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CMAT and Pulp among favourites to win Mercury Prize

Mark SavageMusic correspondent

Getty Images CMAT on stage at the All Points East festivalGetty Images

CMAT and Pulp are among the favourites to win this year’s Mercury Prize for album of the year, which will be awarded in Newcastle on Thursday.

Bookmakers say Irish singer CMAT is the front-runner with her third album, Euro-Country, which blends stories of loneliness and national identity with piercing humour.

She’s followed by former winners Pulp for their unexpected comeback album More; and Irish band Fontaines DC for Romance, which saw the alternative act cross over to the mainstream.

Other nominees for the album of the year award include pop artist PinkPantheress, singer-songwriter Jacob Alon and folk musician Martin Carthy who, at 84, is the prize’s oldest ever nominee.

Carthy, who gave Bob Dylan his first tour of British folk clubs in 1962, is nominated for Transform Me Then Into a Fish, which re-evaluates his songbook from the tail end of a 60-year career.

With a nod for their recent album, 2025’s The Clearing, rock band Wolf Alice have now been shortlisted for all four of their studio albums.

They previously won the prize in 2018 for their second record, Visions of a Life.

And hometown hero Sam Fender will be hoping for a local advantage with his third album, People Watching, a steely-eyed dissection of working-class life in the north.

Getty Images Sam Fender on stage playing a black and white striped guitarGetty Images

This year sees the ceremony move from London to Newcastle, following in the footsteps of the Mobo awards, as part of a new partnership with Newcastle City Council and the North East Combined Authority.

It’s the first time the ceremony has taken place outside the capital since it began in 1992. Next year, the Brit Awards will also leave London, moving to Manchester.

“We’ve always had the aspiration to move the Mercury Prize, in particular, outside of London because it’s a representation of the best music of the year from across Britain and Ireland,” says Jo Twist, says chief executive of the BPI, which organises the Mercurys and the Brits.

“Celebrating that talent from all over the country was part of the thinking.”

Highlighting recent success stories from the north-east – including Brit Award winner Jade and last year’s Mercury Prize recipients English Teacher – Twist says the music industry is making a “big push” to decentralise.

“Talent is everywhere but opportunity isn’t,” she says. “So it’s only right that we bring these large scale shows (outside London) to show there are opportunities within the music industry without having to move city.”

North-east ‘overlooked’

Coventry-born rapper Pa Salieu, who is also Mercury-nominated for his latest album Afrikan Alien, says the change was long overdue.

“I always heard of Mercury, growing up, but it seemed so far away, out of reach,” he says.

“So I think the Mercury Prize should be in Coventry, in Birmingham. It should move like a tour. Let the youth feel heard.”

In Newcastle, the build-up to the ceremony has included a week of fringe events, including concerts from local artists and workshops for newcomers looking for their break.

Among the performers is 29-year-old Finn Forster, from Teesside, who’s gone from playing pubs to supporting Stereophonics on their recent European tour.

He says he’s “super grateful for how much the music industry is taking a step outside of London and the major cities”.

“The north-east has been overlooked for so long,” he says. “Everyone’s incredibly proud about the fact the Mercury is coming – and there’s such a high calibre of people performing at the fringe.”

Thursday’s ceremony will be held at the Utilita Arena, hosted by Sunderland native Lauren Laverne, with performances from nine of the 12 nominees.

The 12 nominated albums are:

  • CMAT – Euro-Country
  • Emma-Jean Thackray – Weirdo
  • FKA Twigs – Eusexua
  • Fontaines DC – Romance
  • Jacob Alon – In Limerence
  • Joe Webb – Hamstrings and Hurricanes
  • Martin Carthy – Transform Me Then Into a Fish
  • Pa Salieu – Afrikan Alien
  • PinkPantheress – Fancy That
  • Pulp – More
  • Sam Fender – People Watching
  • Wolf Alice – The Clearing

Full coverage will be available on BBC television, BBC Sounds, Radio 6 Music and BBC News.

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