The band also gave a shout out the late J Dilla - look at them go!

IDLES have given a boisterous performance of ‘Gift Horse’ on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon – watch the footage below.

The Bristol band dropped the song in January, and it serves as latest teaser from their upcoming album ‘TANGK’. Their fifth LP is set for release on February 16 via Partisan Records – so far, the band have also shared LCD Soundsystem-collaboration ‘Dancer‘ and ‘Grace‘.

Now, the band have performed ‘Gift Horse’ for Jimmy Fallon. Previously, frontman Joe Talbot said of the song: “Look at us go! Music and movement for you and yours. Be bold and ride us like the disco donkeys we are.” You can hear him hollering the song’s distinctive chorus during the Fallon performance: ‘Look at him gooooo!’

The band also gave a shoutout to the late J Dilla, production pioneer and Detroit hip-hop legend, by calling him “the king”. Dilla’s birthday (February 7) was the day before their performance; he died on February 10, 2006 due to cardiac arrest.

Figures such as Questlove praised IDLES for honouring Dilla during their performance/ “Idles took names and mollywhooped us something crazy today,” he wrote on Instagram. “All the while giving respect to Dilla. Man they were ferocious today on Fallon Tonight. Happy Birthday Dilla!” Watch the raucous show below:

In an interview with NME, IDLES spoke about recruiting LCD Soundsystem’s James Murphy and Nancy Whang to provide vocals for ‘Dancer’: “If you don’t ask, you don’t get.

“By that point we’d been touring with them for a few weeks and knew they were lovely human beings,” he told NME. “They took time out of their day off and took us to their studio. They were really accommodating and lovely, so hard-working, patient and awesome. They’re sick.”

He also revealed that ‘Dancer’ was emblematic of ‘TANGK’ and its “infectious” energy: “When I started this album, I said to Bowen: ‘I want to make people dance, I want people to feel the love that I need in my life, I want to make people move, I want our music to be infectious again – and I want it to be infectious in a way that makes people feel, not think. I want to feel part of something electric again’.”

‘TANGK’ will be the follow-up to IDLES’ 2021 album ‘CRAWLER’, which NME gave four stars: “On their first three albums, IDLES instructed others to interrogate their feelings and live their lives being as emotionally open as possible. With ‘CRAWLER’ they take their own advice, adding a whole new dimension to an already beloved band. This appears a stepping stone in the band’s evolution, rather than the finishing line.”

In other news, IDLES have just been announced as part of End Of The Road this year – discover the full lineup here.

Earlier on Friday, Jan. 30, news reports announced an upcoming Netflix documentary exploring the early years and success of the Red Hot Chili Peppers and the impact of the band’s original guitarist Hillel Slovak, who died in 1988 of an accidental heroin overdose.

Directed by Ben Feldman, Variety reported that The Rise of the Red Hot Chili Peppers includes input from members Anthony Kiedis and Flea and is set to premiere on March 20. “At its heart, this is a deeply relatable story — about the friendships that shape our identities and the lasting power of the bonds forged in adolescence,” Feldman said in a statement at the time. “What’s less relatable, of course, is that here those friends went on to create one of the greatest rock bands in history. I’m profoundly grateful to the band and to Hillel’s family for their trust and generosity, and to Netflix for helping bring this story to the world stage.”

However, following the announcement, the band later released their own statement distancing themselves from the project. “About a year ago, we were asked to be interviewed for a documentary about Hillel Slovak. He was a founding member of the group, a great guitarist, and friend. We agreed to be interviewed out of love and respect for Hillel and his memory,” wrote the band in a post shared on social media. “However, this documentary is now being advertised as a Red Hot Chili Peppers documentary, which it is not,” they clarified. “We had nothing to do with it creatively. We have yet to make a Red Hot Chili Peppers documentary. The central subject of this current Netflix special is Hillel Slovak and we hope it sparks interest in his work.”

The group originally encompassed Slovak, Kiedis, Flea, and drummer Jack Irons. It has since gone through several iterations following Slovak’s tragic death, with Irons leaving the group soon after.

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