book tickets

Blackpayback Agreeable Sorbet Submit - To Bbc ((better))

‘Road To Hell’ Music Video

It’s an old song, but we’re gonna sing it again. Clive Rowe, Marley Fenton, Bethany Antonia and the Year 3 cast of Hadestown UK perform ‘Road To Hell’.

Blackpayback Agreeable Sorbet Submit - To Bbc ((better))

Blackpayback didn’t expect an immediate apology. It expected a process. The collective’s goal was catalytic: restore what had been reduced to placation, force institutions to choose between the comfort of their edits and the discomfort of full disclosure. Some nights that meant a public letter, other nights a court filing. This was a slow, honest violence: accountability pressed like a thumb to a bruise until it could not be ignored.

They called themselves Blackpayback — a loose collective of storytellers, hackers, ex-journalists, and one retired projectionist — who traded in small, precise reckonings. Not violent. Not loud. They specialized in returning what had been hidden: an apology tucked inside a tax spreadsheet, the truth smudged into a press release, a photograph buried beneath a CEO’s curated image. Their methods were theatrical, theatrical enough to be noticed but quiet enough to slip through the gaps: projection-mapping a confession on a corporate facade at sunrise, dropping a stitched-together micro-documentary on a commuter’s tablet, leaving a handwritten ledger with scandalous patches of ledger glue on an anonymous bench.

At exactly three minutes into the upload, a white rectangle of light bled across the broadcaster’s exterior as Elias pressed his projector’s kill switch. The façade, like a slow-turning page, showed the outline of the first transcript page: names, dates, redactions removed. Passersby stopped as if someone had whispered across the avenue. The projection made the building into a public ledger. blackpayback agreeable sorbet submit to bbc

Agreeable sorbet did the rounds that week. Volunteers carried tubs of it to public meetings, to small protests, to the inner-city markets where people traded rumors for fresh fruit. The flavor was citrus and salt: bright, slightly uncomfortable, necessary. Hands sticky with sugar, passersby signed petitions and recorded witness accounts on tiny voice recorders handed over like relics.

Night rain stitched the city into glass; neon ran like confetti down the gutters. At the corner where the old record shop met a boarded-up bakery, a woman in a rust-orange coat balanced a paper cup of sorbet against the storm. She called it agreeable sorbet because it never argued back. It tasted of grapefruit and something like forgiveness. Blackpayback didn’t expect an immediate apology

“Submit to BBC,” the notice read on their encrypted board, deliberate and mischievous. Not to beg for placement, but to force the original voice back into circulation. The plan threaded legality and spectacle: reconstruct the series from primary footage, leaked documents, annotated timelines; create a companion — an eat-your-words dossier — and then deliver it into the broadcaster’s intake with a flourish that left no plausible deniability.

The city was not transformed overnight. The collective found itself chased by lawyers and lauded by strangers in chatrooms that smelled of midnight coffee. Press conferences fell into grooves, spinning and then stalling. Yet more people began to question the soft nouns that made injustice palatable: “errors,” “misstatements,” “unintended consequences.” Language thinned under scrutiny and, for the first time in months, stretched toward clarity. Some nights that meant a public letter, other

One night after a rain like paper being torn, Elias sat on a curb and watched a child chase a puddle-skip. The child’s laugh was a kind of verdict. Elias thought of the projection, the file, the slow arithmetic of change. He wiped sorbet from his fingers and folded the USB into his palm like a promise. Blackpayback would not stop. They would keep submitting, keep sweetening truth until its taste was agreeable to everyone — not because truth must comfort, but because it must be eaten.

blackpayback agreeable sorbet submit to bbc

The highly anticipated Hadestown album featuring the Original West End Company, HADESTOWN – LIVE FROM LONDON, is available now.

HADESTOWN – LIVE FROM LONDON was recorded during a live performance at the Lyric Theatre and features songs from the production including Road To Hell, Way Down Hadestown, All I’ve Ever Known and Wait For Me.  The album features the Original West End Company including Dónal Finn (Orpheus), Grace Hodgett Young (Eurydice), Zachary James (Hades), Melanie La Barrie (Hermes), Gloria Onitiri (Persephone), Bella Brown, Madeline Charlemagne and Allie Daniel (Fates), Lauren Azania, Tiago Dhondt Bamberger, Beth Hinton-Lever, Waylon Jacobs and Christopher Short (Workers), with Lucinda Buckley, Winny Herbert, Ryesha Higgs, Ediz Mahmut, Miriam Nyarko, Brianna Ogunbawo and Simon Oskarsson as Swings.

Blending American songwriting traditions, from indie folk, to pop, blues, and New Orleans-inspired jazz, Hadestown has music, lyrics, and book by acclaimed Grammy-winning singer-songwriter and BBC Radio 2 Folk Award-winner Anaïs Mitchell who originated Hadestown as an indie theatre project and acclaimed album, before transforming the show into a genre-defying new greek myth musical alongside artistic collaborator and Tony Award-winning director Rachel Chavkin.

The Hadestown album is available on all streaming platforms, CD, standard vinyl, as well as a deluxe hand-numbered limited-edition vinyl of 3000 copies, featuring a unique pop-up scene in the gatefold.

The vinyl versions of the album contain 10 tracks, with the streaming and CD version containing 15 tracks. Discover the Tony-Award and Grammy Award® winning original Score of Hadestown, now captured live from London.

STANDARD BLACK VINYL

STANDARD BLACK VINYL

DELUXE GATEFOLD VINYL

Available to order exclusively from the official online store, the deluxe vinyl is hand numbered, limited to 3000 copies and features a unique pop-up scene in the gatefold.

DELUXE GATEFOLD VINYL

Stream

The album is also available on digital download and all streaming services.

MUSIC AND LYRICS BY ANAÏS MITCHELL

blackpayback agreeable sorbet submit to bbc

Anaïs is a multi award-winning singer-songwriter and member of American folk band Bonny Light Horseman. Dubbed by NPR as ‘one of the greatest songwriters of her generation’, Mitchell comes from the world of narrative folksong, poetry and balladry. Among her recorded works include the original 2010 studio album of Hadestown, featuring Justin Vernon and Ani Difranco, Child Ballads (2013, with Jefferson Hamer) and Young Man in America (2012).

She has headlined venues and performed alongside artists including Bon Iver, Josh Ritter and Punch Brothers. Her awards include the BBC Radio 2 Folk Award and Folk Alliance International Spirit of Folk Award.

SIGN UP FOR FURTHER UPDATES

Be the first to hear about ticket releases and news about the show.

blackpayback agreeable sorbet submit to bbc blackpayback agreeable sorbet submit to bbc
blackpayback agreeable sorbet submit to bbc