts Centre in Ealing, near where we live and grew up. There was a rave before they played, playing Acid House. . .and there’s a song called Iron Leg by Mickey And The Soul Generation, an American band; it’s a proper old rare groove. They said, ‘that was Acid House, this is Acid Jazz’. They made it up on the spot, and they used it for their label name. That was the provenance, right there.”
Recalling The Brand New Heavies’ roots, Simon says: “When when we first started jamming together, we’d go around to the drummer’s house every Sunday. His mum and dad were thrilled!”
“They were thrilled that he was making friends,” says Andrew.“Oh, no, I think they probably were a bit thrilled,” rejoins Simon. “We would play just one groove, do you remember, Andrew, for ages. So all the parts sort of fitted in. You go, ‘oh, there it is’, and that became the groove, when the parts, the puzzle, fits together, the bass, drums and guitars. You go, ‘that’s a groove, that’s the groove’.”

The Brand New Heavies’ poster for their 2026 tour
Andrew says: “Yeah, it’s like cooking. Different measurements of, you know, maybe you put in more sugar, more flour, a little bit more cayenne, and you stir it for a bit longer. But because we were untrained musicians, in retrospect, I saw that as almost a way of learning.
“Listen to your fellow musicians, and how to learn how to play your instrument. Because music, in terms of playing in a band, I reckon it’s 90 per cent listening. The rest is just technique.”
Simon adds: “Especially with jazz, you know, if you’re not listening to everyone else, it’s like, that’s really where the listening is quintessential. I mean, there’s so many nuances, and it’s almost like Maths as well, the groove. You syncopate or play on top of each other, and it can be really simple. If you listen to early James Brown records, everything around the bass lines builds up into this phenomenal thing. It’s really lovely, kind of like a bowl of fruit.”
“Space” in the music is important too, suggests Andrew: “The amount of space you put into this genre of music, funk, disco, whatever, is the space that you can connect with through dance. So you don’t play all the beats, you leave a little bit of space so you can dance to it, you can put your foot in that space, or you can shake your bum to that little bit of space in the groove.”
Simon concurs: “Absolutely. I mean, one of my favourite examples of that is, because I was kind of a rock player before, playing big bar chords…but when I got into this funk, it was like, I was playing…[he makes the sound of musical notes]…space!
“And this amazing song called Green Onions by Booker T & The MGs, the guitar part is really crucial because it adds a sort of sonic thing, and without that, the record wouldn’t be the same – and that is probably the most spacious example of a groovy, funky thing. Within that, there’s different bits of space for someone else to play in.”
The space for free-form expression applies to each and every Brand New Heavies concert. “We get some complaints…but I’m not gonna name names!” says Andrew. “But, do you know what, there’s something that we do sometimes between songs, at the end of songs, or the beginning of songs, where we just make up a completely new groove arrangement, and maybe that will last for a couple of minutes, and then we go on to the actual song, but we’re very good at that.
“I suppose it’s a form of live remixing, we just change the beat, and maybe start in a different, slightly different voicing of a key of the song. And that can go on for 64 bars, or a couple of minutes, or whatever. And then we finally start the actual song that people know. We love it! I think people really like that, because we’re don’t use tapes, we don’t use any form of backing tracks or anything like that.
“Everything is off the cuff, and there’s a level of vulnerability that comes with that, because no-one exactly knows what to do next – and I think the crowd really like that.”
Vulnerability? “Oh, definitely, and that keeps it interesting for us,” says Simon. “It makes every show unique.” “Like, we don’t remember these jams,” adds Andrew. “Some are sort of songs, some might even turn into songs, occasionally.”
“We might take a song like Stay This Way, where, with the outro, we’ll just go on longer, because we’ll just break it down and let Angela have a sort of diva moment, in a positive way,” further explains Simon. “We don’t know what’s going to happen…but we’re treading the boards, and it keeps it fresh. That’s definitely a thing, so you’ll never see the same Brand New Heavies show twice, that’s for sure – but with some bands you do, you know.”

“That moment of intensity is performance, and that’s what differs from plodding away at a 9-to-5 job,” says The Brand New Heavies’ Simon Bartholomew, above, right
When Angela Ricci took on the lead vocalist’s role, occupied previously by N’Dea Davenport and Siedah Garrett, what drew Simon and Andrew to her voice? “At this point, I have to say that it’s really hard to find a singer for The Brand New Heavies,” says Andrew. “What you’re doing is kind of letting go of your own dreams and passions, or maybe ego, a little bit, because when you’re singing, it’s like being in a theatre production: you’re actually singing songs that have already been developed and sung by someone else.
“So you have to reinterpret songs that were sung by Siedah Garrett, and it’s hard to find a singer that’s willing to let go of their own own dreams or whatever. Fortunately, Angela does it so, so well – and she’s an ex-model, so she knows how to carry herself on stage.”
Simon adds: “Angela had a cassette when she was younger, an Acid Jazz compilation thing that had our song Brother Sister on it, so she’s known the band for a long time, and she’s, like, a fan, you know.”
“She’s done a lot of session work, so she’s used to that sort of role, singing someone else’s songs and interpreting,” says Andrew, who recalls Angela being thrown in at the deep end.
“I thought, ‘oh my god, I hope she can handle it’. We were playing to 5,000, supporting Soul II Soul. We were worried, and she was worried, but we pulled through, and we supported each other, and, you know, eight years later, she gets it. She slots in with what the crowd expects, she’s very poised and very good at engaging with them”… “And with putting up with us,” chips in Simon.
How have the band founders’ priorities changed from 35 years ago? “My main priority is having enough energy and resting enough, so we can deliver, because we’re not spring chickens anymore,” says Andrew, now 59. “So you’ve got to rest, and you’ve got to look after yourself, as everything’s about walking on stage at a half past eight in the evening.
“It’s also remembering that people have got so much choice in live music now and in what to do with their money. So we need to deliver: we do like to dress up a little bit, put some fancy clothes on, and do the nice lighting and pyrotechnics and stuff like that. Our main focus is putting on a good show so that people will hopefully come back and see us again.”
The thrill of performance is alive as ever in Simon and Andrew: “If you’re backstage, it’s something no-one really talks about, it’s an ongoing rule, but there’s a certain level of energy and nervousness and vulnerability that builds up and builds up and builds up three hours before the show,” says Simon.
“Running around backstage, and dressing up, and sharing jewellery, I love it,” says Andrew. “I always start shouting, I start getting loud. I can’t help myself; I think I’ve got Funk Tourette’s,” says Simon. “I get loud, I try and control it. I’m like, ‘come on, go! Whoo!’, and I just start doing stupid voices and things like that.
“It’s part of the build-up, because the whole day is based around almost everything you eat and drink. It’s all leading up to this moment. No-one talks about it but from that point, it is kind of like when sportsmen prepare over a day to go out to perform. It could be a tennis player, it could be a footballer, whatever. That moment of intensity is performance, and that’s what differs from plodding away at a 9-to-5 job. You know you have a part of the day that really matters above all else.”
Andrew concludes: “It’s that concentration on getting it so perfect and right on stage in that moment. I mean, if you’re in a relationship, you’re married, and have kids and stuff, they all have to deal with that. I’m in a new relationship, and I’ve had to explain that, yeah, Andrew might be a little bit tetchy, a little bit short, distant, but it’s just transforming from being maybe daddy or boyfriend into funky bass player.”
The Brand New Heavies, with special guests Galliano, York Barbican, March 19. Doors 7pm. Box office: yorkbarbican.co.uk or aegpresents.co.uk.
























































